In advance of the Bishop Symposium in Scotland later this month, I share a little piece about Bishop and Burns. Nothing profound, mind you, just a bit of fun.
(frontispiece)
Sometime in
the late 1990s, when I was in the midst of transcribing Elizabeth Bishop’s
early, unfinished “Reminiscences of Great Village,” I also toured around Nova
Scotia with a Bishop colleague/friend (a trip that took us from Cape Breton to
Annapolis Royal with a stop in between in Great Village). While we spent a
day/night en route in Antigonish, we happened to go into a used
bookstore where my eyes immediately fell on The Poetical Works of Robert
Burns, an 1898 edition by Frederick Warne and Co., a leather bound volume
well preserved, covered in a thin cellophane wrapping. It cost $25. I bought
it.
(click to enlarge image)
(The only
Burns I knew was the ubiquitous “Auld Lang Syne” and the sentimental “My Love
is Like a Red, Red Rose.” But the first page of the “Reminiscences” had given
me another work that I wanted to know: “O, wert thou in the cauld blast.”1 Here is Bishop’s memory:
We seldom talked much in the
evenings. Now and then my grandfather would read out loud, either from Burns or
the Bible. He had a way of reading Burns — he neither wrestled with the Scotch
dialect nor ignored it — he conceded wherever necessary. There was just enough
to give it a Scotch flavor — like the Canadian regiment in our village which
wore, above the regular soft kahki [sic] uniform, a sort of tam o’shanter
with a bit of Scotch plaid grogram ribbon on it, and a feather.2 It pleased my grandfather to be able to give us that
particular feeling of foreigness [sic] — a drop of red wine into the
clear yellow of the lamp-lit evenings, he didn't take them away or change
them, but gave them a shade of excitement quickened their pulse. His Bible
reading, though, did just the opposite. We became quite stolidly a family when
he read the Bible. My wicked Aunt looked atoned devout, and my poor
grandmother almost a matriarch & 'manager'. Easter [Gertrude] never joined
in with on feeling for Grandfather’s reading. She liked Burns, too — once she
had asked Grandfather to read “Oh wert thou in the cauld blast”, but almost
always she lay on the sofa with an arm across her eyes, her other arm hanging
down so that the white hand lay on the floor. Betsy [the family dog] lay across
her feet [Insert: mother’s feet], occasionally wrinkling up her forehead and
rolling up her eyes at me, so that the whites showed. As it got later you could
smell her more and more clearly.
Standing in
the bookstore, I immediately looked for this poem in the book and learned that it
was, in fact, a song, sung to the tune of “The Lass o’ Livingston.” Not long
after, I also learned that Mendelssohn had also set it to music.3
It was
abundantly clear to me why Gertrude Bulmer Bishop, who had lost her husband too
soon to illness and who had lived the subsequent years struggling with her
grief, in a “wildest waste,” found this song so meaningful.4 Imagine Bishop sitting in the
parlour with her family in the evening listening to her grandfather read this love
song aloud to her mother. The “Reminiscences” records this one instance of Pa’s
reading; there would have been many other instances during the year that Bishop
and her mother together resided with the Bulmers, before Gertrude entered the
Nova Scotia Hospital in June 1916. And how many subsequent evenings of these
readings happened in the years Bishop spent in the village during the late
1910s and through the 1920s. One can guess: more than a few.
William
Bulmer was descended from Yorkshiremen, but living in “New Scotland” had an
impact on him, and the Scottish bard was one of his favourites. Pa Bulmer was
not alone in his love of Burns’s work. Shortly after the turn of the twentieth
century, the folks of Great Village formed the Christophian Literary Society and
Burns was one of their chosen poets. Great Villagers viewed this society as
speaking for their literary taste and culture, and for many years it had a
scholarly and ambitious program of reading: Tennyson, the Brownings, Keats,
Milton, Ruskin, Shakespeare, Dante. The leading light of the society was Rev.
