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Authors: Robert Burns

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Burns is certainly partly laughing at the Devil in the poem's opening sequences (ll. 1–24) by the reductive ridicule of reducing
the devil's energies to being devoted to the poet's petty transgressions. The Devil, however, is not for his own sake being laughed out of court. Burns's poetic wit is in direct proportion to his most potent enemies. The enemy here is not the devil but those who seek demonically to control mankind in his name. For their power structure to remain intact the Devil could not be allowed to become a laughing matter. This is why, even more than the more personally abusive clerical satires, this poem caused such an outcry. As Carol McGuirk finely writes:

A ringing blow in Burns's quarrel with the Auld Licht, this satire caused a major local scandal. Several of the anonymous contributors to
Animadversions
, James Maxwell's compilation of evangelical attacks on Burns (Paisley, 1788), saw this poem as final proof of Burns's evil values. Alexander (‘Saunders') Tait of Tarbolton, a mantua-maker and tailor who considered himself Burns's equal as a satirist, also seized upon this as Burns's most shocking poem, publishing his attack in 1790.

Burns intended it to shock, and so structures the poem round what any Auld Licht partisan would see as a heretical statement of Arminianism: the deil's long-ago invasion of Eden only ‘almost' ‘ruined all' for Adam and Eve (l. 96): the stain of sin is not ineradicable and even Satan (if he wished) could ‘tak a thought' and mend=change and receive forgiveness. Burns's ‘deil' is neither the sadistic demon of Auld Licht sermons nor the tragic hero Milton's Satan considered himself to be. A rather forlorn and unsuccessful mischief-maker, his smudged (‘smoutie') face ashy from brimstone and his plots against humanity invariably thwarted, the deil is addressed more or less as just another ‘poor, damned body'. The poet is dramatising his rejection of predestination. The Arminians had challenged Calvinist ‘election' (salvation through grace alone, not human effort) but Burns focuses on its corollary—repudiation, a doctrine that insisted that the reprobated are eternally cast away from grace, whatever their benighted individual efforts to be (and do) good. Burns, by contrast, announces that he considers himself salvageable (ll. 119–20) –andif ‘a certain Bardie' can besaved, then there must be hope for a mere devil. The poet is paying a backhanded compliment to his own sinfulness as he mocks the Auld Licht. No one – not even the deil – is all bad and forever incapable of change, the poem argues with a cheerful perversity that enraged the Auld Licht. A more orthodox point is also made: hope of heaven is more likely to convert sinners than fear of damnation. (pp. 233–4)

The Death and Dying Words of Poor Mailie,

The Author's Only Pet Yowe: An Unco Mournfu' Tale

First printed in the Kilmarnock edition, 1786.

As MAILIE, an' her lambs thegither,
together

Was ae day nibblin on the tether,
one day, chewing

Upon her cloot she coost a hitch,
hoof, looped

An' owre she warsl'd in the ditch:
over, floundered

5
There, groanin, dying, she did ly,

When
Hughoc
he cam doytan by.
walking/staggering
 

Wi' glowrin een, an' lifted han's
staring eyes

Poor
Hughoc
like a statue stan's;

He saw her days were near hand ended,

10
But, wae's my heart! he could na mend it!
woe, not

He gaped wide, but naething spak.
nothing spoke

At length poor
Mailie
silence brak: —
broke

‘O thou, whase lamentable face
whose

Appears to mourn my woefu' case!

15
My
dying words
attentive hear,

An' bear them to my
Master
dear.

‘Tell him, if e'er again he keep

As muckle gear as buy a
sheep
,
much money

O, bid him never tie them mair,
more

20
Wi' wicked strings o' hemp or hair!

But ca' them out to park or hill,
call/drive

An' let them wander at their will:

So may his flock increase, an' grow

To
scores
o' lambs, an'
packs
o' woo'!

25
‘Tell him, he was a Master kin',
kind

An' ay was guid to me an' mine;
good

An' now my
dying
charge I gie him,
give

My helpless
lambs
, I trust them wi' him.
with

‘O, bid him save their harmless lives,

30
Frae dogs, an' tods, an' butchers' knives!
from, foxes

But gie them guid cow-milk their fill,
give, good

Till they be fit to fend themsel;
themselves

An' tent them duely, e'en an' morn,
tend

Wi' taets o'
hay
an' ripps o'
corn
.
small amounts, handfuls

35
‘An' may they never learn the gaets,
ways

Of ither vile, wanrestfu'
Pets
—
other, restless

To slink thro' slaps, an' reave an' steal,
gaps in dykes

At stacks o' pease, or stocks o' kail.
plants

So may they, like their great
forbears
,

40
For monie a year come thro' the sheers:
many

So
wives
will gie them bits o' bread,
give

An'
bairns
greet for them when they're dead.
children cry

‘My poor
toop-lamb
, my son an' heir,
tup/male

O, bid him breed him up wi' care!
with

45
An' if he live to be a beast,

To pit some havins in his breast!
conduct

An' warn him, what I winna name,
would not

To stay content wi'
yowes
at hame;
ewes

An' no to rin an' wear his cloots,
run, hooves

50
Like other menseless, graceless brutes.
unmannerly

‘An' niest, my
yowie
, silly thing;
next, ewekin/female baby

Gude keep thee frae a
tether string
!
from

O, may thou ne'er forgather up,
make friends

Wi' onie blastet, moorland
toop
;
any, blasted/damned

55
But ay keep mind to moop an' mell,
always, nibble & mix

Wi' sheep o' credit like thysel!

