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+The Project Gutenberg Etext of Oxford[City/Univ], by Andrew Lang
+#24 in our series by Andrew Lang
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+Oxford
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+by Andrew Lang
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+December, 2000 [Etext #2444]
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+The Project Gutenberg Etext of Oxford[City/Univ], by Andrew Lang
+******This file should be named oxfrd10.txt or oxfrd10.zip******
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+This etext was prepared by David Price, email ccx074@coventry.ac.uk
+from the 1922 Seeley, Service & Co. Ltd. edition.
+
+
+
+
+
+OXFORD
+
+by Andrew Lang
+
+
+PREFACE
+
+
+
+These papers do not profess even to sketch the outlines of a history
+of Oxford. They are merely records of the impressions made by this
+or that aspect of the life of the University as it has been in
+different ages. Oxford is not an easy place to design in black and
+white, with the pen or the etcher's needle. On a wild winter or late
+autumn day (such as Father Faber has made permanent in a beautiful
+poem) the sunshine fleets along the plain, revealing towers, and
+floods, and trees, in a gleam of watery light, and leaving them once
+more in shadow. The melancholy mist creeps over the city, the damp
+soaks into the heart of everything, and such suicidal weather ensues
+as has been described, once for all, by the author of John-a-Dreams.
+How different Oxford looks when the road to Cowley Marsh is dumb with
+dust, when the heat seems almost tropical, and by the drowsy banks of
+the Cherwell you might almost expect some shy southern water-beast to
+come crashing through the reeds! And such a day, again, is unlike
+the bright weather of late September, when all the gold and scarlet
+of Bagley Wood are concentrated in the leaves that cover the walls of
+Magdalen with an imperial vesture.
+
+Our memories of Oxford, if we have long made her a Castle of
+Indolence, vary no less than do the shifting aspects of her scenery.
+Days of spring and of mere pleasure in existence have alternated with
+days of gloom and loneliness, of melancholy, of resignation. Our
+mental pictures of the place are tinged by many moods, as the
+landscape is beheld in shower and sunshine, in frost, and in the
+colourless drizzling weather. Oxford, that once seemed a pleasant
+porch and entrance into life, may become a dingy ante-room, where we
+kick our heels with other weary, waiting people. At last, if men
+linger there too late, Oxford grows a prison, and it is the final
+condition of the loiterer to take "this for a hermitage." It is well
+to leave the enchantress betimes, and to carry away few but kind
+recollections. If there be any who think and speak ungently of their
+Alma Mater, it is because they have outstayed their natural "welcome
+while," or because they have resisted her genial influence in youth.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I--THE TOWN BEFORE THE UNIVERSITY
+
+
+
+Most old towns are like palimpsests, parchments which have been
+scrawled over again and again by their successive owners. Oxford,
+though not one of the most ancient of English cities, shows, more
+legibly than the rest, the handwriting, as it were, of many
+generations. The convenient site among the interlacing waters of the
+Isis and the Cherwell has commended itself to men in one age after
+another. Each generation has used it for its own purpose: for war,
+for trade, for learning, for religion; and war, trade, religion, and
+learning have left on Oxford their peculiar marks. No set of its
+occupants, before the last two centuries began, was very eager to
+deface or destroy the buildings of its predecessors. Old things were
+turned to new uses, or altered to suit new tastes; they were not
+overthrown and carted away. Thus, in walking through Oxford, you see
+everywhere, in colleges, chapels, and churches, doors and windows
+which have been builded up; or again, openings which have been cut
+where none originally existed. The upper part of the round Norman
+arches in the Cathedral has been preserved, and converted into the
+circular bull's-eye lights which the last century liked. It is the
+same everywhere, except where modern restorers have had their way.
+Thus the life of England, for some eight centuries, may be traced in
+the buildings of Oxford. Nay, if we are convinced by some
+antiquaries, the eastern end of the High Street contains even earlier
+scratches on this palimpsest of Oxford; the rude marks of savages who
+scooped out their damp nests, and raised their low walls in the
+gravel, on the spot where the new schools are to stand. Here half-
+naked men may have trapped the beaver in the Cherwell, and hither
+they may have brought home the boars which they slew in the trackless
+woods of Headington and Bagley. It is with the life of historical
+Oxford, however, and not with these fancies, that we are concerned,
+though these papers have no pretension to be a history of Oxford. A
+series of pictures of men's life here is all they try to sketch.
