The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Burns hid politics ‘in plain view’

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Scotland’s national bard hid his radical and progressiv­e political opinions “in plain view” while working in the civil service during the turbulent years of the late 18th Century, according to an expert.

Professor Gerard Carruthers will argue that Robert Burns’ political leanings were an “open secret” when he worked as an excise man.

Prof Carruthers, co-director of the centre for Robert Burns studies at Glasgow University, made his revelation­s after studying recently unveiled letters and will set out his views in a talk in Edinburgh tomorrow.

The talk examines the bard’s place in what would be today’s HM Customs and Excise, around the time of the French Revolution.

A passionate believer in the rights of ordinary people, Burns secured a job as an excise man in the late summer of 1788.

Prof Carruthers will say: “There are lots of near conspiracy theories through two centuries that have sought to account for Burns’ career in the excise service.

“The common idea in these theories is that the government had Burns where they wanted him – under their control and politicall­y silenced.

“In fact, as the new letters by contempora­ries of Burns show, he was delighted and not reluctant to be given his position.

“The new material reveals that Burns’ progressiv­e political views were an ‘open secret’ in the civil service. Indeed, some of those intelligen­t and educated colleagues with whom he worked shared his views.”

The two letters were written by John Mitchell, the bard’s excise boss, to one of the poet’s most important patrons, Robert Graham of Fintry.

The university said the new letters have helped to inform the debate on the extent of the bard’s radicalism.

Burns was an opponent of monarchy and slavery, and a champion of democracy and the rights of man.

 ?? Picture: PA. ?? Prof Carruthers will give a talk tomorrow.
Picture: PA. Prof Carruthers will give a talk tomorrow.

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