MILLER’S wife died on
June 25, 1802, leaving her husband with five sons and a daughter.1 As
subsequent events showed, he was not happy in his family. James, who was
his father’s chief hope, fell into evil ways even before the old man
died. After serving an apprenticeship to a trade, and starting business
on his own account, John went to America and practically disappeared
from knowledge, his father hearing of him only in a roundabout fashion.
Robert, who made excellent promise, died on August 12, 1828, while still
a young man. Elizabeth, who remained at home for the most part and
sometimes assisted in the shop, died unmarried in August 1837, a year
after her father.
Miller’s second son, George, proved the black sheep of the family even
while his father lived, and for years was a source of distress to him.
In spite of his “talents and superior abilities” Miller declares he
became “a lasting torment and burden to me and a useless drone in
society to himself.” So extraordinary was his behaviour that doubts were
expressed as to his sanity even while he was yet a youth—doubts which
the course of time amply justified. Repeated attempts were made to fix
him to a special occupation, but every effort failed. His restlessness
began as soon as his apprenticeship to a local draper ended. He appeared
unable to remain long in any business. His father was anxious that he
should become a surgeon, and he was apprenticed to a firm in Dunfermline,
where he might be under the supervision of his uncle. That arrangement
lasted for a few weeks only. Again he was bound to an Edinburgh
engraver. For this profession he showed some aptitude and produced very
creditable work in a very few weeks. But so erratic and restless was his
nature that he would be bound by no engagement and deserted this
employment also on the shortest notice. The strange thing was that he
knew perfectly well how reprehensible his conduct was, and could write
about it in terms of the severest condemnation. An article from his pen
appeared in the Cheap Magazine, when he was in the midst of his
fluctuating resolves, and it began by saying that he knew “ from sad
experience the many flighty sallies or notions which seize the juvenile
mind, and the power that these fanciful ideas have over the actions of
youth by either actuating them to do that which is wrong or prompting
them to spend in idleness (the bane of happiness) that portion of life
when the foundation of the future man should be laid.”
He made several journeys by sea, and on the whole showed a preference
for a life afloat. No one on board the vessels in which he sailed,
however, could long endure his eccentricities. While on a voyage to
India his ongoings became so intolerable that the captain set him ashore
at St. Helena, where by a week or two he missed seeing Napoleon landed a
prisoner.
Although his father never actually assigned the book to him, there is no
reason to doubt that George was the author of a queer volume which
Miller published in 1815. Its short title is “The Traveller’s Guide to
Madeira and the West Indies,” and it gives an account of a voyage to
these places—a voyage which George actually took in the preceding year.
Its sub-title is a “Hieroglyphic Representation of Appearances and
Incidents.” The book is chiefly made up of a series of minute engravings
in which the events of each day are set forth pictorially. In all there
are no fewer than 125 pictures, the whole being accompanied by a running
commentary. Neither the pictures nor the letterpress is of any value
whatever. What little interest the volume possesses centres in the
unusual method pursued in its production.
George’s after-history does not make pleasant reading. His vagrant
disposition continued for many years, but he ultimately settled down in
Dunbar, where he fell under the influence of the drink habit. For a time
he kept house alone, making his living as best he could. His mind at
length gave way and he had to be confined. He died in the local asylum
on the 19th of December, 1869, after having been an inmate of it for
more than twenty years.
Just before his wife died Miller found his prospects so bright that he
seriously considered whether he should not remove to a place more
suitable for his growing business than Dunbar, “communication with which
and the country around is so circumscribed except in an indirect or
roundabout way.” His situation handicapped his wholesale trade
especially, but he hesitated to leave a town where he had “already
succeeded in establishing a snug retail business and where his job
printing was certainly succeeding to his utmost expectation considering
the disadvantages arising out of the localities of the place.” He was on
the point of selecting a town—probably Leith—“where there are so many
opportunities of conveyance to all parts of the kingdom by sea and
land,” but the death of his wife put an end to his search. With a young
family dependent on him, he found it would be inadvisable to remove from
his old home, sacred as it now was by “so many endearing ties.”
