is, that the Scots, being fond of it and unruly, got
rather more freedom under the law of the despotic Roman Empire than the
English achieved by that laborious structure, their Common Law.
In other respects it is curious to
observe with what nicety, when they were about it,
our lawyers would
adopt some small specialty of practice from France. Before leaving the
department of jurisprudence, let me mention just one little example of
this. Long before England had an insolvency statute there existed in
Scotland the "cessio," or cession to his creditors of all his worldly
means by a prosecuted and persecuted debtor, who in return obtained a
protection from further personal pursuit by an old regulation, put into
shape in an Act of Sederunt, or rule of court, in the year 1606, dyvours
or debitors, when they obtained this protection, had "to caus mak and buy
ane hatt or bonnet of yellow coloure," to be worn "in all tyme thairefter,
swa lang as they remane and abide dyvoris; with speciall provision and
ordinance, if at ony tyme or place efter the publication of the said
dyvoris at the said mercat-croce, ony person or personis declarit dyvoris
beis fundin wantand the foresaid hatt or bonnet of yellow colour,
toties it sall be lawful to the baillies of Edinburgh, or ony of his
creditoris, to tak and apprehend the said dyvor," &c. This cap was called
the dyvour’s habit, and may be traced in use after the middle of last
century.
In France there was the "cession"—a
pretty exact parallel to the Scots cessio. There, too, a special
head-covering was worn by the privileged debtor to distinguish him from
those who either were not in debt, or, being so, had no special protection
from the inifictions of their creditors. There was, however a difference,
as if to rebut the charge of slavish imitation: in Scotland, as we have
seen, it was a yellow cap; in France, whence the example was taken, the
cap was green.
Since the Union, legislation for
Scotland has been adapted to the old practice of the English Parliament;
anything derived by the old Scots Parliament from French practice cannot,
therefore, be spoken of as an existing influence of France, yet this is
the place in which a word or two may be most appropriately said about it.
The Parliament of Scotland, when it
came to an end at the Union, differed in constitution from that of
England, having three estates —the nobles, the county members, and the
representatives of the municipal corporations—all sitting together in one
house. This came from the old practice of the States-General of France;
but so little could the shape thus given to the institution affect the
condition of the community, that had the shape of the English Parliament
been substituted for that of the French States-General, the country could
not have been freer than it was. In fact, there arose this mighty
difference between the French institution and its Scots offspring, that
the parent died, while its progeny lived.
The practice of the long-forgotten
States-General of France was an object of rather anxious inquiry at the
reassembling of that body in 1789, after they had been some four centuries
and a half in a state of adjournment or dissolution. The investigations
thus occasioned brought out many peculiarities which were in practical
observance in Scotland down to the Union. All the world has read of that
awful crisis arising out of the question whether the Estates should vote
collectively or separately. Had the question remained within the bounds of
reason and regulation, instead of being virtually at the issue of the
sword, much instructive precedent would have been obtained for its
settlement by an examination of the proceedings of that Parliament of
Scotland which adjusted the Union—an exciting matter also, yet, to the
credit of our country, discussed with perfect order, and obedience to
rules of practice which, derived from the custom of the old States-General
of France, were rendered pliant and adaptable by such a long series of
practical adaptations as the country of their nativity was not permitted
to witness.
There was a very distinct adaptation
of another French institution of later origin, when the Court of Session
was established in 1533. Before that year, the king’s justices
administered the law somewhat as in England, but there was an appeal to
Parliament; and as that body did its judicial work by committees, these
became virtually the supreme courts of the realm. Their proceedings, under
the title of ‘The Acts of the Lords Auditors of Causes and Complaints,’
may be purchased from the Government, with the other volumes issued by the
Record Commission. The Court of Session, established to supersede this
kind of tribunal, was exactly a French parliament —a body exercising
appellate judicial functions, along with a few others of a legislative
character. These were few in this country, but in France they became
sufficiently extensive to render the assembling of the proper Parliament
of the land—the States-General—unnecessary for all regal purposes.
