In December 1800 I entered
the Faculty of Advocates ; and, with a feeling of nothingness, paced the
Outer House.
Being now of an age, and in a position, to observe things intelligently,
I can speak of Edinburgh, and through it of Scotland, then and since,
with the knowledge of a witness, and indeed of an actor in most of its.
occurrences. It is necessary, towards a right perception of the progress
qf the place, that its general condition at this period should be
understood.
Everything rung, and was connected, with the Revolution in France;
which, for above 20 years, was, or was made, the all in all. Everything,
not this or that thing, but literally everything, was soaked in this one
event.
Yet we had wonderfully few proper Jacobins; that is, persons who
seriously wished to introduce a republic into this country, on the
French precedent. There were plenty of people who were called Jacobins ;
because this soon became the common nickname which was given, not only
to those who had admired the dawn of the French liberation, but to those
who were known to have any taste for any internal reform of our own.
There was a short period, chiefly in 1793 and 1794, during which this
imputation was provoked by a ridiculous aping of French forms and
phraseology, and an offensive vaunting of the superior excellence of
everything in that country. But the folly, which only appeared in a few
towns, was very soon over, cured by time, by the failure of the French
experiment, and by the essential absurdity of the thing itself; and it
had never been patronised by a single person of sense and public
character or influence. Firm, but mild and judicious, treatment, and a
little reliance on the tendency of time to abate epidemic follies, would
have made the British Constitution popular, and the proceedings in
France odious, everywhere. Scotch Jacobinism did not exist.
But Scotch Toryism did, and with a vengeance. This thing, however, must
not be considered as exactly the same with pure Toryism in England. It
seldom implies anything with us except a dislike of popular
institutions; and even this chiefly on grounds of personal advantage. A
pure historical and constitutional Tory is a very rare character in this
country.
This party engrossed almost the whole wealth, and rank, and public
office, of the country, and at least three-fourths of the population.
They could have afforded, therefore, to be just and well tempered. But
this, as it appeared to them, would have endangered their supremacy,
which they were aware was upheld by their opponents being believed to
entertain alarming principles and ends. Hence the great Tory object was,
to abuse everybody but themselves, and in particular to ascribe a thirst
for bloodshed and anarchy, not merely to their avowed public opponents,
but to the whole body of the people. It is frightful even to recollect
the ferocious bitterness and systematic zeal with which this principle
was acted upon; and this under the direct sanction of government. No one
ever heard of a check being given, even by a hint, from head quarters,
with a view to arrest intolerance or to encourage charity. Jacobinism
was a term denoting everything alarming and hateful, and every political
objector was a Jacobin. No innovation, whether practical or speculative,
consequently no political or economical reformer, and no religious
dissenter, from the Irish Papist to our own native Protestant Seceder,
could escape from this fatal word. This misrepresentation, and the
natural tendency of the traduced to provoke and frighten by rather
extenuating some of the French proceedings, might make the reader of an
account of those days suppose that the revolutionary infection had
spread far enough and deep enough to justify the proscription it met
with. But, unquestionably, this was not the fact. The chief object at
which our discontented aimed was parliamentary reform. But this and
other homebred ends were hid by a cloud of foreign follies, which the
Tories exhibited as demonstrations that the correction of domestic
abuses was a pretence, and Jacobinism the truth. On this foundation they
represented the whole lower orders as hostile to our institutions; from
which the desired and comfortable inference was, that there was no
salvation for the country except in the predominance of their own party.
The real Whigs were extremely few. Self interest had converted some, and
terror more; and the residue, which stood out, consisted of only the
stronger-minded men of the party. The adherence of these men to rational
opinions was attended with very considerable personal risk in Scotland,
where the result of a political prosecution did not admit of the very
slightest doubt. They were treated as the causes and the shields of the
popular delusions ; and belonging mostly to the bar, they were
constantly and insolently reminded that the case of their brother Thomas
Muir, transported for sedition, was intended for their special
edification. But though the condition of Parliament made their carrying
any practical measure impossible, their constancy to their principles
kept their friends from despair; and this was the chief good that they
did, or could have done. Though on the whole very united, yet, during
the hottest fit of the revolutionary fever, the moderate were disturbed
by the intemperance of the wild; two classes into which all parties are
apt to arrange themselves, but which were particularly repulsive to each
other at this crisis, when the slightest wildness was alarm-ingvto the
moderate, and all moderation contemptible to themselves.
The principal leaders of the true Whig party were Henry Erskine, who had
recently been Lord Advocate; Adam Gillies, John Clerk, and David
Cathcart, all afterwards Judges; Archibald Fletcher, Malcolm Laing,
James Grahame, and John Macfarlane, advocates; and James Gibson, Writer
to the Signet.* Some brighter names, especially that of Jeffrey, had not
yet come into action; and there were a few stout-hearted brethren, who,
though too obscure to be now named, formed a rear rank on whom those in
advance could always rely. The profession of these men armed them with
better qualities than any other avocation could supply in a country
without a Parliament—with talent, the practice of speaking, political
knowledge, and public position; but their personal boldness and purity
marked them out still more conspicuously for popular trust. It was among
them accordingly that independence found its only asylum. It had a few
silent though devoted worshippers elsewhere, but the Whig counsel were
its only open champions. The Church can boast of Sir Harry Moncreiff
alone as its contribution to the cause; but he was too faithful to his
sacred functions to act as a political partisan. John Allen and John
Thomson, of the medical profession, were active and fearless. And the
College gave Dugald Stewart, John Playfair, and Andrew Dalzel. Of these
three, mathematics, which was his chair, enabled Playfair to come better
off than his two colleagues; for Dalzel had to speak of Grecian liberty,
and Stewart to explain the uses of liberty in general; and anxiously
were they both watched. Stewart, in particular, though too spotless and
too retired to be openly denounced, was an object of great secret alarm.
Not only virtuous, but eloquent in recommending virtue to the young, he
united Nero’s objections both to Virginius the rhetorician, and Rufus
Musonius the philosopher ,—“Virginium Flavum et Musonium Rufurn
clari-tudo nominis expulit. Nam Virginius studia juve-num eloquentia,
Musonius prmceptis sapientige, fove-bat.” (Tacitus—An. Lib. 15, cap.
71). A country gentleman with any public principle except devotion to
Henry Dundas, was viewed as a wonder, or rather as a monster. This was
the creed also of almost all our merchants, all our removable office
holders, and all our public corporations. So that, literally, everything
depended on a few lawyers; a class to which, in modern times, Scotland
owes a debt of gratitude which does not admit of being exaggerated. Nor
have any men, since our revolution, been obliged to exercise patriotism
at greater personal risk or sacrifice. Could there have been the
slightest doubt of their purity or courage, public spirit must have been
extinguished in Scotland. The real strength of their party lay in their
being right, and in the tendency of their objects to attract men of
ability and principle.
With the people put down, and the Whigs powerless, Government was the
master of nearly every individual in Scotland, but especially in
Edinburgh, which was the chief seat of its influence. The infidelity of
the French gave it almost all the pious ; their atrocities all the
timid; rapidly increasing taxation and establishments all the venal; the
higher and middle ranks were at its command, and the people at its feet.
The pulpit, the bench, the bar, the colleges, the parliamentary
electors, the press, the magistracies, the local institutions, were so
completely at the service of the party in power, that the idea of
independence, besides being monstrous and absurd, was suppressed by a
feeling of conscious ingratitude. And in addition to all the ordinary
sources of Government influence, Henry Dundas, an Edinburgh man, and
well calculated by talent and manner to make despotism popular, was the
absolute dictator of Scotland, and had the means of rewarding
submission, and of suppressing opposition, beyond what were ever
exercised in modern times by one person, in any portion of the empire.
The true state of things, and its effects, may be better seen in a few
specific facts, than in any general description.
As to our Institutions—there was no popular representation; all
town-councils elected themselves; the Established Church had no visible
rival; persons were sent to the criminal courts as jurymen very nearly
according to the discretion of the sheriff of their county; and after
they got there, those who were to try the prosecution were picked for
that duty by the presiding Judge, unchecked by any peremptory challenge.
In other words, we had no free political institutions whatever.
The consequences of this were exactly what might have been expected, and
all resolved into universal prostration. The town-councils who elected
the burgh members of Parliament, and the 1500 or 2000 freeholders who
elected the county members, formed so small a body that a majority, and
indeed the whole, of them were quite easily held by the Government
strings; especially as the burgh electors were generally dealt with on a
principle which admitted of considerable economy. Except at Edinburgh,
there was only one member for what was termed a district of four or five
burghs. Each town-council elected a delegate; and these four or five
delegates elected the member; and instead of bribing the town-councils,
the established practice was to bribe only the delegates, or indeed only
one of them, if this could secure the majority. Not that the councils
were left unrefreshed, but that the hooks with the best baits were set
for the most effective fishes. There was no free, and consequently no
discussing, press. For a short time two newspapers, the Scots Chronicle
and the Gazetteer, raved stupidly and vulgarly, and as if their real
object had been to cast discredit on the cause they professed to
espouse. The only other newspapers, so far as I recollect, were the
still surviving Caledonian Mercury, the Courant, and the Advertiser; and
the only other periodical publication was the doited Scots Magazine.
