Background
He was born 13 January 1766, at Berrywell, near Dunse, where his father was factor (estate manager) to Lord Douglas.
He was born 13 January 1766, at Berrywell, near Dunse, where his father was factor (estate manager) to Lord Douglas.
While apprenticed to a writer to the signet in Edinburgh, young Ainslie in 1787 formed the acquaintance of Burns, and in May of the same year he made an excursion with the poet in Teviotdale and Berwickshire.
Foreign others similarly named, see the Robert Ainslie navigation page
Burns stayed some days at Berrywell. A sister of Ainslie, whom Burns met on this occasion, was the subject of the impromptu beginning with ‘Fair maid.’ Ainslie passed writer to the signet in 1789. His intimacy with Burns, and his genial manners, secured him a cordial welcome in the literary circles of Edinburgh.
Hogg, who speaks of him as ‘honest Ainslie,’ mentions, as his one failing, constitutional sleepiness, the irresistibility of which Hogg, with characteristic egotism, illustrates by stating that he has ‘seen him fall fast asleep in the blue parlour at Ambrose"s, with North in the chair and myself croupier.’ Fourteen letters of Burns to Ainslie are included in the poet"s correspondence.
According to West. South. Douglas (Works of Burns, ii 188), the ballad, ‘Robin shure in Hairst,’ refers to a juvenile amour of Ainslie. Ainslie presented Sir Walter Scott with a manuscript copy of ‘Tam o" Shanter,’ which he had received from Burns at Ellisland.
He died on 11 April 1838.