Let us turn now to the Universities.
It was undoubtedly the influence of France that stamped on those of
Scotland the form and character of their Continental parentage, so
accurately that to this day they supply the best living specimens from
which we may study the structure of the medieval university. The
University of King’s College in Aberdeen was constructed on the model of
that of Paris, the metropolitan of the universities of the world, whose
usages were the authority in all questions of form and practice. There the
founder of King’s College, Bishop Elphinston, had taught for many years;
so had the first principal, Hector Boece, of whom hereafter. The
transition from the Paris to the Aberdeen of that day must have been a
descent not to be estimated by the present relative condition of the two
places; and one cannot be surprised to find Hector saying that he was
seduced northwards by gifts and promises. Yet it is probable that we would
find fewer actual living remnants of the old institution in Paris itself
than in this northern offspring and its brother universities in Scotland.
In these the forms, the
nomenclature, and the usages of the middle ages are still preserved,
though some of them have naturally changed their character with the
shifting of the times. Each of them has still its chancellor, and
sometimes a high state dignitary accepts of the office. It was of old a
very significant one, for it was the link which allied the semi-republican
institutions of the universities to the hierarchy of St Peter. The bishop
was almost invariably the chancellor, unless the university were
subordinated to some great monastic institution, the head of which became
the chancellor—so in Paris the Prior of St Genevieve held this high
office. In the Scottish universities the usual Continental arrangement
seems to have been adopted prior to the Reformation—as a matter of course,
the bishop was the chancellor.
But while the institution was thus
connected through a high dignitary with the Romish hierarchy, it
possessed, as a great literary community with peculiar privileges, its own
great officer electively chosen for the preservation of those privileges.
It had its Rector, who, like the chief magistrate of a municipal
corporation, but infinitely above him in the more illustrious character of
the functions for which his constituents were incorporated, stood forth as
the head of his republic, and its protector from the invasions either of
the subtle churchmen or the grasping barons. The rector, indeed, was the
concentration of that peculiar commonwealth which the constitution of the
ancient university prescribed. Sir William Hamilton has shown pretty
clearly that, in its original acceptation, the word Universitas was
applied, not to the comprehensiveness of the studies, but to that of the
local and personal expansion of the institution. The university despised
the bounds of provinces, and even nations, and was a place where ardent
minds from all parts of the world met to study together, and impart to
each other the influence of collective intellect working in combination
and competition. The constitution of the Rectorship was calculated to
provide for the protections of this universality, for the election was
managed by the Procurators or Proctors of the Nations, or geographical
clusters into which the students were divided, generally for the purpose
of neutralising the naturally superior influence of the home students, and
keeping up the cosmopolitan character imparted to the system by its
enlightened founders. Hence in Paris the nations were France, Picardy, and
England, afterwards changed to Germany, in which Scotland was included.
Glasgow is still divided into four nations: the Natio Glottiana, or
Clydesdale, taken from the name given to the Clyde by Tacitus. In the
Natio Laudoniana were originally included the rest of Scotland, but it was
found expedient to place the English and the colonists within it; while
Albania, intended to include Britain south of the Forth, has been made
rather inaptly the nation of the foreigners. Rothesay, the fourth nation,
includes the extreme west of Scotland, and Ireland. In Aberdeen there is a
like division into Marenses, or inhabitants of Mar, the central or
metropolitan district; Angusiani, or men of Angus, which, however,
includes the whole world south of the Grampians; while the northern
districts are partitioned into Buchanenses and Moravienses, the people of
Buchan and Moray.
