![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() In it, the speaker compares his love first with a blooming rose in spring and then with a melody "sweetly play'd in tune." If these similes seem the typical fodder for love-song lyricists, the second and third stanzas introduce the subtler and more complex implications of time. Written in ballad stanzas, the verseread today as a poempieces together conventional ideas and images of love in a way that transcends the "low" or non-literary sources from which the poem is drawn. "A Red, Red Rose," first published in 1794 in A Selection of Scots Songs, edited by Peter Urbani, is one such song. During this time, Burns also composed more than three hundred original works for the volume, songs that relied heavily on forms and sentiments popular in the folk culture of the Scottish peasantry. After the 1786 publication of Poems, Chiefly in the Scottish Dialect, Robert Burns spent the last ten years of his life collecting and editing songs for The Scots Musical Museum, an anthology intended to preserve traditional Scottish lyrical forms. ![]()
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