Sir Walter Scott, 1st Baronet (15 August 1771 – 21 September 1832), was a Scottish novelist, poet, playwright and historian. Many of his works remain classics of European and
Scottish literature, notably the novels ''
Ivanhoe'', ''
Rob Roy'', ''
Waverley'', ''
Old Mortality'', ''
The Heart of Mid-Lothian
''The Heart of Mid-Lothian'' is the seventh of Sir Walter Scott's Waverley Novels. It was originally published in four volumes on 25 July 1818, under the title of ''Tales of My Landlord, 2nd series'', and the author was given as "Jedediah Clei ...
'' and ''
The Bride of Lammermoor'', and the narrative poems ''
The Lady of the Lake'' and ''
Marmion''. He had a major impact on European and American literature.
As an advocate, judge and legal administrator by profession, he combined writing and editing with daily work as
Clerk of Session
The Principal Clerk of Session and Justiciary is the clerk of court responsible for the administration of the Supreme Courts of Scotland and their associated staff. The Keeper of the Signet grants a commission to the Principal Clerk of Session ...
and
Sheriff-Depute of
Selkirkshire. He was prominent in Edinburgh's
Tory
A Tory () is a person who holds a political philosophy known as Toryism, based on a British version of traditionalism and conservatism, which upholds the supremacy of social order as it has evolved in the English culture throughout history. The ...
establishment, active in the
Highland Society, long a president of the
Royal Society of Edinburgh (1820–1832), and a vice president of the
Society of Antiquaries of Scotland (1827–1829). His knowledge of history and literary facility equipped him to establish the
historical novel genre
Genre () is any form or type of communication in any mode (written, spoken, digital, artistic, etc.) with socially-agreed-upon conventions developed over time. In popular usage, it normally describes a category of literature, music, or other ...
as an exemplar of European
Romanticism
Romanticism (also known as the Romantic movement or Romantic era) was an artistic, literary, musical, and intellectual movement that originated in Europe towards the end of the 18th century, and in most areas was at its peak in the approximate ...
. He became a
baronet
A baronet ( or ; abbreviated Bart or Bt) or the female equivalent, a baronetess (, , or ; abbreviation Btss), is the holder of a baronetcy, a hereditary title awarded by the British Crown. The title of baronet is mentioned as early as the 14th ...
"of
Abbotsford in the
County of Roxburgh", Scotland, on 22 April 1820; the title became extinct on his son's death in 1847.
Early life
Walter Scott was born on 15 August 1771, in a third-floor apartment on College Wynd in the
Old Town, Edinburgh, a narrow alleyway leading from the
Cowgate to the gates of the
University of Edinburgh (Old College).
He was the ninth child (six having died in infancy) of Walter Scott (1729–1799), a member of a cadet branch of the
Clan Scott
Clan Scott is a Scottish clan and is recognised as such by the Lord Lyon King of Arms.Way, George and Squire, Romily. ''Collins Scottish Clan & Family Encyclopedia''. (Foreword by The Rt Hon. The Earl of Elgin KT, Convenor, The Standing Council ...
and a
Writer to the Signet, by his wife Anne Rutherford, a sister of
Daniel Rutherford and a descendant both of the
Clan Swinton and of the
Haliburton family Haliburton or Halliburton may refer to:
Places
*Haliburton County, Ontario, a county in Canada
*Dysart et al, Ontario, a municipality including the town of Haliburton
Companies
*Halliburton, an oilfield services company based in the US and in the ...
(descent from which granted Walter's family the hereditary right of burial in
Dryburgh Abbey).
Walter was, through the Haliburtons, a cousin of the
London property developer James Burton (d. 1837), who was born with the surname 'Haliburton', and of the same's son the architect
Decimus Burton.
Walter became a member of the
Clarence Club, of which the Burtons were members.

A childhood bout of
polio
Poliomyelitis, commonly shortened to polio, is an infectious disease caused by the poliovirus. Approximately 70% of cases are asymptomatic; mild symptoms which can occur include sore throat and fever; in a proportion of cases more severe sym ...
in 1773 left Scott lame,
a condition that would much affect his life and writing.
To improve his lameness he was sent in 1773 to live in the rural
Scottish Borders
The Scottish Borders ( sco, the Mairches, 'the Marches'; gd, Crìochan na h-Alba) is one of 32 council areas of Scotland. It borders the City of Edinburgh, Dumfries and Galloway, East Lothian, Midlothian, South Lanarkshire, West Lot ...
, at his paternal grandparents' farm at Sandyknowe, by the ruin of
Smailholm Tower, the earlier family home.
Here, he was taught to read by his aunt Jenny Scott and learned from her the speech patterns and many of the tales and legends that later marked much of his work. In January 1775, he returned to Edinburgh, and that summer with his aunt Jenny took spa treatment at
Bath
Bath may refer to:
* Bathing, immersion in a fluid
** Bathtub, a large open container for water, in which a person may wash their body
** Public bathing, a public place where people bathe
* Thermae, ancient Roman public bathing facilities
Plac ...
in Somerset, Southern England, where they lived at 6
South Parade. In the winter of 1776, he went back to Sandyknowe, with another attempt at a water cure at
Prestonpans the following summer.
[
In 1778, Scott returned to Edinburgh for private education to prepare him for school and joined his family in their new house, one of the first to be built in George Square.][ In October 1779, he began at the Royal High School in Edinburgh (in High School Yards). He was by then well able to walk and explore the city and the surrounding countryside. His reading included chivalric romances, poems, history and travel books. He was given private tuition by James Mitchell in arithmetic and writing, and learned from him the history of the ]Church of Scotland
The Church of Scotland ( sco, The Kirk o Scotland; gd, Eaglais na h-Alba) is the national church in Scotland.
The Church of Scotland was principally shaped by John Knox, in the Scottish Reformation, Reformation of 1560, when it split from t ...
with emphasis on the Covenanters.
In 1783, his parents, believing he had outgrown his strength, sent him to stay for six months with his aunt Jenny at Kelso in the Scottish Borders: there he attended Kelso Grammar School, where he met James Ballantyne and his brother John, who later became his business partners and printers.
Appearance
As a result of his early polio infection, Scott had a pronounced limp. He was described in 1820 as "tall, well formed (except for one ankle and foot which made him walk lamely), neither fat nor thin, with forehead very high, nose short, upper lip long and face rather fleshy, complexion fresh and clear, eyes very blue, shrewd and penetrating, with hair now silvery white". Although a determined walker, he experienced greater freedom of movement on horseback.
Student
Scott began studying classics at the University of Edinburgh in November 1783, at the age of 12, a year or so younger than most fellow students. In March 1786, aged 14, he began an apprenticeship in his father's office to become a Writer to the Signet. At school and university Scott had become a friend of Adam Ferguson, whose father Professor Adam Ferguson hosted literary salons. Scott met the blind poet Thomas Blacklock
Thomas Blacklock (10 November 1721 – 7 July 1791) was a Scottish poet who went blind in infancy.
Life
He was born near Annan, Dumfriesshire (now Dumfries and Galloway), of humble parentage, and lost his sight as a result of smallpox when ...
, who lent him books and introduced him to the Ossian cycle of poems by James Macpherson. During the winter of 1786–1787, a 15-year-old Scott met the Scots poet 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 ha ...
at one of these salons, their only meeting. When Burns noticed a print illustrating the poem "The Justice of the Peace" and asked who had written it, Scott alone named the author as John Langhorne and was thanked by Burns. Scott describes the event in his memoirs, where he whispers the answer to his friend Adam, who tells Burns; another version of the event appears in ''Literary Beginnings''.
When it was decided that he would become a lawyer, he returned to the university to study law, first taking classes in moral philosophy (under Dugald Stewart) and universal history (under Alexander Fraser Tytler
Alexander Fraser Tytler, Lord Woodhouselee FRSE (15 October 17475 January 1813) was a Scottish advocate, judge, writer and historian who was a Professor of Universal History, and Greek and Roman Antiquities at the University of Edinburgh.
Life ...
) in 1789–1790.[ During this second university spell Scott became prominent in student intellectual activities: he co-founded the Literary Society in 1789 and was elected to the Speculative Society the following year, becoming librarian and secretary-treasurer a year after.][Hewitt, David (2004) "Scott, Sir Walter (1771–1832)", ''Oxford Dictionary of National Biography''. ]
After completing his law studies, Scott took up law in Edinburgh. He made his first visit as a lawyer's clerk to the Scottish Highlands, directing an eviction. He was admitted to the Faculty of Advocates in 1792. He had an unsuccessful love suit with Williamina Belsches of Fettercairn, who married Scott's friend Sir William Forbes, 7th Baronet
There have been five Baronetcies created for people with the surname Forbes, four in the Baronetage of Nova Scotia and one in the Baronetage of the United Kingdom. The first holder of the Burn Baronetcy of Jessfield, created in the Baronetage of ...