This magazine and these three newspapers actually formed the whole
regular produce of the Edinburgh periodical press. Nor was the absence
of a free public press compensated by any freedom of public speech.
Public political meetings could not arise, for the elements did not
exist. I doubt if there was one during the twenty-five years that
succeeded the year 1795. Nothing was viewed with such horror, as any
political congregation not friendly to existing power. No one could have
taken a part in the business without making up his mind to be a doomed
man. No prudence could protect against the falsehood or inaccuracy of
spies; and a first conviction of sedition by a judge-picked jury was
followed by fourteen years’ transportation. As a body to be deferred to,
no public existed. Opinion was only recognized when expressed through
what were acknowledged to be its legitimate organs; which meant its
formal or official outlets. Public bodies therefore might speak each for
itself; but the general community, as such, had no admitted claim to be
consulted or cared for. The result, in a nation devoid of popular
political rights, was, that people were dumb, or if they spoke out, were
deemed audacious. The wishes of the people were not merely despised, but
it was thought and openly announced as a necessary precaution against
revolution, that they should be thwarted. I knew a case, several years
after 1800, where the seat-holders of a town church applied to
Government, which was the patron, for the promotion of the second
clergyman, who had been giving great satisfaction for many years, and
now, on the death of the first minister, it was wished that he should
get the vacant place. The answer, written by a member of the Cabinet,
was, that the single fact of the people having interfered so far as to
express a wish, was conclusive against what they desired and another
appointment was instantly made.
This condition of the country was not owing to anything like tyranny on
the part of its rulers. They did not create the circumstances in which
they were obliged to act. Their error was that, instead of trying to
mitigate these circumstances, they did what they could to aggravate them
; and this for party purposes. There was no need for tyranny where the
people had no public rights. But it would have been better, if the
efforts of popular leaders to get them public rights had not been
sternly repressed. However, in the circumstances, this party use of
wdiat existed is not much to be wondered at in party men. It was not
owing to any positive despotism that there was no discussion by the
press or by public meetings, but to the general abasement of the
community, among which free habits could not at once arise. This
community consisted of a people that was prostrate, a few brave but
powerless individuals, and an overwhelming faction exercising the whole
influence of the Government, on party principles, and without control.
This necessarily produced great personal bitterness. Even in private
society, a Whig was viewed somewhat as a Papist was in the days of Titus
Oates. There were a few exceptions, in the case of persons too
attractive or too powerful to he ill-used; but in general Whigs had to
associate solely with Whigs. Very dear friendships were in many
instances broken, and although the parties may have survived till age
and changed times made longer severance, absurd, the reconcilement was
always awkward and never true. This incompatibility of public difference
with private cordiality is the most painful recollection that I have of
those days, and the most striking evidence of their hardness.
Fox’s birth-day was generally celebrated by a dinner every year. But
only a very few of the best Whigs could be got to attend, or were wished
for. It was not safe to have many; especially as great prudence was
necessary in speaking and toasting. Yet even the select, though rarely
exceeding a dozen or two, were seldom allowed to assemble without
sheriff’s officers being sent to take down the names of those who
entered. This turned away some, but others never hesitated to say what
they thought of so base a hint. James Gibson and John Clerk used to tell
them to hold up their lanterns, and to be quite sure that they knew
them; and then would give the officers their cards, with orders to be
sure to deliver them with their compliments, and an invitation to their
masters to attend next year.
Even the Whig lawyers who had secured their footing at the bar, or were
plainly irrepressible, had hard enough work to keep their places. The
juniors who dared to begin in this line were put under a severe
proscription, and knew it. Every official gate was shut against them,
and in the practice of their profession the Judges were unkind, and
agents therefore kept their fees for those of the safer faith. The
prospects of no young man could be more apparently hopeless than of him
who, with the known and fatal taint of a taste for popular politics,
entered our bar. But they were generally well warned. If not overlooked
from their insignificance, a written test was for some years presented
to them, and a refusal to subscribe it set a black mark upon him who
refused. I have heard George Cranstoun say that the test was put to him,
and by a celebrated Professor of Law acting for the Tory party. It was
rejected; and Cranstoun found it convenient to leave the bar, and spend
some time, chiefly in Ireland, as an officer in a regiment of fencible
cavalry, commanded by his friend. the Earl of Ancrum.
Henry Erskine, the brightest ornament of the profession, was Dean of the
Faculty of Advocates. Considering the state of the times, the propriety
of his presiding at a public meeting to petition against the war may be
questioned. The official head of a public body should consider what is
due to the principles and the feelings of those he may be supposed to
represent; and to the great majority of the Faculty Erskine’s conduct
must have been deeply offensive. Still, the resolution to dismiss him
was utterly unjustifiable. It was nearly unprecedented, violent, and
very ungrateful. He had covered the Faculty with the lustre of his
character for several years ; and, if wrong, had been misled solely by a
sense of duty. Nevertheless, on the 12th of January 1796 he was turned
out of office. Had he and the Faculty alone been concerned in this
intemperate proceeding, it would not have occurred. But it was meant,
and was taken, as a warning to all others to avoid the dangers of public
meetings on the wrong side. The efforts made to prevent young men from
yielding to their conviction in Erskine’s favour is another striking
mark of the times. Jeffrey, Cranstoun, and Thomas Thomson were ardent to
vote for him, and never were easy in their minds for not having done so.
But Thomson was obliged to yield to the wishes of George Fergusson,
afterwards Lord Hermand; Jeffrey to those of his father and Lord Glenlee;
and Cranstoun to those of the Duke of Buccleuch; and none of them voted
at all.
The conduct of Robert Ferguson, afterwards of Raith, and of George
Joseph Bell, both eminent at last in the Whig party, has often been
misunderstood. But the truth is, that the Whiggism of forbearance of
these young men was in accordance with the gentleness and propriety of
their whole future lives. But what a condition men's minds must have
been in when good men, who had selected them for patronage because they
loved them, were not ashamed to exact such sacrifices.0
Almost everything in the city was under the control of the town-council;
not merely what was properly magisterial, but most things conducive to
the public economy, which are always managed now by independent
guardians. Our light, water, education, paving, trade, including the
port of Leith, the poor, the police, were all in the hands of the great
civic corporation. Hence in Edinburgh, as in all other royal burghs, the
character of the municipal magistracy was symptomatic of the whole
place.
It met in a low, dark, blackguard-looking room, entering from a covered
passage which connected the north-west corner of the Parliament Square
with the Bell, who voted against Erskine, had not then come upon him;
and that Ferguson, who gave no vote, was abroad.
"Only one of Erskine’s personal and political associates deserted his
principles and opposed him,—a man of great worth and learning, and who
afterwards rose deservedly high, but whose respectable future life never
effaced this sad stain from the memory of either friends or foes. When
his name was called and he gave his vote, the clock happened to strike
three; on which John Clerk said, with great intensity. When the cock
crew thrice Peter denied his master.”
Lawnmarket. At its Lawnmarket end, this covered passage opened out on
the south side of u the Heart of Midlothian.’7 If that passage existed
now, it would cross the present opening somewhere between the south-west
corner of St. Giles’ Cathedral and the north-east corner of the Writer’s
Library. The shop of George Heriot was said to have stood within it; and
I certainly remember seeing, after 1805, a horizontal stone lintel over
a door there, with the words "George Heriot” carved upon it. But it was
removed; and unless some antiquary saved it by a judicious theft, it was
probably broken when the whole collection of interesting relics that
encumbered the spot was cleared away. The Council Chamber entered
directly from this passage, and, if it had remained, would have been in
the east end of the Writer’s Library. The chamber was a low-roofed room,
very dark, and very dirty, with some small dens off it for clerks.
Within this Pandemonium sat the town-council, omnipotent, corrupt,
impenetrable. Nothing was beyond its grasp; no variety of opinion
disturbed its unanimity, for the pleasure of Dundas was the sole rule
for every one of them. Reporters, the fruit of free discussion, did not
exist and though they had existed, would not have dared to disclose the
proceedings. Silent, powerful, submissive, mysterious, and
irresponsible, they might have been sitting in Venice. Certain of
the support of the Proconsul, whom they no more thought of thwarting
than of thwarting Providence, timidity was not one of their vices. About
the year 1799a solitary schism amazed the public, by disclosing the
incredible fact that the town-council might contain a member who had an
opinion of his own. A councillor, named Smith, electrified the city by a
pamphlet shewing that the burgh was bankrupt. Time has put it beyond all
doubt that he was right; and fortunate would it have been for the city
and its creditors if this had been acknowledged at the time, instead of
being aggravated by years of subsequent extravagance and concealment.
But his rebellion drove Mr. Smith out of the place.
