steady attendance at school, and when the opportunity
so long delayed came to him at last, he went eagerly at his books.
He was distinguished for a memory of
remarkable tenacity, and by a perseverance unconquerable in the pursuit of
knowledge. We are told he took little part in the school games, preferring
to walk about with a book in his hand. But in spite of this he was well
liked by the boys, and as a friend says of him, "He was no duffer, but
enjoyed fun as much as any of them." Though even of temper and
self-controlled, he was a "terrible fighter," his master says, "when
fighting was to be done." So, though he won no distinction on the
playground, he held his own with his mates, and easily carried the palm as
being the most notable scholar of the district school. His old master,
Alexander McNaughton, writes as follows:
"James was very often taken from his
lessons to help his mother in household work when she would be employed at
outdoor toil on neighbouring farms, yet, despite this, he outstripped his
classmates, especially in Latin, arithmetic, and geometry. He had a clear
head, great powers of concentration, and a memory so retentive that he
seldom forgot what was worth remembering. Of all the boys whom I have put
through the scholastic mill in a period of forty years, none gave me more
pleasure or raised my hopes of his success higher than did James
Robertson."
When he was about fifteen years of
age there was a contest instituted between schools of the three parishes.
The best scholars from each of the schools competed, and, with them, some
lads who had been two years at the college. There seemed small chance for
the Dull scholar, handicapped as he was by his late beginning and his
broken attendance. But undaunted, he entered the competition with all the
energy he possessed of body, mind and spirit. The great day arrived, and
at it they went and continued at it the whole day long. As the hours pass
the combatants fall out one by one till a college lad and Robertson of
Dull are left alone. On into the night they continue the struggle until,
dazed but undaunted, at two o’clock next morning, Robertson is declared
the winner. "He never let go what he once took a grip of," says another
friend, a significant forecast, surely, of a later characteristic.
He was good at Latin, and though
Gaelic was his mother tongue and the only tongue he knew to converse in
till he was sixteen years of age, he was good at book English, too; but
his strong point was arithmetic. When he was about sixteen, a problem that
had given some trouble in the college in Edinburgh was sent down to the
master at Dull.
"If any of them can solve it," said
the master, "it will be Robertson." And to Robertson he gave it, who took
it home and fell upon it. When his father was going to bed that night he
said to his boy:
"Are you not comin’ to your bed,
lad?"
"Yes, after a while," replied the
boy, hardly looking up from his slate. But when next morning the father
came in to light the fire, James rose from the spot where he had been left
sitting the night before, with the solution of the problem in his hands.
No wonder that he was the delight and pride of the master and of his
fellows in the school
But as the years went on, times with
the Robertsons grew worse and the mother’s dream of a college education
for her son, in which he secretly shared, seemed to become less and less
likely to be realized, till in 1854 a terrible storm fell upon the Tayside,
burying flocks and herds and cots beneath its masses of snow, and bringing
ruin to many a small sheep-farmer. There followed a period of great
depression, so great, indeed, that James Robertson, who had lost almost
all that he had, lost heart as well, and resolved to leave his native land
and try his fortune in Canada.
Canada was at that day a far-off
place and wild, and it is almost impossible for us to imagine the feelings
with which these Scottish people, with their passionate love for their
native hills and their yearning for their "ain fowk," contemplated
emigration to the backwoods of Canada so far and so fearsome. But, while
Scotland held all or almost all that their hearts could cling to, Scotland
had little to offer the labouring man in the way of reward for present
toil, and less in the way of hope of future advancement for his family.
Then, too, the word that came back from James McCallum, Mrs. Robertson’s
brother who had gone to Canada some years before, was encouraging. He had
done well for himself and his family out there. So, after long
deliberation and much prayer, and after earnest consultation with their
minister, though with few others, for the Robertsons kept "themselves to
themselves," the resolve was taken and to Canada they would go.
At this juncture arose a question of
the greatest importance to the family as a whole, but especially to the
boy James and to his mother. Shortly before their departure the parish
minister brought an offer from the trustees of what was known as the
Stewart bequest, the proceeds of which were to be devoted to the education
of bright lads in the district, to undertake the education of James if he
would remain behind. It was a time of sore trial for them all, but at
length one and all agreed that it could not be. Not even for the college
education, so long desired and so toilfully sought, could they bear to
leave the boy behind.
So, in 1855, James Robertson and his
family set sail in the George Roger
for Canada, and settled beside James
McCallum in the township of East Oxford, Ontario.
