It has almost become proverbial that Scotland has
supplied from her peasantry, the names of more men eminent in Science,
Art, Literature, and especially in Song, than that furnished by the same
class in any other country. Perhaps this may be accounted for variously.
Some men have risen on the strength of their own inherent genius, if not
to fortune in their lifetimes, at least to their names having become
famous and immortal, and their works successful, after their death. To
this class might be said to belong Burns, and, in a lesser degree Hogg,
and a host of other minor celebrities. Some attribute the reason of the
Scotsman's prominence on the long bead-roll of fame to his national
characteristic, untiring industry and perseverance, which, with a fair
share of education and common-sense, is bound, they say, in the long run
to end in success. Such examples have generally risen from the
peasantry, that class which has long proved the worthiest and most
virtuous of our rural population, a class accounted the mainstay and
backbone of our nationality before the days of Highland depopulation and
political centralisation.
From parents possessed of superior mental and moral
endowments belonging to this class, have sprung such types as Allan
Cunninghame, the Messrs. Chambers, and, along with the highest personal
genius, inherent and partially inherited, that almost crown of
Scotland's literary glory, Thomas Carlyle, the greatness of whose life
and work will only be seen and appreciated as time rolls on. Other two
men more humble in their origin and less gifted in their genius, but
equally great in the purity, nobility, and unspotted nature of their
lives, and whose works are sufficiently meritorious to deserve a
permanent record in the history of their country's literature, are
Alexander and John Bethune, the authors of the following tales, whose
names have become inseparably associated, and long familiarly known, as
the Brothers Bethune.
Regarding their literary efforts, while some of it
might have been due to the promptings of poverty, very much also was the
result of their large-hearted benevolence, and real human interest they
took in their fellow-beings, and in their laudable ambition to produce
something that would be of more than a mere passing interest in the
literary world. This interest we find to be an intelligent one. Their
whole previous career, their training and education, or rather the want
of it, was most unfavourable to the proper expression of their thoughts
and ideas. But this did not lessen their value; they were familiar with
the manners and customs of the class to which they belonged, and could
trace the workings of their minds on a given subject from their earliest
dawnings to full fruition; they knew their likes and dislikes, their
prejudices, their virtues and their failings, and, knowing all this,
could pourtray with graphic power, the result of long and laboured
experience, the scene or idea they had conceived. What they wished to
teach, above everything else, was truth, morality, and that
self-dependence which was so very characteristic of their own lives. But
they did not begin by prating to the people empty pious platitudes; they
knew human nature too well to think they would swallow the pill unless
it was gilded, so they first endeavoured to interest the people in their
tales and stories, and allowed the lesson they meant to teach through
them, to sink unconsciously into their minds. They believed it better to
write a tale which would have the elements of some great truth or moral
virtue in it, and which might be read by thousands, than to write a book
full of valuable instruction, which might lie unlooked at on the
bookseller's shelves. This was well illustrated in their own experience,
for, while their tales were very popular, and gained them a little
money, their volume on "Practical Economy," the joint labours, of both,
while equally meritorious, was by no means so much sought after.
Alexander, the elder brother, was born at Upper
Raukeillour, in the parish of Letham, "Fifeshire, in the month of July,
1804, and John, the younger, in August, 1811, in the same county, and in
the parish of Moniemail, at a place called The Mount, once famous as the
residence of Sir David Lyndsay. Both their parents were servants, and
though they had always a severe struggle with poverty, they were noted
for their general excellence of character, especially the mother, Alison
Christie, who seems to have been a woman of superior mind and great
independence of spirit, qualities inherited in a still stronger degree
by her two sons. One who knew her well says: "She was altogether a rare
character, auld Aily!—pious, but not austere; devout, but not bigoted;
beneficent without ostentation, hospitable, kind-hearted, and generous
even to a fault. She deserved (if ever woman on earth deserved it) the
title of a 'Mother in Israel.' What a wonderful fund of humour she had
too! had her lot been cast in a higher sphere of life, and her education
been like her abilities, she would doubtless have been admired as an
ornament of her sex. From her, if genius be hereditary, the poets must
have derived the singular talent which they possessed." Of the father
the same authority says that he was a worthy patriarch with the snows of
eighty or ninety winters on his venerable head, and that from his
precepts and example the sons derived much of that unbending integrity
and noble independence which uniformly distinguished them.
In consequence of the poverty of the parents, the
education of the sons was almost entirely of the home or domestic sort,
and chiefly devolved upon the mother, who was henceforth to be
responsible for their mental and moral training. Alexander was never
more than four or five months at a school till he was about
three-and-twenty, when he attended evening-classes for a short time,
while John was but one day.
As the father was a servant, the family had to endure
the inconvenience of frequent removals from place to place during the
first seven or eight years of Alexander's life, but after the birth of
the younger brother, John, they came to Woodmill, in the parish of Abdie.
