IN 1795 Miller took a
great step forward in business. In 1790, while still in partnership with
his brother, he had been offered the plant of John Taylor, the
Berwick-upon-Tweed printer. The price was to be between £200 and £300,
but the resources of the firm would not allow of the purchase.
Correspondence with Taylor was renewed in the year named, with the
result that Miller then acquired from him “a printing-press and
sundries” for £23. With the help of an apprentice, who went to Berwick
to be shown how to take down and put up the press, and assisted by John
his brother, now a lad of fourteen, Miller brought his purchase safe to
Dunbar. Soon after the press was set up the establishment became known
as the “ East Lothian Press,” a name which continued when it was
extended to Haddington, and even after the Millers had ceased connection
with it.
George Miller rightly takes great credit to himself for the fact that
his was the first press to be erected in East Lothian. The claim,
however, is not beyond all challenge. It is said that the name of a
printer, resident in Haddington earlier in the century, occurs in a
legal document. But this printer is an exceedingly nebulous personage,
and certainly nothing he may ever have printed is known. If he existed
at all, he probably was a man who, being a printer elsewhere, had some
local connection. Miller may therefore, without much possibility of the
distinction being taken from him, be counted the first printer who
worked a press in Haddingtonshire.
At the time he took this step printing establishments were not numerous
in the provincial towns of Scotland. As compared with some other
countries Scotland had been somewhat late in adopting the press at the
very beginning, and her chief towns exhibited a like dilatoriness even
after Edinburgh had shown the way. The severe printing restrictions then
in force might in part explain why Edinburgh, St. Andrews, Aberdeen,
Glasgow, and Leith alone had presses at work during the seventeenth
century, and why some of them existed for a short time only. The fear of
incurring penalties for unlicensed printing had disappeared during the
eighteenth century, and it might have been supposed that the larger
provincial towns would have taken advantage of the opportunity thus
opened up. So far as can be ascertained, however, presses were at work
in 1795 in the following places only : Dumfries, Dundee, Perth,
Inverness, Kilmarnock, Hawick, Kelso, Duns, and Montrose, with the
possible addition of Dunfermline. After enjoying the services of a
printer for a year in the sixteenth century, Stirling had just again
begun operations. As a centre for a press it could not be said that
Dunbar was as favourably situated as the places named. They were
sufficiently remote from the chief printing towns and from one another
to justify expectation of success, while Dunbar was so near Edinburgh,
the principal printing centre of the country, that it might have been
considered hazardous to attempt even a modified rivalry. Miller,
however, saw an opening possible and with considerable courage he went
in and occupied it. His enterprise was justified, and it was only after
his press had been nine years in operation that he was compelled by
circumstances to transfer it to Haddington as a more suitable centre.
There can be no doubt that Miller had a wide purpose in thus adding a
printing-press to his other forms of activity. He thought he saw in the
scattered community around him a field of enterprise which would augment
his own profits, but he reckoned that while doing so he would be able to
confer great benefits upon its members.
East Lothian was at the time, and still remains, an agricultural county.
Fisheries were indeed carried on along the coasts, but they were neither
large nor of great profit. In its western districts coal-mining employed
a large number of men, but the industry had not as yet reached the
development it afterwards attained. Miller had accordingly to look to
the agricultural labourers as his main constituency, but for various
causes they did not afford a very promising field for a merchant in
books.
For one thing money was scarce. The wage of a skilled tradesman within
the county averaged only from 10s. to 12s. a week. The ordinary farm
labourer was paid mostly in kind, and it was reckoned that his total
income from all sources never exceeded £13 a year, a miserable pittance
from which he had to feed and clothe wife and children. No doubt there
were compensations. The price of food was much smaller than it is
to-day. Should his wife be strong and healthy, she might earn enough
during harvest to pay the rent of the wretched cottage they inhabited—a
building usually only of one compartment. But even with such
possibilities of augmenting his income, a living was not always sure.
Already tendencies had set in that made for a decrease of employment.
Farms were becoming larger and more land was being laid down in grass.
The use of two-horse ploughs, as well as the introduction of various
improvements, was reducing the number of hands required, and the labour
market was becoming congested. As a consequence almost every parish
within the county was returning a diminishing number of inhabitants.
Altogether the conditions of life were such that the ordinary labourer
had little to spend on luxuries like books.
Nor had he been trained to be a reader, and even if he had he had little
means of access to books. The county possessed one or two libraries, but
for one reason or another they were beyond the reach of the people. The
Presbyteries of Dunbar and Haddington had each a collection of books,
which were then little used, and have since been entirely neglected.
