Robert Burns and Religion

About The Book

This title was first published in 2003. This text examines the role of religion in the life of the poet Robert Burns. Incorporating previously unexplored sources and taking into consideration contemporary work on Burns and on Scottish literature and history author J. Walter McGinty presents an account of Burns's personal religion and the factors that helped to form it. McGinty begins by discussing the recurring themes in Burns's religious writings: a belief in a benevolent God; a hankering after if not a hope that there might be a life after death; and a sense of his own accountability. He then presents for comparison the religious poetry of two of Burns's contemporaries William Cowper and Christopher Smart usefully extending the discussion of Burns beyond the purely Scottish context. Finally McGinty provides portraits of some of the ministers of The Church of Scotland's Garland-A New Song followed by an analysis of Burns's religious poetry.
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