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Robert Burns
Use attributes for filter ! | |
Gender | Male |
---|---|
Death | 229 years ago |
Date of birth | January 25,1759 |
Zodiac sign | Aquarius |
Born | Alloway |
United Kingdom | |
Date of died | July 21,1796 |
Children | Elizabeth Riddell Burns |
James Glencairn Burns | |
Maxwell Burns | |
Elizabeth Bishop (Burns) | |
Robert Burns Junior | |
William Nicol Burns | |
Height | 178 (cm) |
Job | Poet |
Author | |
Bard | |
Movies/Shows | Abandon |
The Whole Nine Yards | |
Free Money | |
Spouse | Jean Armour |
Siblings | Annabella Burns |
Gilbert Burns | |
William Burns | |
Agnes Burns | |
Isobel Burns | |
John Burns | |
Poems | To a Mouse |
A Red, Red Rose | |
Tam o' Shanter | |
Comin' Thro' the Rye | |
To a Louse | |
Buried | St. Michael's Churchyard, Dumfries |
Parents | William Burnes |
Agnes Broun | |
Nationality | Scottish |
Died | Oklahoma |
United States | |
Dumfries | |
United Kingdom | |
Party | Democratic Party |
Previous position | Member of the Oklahoma Senate (1941–1948) |
Governor | William H. Murray |
Date of Reg. | |
Date of Upd. | |
ID | 415564 |
The Works of Robert Burns
Kilmarnock volume
The complete poetical works of Burns
The Poetical Works of Robert Burns
Poems of Robert Burns
Burns' Cotter's Saturday night . .
The Complete Poetical Works
A night out with Robert Burns
Burns, The Selected poems of Robert
The complete works of Robert Burns (self-interpreting)
Robert Burns in Your Pocket
The Complete Works
Address to the Deil
The Life and Works of Robert Burns
The Poetical Works of the Late Robert Burns: With an Account of His Life
The letters of Robert Burns
The Jolly Beggars
Songs & poems
To a Mountain Daisy
The Canongate Burns
The songs and poems of Robert Burns
The merry muses
Letters addressed to Clarinda &c
Reliques of Robert Burns
Oh, wert thou in the cauld blast
The Classic Poems
Tam O'Shanter, a Tale
A Poet's Welcome to His Love-begotten Daughter
The poems, epistles, songs, epigrams & epitaphs
Burns: 'A Red, Red Rose' and Other Poems
The Best of Robert Burns
Epistle to Davie (a brother poet)
Understanding Robert Burns: Verse, Explanation and Glossary
Halloween
The Poems and Songs of Robert Burns
Epitaph for James Smith
The Slave's Lament
Robert Burns Songs (Collins Scottish Archive)
To Mary in heaven . .
Lieder unde balladen des Schotten Robert Burns
Favorite Poems
Poems
The complete works of Robert Burns
Poems, songs, and letters
Sylvander and Clarinda
The Kilmarnock Poems: Poems, Chiefly in the Scottish Dialect, 1786
The Best Laid Schemes: Selected Poetry and Prose of Robert Burns
The wee Burns
Robert Burns' Poems
Tam o' Shanter
To a Louse
Robert Burns Life story
Robert Burns, also known familiarly as Rabbie Burns, was a Scottish poet and lyricist. He is widely regarded as the national poet of Scotland and is celebrated worldwide.
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... " There is one called Clarinda who was a mistress of Robert Burns...
Town celebrates Robert Burns' first book of poems
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... Marc Sherland, one of the directors of the Robert Burns World Federation, is keen to mark the significance of the town s link to the national bard...
Memorial celebrates 'radical spirit of Scotland' Winnie Ewing
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... Mr Salmond ended by saying the poet Hugh MacDiarmid had once described Robert Burns as " the true radical spirit of Scotland" and said that is " exactly how we should remember Winnie Ewing"...
