It might not be an easy task to determine with
precision the chief points of contrast between Scottish and English
history, but anyone who compares the two branches of study, as they
are presented to us by their respective exponents, will see at a
glance that persons and incidents are most conspicuous in the one
case, institutions and movements in the other. What distinguishes
the history of England from that, not only of Scotland, but of every
other European State, is the evidence it affords of a continuous
endeavour to develop the machinery of government in accordance with
the spirit of the age. This process can be traced in unbroken
sequence to the Norman Conquest—not that it did not begin in far
earlier times, but that from that period there has been no cataclysm
in the national life. For more than a hundred years after the
Conquest we find the Crown, supported by the mass of the people,
striving to hold the nobles in check. The nobles, exhausted and
chastened, then make head against the monarchy, which Henry II. has
raised to unprecedented strength. Succeeding against John and Henry
III., they are forced into partnership with the Commons by the
statesmanship of Edward I.; and, after attempting for a time to
shake off their allies, they make common cause with them, and
encourage them to assert their power—to refuse supplies, to allot
and supervise expenditure, to impeach the King’s Ministers. The
nobles then become too strong for the weakened
prerogative—constitutional progress, in Bishop Stubbs’ phrase, has
outrun administrative order; and the industrial classes demand a
strong ruler, who will put down feuds and riots and secure the
public peace. Hence the Tudor dictatorship, established to curb the
aristocracy, and maintained in power to cope with external dangers
resulting from the Reformation; and this in turn succumbs to
revolution when the Stewart kings persist in continuing a system
which has outlived its uses. At the Kestoration the Commons keep the
King’s purse, but are not strong enough to direct his policy;
Minister after Minister is impeached, only to be succeeded by
another no less unpopular; and the difficulty is not solved till, as
the tardy result of another revolution, the principle is established
that the government must be exercised by a committee of the party
which is dominant in the House of Commons.
It has been said that the success of Englishmen in
developing their political institutions is to be attributed, not to
‘ ‘ some profound sagacity or foresight peculiar to themselves,”
much less to luck or accident, but to the fact that their “training
in the conduct of affairs” had begun a century or two earlier than
that of Frenchmen or Germans. The fact itself requires to be
explained; but, if national distinctions are to be ascribed more to
environment than to original character, the causes which had
retarded constitutional progress on the Continent were equally
operative in Scotland. Unlike their more powerful neighbours, the
Scots derived no security, no scope for constructive statesmanship,
from their insular position. Maintaining a precarious independence
between the Border and the Highland line, they were never at peace,
and their politics long remained as rude and violent as their social
life. Edward I. and Edward III. all but succeeded in conquering
Scotland, and, the attempt of the latter having been frustrated by
foreign intervention and the outbreak of a continental war, his
successors never ceased to molest the northern kingdom —to assail it
by force and to undermine it by intrigue— as an outpost of France.
In a soil so poor, in a climate so tempestuous, institutions
dwindled rather than grew. Questions not unlike the constitutional
issues of English history do indeed arise, but they are mere
incidents in the rivalry of Crown and barons, and are determined by
the balance of power, without reference to principle or
usage. Scotland, which Sir John Fortescue, the Chief Justice of
Henry VI., cited as a limited monarchy, had its Parliament of three
Estates, but this was never more than the King’s feudal court,
comprising his immediate vassals and chartered burghs. It is
doubtful whether the burgesses were invariably present in Parliament
before the middle of the fifteenth century, and by that time all but
noble freeholders had practically ceased to attend, and the
functions of debate and legislation had been usurped by a committee
known as the Lords of the Articles, or briefly the Articles, and
including, or soon to include, in its membership the Officers of
State. Such a development precluded the possibility of that
antagonism of legislature and executive which was so long the
mainspring of English constitutional progress, and the Scottish
Parliament in all but its last days was little more than an
instrument for registering edicts, and for legalising usurpations,
of the royal power. At all events, it did not advance. Before the
close of the thirteenth century Edward I. had practically reduced
feudalism in England to a system of land tenure; but the political
organisation of Scotland remained almost wholly feudal, not merely
to the Union of 1707, but to the Reform Bill of 1832. In England,
before 1350, shire members and borough members, representing the two
great interests of land and commerce, had united to form a House of
Commons : in Scotland the burgesses sat in one House with the nobles
and prelates, and the lesser tenants of the Crown were not
represented till 1585. Even this reform, a product of the social
changes effected by the Reformation, did not really broaden the
constitution, for the county franchise was confined to a class which
ought in theory to have attended in person.
