Image for The Standard Bearer

The Standard Bearer

Part of the The Kailyard authors series
See all formats and editions

The Standard Bearer is one of S.R. Crockett's Covenanting tales and a work that lay close to his heart.

Dedicated to 'the Good and Kindly Folk of my native parish of Balmaghie', the story is set at the turn of the eighteenth century and takes its inspiration from the life of a rebel minister of Galloway.

The Rev. John Macmillan was deposed for upholding the ancient Standard - the Blue Banner of the Covenant which asserted the rights of the Kirk of Scotland to govern its own affairs.

On the loom of Scottish history the author weaves an episode that he himself describes as 'iron grey and wintry' but in which love and vigorously painted Galloway characters form an adventurous and colourful pattern.

With an introduction that sets out the historical background and provides an illuminating insight into Crockett's own life and working methods, this new edition restores to print one of his most neglected and tautly-constructed novels. -- Richard D. Jackson is a graduate of the University of St Andrews. A former schoolteacher, HM Inspector of Schools and retired senior administrative civil servant, he co-edited The Forest Minstrel for The Collected Works of James Hogg, contributes regularly to Studies in Hogg and his World and has published essays in other journals on Walter Scott, John Buchan and Philip Larkin.

Read More
Title Unavailable: Out of Print
Product Details
Kennedy And Boyd
1904999255 / 9781904999256
Paperback / softback
25/11/2010
United Kingdom
226 pages, black & white illustrations
152 x 229 mm, 338 grams
General (US: Trade) Learn More