In 1814 the Allies made
their first conquest of Paris, and for a year Europe was without
Napoleon. Hostilities were unexpectedly renewed in 1815, and then
ceased, after the short and brilliant flash at Waterloo; but in 1814 a
war which had lasted so long that war seemed our natural state was felt
to be over.
This event separated the lives and the recollections of that generation
into two great and marked parts. From this moment the appearance of
everything was changed. Fear of invasion, contempt of economy, the glory
of our arms, the propriety of suppressing every murmur at any home
abuse, the utter absorption of every feeling in the duty of warlike
union—these and other principles, which for twenty years had sunk the
whole morality of patriotism in the single object of acknowledging no
defect or grievance in our own system, in order that we might be more
powerful abroad, became all inapplicable to existing things; and after a
little time for settling into peace, the removal of the foreign pressure
was followed by a rebound of internal improvement which will mark itself
by its results on many ages of our history. Abuses and defects had,
perhaps unavoidably, crowded into every corner of our affairs. Had the
party with the absolute command of Parliament taken the gradual
reformation of these evils into their own hands, they might have
altered, and strengthened, the foundations of their power. But
resistance of innovation clung to them after it had become plainly
absurd, and was continued, fatally for themselves, as their test and
their object. Meanwhile, a generation was coming into action so young
that its mind had been awakened by the excitement of the French
revolution, and not so old as to have been put under a chronic panic by
its atrocities, and which was cheered on by that mistake of the
adversary, which made the success of every right measure a popular
triumph. The force of this new power was as yet unknown, even to those
among whom it was lodged, particularly in Scotland. Nowhere in this part
of the kingdom, except at Edinburgh, was there any distinct scheme, or
rational hope, of emancipation. But the mind of the lower, and far more
of the middle, classes had undergone, and was still undergoing, a great
though as yet a silent change, which the few who had been long
cherishing enlightened opinions lost few opportunities of promoting and
directing.
The return of peace was distinguished by nothing peculiar to Edinburgh.
We got new things to speak about; and the entire disappearance of drums,
uniforms, and parades, changed our habits and appearance. We were
charmed at the moment by a striking sermon by Alison, and a beautiful
review by Jeffrey, on the cessation of the long struggle; the chief
charm of each being in the expression of the cordial and universal burst
of joy that hailed the supposed restoration of liberty to Europe, and
the downfall of the great soldier who was believed to be its only
tyrant. Old men, but especially those in whose memories the American war
ran into the French one, had only a dim recollection of what peace was;
and middle aged men knew it now for the first time. The change in all
things, in all ideas, and conversation, and objects, was as complete as
it is in a town that has at last been liberated from a strict and
tedious siege.
In 1814 Scott published Waverley—the first of those admirable and
original prose compositions which have nearly obliterated the
recollection of his poetry. Except the first opening of the Edinburgh
Review, no work that has appeared in my time made such an instant and
universal impression. It is curious to remember it. The unexpected
newness of the thing, the profusion of original characters, the Scotch,
language, Scotch scenery, Scotch men and women, the simplicity of the
writing, and the graphic force of the descriptions, all struck us with
an electric shock of delight. I wish I could again feel the sensations
produced by the first year of these two Edinburgh works. If the
concealment of the authorship of the novels was intended to make mystery
heighten their effect, it completely succeeded. The speculations and
conjectures, and nods and winks, and predictions and assertions were
endless, and occupied every company, and almost every two men who met
and spoke in the street. It was proved by a thousand indications, each
refuting the other, and all equally true in fact, that they were written
by old Henry Mackenzie, and by George Cranstoun, and William Erskine,
and Jeffrey, and above all by Thomas Scott, Walter’s brother, a
regimental paymaster, then in Canada. But "the great unknown,” as the
true author was then called, always took good care, with all his
concealment, to supply evidence amply sufficient for the protection of
his property and his fame; in so much that the suppression of the name
was laughed at as a good joke not merely by his select friends in his
presence, but by himself. The change of line, at his age, was a striking
proof of intellectual power and richness. But the truth is, that these
novels were rather the outpourings of old thoughts than new inventions.
A meeting against West Indian Slavery was held in Edinburgh in July
1814. Sir Harry Moncreiff took the lead in it, and a petition to
Parliament was signed by ten or twelve thousand persons. Except for
victories and charity, this was the first assembling of the people for a
public object that had occurred here for about twenty years; and if the
termination of slavery in our West Indian colonies had been a purely
political matter, it could not have been held in Edinburgh even in 1814.
It was only made safe and respectable by the attendance of the humane
and the pious of all politics, and even with this mitigation it excited
great alarm. The symptoms involved in the fact of such a meeting, and of
such a petition, were not unseen by any party. My excellent friend
Thomas Erskine* was united with me in the charge of a copy of the
petition that lay for subscription in the Grassmarket; and we were both
surprised to find a piece of Calvinistic Whiggery, which we thought had
faded, still deeply seated. Many who signed the petition to the Commons,
shrunk back from the one to the Lords. They could not get over the Lords
Spiritual. No reasoning could reconcile them to the title. “I would
rather not homologate” was-the general and conclusive answer.
The extension of the city gave rise in 1815 to the New Town Dispensary.
Any such institution seems at least harmless; yet this one was assailed
with a degree of bitterness which is curious now. It was a civic war.
Two of its principles were, that medicines and medical advice, including
obstetrical aid, were to be administered to patients at their own homes,
and that the office-bearers were to be elected by the subscribers; which
last, though not absolutely new, was then rare in Edinburgh. All the
existing establishments had the usual interest to suppress a rival. But
they disavowed this, which however was their true motive, and raised the
cry against these two peculiarities. A mob selecting a doctor! The
Lying-in Hospital was eloquent on the danger and the vice of delivering
poor women at their own houses. The Old Town Dispensary, which did not
then go to such patients as could not come to it, demonstrated the
beauty of the sick poor being obliged to swallow their doses at a public
office. Subscribers choose managers ! Impracticable, and dangerously
popular! However, common sense prevailed over even this political
bugbear, and the hated institution rose and flourished, and has had all
its defects imitated by its opponents.
These are small matters. But they shew through what strange follies
every effort leading, however indirectly and distantly, to independence
had to struggle. After a certain time, the hackneyed objections to every
thing may, in all communities, be stereotyped, and thrown aside as soon
as they are attempted to be made use of.
The most conspicuous opponent of this charity was Dr. Andrew Duncan,
senior, one of our professors and physicians, and the great patron of
the Old Dispensary; one of the curious old Edinburgh characters. He was
a kind-hearted and excellent man but one of a class which seems to live
and be happy, and get liked, by its mere absurdities. He was the
promoter and the president of more innocent and foolish clubs and
societies than perhaps any man in the world, and the author of
pamphlets, jokes, poems, and epitaphs, sufficient to stock the nation
all amiable, all dull, and most of them very foolish. But they made the
author happy; and he was so benevolent and so simple, that even those
who were suffering under his interminable projects checked their
impatience and submitted. Scientific ambition, charitable restlessness,
and social cheerfulness made him thrust himself into everything
throughout a long life. Yet, though his patronage was generally
dangerous, and his talk always wearisome, nobody could ever cease to
esteem him. He was even the president of a bathing club; and once at
least every year did this grave medical professor conduct as many of the
members as he could collect to Leith, where the rule was that their
respect for their chief was to be shewn by always letting him plunge
first from the machine into the water. He continued, till he was past
eighty, a practice of mounting to the summit of Arthur’s Seat on the
first of May, and celebrating the feat by what he called a poem. He was
very fond of gardening, and rather a good botanist. This made him
president of the Horticultural Society, which he oppressed annually by a
dull discourse. But in the last, or nearly the last, of them he relieved
the members by his best epitaph, being one upon himself. After
mentioning his great age, he intimated that the time must soon arrive,
when u In the words of our inimitable Shakespeare, you will all be
saying, "Duncan’s in his grave.’’
Peace, with its other blessings, wrought no change more striking or more
necessary in Edinburgh than the improvement of our architectural taste.
