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John
Logan (1748-1788)
Scottish
poet, was born at Soutra Midlothian, in 1748. His father, George
Logan, was a farmer and a member of the Burgher sect of the Secession
church. John Logan was sent to Musselburgh grammar school, and
in 1762 to the university of Edinburgh. In 1768-1769 he was tutor
to John,
afterwards Sir John, Sinclair, at Ulbster, Caithness, and n 1770,
having left the Secession church, he was licensed as a preacher
by the presbytery of Haddington. In 1771 he was presented to the
charge of South Leith, but was not ordained till two years later.
On the death of Michael Bruce he obtained that poet's MSS. with
a view to publication. In 1770 he published Poems on Several Occasions,
by Michael Bruce with a preface, in which, after eulogizing Bruce,
who had been a fellow student of his, he remarked that "to
make up a miscellany some poems wrote by different authors are
inserted, all of them originals, and none of them destitute of
merit. The reader of taste will easily distinguish them from those
of Mr Bruce, without their being particularized by any mark."
Logan
was an active member of the committee of the General Assembly
of the Church of Scotland which worked from 1775 to 1781 at revising
the "Translations and Paraphrases" for public worship,
in which many of his hymns are printed. In 1779-1781 he delivered
a course of lectures on the philosophy of history at St Mary's
Chapel, Edinburgh. An analysis of these lectures, Elements of
the Philosophy of History (1781), bears striking resemblance to
A View of Ancient History (1787), printed as the work of Dr W.
Rutherford, but thought by Logan's friends to be his. In 1781
he published his own Poems, including the "Ode to the Cuckoo
" and some other poems which had appeared in his volume of
Michael Bruce's poems, and also his own contributions to the Paraphrases.
His other publications were An Essay on the Manners and Governments
of Asia (1782), Runnamede, a tragedy (1783), and A Review of the
Principal Charges against Warren Hastings (1788). His connection
with the theatre gave offence to his congregation at South Leith;
he was intemperate in his habits, and there was some local scandal
attached to his name. He resigned his charge in 1786, retaining
part of his stipend, and proceeded to London, where he became
a writer for the English Review. He died on the 28th of December
1788. Two posthumous volumes of sermons appeared in 1790 and 1791.
They were very popular, and were reprinted in 1810. His Poetical
Works were printed in Dr Robert Anderson's British Poets with
a life of the author. They were reprinted in similar collections,
and separately in 1805.
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