In 1813 they again removed to a place called Lochend, about a quarter of
a mile distant, and here they continued to reside for the next
twenty-four years. Alexander tells us that it was in consequence of his
parents being, from ill-health and other causes, unable to apprentice
him to any trade that he betook himself, at the age of fourteen, to the
humble occupation of a labourer. No doubt digging drains and ditches is
a prosaic as well as a toilsome occupation for a young literary genius,
aspiring to climb Parnassus' heights; yet, through it all, he never
flinched from the oneness of his purpose, but " still bore up and
steer'd right onwards."
Several years were thus spent in struggles to relieve
the circumstances of his parents, while those hours of leisure he could
command were employed in reading such books as he could borrow in the
neighbourhood, and in otherwise endeavouring to improve his mental
faculties. Such were some of the hard and cruel toils of his early life,
that he says, more than a year afterwards, his joints, on first
attempting to move in the morning, creaked like machinery wanting oil.
Meanwhile, John, whom we formerly stated had only
been one day at school, was sent when about eight years of age to herd
two cows, which their father, as forester on the Woodmill estate, was
then allowed to keep. This herding by the margin of "the waveless lake,"
as he loved to call the little Loch of Lindores, was little to his
taste. But worse was to follow. During the winter of 1823-4, to assist
in supporting himself, he broke stones, along with his brother
Alexander, on the road between Lindores and Newburgh. He was still under
thirteen years of age—in fact, quite a boy, and from the lack of motion
necessary in such work, his legs and feet were sometimes almost frozen.
But he had caught the spirit of independence, and would have suffered or
encountered anything, so that he might enable them to get quit of some
debt which had been incurred in consequence of their father's illness.
In March, 1824, he apprenticed himself for two years
to a weaver in the village of Oollessie, about three miles distant from
his home. At this business he very soon could earn as much as one-and-tenpence
a-day, while Alexander could make little more than half that amount at
stone-breaking. In order to make a provision for his aged father,
Alexander determined to learn the business also. By an agreement with
his master, John's engagement terminated sooner than the stipulated
time. They then took a house as a work-shop, and with about ten pounds,
that had been saved by the most "desperate economy,'' purchased looms
and other articles appropriate to weaving] and at Martinmas, 1825, John
commenced that business on his own account, with Alexander as an
apprentice. But the commercial crash which immediately
followed—1825-26—so utterly disappointed all their calculations, that
they were again glad to resume their occupations as out-door labourers,
the one at a shilling and the other at one shilling and twopence a-day.
Some time after this, when trade recovered a little, their weaving-shop
was required by the landlord for other purposes, and their weaving
utensils, which had cost, what to them was quite a little fortune, was
so much useless lumber.
In addition to the many hardships of boyhood and
youth, John had to struggle with all the evils of an enfeebled
constitution. From 1827 till his death, he was more or less troubled
with dyspepsia, which in time developed into a complication of diseases,
ending in consumption. Alexander attributes the commencement of his
disorders to his remaining too long in the fresh water while bathing,
and by over-exertion in the potato-harvest, taxing his bodily powers too
severely before he had attained the full strength of manhood. In the
winter of 1827, by working in wet drains, up to the knees in water and
exposure to severe frost, the seeds of his future illness were sown.
During the early months of 1828 he was laid up with a bad cold, upon
recovering from which he was visibly much paler than before, and was
ever after very subject to periodical attacks of hard, dry cough, which
lasted for weeks and sometimes for months. Add to this the facts
contained in the following extract from a letter of Alexander's, written
during his illness, and we will probably see the true origin of that
disease which terminated fatally in the case of both brothers:— "From
1814," he says, "to 1837 we, with the exception of one year, lived in a
house which, for the greater part of that period was in such bad repair,
that when it rained we had to place the most of the dishes that we
possessed upon the top of the beds to intercept the water that oozed
through the roof; and when the rain began to fall after we were
sleeping, it was no uncommon thing for us to awake in the morning with
the bedclothes partially wet about us. In winter, too, during a thaw, or
a protracted fall of rain, the water came in under the foundation of the
back wall, and flowed in a stream through the floor, nearly the whole
length of the house, till it made its escape by the door. Nor was this
the worst of it; in some places it formed pools of such extent, that my
brother and myself, who slept at the further end of the house, were
frequently obliged to lay stones and pieces of wood on them to enable us
to reach our bed. We did not seem to suffer anything at the time, but I
am now convinced that to the damp air with which we were so often
surrounded, he (John) owed a part of that delicacy of the chest which at
last consigned him to an early grave, while I am, perhaps, indebted to
the same cause for a something of the same kind."