+
+It is hard, though not impossible, to form a picture in the mind of
+Oxford as she was when she is first spoken of by history. What she
+may have been when legend only knows her; when St. Frideswyde built a
+home for religious maidens; when she fled from King Algar and hid
+among the swine, and after a whole fairy tale of adventures died in
+great sanctity, we cannot even guess. This legend of St. Frideswyde,
+and of her foundation, the germ of the Cathedral and of Christ
+Church, is not, indeed, without its value and significance for those
+who care for Oxford. This home of religion and of learning was a
+home of religion from the beginning, and her later life is but a
+return, after centuries of war and trade, to her earliest purpose.
+What manner of village of wooden houses may have surrounded the
+earliest rude chapels and places of prayer, we cannot readily guess,
+but imagination may look back on Oxford as she was when the English
+Chronicle first mentions her. Even then it is not unnatural to think
+Oxford might well have been a city of peace. She lies in the very
+centre of England, and the Northmen, as they marched inland, burning
+church and cloister, must have wandered long before they came to
+Oxford. On the other hand, the military importance of the site must
+have made it a town that would be eagerly contended for. Any places
+of strength in Oxford would command the roads leading to the north
+and west, and the secure, raised paths that ran through the flooded
+fens to the ford or bridge, if bridge there then was, between
+Godstowe and the later Norman grand pont, where Folly Bridge now
+spans the Isis. Somewhere near Oxford, the roads that ran towards
+Banbury and the north, or towards Bristol and the west, would be
+obliged to cross the river. The water-way, too, and the paths by the
+Thames' side, were commanded by Oxford. The Danes, as they followed
+up the course of the Thames from London, would be drawn thither,
+sooner or later, and would covet a place which is surrounded by half
+a dozen deep natural moats. Lastly, Oxford lay in the centre of
+England indeed, but on the very marches of Mercia and Wessex. A
+border town of natural strength and of commanding situation, she can
+have been no mean or poor collection of villages in the days when she
+is first spoken of, when Eadward the Elder "incorporated with his own
+kingdom the whole Mercian lands on both sides of Watling Street"
+(Freeman's Norman Conquest, vol. i. p. 57), and took possession of
+London and of Oxford as the two most important parts of a scientific
+frontier. If any man had stood, in the days of Eadward, on the hill
+that was not yet "Shotover," and had looked along the plain to the
+place where the grey spires of Oxford are clustered now, as it were
+in a purple cup of the low hills, he would have seen little but "the
+smoke floating up through the oakwood and the coppice,"
+
+
+[Greek text which cannot be reproduced]
+
+
+The low hills were not yet cleared, nor the fens and the wolds
+trimmed and enclosed. Centuries later, when the early students came,
+they had to ride "through the thick forest and across the moor, to
+the East Gate of the city" (Munimenta Academica, Oxon., vol. i. p.
+60). In the midst of a country still wild, Oxford was already no
+mean city; but the place where the hostile races of the land met to
+settle their differences, to feast together and forget their wrongs
+over the mead and ale, or to devise treacherous murder, and close the
+banquet with fire and sword.
+
+Again and again, after Eadward the Elder took Mercia, the Danes went
+about burning and wasting England. The wooden towns were flaming
+through the night, and sending up a thick smoke through the day, from
+Thamesmouth to Cambridge. "And next was there no headman that force
+would gather, and each fled as swift as he might, and soon was there
+no shire that would help another." When the first fury of the
+plundering invaders was over, when the Northmen had begun to wish to
+settle and till the land and have some measure of peace, the early
+meetings between them and the English rulers were held in the border-
+town, in Oxford. Thus Sigeferth and Morkere, sons of Earngrim, came
+to see Eadric in Oxford, and there were slain at a banquet, while
+their followers perished in the attempt to avenge them. "Into the
+tower of St. Frideswyde they were driven, and as men could not drive
+them thence, the tower was fired, and they perished in the burning."
+So says William of Malmesbury, who, so many years later, read the
+story, as he says, in the records of the Church of St. Frideswyde.
+There is another version of the story in the Codex Diplomaticus
+(DCCIX.). Aethelred is made to say, in a deed of grant of lands to
+St. Frideswyde's Church ("mine own minster"), that the Danes were
+slain in the massacre of St. Brice. On that day Aethelred, "by the
+advice of his satraps, determined to destroy the tares among the
+wheat, the Danes in England." Certain of these fled into the
+minster, as into a fortress, and therefore it was burned and the
+books and monuments destroyed. For this cause Aethelred gives lands
+to the minster, "fro Charwell brigge andlong the streame, fro
+Merewell to Rugslawe, fro the lawe to the foule putte," and so forth.