His business continued to extend so rapidly that at the end of 1803 he
was able to report that his job printing had “increased beyond all
former precedent.” Its growth had caused him to look out for larger
printing premises, and by the end of the year he had entered into
possession. But even this was not enough to meet the demands of his
trade, and he was forced to consider the possibility of occupying
another post where he could better command the custom of the county.
Haddington was naturally marked out as the most suitable spot. It
occupied a “ centrical position,” and being the county town was the
place where the main business of the district was transacted. His second
marriage opened up the way for him to take possession of it.
His second wife was Helen Grieve, a native of Stenton, a village distant
about five miles from Dunbar. Like his first marriage, his second had a
spice of romance about it. For a time the lady was indifferent to his
overtures, but she finally yielded. The manner of her surrender is best
told in the husband’s own words. “I happened to be in London on
business,” he says, “and how was I surprised one day to meet her in the
street. ‘Well met!’ said I, ‘the people will be saying we are away to be
married. Suppose we go and get the business settled, and give them room
to talk when we go home.’ ‘I’ll go anywhere with you,’ said she.”
And so the matter was arranged, the wedding taking place on July 11,
1805. The union proved a remarkably happy one. As the rejoicing
bridegroom afterwards said, he had “drawn once more an invaluable
treasure in the lottery of matrimony.” Mrs. Miller took a mother’s care
of his children, threw herself into his business with great energy, and
did much to make the disappointments which ultimately overtook him less
calamitous. He described her as the “tried associate in so many trials,
the approved and proved solace in so long a train of protracted griefs.”
When the twenty-fifth anniversary of their wedding came round, Miller
celebrated the happy occasion in an appropriate ode, which he prints in
full in his autobiography. Mrs. Miller survived her husband.
Miller’s determination to remove the printing part of his establishment
to Haddington was come to suddenly, and he is not clear as to the reason
for his precipitate action. “Circumstances had occurred,” he says, “to
make it imperiously necessary, if I wished to preserve to some of my own
family the printing business which I had been at so much labour and
pains to establish in the county, that I should remove that part of my
establishment to the county town without delay." The circumstances
referred to seem to have been that the excellent prospects Haddington
held out for a printing-press had attracted the attention of a possible
rival, and it was necessary to forestall him. The transference was made
at the end of May 1804.
The removal was rendered all the easier from the fact that Miller’s
brother John was now quite able to take over the supervision of the new
business, and so relieve him of constant attendance upon it. The only
real difficulty in working the two places was the want of adequate
communication between the towns, but that obstacle was removed in the
following October. A new coach then began running between Dunbar and
Edinburgh, by way of Haddington, “a most fortunate occurrence for me,”
says Miller, “as it made the journey in future assume almost the
appearance of stepping from one shop-door to the other, besides the
great advantage it gave me in having my Haddington parcels carried free
”— the latter privilege coming to him as agent for the coach owner.
A century ago Haddington was a somewhat different place from the sleepy
hollow it has since become. Then it was on the highway between Edinburgh
and London, and the day was brightened by the thundering passage of the
stagecoach on its way to either metropolis ; now it is the terminus of a
branch railway-line, and the main stream of traffic passes by on the
other side of the hills out of its sight and hearing. As the centre of a
wide and fertile district, its grain market was then probably the most
important in the whole country. Its wide street afforded ample
accommodation for the fairs in which the Scottish peasantry delighted,
and the county courts held within it gave the town precedence over its
neighbours. It could not boast of any literary life, but it had certain
possibilities within it. For two years after midsummer 1810, Edward
Irving taught school in the burgh and acted as tutor to that fiery
genius, Jane Welsh Carlyle, whose father was a physician in the town. In
1812 Samuel Smiles, destined to become well known as the author of
“Self-Help” and similar books, was born one of a large family in a house
in the main street where the tiny recess under the stair in which he
slept is still shown. He has left a vivid picture of his early days in
his autobiography. These things, however, were still in the future when
Miller settled down in the town and by his press gave facilities to any
literary life the old-fashioned place might contain. In ancient times
the burgh from its situation had possessed some political and
international importance. It must be confessed that in 1804 there was
not much that indicated the possibility of revived interest in it
through its literary performance.
