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George
Gilfillan (1813-1878)
Scottish
author, was born on the 30th of January 1813, at Comrie, Perthshire,
where his father, the Rev. Samuel Gilfillan, the author of some
theological works, was for many years minister of a Secession
congregation. After an education at Glasgow. University, in
March 1836 he was ordained pastor of a Secession congregation
in Dundee. He published a volume of his discourses in 1839,
and shortly afterwards another sermon on Hades, which brought
him under the scrutiny of his co-presbyters, and was ultimately
withdrawn from circulation.
Gilfillan
next contributed a series of sketches of noted contemporary
authors to the Dumfries Herald, then edited by Thomas Aird;
and these, with several new ones, formed his first Gallery of
Literary Portraits, which appeared in 1846, and had a wide circulation.
It was quickly followed by a Second and a Third Gallery. In
1851 his most successful work, the Bards of the Bible, appeared.
His aim was that it should be a poem on the Bible ; and it was
far more rhapsodical than critical. His Martyrs and heroes of
the Scottish Covenant appeared in 1832, and in 1856 he produced
a partly autobiographical, partly fabulous, History of a Man.
For thirty years he was engaged upon a long poem, on Night,
which was published in 1867, but its theme was too vast, vague
and unmanageable, and the result was a failure. He also edited
an edition of the British Poets. As a lecturer and as a preacher
he drew large crowds, but his literary reputation has not proved
permanent. He died on the I 3th of August 1878. He had just
finished a new life of Burns designed to accompany a new edition
of the works of that poet.
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To Famous Folks From Perthshire
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