Nelly Kilpatrick
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

Nelly or Nellie Kilpatrick, Helen Kilpatrick or later Nelly Bone (1759–1820). Nelly (usually short for "Helen") was possibly Robert Burns's first love and muse as stated by Isabella Burns.


Early life

Nelly is usually used as a nickname for "Helen." Some authors give her birth year as 1760. Nelly may have been the daughter of John Kilpatrick,Mackay, page 52 the miller and his wife Jane Reid of Perclewan Mill near Dalrymple.Burns Encyclopedia
Retrieved : 2012-02-06
She was baptised on 1 March 1759.


Life and character

He stated that she had a sweet voice and was wont to sing songs as she worked in the fields.Scotland's Culture
2012-02-06
Nelly married William Bone, coachman to the Laird of Newark. After the move from Millmannoch Mill, Nelly lived in the old hamlet of Percluan or Purclewan, at the mill there and may have also met Robert Burns both there and at Purclewan's smithy where Henry McCandlish, known as Henry Candlish, was the blacksmith. Robert Burns was a close friend of Dr James McCandlish, or Candlish, the blacksmith's son and they had been classmates. Jean, the Sister of James Smith of Mauchline, Burns's close friend, married James Candlish. A parish record at St. Quivox in Ayrshire states that a William Kilpatrick Bone was born to William Bone and his wife Helen Kilpatrick Bone on 12 May 1798. Nelly had a brother, William, who erected her parents' tombstone in the old Low Coylton Kirkyard.Hunter, Page 156


Family origins

At the beginning of the eighteenth century Millmannoch Mill was occupied by a family called Kilpatrick, who also carried on the trade of blacksmithing, because at that time milling lasted around seven months of the year, usually September to April, and as a result millers had to look for alternative work during late spring and summer. Part of the smithy at Millmannoch was still standing in the early 20th century and, it is recorded in front of it there was a large boulder of
granite Granite () is a coarse-grained ( phaneritic) intrusive igneous rock composed mostly of quartz, alkali feldspar, and plagioclase. It forms from magma with a high content of silica and alkali metal oxides that slowly cools and solidifies un ...
sunk to the level of the ground with a "dog" fixed into it for cart wheel , the metal band or ring on a cartwheel. William Kilpatrick was the miller at Millmannoch; his wife was Hellen Craford (sic). William and Helen had a son, Allan Kilpatrick, born at Millmannoch on 4 October 1725; his wife was Margaret Good who died on 12 August 1770, aged 37. This Allan is sometimes said to have been Nelly's father. Allan moved to Purclewan (Percluan) with his father and like him, worked at two jobs, miller and blacksmith, resulting in some confusion in reports over the profession of Nelly's father; he died aged 57. The headstone was erected by their son William Kilpatrick of Barnhill; his spouse was Agnes Logan (1767–1852) and they had a daughter Agnes (1796–1862). Hill has it that Allan may have been the blacksmith at Mount Oliphant, however the smithy for the farm was the nearby Millmannoch. Mount Oliphant is only about one and a half miles away, an easy walk for Nelly to help with the harvest.Rootsweb
etrieved: 2012-04-29


The true identity of Nell

Burns himself did not identify her by her surname. Some significant doubts exist about the true identity of Burns's first romantic love. It was thought at first to be a
Nelly Blair Nelly Blair, later Nelly Smith (17591820) is sometimes suggested as being Scottish poet Robert Burns' first love. The true identity of Nell Burns himself did not identify his 'Handsome Nell' by name. Nelly Kilpatrick has been suggested as being ...
until Burns's sister Isobel gave the name Nelly Kilpatrick, however Isobel was only three years old at the time and some doubt must be cast on her recollections at this stage in her life. Isobel stated that Nelly Kilpatrick was the daughter of the blacksmith of Perclewan. Nelly Kilpatrick would have been only a few weeks younger than Robert Burns, however he stated that his Nell was a year younger than himself.Mackay, page 51


