MONTGOMERY, the
surname of the noble family of Eglinton, which traces its descent from
Roger de Mundegumbrie, Viscount de Hiesmes, son of Hugh de Mundegumbrie
and Joceline de Beaumont, niece of Gonnera, wife of Richard, duke of
Normandy, treat-grandmother of William the Conqueror. Roger de
Mundegumbrie, thus nearly allied to the ruling house of Normandy, after
having obtained great distinction under the Norman banner in France,
accompanied his kinsman, William the Conqueror, into England, and
commanded the van of the invading army at the decisive battle of
Hastings in 1066. In reward of his bravery he was, by the Conqueror,
created earl of Chichester and Arundel, and soon after of Shrewsbury. He
also received from him large grants of land, becoming, in a short time,
lord of no fewer than fifty-seven lordships throughout England, with
extensive possessions in Salop. Having made a hostile incursion into
Wales, he took the castle of Baldwin, and gave it his own name of
Montgomery, a name which both the town in its vicinity and the entire
county in which it stands have permanently retained.
It is not known whence
the name was derived. Eustace, in his ‘Classical Tour,’ vol. i. p. 298,
mentions a lofty hill, called Monte Gomero, not far from Loretto; and in
the old ballad of ‘Chevy Chase,’ the name is given as Mongon-byrry.
The first of the name in
Scotland was Robert de Montgomery, supposed to have been a grandson of
Earl Roger. When Walter, the son of Alan, the first high steward of
Scotland, whose castle of Oswestry was in the vicinity of Shrewsbury,
came to Scotland to take possession of several grants of land which had
been conferred upon him by David I., Robert de Montgomery was one of the
barons who accompanied him from Wales, and received from him the manor
of Eglisham, in the county of Renfrew. This was for two centuries the
chief possession of the Scottish section of the Montgomeries, and still
remains their property undiminished as at first. Robert de Montgomery is
a witness to the foundation charter of Walter, the high steward, to the
monastery of Paisley in 1160, and to other charters between that year
and 1175. He died about 1177.
In the Ragman Roll appear
the names of John de Montgomery, and his brother, Murthaw, as among the
barons who swore fealty to Edward I. in 1296. The former is designated
of the county of Lanark, which then comprehended the county of Renfrew.
The latter was the reputed ancestor of the Montgomeries of Thornton.
Sir John Montgomery, the
seventh baron of Eaglesham, one of the heroes of the battle of Otterburn,
married Elizabeth, only daughter and sole heiress of Sir Hugh de
Eglinton, justiciary of Lothian, and niece of Robert II., and obtained
with her the baronies of Eglinton and Ardrossan. He was the ancestor of
the earls of Eglinton, as mentioned under that title, where the lineage
of that noble family has been already given.
_____
A baronetcy of the United
Kingdom was possessed by the family of Montgomery of Macbeth Hill, or
Magbie Hill, Peebles-shire, descended from Troilus Montgomery, son of
Adam Montgomery of Giffen, a cadet of the Eglinton family, living in the
reigns of James V., and Mary queen of Scots. It was conferred, 28th May,
1774, on William Montgomery of Magbie Hill, but expired on the death of
his son, Sir George Montgomery, second baronet, 9th July 1831.
Sir William’s brother,
Sir James Montgomery, of Stanhope, Peebles-shire, an eminent lawyer, was
also created a baronet. Born at Magbie Hill, in 1721, he was educated
for the Scottish bar, and attained to considerable distinction as an
advocate. On the abolition of the heritable jurisdictions in Scotland in
1748, he was one of the first sheriffs then named by the crown, and he
was the last survivor of those of this first nomination. He rose
gradually to the offices of solicitor-general, and lord-advocate, and in
1775 was appointed lord-chief-baron of the court of exchequer in
Scotland. Upon his retirement from the bench in 1801, he was created a
baronet of the United Kingdom. His exertions in introducing the most
improved modes of agriculture into Peebles-shire gained for him the
title of ‘Father of the county.’ He died April 2, 1803, at the age of
82. His eldest son, William, lieutenant-colonel 43d foot, having
predeceased him, he was succeeded by his 2d son, Sir James, 2d baronet,
born Oct. 9, 1766; appointed lord-advocate in 1804, resigned in 1806; at
one time M.P. for Peebles-shire. He died May 27, 1839.