. In February 1797, the threat of a French invasion persuaded Scott and many of his friends to join the Royal Edinburgh Volunteer Light Dragoons, where he served into the early 1800s, and was appointed quartermaster and secretary. The daily drill practices that year, starting at 5 a.m., indicate the determination with which the role was undertaken.
Literary career, marriage and family
Scott was prompted to take up a literary career by enthusiasm in Edinburgh in the 1790s for modern German literature. Recalling the period in 1827, Scott said that he "was German-mad." In 1796, he produced English versions of two poems by Gottfried August Bürger, ''Der wilde Jäger'' and ''Lenore'', published as ''The Chase, and William and Helen''. Scott responded to the German interest at the time in national identity, folk culture and medieval literature,[ which linked with his own developing passion for traditional balladry. A favourite book since childhood had been Thomas Percy's '' Reliques of Ancient English Poetry''. During the 1790s he would search in manuscript collections and on Border "raids" for ballads from oral performance. With help from John Leyden, he produced a two-volume ''Minstrelsy of the Scottish Border'' in 1802, containing 48 traditional ballads and two imitations apiece by Leyden and himself. Of the 48 traditionals, 26 were published for the first time. An enlarged edition appeared in three volumes the following year. With many of the ballads, Scott fused different versions into more coherent texts, a practice he later repudiated.][ The ''Minstrelsy'' was the first and most important of a series of editorial projects over the next two decades, including the medieval romance '' Sir Tristrem'' (which Scott attributed to Thomas the Rhymer) in 1804, the works of John Dryden (18 vols, 1808), and the works of Jonathan Swift (19 vols, 1814).
On a trip to the English Lake District with old college friends, he met Charlotte Charpentier (Anglicised to "Carpenter"), a daughter of Jean Charpentier of ]Lyon
Lyon,, ; Occitan: ''Lion'', hist. ''Lionés'' also spelled in English as Lyons, is the third-largest city and second-largest metropolitan area of France. It is located at the confluence of the rivers Rhône and Saône, to the northwest of ...
in France and a ward of Lord Downshire in Cumberland, an Anglican. After three weeks' courtship, Scott proposed and they were married on Christmas Eve 1797 in St Mary's Church, Carlisle (now the nave of Carlisle Cathedral). After renting a house in Edinburgh's George Street, they moved to nearby South Castle Street. Their eldest child, Sophia, was born in 1799, and later married John Gibson Lockhart. Four of their five children survived Scott himself. His eldest son Sir Walter Scott, 2nd Baronet (1801–1847), inherited his father's estates and possessions: on 3 February 1825 he married Jane Jobson, only daughter of William Jobson of Lochore (died 1822) by his wife Rachel Stuart (died 1863), heiress of Lochore and a niece of Lady Margaret Ferguson. In 1799 Scott was appointed Sheriff-Depute of the County of Selkirk
Selkirkshire or the County of Selkirk ( gd, Siorrachd Shalcraig) is a historic county and registration county of Scotland. It borders Peeblesshire to the west, Midlothian to the north, Roxburghshire to the east, and Dumfriesshire to the south. ...
, based at the courthouse in the Royal Burgh
A royal burgh () was a type of Scottish burgh which had been founded by, or subsequently granted, a royal charter. Although abolished by law in 1975, the term is still used by many former royal burghs.
Most royal burghs were either created by ...
of Selkirk. In his early married days Scott earned a decent living from his work as a lawyer, his salary as Sheriff-Depute, his wife's income, some revenue from his writing, and his share of his father's modest estate.
After the younger Walter was born in 1801, the Scotts moved to a spacious three-storey house at 39 North Castle Street, which remained his Edinburgh base until 1826, when it was sold by the trustees appointed after his financial ruin. From 1798, Scott had spent summers in a cottage at Lasswade, where he entertained guests, including literary figures. It was there his career as an author began. There were nominal residency requirements for his position of Sheriff-Depute, and at first he stayed at a local inn during the circuit. In 1804, he ended his use of the Lasswade cottage and leased the substantial house of Ashestiel, from Selkirk, sited on the south bank of the River Tweed and incorporating an ancient tower house.[
At Scott's insistence the first edition of ''Minstrelsy'' was printed by his friend James Ballantyne at Kelso. In 1798 James had published Scott's version of Goethe's '' Erlkönig'' in his newspaper ''The Kelso Mail'', and in 1799 included it and the two Bürger translations in a privately printed anthology, ''Apology for Tales of Terror''. In 1800 Scott suggested that Ballantyne set up business in Edinburgh and provided a loan for him to make the transition in 1802. In 1805, they became partners in the printing business, and from then until the financial crash of 1826 Scott's works were routinely printed by the firm.][
Scott was known for his fondness of dogs, and owned several throughout his life. Upon his death, one newspaper noted "of all the great men who have loved dogs no one ever loved them better or understood them more thoroughly".] The best known of Scott's dogs were Maida, a large stag hound, and Spice, a Dandle Dinmont terrier described as having asthma, to which Scott gave particular care. In a diary entry written at the height of his financial woes, Scott described dismay at the prospect of having to sell them: "The thoughts of parting from these dumb creatures have moved me more than any of the reflections I have put down".[
]
The poet
Between 1805 and 1817 Scott produced five long, six-canto narrative poems, four shorter independently published poems, and many small metrical pieces. Scott was by far the most popular poet of the time until Lord Byron
George Gordon Byron, 6th Baron Byron (22 January 1788 – 19 April 1824), known simply as Lord Byron, was an English romantic poet and Peerage of the United Kingdom, peer. He was one of the leading figures of the Romantic movement, and h ...
published the first two cantos of '' Childe Harold's Pilgrimage'' in 1812 and followed them up with his exotic oriental verse narratives.
''The Lay of the Last Minstrel
''The Lay of the Last Minstrel'' (1805) is a narrative poem in six cantos with copious antiquarian notes by Walter Scott. Set in the Scottish Borders in the mid-16th century, it is represented within the work as being sung by a minstrel late in ...
'' (1805), in medieval romance form, grew out of Scott's plan to include a long original poem of his own in the second edition of the ''Minstrelsy'': it was to be "a sort of Romance of Border Chivalry & inchantment". He owed the distinctive irregular accent in four-beat metre to Coleridge's '' Christabel'', which he had heard recited by John Stoddart. (It was not to be published until 1816.) Scott was able to draw on his unrivalled familiarity with Border history and legend acquired from oral and written sources beginning in his childhood to present an energetic and highly coloured picture of 16th-century Scotland, which both captivated the general public and with its voluminous notes also addressed itself to the antiquarian student. The poem has a strong moral theme, as human pride is placed in the context of the last judgment with the introduction of a version of the " Dies irae" at the end. The work was an immediate success with almost all the reviewers and with readers in general, going through five editions in one year.[
The most celebrated lines are the ones that open the final stanza:
Three years after ''The Lay'' Scott published '' Marmion'' (1808) telling a story of corrupt passions leading up as a disastrous climax to the ]Battle of Flodden
The Battle of Flodden, Flodden Field, or occasionally Branxton, (Brainston Moor) was a battle fought on 9 September 1513 during the War of the League of Cambrai between the Kingdom of England and the Kingdom of Scotland, resulting in an English ...
in 1513. The main innovation involves prefacing each of the six cantos with an epistle from the author to a friend: William Stewart Rose, The Rev. John Marriot, William Erskine, James Skene, George Ellis, and Richard Heber: the epistles develop themes of moral positives and special delights imparted by art. In an unprecedented move, the publisher Archibald Constable purchased the copyright of the poem for a thousand guineas at the beginning of 1807, when only the first had been completed. Constable's faith was justified by the sales: the three editions published in 1808 sold 8,000 copies. The verse of ''Marmion'' is less striking than that of ''The Lay'', with the epistles in iambic tetrameters and the narrative in tetrameters with frequent trimeters. The reception by the reviewers was less favourable than that accorded ''The Lay'': style and plot were both found faulty, the epistles did not link up with the narrative, there was too much antiquarian pedantry, and Marmion's character was immoral. The most familiar lines in the poem sum up one of its main themes: "O what a tangled web we weave,/ When first we practice to deceive"
Scott's meteoric poetic career peaked with his third long narrative, ''The Lady of the Lake'' (1810), which sold 20,000 copies in the first year.[ The reviewers were fairly favourable, finding the defects noted in ''Marmion'' largely absent. In some ways it is more conventional than its predecessors: the narrative is entirely in iambic tetrameters and the story of the transparently disguised James V (King of Scots 1513‒42) predictable: Coleridge wrote to Wordsworth: 'The movement of the Poem... is between a sleeping Canter and a Marketwoman's trot – but it is endless – I seem never to have made any way – I never remember a narrative poem in which I felt the sense of Progress so languid." But the metrical uniformity is relieved by frequent songs and the Perthshire Highland setting is presented as an enchanted landscape, which caused a phenomenal increase in the local tourist trade. Moreover, the poem touches on a theme that was to be central to the Waverley Novels: the clash between neighbouring societies in different stages of development.][
The remaining two long narrative poems, '' Rokeby'' (1813), set in the ]Yorkshire
Yorkshire ( ; abbreviated Yorks), formally known as the County of York, is a historic county in northern England and by far the largest in the United Kingdom. Because of its large area in comparison with other English counties, functions have ...
estate of that name belonging to Scott's friend J. B. S. Morritt during the Civil War
A civil war or intrastate war is a war between organized groups within the same state (or country).