So slight was the direct constitutional influence of
a movement which closed the long controversy with England and
provided a counterpoise to the power of the great lords. The
Reformation was not wholly, or even mainly, a religious force, for
it was provoked by the Gallicising policy of Mary of Lorraine as
Regent for her daughter, who was to be Queen of both Scotland and
France, and was headed by the nobles, who were chiefly interested in
engrossing the monastic estates; but the Protestantism which the
nobles accepted, and the peasantry conformed to, as a mere form, was
received with enthusiasm by many of the gentry and superior
townsmen; and this influence, crystallising into a fourfold
hierarchy of Church courts, tended both to create and to organise a
middle class. “Methinks,” wrote an English observer in 1572, “I see
the noblemen’s great credit decay in that country, and the barons,
boroughs and such-like take more upon them.” Scottish Puritanism
found no scope for its energies in Parliament; and, as statesmen
were naturally not disposed to acknowledge the supremacy of
ministers as interpreters of Scripture, which was the duty assigned
to them by Knox, the two organisations, secular and ecclesiastical,
drifted further and further apart, till their independence was
adopted, or rather insisted on, by Andrew Melville as the basis of a
theory which recognised two kingdoms— the kingdom of Christ Jesus,
and the kingdom of his “silly vassal,” James VI.
The Crown had now to reckon with an opposition more
solid and persistent than that of aristocratic caprice; but
Melville’s policy was aggressive, not defensive; and he might justly
be dismissed as a belated Hildebrand, were it not that he was
supported by a popular organisation in whose government clergymen
and laymen had equal rights. When Sir John Eliot in England asserted
that members of the House of Commons were responsible only to that
assembly for words spoken within its walls, he was anticipating a
maxim of our modern constitution; but when Melville delivered
seditious harangues from the pulpit, and refused practically to
answer for them to any but an ecclesiastical court, one can only say
that the fortifications of the Scottish monarchy were of a less
obsolete type than the artillery with which they were assailed. Such
extravagant pretensions were the fruit of an enthusiasm which could
not long be maintained, particularly at a time when it had not yet
penetrated to the mass of the people. Melville had considerable
difficulty in rallying his followers after his discomfiture and
flight in 1584, when he had rebuked the Privy Council for presuming
"to judge the doctrine and control the ambassadors and messengers of
a King and Council greater nor they, and far above them.” A dozen
years later, a minister named Black denied the right of the Privy
Council to call him to account for a singularly outrageous sermon,
asserting that the office-bearers of the Church were “placed in
their spiritual ministry over kings and kingdoms to plant and pluck
up by the roots, to edify and demolish”; and the mass of the clergy,
whom Black had previously denounced for their moderation as “leaders
of the people to hell,” were so disgusted with this firebrand and
the commotion he had raised, that they made their peace with the
King; and theocracy, -exhausted and discredited, subsided for forty
years into a dreamless sleep.
At the close of the sixteenth century, the only
constitutional change which had been effected by the popular spirit
of the Reformation was, as we have seen, the presence of
shire-members in Parliament; and this change, slight enough at best
so long as the Lords of the Articles controlled legislation, was
reduced to insignificance by the overthrow of theocratic
pretensions, and the union in 1603 of the Scottish and English
crowns. Removed to a great distance from the tumults and feudal
disorders of his native kingdom, and wielding the resources of a
separate and powerful State, James, with no fear for his personal
safety, governed Scotland “through the post”; and the Presbyterian
democracy, which had once defied his prerogative, was gradually
moulded into an Episcopal form. Addressing the English Parliament in
1607, he said: “This I may say for Scotland, and may truly vaunt it:
here I sit and govern it with my pen; I write and it is done; and by
a Clerk of the Council I govern Scotland now—which others could not
do with the sword.” The Estates met less and less frequently during
this period, and the restoration of Episcopacy, completed in 1612,
made them wholly subservient to the royal will. The spiritual Estate
had gained a predominating influence in electing the Lords of the
Articles, and, so long as that Estate comprised a considerable
number of titular abbots and priors, the usage was not wholly
inimical to freedom of choice. When, however, the prelacies long
held by laymen had been legally secularised, and the spiritual peers
were reduced to thirteen bishops appointed by the Crown, the Lords
of the Articles became a mere committee of the King’s friends.
