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Robert Anderson (1770–1833), was an English labouring class poet from
Carlisle Carlisle ( , ; from xcb, Caer Luel) is a city that lies within the Northern England, Northern English county of Cumbria, south of the Anglo-Scottish border, Scottish border at the confluence of the rivers River Eden, Cumbria, Eden, River C ...
. He was best known for his ballad-style poems in
Cumbrian The Cumberland dialect is a local Northern English dialect in decline, spoken in Cumberland, Westmorland and Lancashire North of the Sands, not to be confused with the area's extinct Celtic language, Cumbric. Some parts of Cumbria have a mo ...
dialect.


Life

Robert Anderson was born on 1 February 1770, the youngest child of nine when his parents were already old. He received his education in various places, including a
charity school Charity schools, sometimes called blue coat schools, or simply the Blue School, were significant in the history of education in England. They were built and maintained in various parishes by the voluntary contributions of the inhabitants to ...
attached to the cathedral and then under different masters, although he was with none for very long. Having mastered the basics of reading, writing and arithmetic, he was sent to work to help support his family at the age of ten, initially under an elder brother who was a
calico printer Calico (; in British usage since 1505) is a heavy plain weave, plain-woven textile made from unbleached, and often not fully processed, cotton. It may also contain unseparated husk parts. The fabric is far coarser than muslin, but less coarse an ...
. Having some artistic ability, he was apprenticed in 1783 to a pattern drawer and eventually went to London for five years for further training. While there he started writing - "Lucy Gray of Allendale" being the first of his compositions. This and others written that year were set to music by the composer
James Hook James Hook may refer to: * Captain Hook, the villain of J. M. Barrie's play and novel ''Peter Pan'' * James Hook (composer) (1746–1827), English composer and organist * James Hook (priest) (1771–1828), English priest, Dean of Worcester * Jame ...
and performed to some applause in 1794. In 1796 he returned to support his father in Carlisle and found work with a firm there. Two years later his English ''Poems on Various Subjects'' were published by subscription. Afterwards he turned to lighthearted humorous poems in dialect and the first edition of ''Ballads in the Cumbrian dialect'' was published in Carlisle in 1805. Since music was a favourite diversion of his, he composed the music to accompany many of these himself. In 1808, following the death of his father the year before, Anderson left for another position near Belfast, calling on the way to visit the grave of one of his principal influences,
Robert Burns Robert Burns (25 January 175921 July 1796), also known familiarly as Rabbie Burns, was a Scottish poet and lyricist. He is widely regarded as the national poet of Scotland and is celebrated worldwide. He is the best known of the poets who hav ...
. While there he published in the local papers and particularly a series of four "Enigmas" in the ''Belfast Commercial Chronicle'' which sparked a brief fad of imitation. Eventually he had to return to England, since the calico trade was in decline, and was welcomed back to Carlisle with a civic reception. To help relieve his poverty, a new edition of his poems, ''The Poetical Works of Robert Anderson'', was published from the city in 1820, for which he contributed an autobiographical essay. This edition attracted over 1000 subscribers, among them the then
poet laureate A poet laureate (plural: poets laureate) is a poet officially appointed by a government or conferring institution, typically expected to compose poems for special events and occasions. Albertino Mussato of Padua and Francesco Petrarca (Petrarch) ...
,
Robert Southey Robert Southey ( or ; 12 August 1774 – 21 March 1843) was an English poet of the Romantic school, and Poet Laureate from 1813 until his death. Like the other Lake Poets, William Wordsworth and Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Southey began as a ra ...
, and his eventually successor,
William Wordsworth William Wordsworth (7 April 177023 April 1850) was an English Romantic poet who, with Samuel Taylor Coleridge, helped to launch the Romantic Age in English literature with their joint publication ''Lyrical Ballads'' (1798). Wordsworth's ' ...
. Anderson's last years were marked by intemperance and the fear of ending his days in the workhouse. But, though he died very poor, he was saved from that fate by the financial support of friends. After his death, he was buried in the grounds of
Carlisle Cathedral Carlisle Cathedral is a grade-I listed Anglican cathedral in the city of Carlisle, Cumbria, England. It was founded as an Augustinian priory and became a cathedral in 1133. It is also the seat of the Bishop of Carlisle.Tim Tatton-Brown and John ...
, and a memorial was raised there with a medallion likeness and the inscription "Erected by public subscription to the memory of Robert Anderson, the Cumberland Bard, died in Carlisle, 26 Sept. 1833, aged 63 years". The centenary edition of ''Anderson’s Cumberland Ballads and Songs'' was published in 1904. His death was marked by a centenary celebration souvenir, ''Robert Anderson, the Cumberland Bard'', in 1933. Two late silhouette portraits of the poet are now in the
Tullie House Museum and Art Gallery Tullie House Museum and Art Gallery is a museum in Carlisle, England. Opened by the Carlisle Corporation in 1893, the original building is a converted Jacobean mansion, with extensions added when it was converted. At first the building contai ...
, as is his death mask. There is also a head and shoulders portrait of the poet attributed to John Hazlitt in which he is wearing the same neatly knotted neckcloth as in the silhouettes.


