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Robert Sempill the younger - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Robert Sempill, the younger (1595? - 1663?), Scottish poet, son of Robert Sempill, was educated at the University of Glasgow, having matriculated in March 1613. During the Civil War he fought for the ...
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Robert Sempill (the elder) (c. 1530 – 1595), Scottish ballad-writer, was in all probability a cadet of illegitimate birth of the noble house of Sempill or Semple. Very little is known of his life. He appears to have spent some time in Paris. He was probably a soldier, and must have held some office...
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Robert Sempill [the younger] (1595 ?-1665 ?), son of the above, was educated at the university of Glasgow, having matriculated in March 1613. During the Civil War he fought for the Stuarts, He wrote a continuation of his father's "Packman's Pater Noster." Francis Sempill (1616?-1682) was a son of Robert Sempill the younger.
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The Encyclopedia Britannica is free at the JCSM Study Center! This page has information about ROBERT SEMPILL [the younger] (1595? 1665 ?) - Encyclopedia Britannica - ROBERT SEMPILL [the younger] (1595? 1665 ?) Noster." End of Article: ROBERT SEMPILL [the younger] (1595?1665 ?)
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was a son of Robert Sempill the younger. No details of his education are known. His fidelity to the Stuarts involved him in money difficulties, to meet which he alienated portions of his estates to his son.
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A selection of articles related to Robert Sempill the younger A Wisdom Archive on Robert Sempill the younger...
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Fergusson, Robert, 1750–74, Scottish poet, b. Edinburgh. He was a precursor of Robert Burns, who proclaimed his debt to Fergusson's Poems (1773) 1750–74, Scottish poet, b. Edinburgh. He was a precursor of Robert Burns, who proclaimed his debt to Fergusson's Poems (1773). After careers in the clergy and in medicine,
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Francis Sempill (1616? - March, 1682) was a son of Robert Sempill the younger.
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The following recitativo is written in a stanza form called Standard Habbie after a poem made to one Habbie Simpson, piper of Kilbarchan, by Sir Robert Sempill of Beltrees, although the form has an older ancestry.
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Scots (The Scots leid) refers to Anglic varieties derived from early northern Middle English spoken in parts of Scotland and Northern Ireland. In Scotland it is sometimes called Lowland Scots to distinguish it from Scottish Gaelic traditionally spoken in the Highlands and Islands.
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