In October, 1829, John was engaged as a day labourer
in the gardens and plantations on the estate of Inchrye. The following
month Alexander, while blasting rock in a quarry was, by an explosion of
gunpowder, carried a distance of nine or ten yards, and pitched into a
cairn of stones, where he was so severely mangled, that recovery was
doubtful. John now became, for the next four months, the sole
bread-winner of the family, in addition to carefully nursing his brother
at night till the danger was passed. Three years after, Alexander was a
second time "subjected to nearly the same sort of discipline." On this
occasion there were two of them employed about the blast when it
exploded. The other man was killed, while he, though more fortunate, was
found, when taken up, to be quite insensible, and sadly scorched and cut
about the hands, head, and face.
During the periods of convalescence after these
disasters, he amused himself with various efforts of literary
composition, chiefly in verse. Alexander mentions a circumstance which
tended greatly to quicken their taste for literature, and stimulate
their ambition for literary pursuits, since which, both he arid his
brother had been unceasing in their efforts of self-improvement. "When
about the age of twenty-one, he made the acquaintance of a St. Andrews
student, who, in order to procure the means of prosecuting his studies,
had opened an evening school in one of the houses at Lochend. He was an
excellent reciter of poetry, and had his mind well stored with a number
of the best pieces from the best authors. With these he amused and
delighted his hearers in his leisure time, the greater part of which was
spent with the Bethunes. Alexander's first serious attempt to write a
book, he attributes to the following incident, which we give in his own
words.
"As it is sometimes curious to see what a trifling
incident will give an impulse to the human mind, I may here be permitted
to tell you what it was that first set me seriously to the task of
writing a book. A young lady, the daughter of a neighbouring
laird, who farmed his own property, of about eighty acres, himself, had
been in the habit of sometimes calling to inquire for my mother, who had
been a servant in the family of her grandmother. From her she had
learned that myself and my brother were much given to reading, and that
we sometimes went a little farther, and made attempts at writing. We
were accordingly favoured with the loan of a book called 'The Amethyst,'
a sort of religious annual. . . . We were forthwith requested to furnish
some verses for the succeeding number, which were to be forwarded by the
said young lady to its editor. Without being greatly taken with the
proposal, the verses were forwarded to our supposed patroness. About
three weeks thereafter, being then employed breaking stones upon the
public road, I was saluted by the young lady, who, after enquiring after
the health of my father and mother, proceeded, with some embarrassment,
to tell me that, after a great deal of consideration, she had come to
the conclusion that it would be for my advantage to suppress the verses;
but that she really felt vexed, as I might possibly feel vexed, at their
not being sent, etc., etc. To this I replied that the thing had excited
no expectations, and therefore could occasion no disappointment; and
that I should be truly sorry for myself if I could be ' hurt' at such
trifles. But while I said this to her, I said, or rather thought, to
myself,—All very right, and only what might have been expected \
but, in time, we shall see if a smooth-faced girl is to have the power
of determining whether I am to appear in print or not and from that hour
I never lost sight of my purpose for a moment till the MS. of 'Tales and
Sketches of the Scottish Peasantry' was complete."
Discouragements like these, however, instead of
proving obstacles in the path of genius, act rather as an incentive to
more determined perseverance, and, in the end, leads to greater success.
In 1833 it was agreed by the brothers that they
should conjointly produce a small volume of Scriptural pieces, which was
to have been entitled, "The Poetical Preacher," but owing to the
repeated illness of the younger brother, and various other causes, the
design was abandoned. John's contributions towards it were afterwards
included in the volume of poems, with life prefixed, published after his
death.
It may be observed that many of Alexander's first
literary efforts, like those of his brother's, took the form of verse
\ but though endowed with a fair share of the poetical faculty, he
never by any means excelled in this line of composition to the same
degree as he did in prose.
Up till this time both brothers had subjected
themselves to a severe and continued course of self-culture, in which
they resorted to some curious expedients. Of course this could only be
done in the brief intervals snatched from their duties as bread-winners,
in the walks to and from their work, or, while eating their humble
meals. By sitting up late, and rising early, they had contrived to write
a good deal, both in poetry and prose, but in such a secret manner that
the fact was scarcely known beyond the family circle,
Holding the views of practical and social economy
they did, it was quite natural they should wish to make a little money
by their writings, as well as to have their ideas given to the world
through some organ of the press that was seen and read by the public.