The Procurators of the Nations were,
in the University of Paris, those high authorities to whom, as far
separated from all sublunary influences, King Henry of England proposed,
in the twelfth century, to refer his disputes with the Papal power. In
England they are represented at the present day by the formidable Proctor,
who is a terror to evil-doers without being any praise or protection to
them that do well. But it may safely be said that the ingenious youths who
in Glasgow and Aberdeen go through the annual ceremony, as procuratores
nationum, of tendering the votes of the nations in the election of a
rector, more legitimately represent those procurators of the thirteenth
and fourteenth century, who maintained the rights of their respective
nations in the great intellectual republic called a Universitas. The
discovery, indeed, of this latent power, long hidden, like some paheozoic
fossil, under the pedagogical innovations of modern days—which tended to
make the self-governing institution a school ruled by masters — created
astonishment in all quarters, even in those who found themselves in
possession of the privilege. In Aberdeen especially, when some mischievous
antiquary maintained that, by the charter of the younger college, the
election of a lord rector lay with the students themselves, the
announcement was received with derision by a discerning public, and with a
severe frown, as a sort of seditious libel, enticing the youth to
rebellion, by the indignant professors. But it turned out to be absolutely
true, however astounding it might be to those who are unacquainted with
the early history of universities, and think that everything ancient must
have been tyrannical and hierarchical. The students made a sort of
saturnalia of their fugitive power, while the professors looked on as one
may see a solemn mastiff contemplate the gambols of a litter of privileged
spaniel pups.
Those who are logically the very
worst distributors of patronage or honours sometimes turn out to be the
best, because, distrusting their own capacity to judge correctly, they fix
their choice so high up in the hierarchy of merit as to be beyond cavil.
Hence the catalogue of Lord Rectors soars far above respectability and
appropriateness: it is brilliant. From Burke to Bulwer Lytton and
Macaulay, they have, with a few exceptions, been men of the first
intellectual rank. What is a still more remarkable result than that they
should often have been men of genius, there is scarcely an instance of a
lord rector having been a clamorous quack or a canting fanatic.
In Edinburgh there was no such relic
of the ancient university commonwealth, and the students had instinctively
supplied the want by affiliating their voluntary societies, and choosing a
distinguished man to be the president of the aggregate group. The
constitution of the College of Edinburgh, indeed, was not matured until
after the old constitution of the universities had suffered a reaction,
and, far from any new ones being constructed on the old model, the earlier
universities with difficulty preserved their own constitutions. it is a
tribute to the worth of these, that their example has been followed in the
late readjustments in Edinburgh.
That principle of internal
self-action and independence of the contemporary constituted powers, of
which the rectorship and some other relics remain to us at this day, is
one of the most remarkable, and in many respects admirable, features in
the history of the middle ages. It is involved in mysteries and
contradictions which one would be glad to see unravelled by skilful and
full inquiry. Adapted to the service of pure knowledge, and investing her
with absolute prerogatives, the system was yet one of the creatures of
that Romish hierarchy, which at the same time thought by other efforts to
circumscribe human inquiry, and make it the servant of her own ambitious
efforts.
It may help us in some measure to
the solution of the phenomenon to remember that, however dim the light of
the Church may have shone, it was yet the representative of the
intellectual power, and was in that capacity carrying on a war with brute
force. Catholicism was the great rival and controller of the feudal
strength and tyranny of the age. As intellect and knowledge were the
weapons with which the blind colossus was to be attacked, it was believed
that the intellectual arsenals could not be too extensive or complete—that
intellect could not be too richly cultivated. Like many combatants, the
churchmen perhaps forgot future results in the desire of immediate
victory, and were for the moment blind to the effect so nervously
apprehended by their successors, that the light thus brought in by them
would illuminate the dark corners of their own ecclesiastical system, and
lead the way to its fall. Perhaps such hardy intellects as Abelard or
Aquinas may have anticipated such a result from the stimulus given by them
to intellectual inquiry, and may not have deeply inmented the prospect.
But however it came about—whether in
the blindness of all, or the far-sightedness of some—the Church, from the
thirteenth to pretty far on in the fifteenth century, encouraged learning
with a noble reliance and a zealous energy which it would ill become the
present age to despise or forget. And even if it should all have proceeded
from a blind confidence that the Church placed on a rock was unassailable,
and that mere human wisdom, even trained to the utmost of its powers, was,
after all, to be nothing but her handmaiden, let us respect this
unconscious simplicity which enabled the educational institutions to be
placed in so high and trusted a position.
