David Gray (29 January 18383 December 1861) was a Scottish poet, from Merkland, Kirkintilloch. He died in his hometown aged 23. His friend and fellow poet
Robert Buchanan wrote his biography in 1900.
Life
The son of a
handloom weaver, Gray was born at Merkland, by
Kirkintilloch
Kirkintilloch (; sco, Kirkintulloch; gd, Cair Cheann Tulaich) is a town and former barony burgh in East Dunbartonshire, Scotland. It lies on the Forth and Clyde Canal and on the south side of Strathkelvin, about northeast of central Glasgow. ...
, Dunbartonshire. His parents resolved to educate him for the
Free Kirk, and through their self-denial and his own exertions as a pupil teacher and private tutor he was able to complete a course of four sessions at the
university of Glasgow. He began to write poetry for ''
Glasgow Evening Citizen
The ''Evening Citizen'', was an evening version of ''The Glasgow Citizen'' (a daily newspaper founded in 1842 by James David Hedderwick). It was first published in August 1864, was one of the first of three evening newspapers to be printed, publ ...
'' and began his idyll on the
Luggie, the little stream that ran through Merkland. His most intimate companion at this time was
Robert Buchanan, the poet; and in May 1860 the two agreed to proceed to London, with the idea of finding literary employment.
Shortly after his arrival in London Gray introduced himself to
Monckton Milnes, afterwards Lord Houghton, with whom he had previously corresponded. Lord Houghton tried to persuade him to return to Scotland, but Gray insisted on staying in London. He was unsuccessful in his efforts to place Gray's poem, ''The Luggie'', in ''
Cornhill Magazine'', but gave him some light literary work. He also showed him great kindness when a cold which had seized him assumed the serious form of
consumption, and sent him to
Torquay; but as the disease made rapid progress, an irresistible longing seized Gray to return to Merkland, where he arrived in January 1861, and died on 3 December following, having the day before had the gratification of seeing a printed specimen copy of his poem ''The Luggie'', published eventually by the exertions of
Sydney Dobell
Sydney Thompson Dobell (5 April 182422 August 1874) was an English poet and critic, and a member of the so-called Spasmodic school.
Biography
Dobell was born at Cranbrook, Kent. His father, John Dobell, was a wine merchant and his mother Julie ...
. He was buried in the Auld Aisle Churchyard, Kirkintilloch, where in 1865 a monument was erected by friends far and near to his memory.
Published work
''The Luggie'', the principal poem of Gray, is a kind of reverie in which the scenes and events of his childhood and his early aspirations are mingled with the music of the stream which he celebrates. The series of
sonnet
A sonnet is a poetic form that originated in the poetry composed at the Court of the Holy Roman Emperor Frederick II in the Sicilian city of Palermo. The 13th-century poet and notary Giacomo da Lentini is credited with the sonnet's invention, ...
s, In the Shadows, was composed during the latter part of his illness. Encyclopædia Britannica says that most of his poems necessarily bear traces of immaturity, and lines may frequently be found in them which are mere echoes from
Thomson,
Wordsworth or
Tennyson, but they possess, nevertheless, distinct individuality, and show a real appreciation of natural beauty.
Below is a copy of a sonnet which is one of a number he wrote, entitled, "In the shadows." His description of a wet October day shows the skill of the terminally-ill poet:
October's gold is dim— the forests rot,
The weary rain falls ceaseless, while the day
Is wrapped in damp. In mire of village way
Tae hedge-row leaves are stamp'd, and, all forgot,
The broodless nest sits visible in the thorn.
Autumn, among her drooping marigolds,
Weeps all her garnered sheaves, and empty folds,
And dripping orchards – plundered and forlorn.
The season is a dead one, and I die !
No more, no more for me the spring shall make
A resurrection in the earth and take
The death from out her heart. O God, I die !
The cold throat mist creeps nearer, till I breathe
Corruption. Drop stark night upon my death !
''The Luggie and other Poems'', with an introduction by R. Monckton Milnes, and a brief memoir by
James Hedderwick
James Hedderwick LLD (1814–1897) was a Scottish poet, journalist and newspaper proprietor. He founded the famous Glasgow newspaper, the ''Evening Citizen''.
Life
He was born on 18 January 1814 in Govan just west of Glasgow, the third son of J ...
, was published in 1862; and a new and enlarged edition of ''Gray's Poetical Works'', edited by
Henry Glassford Bell
Henry Glassford Bell (5 November 18037 January 1874) was a Scottish lawyer, poet and historian.
Life
Born in Glasgow, the son of advocate James Bell, he received his education at the Glasgow High School and at Edinburgh University.
As a poet ...
, appeared in 1874. See also ''David Gray and other Essays'', by Robert Buchanan (1868), where he also has an essay on Walt Whitman. Buchanan also has a poem on David Gray, in ''Idyls and Legends of Inverburn''.
Parts of ''"The Luggie"'' have been narrated against a backdrop of the
Luggie Water. The eponymous anthology is available and is out of copyright.
David Gray's self penned epitaph was:
Below lies one whose name was traced in sand-
He died not knowing what it was to live:
Died while the first sweet consciousness of manhood
And maiden thought electrified his soul:
Faint beatings in the calyx of the rose.
Bewildered reader, pass without a sigh
In a proud sorrow!
There is life with God,
In other kingdom of a sweeter air:
In Eden every flower is blown: Amen.
27 September 1861.
[http://www.rbwf.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2016/03/1963.pdf pdf pp. 33, 66]
References
External links
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Gray, David
1838 births
1861 deaths
19th-century Scottish people
19th-century poets
Scottish poets
People from Kirkintilloch
Alumni of the University of Glasgow
19th-century deaths from tuberculosis
Tuberculosis deaths in Scotland