They had hitherto been unable to accomplish this, and to overcome the
difficulty, Alexander, in the month of May, 1835, addressed a long and
very characteristic letter to one of the Messrs. Chambers, in which he
gives many interesting particulars regarding himself, his position and
education, his ideas of men and things in general, and his attempts at
authorship, asking his influence and advice as to the best method of
bringing them before the public. At this time he says he had as many
verses—which he did not call poetry—as would make a small volume; prose
essays, etc., that would fill another; while he could easily furnish a
third, composed of tales or little novels. He confesses that, like
Burns, he had early " some stirrings of ambition,',' chiefly to make his
fellowmen at least less miserable. "But," he says, "in me those risings
of the heart had no outlet. What could a labourer do with seven
shillings, or seven-and-sixpence a week 1 My efforts I found were
but a mockery of benevolence, and showed rather the will than the
ability to relieve. I might indeed," he continues, " have wriggled
myself into some sort of notice and earned higher wages—I might have got
myself promoted to be foreman over a few ditchers and dykers, and by '
damning them to get on,' as is customary with such officials, I might
have procured a little favour with their masters and a little money for
myself." But he disdained to be a slave-driver. He could not learn a
trade, as he saw no means of support during the apprenticeship. There
was no prospect of ever being able to earn more than the very barest
means of subsistence for himself and two parents, whose support depended
wholly upon him and his brother John. It can scarcely be wondered at
then, that he should turn his thoughts to writing. It appeared the only
open door to him. Others had succeeded in the same way, and why not he?
Hence this appeal to Mr. Chambers, and his anxiety to submit to him "a
few of these unquenched snuffings of the midnight taper," that he might
pass an opinion as to their merit, and the propriety of giving them to
the public. He goes on to confess he is ambitious, but not merely of
"getting on in the world." . . . ''I never looked," he says, "upon a
fine coat as the alpha and omega of a man's ambition." He is quite aware
the opinions he holds regarding society are heretical; he thinks them
(the rich) "in many respects as ignorant as himself, and in most
respects as selfish as one could well wish them to be." He "cannot
imagine how roast beef and plum-pudding should make a man either
clearer-headed or better-hearted than porridge and potatoes. The last,
with the addition of some milk and much water, has been exclusively the
fare of the present writer, and he has no wish to change it." . . . He
adds, "There is nothing which I would not attempt, nor any difficulty
from which I would shrink, with the prospect of being ultimately
successful before me. I would not, however, travel the dirty road to
public notice and fame which some have waddled over. I would prefer
poverty and an obscure death, with an honest independence of thought and
principle, to wealth and eminence procured by fawning upon the rich and
flattering lordly patrons." The principle expressed in these two
sentences was rigidly adhered to by both brothers throughout their brief
career.
About three months after the date of this letter,
"The Harvest Day," a tale of humble life, appeared in Chambers's
Journal, No. 185. This is one of Alexander's finest compositions. It
was quickly followed in No. 188 by "Hazleburn: A Story of Scottish Rural
Life." These two were probably the first of his stories which appeared
in print. Previous to this, however, he had sent through a friend some
pieces to Blackwood, but there is no reason to suppose they were ever
inserted. Afterwards the two brothel's contributed poetical and other
productions of a varied nature to various periodicals.
In July, 1836, the MS. of "Tales and Sketches of the
Scottish Peasantry" was taken to Edinburgh, and early in 1837 was
published by Messrs. Fraser & Co. For the absolute copyright of this the
author was to be allowed the price of fifty copies. Five of the pieces
contained in this volume were written by John. Shortly after the
appearance of "Tales and Sketches," very favourable notices appeared in
the leading literary journals, and, among others, the Athencev/m
and Spectator speak of them in terms of the most unqualified
praise. Some of the critics, considering that the author was humbly
born, self-educated, nursed in poverty, and struggling with adversity,
termed the work a literary phenomenon.
In 1835, the year preceding that in which the MS. of
their "Tales and Sketches" was sent to Edinburgh, it almost seemed as if
the sun of prosperity was for once to shine upon the fates of these
remarkable brothers. John obtained the situation of overseer at Inchrye,
and an assistant also being required, Alexander accompanied his brother
in that capacity. John's income during this period was £26 yearly, with
some trifling perquisite—a larger sum than he ever earned at any former
or later period of his life.. At the end of six months, however, the
estate passed into other hands, and it was at once intimated to the
overseer that his services would not be required longer than the year
for which he was engaged. Thus soon were their brightening fortunes
clouded. The house, also, at Lochend, in which they had lived for so
many years, was situated on this property, and they soon received notice
from the new proprietor that they must leave it. The brothers considered
they were very harshly dealt with on this occasion, and determined to
provide a home for their aged parents where they would not be subject to
the whim or caprice of any landlord. For this purpose they selected
about a quarter of an acre of ground on the Back-hill of Ormiston,
better known as Mount Pleasant, immediately above the town of Newburgh.
Having settled as to the amount of feu duty to be paid for the ground, a
sufficient quantity of stones was procured, and then the brothers, with
their own hands, commenced to build on the 26th July, 1837. Alexander
tells us how they left home every morning before five o'clock, travelled
three miles, and wrought till nearly half-past seven in the evening,
with no more rest than was absolutely necessary to swallow their
breakfast and dinner, said dinner consisting exclusively of bread, which
they often ate from their pockets, working all the time. After the day's
work was done they had to perform the return journey of three miles.
