• Source: Walter Kennedy (poet)
    • Walter Kennedy (ca. 1455 – c.1508) was a Scottish poet.
      Kennedy was born into the Scottish Clan Kennedy, a principal aristocratic family in Dunure, South Ayrshire. This was part of the Galloway Gàidhealtachd, a strong Gaelic-speaking area of the Scottish Lowlands. He was almost certain to have been a native speaker of the language. Educated at the University of Glasgow, he graduated in 1476, then obtained an MA in 1478.
      His older brother was John Kennedy, 2nd Lord Kennedy of Dunure, Clan Kennedy. He was parson of Douglas who acquired Glentig in 1504 from John Wallace, and married Christian Hynd.
      As great-grandson of Robert III and nephew of James Kennedy, bishop of St Andrews, Kennedy would have been very well-connected in the royal court. He possessed estates in both Carrick and Galloway and is known to have held ecclesiastical posts such as rector of Douglas and canon of Glasgow Cathedral although records show that his right to hold at least one of his posts was contested by the Holy See in Rome.


      Poems of Walter Kennedy


      Walter was a Scottish makar associated with the renaissance court of James IV, perhaps best known as the defendant against William Dunbar in The Flyting of Dumbar and Kennedie, but his surviving works clearly show him to have been an accomplished "master" in many genres. It is likely that a significant body of poetry by him has been lost.
      His most impressive surviving poem is The Passioun.
      Although Kennedy's surviving works are written in Middle Scots he may also have composed in Gaelic. In the Flyting, for instance, Dunbar makes big play of Kennedy's Carrick roots (albeit in the rankly insulting terms that are part of the genre) and strongly associates him with Erschry, which meant in other words the bardic tradition. By this time, the term Irish in Scotland signified Gaelic generally:

      Sic eloquence as thay in Erschry use,
      In sic is sett thy thraward appetyte.
      Thow hes full littill feill of fair indyte.
      I tak on me, ane pair of Lowthiane hippis
      Sall fairar Inglis mak and mair perfyte
      Than thow can blabbar with thy Carrik lippis.
      Such eloquence as they in Irishry [Gaeldom] use
      Is what defines your perverse taste.
      You have very small aptitude for good verse-making.
      I'll wager, a pair of Lothian hips
      Shall fairer English [Lowland Scots] make and more polished
      Than thou can blabber with thy Carrick lips.
      Kennedy also appears at the end of Dunbar's Lament for the Makaris (c.1505) where he is described as being close to death (in poynt of dede) though there is no evidence that he died at this date.


      Works



      Only six works by Walter Kennedy are extant, including his contribution to the Flyting, but taken together these amount to a not insignificant 2443 lines of verse. Kennedy's longest poem is The Passioun of Crist, a courtly and successful depiction of the story of Christ from the nativity to the ascension and a significant yet neglected work altogether different in form, register and subject from the Flyting, his second longest work.
      There are four other works, all much shorter but still highly various in genre:

      An aigit man, twys fourty yeiris
      At Matyne hour, in myddis of the nycht
      Ane Ballat of Our Lady
      Leif luve, my luve, na langar it lyk
      Walter Kennedy was an acclaimed poet in his lifetime. Both Gavin Douglas and Sir David Lyndsay paid tribute to him as a fellow makar in their works.


      Influence


      The twentieth-century poet William Neill, interested in Kennedy's South Ayrshire roots and his possible role as a Gaelic speaker in the Scottish court, has incorporated tributes to the makar into his own writing. One example is the Gaelic poem Chuma Bhaltair Cinneide (In Memory of Walter Kennedy) which opens:

      Chunnaic mi Bhaltair Cinneide
      a' coiseachd troimh clach mo shùl
      fo sgàil a' Chaisteal Dhuibh,
      aig àm laighe ne greine
      is grinneal fo chois
      air tràigh liath Dhùn Iubhair...
      I saw Walter Kennedy
      walking through the apple of my eye
      under the shadow of the Black Vault,
      at the time of sunset,
      and the gravel under his feet

      on the grey beach of Dunure...


      Notes




      References


      Meier, Nicole, ed. (2008). The poems of Walter Kennedy. Edinburgh: Scottish Text Society. ISBN 9781897976289.
      Attribution:

      This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Cousin, John William (1910). "Kennedy, Walter". A Short Biographical Dictionary of English Literature. London: J. M. Dent & Sons – via Wikisource.


      External links


      "Kennedy, Walter" . Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). 1911.

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