MONTROSE has the honour of being the first place in Scotland
where the Greek language was taught although in the days of Robert the
Bruce, “the seminaries had acquired so much celebrity, that he granted the
sum of twenty shillings towards their support.” James Melville in his diary
relates of his uncle Andrew—that prodigy of learning and bold champion of
the Reformation in Scotland —that with the portion that was left him, he
spent, a year or two in Montrose, learning Greek and French under M.
Marsilliers whom John Erskine brought to Montrose, in which he made such
progress, as to astonish the Professor of St. Andrews, by whom he was
tenderly beloved, especially by Mr. John Douglas, Provost of that College,
and Rector of the University, who would take him betwixt his legs at the
fire in winter, and warm his hands and cheeks, and blessing him, say “My
sillie and motherless child, it’s ill to wit what God may mak of thie yet.”
This presentiment of his teacher was fully realised in all the leading
events of his future life —whether as the promoter of sound learning in the
Universities and Schools of Scotland, or in his actings as the Father of
Presbytery. And there is no saying how much he was indebted for his
acknowledged pre-eminence in learning to his acquisition of the Greek and
Latin languages in Montrose. His preceptors at the College of St. Andrews
were not envious, either at his superiority to them in the Greek language,
“with which, indeed, they were unacquainted, for they read and commented
upon the works of Aristotle in a Latin translation. Melville, however, made
use of the Greek text in his studies, a circumstance which exited
astonishment in the University; but it should be recorded to the praise of
his teachers, that, though they could not fail to be mortified under a sense
of their own inferiority, they indulged in no mean jealousy of the superior
acquirements of their pupil; testified no desire to eclipse his reputation ;
threw no obstacles in the way of his advancement; but on the contrary,
loaded him with commendation, and did every thing in their power to
encourage a youth, who they fondly hoped would prove a credit and an
ornament to his country.” He remodelled and presided over the Colleges of
Glasgow and St. Andrews, as well as taught in them; and the fame of his
learning induced many foreigners to attend such celebrated seats of
learning.
James Melville, after having been a few years at the school
of Logie, was sent to continue his learning at Montrose. “The maister of the
scholl, was a lemed, honest, kynd man, whom also for thankfulness I name,
Mr. Andro Miln. I never got a stroke of his hand; howbeit, I committed twa
stupid faults, as it were with fire and sword:—Having the candle in my hand,
on a winter night, before six o’clock, in the school, sitting in the class,
baimly and negligently playing with the bent, with which the floor was
strewed, it kindled, so that we had much ado to put it out with our feet.
The other was being molested by a condisciple, who cut the strings of my pen
and ink-horn with his pen-knife; I aiming with my pen-knife to his legs to
fley him; he feared, and lifting now a leg and now the other, rushed on his
leg upon my knife, and struck himself a deep wound in the shin of the leg,
which was a quarter of a year in curing. In the time of the trying of the
matter, he saw me so humble, so feared, so grieved, yield so many tears, and
by fasting and mourning at the school all day, that he said he could not
find in his heart to punish me farther. But my righteous God let me not slip
that fault, but gave me a warning, and remembrance what it was to be defiled
with blood, although negligently; for within a short space, after I had
caused a cutler, newly come to the town, to polish and sharp the same
pen-knife, and had bought a pennyworth of apples, and cutting and eating the
same in the links, as I put the slice in my mouth, I began to lope up upon a
little sand brae, having the pen-knife in my right hand, I fell, and struck
myself, missing my belly, an inch deep in the inward side of the left knee,
even to the bean, whereby the equity of God's judgment, and my conscience
struck me so, that I was the more wary of knives all my days."
“The grammar school was taught in the Melvilles’ time by Mr.
Thomas Anderson, who, though his learning was slender, was esteemed one of
the best teachers of his time; and under his tuition, Andrew Melville
acquired the principles of the Latin language, in which he afterwards became
so great a proficient. It was the custom in the schools of this period to
combine bodily exercises with the improvement of the mind. By the means of
these, joined to the attention paid to him at home, Andrew recovered from
his early debility, and gradually attained that health of body, which he
enjoyed with very little interruption to an advanced age.”
