Letter from Robert Burns to Alexander Cunningham, 7 July 1796
July 7th 17976
My dear Cunningham
I received yours here his moment
and am indeed am highly flattered with the approbation of
the literary circle you mention; a literary circle inferior to none
in the two kingdoms. - Alas! my friend, I fear the
voice of the Bard will so be heard among you no more!
For these eight or ten months I have been ailing, sometimes
bedrest & sometimes not; but these last three months I
have been tortured with an excruciating rheumatism which
has reduced me to nearly the last stage. - You actually would
not know if you saw me. - Pale, emaciated, & so feeble as
occasionally to need help from my ehoir[?] - my spirits
fled! fled" - but I can no more on the subject only
the Medical folks tell me that my last & only chance
is bathing & country quarters & riding. The deuce
of the matter is this; when an Excise man is off duty
his
- I dare say you know them all personally If they do not grant ^it me, I must lay my account with an exit truly en poet, if I die not of disease I must perish with hunger. - I have sent you one of the songs: the other my memory does not serve me with, & I have no copy here; but I shall be at home son when I will sent it you.- a propos to being at home, M.rs Burns threatens in a week or two, to add one more to my Paternal charge, which, if of the right gender, I intend shall be introduced to the world by respectable designation of Alex. R Cunningham Burns My last was James Glencairn, so you can have no objection to the company of Nobility
- Farewell, RB
Key details
- Archive number
- NTS/02/25/BRN/01/53
- Alt. number
- 3.6081
- Date
- 7 July 1796
- On display
- No
- Creator
- Burns, Robert (Author)
- Recipient
- Cunningham, Alexander
- Archive number
- NTS/02/25/BRN/01/53
- Alt. number
- 3.6081
- Date
- 7 July 1796
- On display
- No
- Creator
- Burns, Robert (Author)
- Recipient
- Cunningham, Alexander
Description
Letter from Robert Burns to Alexander Cunningham, dated Brow-Sea-bathing quarters, 7 July, 1796.
Three page letter from Burns to his friend Cunningham in reply to an earlier letter and explaining his various medical, financial and family problems with which he is beset. He is seeking Cunningham's help to get his full salary restored from the Excise commissioners. (letter no 700)
He describes himself "Pale, emaciated, & so feeble" and that "my spirits fled! fled!", which is perhaps no surprise when he reveals that his medical folks tell him that this is " his last and only chance" of a cure.
In page two Burns explains that as he is on sick leave, the Excise commissioners will only pay him a reduced salary. He asks him to lean on the commissioners whom he expects to be friends of Cunningham to make an exception or else "I must lay my account with an exit en poet, if I die not of disease I must perish with hunger".
His thoughts then turn to home where he tells Cunningham that his wife is close to giving birth and that he intends to name the child "if of the right gender" Alexander Cunningham Burns, mentioning that his previous child was named James Glencairn (after another patron).
The last page contains a transcript of the poem "Lord Gregory", one of two which Burns intends ( or may have been asked) to send but he admits that his memory "does not serve me" and he will send it when he gets home.
Lord Gregory was a poem which Burns had written some time past and had it committed to memory and is recorded as having recited at a dinner with the Earl of Selkirk in 1793 during his Galloway tour with John Syme.
Archive information
Themes
Hierarchy
-
Letters from and to Robert Burns
(
a sub-fonds is a subdivision in the archival material)
- Letter from Robert Burns to Alexander Cunningham, 7 July 1796
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