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SCOTT, Andrew, Scottish poet, born in Bowden, Roxburghshire, in 1757; died there, 22 May, 1839. He was of humble parentage, and, after being employed as a cowherd, enlisted in the army, served in this country during the Revolution, and was surrendered with Cornwallis's army at Yorktown. While he was encamped on Staten island, Scott composed his " Betsey Roscoe," " The Oak-Tree," and many other songs. After the war he settled in his native parish as a farm-laborer. He became a protege of several well-known literary men, and published " Poems, chiefly in the Scottish Dialect" (Kelso, 1811); a second volume of poems (Jed-burgh, 1821); and "Poems on Various Subjects " (Edinburgh, 1826).
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