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James Hogg

James Hogg (1770 – 21 November 1835) was a Scottish poet, novelist and essayist who wrote in both Scots and English. As a young man he worked as a shepherd and farmhand, and was largely self-educated through reading. He was a friend of many of the great writers of his day, including Sir Walter Scott, of whom he later wrote an unauthorised biography. He became widely known as the "Ettrick Shepherd", a nickname under which some of his works were published, and the character name he was given in the widely read series Noctes Ambrosianae, published in Blackwood's Magazine. He is best known today for his novel The Private Memoirs and Confessions of a Justified Sinner. His other works include the long poem The Queen's Wake (1813), his collection of songs Jacobite Relics (1819), and his two novels The Three Perils of Man (1822), and The Three Perils of Woman (1823).

James Hogg
Bornbefore 9 December 1770
Ettrick, Selkirkshire, Scotland
Died21 November 1835 (aged 64)
Ettrick, Selkirkshire, Scotland
Occupation
  • Novelist
  • essayist
  • poet
  • biographer
  • journalist
Period1794–1835
Notable worksThe Private Memoirs and Confessions of a Justified Sinner
SpouseMargaret Phillips
ChildrenElizabeth Hogg; James Robert Hogg; Harriet Sidney Hogg; Jessie Hogg; Margaret Lydia Hogg; Mary Gray Garden; Catherine Hogg
Live head cast of James Hogg, Scottish National Portrait Gallery

Biography Edit

Early life Edit

James Hogg was born on a small farm near Ettrick, Selkirkshire, Scotland in 1770 and was baptised there on 9 December, his actual date of birth having never been recorded.[1][2] His father, Robert Hogg (1729–1820), was a tenant farmer while his mother, Margaret Hogg (née Laidlaw) (1730–1813), was noted for collecting native Scottish ballads.[1][3] Margaret Laidlaw's father, known as Will o' Phawhope, was said to have been the last man in the Border country to speak with the fairies.[4] James was the second eldest of four brothers, his siblings being William, David, and Robert (from eldest to youngest).[5] Robert and David later emigrated to the United States, while James and William remained in Scotland for their entire lives.[5]

James attended a parish school for a few months before his education was stopped due to his father's bankruptcy as a stock-farmer and sheep-dealer. Robert Hogg was then given the position of shepherd at Ettrickhouse farm by one of his neighbours. James worked as a farm servant throughout his childhood, tending cows, doing general farm work, and acting as a shepherd's assistant. His early experiences of literature and story telling came from the Bible and his mother's and uncle's stories.[6] In 1784 he purchased a fiddle with money that he had saved, and taught himself how to play it. In 1785 he served a year working for a tenant farmer at Singlee. In 1786 he went to work for Mr. Laidlaw of Ellibank, staying with him for eighteen months. In 1788 he was given his first job as a shepherd by Laidlaw's father, a farmer at Willenslee. He stayed here for two years, learning to read while tending sheep, and being given newspapers and theological works by his employer's wife.[7]

 
The farmhouse at Blackhouse, where Hogg worked as a young man

In 1790 he began ten years of service to James Laidlaw of Blackhouse in the Yarrow valley. Hogg later said that Laidlaw was more like a father to him than an employer. Seeing how hard he was working to improve himself, Laidlaw offered to help by making books available for Hogg from his own library, and through a local lending library. Hogg also began composing songs to be sung by local girls. He became a lifelong friend of his master's son, William Laidlaw, himself a minor writer and later the amanuensis of Walter Scott. It was at this time that Hogg, his eldest brother, and several cousins, formed a debating society of shepherds.[8]

Hogg first became familiar with the work of the recently deceased Robert Burns in 1797, after having the poem Tam o' Shanter read to him. During this period Hogg wrote plays and pastorals, and continued producing songs. His work as a sheep drover stimulated an interest in the Scottish Highlands. In 1800 he left Blackhouse to help take care of his parents at Ettrickhouse. Early in 1801 he published a booklet Scottish Pastorals. His patriotic song "Donald Macdonald", printed as a broadside probably in 1803, achieved considerable popularity.[9]

Career Edit

In 1801 Hogg was recruited to collect ballads for Walter Scott's collection Minstrelsy of the Scottish Border. He met Scott himself the following year and began working for the Edinburgh Magazine.[10] In the summer of 1802 he embarked on the first of three tours of the Highlands with a view to securing a farm of his own.[11] He eventually found a farm on Harris but due to trouble with his finances and a legal issue he was unable to secure a lease by 1804. He may not have been really committed to the project in any case.[12] His experiences on his Highland tours were described in letters to Scott which were published in the Scots Magazine.[13][14] On his way back to Ettrickhouse in 1803 he dined with the novelist John Galt in Greenock. In 1805–06 he worked as a shepherd in Dumfriesshire, meeting the poet Allan Cunningham and becoming friends with him and his family. In October 1806 he became the lover of a young woman named Catherine Henderson, and in the same autumn he attempted unsuccessfully to establish himself as an independent farmer.[15]

Hogg's first collection, The Mountain Bard, was published in February 1807 by Constable. At the end of summer 1807 his daughter by Catherine Henderson was born, baptised on 13 December as Catherine Hogg. In 1837 she married David Lauder[16] and they named their son James Hogg Lauder.[17] Catherine Henderson herself went on to marry David Laidlaw in 1812.[18] Hogg continued working as a sheep-grazer for other farmers, but his debts began to grow throughout 1808–1809. At the end of 1809 he began an affair with Margaret Beattie, and soon after absconded from his creditors, returning in disgrace to Ettrick.[15]