The council's two great organs were John Gray and James Laing. Gray was
city clerk; a judicious man, with a belly, white hair, and decorous
black clothes ; famous for drinking punch, holding his tongue, and doing
jobs quietly; a respectable and useful officer, with an exclusive
devotion to the town-council, but with such municipal wisdom, and such
an intimate acquaintance with their affairs, that he was oftener the
master than the slave. There was a person of this class in almost every
royal burgh. If Gray was the head of the Council, Laing was its hand. He
was one of the clerks, and managed such police as we then had; and,
though not an officer in the old Town Guard, could, as representing the
magistrates, employ it as he chose. It is incredible now how much power
this man had, and how much lie was feared. His masters, to whom he was
all apparent obeisance, felt that they could not do without his activity
and experience. He knew this, and adventured accordingly; and the result
was, that with sagacity enough to keep clear of offensive excess towards
them, he did almost anything else that he chose. He had more sense than
to meddle with the rich, but over the people he tyrannized to his
heart’s content. For example—about the year 1795, six or eight baker
lads of good character, and respectable though humble parentage, being a
little jolly one night, were making a noise on the street. This
displeased Mr. Laing, who had a notion that nobody could be drunk with
safety to the public except himself. So he had the lads apprehended; and
as they did not appear in the morning, their friends became alarmed, and
applied to Mr. (afterwards Sir Henry) Jardine, a zealous partisan of
Government, who took an interest in the family of one of them. Mr.
Jardine told me that next morning he inquired about them, when Laing
told him that 'he need give himself no trouble, because u they are all
beyond Inchkeith by this time” And so they were. He had sent them on
board a tender lying in Leith Roads, which he knew was to sail that
morning.
This was done by his own authority, without a conviction, or a charge,
or an offence. They had been troublesome, and this was the very way of
dealing with such people. Such proceedings were far from uncommon,
especially during the war, when the navy and the army were the
convenient receptacles of all it was comfortable to get quit of
summarily. Legal redress was very seldom resorted to. Laing had an
incomprehensible reverence for Dugald Stewart. Stewart used to tell, how
he was walking in the Meadows very early one morning, when he saw a
number of people within the enclosure seemingly turning up the turf, and
that upon going up to them he found his friend Jamie Laing, who
explained that in these short light nights there was nothing going on
with the blackguards, u and so, ye see, Mr. Professor, Eve just brought
oot the constables to try oor hands at the moudieworts.
Though I had little personal knowledge of any other town council, there
is no reason to believe that, in general, they were a whit better than
that of Edinburgh. On the contrary, as Edinburgh was under the eye and
the influence of higher men, the probability is that they were worse •
and many of the small ones were in the lowest possible condition both of
public and private morality. In general, they were sinks of political
and municipal iniquity, steeped in the baseness which they propagated,
and types and causes of the corruption that surrounded them.
But by far the most frightful, and the justest, idea of the spirit of
those times is to be found in the proceedings of the Supreme Criminal
Court in the Sedition Trials of 1793 and 1794. These cannot be seen in
detail without a minute examination of the reports, and indeed they are
very faintly given even in the State Trials.
They were political prosecutions, during a period of great political
excitement; and therefore, however faction might have raged, everything
done by the Court ought to have been done calmly, impartially, and
decorously. The general prevalence of public intemperance was the very
circumstance that ought to have impressed more deeply upon judges the
duty of steady candour, and of that judicial humanity which
instinctively makes every right-minded occupier of the judgment seat
interpose between a prisoner and prejudice. The Court does not seem to
have been unduly inflamed by the official accuser. The madness of the
people, if it existed, would have been best allayed by giving them
reason to rely on the administration of justice. But I fear that no
impartial censor can avoid detecting, throughout the whole course of the
trials, not mere casual indications of bias, but absolute straining for
convictions. With all their prepossessions the judges were not cruel,
nor even consciously unfair. But being terrified, and trying those who
were causing their alarm, they could scarcely be expected to enter the
temple of justice in a state of perfect composure. If ever there was an
occasion when a judge might have shone, simply by being just, this was
one. But the bench was the place upon which political passions, not
aggravated by the prosecutor, and distressing to many of tire jurymen,
settled and operated. Little depended upon erroneous decision. But what
shall be held to be sedition always resolves, to a far greater extent
than in other crimes, into mere opinion, and therefore everything
depended upon candour of construction. Hence, all the sources of
prejudice ought to have been at least attempted to be excluded. Fair
play ought to have been given to claims of constitutional right, and
particularly to supposed privileges of public discussion. No juryman
ought to have been able to excuse any party spirit that he felt coming
over him by the contagion of the bench. Yet the fact is, that in every
case sentiments were avowed implying the adoption of the worst current
intemperance. If, instead of a Supreme Court of Justice, sitting for the
trial of guilt or of innocence, it had been an ancient commission
appointed by the Crown to procure convictions, little of its judicial
manner would have required to be changed.
When the verdicts were returned, the Court had to exercise a
discretionary power in fixing upon the sentence; which discretion
ranged, as these judges decided, from one hour’s imprisonment to
transportation for life. Assuming transportation to be lawful, it was
conceded not to be necessary, and it was not then, nor at any time, used
in England as a punishment of sedition. At that period it implied a
frightful voyage of many months, great wretchedness in the new colony,
an almost complete extinction of all communication with home, and such
difficulty in returning, that a man transported was considered as a man
never to be seen again. Nevertheless, transportation for a first offence
was the doom of every one of these prisoners.
All this was approved of no doubt, not only by the Tories, but by
Parliament advised by the Lord Chancellor. But this never satisfied
judicious men, and it can neither silence nor pervert history. It will
remain true that, in order to find a match for the judicial spirit of
this Court, at this period, we must go back to the days of Lauderdale
and Dalzell.
It has been said, in defence of the Court, that the times were
dangerous. So they were. But these are the very times in which the torch
of justice should burn most purely. It has also been said that the
prisoners were all guilty. Holding this to be true, had they not a right
to be fairly tried? And lastly it has been said, that after these trials
there was no more sedition. The same thing might be said though they had
been tried by the boot, and punished by fire. Jeffreys and Kirke put
down sedition, for the day, by their bloody assizes. But our exhibitions
of judicial vigour, instead of eradicating the seditious propensity,
prolonged its inward vitality. Future outbreaks were only avoided by the
course of events, which turned men’s passions into other channels.
These trials, however, sunk deep not merely into the popular mind, but
into the minds of all men who thought. It was by these proceedings, more
than by any other wrong, that the spirit of discontent justified itself
throughout the rest of that age. It was to them that peaceful reformers
appealed for the practical answer to those, who pretended to uphold our
whole Scotch system as needing no change. One useful lesson, to be sure,
they taught, though in the wrong way—namely, that the existence of
circumstances, such as the supposed clearness and greatness of their
guilt, tending to prejudice prisoners on their trials, gives them a
stronger claim than usual on that sacred judicial mildness, which, far
more than any of the law’s terrors, procures respect for authority, and
without which courts, let them punish as they may, only alienate and
provoke.
Such was the public condition of Edinburgh in 1800, and for the
preceding ten years. It was a condition of great pain and debasement,
the natural consequence of bad times operating on defective political
institutions. The frightful thing was the personal bitterness. The
decent appearance of mutual toleration, which often produces the virtue
itself, was despised, and extermination seemed a duty. This was bad
enough in the capital; but far more dreadful in small places, which were
more helplessly exposed to persecution. If Dugald Stewart was for
several years not cordially received in the city he adorned, what must
have been the position of an ordinary man who held liberal opinions in
the country or in a small town, open to all the contumely and
obstruction that local insolence could practise, and unsupported
probably by any associate cherishing kindred thoughts. Such persons
existed everywhere: but they were always below the salt. Their merit
therefore was great. Under insult and cold unkindness, and constant
personal loss, they adhered throughout many dark years to what they
thought right; and such of them as lived to be old men had the reward of
seeing the regeneration, which had depended so much on their spirit and
firmness.
This was the first time that Scotland had ever been agitated by
discussions upon general principles of liberty. Neither the Union, nor
the two Rebellions, nor even the Revolution, had any of this matter in
them. The course of this our first conflict of constitutional opinion
has been very distinctly marked. With no improvement in their public
education, habits, or institutions, with all power in the hands of those
with whom change was in itself an ultimate evil, and with reason
superseded by dread of revolution, the cause of the people was put down,
and could not possibly have been then raised up. The only hope was in
the decline of the circumstances that had sunk it. What had to be waited
for was, the increase of numbers and of wealth, the waning of the
revolutionary horror, the dying out of the hard old aristocracy, the
advance of a new generation, and the rise of new guides. The gradual
introduction and operation of these redeeming circumstances has been
very interesting, and illustrates, by the example of a single place, the
general principles which regulate the improvement of the world.