His sons by a first wife
having predeceased him, he was succeeded by his eldest son by his 2d
wife, daughter of Thomas Graham, Esq. of Kinross. This son, Sir Graham
Montgomery, 3d baronet, born July 9, 1823, graduated at Christ Church,
Oxford, B.A.; married in 1845, Alice, daughter of John James
Hope-Johnston, Esq. of Annandale, M.P. Issue 4 sons and 4 daughters.
Sons: James Gordon Henry, born Feb. 6, 1850, Basil-Templer, Charles
Percy, and Arthur Cecil. M.P. for Peebles-shire, 1852; lord-lieutenant
of Kinross-shire, 1854.
The first of the family
of Montgomerie of Annick Lodge, Ayrshire, was Alexander, second son of
Hugh Montgomerie of Coilsfield, brother of Hugh, twelfth earl of
Eglinton. His son, William Eglinton Montgomerie, succeeded him in 1802.
The eldest sister of the latter, Elizabeth, was the first wife of the
Right Hon. David Boyle, lord-justice-general of Scotland, and died in
1822.
_____
The Irish family of
Montgomery of Grey Abbey, county Down, is descended from Sir Hugh
Montgomery, sixth laird of Braidstone, in the parish of Beith, Ayrshire,
a cadet of the noble house of Eglinton, and the principal leader in the
colonization of Ulster in 1606. The insurrectionary disturbances in
Ireland before the death of Queen Elizabeth, had placed a large extent
of confiscated property at the disposal of the crown. The laird of
Braidstone, with a view of obtaining some portion of it, effected the
escape of Con O’Neil, the chief of Ulster, from the castle of
Carrickfergus, where he had long been imprisoned. O’Neil, in consequence
“granted and assigned one half of all his land estate in Ireland” to him
“his heirs and assigns.” Thereafter, O’Neil and Braidstone went to
Westminster, when, through the influence of Braidstone’s brother,
George, who was chaplain to his majesty, O’Neil received pardon of the
king; Braidstone was knighted, and orders were given that the agreement
betwixt them should be confirmed by letters patent, under the great seal
of Ireland, “at such rents as therein might be expressed, and under
condition that the lands should be planted with British protestants, and
that no grant of fee farm should be made to any person of mere Irish
extraction.”
In the winter of 1605,
Sir Hugh Montgomery obtained from O’Neil a deed of feofment of all his
lands. In the following May, the plantation of Ulster had begun. Amongst
the gentlemen who joined Sir Hugh in the enterprise were, John Shaw of
Greenock, Patrick Montgomerie of Blackhouse, Colonel David Boyd, Patrick
Shaw of Kerseland, Hugh Montgomerie, junior, Thomas Nevin of Monkreddin,
Patrick Mure of Dugh, Sir William Edmiston of Duntreath, and Mrssrs,
Neill and Calderwood; besides a great many retainers. In 1610, only four
years after the first planting, Sir Hugh brought before the king’s
muster-master 1,000 able fighting men.
The success of this
Scotch enterprise led to the formation of the London companies in 1612,
and thus was founded the protestant province of Ulster, which, says
Hume, from being “the most wild and disorderly province of all Ireland,
soon became the best cultivated and most civilized.”
In 1622, Sir Hugh
Montgomery was raised to the peerage of Ireland as Viscount Montgomery
of Ardes, county Down. He was grandfather of Hugh, third Viscount
Montgomery of Ardes, created in 1661, earl of Mount Alexander. These
titles expired with Thomas, seventh earl, in 1758.
The Montgomeries of the
Hall, county Donegal, possessing a baronetcy of the united kingdom, of
the creation of 1808, and the Montgomeries of Convoy House, in the same
county, are also descended from the Eglinton family, their progenitors
in Ireland being among the settlers in Ulster in the reign of James VI.
And I.
MONTGOMERY, ALEXANDER, a celebrated poet of the reign of James
VI., supposed to have been a younger son of Montgomery of Hazlehead
Castle, in Ayrshire, a branch of the noble family of Eglinton, was born
probably about the middle of the 16th century. Of his personal history
there are no authentic memorials. In his poem, entitled ‘The Navigatioun,’
he calls himself “ane German born.” Dempster describes him as “Equus
Montanus, vulgo vocatus;” but it is certain that he was never knighted.