This dreary task was repeated day after day, except during the space of
less than a week, when they had the assistance of a regular mason. To
ordinary mortals this self-imposed task would seem a cheerless one; but
the vision of seeing their parents provided for in comfort during their
declining years was sufficient to cheer them in their extraordinary
exertions, and warm their hearts as they trudged wearily homewards after
each day's toil. When they commenced the house they had only £30 in
money, and two bolls of oatmeal. By the time it was finished, on the
last day of September,—a little over two months—this was all expended,
and they were glad again to engage in such work as they could find, in
order to procure the daily necessaries of life for themselves and the
family, and to provide a little money to defray the expenses of removing
to their new home. This house which they had reared by such "desperate
exertion and economy," is a substantial stone structure of two stories
in height, and thirty-six feet in length by twenty in breadth; a
sufficiently tangible monument to the filial affection and personal
worth, as well as of the arduous toil of two poor peasant sons of
genius, whose humble virtues and manly character ought to be their
country's pride.
To this house they removed on the 9th November, 1837,
and, during the following winter, which was so severe as to partly
prevent them from engaging in their ordinary labour, they busied
themselves with a revision of the MS. of their "Lectures on Practical
Economy," which had been returned to them from Edinburgh for that
purpose.
This little book is probably one of the most
interesting productions of the Brothers Bethune. The lectures were
written chiefly with the intention to benefit the homes and habits of
the poor. To the usual charm and simplicity of their style, in this case
was added, at least from the practical point of view, perfect knowledge
of, and familiarity with their subject—a knowledge gained by
dearly-bought experience extending from the cradle to the grave. Even
the method of its production might aptly be considered as an
illustration of the subject, as well as a literary curiosity. The
lectures were first written upon brown paper bags ripped open, shreds of
paper which had come to the house with tea, sugar, tobacco, etc.—in
short, anything that would carry ink, while the authors had no better
writing-desk than their knees. The whole of the writing, too, was done
with two quills, which were more than half used-up to commence with.
They had no books or authorities to consult on the subject save the one
article on "Accumulation" in the Penny Cyclopaedia. Though a
failure financially, it was very favourably spoken of by men eminent in
the literature of the subject on which it treated; among others Dr.
Thomas Murray, the lecturer on Political Economy, Maculloch, and George
and Andrew Combe.
Another instance may be given here of their practical
economy in the frugality of their habits. Alexander says, in his letter
to Mr. Chambers, 1835, before quoted:—"As an evidence of how little I
require for myself, it may be mentioned that the coat in which I now
write has actually served me since the year 1827. During the whole of
that time it has been on service every day, with the exception of about
eight months, for which period, between accidents, smallpox, and other
diseases, I was mostly confined to bed, or at least unable to wear it
much."
Their little volume was well received by the press in
general. The Edinburgh Chronicle says of it:—"The work is not
only right in the main, but it is right in all its details. It embodies
a system of practical philosophy. It does not profess to be a system of
Political Economy, though, so far as it goes, its Political Economy is
sound; but it is a system of social, domestic, personal, and practical
economy. It unfolds the general framework and mechanism of society,
particularly as respects the industrial classes. It explains the nature
of social life and civil society; shows on what principles these depend,
and how they may be improved; and how the great objects of human
life—health, happiness, and independence—may be best promoted. And the
task is performed in a manner so logical, in language so vigorous yet
perspicuous, and in a spirit so bland and philanthropic, that while the
work cannot but please the scholar, it is equally calculated not merely
to please, but to interest and instruct the uneducated reader."
Their intention regarding this work was first to
deliver the series of lectures in the surrounding towns and villages,
and then when they had acquired, by this means, a certain amount of
popularity, to sell the copy-right to a publisher. But they found the
labour and irksomeness of committing them to memory intolerable, and
were unable to overcome their natural diffidence sufficiently to enable
them to appear as public teachers. The idea was reluctantly abandoned,
and the MS. sent to Edinburgh, from which it was returned, as stated
above, during the winter of 1838, shortly after they had entered their
new home.
The authors had already taken considerable pains with
their subject, and they now made such alterations and amendments as had
been suggested to tliem by the friendly critics to whom it had been
submitted, and again returned it to Edinburgh in the month of March.
In the meantime they had experienced their first
family bereavement, by the death of their father, which took place,
after a few days illness, on the 8th February. This was a great blow to
both, especially to John, whose health for some time had been gradually
getting more precarious. Nor is it astonishing that such was the case.
