THAT building beside the Academy, erected by the Seven
Incorporated Trades of Montrose, was opened in August, 1833. The author and
the Rev. James Dickson were the first teachers. It was built partly by
subscription, for the Trades were not able to give much out of their funds,
and I believe the town gave a little help in the end. It cost £700. But
before proceeding farther, it may not be out of place to say a little about
the situation which I left to come to Montrose. There are no high-ways, but
there are bye-ways; and it is not every one that can sit down to write with
that dogged determination that Dr. Johnson assumed when he was not
altogether in the humour. Therefore, although what immediately follows may
not seem to have much to do with the subject in hand, I hope the courteous
reader will excuse me. Being up this morning at twenty minutes past five—too
early an hour for putting on fire, without which it is not comfortable to
sit long in a cold morning—I set out to take a walk to the top of the hill
of Edzell, where the wind from the hills was rather cold. From the top of
this hill you can see the sea in the distance, and I had not seen it for
three weeks before. The hilly country about here very much resembles the
Highlands of Argyleshire, where I was tutor to Captain Campbell at
Duilletter, near Dalmally, for three years, and where I spent a sort of
Robinson Crusoe life, including the day, but without the man Friday. At any
rate, on my way thither from Inverary, where I had been assistant to the
parish schoolmaster, (Mr. George Riddoch, now at Elie,) "I had to walk 18
miles, and, losing my way, I lay in the hills all night, hanging by hand to
a birch tree at the side of a burn, and it was a drizzly night in October.
Had it not been that I had a little mountain dew in a small flask, provided
for me by Mrs Riddoch, I should have got my death of cold. From the place
nothing was to be heard but the murmuring sound of the river Shrae at the
bottom of the vale below, and, through the darkness visible, the frowning
heights of the grampian mountains on the opposite side beyond. In short, I
was in the land of Rob Roy Macgregor; and the hill facing Dalmally Inn and
the Parish Church of Glenorchy, on the top of the same hill where I was all
night, was that from which the Dugal Creature was thrown down. However, when
the morning light appeared, I crawled up with difficulty to a height, and
saw the house of Duilletter. The minister said, when I told him of my
adventure, that he did not know whether to laugh at me or to be angry. I had
been directed the way across the bum by some cottagers, but afterwards lost
it, and could neither find my way back nor forward. When I arrived I got
into the schoolmaster’s bed, and he brought me some peat-reek whisky in a
silver quaich, and in a short time, when the family were up, I was called to
the parlour to breakfast, but could scarcely swallow from the exposure.
However, after dinner I was all right again.
The previous summer having been wet, the peats had never been
got properly dried, and we always had difficulty that winter in getting a
fire made, #so the boys and I had to rummage for firewood, and sometimes
took a bit of paling when we could get no other. A good fire is a great help
to study; but sometimes the landlady, when she looked in, would have grudged
us the good fires we had. Tutors in the Highlands are expected to give a
hand at gardening or farm work, and I did both, though certainly not
obliged, and not able to do much at a time. 1 don’t know how Dr. Chalmers
would have liked this, but I felt it good for me, and at last took so much
interest in the garden that I would not come in to tea when strangers were
at the house,—for, be it observed, we never had any tea unless when visitors
came. The landlady was very economical; but the first night I could not
think enough why the tea was never coming; at last, however, supper came,
and we did ample justice to it. It is a very romantic, wild looking country,
at the head of Loch Awe, and from the parlour window we saw the torrent
rushing, and dashing down from the lofty grampian mountains not far off. An
addition was made to the garden the spring before I left, and new buildings
were erected, besides improvements made on the old, and it really cost me no
small concern to leave the garden and kail plants that were thriving under
my care. In such a retired glen, it was not likely that the children could
have any idea of the amusements of a town-life; but I got a great big dragon
made and plenty of twine, and set it up among the hills, as I heard here (at
Edzell) that Dr. Guthrie did in the country with his own children, and the
youngsters were filled with wonder and amazement at the kite flying in the
air. Now, this romantic way of living just suited mo, and I never took the
cold all the time I was there, though at Glasgow I could not get rid of it,
and Mr. C. brought from that splendid city a pair of globes before I left,
so that it was no wonder when in the North British Advertiser I saw an
advertisement for two teachers wanted for the Trades’ Schools of Montrose,
my native town, that I hesitated about leaving. At first I thought it
desirable to apply for one of these places, and changed my mind again, and
consented to stop, and with the indecision brought upon myself a desperate
headache—in fact, gave up all thoughts of it. Again I thought it is a pity
not to try to get among my friends, and perhaps secure a permanent
situation, so I said to Captain C. that if he would give me the situation
for life I would remain; but as that could not be, I got him to furnish a
testimonial, and I wrote to the Convener, the late Mr. Thomas Barclay,
watchmaker, that as no doubt both of the situations would now be filled up,
if he would keep me in view for the next vacancy I would feel obliged.
