Scottish poet, known as the “Ettrick Shepherd,” who enjoyed a vogue
during the ballad revival that accompanied the Romantic movement.
Hogg spent most of his youth and early manhood as a shepherd and was
almost entirely self-educated. His talent was discovered early by Sir
Walter Scott, to whom he supplied material for Scott’s Minstrelsy of the
Scottish Border. Before publishing The Queen’s Wake (1813), a book of
poems concerning Mary Stuart, Hogg went in 1810 to Edinburgh, where he
met Lord Byron, Robert Southey, and William Wordsworth. Of Hogg’s
prolific poetic output, only a few narrative poems and ballads included
in the Wake are of lasting value. Among them are “Kilmeny” and “The
Witch of Fife.” Probably a more important work is Hogg’s novel The
Private Memoirs and Confessions of a Justified Sinner (1824), a
macabre tale of a psychopath that anticipates the modern psychological
thriller.
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