I. THE FIRST THREE YEARS, SEPTEMBER 1910 TO
DECEMBER 1913.
Before Henry Dundas arrived at Eton, his parents had
to decide whether to send him to College as a King’s Scholar or to a
Master’s house as an Oppidan, his name having been down for my own
House for some years. Henry had passed eleventh into College in the
College Examination of 1910; his parents, however, putting on one
side the considerable financial considerations involved, had
determined to do what was thought best for their boy. In College
there are seventy King’s Scholars, elected as a result of a stiff
competitive examination, and therefore all intelligent and some very
clever. For such an intellectual atmosphere with the invigoration
that comes from competing brains there was much to be said. In any
one of the twenty-six Oppidan Houses, on the other hand, the
intellectual standard is, of course, very much lower. But in such a
House Henry would have the advantage of meeting a greater variety of
boys ; and the general outlook of an Oppidan is, not infrequently,
wider than that of a Colleger. The parents eventually decided in
favour of an Oppidan House, and this, if it was Henry’s loss, was at
any rate his House Master’s gain. Henry, however, all through his
Eton life had so many intimate friends in College that, to a large
extent, he enjoyed the advantages of both societies.
The new world of Eton, to which Henry was introduced
in September 1910, has often been compared to a university rather
than to a school. The spacious dignity of its buildings and of its
grounds, its Chapel and its Cathedral Service, its traditions of
liberty and the independence of its members, all give that
impression. Its vast numbers again—over 1100 at the present time
—make the various Houses in which the boys are lodged more like
little Colleges, each with its own individuality and traditions, and
the members of each during the earlier period, at all events, of a
boy’s Eton career, keeping very much together. In the supervision of
these Houses an Eton Master has three advantages not always enjoyed
at other schools. In the first place, his numbers are not too large
or too small; no House has less than thirty-six boys nor more than
forty-two. In the second place, the boys are put down for a House
Master (often soon after they are born), and not for the building in
which he happens to reside ; and the House Master has absolute
control over his own list. Many of the boys may be the sons or
connections of a House Master’s own contemporaries at Eton or the
university, and an Eton House often bears something of the character
of a family party. In the third place, each boy has a separate room;
and there is an excellent custom at Eton whereby House Masters
wander round their Houses during the hour between Evening Prayers
and Lights-Out, when every boy has to be in his own room, and the
House Master thus gets an opportunity of seeing a boy by himself and
without formality. But, of course, the care of some forty boys who
are passing through the difficult and varied stages from childhood
at twelve or thirteen to manhood at eighteen or nineteen must be an
arduous and anxious undertaking for any one, especially where such a
large amount of liberty is allowed as at Eton, and the boys
themselves, as a result of their home surroundings, are so
independent; and the youthful Henry, in the course of his career,
was to provide for his House Master along with many delights some
measure of small anxieties.
An Eton boy fulfils the condition of Aristotle, that
he should learn to obey before he begins to govern. On his arrival
he has to “fag” so long as he is a Lower Boy. The duration of his
existence as a Lower Boy depends upon his intellect —it may be a
year, or two years, or even nearly three years. Then follows a
period of some two years when he neither “fags” nor is “fagged.”
After that he is allowed “to fag”; and if and when he becomes a
member of the “Library,” he is allowed to call “Boy”—in other words,
boys have to run to find him when he wants something done instead of
his having to find some “Lower Boy.” Henry Dundas, it need scarcely
be said, had the shortest possible time as a fag, and the longest
possible as a fag-master.
The government of an Eton House varies considerably
in detail in different Houses, and there is no absolutely fixed or
stereotyped system. In my own House the government is a mixture of
that of Miss Evans’s, at which House I was a boy, and of my
predecessor Mr Radcliffe, from whom I originally took over the boys
in my House; and as they were undoubtedly two of the best Houses at
Eton, I felt I could not do better than follow their example. The
governing body of the House is “the Library,” of some four to seven
members. The official members of the Library are—first, the Captain
of the House. He was appointed by me ; he is usually, though by no
means invariably, the boy highest
[I remember when I was a boy at Eton, a boy in Miss
Evans’s House was rash enough to say that he would prefer to be in
Mr Radcliffe’s House to being in Miss Evans’s; this opinion, though
a tribute to Mr Radcliffe, was hotly resented, it is needless to
say, at “My Dame’s.”]
up in the School order. He was the boy primarily
responsible for the welfare of the House, and this is the position
which Henry was to occupy during his last year at Eton. Secondly,
there was the Captain of the Games, appointed by the out-going
Captain. Thirdly, there was the President of the Library, elected by
the Debating Society—a very useful office to provide for some
outstanding personality who holds neither of the two other
positions. Sometimes the three offices were held by three different
persons, sometimes a pluralist would hold them all—as in Henry’s
first summer, when Geoffrey Colman, who but for the War would have
been Captain of the Oxford University Eleven at Lord’s in the summer
of 1915, was the chief presonality in the House. The other members
of the Library were co-opted. It was before the Library that
offenders were brought after Evening Prayers. Their cases were
heard, their excuses considered, and if necessary the supreme
penalty of the law was enforced—and Henry, so far as my memory
serves, was to suffer on more than one occasion. Below the Library
was the “ Debating Society,” election to which gave the right to sit
at certain hours in the Boys’ Library, and was regarded as the first
step in the ladder of promotion in the House. The members of this
Society, some fourteen in number (including the Library), were
elected by ballot.
