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Significant Scots
John Row |
ROW, JOHN, a celebrated divine, was descended of a family
of some note for the part they had borne in the ecclesiastical history of
their country. His grandfather, John Row, had gone abroad in early youth,
and the fame of his talents and learning having reached the Vatican, he was
in 1559, selected by the Pope as an emissary to watch over the dawning
reformation in Scotland. But, in a short time after his return to his native
country, he embraced the principles of the reformed religion, and advocated
them with much zeal and ability. He was in 1560, appointed minister of
Perth, and from that time enjoyed considerable influence in the councils of
the reformed clergy, sharing the friendship of Knox, and other distinguished
men of that age. His eldest son was for fifty-two years minister of Carnock
in Fife, and died at the advanced age of seventy-eight. He was partly author
of "The Historie of the Kirk of Scotland from the year 1558, to August in
Anno 1637, written by Mr John Row, late minister at Carnock, in the province
of Fife and presbyterie of Dunfermline." This is preserved in MS. in the
Advocates’ library, and has been pronounced by one well fitted to judge, "a
very valuable but rather prolix work." The date of the birth of John Row,
his second son, the subject of the present memoir has not been preserved,
but it may be referred to the latter years of the sixteenth, or more
probably to the beginning of the seventeenth century. [The learned editor of
"Memorials of the Family of Row," (a work to which we are indebted for much
of the information given in the following memoir) erroneously calls John Row
the eldest son of his father.] At a very early period of life he was
appointed rector of the grammar school at Perth, and for many years
discharged that office with much reputation. He was the first Hebrew scholar
of that day, an accomplishment which seems to have been hereditary in the
family; his father, it is reported, having "discovered some genius for
Hebrew when he was only a child of four or five years old," and his
grandfather having been, it is said, the first who publicly taught Hebrew in
Scotland. While rector of the Perth school, Row composed his "Hebreae
Linguae Institutiones Compendiosissimae et facillimae in Discipulorum
gratiam primum concinnatae," which was published at Glasgow in 1644. This
work was dedicated to lord chancellor Hay of Kinnoul, to whom he expresses
himself obliged for benefits conferred on his father, and for having
procured himself the situation he held. After the fashion of the day, the
book was prefaced by several commendatory verses, and of these some are from
the pen of the celebrated Alexander Henderson, Samuel Rutherford and John
Adamson. The work also bore the record of the unanimous approbation of the
faculty of the college of St Leonard in the university of St Andrews. Three
years previous to the publication of the "Hebreae Linguae Institutiones" Row
was by the influence of the famous Andrew Cant appointed one of the
ministers of Aberdeen. In 1643, he published a Vocabulary of the Hebrew
language, which he dedicated to his new patrons, the town council of
Aberdeen. This mark of respect was rewarded by the following ordinance of
that body: "20th September, 1643, the counsell considering the panes taken
be Mr John Row in teaching the Hebrew tongue, and for setting forth ane
Hebrew dictionar, and dedicating the same to the counsell, ordanes the
thesaurar to delivar to the said Mr John Row for his paines four hundreth
merk Scotts money." [Council Register of Aberdeen, vol. iii. p. 771.] In his
office of minister of Aberdeen, Row supported the principles of his
coadjutor Andrew Cant, and was with him highly obnoxious to the more
moderate party of the presbyterians, and to those who still favoured
episcopacy. The amusing annalist Spalding, who attended his prelections,
loses no opportunity of holding him up to ridicule or detestation; and
language seems sometimes to fail him for the expression of his horror at
Row’s innovations. "One of the town’s officers," he relates, "caused bring a
bairn to the lecture lesson, where Mr John Row had taught, to be baptized;
but because this bairn was not brought to him when he was baptizing some
other bairns, he would not give baptism; whereupon the simple man was forced
to bring back this child unbaptized. The wife lying in child-bed, hearing
the child was not baptized, was so angry, that she turned her face to
the wall, and deceased immediately through plain displeasure, and the bairn
also ere the morn; and the mother, and her bairn in her oxter, were both
buried together. Lamentable to see," writes the indignant chronicler,
"how the people are thus abused!" In 1644, Row was chosen moderator
of the provincial assembly at Aberdeen; and the next year, on the approach
of Montrose at the head of the royalist forces, he, with Cant and other
"prime covenanters," sought refuge with the earl Marischal in the castle of
Dunottar. In 1649, the Scottish parliament appointed a committee to
remonstrate against the contemplated murder of Charles I., and Row was one
of six clergymen nominated to act with the committee. In 1651, a commission,
consisting of five colonels from the army of Monk, visited the king’s
college of Aberdeen, and, among other acts, deposed the principal, Dr Guild;
and the next year, Row was chosen his successor. He seems to have filled the
principal’s chair with much credit; he maintained strict discipline, and
added to the buildings of the college, while his own learning extended the
reputation of the university. On the 8th October, 1656, being a day
appointed for a public thanksgiving, he preached in Westminster abbey before
the parliament, and his sermon was afterwards printed by their orders, under
the title of "Man’s Duty in magnifying God’s Work." On the Restoration,
principal Row lost no time in paying his court to the new authorities. In
1660, he published at Aberdeen, a work which was laudatory of the king, and
abusive of Cromwell, who is styled "Trux vilis vermes," being the anagram of
"O vile cruel worm" (Oliver Cromwell) latinized. This panegyric, however,
availed him little. Some of his works, which contained reflections on the
royal family, were taken from the college, and burned at the cross of
Aberdeen by the hands of the hangman: and in 1661, Row resigned his office
of principal. He soon after established a school at Aberdeen, and lived for
some years on the scanty emoluments derived from this source, eked out by
charitable donations. Thereafter he retired to the family of a son-in-law
and daughter in the parish of Kinellar, about eight miles from Aberdeen,
where he spent the remainder of his days. He was interred in the churchyard
of the parish, but no monument marks his grave. Besides the works we have
mentioned, and some others which seem to be lost, principal Row wrote a
continuation of his father’s History of the Church, which is extant in the
Advocates’ library, under the title of "Supplement to the Historie of the
Kirk of Scotland, from August, anno 1637, and thenceforward to July, 1639;
or ane Handful of Goates Haire for the furthering of the Building of the
Tabernacle: a Short Table of Principall Things for the promoving of the most
excellent Historie of this late blessed Work of Reformation, in the hands of
such as are employed therein by the General Assemblie; written by Mr John
Row, Minister at Aberdene." Mr James Row, minister of Monivaird and Strowan,
a younger brother of principal Row, is well known to the curious in Scottish
literature, as the author of the celebrated "Pockmanty Sermon," preached in
Saint Giles’s, in 1638, and which has been lately reprinted under the titles
of "The Red-Shanke’s Sermon;" and "A Cupp of Bon-Accord." |
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