James Macpherson photograph

James Macpherson

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Gender Male
Death227 years ago
Date of birth October 27,1736
Zodiac sign Scorpio
Born Ruthven
United Kingdom
Date of died February 17,1796
DiedInverness
United Kingdom
Literary movement Romanticism
Parents Ellen Macpherson
Andrew Macpherson
Job Voice acting
Education University of Aberdeen
Marischal College
Hamilton Grammar School
Awards Pulitzer Prize for History
Jefferson Lecture
Guggenheim Fellowship for Humanities, US & Canada
Anisfield-Wolf Book Award for Nonfiction
NationalityScottish
Place of burialWestminster Abbey, London, United Kingdom
Children Juliet Macpherson
Influences Dante Alighieri
John Milton
Emanuel Swedenborg
Grandchildren David Brewster Macpherson
Date of Reg.
Date of Upd.
ID404558

The poems of Ossian, the son of Fingal
Fragments of Ancient Poetry Collected in the Highlands of Scotland and Translated from the Gallic or Erse Language
Temora
Fingal and Other Poems of Ossian
Fingal
Ossian
The Battle of Lora
The rights of Great Britain asserted against the claims of America
An Introduction to the History of Great Britain and Ireland
The Poetical Works of Ossian
Original Papers, Containing the Secret History of Great Britain from the Restoration, to the Accession of the House of Hannover: To which are Prefixed Extracts from the Life of James II as Written by Himself
A Short History of the Opposition During the Last Session of Parliament
The Highlander: A Poem: in Six Cantos . . .
James Macpherson's Fragments of Ancient Poetry (1760).
Fingal: A Poem in Six Books
The Fingal of Ossian,: An Ancient Epic Poem in Six Books.
The Works of Ossian, the Son of Fingal, Translated from the Galic Language by James MacPherson. . .
The History and Management of the East-India Company: From Its Origin in 1600 to the Present Time. Containing the affairs of the Carnatic . . . . Volume the first
An Introduction to the History of Great Britain and Ireland: Or, an Inquiry Into the Origin, Religion, Future State . . . of the Britons, Scots, Irish and Anglo-Saxons. By James Macpherson . . .
Fingal: An Epic Poem
The genuine remains of Ossian
A critical dissertation on the poems of Ossian, the son of Fingal
The History and Management of the East-India Company; Volume 1 - Scholar's Choice Edition
The Rights of Great Britain Asserted Against the Claims of America: Being an Answer to the Declaration of the General Congress. the Eighth Edition. to Which Is Now Added, a Refutation of Dr. Price's State of the National Debt
The Works of Ossian, the Son of Fingal;; Volume 1
The Highlander
Magic Lands: Legends and Enchantments
The Rights of Great Britain Asserted Against the Claims of America: Being an Answer to the Declaration of the General Congress. The Ninth Edition. To which is Now Added, a Further Refutation of Dr. Price's State of the National Debt
The Poetical Works of James MacPherson, Esq. , with the Life of the Author
The History and Management of the East-India Company, from Its Origin in 1600 to the Present Times. Volume the First. . . . the Whole Compiled from Authentic Records
The Poems of Goethe: Easyread Super Large 20pt Edition
The Songs of Selma. From the Original of Ossian the Son of Fingal
The Poems of Ossian: Being a Literal Translation from the Original Gaelic Into English : with a Dissertation Concerning the Era in which the Poet Lived : and a Critical Dissertation by the Late Rev. Hugh Blair, |. . . .
The History of Great Britain, from the Restoration, to the Accession of the House of Hannover. . . of 2; Volume 1
An Introduction to the History of Great Britain and Ireland: Or, an Inquiry Into the Origin, Religion, Future State, . . . of the Britons, Scots, Irish, and Anglo-Saxons. by James Macpherson, . . . the Third Edition
Fingal: An Epic Poem in Six Books, Taken from Ossian's Works
The Poems of Ossian, the Son of Fingal. Translated By James MacPherson, Esq. A New Edition, Carefully Corrected, and Greatly Improved
Morison's Edition of the Poems of Ossian, the Son of Fingal. Translated by James Macpherson, Esq; Carefully Corrected, and Greatly Improved. with a Sett [sic] of Elegant Engravings, from Original Drawings, by Stothard and Allan. . . . of 2;
Poems of Oisin, Bard of Erin: The Battle of Ventry Harbour, &c. From the Irish
The Works of Ossian, the Son of Fingal. in Two Volumes. Translated from the Galic Language by James Macpherson. . . . the Third Edition. of 2; Volume 1
The History of Great Britain, from the Restoration, to the Accession of the House of Hannover; Volume 2
The Rights of Great Britain Asserted Against the Claims of America: Being an Answer to the Declaration of the General Congress. the Ninth Edition. to Which Is Now Added, a Further Refutation of Dr. Price's State of the National Debt. . .
Poems of Ossian: Tr. by James Macpherson. With an Introduction, Historical and Critical
The Poems of Ossian. in Two Volumes. a New Edition. Translated by James Macpherson, Esq. . . . of 2; Volume 1
The Poems of Ossian in the Original Gaelic; Volume 1
Original Papers; Containing the Secret History of Great Britain, from the Restoration, to the Accession of the House of Hannover. . . . the Whole Arranged and Published by James Macpherson, . . . the Second Edition. of 2;
Selected Poetry
The Poems of Ossian in the Original Gaelic with a Literal Translation Into English and a Dissertation on the Authenticity of the Poems
Works Of Ossian
Fingal, an ancient epic poem, in six
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James Macpherson Life story


James Macpherson was a Scottish writer, poet, literary collector, and politician. He is known for the Ossian cycle of epic poems, which he claimed to have discovered and translated from Gaelic.

