VEDDER, DAVID.—This
warm-hearted enthusiastic sailor-poet, whose open countenance and massive
form have so recently disappeared from among us, was born in the parish of
Burness, Orkney, in 1790. His father was a small proprietor near Kirkwall;
but of him he was bereaved in early boyhood; his widowed mother, however,
directed the first steps of his education with singular ability, and
carefully led him into that good path which he followed out to the end of
his days. Being left an orphan at the age of twelve, David chose the
occupation most natural to an island boy and Orcadian—it was that of a
sailor, and in the first instance as a cabin-boy; but at the age of eighteen
he rose to the rank of mate, and only two years after to the command of a
ship, in which he made several voyages to Greenland and other places.
Afterwards he entered the revenue service, as first officer of an armed
cruiser, in which he continued till 1820, when he obtained the government
appointment of tide-surveyor of customs, and officiated in that capacity at
the ports of Montrose, Kirkcaldy, Dundee, and Leith, till the close of his
active and well-spent life.
Although the tempest-beaten
shores and incessantly shifting skies of Orkney are so fitted to inspire
poetical emotions—though its wild scenery is fraught with such romantic
historical remembrances—and though its children are the descendants of those
Vikings and Jaris, who wrought such wondrous deeds in their day, and of
those Scalds who recorded them in song—yet it is singular that so few
Orcadians of the modern stock have distinguished themselves in the walks of
poetry. A veritable Orkney poet, therefore, is the more valuable, on account
of the rarity of the species—and one of these few, as well as the choicest
specimen of the whole, was David Vedder. The maternal education, although so
early terminated, had not only made him a reader and a thinker, but had
cultivated his poetical tendencies, so that the ocean storms, by which they
might have been otherwise extinguished, only seem to have nursed them into
full maturity. Even while a young sailor, and amidst the boisterous
navigation of the Northern seas, his chief recreation as well as delight was
poetry, so that he ventured at the early age of twenty-one to launch his
first published poem into the pages of a magazine. Thus committed to the
destinies of the press, other similar attempts quickly followed; and
encouraged by the favourable reception they experienced, he commenced
authorship in earnest, with a volume entitled the "Covenanter’s Communion,
and other Poems," which was published by Blackwood in 1820. This work was so
favourably received, that the whole impression was soon exhausted.
We can only give a brief
enumeration of David Vedder’s other works. To the "Covenanter’s Communion"
succeeded his "Orcadian Sketches"—a production of prose and verse
intermixed, in the strong sonorous poetry of which the ringing of his native
storms predominates, while many of the events are reminiscences of his own
early life. This was followed by a "Life of Sir Walter Scott," which was
much read and admired, until it was superseded by the able and ample
narrative of Lockhart. In 1841 he published a volume of his collected
pieces, under the title of "Poems—Legendary, Lyrical, and Descriptive." In
1848 he published, in conjunction with his son-in-law, Mr. Frederick Schenck,
the distinguished lithographer, a splendidly illustrated volume, entitled
"Lays and Lithographs," the whole of the letter-press of which was supplied
by Mr. Vedder. His last principal work was a new English version of the
quaint old German story of "Reynard the Fox," adorned with similar
illustrations.
Besides these entire
productions, Mr. Vedder was considerably employed, over a course of years,
as a coadjutor in other literary undertakings. These, independently of
numerous contributions to newspapers and magazines, consisted of additions
to George Thomson’s "Musical Miscellany," Blackie’s "Book of Scottish Song,"
and Robertson’s "Whistlebinkie." He also contributed the greater part of the
letter-press to Geikie’s well-known volume of "Etchings." As his authorship
had commenced, in like manner it terminated, with the Covenanters; for
during his last illness he was employed in the composition of a beautiful
ballad, descriptive of their sufferings, founded upon an incident in the
life of Andrew Gray, of Chryston, in Ayrshire.
The estimate of Vedder’s
literary and intellectual character has been justly and briefly expressed by
the Rev. George Gilfillan in the following words—"As a poet and prose writer
his powers were of no ordinary kind. He added to strong unrestrained sense
much fancy and humour. If not a ‘maker’ in the full extent of that name, he
had unquestionably a true natural vein. Dr. Chalmers used actually to
electrify his class-room by reading those lines of Vedder’s entitled ‘All
Nature worships there;’ and many parts of his ‘Covenater’s Communion’ and
his ‘Orcadin Sketches’ display similar power and truth of genius. Although
in a great degree self-taught, he managed not only to acquire an excellent
English style, but an extensive knowledge of foreign tongues, and his
translations from the German are understood to be exceedingly faithful and
spirited."
The death of Mr. Vedder
occurred at his residence in Newington, near Edinburgh, on the 11th
of February, 1854, when he had reached his sixty-fourth year. His funeral
was attended by most of the literary men of Edinburgh, who thus rendered
public honour to his talents and worth; and a selection from his writings,
edited by that distinguished young poet, Alexander Smith, is expected to be
published, the profits of which are to be devoted to the erection of a
monument over the grave of Vedder, in the Southern Cemetery at the Grange. |