Letter from Robert Burns to William Dunbar, 7 April 1788
1788
I have not delayed so long to write you, my much respected
Friend, because I thought no farther of my promise. - I have
long since given up that kind of formal correspondence
where one sits down irksomely to write a letter because
we think we are in duty bound so to do. -
I have been roving over the Country, as my farm I
have taken is forty miles from this place, hiring
servants and preparing matters: but most of all, I am
earnestly busy to bring about a revolution in my own
mind. - As, till within these eighteen months, I never
was the wealthy master of ten guineas, my knowledge
of business is to learn; add to this, my late scenes of idle-
ness and dissipation have enervated my mind to an
alarming degree. - Skill in the sober Science of Life
is my most serious and hourly study. - I have dropt
all conversation and all reading (prose-reading) but
Except one worthy young fellow, I have not one single Corre-
spondent in Edin.r- You have indeed kindly made
me an offer of that kind, an offer which gives me the
highest pleasure. - The world of Wits, and Gens comme
il faut which I lately left, and with whom I never again
will intimately mix, from that Port Sir, I expect your
Gazette: what les beaux Espirits are saying, what they
are doing and what they are singing. - Any sober
intelligence from my sequestered walks of life; any drou
-riginal; any passing remark, important forsooth bec
it is mine; any little Poetic affort, however embroyole
these, my dear Sir, are all you have to expect from me
When I talk of Poetic efforts, I much have it always under-
stood, that I appeal from your wit and taste to your friend
ship and good nature. - The first would be my favourite
tribunal where I defied Censure; but the last, where I
declined Justice. -
I have scarcely made a single Distic since I saw you,
When I meet with an old Scots Air tha has any
facetious idea in its Name, I have a peculiar pleasure
in following out that idea for a verse or two. -
I did, last time I called for you. A few lines from
you, directed to me, at Mauchline, were it but to
let me know how you are, will set my mind a
good deal. - Now, never shun the idea of writing me
because perhaps you may be out of humour or spirits:
I could give you a hundred good consequences attending
a dull letter; one for example, and the remaining ninety nine
some other time; it will always serve to keep in countenance,
my much respected, Sir, your obliged friend, and humble serv.t
Rob.t Burns
Key details
- Archive number
- NTS/02/25/BRN/01/80
- Alt. number
- 3.6308
- Date
- 7 April 1788
- On display
- No
- Creator
- Burns, Robert (Author)
- Recipient
- Dunbar, William
- Archive number
- NTS/02/25/BRN/01/80
- Alt. number
- 3.6308
- Date
- 7 April 1788
- On display
- No
- Creator
- Burns, Robert (Author)
- Recipient
- Dunbar, William
Description
Letter from Robert Burns to William Dunbar, dated Mauchline, 7 April 1788.
Three page letter where Burns appraises his Edinburgh friend William Dunbar of his recent farm commitment at Ellisland, some 40 miles from Mauchline, admitting to a lack of business acumen and asking him for news of the Edinburgh scene which he has recently left behind. (letter no 236)
Page two is largely devoted to a plea by Burns to encourage Dunbar to continue his correspondence with him as he has few Edinburgh friends who do so now he has left and he is anxious for news of the gossip from the Capital. He finishes this page by saying he has written scarcely two lines of poetry since he left Edinburgh.
On page three Burns asks after Dunbar's health, which had been poorly when they last met, and the then continues his plea for Dunbar to write to him no matter how well he may be feeling.
Burns's previous letter to William Dunbar, a Writer to the Signet in Edinburgh, had been enclosed with the return of a book and had been written a few days before he ended his winter's stay Edinburgh and left for Mauchline in February 1788.
Archive information
Place of creation
Themes
Hierarchy
-
Letters from and to Robert Burns
(
a sub-fonds is a subdivision in the archival material)
- Letter from Robert Burns to William Dunbar, 7 April 1788
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