Alexander L. Fraser (1870-1954),5 who was not only the Presbyterian
minister at St. James Church (1904-1914), but also a prolific poet, who
published ten volumes of poems during his life, including one entitled By
Cobequid Bay, where sat Great Village.6
Bishop knew
that her mother and aunts were members of the society and remembered that her
aunts often recited Browning and Tennyson to her. Coincidentally, Mendelssohn
was Aunt Mary’s favourite composer, so one can’t help but wonder if she perhaps
played his setting of “O, wert thou….”
(Rev. Alexander Louis Fraser)
Under
Fraser’s leadership, the society engaged in public performances, taking their
love of literature out of private parlours and onto the concert stage. Dating
from the year before Bishop was born, the Truro Daily News, on 4 January
1910, announced a significant upcoming event in Great Village:
Preparations are underway for a great and grand celebration of
Robbie Burns night at the town hall on Tues. evening, Jan. 25, in the form of
an entertainment by the “Kritosophian [sic] Literary Society” under the
able leadership of their President, Rev. A.L. Fraser, members and local talent,
for which Great Village is well noted.
(Brief
aside: The spelling of the society’s name had at least five variants, which is
both puzzling and amusing.)
The TDN
was not overstating the descriptors, on 2 February, a detailed account of the
festivities appeared:
“A Burns’ Night at Great
Village” — The regular meeting of the Literary society being due to occur on
the 25th inst., and that date being the anniversary of Scotland’s greatest
poet, Robbie Burns, it was decided to deviate from the usual course and
celebrate the occasion by a public evening’s entertainment in honour of that
illustrious bard.
Accordingly, at 8 p.m., on Tues. the Town Hall was filled to
overflowing with an expectant and somewhat enthusiastic audience, from this and
adjoining villages as a “Burns night” is a new departure from what has hitherto
been observed in our town.
The meeting being called to order by the chairman, Rev. A.L.
Fraser, President of the Society, two solid hours of genuine pleasure was
afforded by a well-directed and efficient body of entertainers, when the
following program was carried out:
Scotch National Anthem —
“Scots Wha’ Ha” (chorus & violins)
Life of Burns — Mrs. W.G.
Blaikie
“Hundred Pipers” — (violins)
“My Love is like a red, red
Rose” — (violins)
“Coming thru the Rye” — (solo
& violins)
Address on Burns — Rev. A.L.
Fraser
“Bonnie Doon” — (chorus &
violins)
“John Anderson my Jo’ John” —
(violins)
“Afton Waters” — (solo &
violins)
Reading selection from Burns,
Mr. Brownie (Scotsman)
Reading selection from Burns,
Mrs. L.C. Layton
“Here’s a health to one I
love, dear” — (solo & violins)
“Will ye na’ come back again”
— (violins)
“O wert thou in the cauld
blast” — (Duet & violins)
“My love she’s but a Lassie
yet” — (violin duet)
Imitation bagpipes (violins —
Dr. & Mrs. Doherty)
“Auld Lang Syne” (closing —
chorus & violins)
Two gentlemen direct from the
heather were present, Mr. Brownie, referred to above, and Rev. McKendrick, of
Economy, who faced the inclement weather to be present, and who in the course
of a few remarks, stated that he had never yet failed to be present at a Burns
celebration, and it afforded him pleasure to attend here by special invitation.
A vote of thanks was tendered to Miss Morris, violinist, of
Londonderry, and also to Miss Abby Spencer and others, including the orchestra,
for their generous assistance.
Miss Annie Gould presided at the organ. The violinists
included Dr. and Mrs. Doherty, Mrs. D.W. Blaikie, Misses Winnie Morris, Belle Chisholm
and Hattie Carter. The soloists, Misses Abby Spencer, Annie Moraesh and Maggie
Chisholm.
Whilst leaving the hall the idea suddenly occurred to Mr.
