I fear for my songs; however, a few may please, yet originality is a coy feature in composition, and in a multiplicity of efforts in the same style, disappears altogether. For these three thousand years, we poetic folks have been describing the spring, for instance; and as the spring continues the same, there must soon be a sameness in the imagery, &c., of these said rhyming folks. A great critic (Aikin) on songs, says that love and wine are the exclusive themes for song-writing. The following is on neither subject, and consequently is no song; but will be allowed, I think, to be two or three pretty good prose thoughts inverted into rhyme. Is there for honest poverty.[275] I do not give you the foregoing song for your book, but merely by way of vive la bagatelle; for the piece is not really poetry. How will the following do for "Craigieburn-wood?"— Sweet fa's the eve on Craigieburn.[276] Farewell! God bless you! R. B.
Letter № 310 · CCCX
To Mr. Thomson
January 1795
Footnotes
- 275. Song CCLXIV.
- 276. Song CCXLV.
- Recipient
- Mr. Thomson
- Dated
- January 1795
- Source
- Project Gutenberg #18500 — The Complete Works of Robert Burns (ed. Allan Cunningham)