The Border Magazine - Date unknown cir. Jan 1896
Mr. John Usher as a Poet. |
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BY SIR GEORGE DOUGLAS, BART. |
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MR.
John USHER, late farmer of
Stodrig, and Laureate of the Borders, as I have heard him called, has
passed away at Kelso, at the ripe age of eighty-six. In so long a life,
it was matter of course that a man of his strong vitality should find
room for great and varied activity: and though well-pleased to have the
opportunity of laying my pebble on the cairn of a respected
neighbour and a well-liked friend, I cannot help wishing that the task
of writing about him for the Border Magazine had fallen to one
who knew him earlier and in a more varied relation than I can claim to
have done. For I am sure there must be good stories to tell, and
interesting traits of character to record, of his early life, of his
feats in horsemanship, of his life as a farmer, of his brilliancy and
geniality as a boon-companion. That these will be committed to writing
some day, and the sooner the better, I sincerely hope, as I sincerely
regret the circumstance which makes of them, as regards myself, a sealed
book. Owing to a difference of nearly fifty years in our ages, it was as
“Old Usher,” as he was affectionately called by the people
hereabout, that I first knew him; and, later in life, when congeniality
of taste drew us closer together, it was of literary matters that we
were eager to talk when we met. So it is only in old age and on the literary side that I can pretend to have known him
intimately, which side was, after all, the less characteristic side of
his nature. He would himself have been the last to overrate his poetic
talents, and there was no one whose sell-respect would have revolted
sooner from the sickly over-praise which is the fashion of the present
day. He
May be said to have begun his connexion with literature in earliest
childhood, and under circumstances in themselves sufficient to kindle
the flame of inspiration in him. His father owned Toftfield, now
Huntlyburn, a small property then adjoining Abbotsford, but afterwards
acquired by Sir Walter Scott and added to the larger estate; and as a
little boy, Usher had the honour of standing between the knees of Sir
Walter, and singing him a song, in reward for which he received the
present of a pony from the great man. Later in life, as an athlete and
frequenter of Border Games, he became familiar with the Ettrick
Shepherd; and among other literary lights with whom he was acquainted
were John Wilson, Henry Scott Riddell, and (of course) his fellow-Kelsonian,
Stoddart. He himself began to compose early, his first song being
written in 1834, for a banquet given to a defeated candidate for East
Lothian at the first parliamentary election after the passing of the
great Reform Bill. This shows the poet to have lighted immediately on
the style of composition which suited him best. For he was at his best
as a song-writer, and perhaps especially at his best as a writer of
“occasional” and local songs; songs, for instance, written to
celebrate such events as the Majority of the Marquess of Bowmont, or the
Presentation of a Portrait to the Duke of Roxburghe, songs on the Kelso
Volunteers, Kelso Mechanics’ Institute, and last, not least,
Kelso Curling Club, in which last-named composition he admirably hits
off characteristics of the various players, and humorous incidents of
the season’s play. Probably it was from this facility in occasional
pieces that he got his title of Laureate of the Borders. . |
Of
course the drawback of this style of composition is that its interest is
local and ephemeral. However the poet also succeeded admirably in songs
appealing to a wider public. His four charming songs on Scotch proverbs
are an instance – to which he himself composed melodies, and his
singing of which was an agreeable incident in many an evening's
entertainment. They are full of a mellow and tuneful wisdom which
entitles them to be preserved. Then there is his “Pipe of Tobacco,”
a capital Smoker’s Song, and his "Channel Stane,” an equally
good song inscribed to “a’ keen curlers,” and therefore not of
merely local application. These last two are his most finished, and
probably his most lasting contributions to Border literature. His
remaining poems are chiefly of a personal character, that is they are
inspired by themes, such as an old friend, a first grand-child, genial
companionship, the death of a favourite horse, suggested by his everyday
life and which appealed directly to his deeper feelings. In them he
generally embodied his sadder thoughts, as opposed to the livelier
impulses which found expression in his convivial songs. Coming straight
from the heart, they express warm feeling sweetly, and bear upon them
the impress of a strong personality. In more sustained styles of poetry
he accomplished nothing, missing perhaps the stimulus of a direct
personal interest, or the near prospect of a sympathetic audience. Late
in life, when meditating the publication of his book, he applied to me
for a subject for a longer poem which should serve to swell its bulk. I
suggested Queen Mary’s ride from Jedburgh to visit the wounded
Bothwell at Hermitage. The subject suited him well enough, for it had to
do with two of the things which he liked best, namely the Borders and a
horse; whilst he was also a chivalrous admirer of beauty in the fair
sex. But if he dreamed over it, he did no more. In knowledge of
literature, while quite without pretension, he was qualified to hold his
own in conversation with professional men of letters; and lest this
assertion be thought to savour in the least degree of patronage, let me
ask how many men of letters exist who could hold their own with
practical farmers in conversation about farming? He retained his musical
powers almost to the last, and when last I heard him sing, three and
four years ago, notwithstanding his great age, he acquitted himself with
perfect grace, winning hearty applause from all present. He was indeed
one who bore his years lightly. His fine and plentiful silver hair, his
well-knit figure, the neatness of his attire, all harmonized well with
his native dignity and the courtesy of his manners. Nor was his
personality the less attractive for being somewhat subdued by age.
Throughout the Borders, his merits were widely recognized; and I doubt
not that at his funeral to-day very many who, like myself, knew, valued,
respected and admired him, will assemble to pay the last tribute of
respect to one who supplied a rare (though not unique) instance of a
vein of poetic feeling and creative imagination combining with the
sturdy character and shrewd practical capacity of the typical Border
Farmer. January 11, 1896
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© Mark Usher 30 Aug 2003 |
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