In 1810 Hogg moved to Edinburgh to start a literary career. In March 1810 his daughter by Margaret Beattie was born, christened Elizabeth Hogg in June. At the end of 1810 he met his future wife Margaret Phillips. His magazine The Spy, begun in 1810, ended after a year. At this time he became a founder member of a debating society called The Forum, eventually serving as its secretary. In 1812 he composed a long poetical work. The Queen's Wake (the setting of which was the return to Scotland of Mary, Queen of Scots in 1561 after her exile in France) was published early in 1813 and was a success. It was, in the guise of a competition, a collection of verse tales, of which Kilmeny became and remained the best known. At the end of 1813 Hogg began writing a narrative poem Mador of the Moor set in the central Highlands; he completed it the spring of 1814 but it was not published for another two years.[19]

In 1814 Hogg completed a visionary poetic narrative The Pilgrims of the Sun in three weeks, and in the same year he met William Wordsworth and made a visit to the Lake District to see Wordsworth and other poets. In 1815 the Duke of Buccleuch granted him a small farm at Eltrive Moss, where he could live rent-free for his lifetime. He continued to write songs and poems, including "The Field of Waterloo" and "To the Ancient Banner of Buccleuch". His poem Mador of the Moor was published in 1816. Later in the year he published his collection of parodies The Poetic Mirror, achieving a marked success.[20]

 
James Hogg, detail of an oil painting by William Nicholson

Hogg first met the publisher William Blackwood in the aftermath of his own publisher John Goldie's 1814 bankruptcy, and in 1817 he helped with the start of Blackwood's Edinburgh Monthly Magazine.[21] He published his two volume collection Dramatic Tales in May. In 1818 his collection The Brownie of Bodsbeck; and Other Tales was published by Blackwood. At this time Hogg was busy with his work Jacobite Relics. In 1819 he proposed marriage to Margaret Phillips. At the end of the year he published the first volume of Jacobite Relics. He married Margaret Phillips on 28 April 1820. His second tales collection Winter Evening Tales was published a month later. At the end of the year his father died. The second volume of Jacobite Relics was published in February 1821, and his son James Robert Hogg was born in March 1821. Around this time, Hogg began having serious financial problems.[22]

It was through the Edinburgh Monthly Magazine, soon renamed Blackwood's Magazine, that Hogg found fame, although it was not the sort that he wanted. Launched as a counter-blast to the Whig Edinburgh Review, Blackwood wanted punchy content in his new publication. He found his ideal contributors in John Wilson (who wrote as Christopher North) and John Gibson Lockhart (later Walter Scott's son-in-law and biographer). Their first published article, "The Chaldee Manuscript", a thinly disguised satire of Edinburgh society in biblical language which Hogg started and Wilson and Lockhart elaborated, was so controversial[23] that Wilson fled and Blackwood was forced to apologise. Soon Blackwood's Tory views and reviews – often scurrilous attacks on other writers – were notorious, and the magazine, or "Maga" as it came to be known, had become one of the best-selling journals of its day.

But Hogg quickly found himself forced out of the inner circle. As other writers such as Walter Maginn and Thomas de Quincey joined, he became not merely excluded from the lion's share of publication in Maga, but a figure of fun in its pages. Wilson and Lockhart were dangerous friends. Hogg's Memoirs of the Author's Life were savagely attacked by an anonymous reviewer, causing Hogg to temporarily break with Blackwood's, and go to work for Constable's smaller Edinburgh Magazine.[24]

In 1822 the Maga launched the Noctes Ambrosianae or "Nights at Ambrose's", imaginary conversations in a drinking-den between semi-fictional characters such as North, O'Doherty, The Opium Eater and the Ettrick Shepherd. The Shepherd was Hogg.[24] The Noctes continued until 1834, and were written after 1825 mostly by Wilson, although other writers, including Hogg himself, had a hand in them. The Shepherd of the Noctes is a part-animal, part-rural simpleton, and part-savant. He became one of the best-known figures in topical literary affairs, famous throughout Britain and its colonies. Quite what the real James Hogg made of this is mostly unknown, although some of his letters to Blackwood and others express outrage and anguish.

 
An etching of James Hogg, published 1855

Hogg's Poetical Works in four volumes were published in 1822, as was his novel The Three Perils of Man. In 1823, in debt to Blackwood, Hogg began publishing his work The Shepherd's Calendar in Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine. Hogg's daughter Jessie was born in April, and later in the year he published his novel The Three Perils of Woman. In June 1824 he published his best known work, the novel The Private Memoirs and Confessions of a Justified Sinner. His epic poem Queen Hynde was published at the end of the year. In 1825 he found a new and lucrative market for his works as he began publishing in a literary annual called the Literary Souvenir.[24]

In 1825 Hogg's daughter Maggie was born, and he began writing a new prose work, later titled Tales of the Wars of Montrose. In 1826 Hogg was in serious trouble with his debts, while the firm of Constable collapsed, involving Walter Scott and Hogg's friend John Aiken. In 1827 his debts began to lighten as his Shepherd's Calendar pieces were being published, and he was getting more and more applications to contribute to annuals. The death of his father-in-law, whose family Hogg had been supporting, gave him relief. His third daughter Harriet was born at the end of the year. Hogg's collection Select and Rare Scotish Melodies was published in 1829, and he continued to write songs and contribute to annuals throughout 1828–29, while The Shepherd's Calendar was published in book form in Spring, 1829.[25]