The printing establishment thus set up included, besides John Miller, a
pressman, a bookbinder, and two apprentices. The first six months’
returns showed how amply Miller was justified in making the
transference. “In a space not much exceeding six months,” he says, “viz.
from 4th June to 31st December, 1804, the amount of our job printing had
exceeded the amount at Dunbar for the whole prosperous year preceding
the 31st December, 1803.” Almost as soon as the press was set up it
obtained orders from the Town Council. These consisted chiefly of
notices, or “ advertisements,” as they were called, to be posted about
the town. The following bill was among the earliest presented to the
Council, and may not be uninteresting as showing the kind of work the
press did as well as the prices charged :—
It will be observed that the account
indicates what was done in the burgh when news reached it of the victory
at Trafalgar Bay and the death of Nelson. Miller also became the town’s
agent in procuring books for the municipal library. In the first year
the citizens’ indebtedness to him amounted to £21 17s., and this sum was
the total after the bill had been discounted by 10 per cent.
One severe disappointment Miller met with at the beginning of his career
in the county town. About the time he began his extended business, the
King’s Printers made a determined effort to secure adequate recognition
of their privilege. It had been the custom for all work required in
connection with the lieutenancy of counties to be done by local
printers. This the King’s Printers now claimed as their own, and the
authorities had reluctantly to recognize that what they demanded lay
within their prerogative. The decision was particularly hard on Miller,
who had removed to Haddington so that, among other things, he might the
more effectually hold the very work of which he was now to be deprived.
“It was certainly a most disastrous and dispiriting piece of
intelligence,” he said, “however softened down by the kind offices and
friendly bearing of my Haddington friends. To those who in their several
settled situations were obliged to submit to it merely that an already
huge and overgrown monopolist might have his income increased, it was
sufficiently vexatious; but to me who had just taken such a decisive
step and put myself to so much expense in order to secure it more
firmly, it really bore much the appearance of what, alas! I have so
often experienced, the dashing the cup from my lips after it had almost
reached them.” It does not appear where Miller secured premises for his
printing establishment, but towards the end of 1804 he made an offer to
the magistrates of Haddington to take two shops from them on a lease of
seven years. These stood one on each side of the main entrance to the
Flesh Market, a building which had just been erected for the convenience
of the town. One shop he appropriated to each of the departments, for he
had determined again to associate the trade of a general merchant with
that of a bookseller. With as much formality as possible he opened
business in them on May 25, 1805. It is apparent that Miller came to rue
the bargain he had made with the town authorities, for his son James has
this curious note in his “History.” Speaking of the market he says, “The
two shops in the front which are now let for £6 each were at first let
conjointly on a lease of seven years at £30 sterling per annum.” The
whole building was removed some years ago to make room for an approach
to a new bridge over the Tyne.
In accordance with an agreement into which the brothers had entered,
John continued in charge of the Haddington branch for a year, leaving at
Whit-Sunday 1805 to make preparations for starting business on his own
account elsewhere. His removal left Miller in a strait. He had not yet a
son sufficiently advanced to undertake the supervision of the extension,
for James was only in his fourteenth year. The merchandise business,
however, was so promising that he determined to take up his residence in
Haddington with his family and place the Dunbar shop in the charge of
his mother-in-law. He accordingly rented a house in the county town, and
transferred his home to it in July 1805.
The change did not work out well. The house he had taken proved
unsuitable, and its inland situation affected the general health of his
family. His frequent absences from home made him largely dependent upon
hired servants, and they were a constant source of anxiety to him. They
were either deficient as workmen or remained with him too short a time.
A pressman who had left his employment threatened to set up in
opposition to him, and to add to his troubles his mother-in-law fell
into bad health : she died in December 1806. Rumours were also being
circulated to his disadvantage at Dunbar, for it was alleged that he
intended abandoning the town altogether, and a rival was already seeking
to secure what he might leave. All those things made him resolve to
return to his native town, which he did after one year’s exile from it.
He did not, however, give up all residence in Haddington. He transformed
the back premises of one of the shops into a residence, and kept up “the
appearance of a dwelling-house” there for some time longer.
WITCHES RIDING THE STORM. |