Among his few possessions the lad
carried as his most priceless treasure the certificate from his old
master, as follows:
"That James Robertson attended the
parish school of Dull from December, 1851, to date hereof, and was
educated in English, reading, grammar, writing, arithmetic, geography, and
religious knowledge, that he acquired a reasonable acquaintance with the
elements of Latin and was reading Caesar and Ovid, that he studied
mathematics with much success, having mastered the first four books of
Euclid’s elements and algebra as far as quadratic equations, that his
progress in the above enumerated branches was more than usually rapid, and
his moral character and conduct in the highest degree satisfactory; but
notwithstanding his being a young man of modest and unassuming manners,
his natural abilities were conspicuous as well during ordinary school
exercises as on examination days, on which occasions he invariably carried
away the highest prizes. That he is leaving this locality for the purpose
of emigrating to America and that whether he be there employed in teaching
the young, in which capacity he has had some experience while assisting
me, or in any other occupation to which Providence may call him, I feel
sure that his wonted diligence and perseverance will accompany him and
success crown his labours, is certified at the schoolhouse of Dull, in the
county of Perth, by Alexander McNaughton, parish schoolmaster, May 9,
1855."
With a certificate of this kind from
a parish school. master of Mr. McNaughton’s well-known ability and reserve
of speech, James might indeed front much. On a visit to his native parish
many years afterwards he writes as follows to his old master:
"No. 20 Mound Place, Edinburgh, April 2, 1897.
"My DEAR MR. MCNAUGHTON :— "I have
never lost my interest in the school of Dull or in its pupils, and I
anticipate no small pleasure in my intended visit to renew acquaintance
with scenes once familiar. Rivers and roads, hills and woods continue the
same, although familiar faces have disappeared and strange faces have
taken their place. I wish, therefore, to send some three pounds’ worth of
books to my old school in prizes to the pupils attending there now and I
would like very much if you would oblige me by selecting them. I have
perfect confidence in your judgment as to the books and the subjects for
which they are to be given. I mention three pounds, but should three
pounds not do justice to the school, make it four or even five. To the
teacher and not to the school as such do I owe what of good I got in Dull,
but yet this is the only way I can indicate that I have not forgotten the
scenes of early days.
"With much respect I am, dear sir,
"Yours sincerely,
"JAMES ROBERTSON."
Western Ontario was, at that time,
but sparsely settled. The Great Western Railway had not long been opened.
At the front, along river and lake, settlements clustered, but in the
backwoods counties, vast sections of the forest primeval remained unbroken
and immigrants, pushing their way past the homes of early settlers, found
themselves in the midst of this unbroken forest, and faced with the labour
of hewing themselves homes out of its gloomy and terrible depths.
The first summer was spent in
enlarging the clearing upon their farm. The winter following, James with
the other boys, chopped cord-wood and hauled it to the neighbouring
village of Woodstock. For a part of the following summer he laboured again
at farm-work, but for a few weeks of that summer he walked night and
morning a distance of six miles to attend school at Woodstock, carrying
his dinner with him. When the time for the teachers’ examinations arrived,
James asked for the privilege of writing. His teacher, however, objected
because of his short attendance upon school. The boy was not to be balked.
Too long had he had the university and college in view. Other boys were
making their way, therefore why should not he? He went to his minister,
the Rev. Mr. McDermot, of Chalmers Church, Wood-stock, and stated his
case, showing his much prized certificate from the parish schoolmaster of
Dull. The minister was greatly impressed, not only with the certificate he
presented, but also with his determined spirit. The boy had, indeed, a
"terrible jaw." He tried to persuade young Robertson that it would be
wiser for him to delay his attempt, urging that he was not used to the
Canadian style of work and of examinations. It was all in vain. Robertson
would not be stopped. He only wanted a chance, and finally the minister
went to the teacher and persuaded him to let the lad have his way. That
"terrible jaw" of the boy had appealed to the minister. The teacher agreed
and the papers were given to Robertson who, when the examination was over,
went back to his home and his work at the clearing of the land and the
gathering in of the crops.
The weeks passed and there was no
news of the examination. Young Robertson was disappointed. He had been too
impatient and too confident of himself, and it would have been wiser to
have taken the minister’s advice. It was his first failure, and the lad
took it quietly enough, but with a keen sense of defeat.
One day in the late fall, his
younger brother, Archie, was sent with another lad to a neighbouring
post-office. Hearing his name, the postmistress called out to him:
"Have you a brother James?"
"Yes."
"Then here’s a letter for him that’s
been here for three months," and handed out a long blue envelope.