Later life Edit

 
Ettrick Parish Church, where Hogg is buried
 
James Hogg as depicted on the Scott Monument

In 1830 he started publishing in the new Fraser's Magazine, which helped to alleviate a further financial crisis,[26] and at the end of the year he met with Walter Scott for the last time. In early 1831 Hogg's Songs, by The Ettrick Shepherd was published, but the publishing of the companion volume A Queer Book was held up by Blackwood. Hogg's last child, his daughter Mary, was born in August. At the end of the year he quarrelled with Blackwood, and decided to publish his works in London. In 1832 his Altrive Tales was published in London, while Blackwood finally published A Queer Book in April or May. Hogg was offered a large sum to edit a collection of the works of Robert Burns, but the bankruptcy of his London publisher stopped the publication of his Altrive Tales after the first of the twelve projected volumes.[27]

In 1833 Hogg had an accident while curling, falling through the ice, causing a serious illness. In 1834 his biographical work Familiar Anecdotes of Sir Walter Scott was published in the United States, while a pirated version published in Glasgow led to a break with Lockhart. Hogg mended his relationship with Blackwood in May, but Blackwood died at the end of the year. Hogg published Tales of the Wars of Montrose in March 1835.

Death Edit

James Hogg died on 21 November 1835 and was buried in Ettrick Churchyard, close to his childhood home in the Scottish Borders.[28] In 2021, it was reported that his grave had been preemptively toppled by Scottish Borders Council out of safety concerns and that independent restoration efforts were planned by the community.[29]

Wordsworth's "Extempore Effusion upon the Death of James Hogg", written on the 30th of November, nine days after Hogg's death,[30] includes the lines:

The mighty Minstrel breathes no longer,
'Mid mouldering ruins low he lies;
And death upon the braes of Yarrow,
Has closed the Shepherd-poet's eyes.

This eulogy notwithstanding, Wordsworth's notes state "He was undoubtedly a man of original genius, but of coarse manners and low and offensive opinions."[31]

Legacy Edit

Among the reading public at large Hogg was, during his lifetime, one of the most admired writers of the day, but this admiration was largely for his success in overcoming the disadvantages of his peasant birth and lack of education. He was considered a man of great natural genius whose uncouth style and subject-matter, so natural for the clownish figure depicted in the Noctes Ambrosianae, should not be held against him.[32] A collected edition of his works was published in the 1830s, after Hogg's death, pruned of some passages which offended the increasing delicacy of the age, and another Works of the Ettrick Shepherd was prepared in the 1860s which took the process even further; some works, for example The Three Perils of Woman, were excluded altogether. Victorian readers of these emasculated texts naturally came to the conclusion that Hogg had been overrated, and that he was notable mainly as an example of triumph over adverse circumstances.[33][34][35] Apart from Justified Sinner, which even his detractors acknowledged as unusually powerful (and often attributed to someone else, usually Lockhart), his novels were regarded as turgid, his verse as light, his short tales and articles as ephemera.

 
James Hogg monument at St Mary's Loch by Andrew Currie

This situation only began to change in 1924, when the French writer André Gide was loaned Justified Sinner by Raymond Mortimer. Gide was amazed, writing that "It is long since I can remember being so taken hold of, so voluptuously tormented by any book."[36] Its republication in 1947, with an enthusiastic introduction by Gide,[37] helped bring about the modern critical and academic appreciation of this novel. Growing interest in The Confessions led to the rediscovery and reconsideration of his other work in the late 20th and early 21st centuries. Now his novel The Three Perils of Woman is also considered a classic and all his work, including his letters, is undergoing major publication in the Stirling/South Carolina editions. However, Justified Sinner remains his most important work and is now seen as one of the major Scottish novels of its time, and absolutely crucial in terms of exploring one of the key themes of Scottish culture and identity: Calvinism. In a 2006 interview with Melvyn Bragg for ITV1, Scottish novelist Irvine Welsh cited Hogg, especially The Confessions as a major influence on his writing. A James Hogg Society was founded in 1981 to encourage the study of his life and writings.[38] Hogg's story "The Brownie of the Black Haggs" was dramatised for BBC Radio 4 in 2003 by Scottish playwright Marty Ross as part of his "Darker Side of the Border" series. More recently Ross returned to the villain of that story, Merodach, making him the villain of a Doctor Who audiobook, Night's Black Agents (Big Finish Productions 2010), in which this demonic figure assumes the pose of a Minister of the Kirk.

Thomas Wilson's Opera, The Confessions of a Justified Sinner (1972–75), commissioned by Scottish Opera, is based on the novel.[citation needed]

A bill he issued to purchase £50 worth of lambs in 1824 is exhibited in the Museum on the Mound, Edinburgh.[39]

Hogg is a direct ancestor of Nobel Prize-winning Canadian writer Alice Munro.[40]

