with the want of success in farming, led him to think
of going to Jamaica as bookkeeper on a plantation.
From this he was dissuaded by a letter from Dr. Thomas
Blacklock (q.v.), and at the suggestion of his
brother pub. his poems. This first ed.
was brought out at Kilmarnock in June 1786, and contained
much of his best work, including “The Twa Dogs,”
“The Address to the Deil,” “Hallowe’en,”
“The Cottar’s Saturday Night,” “The
Mouse,” “The Daisy,” etc., many
of which had been written at Mossgiel. Copies
of this ed. are now extremely scarce, and as much as
L550 has been paid for one. The success of the
work was immediate, the poet’s name rang over
all Scotland, and he was induced to go to Edin. to
superintend the issue of a new ed. There he was
received as an equal by the brilliant circle of men
of letters which the city then boasted—Dugald
Stewart, Robertson, Blair, etc., and was a guest
at aristocratic tables, where he bore himself with
unaffected dignity. Here also Scott, then a boy
of 15, saw him and describes him as of “manners
rustic, not clownish. His countenance ... more
massive than it looks in any of the portraits ...
a strong expression of shrewdness in his lineaments;
the eye alone indicated the poetical character and
temperament. It was large, and of a dark cast,
and literally glowed when he spoke with feeling or
interest.” The results of this visit outside
of its immediate and practical object, included some
life-long friendships, among which were those with
Lord Glencairn and Mrs. Dunlop. The new ed. brought
him L400. About this time the episode of Highland
Mary occurred. On his return to Ayrshire he renewed
his relations with Jean Armour, whom he ultimately
married, took the farm of Ellisland near Dumfries,
having meanwhile taken lessons in the duties of an
exciseman, as a line to fall back upon should farming
again prove unsuccessful. At Ellisland his society
was cultivated by the local gentry. And this,
together with literature and his duties in the excise,
to which he had been appointed in 1789, proved too
much of a distraction to admit of success on the farm,
which in 1791 he gave up. Meanwhile he was writing
at his best, and in 1790 had produced Tam o’
Shanter. About this time he was offered and
declined an appointment in London on the staff of the
Star newspaper, and refused to become a candidate
for a newly-created Chair of Agriculture in the Univ.
of Edin., although influential friends offered to
support his claims. After giving up his farm he
removed to Dumfries. It was at this time that,
being requested to furnish words for The Melodies
of Scotland, he responded by contributing over
100 songs, on which perhaps his claim to immortality
chiefly rests, and which placed him in the front rank
of lyric poets. His worldly prospects were now
perhaps better than they had ever been; but he was
entering upon the last and darkest period of his career.
He had become soured, and moreover had alienated many
of his best friends by too freely expressing sympathy
with the French Revolution, and the then unpopular
advocates of reform at home. His health began
to give way; he became prematurely old, and fell into
fits of despondency; and the habits of intemperance,
to which he had always been more or less addicted,
grew upon him. He d. on July 21, 1797.