Birth date: 
1759
Death date: 
1796
Birth town: 
Ayrshire
Country: 
Scotland

Burns, sometimes known as the 'ploughman poet', was the eldest son of a poverty-stricken farmer. Though his father had moved to Ayrshire, where Burns was born, in order to attempt to improve his fortunes, he eventually died as a bankrupt - after taking on first one farm and then, unsuccessful, moving to another - in 1784. Robert, who had been to school since the age of six, and was also educated at home by a teacher, had, by the age of fifteen, already become the farm's chief labourer. He had also acquired a reading knowledge of French and Latin and had read Shakespeare, Dryden, Milton and the Bible. After his father's death, he and his brother continued farming together, working now at Mossigiel.

The poverty of Burns' early life, though far from being overcome, had produced in him a supporter of the French Revolution and a rebel against both Calvinism and the social order of his time. His rebellious nature soon became evident in his acts. Burns' first illegitimate child was borne to him by Elizabeth Paton in 1785. Two sets of twins later followed, and various amorous intrigues, from Jean Amour, whom he afterward married.

It was also during this period that Burns' first achieved literary success. Though he had thought of emigration to Jamaica as a possible way to avoid his mounting problems, he published his Poems Chiefly in the Scottish Dialect on July 31 1786 at Kilmarnock. This volume contained, among others, 'The Cotter's Saturday Night', 'To a Mouse', 'To a Mountain Daisy' and 'The Holy Fair', all of which were written at Mossigiel. The volume brought him immediate success.

After 1787 Burns, married in 1788 and having moved to Ellisland with his bride, worked chiefly for James Johnson, whom he met in Edinburgh, and, later, for George Thomson. It was for these men that Burns compiled and added to the two great compilations of Scottish songs: Thomson's Scott's Musical Museum and Johnson's Select Collection of Original Scottish Airs for the Voice. Alongside this work, which Burns did on an unpaid basis, he also worked, from 1791 onward, as an Excise Officer. This allowed him to give up farming and move to the Dumfries. He died from rheumatic fever just five years later, having also published, again in 1791, his last major work, a narrative poem entitled 'Tom O'Shanter'.

Poems by this Poet

Displaying 721 - 730 of 839
Poemsort descending Post date Rating Comments
There'll Never Be Peace Till Jamie Comes Hame 19 May 2014
5
Average: 5 (1 vote)
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There's News Lasses News 29 November 2013
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Thine am I, my Chloris fair 19 May 2014
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Third Epistle to J. Lapraik 19 May 2014
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Thou hast left me ever, Jamie 19 May 2014
0
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Thou Ling'ring Star 5 September 2014
0
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Thou Lingering Star 31 May 2013
0
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Though fickle fortune has deceiv'd me 19 May 2014
0
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Three Gude Fellows Ayont Yon Glen 5 September 2014
0
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Tibbie 19 May 2014
5
Average: 5 (1 vote)
0

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