It may be asked where the House Master appears in the
government of his House. In my own case he is somewhat in the
position of the Crown, which, according to Mr Bagehot’s immortal
work on the British Constitution, has three rights—the right to be
consulted, the right to encourage, and the right to 'warn. A House
Master also has a veto on the supreme penalty of the law—indeed he
is in a curious position of not being able to exercise that power
himself, but of his leave having to be obtained by the Captain of
the House before the rod can be used which prevents the spoiling of
the child. But personally I have seldom interfered, believing that,
as was the case at Miss Evans’s, where leave was never asked,
substantial justice is as a rule done. And, of course, in any
important matter, le dernier mot which, according to a French
historian, is the ultimate test of sovereignty, must rest with the
House Master, though in my own case it has been very seldom uttered.
How did Henry Dundas get on in this new world in
which he found himself during the first three and a half years of
his school life, September 1910-December 1913, which we may take as
the first period of his Eton career ? With the Upper Boys he got on,
so far as they saw anything of him, well. They saw the promise of
the future in him; moreover, he could be relied on when they were
bored to give them a Lauder song. But it must be confessed that with
some of his own more immediate contemporaries during the earlier
part of his Eton life he was not at all times over-popular. To begin
with, boys such as he go soaring up the House and the School; they
lose touch with those of their own age, and it is hardly in human
nature that they should be popular with rather older boys who are
being supplanted in House and School order. Moreover, the process of
“growing up” in the case of boys of such abnormal activities as
those of Henry is a difficult one. Your boy poet may be morose and
“touchy”; the boy of Henry’s type, on the other hand, is apt to
appear to be a trifle conceited, exuberant, tactless, and his self
consciousness will take the form, not of shyness, but of forcing
himself into the centre of the picture. And even his intellectual
restlessness is exhausting to growing boys. “Henry Dundas,” said one
of his contemporaries to me at the end of his second year, “is all
right; but you must not have too much of him at a time.” Henry’s
many good qualities, however—his good nature, his real though not
always apparent modesty, his sympathy—were soon to-show themselves,
and these qualities, combined with his wit and readiness and his
proficiency in everything he took up, gained him a large
acquaintance and many friends.
But we must turn from the House to other aspects of
Henry’s career during his first three and a half years at Eton. And
first intellectual. At Eton every boy has, besides his House Tutor,
a Classical or Modern Tutor. When a boy first comes to Eton, he has
a Classical Tutor; if and when he branches in later school life to
some modern subject, he often changes to a Modern Tutor. In Houses
held by Classical Masters the House Tutor and the Classical Tutor
are usually one and the same person, but in other Houses they are
not. In the old days, when the Eton Houses were largely held by
ladies, the position of the Classical Tutor was all-important. At
the present time, when all Houses are held by Masters, the position
of the Classical Tutor is not, of course, except in the case of the
King’s Scholars, what it was. But he is primarily responsible for
the boy’s work, and the House Tutor and the Classical Tutor
generally consult on most matters concerning the boy’s welfare.
Henry’s Classical Tutor was R. S. Durnford, or, as we called him,
“Dick.” Steeped in Eton traditions, [His grandfather and
grand-uncle, the one Bishop of Chichester and the other Lower Master
and Fellow of Eton, were Old Etonians, as were his father, his uncle
(Provost of King’s), and two of his brothers. His great-grandfather
on his mother’s side was the famous Dr Keate.] a good scholar, a
capable athlete, Dick was personally one of the most equable,
good-tempered, and lovable of men. Henry could not have been more
fortunate ; for Dick, though alive to Henry’s superficial faults,
saw the promise of the future, and had the most important of
gifts—sympathy and patience. When the War came, however, in 1914,
Dick was one of the first to go. I remember him now with tears in
his eyes coming to tell me he had decided to join up in one of
Kitchener’s earliest battalions —tears not of fear of what was
coming, but of regret for what he was giving up; for we both
knew—though the thought was unexpressed— how uncertain were his
chances of returning to the work and place he loved so well.
In Dick Durnford’s pupil-room the chief companions of
Henry Dundas were Arthur Pitman and Wernher. Arthur Pitman was also
in my House, a most cheery sunny boy with a competent brain and
gifted with a directness and frankness of speech which was pleasing
if occasionally embarrassing. Neighbours in Edinburgh, in the same
House and the same pupil-room, Henry and Arthur were naturally
thrown a good deal together. They were of different temperaments; of
different gifts—Arthur excelling with the brush, Henry with the pen
; of different occupations—Arthur, as was fitting with one of his
family, being a Wet-Bob and securing his Eight, and Henry being a
Dry-Bob who ought to have got his Eleven. And yet they were always
good friends, if occasionally conscious, as boys, and still more
grown-up people in small societies are apt to be, of each other’s
failings. Wernher, Henry’s chief intellectual rjval, was a most
remarkable boy. In any examination he could beat any of his
contemporaries of his age, including the Collegers. I remember the
late ViceProvost of Eton, Mr Rawlins, saying almost with despair,
that it was impossible to give him anything but a hundred marks out
of a hundred for a Latin translation ; and Sir Richard Lodge of
Edinburgh, who examined him in History, was greatly impressed by his
remarkable mastery of the facts of the Reformation period in
European History. I have never come across a boy in my
experience—which is now rather a long one— who could, apparently
without effort, master a complicated period with greater ease or
write upon it with more unfailing lucidity. His writing lacked the
liveliness that Henry would give to an answer, but then Wernher
never omitted any material point. And now all four of these friends,
each so full of promise, have gone from us. Dick was killed in an
attack near Hooge in 1915; Wernher fell in one of the last
offensives of the Somme in ’16; Arthur Pitman was “missing” with his
aeroplane, his final fate unknown, in the early part of ’18 ; and
Henry was killed on the Canal du Nord in the last phase of the War.
Henry’s intellectual successes began at once.
