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Enriched edition. An 18th-century Scottish pastoral comedy of a shepherd and shepherdess, rustic Scots dialect, gentle humor, and love across social lines
The Gentle Shepherd (1725) is a pastoral comedy, largely in Scots, that fuses Augustan polish with Lowland vigor. Set by the Pentland Hills, its chief plot—the courtship of Patie and Peggy—moves through dialogue and songs fitted to familiar airs. Ramsay retools pastoral staples—disguise, recognition, restoration of order—within a distinctly Scottish moral economy where communal labor and vernacular wit bear ethical weight. Interleaving brisk scenes with lyric set-pieces, the play anticipates ballad-opera effects while rooting national sentiment in everyday speech. Ramsay—Edinburgh wigmaker turned bookseller, anthologist, and theatrical entrepreneur—championed Scots verse in the early eighteenth century. His Tea-Table Miscellany and The Ever Green revived native song, and his circulating library broadened access to print. Writing amid post-Union uncertainty and Jacobite aftershocks, he sought a civic humanism that dignified ordinary life, making the Scots tongue a medium for decorum, humor, and communal harmony. The Gentle Shepherd rewards readers of theater history, folk song, and the Scottish Enlightenment's vernacular culture. Scholars will find a lucid case study in how genre and language shape national feeling; performers and musicologists will relish its singable architecture. For anyone curious how elegance and earthiness cohere on page and stage, this play remains an exemplary, companionable guide.
Quickie Classics summarizes timeless works with precision, preserving the author's voice and keeping the prose clear, fast, and readable—distilled, never diluted. Enriched Edition extras: Introduction · Synopsis · Historical Context · Brief Analysis · 4 Reflection Q&As · Editorial Footnotes.