In the titles to his works he is styled “Captain,” and it is conjectured
that he was at one time a commander in the body guard of the Regent
Morton. Melvil, in his ‘diary,’ mentions him about 1577, as “Captain
Montgomery, a good honest man, and the regent’s domestic.” His poetical
talents procured him the patronage of James VI., from whom he enjoyed a
pension. In his majesty’s ‘Reulis and Cautelis to be observit and
eschewit in Scottish Poesie,’ published in 1584, the royal critic quotes
some of Montgomery’s poems, as examples of the different styles of
verse.
In his latter years, he
seems to have fallen into misfortunes. His pension was withheld from
him. He was also involved in a tedious law-suit before the court of
session, and he was for some time the tenant of a gaol. One of his minor
pieces is entitled ‘The Poet’s Complaynte against the Unkindnes of his
Companions, when he wes in Prissone.’ His best known production is his
allegorical poem of ‘The Cherrie and the Slae,’ on which Ramsay formed
the model of his ‘vision,’ and to one particular passage in which he was
indebted for his description of the Genius of Caledonia. It was first
published in 1595, and reprinted in 1597, by Robert Waldegrave,
“according to a copie corrected by the author himselfe.” Another of his
compositions is styled ‘The Flyting betwixt Montgomerie and Polwart.’ He
also wrote ‘The Minde’s Melodie,’ consisting of Paraphrases of the
Psalms, two of which were printed by Ramsay in his Evergreen. Foulis of
Glasgow published, in 1751, an edition of his poetry, and Urie of the
same place brought out another in 1754. He composed a great variety of
Sonnets in the Scottish language; and among the books presented by
Drummond to the university of Edinburgh is a manuscript collection of
the poems of Montgomery, consisting of Odes, Sonnets, Psalms, and
Epitaphs. His death appears to have taken place between 1597 and 1615,
in which latter year an edition of his ‘Cherrie and Slae’ was printed by
Andrew Hart. In 1822 a complete edition of his poems was published at
Edinburgh, under the superintendence of Mr. David Laing, with a
biographical preface by Dr. Irving.
MONTGOMERY, JAMES,
an eminent religious poet, was born in Irvine, in Ayrshire, November 4,
1771. His father, the Rev. John Montgomery, of Irish birth though of
Scottish extraction, was a preacher in the church of the United or
Moravian brethren. When the poet was about four years and a half old,
his parents returned to their native parish in the county of Antrim, in
the north of Ireland. About two years afterwards he was sent to the
seminary of the United Brethren at Fulneck, near Leeds, for his
education, and he remained there for ten years. In 1783, his parents
went to preach the gospel among the slaves in the West Indies, where
they both died, his mother at Tobago in 1790, and his father at
Barbadoes in 1791.
He was early inspired
with a desire to write poetry by hearing a portion of Blair’s ‘Grave’
read. When only ten years old, the bent of his mind was shown by his
composition of various little hymns. About 15 he began to write a heroic
poem on the subject of ‘Alfred.’ He was first placed as an assistant in
a general dealer’s shop, at Mirfield near Fulneck, but anxious for a
higher occupation, he one day set off, with three shillings and sixpence
in his pocket, to walk to London. He was at a little public house at
Wentworth, when a youth of the name of Hunt entered, and getting into
conversation with him, informed him that his father, who kept a general
store at Wath, in a neighbouring village, required an assistant. He
accordingly applied, and was successful. The following year (1790) he
obtained an introduction to Mr. Harrison, a London publisher, and having
offered him a manuscript volume of his verses, the latter took him into
his shop as an assistant, although he declined to publish his poems. In
two years more, namely in 1792, he was fortunate enough to obtain a
situation in the establishment of Mr. Gales, a bookseller of Sheffield,
who had set up a newspaper called the Sheffield Register. In a short
time his employer had to leave England, to avoid imprisonment for
printing articles too liberal for the then government, and Montgomery,
at the age of twenty-two, became the editor and publisher of the paper,
the name of which, on its becoming his part property, he changed to the
more poetical one of The Sheffield Iris.
