EVER on the outlook for
new and progressive ways of extending his business and increasing his
usefulness, Miller in 1813 ventured on the difficult path of journalism.
He could not have been ignorant of the many failures that marked that
route in the past, but he believed that he was able to use a new method
which promised success. He had done much business in occasional
literature of an “improving” type, and had satisfied himself that there
was an appetite for it in the country. His sales had been continuous and
extended, and the only difference between the literature he proposed to
issue, and what he had already succeeded in selling, was to be in
regularity of issue and uniformity of price. As a matter of fact he
republished several of his tracts in the pages of his new venture.
Miller laid elaborate plans for making his intentions known. As early as
June of the preceding year he scattered prospectuses of the proposed
journal broadcast over the land. He addressed circulars to ministers and
presbyteries, and enlisted the help of parish schoolmasters everywhere
in obtaining subscribers. Confined mainly to Scotland, his efforts
extended also to several of the centres of population in England.
Everything possible was done to ensure success.
The first number of the Cheap Magazine was issued on January 14, 1813,
the editor’s birthday. It was a monthly duodecimo of forty-eight pages
and carried the sub-title, “Poor Man’s Fireside Companion,” a name that
was dropped at the beginning of the second volume. As was then
customary, thirteen numbers were issued for the year, the last being
named a “Supplement.” The contents of the journal were of a
miscellaneous character, and as the prospectus said, “the whole was
adapted to the lowest capacity, calculated to promote the interests of
religion, virtue, and humanity, and to dispel the shades of ignorance,
prejudice, and error among the lower classes of mankind.” Miller is
frank enough to say that publication was undertaken “in the way of duty
as well as in the way of business,” and there seems no reason to doubt
that his chief object was to raise moral issues and to do what he could
to promote right living among those who were showing signs of breaking
beyond control. In the preceding year “shocking scenes that disgraced
the streets of Edinburgh," as well as the execution of three miserable
lads, had taken place in the capital, and these things had moved him to
begin the periodical in the hope that its pages would aid in making such
events impossible. On the title-page of his magazine he accordingly
wrote that its purpose was the “prevention of crimes” and to “insure the
peace, comfort, and security of society,” as well as to give young and
thoughtful minds “a taste for reading subjects of real utility.”
From the first the Cheap Magazine was a great success. Miller, who
described himself comprehensively as “not only the original and sole
projector and editor, but the author of several of its leading papers
and smaller pieces, as well as the printer and publisher, the seller and
distributor,” declares that of the first number “there were printed at
different periods, but mostly if not all within the year, upwards of
Twenty-one Thousand Copies!”—a circulation which was then phenomenal.
Concerning the magazine as a whole, his son wrote that it “was
circulated in every parish in Scotland at a vast expense from the high
price of carriage and postage,” and that “15,000 to 20,000 copies were
printed.” He adds that “Haddington beheld the novel scene of three
presses in motion which turned off twenty reams of paper in a week,” not
a large output in view of present-day printing developments, but
noteworthy a century ago.
It is perhaps unnecessary to occupy space in describing the kind of
matter that found its way into the pages of the magazine. Mental and
moral improvement being the aim of everything that secured a place
within it, the articles included stories of the primitive passions, the
lessons of which were made painfully evident in almost every paragraph;
poems that resembled Dr. Watts’s well-known didactic verses; papers on
the industrial arts and the commoner sciences; hints on etiquette and
domestic conduct in every conceivable situation, as well as
miscellaneous scraps of information. Social and family duties were
constantly inculcated and warnings against infringements were made as
solemn as possible.
Nothing was left to the imagination, everything was set down in such
plain language that no mistake could be made. Many of the papers were on
topics dealt with by the famous essayists of a former generation, but
they had none of the fine English, the wide culture or the classical
allusions of their predecessors. A few titles taken from one number will
sufficiently indicate the nature of the contents :—“Summer Furnishes us
with Images of Death”; “The Industrious Children”; “Dreadful
Consequences of Gaming”; “Fatal Effects of Anger”; “Piety the Foundation
of Good Morals”; “The Progress of Genius from Obscure and Low Situations
to Eminence and Celebrity,” an anticipation of Samuel Smiles’s
“Self-Help.” With evident relish the editor inserted a poetical
contribution, entitled “The Labourer’s Repast or the Cheap Magazine.”
The lines halt and the rhymes are imperfect, but the verses show how the
editor met the needs of the class to whom he appealed. Two stanzas will
suffice. Ye careless
and indolent ! open vour eyes,
Ah! halt not, I pray you, between:
And you that are young, here’s matter to prize,
Contained in the Cheap Magazine.