There is no evidence that this system of royal
absolutism would in itself have provoked a revolution; for it was
never directly challenged on constitutional grounds, and encountered
no resistance till it had come into conflict with the three great
forces of Scottish politics— aristocracy, nationality and religion.
Complaint was made that in the Parliament held in person by Charles
I. in 1633 “voices were bought and packed”; but this was merely an
indication of the storm that was being aroused by Charles’s
interference with the ecclesiastical property of the nobles—their
tithes and church lands, and by his persistence in his father’s
attempt to introduce Anglican forms of worship. The movement which
took the Covenant as its watchword originated in much the same
causes—national, social and religious—as the Reformation, but it
embraced the lower as well as the upper and the middle class, and
had a far greater influence on parliamentary forms. The Committee of
the Articles, which the bishops had manipulated, was abolished at
their deposition; but Parliament, despite its freedom of debate and
legislation, was still much inferior to the General Assembly as a
popular force; and it was not till the Assembly donned what it
called “the spiritual armour” of Andrew Melville, till it condemned
an Act of Parliament and prohibited all persons from obeying it “as
they would not incur the wrath of God and the censures of the Kirk,”
that the civil authority asserted, and succeeded in establishing,
its power. Cromwell, by defeating the expedition in support of the
Royalist cause in England, which the Church had vainly opposed,
enabled theocracy to retrieve its defeat; but Melville’s spiritual
kingdom estranged its great ally by making a Covenanter of Charles
II.; and that kingdom, in a year and a half, had become a byword for
fanaticism and extravagance when Cromwell in 1650 demolished it for
ever at Dunbar.
The half-century, 1660-1707, extending from the
Restoration to the Union, is conterminous with the last and most
important phase of the Scottish Parliament. Religion was never
again, except at one brief crisis, to be the principal factor in
politics, for the re-establishment of Episcopacy, violently as it
was resisted in certain districts, was accepted without demur in the
Parliament House; the General Assembly continued in abeyance till
1690, when it rapidly subsided into a purely ecclesiastical court;
and nothing is more noticeable in the public records of this period
than the interest excited by questions of industry and trade. Under
such conditions, indicating the growth of a secular spirit, the
legislature could not fail to gain in strength. The Committee of the
Articles, elected in such a manner as to place it once more at the
disposal of the Crown, was indeed restored; but overtures, not
presented through this medium, could be directly introduced; and the
House was no longer content to efface itself whilst the Articles
were at work. It met frequently; lively debates and close divisions
were not uncommon—divisions so close that we read of a motion being
carried by the Chancellor’s casting vote; the Government had to
cajole and threaten as well as to command; and it has been remarked
as proof of the growing interest in politics that burgh seats were
becoming an object of ambition to landowners, and that in 1678 a
committee was appointed for the first time to determine controverted
elections. When Lauderdale as the King’s Commissioner opened
Parliament in 1673, he “met with such a spirit as he thought never
to have seen,” and found that a compact party, inspired, as he
believed, by Shaftesbury, the English Opposition leader, was
determined not only to attack his fiscal policy, but to subvert
"that excellent constitution of the Articles which is the security
of monarchical government here”; and the common purpose which united
the opponents of despotism in Scotland and England received further
illustration in the following reign. James VII. opened his direct
assault on British Protestantism by attempting to procure a
statutory toleration for the Scottish Catholics; and, after a keen
contest, which was watched with great anxiety in London, his
proposal was reduced by the Articles to a bare concession of private
worship, and in this form was summarily rejected by the House.
