Shaw's first work, published by subscription, was
An Analysis of the Gaelic Language, London, 1778 (2nd edition Edinburgh, 1778). Part of the "Proposals" for this work was written by Johnson. Shaw also planned to collect the vocabulary of
Scottish Gaelic. Johnson approved and Shaw set off for the
Scottish Highlands, financing himself since the
Highland Society of London would not, and Johnson sent him on his way, saying: "Sir, if you give the world a vocabulary of that language, while the island of Great Britain stands in the Atlantic ocean your name will be mentioned". After having travelled in Scotland and Ireland, Shaw completed and published
A Galic and English Dictionary, containing all the Words in the Scottish and Irish Dialects of the Celtic that could be collected from the Voice and Old Books and MSS., 2 vols. London, 1780. On 20 January 1786 he won an action in the
court of session against some of the subscribers, who argued that they were not bound to accept the book because it was defective; it was admitted that he "had not fulfilled the terms of his printed proposals". Highlanders had refused to give him information unless paid for it. Shaw had more luck in Ireland, with the result that the work contained strictly Irish words. • Macpherson's claimed manuscript sources did not exist; • While there were Irish epic sources, there were none in the Scottish Highland oral tradition; and • Macpherson's grasp of Gaelic was slight.
Other works Shaw also published: •
Suggestions respecting a Plan of National Education, with Conjectures on the probable Consequences of non-descript Methodism and Sunday Schools; Bath, 1801. •
The Life of Hannah More, with a Critical Review of her Writings, London, 1802. Under the pseudonym "the Rev. Sir Archibald MacSarcasm, bart." Part of the "Blagdon controversy", the book suggested that some of
Hannah More's work should be burned. ==Notes==