Nearly a century before a native of Haddington had bequeathed a library
of notable volumes to his birthplace. To-day they are of no mean value
to the bibliographer, but a century ago they were as likely, from their
nature, to attract readers among the common people as they are to-day.
The famous Bishop Burnet had given a library to his old parish of
Salton, but had reserved it “for the minister’s house and use.” As far
back as 1683 there was a collection of sixty books attached to the
parochial school of Ormiston, but the benefit they were likely to bestow
on the general community may be judged from the fact that they were “in
Hebrew, Greek, and Latin, as well as in English.” Nor had the usual
parochial school done much to foster in the people a taste for
literature. About the time Miller set up in business the minister of
Pencaitland said of his parishioners: “All of them can at least read the
Bible, and the greatest part of the young men, whose parents could
afford but little for their education, attend the schoolmaster in the
winter evenings, who for a small consideration teaches them writing and
the commoner rules of arithmetic.” But such a training could not make
them lovers of books. Greater facilities came to be put within the reach
of farm-servants, but half a century later the minister of Haddington,
the centre of the county’s culture, could still write : “ Though in
general acquainted with the elementary branches of education—as reading,
writing, and arithmetic—and amply provided with the means of information
in most departments of knowledge, by having access to libraries,
parochial and itinerating, they are not much given to reading, nor
remarkable for their attainments in general information.” It is surely
testimony to Miller’s insight that he was able to see possibilities of
literary attainment in such apparently adverse material, and to his
industry that he succeeded in building up a promising business among
them.
At first Miller had to be his own compositor and pressman, for although
he had bound his brother John as an apprentice to himself in October of
the preceding year, the lad could not as yet be of much assistance. The
plant permitted of work of the jobbing kind only, but Miller had soon an
increasing custom in that direction. When he had longer manuscripts to
set up he had still to give them out, and his pamphlet on war was in
this way printed in Edinburgh even after he had acquired a press of his
own. By the spring of 1801, however, he had adequate assistance, and in
that year purchased a second press. With it he was able to produce
larger works, and before the year closed had printed and published “
Robinson Crusoe,” a duodecimo of 238 pages.
For some time after obtaining his first press Miller merely executed
what work was sent in to him. In 1798 he struck out a bolder line by
printing for sale by himself Shorter Catechisms, some children’s books,
and what he calls “pamphlets,” of which he produced “an assortment of
twenty kinds.” These were what are now known as chapbooks, though Miller
carefully avoids the name for a reason that will appear later. They
included such prints as Montgomerie’s “Cherry and the Slae,” and “ The
Laird of Cool’s Ghost,” which latter was afterwards somewhat severely
denounced by him. In 1800 he added ballads. The extent of his production
in this particular branch may be gauged from a note he has under date
1801. He speaks of “My halfpenny books, 25 reams, or 48,000, of which I
appear to have printed from the 8th of February to the 18th of March
this year, which were succeeded by 12,000 penny ones. And on the 1st of
May I have it recorded that I finished my 240 reams of ballads, which
were characterized by their purity from anything offensive to propriety
and delicacy, and some of them, I believe, for their moral tendency, a
thing not very common among their predecessors, and which I mention the
more as being perhaps the first attempt of the kind to reform, if not to
remodel, what has been supposed to have so much influence on the lower
orders—the national ballads.” Most of these prints have now perished,
but some specimens have survived to show their style: on the whole they
were crudely printed on inferior paper. They were, however, the means of
introducing Miller to wholesale trading. He exchanged them for similar
productions of other presses, and so increased his stock. In this way,
for example, he obtained from a Falkirk printer the ten volumes of an
edition of Erskine’s works for sixteen reams of his booklets. Quantities
of them were also disposed of to booksellers, who sold them to the
hawkers, and these in turn scattered them over the countryside.
Twice in these early years of his press Miller came into conflict with
the law. For some time he had been printing Shorter Catechisms and the
Proverbs of Solomon for use in schools. These books the King’s Printers
alone had the right to print, and in the summer of 1800 Miller was
somewhat rudely awakened to a sense of his transgression by being
interdicted from further production. This was all the harder on him
because he had just procured a new fount of type in order to print them
in better style.
The other was more serious. One day in July 1799 a Government official
appeared in his office and seized certain bundles of paper on the ground
that it had been wrongly “classed”—that is, that the tax paid on the
paper had been lower than its quality demanded, and that a fraud had
therefore been committed on the revenue. Miller was so astonished at the
action of the officer that he resisted the seizure, and the man had at
length to send for a file of soldiers to aid him in effecting his
purpose.
