Scotland turns to 18th-century poet for economic stimulus
Sunday’s 'Burns Night' – featuring poems and neats and tatties – is the first test of the effort.
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Few, if any, places have stronger links to Burns than Dumfries, a picturesque town of about 30,000 people near the border with England. It was once said that Dumfries was "The grandest city in the world, for thou hast Burns's grave." With this in mind, many here are banking on "Homecoming Scotland" being translated into a sharp increase in visitors this year.
Skip to next paragraphAmong the town's other Burns's sites is the Globe Inn, Burns's favorite pub, which retains the same wood panels and beams, and even the "Burns's chair," where the poet once held court. Pub owner Marion McKerrow welcomes the homecoming plans.
"It's time to highlight what Robert Burns is about and the attraction he is all over the world," she says.
A poor boy named 'Rabbie'
Robert Burns – better known as Rabbie – was born in Ayrshire on Scotland's west coast in 1759. One of seven children, he grew up in poverty and hardship, but was well-educated by his father, reading the Bible and Shakespeare from an early age. He had some schooling and began writing verses while also working as a farm laborer and plowman.
He went on to write scores of poems and songs in the Scots dialect and became known as "The Ploughman Poet." His works include "O my Luve's Like a Red, Red Rose," "Address To a Haggis," and "Scots Wha Hae," once considered Scotland's unofficial national anthem. He enjoyed tremendous success and travelled all over Scotland, settling in Dumfries before his death at 37.
This weekend is key test
The first real test of the year's initiative will come this weekend as the homecoming year is launched with events in Edinburgh, Glasgow, Dumfries, and Ayrshire. Jan. 25th each year is known as Burns Night, when people gather for traditional suppers of haggis, neaps and tatties (turnips and potatoes), and to hear readings from Burns's works. In Dumfries, four lantern processions will make their way through the town, converging for a fire show and a display of traditional celtic music ahead of one of the country's biggest Burns suppers.
Skeptics of the initiative, including Elaine Murray, Dumfries' Labour Member of the Scottish Parliament, asks what impression visitors will get of town's like Dumfries if the Scottish Government doesn't do more to rescue the economy.
"What they're going to see is a pretty empty looking High Street with a lot of closed- down shops," she says. "We need to know how the Scottish Government intends to promote town center regeneration.... All we've got here is warm words and nothing very substantial at all."
Mr. Salmond, however, spoke in his New Year message of a "spirit of optimism abroad that will pull us through the hard times." He ended his address by quoting from Burns's poem "For A' That and A' That:"
"For a' that, an a' that,
It's comin yet for a' that,
That man to man the warld o'er,
Shall brithers (brothers) be for a' that."
Many in Dumfries hope he's right.



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