This quality, for the indulgence of which Scotland has such advantages
in its materials and its positions, had never been cultivated, or at
least had never been acted upon, in modern times. There was a period
during which feudal war created striking castles, and Popery glorious
temples; but when the operation of these ceased, and internal defences
became useless, and religious pomp odious, we sank into mere
convenience, which we were too poor to associate with architectural
beauty or grandeur. How many edifices can architecture justly boast of
having produced in Scotland during the first hundred years after the
Union? In towns the great modern object has uniformly been to extinguish
all the picturesque relics and models of antiquity, and to reduce
everything to the dullest and baldest uniformity. In addition to the
varied forms exhibited by our forefathers, almost every city on the
Continent supplied us with specimens of striking and cheap town
architecture perfectly adapted to the purposes of ordinary life. Yet we
went on as if these examples were ridiculous, and as if the common sense
of building consisted solely in making it mean, and all mean in the same
way. In Edinburgh, moreover, we were perpetually mistaking the
accidental effect produced by situation, for that which can only be
secured by design and our escape from the old town gave us an
unfortunate propensity to avoid whatever had distinguished the place we-
had fled from. Hence we were led into the blunder of long straight lines
of street, divided to an inch, and all to the same number of inches, by
rectangular intersections, every house being an exact duplicate of its
neighbour, with a dexterous avoidance, as if from horror, of every
ornament or excrescence by which the slightest break might vary the
surface. What a site did nature give us for our New Town! Yet what
insignificance in its plan! What poverty in all its details! The
creation of that abominable incumbrance, the u Earthen Mound,’7 by which
the valley it abridges and deforms was sacrificed for a deposit of
rubbish, was not merely permitted without a murmur to be slowly raised,
but throughout all its progress was applauded as a noble accumulation.
Our jealousy of variety, and our association of magnificence with
sameness, was really curious. If a builder ever attempted (which
however, to do them justice, they very seldom did) to deviate so far
from the established paltriness as to carry up the front wall so as to
hide the projecting slates, or to break the roof by a Flemish storm
window, or to turn his gable to the street, there was an immediate
outcry; and if the law allowed our burgh Edile, the Dean of Guild, to
interfere, he was sure to do so. Abercromby Place, though not begun till
about 1809, was the first instance in which the straight line was
voluntarily departed from. People used to go and stare at the curved
street. There were then probably not six houses in George Street, or
twenty in the whole New Town, in which the unbroken surface of vulgar
slate did not project over the front wall. Yet there lias very rarely
been so large, so well placed, and so free a surface exposed at once to
the taste of any architect who had ever seen the Continent. But every
conception except of straight lines, cut rectangularly into equal
spaces, and of every thirty front feet being covered with the plainest
and the cheapest house, each exactly like its neighbour, seems to have
been excluded. It will take many years, and the cost of building about'
a half of the original New Town over again, to lessen the baseness of
the first ideas. We have now some pillars, balconies, porticos, and
ornamental roughening; and money, travelling, and discussion will get us
on.
It was the return of peace that first excited our attention, and tended
to open our eyes. Europe was immediately covered with travellers, not
one of whom, whether from taste, or conceit, or mere chattering—but it
all did good—failed to contrast the littleness of almost all that the
people of Edinburgh had yet done, with the general picturesque grandeur
and the unrivalled sites of their city. It was about this time that the
foolish phrase, "The Modern Athens,” began to be applied to the capital
of Scotland; a sarcasm, or a piece of affected flattery, when used in a
moral sense; but just enough if meant only as a comparison of the
physical features of the two places. The opportunities of observing, and
the practice of talking of, foreign buildings in reference to our own,
directed our attention to the works of internal taste, and roused our
ambition.
It was fortunate that it was about this stage of our advancement that,
independently of any object beyond mere access, all the old approaches
to the city had to be abandoned, and new ones made. I wish that anybody
had thought of preserving the lines of these old Appians in an
intelligible map. They seemed to have been planned, or rather used —for
there was no planning about them, not so much for the convenience of the
people, as with a view to keep enemies out. Narrowness, crookedness, and
steepness, was the principle of them all. They luckily could not be
improved, and therefore new approaches had to be made. This brought free
ground to sale; and the result was the creation of admirable accesses,
all connected with much very respectable building ;. the owners being
always tempted to allure the spreading population by laying out their
land attractively. Hence Newington, Leith Walk, the grounds of
Inverleith, the road to Corstorphine, and to Queensferry, and indeed all
the modem approaches, which lead in every direction through most
comfortable suburbs.
A few years before this William Stark, the best modern architect that
Scotland had produced, appeared. After lie had established his
reputation at Glasgow and other places, bad health compelled him to seek
a retreat in Edinburgh, where however he only survived till October
1813. Thus he was too young to have done much; but he had excited
attention and given good principles, particularly in reference to the
composition of towns. The magistrates consulted him on the best way of
laying out the ground on the east side of Leith Walk; and he explained
his views in a very sensible, though too short, memorial. On the 20th of
October 1813 Scott mentions his death to Miss Baillie in these terms, u
This brings me to the loss of poor Stark, with whom more genius has died
than is left behind among the collected universality of Scottish
architects. His mantle however dropped on his pupil William Playfair; to
whom Edinburgh has been more indebted since, than to the taste of all
other modem architects it has produced or employed. The earliest
evidence of his talent was in his attempt to retrieve the fatal errors
that had nearly ruined our College; and the purity of his Grecian taste
has since been attested wherever it has had an opportunity of displaying
itself. It is now to be seen conspicuously in every quarter of the city.
There are blots no doubt; but they have been made by his employers, not
by him. For an architect is almost the only professional man who can
never be rightly judged of by the works which he executes. His art is
costly, and each part is fixed as soon as it is done. There is no
rubbing out. This would be severe, even were he allowed to have his own
way. But how often does it happen that he is thwarted by position,
poverty, or obstinate ignorance ? He must perpetually sacrifice his
taste to suit the humours and the purses of his employers. Yet nothing
is so common as to hear an architect condemned on the mere sight of a
work against every defect of which he protested. Painters don’t paint,
nor do poets write, on these terms.
The influence of these circumstances can only be appreciated by those
who knew Edinburgh during the war. It is they alone who can see the
beauty of the bravery which the Queen of the North has since been
putting on. There were more schemes, and pamphlets, and discussions, and
anxiety about the improvement of our edifices and prospects within ten
years after the war ceased, than throughout the whole of the preceding
one hundred and fifty years.
One lamentable error we certainly have committed, are committing, and,
so far as appears, will ever commit. We massacre every town tree that
comes in a mason’s way; never sacrificing mortar to foliage. Stark
raised his voice against this atrocity, but in vain. I do not know a
single instance in which the square and the line have been compelled to
accommodate themselves to stems and branches.
To a considerable extent this is a consequence of our climate, which
needs sun and not shade. But there are many situations, especially in a
town, where shade is grateful, and many where, without interfering with
comfort, foliage besides its natural beauty combines well with
buildings. And there was no Scotch city more strikingly graced by
individual trees and by groups of them than Edinburgh, since I knew it,
used to be. How well the ridge of the old town was set off by a bank of
elms that ran along the front of James’ Court, and stretched eastward
over the ground now partly occupied by the Bank of Scotland. Some very
respectable trees might have been spared to grace the Episcopal Chapel
of St. Paul in York Place. There was one large tree near its east end
which was so well placed that some people conjectured it was on its
account that the Chapel was set down there. I was at a consultation in
John Clerk’s house, hard by, when that tree was cut. On hearing that it
was actually down we ran out, and well did John curse the Huns. The old
aristocratic gardens of the Canongate were crowded with trees, and with
good ones. There were several on the Calton Hill: seven, not ill grown,
on its very summit. And all Leith Walk and Lauriston, including the
ground round Heriot’s Hospital, was fully set with wood. A group was
felled about the year 1826 which stood to the west of St. John’s Chapel,
on the opposite side of the Lothian Road, and formed a beautiful
termination of all the streets which join near that point. One half of
the trees, at the least, might have been spared, not only without
injuring, but with the effect of greatly adorning, the buildings for
which they have been sacrificed. Moray Place, in the same way, might
have been richly decorated with old and respectable trees. But they were
all murdered, on the usual pretence of adjusting levels and removing
obstructions. It was with the greatest difficulty that Sir Patrick
Walker, the superior of the ground, succeeded in rescuing the row in
front of Coates Crescent from the unhallowed axes of the very vassals.