Works Edit

Poetry Edit

Non-fiction Edit

Prose fiction Edit

Songs Edit

See also Edit

Footnotes Edit

  1. ^ a b Hughes, Gillian (5 November 2001). "James Hogg". The Literary Encyclopedia. Retrieved 1 April 2009.
  2. ^ In "Biographical Sketch of the Ettrick Shepherd," the Rev. Thomas Thomson states: "The subject of our memoir was born, according to his own account, in 1772, and on the 25th of January(...)." (Hogg, James (1876). The Works of the Ettrick Shepherd : Centenary Edition. with a Memoir of the Author by the Rev. Thomas Thomson ... Poems and Life. with Many Illustrative Engravings. London: Blackie & Son. pp. ix.). In an obituary, published 3 December 1835, it was stated that his date of birth was on 25 January 1772 ("Memoir of James Hogg". Fife Herald. 3 December 1835. Retrieved 30 March 2023.)
  3. ^ Gilbert, Suzanne (19 May 2006). . University of Stirling. Archived from the original on 21 July 2011. Retrieved 1 April 2009.
  4. ^ Buchan, John (1961). Sir Walter Scott. Cassell. p. 62.
  5. ^ a b . University of Stirling. Archived from the original on 21 July 2011. Retrieved 1 April 2009.
  6. ^ Duncan (2004), p. xlvi.
  7. ^ Duncan (2004) pp. xlvi–xlvii
  8. ^ Duncan (2004) p. xlvii
  9. ^ James Hogg, The Forest Minstrel, ed. P. D. Garside and Richard D. Jackson (Edinburgh 2006), 348–50.
  10. ^ Batho (1927) pp. 18–22
  11. ^ Gilkison, Bruce (2016), Walking with James Hogg, Edinburgh University Press
  12. ^ Gillian Hughes, James Hogg: A Life (Edinburgh, 2007), pp. 55–56.
  13. ^ Laughlan, William F. (Ed.) (1981), James Hogg Highland Tours: The Ettrick Shepherd's Travels in the Scottish Highlands in 1802, 1803 and 1804, Byway Books, Hawick
  14. ^ De Groot, H.F. (Ed.), Highland Journeys, The Collected Works of James Hogg, Stirling /South Carolina Edition, Edinburgh University Press
  15. ^ a b Duncan (2004) p. xlviii; Hughes (2007), pp. 73–77.
  16. ^ Old Parish Registers for St. Cuthbert's, Edinburgh, marriage took place on 20 November 1837
  17. ^ Informant on his mother's Death Certificate 17 August 1857.
  18. ^ Old Parish Registers for Ettrick, Roxburghshire
  19. ^ Hughes (2007), pp. 119–23, 142.
  20. ^ Duncan (2004) pp. xlix–l
  21. ^ Batho (1927) pp. 69, 93–94
  22. ^ Duncan (2004) p. li
  23. ^ Duncan (2004) p. l
  24. ^ a b c Duncan (2004) p. lii
  25. ^ Duncan (2004) p. liii; Hughes (2007), pp. 225, 255.
  26. ^ Hughes (2007), pp. 220–22.
  27. ^ Duncan (2004) p. liv
  28. ^ Duncan (2004) p. lv
  29. ^ "'Worst damage since Cromwell' leaves James Hogg's grave devastated". The National.
  30. ^ 'The Ettrick Shepherd' Staffordshire Advertiser - Saturday 12 December 1835
  31. ^ Wordsworth, William (1835) "Extempore Effusion upon the Death of James Hogg" 19 May 2009 at the Wayback Machine Virginia University. Retrieved 25 July 209.
  32. ^ Hogg, James (2004). Anecdotes of Scott. Edinburgh, UK: Edinburgh University Press. pp. v–vi. ISBN 0-7486-2085-0.
  33. ^ Hogg, James (2004). Anecdotes of Scott. Edinburgh, UK: Edinburgh University Press. p. vi. ISBN 0-7486-2085-0.
  34. ^ Mack, Douglas S. (2004). "Oxford Dictionary of National Biography". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/13470. Retrieved 19 March 2012. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  35. ^ "The Cambridge History of English and American Literature". Bartleby. 1907–1921. Retrieved 19 March 2012.
  36. ^ Hogg, James (2007). The Private Memoirs and Confessions of a Justified Sinner; Afterword. Edinburgh, UK: Canongate. ISBN 978-1-84195-958-0.
  37. ^ Hogg, James (1947). The Private Memoirs and Confessions of a Justified Sinner. London, UK: Cresset.
  38. ^ "The James Hogg Society". University of Stirling. Retrieved 19 March 2012.
  39. ^ Wall text from The Bank on the Mound, Museum on the Mound, Edinburgh.
  40. ^ Taylor, Catherine (10 October 2013). "For Alice Munro, small is beautiful" – via www.telegraph.co.uk.
  41. ^ Bibliographic information from:Bleiler, Everett (1948). The Checklist of Fantastic Literature. Chicago: Shasta Publishers. p. 110.

References Edit

Further reading Edit

  • Parr, Norah (1980), James Hogg at Home: Being the Domestic Life and Letters of the Ettrick Shepherd , Douglas S. Mack, Dollar, ISBN 9780950541624
  • Petrie, Elaine E. (1981), Hogg at Home and Abroad, review of The Private Memoirs and Confessions of a Justified Sinner, in Murray, Glen (ed.), Cencrastus No. 6, Autumn 1981, pp. 39 & 40
  • Gilkison, Bruce (2016), Walking with James Hogg: The Ettrick Shepherd's Journeys through Scotland, Edinburgh University Press, ISBN 978-1-4744-1538-5

External links Edit

  • Works by James Hogg in eBook form at Standard Ebooks
  • Works by James Hogg at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by James Hogg at Faded Page (Canada)
  • Works by or about James Hogg at Internet Archive
  • Works by James Hogg at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  
  • James Hogg (1822) The Three Perils of Man; or, War, Women, and Witchcraft Google eBook
  • James Hogg (1823) The Three Perils of Woman: or, Love, Leasing, and Jealousy
  • The James Hogg Society 29 April 2009 at the Wayback Machine by the Department of English Studies, University of Stirling
  • BBC – Writing Scotland – James Hogg
  • James Hogg Collection. General Collection, Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library.
  • Lock the door Lariston