In 1800 the people of Edinburgh were much occupied about the removal of
an evil in the system of their Infirmary; which evil, though strenuously
defended by able men, it is difficult now to believe could ever have
existed. The medical officers consisted at that time of the whole
members of the Colleges of Physicians and of Surgeons, who attended the
hospital by a monthly rotation; so that the patients had the chance of
an opposite treatment, according to the whim of the doctor, every thirty
days. Dr. James Gregory, whose learning extended beyond that of his
profession, attacked this absurdity in one of his powerful, but wild and
personal, quarto pamphlets. The public was entirely on his side; and so
at last were the managers, who resolved that the medical officers should
be appointed permanently, as they have ever since been. Most of the
medical profession, including the whole private lecturers, and even the
two colleges, who all held that the power of annoying the patients in
their turn was their right, were vehement against this innovation; and
some of them went to law in opposition to it.
Gregory, descended from an illustrious line, was a curious and excellent
man, a great physician, a great lecturer, a great Latin scholar, and a
great talker; vigorous and generous; large of stature, and with a
strikingly powerful countenance. The popularity due to these qualities
was increased by his professional controversies, and the diverting
publications by which he used to maintain and enliven them. The
controversies were rather too numerous; but they never were for any
selfish end, and he was never entirely wrong. Still, a disposition
towards personal attack was his besetting sin. Mr. John Bell, the best
surgeon that Scotland had then produced, a little vigorous creature, who
wrote well and with intense professional passion, was generally put
forward by his brethren to carry on the Gregorian battles. Perhaps he
had the best both of the argument and of the clever writing; but the
public sided with the best laugher; and so Gregory was generally held to
have the victory.
When I first knew it, the Parliament House, both outside and in, was a
curious and interesting place. No one who remembers the old exterior can
see the new one without sorrow and indignation. The picture which recals
the old edifice most distinctly to my mind, is the one in Arnot’s
History of Edinburgh. The Parliament Square (as foppery now calls it,
but which used, and ought, to be called the Parliament Close) was then,
as now, enclosed on the north by St. Giles’ Cathedral, on the west by
the Outer House, and on the south, partly by courts, and partly by
shops, above which were very tall houses, and on the east by a line of
shops and houses of the same grand height. So that the courts formed the
south-west angle of the Close. The old building exhibited some
respectable turrets, some ornamented windows and doors, and a handsome
balustrade. But the charm that ought to have saved it, was its colour
and its age, which, however, were the very things that caused its
destruction. About 170 years had breathed over it a grave grey hue. The
whole aspect was venerable and appropriate; becoming the air and
character of a sanctuary of Justice. But a mason pronounced it to be all
“ Dead Wall ” The officials to whom, at a period when there was no
public taste in Edinburgh, this was addressed, believed him; and the two
fronts were removed in order to make way for the bright freestone and
contemptible decorations that now disgrace us. The model having been
laid down, has been copied on all subsequent occasions; till at last the
old Parliament Close would not be known by the lawyers or senators who
walked through it in the days of the Stuarts, or of the first two of the
Guelphs. I cannot doubt that King Charles tried to spur his horse
against the Vandals when he saw the profanation begin. But there was
such an utter absence of public spirit in Edinburgh, then, that the
building might have been painted scarlet without anybody objecting.
The auctioneers and pawnbrokers had their quarters in the Horse Wynd,
where I remember genteel families living in most excellent houses. The
potters and candlemakers congregated in the Rows which still bear their
names. I don’t know the former seat of the shoemakers, but about the
beginning of the century they took possession of the new made Leith
Terrace, which was then thought a very fine thing, as well it might,
being the only place in Edinburgh, or perhaps in Scotland, with a street
above the roofs of houses. The sons of Crispin occupied both the shops
below this street and those in it—two rows of shops. As soon as the
South Bridge was built it was taken possession of by the haberdashers.
The Parliament Close was the haunt of the jewellers, some watchmakers,
and a few booksellers, which last, however, flowed more over into the
High Street. A wooden partition, about fifteen feet high, was drawn
across the Outer House, cutting off apparently about twenty-five or
thirty feet of its northern end, but with a small central opening into
the public hall. Arnot says that this space was occupied by booksellers’
stalls when he published his book in 1788. These stalls must have
disappeared, or been greatly diminished, very soon after this; for I was
there for the first time about 1792 or 1793, and observed none of them.
The whole space seemed to be occupied as a jeweller’s and cutler’s shop.
My first pair of skates was bought there; and I remember my surprise at
the figures with black gowns and white wigs walking about among the
cutlery.
But the delightful place was The Krames. It was a low narrow arcade of
booths, crammed in between the north side of St. Giles’ Cathedral and a
thin range of buildings that stood parallel to the Cathedral, the
eastmost of which buildings, looking clown the High Street, was the
famous shop of William Creech the bookseller. Shopless traffickers first
began to nestle there about the year 1550 or 15GO, and their successors
stuck to the spot till 1817, when they were all swept away. In my
boyhood their little stands, each enclosed in a tiny room of its own,
and during the day all open to the little footpath that ran between the
two rows of them, and all glittering with attractions, contained
everything fascinating to childhood, but chiefly toys. It was like one
of the Arabian Nights7 bazaars in Bagdad. Throughout the whole year it
was an enchantment. Let any one fancy what it was about the New Year,
when every child had got its handsel, and every farthing of every
handsel was spent there. The Krames was the paradise of childhood.
Scarcely a year has passed since the time I am referring to without some
change in the internal arrangement of the Outer House. Doors, chimneys,
screens, windows, benches, and Lords Ordinary's bars, have wandered
round and round the whole hall, exactly as has suited the taste of the
official improver of the day. After much temporary deformity, and many
alarming escapes, the result on the whole has been good, because the
recent taste has been to remove obstructions, and to introduce art.
The modern accommodation for the courts is so ample that it is curious
to recollect its amount, and how it looked before 1808, when the judges
began to-sit in two separate chambers. The den called The Inner House
then held the whole fifteen judges. It was a low square-like room, not,
I think, above from thirty to forty feet wide. It stood just off the
southeast corner of the Outer House; with the Exchequer, entering from
the Parliament Close, right above. The Barons being next the sky, had
access to the flat leaden roof, where I have seen my father, who was one
of them, walking in his robes. The Inner House was so cased in venerable
dirt that it was impossible to say whether it had ever been painted; but
it was all of a dark brownish hue. There was a gallery over the bar, and
so low that a barrister in a frenzy was in danger of hitting it. A huge
fireplace stood behind the Lord President's chair, with one of the stone
jambs cracked, and several of the bars of the large grate broken. That
grate was always at least half full of dust. It probably had never been
completely cleared since the institution of the Court in the sixteenth
century. The hearthstone, the fender, and the chimney-piece were all
massive, and all undisturbed by any purification. On the one side of
that fire-place there was fixed in a wooden frame the Lord’s Prayer, and
on the other side the Ten Commandments each worked in faded gold thread
letters into a black velvet ground. George Cranstoun used to propose
adding a Scriptural verse to be set over the head of each judge, and had
culled the texts.
Dismal though this hole was, the old fellows who had been bred there
never looked so well anywhere else; and deeply did they growl at the
spirit of innovation which drove them from their accustomed haunt. The
cave indeed had an antique air. It was Durie’s Reports. Very little
fancy was necessary to make one see the ancient legal sages through its
dim litigious light.
Of the fifteen judges of those days, some of course were u heads without
name.” Of the others Monboddo, Swinton, and Braxfield had left the scene
shortly before I entered the Faculty.
Classical learning, good conversation, excellent suppers, and ingenious
though unsound metaphysics were the peculiarities of Monboddo. He was
reputed a considerable lawyer in his own time; and his reports shew that
the reputation was well founded. Some offence had made him resolve never
to sit on the same bench with President Dundas ; and he kept this vow so
steadily that he always sat at the clerk’s table even after Dundas was
gone. I never saw him sitting anywhere else. This position enabled him
to get easily out and in; and whenever there was a pause he was sure to
slip off, gown and all, to have a talk in the Outer House, where I have
often seen the shrivelled old man walking about very cheerfully. He went
very often to London, almost always on horseback, and was better
qualified than most of his countrymen to shine in its literary society.
But he was insufficiently appreciated; and he partly justified and
indeed provoked this, by taking his love of paradox and metaphysics with
him, and dealing them out in a style of academical formality; and this
even after he ought to have seen, that all that people cared about his
dogmas was to laugh at their author. It is more common to hear anecdotes
about his maintaining that men once had tails, and similar follies, than
about his agreeable conversation and undoubted learning. All who knew
him in Edinburgh concur in describing his house as one of the most
pleasant in the place.
I knew Lord Swinton as much as a youth can know an old man, and I have
always been intimate with his family. He was a very excellent person ;
dull, mild, solid, and plodding; and in his person large and heavy. It
is only a subsequent age that has discovered his having possessed a
degree of sagacity, for which he did not get credit while he lived. So
far back as 1765 he published an attack on our system of entails; in
1779 he explained a scheme for a uniform standard of weights and
measures ; and in 1789 he put forth considerations in favor of dividing
the Court of Session into more courts than one, and of introducing
juries for the trial of civil causes. All these improvements have since
taken place, but they were mere visions in his time; and his
anticipation of them, in which, so far as I ever heard, he had no
associate, is very honourable to his thoughtfulness and judgment.
