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Robert Burns, sometimes known as the 'ploughman poet', was born this day in 1759. He was the eldest son of a poverty-stricken farmer. Though his father had moved to Ayrshire, where Burns was born, in order to attempt to improve his fortunes, he eventually died as a bankrupt - after taking on first one farm and then, unsuccessful, moving to another - in 1784. Robert, who had been to school since the age of six, and was also educated at home by a teacher, had, by the age of fifteen, already become the farm's chief laborer. He had also acquired a reading knowledge of French and Latin and had read Shakespeare, Dryden, Milton and the Bible. After his father's death, he and his brother continued farming together, working now at Mossigiel.
For more information, access www.poemhunter.com/robert-burns/biography/. The poem I’m reading is “A Red, Red Rose”.
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AuthorSemi-retired statistician who likes movies and theater. ArchivesCategories |
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