james, hogg, other, people, named, disambiguation, 1770, november, 1835, scottish, poet, novelist, essayist, wrote, both, scots, english, young, worked, shepherd, farmhand, largely, self, educated, through, reading, friend, many, great, writers, including, wal. For other people named James Hogg see James Hogg disambiguation James Hogg 1770 21 November 1835 was a Scottish poet novelist and essayist who wrote in both Scots and English As a young man he worked as a shepherd and farmhand and was largely self educated through reading He was a friend of many of the great writers of his day including Sir Walter Scott of whom he later wrote an unauthorised biography He became widely known as the Ettrick Shepherd a nickname under which some of his works were published and the character name he was given in the widely read series Noctes Ambrosianae published in Blackwood s Magazine He is best known today for his novel The Private Memoirs and Confessions of a Justified Sinner His other works include the long poem The Queen s Wake 1813 his collection of songs Jacobite Relics 1819 and his two novels The Three Perils of Man 1822 and The Three Perils of Woman 1823 James HoggPortrait by Sir John Watson Gordon 1830 Scottish National Gallery Bornbefore 9 December 1770Ettrick Selkirkshire ScotlandDied21 November 1835 aged 64 Ettrick Selkirkshire ScotlandOccupationNovelist essayist poet biographer journalistPeriod1794 1835Notable worksThe Private Memoirs and Confessions of a Justified SinnerSpouseMargaret PhillipsChildrenElizabeth Hogg James Robert Hogg Harriet Sidney Hogg Jessie Hogg Margaret Lydia Hogg Mary Gray Garden Catherine HoggLive head cast of James Hogg Scottish National Portrait Gallery Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life 1 2 Career 1 3 Later life 1 4 Death 2 Legacy 3 Works 3 1 Poetry 3 2 Non fiction 3 3 Prose fiction 3 4 Songs 4 See also 5 Footnotes 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksBiography EditEarly life Edit James Hogg was born on a small farm near Ettrick Selkirkshire Scotland in 1770 and was baptised there on 9 December his actual date of birth having never been recorded 1 2 His father Robert Hogg 1729 1820 was a tenant farmer while his mother Margaret Hogg nee Laidlaw 1730 1813 was noted for collecting native Scottish ballads 1 3 Margaret Laidlaw s father known as Will o Phawhope was said to have been the last man in the Border country to speak with the fairies 4 James was the second eldest of four brothers his siblings being William David and Robert from eldest to youngest 5 Robert and David later emigrated to the United States while James and William remained in Scotland for their entire lives 5 James attended a parish school for a few months before his education was stopped due to his father s bankruptcy as a stock farmer and sheep dealer Robert Hogg was then given the position of shepherd at Ettrickhouse farm by one of his neighbours James worked as a farm servant throughout his childhood tending cows doing general farm work and acting as a shepherd s assistant His early experiences of literature and story telling came from the Bible and his mother s and uncle s stories 6 In 1784 he purchased a fiddle with money that he had saved and taught himself how to play it In 1785 he served a year working for a tenant farmer at Singlee In 1786 he went to work for Mr Laidlaw of Ellibank staying with him for eighteen months In 1788 he was given his first job as a shepherd by Laidlaw s father a farmer at Willenslee He stayed here for two years learning to read while tending sheep and being given newspapers and theological works by his employer s wife 7 nbsp The farmhouse at Blackhouse where Hogg worked as a young manIn 1790 he began ten years of service to James Laidlaw of Blackhouse in the Yarrow valley Hogg later said that Laidlaw was more like a father to him than an employer Seeing how hard he was working to improve himself Laidlaw offered to help by making books available for Hogg from his own library and through a local lending library Hogg also began composing songs to be sung by local girls He became a lifelong friend of his master s son William Laidlaw himself a minor writer and later the amanuensis of Walter Scott It was at this time that Hogg his eldest brother and several cousins formed a debating society of shepherds 8 Hogg first became familiar with the work of the recently deceased Robert Burns in 1797 after having the poem Tam o Shanter read to him During this period Hogg wrote plays and pastorals and continued producing songs His work as a sheep drover stimulated an interest in the Scottish Highlands In 1800 he left Blackhouse to help take care of his parents at Ettrickhouse Early in 1801 he published a booklet Scottish Pastorals His patriotic song Donald Macdonald printed as a broadside probably in 1803 achieved considerable popularity 9 Career Edit In 1801 Hogg was recruited to collect ballads for Walter Scott s collection Minstrelsy of the Scottish Border He met Scott himself the following year and began working for the Edinburgh Magazine 10 In the summer of 1802 he embarked on the first of three tours of the Highlands with a view to securing a farm of his own 11 He eventually found a farm on Harris but due to trouble with his finances and a legal issue he was unable to secure a lease by 1804 He may not have been really committed to the project in any case 12 His experiences on his Highland tours were described in letters to Scott which were published in the Scots Magazine 13 14 On his way back to Ettrickhouse in 1803 he dined with the novelist John Galt in Greenock In 1805 06 he worked as a shepherd in Dumfriesshire meeting the poet Allan Cunningham and becoming friends with him and his family In October 1806 he became the lover of a young woman named Catherine Henderson and in the same autumn he attempted unsuccessfully to establish himself as an independent farmer 15 Hogg s first collection The Mountain Bard was published in February 1807 by Constable At the end of summer 1807 his daughter by Catherine Henderson was born baptised