Immediately he wrote me that they had not got a teacher for the Upper
School, for writing and arithmetic, and that I should come to Montrose and
see about it. So, without delay I wrote to my old school-fellow, Mr. Adam
Burnes, to show my letter to certain friends in Montrose. It was a curious
coincidence, that on taking my seat at Glasgow on the top of the coach, the
late Mr. William Sharp, wine-merchant, was my fellow-traveller, from whom I
got all the information about the Trades’ Schools, and how the land lay. He
accompanied me as far as Perth, and told me to call upon his brother Charles
at Montrose, with whom I remained a day or two, and was treated with much
hospitality. Mr. Bumes and he went with me to Mr. T. Barclay, and then Mr.
Sharp and I called upon Dr. Paterson. I was introduced to Dr. Smith and
others. Mr. Nixon I had heard preach at Dr. J. T. Paterson’s Scotch Church,
Bishopwearmouth, Sunderland, several years before, and how strange I thought
it now to find him minister of St. John’s Chapel of Ease, Montrose. Although
in one sense I had only to walk the course, there being no other competitor,
yet I was subjected to a very strict examination, and had 35 questions to
work and answer on the slate, and afterwards to put down the solutions in
writing. Being locked in the lower school while this was in hand, Dr.
Paterson would have looked in now and then and said, “If it is any
encouragement to you, all you have yet done is right." There was wine and
cake set down, but I would not taste till all was over. At last the
ministers, Provost John Barclay, and other gentlemen came in and examined my
work, and then the Doctor withdrew to a desk and began writing. This was to
recommend the Trades to appoint me to the situation. I have to thank Dr.
Paterson especially, for he, the late Rev. Dr. Smith, and Rev. Mr. Nixon
were all exceedingly friendly. This was like a new start in life again,
after all I had passed through. ,
We were told plainly enough that it depended entirely upon
our own exertions whether we succeeded or not. We were in what Sir Robert
Peel called “ the cold shade of opposition,” and were made to see that we
must act upon the motto, omnia vincit labor, and be martyrs to the cause.
Nothing in these circumstances can sustain a man but the mens conscia recti,
for the test is severe, and it requires a strong feeling of independence to
sustain it. Magna componere parvis, such is the case with an independent
member of Parliament, who has an eye to the public good, but great is his
power. Such was the character of Joseph Hume, and such also is that of his
worthy successor. A small independent party may turn the scale when it is
nearly equally balanced between whig and tory, and may dispose either to
adopt measures which will promote and secure the best interests of the
country. To sustain us we had always the approval of the clergy of all
denominations at the annual examinations, and in particular, on one
occasion, the warm commendation of the Presbytery of Brechin; but there was
the painful feeling that the smallest remissness on our part would upset the
whole. Mr. Calvert once said to me, “ You are hurting the Academy but it was
expected from us that we should give as good an education as was given
there, aye, and under every discouragement too. While on his visit to
Montrose, Provost Burnes advised his son, Sir Alexander, to sink some money
for prizes to the Academy and the Trades, Schools, as the best thing he
could do for his native town; and, accordingly, he laid out £100 for this
object, the interest of which is still given for prizes. On writing to Sir
Alexander in India, acknowledging the gift, he returned me the following
letter :—
Cabool, 21st July, 1840.
“My Dear Sir,—I really feel very much obliged to you for your
very kind and most friendly expressions conveyed to me in your letter of the
30th of April last. Coming from Montrose, and from an old school-fellow,
they conjure up many pleasing associations to gratify me, and bring back to
my mind’s eye those days when we so
*Often loitered o’er that green,
When pleasing innocence endeared each passing scene.*
It, I assure you, affords me no small satisfaction to find so
small a gift so highly appreciated; and if, under jour able superintendence,
the mite which I have contributed towards stirring up a little emulation is
attended with beneficial consequences, I imagine at least I shall have more
to thank in your kindness of expression to your pupils, than in the value of
the gift. To tell the truth, fortune did not use to smile on me on
examination-day. I never got a prize in my life, and though, I no doubt, got
all I deserved, I remember many an examination passing without any prizes
being awarded ; and at a lapse of some five-and-twenty years, I would fain
persuade myself that had there been something to give I might have got it—so
fondly, you see, do "we cling to the brighter side of the picture.
