Skip navigation
London Review of Books London Review Bookshop

Bad Shepherd subscriber-only content

Robert Crawford

  • The Collected Works of James Hogg. Vol. VIII: The ‘Spy’ edited by Gillian Hughes

For those brought up to associate Scottishness with silence, exile and cunning, much Scots verse sounds megaphonically noisy. ‘You’ve a good Scots tongue in your heid,’ generations of mothers have told their children, preparing them to meet royalty, headmasters, Sloane Rangers or public transport officials. This lore of speaking out is evident in the poetry of thieving, upstart medieval bagpipers (as ventriloquised by Lowland poets) or, even further back, of the saintly immigrant, Columba, bringing the celestial house down with his apocalyptic organ-blasts of aureate Latin. The percussive, masculinist Scottish muse lets rip through the rat-a-tat of Blind Hary’s Wallace; and in the brassy Reformation of John Knox it blares even in the sophisticated George Buchanan’s over-the-top ‘Elegy for Jean Calvin’. The volume remains high in some of Robert Fergusson’s sophistic-performative street-talk, Burns’s on-off, rip-roaring ‘Tam o’Shanter’, MacDiarmid’s last trump blawing ‘tootle-ootle-oo’, Edwin Morgan’s Loch Ness Monstering ‘Splgraw fok fok splgrafhatchgabrlgabrl fok splfok!’ and Kathleen Jamie’s equally exclamatory concluding line ‘THE QUEEN OF SHEBA!’ The orality of Scottish poetry is of the battlefield and pulpit. It does contain subtleties, even in the brass section, but it’s seldom averse to a yell.

subscriber-only content Subscribers to the print edition can log in to view the entire article. For information about subscribing to the London Review of Books click here. This article is available for purchase online. Buy this article.

Robert Crawford, whose Selected Poems were published in 2005, teaches at St Andrews.

LRB cover artwork

From the archive

Impossible Wishes
Michael Wood on Thomas Mann

Four-Day Caesar
Mary Beard: Tacitus and the Emperors

Short Cuts
Thomas Jones on Aristophanes

High-Meriting, Low-Descended
John Mullan: The Unpolished Pamela

Shoe-Contemplative
David Bromwich on The Day-Star of Liberty: William Hazlitt’s Radical Style by Tom Paulin