It cost him years of what was called obstinacy. I tried to save a very
picturesque group, some of which waved over the wall at the west end of
the jail on the Calton Hill. I succeeded with two trees; but in about
four years they also disappeared. It only required a very little
consideration and arrangement to have left the whole of these trees and
many others standing without abating a single building. But the sad
truth is that the extinction of foliage, and the unbroken display of
their bright free-stone, is of itself a first object with both our
masons and their employers. The wooded gardens that we have recently
acquired are not inconsistent with this statement. There was no
competition between them and building. It is our horror of the direct
combination of trees with masonry, and our incapacity to effect it, that
I complain of. No apology is thought necessary for murdering a tree;
many for preserving it.
In 1815 Jeffrey set up his rustic household gods at Craigcrook, where
all his subsequent summers have been passed. This was scarcely a merely
private arrangement. It has affected the happiness, and improved both
the heads and the hearts of all the worthy of this place. No unofficial
house in Scotland has had a greater influence on literary or political
opinion. Beautiful though the spot, as he has kept it, is, its deepest
interest arises from its being the residence of such a man. Nothing can
efface the days they have passed there from the recollection of his
friends. Their rural festivities are dignified by his virtues and
talents, by all our Edinburgh eminence, and by almost every interesting
stranger. The Craigcrook Saturdays during the summer session! Escape
from the court and the town, scenery, evergreens, bowls, talk, mirth,
friendship, and wine inspire better luxury than that of the Castle of
Indolence, without any of its dulness.
The first modern Musical Festival was held in Scotland in 1815. It
sprang more from charity than from love of harmony. But the music, as I
am told—for though I heard some of it I did not comprehend it, was good;
and the Outer House, where it was performed, was not ill calculated to
give it effect. We have become an infinitely more harmonious nation
since then. Indeed none of our advances is more decided than our musical
one. But this is not for one with dead ears to speak of.
The beginning of the year 1816 was distinguished by one of the most
important events in the progress of our law. u The Jury Court” was
opened, and on the 22d of January tried its first cause. We had long
been verging towards the introduction of civil juries. The experiment
was keenly resisted, chiefly by the older judges, and by the established
obstructors of change. It is easy now to discover that in some respects
the plan might have been mended; but, on the whole, the introduction of
so complicated and difficult a novelty was conducted with considerable
wisdom. A separate court, a presiding judge trained to English practice,
special issues, and no more extensive jurisdiction in matters of law
than was indispensable for the trial of facts, were all necessary at
first. For a while the idle public took great interest in the new
tribunal; partly because the causes were intelligible, which the
decisions of civil causes on printed evidence never can be to
spectators, and partly because the counsel were expected to make play in
every trial. Jeffrey and I were the chief delinquents in this line,
because we had the largest share of the business, and every client
thought his cause ill used, if it was not made a great cause of.
However, though this expectation is abated in litigants, and
extinguished in the public, I suspect that the modern harangues are
fully as animated and as long as ours.
William Adam, David Monypenny (Lord Pit-milly), and Allan Maconochie
(Lord Meadowbank) were the first three judges. Adam had the misfortune
to come into this new scene under exaggerated expectations of what he
was to do. He owed this to his Scotch nativity and education, the tastes
and feelings of which forty years general residence in England had only
strengthened; to the kindliness of his manners; to his spirit in
Parliament on several Scotch questions; and to his having been an
associate of important public men on many great public occasions.
Extravagant anticipations were formed of the person who had first fought
Fox, and then been his friend; who had spoken in debate with Pitt;
managed the affairs of Eoyal Dukes ; been the standing counsel of such
clients as the East India Company and the Bank of England, and in great
practice in Parliamentary Committees. His appearance was good. It was
that of a farming gentleman. He had a distinct rational voice, and an
admirable, plain, well-bred manner. Though well read for a busy
gentleman, he was not a person of either learning or general ability.
His true merits resolved into industry, practical sense, agreeable
deportment, and a conscientious ambition to secure the success of the
Jury Court experiment. His conspicuous defect was obscurity of judicial
speech. It is very difficult to account for this ; because on other
matters he had a very clear head, and a very clear tongue. I cannot
analyse the process by which one so versant in the practice, and in the
explanation, of business, and so totally unincumbered by either
diffidence or conceit, should have generally contrived to get mystical
on the bench. It arose partly, I have no doubt, from his not being at
home with the legal ideas and legal terms of the law of Scotland. Yet
this will not account for it entirely. The acute and mathematical Lord
Glenlee once described the thing very well. Adam was delivering an
opinion, or explaining something, in the Court of Session, when Glenlee,
after listening for a long time, without attaining any definite idea, to
his well-sounding sentences marked by all the appearance of precision
and all the reality of confusion, observed—"He speaks as if he were an
Act of .Parliament.”
Yet no other man could have done his work. He had to guide a vessel over
shoals and among rocks. This was his special duty, and he did it
admirably. His experience of English practice enabled him to remove
difficulties formidable to our awkwardness. He protected his court from
prejudices which, if not subdued by his patience and dexterity, would
have crushed it any week. He saw that the Scotch could scarcely be
expected to fall into the old English idolatry of jury trial; but
believing that, when properly applied, civil juries were nowhere more
valuable than in Scotland, where the people were generally educated, and
yet had no popular institutions, he had no pride and no pleasure so
great as that of permanently securing them, in one shape or other, for
his native country. Both on the bench and at chambers he gave us the
best example of judicial urbanity that we had ever seen. Nothing could
be more beautiful, and sometimes even affecting, than the anxiety of
this old, and at last nearly blind, man to do his work, and the earnest
patience and polite cheerfulness with which he gave himself to it. So
far as we are to retain civil trial by jury in this country, we shall
owe it to him personally. No one else could have either launched or
piloted it. When in 1830 the Jury Court ceased to exist as a separate
court his vocation was at an end; and he retired with the respect and
the affection of the whole legal profession and of the public.
Nothing could exceed his delightfulness in society, and especially in
domestic life. He was not a whit the worse of a hot temper. When it
transpired, it only amused his friends. A day passed with the Chief
Commissioner at Blair-Adam—his Eden, where his heart laughed in its
boyhood, was a day of amiable virtue, always to be remembered with
pleasure.
When I first saw Monypenny, I was a boy looking out of a window in the
High Street of Edinburgh at the foot procession of the Lord High
Commissioner to the General Assembly; and Monypenny was walking before
His Grace the Earl of Leven, dressed like a mackaw, as the
Commissioner’s purse-bearer. Little did he, or anybody, then dream that
the day was to come in which he was to have a seat on three supreme
benches, and to become some one in his profession. Of good sense, but of
moderate ability, with no legal learning beyond what an ordinary hand to
mouth lawyer needs, and no power either of speaking or of writing beyond
that of clear statement, his judicial powers were very considerable, far
above his powers as a counsel. Slender, pure-eyed, clear-skinned, a
beautifully composed manner, a distinct quiet voice, and an air of
steady propriety in all he said or did, his outward style was excellent
and striking, simple yet dignified, without feebleness, and patient, yet
neither passive nor dull. This admirable and very peculiar manner left
his judgment and industry to operate unobstructed; and they were
concentrated on his profession, the exercise of which was his sole
enjoyment. Amidst the vexatiousness of the most complicated case,
aggravated by the strife of the bar, and the collisions of the bench, he
sat so serenely, and got through his work with such composure, that it
made one cool to look at him.
Meadowbank ought neither to have taken nor to have got a seat in this
court. His health scarcely allowed him even to enter it; and he died
soon after his appointment. For above a year before his death he was
worn away by some painful disorders, which he bore up against with great
energy. Though obliged to forego the court, the conflicts and the toils
of which were his luxury, he read, and wrote, and discussed to the very
last.