At that period, the
government, apprehensive of the diffusion in England of the democratic
and republican principles of the first French revolution, watched with a
jealous eye the freedom of the press. In January 1794, amidst the keen
political excitement that prevailed, Montgomery was prosecuted by the
Attorney General on a charge of having reprinted and sold to a street
hawker, six quires of a ballad, written by a clergyman of Belfast,
commemorating ‘The fall of the Bastile’ in 1789, which by the crown was
interpreted into a seditious libel. Being found guilty, notwithstanding
the innocence of his intentions, he was sentenced to three months
imprisonment, in the castle of York, and to pay a fine of £20. In the
following January he was again tried, for a second imputed political
offence, the publication in his paper of a paragraph which reflected on
the conduct of a magistrate in quelling a riot at Sheffield. He was
again convicted, and sentenced to six months’ imprisonment in York
castle, to pay a fine of £30, and to give security to keep the peace for
two years. “All the persons,” said Montgomery, writing in 1825, “who
were actively concerned in the prosecutions against me in 1794 and 1795,
are dead, and, without exception, they died in peace with me. I believe
I am quite correct in saying that from each of them distinctly, in the
sequel, I received tokens of good will, and from several of them
substantial proofs of kindness. I mention not this as a plea in
extenuation of offences for which I bore the penalty of the law; I rest
my justification, in these cases, now on the same grounds, and no other,
on which I rested my justification then. I mention the circumstance to
the honour of the deceased, and as an evidence that, amidst all the
violence of that distracted time, a better spirit was not extinct, but
finally prevailed, and by its healing influence did indeed comfort those
who had been conscientious sufferers.”
After his release, his
health having been affected by the confinement, he went for a few weeks
to Scarborough, and then resumed his duties as editor of the Iris. The
proprietorship of that paper up to July 3d, 1795, had been a co-partnery
between the poet, and Benjamin Naylor, but at that date the partnership
was dissolved. Montgomery, who thence became sole proprietor, giving an
engagement for the payment of £1,600, the sum originally paid for the
property; and although he considered the terms somewhat hard, a few
years of industry and prosperity enabled him to liquidate the bond. To
the columns of his paper he had contributed occasional pieces of poetry,
as well as written for it a series of Essays, of an entertaining or
satirical nature, entitled ‘The Enthusiast.’ Between 1790 and 1796 he
had written a novel in four volumes, which was never printed, and was
ultimately committed to the flames. He had also composed various hymns,
both political and religious, and written four addresses, which were
spoken at the theatre at Sheffield. At the beginning of 1797, he
published his first work, entitled ‘Prison Amusements, by Paul
Positive.’ A name which he early adopted for his juvenile pieces, and
the initials of which were often mistaken for those of Peter Pindar, the
celebrated satirist of the day. The volume contained twenty-four poems,
many of which, as the Preface states, were composed in bitter moments,
amid the horrors of a gaol, under the pressure of sickness. One of the
most conspicuous pieces in the volume was entitled the ‘Pleasures of
Imprisonment.’ It was afterwards corrected and greatly abridged by the
author. The largest and most elaborate piece, however, was ‘The Bramin,’
in two cantos, and in heroic verse. The same year he commenced a new
series of Essays, in the columns of the Iris, under the designation of
‘The Whisperer, or Hints and speculations by Gabriel Silvertongue,
Gent.’ These lucubrations were, the following year, collected by the
author, and published in a volume at London. He afterwards got ashamed
of the work, and did all he could to suppress it.
In 1801, with the view of
extending his poetical claims, he transcribed three of his poems, from
the columns of the Iris, and with the signature of Aleaeus, sent them to
the editor of the ‘Poetical Register.’ These were the ‘Remonstrance to
Winter,’ ‘The Lyre,’ in blank verse, and ‘The Battle of Alexandria.’ In
the following year he also contributed some pieces to the same
publication, and on both occasions his poems were highly eulogized by
Dr. Aikin, in noticing that work in the ‘Annual Review,’ and quotations
given. From this period till 1806, he wrote and inserted in the columns
of the Iris many of the best of his minor pieces, such as ‘The Pillow;’
‘The Thunder Storm;’ ‘The Joy of Grief;’ ‘The Snowdrop;’ ‘The Ocean;’
‘The Grave;’ ‘The Common Lot,’ &c. In that year appeared ‘The Wanderer
of Switzerland, and other Poems,’ among which were the pieces named and
others. On its publication, it was at once acknowledged that a new poet
had arisen whose claims to have his name inscribed on the bard-roll of
his country could not be disputed. The work was most favourably
received, and in the course of a few weeks every copy of the first
edition was sold. A second edition was also speedily exhausted. A third
edition of a thousand copies was issued by Messrs. Longman and Co., the
eminent London publishers, who had entered into an arrangement with the
author for the purpose. Among other periodicals which welcomed Mr.