Lord Rosebery, the most distinguished of Eton’s
living historians, had just given a sum of money to found prizes at
Eton for the encouragement of History. The prizes were allocated,
one for competition amongst Lower Boys, and the other for those at
the top of the School. Henry as a Lower Boy in his first Half
competed and obtained one of the two prizes: it was peculiarly
appropriate that the prize given by Pitt’s Scottish biographer
should go, on this its first presentation, to the
great-great-great-grandson of Pitt’s chief Scottish ally, Henry
Dundas, afterwards Lord Melville. That same Half, Henry obtained the
Brinckman Divinity Prize, and by the end of his second year at Eton
he had taken a “Trials Prize” and various “Distinctions in Trials,”
as well as the School Certificate which exempted him from any
University Entrance Examination. The next four Halves of his career,
September 1912-December 1913, were spent, two of them “up” to the
present Vice-Provost, Mr Macnaghten, and the others “up” to the late
Vice-Provost, Mr Rawlins, one an ex-Eellow of Trinity and the other
of King’s, and deservedly reputed to be the two best teachers in the
School. With the end of 1913 Classics ceased to be the staple of
Henry’s education, and we may appropriately end with two extracts
from Classical reports. One is from Mr Booker, to whom he was “up”
in the summer of 1912 :—
“CLASSICAL REPORT FOR SUMMER SCHOOL-TIME, 1912.
“Name : . . . Dundas, O. S.
“Place : . . . 4th.
“An exceedingly sharp youth—almost too sharp for the
peace of mind of his division-master, whom he bombards with volleys
of incisive, and often awkward questions! But underneath this
inquisitiveness, I am afraid, there is some lack of thoroughness.
Careless blunders mar his compositions, and a meticulous study like
Greek accentuation is beneath his contempt. There is no doubt a
fascination in watching the agility of his mind, but he has the
defects of his qualities. R. P. L. Booker.”
And the other is from Mr Macnaghten in the Michaelmas
Term of the same year :—
“CLASSICAL REPORT FOR MICHAELMAS SCHOOLTIME, 1912.
“Dundas is an excellent boy, as keen as mustard, and
willing to take any amount of pains. He is also very intelligent,
and takes considerable interest in all his work. Unfortunately he
breaks down in verse composition, and that is my only reason for not
sending him up for good. I am really sorry to have to disappoint
him; but when I looked through all the verses I had kept throughout
the Half there was no copy of his forthcoming, and indeed he has
only once got more than half marks. His Iambics are on the same low
level—Greek Prose and Latin Prose are both much better, but there
was no copy of either sufficiently good to merit sending up. English
Essays and history are strong points: he has latterly done very
well in construing ; and throughout he has been a lively and
appreciative member of the division. High spirits not always kept in
control before my entry can hardly be reckoned against him— a most
promising friendly boy.
H. Macnaghten.”
In athletics, Henry was meanwhile during these three
and a half years making his mark. In his very first summer—the
summer of 1911—the House won the Junior Cricket Cup. It is no
exaggeration to say that Eton cricket has been transformed during
the last twenty-five years by the introduction of the “League
System” for “Dry-Bobs” under sixteen. The twenty-six Houses are
divided into two Leagues, the thirteen Houses in each League play
every other House, and then the leaders of each League play each
other for the Cup. When I was a boy I remember the listless slack
games of cricket boys of under sixteen used to play; now, when these
matches are in progress, one sees little groups of partisans dotted
over the vast extent of Agar’s Plough watching with unremitting
interest the fortunes of the games. The matches are just long
enough. Scores of over 100 for an innings are infrequent, those of
under 50 quite common; 3 to 5 hours’ cricket sees, as a rule, the
match over.
In the particular year 1915 my House headed one
League with a record of 13 matches played and 13 won; and it then
beat the leading House of the other League by an innings and 67
runs. In these successes the protagonists were Lord Francis Hill,
Eric Anson, and Henry Dundas. When our opponents were in, those
three between them got rid of most of the side. Henry was a safe
wicket-keeper, Hill and Anson brilliant slips. Anson used to bowl at
one end with Hill at slip ; and the next over was vice versa. With
small boys’ cricket the number of slip and wicket catches given is
remarkable; and a look through the lists of the old matches shows
how often the best bats among our opponents succumbed either to one
or the other. We always put our opponents in first on principle,
generally got them out cheaply, and then went in ourselves. At the
beginning of the season Hill made the most prodigious number of
runs, and after the first few matches had an average of something
over 200. When he failed, Anson and Dundas made runs; and if all
three failed—as happened very seldom—the tail would wag effectively,
as it did in the Final Match, when the first 5 wickets went down
for 59 and yet the total reached 150. Henry was splendidly keen in
all these matches, and eventually wrote an account of them with full
details and a commentary, and a final summing up of the season. It
was written on twenty-four large pages of foolscap, and then
presented to me—and for a boy of fifteen it was written with an
astonishing amount of vividness and vitality.
In the next year, 1912, Henry Dundas was Captain of
the Junior Eleven, and got his Upper Sixpenny—i.e., the best Eleven
in the School of those under sixteen ; and in the following year he
got his Lower Club—i.e., the best Eleven of those a year older. To
Eton football he did not take very kindly; but he was very promising
at Rugby, and in the Lent School-time of 1913, when just over
sixteen, he made his first appearance for the School Fifteen.
