RECOMMEND
 ADD COMMENT  READ COMMENTS (0)  PRINT  EMAIL  SHARE  THE CANADIAN ENCYCLOPEDIA
0 people recommend this
Duncan Campbell Scott, poet, short-story writer, civil servant (b at Ottawa 2 Aug 1862; d there 19 Dec 1947). Duncan Campbell Scott's ambition was to become a doctor, but family finances were precarious and in 1879 he joined the federal Department of Indian Affairs. He became its deputy superintendent in 1913, a post he held until retirement in 1932. Scott is commonly placed with the "poets of the Confederation," but although the contemporary of Archibald LAMPMAN, Bliss CARMAN and C.G.D. ROBERTS he was personally close only to Lampman, who in the 1880s had sparked him to try poetry. Precise in imagery, intense yet disciplined, flexible in metre and form, Duncan Campbell Scott's poems weathered well the transition from traditional to modern poetry in Canada.


Keywords
Born in 1862
Poets

By the late 1880s Duncan Campbell Scott was a regular contributor to Scribner's Magazine. His 1896 In the Village of Viger is a collection of delicate sketches of French Canadian life. Two later collections, The Witching of Elspie (1923) and The Circle of Affection (1947), contained many fine short stories in wilderness settings. His short fiction was brought together in The Uncollected Short Stories of Duncan Campbell Scott, published in 2001.

As a spare-time writer Duncan Campbell Scott found the pursuit of poetry more manageable than fiction. In 1893 he published his first volume of poetry, The Magic House and Other Poems. Seven more collections of poems followed: The Magic House: Labor and the Angel (1898), New World Lyrics and Ballads (1905), Via Borealis (1906), Lundy's Lane and Other Poems (1916), Beauty and Life (1921), The Poems of Duncan Campbell Scott (1926) and The Green Cloister (1935). The Circle of Affection, chiefly a collection of prose, included a number of poems not previously published. Although Scott complained of critical neglect, his literary reputation has never been in doubt. He has been well represented in virtually all major anthologies of Canadian poetry published since 1900.

His work and travels for the Department of Indian Affairs furnished Scott with many literary subjects. The ironic contradiction between Scott's prominent role in implementing assimilation, later recognized as a racist bureaucratic policy, and his literary representations of First Nations peoples in his poetry and fiction has generated considerable critical controversy. For example, in poems such as his 1894 sonnet "The Onondaga Madonna," Scott presents his Native subjects as noble, but doomed. Later 20th- and 21st-century readers can see the dark irony of Scott's poetic lament for a waning culture that his own department was actively eradicating.

Duncan Campbell Scott valued music even above poetry and was an accomplished pianist. Murray ADASKIN was a friend, as were painters Homer WATSON and Edmund MORRIS and later Lawren HARRIS and Clarence GAGNON. Scott was a prime mover in the establishment of the Ottawa Little Theatre and the Dominion Drama Festival. A one-act play, Pierre, was first performed at the Ottawa Little Theatre in 1923 and subsequently published in Canadian Plays from Hart House Theatre (1926).

There is ample evidence of Duncan Campbell Scott's engagement as a writer. He contributed (with Lampman and Wilfred CAMPBELL) informal essays to the Toronto Globe in 1892-93, published as At the Mermaid Inn (1979). He wrote a novel which did not go to press until it was brought out in 1979 as The Untitled Novel. For the Makers of Canada series, which he directed with Pelham Edgar, he wrote a biography of John Graves SIMCOE (1905). In 1947 he published a book on Walter J. PHILLIPS. Perhaps most impressive was Duncan Campbell Scott's lifelong concern for Lampman's literary reputation. This loyalty to his good friend was expressed mainly by Scott's editions of Lampman's poems (1900-47).

See also NATIVE PEOPLE, GOVERNMENT POLICY.


Scott, Duncan Campbell
Duncan Campbell Scott (courtesy Library and Archives Canada/C-3187).

