Scottish Gin GINS

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Scottish Gin GINS GINS From Tokyo to New York, London and here at home, bartenders worldwide are using Gin as a staple of 21st century mixology. The rise of craft Gin makers has exploded over the last decade, with over 75 now open in the UK and over 70% of Gin produced right here in Scotland, making the craft distilling movement one of the most exciting to emerge from the world of drink in recent years. Scottish Gin Boë Stirling 41.5% abv £3.50 Silver award winner at the 2014 World Gin awards. Lovingly created in small batches, 13 rare hand picked botanicals and spices are infused in the finest neutral grain spirit. Caorunn Speyside 41.8% abv £3.60 Caorunn is Gaelic for rowanberry. It includes 11 botanicals-including rowanberries, apple, heather, bog myrtle and dandelion. The five-sided bottle represents the five Celtic botanicals. Eden Mill St Andrews 42% abv £3.60 Made with sea buckthorn, sometimes known as simply ‘seaberries’, for a satisfying tang. The true spirit of St Andrews. Edinburgh Gin Edinburgh 43% abv £3.80 Their method is perfectly simple and inspired - ’beGin at the beGinning, go on until you come to the end: then stop!’ A very creamy little Gin. Hendrick’s Girvan 41.4% abv £3.80 More than any other gin, this has led to a new generation of gins exploring more adventurous aromas and flavours. Rock Rose Caithness 41.5% abv £3.80 Rock Rose Gin heralds a new vintage each year as local botanicals will subtly change year on year. Blackwoods Shetland 40% abv £3.50 It is made in the Shetlands using handpicked Shetland botanicals. Handsome and tasty. ALL MEASURES 25ML UNLESS OTHERWISE STATED GIN Scottish Gin NB Gin North Berwick 42% abv £3.50 Made with 8 carefully selected botanicals - juniper, lemon peel, grains of paradise, coriander seed, angelica root, cardamom, orris root and cassia bark. Very well-balanced. Arbikie Kirsty’s Gin Arbroath 43% abv £3.50 Named after Arbikie’s Master Distiller Kirsty Black, the gin embodies elements of the ocean, rock and land. Kirsty’s Gin incorporates three traditional Scottish botanicals, kelp, carline thistle and blaeberries. Makar Glasgow 43% abv £3.70 The enlivening power of the finest juniper berries form the heart and soul of Makar Glasgow Gin, complemented by seven botanicals shipped to Glasgow from around the world. The Botanist Islay 46% abv £3.90 A small batch, artisanal Islay gin combining 9 classic botanicals with a further 22 others local to the island. Darnley’s View Edinburgh 40% abv £3.80 Made with six carefully selected botanicals, including juniper, lemon peel and elderflower and distilled in a time honoured way. Daffy’s Small Batch Gin Edinburgh43.4% abv £3.70 An exceptionally fresh, smooth and truly original gin with complexity and balanced charm. Awarded gold at the International Wine and Spirits Competition 2015. Strathearn Juniper Perthshire 47% abv £3.70 As the name suggests, this is strongly juniper-led. A smooth, sweet start switches to a light peppery mouth-feel which is followed by a gentle sherbet finish as the citrus develops. Strathearn Heather Rose Perthshire 40% abv £3.60 A celebration gin, ideal for a special occasion or as an everyday treat. Fragrant, floral and light, sweet yet spicy. Strathearn Citrus Perthshire 40% abv £3.60 A newer style of gin with added elements of zest, herbs and spices combining a hint of Italian lemons and Spanish grapefruit with a suggestion of kaffir lime leaves and star anise. Strathearn Oaked Highland Gin Perthshire 40% abv £3.60 Oaked Highland gin is where whisky meets gin. This is a smooth, oaky gin with notes of juniper and citrus. Designed as an after-dinner gin, like a digestif to be sipped and savoured. Stirling Gin Stirling 43% abv £3.90 Stirling’s first gin! Infused with hand picked Stirlingshire nettles, basil, lemon peel, orange peel, juniper and angelica root. Lundin Gorse Gin 43.1% abv £3.60 From the Kingdom of Fife distilled with 18 botanicals including Italian and Macedonian juniper, elderflower, chamomile, caraway, grapefruit, bitter orange, cinnamon and Fife gorse. London dry style. ALL MEASURES 25ML UNLESS OTHERWISE STATED GIN Scottish Gin Boë Violet Gin 41.5% abv £3.70 The