Montgomery’s work with high and discriminating praise, was the ‘Eclectic
Review,’ then conducted by Mr. David Parken, a barrister. This gentleman
soon entered into a correspondence with the poet, which led to his
becoming one of the regular contributors to that publication, when he
had for his associates such men as Robert Hall, Adam Clarke, Olinthus
Gregory, and John Foster.
On the appearance in
1807, of the third edition of ‘The Wanderer of Switzerland,’ the
Edinburgh Review opened its batteries upon it, and in a most abusive
critique predicted “that in less than three years nobody would know the
name of the ‘Wanderer of Switzerland,’ or any of the other poems in the
collection.” As in the memorable case of Lord Byron, however, the
judgment of the public reversed the decision of the critic. Within
eighteen months, a fourth edition of 1,500 copies of the condemned
volume was passing through the press where the Edinburgh Review itself
was printed, and fifteen years afterwards, namely in January 1822, it
had reached its ninth edition. At that period Montgomery acknowledged
that so great had been the success of the work that it had produced him
upwards of £800, and more than twelve thousand copies had been sold,
besides about a score of editions printed in America.
In Byron’s ‘English Bards
and Scotch Reviewers,’ published in 1809, Montgomery found himself
noticed in this strain:
“With broken lyre and
cheek serenely pale,
Lo! Sad Aleaeus wanders down the vale!
Though fair they rose, and might have bloomed at last,
His hopes have perished by the northern blast;
Nipped in the bud by Caledonian gales,
His blossoms wither as the blast prevails!
O’er his lost works let classic Sheffield weep;
May no rude hand disturb their early sleep!”
And in a note he adds,
“Poor Montgomery, though praised by every English Review, has been
bitterly reviled by the Edinburgh! After all, the Bard of Sheffield is a
man of considerable genius; his ‘Wanderer of Switzerland’ is worth a
thousand ‘Lyrical Ballads,’ and at least fifty ‘Degraded Epics.’”
Mr. Montgomery’s next
work was ‘The West Indies,’ a poem in four parts and in the heroic
couplet, written in honour of the abolition of the African slave-trade
by the British legislature in 1807. It was produced at the request of
Mr. Bowyer, the London publisher, to accompany a series of engravings
representing the past sufferings and the anticipated blessings of the
long-wronged Africans, both in their own land in the West Indies, and
appeared in 1809 in connection with poems on the same subject, by James
Grahame, author of ‘The Sabbath,’ and Miss Benger. When Montgomery’s
poem was republished by itself, accompanied by about twenty occasional
poems, upwards of ten thousand copies were sold in ten years. His
parents had laid down their lives in behalf of the enslaved and
perishing negro, and in this poem, their son, with a vigour and freedom
of description and a power of pathetic painting entirely his own, raised
his generous appeal to public justice in the negro’s behalf, which, no
doubt, had its effect when, twenty years after, slavery itself was
abolished in all the colonies belonging to Britain.
In the spring of 1813,
Mr. Montgomery published ‘The World before the Flood,’ a poem in ten
cantos in the heroic couplet, suggested to the poet by a passage in the
eleventh book of Paradise Lost referring to the translation of Enoch. He
had now begun to take an active and prominent part in the religious and
benevolent meetings of Sheffield and its neighbourhood, particularly in
connexion with missionary movements, the Bible Society, and the Sabbath
School Union, and in 1814 he was regularly admitted a member of the
Moravian church, of which his brother, the Rev. Ignatius Montgomery, was
a minister. He himself had been intended for the ministry in connexion
with the United Brethren, had not his early tendency to poetry prevented
his entering upon the studies necessary for it. Another of his brothers,
Robert Montgomery, was a grocer at Woolwich. They were all three
educated at the Moravian seminary at Fulneck. While the poet was there,
the institution was on one occasion visited by no less a personage than
Lord Monboddo, the celebrated Scottish judge. None of the boys had ever
seen a lord before, and Monboddo was a very strange-looking lord indeed.