11. January 1914 - July 1915.
We now come to the second stage of Henry’s career at
Eton—the year and a half from January 1914 to July 1915—and here
some explanation is necessary of Eton studies. The whole curriculum
has been transformed in the last quarter of a century. When I was a
boy at Eton, and even when in 1895 I came back as a Master, the
staple of education throughout the School was Latin and Greek, with
the exception of a certain number who took up German for Greek, and
those who belonged to the Army Class. That Latin and Greek still
occupy a predominant position throughout a boy’s life at Eton is
still, I observe, held by educational “experts” who write to the
papers, and by not a few Old Etonians. It is therefore not out of
place to say that at the present time more iJhan half the boys in
the School never study the Greek language at all at any period of
their career. Those judged of linguistic promise, however, some 40
per cent to 45 per cent, study Greek for at least two years, and
most of them continue to do so, at any rate, till somewhere between
the ages of sixteen and seventeen and a half, when they obtain the
School Certificate. Henry was, of course, one of the clever ones,
and he continued, by my advice and Dick’s, to make Classics his
chief study for a year and a half after he had passed the
Certificate Examination successfully, as he was then so very young.
When a boy has secured a School Certificate he is
allowed to “specialise”—specialisation is allowed in a modified form
before this, but not in the full form until the Certificate is over.
Then a boy may take up either Classics, or Mathematics, or Science,
or Modern Languages, or History, as his chief subject, or he may
belong to a general Division and enjoy a more varied diet composed
of a mixture of Classics, History, Science, and French. A goodly
number of boys choose History, which, of course, for those with
political traditions behind them, is a very congenial subject.1 In
some School stories I observe that the History specialist is
depicted as a kind of gilded youth who takes up History frankly as a
soft option. I will not deny that there may be some of this
particular variety at Eton, but the historians at Eton have always
included a number of able boys with fresh and active minds. My
colleagues (Mr G. W. Headlam and Mr C. H. Blakiston) and I myself,
who have been responsible for the historians, have always, however,
been against excessive and undue specialisation. The historians
spend a quarter of their school hours over languages, either
Classics, German, Latin, or French. Moreover, they take up other
subjects, such as Civics or Economics, Geography or English, so that
considerably less than half their school hours are directed
exclusively to History. My own endeavour has always been to interest
the boys by taking up some period in detail, and to teach them by
essays and by questions how to use their facts for purposes of
argument and illustration, and to write their own language lucidly
and, if possible, attractively. The lot of a teacher trying to
interest boys of seventeen or eighteen in the study of History is
indeed an enviable one; he might well hesitate, to parody Gibbon’s
phrase, to exchange his invincible love of teaching such boys for
all the wealth of the Indies —and of all boys, perhaps Eton boys are
the most rewarding, in this subject at any rate, to teach.
From the moment that Henry came to Eton there was
never any doubt as to what subject he would eventually take up. He
was no Classical scholar in the strict sense of that word; and both
his Latin and Greek Composition were below scholarship form. But, on
the other hand, he was keenly interested in History, and had just
the mind for it. To begin with, like Macaulay, he had a most
remarkable capacity, almost a voracity for detail. When he was a
young boy at Eton he knew not only all the teams in the Scottish
Football League and their places in it, but even each individual
member by name and his position in the football field. Later on,
golf records became his hobby, and it was impossible to “stump” him
in the performances of any professional, more particularly if he was
a Scot. From these he branched to Gilbert and Sullivan’s operas,
which he knew practically by heart, and the person who bet Henry a
franc on a Gilbert and Sullivan quotation (Letters, p. 77) was as
ill-advised as Walpole who, it will be remembered, lost his guinea
to Pulteney over a quotation from Horace. In the second place, Henry
possessed a remarkably clear head, and when he came to the serious
study of History was always master of his details. The more
complicated the period the more he enjoyed it. I remember doing with
him in particular the reign of Charles II., perhaps the most
complicated in English History, and the history of the Italian
States, 1494-1516, a perfect maze of changing personalities and
politics. I had to do that particular period of Italian History for
my Schools at Oxford, and very difficult I found it. But Henry
succeeded without difficulty in mastering the intricate family and
political relationships of the many families, such as the Medici,
Sforza, and the House of Anjou, and in tracing the endless
succession of leagues these families formed against each other in
turn. Thirdly, Henry delighted in the study of human personality.
The characters of past times had a never-failing attraction for him,
and essays on such people were amongst the best he ever did.
Fourthly, Henry had in his writing, if a certain exuberance, also
great vitality and “go,” and his writing was full of that
indefinable “promise” which Oxford examiners look for in their
History scholars.
Henry had, in his year and a half as a History
specialist, some able boys in his Division, such as Impey, the
Brackenbury scholar of Balliol, who wrote as a boy in a style so
mature that his English master put his work in a different class
from that of any one else; Dickinson, who was later to fly over
Constantinople in the War, and who was able to aim his bombs with
greater precision because of the plan of the city he had studied
with his Classical Tutor while at Eton; Browne, Scholar of
Magdalene, Cambridge, who was to lose his leg on his first day in
the battlefield; Blacker, a very able boy killed in the War; Cazalet,
the friend of us all; and of course the unconquerable Wernher.
But to Henry Dundas himself, however, the first Half
of 1914 was memorable, probably not so much because he became a
History specialist, but because he was a member of the Eton Rugby
Fifteen which succeeded in defeating Wellington. Rugby Football is
only played by a few of the Upper Boys at Eton for part of one Half
in the year, whilst it is the School game at Wellington. That School
very kindly gave us a match every year, and almost invariably a very
considerable beating. But in this particular year we had the
advantage of a deluge of rain—“the rain came down in buckets”—as on
the day before the battle of Waterloo. Such rain which, according to
modern French historians, proved, by delaying Napoleon’s advance the
next day, to be the salvation of Wellington on the battlefield of
Waterloo, was on this occasion the ruin of the school called after
his name. It enabled the Etonians to convert the game into a kind of
Eton dribbling game, and to snatch a victory by 9 points to 3. It is
a curious example of the weakness of human nature, that all of us,
however old we may be, look upon a game which we have won by some
amazing “fluke” as a well - merited success. Henry’s letter to his
father on the match, which, as being an historic occasion, is
printed below, would not be less enthusiastic if an older person had
been the victor and the writer, and not a boy of barely seventeen.