addition of violets creates a stylish gin with a light, delicate taste and beautiful colour and aroma. Boë Passion Gin 41.5% abv £3.50 Tangy passion fruit-flavoured gin with a mixture of fresh passion fruit and bright orange notes mixed with classic herbaceous gin ingredients Boë Spiced Orange Gin Liqueur 20% abv £3.50 The perfect balance of the bitter sweet taste of oranges blended with festive spices. Boë Peach & Hibiscus Gin Liqueur 20% abv £3.30 The tanginess and berry-rich flavour of Hibiscus combines perfectly with fresh peaches, to give a delightful fruity and flowery aroma and taste. Enjoy with Champagne or Prosecco, in cocktails, with soda or lemonade or simply over ice. Boë Scottish Bramble Gin Liqueur 20% abv £3.30 The rich, fruitiness of brambles give a beautiful and distinctive taste, aroma and appearance. Enjoy with Champagne or Prosecco, in cocktails, with soda or lemonade or simply over ice. Edinburgh Gin - Rhubarb & Ginger Liqueur 20% abv £3.10 Spring-crop rhubarb and Oriental ginger marry to create a liqueur that promises lively sweetness, sharpness and spice on the nose and palate, with a lingering warm finish. Edinburgh Gin - Raspberry Liqueur 20% abv £3.10 The nose promises full red berry aromas, whilst the full flavour delivers sweet ripeness accented by a sharp edge. The flavours perfectly complement a dry sparkling wine for a summery fizz, or try it in your favourite fruity cocktail. Edinburgh Gin - Plum & Vanilla Liqueur 20% abv £3.10 This velvety liqueur blends juicy plums with luxurious Madagascan vanilla for a luscious, rich flavour. On the nose, aromas of ripe stone fruit and marzipan, whilst on the palate, rich sweetness balanced by a softly warming vanilla finish. Edinburgh Gin - Elderflower Liqueur 20% abv £3.10 On the nose, it delivers a highly aromatic, floral bouquet. On the palate, this is a delicately sweet liqueur with light citrus notes and a fruity finish of grapefruit, pear and peach. Edinburgh Gin - Pomegranate & Rose Liqueur 20% abv £3.10 A fragrant, lip-smacking liqueur from those wonderful Edinburgh Gin folks, featuring the flavours of pomegranate and rose. Add a splash of this to your glass of sparkling wine, enjoy it with tonic, pour it over ice - it’s a versatile tipple that’ll surely liven up your drinks collection. ALL MEASURES 25ML UNLESS OTHERWISE STATED GIN World Gin Bombay Sapphire London, England 40% abv £3.40 One of the best known and most delicately perfumed gins in the world, Bombay Sapphire makes an excellent Martini, and is great as a base for a gin and tonic. Tanqueray London 43.1% abv £3.30 Legend has it that Tanqueray was the first drink in the White House after the repeal of prohibition. A quintessential London Dry Gin. Tanqueray No. 10 London, England 47.3% abv £3.60 An incredible small batch London Dry Gin named for pot still number 10 in which it is made. Citrussy and full-bodied. Tanqueray Sevilla Gin 41.3% abv £3.30 Made with bittersweet Seville oranges to deliver a fruitful and zesty taste, balanced with the 4 botanicals of our classic London dry gin. This taste of the sun-soaked Mediterranean is a uniquely enjoyable yet complex gin. Gin Mare Spain 42.1% abv £3.90 Made in a small Spanish fishing town just outside Barcelona, Gin Mare epitomises the Mediterranean spirit. It is savoury and unusual yet balanced. Brooklyn Gin USA 40% abv £3.70 Brooklyn Gin is made in New York with fresh citrus peels and hand-cracked juniper. Fresh, complex and really smooth. Aviation Gin USA 42% ABV £3.70 Aviation Gin offers a Dutch style - it was distilled from rye and flavoured with juniper, lavender, anise, sarsaparilla, orange peel and cardamom. Martin Millers London, England/Iceland 40% abv £3.60 Distilled in pot stills and shipped to Iceland, where it is mixed with Icelandic spring water. Blue Bottle Guernsey, England 43% abv £3.90 Blue Bottle Gin comes to us from the Three Fingers Distillery on the Island of Guernsey and features a selection of botanicals which include juniper, cubeb pepper, nutmeg and local gorse flowers. Brockmans London, England 40% abv £3.60 To make Brockmans, exquisite botanicals are sourced from all over the world. This creates an intensely smooth gin that is sensual and daringly different. Bloom 