"I have a very lively remembrance of you at school. You were
in the class above me, but not so much advanced in years as to be in another
clique. Whether we went to the North-Water—Dun’s Brig—the Point— the Rock of
St. Skae—Rossie—to 'catch podlies’ at the pier, or use our Skatchets at the
*Cruizers’—woes me! I give a sigh as I think of the cares one brings on
himself in after life by adding the affairs of the public to those of
himself. That demon, ambition, I fear makes us climb the high hill, as my
great relative Burns said, 4 not for the laudable anxiety of viewing an
extended landscape, but rather for the pride of looking down on our
fellows,’ yet I do feel also that I have the ennobling feeling you speak of,
and that I am working for my country’s good, and hitherto that country has
nobly rewarded me.
"If I were near you, I might have it in my power to give you
a lift 4 for auld langsyne,’ and could I, you may be sure I would—as it is,
my worthy father, I am sure, would for my sake do it; nor would my good
brother, Adam, fail, for believe me, you have my hearty good wishes for your
welfare and prosperity ; and as Cicero said of Virgil, my best wish is that
among the youths you send forth there may be many you see shine as magnet spet altera
Roma—no MonUsrosarum,—and I ever am,
“Yours most faithfully and sincerely
(Signed) Albx. Bubhbs.
"To Mr. D. Mitchell, Trades’ School, Montrose.”
Sir Alexander Burnes was one of nature’s nobility—a youth
full of promise and of high expectations—his career short as it was
brilliant—and always his thoughts turned to home and its endearments—how he
thought even of his bed-room ! But oh! that unfortunate expedition he was
sent on to restore Shah Soojah to the throne of his ancestors, which he had
forfeited by his imbecility. Pity it was that Sir Alexander’s remonstrances
were not listened to. His own subjects had discarded him as unfit to reign,
and for the British Government to replace such a one was not in accordance
with their wonted prudence, better would it have been for Sir Alexander to
have resigned his commission, (if that were in accordance with military
usage, as it is in affairs of state,) and then by the failure of the design
in other hands it would have been seen that Sir Alexander was in the right,
and his life would have been saved. Above all, it was an ungracious task for
him, who had been kindly and hospitably treated by the reigning chief.
It should be mentioned, that on his visit to Montrose there
was a grand public dinner given to him in the Guild Hall, at which the late
Lord Panmure was present, and many of his school companions. They were all
enthusiastic in their admiration of him, and delighted at the opportunity of
bearing a part in such a testimonial of their high appreciation of his
merits—it was with such emotion perhaps as Joseph’s brethren felt when they
saw him raised to high and deserved honour. His worthy father was there, and
made one of his excellent and spirit-stirring speeches. He made an excellent
one himself. When he came to notice the improvements in M6ntrose since he
left it he spoke thus—“ Beginning at my father’s garden, there is the
Academy, and the Trades1 Schools rivalling the Academy—(this was like
incense to me you maybe sure, but it was left out of the report of
the Review)—and the tall chimneys, like the minarets in our Indian cities.7’
This is all of it that I recollect.
The following notice of Sir Alexander Bumes’s death, which
appeared in the Morning Herald of the 8th February, 1842, may interest my
readers, as shewing how much he was appreciated by others than Scotchmen,
and also as containing a condensed summary of his brilliant career :—
“The late Sib, Alexander Burnes.—This lamented individual,
who according to the reports published yesterday, was cruelly massacred in
Cabool, was a distinguished member of several of the scientific societies in
the metropolis, and well known in the literary world. His age was between 35
and 40, and he entered into the 21st native infantry in 1821. When he held
the rank of lieutenant in 1831 he was deputed in a political capacity to the
court of Lahore, charged with a letter from George IV., and a present of
some horses, to the ruler of that country. The object of this mission having
been completed, he next made a journey to trace the course of the Indus,
which had been previously crossed only at particular points by former
travellers, whilst several points had not been surveyed. He here visited
many of the conquests of Alexander, and was the first European of modern
times who had navigated the river Indus, an expedition attended with great
risk and hazard. He then visited Bokhara, the great seat of Arabic
literature in the east, which was known as *Ilium ul Bilad,* the *Mother of
Cities.’ On his return from his expedition to this country in 1834 he was
made a fellow of the Royal Society, and received the honorary testimonials
of several other learned bodies. In May, 1834, he received from the Royal
Geographical Society the fourth royal premium of fifty guineas for his
navigation of the river Indus, and a journey to Balkh and Bokhara across
Central Asia. At the meeting of the Royal Asiatic Society en Feb. 21, 1835,
Earl Munster, V. P., in the chair, this lamented individual was elected an
honorary member, for having ( fixed with accuracy the position of Bokhara
and Balkh, and the great Himalayan mountains, and having done more to the
construction of a map of those countries than had been done since Alexander
the Great.’ On this occasion he was complimented by Sir Alexander Johnstone
for having almost ascertained a continuous route and link of communication
between Western Asia and the Caspian Sea, as also for his excellent
diplomatic arrangements with the Ameers of Sindh. The museum of the Royal
Asiatic Society also contains the Bokhara cloak worn by him in his travels
in the Punjaub. He was the author of many papers in the ‘Transactions of the
Geographical and Asiatic Societies' and his ‘Travels in Bokhara,’ which went
through two editions, are well known. The late Sir Alexander Burnes, who was
of a Scotch family, held local rank as lieutenant-colonel for services in A
Afghanis tan and Persia, which was dated 8th April, 1886, and shortly
afterwards on his return to India, in acknowledgment of his diplomatic and
other services, he was knighted, and made companion of the Bath. His
services were chiefly devoted in a diplomatic capacity to his country ; but
his geographical researches in Central Asia were unequalled by any modem
traveller.”
