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Walter Scott [1771-1832] SCO
Ranked #123 in the top 380 poets
Votes 74%: 178 up, 61 down

Historical novelist, playwright and poet. Advocate, judge and legal administrator

SIR WALTER SCOTT, the fourth child of Walter Scott, writer to the Signet of Edinburgh, was born in that city on the 15th of August 1771. He came of the Border family, the Scotts of Harden, an offshoot from the house of Beccleuch. His childhood was passed for the most part at Sandyknowe, the farm of his Father in Roxburghshire. In I783, he went to the University.From his earliest childhood onward, he was a ravenous and insatiable reader; his memory was of extraordinary range and tenacity, and of what he read and observed he seemed to have forgotten almost nothing. 

In 1786, he was apprenticed to his father, in whose office he worked as a clerk until 1895, in which year he was called to the bar. In his profession he had fair success, and in 1797 he was married to Charlotte Margaret Carpenter. 

Meantime his leisure had been occupied with literature. His first publication, a translation Burger`s ballads, "Lenore" and "The Wild Huntsman", was issued in 1796. In 1804, he issued an edition of the old poem, "Sir Tristrem", `Meantime`,`The Lay of the Last Minstrel`, had been in progress, and by its publication in 1805, Scott became at a bound the most popular author of his day. 

During the next ten years he gave to the world the poems "Marmion", (1808), "The Lady of the Lake" (1810), "The Vision of Don Roderick" (1811), "Rokeby" (1812), "The bridal of Triermain" anonymously published (1813). "The Lord of the Isles" and "The Field of Waterloo".

The enthusiasm with which the earlier of these works were received somewhat began to abate as the series proceeded. This Scott distinctly noted, and after what he felt as the comparative failure of "The Lord of the Isles" in 1815, with a trivial exception, he published no more poetry. But already in Waverly, which appeared without his name in 1814, he had achieved the first of a new and more splendid series of triumphs. "The Antiquary", "The Black Dwarf", "Old Mortality", "Rob Roy","The Heart of Midlothian" rapidly followed, and the Great Unknown, as he was called, (whom yet every one could guess to be no other than Walter Scott), became the idol of the hour. 

From this time onward for some years, Scott stood on a pinnacle of fame and brilliant social prosperity that no other British man of letters had reached. In 1820, to set a seal upon all this distinction, a baronetcy was bestowed upon him as a special mark of royal favor. But sudden ruin smote the stately fabric of his fortunes. Through the failure of the printing and publishing house of James Ballentine, in which he was a partner, Scott found himself one forenoon  bankrupt, with personal liabilities to the extent of something like?150,000. With his creditors composition would have been easy; but this usual course he disdained. "God granting him time and health," he said, he would owe no man a penny. Breaking up the establishment at Abbottsford, where the wife whom he loved lay dying, he hired a lodging at Edinburg, and there for some years, with stern and unfaltering resolution, be toiled at his prodigious task. The stream of novels flowed as formerly; a "History of Napoleon" in eight volumes, was undertaken and completed, with much other miscellaneous work; and within the space of two years Scott had realized for his creditors the amazing sum of nearly ?40,000. A new and annotated edition of the novels were issued with immense success, and there seemed every prospect that, within a reasoable period, Scott might again front the world, as he had pledged himself to do, not owing to any man a penny. But the limits of endurance had been reached. 

In 1830, he was smitten down with paralysis, from which he never thoroughly rallied. At Abbotsford, on the 21st of September, 1832, he died with his children around him, and the murmur of the Tweed in his ears. On the 26th he was buried beside his wife, in the old Abbey of Dryburg.

Didactism, Freemasons, History, Romanticism, Tory

YearsCountryPoetInteraction
1759-1796
SCO
Robert Burns
→ influenced Walter Scott
1775-1817
ENG
Jane Austen
→ (sentimentalism) disliked Walter Scott
1835-1910
USA
Mark Twain
→ disliked Walter Scott
1631-1700
ENG
John Dryden
← praised by Walter Scott
1749-1806
ENG
Charlotte Smith
← praised by Walter Scott
1774-1843
ENG
Robert Southey
← friend of Walter Scott
1777-1844
SCO
Thomas Campbell
← praised by Walter Scott
1779-1852
IRL
Thomas Moore
← (novel) influenced by Walter Scott
1816-1855
ENG
Charlotte Bronte
← influenced by Walter Scott
1818-1848
ENG
Emily Jane Bronte
← influenced by Walter Scott
1820-1849
ENG
Anne Bronte
← influenced by Walter Scott
1828-1882
ENG
Dante Gabriel Rossetti
← influenced by Walter Scott
1830-1894
ENG
Christina Georgina Rossetti
← influenced by Walter Scott
1834-1896
ENG
William Morris
← influenced by Walter Scott
1866-1943
ENG
Beatrix Potter
← influenced by Walter Scott
1874-1946
USA
Gertrude Stein
← influenced by Walter Scott
1892-1950
USA
Edna St. Vincent Millay
← influenced by Walter Scott