Notwithstanding the utter dissimilarity of the two men, there was a
great friendship between him and Henry Erskine, which it is to the honor
of Swinton’s ponderous placidity that Erskine’s endless jokes upon him
never disturbed. But the giant of the bench was Braxfield. His very name
makes people start yet.
Strong built and dark, with rough eyebrows, powerful eyes, threatening
lips, and a low growling voice, he was like a formidable blacksmith. His
accent and his dialect were exaggerated Scotch; his language, like his
thoughts, short, strong, and conclusive.
Our commercial jurisprudence was only rising when he was sinking, and,
being no reader, he was too old both in life and in habit to master it
familiarly ; though even here he was inferior to no Scotch lawyer of his
time except Ilay Campbell the Ford President. But within the range of
the Feudal and the Civil branches, and in every matter depending on
natural ability and practical sense, he was very great;
and his power arose more from the force of his reasoning and his
vigorous application of principle, than from either the extent or the
accuracy of his learning. I have heard good observers describe with
admiration how, having worked out a principle, he followed it in its
application, fearlessly and triumphantly, dashing all unworthy
obstructions aside, and pushed on to his result with the vigour and
disdain of a consummate athlete. And he had a colloquial way of arguing,
in the form of question and answer, which, done in his clear abrupt
style, imparted a dramatic directness and vivacity to the scene.
With this intellectual force, as applied to law, his merits, I fear,
cease. Illiterate and without any taste for refined enjoyment, strength
of understanding, which gave him power without cultivation, only
encouraged him to a more contemptuous disdain of all natures less coarse
than his own. Despising the growing improvement of manners, he shocked
the feelings even of an age which, with more of the formality, had far
less of the substance of decorum than our own. Thousands of his sayings
have been preserved, and the staple of them is indecency; which he
succeeded in making many people enjoy, or at least endure, by hearty
laughter, energy of manner, and rough humour. Almost the only story of
him I ever heard that had some fun in it without immodesty, was when a
butler gave up his place because his lordship's wife was always scolding
him. “Lord!" he exclaimed, "ye've little to complain o': ye may be
thankfu' ye're no married to her."
It is impossible to condemn his conduct as a criminal judge too gravely,
or too severely. It was a disgrace to the age. A dexterous and practical
trier of ordinary cases, he was harsh to prisoners even in his
jocularity, and to every counsel whom he chose to dislike. I have heard
this attempted to be accounted for and extenuated by the tendency which
the old practice of taking all the evidence down in writing, by judicial
dictation, had to provoke a wrangle between the court and the bar every
moment, and thus to excite mutual impatience and hostility. No doubt
there was something in this ; but not much. And Braxfield, as might have
been expected from his love of domineering, continued the vice after its
external cause, whatever it may have been, had ceased. It may be doubted
if he was ever so much in his element as when tauntingly repelling the
last despairing claim of a wretched culprit, and sending him to Botany
Bay or the gallows with an insulting jest; over which he would chuckle
the more from observing that correct people were shocked. Yet this was
not from cruelty, for which he was too strong and too jovial, but from
cherished coarseness.
This union of talent with a passion for rude predomination, exercised in
a very discretionary court, tended to form a formidable and dangerous
judicial character. This appeared too often in ordinary cases: but all
stains on his administration of the common business of his court
disappear in the indelible iniquity of the political trials of 1793 and
1794. In these he was the Jeffreys of Scotland. He as the head of the
Court, and the only very powerful man it contained, was the real
director of its proceedings. The reports make his abuse of the judgment
seat bad enough but his misconduct was not so fully disclosed in formal
decisions and charges, as it transpired in casual remarks and general
manner. "Let them bring me prisoners, and I’ll find them law” used to be
openly stated as his suggestion, when an intended political prosecution
was marred by anticipated difficulties. If innocent of this atrocious
sentiment, he was scandalously ill-used by his friends, by whom I
repeatedly heard it ascribed to him at the time, and who, instead of
denying it, spoke of it as a thing understood, and rather admired it as
worthy of the man and of the times. Mr. Horner (the father of Francis),
who was one of the jurors in Muir’s case, told me that when he was
passing, as was often done then, behind the bench to get into the box,
Braxfield, who knew him, whispered— "Come awa, Maister Horner, come awa,
and help us to hang1 ane o’ thae daamned scoondrels.” The reporter of
Gerald’s case could not venture to make the prisoner say more than that
"Christianity was an innovation.” But the full truth is, that in stating
this view he added that all great men had been reformers, "even our
Saviour himself.” "Muckle he made o’ that,” chuckled Braxfield in an
under voice, "he was hanget.” Before Hume’s Commentaries had made our
criminal record intelligible, the forms and precedents were a mystery
understood by the initiated alone, and by nobody so much as by Mr.
Joseph Norris the ancient clerk. Braxfield used to quash anticipated
doubts by saying—u Hoot! just gie me Josie Norrie and a gude jury, an’
I’ll doo for the fallow.” He died in 1799, in his seventy-eighth year.
Of the older judges still on the bench in 1800, but who soon left it,
there were two who ought not to be allowed to perish. These were the
Lord Justice-Clerk Lae, and the Lord President Campbell.
David Rae, Lord Eskgrove, succeeded Braxfield as head of the Criminal
Court, and it is his highest honor that he is sometimes mentioned as
Braxfield’s judicial rival. In so far as law and political partiality
went, they were pretty well matched; but in all other respects they were
quite different men.
Eskgrove was a very considerable lawyer; in mere knowledge probably
Braxfield’s superior. But he had nothing of Braxfield’s grasp or
reasoning, and in everything requiring force or soundness of head, he
was a mere child compared with that practical Hercules. Still he was
cunning in old Scotch law.
But a more ludicrous personage could not exist. When I first knew him he
was in the zenith of his absurdity. People seemed to have nothing to do
but to tell stories of this one man. To be able to he did so, he would
certainly tell it accurately, because he knew the facts quite well. But
in reporting what Sir Walter had said at the royal table, the Lord Chief
Commissioner Adam confused the matter, and called the judge Braxfield,
the crime forgery, and the circuit town Dumfries ; and this inaccurate
account was given by Mr. Lockhart in his first edition of Scott's life
(chap. 34). Braxfield was one of the judges at Hay's trial, but he had
nothing to do with the checkmate.
give an anecdote of Eskgrove, with a proper imitation of liis voice and
manner, was a sort of fortune in society. Scott in those days was famous
for this particularly. Whenever a knot of persons were seen listening in
the Outer House to one who was talking slowly, with a low muttering
voice and a projected chin, and then the listeners burst asunder in
roars of laughter, nobody thought of asking what the joke was. They were
sure that it was a successful imitation of Esky; and this was enough.
Yet never once did he do or say anything which had the slightest claim
to be remembered for any intrinsic merit. The value of all his words and
actions consisted in their absurdity.
He seemed, in his old age, to be about the average height; but as he
then stooped a good deal, he might have been taller in reality. His face
varied, according to circumstances, from a scurfy red to a scurfy blue;
the nose was prodigious; the under lip enormous, and supported on a huge
clumsy chin, which moved like the jaw of an exaggerated Dutch toy. He
walked with a slow stealthy step— something between a walk and a hirple,
and helped himself on by short movements of his elbows, backwards and
forwards, like fins. The voice was low and mumbling, and on the bench
was generally inaudible for sometime after the movement of the lips
shewed that he had begun speaking; after which the first word "that was
let fairly out was generally the loudest of the whole discourse. It is
unfortunate that, without an idea of his voice and manner, mere
narrative cannot describe his sayings and doings graphically.
One of his remarks on the trial of Mr. Fysche Palmer for sedition—not as
given in the report of the trial, but as he made it—is one of the very
few things he ever said that had some little merit of its own. Mr. John
Haggart, one of the prisoner’s counsel, in defending his client from the
charge of disrespect of the king, quoted Burke’s statement that kings
are naturally lovers of low company. "Then, sir, that says very little
for you or your client! for if kinggs be lovers of low company, low
company ought to be lovers of kinggs!"
Nothing disturbed him so much as the expense was converted by him into,
u I met one young friend as I was walk-ing in the Canon-gate.” of the
public dinner for which the judge on the circuit lias a fixed allowance,
and out of which the less he spends the more he gains. His devices for
economy were often very diverting. His servant had strict orders to
check the bottles of wine by laying aside the corks. His lordship once
went behind a screen at Stirling, while the company was still at table,
and seeing an alarming row of corks, got into a warm altercation, which
everybody overheard, with John ; maintaining it to be “impossibill” that
they could have drunk so much. On being assured that they had, and were
still going on—u Well, then, John, I must just protect myself! ” On
which he put a handful of the corks into his pocket, and resumed his
seat.