40% abv £3.50 A clear, bright liquid nose: A light floral gin, with traditional perfume and earthy aromas. The predominant notes are chamomile, pomelo and honeysuckle. Taste: Slightly sweet with a very smooth mouth feel. Finish: Citrus finish with no aggressive alcohol bite. Fifty Pounds - London 43.5% abv £4.60 Piney juniper and fresh citrus to the fore followed by fragrant woody notes from coriander and a touch of spice on the mid-palate. The finish is beautifully balanced and silky smooth. ALL MEASURES 25ML UNLESS OTHERWISE STATED GIN World Gin Warner Edwards - Melissa Gin 43% abv £4.10 Sweet and refreshing, with light minty notes joined by delicate citrus and earthy juniper. Whitley Neill - Original (Small Batch) 43% abv £3.80 Rich notes of juniper and citrus, pot puri and exotic spices. The finish is a long one, with a subtle fade of herbs, cocoa and candied lemon peels, while the nose is both citrus-sweet and peppery, with a distinctive floral aroma. Whitley Neill - Rhubarb & Ginger 43% abv £3.90 The essence of rhubarb adds a tart crisp edge to a smooth English gin base whilst the ginger extract warms the palate for a full-bodied finish.
Recommended publications
  • EIKS an ENS Nummer 10
    EIKS AN ENS The newsletter o the Scots Leid Associe Nummer 10 Januar 2017 Januar Jottins A GUID NEW YEAR TI OOR MEMMERS AA AN SUM. SUBSCRIEVINS are nou due. Siller ti SLS, 4 Ancrum Drive, Dundee DD2 2JB or pey online £20 ordinar memmership £25 owerseas, jynt, schuil or college,corporate Mind an pit in your entries afore Januar 31st. Hae a keek at the wabsteid for Scotsoun CDs. This year’s Collogue wull hae place in Perth on Setterday, 3rd June. “THE SCOTS LEID AN EUROPE” Sonnet to mark the impending 60th birthday of William Hershaw on 19th March 2017 Nou, dinnae be feart o saxty, Willie Juist heeze a wee gless o the bluid reid wine tae the hinder end o year fifty nine Aye, an mebbe ye'll tak a guid gill tae afore ye dover, heid oan the pillae wauken tae find ye’ve owergaun the line an qualifee’d for yer bus pass propine Ken, it maks ye strang whit disnae kill ye Ance domine, aye baird an makar bauld A ‘cultural provocateur’ they say Fowerty odd year o scrievin wir leid Nae sign o lettin up as ye get auld Howkin awa at the coalface aa dey Aye screivin, Willie, till ye drap doun deid Kevin Connelly Burns’ Hamecomin When taverns stert tae stowe wi folk, Bit tae oor tale. Rab’s here as guest, An warkers thraw aff labour’s yoke, Tae handsel this by-ornar fest – As simmer days are waxin lang, Twa hunnert years an fifty’s passed An couthie chiels brak intae sang; Syne he blew in on Janwar’s blast.
    [Show full text]
  • Jackie Kay, CBE, Poet Laureate of Scotland 175Th Anniversary Honorees the Makar’S Medal
    Jackie Kay, CBE, Poet Laureate of Scotland 175th Anniversary Honorees The Makar’s Medal The Chicago Scots have created a new award, the Makar’s Medal, to commemorate their 175th anniversary as the oldest nonprofit in Illinois. The Makar’s Medal will be awarded every five years to the seated Scots Makar – the poet laureate of Scotland. The inaugural recipient of the Makar’s Medal is Jackie Kay, a critically acclaimed poet, playwright and novelist. Jackie was appointed the third Scots Makar in March 2016. She is considered a poet of the people and the literary figure reframing Scottishness today. Photo by Mary McCartney Jackie was born in Edinburgh in 1961 to a Scottish mother and Nigerian father. She was adopted as a baby by a white Scottish couple, Helen and John Kay who also adopted her brother two years earlier and grew up in a suburb of Glasgow. Her memoir, Red Dust Road published in 2010 was awarded the prestigious Scottish Book of the Year, the London Book Award, and was shortlisted for the Jr. Ackerley prize. It was also one of 20 books to be selected for World Book Night in 2013. Her first collection of poetry The Adoption Papers won the Forward prize, a Saltire prize and a Scottish Arts Council prize. Another early poetry collection Fiere was shortlisted for the Costa award and her novel Trumpet won the Guardian Fiction Award and was shortlisted for the Impac award. Jackie was awarded a CBE in 2019, and made a fellow of the Royal Society of Literature in 2002.