Wellington boys who may happen to read it will no doubt feel that
they need not grudge, after their many victories, this modest
success to Eton, and its perhaps exuberant celebration—for it has so
far been the only, and may well prove to be the last, success that
falls to Eton’s lot.
“Darling Daddy,—The greatest triumph of the century!
We have beaten Wellington by 3 tries to one. It really was a grand
performance. I will now proceed to narrate in detail: On Thursday we
played New College, on a wet day and a wet ground, and we got beaten
by 27-0. Not very encouraging. New were very good: strong and big in
the scrum. We only got the ball twice the whole match—and very fast
and clever behind, led by W. G. K. Boswell, who got four tries
himself. Well, on Friday afternoon we had a mild practice, scrums,
tackling, kicking, &c., then on Saturday morning we went round to
Kindersley’s, and he gave us some last words of advice. Rain began
about 10 and continued off and on all the morning, so by the time of
kick off, 3, the ground was like a bog. We took the Field as follows
:—
J. G. Frere,
A. R. Cooper, G. E. Younghusband, G. D. Pape, and L. E. C. Dale
Lace.
A. S. Belmont, H. L. Dundas,
S. I. Fairbairn, I. P. R. Napier, J. Scudamore, D. C. Cayley, A. H.
Gold, T. S. Hankey, H. G. C. Streatfeild, and P. S. Abraham. Simpson
hurt his leg, so Tom played instead of him.
“The Editor of the ‘Sportsman’ told Pape just before
the start that we should be very lucky if beaten by less than 15
points. The ground looked very smart with ropes. Things all round
it, and there was a big crowd, including a lot of Sandhurst and
Wellington lads. We won the toss and played towards the River;
Slough road at our backs; the rain fell in torrents. Their
three-quarters tried to get going, but our tackling was deadly.
After about a quarter of an hour our forwards settled down, and
began to rush the Wellington pack all over the field. The ball was
like leaden glass, so handling was impossible. Several times the
forwards almost had it over, and then just before half-time I hurled
myself over the line between the posts in the most dashing style:
Loud cheers. Pape missed the kick : Half Time : Eton 3, Wellington
0. Every one frightfully bucked. Well, straight from the start of
the second half, our forwards rushed down on their line, and after a
bit of loose play Cayley got a try in the corner. Napier almost
converted —6-0. Then Wellington began to press. Their forwards
heeled, and Davis, the outside half, got the ball out to Simson, the
right centre, who passed to Allom, the right wing, who repassed to
Simson, who scored. Quite a good piece of work. The kick failed :
6-3. Then from the 25 kick Scu. headed a grand rush down to their
line, where we stayed till the end. Scrum after scrum we got over
about four times, and each time the referee—a man Griffiths—who did
very well— had them back, as he couldn’t see. Then at last, five
minutes from the end, Ian Fairbairn hurled himself over. The kick
again failed: 9-3. Then ‘No side.’ The crowd really got excited and
cheered like anything. How different to the ghastly apathy at those
ridiculous field matches last Half. Old Kindersley almost lost
control: he was frightfully bucked. On our side the forwards were
wonderful: they kept it up the whole ‘ time, only showing faint
signs of cracking when they got their try. Ian Fairbairn led them
magnificently, and Ian Napier, Scu., and Tom were about the next
best, though every one of them was splendid. Algy and I were both
very much on the job, and went down to the ball with tremendous
courage. The three-quarters had nothing to do. . . . John Frere was,
as usual, excellent in all he had to do at back. The mud was
unspeakable : all of us, particularly Algy, Ian Fairbairn, Scu., and
I were unrecognisable, black from top to toe. Everybody was wild
with delight. It really was splendid, though of course on a fine day
they would have won, as their backs
were supposed to be really good, esp. the
Allom-Simson wing, but of course they never got a chance, as our
forwards controlled the game. It will be topping seeing Mum on
Thursday. I wish you could come down too. I suppose it is
impossible. I got a for a 28 pages on Wallenstein last week, thus
keeping up my record of over 50 for every essay this half. Now I
must flee to school. Love from
H.”
In August 1914, as we all know too well, came the
Great War. The immediate result upon Eton was that 150 boys who
would have stayed on at once left, some of them only seventeen or
even sixteen years of age, for fear that otherwise they “might be
too late for the War”! My own House was depleted like other Houses,
and included in the number were Arthur Pitman, the Anson twins, and
Tom Hunter, who lost his leg in an accident, then joined the Flying
Corps, and was the first of our airmen to be killed in
Italy. Consequently the younger generation of boys came to the
front, and Henry’s time of greatness at School, which would normally
have come from September 1915 to July ’16, came a year earlier.
Benjamin Disraeli, in spite of the fact that he was
at no Public School himself, has given us in his wonderful picture
of Eton in 'Coningsby,’ a celebrated passage on a boy’s last year at
school. “Fame and power,” he writes, “are the objects of all men.