The aim of one side may be to take control of the country or a region, to achieve independence for a region, or to change government polic ...
period, and '' The Lord of the Isles'' (1815), set in early 14th-century Scotland and culminating in the Battle of Bannockburn in 1314. Both works had generally favourable receptions and sold well, but without rivalling the huge success of ''The Lady of the Lake''. Scott also produced four minor narrative or semi-narrative poems between 1811 and 1817: '' The Vision of Don Roderick'' (1811, celebrating Wellington's successes in the Peninsular Campaign, with profits donated to Portuguese war sufferers); '' The Bridal of Triermain'' (published anonymously in 1813); ''The Field of Waterloo
''The Field of Waterloo'' is a poem by Walter Scott, written and published in 1815. It is in iambic tetrameters and trimeters with a few Spenserian stanzas at the end. The work moves from a depiction of the site of the battle, with farm life renew ...
'' (1815); and ''Harold the Dauntless
''Harold the Dauntless'' is a narrative poem in six short cantos by Walter Scott, published in 1817. It employs a variety of metres.
Set in the Durham area, the poem tells of Harold's rejection of his father Witikind's acceptance of Christian ...
'' (published anonymously in 1817).
Throughout his creative life Scott was an active reviewer. Although himself a Tory he reviewed for '' The Edinburgh Review'' between 1803 and 1806, but that journal's advocacy of peace with Napoleon led him to cancel his subscription in 1808. The following year, at the height of his poetic career, he was instrumental in establishing a Tory rival, '' The Quarterly Review'' to which he contributed reviews for the rest of his life.
In 1813 Scott was offered the position of Poet Laureate. He declined, feeling that "such an appointment would be a poisoned chalice," as the Laureateship had fallen into disrepute due to the decline in quality of work suffered by previous title holders, "as a succession of poetasters had churned out conventional and obsequious odes on royal occasions." He sought advice from the 4th Duke of Buccleuch
Charles William Henry Montagu-Scott, 4th Duke of Buccleuch and 6th Duke of Queensberry, KT (24 May 1772 – 20 April 1819), styled Earl of Dalkeith until 1812, was a British landowner, amateur cricketer and Tory politician.
Background and educ ...
, who counselled him to retain his literary independence. The position went to Scott's friend, Robert Southey.
The novelist
Gothic novel
Scott was influenced by Gothic romance, and had collaborated in 1801 with 'Monk' Lewis on ''Tales of Wonder''.[''The Bloomsbury Guide to English Literature'', ed. Marion Wynne Davis. New York: Prentice Hall, 1990, p. 885.]
Historic romances
Scott's career as a novelist was attended with uncertainty. The first few chapters of ''Waverley'' were complete by roughly 1805, but the project was abandoned as a result of unfavourable criticism from a friend. Soon after, Scott was asked by the publisher John Murray to posthumously edit and complete the last chapter of an unfinished romance by Joseph Strutt. Published in 1808 and set in 15th-century England, ''Queenhoo Hall'' was not a success due to its archaic language and excessive display of antiquarian information. The success of his Highland narrative poem ''The Lady of the Lake'' in 1810 seems to have put it into his head to resume the narrative and have his hero Edward Waverley journey to Scotland. Although ''Waverley'' was announced for publication at that stage, it was again laid by and not resumed until late 1813, then published in 1814. Only a thousand copies were printed, but the work was an immediate success and 3,000 more were added in two further editions the same year. ''Waverley'' turned out to be the first of 27 novels (eight published in pairs), and by the time the sixth of them, ''Rob Roy'', was published, the print run for the first edition had been increased to 10,000 copies, which became the norm.
Given Scott's established status as a poet and the tentative nature of ''Waverley''s emergence, it is not surprising that he followed a common practice in the period and published it anonymously. He continued this until his financial ruin in 1826, the novels mostly appearing as "By the Author of ''Waverley''" (or variants thereof) or as ''Tales of My Landlord''. It is not clear why he chose to do this (no fewer than eleven reasons have been suggested), especially as it was a fairly open secret, but as he himself said, with Shylock, "such was my humour."
Scott was an almost exclusively historical novelist. Only one of his 27 novels – ''Saint Ronan's Well'' – has a wholly modern setting. The settings of the others range from 1794 in '' The Antiquary'' back to 1096 or 1097, the time of the First Crusade
The First Crusade (1096–1099) was the first of a series of religious wars, or Crusades, initiated, supported and at times directed by the Latin Church in the medieval period. The objective was the recovery of the Holy Land from Islamic ...
, in '' Count Robert of Paris''. Sixteen take place in Scotland. The first nine, from ''Waverley'' (1814) to '' A Legend of Montrose'' (1819), all have Scottish locations and 17th- or 18th-century settings. Scott was better versed in his material than anyone: he could draw on oral tradition and a wide range of written sources in his ever-expanding library (many of the books rare and some unique copies). In general it is these pre-1820 novels that have drawn the attention of modern critics – especially: ''Waverley'', with its presentation of the 1745 Jacobites drawn from the Highland clans as obsolete and fanatical idealists; ''Old Mortality'' (1816) with its treatment of the 1679 Covenanters as fanatical and often ridiculous (prompting John Galt to produce a contrasting picture in his novel ''Ringan Gilhaize'' in 1823); ''The Heart of Mid-Lothian'' (1818) with its low-born heroine Jeanie Deans making a perilous journey to Windsor in 1737 to secure a promised royal pardon for her sister, falsely accused of infanticide; and the tragic ''The Bride of Lammermoor'' (1819), with its stern account of a declined aristocratic family, with Edgar Ravenswood and his fiancée as victims of the wife of an upstart lawyer in a time of political power-struggle before the Act of Union in 1707.
In 1820, in a bold move, Scott shifted period and location for ''Ivanhoe'' (1820) to 12th-century England. This meant he was dependent on a limited range of sources, all of them printed: he had to bring together material from different centuries and invent an artificial form of speech based on Elizabethan and Jacobean drama. The result is as much myth as history, but the novel remains his best-known work, the most likely to be found by the general reader. Eight of the subsequent 17 novels also have medieval settings, though most are set towards the end of the era, for which Scott had a better supply of contemporaneous sources. His familiarity with Elizabethan and 17th-century English literature, partly resulting from editorial work on pamphlets and other minor publications, meant that four of his works set in the England of that period – '' Kenilworth'' (1821), '' The Fortunes of Nigel'' and '' Peveril of the Peak'' (1821), and ''Woodstock
Woodstock Music and Art Fair, commonly referred to as Woodstock, was a music festival held during August 15–18, 1969, on Max Yasgur's dairy farm in Bethel, New York, United States, southwest of the town of Woodstock, New York, Woodstock. ...
'' (1826) – present rich pictures of their societies. The most generally esteemed of Scott's later fictions, though, are three short stories: a supernatural narrative in Scots, "Wandering Willie's Tale" in '' Redgauntlet'' (1824), and "The Highland Widow" and "The Two Drovers" in '' Chronicles of the Canongate'' (1827).
Crucial to Scott's historical thinking is the concept that very different societies can move through the same stages as they develop, and that humanity is basically unchanging, or as he puts it in the first chapter of ''Waverley'' that there are "passions common to men in all stages of society, and which have alike agitated the human heart, whether it throbbed under the steel corslet of the fifteenth century, the brocaded coat of the eighteenth, or the blue frock and white dimity waistcoat of the present day." It was one of Scott's main achievements to give lively, detailed pictures of different stages of Scottish, British, and European society while making it clear that for all the differences in form, they took the same human passions as those of his own age. His readers could therefore appreciate the depiction of an unfamiliar society, while having no difficulty in relating to the characters.
