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Scott's Poetical Works

Print
1834 (engraved)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

Line engraving on steel (engraver's proof), delicate impression printed on paper, depicting the peel tower at Smailholm on the Scottish Borders


Object details

Categories
Object type
Titles
  • Scott's Poetical Works (series title)
  • Smailholme Tower (Vignette) (assigned by artist)
Materials and techniques
Line engraving on steel
Brief description
Line engraving on steel by E. Goodall depicting a vignette of Smailholm Tower, for the publication 'Scott's Poetical Works' (Cadell), after a drawing by J. M. W. Turner. Great Britain, 1834.
Physical description
Line engraving on steel (engraver's proof), delicate impression printed on paper, depicting the peel tower at Smailholm on the Scottish Borders
Credit line
Bequeathed by Horace Mummery
Subjects depicted
Places depicted
Literary reference'Scott's Poetical Works' - Sir Walter Scott
Bibliographic reference
Smailholm tower is a 20m high (65ft) tower house, with walls 2.5m (9 ft) thick, built onto the rock craig. In its shadow lie the ruined foundations of an outer hall and kitchen block, discovered during excavations in 1979–81. A stout defensive wall encloses the barmkin, otherwise known as a courtyard. The tower house comprised the main residential accommodation for its Pringle laird – ground-floor cellars, first-floor hall, second-floor bedchamber and additional chambers at the top. The views from the battlements are wide-ranging, and on a clear day you can see as far as Bamburgh Castle, 33 miles (53km) away in Northumberland. Border families and reivers The Pringles, who built the tower in the first half of the 15th century, were a prominent Border family. Their position as squires of the powerful earls of Black Douglas brought them the lucrative position of warden of the Ettrick Forest. They suffered from the reivers, as did all people on both sides of the Border. During two raids in 1544, reivers from Northumberland got away with over 700 cattle and 100 horses. The family relocated to Galashiels in the later 16th century (their burial vault was in Melrose Abbey), and in 1645 the tower and estate at Smailholm was purchased by the Scotts of Harden, near Hawick. They already had a fine house, so they leased Smailholm to a kinsman, Walter ‘Beardie’ Scott, Sir Walter Scott’s great-grandfather. Smailholm and Sir Walter Scott Walter Scott was born in Edinburgh in 1771, but as an infant he fell ill, and his parents sent him to Smailholm for the good of his health. He was just 18 months when he arrived at Sandyknowe Farmhouse, the dwelling down in the hollow that replaced Smailholm Tower as the Scotts’ family home. There his grandmother and aunt told him tales of the Border countryside. In his old age, Scott acknowledged the powerful effect these Border ballads had on his imagination, as did the sight of his ancestors’ ancient tower, ‘standing stark and upright like a warden’. In 1802, Scott published his much acclaimed Minstrelsy of the Scottish Border. Later, shortly before his death in 1831, he paid an emotional visit to Smailholm.
Other number
R494 - Rawlinson number (Mummery Bequest)
Collection
Accession number
E.4341-1946

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Record createdJune 30, 2009
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