Aubrey Smith, of Londonderry, that Great Village had a really truly living
poet, in the person of Rev. A.L. Fraser, author of “Songs and Sonnets,” and
other poems (the latest being part of his address on “Burns” in poetry, which
we hope will be reproduced in print), where upon three cheers for “Our Poet”
were called upon for by Mr. Smith and the building resounded with hearty good
cheers and a “tiger.” Thus was brought to a close what proved to be a
successful and enjoyable evening’s entertainment in honour of the immortal bard
Burns. One Present. TDN
Burns does
not appear often in Bishop’s oeuvre (indeed, no where that I know of in
her published poetry or prose). The only reference to him in the Library of
America’s Bishop: Poems, Prose, and Letters is on page 704, in notes
towards an essay entitled “Writing poetry is an unnatural act….” She wrote
cryptically: “Burns: — lacks mystery, maybe — but — weaker in the mystery.” A much more
positive statement is found on page 37 in Words in Air, the
Bishop-Lowell correspondence. In a 30 May 1948 letter she observed: “Marianne
[Moore] has a very nice, old-fashioned steel-engraving of Burns in the front
hall. I admired it; said I hoped sometime to write something about him, &
didn’t he look nice. She replied, ‘But he couldn’t have looked that nice,
really, of course’.” Lowell had to have his say about Burns and in a 2 July
1948 letter he declaimed:
Read a good
essay on Burns in an anthology of essays gotten together by F.R. Leavis. I
guess he’s really quite a first rate poet, and I’ve followed fashion in
ignoring him. It’s funny, because his rhythms and stanzas are technical
fire-works just on the surface. Then so much experience or observation. I don’t
know which, for I’ve never soaked in him and have trouble with Scots — more
verbs I have to look up than a French poet. (WIA, 40-41)
Even if the
“great and grand” Burns Night was something of a departure for the Literary
Society of Great Village, the TDN records other such events in the
village in later years (for example, in January 1923). It will be of no
surprise, however, that “Burns Nights” events have been common in many parts of
“New Scotland” from the nineteenth century right into the twenty-first.7 Indeed, there is still a Burns Society
in Nova Scotia.8 So important was the Scottish national poet to the province that in
1919 a group of admirers funded the casting of a magnificent bronze of the bard,
which still stands in Victoria Park in downtown Halifax, N.S. This impressive
statue represents decades of celebrations similar to that long-ago Great
Village gathering.
(Burns bronze statue in Halifax, N.S.
Photo by Susan Kerslake)
Perhaps
Burns was not as direct and identifiable an influence on Elizabeth Bishop as
was Herbert, Hopkins or Baudelaire, whom she studied and imitated at Vassar; but
as a child she was “soaked” in the oral culture and traditions in Great
Village, many of which were deeply influenced by the poetry and lyrics of
Burns. These conditions were not located in a specific moment, event or impact
(though there were such things, as noted above); but rather were part of the
“yonder lea” of lateral and diffuse effect, an aural and imaginative landscape,
what Bishop once described (in relation to her mother) as “the elements
speaking: earth, air, fire, water.” (PPL 118) Culture operates in ways
similar to mycorrhizal networks in forests, nutrients from ancient (let us say
“mother”) trees seeping through the earth, through intricate interconnections,
reaching the young growth often distant from the original sources.
Recently,
in conversation with an elder friend with a deep Scottish ancestry (she was
born and raised in Cape Breton), who lives in Bridgetown (my home town) in the
Annapolis Valley of Nova Scotia, she noted that “Burns Nights” were annual events
at the Bridgetown United Church, where she attended for decades. Growing up
there, I completely gapped these events, as my immediate family was not
church-going in the least. Remarkably, these “nights” are still happening. I
learned of one such event taking place in Bridgetown on 20 January 2024, at the
local Royal Canadian Legion (there was even haggis on the dinner menu).
(Page from The Reader announcing a Burns Night
in Bridgetown,
2024. Ad in the top right corner.
Click to enlarge image.)
Yet again,
during a conversation about Burns with another elder friend in Middleton (where
I now live, not that far from Bridgetown, I might add), she remembered a
songbook she used in school during the 1940s that contained songs from around
the world.9
There are two Burns songs: “Ye Banks and Braes” and “O, wert thou in the cauld
blast” (Mendelssohn’s setting). My friend remembers vividly singing the latter
and went in search of the songbook, which she retrieved and proceeded to sing a
few bars of the sad and aching song that had meant so much to Gertrude Bulmer
Bishop.