One great outcry against this court, at first, was excited by our being
required to adopt the English unanimity of juries. We had been
accustomed to it for above a century in the Exchequer, which was an
English court. But its sittings were solely in Edinburgh, and its
verdicts were of a penal nature; so that the country at large knew
little about its proceedings, and it had not to deal with the complexity
of civil competitions. It therefore got on without much practical
obstruction. But when it was proposed to carry the principle into all
proofs, and all over the land, hosts of fiery objectors started up, who
on grounds logical, political, metaphysical, and religious, denounced
the scheme as justifying rebellion at the least. The religious
objection, which resolved into the perjury (as it was called) of the
minority, sacrificing its conscience to the conscience of the majority,
was the one that made the deepest impression on the Scotch mind.
Meadowbank wrote a good pamphlet explanatory of the true working of the
principle of unanimity, which operates (as he said) by producing
discussion and concession among jurors, and thus makes a verdict by even
compulsory unanimity a truer extract of the average sense of the whole
of them, than if all reasoning had been superseded by a vote. There is
some ingenuity in this, which is all that can be said in defence of the
venerable English habit. But if it was sound, it is odd that of all the
tribes of mankind the habit has been tolerated in England alone. I
believe it to be absurd; and that, whether a bare majority ought to be
allowed to decide or not, always requiring unanimity is nonsense.
Experience has not in the least diminished our Scotch aversion to it.
Another advance towards the habit of public meetings, and a far more
important one than that of the preceding year in favor of slaves, took
place in February 1816. A meeting was then held in the Merchants’ Hall
to petition Parliament against the continuance of the property and
income tax. This was the first respectable meeting held in Edinburgh,
within the memory of man, for the avowed purpose of controlling
Government on a political matter; and was justly considered by the
prophetic as a striking indication of the tendency of the public mind *
the more so that it was attended by a few Tories, who, though attached
to ministers, were more attached to their money. Mr. Menteath of
Closeburn presided; Jeffrey moved resolutions, which Moncreiff seconded.
In this year we lost George Wilson, a person whose very name was unknown
to the public, but whose character tinged the character of some of those
whose names were never out of the public ear. He was the person who is
spoken of with such reverence and affection by Romilly and Horner, and
who stood so high in the confidence and love of all the really eminent
in London; a Scotchman by birth and education, and an English lawyer by
profession. Better fitted by calmness and simplicity for the Bench than
for the jangling work of the Bar, no elevation would have been above his
merits or the reasonable hopes of his friends. But all their and his
views were blighted by a severe attack of paralysis which compelled him
to leave London. He withdrew to Edinburgh in 1810, and died there in
June 1816. His life here was a rare and noble example of practical
philosophy. Driven suddenly by ruined health from his accustomed scenes
of ambition and enjoyment, he had to reconcile himself to a retired
existence on a very low scale of vitality, in a place where, except to
his old friends Dr. Gregory and Henry Mackenzie, and two or three more,
he was unknown. And he did it beautifully. His mildness and intelligence
attracted the worthy; and good society temperately enjoyed, literature
and benevolence, a deep interest in the friends he had left and in all
the public subjects that engaged them, and a growing affinity for those
he had recently acquired, occupied him as fully as was safe; and he
resigned himself with such a contented attachment to the new scene, that
it almost seemed as if he was glad of a calamity that enabled him to
indulge in so rational a retirement. He rarely missed the Friday Club,*
where his serenity and excellent conversation, over his glass of cold
water, made us feel as if we ought to despise ourselves for our
champagne. In writing to Gregory about his attack, after it occurred, he
said u we bachelors have a great advantage over you married men in
dying. The club always brightened at his appearance. It was sure of
admirable talk and opinions, great knowledge of good books and good men,
perfect candour, a gentle manner, and a soft voice. It is a pleasure to
recollect him, and to preserve a character which, except in the memories
of his friends, he has done nothing to perpetuate.
It was in 1816 also that we heard the first whisperings of what was
termed u the National Monument of Scotland/7 The idea of commemorating
the triumphs of the late war, and of exciting the heroisms of future
conflicts, was first thrown out publicly at a county meeting; and the
scheme was often discussed throughout some succeeding years. The
original plan did not go beyond a pillar, or some such thing. But there
were some who thought that the prevailing effervescence of military
patriotism created a good opportunity for improving the public taste by
the erection of a great architectural model. The Temple of Minerva,
placed on the Calton Hill, struck their imaginations, and though they
had no expectation of being able to realize the magnificent conception
they resolved, by beginning, to bring it within the vision of a distant
practicability. What, if any, age would finish it, they could not tell;
but having got a site, a statute, and about £20,000, they had the honor
of commencing it.
Two edifices were begun tbis year, of respectable beauty. Our
episcopalians used to be so few that their two principal congregations
met, the one in a humble place at the west end of Rose Street, the other
in a chapel which, though handsome and spacious when got at, was buried
in an inaccessible close on the south side of the Canongate. Indeed it
was only within a few years before that this sect had got some of the
legal vexations which had clouded it removed. They now raised their
heads and growing in numbers, and in aristocracy, erected their new
chapels at the west end of Princes Street, and at the east end of York
Place. The ambition of architecture has since begun to infect the
presbyterian seceders.
Archibald Alison, the author of the Essays on Taste, was then the most
distinguished of the episcopalian clergy of Edinburgh and, so far as I
know, of Scotland. A most excellent and agreeable man; richly imbued
with literature ; a great associate of Dugald Stewart, Playfair, Dr.
Gregory, Jeffrey, Francis Horner, and all the eminent among us;
delightful in society • and, in truth, without a single defect except
the amiable one of too soft a manner. As a preacher he was a consummate
artist, in his own peculiar line of feeling and impressive elegance. His
voice was clear and sweet, his taste very refined, and his air and
gesture very polite. It was the poetry of preaching. The prevailing
defect was that it was all too exquisite. The composition, the
sentiments, the articulation, and the look were in too uniform a strain
of purity and feeling. To the hearer, cloyed by a system of studied
perfection, artlessness, though leading to some carelessness or even
coarseness, would have been a relief. Notwithstanding this deduction,
however, from the effect of exertions which always derive their greatest
charm from simplicity, it was impossible to hear Alison preach without
being moved and delighted. Even at this distance of time, his discourses
during the occasional fasts and thanksgivings throughout the war, the
whole of which I heard, still thrill in my ear and my heart. He was
almost the only preacher I have ever known who habitually made the
appearances of external nature, and the kindred associations,
subservient to the uses of the pulpit. This copious and skilful
application of the finest, and most generally understood, elements of
taste was one great cause of his peculiar success; and, managed with
judgment, sensibility, and grace, it explained how those who sometimes
entered his chapel determined to dislike his excess of art, rarely left
it without being subdued by the beauty and impressiveness of his
eloquence.
The year 1816 closed bitterly for the poor. There probably never were so
many people destitute at one time in Edinburgh. The distress was less in
severity than in 1797; but the population having-increased, it was
greater in extent. Some permanent good was obtained from the labour of
the relieved. Bruntsfield Links were cleared of whins, and of old
quarries; walks were made, for the first time, on the Calton Hill; and a
path was cleared along the base of the perpendicular cliff of Salisbury
Crags. Until then these two noble terraces were enjoyable only by the
young and the active.
This walk along the Crags was the first thing that let the people see
what we were in imminent danger of losing by the barbarous and wasteful
demolition of the rock, which had been proceeding unchecked for nearly
thirty years. When I first scrambled to that cliff, which must have been
about 1788, the path along its base was certainly not six feet wide, and
in some places there was no regular path at all. By 1816 the cliff had
been so quarried away that what used to be the footpath was, in many
places, at least 100 feet wide; and if this work had been allowed to go
on for a few years more, the whole face of the rock would have
disappeared. This would have implied the obliteration of some of the
strata which all Edinburgh ought to have revered as Hutton’s local
evidence of the Theory of the Earth, and one of the most peculiar
features of our scenery. The guilty would have been—first, the
Hereditary Keeper of the Park, who made money of the devastation by
selling the stones; secondly, the Town Council and tlie Road Trustees,
who bought them; thirdly, the Crown and its local officers, who did not
check the atrocity. Of these the Crown was the lea*st criminal. It did
interfere at last; and it was reserved for Henry Brougham, who had often
clambered among these glorious rocks as a boy, to pronounce as
Chancellor the judgment which finally saved a remnant of them.
