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19 September 2014
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大象传媒 - History - Scottish History

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The Makars

Robert Henryson (1450-c.1505) book
Henryson flourished through the turbulent reign of James III. He is thought to have been educated at Glasgow University and found work as a schoolmaster in Dunfermline.

He is well known for his reworking of Aesop’s Fables into the Scots tongue, called ‘The Morall Fabillis of Esope the Phrygian’, which was loved by generations of Scots readers.


Perhaps his most famous work is 'The Testament of Cresseid', where he follows the fate of the classical, tragic anti-heroine, Cressida. The work is a continuation of a theme which the English poet, Chaucer, had depicted in his 'Troilus and Criseyde' - Henryson is known in some literary circles as a Scottish Chaucerian.

Cressida betrays the true love of Troylus for the lust of Diomede, and is then judged by the gods, who sentence her to life as a leper. Cast out into the world to suffer her fate at a leper colony, one day she meets her ex-lover, Troylus, who, poignantly, fails to recognise her in her leprous state. Henryson uses Cressida’s tragic story and her subsequent penitence to pose difficult questions about the nature of sin and the difficulties of leading a moral life.

Indeed, most of his poetry grapples with these moral issues and Henryson aims to guide and educate the medieval reader using allegory and fable - perhaps making the lesson easier to learn when it is made less personal. Thus, the trials of life are allegorised through the adventures of foxes, chickens, wolves and lambs in his fables.

Tantallon Castle

Bishop Gavin Douglas (1476-1522)
Gavin Douglas is the celebrated translator of Virgil’s famous Latin epic poem, The Aeneid. Translating into vernacular Scots, he tells the tale of the Trojan Aeneas’s epic journey after the fall of Troy. Douglas was educated at St. Andrews University and pursued a successful career as a poet until the Battle of Flodden, fought between Scotland and England in 1513, when he became involved in various political intrigues.

James IV’s widow, Margaret Tudor, married into the Douglas faction, and Gavin was soon her chief advisor, gaining a promotion to the post of Bishop of Dunkeld (1515). However, the fickle fortunes of Renaissance politics dictated that the Douglas faction would fall from power and in 1521 Gavin Douglas was arraigned for high treason. He fled into exile to save his neck only to die of the plague.

Sir David Lyndsay of the Mount (c.1486-1555)
David Lyndsay was the last of the great Makars before the Reformation. The son of a Fife laird, he was an attendant to the infant James V and later acted as a diplomat for James to the courts of Europe. Lyndsay drew on his experiences at the heart of the royal court to write his most famous play, 'Ane Satyre of the Thrie Estaitis'. The 'three estates' mentioned in the title are the clergy, the nobility and the burgesses (or craftsmen), and their faults are exposed by John the Common-Weill (commonwealth). This play, like so much of Lindsay's work, is directed against the pride and greed prevalent in Scottish society and against the ills of society which hamper the common good of the nation

James IV's Court

William Dunbar (c.1460-c.1530)
William Dunbar was the ‘maister poete’ of the Renaissance court of King James IV. Educated at St Andrews University, he possessed an outstanding poetic talent that some consider to equal, if not surpass, that of Robert Burns.

Literary scholars point out that Dunbar, unlike many medieval poets, reveals a lot of his own personality through his poetry, disclosing a sensitive and moody individual, capable of harsh cynicism and cutting humour. He writes with heartfelt emotion and wit on subjects as mundane as the toothache, yet always entertains - as he was required to do. Like many other Renaissance artists, he was dependent on the king’s patronage and for Dunbar, well aware of his own talent, that reward was never enough.

Dunbar was at home with a vast range of poetic genre, from hymns to satire and from the strict formality of the high poetic style to vulgar comedy.

'The Flyting of Dunbar and Kennedie' is a brilliant example of the Scots tradition of Flyting, a tradition in which two poets match their skills in a contest of poetic insults - a sort of literary slagging match. In this example, the contestants were Dunbar and fellow Makar Walter Kennedy.

Perhaps Dunbar’s most touching poem is his ‘Lament for the Makaris’. He wrote it in a time of sickness when he was troubled by his own mortality, thus the refrain: ‘Timor mortus conturbat me’ ('the fear of death worries me'). The poem also shows that Dunbar saw himself as part of a long tradition of Makars in Scotland. Sadly many of their works are lost to us now, but among those mentioned by Dunbar are poets like Andrew Wyntoun, author of a verse chronicle of Scottish history, and John Barbour, who composed 'The Bruce', as well as Blind Harry, Robert Henryson and, affectionately, his flyting partner, Walter Kennedy.


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