The Scotsman

Burns’ love for Jean was ‘complex’ but he was no Weinstein, says novelist

Burns scholar defends poet after Lochhead comment

- By SHÂN ROSS sross@scotsman.com

His image was that of the “heaven-taught ploughman” whose striking dark looks saw women of all background­s besotted and smitten by him and his poetry.

But earlier this week Liz Lochhead, former Makar – Scotland’s national poet – claimed Robert Burns was the “Harvey Weinstein of his day”.

Lochhead, Makar from 200116, said while researchin­g the poet’s work for a talk entitled “Burns and women” at the Scottish Hellenic Society later this month, she read a letter by Burns where he bragged about forcing Jean Armour – who later became his wife – to have sex on a floor strewn with horse manure while she was pregnant.

In the letter, written in 1788 to his friend Bob Ainslie, Burns wrote of jumping on a “destitute and friendless” woman and giving her a “thundering scalade” (a military assault) when she was pregnant.

Lochhead said: “The disgracefu­l sexual boast to his friend seemed very like rape of his heavily pregnant girlfriend.”

Now Catherine Czerkawska, a leading Burns scholar, award-winning novelist and playwright, has defended the poet’s reputation.

Ms Czerkawska told The Scotsman: “Any comparison­s between the poet and Weinstein are invidious.

“The poet had close but largely platonic friendship­s with women of all ages. Moreover, to label as rape the events described in the notorious ‘horse litter letter’ is to oversimpli­fy a relationsh­ip of great complexity.

“When I was researchin­g The Jewel [her historical novel about Jean’s life published in 2016]Jeanarmour­emergedas a strong woman with an abiding affection for her husband.

“In 1788, she was pregnant with the second of two sets of his twins. Burns was enjoying his Edinburgh celebrity, but guilty about the emotional mess he had left behind. Both were in mourning for their 13-month-old daughter.

“Although he bragged that he had made love to a receptive Jean, I suspect the truth was that Jean submitted to him without much enjoyment and he knew it.

“The babies, born soon after, didn’t survive long.

“Never a cruel man, he had betrayed Jean and his own code of kindness. Within a short space of time, he trotted back to Mauchline seeking her forgivenes­s and the couple were officially married. The honeymoon period was both passionate and happy.

“I am often asked what I thought of Burns as I was researchin­g the novel. I could feel the warm blast of his charm and good humour some 230 years later. There are few ‘sex pests’ who would elicit that response.”

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 ??  ?? Liz Lochhead described Burns as ‘the Harvey Weinstein of his day’ after reading a letter by the poet to his friend; Catherine Czerkawska, below, has hit back to defended the poet’s reputation
Liz Lochhead described Burns as ‘the Harvey Weinstein of his day’ after reading a letter by the poet to his friend; Catherine Czerkawska, below, has hit back to defended the poet’s reputation
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