Scott is fascinated by striking moments of transition between stages in societies. Coleridge, in a discussion of his early novels, found that they derive their "long-sustained ''interest''" from "the contest between the two great moving Principles of social Humanity – religious adherence to the Past and the Ancient, the Desire & the admiration of Permanence, on the one hand; and the Passion for increase of Knowledge, for Truth as the offspring of Reason, in short, the mighty Instincts of ''Progression'' and ''Free-agency'', on the other." This is clear, for example, in ''Waverley'', as the hero is captivated by the romantic allure of the Jacobite cause embodied in Bonnie Prince Charlie and his followers before accepting that the time for such enthusiasms has passed and accepting the more rational, humdrum reality of Hanoverian
The adjective Hanoverian is used to describe:
* British monarchs or supporters of the House of Hanover, the dynasty which ruled the United Kingdom from 1714 to 1901
* things relating to;
** Electorate of Hanover
** Kingdom of Hanover
** Province o ...
Britain. Another example appears in 15th-century Europe in the yielding of the old chivalric world view of Charles, Duke of Burgundy to the Machiavellian pragmatism of Louis XI. Scott is intrigued by the way different stages of societal development can exist side by side in one country. When Waverley has his first experience of Highland ways after a raid on his Lowland host's cattle, it "seemed like a dream ... that these deeds of violence should be familiar to men's minds, and currently talked of, as falling with the common order of things, and happening daily in the immediate neighbourhood, without his having crossed the seas, and while he was yet in the otherwise well-ordered island of Great Britain." A more complex version of this comes in Scott's second novel, '' Guy Mannering'' (1815), which "set in 1781‒2, offers no simple opposition: the Scotland represented in the novel is at once backward and advanced, traditional and modern – it is a country in varied stages of progression in which there are many social subsets, each with its own laws and customs."[
Scott's process of composition can be traced through the manuscripts (mostly preserved), the more fragmentary sets of proofs, his correspondence, and publisher's records. He did not create detailed plans for his stories, and the remarks by the figure of "the Author" in the Introductory Epistle to ''The Fortunes of Nigel'' probably reflect his own experience: "I think there is a dæmon who seats himself on the feather of my pen when I begin to write, and leads it astray from the purpose. Characters expand under my hand; incidents are multiplied; the story lingers, while the materials increase – my regular mansion turns out a Gothic anomaly, and the work is complete long before I have attained the point I proposed." Yet the manuscripts rarely show major deletions or changes of direction, and Scott could clearly keep control of his narrative. That was important, for as soon as he had made fair progress with a novel he would start sending batches of manuscript to be copied (to preserve his anonymity), and the copies were sent to be set up in type. (As usual at the time, the compositors would supply the punctuation.) He received proofs, also in batches, and made many changes at that stage, but these were almost always local corrections and enhancements.
As the number of novels grew, they were republished in small collections: ''Novels and Tales'' (1819: ''Waverley'' to ''A Tale of Montrose''); ''Historical Romances'' (1822: ''Ivanhoe'' to ''Kenilworth''); ''Novels and Romances'' (1824 823 '' The Pirate'' to '' Quentin Durward''); and two series of ''Tales and Romances'' (1827: ''St Ronan's Well'' to ''Woodstock''; 1833: ''Chronicles of the Canongate'' to '' Castle Dangerous''). In his last years Scott marked up interleaved copies of these collected editions to produce a final version of what were now officially the ''Waverley Novels'', often called his 'Magnum Opus' or 'Magnum Edition'. Scott provided each novel with an introduction and notes and made mostly piecemeal adjustments to the text. Issued in 48 smart monthly volumes between June 1829 and May 1833 at a modest price of five shillings (25p) these were an innovative and profitable venture aimed at a wide readership: the print run was an astonishing 30,000.
In a "General Preface" to the "Magnum Edition", Scott wrote that one factor prompting him to resume work on the ''Waverley'' manuscript in 1813 had been a desire to do for Scotland what had been done in the fiction of Maria Edgeworth, "whose Irish characters have gone so far to make the English familiar with the character of their gay and kind-hearted neighbours of Ireland, that she may be truly said to have done more towards completing the Union, than perhaps all the legislative enactments by which it has been followed up Act of Union of 1801">Acts_of_Union_1801.html" ;"title="he Acts of Union 1801">Act of Union of 1801" Most of Scott's readers were English: with ''Quentin Durward'' (1823) and ''Woodstock'' (1826), for example, some 8000 of the 10,000 copies of the first edition went to London. In the Scottish novels the lower-class characters normally speak Scots, but Scott is careful not to make the Scots too dense, so that those unfamiliar with it can follow the gist without understanding every word. Some have also argued that although Scott was formally a supporter of the Union with England (and Ireland) his novels have a strong nationalist subtext for readers attuned to that wavelength.
Scott's new career as a novelist in 1814 did not mean he abandoned poetry. The Waverley Novels contain much original verse, including familiar songs such as "Proud Maisie" from ''The Heart of Mid-Lothian'' (Ch. 41) and "Look not thou on Beauty's charming" from ''The Bride of Lammermoor'' (Ch. 3). In most of the novels Scott preceded each chapter with an epigram or "motto"; most of these are in verse, and many are of his own composition, often imitating other writers such as Beaumont and Fletcher.
]
Recovery of the Crown Jewels, baronetcy, and ceremonial pageantry
Prompted by Scott, the Prince Regent (the future George IV) gave Scott and other officials permission in a Royal Warrant dated 28 October 1817 to conduct a search for the Crown Jewels (" Honours of Scotland"). During the Protectorate under Cromwell these had been hidden away, but had subsequently been used to crown Charles II. They were not used to crown subsequent monarchs, but were regularly taken to sittings of Parliament, to represent the absent monarch, until the Act of Union 1707. So the honours were stored in Edinburgh Castle, but their large locked box was not opened for more than 100 years, and stories circulated that they had been "lost" or removed. On 4 February 1818, Scott and a small military team opened the box and "unearthed" the honours from the Crown Room of Edinburgh Castle
Edinburgh Castle is a historic castle in Edinburgh, Edinburgh, Scotland. It stands on Castle Rock (Edinburgh), Castle Rock, which has been occupied by humans since at least the Iron Age, although the nature of the early settlement is unclear. ...
. On 19 August 1818 through Scott's effort, his friend Adam Ferguson was appointed Deputy Keeper of the " Scottish Regalia". The Scottish patronage system swung into action and after elaborate negotiations the Prince Regent granted Scott the title of baronet
A baronet ( or ; abbreviated Bart or Bt) or the female equivalent, a baronetess (, , or ; abbreviation Btss), is the holder of a baronetcy, a hereditary title awarded by the British Crown. The title of baronet is mentioned as early as the 14th ...
: in April 1820 he received the baronetcy in London, becoming Sir Walter Scott, 1st Baronet.
After George's accession, the city council of Edinburgh invited Scott, at the sovereign's behest, to stage-manage the 1822 visit of King George IV to Scotland. In spite of having only three weeks to work with, Scott created a spectacular, comprehensive pageant, designed not only to impress the King, but in some way to heal the rifts that had destabilised Scots society. He used the event to contribute to drawing a line under an old world that pitched his homeland into regular bouts of bloody strife. Probably fortified by his vivid depiction of the pageant staged for the reception of Queen Elizabeth in ''Kenilworth'' he and his "production team" mounted what in modern days would be a PR event, with the King dressed in tartan
Tartan ( gd, breacan ) is a patterned cloth consisting of criss-crossed, horizontal and vertical bands in multiple colours. Tartans originated in woven wool, but now they are made in other materials. Tartan is particularly associated with Sc ...
and greeted by his people, many of them also in similar tartan ceremonial dress. This form of dress, proscribed after the Jacobite rising of 1745, became one of the seminal, potent and ubiquitous symbols of Scottish identity.
Financial problems and death
In 1825, a UK-wide banking crisis resulted in the collapse of the Ballantyne printing business, of which Scott was the only partner with a financial interest. Its debts of £130,000 () caused his very public ruin. Rather than declare himself bankrupt or accept any financial support from his many supporters and admirers (including the King himself), he placed his house and income in a trust belonging to his creditors and set out to write his way out of debt. To add to his burdens, his wife Charlotte died in 1826.
Despite these events or because of them, Scott kept up his prodigious output. Between 1826 and 1832 he produced six novels, two short stories and two plays, eleven works or volumes of non-fiction, and a journal, along with several unfinished works. The non-fiction included the ''Life of Napoleon Buonaparte'' in 1827, two volumes of the ''History of Scotland'' in 1829 and 1830, and four instalments of the series entitled ''Tales of a Grandfather – Being Stories Taken From Scottish History'', written one per year over the period 1828–1831, among several others. Finally, Scott had recently been inspired by the diaries of Samuel Pepys and Lord Byron
George Gordon Byron, 6th Baron Byron (22 January 1788 – 19 April 1824), known simply as Lord Byron, was an English romantic poet and Peerage of the United Kingdom, peer. He was one of the leading figures of the Romantic movement, and h ...
, and he began keeping a journal over the period, which, however, would not be published until 1890, as '' The Journal of Sir Walter Scott''.
By then Scott's health was failing, and on 29 October 1831, in a vain search for improvement, he set off on a voyage to Malta and Naples on board ''HMS Barham'', a frigate put at his disposal by the Admiralty. He was welcomed and celebrated wherever he went. On his journey home he boarded the steamboat ''Prins Frederik'' going from Cologne to Rotterdam. While on board he had a final stroke near Emmerich
Emmerich may refer to:
Places
* Emmerich am Rhein, city in North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany
** Emmerich Rhine Bridge
** Emmerich station
* Emmerich, Wisconsin, unincorporated community in the town of Berlin, Wisconsin, United States
Other uses
* ...
. After local treatment, a steamboat took him to the steamship ''Batavier'', which left for England on 12 June. By pure coincidence, Mary Martha Sherwood was also on board. She would later write about this encounter. After he was landed in England, Scott was transported back to die at Abbotsford on 21 September 1832. He was 61.
