Everything about Rob Roy Novel totally explained
Rob Roy (1817) is a novel by
Walter Scott about Frank Osbaldistone, the son of an English merchant who goes to the
Scottish Highlands to collect a debt stolen from his father.
Rob Roy MacGregor, whom the book is named after, appears in the book several times but isn't the lead character (in fact the narrative doesn't move to
Scotland until half way through the book).
Plot introduction
The story takes place at the time of the 'Fifteen
Jacobite Rising. The plot has been criticized as disjointed; the end especially is hurried.
Frank Osbaldistone, the narrator, quarrels with his father and is sent to stay with an uncle, Sir Hildebrand Osbaldistone, in Northumberland. Frank falls in love with Diana Vernon, Sir Hildebrand's niece, whose father has been forced to go into hiding because of his Jacobite sympathies. Frank's cousin, Rashleigh, steals important documents vital to the honour of Frank's father, William, and Frank pursues Rashleigh to Scotland. There he meets Robert Roy MacGregor, an associate of Diana's father. When Rashleigh attacks Frank, Rob Roy kills Rashleigh. All Sir Hildebrand's other sons are killed in the Jacobite rebellion, and Frank inherits Sir Hildebrand's property and marries Diana.
The novel is a brutally realistic depiction of the social conditions in Highland and Lowland Scotland in the early 18th Century. The Highlanders were compared with American Indians, as regards to their primitive, isolated lifestyle.
Background
Rob Roy was written from the Spring of
1817 and published on
Hogmanay of that year. Like the original
Waverley novel it was published anonymously and came in three volumes. The demand for the novel was huge and a whole ship from
Leith to
London contained nothing but an entire edition of it.
Furthermore,
Rob Roy was written at a time when many Europeans started regretting colonialism and imperialism as reports circulated back of horrendous atrocities towards primitive cultures. It was also a time when debates raged about the slave trade, the British occupation of India, and, more relevant to the novel, the disastrous effect of the Highland Clearances. Many writers would praise pre-commercial cultures and their defiance against the corrupting influence of commercial imperialism and "civilized" values. William Wordsworth wrote
The Conventions of Cintra, praising Spanish resistance to Napoleonic force; Byron would go on to praise Amazonian women in
Child Harold's Pilgrimage, inverting the "polite" norms of femininity that the modern "civilized" world placed on them; and, finally, Walter Scott would write about similar events in
The Visions of Don Roderick. What was evidently being championed before Scott wrote Rob Roy was a pre-commercial culture’s primitive resistance. The term "guerrilla" (as in warfare etc) came about during this period.
Characters in "Rob Roy"
- Francis Osbaldistone, son of an English Merchant
- Rashleigh Obaldistone, his cousin, and the villain.
- Robert Roy MacGregor Campbell, a scot livestock operator, and leader of an old clan-based group
- Helen Campbell, his wife
- Andrew Fairservice, a shrewd gardener
- Diana Vernon, resident at Obaldistone Hall, the love interest.
- Captain Thornton, a brave and noble British officer.
Cultural references
The novel wasn't the source of the film in 1995 as Rob Roy. It was directed by Michael Caton-Jones and starred Liam Neeson, Jessica Lange, John Hurt.
It also made it onto film by the Disney studios in 1953 as Rob Roy, the Highland Rogue.
A brand of blended Scotch whisky, Bailie Nicol Jarvie, is named after a character from the book.Further Information
Get more info on 'Rob Roy Novel'.
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