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Sartor Resartus and Essays on Burns and Scott

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ISBN-10: 1116863006

ISBN-13: 9781116863000

Edition: N/A

Authors: Thomas Carlyle, Walter Scott, Robert Burns

List price: $31.75
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Book details

List price: $31.75
Publisher: BiblioBazaar
Binding: Paperback
Pages: 340
Size: 7.44" wide x 9.69" long x 0.71" tall
Weight: 1.342
Language: English

Scott was born in Edinburgh, Scotland, the son of a writer. As a young boy, he contracted polio and was sent to his grandfather's farm to recuperate. While there, he came to know and love the Border country, which figures prominently in his work. Scott began his literary career by writing metrical tales. "The Lay of the Last Minstrel," "Marmion," and "The Lady of the Lake" made him the most popular poet of his day. Sixty-five hundred copies of "The Lay of the Last Minstrel" were sold in the first three years, a record sale for poetry. His later romances in verse, "The Vision of Don Roderick," "Rokeby," and "The Lord of the Isles," met with waning interest owing to the rivalry of Byron,…    

Robert Burns (175996) was born into a farming family in Ayrshire, Scotland. The publication in 1786 of his first book, Poems, Chiefly in the Scottish dialect, made him famous overnight and saw him f�ted by Edinburgh society. But Burns made no money from his writing and quickly fell on hard times, returning to farming in Dumfries, and, when that failed, to work as an Excise officer. He devoted his final years to poetry and the writing of Scottish songs.