Even their partial fruition is gained by very few, and that too at
the expense of social pleasure, health, conscience, life. Yet what
power of manhood in passionate intenseness, appealing at the same
time to the subject and the votary, can rival that which is
exercised by the idolised chieftain of a great Public School? What
fame of after days equals the rapture of celebrity that thrills the
youthful poet, as in tones of rare emotion he recites his triumphant
verses amid the devoted plaudits of the flower of England? That’s
fame, that’s power: real, unquestioned, undoubted, catholic.” Not
many boys at any school can have had activities so manifold or
powers so great as Henry Dundas in his last year. In the Michaelmas
School-time of 1914 he became a member of the Vlth Form and Captain
of his House; and he was also appointed Editor of the ‘Eton College
Chronicle.’ Before the Half was over he had gained his House Colours
at Football, and been elected into Pop; and most important of all,
he had obtained a History Exhibition at New College, Oxford. In the
Lent School-time of 1915 he became Captain of the Rugby Fifteen, and
won the Loder Declamation Prize, Lord Curzon being the judge and
delivering a most interesting address on Oratory. In the summer he
became Captain of the Oppidans, won a History Scholarship at Christ
Church, Oxford, and was within an ace of getting his Cricket Eleven;
and he finished up his career by securing the first Oppidan Prize in
an examination for those at the top of the School.
Nor does this fist exhaust his activities. Eton is as
much riddled by societies as Oxford, and practically every evening
Henry was out—on Monday perhaps to the Scientific Society; on
Tuesday certainly to the Shakespeare Society; on Wednesday to an
Intercession Service, held during the War; on Thursday to the Essay
Society; on Friday to a “Pop” debate; and on Saturday perhaps first
to a Lecture, and then to a Debate in the House at his own House
Debating Society. And had the Eton Political Society been in
existence in his day he would certainly have become an active member
of that. Moreover, he was a prolific writer. Essays, sometimes of
thirty pages, leaders and articles for the ‘Eton College Chronicle,’
squibs and lampoons intended for more private circulation, poured
from his pen. He also produced in his last Half an ephemeral known
as the 'Jolly Roger.’ Of this a Master had to be the censor; and
article after article and verse after verse that Henry’s fertile
brain produced, had to endure, as reflecting on various authorities,
the censorial “blue pencil.” Finally, when at last his labours were
completed and the paper on the verge of production, the censor
produced this apology to Henry :—
A Plea from the Criminal, in arrest of Judgment.
(To the tune of “There’s no fool like an old fool.”)
Ungenially, I fear, I’ve baulked your springing A
mine of mirth to make all Eton split;
Incensed, you long to see the Censor swinging,
Yourself the Acolyte—that were but fit.
Suspend instead—your judgment, till it mellow (He
once was younger than your ardent self,
And even now he means no ill, poor fellow);
Suspend it, till you too are on the shelf.
—Cato.
Taking some of Henry’s activities in various fields,
we may begin by saying something about his work. His various
successes, his Exhibition and Scholarship, his Loder and Oppidan
Prizes, showed he had not been idle. Moreover, he had the great
advantage of being for part of his History and Classics up to Mr C.
R. L. Fletcher, the distinguished historian, who had come
temporarily to take his son’s place as Master. [The son was in the
trenches at Bois Grenier, just behind which he now lies buried. The
Germans had captured a French flag, which they boastingly flew from
the top of their trendies. Fletcher stole across No Man’s Land one
night and managed to seize it and to return unscathed. That flag is
now in the Ante-Chapel at Eton.] All of us, Masters and boys, were
the better, not only for Mr Fletcher’s teaching, but for association
with his personality. And I cannot refrain from quoting two
characteristic reports.
“ HISTORY REPORT FOR MICHAELMAS SCHOOLTIME, 1914.
“A very able boy, with a fine natural gift for
scholarship and with strongly marked taste for Literature. Nihil
tangit quod non ornat. And seldom can any Master have had a boy whom
it was such a pleasure to teach and to know.
Conduct—Excellent in every respect.
C. R. L. Fletcher.”
“History report for lent school-time, 1915.
“Far the ablest of the specialists, he can turn out
work that none of them can touch; but he can also be frightfully
disappointing. His interest is so varied, and everything comes so
easy to him, that he is in danger of coming to grief not between
two, but between a dozen stools. I believe he writes the leaders for
the *Chronicle" while he is actually translating Homer right under
my nose. His sense of form and style, his literary instinct, are
most remarkable, and the gusto with which he flies at a difficult
subject is delightful. I did not know that he was also a linguist
till I asked him to translate a piece of thirteenth-century
Norman-French at sight—he did it almost without a mistake. His
lovable character makes it almost impossible to scold him, and yet I
feel that he often wants scolding. Another thing that strikes me
favourably is the great sanity of his opinions when you can get him
in a serious mood. He thinks everything out for himself, or else the
right idea comes to him without reflection.
“Conduct—Excellent; apt to be on tardy book, however.
C. R. L. Fletcher.”
As Captain of the House, Henry Dundas was very
sensible, and he possessed that sanity of judgment to which Mr
Fletcher referred. He himself, in the House-Book, to which each
successive Captain contributed a commentary with the doings of the
House, rejoiced in the fact that the House was not during his period
of influence, “standoffish,” as perhaps Eton Houses, my own
included, are often inclined to be. “The old grim spirit,” he says,
“of keeping to ourselves has entirely died out, and a delightful
spirit of broad-mindedness and toleration has taken its place. The
House Library is now the rendezvous of all the best elements in
Eton. Everybody with any claims to intelligence or pleasantness of
conduct is welcome—and both are gainers.”
In the large domains of School life he was, of
course, increasingly prominent. He was elected to Pop at Christmas,
and in his last summer, as Captain of the Oppidans, was one of the
chief officials in the School and in the inner ring of the oligarchy
which directed affairs. The Captain of the School as highest
Colleger, the Captain of the Oppidans as the highest Oppidan, are
officially the authorities of the School, and with the Captain of
the Boats, the Captain of the Eleven, and the President of Pop, are
the boys consulted on all matters of importance. The Captain of the
Oppidans is also the arbiter in all matters of fagging, and he is
traditionally the champion of the rights of Vlth Form. He keeps an "Oppidan
Book" in which are recorded the chief events in his turn of office;
and I remember how Henry rejoiced in reading the luminous pages
which Lord Curzon contributed when he held that position.