Brougham tormented him, and sat on his skirts wherever he went, for
above a year. The Justice liked passive counsel who let him dawdle on
with culprits and juries in his own way ; and consequently he hated the
talent, the eloquence, the energy, and all the discomposing qualities of
Brougham. At last it seemed as if a court day was to be blessed by his
absence, and the poor Justice was delighting himself with the prospect
of being allowed to deal with things as he chose; when, lo ! his enemy
appeared —tall, cool, and resolute. "I declare,” said the Justice, "that
man Broom, or Brougham is the torment of my life!” His revenge, as
usual, consisted in sneering at Brougham’s eloquence by calling it or
him the Harangue. "Well, gentle-men, what did the Harangue say next? Why
it said this” (misstating it); u but here, gentle-men, the Harangue was
most plainly wrong, and not intelligibill.”
As usual, then, with stronger heads than his, everything was connected
by his terror with republican horrors. I heard him, in condemning a
tailor to death for murdering a soldier by stabbing him, aggravate the
offence thus, u and not only did you murder him, whereby he was
berea-ved of his life, but you did thrust, or push, or pierce, or
project, or propell, the le-thall weapon through the belly-band of his
regimental breeches, which were his Ma-jes-ty’s!”
In the trial of Glengarry for murder in a duel, a lady of great beauty
was called as a witness. She came into Court veiled. But before
administering the oath Eskgrove gave her this exposition of her
duty—"Young woman! you will now consider yourself as in the presence of
Almighty God, and of this High Court. Lift up your veil; throw off all
modesty, and look me in the face.”
Sir John Henderson of Fordell, a zealous Whig, had long nauseated the
civil court by his burgh politics. Their Lordships had once to fix the
amount of some discretionary penalty that he had incurred. Eskgrove
began to give his opinion in a very low voice, but loud enough to be
heard by those next him, to the effect that the fine ought to be fifty
pounds; when Sir John, with his usual imprudence, interrupted him, and
begged him to raise his voice, adding that if judges did not speak so as
to be heard, they might as well not speak at all. Eskgrove, who could
never endure any imputation of bodily infirmity, asked his neighbour,
"What does the fellow say?” "He says that, if you don’t speak out, you
may as well hold your tongue.” "Oh, is that what he says? My Lords, what
I was saying was very simpell. I was only sayingg that in my humbell
opinyon, this fine could not be less than two hundred and fifty pounds
sterlingg”—this sum being roared out as loudly as his old angry voice
could launch it.
His tediousness, both of manner and matter, in charging juries was most
dreadful. It was the custom to make juries stand while the judge was
addressing them; but no other judge was punctilious about it. Eskgrove
however insisted upon it; and if any one of them slipped cunningly down
to his seat, or dropped into it from inability to stand any longer, the
unfortunate wight was sure to be reminded by his Lordship that "these
were not the times in which there should be any disrespect of this high
court, or even of the law.” Often have I gone back to the court at
midnight, .and found him, whom I had left mumbling hours before, still
going on, with the smoky unsnuffed tallow candles in greasy tin
candlesticks, and the poor despairing jurymen, most of the audience
having retired or being asleep; the wagging of his Lordship's nose and
chin being the chief signs that he was still charging.
A very common arrangement of his logic to juries was this—“And so,
gentlemen, having shewn you that the pannell’s argument is utterly
impossibill, I shall, now proceed for to shew you that it is extremely
improbabill.”
He rarely failed to signalize himself in pronouncing sentences of death.
It was almost a matter of style with him to console the prisoner by
assuring him that, “whatever your religious persuashon may be, or even
if, as I suppose, you be of no persuashon at all, there are plenty of
rever-end gentlemen who will be most happy for to shew you the way to
yeternal life."
He had to condemn two or three persons to die who had broken into a
house at Luss, and assaulted Sir James Colquhoun and others, and robbed
them of a large sum of money. He first*, as was his almost constant
practice, explained the nature of the various crimes, assault, robbery,
and hame-sucken—of which last he gave them the etymology ; and he then
reminded them that they attacked the house and the persons within it,
and robbed them, and then came to this climax—u All this you did; and
God preserve us! joost when they were sitten doon to their denner!”
But a whole volume could easily be filled with specimens of his
absurdities. Scott, not by invention but by accurate narration, could
have done it himself. So could Jeffrey; and William Clerk; and William
Erskine; and indeed everybody who had eyes and ears. He was the staple
of the public conversation; and so long as his old age lasted (for of
his youth I know nothing) he nearly drove Napoleon out of the Edinburgh
world. He died in 1804, in his eightieth year; and had therefore been
put at the head of the Court when he had reached the age of seventy-six:
an incredible appointment; for his peculiarities had been in full
flourish long before that. It would have been a pity if the public had
lost them ; but it was unfortunate that a judicial chair was necessary
for their complete exhibition. A story of skgrove is still preferred to
all other stories. Only, the things that he did and said every day are
beginning to be incredible to this correct and flat age.
Besides great experience and great reputation in every legal sphere,
Ilay Campbell, the Lord President, had had his mind enlarged by the
office of Lord Advocate, which had introduced him to Parliament and to
public administration. These opportunities were not lost upon his
working and intelligent intellect. As a lawyer, and in every department
of the science, he was inferior to none of his brethren in depth or
learning, and was greatly superior to them all in a genuine and liberal
taste for the law’s improvement. Of all the old judges he was the only
one whose mind was thoroughly opened to the comprehension of modern
mercantile jurisprudence. Though grave and sound, ingenuity was perhaps
his prevailing power. Fineness in a piece of reasoning had far greater
attractions for him than plainness: the reality of a distinction was
rather improved by its not being obvious. I forget whether it was
Thurlow or Loughborough who described this logical delicacy by saying,
that if the question was, whether a wine was Sherry or Madeira, he would
refer it to Wight; but that if it was whether the wine was one kind of
either, or another kind, he would rely upon Campbell. This habit of
active refinement is often unfavourable to correctness of judgment. But
this tendency was avoided in him by the practical nature of the ends and
of the means to which his life was devoted. His sagacity upon these
matters was too strong to be misled by the subtlety which he reserved
for the logic of professional argument.
His forensic writing, which was the form in which the argumentation of
the bar was then mostly conducted, was admirable. And well was he
practised in it; because during a considerable period of his career, he
was believed to have furnished at least one Session Paper every day.
They were models, as everything he wrote was, of clearness and brevity.
His speaking, always admirable in matter, was the reverse of attractive.
He could only be severely argumentative, and the painfulness of this was
increased by the minuteness of his elaboration, and the dryness of his
manner. His voice was low and dull, his face sedate and hard. Even when
heaving internally with strong passion, externally he was like a knot of
wood.
There was one part of his Presidential duty which he performed better
than any one in that chair has ever done. He was accessible to every
individual, and to every scheme, having the improvement of the law for
their object; and not content with a formal and gracious tolerance of
legal authors or reformers, he listened with the sincere patience of one
who liked the subject, read every line of their manuscripts, discussed
every point, and gave them the full aid of his station and experience.
Bell’s recorded acknowledgments of the assistance he derived from him,
in the construction of his great work, are not merely complimentary, but
express the simple fact. He did not go, and could not have gone, so far
in legal reform as Parliament and the public have since done; and no
wise man, whatever his opinions might have been, would have attempted to
do so in his day. But he went far enough to evince great enlargement of
mind, and a complete superiority to that adherence to established abuses
which is most unjustly ascribed to all professional lawyers. I can
sympathize with his lingering attachment to that judicial discretion,
termed the nobile officium, of the Court, which though dangerous, and
seldom mentioned now except with a sneer, was necessary long ago, and
was frequently appealed to and exercised for several years after I came
to the bar. His collection of the rarer Acts of Sederunt was made and
published chiefly in order to defend this authority, by shewing how
beneficially it had been administered. It is a power that can never be
safe; but it was natural, and indeed indispensable, in old Scotland:
where Praetorian equity was at least better than anything that was to be
expected from subservient Parliaments or profligate Privy Councils.
The only shade ever attempted to be cast over Sir Hay’s memory was by an
insinuation that as Lord President he was tricky. That he was ambitious
of having a prevailing influence over his brethren was true of him, as
of every other Chief Justice. None of them ever like to be in a minority
in their own court. But there was no ground for believing that he
attempted to secure this honourable predominance by improper management.
We must consider the circumstances of his situation. When a Court
consists, as the Court of Session then did, of a mob of fifteen judges,
meeting without previous consultation, and each impatient for
independent eminence, and many of them liable to be called away and to
return irregularly in the course of the same day, the decorum of the
tribunal often compels the head to exercise an indirect control, which
is liable to be mistaken for manoeuvring dexterity. The necessity for
anything of the kind has been extinguished by reducing the Court to a
small number of fixed judges. But so long as it might consist of
fifteen, and might at every moment vary between fifteen and nine,
President Campbell managed it exactly as all other Presidents had been
obliged to do. Had there been more in his manner and general reputation
to render this charge improbable, it would never have been made. Blair
would have put it down by a look. But Campbell was known to have a turn
for managing, and to hide beneath his calm steady appearance a deep and
artful spirit. That he allowed it, however, to obstruct his Presidential
correctness I do not believe.
His private life was useful and respectable. Beloved by his family, and
looked up to by a large circle of friends, he passed his time in town
mostly in his library, and in the country on his farm; and wherever he
was, he was always a hospitable gentleman. Few houses saw more or better
company than his. He had an excellent Presidential custom of giving
substantial and agreeable evening parties to the young men at the Bar.