Consider, ye Parents! on you it depends
To bend the young Sprig while it’s green;
I’m apt to believe, you’ll accomplish your ends,
By a purchase of this Magazine.
Miller himself was responsible for a large
proportion of the letterpress that appeared in the journal, and he
afterwards compiled two volumes from his articles. Besides being aided
by papers sent in voluntarily he had the help of several writers whose
names have now lost all significance. Dr. Mavor, an English writer on
moral subjects and somewhat celebrated in his day, provided the preface.
Chief, however, among Miller’s contributors was Mrs. Beatrice Grant, a
lady whose literary attainments and services to himself Miller was never
weary of extolling. Belonging to the Campbells of Duntroon, she was the
sister of that Sir Neil who accompanied Napoleon to Elba, and the widow
of the minister of Duthil, a parish in the eastern highlands of
Inverness-shire. Two volumes long since forgotten—“Popular Models and
Impressive Warnings for the Sons and Daughters of Industry,” and
“Intellectual Education”—came from her pen.
It is to-day difficult to discover wherein the attraction of the Cheap
Magazine lay. It was fairly well printed, but the paper on which it was
produced was poor and the illustrations were wretched. Its tone was
severe—and there was little or no brightness in the writing. But there
is abundant evidence that it met with widespread acceptance. Church
courts passed resolutions approving of it, just as at a later date they
condemned Norman MacLeod’s Good Words. Well-known divines sent
testimonials to the editor. Press notices were laudatory, and men of
such diverse schools as William Wilber-force, Lindley Murray, and David
Dale commended it. There can be no doubt that it met a distinct need,
and this along with the great enterprise of the editor and printer in
pushing the sales everywhere explains its success.
The Chamberses of Edinburgh have been blamed for not giving greater
honour to the Cheap Magazine as a pioneer of popular periodical
literature. In describing the rise of their famous Edinburgh Journal,
William Chambers mentions several magazines which the brothers evidently
had in mind when they made the venture—their own Kaleidoscope of 1821,
the London Mirror of 1822, and the Edinburgh Cornucopia of 1831, as well
as the Constable Miscellanies. But Miller’s magazine finds no place in
the roll of honour, nor does any influence it may have exerted on their
plans, it is complained, ever appear to have received acknowledgment at
their hands. This, however, is to claim for the Cheap Magazine a place
it is hardly entitled to fill.
In their “Gazetteer of Scotland,” published a year before the appearance
of Miller’s “Latter Struggles,” Robert Chambers did ample justice to the
public service rendered by the little magazine. Speaking of the “works
of a popular nature calculated to promote the interests of religion,
virtue, and humanity among the lower orders” that issued from the Dunbar
Press, the writer adds, “One of them was a periodical styled the Cheap
Magazine, which though conducted on an unambitious plan was certainly an
undertaking in some respects in advance of the age. It appeared in the
year 1814; afforded a considerable mass of paper and print once a month
at 4d., and was filled with matter calculated to instruct, as well as
amuse, the two great, classes who mostly require instruction, the young
and the poor. Such a work, as it was rather a design of the present time
than of that when it appeared, might surely be tried again with better
hopes of success than at first. The work at present which approaches
nearest to it is the Gaelic Messenger of Dr. MacLeod.” On the whole this
fairly represents the value of the Cheap Magazine, and the part it
played in educating the public for the popular periodical literature
that appeared twenty years later. Miller himself uttered no complaint of
being overlooked, although he wrote accounts of his magazine after
Chambers's Journal had begun its issue. No one who compares the two
papers will discover much that the Edinburgh firm owed to their
Haddington predecessor.
The truth is that there were cheap and popular magazines in Scotland
long before Miller’s publication. Ruddiman’s Weekly Magazine, which was
begun in 1768, for example, provided thirty-two pages weekly, and
according to Arnot, the historian of Edinburgh and its contemporary, “as
this was afforded very cheap, the publication was very successful.
Indeed, it became so in a degree unprecedented in Scotland, for in
winter 1776 the number of copies sold amounted to 3,000 weekly.”
The merit of Miller’s publication was that it reached the farm labourer
and the remote villager, a class for which no special provision had
hitherto been made. Its forerunners had sought to capture the interest
of readers variously described as “courteous,” “ingenuous,” “polite,” or
as “gentlemen of taste” the Cheap Magazine catered for those whom
without offence it called “the lower orders,” and satisfied their needs
in a way that corresponded to their attainments.
The reference to Lord Brougham doubtless arises from the fact that in
1825 he published his “Practical Observations upon the Education of the
People,” in which he recommended the establishment of Book Clubs or
Reading Societies.