He wore a large, stiff, bushy periwig, surmounted by a huge, odd-looking
hat; his very plant coat was studded with broad brass buttons, and his
breeches were of leather. He stood in the schoolroom, with his grave
absent face bent downwards, drawing and redrawing his whip along the
floor, as the Moravian teacher pointed out to his notice boy after boy.
“And this,” said the Moravian, coming at length to young Montgomery, “is
a countryman of your lordship’s.” His lordship raised himself up, looked
hard at the little fellow, and then shaking his huge whip over his head,
“Ah,” he exclaimed, “I hope his country will have no reason to be
ashamed of him.” “The circumstance,” said the poet, “made a deep
impression of my mind, and I determined, -- I trust the resolution was
not made in vain, -- I determined in that moment that my country should
not have reason to be ashamed of me.”
In January 1817 a volume
was published, entitled ‘The State Lottery, a Dream,’ by Samuel Roberts,
a friend of Montgomery, directed against that species of national
gambling, which, too long authorized by government, was some years after
put an end to by act of parliament. The book contained ‘Thoughts on
Wheels, a poem in five parts,’ by James Montgomery, in which he
introduced an ‘Ode to Britain,’ written in a lofty strain of patriotism,
which was included in the first edition of the poet’s collected poems in
1836, and a quarter of a century after its first publication he recited
it at a public breakfast given to him at Glasgow, when he visited
Scotland in 1841.
In 1819 he produced
‘Greenland and other Poems.’ The principal piece is in five cantos, and
contains a sketch of the ancient Moravian church, its revival in the
18th century, and the origin of the missions by that people to Greenland
in 1733. The poem as published is only a part of the author’s original
plan. It consists of a series of episodes, some of which are very
beautiful, while the glowing descriptions of the peculiar natural
phenomena of the arctic regions are striking and original. In 1822
appeared his little volume of ‘Songs of Zion,’ being imitations or
paraphrases of the Psalms of David. In the following year he was elected
vice-president of the Sheffield Literary and Philosophical Society, then
newly formed, when he delivered the opening lecture; “thus,” says his
biographers, “presenting himself for the first time in that interesting
character which he was destined so often afterwards to sustain, not only
before his own townspeople, but in various other places.” In this
address, speaking of the literature of some of the celebrated nations of
antiquity, whose political vicissitudes fill so large a space in the
page of history, he made this striking remark: “There is not in
existence a line of verse by Chaldaean, Babylonian, Assyrian, Egyptian,
or Phoenician bard.”
“The had not poet, and
they died.”
In December of the same
year, he delivered a ‘Lecture on Modern English Literature’ before the
same Society. It is comprised in the series afterwards published.
In 1824, a request having
been made to him by his publishers, Messrs. Longman and Co., to supply
them with as much matter in prose as would make two volumes, appeared
anonymously his ‘Prose by a Poet.’ Some of the most interesting portions
of this work had been reconstructed out of the best written of his
newspaper articles, and for a time it sold well, but did not long retain
its popularity. Montgomery himself remarked that ‘Prose by a Poet’ would
probably fail to please either of two large classes of readers, namely,
persons of taste merely, who would be disgusted with the introduction of
religious sentiments; and individuals of a decidedly religious
character, who would consider much of the matter too light or
sentimental; and he was not mistaken. The same year was published a
volume entitled ‘The Chimney Sweeper’s Friend, and Climbing Boys’
Album,’ containing pieces by different authors, ‘arranged by James
Montgomery,’ and dedicated to the king, George IV. The work was got up,
mainly by Montgomery’s exertions, to aid in effecting the abolition, at
length happily accomplished, of the cruel and unnatural practice of
employing boys in sweeping chimneys.