+It is pleasant to see how old are the familiar names "Cherwell,"
+"Hedington," "Couelee" or Cowley, where the college cricket-grounds
+are. Three years passed, and the headmen of the English and of the
+Danes met at Oxford again, and more peacefully, and agreed to live
+together, obedient to the laws of Eadgar; to the law, that is, as it
+was administered in older days, that seem happier and better ruled to
+men looking back on them from an age of confusion and bloodshed. At
+Oxford, too, met the peaceful gathering of 1035, when Danish and
+English claims were in some sort reconciled, and at Oxford Harold
+Harefoot, the son of Cnut, died in March 1040. The place indeed was
+fatal to kings, for St. Frideswyde, in her anger against King Algar,
+left her curse on it. Just as the old Irish kings were forbidden by
+their customs to do this or that, to cross a certain moor on May
+morning, or to listen to the winnowing of the night-fowl's wings in
+the dusk above the lake of Tara; so the kings of England shunned to
+enter Oxford, and to come within the walls of Frideswyde the maiden.
+Harold died there, as we have seen, but there he was not buried. His
+body was laid at Westminster, where it could not rest, for his
+enemies dug it up, and cast it forth upon the fens, or threw it into
+the river. Many years later, when Henry III. entered Oxford, not
+without fear, the curse of Frideswyde lighted also upon him. He came
+in 1263, with Edward the prince, and misfortune fell upon him, so
+that his barons defeated and took him prisoner at the battle of
+Lewes. The chronicler of Oseney Abbey mentions his contempt of
+superstitions, and how he alone of English kings entered the city:
+"Quod nullus rex attemptavit a tempore Regis Algari," an error, for
+Harold attemptavit, and died. When Edward I. was king, he was less
+audacious than his father, and in 1275 he rode up to the East Gate
+and turned his horse's head about, and sought a lodging outside the
+town, reflexis habenis equitans extra moenia aulam regiain in
+suburbio positam introivit. In 1280, however, he seems to have
+plucked up courage and attended a Chapter of Dominicans in Oxford.
+
+The last of the meetings between North and South was held at Oxford
+in October 1065. "In urle quae famoso nomine Oxnaford nuncupatur,"
+to quote a document of Cnut's. (Cod. Dipl. DCCXLVI. in 1042.) There
+the Northumbrian rebels met Harold in the last days of Edward the
+Confessor. With this meeting we leave that Oxford before the
+Conquest, of which possibly not one stone, or one rafter, remains.
+We look back through eight hundred years on a city, rich enough, it
+seems, and powerful, and we see the narrow streets full of armed
+bands of men--men that wear the cognisance of the horse or of the
+raven, that carry short swords, and are quick to draw them; men that
+dress in short kirtles of a bright colour, scarlet or blue; that wear
+axes slung on their backs, and adorn their bare necks and arms with
+collars and bracelets of gold. We see them meeting to discuss laws
+and frontiers, and feasting late when business is done, and
+chaffering for knives with ivory handles, for arrows, and saddles,
+and wadmal, in the booths of the citizens. Through the mist of time
+this picture of ancient Oxford may be distinguished. We are tempted
+to think of a low, grey twilight above that wet land suddenly lit up
+with fire; of the tall towers of St. Frideswyde's Minster flaring
+like a torch athwart the night; of poplars waving in the same wind
+that drives the vapour and smoke of the holy place down on the Danes
+who have taken refuge there, and there stand at bay against the
+English and the people of the town. The material Oxford of our times
+is not more unlike the Oxford of low wooden booths and houses, and of
+wooden spires and towers, than the life led in its streets was unlike
+the academic life of to-day. The Conquest brought no more quiet
+times, but the whole city was wrecked, stormed, and devastated,
+before the second period of its history began, before it was the seat
+of a Norman stronghold, and one of the links of the chain by which
+England was bound. "Four hundred and seventy-eight houses were so
+ruined as to be unable to pay taxes," while, "within the town or
+without the wall, there were but two hundred and forty-three houses
+which did yield tribute."
+
+With the buildings of Robert D'Oily, a follower of the Conqueror's,
+and the husband of an English wife, the heiress of Wigod of
+Wallingford, the new Oxford begins. Robert's work may be divided
+roughly into two classes. First, there are the strong places he
+erected to secure his possessions, and, second, the sacred places he
+erected to secure the pardon of Heaven for his robberies. Of the
+castle, and its "shining coronal of towers," only one tower remains.