WorkLangRating
Lochinvar
eng
30
The Lady of the Lake: Canto I. - The Chase
eng
16
Patriotism 1: Innominatus
eng
10
Breathes There the Man... From the Lay of the Last Minstrel
eng
4
Saxon War-Song
eng
4
Answer
eng
3
MacKrimmon`s Lament
eng
3
Proud Maisie
eng
3
Hunter`s Song
eng
2
Hunting Song
eng
2
March, March, Ettrick and Teviotdale
eng
2
The Maid of Neidpath
eng
2
The Palmer
eng
2
A Serenade
eng
1
Bruce and the Abbot
eng
1
Death Chant
eng
1
Eleu Loro
eng
1
Farewell to the Muse
eng
1
Love
eng
1
MacGregor`s Gathering
eng
1
Marmion: a Christmas Poem
eng
1
Marmion: Canto II. - The Convent
eng
1
Marmion: Canto VI. - The Battle
eng
1
Rebecca`s Hymn
eng
1
Rokeby: Canto I.
eng
1
Rosabelle
eng
1
The Field of Waterloo
eng
1
The Troubadour
eng
1
The Wild Huntsman
eng
1
Wandering Willie
eng
1
An Hour With Thee
eng
0
Ancient Gaelic Melody
eng
0
As Lords Their Labourers` Hire Delay
eng
0
Bonaparte
eng
0
Bonny Dundee
eng
0
Border Ballad
eng
0
Brignall Banks
eng
0
Cadyow Castle
eng
0
Christmas
eng
0
Claud Halcro`s Song
eng
0
Cleveland Lyke-wake Dirge (Traditional
eng
0
Cleveland`s Song
eng
0
Coronach
eng
0
Datur Hora Quieti
eng
0
Davie Gellatley`s Song
eng
0
Donald Caird`s Come Again
eng
0
Elspeth`s Ballad
eng
0
Flora Macivor`s Song
eng
0
For A` That And A` That
eng
0
Frederick and Alice
eng
0
Funeral Hymn
eng
0
Gathering Song of Donald the Black
eng
0
Glenfinlas; or, Lord Ronald`s Coronach
eng
0
Harp of the North, Farewell!
eng
0
Hellvellyn
eng
0
Here`s a Health to King Charles
eng
0
It was an English Ladye Bright
eng
0
Jock of Hazeldean
eng
0
Lines On Captain Wogan. To An Oak Tree
eng
0
Lucy Ashton`s Song
eng
0
Lullaby of an Infant Chief
eng
0
Major Bellenden`s Song
eng
0
March Of The Monks Of Bangor
eng
0
Marmion: Canto I. - The Castle
eng
0
Marmion: Canto III. - The Inn
eng
0
Marmion: Canto IV. - The Camp
eng
0
Marmion: Canto V. - The Court
eng
0
Marmion: Introduction
eng
0
Nora`s Vow
eng
0
On Ettrick Forest`s Mountains Dun {Life In The Forest}
eng
0
On Leaving Mrs. Brown`s Lodgings
eng
0
On Tweed River
eng
0
Patriotism 2: Nelson, Pitt, Fox
eng
0
Rokeby: Canto II.
eng
0
Rokeby: Canto III.
eng
0
Rokeby: Canto IV.
eng
0
Rokeby: Canto V.
eng
0
Rokeby: Canto VI.
eng
0
Romance of Dunois
eng
0
Saint Cloud
eng
0
Soldier, rest! thy warfare o`er,
eng
0
Soldier, Wake
eng
0
Song -- County Guy
eng
0
Song of the Glee-Maiden
eng
0
Song of the Zetland Fisherman
eng
0
St. Swithin`s Chair
eng
0
The Bard`s Incantation
eng
0
The Barefooted Friar
eng
0
The Battle of Sempach
eng
0
The Black Knight`s Song
eng
0
The Bridal Of Triermain
eng
0
The Crusader`s Return
eng
0
The Dance of Death
eng
0
The Dreary Change {The sun upon the Weirdlaw Hill}
eng
0
The Dying Bard
eng
0
The Dying Gipsy Smuggler
eng
0
The Eve of St. John
eng
0
The Gray Brother
eng
0
The Lady of the Lake: Canto II. - The Island
eng
0
The Lady of the Lake: Canto III. - The Gathering
eng
0
The Lady of the Lake: Canto IV. - The Prophecy
eng
0
The Lady of the Lake: Canto V. - The Combat
eng
0
The Lady of the Lake: Canto VI. - The Guardroom
eng
0
The Lay of Poor Louise
eng
0
The Lay of the Last Minstrel: Canto I
eng
0
The Lay of the Last Minstrel: Canto II.
eng
0
The Lay of the Last Minstrel: Canto III.
eng
0
The Lay of the Last Minstrel: Canto IV.
eng
0
The Lay of the Last Minstrel: Canto V.
eng
0
The Lay of the Last Minstrel: Canto VI.
eng
0
The Lord of the Isles: Canto I.
eng
0
The Lord of the Isles: Canto II.
eng
0
The Lord of the Isles: Canto III.
eng
0
The Lord of the Isles: Canto IV.
eng
0
The Lord of the Isles: Canto V.
eng
0
The Lord of the Isles: Canto VI.
eng
0
The Maid of Toro
eng
0
The Noble Moringer
eng
0
The Norman Horse-Shoe
eng
0
The Orphan Maid
eng
0
The Outlaw
eng
0
The Reiver`s Wedding
eng
0
The Resolve
eng
0
The Return to Ulster
eng
0
The Rover`s Adieu
eng
0
The Song of Harold Harfager
eng
0
The Song of the Tempest
eng
0
The Truth of Woman
eng
0
The Violet
eng
0
The Vision of Don Roderick
eng
0
Thomas the Rhymer
eng
0
To a Lady - with Flowers from a Roman Wall
eng
0
To a Lock of Hair
eng
0
To The Sub-Prior
eng
0
Twist Ye, Twine Ye
eng
0
Verses Found in Bothwell`s Pocket-book
eng
0
Waverly
eng
0
Where Shall the Lover Rest
eng
0
Why Sit`st Thou By That Ruin`d Hall?
eng
0
William and Helen
eng
0

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