In 1825 his connexion
with the Iris terminated, as he that year disposed of the newspaper and
his printing business and materials to Mr. John Blackwell, who had been
at one time a Methodist preacher, but afterwards became a dealer in old
books, and was then a printer and stationer. On his retirement from the
paper, which he had conducted for thirty years, every class of
politicians in the town of Sheffield united in giving him a public
dinner, Lord Milton, afterwards Earl Fitz-William, in the chair, as a
testimony that there was among them but one feeling of goodwill towards
him, and but one opinion as to the integrity with which he had for so
long a time discharged his duties as an editor. The dinner took place on
the poet’s birthday, November 4th, 1825, when 116 gentlemen sat down to
the table. In returning thanks, the poet entered into some details
relative to his early life, as well before as after his residence in
Sheffield; alluding also to his varied labours and ultimate success as a
poet, in which character his name will be known to all time. He spoke
with pardonable pride of the success which had crowned his labours as an
author, “Not indeed,” he said, “with fame and fortune, as these were
lavished on my greater contemporaries, in comparison with whose
magnificent possessions on the British Parnassus my small plot of ground
is no more than Naboth’s vineyard to Ahab’s kingdom; but it is my own;
it is no copyhold; I borrowed it, I leased it from none. Every foot of
it I enclosed from the common myself; and I can say that not an inch
which I had once gained have I ever lost.” Some of his friends who could
not attend, including many ladies, afterwards presented him with 200
guineas, to be applied to the revival of a mission which his father, the
Rev. John Montgomery, had begun in Tobago, but which had been suspended
since his death in 1791. The proprietor of the estate on which it was
situated, Mr. Hamilton, a Scotchman, had in his will bequeathed £1,000,
contingent on the renewal of the mission. To this sum, the two hundred
guineas were to be added, and the gift was accompanied by the delicate
request that the renewed mission should be distinguished by the name of
Montgomery, in honour both of himself and his father.
At the close of 1825
appeared ‘The Christian Psalmodist; or Hymns, Selected and Original.’
These compositions, 562 in number, are from a great variety of authors,
including one hundred from his own pen, which form part fifth of the
collection. The compilation was made for Mr. Collins, the Glasgow
publisher (who died January 2, 1853) and for it he received one hundred
guineas. The prefatory essay contains some judicious remarks on the
writing of hymns, as one branch of the poetic art, and on the works of
Bishop Kenn, Dr. Isaac Watts, Addison, Toplady, Charles Wesley, and
others who have excelled in it. Montgomery also wrote an Introductory
essay to an edition of Cowper’s poems, then about to be issued by
Messrs. Chalmers and Collins.
In 1827, appeared ‘The
Pelican Island,’ by Mr. Montgomery, a poem in blank verse, suggested by
a passage in Captain Flinders’ ‘Voyage to Terra Australis,’ describing
the existence of the ancient haunts of the pelican in the small islands
on the coast of New Holland. The narrative is supposed to be delivered
by an imaginary being who witnesses the series of events related after
the whole has happened. To the ‘Pelican Island’ was added, as usual,
some of his smaller poems. Previous to its publication a work called
‘The Christian Poet’ was issued by Mr. Collins of Glasgow, with an
admirable introductory essay by Mr. Montgomery, a species of writing in
which he excelled. He also wrote the Introductory Essays to new editions
of ‘The Pilgrim’s Progress,’ ‘The Olney Hymns,’ the ‘Life of the Rev.
David Brainerd,’ and other works published by the same firm. In 1830 he
contributed to the Cabinet Cyclopedia the brief memoirs of Dante,
Ariosto, and Tasso, which appeared in the series of ‘Literary and
Scientific Men of Italy.’ The same year he compiled for the London
Missionary Society, ‘The Missionary Journal,’ from a vast mass of
valuable materials which had been placed in his hands, for which he
received £200. He also delivered a course of lectures on the History of
English Literature before the members of the Royal Institution of Great
Britain at London. The following year he lectured on Poetry at the same
Institution. Both courses he prepared for the press and published in
1833.
