| Scotland's national barb is world famous and his birth is celebrated on January 25th with Burns night celebrations. But what do you know about him?
Robert Burns was born on 25 January 1759 in the village of Alloway in Ayrshire. For much of his life he was
involved with the land and physical toil and knew well the difficulties of poverty and deprivation. Nevertheless, as a
young man he had taken to writing poetry, much of it in his native Scots language. This was unusual - by the end of
the 18th century Scots was no longer regarded as the speech of "educated" men and women.
In 1786 he was about to emigrate to the West Indies when he published a
collection of his poems in the county town of Kilmarnock - "Poems, Chiefly in
the Scottish Dialect". The book (now known as the Kilmarnock Edition) was an
instant success and instead of emigrating he went to Edinburgh where he was
welcomed by a number of leading literary figures.
The money he earned firstly allowed him to travel. During his journeys he was
to collect and edit many of the almost forgotten songs and, of course, obtain
inspiration for further poetry. We have an example in Midi of the Month.
Despite the money which he earned from his poems, he still had to make a
living by being both a farmer and an excise officer in Dumfries. While trying to
cultivate an unproductive farm and carry out his duties as an exciseman, he
continued to write - mainly collections of songs which would otherwise have
been lost forever. His health had never been particularly robust and he died,
aged 37, on 21 July 1796.
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