The Grammar School had the honour of being taught by David
Lindsay, son to the laird of Edzell, who, on account of his learning it
would not be unreasonable to suppose, had some hand in the symbolical
devices and Latin inscriptions which to this day are to be seen around the
walls of the garden of the old Castle of EdzelL Lindsay was afterwards
bishop, first of Brechin, and then of Edinburgh; and it was at his head that
Jeanie Geddes flung the stool when he began to read the book of common
prayer in the High Church of Edinburgh, in July, 1637.
There have been from time to time many eminent teachers in
the Montrose Academy. The Rev. George Cowie, Independent Minister of
Montrose, was at one/time, before he left the Established Church, teacher of
English, and he had a very good style of reading. Perhaps it is not
generally known, that the Rev. Dr. Gordon of the High Church of Edinburgh,
was a candidate for the Rectorship of the Montrose Academy, but such was the
case, as Provost Burness told me many years ago. But it is of late years
that the Academy had a Rector. The first was a Mr. Johnston. Dr. J. P. Nicol,
afterwards Professor of Astronomy in the University of Glasgow, was
previously Rector of the Academy. About 50 years ago, the names of the
public teachers were:—Mr. James Calvert, Rector of the Grammar School; Mr.
John Rintoul, and Mr. James Norval, teachers of Reading and Grammar; besides
which the latter taught Geography; Mr. Robert Baird, and subsequently Mr. W.
Beattie, teachers of Writing and Arithmetic; and Mr. Robert Monro, teacher
of Drawing.
Of all these, Mr. Calvert was the one that we stood most in
awe of, for he was a powerful man, and it was no joke to incur his
displeasure. He would have given a dosen of "palmies” at any time; and we
would have been shaking in our shoes if we had not our lessons—it was in
fact sometimes a reign of terror; though at other times he would have been
funny enough, and even then his fun was sometimes worse than his earnest,
for he would have set himself down beside us, and thrashed us, at first in a
playful mood; but if any bad winced under the lash, or lifted up his
trousers to save his skin, he would have laid on harder, and sometimes got
angry. We were always glad of a visit from Provost Bumes, for when he looked
in, it was always with a smiling face, and his saluation was “Salve Domine,”
to which Mr. C. replied “Salvus ms mi Drasme” and everything got on smoothly
that afternoon; and if we had any fear, it always left us when the Provost
made his appearance, and we felt happy, as when the sun breaks forth in a
cloudy day. When he was angry the saying was, “He’ll not pass a word the
day.” On one of these occasions, he was thrashing the class that was up most
umercifully, and those that had still to be called up, would have been all
anxiety to be prepared with their lessons; but one thinking it impossible
that he would escape, and dreading Calvert’s lash more than anything that
could happen to him, got a bit of tobacco and chewed it, and made himself so
sick, that he was vomiting on the floor. When Mr. C. w as told that he was
so sick, he came to him and said: “Poor fellow, he is very ill; what has
come over him? One of you boys had better take him out to the fresh air, or
just as well take him home altogether.” This was what the rogue wanted, just
to be out of Calvert’s reach, and I believe he was ill with a sore belly all
that night. But all this severity did not make us get our lessons any
better; we just enjoyed our play the more when we got out. We did not enjoy
the advantages within the reach of boys now at the Academy of getting help
with our lessons at night—all the help we got was when we could see Wattie
Scott, or any body, to read over the construction hurriedly at a close head,
a few minutes before the school went in; and if any of us could not follow
him, he would not go back upon it. Now the boys get help with their tasks,
and are pretty well prepared for next day which must give them a feeling of
comfort, besides a good habit of learning a little every day, for “small
strokes fell great oaks,” and “Ut gutta cavat lapidem non vi, Bed ecepe
cadendo, sic puer fit doctus non vi, Bed saepe legendo.” When the scholars
have their lessons well prepared, it gives the teacher opportunity to give
them more information about the niceties of the language, and makes the
whole more of a pleasure than a task. But Mr. C., though a hard master, was
proud if any of his scholars rose to distinction in after life ; and I
noticed that he went to hear the Rev. Dr. King, one of them, in Mr. Nixon’s
church; and was present at Sir Alex. Burnes’s banquet, when he asked me if
the Trades gave me time to take my dinner.
