William Murdoch (24 February 1823 – 4 May 1887) was a Scottish-Canadian poet.
Born in Paisley, Renfrewshire, Scotland, Murdoch migrated to Canada in 1854, aged 31. The following year, he was appointed manager of the gasworks on Partridge Island in Saint John, New Brunswick. He contributed to the Saint John Morning News from 1865, and published Poems and Songs (1860) and Discursory Ruminations: A Fireside Drama (1876).
Murdoch died in Saint John, New Brunswick, Canada.
Style
He wrote in the Lowland Scots dialogue made popular by Robert Burns. The Literary History of Canada describes Murdoch's poems as having "style and polish" and it cites the following stanza as representative:
God pity then the poor blue noses
Their cheeks like flour, their nebs like roses;
They puff, they grue, and swallow doses
- To heat their wame
Till aft when night their business closes
- They hiccup hame.
- – from Poems and Songs
References
- Carl F. Klinck, Literary History of Canada Second Edition Volume One, Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1976, p. 131.
External links
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- 1823 births
- 1887 deaths
- 19th-century Canadian poets
- Canadian male poets
- English-language poets
- Writers from Saint John, New Brunswick
- Scottish emigrants to pre-Confederation New Brunswick
- Scottish poets
- Poets from Paisley, Renfrewshire
- Journalists from Paisley, Renfrewshire
- Journalists from Saint John, New Brunswick
- 19th-century British journalists
- British male journalists
- 19th-century British male writers
- Canadian male non-fiction writers
- Scottish writer stubs
- Canadian poet stubs