Impromptu On Mrs Riddell's Birthday, 4th November 1793


Old Winter, with his frosty beard, Thus once to Jove his prayer preferred. What have I done of all the year, To bear this hated doom severe? My cheerless suns no pleasure know; Night's horrid car drags, dreary, slow; My dismal months no joys are crowning, But spleeny English, hanging, drowning. Now, Jove, for once be mighty civil; To counter balance all this evil; Give me, and I've no more to say, Give me Maria's natal day! That brilliant gift will so enrich me, Spring, Summer, Autumn, cannot match me. 'Tis done!!! says Jove: so ends my story, And Winter once rejoiced in glory.

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Stella Gonet

About this work

This is a poem by Robert Burns. It was written in 1793 and is read here by Stella Gonet.

Themes for this poem

naturefriendship

Selected for 04 November

Today's poem was written for Burns's friend and patroness, Maria Riddell, from whom, he would become painfully estranged after a boorish outburst. The drunken impropriety was probably provoked by friends of that wealthy gentlewoman and 'county set' beauty. Some of the Dumfriesshire gentry believed the low-born Bard to have forgotten his station. Consequently, they duped their social 'inferior' into an improvised gesture of unwanted and offensive 'rough wooing'. The spontaneous effusion comprising this poetic selection, however, was acceptably seemly.

Donny O'Rourke

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