Robert Sempill
Robert Sempill (the elder) (c. 1530–1595), in all probability a cadet of illegitimate birth of the noble house of Sempill or Semple, was a Scottish ballad-writer and satirist.
Very little is known of Sempill's life.[1] He was probably a soldier, and must have held some office at the Scottish court, as his name appears in the Lord Treasurer's books in February 1567 – 1568, and his writings show him to have had an intimate knowledge of court affairs. As a Protestant, he was a bitter opponent of Queen Mary and of the Catholic Church, authoring ballads supporting action against Queen Mary.[2] Sempill was present at the siege of Leith (1559-1560) and at the siege of Edinburgh Castle,[3] serving with the army of James Douglas, Earl of Morton. He was in Paris in 1572, but fled the country after the massacre of St Bartholomew. Three of his poems appear in the Bannatyne Manuscript.[3]
His chief works are:
- The Ballat maid vpoun Margret Fleming callit the Flemyng bark
- The defence of Crissell Sande-landis
- The Claith Merchant or Ballat of Jonet Reid, ane Violet and Ane Quhyt, all three in the Bannatyne manuscript
They are characterized by extreme coarseness, and are probably among his earlier works. His chief political poems are:
- The Regentis Tragedie, a broadside of 1570
- The Sege of the Castel of Edinburgh (1573), interesting from an historical point of view
- Ane Complaint vpon fortoun ... (1581)
- The Legend of the Bischop of St Androis Lyfe callit Mr Patrik Adamsone (1583)
Some of his poems and ballads were intended to advance the cause of the King's side during the Marian civil war.[2] He was a mid-ranking Kings Party supporter, prominently known despite being outside of party leadership.[1] He assuredly authored twelve poems out of a collection of twenty-five broadsides arguing against Queen Mary as a part of the Kings Party's political campaign, which collectively are known as the "Sempill ballads".[4][5] Anonymous printed ballads such as The tressoun of Dumbertane, Robert Lekprevik, Edinburgh (1570), have been attributed to Sempill. The Tressoun describes Lord Fleming's failed ambush of the English commander William Drury at Dumbarton Castle.[6]
See Chronicle of Scottish Poetry (ed. James Sibbald, Edinburgh, 1802); and Essays on the Poets of Renfrewshire by William Motherwell, in The Harp of Renfrewshire (Paisley, 1819; reprinted 1872).
Modern editions of Sempill are: Sege of the Castel of Edinburgh, a facsimile reprint with introduction by David Constable (1813); The Sempill Ballates (T. G. Stevenson, Edinburgh, 1872) containing all the poems; Satirical poems of the Reformation (ed. James Cranstoun, Scottish Text Soc., 2 vols, 1889-1893) with a memoir of Sempill and a bibliography of his poems.
References
- Blakeway, Amy (2009). "The Response to the Regent Moray's Assassination DOI: 10.3366/E0036924109000560". The Scottish Historical Review. 88 (225): 9–33. doi:10.3366/E0036924109000560. ISSN 0036-9241. JSTOR 25530046.
- Phillips, James E. (1955). "A Revaluation of Horestes (1567)". Huntington Library Quarterly. 18 (3): 227–244. doi:10.2307/3816454. ISSN 0018-7895. JSTOR 3816454.
- Bawcutt, Priscilla J. "Sempill, Robert (d. 1595?), poet and protestant controversialist". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford University Press.
- McElroy, Tricia A. (2007). "Imagining the "Scottis Natioun": Populism and Propaganda in Scottish Satirical Broadsides". Texas Studies in Literature and Language. 49 (4): 319–339. doi:10.1353/tsl.2007.0018. ISSN 0040-4691. JSTOR 40755491. S2CID 152704677.
- Watson, George (1974). The New Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature: Volume 1, 600-1660. Cambridge University Press. p. 2341. ISBN 0521200040.
- Calendar of State Papers Scotland, vol. 3, (1903), 177: The tressoun of Dumbarton, 15 May, Robert Lekprevik, Edinburgh, 1570: Cranstoun, James, ed., Satirical Poems of the Reformation, vol. 1 (1892) 170-173, & notes vol. 2 (1893), 113-7
- This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Sempill, Robert". Encyclopædia Britannica. 24 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 633.