Scott was buried in Dryburgh Abbey, where his wife had earlier been interred. Lady Scott had been buried as an Episcopalian; at Scott's own funeral, three ministers of the Church of Scotland officiated at Abbotsford and the service at Dryburgh was conducted by an Episcopal clergyman.
Although Scott died owing money, his novels continued to sell, and the debts encumbering his estate were discharged shortly after his death.[
]
Religion
Scott was raised as a Presbyterian in the Church of Scotland. He was ordained as an elder in Duddingston Kirk in 1806, and sat in the General Assembly for a time as representative elder of the burgh of Selkirk. In adult life he also adhered to the Scottish Episcopal Church: he seldom attended church but read the Book of Common Prayer
The ''Book of Common Prayer'' (BCP) is the name given to a number of related prayer books used in the Anglican Communion and by other Christianity, Christian churches historically related to Anglicanism. The original book, published in 1549 ...
services in family worship.
Freemasonry
Scott's father was a Freemason, being a member of Lodge St David, No. 36 (Edinburgh), and Scott also became a Freemason in his father's Lodge in 1801, albeit only after the death of his father.
Abbotsford House
When Scott was a boy, he sometimes travelled with his father from Selkirk to Melrose, where some of his novels are set. At a certain spot, the old gentleman would stop the carriage and take his son to a stone on the site of the Battle of Melrose (1526).
During the summers from 1804, Scott made his home at the large house of Ashestiel, on the south bank of the River Tweed, north of Selkirk. When his lease on this property expired in 1811, he bought Cartley Hole Farm, downstream on the Tweed nearer Melrose. The farm had the nickname of " Clarty Hole", and Scott renamed it "Abbotsford" after a neighbouring ford used by the monks of Melrose Abbey. Following a modest enlargement of the original farmhouse in 1811–12, massive expansions took place in 1816–19 and 1822–24. Scott described the resulting building as 'a sort of romance in Architecture' and 'a kind of Conundrum Castle to be sure'. With his architects William Atkinson and Edward Blore Scott was a pioneer of the Scottish Baronial style of architecture, and Abbotsford is festooned with turrets and stepped gabling. Through windows enriched with the insignia of heraldry the sun shone on suits of armour, trophies of the chase, a library of more than 9,000 volumes, fine furniture, and still finer pictures. Panelling of oak and cedar and carved ceilings relieved by coats of arms in their correct colours added to the beauty of the house.[
It is estimated that the building cost Scott more than £25,000 (). More land was purchased until Scott owned nearly . In 1817 as part of the land purchases Scott bought the nearby mansion-house of Toftfield for his friend Adam Ferguson to live in along with his brothers and sisters and on which, at the ladies' request, he bestowed the name of Huntlyburn. Ferguson commissioned Sir David Wilkie to paint the Scott family resulting in the painting ''The Abbotsford Family'' in which Scott is seated with his family represented as a group of country folk. ]Ferguson
Ferguson may refer to:
Places
Canada
* Ferguson Avenue (Hamilton, Ontario)
* Ferguson, British Columbia
* Mount Ferguson (Ontario), a mountain in Temagami, Ontario
United States
*Ferguson, a meteorite fall in North Carolina
* Ferguson, Arkansas ...
is standing to the right with the feather in his cap and Thomas Scott, Scott's Uncle, is behind. The painting was exhibited at the Royal Academy in 1818.
Abbotsford later gave its name to the Abbotsford Club, founded in 1834 in memory of Sir Walter Scott.
Reputation
Later assessment
Although he continued to be extremely popular and widely read, both at home and abroad, Scott's critical reputation declined in the last half of the 19th century as serious writers turned from romanticism to realism, and Scott began to be regarded as an author suitable for children. This trend accelerated in the 20th century. For example, in his classic study '' Aspects of the Novel'' (1927), E. M. Forster harshly criticized Scott's clumsy and slapdash writing style, "flat" characters, and thin plots. In contrast, the novels of Scott's contemporary Jane Austen, once appreciated only by the discerning few (including, as it happened, Scott himself) rose steadily in critical esteem, though Austen, as a female writer, was still faulted for her narrow ("feminine") choice of subject matter, which, unlike Scott, avoided the grand historical themes traditionally viewed as masculine.
Nevertheless, Scott's importance as an innovator continued to be recognised. He was acclaimed as the inventor of the genre of the modern historical novel (which others trace to Jane Porter, whose work in the genre predates Scott's) and the inspiration for enormous numbers of imitators and genre writers both in Britain and on the European continent. In the cultural sphere, Scott's Waverley novels played a significant part in the movement (begun with James Macpherson's '' Ossian'' cycle) in rehabilitating the public perception of the Scottish Highlands
The Highlands ( sco, the Hielands; gd, a’ Ghàidhealtachd , 'the place of the Gaels') is a historical region of Scotland. Culturally, the Highlands and the Lowlands diverged from the Late Middle Ages into the modern period, when Lowland ...
and its culture, which had been formerly been viewed by the southern mind as a barbaric breeding ground of hill bandits, religious fanaticism, and Jacobite risings.
Scott served as chairman of the Royal Society of Edinburgh and was also a member of the Royal Celtic Society. His own contribution to the reinvention of Scottish culture was enormous, even though his re-creations of the customs of the Highlands were fanciful at times. Through the medium of Scott's novels, the violent religious and political conflicts of the country's recent past could be seen as belonging to history—which Scott defined, as the subtitle of ''Waverley'' ("'Tis Sixty Years Since") indicates, as something that happened at least 60 years earlier. His advocacy of objectivity and moderation and his strong repudiation of political violence on either side also had a strong, though unspoken, contemporary resonance in an era when many conservative English speakers lived in mortal fear of a revolution in the French style on British soil. Scott's orchestration of King George IV's visit to Scotland, in 1822, was a pivotal event intended to inspire a view of his home country that accentuated the positive aspects of the past while allowing the age of quasi-medieval blood-letting to be put to rest, while envisioning a more useful, peaceful future.
After Scott's work had been essentially unstudied for many decades, a revival of critical interest began in the middle of the 20th century. While F. R. Leavis had disdained Scott, seeing him as a thoroughly bad novelist and a thoroughly bad influence ('' The Great Tradition'' 948, György Lukács (''The Historical Novel'' 937, trans. 1962 and David Daiches (''Scott's Achievement as a Novelist'' 951 offered a Marxian political reading of Scott's fiction that generated a great deal of genuine interest in his work. These were followed in 1966 by a major thematic analysis covering most of the novels by Francis R. Hart (''Scott's Novels: The Plotting of Historic Survival''). Scott has proved particularly responsive to Postmodern approaches, most notably to the concept of the interplay of multiple voices highlighted by Mikhail Bakhtin, as suggested by the title of the volume with selected papers from the Fourth International Scott Conference held in Edinburgh in 1991, ''Scott in Carnival''. Scott is now increasingly recognised not only as the principal inventor of the historical novel and a key figure in the development of Scottish and world literature, but also as a writer of a depth and subtlety who challenges his readers as well as entertaining them.
Memorials and commemoration
During his lifetime, Scott's portrait was painted by Sir Edwin Landseer and fellow Scots Sir Henry Raeburn and James Eckford Lauder
James Eckford Lauder (15 August 1811 in Edinburgh – 27 March 1869 in Edinburgh) was a notable mid- Victorian Scottish artist, famous for both portraits and historical pictures.
Life and work
A younger brother of artist Robert Scott Laud ...
. In Edinburgh, the 61.1-metre-tall Victorian Gothic spire of the Scott Monument was designed by George Meikle Kemp. It was completed in 1844, 12 years after Scott's death, and dominates the south side of Princes Street. Scott is also commemorated on a stone slab in Makars' Court, outside The Writers' Museum, Lawnmarket, Edinburgh, along with other prominent Scottish writers; quotes from his work are also visible on the Canongate Wall of the Scottish Parliament building in Holyrood. There is a tower dedicated to his memory on Corstorphine Hill in the west of the city and Edinburgh's Waverley railway station, opened in 1854, takes its name from his first novel.
In Glasgow
Glasgow ( ; sco, Glesca or ; gd, Glaschu ) is the most populous city in Scotland and the fourth-most populous city in the United Kingdom, as well as being the 27th largest city by population in Europe. In 2020, it had an estimated pop ...
, Walter Scott's Monument dominates the centre of George Square, the main public square in the city. Designed by David Rhind in 1838, the monument features a large column topped by a statue of Scott.
There is a statue of Scott in New York City's Central Park
Central Park is an urban park in New York City located between the Upper West Side, Upper West and Upper East Sides of Manhattan. It is the List of New York City parks, fifth-largest park in the city, covering . It is the most visited urban par ...
.
Numerous Masonic Lodges have been named after Scott and his novels. For example: Lodge Sir Walter Scott, No. 859 ( Perth, Australia) and Lodge Waverley, No. 597, (Edinburgh, Scotland).
