|
Date: |
|
Description: | This is the manuscript Burns wrote to give to Stewart & Meikle, the publishers of its first twopenny edition. The Cantata is a series of tales influenced by John Gay's Beggars Opera and other works. Burns relates the life stories of eight local vagabonds assembled in a Mauchline Inn in a loquacious and jolly mood. (poem no 84)
When at Mossgeil in 1785 Burns and friend John Richmond visited an Inn in Mauchline where they experienced the inebriated setting and vagabond characters which inspired this work. It was his only attempt at a longer work capable of being staged.
Page 10 in the tinkers tale, he tells of his trade and how he often took the bounty to be a soldier but was sure to be absent when his unit marched off. He tells the woman that she should give up on the fiddler. From now on he will look after her need or, he says, may he never have drink again. | License: | http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0 | Publisher: | Burns Monument Trust | Temporal: | 1785-01-01 - 1785-12-31 | Source: | Burns Scotland | Identifier: | Poem by Robert Burns: 'The Jolly Beggars | Go to resource |
|
|