Mr. Rintoul was an excellent and pains-taking teacher of
Reading, Spelling, and Grammar. He kept up good discipline in the
school—sometimes he had 70 in the highest class. He had a good, well-toned
voice; and I always said when at Aberdeen, that I never heard a reader like
Mr. Rintoul. As to his faithfulness to his trust, I may mention, that when a
few of us were kept in for not having our lessons, we had to read the same
piece over perhaps twenty times till we read it to please him, thinking
always when we got to the end this will do now—“No, read it over again.”
Although he had only the use of his left hand, he could give a very hard “palmy,”
and was accounted so severe, that the boys made a bonfire at his death. He
wrote beautifully, too, with his left hand. It happened sometimes after a
few of the classes had been heard, and the rest would have been waiting
their turn to be called up, that Mr. R. would have dismissed the whole
school, being probably invited out to dinner that day, and I suppose no
greater joy could be felt than when children are so unexpectedly set free.
Mr. Norval never had so many scholars, as Mr. Rintoul,
although no doubt he was a very efficient teacher, and the only one who
taught Geography at that time. Being of a rather snarling disposition, it
made the ill-disposed boys play tricks upon him. Both Mr. Calvert’s school
and his entering by the same passage in the middle of the old schools, the
boys would have rapped with their feet at his side, when he would have come
out, tawse in hand; but I don’t know if he ever found out the culprits.
Archie Fraser had a goat that some way or other got into the school; and
being a rather troublesome companion, it was put into the place of
confinement for bad boys, but making its escape, it sprang through the
window and smashed it. Better had it been if the window had been opened at
first. He delivered very learned lectures on Astronomy, which were
afterwards published—it was indeed a treat to hear him make a speech on any
public occasion, being droll and - sarcastic. He got on altogether very
creditably, and managed by the fruits of his industry, to build a habitation
for himself more than a mile out of town, which he named the “Cottage of
Repose,” where, to the end of his days he enjoyed that otium cum dignitate,
which it were to be wished that every teacher, who is really a public
benefactor, should have. Mr. R. Monro made a most perfect likeness of him,
now to be seen in the Museum.
Mr. Robert Baird was the only teacher of Writing and
Arithmetic, until Mr. William Beattie came; and this might never have been,
if Mr. Baird had got an assistant, which, although the council pressed it
upon him, he would never consent to do, until health failing him, he was
obliged to have one. He had a very numerous school, and always managed to
keep up his authority well, and so much the better; that he was never known
to laugh in the school, and that he kept up that respect for himself which
every teacher should have before he do much good. However, for some fault or
other, he drove a boy upon a desk, and made his nose bleed, and that boy’s
father being a member of the town council, he urged them to get another
teacher, since Mr. B. would not consent to get an assistant, and this led to
Mr. Beattie’s being appointed. He first taught in the old council-room,
until the Academy was built in 1814. Several of Mr. Bairds scholars left him
to the new master, whose style of writing was different from Mr. Baird’s,
who wrote a beautiful round hand, the turns being better shaped than
copper-plate, being of a graceful oval shape; now Mr. B. made sharper turns,
and was also a most beautiful ornamental writer, whether Old English, German
text, or flourishing. The figures of birds and eagles that he dashed off
upon the boys’ count books, were superb. Mr. Baird at this time began us to
make capitals on the slate, figures and things, but never attempted the
ornamental writing, and he would at times have quarrelled any of the
scholars for making saw-teethed turns as he called them; this was Beattie’s
style. Mr Baird once fainted in the school, and fell fiat on the floor, and
such a shriek got up, especially among the girls, for I suppose we all
thought he was dead. However, he lived long after this, and died, 1 think
about 1821, at the early age of 47, although any body would have said he was
ten years older —the man in fact was never well. He would have gone
backwards and forwards making and mending pens the whole day, except when he
looked at the copies, or laid down pens. Many a hitch would he have given to
his weary shoulders. He left .£3000 at his death to an aunt. So grave and
taciturn was he at school, that when John Calvert told me he was funny and
joky in his own house I would not believe it. Some of us noticed Mr. Baird
and Mr. Beattie coming down the church-yard together; and we thought they
were speaking together; but Mr. Beattie, many years afterwards, when I was
teacher in the Trades School, and mentioned the circumstance to him, said,
that Mr. Baird never spoke to him in his life, although they were for years
colleagues in the Academy.