Poetry in Cumberland dialect

Although Anderson was largely responsible for the contemporary popularisation of English dialect poetry, his 1805 Ballads were far from the first. His work had been preceded the year before by the ''Miscellaneous Poems'' of John Stagg. In consequence of their championship of the region, Stagg was to be called ‘The Cumbrian Minstrel’ and Anderson ‘The Cumberland Bard’. But they were only following in the footsteps of the 18th century ‘Cumberland Muse’,
Susanna Blamire Susanna Blamire (12 January 1747 – 1794) was an English Romantic poet, sometimes known as 'The Muse of Cumberland' because many of her poems represent rural life in the county and, therefore, provide a valuable contradistinction to those am ...
. A member of the gentry, she had written songs in Scots that were set to music by
Joseph Haydn Franz Joseph Haydn ( , ; 31 March 173231 May 1809) was an Austrian composer of the Classical period (music), Classical period. He was instrumental in the development of chamber music such as the string quartet and piano trio. His contributions ...
. Her work in Cumbrian dialect was less well known until the vogue established by Anderson. There had been other well educated precursors in the 18th century who had already used dialect in their poetry. One of the earliest was the Rev.
Josiah Relph Josiah Relph (3 December 1712 – 26 June 1743) was a Cumberland poet (his first name is given as Joseph in earlier editions of the ''Dictionary of National Biography''). His poetical works were first published in 1747 under the title of ''A Miscel ...
, whose imitations of Theocritan
Pastoral A pastoral lifestyle is that of shepherds herding livestock around open areas of land according to seasons and the changing availability of water and pasture. It lends its name to a genre of literature, art, and music (pastorale) that depicts ...
s self-consciously introduce the demotic for local colour. Although written about 1735, they were not published until after the author's death in ''A Miscellany of Poems'' (Wigton, 1747). The Rev. Robert Nelson followed him in the same tradition with ''A choice collection of poems in Cumberland dialect'' (Sunderland, 1780). Ewan Clark, a contemporary of Nelson's, also wrote a handful of dialect imitations that were included in his ''Miscellaneous Poems'' (Whitehaven 1779). The year of the publication of ''Ballads in the Cumbrian dialect'' (1805) also saw a third edition of Relph's poems. Earlier there had been a 1797 edition, a copy of which Anderson had sent to a female friend accompanied by a verse epistle. The work of these earlier writers was to be incorporated with poems by some of Anderson's contemporaries in anthologies that followed the popular reprints of his ballads, always stressing their Cumbrian affiliation. One such collection was ''Ballads in the Cumberland dialect, chiefly by R. Anderson'' (1808, second edition 1815, Wigton), which included poems by Miss Blamire and other anonymous female writers, Ewan Clark and Mark Lonsdale, as well as woodcuts in the style - or from the workshop - of
Thomas Bewick Thomas Bewick (c. 11 August 17538 November 1828) was an English wood-engraver and natural history author. Early in his career he took on all kinds of work such as engraving cutlery, making the wood blocks for advertisements, and illustrating ch ...
. The influence of the earlier pastoral style is manifest in the many dialogue poems there, including Anderson's own work. A more ambitious anthology of dialect verse, ''Dialogues, poems, songs, and ballads, by various writers, in the Westmoreland and Cumberland dialects'', followed from London in 1839.