The Church supplied something then,
indeed, which we search after in vain in the present day, and which we
shall only achieve by some great strides in academic organisation, capable
of supplying from within what was then supplied from without. What was
thus supplied was no less than that cosmopolitan nature, which made the
university not merely parochial, or merely national, but universal, as its
name denoted. The temporal prince might endow the academy with lands and
riches, and might confer upon its members honourable and lucrative
privileges; but it was to the head of the one indivisible Church that the
power belonged of franking it all over Christendom, and establishing
throughout the civilised world a freemasonry of intellect, which made all
the universities, as it were, one great corporation of the learned men of
the world.
It must be admitted that we have
here one of those practical difficulties which form the necessary price of
the freedom of Protestantism. When a great portion of Europe was no longer
attached to Rome, the peculiar centralisation of the educational systems
was broken up. The old universities, indeed, retained their ancient
privileges in a traditional, if not a practically legal shape, carrying
through Lutheranism and Calvinism the characteristics of the abjured
Romanism, yet carrying them unscathed, since they were protected from
injury and insult by the enlightened object for which they were
established and endowed. When, however, in Protestant countries, the old
universities became poor, or when a change of condition demanded the
foundation of a new university, it was difficult to restore anything so
simple and grand as that old community of privileges which made the member
of one university a citizen of all others, according to his rank, whether
he were laureated in Paris or Bologna, Upsala or St Andrews.
The English universities, by their
great wealth and political influence, were able to stand alone, neither
giving nor taking. Their Scottish contemporaries, unable to fight a like
battle, have had reason to complain of their ungenerous isolation; and as
children of the same parentage, and differing only from their southern
neighbours in not having so much worldly prosperity, it is natural that
they should look back with a sigh, which even orthodox Presbyterianism
cannot suppress, to the time when the universal mental sway of Rome,
however offensive it might be in its own insolent supremacy, yet exercised
that high privilege of supereminent greatness to level secondary
inequalities, and place those whom it favoured beyond the reach of
conventional humiliations.
Besides that great officer the
rector, we have in Scotland a Censor too; but for all the grandeur of his
etymological ancestry in Roman history, he is but a small officer—in
stature sometimes, as well as dignity. He calls over the catalogue or roll
of names, marking those absent—a duty quite in keeping with that
enumerating function of the Roman office; which has left to us the word
census as a numbering of the people.
So lately as the eighteenth century,
when the monastic or collegiate system which has now so totally
disappeared from the Scottish universities yet lingered about them, the
censor was a more important, or at least more laborious officer, and,
oddly enough, he corresponded in some measure with the character into
which, in England, the proctor had so strangely deviated. In a regulation
adopted in Glasgow in 1725, it is provided "that all students be obliged,
after the bells ring, immediately to repair to their classes, and to keep
within them, and a censor be appointed to every class, to attend from the
ringing of the bells till the several masters come to their classes, and
observe any, either of his own class or of any other, who shall be found
walking in the courts during the above time, or standing on the stairs, or
looking out at the windows, or making noise." This has something of the
mere schoolroom characteristic of our modern university discipline; but
this other paragraph, from the same set of regulations, is indicative both
of more mature vices among the precocious youth of Glasgow, and a more
inquisitorial corrective organisation :—
"That for keeping order without the
College, a censor be appointed to observe any who shall be in the streets
before the bells ring, and to go now and then to the billiard-tables, and
to the other gaming-places, to observe if any be playing at the times when
they ought to be in their chambers; and that this censor be taken from the
poor scholars of the several classes alternately, as they shall be thought
most fit for that office, and that some reward be thought of for their
pains." In the fierce street conflicts to which we may have occasion to
refer, the poor censors had a more perilous service.