My
intention with this brief essay is to convey something of the abiding presence
of Burns in Nova Scotia, rather idiosyncratically, I know, and his soft impact
on Bishop. I have had such fun in the process. What was a surprise: more
delightful conversations than I expected when I took up this subject, revealing
to me the persistence of Burns in this part of the world. Burns’s hold on
mainstream imagination has diluted to almost nothing, sadly, but that is
perhaps a reflection of the general decline of interest in poetry and history,
no reflection on Burns. But one could suppose that Bishop herself might be
inclined to attend one of theese “Burns Nights.” (I suspect the pandemic
curtailed them, as it did most other gatherings, but it is nice to see one
happen so recently, at least in Bridgetown! I confess, I did not brave
inclement January weather, as did Rev. McKendrick, though Economy is about the
same distance from Great Village as Middleton is from Bridgetown, so I missed
out on the haggis.)
(“O, Wert Thou in the Cauld Blast" pages in the songbook.)
********************
NOTES
1. https://www.bbc.co.uk/arts/robertburns/works/o_wert_thou_in_the_cauld_blast/
2. During World
War I the young men of Great Village enlisted in a variety of battalions,
brigades and regiments. One of the first regiments to recruit was the 6th
Canadian Mounted Rifles, which mobilized on 17 March 1915 in Amherst, N.S. The
106th Battalion, Nova Scotia Rifles, was authorized on 8 November 1915, with
headquarters in Truro and companies at Truro and Springhill. These young men
also joined medical corps and siege batteries. The battalion which most
impressed Bishop, which was at the peak of its recruitment activity during
1916, was the 193rd Battalion, authorized on 24 January and commissioned “as a
Highland Brigade Battalion...on February 23, 1916.” “The territory of the
Battalion embraced the six Eastern Counties of the Mainland — Cumberland,
Colchester, Hants, Pictou, Antigonish and Guysboro, with headquarters in Truro.
Within one month the Battalion was over strength.” (Stuart M. Hunt, Nova
Scotia’s Part in the Great War, 1920) Decades later, Bishop vividly
remembered the Great Village lads of this battalion:
In Nova Scotia the soldiers, some of whom I actually knew, wore beautiful
tam-o’-shanters with thistles and other insignia on them. When they got dressed
up, they wore kilts and sporrans. One of them had come courting my young aunt
in this superb costume, carrying a swagger stick, and let me examine him all
over. The Johnny-get-your-gun type of soldier in Worcester seemed very drab to
me. (CPr 28)
(Harold Spencer of Great Village in his Highland
Brigade Battalion regalia, circa 1916)
3. https://tunearch.org/wiki/Annotation:Lass_of_Livingstone_(The). I have learned that Mendelssohn spent some time in Scotland and I find
it so interesting that he chose this short, aching song to set.
4. In the literary criticism, academic scholarship and
biographical literature about Bishop, Gertrude Bulmer Bishop has been treated
with great disrespect. She has been dismissed as “mad” or completely ignored,
an absent figure at best and at worst a terrible burden to her daughter. Just
who she was has not mattered, it seems, in the least. I have spent a lot of
time writing about this foundational relationship: the mother-daughter dyad,
which was a complex and profound influence on Bishop’s life and work in my own
still unpublished biographical study, Lifting Yesterday: Elizabeth Bishop
and Nova Scotia.
5. https://pennyspoetry.fandom.com/wiki/Alexander_Louis_Fraser. Though retired by the time Bishop
appeared in Great Village, Fraser continued to visit the village regularly
throughout the 1920s and early 1930s.
6. https://canadianpoetry.org/2016/07/05/by-cobequid-bay/
7. https://www.dal.ca/news/2013/01/24/robert-burns-day--celebrating-scotland-s-most-famous-poet.html
8. https://www.halifaxburnsclub.org/index.html
9. This songbook was used for many years across Canada. The copy my
friend has is well-worn from frequent use.
(Title page of songbook.
Courtesy of Janet Parker Vaughan.)