Anderson's verse

Anderson's work in standard English went on to include long narratives, which were added to his lyrics and occasional poems. These were collected together with his dialect poems in the 1820 ''Poetical Works'', but there was still much of his that remained unpublished among his manuscripts. After his death a good proportion, some 130 pieces, including extra verses and other changes by its own account, were added to ''Anderson’s Cumberland Ballads'', published from Wigton in 1840. Even so, this was limited to his dialect writing. His opera, "The Chief of Skye", was never published and remained unknown apart from some biographical mentions. Mark Huggins has commented on Anderson that he "was a man of the people, and most of his songs were about real individuals, whose names appear in parish registers of the time." He celebrated the area's small towns, farms, fairs, markets and landscape, addressing the life of the inhabitants: their work, loves, feasting, drinking, dancing and cockfights. His ballads are full of human interest and playful humour, with an eye to the ridiculous that does not demean his subjects. A handful of these ballads were to enter the oral tradition and be collected by folk song enthusiasts in the early 20th century. Four in particular are still recognised as classics: "Barbary Bell", "Sally Gray", "The Blackwell Merry Night", and "Canny Cumberland. As commonly happens with oral material, their text changed as the original authorship was forgotten. The most radical example of this occurred in the later history of "Jenny’s Complaint". Adapted to the mining circumstances of southern Cumbria, it lived a life of its own, divorced from the tune Anderson wrote for it, as "The Recruited Collier". Anderson's earliest poem, "Lucy Gray of Allendale", provides a somewhat similar example of transforming influence in the literary sphere. There is some confusion here, since one of the ‘Lucy poems’ written by William Wordsworth during his 1799-1800 tour of Germany actually is titled "Lucy Gray". It was, by his account, based on the story of a Halifax girl who lost her way in the snow, although a claim has also been made that he may have been remembering
Christopher Anstey Christopher Anstey (31 October 1724 – 3 August 1805) was an English poet who also wrote in Latin. After a period managing his family's estates, he moved permanently to Bath and died after a long public life there. His poem, ''The New Bath Gui ...
’s ballad, "The Farmer’s Daughter". The story of Anderson's "Lucy Gray" was related to him by a Northumbrian rustic about a village beauty who died at seventeen and was followed to the grave by her lover. This fits the scene depicted in another of Wordsworth's Lucy poems, "She dwelt among the untrodden ways". The likeness between the poems is particularly noteworthy in the first draft of Wordsworth's poem. His five stanzas in standard ballad metre are matched by Anderson's six, and both begin with flower imagery, although it is not so obvious in Wordsworth's final published version, in which he removed the original first and fourth stanzas. This succinctness makes far more pointed the revelation that the speaker is Lucy's lover; that only emerges in Wordsworth's final stanza but enters Anderson's poem at a much earlier point. Wordsworth himself does not acknowledge an influence and the only evidence that he had heard of Anderson is his subscription to the 1820 ''Poetical Works''. Anderson had started writing at a time when the Scots dialect poetry of Robert Burns was spawning fashionable imitations. His initial impulse to write had sprung from disgust at songs "written in a mock pastoral Scottish style" that he had encountered while in London. But this did not prevent him from writing in the same debased
Lallans Lallans (; a variant of the Modern Scots word ''lawlands'' meaning the lowlands of Scotland), is a term that was traditionally used to refer to the Scots language as a whole. However, more recent interpretations assume it refers to the dialects o ...
that he deprecated. Indeed, beside the lyrics of his in standard English set by James Hook, several others were in Anderson's derivative Scots, including "Donald of Dundee", "Bonny Jem", "Muirland Willy", "Dearly I love Johnny O" and "The Press Gang". He also used it later in a verse epistle addressed to Burns and in his narrative poems, "The Harper", "The Dying Harper" and "Fair Margaret's Bower". Shortly after his death, some of his lyrics were published alongside those of his model in the chapbook ''Burns' songs and Anderson's Cumberland ballads'' (Newcastle upon Tyne, 1839). By comparison with his writing in Scots, Anderson's own dialect work was more uncompromising and brought better success.Romantic masculinities, Edinburgh U 199
p.49
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See also

*
List of 18th-century British working-class writers This list focuses on published authors whose working-class status or background was part of their literary reputation. These were, in the main, writers without access to formal education, so they were either autodidacts or had mentors or patrons ...


References

The bulk of the details of Anderson's life are drawn from the autobiographical essay at the head of the 1820 edition of his poems.


External links

*Mike Huggins, "Popular Culture and Sporting Life in the Rural Margins of Late Eighteenth-Century England: The World of Robert Anderson", Eighteenth-Century Studies, vol. 45, no. 2 (2012)
Pp. 189–205
{{DEFAULTSORT:Anderson, Robert 1770 births 1833 deaths 19th-century English poets 18th-century English poets People from Carlisle, Cumbria English male poets 18th-century English male writers 18th-century English writers