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WILLIAM EDMONSTOUNE AYTOUN (1813-1865)

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Originally appearing in Volume V03, Page 77 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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WILLIAM EDMONSTOUNE AYTOUN (1813-1865)  , Scottish poet, humorist and
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miscellaneous writer, was born at
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Edinburgh on the 21st of
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June 1813 . He was the only son of Roger Aytoun, a writer to the signet, and the
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family was of the same stock as
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Sir Robert Aytoun noticed above . Prom his
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mother, a woman of marked originality of character and considerable culture, he derived his distinctive qualities, his early tastes in literature, and his
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political sympathies, his love for ballad
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poetry, and his admiration for the Stuarts . At the age of eleven he was sent to the Edinburgh Academy, passing in due time to the university . In 1833 he spent a few months in
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London for the purpose of studying law; but in September of that
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year he went to study German at
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Aschaffenburg, where he remained till
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April 1834 . He then resumed his legal. pursuits in his
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father's chambers, was admitted a writer to the signet in 1835, and five years later was called to the Scottish bar . But, by his own confession, though he " followed the law, he never could overtake it." His first publication—a
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volume entitled Poland, Homer, and other Poems, in which he gave expression to his eager
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interest in the state of Poland-had appeared in 1832, While in Germany he made a
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translation in blank verse of the first
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part of Faust; but, forestalled by other
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translations, it was never published . In 1836 he made his earliest contributions to Blackwood's
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Magazine, in translations from Uhland; and from 1839 till his
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death he remained on the staff of Blackwood . About 1841 he became acquainted with Mr (afterwards Sir) Theodore Martin, and in association with him wrote a series of
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light humorous papers on the tastes and follies of the day, in which were interspersed the verses which afterwards became popular as the
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Ban Gaultier
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Ballads (1855) . The
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work on which his reputation as a poet chiefly rests is the
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Lays of the Scottish Cavaliers (1848; 29th ed . 1883) . In 1845 he was appointed professor of rhetoric and belles lettre - at Edinburgh University .

His lectures were very attractive, and the number of students increased correspondingly . His services in support of the Tory party, especially during the

Anti-Corn-Law struggle, received official recognition in his appointment (1852) as
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sheriff of Orkney and Zetland . In 1854 appeared Firmilian, a Spasmodic Tragedy, in which he attacked and parodied the writings of Philip James Bailey,
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Sydney Dobell and Alexander Smith; and two. years later he published his Bothwell, a Poem . Among his other
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literary
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works are a Collection of the Ballads of Scotland (1858), a translation of the Poems and Ballads of Goethe, executed in co-operation with his friend Theodore Martin (1858), a small volume on the
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Life and Times of Richard I . (1840), written for the Family Library, and a novel entitled Norman Sinclair (1861), many of the details in which are taken from incidents in his own experience . In 186o Aytoun was elected honorary president of the Associated Societies of Edinburgh University . In 1859 he Jost his first wife, a daughter of John Wilson (Christopher North), to whom he was married in 1849, and this was a
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great blow to him . His mother died in November 1861, and his own
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health began to fail . In December 1863 he married
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Miss Kinnear . He died at Black-hills, near
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Elgin, on. the 4th of August 1865 . See Memoir of W . E .

Aytoun (1867), by Sir Theodore Martin, with an appendix containing some of his

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prose essays .

End of Article: WILLIAM EDMONSTOUNE AYTOUN (1813-1865)
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