The strangers sharing stories on Edinburgh's listening bench

Dec 14,2021 5:40 am

Special benches offering people somewhere to sit down and chat with strangers in a bid to tackle loneliness have been popping up in town centres, parks and even school playgrounds in recent years. When a new " listening bench" appeared on Edinburgh's Royal Mile last week, Bbc Scotland journalist Angie Brown decided to take a seat to see who she would meet.

At first I felt a bit self conscious. I Am normally comfortable sitting on My Own on the traditional wooden benches across The City but this one is brightly painted white and green and I felt the throng of passers-by were looking at me.

But I only had a few awkward minutes before The First of my Three Encounters with people eager to talk.

'Would You like to go for a cup of tea some time?'

Fiona Cowie joined me on The Bench because she wanted to listen to a nearby busker who was singing her late father's favourite song.

" She's singing Ave Maria so I just had to stop to think about my dad. It was the tenth anniversary of his death a few weeks ago, " she told me.

" He would play The Song often when we were Growing Up in Wick. I have very happy memories of him and his death has been a huge loss to me and my Three Sisters . "

Her late father, who was a Bus Driver , loved writing poetry and named her Fiona, meaning fair one, from work by Scottish poet James Macpherson .

She left home to move to Edinburgh when she was a teenager and studied to become a reflexologist.

She Said : " It's a different way of life Up There and I wanted to travel, I went all over The Place from my base in Edinburgh.

" Then 10 Years ago I was just about to travel to Budapest when I Heard my dad was very ill.

" There was only a train to Inverness so I then had to catch a taxi to Wick. It was easily a two-hour trip and cost hundreds of pounds. He was very frugal with money so I could Never Tell him that.

She added: " I've still never made it to Budapest and I have no interest in it now since he died. "

As well as telling me about her dad, Fiona, who lives on her own in Leith, talked about her reflexology business and working with the homeless At Christmas .

After an hour on The Bench she was getting cold and got up to leave.

She added: " I've really enjoyed talking With You , Would You like to go for a cup of tea some time? "

The busker keeping warm with some opera singing

Professional opera singer and busker Beatrix Milan was next to join me on The Bench .

It was her rendition of Ave Maria that had earlier caught Fiona's attention.

The 31-year-old Hungarian, who has been living in Edinburgh for Six Years , sings near The Spot where The Bench was put in place and told me she had seen lots of people listening to each other on it over The Past few days.

A Man who had been standing listening to her singing began belting out a song in an operatic voice before shaking her hand and saying he sang baritone.

" What type of singing voice do you have? " I asked her. She is a soprano.

She told The Man he had " real potential" and that she could teach him, but He Said he was only visiting The City as a tourist.

It was getting very cold now and I asked if it affected her voice and how she coped being outside for so long in such temperatures.

" I wear gloves, but it's the diaphragm work that keeps the rest of me warm. It is the intensity of the breathing using long phases, pushing out the abdomen, it's a singing muscle workout. "

Beatrix started busking after visiting her sister in Dundee.

" She was Moving Out and I was helping her clean when I broke The Oven door and didn't have enough money to have it repaired so I went out into The Street and started singing classical songs. "

Beatrix, who studied for a music degree in Vienna, told me she dreams of singing with Scottish Opera, but for now enjoys busking. It also gives her somewhere to practice " as My Voice is often too loud for singing in flats I've lived in. "

Since arriving in Scotland from her home in Siofok, she has worked in call centres and as a waitress but said busking is where she makes The Most money.

" When I first started singing in The Street I didn't do opera because I didn't think it would be well received in Scotland, especially for my age group.

" But now I cannot believe the reaction I get. I've had people paint pictures of me, others put notes in my hand saying I'm their hero and drunken teenagers give me £20, saying they love my singing. "

'My hair fell out due to stress'

Beatrix left to go to her other job of waitressing and I was then joined on The Bench by Zaheer Aslam who asked if I had time to speak to him.

I told him I was A Journalist and there to listen and he started to talk to me about his experience of having alopecia. He first started losing hair when he was aged 13 and at Secondary School in Edinburgh.

" I didn't notice it Coming Out , or it lying on my pillow or anything like that. It was patches the size of a 50 pence coin, " the 40-year-old said.

" I had longish curtains hair so my mum used to dab her black eyeliner onto the patches to take The Eye away from the areas. "

He was given permission to wear a hat in class at school. " It was a Cyprus Hill beanie hat, " he told me.

" My doctor wanted me to have steroid injections in my head but I didn't want that. "

Each week his dad drove him to see someone using natural medicines in Huddersfield. The patches would grow back but then others would appear.

Zaheer told me that when he was 19 he learned a friend had died and overnight his eyelashes and eyebrows all fell out.

" I lost 90% of the hair on My Body . I Heard it was stress that caused alopecia but it wasn't until years later that I realised I had been stressed. "

In 2008 he drove from Scotland to Mongolia and his hair started growing back.

He Said : " I was the happiest version of myself on that adventure, I had left the stress behind and didn't have any pressures and that's when I noticed my hair growing back. "

Asked about his experience of lockdown Zaheer, who works in His Family 's shop in the City Centre and lives with His Dog , said he found The First lockdown very hard.

" But then I got used to it and realised I didn't have the same work stresses, " he told me.

" I Caught Up with myself and I recognise now that's when my hair grew back. I've come to realise that is what I need to look for in life. "

The Listening bench on the Royal Mile in Edinburgh is one of six benches which have been put in place in cities across the UK as part of ITV programme



Source of news: bbc.com

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