of which, the capital of the state of Bashahr in the Punjab, has given its name to the fine woollen shawls, widely known as Rampur chadars.
RAMPUR BOALIA, or Beuleah, a town of British India,
the administrative headquarters of Rajshahi district in Eastern
Bengal and Assam; on the left bank of the Ganges. Pop.
(1901) 21,589. It was originally chosen as a commercial
factory for the silk trade, which is again being officially
encouraged by the agricultural department. The town
contains a government college, and an industrial school for
sericulture. Most of the public buildings were severely damaged
by the earthquake of the 12th of June 1897. There is a daily
steamer service on the Ganges.
RAMSAY, ALLAN (1686–1758), Scottish poet, was born at Leadhills, Lanarkshire, on the 15th of October 1686. He was
educated at the parish school of Crawford, and in 1701 was
apprenticed to a wig-maker in Edinburgh. He married
Christian Ross in 1712; a few years after he had established
himself as a wig-maker (not as a barber, as has been often
said) in the High Street, and soon found himself in comfortable
circumstances. His first efforts in verse-making were inspired
by the meetings of the Easy Club (founded in 1712), of which
he was an original member; and in 1715 he became the Club
Laureate. In the society of the members he assumed the
name of “Isaac Bickerstaff,” and later of “Gawin Douglas,”
the latter partly in memory of his maternal grandfather Douglas
of Muthill (Perthshire), and partly to give point to his boast
that he was a “poet sprung from a Douglas loin.” The choice
of the two names has some significance, when we consider his
later literary life as the associate of the Queen Anne poets and
as a collector of old Scots poetry. By 1718 he had made some
reputation as a writer of occasional verse, which he published
in broadsheets, and then (or a year earlier) he turned bookseller
in the premises where he had hitherto plied his craft of
wig-making. In 1716 he had published a rough transcript of
Christ’s: Kirk on the Green from the Bannatyne MS., with some
additions of his own. In 1718 he republished the piece with
more supplementary verses. In the following year he printed
a collection of Scots Songs. The success of these ventures
prompted him to collect his poems in 1722. The volume was
issued by subscription, and brought in the sum of four hundred
guineas. Four years later he removed to another shop, in the
neighbouring Luckenbooths, where he opened a circulating
library (the first in Scotland) and extended his business as a
bookseller. Between the publication of the collected edition
of his poems and his settling down in the Luckenbooths, he had
published a few shorter poems and had issued the first instalments
of The Tea-Table Miscellany and The Ever Green (both
1724–1727). The Tea-Table Miscellany is “A Collection of
Choice Songs Scots and English,” containing some of Ramsay's
own, some by his friends, several well-known ballads and songs,
and some Caroline verse. Its title was suggested by the programme
of the Spectator: and the compiler claimed the place
for his songs “e’en while the tea’s fill’d reeking round,” which
Addison sought for his speculations at the hour set apart “for
tea and bread and butter.” In The Ever Green, being a Collection
of Scots Poems wrote by the Ingenious before 1600,
Ramsay had another purpose, to reawaken an interest in the
older national literature. Nearly all the pieces were taken
from the Bannatyne MS., though they are by no means verbatim
copies. They included his version of Christ’s Kirk (u.s.)
and a remarkable pastiche by the editor entitled the Vision.
While engaged on these two series, he produced, in 1725, his
dramatic pastoral The Gentle Shepherd. In the volume of
poems published in 1722 Ramsay had shown his bent to this
genre, especially in “Patie and Roger,” which supplies two
of the dramatis personae to his greater work. The success of
the drama was remarkable. It passed through several editions,
and was performed at the theatre in Edinburgh; its
title is still known in every corner of Scotland, even if it be no
longer read. Ramsay wrote little afterwards, though he published
a few shorter poems, and new editions of his earlier
work. A complete edition of his Poems appeared in London
in 1731 and in Dublin in 1733. With a touch of vanity he
expressed the fear lest “the coolness of fancy that attends
advanced years should make me risk the reputation I had
acquired.” He was already on terms of intimacy with the
leading men of letters in Scotland and England. He corresponded
with Hamilton of Bangour (q.v.), Somerville (q.v.),
Gay (q.v.) and Pope. Gay visited him in Edinburgh, and Pope
praised his pastoral-compliments which were undoubtedly
responsible for some of Ramsay's unhappy poetic ventures
beyond his Scots vernacular. The poet had for many years
been a warm supporter of the stage. Some of his prologues
and epilogues were written for the London theatres. In 1736
he set about the erection of a new theatre, “at vast expense,”
in Carrubber's Close, Edinburgh; but the opposition was too
strong, and the new house was closed in 1737. In 1755 he
retired from his shop to the house on the slope of the Castle
Rock, still known as Ramsay Lodge. In this house, called by
his friends “the goose-pie,” because of its octagonal shape, the
poet died on the 7th of January 1758.
Ramsay's importance in literary history is twofold. As a pastoral writer (“in some respects the best in the world,” according to Leigh Hunt) he contributed, at an early stage, to the naturalistic reaction of the 18th century. His Gentle Shepherd, by its directness of impression and its appreciation of country life, anticipates the attitude of the school which broke with neo-classical tradition. It has the “mixed” faults which make the greater poem of his Scots successor, Thomson, a “transitional” document, but these give it an historical, if not an individual, interest. His chief place is, however, as an editor. He is the connecting-link between the greater “Makars” of the 15th and 16th centuries, and Fergusson (q.v.) and Burns. He revived the interest in vernacular literature, and directly inspired the genius of his greater successors. The preface to his Ever Green is a protest against “imported trimming” and “foreign embroidery in our writings,” and a plea for a return to simple Scottish tradition. He had no scholarly interest in the past, and he never hesitated to transform the texts when he could give contemporary “point” to a poem; but his instinct was good, and he did much to stimulate an ignorant public to fresh enjoyment. In this respect, too, he anticipates the reaction in England which followed securely on the publication of Percy's Reliques.
The Tea-Table Miscellany was reprinted in 1871 (2 vols., Glasgow; John Crum); The Ever Green in 1875 (2 vols., Glasgow; Robert Forrester); The Poems of Allan Ramsay in 1877 (2 vols., Paisley; Alex. Gardner). These volumes are uniform in size and binding, though issued by different publishers, u.s. A selection of the Poems appeared in 1887 (1 vol. 16mo, London; Walter Scott). There are many popular reprints of The Gentle Shepherd. (G. G. S.)
RAMSAY, ALLAN (1713–1784), Scotch portrait-painter, the
eldest son of the author of The Gentle Shepherd, was born at
Edinburgh in 1713. Ramsay manifested an aptitude for art
from an early period, and at the age of twenty we find him
in London studying under the Swedish painter Hans Huyssing,
and at the St Martin's Lane Academy; and in 1736 he left
for Rome, where he worked for three years under Solimena
and Imperiali (Fernandi). On his return he settled in Edinburgh;
and, having attracted attention by his head of Forbes
of Culloden and his full-length of the duke of Argyll, he
removed to London, where he was patronized by the duke
of Bridgewater. His pleasant manners and varied culture,
not less than his artistic skill, contributed to render him popular.
In 1767 he was appointed to succeed Shakelton as principal
painter to the king; and so fully employed was he on the
royal portraits which the king was in the habit of presenting
to ambassadors and colonial governors, that he was forced to
take advantage of the services of a host of assistants—of whom
David Martin and Philip Reinagle are the best known. His
life in London was varied by frequent visits to Italy, where
he occupied himself more in literary and antiquarian research
than with art. But this prosperous career came to an end,
his health being shattered by an accidental dislocation of the