In 1841 he visited
Scotland, for the first and only time since his childhood. On this
occasion he accompanied the Rev. Mr. Latrobe. Their main object was the
promotion of the missions of the United Brethren, but Montgomery had
also a great desire to see the land of his birth. “Scotland,” he said,
in a letter, written in July 1844, to the committee of the Burns’
Festival, “took such early and effectual root in the soil of my heart
that to this hour it appears as green and flourishing, in the only eyes
with which I can now behold it, as when, after an absence of more than
threescore years, I was favoured to see it with the eyes that are
looking on this paper. Though scarcely four and a half years old when
removed, I have yet more lively, distinct, and delightful recollections
of little Irvine, its bridges, its river, its street aspect, and its
rural landscape, with sea-glimpses between, than I have equal
reminiscences of any subsequent period of the same length of time, spent
since then in fairer, wealthier, and more familiar, and therefore less
romantic, England. Yet those fond recollections of my birthplace, and
renewals of infant experience had become, through the vista of
retrospect, so ideal, that when, in the autumn of 1841, for the first
time, I returned to the scenes of my golden age, the humble realities,
though as beautiful as heaven’s daylight could make them in the first
week of a serene October, I could hardly reconcile with the ideal of
themselves, into which they had been transmuted by frequent repetition
and retouching – every time with a mellowing stroke – in the process of
preserving the identity of things, ‘that were to me more dear and
precious,’ which had been so soon and so long removed out of sight, but
never out of mind. I can, however, say that with the brief acquaintance
which on that occasion I made with my country and my birthplace, and
especially with what is the glory and the blessing of both, the frank,
and kind, and gracious inhabitants, -- my brief acquaintance, I was
going to say, with these had more than ever endeared to my better
feelings the land that gave me birth and the blood kindred with whom I
felt myself humbly but honestly allies.” In a postscript he explained
that by “blood kindred,” he meant his kinship to all the blood of
Scotland, neither less nor more, pretending to no affinity with the
noble house of Eglinton.
He was received with
great enthusiasm by the magistrates and inhabitants of Irvine. That town
is distinguished as “the only spot in Scotland where the United Brethren
first found a footing.” The house in which the poet was born is still
(1856) standing in Halfway Street. In his father’s time the
dwelling-house was under the same roof with the little chapel in which
he ministered. The latter was afterwards converted into a weaver’s shop.
A tablet has been placed on the wall to remind visitors that that humble
dwelling was the birthplace of the author of ‘The World before the
Flood.’ His reception in Edinburgh and Glasgow was also most gratifying
to his feelings. In the latter city a public breakfast was given to him.
A collected edition of
his works with autobiographical and illustrative notes, had been
published in 1841, and in 1851 the whole of his works appeared in one
volume 8vo. In 1853 he issued a collection of ‘Original Hymns, for
Public, Private, and Social Devotion.’ IN his latter years he enjoyed a
pension of £150.
One of his last public
appearances was at the meeting of the Wesleyan conference at Sheffield
in October 1852. He entered leaning heavily on the arm of Dr. Hannah,
and was by him conducted to a seat in front of the platform. A few
appropriate words from Dr. Hannah introduced him to the Conference. The
president addressed him in simple and graceful terms. Then the aged and
hoary poet, somewhat bent and very feeble in body, with the silver hair
shining in flakes as it fell thin upon his temples, or waved slightly
upwards from the side of his head, stepped forward to the front of the
platform, and, raising his hands in prayer and blessing, pronounced the
words – “The Lord bless and keep you; the Lord make his face to shine
upon you and be gracious unto you; the Lord life up his countenance upon
you, and give you peace.” The beautiful and impressive way in which he
uttered the last words of this prayer was said to have been
inexpressibly affecting.
Mr. Montgomery, who was
never married, died at his residence, The Mount, Sheffield, May 1, 1854,
and was buried at Sheffield. His portrait is subjoined:
[portrait of James Montgomery]
His funeral was a public
one, and a monument was afterwards erected to his memory in the town of
Sheffield. ‘Memoirs of the Life and Writings of James Montgomery,
including Selections from his Correspondence, remains in prose and
verse, and Conversations on various subjects; by John Holland and James
Everett;’ have been published in six volumes 8vo, London, 1854-56.
REPORT ON THE MUNIMENTS OF THE RIGHT
HONOURABLE ARCHIBALD WILLIAM MONTGOMERIE, EARL OF EGLINTON AND WINTON,
AT EGLINTON CASTLE, IN THE COUNTY OF AYR, BY WILLIAM FRASER, LL.D.,
EDINBURGH.
Manuscripts
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