James, however, exerted his prerogative in both
kingdoms to suspend the penal laws; and, when this step had caused a
revolt of his English subjects, the Estates concurred in his
deposition, and, in offering the Crown to William and Mary, declared
in the Claim of Right that the late sovereign had violated "the
fundamental constitution of this kingdom and altered it from a legal
limited monarchy to an arbitrary despotic powers; that he had
publicly asserted his right to “annul and disable all the laws’’;
that he had levied money without their consent; that he had
imprisoned persons without cause assigned, and delayed to put them
to trial; that he had dictated the decisions of judges; and that he
had subverted the third Estate by nominating the town-councils which
elected its representatives in Parliament. In another document
certain “grievances” were enumerated which could not be called
illegal, since all or most of them had received statutory
recognition; and first on the list, as might have been anticipated,
was the Committee of the Articles. William yielded to both
petitions; but he was no less reluctant than Lauderdale to give
effect to a reform which would deprive him of all influence in the
making of laws except the precarious and very unpopular one of
refusing his assent. As Episcopacy had been abolished, the Committee
could not in any case have been chosen in the old way, and it was
proposed that each Estate should elect its own members; but this
concession was very far from satisfying the House; and in 1690
William was forced to agree to an Act which provided that there
should no longer be “a standing committee,” and that the King’s
Ministers, though entitled to attend such temporary and specific
committees as might be appointed, should have power only to propose
and debate, not to vote.
Henceforth, during the seventeen years of life which
still remained to it, the Scottish Parliament was as completely
unfettered as the Irish Parliament was to be for one year longer
after the British Cabinet had lost the initiative in legislation
through the repeal in 1782 of Poynings’ Law; and the Ministers of
George III., when they strained every resource of corrupt influence
in Ireland to compensate the Crown for the loss of direct control,
were merely repeating a policy which had been pursued in Scotland by
William, and, less successfully, by the advisers of Queen Anne. Of
the problem which had thus arisen, Union inevitably suggested itself
as the only permanent solution—the problem how a legally independent
Parliament at Edinburgh or Dublin was to be reconciled with a
Ministry which, tacitly in the one case, avowedly in the other, took
its orders from the English Court; and Scottish and Irish patriots
denounced in almost identical terms the expedients with which this
difficulty was temporarily met. “Let no man say,” exclaimed Fletcher
of Saltoun, “that it cannot be proved that the English Court has
ever bestowed any bribe in this country. For they bestow all offices
and pensions; they bribe us and are masters of us at our own cost.
It is nothing but an English interest in this House that those who
wish well to our country have to struggle with at this time.”
“Before 1782,” said Wolfe Tone, “England bound us by her edict.
Since 1782 we are bound by English influence acting through our own
Parliament.”
This, at least, it may be supposed, was a genuine
movement in favour of constitutional reform, but the causes in which
it originated, even if we put aside the personal and the religious
element, were not really of that kind. We have seen that in the case
of a people whose nationality was so intense and so precarious as
that of the Scots, it was hardly possible for a crisis to arise in
which independence was not more or less involved; and, when we look
more closely into the course of events which has just been
described, we find that the opposing forces were not merely a
legislature and an executive, but a Scottish Parliament and what was
virtually an English Crown. The quarrel of the kingdoms, which had
lately been religious, was now commercial. During the first half of
the seventeenth century, the Scots had been practically free to
trade with England and her colonies to the extent of their very
limited means; but this boon, which the incorporating union effected
by Cromwell formally conferred, was withdrawn by the Navigation Act
of 1660; and the Scottish Parliament not only retaliated on English
shipping, but exhausted its ingenuity for twenty or thirty years in
devising a system of tariffs, exemptions and monopolies to protect
the home market, to introduce new industries, and to revive the
old. Two abortive conferences were held—one to reconcile Scottish
and English commerce, the other to promote a union. When the Estates
in 1673 were called upon to contribute to the war with Holland, a
member fell upon the war and said it was only for the benefit of
England, for their trade and their plantations, wherein this kingdom
were made worse than strangers.” A new commission to negotiate a
commercial treaty was appointed at the accession of James VII.; and
that sovereign, when soliciting repeal of the anti-Catholic laws,
declared that “we have made the opening of a free trade with England
our particular care, and are proceeding in it with all imaginable
application.”