The change which was taking place in the character of our population was
now evinced by an occurrence which was remarkable both as an effect, and
as a cause. The first number of u The Scotsman” newspaper was published
in January 1817. The incalculable importance of this event can only be
understood by those who recollect that shortly before this the newspaper
press of Edinburgh, though not as much fettered as in St. Petersburgh
(as it has been said to have been), was at least in as fettered a
condition as any press that is legally free could be. Most candid men
who knew Scotland before the peace of 1814 will probably agree, that if
the most respectable and unprosecuted London opposition newspaper had
been published in Edinburgh, the editor would have been better
acquainted with the Court of Justiciary than he would have found
comfortable. The undisturbed continuance of the Edinburgh Review would
be inconsistent with this statement, were it not that there is no
analogy between a work of which the politics are dignified by general
literature, and which only appears quarterly, at the price of five
shillings, and the provocations of a cheap and purely political and
generally accusative publication, tormenting every week or every day.
When Major Cartwright, the itinerant reformer, lectured here about 1812,
he was attended by considerable audiences; yet because he preached the
doctrines of universal suffrage, and annual parliaments, no editor of
any Edinburgh newspaper, though offered to be paid as for an
advertisement, and one of them a hearer of the discourses, had courage
to allow any account whatever of the lectures to appear in his paper.
The editor who attended them told me that, though he differed from the
lecturer, what he said was a good and perfectly lawful defence of the
doctrines, and that he would have liked to have published their
substance, but that he could not ruin his paper. He felt, and explained,
that the bare exposition of such reforms would hurt the mere reporter.
The appearance therefore of a respectable opposition newspaper was
hailed, and condemned, according to people’s tastes: but they all saw in
it a sign. Though only published once a week, and taking only literary
advertisements, it soon attained a large circulation. It is now
flourishing in a vigorous manhood, immeasurably the best newspaper that
exists, or lias ever existed, in Scotland. Its only defect has been
heaviness; a defect, however, inseparable from provincial locality,
particularly in Scotland, where the people are grave, and too far out of
the world to acquire smartness and tact. The original projectors of this
the first Scotch newspaper which combined independence with
intelligence, and moderation with zeal, were Charles Maclaren, who has
since distinguished himself in science, William Ritchie, solicitor, and
John Robertson, bookseller. Its earliest conductors were Ritchie and
Maclaren, and John Ramsay Macculloch, now chiefly celebrated as a
political economist, the principles of which science he has examined and
disseminated with a talent and success that will make his career an era
in its history. They were all able men, and honest in the public cause,
the greatest virtue the conductors of a newspaper can possess. Ritchie
was bold and zealous, and a very respectable legal practitioner. He
died, after a tedious illness, a short time after the news of the first
accession of the Whigs to real power in 1830 reached Edinburgh, when his
last political act consisted in raising himself in bed on his elbow, and
giving a feeble cheer.
Nobody was enjoying the progress of sound opinions in Scotland more than
Francis Horner. But alas! our forebodings were realized; and the gaiety
of the Outer House was stilled by our learning, one day this spring,
that on the 8th of February 1817 he had died in Italy. Every virtuous
heart was covered with mourning. We did not think so much of his loss to
the empire as to Scotland and ourselves. Acquainted with all our
circumstances, and ambitious of nothing so much as the elevation of his
native country, he would have brought to the discussion of all the vital
questions that were about to arise talents which, already great, were
steadily improving, and a character that made him almost the
representative of virtue itself. In this his native city, the sorrow for
his family, to whom it was an honor to bear his name, and for the
premature extinction of his own prospects, was deep and nearly
universal. The last time I saw him was about the end of September 1816.
It was at Dryden near Roslin, where his father was then residing.
Rutherfurd0 and I had gone to visit him. He was very ill, breathless,
and weak. Removing for the winter into milder air had been resolved on ;
but we both feared it was too late. He walked out a little with us.
Never can I forget the fading avenue, and the autumnal day, in which we
parted from him, as we foreboded never to meet again.
The valuable and peculiar light in which Homer stands out—the light in
which his history is calculated to inspire every right-minded youth, is
this. He died at the age of thirty-eight; possessed of greater public
influence than any other private man* and admired, beloved, trusted, and
deplored by all except the heartless or the base. No greater homage was
ever paid in Parliament to any deceased member. Now let every young man
ask—how was this attained? By rank? He was the son of an Edinburgh
merchant. By wealth? Neither he, nor any of his relations, ever had a
superfluous sixpence. By office? He held but one, and only for a few
years, of no influence and with very little pay. By talents? His were
not splendid, and he had no genius. Cautious and slow, his only ambition
was to be right. By eloquence? He spoke in calm good taste, without any
of the oratory that either terrifies or seduces. By any fascination of
manner? His was only correct and agreeable. By what then was it? Merely
by sense, industry, good principles, and a good heart—qualities, which
no well-constituted mind need ever despair of attaining. It was the
force of his character that raised him; and this character not impressed
upon him by nature, but formed, out of no peculiarly fine elements, by
himself. There were many in the House of Commons of far greater ability
and eloquence. But no one surpassed him in the combination of an
adequate portion of these with moral worth. Horner was born to shew what
moderate powers unaided by anything whatever except culture and goodness
may achieve, even when these powers are displayed amidst the competition
and jealousy of public life.
Considering what Blackwood’s Magazine soon became, it seems strange that
a just memoir of Horner, and by Dr. Gordon, should have been the first
article of its first number. The rise of this publication forms another
important mark in our local story.
Our only monthly periodical work was the dotard Scots Magazine, which
now lived, or rather tried to live, upon its antiquity alone. Constable
imprudently broke its last spell by changing its title and structure,
which gave Mr. William Blackwood, an active bookseller, an opening for a
new adventure; though probably he had no anticipations beyond those of
an ordinary magazine of ordinary success. But it soon became, in its
politics, a work of violent personality and it was to this, far more
than even to its unquestionable talent and spirited writing, that its
influence, at least for a long time, was owing.
There was a natural demand for libel at this period. The human mind had
made a great advance, and the pressure of war being removed, new
opinions were coming everywhere into collision with old ones; so that
there was a general shock between those who wished to perpetuate old
systems, and those who wished to destroy or reform them. Even in Greece,
Italy, Spain, South America, and various other parts of the world, a
movement of intellect, or of discontent, produced open war between
bigotry and liberality. In Britain, where open violence was checked by
the strength of the law, it engendered fiercer conflicts of parties than
had been known, except near revolutions. Now a war of opinion is a
condition of which libel is one of the natural products.
Edinburgh was peculiarly ripe for the use of this weapon, because there
was no place where the contrast between the new and the old internal
systems was so strong. The whole official power of Government was on one
side, nearly the whole talent and popularity on the other ; and the
principles espoused by each admitted of no. reconciliation. The Tories
could boast of some adherents of talent, and of many of great worth, but
their political influence now depended almost entirely on office. With
the exception of Scott, I cannot recollect almost a single individual
taking at this time a charge of public opinion, and of personal weight,
who was not a Whig. In opposition to this official authority, which in
itself is seldom deeply seated, and is always disliked, there was
arrayed almost the whole body of our local talent and independence
cordially united. The Whigs, condemned no longer to cherish their
principles in silence, finding public spirit revive, assumed the lead,
and their standard was followed by a host consisting of all those who
felt themselves raised into something like a region of freedom. They
came forth from despised dissenting congregations, from half liberated
corporations, from shops, from the law, and, which was a better sign of
the current, even from medicine, and, which was the best symptom of all,
from the aristocracy of the lower orders. All these, aided by the
emancipated in the shires, soon became accustomed, as if it was a part
of the necessary order of things, to see official power against them,
and moral influence in their favor.