    [Show full text]
  • "Dae Scotsmen Dream O 'Lectric Leids?" Robert Crawford's Cyborg Scotland
    Virginia Commonwealth University VCU Scholars Compass Theses and Dissertations Graduate School 2013 "Dae Scotsmen Dream o 'lectric Leids?" Robert Crawford's Cyborg Scotland Alexander Burke Virginia Commonwealth University Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarscompass.vcu.edu/etd Part of the English Language and Literature Commons © The Author Downloaded from https://scholarscompass.vcu.edu/etd/3272 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the Graduate School at VCU Scholars Compass. It has been accepted for inclusion in Theses and Dissertations by an authorized administrator of VCU Scholars Compass. For more information, please contact [email protected]. i © Alexander P. Burke 2013 All Rights Reserved i “Dae Scotsmen Dream o ‘lectric Leids?” Robert Crawford’s Cyborg Scotland A thesis submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts in English at Virginia Commonwealth University By Alexander Powell Burke Bachelor of Arts in English, Virginia Commonwealth University May 2011 Director: Dr. David Latané Associate Chair, Department of English Virginia Commonwealth University Richmond, Virginia December, 2013 ii Acknowledgment I am forever indebted to the VCU English Department for providing me with a challenging and engaging education, and its faculty for making that experience enjoyable. It is difficult to single out only several among my professors, but I would like to acknowledge David Wojahn and Dr. Marcel Cornis-Pope for not only sitting on my thesis committee and giving me wonderful advice that I probably could have followed more closely, but for their role years prior of inspiring me to further pursue poetry and theory, respectively.
    [Show full text]
  • Scottish Poetry 1974-1976 Alexander Scott
    Studies in Scottish Literature Volume 13 | Issue 1 Article 19 1978 Scottish Poetry 1974-1976 Alexander Scott Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarcommons.sc.edu/ssl Part of the English Language and Literature Commons Recommended Citation Scott, Alexander (1978) "Scottish Poetry 1974-1976," Studies in Scottish Literature: Vol. 13: Iss. 1. Available at: https://scholarcommons.sc.edu/ssl/vol13/iss1/19 This Article is brought to you by the Scottish Literature Collections at Scholar Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in Studies in Scottish Literature by an authorized editor of Scholar Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Alexander Scott Scottish Poetry 1974-1976 For poetry in English, the major event of the period, in 1974, was the publication by Secker and Warburg, London, of the Com­ plete Poems of Andrew Young (1885-1971), arranged and intro­ duced by Leonard Clark. Although Young had lived in England since the end of the First World War, and had so identified himself with that country as to exchange his Presbyterian min­ istry for the Anglican priesthood in 1939, his links with Scotland where he was born (in Elgin) and educated (in Edin­ burg) were never broken, and he retained "the habit of mind that created Scottish philosophy, obsessed with problems of perception, with interaction between the 'I' and the 'Thou' and the 'I' and the 'It,."l Often, too, that "it" was derived from his loving observation of the Scottish landscape, to which he never tired of returning. Scarcely aware of any of this, Mr. Clark's introduction places Young in the English (or Anglo-American) tradition, in "the field company of John Clare, Robert Frost, Thomas Hardy, Edward Thomas and Edmund Blunden ••• Tennyson and Browning may have been greater influences." Such a comment overlooks one of the most distinctive qualities of Young's nature poetry, the metaphysical wit that has affinities with those seven­ teenth-century poets whose cast of mind was inevitably moulded by their religion.
