In Search of Gravestones Old and Curious
Chapter 12
goodliness thereof is as the flower of the field." At the back of the stone is written: "This burying ground, containing two graves, belongs to William Rait, Merchant. Aberdeen, 1800." The practice of carving on both faces of the headstone is very common in Scotland, and, so far as I have observed, in Scotland alone; but, strange as it may seem, Scotland and Ireland when they write gravestone inscriptions have one habit in common, that of beginning their epitaphs, not with the name of the deceased person, but with the name of the person who provides the stone. Thus:--
Erected by William Brown to his Father John Brown, etc., etc.
[Footnote 14: It has been suggested to me that these "tombs" were the luxuries of the wealthier inhabitants.]