After the Revolution, which emancipated Parliament
and finally disposed of the religious dispute, the patriotic rather
than constitutional character of the agitation in Scotland was soon
completely disclosed. Despairing of any abatement in their favour of
the English colonial monopoly, the Estates in 1693 passed an Act for
the encouragement of foreign trade, and, two years later,
established a Scottish East India Company, which, however, formed a
settlement, not in India, but on the isthmus of Darien. When this
scheme collapsed, mainly, it was believed, owing to English
ill-will, they passed the Act of Security, providing that the
successor to Queen Anne in Scotland should not be her successor in
England unless such conditions of government had previously been
enacted a/s should secure from English interference the sovereignty
of the kingdom, its legislative power, its religion and trade; and
the following were the conditions, only the first of which, in
common with the Act of Security, received the royal assent: that the
sovereign should not make war or peace on behalf of Scotland without
consent of Parliament; that Parliament should be consulted in the
appointment of Ministers, privy councillors and judges; that a new
Parliament should meet every third year, from which revenue officers
were to be excluded, and that Scotland should be represented by its
own ambassadors in all treaties with foreign Powers. Alarmed by this
threat of separation in the midst of a French war, the English
Parliament resolved to treat for union; and the flower of the
Nationalist party, realising that England was now offering
commercial privileges, and would be less likely than ever to make
such a concession if her corrupt influence in Scotland were cut off
by constitutional reforms, decided, as one of them ruefully
expressed it, cc to drink the potion to prevent greater
evils.” Henceforth Jacobitism was the only compact force enlisted
against the Union; and it shows how much more the Scots were
attached to their religious than to their political constitution
that, unpopular as the Union was, no Whig or Presbyterian, with some
rare exceptions, was prepared to obtain its repeal at the price of
restoring a Catholic prince.
From this survey we are forced to conclude that,
whilst the Scots before the Union were anything but a long-suffering
or submissive people, their social condition was too backward and
unsettled to permit of that development of private rights under the
protection of the law which in England had for centuries been
encroaching on the royal power. Legal shackles were no real
impediment to a Scottish king, who, nevertheless, if he offended any
powerful section of his subjects, was not unlikely to be resisted or
deposed. Various movements, apparently constitutional, have been
reviewed; but they all resolve themselves on analysis into
emanations of class interest, of the religious or the national
spirit; and there was no continuity in these movements, such as
would have enabled the Church to appeal to rights extorted by the
nobles, and Nationalists to principles established by the Church.
When the representatives of a nation which had developed no
constitutional tradition were called upon to take their share at
Westminster in adjusting the delicate relations of Crown and
Parliament, it might easily have been predicted in which scale their
weight would be cast; and in the course of this work we shall have
frequent occasion to question, if not to invert, the statement of
Buckle with regard to the Scots—expressing what he took to be “the
largest and most important fact in their history”—that they were
liberal in politics, illiberal in religion.
The Scottish Parliament passed away in 1707, but
there was one part of its constitution which survived intact for a
century and a quarter, and that was the rules it had laid down for
the election of its shire and burgh members. The example of England
is sufficient to prove that a high degree of political freedom may
be attained without any adequate provision for consulting the
popular will; but in this case the representative system was
mutilated and anomalous rather than organically unsound. In the
English county elections before the reign of Henry VI. serfdom was
practically the sole disqualification for a vote; and, even after
the Act of 1430, which restricted the franchise to freeholders of
forty shillings’ annual value, the county representation was still
so liberal in character that its enlargement was the principal
remedy proposed by Chatham and the early advocates of parliamentary
reform. The urban as well as the rural constituencies had originally
been free, but only 59 boroughs out of 203 could claim, or even
pretend to, that character at the date of the Reform Bill; for in
all but these the right of election accruing to householders had
been restricted by local usage or had wholly disappeared. In one
group it depended on the holding by burgage tenure of ancient
tenements or their site; which might be a ploughed field, as at Old
Sarum; a water-course, as at Downton; or a salt-spring which had
long ceased to flow, as at Droitwich; in another group it was the
privilege of a freeman, in the modern signification of that word as
the member of a trade guild; and in a third it had been engrossed by
the council. This last group, once perhaps the largest, had been
diminished in consequence of efforts made by the townsmen to recover
their power; and in 1832 there were only 43 boroughs in which
popular rights had been so completely usurped that a member was wont
to speak, not of his constituents, but of his corporation. In all
these groups, by no means rigidly defined, were comprised places of
no importance, chiefly in the south-west, which had been
enfranchised by the Tudors as a means of extending the influence of
the Crown in Parliament, and places, once prosperous, which had
fallen into decay; and these nomination or pocket boroughs—so-called
because territorial magnates could dispose of them at pleasure—were
so numerous that 84 individuals, “by their own immediate
authority,5’ were said in 1793 to return 157 members. Nevertheless,
in some of the householder constituencies, and in many of the
freeman group, there was a sufficient number of voters to
contribute, so far as electoral abuses permitted, a popular element
to the House. Whilst half-a-dozen inhabitants elected the two
members for Gatton, there were 1300 on the roll of Northampton, 2200
on that of Preston, 17,000 on that of Westminster. Rye, the smallest
freeman borough, had only six electors; but there were 1200 at
Exeter and Carlisle, over 2000 at Worcester, York and Liverpool,
3500 at Nottingham, 6000 at Bristol, and 12,000 in the City of
London.