I have only yet mentioned by name my excellent colleague, now
the Rev. James Dickson,—but a better teacher of English Grammar, and of the
Languages, could not hav£ been selected. If he had only remained I might
have been there too. I was pressed enough to be sure. He had the best method
of imparting a knowledge of English Grammar of any I ever knew by the
questions he put. He could also teach Latin, Greek, Hebrew, French, German,
and Italian. He helped, indeed, the late Mr. George Milne to translate a
book from the Norse language. Many years after he left the Trades* School he
received, as I have heard, £40 a-year for teaching in one family in
Montrose; and he taught the young ladies Greek and Hebrew, French and
Italian—some of these perhaps ministers’ wives since.
The following is a specimen of the letters written in the
author’s department of the Trades* Schools—all imaginary of course.
“London, 20th July, 1835.
"My Dear Father,—You have most kindly consulted my feelings
in writing thus early in answer to my last. Your letter of 15th instant,
which I anxiously looked for, conveyed the most welcome intelligence of the
welfare of the whole family. You have no idea how delightful it is to hear
from home, when one has left it for the first time to live at a distance
among strangers. Tour letter restored me, as it were, once more to my place
in the family circle, and I assure you I shall return with increased delight
to my business in the counting-house, and when my work is over for the day,
Bhali enjoy a ramble about town; but you need not be afraid that I shall
associate with any bad companions. My master’s son, William, is just of my
own age, and he promised that when he had done his tasks for school he would
accompany me and shew any thing worth seeing about the public buildings. He
is really a nice boy, I think, and shews early symptoms of being exactly
such a business-man as his father. He is my sole companion at present, and
if we make any more aquaintance I am determined they shall be well selected,
being firmly resolved to be guided by the excellent rules you laid down as
to forming connections. I think I shall like my business very well. I rise
at five this fine weather, and have time to dress and take a short walk
before going to the counting-house at six ; but early rising is no trouble
to me now, having been in the practice of attending school so early at
Montrose, and I find I am much the better of it, for I enjoy a good appetite
still, for all they say about the bad air of London. The sickly, meagre-looks
of many of the cockneys must, I am sure, be owing to their sitting up so
late, going to places of entertainment, and lying so long in bed. The
clerks, and many of the principal partners, even in wholesale concerns in
town, are astir at six, and get most of their country orders despatched
before breakfast, after which they have more time to attend to their town
and other business —such as bringing up the books, &c., it being an
invariable maxim with my master, and indeed in all well-conducted
establishments, never to let these behind a single day. I begin now to think
there is a great beauty in following a regular system, it leaves the mind so
free and unencumbered when every thing is over, and enables us to spend the
hours of relaxation in a cheerful and profitable manner.
“But my letter, I perceive, is growing lengthy, so I must now
take my leave of you, but not without requesting you to favour me with a
long letter next, and don’t think anything trifling to mention that you
think will interest me.
“I am, my dear Father,
“Your affectionate Son,
“G L ”
Perhaps a better division of the branches taught might have
been that at first recommended by the late Mr. Anderson, parish schoolmaster
of St. Cyrus, which was the plan adopted at the outset, and followed for a
few years at first with much success—viz., Writing, Arithmetic, &c., in the
Upper School, and Reading, Grammar, (fee., in the Lower; but after Mr.
Dickson’s retirement it was thought advisable, for various reasons, to make
the one independent of the other. The present teachers, Messrs Marr and
Ross, are very efficient, and have large classes. The above arrangement, it
is likely, would have received the late Mr. Dorward’s sanction, if it had
been proposed at the time when the Trades transferred the management to his
Trustees. The master of the Upper School has £30 a-year salary, and Mr. Ross
£20. Mr. Marr, having pupil teaching, has besides a Government salary.
The scholar who has risen to most distinction from the
Trades’ School, is James Scott Robertson, Esq., now purveyor-in-chief at the
Horse Guards, whom Lord Panmure, when Secretary for War, sent out to the
Crimea, in the same capacity, to put things to rights there, which he
speedily accomplished, and of whom the celebrated French cook, Soyer, said,
that he was the right man in the right place. |