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One of Sir Walter Scott's most celebrated and accessible works, The Lay of the Last Minstrel was a huge publishing phenomenon when it first appeared in 1802, with six editions appearing in three years years and sales of 27,000 in a decade. Its impact on Border tourism was vast, as countless people, moved by Scott's evocative description of the moonlit Melrose Abbey, flocked to the area. Painters too were inspired by the scene, and such was its fame that even prime minister William Pit recited sections from it in front of dinner guests. Told by an ageing minstrel to Ann, Duchess of Buccleuch in return for hospitality at Newark Castle, The Lay of the Last Minstrel is a powerful and dramatic tale concerning love, murder and kidnapping. A strong supernatural element lies at its heart, making it one of the most significant gothic tales ever written. This edition features an introduction by the Duke of Buccleuch.
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THE
LAY
OF
THE LAST MINSTREL
A POEM IN SIX CANTOS
This eBook edition published in 2013 by
Birlinn Limited
West Newington House
Newington Road
Edinburgh
EH9 1QS
www.birlinn.co.uk
This edition taken from the eighth edition (1808) printed for
Longman, Hurst, Rees and Orme, London and
A. Constable and Co., Edinburgh
Introduction copyright © the Duke of Buccleuch 2013
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored or transmitted in any form without the express written permission of the publisher.
ISBN: 978-1-78027-185-9
eBook ISBN: 978-0-85790-722-6
British Library Cataloguing-in-Publication Data
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION TO THE BOWHILL EDITION
THE LAY OF THE LAST MINSTREL CANTO FIRST
Introduction
The Lay of The Last Minstrel Canto First
The Lay of The Last Minstrel Canto Second
The Lay of The Last Minstrel Canto Third
The Lay of The Last Minstrel Canto Fourth
The Lay of The Last Minstrel Canto Fifth
The Lay of The Last Minstrel Canto Sixth
INTRODUCTION
TO THE
BOWHILL EDITION
BY
THE DUKE OF BUCCLEUCH
The much loved Dame Jean Maxwell Scott, the last of Sir Walter Scott's direct descendants to live at Abbotsford, was my wife's godmother. Shortly after we were married some thirty years ago she gave her a special copy of The Lay of the Last Minstrel which came, as she wrote, from the author's great-great-great-granddaughter to the new Countess of Dalkeith, successor to the title once held by Scott's friend and enthusiastic muse, Harriet. Already on its eighth print run in 1808, it is this copy which Birlinn has faithfully transcribed as the basis for the new Bowhill edition of The Lay of the Last Minstrel.
That the first edition had appeared just three years before in January 1805 was testament to the phenomenal success of Scott's first long narrative poem. His Minstrelsy of the Scottish Border, the compendium of the mainly oral verse of the region, had earned him wide respect. The Lay paved the path to his financial fortune. Sales exceeded 18,000 in five years, an astonishing figure at the time and although the bargain he struck with his publishers was so unbalanced that they embarrassedly made it up to him with the purchase of a fine horse, he was able to command an advance of 1,000 guineas (£1,050) for his next work, Marmion.
The Minstrel's tale is set in the sixteenth century but Scott has him tell it at the end of the seventeenth century on a stormy night in gaunt Newark tower in the Yarrow valley to the widowed Anna, Duchess of Buccleuch, who ‘though born in such a high degree . . . had wept o'er Monmouth's bloody tomb’. Place and family names of the Scottish and English borders abound. Centred on Branxholme, the old Scott family fortress near Hawick, it is a complex tale of romance and revenge, of noble motives and base methods including sorcery, petty feuding and high politics. Presiding over events is an earlier Buccleuch widow, in the poem just called the Ladye, whose husband, Sir Walter, had fallen in a bitter feud with, amongst others, a Lord Cranstoun, who unfortunately has become the great love of her daughter, Lady Margaret. In her determination to thwart the romance, the old lady deploys the loyal and chivalrous Sir William of Deloraine, whose despatch to retrieve the magic book of wizard Michael Scott from his tomb in Melrose Abbey at dead of night provides some of the poem's most vivid images. A series of disasters, including loss of the book and kidnapping of the young Buccleuch heir, follows, mainly due to the intervention of the Goblin Page, a magically endowed and malicious dwarf figure attached to Cranstoun. Even Scott acknowledged later that he might be ‘an excrescence’, but the character had been urged on him by Harriet, Countess of Dalkeith – his ‘lovely chieftainess . . . who has more of the angel in face and temper than anyone alive’ – who was a powerful influence in encouraging him to write the poem. Eventually after great forces have been deployed, an English army led by Lords Dacre and Howard, and all the Border clans aroused, it climaxes in mortal combat between Cranstoun disguised as Deloraine and the English champion, Sir Richard Musgrave, who, to general lamenting, ends up as the only real casualty of all six cantos.
Yet for all the often fantastical complexities the poem is a galloping tale. Completed, Scott later claimed, ‘about the rate of a canto a week’, he described it to a friend as ‘a light horseman sort of stanza’. Its irregular metre was strikingly original to contemporary readers as well as providing room for manoeuvre for the writer. Even at the time there was some controversy in literary circles as to the extent Scott had been inspired by having heard a recitation of Coleridge's ‘Christabel’, but Coleridge himself was generous and it was as much the scope of the narrative tale that enthralled readers as the verse. That was notwithstanding the prominence given to Scott's (and this writer's) own family and its historic glory amongst the Border clans in what John Sutherland vividly describes as ‘less a poem than a totem pole in verse’.
The Lay's popularity rested not just on the number of copies shifted but also on a spread of critical enthusiasm, starting with Wordsworth who wrote that ‘the novelty of the manners, the clear picturesque descriptions, and the easy glowing energy of much of the verse, greatly delight me’. Its appeal spanned the political divide, admired as much by Charles James Fox as by William Pitt, the Prime Minister, who described it as the sort of thing ‘which I might have expected in painting but could never have fancied capable of being given in poetry’.
I hope that with this publication its appeal might once again span the centuries. There are sections, as happens with Scott, which even the most devoted reader will skip by. There are lines – ‘Breathes there the man, with soul so dead’ or ‘O Caledonia! stern and wild’ – that are almost too familiar. But overall it is a tale of wonderful drama, vividly told, full of great descriptive poetry – ‘the gay beams of lightsome day/Gild, but to flout, the ruins grey’ of Melrose Abbey – and above all passages of beauty, true love is ‘the secret sympathy, The silver link, the silken tie/Which heart to heart, and mind to mind, In body and in soul can bind’. Beneath all the hurly burly and fun Scott's humanity, the foundation of all his writing, is there, and it is timeless.
Richard Buccleuch
THE
LAY
OF
THE LAST MINSTREL
A POEM;
THE EIGHTH EDITION.
WITH
BALLADS AND LYRICAL PIECES.
BY
WALTER SCOTT, ESQ.
Dum relego, scripsisse pudet, quia plurima cerno,Me quoque, qui feci judice, digna Uni.
LONDON :
PRINTED FOR LONGMAN, HURST, REES, AND ORME,PATERNOSTER-ROW, AND A. CONSTABLE AND CO. EDINBURG;
BY JAMES BALLANTYNE AND CO. EDINBURGH.
1808.
THE
LAY
OF
THE LAST MINSTREL
CANTO FIRST
INTRODUCTION
THE way was long, the wind was cold,
The Minstrel was infirm and old;
His withered cheek, and tresses gray,
Seemed to have known a better day;
The harp, his sole remaining joy,
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!