+From the vast strength of this picturesque edifice, with the natural
+moat flowing at its feet, we may guess what the castle must have been
+in the early days of the Conquest, and during the wars of Stephen and
+Matilda. We may guess, too, that the burghers of Oxford, and the
+rustics of the neighbourhood, had no easy life in those days, when,
+as we have seen, the town was ruined, and when, as the extraordinary
+thickness of the walls of its remaining tower demonstrates, the
+castle was built by new lords who did not spare the forced labour of
+the vanquished. The strength of the position of the castle is best
+estimated after viewing the surrounding country from the top of the
+tower. Through the more modern embrasures, or over the low wall
+round the summit, you look up and down the valley of the Thames, and
+gaze deep into the folds of the hills. The prospect is pleasant
+enough, on an autumn morning, with the domes and spires of modern
+Oxford breaking, like islands, through the sea of mist that sweeps
+above the roofs of the good town. In the old times, no movement of
+the people who had their fastnesses in the fens, no approach of an
+army from any direction could have evaded the watchman. The towers
+guarded the fords and the bridge and were themselves almost
+impregnable, except when a hard winter made the Thames, the Cherwell,
+and the many deep and treacherous streams passable, as happened when
+Matilda was beleaguered in Oxford. This natural strength of the site
+is demonstrated by the vast mound within the castle walls, which
+tradition calls the Jews' Mound, but which is probably earlier than
+the Norman buildings. Some other race had chosen the castle site for
+its fortress in times of which we know nothing. Meanwhile, some of
+the practical citizens of Oxford wish to level the Jews' Mound, and
+to "utilise" the gravel of which it is largely composed. There is
+nothing to be said against this economic project which could interest
+or affect the persons who entertain it. M. Brunet-Debaines'
+illustration shows the mill on a site which must be as old as the
+tower. Did the citizens bring their corn to be tolled and ground at
+the lord's mill?
+
+Though Robert was bent on works of war, he had a nature inclined to
+piety, and, his piety beginning at home, he founded the church of St.
+George within the castle. The crypt of the church still remains, and
+is not without interest for persons who like to trace the changing
+fortunes of old buildings. The site of Robert's Castle is at present
+occupied by the County Gaol. When you have inspected the tower
+(which does not do service as a dungeon) you are taken, by the
+courtesy of the Governor, to the crypt, and satisfy your
+archaeological curiosity. The place is much lower, and worse
+lighted, than the contemporary crypt of St. Peter's-in-the-East, but
+not, perhaps, less interesting. The square-headed capitals have not
+been touched, like some of those in St. Peter's, by a later chisel.
+The place is dank and earthy, but otherwise much as Robert D'Oily
+left it. There is an odd-looking arrangement of planks on the floor.
+It is THE NEW DROP, which is found to work very well, and gives
+satisfaction to the persons who have to employ it. Sinister the
+Norman castle was in its beginning, "it was from the castle that men
+did wrong to the poor around them; it was from the castle that they
+bade defiance to the king, who, stranger and tyrant as he might be,
+was still a protector against smaller tyrants." Sinister the castle
+remains; you enter it through ironed and bolted doors, you note the
+prisoners at their dreary exercises, and, when you have seen the
+engines of the law lying in the old crypt you pass out into the place
+of execution. Here, in a corner made by Robert's tower and by the
+wall of the prison, is a dank little quadrangle. The ground is of
+the yellow clay and gravel which floors most Oxford quadrangles. A
+few letters are scratched on the soft stone of the wall--the letters
+"H. R." are the freshest. These are the initials of the last man who
+suffered death in this corner--a young rustic who had murdered his
+sweetheart. "H. R." on the prison wall is all his record, and his
+body lies under your feet, and the feet of the men who are to die
+here in after days pass over his tomb. It is thus that malefactors
+are buried, "within the walls of the gaol."
+
+One is glad enough to leave the remains of Robert's place of arms--as
+glad as Matilda may have been when "they let her down at night from
+the tower with ropes, and she stole out, and went on foot to
+Wallingford." Robert seems at first to have made the natural use of
+his strength. "Rich he was, and spared not rich or poor, to take
+their livelihood away, and to lay up treasures for himself." He
+stole the lands of the monks of Abingdon, but of what service were
+moats, and walls, and dungeons, and instruments of torture, against
+the powers that side with monks?
+
+The Chronicle of Abingdon has a very diverting account of Robert's
+punishment and conversion. "He filched a certain field without the
+walls of Oxford that of right belonged to the monastery, and gave it
+over to the soldiers in the castle. For which loss the brethren were
+greatly grieved--the brethren of Abingdon. Therefore, they gathered
+in a body before the altar of St. Michael--the very altar that St.