In the days of Dundas came the “collar controversy.”
It seems absurd to quarrel about collars, but, after all, Rome was
rent in twain in the first century B.C. about the purple border to
the toga, and Prime Ministers of Great Britain have been known to
spend sleepless nights over the disposal of a Garter. And, of
course, as in Rome with the toga, the collar was merely the symbol
of a constitutional struggle. The Vlth Form at Eton has various
rights—it proceeds in stately procession up Chapel, it provides the
speakers in the speeches on 4th June, it on ceremonial occasions
represents the School. George III., on one occasion, asked Stratford
Canning, known later to fame as Lord Stratford de Redclilfe, when he
was still a boy at Eton, what part of the School he was in. “The
Vlth Form, sir,” answered Canning. “A much greater man,” replied the
King, “than I can ever make you.” But that incident happened more
than 100 years ago, and membership of Vlth Form does not count for
so much as it did. The body which does carry the greater weight is
“Pop,” or the Eton Society. This is a society which was founded in
1811 for purposes of debate, and Mr Gladstone and other famous
persons were members of it; and a short time ago it celebrated its
centenary, with Lord Rosebery in the chair. Nowadays, however, its
debating has somewhat sunk into the. background, and it is a society
representing the dominant personalities in the School. It has
certain official elements, but most of the members are co-opted by
the boys themselves. Of course, as in every school, the athletic
element is well represented; but it by no means follows that because
a boy is in the Eleven or the Eight he should be elected to Pop.
Indeed, at times the “intellectuals” have been the predominant
element.
Both Vlth Form and the Eton Society have certain
distinguishing marks of dress, Vlth Form in collars, and Pop in
collars and other articles of attire. When Henry was Captain of the
Oppidans a Colleger in Vlth Form suddenly startled the Eton world,
or rather the upper portion of it, by wearing a collar which
hitherto Pop had only worn. At once the hot-heads in Pop were up in
arms; behind the collar, it was thought, lurked the design to revive
the glories of Vlth Form at the expense of Pop. Henry, as at once a
member of Pop and the Captain of the Oppidans, might have been
justified in a seat on the fence; but he at once plunged into the
fray on the side of Vlth Form. Feeling at one time ran strong. The
matter was eventually unofficially referred to a Master who was a
former President of Pop; and I remember his telling me how Henry had
at once got to the heart of the controversy, and proved with
inexorable logic that a self-appointed and unofficial, and in the
annals of Eton, an almost mushroom body like Pop, could have no
rights against an authorised body like Vlth Form, who were
officially, though not perhaps actually, the chief authorities of
the School. The more extreme members of Pop were convinced, and Vlth
Form wore what collars they liked.
No doubt the controversy appears a very childish one
during the Great War; but it was not more childish, and certainly
less reprehensible, than the various squabbles at the same time, bet
ween Government Departments; and nothing seems more absurd to
outsiders and of greater importance to those engaged in it than a
controversy on some constitutional symbol of power! But I have
related the story rather because it illustrates Henry’s courage in
upholding a cause which was not the popular one, his judgment in at
once realising the strength of the position of Vlth Form, and his
successful insistence upon it in discussion and debate.
I have said at the beginning of this chapter that
Henry was not over-popular with his contemporaries during the
earlier part of his career. What was his position in the School at
the end? Henry had gradually during his career at Eton been shedding
his exuberances, though the hypercritical might still perhaps have
liked to use a pruning-knife. But his many excellent qualities, his
good temper, his courage, his real kindness of heart, had won
recognition; and the variety of his gifts and attainments, his ready
wit, his wide reading, his powers of imitation and storytelling,
made him the most amusing and interesting of companions. At the end
of his time at Eton he was certainly one of the outstanding
personalities of the School. Mr Alan Lubbock, one of Henry’s closest
friends, has kindly sent an appreciation which gives the point of
view of a contemporary, and describes admirably his activities and
the impression he made.
“During his last year or two at Eton, Henry’s
position was most remarkable. Perhaps what struck his contemporaries
most was the enormous number of boys in the School whom he knew :
for he knew practically every one, even the most unlikely; and those
whom he did not know personally he usually knew by sight. Here again
the power of his memory and his eagerness for the acquisition of
knowledge showed themselves. If he saw a boy about whom he knew
nothing, he at once took steps to find out; and many a time, when I
have asked Henry about some obscure-looking Lower Boy whom he had
just greeted by his Christian name, he has given me a complete
history of his life, including private school and position in his
family—and this when there was no special reason at all why he
should take any interest in him. But none of his relations depended
simply on his qualities of good companionship. It would be a mistake
to suppose that his enormous acquaintance was the result of mere
curiosity, or of a desire to be on easy neutral terms in all
circles. His unceasing energies worked in his social talents, as
well as in everything else, so that all who knew him felt that an
active force, stimulating, disturbing, as well as delighting, was
being brought to bear upon them. To make life as full as possible,
to push it into closest contact with every point of his
surroundings, was his continual object, in pursuit of which
institutions were explored to the limit of their possibilities, and
from personalities a definite response of some kind was necessarily
evoked.