Author R.L. MCDOUGALL


Suggested Reading
Dragland, Stan, Duncan Campbell Scott and the Literature of Treaty 9 (1994).


Links to Other Sites
Canadian Poetry Archive
This Library and Archives Canada website offers an extensive collection of exemplary Canadian poetry and biographies of various Canadian poets.

The Canadian Poetry Press
This site offers scholarly commentary on a wide range of Canadian poetry. Includes many poems by Canadian authors and information about the “Confederation poets”.

Feature Articles
David Thompson: The Greatest Geographer the World has Known
David Thompson was an outsider, struggling to find a foothold in the empire that had consumed his country...
MOST READ ARTICLES
Trudeau, Pierre Elliott
Pierre Elliott Trudeau, politician, writer, constitutional lawyer, prime minister of Canada 1968-79 and 1980-84 (b at ...
Great Depression
Few countries were affected as severely as Canada by the worldwide Depression of the 1930s. It is estimated that ...
Riel, Louis
Louis Riel, Métis leader, founder of Manitoba, central figure in the NORTH-WEST REBELLION (b at Red River ...
MOST RECOMMENDED ARTICLES
Great Depression
Few countries were affected as severely as Canada by the worldwide Depression of the 1930s. It is estimated that ...
Evangelical Christian Church in Canada (Disciples of Christ)
Evangelical Christian Church, often called the Christian Church (Christian Disciples), is a denomination stemming from ...
Group of Seven
The Group of Seven was founded in 1920 as an organization of self-proclaimed modern artists. The original members - ...
MOST COMMENTED ON ARTICLES
Sears Canada Inc
Sears Canada Inc, headquartered in Toronto, is a Canadian retailer incorporated in 1952. In 1953 operating under the ...
Ware, John
John Ware, "Nigger John," horseman, rancher (b near Georgetown, SC 1845; d near Brooks, Alta 11 Sept 1905). ...
Land Claims
Land claims are dealt with by a process established by the federal government to enable INDIANS, INUIT and ...
newsletter subscription
* E-mail:
join us on facebook twitter
WIRE BLOG
Survival Kit
by ANNE SEIGNOT
WIRE BLOG
Love Stories
by JENNIFER GIVOGUE
ARTICLE
Pierre Trudeau: Politics and Personality
by WILLIAM CHRISTIAN
ARTICLE
How to Reverse the Decline of Parliament
by NELSON WISEMAN
WIRE BLOG
Prorogation Protest
by WILLIAM CHRISTIAN
INSIDE TCE
Gallery
Browse the rich visual resources of The Canadian Encyclopedia through thematic galleries of Canadian Art, History, Nature, People, and Science and Technology.
Interactive Resources
Illustrations, lively text, animations, sounds and games help make learning about Canadian history, art, geography, architecture and other topics entertaining as well as informative.
Canucklehead
The ultimate test of your knowledge of Canada, trivial and otherwise. You can choose from more than 60 dynamic quizzes with visual or text clues. Your scores depend on the speed with which you answer and the number of clues you need. Results are sent to you by email and high scores are posted on the site.
Timeline
This unique resource includes more than 6000 events from Canadian and world history. It can be searched by era, subject, keyword or date. To find out what happened on your birthday, select the month and day of your birth.
100 Greatest Events
This selection of the 100 "greatest" events in Canadian history was made by editor in chief James H. Marsh to draw attention to events that have left an indelible memory in the minds of later generations.
THE ENCYCLOPEDIA OF MUSIC IN CANADA
Brandt, Paul
Paul Brandt, singer. Songwriter, b Paul Rennee Belobersycky, Calgary 21 July 1972. Brandt grew up on gospel music and sang in church, but he soon developed a love for country music and, in 1992, won $1000 in a talent contest at ...


Who's Who at TCE    |    Our Partners The Canadian Encyclopedia © 2010 Historica-Dominion Copyright Information