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ALLAN CUNNINGHAM (1784-1842)

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Originally appearing in Volume V07, Page 633 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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ALLAN CUNNINGHAM (1784-1842)  , Scottish poet and man of letters, was born at Keir,
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Dumfriesshire, on the 7th of December 1784, and began
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life as a stone mason's apprentice . His
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father was a neighbour of Burns at Ellisland, and Allan with his
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brother James visited James Hogg, the
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Ettrick shepherd, who became a friend to both . Cunningham contributed some songs to Roche's
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Literary Recreations in 1807, and in 1809 he collected old
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ballads for Robert Hartley Cromek's Remains of Nithsdale and Galloway
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Song; he sent in, however, poems of his own, which the editor inserted, even though he may have suspected their real author-
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ship . In 1810 Cunningham went to
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London, where he supported himself chiefly by newspaper
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reporting till 1814, when he became clerk of the
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works in the studio of Francis Chantrey, retaining this employment till the sculptor's
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death in 1841 . He meanwhile continued to be busily engaged in literary
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work . Cunningham's
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prose is often spoiled by its misplaced and too ambitious rhetoric; his verse also is often over-ornate, and both are full of manner-isms . Some of his songs, however,. hold a high place among
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British lyrics . " A Wet
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Sheet and a Flowing Sea " is one of the best of our sea-songs, although written by a landsman; and many other of Cunningham's songs will bear comparison with it . He died on the 3oth of
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October 1842 . He was married to
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Jean Walker, who had been servant in a house where he lived, and had five sons and one daughter . JOSEPH DAVEY CUNNINGHAM (1812-1851) entered the Bengal Engineers, and is known by his
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History of the Sikhs (1849) .
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SIR ALEXANDER CUNNINGHAM (1814-1893) also entered the Bengal Engineers; attaining the rank of major-general; he was director general of the
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Indian Archaeological Survey (1870-1885), and wrote an Ancient Geography of India (1871) and Coins of
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Medieval India (1894) .

PETER CUNNINGHAM (1816-1869) published several topographical and
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biographical studies, of which the most important are his Handbook of London (1849) and The Life of Drummond of Hawthornden (1833) . FRANCIS CUNNINGHAM (1820-1875) joined the Indian army, and published
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editions of Ben
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Jonson (1871), Marlowe (187o) and Massinger (1871) . The works of Allan Cunningham include Lives of the Most Eminent British Painters, Sculptors and Architects (1829-1833); Sir Marmaduke Maxwell (182o), a dramatic poem; Traditionary Tales of the Peasantry (1822), several novels (Paul Jones, Sir Michael Scott, Lord Roldan); the Maid of Elwar, a sort of epic
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romance; the Songs of Scotland (1825) ; Biographical and Critical History of the Literature of the Last Fifty Years (1833) ; an edition of The Works of Robert Burns, with notes and a life containing a good
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deal of new material (1834) ; Biographical and Critical
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Dissertations affixed to Major's
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Cabinet Gallery of Pictures; and Life,
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Journals and Correspondence of Sir David Wilkie, published in 1843 . An edition of his Poems and Songs was issued by his son, Peter Cunningham, in 1847 .

End of Article: ALLAN CUNNINGHAM (1784-1842)
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