I was delighted to read the letter by David Stevenson advocating Scots Wha Hae as the rightful anthem of our nation (Illustrious history of Scots Wha Hae, Letters, April 27).

James Kinsley, in the definitive edition of Burns, gave this song as Robert Bruce's March To Bannockburn - "To its ain tune" - and introduced it thus: "The Scottish war of independence roused Burns's fervent patriotic feeling throughout his life."

Burns regarded William Wallace as his greatest hero: "My heart glows with a wish to be able to do justice to the merits of the Saviour of his Country …" Bruce, of course, also figured in the tributes paid by the national bard, and, in the year of a special anniversary for Bannockburn and the independence referendum, the song should be afforded the maximum publicity as our national anthem!

Burns regarded this lyric as being applicable to contemporary events and reluctantly decided to remain anonymous from authorship of the verses. The song actually appeared in a list of proscribed material in the early 19th century.

Norrie Paton

Campbeltown