    [Show full text]
  • The Poetry of Civic Nationalism: Jackie Kay's 'Bronze Head from Ife'
    Article How to Cite: McFarlane, A 2017 The Poetry of Civic Nationalism: Jackie Kay’s ‘Bronze Head From Ife’. C21 Literature: Journal of 21st-century Writings, 5(2): 5, pp. 1–18, DOI: https://doi.org/10.16995/c21.23 Published: 10 March 2017 Peer Review: This article has been peer reviewed through the double-blind process of C21 Literature: Journal of 21st-century Writings, which is a journal of the Open Library of Humanities. Copyright: © 2017 The Author(s). This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (CC-BY 4.0), which permits unrestricted use, distri- bution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited. See http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/. Open Access: C21 Literature: Journal of 21st-century Writings is a peer-reviewed open access journal. Digital Preservation: The Open Library of Humanities and all its journals are digitally preserved in the CLOCKSS scholarly archive service. The Open Library of Humanities is an open access non-profit publisher of scholarly articles and monographs. Anna McFarlane, ‘The Poetry of Civic Nationalism: Jackie Kay’s ‘Bronze Head From Ife’’ (2017) 5(2): 5 C21 Literature: Journal of 21st-century Writings, DOI: https://doi.org/10.16995/c21.23 ARTICLE The Poetry of Civic Nationalism: Jackie Kay’s ‘Bronze Head From Ife’ Anna McFarlane University of Glasgow, GB [email protected] This article examines the work of the newly-minted Scots makar, Jackie Kay, charting her development as a black Scottish writer committed to the interrogation of identity categories.
    [Show full text]
  • Edwin Morgan - Poems
    Classic Poetry Series Edwin Morgan - poems - Publication Date: 2012 Publisher: Poemhunter.com - The World's Poetry Archive Edwin Morgan(27 April 1920 – 17 August 2010) Edwin George Morgan was a Scottish poet and translator who was associated with the Scottish Renaissance. He is widely recognised as one of the foremost Scottish poets of the 20th century. In 1999, Morgan was made the first Glasgow Poet Laureate. In 2004, he was named as the first Scottish national poet: The Scots Makar. <b>Life and Career</b> Morgan was born in Glasgow and grew up in Rutherglen. His parents were Presbyterian. As a child he was not surrounded by books, nor did he have any literary acquaintances. Schoolmates labelled him a swot. He convinced his parents to finance his membership of several book clubs in Glasgow. The Faber Book of Modern Verse (1936) was a "revelation" to him, he later said. Morgan entered the University of Glasgow in 1937. It was at university that he studied French and Russian, while self-educating in "a good bit of Italian and German" as well. After interrupting his studies to serve in World War II as a non- combatant conscientious objector with the Royal Army Medical Corps, Morgan graduated in 1947 and became a lecturer at the University. He worked there until his retirement in 1980. Morgan first outlined his sexuality in Nothing Not Giving Messages: Reflections on his Work and Life (1990). He had written many famous love poems, among them "Strawberries" and "The Unspoken", in which the love object was not gendered; this was partly because of legal problems at the time but also out of a desire to universalise them, as he made clear in an interview with Marshall Walker.
    [Show full text]
  • Edinburghs Hogmanay 20 Release
    WORLD-FAMOUS EDINBURGH’S HOGMANAY REVEALS ITS MAIN EVENT: FARE WELL • Edinburgh’s Hogmanay presents the largest swarm drone show ever seen in the UK, Fare Well. • 150 drones will create iconic images and words in the Scottish sky set to original words and music by Scots Makar Jackie Kay and Skye’s Niteworks. • Producers today release an exclusive clip of the show, Fare Well. • David Tennant leads line up of narrators for this unique ‘online only’ show. • Edinburgh's Hogmanay online celebration will run from 29 to 31 December 2020 at 7pm nightly • Visit www.edinburghshogmanay.com to witness the spectacle for yourselves Event: Fare Well, Edinburgh’s Hogmanay 2020 Dates: 29 – 31 December 2020 Timings: 7pm nightly Further Information: www.edinburghshogmanay.com Edinburgh, Scotland – Celebrated globally, New Year is known as an occasion of reflection, spectacular moments and celebration – and despite everything that has landed on 2020’s doorstep, Edinburgh’s Hogmanay is dedicated to continuing this tradition and, for the first time in its history, with a fully digital programme. Created as a reflection of the year that’s gone and a hope for the future, Edinburgh’s Hogmanay will bring to life an exciting new piece of writing by award-winning poet and Scots Makar, Jackie Kay. Taking inspiration from Scotland’s land and air, the new work, titled Fare Well, will take viewers on a breath-taking visual journey with the help of 150 individual drones, creating Scotland’s first ever large-scale drone show and the largest drone show ever seen in the UK.