The annual was created in 2010 by the Duke and Duchess of Buccleuch, whose ancestors were closely linked to Sir Walter Scott. At £25,000, it is one of the largest prizes in British literature. The award has been presented at Scott's historic home, Abbotsford House.
Scott has been credited with rescuing the Scottish banknote. In 1826, there was outrage in Scotland at the attempt of Parliament
In modern politics, and history, a parliament is a legislative body of government. Generally, a modern parliament has three functions: representing the electorate, making laws, and overseeing the government via hearings and inquiries. ...
to prevent the production of banknotes of less than five pounds. Scott wrote a series of letters to the ''Edinburgh Weekly Journal'' under the pseudonym "'' Malachi Malagrowther''" for retaining the right of Scottish banks to issue their own banknotes. This provoked such a response that the Government was forced to relent and allow the Scottish banks to continue printing pound notes. This campaign is commemorated by his continued appearance on the front of all notes issued by the Bank of Scotland. The image on the 2007 series of banknotes is based on the portrait by Henry Raeburn.
During and immediately after World War I there was a movement spearheaded by President Wilson
Thomas Woodrow Wilson (December 28, 1856February 3, 1924) was an American politician and academic who served as the 28th president of the United States from 1913 to 1921. A member of the Democratic Party, Wilson served as the president of P ...
and other eminent people to inculcate patriotism in American school children, especially immigrants, and to stress the American connection with the literature and institutions of the "mother country" of Great Britain, using selected readings in middle school textbooks. Scott's ''Ivanhoe'' continued to be required reading for many American high school students until the end of the 1950s.
A bust of Scott is in the Hall of Heroes of the National Wallace Monument in Stirling
Stirling (; sco, Stirlin; gd, Sruighlea ) is a city in central Scotland, northeast of Glasgow and north-west of Edinburgh. The market town, surrounded by rich farmland, grew up connecting the royal citadel, the medieval old town with its me ...
. Twelve streets in Vancouver, British Columbia
Vancouver ( ) is a major city in western Canada, located in the Lower Mainland region of British Columbia. As the List of cities in British Columbia, most populous city in the province, the 2021 Canadian census recorded 662,248 people in the ...
are named after Scott's books or characters.
In The Inch district of Edinburgh, some 30 streets developed in the early 1950s are named for Scott (Sir Walter Scott Avenue) and for characters and places from his poems and novels. Examples include Saddletree Loan (after Bartoline Saddletree, a character in '' The Heart of Midlothian''), Hazelwood Grove (after Charles Hazelwood, a character in '' Guy Mannering'') and Redgauntlet Terrace (after the 1824 novel of that name).
Influence
On novelists
Walter Scott had an immense impact throughout Europe. "His historical fiction ... created for the first time a sense of the past as a place where people thought, felt and dressed differently". His historical romances "influenced Balzac, Dostoevsky, Flaubert, Tolstoy, Dumas, Pushkin, and many others; and his interpretation of history was seized on by Romantic nationalists, particularly in Eastern Europe
Eastern Europe is a subregion of the European continent. As a largely ambiguous term, it has a wide range of geopolitical, geographical, ethnic, cultural, and socio-economic connotations. The vast majority of the region is covered by Russia, wh ...
".["Abstract": M. Pittock, ed., ''The Reception of Sir Walter Scott in Europe''.] Also highly influential were the early translations into French by Defauconpret.[
Letitia Elizabeth Landon was a great admirer of Scott and, on his death, she wrote two tributes to him: ''On Walter Scott'' in the Literary Gazette, and ''Sir Walter Scott'' in Fisher's Drawing Room Scrap Book, 1833. Towards the end of her life she began a series called ''The Female Picture Gallery'' with a series of character analyses based on the women in Scott's works.
]Victor Hugo
Victor-Marie Hugo (; 26 February 1802 – 22 May 1885) was a French Romantic writer and politician. During a literary career that spanned more than sixty years, he wrote in a variety of genres and forms. He is considered to be one of the great ...
, in his 1823 essay, ''Sir Walter Scott: Apropos of Quentin Durward'', writes:
Alessandro Manzoni
Alessandro Francesco Tommaso Antonio Manzoni (, , ; 7 March 1785 – 22 May 1873) was an Italian poet, novelist and philosopher. He is famous for the novel '' The Betrothed'' (orig. it, I promessi sposi) (1827), generally ranked among the maste ...
's '' The Betrothed'' (1827) has similarities with Walter Scott's historic novel '' Ivanhoe'', although evidently distinct.
In Charles Baudelaire
Charles Pierre Baudelaire (, ; ; 9 April 1821 – 31 August 1867) was a French poet who also produced notable work as an essayist and art critic. His poems exhibit mastery in the handling of rhyme and rhythm, contain an exoticism inherited ...
's '' La Fanfarlo'' (1847), poet Samuel Cramer says of Scott:
In the novella, however, Cramer proves as deluded a romantic as any hero in one of Scott's novels.
Jane Austen, in a letter to her nephew James Edward Austen on 16 December 1816, writes:
In Jane Austen's '' Persuasion'' (1817) Anne Elliot and Captain James Benwick discuss the "richness of the present age" of poetry, and whether '' Marmion'' or '' The Lady of the Lake'' is the more preferred work.
Mary Shelley
Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley (; ; 30 August 1797 – 1 February 1851) was an English novelist who wrote the Gothic novel '' Frankenstein; or, The Modern Prometheus'' (1818), which is considered an early example of science fiction. She also ...
, while researching for her historical novel, ''The Fortunes of Perkin Warbeck
''The Fortunes of Perkin Warbeck: A Romance'' is an 1830 historical novel by Mary Shelley about the life of Perkin Warbeck. The book takes a Yorkist point of view and proceeds from the conceit that Perkin Warbeck died in childhood and the sup ...
'' (1830), wrote a letter to Walter Scott on 25 May 1829, asking him for information on any works or manuscripts he knew about Perkin Warbeck
Perkin Warbeck ( 1474 – 23 November 1499) was a pretender to the English throne claiming to be Richard of Shrewsbury, Duke of York, who was the second son of Edward IV and one of the so-called " Princes in the Tower". Richard, were he ali ...
, she concludes the letter:
In Charlotte Brontë's '' Jane Eyre'' (1847) St. John Rivers gives a copy of '' Marmion'' to Jane to provide her "evening solace" during her stay in her small lodging.
Emily Brontë's '' Wuthering Heights'' was influenced by the novels of Walter Scott. In particular, according to Juliet Barker, '' Rob Roy'' (1817) had a significant influence on Brontë's novel, which, though "regarded as the archetypal Yorkshire novel ... owed as much, if not more, to Walter Scott's Border country". ''Rob Roy'' is set "in the wilds of Northumberland
Northumberland () is a ceremonial counties of England, county in Northern England, one of two counties in England which border with Scotland. Notable landmarks in the county include Alnwick Castle, Bamburgh Castle, Hadrian's Wall and Hexham Ab ...
, among the uncouth and quarrelsome squirearchical Osbaldistones", while Cathy Earnshaw "has strong similarities with Diana Vernon, who is equally out of place among her boorish relations" (Barker p. 501).
In Anne Brontë's '' The Tenant of Wildfell Hall'' (1848) the narrator, Gilbert Markham, brings an elegantly bound copy of '' Marmion'' as a present to the independent "tenant of Wildfell Hall" (Helen Graham) whom he is courting, and is mortified when she insists on paying for it.
In George Eliot's '' Middlemarch'' (1871), Mr. Trumbull remarks to Mary Garth:
Thomas Hardy, in his 1888 essay, ''The Profitable Reading of Fiction'', writes:
The many other British novelists whom Scott influenced included Edward Bulwer-Lytton
Edward George Earle Lytton Bulwer-Lytton, 1st Baron Lytton, Her Majesty's Most Honourable Privy Council, PC (25 May 180318 January 1873) was an English writer and politician. He served as a Whigs (British political party), Whig member of Parl ...
, Charles Kingsley, and Robert Louis Stevenson. He also shaped children's writers like Charlotte Yonge and G. A. Henty.
Nathaniel Hawthorne, in a letter to his sister Elizabeth on 31 October 1820, writes:
Edgar Allan Poe, an admirer of Scott, was particularly captivated with '' The Bride of Lammermoor'', calling it "that purest, and most enthralling of fictions", and "the master novel of Scott."
In a speech delivered at Salem, Massachusetts, on 6 January 1860, to raise money for the families of the executed abolitionist John Brown (abolitionist), John Brown and his followers, Ralph Waldo Emerson calls Brown an example of true chivalry, which consists not in noble birth but in helping the weak and defenseless and declares that "Walter Scott would have delighted to draw his picture and trace his adventurous career."
Henry James, in his 1864 essay, ''Fiction and Sir Walter Scott'', writes:
In his 1870 memoir, ''Army Life in a Black Regiment'', New England abolitionist Thomas Wentworth Higginson (later editor of Emily Dickinson), described how he wrote down and preserved Negro spirituals or "shouts" while serving as a colonel in the First South Carolina Volunteers, the first authorized Union Army regiment recruited from freedmen during the Civil War. He wrote that he was "a faithful student of the Scottish ballads, and had always envied Sir Walter the delight of tracing them out amid their own heather, and of writing them down piecemeal from the lips of aged crones."