His trifling savings were required to defray the funeral expenses of his
father, and he was living through the severity of this severe winter, on
oatmeal and potatoes, without any addition whatever, not even that of
milk. So says Alexander, whose fare was doubtless as primitive and
scanty. This pinching poverty and lack of generous nourishment,
succeeded by a summer of drudgery must have told on even a stronger
constitution than that of John Bethune's. In November he gave up all
outdoor labour, and rather rashly resolved to trust to his pen for
support in the future. For months he scarcely ever went out, so eager
was he to succeed in his now undivided profession. But one evening at
the end of January, 1839, he went to a meeting of the Newburgh
Temperance Society, for which he had some time acted as Secretary. After
sitting for two or three hours in a strongly heated room, he felt, on
coming out to the open air, a tendency to shivering. It was a night of
intense cold i had three miles to walk, and before he reached home, he
had ught that fatal cold which paved the way for his dismission am the
world.
In getting publishers for his writings, he was only
partially successful. One disappointment succeeded another, till on the
.h May, 1839, they received a letter, announcing the publication at
last, of their lectures on Practical Economy, and stating that it was no
favourite with the trade, as not one of the Edinburgh booksellers had
subscribed for a single copy, and that it was not likely to sell in
haste. Deeply mortified at the failure of a work, regarding which he was
so sanguine of success, his health, which had been very indifferent for
some months, now gave way, and, after an illness with many fitful
intervals of improvement and relapse, he breathed his last on the 1st of
September, 1839. Through all this illness, he was attended by Alexander,
with a care and tenderness that could scarcely be surpassed, even by the
love or self-devotion of woman. He left all his own labours that he
might attend on his wants. He went with him to various places for change
of air, supported him in his extreme weakness, and even put on his
clothes in the morning to warm them for him ere he got out of bed.
Alexander was inconsolable at the loss of his brother, part of his very
existence seemed to have been wrenched from him. So great was his
grief, that it cast a gloom over the whole remaining portion of his
life, that nothing could altogether disspel. We find him in a letter to
a friend thus lamenting his loss—"Seven months since he was laid to
sleep in the dust, never again to be awakened, by spring, or summer, or
any remaining season, till the mighty angel shall come forth, and near
that time shall be no longer. . . . Every morning hen I awake, every
night when I lie down, everything with which I am surrounded, and every
moment which passes, brings him freshly to my remembrance. To me the
rising sun shines on loneliness, and his setting beam writes in shadows
the deep and sad conviction that my most valued, and almost my last
friend, is gone."
He commenced to write a sketch of his brother's life,
without the view to its future publication, and this served in a measure
to -wean him from the melancholy which threatened to overwhelm him. He
says if he himself were dead, there lives not one who could tell aught
concerning his brother, "save that he lived poor, toiled bard, and died
early," and further adds, " that our feelings and pursuits were almost
the very same, that we never knew what it was to have separate interests
for a single moment, that we had buffeted, or rather been buffeted, by
fortune together from boyhood, that we had supped from the same table,
sat by the same fire, and slept in the same bed, with very few
interruptions, from the period of infancy, and that we were nearly the
last of the name and the race to which we belonged." At the request of
some friends, he agreed to prepare for publication, together with this
life, a selection of John's poems. To him it was indeed a labour of
love. He entered upon it with great zeal, spared no pains, working at it
both night and day, excepting such times as enabled him to procure the
necessaries of life, either by the drudgery of his ordinary toil, or by
his literary labours. The principal object in making this attempt was to
raise a few pounds, wherewith to place a stone over his brother's grave
in Abdie churchyard.
When the "Life and Poems" was ready, it was sent for
revision to a literary friend, who had performed the same kind office
for the former works published by the Brothers Bethune. Five or six
hundred copies of the book were subscribed for, and the remainder of the
issue of seven hundred almost immediately sold on publication. The
Athenceum, The Witness, and other papers spoke very favourably of
it, while its reception by the public must have been highly gratifying
to Alexander. Had a larger edition been printed, the result, from a
pecuniary point of view, might have been pretty considerable. It passed
into a second edition the following year, 1841, published by Wright and
Albright, Bristol. As an introduction, a very appreciative extract is
given of a letter from James Montgomery the poet. A good number of new
poetical pieces have been added, and, had it not been that the
publishers were dissuaded from it, by Mr. Montgomery in this same
letter, they would have willingly enlarged the second edition to two
volumes without the least scruple. This memoir of his brother secured
for its author much sympathy and attention from many who were utter
strangers to him, along with offers of assistance, all of which he
firmly and consistently refused. When money was sent him he invariably
returned it, and, while thanking his would-be benefactors, told them at
the same time that he considered it the duty of every man to provide for
his own necessity, as far as his ability would go.
He once received an anonymous letter containing
fifteen pounds, which he was merely to acknowledge receipt-of through
his publishers; he did so, but informed his unknown friend that the
money was lodged in the bank subject to his order. Mr. Bethune was never
able to ascertain the name of this kind and generous friend, but we
believe it was Mr. H. F. Chorley, the author of "Music and Manners" and
other works, who, with the assistance of some friends, contributed the
money and transmitted it through the publishers, Messrs. A. & C. Black.