In contrast with this representative system, the
shrunken embodiment of a worthy ideal, we have now to consider one
which was illiberal in theory, and in practice had become
unspeakably worse. When the first Earl of Stair was called to
account by the Estates for having said that an Act of theirs was
"but a decreet of the Baron Court,” he excused himself on the ground
that “the representation here was feudal”; and the words were as
true in 1830 as when they were uttered in 1701. The Scottish
Parliament, which the British legislature absorbed, was not a
national institution, for its elected members and their constituents
were alike dependent on fiefs or charters derived from the Crown. If
the election laws and usages had been the same in Scotland as in
England, it might indeed have been of little practical importance
whether the Parliament at Edinburgh represented the King’s subjects
or only his immediate vassals; and for a considerable period the two
codes had something in common. When the Scottish county franchise
was introduced in 1585, it was based, like the English, on a forty
shilling freehold; but the Scottish freeholders, who did not include
in their ranks the poorer gentry and the yeomanry, were a far less
numerous body than the same class in England; and this small
electorate was made a great deal smaller by an Act passed in 1681.
Of two alternative qualifications which were then established, the
first was “a forty shilling land of old extent held of the King.”
The words "of old extent" referred to a general valuation which had
been made, nearly four centuries earlier, in the reign of Alexander
III.; and the difference thus inaugurated between the real and the
nominal value went on increasing till in 1793 the rent of land rated
for election purposes at forty shillings was computed at from £70 to
£130 sterling. Thus, whilst in England the county franchise fell
automatically with the decrease in the purchasing power of moneyi in
Scotland it rose. Where a freeholder could not appeal in support of
his claim to the “old extent,” he might nevertheless acquire a vote
if his property was assessed in the books of the land tax
Commissioners at the actual value of £400 Scots, equivalent in 1793
to £400 sterling; and the qualification required under this clause
was thus nearly four times as high as that established by the other.
Custom soon perverted, and in many cases even
extinguished, the very small representation permitted to Scottish
counties by the Act of 1681. Nobles and other great proprietors
multiplied freehold qualifications on their estates, and assigned
them to their dependents in temporary and conditional grants. At the
first general election after the Union, Queensberry, the Government
manager, was accused of "splitting freeholds and making fraudulent
sales of them with clauses of revocation”; and this practice, which
had probably begun in still earlier times, continued till 1714, when
the British Parliament prescribed an oath to expose such conveyances
in trust. The legislation of 1681 now suggested a more subtle device
to those whose evasion of the law had thus been checked. As the Act
of that year admitted as a qualification property or
superiority, or, in other words, superiority whether or not
accompanied with proprietary rights, it became usual to transfer
parcels of land valued at not less than £400 Scots from the Crown to
subject-superiors, and thus to create votes by a mere manipulation
of tenure." No bond or trust was needed, the superior being entitled
to only a nominal rent. With a view to putting down this abuse, the
trust-oath of 1714 was re-enacted in 1734, with the addition of a
stringent clause in which any person claiming to be enrolled as an
elector might be called upon to swear "that my title to the said
lands and estates is not nominal or fictitious, created or reserved
in me in order to enable me to vote for a member to serve in
Parliament.” But ‘‘naked superiorities,” worth a penny or sixpence a
year, continued of course to be a perfectly legal qualification; and
very few of those—frequently non-residents—who had acquired them for
political purposes scrupled to take an oath, the falsity of which
was so difficult to detect. In the course of this work we shall find
that further and little more successful attempts were made to
exterminate “these nominal esquires, these barons of shreds and
patches.” Meanwhile, we may content ourselves with a glance at the
county electorate as it existed after the Act of 1681 had been in
operation for more than a century.
