Lochinvar by Walter Scott โ€“ Summary and Questions

Lochinvar by Walter Scott

About the Poet and the Poem

Sir Walter Scott (1771-1832), Scottish writer and poet and one of the greatest historical novelists, was born on August 15, 1771, in Edinburgh as the son of a solicitor Walter Scott and Anne, a daughter of professor of medicine. An early illness left him lame in the right leg, but he grew up to be a man over six feet and great physical endurance. Scottโ€™s interest in the old Border tales and ballads had early been awakened, and he devoted much of his leisure to the exploration of the Border country. He attended Edinburgh High School and studied at Edinburgh University arts and law. Scott was apprenticed to his father in 1786 and in 1792 he was called to the bar. In 1799 he was appointed sheriff depute of the county of Selkirk. In 1797 Scott married Margaret Charlotte Charpenter. They had five children

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In 1802-03 Scottโ€™s first major work, Minstrelsy Of The Scottish Border appeared. As a poet, Scott rose into fame with the publication of The Lay Of The Last Minstrel (1805) about an old border country legend. It became a huge success and made him the most popular author of the day. It was followed by Marmion (1808), a historical romance in tetrameter. The Lady In The Lake appeared in 1810 and Rokeby in 1813. Scottโ€™s last major poem, The Lord Of The Isles, was published in 1815

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In 1806 Scott became clerk to the Court of Session in Edinburgh. To increase his income he started a printing and publishing business with his friend James Ballantyne. The enterprise crashed and Scott accepted all debts and tried to pay them off with his writings.

Summary of the Poem

The Poem โ€œLochinvarโ€ by Walter Scott (1771-1832) is a heroic ballad about the effect of a young gallantโ€™s actions on those around him. Scott grew up in Scotland and became a national hero; he was fascinated with military personages and this poem squarely fits into that mould. Scott himself was absorbed by the vicissitudes of war, including the national defeat at the Battle of Flodden Field. This engagement, with its enormous death toll and the purity with which it is supposed to have been fought, is a rich part of Scottish heritage. Lochinvar itself refers to a lake in Scotland and the hilly area lends the poem its name.

The poem opens with an interjection โ€œOh!โ€ that sets the poem up for the introduction of a dashing knight. Without firearms and armed with the only broadsword Lochinvar rides his fast horse quickly towards an as-yet-unknown destination. The reader sees he is โ€˜faithful in love and gallant in warโ€™. This is the first in a series of rhyming couplets that pair โ€˜Lochinvarโ€™ with โ€˜warโ€™. This is an association that Scott badly wants the reader to make. There are many positive descriptions of Lochinvarโ€™s courage that follow.

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Lochinvarโ€™s coming in from the west is a metaphor for him as a sort-of sun. Thus the other characters are planets revolving about him, the storyโ€™s prime mover. In the second stanza, we learn that he is charging headlong towards a wedding where a โ€˜dastardโ€™, a sneaking coward, is marrying Ellen of Lochinvar. The bride โ€˜had consentedโ€™, virtually her only action in the poem.

โ€˜Boldlyโ€™ Lochinvar enters the reception hall. This contrasts with the โ€˜poor, craven bridegroom who never says a word. The brideโ€™s father only asks what intention has for them, hand on his sword and resigned to his fate.

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