In this situation, when the popular cause had got "the Scotsman" it was
natural for the opposite cause to set up its magazine; and, in the
circumstances, a certain degree of personality was only to be expected.
The fault of the new organ lay in its excess; which was the more
offensive from our being then so little accustomed to it, and the
smallness of the society into which the firebrands were cast. This is
alluded to in the u Nodes Ambrosiana?” in speaking of the Beacon
newspaper. u A Beacon! Gude pity us! etc. Though your Antijacobins, and
John Bulls, and Twopenny Post-Bags, and sae on, do very weel in the
great Babel of Lunnun, the like o’ thae things are quite heterogeneous
in this small atmosphere of the Edinbro’ meridian. The folk here canna
thole’t.”0 Posterity can never be made to feel the surprise and just
offence with which, till we were hardened to it, this work was received.
The minute circumstances which impart freshness to slander soon
evaporate; and the arrows that fester in living reputations and in
beating hearts are pointless, or invisible, to the eyes of those who
search for them afterwards as curiosities. The favourite calumny was
founded on charges of irreligion. Such charges, however false, are
always favourably received by a large portion of the public, even though
proceeding from persons of whom laughter at religion, and clever
parodies of Scripture, are notoriously the favourite pastimes.')' No
wonder then that divisions j* The bookseller and Pringle soon quarrelled;
and, the Magazine assuming, on the retirement of the latter, a high Tory
character, Laidlaw’s Whig feelings induced him to renounce its alliance
; while Scott, having no kindness for Blackwood personally, and
disapproving (though he chuckled over it) the reckless extravagance of
juvenile satire, which, by and by, distinguished this journal, appears
in our narrow society which all reasonable men had practically agreed to
close were re-opened, and much of the ferocity of 1793 revived.
This vice of offensive personality, which was flagrant at first, is the
more to be lamented, that in talent and originality this magazine has
been, and is, the best that has been published in its day in Britain. It
has been supported by a continued succession of able men, who have
covered it with contributions of great and inventive power; and,
avoiding the lethargy which seems the constitutional malady of prolonged
magazines, its thinking and writing have always been spirited. Its
literary compositions and criticisms have generally been excellent. But
it was set up chiefly as a political work; and in this department it has
adhered with respectable constancy to all the follies it was meant to
defend. It is a great depository of exploded principles; and indeed it
will soon be valuable as a museum of old errors.
to have easily acquiesced iu the propriety of Laidlaw’s determination
(Lockhart’s Life of Scott, vol. IV. p. 65). A chuckle from Scott, in the
blaze of his reputation, was all that young men needed to instigate
them. In another passage Mr. Lockhart describes these monthly attacks as
“those grotesque jeux d'esprit by which, at this period, Blackwood’s
young Tory wags delighted to assail their elders and betters of the Whig
persuasion” (vol. IV. p. 109). Deducting gloss, this means that
respectable characters were wilfully and systematically slandered, but
that it was funnily done; which was not always the case, for it was
often with bitter gravity.
It was long enlivened by the "Nodes Ambrosiance,” a series of scenes
supposed to have occurred in a tavern in Register Street kept by one
Ambrose. And no periodical publication that I know of can boast of so
extraordinary a series of jovial dramatic fiction. Wilson, I believe,
now professes to regret and condemn many things in these papers, and to
deny his authorship of them but substantially they are all his. I have
not the slightest doubt that he wrote at least ninety per cent of them.
I wish no man had anything worse to be timid about. There is not so
curious and original a work in the English or Scotch languages. It is a
most singular and delightful outpouring of criticism, politics, and
descriptions of feeling, character, and scenery, of verse and prose, and
maudlin eloquence, and especially of wild fun. It breathes the very
essence of the Bacchanalian revel of clever men. And its Scotch is the
best Scotch that has been written in modem times. I am really sorry for
the poor one-tongued Englishman, by whom, because the Ettrick Shepherd
uses the sweetest and most expressive of living languages, the homely
humour, the sensibility, the descriptive power, the eloquence, and the
strong joyous hilarity of that animated rustic can never be felt. The
characters are all well drawn, and well sustained, except that of the
Opium Eater, who is heavy and prosy: but this is perhaps natural to
opium. Few efforts could be more difficult than to keep up the bounding
spirit of fresh boyish gaiety which is constantly made to break out
amidst the serious discussions of these tavern philosophers and
patriots. After all just deductions, these Nodes are bright with genius.
It was a matter of course, that as soon as the country began to awaken,
the great question of Burgh Reform should be revived. Those who were
bent on this object had the advantage of having to deal with a single
and clear evil, capable of being removed only in one way. By the
constitution of all the Royal Burghs in Scotland (above GO in number)
each town-council elected its successor; which in practice meant that
they all elected themselves. The system of self-election was universal,
and very jealously adhered to. The effect of this system in depressing
the civic communities, and encouraging municipal abuse, could not be
exaggerated. Hence it was one of the earliest of the constitutional
vices which public-spirited men saw the necessity of attacking, when the
era for political reform began to dawn. The subject had been keenly
agitated, but with little hope of success and no general support, so far
back as 1785. But as the town-councils were the only electors of our
city representation in Parliament, and these bodies were easily kept in
ministerial order by simple, direct, and scarcely concealed bribery,
their unchanged continuance was defended as obstinately as the
drawbridge of the castle. Yet I consider it as a fact that, with the
burgh reformers, the improvement of our parliamentary representation, if
an object at all, was infinitely less so than the improvement of the
system by which our municipal affairs were managed. When the struggle
began, and for many years afterwards, the reformers would have been
content with such a relaxation of the existing system, as would have
kept the political power of the Tory party nearly as safe as it was
under self-election. But concession was withheld till a triumph on the
opposite side made it useless. Meanwhile the collateral effect of the
contest, in provoking the citizens into a spirit of independence, was
far more useful than the attainment of their merely burgh objects eould
have been. Government thought that the subject had been forgotten. But
the hopelessness of prosecuting any civil struggle while the war lasted
had only kept it in abeyance. The fire was not out. Its ashes lay
smouldering; and protracted abuses only blew them up the more fiercely
when they came to be stirred. The battle lasted several years after
this, and its movements became complicated; but, generally, its progress
was this.—
The election of the magistracy of Montrose became void from a failure to
comply with the Set, or constitution, of the burgh. On this the Crown
revived the magistracy by a Poll warrant—that is, a warrant to elect
addressed to the burgesses at large: The effect was the creation of a
town council with a taste for some independence. Other burghs instantly
saw that this was a precedent which might, be followed, wherever legal
ingenuity could detect a flaw in the rather nice and technical mysteries
of a town council election; and that an independent magistracy being
once formed, self-election might enable it to be perpetuated.
Government, however, soon repudiated the example which it had been
misled to rear up, and would grant no more poll warrants; but fell on
the scheme of repairing lapsed councils by warrants addressed to the
members of the council who had been last duly elected. It got well
abused by the Whigs for its retreat, but far better by the Tories for
its advance.
In order to try whether the Crown would persist in always restoring the
old magistracies, several complaints of undue election were brought into
the Court of Session. One of these, directed against the town council of
Edinburgh, made a great noise. Only two of them, from Aberdeen and
Inverness, succeeded; and in both cases the Crown adhered to its
principle. This raised a crop of new legal proceedings; first, by
burgesses, who challenged the Crown’s right to grant any other than poll
warrants, and then by the Officers of State who challenged its right to
grant these. It is needless to trace the progress of this mass of
litigation. It produced a good deal of legal learning and investigation,
great public excitement, and veiy little legal result. The Court of
Session was not supposed to have gained credit under the discussions.