on 13 December as Catherine Hogg In 1837 she married David Lauder 16 and they named their son James Hogg Lauder 17 Catherine Henderson herself went on to marry David Laidlaw in 1812 18 Hogg continued working as a sheep grazer for other farmers but his debts began to grow throughout 1808 1809 At the end of 1809 he began an affair with Margaret Beattie and soon after absconded from his creditors returning in disgrace to Ettrick 15 In 1810 Hogg moved to Edinburgh to start a literary career In March 1810 his daughter by Margaret Beattie was born christened Elizabeth Hogg in June At the end of 1810 he met his future wife Margaret Phillips His magazine The Spy begun in 1810 ended after a year At this time he became a founder member of a debating society called The Forum eventually serving as its secretary In 1812 he composed a long poetical work The Queen s Wake the setting of which was the return to Scotland of Mary Queen of Scots in 1561 after her exile in France was published early in 1813 and was a success It was in the guise of a competition a collection of verse tales of which Kilmeny became and remained the best known At the end of 1813 Hogg began writing a narrative poem Mador of the Moor set in the central Highlands he completed it the spring of 1814 but it was not published for another two years 19 In 1814 Hogg completed a visionary poetic narrative The Pilgrims of the Sun in three weeks and in the same year he met William Wordsworth and made a visit to the Lake District to see Wordsworth and other poets In 1815 the Duke of Buccleuch granted him a small farm at Eltrive Moss where he could live rent free for his lifetime He continued to write songs and poems including The Field of Waterloo and To the Ancient Banner of Buccleuch His poem Mador of the Moor was published in 1816 Later in the year he published his collection of parodies The Poetic Mirror achieving a marked success 20 nbsp James Hogg detail of an oil painting by William NicholsonHogg first met the publisher William Blackwood in the aftermath of his own publisher John Goldie s 1814 bankruptcy and in 1817 he helped with the start of Blackwood s Edinburgh Monthly Magazine 21 He published his two volume collection Dramatic Tales in May In 1818 his collection The Brownie of Bodsbeck and Other Tales was published by Blackwood At this time Hogg was busy with his work Jacobite Relics In 1819 he proposed marriage to Margaret Phillips At the end of the year he published the first volume of Jacobite Relics He married Margaret Phillips on 28 April 1820 His second tales collection Winter Evening Tales was published a month later At the end of the year his father died The second volume of Jacobite Relics was published in February 1821 and his son James Robert Hogg was born in March 1821 Around this time Hogg began having serious financial problems 22 It was through the Edinburgh Monthly Magazine soon renamed Blackwood s Magazine that Hogg found fame although it was not the sort that he wanted Launched as a counter blast to the Whig Edinburgh Review Blackwood wanted punchy content in his new publication He found his ideal contributors in John Wilson who wrote as Christopher North and John Gibson Lockhart later Walter Scott s son in law and biographer Their first published article The Chaldee Manuscript a thinly disguised satire of Edinburgh society in biblical language which Hogg started and Wilson and Lockhart elaborated was so controversial 23 that Wilson fled and Blackwood was forced to apologise Soon Blackwood s Tory views and reviews often scurrilous attacks on other writers were notorious and the magazine or Maga as it came to be known had become one of the best selling journals of its day But Hogg quickly found himself forced out of the inner circle As other writers such as Walter Maginn and Thomas de Quincey joined he became not merely excluded from the lion s share of publication in Maga but a figure of fun in its pages Wilson and Lockhart were dangerous friends Hogg s Memoirs of the Author s Life were savagely attacked by an anonymous reviewer causing Hogg to temporarily break with Blackwood s and go to work for Constable s smaller Edinburgh Magazine 24 In 1822 the Maga launched the Noctes Ambrosianae or Nights at Ambrose s imaginary conversations in a drinking den between semi fictional characters such as North O Doherty The Opium Eater and the Ettrick Shepherd The Shepherd was Hogg 24 The Noctes continued until 1834 and were written after 1825 mostly by Wilson although other writers including Hogg himself had a hand in them The Shepherd of the Noctes is a part animal part rural simpleton and part savant He became one of the best known figures in topical literary affairs famous throughout Britain and its colonies Quite what the real James Hogg made of this is mostly unknown although some of his letters to Blackwood and others express outrage and anguish nbsp An etching of James Hogg published 1855Hogg s Poetical Works in four volumes were published in 1822 as was his novel The Three Perils of Man In 1823 in debt to Blackwood Hogg began publishing his work The Shepherd s Calendar in Blackwood s Edinburgh Magazine Hogg s daughter Jessie was born in April and later in the year he published his novel The Three Perils of Woman In June 1824 he published his best known work the novel The Private Memoirs and Confessions of a Justified Sinner His epic poem Queen Hynde was published at the end of the year In 1825 he found a new and lucrative market for his works as he began publishing in a literary annual called the Literary Souvenir 24 In 1825 Hogg s daughter Maggie was born and he began writing a new prose work later titled Tales of the Wars of Montrose In 1826 Hogg was in serious trouble with his debts while the firm of Constable collapsed involving Walter Scott and Hogg s friend John Aiken In 1827 his debts began to lighten as his Shepherd s Calendar pieces were being published and he was getting more and more applications to contribute to annuals The death of his father in law whose family Hogg had been supporting gave him