, Scott's collaborator in the
Minstrelsy Energetic as Scott's researches had been, he gained still more from the researches of other collectors he befriended or exchanged letters with. He gained access to several manuscript collections originating from the
Borders and from north-east Scotland, notably those of
Mrs Brown of Falkland,
David Herd and
Robert Riddell. He recruited assistants from widely different strata of society, including the wealthy and learned bibliophile
Richard Heber, the lawyer Robert Shortreed, the literary antiquaries
Robert Jamieson and
Charles Kirkpatrick Sharpe, and later the farmer
William Laidlaw and the shepherd-poet
James Hogg. Of these the most invaluable, more a collaborator than an assistant, was
John Leyden, a brilliant young linguist and poet who has been called "the project's workhorse and its architect". There have been criticisms of Scott for exploiting his helpers and for letting only his own name appear on the title-page, but all gave their help freely and were fully acknowledged in the body of the book. In the
Minstrelsy, Scott produced an
eclectic edition, combining lines and stanzas from different versions of each ballad to produce what he thought the best version from a purely literary point of view. This approach would now be considered unscholarly, but Scott wanted his book to appeal to a general reading public which had little regard either for scholarship or for ballad texts in the raw state. In his later years he changed his mind on this point, and wrote that "I think I did wrong...and that, in many respects, if I improved the poetry, I spoiled the simplicity of the old song". One aspect of his editing has proved controversial over the years. Scott denied introducing any new material of his own into the ballads to patch over corrupt lines, saying "I have made it an invariable rule to attempt no improvements upon the genuine Ballads which I have been able to recover"; and again, "I utterly disclaim the idea of writing anything that I am not ready to own to the whole world". J. G. Lockhart took his claims at face value, but later commentators, from
Francis James Child onwards, took a different view, so that it became commonplace to accuse him of writing not just lines of his own but even entire stanzas. However, more recent analyses of the texts by Keith W. Harry, Marryat Ross Dobie and Charles G. Zug have largely vindicated Scott's claims, showing that he was probably responsible for nothing more than an occasional word or phrase. The
Minstrelsy began with a substantial general introduction with several appendices of documentary material, followed by the editions of the various ballads; each of these has an explanatory headnote which puts the ballad into its historical context, then the text of the ballad itself, and finally a set of explanatory notes. Originally Scott wanted to restrict himself to those ballads that celebrated the
Border raids of the past, but he was drawn into including romantic ballads telling entirely unhistorical stories, and also modern imitations of the traditional ballads written by Scott and Leyden, and in later editions by
Matthew Lewis, Charles Kirkpatrick Sharpe,
Anna Seward and others. These three categories of ballad were clearly demarcated from each other in the
Minstrelsy. For some while Scott intended to include the Middle English romance
Sir Tristrem among the romantic ballads, convinced as he was that it was a Scottish production, but it proved so difficult and time-consuming to edit that he had to publish it separately in 1804, two years after the
Minstrelsy had appeared. Likewise, one of his imitations of the ancient ballads expanded to such a length as he wrote it that it outgrew its intended place in the
Minstrelsy and was instead published as
The Lay of the Last Minstrel, laying the foundation of Scott's tremendous fame as an original poet. == Publication ==