Those who became interested in him, and wished to befriend him, in any
way, were obliged to confine their efforts to promoting the sale of his
books, a means of relief which ho evidently considered did not infringe
the stern principle of his independence. So jealous was he of this
feeling of independence and self-respect, that he was sometimes afraid
his friends were making a demand for his books, as a pretext for
bestowing their own benevolence upon an author, who had too much of the
"pride of poverty" in his disposition to accept it in any other form.
The following is an instance of his almost Quixotic
honesty in money matters. A friend who had, succeeded in disposing among
his acquaintances of about 100 copies of his brother's "Life and Poems"
at four shillings each, sent him the money, which he at the time
accepted, partly to relieve the wants of his mother, who was now so ill
as to require almost his whole care and attention night and day. The
price mentioned in the prospectus, and 'for which the book usually sold,
was three shillings, at which rate the 100 copies would have realised
fifteen pounds. The difference between this and twenty-two pounds, the
sum sent by his friend, he afterwards returned, determined not to use
one farthing of what he considered did not exclusively belong to him.
Notwithstanding the painful minuteness of the
narrative of John's long and tedious illness, this affectionate memoir
is full of interest. It presents to us a vivid picture of the peasant
class of Scotland, and of peasant life at that time. It traces their own
early education, or rather the want of it, their efforts of
self-improvement under the most unpromising circumstances, learning to
read, write, and spell almost when they had reached manhood, then making
their acquaintance with such volumes as may be considered heirlooms in
the family of every Scottish peasant, such as the "Cloud of Witnesses,"
"The Scots Worthies," "The History of Bruce and Wallace," and the "Poems
of Burns." Subsequently it details all the difficulties, struggles,
latent and secretly cherished ambitions, and wonderful efforts of
self-denial practised through years of grinding poverty and toil. The
marvel is that so much industry, good sense, sobriety, and other virtues
that adorn their spotless lives had no more seeming result from a
worldly point of view. They were born poor, and poverty and misfortune
haunted them through life, None of their undertakings seemed to prosper,
accident, disease, and death again and again interfered with the
execution of their plans, and at last carried them both off, partly
victims to the injudicious over-exertions of their early life, and
partly to the continued, and perhaps unavoidable hardships of their
maturer years, just as their case was beginning to attract the universal
sympathy and respect of the public.
The favourable reception accorded to Alexander's life
of his brother was marred by another melancholy bereavement, the death
of his mother, which occurred on the 21st December. During the whole of
her illness, her son attended and watched over her with the most
affectionate and self-denying care, and he states that for nearly five
months his clothes had never been off except to change his shirt. After
repeatedly taxing his powers to such an extreme, it is little wonder
that he died early.
The successive deaths, at short intervals, of so many
near relations, united with the other hardships of his lot, left him
very dejected in spirit. He says his mother's death was the annihilation
of the last shred of that little world of domestic affection, in the
midst of which he was once happy, and among the remaining ruins of which
he still wished to dwell. But all was now over, the last, green spot
around which memory, imagination and fancy were alike fain to linger,
had for ever disappeared, and an unvariegated desert remained behind.
Though poverty and sorrow had almost broken his spirit, still he
laboured on with the usual unflagging industry, and there were even
seasons in his life when he could reflect upon his departed friends with
a melancholy interest which had more in it of pleasure than of pain. But
we find that while formerly he wrote with greater hopefulness regarding
his prospects in the future, now hope had ceased to gild that future for
him, and he shrank from the very idea of making any change in his
situation, even when it appeared to be for the better. One such change
he did make about this time, 1841, but it was unsatisfactory, and he
never ventured another. Mrs. Hill, the wife of the Inspector of Prisons
in Scotland, having read his brother's "Life and Poems,'' became
interested in the author, and procured for him what she conceived would
be a comfortable situation in the Glasgow Bridewell. He accepted it
without having any very sanguine expectations regarding it, but on
getting there he learned he would have to officiate for a year or two as
a turnkey in order to master the science of "prison discipline," after
which he might have a chance of promotion by being appointed a jailor in
some county town with a salary of forty or fifty pounds a year. He was
disappointed when he found the duties he was expected to perform were
those of a turnkey, and with that consideration for others which
characterised all his actions, he resolved, for the sake of his
patroness, to remain for a few months, and then beg to be allowed to
retire from a situation for which he considered himself unqualified. But
little over a week had passed, after entering upon his duties, when he
caught a bad cold, and, fearing the effects would be similar as in his
brother's case two years previously, he wrote a note resigning his
situation, and returned home, most of the way on foot. From the effects
of this wild goose chase, as he called it, he did not recover for three
or four months. Of all conceivable occupations, it was the least adapted
to a man of the habits and character of Alexander Bethune.