The double offence of fraud and deforcement was a serious one, and might
have ended most disastrously for Miller had he not taken steps to put
himself right with the authorities. Next morning he generously made all
haste on a borrowed horse to the mill at Chirnside, from which he had
obtained the paper, and so prevented the manufacturer from issuing more
of it. That action, however, did not save himself, and in a short time
he received a summons to appear before the Court of Exchequer to answer
the charges made against him. As it turned out, the trial did not take
place. The manufacturer was able to convince the authorities that while
the paper was in course of manufacture the very officer who had made the
seizure had advised him “to make the paper a small shade darker so that
it might be put into the second class and so be charged a smaller duty
than the first.” The defence was irresistible, and the charges were
withdrawn.
The trade which Miller had now built up in cheap popular literature soon
led him to take the whole matter of their contents into his serious
consideration. As has already been indicated, he was uneasy about the
evil effects these cheap prints had upon public morality, and in 1802 he
proceeded to put into execution a plan which he deemed would preserve
all the good such popular literature was fitted to do, and at the same
time destroy the tendencies for evil that lurked in its wide
distribution. Miller was fairly well equipped for the development he had
in view. He was now able to produce work of which no printer need be
ashamed. In 1803, for example, he sent out a single sheet giving the
signals to be displayed in the event of the French attempting a landing
on the coast, that, could hardly be excelled in beauty of type and grace
of setting.
For many generations chapbooks had been the prevailing literature of the
common people in Scotland as they had been elsewhere. There may have
been a sufficiency of books and magazines for the better classes over
the country and for the indwellers in the cities, but the peasantry were
largely, if not wholly, dependent on what the itinerant hawker, who
periodically visited their neighbourhood with all manner of articles to
sell, might bring in his basket. Any literature the chapmen carried in
this way had to be cheap, for money did not circulate extensively among
their possible clients ; it had to be simple because their customers had
neither the training to understand severe treatises nor the desire to
read them; and it had to have qualities which would make each
publication attractive in itself and the forerunner of further purchases
from the same basket. It is to be feared that the chapbooks thus
provided were often characterized by coarseness and sometimes even by
obscenity.
Perhaps Dr. William Chambers provides a sufficiently succinct
description of this class of literature. “The old Chap Books,” he says,
“consisting of coarsely printed sheets, duodecimo, embellished with
coarse frontispieces, aimed at no sort of instruction such as we now
understand by the term ; yet they furnished amusement to the humble
fireside. They appealed to the popular love of the heroic, the
marvellous, the pathetic and the humorous. Many of them were nothing
more than an embodiment of the legends, superstitions, ballads, and
songs which had been kept alive by oral tradition before the invention
of printing. Superstitions, as may be supposed, formed the staple
material. So numerous were the books for telling fortunes, discovering
and averting witchcraft, narrating the appearance of ghosts,
prognosticating the weather, interpreting dreams, and explaining lucky
and unlucky days that the extent and depth of public credulity must have
been immense.” To all which must be added that a large proportion of
chapbooks were religious and dealt with Bible narratives or episodes in
Church history. So extensive was the circulation of all kinds that it
has been estimated that the annual sale in Scotland must have greatly
exceeded 200,000. The leading Scottish presses for their production were
those of Glasgow, Edinburgh, Falkirk, Stirling, and Paisley.
Much of this ephemeral literature had, even at its best, so little
educational or moral value that it is surprising no earlier effort was
made to replace it. Such a hold, however, had it upon the affections of
the people that it required no ordinary courage to attempt its
displacement: it was to this task that Miller boldly applied himself.
His plan was to substitute for it publications which, while avowedly
religious and moral, were nevertheless near enough to it in appearance
and style not to suggest a violent rupture between the old and the new.
It does not appear that Miller stepped in as a reformer from the
outside. He gives no indication that he had any personal acquaintance
with the evils wrought by the chap-book, but there is every probability
that he had practical experience of them. No one would think of
condemning a reformer and consider him unworthy of a hearing simply
because once upon a time he had practised what he afterwards preached
against. And Miller probably had some first-hand knowledge of the evils
of the literature he set himself to correct. He had printed and
published at least two chapbooks which could not be distinguished in
tone and matter from the most objectionable that were in circulation.
In pursuance of his plan Miller published during 1802-4 a series of
small booklets to which he gave the name of “Cheap Tracts.” They
numbered twenty in all, and dealt with various informative topics.
According to his usual economical method he published them afterwards in
volume form, and even reproduced some of them in his Cheap Magazine, so
extending their usefulness. In tract form the issue amounted to 60,000,
or on the average 3,000 to each.
