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CHAPTER XXIII - “LIVING GREEK.” 1888–1891

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 October 2010

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Summary

Concerning the ‘Life of Burns,’ Dr Stodart Walker, the Professor's nephew, writes:—

I asked him once why he wrote this book. “Well,” he said, “I was asked to do it, and at first I refused, for I can never do work to order. But then I thought a little, and I said to myself, There are two kinds of persons who may write that life. First, the blind heroworshipper, who will write a useless blatant kind of work; and then another much worse person, who will play the righteous uncharitable moralist with Burns, and probably look at him through his own myopic lenses. I felt that I understood Burns, and that righteousness and mercy could guide my course.”

How he succeeded can best be understood by reading the book. It has been accounted “a tender and yet masterly review of the greatest lyric poet of his native land.” He neither suppresses nor extenuates the wrong done by Burns, but he teaches us to understand the man's temperament,—with its glow of genius, its self-respect, its temptations, its deep remorse, its unassailable dignity in presence of his dull accusers.

The author lectured on the subject of Burns in Kilmarnock at the time of its publication, and records how he was treated with great hospitality of a teetotal character, out of keeping with the place and the occasion.

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John Stuart Blackie
A Biography
, pp. 407 - 427
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2010
First published in: 1896

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