After the comparison drawn between the two teachers of
writing, &c., little requires to be said of Mr. Beattie, but that he was an
excellent teacher, both of writing and arithmetic, and that his style of
writing was better adapted for girls than boys. He was pensioned off at
last, when a new arrangement was made in the classes of the Academy, with
£50 a yean—a very good retiring allowance.
Mr. Robert Monro was teacher of drawing, and I never liked
any class that I attended better, and always felt disappointed when any
thing had prevented him coming. He taught both sketching and water-colours,
and excelled in oil-painting, having improved himself—(for he was a genius
in drawing)—under some celebrated master. He drew his own portrait by a
mirror, and it was considered a good likeness; and no better proof of his
skill in portrait painting could be desired than the picture of Mr. Norval
in the Museum, for it is true to the life. He would have drawn imaginary
pictures in oil.
The present teachers are in nowise behind their respected
predecessors, but in many things their superiors, especially as they require
the lessons to be well prepared at home. Mr. Hay has been very fortunate in
getting such an able assistant as Mr. Crockart, who is a most beautiful
writer. The prize-map of Europe, drawn by Miss M. Rodgers, is a chrf-d
oeuvre, and in lightness of touch and finish surpasses an engraving.
Although it has nothing to do with her proficiency, yet it may be mentioned,
as it is a fact, that her father learned to make maps at the Trades’ School
many years ago, and he did them in style. The Academy, in short, in all its
departments is a most respectable institution, and does much credit to the,
town. The line in Virgil, changing the first word in the text, may be
addressed to the scholars—
“O fortunati minium sun si bona norint
Ducipuli” '
Mr. Calvert’s Boarding Establishment.
Mr. Calvert was appointed at the beginning of the century to
succeed Aaron Lithgow, to whom he was assistant, and probably from the time
of his marriage began to keep boarders. The house he lived in, before coming
to Mr. Hodgson’s house in Hodgson Square, was that large house before you
come to Sheret’s Close at the Port. He had at the time I was with
him—between 1815 and 1820—from 20 to 30 boarders at £30 each, besides £3 for
washing; and he had all the laird’s v sons far and near as boarders—the
Taylors of Kirktonhill, the laird of Brotherton’s son, the Raitts of
Anniston, the Duncans of Parkhill, John Bell, the provost’s son of Dundee,
two from Arbroath, George Wilson, son of the minister of Farnell, the
Websters of Carmyllie, who once lived at Newmanswalls, and many others. The
carriage used always to be sent for the Taylors on the Saturday, and brought
them back on the Monday. They once requested me to go home with them, and
being brought up in town, I thought it no small honour to get a ride in a
chaise. The lady, on Sunday, after breakfast, made us read verse about a
chapter in the Bible, and in the evening heard us the Catechism, Mr Robert
Taylor being the young laird at the time. On Sabbath evening Mr C. took us
all out a walk in the links, down from his own house along the golf-course,
and when we got home we retired to the school-room ; but when we heard the
voice of Miss Calvert calling up stairs, “come down, boys,” it sounded as a
knell of departed joys in our ears, for we had to go down and repeat our
Psalms, Taraphrases, and Catechism, and though we had them all it made no
difference, such a terror was it to be summoned into
Mr C.’s presence. Sometimes Mr Baird would have called upon him, and then we
were never called down—a happy relief.
Being accustomed when at Mr Calvert’s to spend the vacation
at Muirton of Benholm, I told the boarders how kindly we were treated by our
friends there, when on a holiday 14 or 15 of them went out in a body—a
distance of 13 miles— and landed upon them for dinner, hungry enough, yon
may be sure, after such a journey. |