    [Show full text]
  • Newsletter No. 6
    25 Buccleuch Place Edinburgh EH8 9LN THE SCOTTISH TEXT SOCIETY Newsletter Number 6 – October 2013 Dear Member Welcome to the autumn edition of the Scottish Text Society newsletter. In this edition you will see how the Society’s publication programme is developing as well as finding a wealth of information on recent publications and forthcoming events which I hope will be of interest to you. First of all the Society’s latest publication, Rhiannon Purdie’s Shorter Scottish Medieval Romances, (Series 5 Vol 11) has been well received and in particular with a glowing review in The Medieval Review. Volumes In Preparation Our next volume will be Richard Holland: The Buke of the Howlat (ed Ralph Hanna) to be published in the summer of 2014. Following on from this will be The Maitland Quarto (ed Joanna Martin) with a publication date of late 2014 or early 2015. The preparation of The Poems of John Stewart of Baldynneis (ed Katherine McClune) has been unavoidably delayed by the editor’s maternity leave but publication is expected in 2015. Also expected in 2015 is Comic and Parodic Poems (ed Janet Hadley Williams) with Gavin Douglas: The Eneados (eds Priscilla Bawcutt and Ian Cunningham) in 2015 or early 2016. We also expect Scottish Satirical Literature (1567-1584) (ed Tricia McElroy) to be published in 2016. Recent Publications Betuix pyne and faith: The Poetics of Compassion in Walter kennedy’s Passioun of Christ, (R James Goldstein) in Studies in Philology 110.3 (Summer 2013). A Distinction of Poetic Form: What Happened to Rhyme Royal in Scotland? R James Goldsrtein in The Anglo-Scottish Border and the Shaping of Identity, 1300-1600 (ed Mark P Bruce and Katherine H Terrel), (New Middle Ages Series, New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2012).
    [Show full text]
  • Alien Voices from the Street: Demotic Modernism in Modern Scots Writing Author(S): Roderick Watson Source: the Yearbook of English Studies, Vol
    Alien Voices from the Street: Demotic Modernism in Modern Scots Writing Author(s): Roderick Watson Source: The Yearbook of English Studies, Vol. 25, Non-Standard Englishes and the New Media Special Number (1995), pp. 141-155 Published by: Modern Humanities Research Association Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/3508823 . Accessed: 17/05/2013 11:20 Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at . http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp . JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact [email protected]. Modern Humanities Research Association is collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to The Yearbook of English Studies. http://www.jstor.org This content downloaded from 187.121.40.54 on Fri, 17 May 2013 11:20:11 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions Alien Voices from the Street: Demotic Modernism in Modern Scots Writing RODERICK WATSON Universityof Stirling Modern Scottish writing in Scots has been characterized by two apparently contradictory impulses: an interest in direct and demotic utterance, and a move towards a degree of linguistic estrangement. In either case, the end result has been to destabilize the cultural and expressive hegemony of standard English and to liberate a sense of linguistic and imaginative energy. Of course there will always be a degree ofdefamiliarization in any attempt to catch the actual phonetics of street speech, as in the poetry of Tom Leonard, but a more self-consciously literary and modernistic dislocation can also be found in the prose ofJames Kelman and Alasdair Gray, neither of whom is any less concerned than Leonard is with the position of the ordinary 'man in the street'.
    [Show full text]
  • The Afterlives of Allan Ramsay in the British Periodical Press, 1720–1870
    The Afterlives of Allan Ramsay in the British Periodical Press, 1720–1870 Rhona Brown Scottish Literary Review, Volume 10, Number 1, Spring/Summer 2018, pp. 95-115 (Article) Published by Association for Scottish Literary Studies For additional information about this article https://muse.jhu.edu/article/696245 Access provided by University of Glasgow Library (19 Jun 2018 13:53 GMT) RHONA BROWN The Afterlives of Allan Ramsay in the British Periodical Press, "Æ^" Abstract This article considers Allan Ramsay’s reception in Scottish and English newspapers, magazines and literary periodicals in the one hundred and ¢fty years following his earliest, career-setting publi- cations and the ¢rst volume of his poems, published in "Æ". It analyses his literary afterlives in two sections: ") "Æ^", in which commentators and reviewers give immediate responses to Ramsay’s life and works and in which his reception diversi¢es with the prominence, later in the century, of Robert Fergusson and Robert Burns; and Æ) "^", a period in which the reading public, the literary marketplace and its contexts are undergoing rapid evolution. The article argues that Ramsay’s role as a well- spring of Scots vernacular poetry is in£uential on the reception of Fergusson and Burns, but also that the prominence, particularly of Burns, in turn a¡ects Ramsay’s reception as the eighteenth century moves into the nineteenth. It reads Ramsay through reviews, anec- dotes and polemical pieces, demonstrating that Ramsay not only in£uenced the course of Scots vernacular poetry throughout the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, but also the priorities and preferences of those who were responsible for constructing the canon of Scottish literature in the period.