Association with Robert Burns

When Robert Burns was 15 he met "Handsome Nell", his first young love, a ''"bonnie, sweet, sonsie lass"'', although he apparently never told her of his love. Nelly Bone, is better known as Nelly Kilpatrick. They are first recorded to have met when William Burnes hired some extra help to bring in the harvest while they were at nearby Mount Oliphant Farm and Burns came to be paired with her, following the Ayrshire custom of that time. In his autobiographical letter to Dr Hunter he wrote: ''"Indeed, I did not not well know myself I liked so much to loiter behind with her when returning in the evening from our labours; why the tones of her voice made my heart-strings thrill like an
Aeolian harp An Aeolian harp (also wind harp) is a musical instrument that is played by the wind. Named for Aeolus, the ancient Greek god of the wind, the traditional Aeolian harp is essentially a wooden box including a sounding board, with strings stretched ...
, and particularly why my pulse beat such a furious rantann when I looked and fingered over her hand to pick out the nettle-stings and thistles."'' He wrote a poem to Nell, unpublished during his life, but it appeared in his ''Commonplace Book'' and set to the tune of Nelly’s favourite reel. He had heard her singing a song by a local country laird's son who was courting her and felt that he could do better, so it was with Nelly in mind that he wrote his first song "
Handsome Nell ''Handsome Nell'' was the first song written by Robert Burns, often treated as a poem, that was first published in the last volume of James Johnson's Scots Musical Museum in 1803 (No.551) with an untitled tune. Burns recorded in holograph on p ...
", given the tune "I am a Man Unmarried" in his first ''Commonplace Book''-
The tune to the song has not come down to us. Some years later Burns wrote of this song, saying - ''"I never had the least thought or inclination of turning poet till I got once heartily in love, and then rhyme and song were, in a manner, the spontaneous language of my heart. I remember I composed it in a wild enthusiasm of passion, and to this hour I never recollect it but my heart melts, and my blood sallies at the remembrance."''The World Burns Club.
Retrieved : 2012-02-06
Nelly has been said to figure in Burns's poem, ''"Halloween"''
Retrieved : 2012-02-06
and the verse :


See also

* Jean Armour * Alison Begbie *
Nelly Blair Nelly Blair, later Nelly Smith (17591820) is sometimes suggested as being Scottish poet Robert Burns' first love. The true identity of Nell Burns himself did not identify his 'Handsome Nell' by name. Nelly Kilpatrick has been suggested as being ...
* Agnes Burns *
Agnes Broun Agnes Broun, Agnes Brown or Agnes Burnes (17 March 1732 – 14 January 1820), was the mother of Scotland's national poet, Robert Burns. Agnes's father, Gilbert (1708–1774), was the tenant of the farm of Craigenton, in Kirkoswald parish, Sout ...
* Isabella Burns *
Elizabeth 'Betty' Burns Elizabeth Burns, Elizabeth Park or Mrs John ThomsonBurns Encyclopedia
Retrieved : ...
* William Burnes *
May Cameron May Cameron also known as Margaret, Peggy, or Meg Cameron,Burns Encyclopedia
Ret ...
* Mary Campbell (Highland Mary) * Jenny Clow *
Jean Gardner Jean Gardner or later Jean Hill, was ''"a young woman of very surpassing beauty,"'' with a ''"light foot and an ensnaring eye,"''
* Jessie Lewars *
Mary Morison Mary Morison or Mary Morrison (1771 – 29 June 1791),Burns Encyclopedia
Re ...
* Ann Park *
Elizabeth Paton Elizabeth "Betsey" Paton or later Elizabeth Andrew of Lairgieside (1760 – c. 1799) was the daughter of James Paton and Eleanor Helen Paton of Aird Farm, Crossroads, Ayrshire. Following an affair with Robert Burns she gave birth on 22 May 1785 ...
* Peggy Thompson


Notes


References

* Annandale, Charles (Editor) (1890). ''The Works of Robert Burns''. London : Blackie & Son. * Dougall, Charles S. (1911). ''The Burns Country''. London: A & C Black. * Douglas, William Scott (Edit.) (1938). ''The Kilmarnock Edition of the Poetical Works of Robert Burns''. Glasgow : The Scottish Daily Express. * Ewing, James Cameron & Cook, Davidson (Editors). (1938). '' Robert Burns's Commonplace Book 1783–1785''. Glasgow : Gowans & Gray. * Hill, John C. Rev. (1961). ''The Love Songs and Heroines of Robert Burns.'' London : J. M. Dent. * Hunter, Douglas & McQueen, Colin Hunter. (2009). ''Hunter's Illustrated History of the Family, Friends, and Contemporaries of Robert Burns.'' Published by the authors. . * MacIntosh, Donald (2006). ''Travels in Galloway''. Glasgow : Neil Wilson. . * Mackay, James (2004). ''Burns. A Biography of Robert Burns''. Darvel : Alloway Publishing. . * McMichael, George. ''Notes on the Way Through Ayrshire''. Ayr : Hugh Henry. {{DEFAULTSORT:Kilpatrick, Nelly Robert Burns History of East Ayrshire 18th-century Scottish women 1759 births 1820 deaths People from East Ayrshire