According to Marx's daughter Eleanor Marx, Eleanor, Scott was "an author to whom Karl Marx again and again returned, whom he admired and knew as well as he did Balzac and Fielding."
Mark Twain, in his 1883 ''Life on the Mississippi'', satirized the impact of Scott's writings, declaring with humorous hyperbole that Scott "had so large a hand in making Southern character, as it existed before the American Civil War, [American Civil] war" that he is "in great measure responsible for the war." He goes on to coin the term "Sir Walter Scott disease", describing a respect for aristocracy, a social acceptance of duels and vendettas, and a taste for fantasy and romanticism, which he blames for the South's lack of advancement. Twain also targeted Scott in ''Adventures of Huckleberry Finn'', where he names a sinking boat the "Walter Scott" (1884); and, in ''A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court'' (1889), the main character repeatedly utters "Great Scott!" as an oath; by the end of the book, however, he has become absorbed in the world of knights in armour, reflecting Twain's ambivalence on the topic.
In ''Anne of Green Gables'' (1908) by Lucy Maude Montgomery, as Anne Shirley, Anne is bringing in the cows from pasture:
The idyllic Cape Cod retreat of suffragists Verena Tarrant and Olive Chancellor in Henry James's ''The Bostonians'' (1886) is called Marmion, evoking what James considered the Quixotic idealism of such social reformers.
In ''To the Lighthouse'' by Virginia Woolf, Mrs. Ramsey glances at her husband:
Virginia Woolf, in a letter to Hugh Walpole on 12 September 1932, writes:
John Cowper Powys described Walter Scott's romances as "by far the most powerful literary influence of my life". This can be seen particularly in his two historical novels, ''Porius: A Romance of the Dark Ages'', set during the end of Roman Britain#End of Roman rule, Roman rule in Britain, and ''Owen Glendower (novel), Owen Glendower''.
In 1951, science-fiction author Isaac Asimov wrote ''Breeds There a Man...?'', a short story with a title alluding vividly to Scott's ''The Lay of the Last Minstrel
''The Lay of the Last Minstrel'' (1805) is a narrative poem in six cantos with copious antiquarian notes by Walter Scott. Set in the Scottish Borders in the mid-16th century, it is represented within the work as being sung by a minstrel late in ...
'' (1805). In Harper Lee's ''To Kill a Mockingbird'' (1960), the protagonist's brother is made to read Walter Scott's book '' Ivanhoe'' to the ailing Mrs. Henry Lafayette Dubose. In ''Mother Night'' (1961) by Kurt Vonnegut Jr., memoirist and playwright Howard W. Campbell Jr. prefaces his text with the six lines beginning "Breathes there the man..." In ''Knights of the Sea'' (2010) by Canadian author Paul Marlowe, there are several references to '' Marmion'', as well as an inn named after '' Ivanhoe'', and a fictitious Scott novel entitled ''The Beastmen of Glen Glammoch''.
The other arts
Although Scott's own appreciation of music was basic, to say the least, he had a considerable influence on composers. Some 90 operas based to some extent on his poems and novels have been traced, the most celebrated being Gioachino Rossini, Rossini's ''La donna del lago'' (1819, based on ''The Lady of the Lake'') and Gaetano Donizetti, Donizetti's ''Lucia di Lammermoor'' (1835, based on '' The Bride of Lammermoor''). Others include Donizetti's 1829 opera ''Il castello di Kenilworth'' based on '' Kenilworth'', Georges Bizet's La jolie fille de Perth (1867, based on ''The Fair Maid of Perth''), and Arthur Sullivan's ''Ivanhoe (opera), Ivanhoe'' (1891).
Many of Scott's songs were set to music by composers throughout the 19th century. Seven from ''The Lady of the Lake'' were set in German translations by Franz Schubert, Schubert, one of them being 'Ellens dritter Gesang' popularly known as 'Schubert's ''Ave Maria. Three lyrics, also in translation, appear from Ludwig van Beethoven, Beethoven in his ''Twenty-Five Scottish Songs (Beethoven), Twenty-Five Scottish Songs'', Op. 108. Other notable musical responses include three overtures: ''Waverley'' (1828) and ''Rob Roy'' (1831) by Hector Berlioz, Berlioz, and ''The Land of the Mountain and the Flood'' (1887, alluding to ''The Lay of the Last Minstrel'') by Hamish MacCunn. "Hail to the Chief" from "The Lady of the Lake" was set to music around 1812 by the songwriter James Sanderson (c. 1769 – c. 1841). See the Wikipedia article "Hail to the Chief."
The Waverley Novels are full of eminently paintable scenes and many 19th-century artists responded to them. Among the outstanding paintings of Scott subjects are: Richard Parkes Bonington's ''Amy Robsart and the Earl of Leicester'' (''c.'' 1827) from ''Kenilworth'' in the Ashmolean Museum, Oxford; Eugène Delacroix, Delacroix's ''L'Enlèvement de Rebecca'' (1846) from '' Ivanhoe'' in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; and John Everett Millais, Millais's '' The Bride of Lammermoor'' (1878) in Bristol Museum and Art Gallery.
In fiction
Walter Scott features as a character in Sara Sheridan's novel ''The Fair Botanists'' (2021).
Works
Novels
The Waverley Novels is the title given to the long series of Scott novels released from 1814 to 1832 which takes its name from the first novel, '' Waverley''. The following is a chronological list of the entire series:
*1814: '' Waverley''
*1815: '' Guy Mannering''
*1816: '' The Antiquary''
*1816: ''The Black Dwarf (novel), The Black Dwarf'' and '' Old Mortality'' or ''The Tale of Old Mortality'' – the 1st instalment from the subset series, Tales of My Landlord
*1817: '' Rob Roy''
*1818: ''The Heart of Mid-Lothian
''The Heart of Mid-Lothian'' is the seventh of Sir Walter Scott's Waverley Novels. It was originally published in four volumes on 25 July 1818, under the title of ''Tales of My Landlord, 2nd series'', and the author was given as "Jedediah Clei ...
'' – the 2nd instalment from the subset series, Tales of My Landlord
*1819: '' The Bride of Lammermoor'' and '' A Legend of Montrose'' or ''A Legend of the Wars of Montrose'' – the 3rd instalment from the subset series, Tales of My Landlord
*1819 (dated 1820): '' Ivanhoe''
*1820: ''The Monastery''
*1820: ''The Abbot''
*1821: '' Kenilworth''
*1822: '' The Pirate''
*1822: '' The Fortunes of Nigel''
*1822: '' Peveril of the Peak''
*1823: '' Quentin Durward''
*1824: ''St. Ronan's Well'' or ''Saint Ronan's Well''
*1824: '' Redgauntlet''
*1825: ''The Betrothed (Walter Scott novel), The Betrothed'' and ''The Talisman (Scott novel), The Talisman'' – a subset series, Tales of the Crusaders
*1826: ''Woodstock
Woodstock Music and Art Fair, commonly referred to as Woodstock, was a music festival held during August 15–18, 1969, on Max Yasgur's dairy farm in Bethel, New York, United States, southwest of the town of Woodstock, New York, Woodstock. ...
''
*1827: '' Chronicles of the Canongate'' — containing two short stories ("The Highland Widow" and "The Two Drovers") and a novel (''The Surgeon's Daughter'')
*1828: ''The Fair Maid of Perth'' – the 2nd instalment from the subset series, Chronicles of the Canongate
*1829: ''Anne of Geierstein''
*1832: '' Count Robert of Paris'' and '' Castle Dangerous'' – the 4th instalment from the subset series, Tales of My Landlord
Other novels:
*1831–1832: ''The Siege of Malta (novel), The Siege of Malta'' – a finished novel published posthumously in 2008
*1832: ''Bizarro (novel), Bizarro'' – an unfinished novel (or novella) published posthumously in 2008
Poetry
Many of the short poems or songs released by Scott (or later anthologized) were originally not separate pieces but parts of longer poems interspersed throughout his novels, tales, and dramas.
*1796: ''Translations and Imitations from German Ballads by Sir Walter Scott, The Chase, and William and Helen: Two Ballads, translated from the German of Gottfried Augustus Bürger''
*1800: ''Glenfinlas (poem), Glenfinlas''
*1802–1803: ''Minstrelsy of the Scottish Border''
*1805: ''The Lay of the Last Minstrel
''The Lay of the Last Minstrel'' (1805) is a narrative poem in six cantos with copious antiquarian notes by Walter Scott. Set in the Scottish Borders in the mid-16th century, it is represented within the work as being sung by a minstrel late in ...
