Online Encyclopedia

WILLIAM CLELAND (1661?-1689)

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Originally appearing in Volume V06, Page 481 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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WILLIAM CLELAND (1661?-1689)  , Scottish poet and soldier, son of Thomas Cleland, gamekeeper to the
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marquis of Douglas, was born about 1661 . He was probably brought up on the marquess of Douglas's estate in
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Lanarkshire, and was educated at St Andrews University . Immediately on leaving college he joined the army of the
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Covenanters, and was
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present at Drumclog, where, says Robert Wodrow, some attributed to Cleland the manoeuvre which led to the victory . He also fought at Bothwell
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Bridge . He and his
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brother James were described in a royal proclamation of the 16th of
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June 1679 among the leaders of the insurgents . He escaped to Holland, but in 1685 was again in . Scotland in connexion with the abortive invasion of the
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earl of Argyll . He escaped once more, to return in 1688 as agent for William of Orange . He was appointed
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lieutenant-colonel of the Cameronian regiment raised from the minority of the western Covenanters who consented to serve under William III . The
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Cameronians were entrusted with the defence of
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Dunkeld, which they held against the fierce assault of the Highlanders on the 26th of August . The repulse of the Highlanders before Dunkeld ended the Jacobite rising, but Cleland fell in the struggle . He wrote A Collection of several Poems and Verses composed upon various occasions (published posthumously, 1697) .

Of "Hullo, my fancie, whither wilt

thou go ? " only the last nine stanzas are by Cleland . His poems have small
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literary merit, and are written, not in pure
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Lowland Scots, but in
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English, with a large admixture of Scottish words . The longest and most important of them are the"`
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mock poems " " On the Expedition of the Highland
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Host who came to destroy the western shires in winter 1678 " and " On the clergie when they met to consult about taking the Test in the
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year 1681." An Exact Narrative of the Conflict of Dunkeld . collected from several
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officers of the regiment . . . appeared in 1689 .

End of Article: WILLIAM CLELAND (1661?-1689)
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