    [Show full text]
  • Begin-Gin-Menu.Pdf
    LET THE TASTE DISCOVERY Welcome to beGIN! Our team has carefully curated a selection of over 100 gins from Scotland and around the world, each chosen for their ingredients, origins and of course, quality. To help you select your drink, we’ve categorised our gins as: Scottish, classic, citrus, fruity, floral, spiced and weird (for those who want to try something a little extra!). GIN SERVE GS Our Gin Serve includes a 25ml serving of your selected gin. Use your GINtuition and add a mixer and garnish to your drink for £2. PERFECT SERVE PS Our Perfect Serve includes a 50ml serving of your selected gin, with a mixer and garnish—either our recommended pairing or your own choice, served in a large, round, Spanish copa glass filled with ice to keep your drink perfectly chilled. HOUSE GIN GS PS PLYMOUTH England .................................. £3 .00 | £7.50 beginglasgow.com 0141 341 6516 341 0141 Made at the historic Black Friars DistilleryGlasgow Road, Byres 385 in Devon town. Dry and smooth with strong citrus - ABV 41.2% VERY ISCO E D ST TA E H GIFT VOUCHERS T T E L Treat your favourite gin connoisseur COCKTAIL with a beGIN gift voucher! over 100 Menu GINS ORDER ONLINE AT to choosefrom BEGINGLASGOW.COM A GIFT FOR YOU MIXERS & GARNISHES MIXERS GARNISHES 1724 Tonic* Strawberry Mint Raspberry Thyme Franklin & Son’s Indian Tonic Blueberry Rosemary Franklin & Son’s Light Tonic Bramble Basil Franklin & Son’s Sicillian Lemon Tonic Lemon Sage Franklin & Son’s Pink Grapefruit Tonic Lime Coriander Orange Ginger Franklin & Son’s Rhubarb Tonic Grapefruit
    [Show full text]
  • Scottish Literature: Timeline Historical Events Literary Events (Selected
    Scottish Literature: Timeline Historical events Literary events (selected) 300 First recorded mention of the tribe called ‘Picts’ (Pictish speaking) 397 St Ninian establishes a Christian mission at Whithorn. 470 The Gododdin kingdom is founded north of the River Tweed (Cumbric speaking) 563 Columba (Colum Cille) founds Christian mission at Iona 574 Consolidation of kingdom of Dalriada in 597 ‘Elegy for Colum Cille’ (Gaelic) the west (Gaelic-speaking) 638 The settlement later known as ‘Edinburgh’ 7th C: The Gododdin (Cumbric) is taken from Gododdin by Northumbrians (northern Old English speakers) 700 ‘Dream of the Rood’ (OE) 794 Beginning of Viking invasions 747 ‘Hymn to Mary’, Cú Chuimne and settlements (Old Norse speakers) (Latin) 843 Death of Kenneth Mac Alpin, king who united Picts and Scots. 1058 After defeating Macbeth, Malcolm III is proclaimed king. He later marries Princess (later Saint) Margaret, of the English royal family, a refugee from the Norman conquerors (1066). 1124 David I, son of Malcolm and Margaret ascends to the Scottish throne and begins 12th C: ‘Arran’ (Gaelic) the ‘normanizing’ of Scotland: grants lands to Norman barons, builds abbeys 1230: Orkneyinga saga (Old Norse) and establishes ‘burghs’. 1286 Alexander III dies without an heir. The English king, Edward I supports John Balliol’s claim to the Scottish throne in return for fealty. This leads to the Wars of Independence. 1305 William Wallace is hung, drawn and quartered for leading Scottish resistance To Edward I. 1314 Robert Bruce leads Scots to victory at the Battle of Bannockburn. Historical events Literary events 1340 Declaration of Arbroath asserts Scottish sovereignty.
    [Show full text]