Many have I seen. Not stiff and vapid formalities, nor impracticable
mobs, but manageable meetings of from ten to twenty, where he presided,
in his single-breasted coat and a wig, over solid food, and free talk,
and copious claret. But these were in the supper days.
Of the younger judges, who belonged to the generation with which I was
now connected, the most remarkable were Lord Glenlee, Lord Hermand, Lord
Meadowbank, and Lord Cullen; all of whom I knew personally.
I was so intimately connected, as a relation and friend, with Lord
Kilkerran’s son George Fergusson, Lord Hermand, that it may perhaps be
supposed that I cannot speak candidly about him. But he has often been
described in a way neither agreeable to truth, nor respectable for
himself. His celebrity arose entirely from his personal character. For
although he attained considerable practice at the bar, and was a quick
and vigorous judge, and took a keen part in all the public measures of
his time, he was not so important in these spheres as to have been a man
of mark in them, independently of his individual peculiarities. But
these made him one of the most singular, and indeed incredible, of our
old originals. They often threw even Eskgrove into the shade during that
person’s life; and after he died, no Edinburgh man, by worth and
singularity alone, belonged so much as Hermand did to the public.
His external appearance was as striking as every thing else about him.
Tall and thin, with grey lively eyes, and a long face strongly
expressive of whatever emotion he was under, his air and manner were
distinctly those of a well-born and well-bred gentleman, His dress for
society, the style of which he stuck to almost as firmly as he did to
his principles, reminded us of the olden time, when trowsers would have
insulted any company, and braces were deemed an impeachment of nature.
Neither the disclosure of the long neck by the narrow bit of muslin
stock, nor the outbreak of the linen between the upper and nether
garments, nor the short coat sleeves, with the consequent length of bare
wrist, could hide his being one of the aristocracy. And if they had, the
thin and powdered grey hair, flowing down into a long-thin
gentleman-like pigtail, would have attested it. His morning raiment in
the country was delightful. The articles, rough and strange, would of
themselves have attracted notice in a museum. But set upon George
Fergusson, at his paradise of Hermand, during vacation, on going forth
for a long day’s work—often manual—at his farm, with his grey felt hat
and tall weeding hoe—what could be more agrestic or picturesque!
Till about the age of thirty, when he began to get into practice, he was
a pretty regular student; and he was always fond of reading, and being
read to, but not methodically, nor in any particular line. He had thus
gathered a respectable chaos of accidental knowledge. Of his various and
very respectable mental powers, acuteness was perhaps the most striking.
His affections were warm and steady; his honor of the highest and purest
order.
But all this will not produce a curious man. What was it that made
Hermand such an established wonder and delight ? It seems to me to have
been the supremacy in his composition of a single quality —intensity of
temperament, which was so conspicuous that it prevented many people from
perceiving anything else in him. He could not be indifferent. Repose,
except in bed, where however he slept zealously, was unnatural and
contemptible to him. It used to be said that if Hermand had made the
heavens, he would have permitted no fixed stars. His constitutional
animation never failed to carry him a flight beyond ordinary mortals.
Was he in an argument, or at whist, or over his wine; in Court, or at an
election, or a road meeting; consulting with a ploughman, or talking
with a child; he was sure to blaze out in a style that nobody could have
fancied, or could resist enjoying. Those who only saw the operation of
this ardour in public conflict, were apt to set him down as a phrenzied
man, with rather a savage temper, an impression that was increased by
what the Scotch call the Birr, which means the emphatic energy, of his
pronunciation. Beholding him in contention, they thought him a tiger.
But to those who knew him personally, the lamb was a truer type. When
removed from contests which provoke impatience, and placed in the
private scene, where innocent excesses are only amusing, what a heart!
what conversational wildness! made more delightful by the undoubting
sincerity of the passing extravagance. There never was a more pleasing
example of the superiority of right affections over intellectual
endowments in the creation of happiness. Had he depended on his
understanding alone, or chiefly, he would have been wrecked every week.
But honesty, humanity, social habits, and diverting public explosions,
always kept him popular ; and he lived about eighty-four years, with
keen and undisguised feelings and opinions, without ever being alienated
from a friend, or imagining a shabby action, devoted to rural
occupations, keeping up his reading, and maintaining his interest in the
world by cultivating tlie young. Instead of sighing over the departure
of former days, and grumbling at change, he zealously patronized every
new project, not political; and at last mellowed away, amidst a revering
household, without having ever known what a headache is, with no decay
of his mental powers, and only a short and gentle physical feebleness.
With very simple tastes, and rather a contempt of epicurism, but very
gregarious, he was fond of the pleasures, and not least of the liquid
ones, of the table; and he had acted in more of the severest scenes of
old Scotch drinking than any man at last living. Common-place topers
think drinking a pleasure; but with Hermand it was a virtue. It inspired
the excitement by which he was elevated, and the discursive jollity
which he loved to promote. But beyond these ordinary attractions, he had
a sincere respect for drinking, indeed a high moral approbation, and a
serious compassion for the poor wretches who could not indulge in it;
with due contempt of those who could, but did not. He groaned over the
gradual disappearance of the Fereat days of periodical festivity, and
prolonged the observance, like a hero fighting amidst his fallen
friends, as long as he could. The worship of Bacchus, which softened his
own heart, and seemed to him to soften the hearts of his companions, was
a secondary duty.
But in its performance there was no violence, no coarseness, no
impropriety, and no more noise than what belongs to well-bred jollity
unrestrained. It was merely a sublimation of his peculiarities and
excellences; the realization of what poetry ascribes to the grape. No
carouse ever injured his health, for he was never ill, or impaired his
taste for home and quiet, or muddled his head : he slept the sounder for
it, and rose the earlier and the cooler. The cordiality inspired by
claret and punch was felt by him as so congenial to all right thinking,
that he was confident that he could convert the Pope if he could only
get him to sup with him. And certainly his Holiness would have been hard
to persuade, if he could have withstood Hermand about the middle of his
second tumbler.
The public opinions of this remarkable person were very decided and not
illiberal; for he combined strong Tory principles with stronger Whig
friendships, and a taste for Calvinism, under the creed of which he
deemed himself extremely pious, with the indulgence of every social
propensity.
Like many other counsel, not of the highest class, he owed his
professional practice chiefly to the fervour of his zeal. His other
qualities would have carried him a considerable way, but they would
never have raised him to the height he reached and retained, without his
honest conviction that his client was always right, and always ill-used.
When it was known that he was to speak, the charm of the intensity which
this belief produced never failed to fill the Court. His eagerness made
him froth and sputter so much in his argumentation that there is a story
to the effect, that when he was once pleading in the House of Lords, the
Duke of Gloucester, who was about fifty feet from the bar, and always
attended when “Mr. George Fergusson, the Scotch counsel” was to speak,
rose and said with pretended gravity, u I shall be much obliged to the
learned gentleman if he will be so good as to refrain from spitting in
my face.” The same animation followed him to the bench, where he
moderated no view from prudence, and flinched from no result, and never
saw any difficulty. President Campbell once delivered one of his deep
and nice opinions, full of qualifications and doubts. The instant he was
done, Hermand sprang upon him by a judgment beginning—u My Lords,0 thank
God, I never doubted! ”
He was very intimate at one time with Sir John Scott, afterwards Lord
Eldon. They were counsel together in Eldon’s first important Scotch
entail case in the House of Lords. Eldon was so much alarmed that he
wrote his intended speech, and begged Hermand to dine with him at a
tavern, where he read the paper, and asked him if he thought it would
do. "Do, Sir? It is delightful—absolutely delightful ! I could listen to
it for ever! It is so beautifully written! And so beautifully read ! But
Sir, it’s the greatest nonsense ! It may do very well for an English
chancellor; but it would disgrace a clerk with us.” He told me the
blunder, and though gross for a Scotch lawyer, it was one that an
English counsel would readily commit. Many a bottle of port did he and
Eldon discuss together.
Bacon advises judges to draw their law "out of your books, not out of
your brain.” Hermand generally did neither. He was very apt to say "My
Laards, I feel my law—here, my Laards,” striking his heart. Hence he
sometimes made little ceremony in disdaining the authority of an Act of
Parliament, when he and it happened to differ. He once got rid of one
which Lord Meadowbank (the first), whom he did not particularly like,
was for enforcing because the Legislature had made it law, by saying, in
his snorting, contemptuous way, and with an emphasis on every
syllable—"But then we’re told that there’s a statute against all this. A
statute! What’s a statute? Words. Mere words! And am I to be tied down
by words? No, my Laards; I go by the law of right reason.” Lord Holland
noticed this in the House of Peers as a strange speech for a judge. Lord
Gillies could not resist the pleasure of reading Holland's remark to
Hermand, who was generally too impetuous to remember liis own words. He
entirely agreed with Lord Holland, and was indignant at the Court
suffering “from the rashness of fools.” “Well, my Lord, but who could
Lord Holland be alluding to?” “Alluding to? who can it be but that
creature Meadowbank?”
