Old Mortality
Sir Walter Scott, philip bates
Paperback
(CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, Sept. 19, 2015)
Sir Walter SCOTT (1771-1832), son of Walter Scott, a Writer to the Signet, was born in College Wynd, Edinburgh, educated at Edinburg High School and University, and apprenticed to his father. He spends part of his childhood in the rural Scottish Borders at his paternal grandparents' farm at Sandyknowe. Here he was taught to read by his aunt Jenny, and learned from her the speech patterns and many of the tales and legends that characterised much of his work. He was called to the bar in 1792. At the age of 25 he began to write professionally, translating works from German. His first publication being rhymed versions of ballads by Gottfried August Bürger in 1796. He then published a three-volume set of collected ballads of his adopted home region, The Minstrelsy of the Scottish Border. In 1820, Scott was created baronet. Scott´s influence as a novelist was incalculable: he established the form of the “Historical Novel”, and the form of the short story with “The Two Drovers” and “The Highland Widow”. He was avidly read and imitated throughout the 19th cent, and there was a revival of interest from European Marxist critics in the 1930´s, who interpreted his works in terms of historicism. Postmodern tastes favoured discontinuous narratives and the introduction of the "first person", yet they were more favourable to his work than Modernist tastes. Scott is now seen as an important innovator and a key figure in the development of Scottish and world literature. “ Old Mortality” (1816). The second volume of Tales of My Landlord. The action is set in 1679 against the backdrop of the military campaign waged by John Graham against a Covenanting army. The Covenanters had risen against Charles II in protest against the reintroduction of Episcopalian church government. The hero, Henry Morton of Milnwood, a moderate Presbyterian, is arrested for harbouring John Burley of Balfour, a Covenanting friend of his father. Burley has participated in the murder of Archbishop Sharpe of St. Andrews. Morton is sentenced to death but is saved through the intervention of Lord Evandale, his friend and rival for the hand of Edith Bellenden.