The remarkable
thing is that he didn't seek a career as a writer; he always considered
himself an amateur and devoted his talents to other pursuits --
the bar, publishing and public service. He wrote only to earn
money to support his education and later on to supplement his
earnings to support the lifestyle he enjoyed. His public service
activities included several years as a staff assistant to Lord
Milner who was in charge of South African reconstruction after
the Boer War, serving as an intelligence officer at GHQ in France
during World War I and directing the British government's Office
of Information under Lloyd George. Later on he was a Member of
Parliament, High Commissioner to the General Assembly for the
Church of Scotland and during his last five years, Governor General
of Canada. His publishing career included sewing as an active
partner in Edinburgh publishing firm of T. Nelson and Son, and
a director and deputy chairman of the Reuters news service. His
law practice specialized in tax matters. What is truly amazing
is that he achieved all this in spite of having suffered from
poor health throughout his career, first from a skull fracture
as a youth and later from debilitating duodenal ulcers.
But Buchan's
health problems didn't deter him from enjoying the outdoor life
-- throughout his career he enthusiastic participated in mountain
climbing, stalking and fishing. He was also intensely interested
in exploration of the remaining unknown areas of the world and
wrote about all of these in both his fictional and nonfictional
works. His love of the outdoors was fostered as a result of spending
his youthful summer holidays in upper Tweedsdale area where his
matemal grandparents lived. The title he choose when he was made
a peer before going to Canada was clearly a result of his identification
with this area.
AIthough he
complained about the time wasted in 'going out', he didn't neglect
the social side of things and, in particular, he enjoyed the clubs
of London, country-house weekends and Highland hunting lodges,
all of which feature in his writings. At age thirty-two he married
Susan Grosvenor whose father Norman was rich and well connected.
Their marriage was an especially happy one and they raised three
sons and a daughter. After WW I, they bought Elsfield Manor, an
estate outside Oxford in the Cotswold country and this became
the source of another enthusiasm and the need for more writing
to pay for it.