Miller seems to have varied in his opinion as to the good done by these
publications. In a circular he issued in 1812, he says that “having been
mostly disposed of to wholesale booksellers, and resold by them to
shopkeepers and hawkers, they must have long ere now obtained a wide
circulation, and he trusts have done some good. But as the sameness of
an article is not well calculated for the wholesale market alone, as the
home consumption for these was but trifling, and as the exchange
business affords but a slow return to lighten the burden of a heavy
outlay, the publisher had little encouragement to proceed. More recently
some clergymen in Dumfriesshire formed themselves into a society for the
avowed purpose of publishing and disseminating tracts of a similar
tendency, but having sent two volumes into the world, it would appear
from report that they also have met with no inducement to continue their
undertaking; perhaps in the former instance too little regard was paid
to a home or local circulation, in the latter too much.” Writing twenty
years later, however, he is more convinced that his labours had been
instrumental in doing much to destroy love for the deleterious chapbook.
“I need scarcely remind my more aged contemporaries,” he wrote in 1833,
“that my avowed motive at the time for bringing out that multitudinous
host of tracts in so cheap and humble a form was in order to counteract
the dangerous tendency of that noxious description which were then so
abundantly scattered about the country through the medium of what has
been so emphatically styled ‘ that copious source of mischief, the
hawker’s basket’; and those who will take the trouble of recollecting
the Lothian Toms, the John Cheaps, the Wise Willies, and other
pernicious trash, which I shall not pollute my pages by naming, and
compare them with the substitutes I had been at so much pains to put in
their place, I trust will do me the justice to say that my motives were
good. . . . Even that comparatively harmless production, ‘The Laird of
Coul’s Ghost,’ at one time a great favourite in this neighbourhood in
consequence of its being represented in the tract as the theatre of the
repeated appearance of the unearthly visitor, seems to have entirely
vanished at the crow of the cock in No. 19 ; and the ‘Witty Sayings of
George Buchanan ’ have sunk in the estimation of the more intelligent
young men of latter times before the far more rational entertainment to
be derived from that most excellent series of ‘Councils to Young Men ’
in No. 5.” Again he says that “since the publication of my Cheap Tracts
in 1802-3 complexion of the contents of the hawker’s basket has
undergone a very sensible alteration or material change to the better”;
and his son James roundly affirms that they “ superseded the common
trash of the hawker’s basket.”
It is an exaggeration, pardonable perhaps, but still an exaggeration,
for the processes of education were already tending to make such
publications impossible, and various economic movements were helping to
the same end. There seems to be no reason, however, to doubt that
Miller’s efforts had their effect on the general result, and he at least
deserves credit for having perceived the evil that lay in the
circulation of the ordinary chap-book, and for taking all methods open
to him for counteracting it.
Meantime Miller was being forced into another development of his
business. His shelves were becoming crowded and it was necessary that he
should relieve the pressure. “What with manufacturing, exchanging and
purchasing at sales, etc., my book stock had accumulated to such an
extent that the off-going or outlet by auctions, wholesale journeys,
etc., bore no proportion to the same.” He determined on a bold move— to
sell wholesale to the wholesale booksellers themselves. He is astonished
at his own audacity, for he knew that “ few country booksellers of my
standing and time of life would have attempted” such a course. “ Was it
not sufficient,” he asks himself, “that I should have been deluging all
the neighbouring villages and hamlets by my auctions? Was it not more
than sufficient that I should have been carrying on my operations in the
usual wholesale form across the country from Berwick-upon-Tweed to the
good town of Ayr, and from the banks of the Forth to the wilds of
Galloway, but I must now commence the serious operation of carrying my
attack into the great literary citadel of the country and there
attempting to sell wholesale to the wholesale booksellers themselves!”
It certainly required considerable courage in a country bookseller to
say to his brethren of the capital that he had anything worth their
notice, but his confidence in attacking Edinburgh was justified. The
sale was held in Metcalf’s Tavern in the Lawnmarket on February 9, 1802,
and continued for two days. To ensure an attendance he issued a printed
catalogue of the books to be sold, undertook to give credit on a
graduated scale to all purchasers, and provided a free dinner-table
before business began to all who cared to sit down. The result was
satisfactory, although the auctioneer had to contend with the presence
of the city magistrates in another room. They were busy eating the
“deid-chack,” as the ghastly meal after an execution was called. Miller
returned home with cash or bills for £300 in his pocket, and with the
determination to continue this method of disposing of his stock. |