Ian Robert Hamilton Abbot was a Scottish poet. A posthumous work of Abbot, Finishing the Picture was published by Kennedy and Boyd in 2015.
Life
Abbot was the son of a house-painter, Thomas Abbott and mother Robina Abbot. His brother was Frazer Abbot a respected painter and his sister was a nurse. Abbot grew up in a tenement on Ruthven Avenue in the city and attended the Northern District School. Abbots family later moved to Rannoch Road in the northwest area of Perth with Abbot moving to Goodlyburn Primary School and later Perth Academy. Abbot left the Academy before completing his exams to work at Tay Salmon Fisheries Company. During this period Abbot became increasingly Left-wing in his political outlook.
In the 1970s, Abbot became a Silversmith and moved to Whitebridge to devote himself to writing, but the remoteness of the location meant that orders for work became fewer and the business failed. After losing his business, Abbot took on a large number of low paying jobs to earn enough money to live, e.g. casual farm work. He worked as a sheep clipper, fencer, tractor driver and pony drover. Other positions that Abbot described in the biographical entry of his Avoiding the Gods included barman, different types of drivers, forestry worker, auditor and interior designer. Abbot explained during this period that he took these positions to try and support himself while travelling in Africa, according to his Scottish Arts Councilbursary application biographical statement, but his aim was to become a full-time writer. Moreover, in a letter to William Montgomerie, Abbot admitted that the idea of risking all on full-time writing scared him.
1980s
At the start of the 1980s onwards Abbot's poetry started to appear in print. In 1982 he won a prize of £50 that was posted by the Royal Lyceum Theatre for the poem Ariel. In 1985 Abbot won another poetry competition with his poem called Scott’s first voyage, in a competition that was held by the Poetry Association of Scotland. By the mid 1980s, Abbot was touring Scotland where he gave readings and ran workshops in poetry writing. This led to the Scottish Arts Council to provide a bursary that enabled him to complete the work on the manuscript Avoiding the Gods. The manuscript was published in 1988 by Chapman Publishing.