relief His third daughter Harriet was born at the end of the year Hogg s collection Select and Rare Scotish Melodies was published in 1829 and he continued to write songs and contribute to annuals throughout 1828 29 while The Shepherd s Calendar was published in book form in Spring 1829 25 Later life Edit nbsp Ettrick Parish Church where Hogg is buried nbsp James Hogg as depicted on the Scott MonumentIn 1830 he started publishing in the new Fraser s Magazine which helped to alleviate a further financial crisis 26 and at the end of the year he met with Walter Scott for the last time In early 1831 Hogg s Songs by The Ettrick Shepherd was published but the publishing of the companion volume A Queer Book was held up by Blackwood Hogg s last child his daughter Mary was born in August At the end of the year he quarrelled with Blackwood and decided to publish his works in London In 1832 his Altrive Tales was published in London while Blackwood finally published A Queer Book in April or May Hogg was offered a large sum to edit a collection of the works of Robert Burns but the bankruptcy of his London publisher stopped the publication of his Altrive Tales after the first of the twelve projected volumes 27 In 1833 Hogg had an accident while curling falling through the ice causing a serious illness In 1834 his biographical work Familiar Anecdotes of Sir Walter Scott was published in the United States while a pirated version published in Glasgow led to a break with Lockhart Hogg mended his relationship with Blackwood in May but Blackwood died at the end of the year Hogg published Tales of the Wars of Montrose in March 1835 Death Edit James Hogg died on 21 November 1835 and was buried in Ettrick Churchyard close to his childhood home in the Scottish Borders 28 In 2021 it was reported that his grave had been preemptively toppled by Scottish Borders Council out of safety concerns and that independent restoration efforts were planned by the community 29 Wordsworth s Extempore Effusion upon the Death of James Hogg written on the 30th of November nine days after Hogg s death 30 includes the lines The mighty Minstrel breathes no longer Mid mouldering ruins low he lies And death upon the braes of Yarrow Has closed the Shepherd poet s eyes This eulogy notwithstanding Wordsworth s notes state He was undoubtedly a man of original genius but of coarse manners and low and offensive opinions 31 Legacy EditAmong the reading public at large Hogg was during his lifetime one of the most admired writers of the day but this admiration was largely for his success in overcoming the disadvantages of his peasant birth and lack of education He was considered a man of great natural genius whose uncouth style and subject matter so natural for the clownish figure depicted in the Noctes Ambrosianae should not be held against him 32 A collected edition of his works was published in the 1830s after Hogg s death pruned of some passages which offended the increasing delicacy of the age and another Works of the Ettrick Shepherd was prepared in the 1860s which took the process even further some works for example The Three Perils of Woman were excluded altogether Victorian readers of these emasculated texts naturally came to the conclusion that Hogg had been overrated and that he was notable mainly as an example of triumph over adverse circumstances 33 34 35 Apart from Justified Sinner which even his detractors acknowledged as unusually powerful and often attributed to someone else usually Lockhart his novels were regarded as turgid his verse as light his short tales and articles as ephemera nbsp James Hogg monument at St Mary s Loch by Andrew CurrieThis situation only began to change in 1924 when the French writer Andre Gide was loaned Justified Sinner by Raymond Mortimer Gide was amazed writing that It is long since I can remember being so taken hold of so voluptuously tormented by any book 36 Its republication in 1947 with an enthusiastic introduction by Gide 37 helped bring about the modern critical and academic appreciation of this novel Growing interest in The Confessions led to the rediscovery and reconsideration of his other work in the late 20th and early 21st centuries Now his novel The Three Perils of Woman is also considered a classic and all his work including his letters is undergoing major publication in the Stirling South Carolina editions However Justified Sinner remains his most important work and is now seen as one of the major Scottish novels of its time and absolutely crucial in terms of exploring one of the key themes of Scottish culture and identity Calvinism In a 2006 interview with Melvyn Bragg for ITV1 Scottish novelist Irvine Welsh cited Hogg especially The Confessions as a major influence on his writing A James Hogg Society was founded in 1981 to encourage the study of his life and writings 38 Hogg s story The Brownie of the Black Haggs was dramatised for BBC Radio 4 in 2003 by Scottish playwright Marty Ross as part of his Darker Side of the Border series More recently Ross returned to the villain of that story Merodach making him the villain of a Doctor Who audiobook Night s Black Agents Big Finish Productions 2010 in which this demonic figure assumes the pose of a Minister of the Kirk Thomas Wilson s Opera The Confessions of a Justified Sinner 1972 75 commissioned by Scottish Opera is based on the novel citation needed A bill he issued to purchase 50 worth of lambs in 1824 is exhibited in the Museum on the Mound Edinburgh 39 Hogg is a direct ancestor of Nobel Prize winning Canadian writer Alice Munro 40 Works EditPoetry Edit Scottish Pastorals 1801 The Mountain Bard 1807 The Forest Minstrel 1810 The Queen s Wake 1813 The Pilgrims of the Sun 1815 Mador of the Moor 1816 Queen Hynde 1824 Winter Evening Tales 1820 This book also contains short stories and novellas A Queer Book 1832 Non fiction Edit The Shepherd s Guide 1807 treatise on sheep The Spy 1810 11 weekly periodical The Shepherd s Calendar 1829 collected essays Familiar Anecdotes of Sir Walter Scott 1834 memoir A Series of Lay Sermons 1834 