‘And now,
my bairns
, wi' my last breath,

I lea'e my blessin wi' you baith:
leave, with, both

An' when you think upo' your Mither,
mother

60
Mind to be kind to ane anither.
one another

‘Now, honest
Hughoc
, dinna fail,
do not

To tell my Master a' my tale;

An' bid him burn this cursed
tether
,

An' for thy pains thou'se get my blather.'
thou will, bladder

65
This said, poor
Mailie
turn'd her head,

An' clos'd her een amang the dead!
eyes, among
 

This poem fuses an actual experience at Lochlea, subsequently recorded by Gilbert Burns, with Burns's awareness of the tradition of comic animal monologue as integral to the eighteenth-century Scottish vernacular revival. As Burns noted, Hughoc was an actual neighbouring herdsman though, in reality, the sheep was freed from
the strangling tether and survived. Its ‘poetic' death is necessary to the comic pathos of the poem. The literary tradition of burlesquing animal poetry commenced with William Hamilton of Gilbertfield (c. 1665–1751) whose rhetorical greyhound's death-speech parodies Blind Harry's
Wallace
. Burns would also be aware of the so-influential Robert Fergusson's very funny parody of Henry Mackenzie's
The Man of Feeling
(1771) with his Milton-burlesquing
The Sow of Feeling
(1773). As we saw in the Introduction, Mackenzie never forgave Fergusson's lachrymose porcine parody. The tone of Burns's poem is more subtle since the mother's dying warnings to her children, particularly against keeping the wrong sexual company, are a mixture of his satirising snobbery and prudery with genuine sympathy towards a mother's natural, protective love. Burns, indeed (see
Address to a Young Friend
), often displayed a genuine paternal care, which revealed a desire to preserve his varied dependants from the dangers inherent in his own licentious excesses.

Poor Mailie's Elegy

First printed in the Kilmarnock edition, 1786.

Lament in rhyme, lament in prose,

Wi' saut tears tricklin down your nose;
salt

Our
Bardie's
fate is at a close,

        Past a' remead!
remedy

5
The last, sad cape-stane of his woes;
coping stone (final weight)

       
Poor Mailie's
dead! 

It's no the loss of warl's gear,
worldly goods

That could sae bitter draw the tear,
so

Or mak our
Bardie
, dowie, wear
drooping/gloomy

10
        The mourning weed:

He's lost a friend an' neebor dear
neighbour

        In
Mailie
dead.

Thro' a' the toun she trotted by him;
town

A lang half-mile she could descry him;
long

15
Wi' kindly bleat, when she did spy him,

        She ran wi' speed:

A friend mair faithfu' ne'er cam nigh him,
more, came near

        Than
Mailie
dead.

I wat she was a
sheep
o' sense,
wot

20
An' could behave hersel wi' mense:
tact/grace

I'll say't, she never brak a fence,
broke

        Thro' thievish greed.

Our Bardie, lanely, keeps the spence
parlour

        Sin'
Mailie's
dead.

25
Or, if he wanders up the howe,
glen

Her livin image in
her yowe
ewe

Comes bleatin till him, owre the knowe,
over the hill edge

        For bits o' bread;

An' down the briny pearls rowe
roll

30
        For
Mailie
dead.

She was nae get o' moorlan tips,
not born from

Wi' tawted ket, an' hairy hips;
matted fleece

For her forbears were brought in ships,

        Frae 'yont the TWEED:
from beyond

35
A bonier
fleesh
ne'er cross'd the clips
fleece, sheep shears

        Than
Mailie
dead.

Wae worth the man wha first did shape
woe befall

That vile, wanchancie thing — a
raep
!
dangerous, rope

It maks guid fellows girn an' gape,
makes good, facial contortion

40
        Wi' chokin dread;

An'
Robin's
bonnet wave wi' crape
mourning

        For
Mailie
dead.

O a' ye
Bards
on bonie DOON!

An' wha on AIRE your chanters tune!
who, Ayr, bagpipes

45
Come, join the melancholious croon

        O'
Robin's
reed!

His heart will never get aboon!
above/over

        His
Mailie's
dead! 

This was probably written in 1785–6 as a companion piece for publication with the preceding Mailie monologue. Again the tone of the poem is mixed. Burns employs the six-line Standard Habbie used in vernacular eighteenth-century elegy while partly parodying the content of these poems. His most specified source is probably Fergusson's
Elegy on the Death of Mr David Gregory
with its repetitive end-line ‘Sin Gregory's dead'. He is also partly sending up his own emotions. This is emphasised by the recent discovery
from a London saleroom catalogue for May 1962 of an hitherto unknown last stanza:

She was nae get o' runted rams,

Wi' woo' like goat's an' legs like trams;

She was the flower o' Fairlee lambs,

        A famous breed:

Now Robin, greetin', chows the hams

        O' Mailie dead.

This peasant practicality would have been too much for his genteel audience. On the other hand, there is real affection for its pedigree beauty. This was the man who was still surrounding himself with pet sheep at Ellisland. Further, as in his mouse poem, the lives of men and beasts are both brutally intruded upon not only by lethal elemental forces but by human-inspired, cruel economic and political forces. The accidentally throttled beast has its more sinister legally garrotted human counterpart:

Wae worth the man wha first did shape

That vile chancie thing – a rape!

It maks guid fellows girn an' gape,

        Wi' chokin dread …

BOOK: The Canongate Burns
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