Mayne wrote poetry in Dumfries, and after 1777 he contributed poems to ''Ruddiman's Weekly Magazine
, Edinburgh. Between 1807 and 1817 several of his lyrics appeared in the Gentleman's Magazine''. Mayne's
Siller Gun was based on a Dumfries
wapinschaw: the competitors were members of the corporations, and the prize a silver cannon-shaped tube presented by James VI. It consisted of twelve stanzas when it appeared in 1777. Enlarged to two cantos in 1779, and to three and four in 1780 and 1808 respectively, it took final shape in five cantos with notes in 1836. It was conceived in the spirit of
Peblis to the Play. ''Hallowe'en
, published in Ruddiman's Weekly Magazine'' in November 1780, may have stimulated Burns's brilliant treatment of the same theme, according to Chambers,
Life and Work of Burns (i. 154, ed. 1851).
Logan Braes, which appeared in the
Star, 23 May 1789, had two lines plagiarised by Burns in a
Logan Braes of his own.
Glasgow, published in the
Glasgow Magazine in December 1783, was enlarged and issued in 1803. In the same year Mayne published a patriotic address
English, Scots, and Irishmen. ==References==