Mrs. Hill, however, still continued to interest
herself in his behalf, and next endeavoured to procure for him a post as
teacher or librarian in the Forth Penitentiary. A long and interesting
correspondence passed between them in which he embodies some of his
views in regard to prison discipline. Nothing ever came out of the Perth
affair, so that his ambition to become a moral teacher of some sort or
other was still ungratified.
In 1842 he published a memoir of his grandmother,
Annie Macdonald, the sale of which fully answered his expectations, and
brought him about twenty pounds. In the month of July of the same year
he paid a visit of eight or ten days to Aberdeenshire, to see his friend
and future biographer, Mr. William M'Combie, a kindred spirit with
himself, and the author of "Hours of Thought" and "Moral Agency." He
walked on foot the greater part of the way, going and returning. This
same year, at the end of the harvest, he paid another visit to Edinburgh
to make arrangements for the publication of the "Scottish Peasant's
Fireside." This volume appeared in February, 1843, and was published by
Adam and Charles Black, who took the whole risk, and allowed the author
half of the clear profits that might arise from the sale. While it was
passing through the press in the end of 1842, he was attacked by fever,
from which he never properly recovered. By a gradual transition, the
disease developed into that of pulmonary consumption. He removed to the
little village of Kennoway for change of air, but derived no advantage
from it.
In one of the periods of his partial convalescence,
an offer was made to him, which he conditionally accepted, of the
editorship of the Dumfries Standard, a paper about to be started
in the Non-intrusion interest in Dumfries. This was almost the only
flash of fortune's lamp that had brightened his worldly path, and seemed
as if it was the one gleam of comfort, specially sent to cheer the
struggling spirit in its journey to the great beyond. The salary was to
have been £100 a year, not a large one, certainly, for an editor, but
vast indeed to one whose former resources were so limited, and whose
habits and mode of life were so economical. Bat alas! it never was
destined to be more than a prospect. It is questionable, even had he
recovered sufficiently, whether he would have found the employment so
congenial to one of his temperament as he anticipated. Even poor Hugh
Miller himself, upon whose recommendation he was selected, found the
self-same task a hard one indeed, and in the end sank under it.
After his return from Kennoway, he became gradually
weaker, and soon ceased all attempts at writing. He had, during this
period, relaxed a little his principles of independence, and allowed
some English friends and others to minister to his comfort. He only
permitted this in one or two cases, and from those whose friendship he
highly valued, and accompanied by the proviso that he would either repay
the money, or devote it to the relief of others, if ever he should be
able to resume his labours. One of those friends was a Quaker lady in
England, who had formerly sought to assist him, and who had since been
one of his most regular and welcome correspondents. Several medical
gentlemen, also, belonging to Bristol, through one of their number,
tendered him their professional advice, offered to supply him with
money, and even undertook the whole responsibility of having him removed
to enjoy the benefits of some milder and more equable climate— such as
that of Bute—which it was supposed would be favourable to the recovery
of his health. His rapidly increasing weakness, however, prevented this
from being carried into effect. There is thus some slight satisfaction
in the reflection that during his last illness, he lacked no comfort,
and was nursed with great care and tenderness by his surviving aunt,
Mrs. Ferguson. After a few months lingering illness, he died on Tuesday,
the 13th June, and was buried on the following Saturday.
He had expressed his desire to be laid in the same
grave as his brother, but owing to some carelessness, another had been
opened, into which the body was placed. But this so dissatisfied his
aunt, that she had it disinterred, and put, according to his desire,
into his brother's grave. The monument erected by Alexander to his
brother John, is a square stone pillar about seven feet high, with a
cornice surmounted by a vase. On the north side has been put the
following inscription :—
In the same grave
with John, rest the remains of
his brother,
ALEXANDER BETHUNE,
the last member of a worthy family,
who died, June 13th, 1843,
AGED 38.
WITH SCARCELY ANY SCHOOL EDUCATION, AND UNDER THE
PRESSURE OF POVERTY, AND THE SEVEREST TOIL, HE PRODUCED SEVERAL WORKS OF
MUCH MERIT, ILLUSTRATIVE OF THE CHARACTER AND MANNERS, AND CONDUCIVE TO
THE IMPROVEMENT, OF HIS OWN CLASS OF SOCIETY AND WAS AS REMARKABLE FOR
HIS INDEPENDENCE OF SPIRIT AND PRIVATE VIRTUES, AS FOR HIS LITERARY
ATTAINMENTS.
This monument now marks the burial place of the whole
family, and may with truth be said to be "the graves of an household."
Charles Kingsley, himself a nobleman among men, says—"This spot and the
house they built, will become a pilgrim's station, only second to
Burns's grave, whenever the meaning of worth and worship shall become
rightly understood among us." Many may learn a lesson of great
usefulness to themselves, and those around them, from the simple story
of the lives of John and Alexander Bethune.