In giving his opinion on the validity of a qualification to vote for a
member of Parliament, after it had been sustained both here and in the
House of Lords, he declared that, nevertheless, it was not only bad, but
so bad that “I defy Omnipotence to make it good.” “Then,” said the quiet
philosophic Playfair, “it must be very bad indeed; for his Lordship
assured me, in a conversation about Professor Leslie’s case, that he had
no difficulty at all in conceiving God to make a world where twice three
was not six.”
There was a case about a lease, where our Court thought itself entitled
in equity to make a new contract for parties, different from the one
which the parties had made for themselves. The Lord Chancellor (Eldon)
was of opinion that a clear clause in a contract ought always to be
enforced, and remitted the matter to the Court below for
reconsideration. The result of Iiermand’s reconsideration was this—
“Why, my Lords, I beg to put a very simple question to the House of
Lords. Suppose that the tenant had engaged to hang himself at the end of
the lease, would their Lordships enforce that?” Upon a second appeal,
after reading the question aloud, Eldon, with ludicrous gravity, said u
that he would endeavour to make up his mind upon the very important
question put, when the case should come before their Lordships in
regular form;” and added, that he had great pleasure in remembering when
his friend George Fergusson and he used to do battle at this bar in
Scotch causes, but that, if he recollected right, his learned friend had
not then the admiration of the Court of Session that he seemed to have
acquired since. Hermand was pleased with the recognition, and exclaimed,
"And if he knew the truth, 'Sir,—though this is a secret—he would find
that I had not got it yet.”
Two young gentlemen, great friends, went together to the theatre in
Glasgow, supped at the lodgings of one of them, and passed a whole
summer night over their punch. In the morning a kindly wrangle broke out
about their separating or not separating, when by some rashness, if not
accident, one of them was stabbed, not violently, but in so vital a part
that he died on the spot. The survivor was tried at Edinburgh, and was
convicted of culpable homicide. It was one of the sad cases where the
legal guilt was greater than the moral; and, very properly, he was
sentenced to only a short imprisonment. Hermand, who felt that discredit
had been brought on the cause of drinking, had no sympathy with the
tenderness of his temperate brethren, and was vehement for
transportation. “We are told that there was no malice, and that the
prisoner must have been in liquor. In liquor! Why, he was drunk! And yet
he murdered the very man who had been drinking with him! They had been
carousing the whole night; and yet he stabbed him! after drinking a
whole bottle of rum with him! Good God, my Laards, if he will do this
when he’s drunk, what will he not do when lie’s sober?”
His love of children was warm-hearted and unaffected. He always treated
them seriously, exactly as if they were grown up. Few old men’s speeches
are more amiable than his about his grand-nephew who happened to be his
partner in a match at bowls, "No wonder that that little fellow and are
such friends—there are just seventy years between us.” He was eighty,
the boy ten.
But when a boy happened to be a sailor, he was irresistible. A little
English midshipman being violently attacked by a much bigger lad in
Greenock, defended himself with his dirk, and by an unfortunate, if not
accidental, thrust, killed the assailant. He was tried for this at
Glasgow, and had the good luck to have Hermand for his judge; for no
judge ever fouglit a more gallant battle for a prisoner. The boy
appeared at the bar in his uniform. Hermand first refused "to try a
child.?" After this was driven out of him, the indictment, which
described the occurrence and said that the prisoner had slain the
deceased “ wickedly and feloniously,” was read; and Hermand then said, u
Well, my young friend, this is not true, is it? Are you guilty or not
guilty?” “Not guilty, my Lord.” “I’ll be sworn you’re not!” In spite of
all his exertions, his young friend was convicted of culpable homicide;
for which he was sentenced to a few days’ imprisonment.
Allan Maconochie, Lord Meadowbank, was a curious and able man. His true
merits were obscured, while he lived, by certain accidental oddities
which obstructed the perception of them. He took great pleasure in
exercising his own mind, and in making people wonder at the singularity
of his views; into wdiich, as into his language, he never failed to
infuse as much metaphysical phraseology and argument as he could. Though
not really conceited, he was apt to put on an air of pretension, which,
though it was chiefly in the manner, was often misunderstood. There
could scarcely be better evidence of the vigour of his intellect, than
that he was able, by it alone, to triumph over his defects.
For he was a person of great mental activity and acuteness; an
independent and original thinker, and of very considerable learning. His
knowledge reached every subject—legal, scientific, historical and
literary, and consequently was perhaps more varied than accurate; and
under his ceaseless industry his information increased hourly. I used to
go circuits with him, and he seemed to me to be equally at home in
divinity, or agriculture, or geology, in examining mountains, or
demonstrating his errors to a farmer, or refuting the dogmas of the
clergyman; though of all his occupations, the last perhaps gave him the
greatest pleasure. For his peculiar delight, and his peculiar power, was
in speculation; chiefly as applied to the theoretical history of man and
of nations. He acquired great skill in the use of his metaphysical
power, both as a sword and as a shield, in the intellectual contests in
which it was his delight to be always engaged. He questioned every
thing; he demonstrated every thing; his whole life was a discussion.
This, though sometimes oppressive, was generally very diverting, and
gave him a great facility in detecting and inventing principles, and in
tracing them to their sources, and to their consequences. Jeffrey
described this well when he said, that while the other judges gave the
tree a tug, one on this side and one on that, Meadowbank not only tore
it up by the roots, but gave it a shake which dispersed the earth and
exposed the whole fibres.
In the higher quality of ealm soundness he was not equally eminent.
Indeed before he spoke it would often have been a fair wager, whether
what he said would be reasonable or extravagant. All that was certain
was, that even his extravagance would be vigorous and original.
Soundness indeed had no great attraction for a spirit eager for victory,
but still more eager for conflict. He had more pleasure in inventing
ingenious reasons for being wrong, than in being quietly right. Thus,
with powers which made all anxious to listen, he had few followers as a
safe leader.
Sir Harry Moncreiff, who was present at his marriage, and I believe
performed the ceremony, told me that the knot was tied about seven in
the evening, and that at a later hour the bridegroom disappeared; and,
on being sought for, was found absorbed in the composition of a
metaphysical essay "on pains and penalties.”
Mr. Thomas Walker Baird was, in a dull technical way, stating a dry ease
to his Lordship, who was sitting single. This did not please the judge,
who thought that his dignity required a grander tone. So he dismayed
poor Baird, than whom no man could have less turn for burning in the
Forum, by throwing himself back in his chair, and saying u Declaim, Sir!
why don’t you declaim? speak to me as if I were a popular assembly!”
Robert Cullen, a son of the great physician, was a gentleman-like person
in his manner, and learned in his profession, in which however he was
too indolent and irregular to attain steady practice. His best
professional achievement was his written argument for Lord Daer, in
support of the right of the eldest sons of Scotch peers to sit in the
House of Commons and his best political one was, the bill for the reform
of the Scotch representation in 1785, which he drew, and his share in
the measures connected with that project.
But the truth is, that he had the misfortune to possess one power which
seems to exclude the exercise of all others. He was a mimic ; and one of
the very highest order. Dugald Stewart somewhere calls him “the most
perfect of all mimics.” His skill was not confined to imitations of
voices, looks, manners, and external individualties; but he copied the
very words, nay the very thoughts of his subjects. He was particularly
successful with his friend Principal Robertson, whose character he, once
endangered in a tavern by indecorous toasts, songs, and speeches, given
with such a resemblance of the original, that a party on the other side
of the partition, suspecting no trick, went home believing that they had
caught the reverend historian unawares. On another occasion, the
Principal announced his determination to administer a severe lecture to
a young Englishman, who was boarding with him, the next time that he
staid out too late at night. He soon transgressed again, probably in
Cullen’s company. Cullen, knowing what was likely to happen, went to the
Principal’s early next morning, and walked up to the youth’s room, with
an exact resemblance of the doctor’s step on the stair, and then,
seating himself behind the curtain, gave a long and formal admonition to
the headachy penitent; after which he retired with the same foot-tread.
In fulfilment of his threat, the Principal approached sometime
afterwards, sat down, and began. After he had gone on a certain time,
the culprit, who could not understand why he should get it twice,
confessed his sin, and reminded the doctor, that when he had been with
him before, he had assured him that he would not err in the same way
again. u Oh ho!” said the Principal, "so that dog Cullen has been before
me!” He could not tell a story without disclosing his power—a fee-less
faculty.
Though these few were those most spoken of, the Bench contained several
other learned and worthy judges, but not one whose public ideas went
beyond the passing hour, or who saw any duty or object for that hour
except an adoption and promotion of its intolerance. Cullen, and
Bannatyne Macleod, an honest merry old gentleman, were so far
disenthralled that they disclaimed exclusive fealty to Henry Dundas, to
whom by some accident they did not directly owe their appointments. With
these two shades of immaterial exception, there probably were not
fifteen other men in the island to whom political independence was more
offensive than to these fifteen judges. |