This response was, as often as not, in some form of
opposition, and a considerable measure of unpopularity would
undoubtedly have resulted, had it not been for Henry’s obvious
affection for every one. He attacked right and left, but never with
malice: the “heavies,” as he called the more exclusively athletic
section of the school, particularly in Pop, were continually being
satirised, but always to their faces, and in a way so full of humour
and good nature that ill-feeling never entered, to prevent his
victims taking equal delight with every one else in the fresh view
which his imagination gave them of themselves and of all about them.
When there were any differences or antagonisms which sprang from
personal causes, jealousy or the like, I never remember that Henry
took any side—kindly ridicule was poured on both, and ill-feeling
generally melted in laughter; but whenever there was a controversy
on a matter of principle, he declared himself at once as on one
side, and employed reason, wit, and all to their fullest, not only
to prevail over the other side, but to convince them.
“His remarkable powers of entertainment helped to
make up his position in the School, and especially in Pop, where not
only could he hold a large audience spellbound while he recited the
lurid biography in verse (composed perhaps during the last school)
of some eminently worthy master, but also, what was more difficult,
he could stimulate others to flights of fancy rivalling his own,
being ‘not only witty in himself, but the cause that wit was in
other men.’
“Logic always supported, if it did not guide, the
tremendous overflow of his energies, sometimes to the embarrassment
of his friends, who were often compelled, if only in self-defence,
to try to curb some of his activities. During his last two Halves he
was Oppidan editor of the ‘Chronicle,’ in which he saw a rather dull
official paper, needing to be revived with a little sensational
journalism. This he gave it (especially in reports of Rugger
matches, where he loved to employ the methods of the cheap sporting
Press), and his efforts were a continual source of alarm to the more
timid College editor, whose counsels of moderation Henry generally
dismissed with his convincing logic; though if he saw that any
friend would really be happier for his abandoning some project, he
would always do so with perfect good humour, and look for some other
field for his enterprise.
“In his relations with his closest friends, loyalty
and sympathy were unfailing, and in spite of all his own varied
powers, he had a real and deep admiration, which was always fully
expressed, for anything that was at all good in what they did. In
his generous appreciation of other people’s qualities or powers, he
never thought of comparing them with his own; just as in his
vigorous exercise of his own talents, he never had time to stop and
admire them. So complete was this part of Henry’s life, and so
concentrated had he always been on making the best use of the
present time, that no one, I think, who genuinely loved Eton ever
left with fewer regrets—even though that was at a time when leaving
meant much more than it does in times of peace, for we were acutely
conscious of what was coming.
“To indicate fully other Eton figures, often only one
image is needed, as when a boy found expression entirely or mainly
in one line, whether that was in rowing, in cricket, in disciplining
his house, or in anything; but with Henry, by reason of his
identification of himself with Eton life in every aspect that
offered, this is impossible: each image, each phrase means so
little, except in the light of a hundred others, and it is
impossible to convey briefly to those who did not know him any idea
of the variety of the delight and inspiration which his memory
brings to those who were privileged to be his friends.”
For Henry I looked forward to the possession of an
All Souls’ Fellowship at Oxford, and to a brilliant career in the
future. For it was in politics that he would probably have found his
real vocation. He would have revelled in the elections, public
meetings, the changes in the fortunes of the “Blues” and “Greens ”
in our political arena—if such continue—and in all the things which,
whatever the critics may say, make political life undeniably
attractive to those who take part in it. But Henry Dundas had also
the capacity for detail, the insight and the sympathy and, above
all, the courage which would have made him a statesman and not a
mere politician; and there is no height to which he might not have
risen. The Great War, however, claimed him, as it did all others of
his age at the very threshold of their careers; and the boy who left
Eton in July 1915 after his last year of delights, was within a year
to see the most blood-stained highway in the world at Hooge, and to
witness death in its most horrible forms on the Somme. At twenty he
was to command a Company, with the lives of some 200 men dependent
upon his judgment and his example; and soon after he was twenty-one
his life with all its brilliant promise was to close.
In Mr Fletcher’s reports there is a reference to
Henry’s various and conflicting activities. But the wonder to me is
that boys during the War worked as well and behaved as well as they
did. “The Angel of Death,” said John Bright in a famous speech
during the Crimean War, “has been abroad throughout the land; we may
almost hear the beating of his wings.” But if the Crimean War
claimed its thousands, the Great War claimed its hundreds of
thousands. Death was very close to us at Eton during those four
years. One day a boy would lose his father ; the next another would
mourn a brother. Week by week were read in the Chapel the names of
those Old Etonians who had just fallen; week by week the lists of
the dead outside the Chapel grew longer. And when the boys reached
an age when they could kill and be killed, they went forth to meet
gas and liquid fire, the bullet and the shell, the grenade and the
mine. Over all hovered the Angel of Death; the fortunate might hope
for wounds or imprisonment, for gas or shell-shock, but to one in
four the Angel would give the summons. Some of us older people
thought, and thought wrongly, that youth cared only for the moment,
and had no thought for the morrow; all the more honour to those boys
at Eton and elsewhere who faced that morrow and all its horrors
unflinchingly, and so far as their elders were concerned, silently.
They worked and played at school, and talked and behaved just as if
the future had no troubles ; but they knew what awaited them and
said nothing.
Henry’s continual reference to his life at Eton in
his letters from the front show how strong a hold it had secured
upon him and how affectionate was his memory of it. I remember a
Master of a renowned Oxford College saying to me that with boys from
other schools their loyalty and affection to their University or
College might come first, but with Etonians never—Eton is always
first with them. And those of us, either old or young, who are in
any way responsible for Eton welfare, will feel that the highest
tribute we can pay to those who are gone is to endeavour to preserve
the best traditions of the School, and to do our utmost to make the
name of Eton as much cherished by future generations of Etonians as
it was by those generations who fought and died in the Great War. |