THE KILMARNOCK BURNS: A CENSUS

Document Type

Book

Abstract

This book is the first modern attempt to track down how many copies of Burns’s first book still survive. Burns’s Poems, Chiefly in the Scottish Dialect (1786) has long been recognized as one of the world’s great books. The 612 copies that were printed in the summer of 1786 by a local printer, John Wilson, in Kilmarnock, Scotland, sold out almost immediately and launched Burns’s worldwide reputation. In time, copies of the Kilmarnock, often splendidly rebound to indicate its importance and growing monetary value, became prized by book collectors on both sides of the Atlantic. This study describes the present appearance of each of the surviving copies, including any inscriptions, and traces, as far as possible, their previous ownership and its significance. In addition, drawing on print and digital evidence for copies that have previously been reported, the study documents the larger story of public interest in Burns and Burns collecting from the early nineteenth-century to the present day. The book opens with an introduction, by Allan Young, about the project and its findings, with a list of important “lost” copies, followed by Patrick Scott's account of how the Kilmarnock was published and how it became a collector's item.

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