Its public showed their appreciation by buying the paper in thousands.
Its purpose was avowedly didactic, and the marvel is that it succeeded
so well at a time when no special religious fervour existed. It made its
way to great centres of population as well as to country hamlets. Sir J.
M. Barrie found a copy in his father’s house, and in “A Window in
Thrums” refers to it affectionately as “The Cheapy,” a name which has
evidently sprung from his own kindly remembrance of it. Its monthly
appearance accustomed the common people to a regular supply of
literature, and the many subsequent reprints of it that issued from the
Haddington press helped to keep interest alive, and so prepared the way
for the enthusiastic reception accorded to the cheap literature of
Charles Knight and the Chamberses when it appeared twenty years later.
After the Cheap Magazine had existed for two years it was withdrawn. It
seems impossible to discover the complete reason for the stoppage. Its
editor indicates that it began the second year of publication with a
circulation “now much reduced,” but still “very respectable.” The
demand, however, although not so keen, continued to show a desire on the
part of the public for its circulation. But Miller evidently thought he
had better bring the venture to a close. It had been the fashion in the
preceding half-century not to continue the issue of any magazine beyond
the fixed limit of a few numbers, and to end publication when there was
sufficient material to make two or three respectable volumes. The
conductors did not wish their journals to outlive their usefulness and
popularity, and were besides anxious to have them complete upon their
shelves before they reached unmanageable proportions in point of bulk.
Several of the more successful were resuscitated with such changes in
their appearance, price, and contents as experience had shown to be
warranted. Miller followed this later precedent and immediately put
another in place of the one he had withdrawn.
The last issue of the Cheap Magazine took place in December 1814. 'Lae
Monthly Monitor and Philanthropic Museum sent out its first number in
the following January. In design it resembled its predecessor closely,
although the price was somewhat higher. The editor and principal
contributor was still Miller himself, and it contained continuations of
several papers he had begun in the Cheap Magazine. It made greater
claims to literary quality, although Miller’s son wrote that both
periodicals were “rather of an instructive than literary nature.” The
Monitor expired in December after twelve monthly numbers had been
published. Its editor had by that time undertaken another branch of
bookselling which required all the attention he could give it. His own
literary resources and material were becoming exhausted, and the novelty
of the scheme was also wearing off in the public mind. In chronicling
the death of two other journals that had been published in Haddington in
1822 and 1828, Miller’s son says that “the country-town is situated too
near the fountain-head of letters in the metropolis for such
publications to succeed.” The Monitor had no doubt to suffer the
competition of the capital, but the real reason for its disappearance
was probably the financial difficulties which were even then beginning
to be felt by its publisher. The magazine was ended with an indication
that it might reappear as a quarterly, but events that speedily crowded
in on Miller made that course impossible.
It was while he was engaged in these
periodical ventures that Miller transferred his lending library to
Haddington. As he states in a circular addressed to his Dunbar
customers, he was induced to make the change “because the greater part
of the books had already passed through their hands.” The books were
removed in June 1814 and placed under the care of his son James. In the
same month he published a catalogue giving the names of 2,500 volumes
the library contained.
The library did not prove successful in the county town, and within a
few years the collection was dispersed. Miller felt the failure keenly.
“If the establishment was allowed to fall to pieces,” he says, “ it was
none of my fault. I did what I could to make myself useful.” It is
evident from the bitter way in which he speaks of the Itinerating
Library scheme started by Samuel Brown of Haddington in 1817,1 that he
considered himself ousted from the field by that venture. It had
apparently been urged on behalf of Brown’s plan that it would ultimately
benefit the bookseller by creating an appetite for reading. Miller’s
experience proved the fallacy of the expectation. He discovered that
those who were able to obtain their reading for nothing were unlikely
ever to pay for it. He was specially offended because Brown by his new
scheme practically ignored all his efforts in the past. “It is evident,”
he says, “that East Lothian should have been the last place to which
these gentry should have turned their attention. But it unfortunately so
happens that there are many well-meaning people in the world who are
very unwilling to help forward any laudable measure except they
themselves take the lead, and others who are ready to object to any
selection or collection of books in which they have not been consulted.”
The opposition may perhaps be in part explained by Miller’s last phrase.
He had already come into conflict with one of the warmest supporters of
the year 1830 forty collections were itinerating among thirty-one towns
and villages of East Lothian alone. The scheme spread to Ireland and the
colonies and even to St. Petersburg.
Brown’s plan. This person had challenged him because he had printed the
bills of certain strolling players, and some sharp letters had passed
between them. It is possible that Miller had, in some of the books he
had placed before the public, again offended the notions of propriety
entertained by this man and his colleagues.
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