Instead of applying a severer candour, and a more strictly judicial
calmness, to questions plainly involving party passions and objects, it
was allowed to transpire too obviously, through the tone and manner of
most of the judges, that they were neither ignorant of the objects of
the litigants, nor indifferent about the results. Judges cannot be made
of ice or wood, and it is not their duty to extinguish, even if they
could, all their public principles. Some allowance, therefore, ought to
be made for disclosures of feeling which it is so difficult to resist,
and the sensitive jealousy of suitors, and their professional champions,
is always to be distrusted. Still, inflexible fairness being the most
necessary of all the judicial duties, every incident that attests its
absence is most properly watched and denounced. Public officers, who are
trained and honoured for the practice of impartiality, have infinitely
less excuse than other men for tolerating objects or passions within
their breasts, which either are, or must be supposed to be, inconsistent
with the power of holding the scales of justice steadily.
While these matters were agitating the courts, Lord Archibald Hamilton,
one of the very few active and independent Scotch members, succeeded (by
a miracle) in obtaining a committee on our burgh system. Loud were the
rejoicings on the one side, and sad the dismay on the other, when the
tidings of this scarcely credible vote reached Scotland. Edinburgh
seemed to have wakened into a new existence, when its civic
functionaries were obliged to repair to London, and to open the windows
of the council chamber, and let in the light. The affairs of four burghs
were investigated; and it was held to be clearly proved that these four
were bankrupt, and that this had been the result of municipal
mismanagement. In the case of Aberdeen this was publicly admitted by the
magistrates in a formal act of abdication. These disclosures, instead of
convincing Government of the absolute necessity of proceeding, in one
way or other, through the whole burghs, unfortunately convinced it of
the very reverse. The results were that the inquiry was suddenly
quashed, that the legal proceedings died away, and that the people were
thus compelled to return to their old bondage. But the evil day of
reform was only put off, with a deeper accumulation of abuses, till the
arrival of a more favourable hour.
No single folly ever opened so many Scotch eyes. The minister who had
had the sense to do anything merely to check municipal expenditure, or
to concede to corporations the valuable, but for remoter objects the
perfectly insignificant, privilege of electing their own deacons in
reality, and not in form only, might have retarded the regeneration of
Scotland. But the course adopted first excited the hopes, and then the
indignation of the people. It began by disclosing the trustlessness of
town councils, and ended by hardening them in their protected abuse of
power. However, it worked to good. It reared a generation of intelligent
and active citizens, who were trained by the struggle to political
concert.
It is impossible to think of burgh1 reform without remembering Archibald
Fletcher, advocate, its stoutest and most indefatigable champion. He
gave his whole energies to it in the dawn of its agitation; and its
revival after a thirty years’ slumber, though it found his body old and
infirm found no abatement of his spirit. Even in the extremity of old
age he compiled a volume of tracts in furtherance of his favourite
cause, the renewal of which, in spite of what appeared to others to be
its unavoidable dulness of detail, he declared u had revived his youth,
who had openly practised their calling since 1793-4, ventured to begin
business again; not in Scotland, where transportation was still the law,
but in England, which they greatly disturbed. It is usual to ascribe all
that followed to the harangues of these crazy orators. But demagogues
are almost always effects ; very rarely causes. They are the froth that
rises and bubbles on the surface, when the mass of the people ferments.
The sedition of opinion moreover was promoted by the sedition of the
stomach. The country was in deep distress; and natural dearth was
aggravated by the artificial arrangements of trade and manufactures,
which operated like what miners call troubles, in the transition from
war to peace.
It was in these circumstances that certain judicial proceedings were
taken in Scotland against several persons accused of sedition,0 and of
having taken and administered unlawful oaths. These proceedings created
an intense interest both in Parliament and in the country, and are well
worthy of being studied in all their details. The general story of the
unlawful oaths case is this.—
There was a weaver in Glasgow called Alexander Richmond. Jeffrey and I
had got acquainted with him in 1812, from having been his counsel when
he was accused of accession to the most extensive and peaceful
combination of workmen that had ever appeared in this part of the
kingdom; the organization and management of which was better evidence of
his talent and influence than many men of high political station could
have produced. Knowing the temper of the Court in these matters, we
advised him to submit to outlawry; whereby he escaped the outrageous
sentence which doomed some of his companions to eighteen months’
imprisonment. When the irritation was over he reappeared and pleaded
guilty; and after proving that he was in very bad health, and getting a
great character, even from his former masters, he was only imprisoned
about a of at once taking up the clean one, he stopped, and grumphed,
and looked at the one, and then at the other, always turning with
aversion from the dirty one ; and then he approached the other
resolutely, as if his mind was made up; but at last he turned away from
it, saying fiercely, “No! Fll be d d if I put on a clean sark for them.”
Accordingly he insulted their Lordships by going to Court with the foul
one. Not like Falkland.
His gentleness and air of melancholy thoughtfulness made us believe him
to be a heartbroken contemplative man, who had formed the association,
and then let himself be its victim, solely from devotion to what he held
to be the rights of his comrades. We felt so interested in him, that we
gave, and got for, him a little money to set up in business, and then
we: lost sight of him for some years; when to our amazement we heard him
charged with having been recently acting as a Government spy.
In 1824 he published a curious u Narrative” of his connection with the
authorities, and with the troubles, in Glasgow; chiefly with a view to
vindicate his character. This was rather a delicate effort, partly
because it implied his disclosing communications which he must have
known were confidential; and partly because he had to meet the
inconvenient fact of his having received considerable sums, and more
considerable promises, from Government—not for his spyship, which both
he and his employers denied, but as a compensation for his being thrown
out of work, by being obliged to leave Glasgow. His "Narrative” may not
be vitiated by purposed falsehood; but though there is a general
foundation of truth in it, the details of no such statement can ever be
relied upon when they depend entirely on the authority of the narrator.
His being implicated and paid for wliat looked too like spy’s work,
greatly shook our faith in him ; but still the peculiar circumstances in
which he had let himself be placed in that position, and our conviction
of his benevolence, prevented us casting him off.
The way he was drawn in, according to his own account, was this.
Government, or its Glasgow representatives, suspecting that illegal
oaths were administered there, resorted to Richmond as a person who
could best ascertain whether this was the fact. His statement has
uniformly been that his love of his old associates made him anxious, on
their account, and to save them from deeper guilt, to find out what they
were really doing; but that as he was aware that his appearance among
them might make them think such oaths safe, his employers came under a
positive engagement with him, that no one should be prosecuted who might
administer or take an oath in his presence on the only occasion on which
he meant to go among them. This engagement was denied; and though there
are facts which make its having been entered into not improbable, the
presumption is certainly against him, chiefly from the apparent
absurdity and illegality of the bargain. However, he soon ascertained
that the crime had been committed, and reported accordingly; but whether
the exact words of the unlawful oath were brought away I do not know.
A copy of what was supposed to be the oath having been obtained, it
seems to have been impossible to resist the temptation of producing an
impression by reading it in the House of Commons. And doubts being
expressed of the accuracy of the information, the Lord Advocate was
cheered by his party into the rashness of pledging himself to prove its
accuracy by speedy convictions. Accordingly, several persons were
apprehended on warrants charging them with high treason; which, as the
law was then generally understood, had the effect of depriving them of
the benefit of the Act 1701. The prisoners, instead of being committed
to an ordinary jail, were taken to the Castle of Edinburgh, where access
to them was made nearly impossible. All the while, however, there was no
serious intention of trying them for high treason; and hence though this
charge was always kept up in the warrants, it never entered any of the
many indictments.
As it was certain that there would be a series of trials if one should
succeed, and the whole affair, whatever the guilt might be, was thought
to be conducted with far too high a hand, the counsel employed for the
different prisoners acted in concert at all the material moves. This
made an array of counsel not usual in Scotland, consisting of Clerk,
Cranstoun, Thomas Thomson, Jeffrey, John Peter Grant, Moncreiff, Murray,
and myself. Many were tlie sneers by the prosecutors, and even by some
of the judges, at this confederacy. Hermand often snorted with open
contempt at what he called u the combination of learned gentlemen.” To
all which the combiners used to say that they trusted that the Bar of
Scotland would always supply any force that the defence of political
prisoners, with the Crown against them, might require.
