The Brigs of Ayr

E156486

"The Brigs of Ayr" is a poem by Robert Burns that personifies the old and new bridges over the River Ayr in Scotland to reflect on change, progress, and local life.

All labels observed (1)

Label Occurrences
The Brigs of Ayr canonical 2

How this entity was disambiguated

Statements (46)

Predicate Object
instanceOf poem
associatedWith Ayrshire
River Ayr bridges
author Robert Burns
belongsToMovement Scottish Enlightenment-era poetry
countryOfOrigin Scotland
createdBy Robert Burns
features dialogue between bridges
featuresCharacter Ayr Bridge
surface form: New Bridge of Ayr

Ayr Bridge
surface form: Old Bridge of Ayr
genre satirical poem
topographical poem
hasCanonicalStatus well-known poem by Robert Burns
hasCulturalSignificance Scottish literary heritage
local identity of Ayr
hasForm dialogic poem
hasImagery contrast between antiquity and modernity
hasMeter rhymed verse
hasNarrativePerspective third-person with personified speakers
hasPublicationCentury 18th century
hasSubjectMatter infrastructure and community life
tension between tradition and innovation
hasTitleReference bridges over the River Ayr
hasTone humorous
reflective
satirical
influencedBy contemporary public works in Ayr
local geography of Ayr
language English
literaryDevice personification
literaryForm narrative poem
mainTheme change
conflict between old and new
local life in Ayr
progress
mentions civic improvements in Ayr
local characters of Ayr
originalLanguageVariant Scots
partOf Robert Burns’ Ayrshire poems
reflectsOn social change in 18th-century Scotland
urban development in Ayr
setting Ayr River
surface form: River Ayr

town of Ayr
subjectOf Ayr Bridge
surface form: New Bridge of Ayr

Ayr Bridge
surface form: Old Bridge of Ayr
workOf Scottish literature

How these facts were elicited

Referenced by (2)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Poems of Robert Burns containsWork The Brigs of Ayr
Auld Brig mentionedIn The Brigs of Ayr