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Andrew Macdonald (born Andrew Donald) (1757–1790), pen name Matthew Bramble, was a Scottish clergyman, poet and playwright.


Early life and education


Andrew MacDonald was born on 27 February 1757,[1] the son of George Donald, a market gardener. The family lived at the foot of Leith Walk, in Leith, the busy port for Edinburgh on the Firth of Forth. Andrew Donald (as he was then known) attended the Grammar School in Leith and at an early age he demonstrated a flair for music. The Donald family was Episcopalian; the non-juror Scottish Episcopal Church at this time was heavily proscribed following its support for Bonnie Prince Charlie in the Jacobite rising a few years before. After 1745 the English passed laws to restrict Epicopalian clergy from officiating, unless they swore allegiance to the Kingand.[2]

Andrew attended Edinburgh University until 1775.[3]

Another resident in Leith at this period was the Scottish Episcopalian bishop, Robert Forbes.[4] The precocious gardener's son impressed Bishop Forbes, who sent him to study at the University of Edinburgh with a view to ordination. Although Scottish Episcopal ordination was officially banned at the time, Bishop Forbes ordained Andrew Donald into deacon's orders in 1775. It was at this time that the surname was changed to Macdonald (also written as M’Donald).


Ministry


Andrew Macdonald spent a year as private tutor to the children of the Oliphants of Gask in Perthshire.[5] Mr and Mrs Laurence Oliphant were influential Jacobites, and their daughter Carolina, Baroness Nairne, would later become celebrated for her popular Jacobite verse.

Macdonald left the Oliphants in about 1777 to become the Scottish Episcopal incumbent in the Lanarkshire city of Glasgow. Bishop Forbes having died in November 1775, Macdonald was ordained priest by Bishop William Falconer. At this time Glasgow had a thriving authorised ('qualified') Episcopal chapel, St Andrew's-by-the-Green, whilst Macdonald's small non-juror congregation assembled in a meeting-house in Stockwell Street.[6] A book of his sermons from this period was published posthumously. Its preface states that Macdonald's talents were held in high esteem, and his private virtues generally respected.[7]

Macdonald was without private means, and the non-juror congregation in Glasgow was too small to support him from seat-rents. He supplemented his income with writing, and took in student lodgers. William Erskine, Lord Kinneder, (the judge and mentor of Sir Walter Scott) lodged with Macdonald during his student days, and recounted that it was Macdonald who had instilled in him a passion for English literature.[8] Macdonald was passionately fond of poetry and music; an accomplished violinist, he became a director of a music club in Glasgow.


Writing


Macdonald first appeared in print as a poet in 1772 when he published Velina, a poetical fragment in imitation of the style of Edmund Spenser.[9] A couple of years later he published a novel called The Independent, which was 'favourably spoken of by the majority of its readers'.[10] Macdonald also wrote the play, Vimonda, a Tragedy.

Alexander Tytler (who met Macdonald several times 'in companies of literary people') recorded that Macdonald married a young girl in Glasgow who had been his maid-servant; the congregation did not approve and deserted his meeting-house. Macdonald became disgusted with his profession,[5] resigned from his clerical duties, and moved to Edinburgh. It was in Edinburgh in 1787 that Vimonda was first performed, at the Theatre Royal. Walter Scott, who was aged sixteen in 1787, would later recall seeing Macdonald in James Sibbald's circulating library[11] (where Scott was also to spot Robert Burns). In Edinburgh he became a friend of John Brown, the artist.


London


After just a few months in Edinburgh Macdonald travelled south to London, where, on 5 September 1787, Vimonda opened at George Colman's theatre in the Haymarket, the principal characters played by Mr Bensley, Mr Aickin, Mr Kemble, Mr Johnson, Mr Bannister jun., Miss Woolery, and Mrs Kemble. A review the next day praised the acting.[12] Another reviewer suggested that, whilst Vimonda had some of the faults of a first play, the playwright had promise.[10]

With the composer William Shield he started work on an opera. To earn some money, Macdonald wrote for newspapers, mostly satirical pieces under the pseudonym Matthew Bramble (the name of a character in the novel Humphry Clinker, by fellow Scot, Tobias Smollett). Financial worries forced the family to move from Brompton to ‘a mean residence’ in Kentish Town. Although by nature buoyant, amiable, and engaging, the pressure of his hardships overwhelmed Macdonald, and ‘having no powerful friends to patronise his abilities, and suffering under the infirmities of a weak constitution, he fell victim, at the age of three and thirty, to sickness, disappointment and misfortune.’[7] Andrew Macdonald died on 22 August 1790,[13] leaving his wife and young child destitute.


Legacy


The Independent appeared in German translation in 1789. In 1805, in the United States, William Ioor recast the same novel as a comedy in five acts. Under the title, Laura, Macdonald's 1782 sonnet appeared in The Wiccamical Chaplet by George Huddesford (1804), followed by another sonnet, The return of Laura, not by Macdonald. A snatch of a ballad by Macdonald was quoted by Sir Walter Scott in chapter 11 of Waverley (1814). Two stanzas[14] by the ingenious and unhappy Andrew Macdonald appear in chapter 21 of Scott's 1819 novel A Legend of Montrose; a German translation of the Macdonald verses provided Franz Schubert with the text for his song, Lied der Anne Lyle (D830, 1825). Joseph Haydn made an arrangement of another Macdonald song, By the stream so cool and clear (St Kilda Song) (Hob. XXXIa, 19).


Publications



Sources



References and footnotes


  1. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography
  2. Frederick Goldie: A Short History of the Episcopal Church in Scotland, Edinburgh, 1976.
  3. Grant Old and New Edinburgh; vol. V, p. 159
  4. Bishop Robert Forbes, Bishop of Ross and Caithness from 1746-75, was author/compiler of The Lyon in Mourning, or a collection of speeches, letters, journals, etc., relative to the affairs of Prince Charles Edward Stuart
  5. Letter written by Lord Woodhouselee (Alexander Fraser Tytler) in 1805, quoted in Notes and Queries, April 1860.
  6. James Cleland: Annals of Glasgow, Glasgow, 1816. The congregation survived, eventually to become St Mary's Episcopal Cathedral.
  7. Twenty-eight Miscellaneous Sermons by Andrew Macdonald, 1790.
  8. John Gibson Lockhart: The Life of Sir Walter Scott, Edinburgh, 1837-38.
  9. Grant Old and New Edinburgh; vol. V
  10. The English Review, 1789, vol. xii
  11. Walter Scott: "Autobiographical Fragment", 1808, in John Gibson Lockhart: The Life of Sir Walter Scott, Edinburgh, 1837-38.
  12. The Daily Universal Register (The Times), 6 September 1787.
  13. David M. Bertie: Scottish Episcopal Clergy, 1689–2000, 2000.
  14. Taken from Love and Loyalty



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