When the first prisoner, William Edgar, was placed at the bar, the
prosecutor seemed to expect an easy conviction that very day. But the
advisers of the prisoners, believing Time to be the surest composer of
violence, resolved to procrastinate as much as they could; and their
opponents supplied them with ample materials for preliminary discussion
and delay. This produced a long and memorable struggle, in which the
prosecutor was so often baffled, that Mr. Finlay the member for Glasgow,
a ministerialist, and who was in the heart of the whole affair, made a
direct charge of incapacity against the Crown counsel in the House of
Commons. At last, after above three months had been wasted in changing
and mending indictments, and in verbal and printed argumentation, one
prisoner, Andrew McKinley, was actually brought to trial on the facts.
But the trial had scarcely begun when something more extraordinary
transpired. The first witness, John Campbell, on being asked the absurd
initial question then put to every witness in criminal trials —whether
he had received or been promised anything for giving evidence, said that
he had. On being asked by whom? He answered, "By that
gentleman”—pointing to the Advocate-depute. The audience seemed to start
at this statement, and were then anxiously silent. The judges frowned on
the man as if they would have eaten him on the spot. His statement was
taken down in writing, and is to be found in the Reports of the Trial.
If the witness is to he believed, it is difficult to avoid the
conclusion that there had been an attempt to corrupt. For the substance
of his statement is, that besides merely protecting a witness on the
unpopular side from personal harm, a reward was promised, or held out,
provided he would give evidence of a particular tendency; and the real
meaning of what was proposed was such, that the sheriff, who was there
as a magistrate bound to see justice done, would not allow it to be set
down in writing. No witness ever gave his testimony in a manner more
entitled to credit. Calm, clear, and unexaggerating, he went into all
the details with precision and apparent probability, and often suggested
minute but material corrections to the presiding judge, as he was
dictating to the clerk of Court and I am not aware that there ever
was a surmise against his general character.
When the deposition was adjusted, every body looked as if
thinking—“What’s to come next?” Hermand at once cut the knot by
suggesting that, if what had been sworn was true, the witness was
inadmissible, an attempt having been made to corrupt him; and if it was
false, then he was inadmissible from being perjured; so he was
inadmissible either way. This conclusion was evidently not warranted by
law; because not having been convicted of perjury, his mis-statements
only went to impeach his credit; and if he was trying to disqualify
himself, the prosecutor was entitled to disprove what he had said. But
the court at once adopted a view which closed a very painful scene. So
the witness was allowed to walk away.
If the accusation had depended solely on Campbell, it might have been
fairly said that his single testimony was insufficient to criminate high
public officers. But it did not depend on him alone. The gentlemen
accused did, or allowed to be done for them, three things which it was
difficult to reconcile with the idea of their being conscious of
innocence. One was, their not strenuously resisting the Court in
excluding further inquiry. The prisoner put on record an offer to
corroborate the witness. The prosecutor put on record an answer
professing his anxiety that this matter should be gone into. But though
this looks very well in the report, it was seen, and felt, and
understood at the time that the saving process of the Court, instead of
being heartily opposed, was virtually acceded to. Another, and a far
more material, blunder was, that when a motion was made in Parliament
(10th February 1818) for a committee to inquire into the truth of
Campbell’s statement, it was resisted, and by the aid of Government
thrown out. The only ground on which this insane course (innocence being
assumed) was explained, rested on the assertion that Campbell, who must
have been the chief witness, was perjured already. Yet they completed
their folly by a third apparent inconsistency with conscious rectitude.
Campbell’s perjury was their main point; yet he was never indicted for
this offence, although they were goaded to bring him to trial. If he had
been put to the bar, his evidence would have been excluded, while that
of the Solicitor-General, the Advocate-depute, the Sheriff of Edinburgh,
and the Procurator-fiscal, who were the persons mentioned by Campbell,
might have been received.* But no indictment was ever adventured upon.
They may have been innocent. But if they were, they were surely not
wise. And if they only meant to protect the witness, which is sometimes
necessary, this, as usual, ought to have been done openly, and both the
prisoner and the Court ought to have been told of it.
Richmond in his "Narrative” assumes that the prisoner’s counsel knew
what Campbell was going to say, and compliments them for acting surprise
well. There was no acting in the matter. Campbell had been locked up,
inaccessibly, in the Castle; and seeing an acquaintance passing threw a
bit of tobacco to him from his window. His friend picked this up; and
finding that it contained a piece of dirty paper with something written
on it, took the paper to Mr. David Eamsay, a most respectable writer to
the Signet, who had all along been agent for most of these prisoners.
The bit of paper merely stated the general fact that Campbell had been
tampered with by the authorities, without mentioning how, or by whom.
Mr. Ramsay of course informed his counsel of this; but they, having no
means of questioning the witness, who was sealed up, and distrusting the
statement, resolved to do nothing, but to let things take their own
course.
Campbell being disposed of, the trial proceeded; and it was very soon
established that illegal oaths had been administered, and, in all human
probability, by the prisoner, But the truth of the particular charge was
by no means so clear. This depended on the exact words used. A very
slight change of expression could easily soften the character of the
oath into mere rashness, or doubt, or even innocence, or aggravate it
into worse guilt than that charged. Jeffrey and Thomas Brown, our Moral
Professor—two of the acutest of men, used to amuse themselves by trying
how many different constructions they could put on the words, and by how
few and how slender variations of expression they could make it all
harmless. Now, when the prosecutor examined the witnesses he chiefly
relied on for the precise terms, it came out that they had seen an oath
in the newspapers which was said to have been quoted in the House of
Commons, that this was like the one they had been privy to, but that
they could not separate their recollection of what they had seen, from
their recollection of what they had heard; so that they could not tell
whether in giving evidence, they were doing more than reciting from the
newspaper. On this the prosecutor struck.
The prison and castle gates were instantly opened, and all the kindred
prisoners walked forth. And so ended this long, tough, and important
conflict. The trial was over about nine in the evening of a bright
summer Saturday. I instantly walked out to Bonaly, with a light step,
and in an agitation of triumph. This was partly the produce of
professional vanity, a passion stronger in the law than in the army or
navy, or even in medicine or the church, and inferior only to that of
verse, art, and the theatre. But there was also some feeling of justice
in it. We were not satisfied of the prisoner’s guilt in the precise
matter charged, and were certain that his guilt had not been
established; and there had been strange circumstances in the conduct of
the prosecution, which was connected with the general system of a justly
unpopular Government.
Shortly after this we were thrown into an uproar by a point of
Calvinistic orthodoxy. Moved by the sad and unexpected death of the
Princess Charlotte, which had melted all hearts, every clergyman in
Edinburgh, except one, following the universal example, had religious
service in his church on the 19th of November 1817, the day of her
funeral, which was what we call a iveek-day—that is, not a Sunday. This,
in Scotland, was not in obedience to the Royal proclamation, which we
sons of Calvin always despise, but solely from natural decency and
piety. Addressing their flocks on such an occasion, of course they all
introduced the poor Princess, her virtues and her fate; and this in most
cases probably amounted to a funeral sermon. But the Reverend Andrew
Thomson maintained that all such sermons are repugnant to the
presbyterian system, and dangerous in themselves from their tendency to
degenerate into sycophantish eulogy: and perhaps he was right in this.
But most clearly he was wrong in bringing discredit on his party, by
being the only minister who shocked the universal feeling by acting on
this principle on this occasion. Several of his brethren entreated him
to yield. Sir Harry in particular remonstrated and implored. But a
useless personal battle, in which his will was on one side and all the
world on the other, had always irresistible charms to Thomson. So he
stood out; and while crowds rolled into every other church, the gates of
his were closed, and he himself was made happy by being universally
abused. On the following Sunday he preached on death, and alluded to the
recent calamity, in a manner that disarmed those that heard him ; and
for the edification of those who did not, he published a pamphlet,
demonstrating that everybody was wrong except himself. Possibly they
were : but it seems odd how notices of striking deaths, which is so
common on Sundays, and was so even in Thomson s own practice, should be
so bad on every other day. |