Disambiguation evidence for Robert Burns poem "Comin' Thro' the Rye" via surface form

"Comin' Thro' the Rye"


As subject (47)

Triples where this entity appears as subject under the label "Comin' Thro' the Rye".

Predicate Object
associatedWith Scottish folk tradition
associatedWith romantic folk imagery
author Robert Burns
basedOn earlier folk tune
basedOn traditional Scottish song
belongsTo Burns' love songs
belongsTo Scottish literature
centuryOfComposition 18th century
character Jenny
character a speaking narrator
countryOfOrigin Scotland
culturalImpact became a well-known Scottish song
culturalImpact widely anthologized in Burns collections
firstLine O, Jenny's a' weet, poor body
form song lyric
genre lyric poetry
hasAdaptation choral arrangements
hasAdaptation musical settings
hasAdaptation recorded folk songs
hasAdaptation vocal performances
hasImagery secretive meetings in fields
hasImagery wet clothes from crossing the rye
hasSetting a rye field
hasSetting rural Scotland
hasTitleVariant The Catcher in the Rye
surface form: Coming Through the Rye
hasVersion expurgated versions with altered lyrics
hasVersion more explicit traditional variants
influenced The Catcher in the Rye
influencedAuthor J. D. Salinger
inspiredTitleOf The Catcher in the Rye
instanceOf Scots-language poem
instanceOf poem
language Scots
literaryMovement Scottish Enlightenment-era literature
meter song-like stanza form
partOf Robert Burns' song collections
publicationStatus public domain
questionedBy moral commentators of its time
referencedIn The Catcher in the Rye
rhymeScheme simple rhyming quatrains
subjectMatter meeting lovers in the rye
subjectMatter public versus private morality
theme romantic encounters
theme sexuality
theme social convention
writtenBy Robert Burns
writtenIn 18th century