moral and religious discourses Prose fiction Edit The Brownie of Bodsbeck 1817 novel The Surpassing Adventures of Allan Gordon 1818 novella Winter Evening Tales 1820 short stories novellas The Three Perils of Man 1822 novel The Three Perils of Woman 1823 novel The Private Memoirs and Confessions of a Justified Sinner 1824 novel The Brownie of the Black Haggs 1828 short story tale Altrive Tales 1832 short stories Tales of the Wars of Montrose 1835 short stories Tales and Sketches of the Ettrick Shepherd 1837 41 Songs Edit Jacobite Relics 1819 collection of Jacobite protest songs Songs by The Ettrick Shepherd 1831 songs See also Edit nbsp Poetry portalAikwood Tower the home of Lord Steel houses an exhibition on the life and work of James Hogg Jean Lorimer Chloris Footnotes Edit a b Hughes Gillian 5 November 2001 James Hogg The Literary Encyclopedia Retrieved 1 April 2009 In Biographical Sketch of the Ettrick Shepherd the Rev Thomas Thomson states The subject of our memoir was born according to his own account in 1772 and on the 25th of January Hogg James 1876 The Works of the Ettrick Shepherd Centenary Edition with a Memoir of the Author by the Rev Thomas Thomson Poems and Life with Many Illustrative Engravings London Blackie amp Son pp ix In an obituary published 3 December 1835 it was stated that his date of birth was on 25 January 1772 Memoir of James Hogg Fife Herald 3 December 1835 Retrieved 30 March 2023 Gilbert Suzanne 19 May 2006 Hogg Traditional Culture and The Mountain Bard University of Stirling Archived from the original on 21 July 2011 Retrieved 1 April 2009 Buchan John 1961 Sir Walter Scott Cassell p 62 a b Sketch of the Life of the Ettrick Shepherd University of Stirling Archived from the original on 21 July 2011 Retrieved 1 April 2009 Duncan 2004 p xlvi Duncan 2004 pp xlvi xlvii Duncan 2004 p xlvii James Hogg The Forest Minstrel ed P D Garside and Richard D Jackson Edinburgh 2006 348 50 Batho 1927 pp 18 22 Gilkison Bruce 2016 Walking with James Hogg Edinburgh University Press Gillian Hughes James Hogg A Life Edinburgh 2007 pp 55 56 Laughlan William F Ed 1981 James Hogg Highland Tours The Ettrick Shepherd s Travels in the Scottish Highlands in 1802 1803 and 1804 Byway Books Hawick De Groot H F Ed Highland Journeys The Collected Works of James Hogg Stirling South Carolina Edition Edinburgh University Press a b Duncan 2004 p xlviii Hughes 2007 pp 73 77 Old Parish Registers for St Cuthbert s Edinburgh marriage took place on 20 November 1837 Informant on his mother s Death Certificate 17 August 1857 Old Parish Registers for Ettrick Roxburghshire Hughes 2007 pp 119 23 142 Duncan 2004 pp xlix l Batho 1927 pp 69 93 94 Duncan 2004 p li Duncan 2004 p l a b c Duncan 2004 p lii Duncan 2004 p liii Hughes 2007 pp 225 255 Hughes 2007 pp 220 22 Duncan 2004 p liv Duncan 2004 p lv Worst damage since Cromwell leaves James Hogg s grave devastated The National The Ettrick Shepherd Staffordshire Advertiser Saturday 12 December 1835 Wordsworth William 1835 Extempore Effusion upon the Death of James Hogg Archived 19 May 2009 at the Wayback Machine Virginia University Retrieved 25 July 209 Hogg James 2004 Anecdotes of Scott Edinburgh UK Edinburgh University Press pp v vi ISBN 0 7486 2085 0 Hogg James 2004 Anecdotes of Scott Edinburgh UK Edinburgh University Press p vi ISBN 0 7486 2085 0 Mack Douglas S 2004 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 13470 Retrieved 19 March 2012 Subscription or UK public library membership required The Cambridge History of English and American Literature Bartleby 1907 1921 Retrieved 19 March 2012 Hogg James 2007 The Private Memoirs and Confessions of a Justified Sinner Afterword Edinburgh UK Canongate ISBN 978 1 84195 958 0 Hogg James 1947 The Private Memoirs and Confessions of a Justified Sinner London UK Cresset The James Hogg Society University of Stirling Retrieved 19 March 2012 Wall text from The Bank on the Mound Museum on the Mound Edinburgh Taylor Catherine 10 October 2013 For Alice Munro small is beautiful via www telegraph co uk Bibliographic information from Bleiler Everett 1948 The Checklist of Fantastic Literature Chicago Shasta Publishers p 110 References EditThe Electric Shepherd A Likeness of James Hogg 2004 Karl Miller James Hogg 1899 Sir George Douglas in the Famous Scots Series published by Oliphant Anderson and Ferrier Duncan Ian 2004 Winter Evening Tales Chronology Scotland Edinburgh University Press pp xlvi lv ISBN 07486 2086 9 Batho Edith 1927 The Ettrick Shepherd Cambridge University Press pp 18 22 69 93 94 Further reading EditParr Norah 1980 James Hogg at Home Being the Domestic Life and Letters of the Ettrick Shepherd Douglas S Mack Dollar ISBN 9780950541624 Petrie Elaine E 1981 Hogg at Home and Abroad review of The Private Memoirs and Confessions of a Justified Sinner in Murray Glen ed Cencrastus No 6 Autumn 1981 pp 39 amp 40 Gilkison Bruce 2016 Walking with James Hogg The Ettrick Shepherd s Journeys through Scotland Edinburgh University Press ISBN 978 1 4744 1538 5External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to James Hogg nbsp Wikisource has original works by or about James Hogg nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to James Hogg Works by James Hogg in eBook form at Standard Ebooks Works by James Hogg at Project Gutenberg Works by James Hogg at Faded Page Canada Works by or about James Hogg at Internet Archive Works by James Hogg at LibriVox public domain audiobooks nbsp James Hogg 1822 The Three Perils of Man or War Women and Witchcraft Google eBook James Hogg 1823 The Three Perils of Woman or Love Leasing and Jealousy The James Hogg Society Archived 29 April 2009 at the Wayback Machine by the Department of English Studies University of Stirling BBC Writing Scotland James Hogg James Hogg Collection General Collection Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library Lock the door Lariston Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title James Hogg amp oldid 1171367274, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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