It was the teacher’s certificate,
long coveted and long despaired of. The envelope was opened in the
presence of the family and became the occasion of a suppressed jubilation.
But afterwards the boy carried it out to the back of the house and there
gloated upon it.
And now for a school. The Corner
School where the Governor’s Road meets the Tenth Line of East Zorra, was
vacant. Robertson applied for it, sending in his certificate. The boy had
not walked his six miles back and forth, to and from Woodstock, without
being noticed. He got his school and began work as teacher in January of
1857, at the age of eighteen.
He was a raw, awkward, uncouth lad.
His clothes were made by the travelling tailor, and none too elegant. His
manners and speech were abrupt almost to the point of rudeness at times,
but he carried into his work a purpose to get the best out of himself and
out of that little company of boys and girls that faced him in the Corner
School. He was stern in discipline—a distinguished member of the House of
Commons, the Hon. James Sutherland, wrote that he remembered well a
birching he had at his hands—but he seldom needed to use the birch. He
kept his pupils so busy that they had little time for mischief. He filled
them with his own enthusiasm for work. One of his pupils, who lived at the
teacher’s boarding place, writes:
"One evening we came upon a problem
in Gray’s Arithmetic about oxen grazing in a field and the grass growing
uniformly, the question being how long the grass in the field would
support the oxen. This was one of the knotty questions of that day. The
solution not coming as easily as was customary and bedtime having arrived,
I proposed retiring. I can see him yet, how he rose up, put off his coat
and sat down to it. I went to bed and was soon in the land where such
problems cease to trouble a boy, but after some time he wakened me up,
solution in hand, and sought to make plain to me, still drowsy with sleep,
the points of the problem. There was no shirking and no scamping in the
work done in that school."
The teacher’s boarding place was the
house of Mr. Peter McLeod, who was a distiller in a small way. This
distilling industry throughout Ontario was primitive in its nature and
primitive in operation. It was the custom for the farmers to take their
"tailings" of wheat and rye and barley to the mill in Woodstock, where
they were chopped and made ready for Peter McLeod’s still. Peter was an
honest man and made honest whiskey, part of which he gave to the farmers
for their chopped tailings, and the rest he retailed at twenty-five cents
a gallon. Oh, blissful days for drouthy Scots! Of course, to all in the
house the whiskey was as free as water, for Peter was as kindly as he was
honest, so the young teacher with the rest was welcome to his "fill" of
whiskey. In those good old days there were no faddy notions about total
abstinence and that sort of thing. Whiskey was not so much rated among the
luxuries, but among the necessities of life. No house could afford to be
without it. Hospitality demanded that it should welcome the coming and
speed the parting guest. At the logging-bees and raisings, the chopping
and the threshing, whiskey was a plain necessity, while at weddings,
christenings, and funerals, it was equally indispensable. For who would be
so mean as to fail to provide what would lend wings to dancing feet,
pledge life and prosperity to the newly christened babe, and bring comfort
to the heart in sorrow? Wrong! What wrong could there be in honest whiskey
made by Peter McLeod out of their own wheat and rye and barley? And didn’t
the ministers and the elders and all godly men
take their decent glass, asking
God’s blessing over it as over any other good creature of His? Tut, man,
what would you have! And what if some of the weak-headed did take "a wee
drap" too much! No blame to the whiskey for that, surely, but to the men
who were not fit to use it. And as for hurting any one, look at Peter
McLeod himself, who had barrels of it and who dipped it out with a dipper.
Did any one ever see him the worse? Not a bit.
This was the temperance atmosphere
of the day, and in Peter McLeod’s distillery it was that the young Scotch
Canadian lad took up his abode on his first venture from home. But it was
Peter McLeod’s distillery, too, that made young Robertson a total
abstainer for life, and an enthusiast in the propagation of total
abstinence principles. For he had seen that same Peter McLeod’s whiskey,
good and honest as it was, make beasts out of men, turn the kindly
gatherings of neighbours into scenes of revelry and brawling, and, indeed,
not even the sacred ranks of the church-members were safe from its
dreadful inroads. Peter McLeod might take his own whiskey in sober
moderation and with little hurt to him, but there were others who could
only drink it to their ruin and degradation. Robertson became a rabid
teetotaler, and it says something for the influence of his personality
that a young man liv-ing in the same house with him became, like him, a
total abstainer. Long years afterwards that young man, now an honoured
minister of the Gospel, wrote:
"Robertson always acted the
missionary, and I was one of his converts to total abstinence on
principle. We did not take or make any pledge, but I can thank God for
meeting Robertson when I was young."