''
*1806: ''Ballads and Lyrical Pieces''
*1808: Marmion (poem), ''Marmion: A Tale of Flodden Field''
*1810: The Lady of the Lake (poem), ''The Lady of the Lake''
*1811: '' The Vision of Don Roderick''
*1813: The Bridal of Triermain by Walter Scott, ''The Bridal of Triermain''
*1813: Rokeby (poem), ''Rokeby''
*1815: ''The Field of Waterloo
''The Field of Waterloo'' is a poem by Walter Scott, written and published in 1815. It is in iambic tetrameters and trimeters with a few Spenserian stanzas at the end. The work moves from a depiction of the site of the battle, with farm life renew ...
''
*1815: '' The Lord of the Isles''
*1817: ''Harold the Dauntless
''Harold the Dauntless'' is a narrative poem in six short cantos by Walter Scott, published in 1817. It employs a variety of metres.
Set in the Durham area, the poem tells of Harold's rejection of his father Witikind's acceptance of Christian ...
''
*1825: ''Bonnie Dundee''
Short stories
*1811: "The Inferno of Altisidora"
*1817: "Christopher Corduroy"
*1818: "Alarming Increase of Depravity Among Animals"
*1818: "Phantasmagoria"
*1827: "The Highland Widow" and "The Two Drovers" (see ''Chronicles of the Canongate'' above)
*1828: "My Aunt Margaret's Mirror", "The Tapestried Chamber", and "Death of the Laird's Jock" – from the series ''The Keepsake Stories''
*1832: "A Highland Anecdote"
Plays
*1799: ''Götz von Berlichingen (Goethe), Goetz of Berlichingen, with the Iron Hand: A Tragedy'' – an English-language translation of the 1773 German-language play by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe entitled ''Götz von Berlichingen (Goethe), Götz von Berlichingen''
*1822: ''Halidon Hill''
*1823: ''MacDuff's Cross''
*1830: ''The Doom of Devorgoil''
*1830: ''Auchindrane''
Non-fiction
*1814–1817: ''The Border Antiquities of England and Scotland'' – a work co-authored by Luke Clennell and John Greig with Scott's contribution consisting of the substantial introductory essay, originally published in 2 volumes from 1814 to 1817
*1815–1824: ''Essays on Chivalry, Romance, and Drama'' – a supplement to the 1815–1824 editions of the ''Encyclopædia Britannica''
*1816: ''Paul's Letters to his Kinsfolk''
*1819–1826: ''Provincial Antiquities of Scotland''
*1821–1824: ''Lives of the Novelists''
*1825–1832: '' The Journal of Sir Walter Scott'' — first published in 1890
*1826: ''The Letters of Malachi Malagrowther''
*1827: ''The Life of Napoleon Buonaparte''
*1828: ''Religious Discourses. By a Layman''
*1828: ''Tales of a Grandfather; Being Stories Taken from Scottish History'' – the 1st instalment from the series, Tales of a Grandfather
*1829: ''The History of Scotland: Volume I''
*1829: ''Tales of a Grandfather; Being Stories Taken from Scottish History'' – the 2nd instalment from the series, Tales of a Grandfather
*1830: ''The History of Scotland: Volume II''
*1830: ''Tales of a Grandfather; Being Stories Taken from Scottish History'' – the 3rd instalment from the series, Tales of a Grandfather
*1830: ''Letters on Demonology and Witchcraft''
*1831: ''Tales of a Grandfather; Being Stories Taken from the History of France'' – the 4th instalment from the series, Tales of a Grandfather
*1831: ''Tales of a Grandfather: The History of France (Second Series)'' — unfinished; published 1996
Archives
In 1925 Scott's manuscripts, letters and papers were donated to the National Library of Scotland by the Advocates Library of the Faculty of Advocates.[Brown, Iain Gordon (2000). "Collecting Scott for Scotland: 1850–2000." ''The Book Collector'' 49 no.4 (winter): 502–534. Article by the curator of the Scott Collection at the National Library of Scotland expanded from his presentation at the 35th Congress of the International League of Antiquarian Booksellers, Edinburgh, September 18, 2000.]
See also
*Jedediah Cleishbotham (fictional editor of ''Tales of My Landlord'', and Scott's ''alter ego'')
*G. A. Henty
*Karl May
*Baroness Orczy
*Rafael Sabatini
*Emilio Salgari
*List of people on banknotes#Scotland, People on Scottish banknotes
*Samuel Shellabarger
*Lawrence Schoonover
*Jules Verne
*Frank Yerby
*GWR Waverley Class steam locomotives
*List of books for the "Famous Scots Series", "Famous Scots Series"
*Principal Clerk of Session and Justiciary
*Writers' Museum
References
Cited sources
*
*
*
Further reading
*''Approaches to Teaching Scott's Waverley Novels'', ed. Evan Gottlieb and Ian Duncan (New York, 2009).
*Bautz, Annika. ''Reception of Jane Austen and Walter Scott: A Comparative Longitudinal Study''. Continuum, 2007. , .
*
*Brown, David. ''Walter Scott and the Historical Imagination''. Routledge, 1979, ; Kindle ed. 2013.
*John Buchan, Buchan, John. ''Sir Walter Scott'', Coward-McCann Inc., New York, 1932.
*Calder, Angus (1983), ''Scott & Goethe: Romanticism and Classicism'', in Hearn, Sheila G. (ed.), ''Cencrastus'' No. 13, Summer 1983, pp. 25–28,
*
*Cornish, Sidney W. ''The "Waverley" Manual; or, Handbook of the Chief Characters, Incidents, and Descriptions in the "Waverley" Novels, with Critical Breviates from Various Sources''. Edinburgh: A. and C. Black, 1871.
*Crawford, Thomas, ''Scott'', Kennedy & Boyd, 2013
*Duncan, Ian. ''Scott's Shadow: The Novel in Romantic Edinburgh''. Princeton UP, 2007. .
*Ferris, Ina. ''The Achievement of Literary Authority: Gender, History, and the Waverley Novels'' (Ithaca, New York, 1991).
*Hart, Francis R.. ''Scott's Novels: The Plotting of Historic Survival'' (Charlottesville, Virginia, 1966).
*Kelly, Stuart. ''Scott-Land: The Man Who Invented a Nation''. Polygon, 2010. .
*Letitia Elizabeth Landon, Landon, Letitia Elizabeth, ''The Female Portrait Gallery''. A series of 22 analyses of Scott's female characters (curtailed by Letitia's death in 1838). Laman Blanchard: ''Life and Literary Remains of L.E.L.'', 1841. Vol. 2. pp. 81–194.
*Lincoln, Andrew. ''Walter Scott And Modernity''. Edinburgh UP, 2007.
*Millgate, Jane. ''Walter Scott: The Making of the Novelist'' (Edinburgh, 1984).
*Oliver, Susan.
Walter Scott and the Greening of Scotland: Emergent Ecologies of a Nation
'. Cambridge University Press, 2021.
*Ann Rigney, Rigney, Ann. ''The Afterlives of Walter Scott: Memory on the Move''. Oxford UP, 2012.
*
*''Scott in Carnival: Selected Papers from the Fourth International Scott Conference, Edinburgh, 1991'', ed. J. H. Alexander and David Hewitt (Aberdeen, 1993).
*Scott, Paul Henderson. ''Walter Scott and Scotland'', William Blackwood, Edinburgh, 1981,
*Shaw, Harry, ''Scott, Scotland and Repression'', in Bold, Christine (ed.), ''Cencrastus'' No. 3, Summer 1980, pp. 26 – 28.
*Robertson, Fiona, ''The Edinburgh Companion to Sir Walter Scott.'' Edinburgh University Press, 2012.
*Tulloch, Graham. ''The Language of Walter Scott: A Study of his Scottish and Period Language'' (London, 1980).
*''Walter Scott: New Interpretations, The Yearbook of English Studies''. Vol. 47. 2017. Modern Humanities Research Association
DOI: 10.5699/yearenglstud.47.issue-2017
*Welsh, Alexander. ''The Hero of the Waverley Novels'' (New Haven, 1963).
External links
*
*
*
*
Works by Walter Scott
at The Online Books Page
Sir Walter Scott and Hinx, his Cat
The Edinburgh Sir Walter Scott Club
''Sir Walter Scott''
biography by Richard H. Hutton, 1878 (from Project Gutenberg)
*
Walter Scott's profile and catalogue of his library at Abbotsford
on LibraryThing.
Guardian Books – Sir Walter Scott
Portraits at the National Portrait Gallery
*Bust of Walter Scott by Sir Francis Leggatt Chantrey, 1828, white marble, Philadelphia Museum of Art, # 2002.222.1, Philadelphia (PA).
Sir Walter Scotts friends by Florence MacCunn 1910.
Scottish Freemasonry (The Grand Lodge of Scotland)
Poems by Walter Scott at English Poetry
Archive materials
Walter Scott Digital Archive
at the University of Edinburgh.
Millgate Union Catalogue of Walter Scott Correspondence
Correspondence of Sir Walter Scott, with related papers, ca. 1807–1929
*hdl:10079/fa/beinecke.scott, Sir Walter Scott Collection. General Collection, Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library.
Sir Walter Scott Collection
at the Harry Ransom Center
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