From a very careful estimate3 printed in 1790, it
appears that there were then 2655 voters in the counties of
Scotland, and that 1318 of these, or nearly one half, were
fictitious. The proportion of fictitious to real voters varied
greatly in different districts, but, on the whole, it was lowest in
the east and south, and highest in the west and north. In
Midlothian, the purest county, there were only 10 nominal
freeholders out of 93, in Perthshire 19 out of 147, in Fife 32 out
of 185. In Argyll, Aberdeenshire, Caithness and Orkney the two
classes were about equal; but the “parchment barons ” were either a
considerable or a great majority in the counties of Ayr, Lanark,
Renfrew, Dumbarton, Inverness, Moray, Banff, Nairn, Cromarty,
Sutherland, Kinross, Clackmannan, and Bute. Of 123 voters in Banff
only 19 were real, of 114 in Renfrew only 32, of 83 in Inverness
only 20, and of 12 in Bute only 3.
If the Scottish people in rural constituencies were
not wholly excluded from the franchise, in the burghs that result
had long been attained. In accordance with the constitution of the
Scottish Parliament as the King’s feudal court, representation was
confined to the “free burghs royal,” whose charters of erection were
derived from the Crown. Corporate election of burgh members, which
prevailed to a limited extent in England, had always been universal
in Scotland, but till 1469 the town-councils were chosen by the
burgesses at large. In that year, on account of “great trouble and
contention "occasioned yearly" through multitude and clamour of
common, simple persons, "an Act was passed which provided“ that the
old council of the town shall choose the new council; and
henceforward the people had no voice in the election of burgh
members, with the exception—if exception it can be called—that in
burghs possessing trade-guilds (37 out of 66) a fraction of the
council was elected, to some extent, by these bodies. All the royal
burghs except Edinburgh, which returned one member, were bracketed
at the Union in groups of four or five, in order to reduce their
representation from 66 members to 15. The council of each burgh in a
group elected a delegate, and the delegates in conjunction elected
the member. At the date of the Reform Bill the total burgh
electorate numbered 1303, whilst in the whole of Scotland, with a
population of nearly 2½ millions, there were little more than 4000
voters. A much larger total was to be found on the roll of many
English counties, and there were several towns in England where a
single by-election took more voters to the poll than a general
election in Scotland.
The Scottish contingent at Westminster was completed
by a body of sixteen peers, who were supposed to represent the
nobility who had sat in the national Parliament, whilst the
forty-five commoners gave countenance to a similar fiction in regard
to counties and burghs. Legally the nobles were quite unfettered in
their choice, but in practice they almost invariably accepted a
Government list.
It remains only to point out that the political
subservience which resulted from these conditions was as fully
developed in the first half of the eighteenth century as we shall
find it to have been in the second. Called to take part in politics
more English than British, inheriting no constitutional spirit, and
confronted with a representative system in which such a spirit, had
it existed, could have found no expression, the Scottish upper class
looked to a parliamentary career chiefly as a means of earning the
spoils of office; and, having a sufficient equivalent at command,
they seldom failed to obtain their reward. With reference to the
general election of 1708, the first after the Union, Bishop Burnet
remarks that Ministers had “laid it down for a maxim not to be
departed from, to look carefully to elections in Scotland that the
members returned from them might be in an entire dependence on them
and be either Whigs or Tories as they should shift sides”; and the
policy thus initiated was steadily pursued. In 1711, after another
general election had brought the Tories into power, the opening of
Parliament was believed to have been delayed in order to allow time
for the arrival of the Scottish members, who were “all of the Court
party”; and, more than thirty years later, when it was proposed to
exempt Scotland from the imposition of certain Catholic fines, an
English member of the Commons said that he knew of no reason for
such exemption “unless it was because forty-five Scottish
representatives in that House always voted as they were
directed.” When measures affecting their own country were
introduced, the Scottish members were by no means unanimous, and
might even oppose the Government, as, with one exception, they did
in the case of the Porteous Bill; but on all other questions their
conduct on the whole,4 in both Houses, was such as fully to justify
their reputation as “a dead Court weight.”
Politics, at all events Westminster politics, do not
bulk very largely in the development of Scotland during the latter
half of the eighteenth century; but the conclusions we have arrived
at in the course of this Introduction may prove to be of service in
a much wider field. From the Union of 1707 till the area of
representation was immensely enlarged in 1832, the spirit of a
defunct legislature was never exorcised, the grasp of its lifeless
hand was never relaxed, from Scottish public life; and a knowledge
of what this influence involved may help us to understand how it was
that in the ecclesiastical and in the social sphere intellectual
liberality and practical repression were too often combined. |