Bob Dylan puts Highland mansion retreat up for sale
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... He chose Robert Burns A Red, Red Rose , written in 1794, as one of his all-time favourites and has said Scottish folklorist Hamish Henderson s song The 51st (Highland) Division s Farewell to Sicily influenced his song the Times They Are A Changin ...
Burns Night: Lady Carolina Nairne's poignant work mistaken for bard's
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...By Kathleen CarragherProducer, The Secret BardThe Land O the Leal, one of the most poignant Scottish folk songs, is often mistaken as the work of the great bard, Robert Burns...
El Sistema: How a Venezuelan music scheme changed Raploch
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... Robert Burns used the name as an adjective...
Mystery book sculptures to be auctioned in Edinburgh
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... Each represented a classic of Scottish literature, Tam O Shanter by Robert Burns; Whisky Galore, by Compton Mackenzie; Peter Pan, by J...
Why do people link hands to sing Auld Lang Syne?
![Why do people link hands to sing Auld Lang Syne?](https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/news/1024/branded_news/BF6D/production/_122550094_index.jpg)
... " What is the origin of the song? Robert Burns was a Freemason...
Why do people link hands to sing Auld Lang Syne?
On New Year 's Eve millions of people around the World Link hands when they sing Auld Lang Syne.
Now research from the University of Edinburgh has revealed the origins of the Hogmanay tradition are connected to freemasonry.
Singing with arms crossed and hands joined was a parting ritual at many Masonic lodges.
Musicologist Dr Morag Grant discovered The Connection in The Archives at Glasgow's Mitchell Library .
A newspaper report of an Ayrshire lodge's Burns Supper in 1879 describes Auld Lang Syne being sung as members formed " The Circle of unity" - a Masonic ritual also called the " chain of union".
Dr Grant said The Tradition of singing The Song at times of parting, with crossed hands, emerged in the mid-19th century among Freemasons and other fraternal organisations.
" Auld Lang Syne's sentiments didn't just resonate with Freemasons, " She Said .
" Some of the earliest reports of The Song 's use at parting come from American college graduations in the 1850s. "
" The many traditions and rituals associated with The Song - as well as its simple, singable Tune - are key to understanding its phenomenal spread, and why we still sing it today. "
What is The Origin of The Song ?Robert Burns was a Freemason. The organisation was instrumental in promoting The Poet 's work during his life and after his death.
He was inspired to write Auld Lang Syne by fragments of earlier folk songs. He wrote the lyrics in 1788 but The Tune did not appear together with The Song until after his death.
In The Final verse The Singer offers his hand of friendship to an old friend, and asks for one In Return .
Burns wrote: " And there's a hand, my trusty fiere. And gie's a hand o' thine. "
Traditionally, at this point The Hands are crossed and offered to the those on either side in The Circle of singers.
Dr Grant uncovered the masonic link while researching her book Auld Lang Syne: A Song And Its Culture, which explores how its popularity spread around The World .
She studied sources including written accounts, newspaper reports, theatre playbills, printed music and early recordings.
How did its popularity spread?Dr Grant suggests Auld Lang Syne's global fame predates the invention of sound recording and the broadcast era.
The Song had already spread to Japan where it was played at graduations. The Tune - known as Hotaru no Hikari - is still played at the close of business in some shops.
In 1877, Alexander Graham Bell used it to demonstrate The Telephone , and in 1890 it was one of The First songs recorded on Emil Berliner's gramophone.
The Song 's use at New Year emerged around the same time, through Scots gathering outside St Paul's Cathedral in London and others living abroad.
The Scouts also played a key role in its global fame. It was sung at the end of The First World Scout Jamboree in 1920 and versions in French, German, Greek and Polish soon followed.
By 1929, the New Year tradition was so well established internationally that a line from The Song was displayed on the electronic ticker at celebrations in Times Square, New York .
Dr Grant said: " It's remarkable how this Song , written in a language which even most Scots don't fully understand, has become so synonymous with New Year The World over.
" Auld Lang Syne is a Song about the ties that bind us to others across The Years and even though its appeal is now global, it's very much rooted in The World Burns inhabited. "
Source of news: bbc.com