+Dunstan the archbishop dedicated--and cast themselves weeping on the
+ground, accusing Robert D'Oily, and praying that his robbery of the
+monastery might be avenged, or that he might be led to make
+atonement." So, in a dream, Robert saw himself taken before Our Lady
+by two brethren of Abingdon, and thence carried into the very meadow
+he had coveted, where "most nasty little boys," turpissimi pueri,
+worked their will on him. Thereon Robert was terrified and cried
+out, and wakened his wife, who took advantage of his fears, and
+compelled him to make restitution to the brethren.
+
+After this vision, Robert gave himself up to pampering the monastery
+and performing other good works. He it was who built a bridge over
+the Isis, and he restored the many ruined parish churches in Oxford--
+churches which, perhaps, he and his men had helped to ruin. The
+tower of St. Michael's, in "the Corn," is said to be of his building;
+perhaps he only "restored" it, for it is in the true primitive style-
+-gaunt, unadorned, with round-headed windows, good for shooting from
+with the bow. St. Michael's was not only a church, but a watchtower
+of the city wall; and here the old northgate, called Bocardo, spanned
+the street. The rooms above the gate were used till within quite
+recent times, and the poor inmates used to let down a greasy old hat
+from the window in front of the passers-by, and cry, "Pity the
+Bocardo birds":
+
+
+"Pigons qui sont en 1'essoine,
+Enserrez soubz trappe voliere,"
+
+
+as a famous Paris student, Francois Villon, would have called them.
+Of Bocardo no trace remains, but St. Michael's is likely to last as
+long as any edifice in Oxford. Our illustrations represent it as it
+was in the last century. The houses huddle up to the church, and
+hide the lines of the tower. Now it stands out clear, less
+picturesque than it was in the time of Bocardo prison. Within the
+last two years the windows have been cleared, and the curious and
+most archaic pillars, shaped like balustrades, may be examined. It
+is worth while to climb the tower and remember the times when arrows
+were sent like hail from the narrow windows on the foes who
+approached Oxford from the north, while prayers for their confusion
+were read in the church below.
+
+That old Oxford of war was also a trading town. Nothing more than
+the fact that it was a favourite seat of the Jews is needed to prove
+its commercial prosperity. The Jews, however, demand a longer notice
+in connection with the still unborn University. Meanwhile, it may be
+remarked that Oxford trade made good use of the river. The Abingdon
+Chronicle (ii. 129) tells us that "from each barque of Oxford city,
+which makes the passage by the river Thames past Abingdon, a hundred
+herrings must yearly be paid to the cellarer. The citizens had much
+litigation about land and houses with the abbey, and one Roger
+Maledoctus (perhaps a very early sample of the pass-man) gave
+Abingdon tenements within the city." Thus we leave the pre-Academic
+Oxford a flourishing town, with merchants and moneylenders. As for
+the religious, the brethren of St. Frideswyde had lived but loosely
+(pro libito viverunt), says William of Malmesbury, and were to be
+superseded by regular canons, under the headship of one Guimond, and
+the patronage of the Bishop of Salisbury. Whoever goes into Christ
+Church new buildings from the river-side, will see, in the old
+edifice facing him, a certain bulging in the wall. That is the mark
+of the pulpit, whence a brother used to read aloud to the brethren in
+the refectory of St. Frideswyde. The new leaven of learning was soon
+to ferment in an easy Oxford, where men lived pro libito, under good
+lords, the D'Oilys, who loved the English, and built, not churches
+and bridges only, but the great and famous Oseney Abbey, beyond the
+church of St. Thomas, and not very far from the modern station of the
+Great Western Railway. Yet even after public teaching in Oxford
+certainly began, after Master Robert Puleyn lectured in divinity
+there (1133; cf. Oseney Chronicle), the tower was burned down by
+Stephen's soldiery in 1141 (Oseney Chronicle, p. 24).
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II--THE EARLY STUDENTS--A DAY WITH A MEDIEVAL UNDERGRADUATE
+
+
+
+Oxford, some one says, "is bitterly historical." It is difficult to
+escape the fanaticism of Antony Wood, and of "our antiquary," Bryan
+Twyne, when one deals with the obscure past of the University.
+Indeed, it is impossible to understand the strange blending of new
+and old at Oxford--the old names with the new meanings--if we avert
+our eyes from what is "bitterly historical." For example, there is
+in most, perhaps in all, colleges a custom called "collections." On
+the last days of term undergraduates are called into the Hall, where
+the Master and the Dean of the Chapel sit in solemn state.
+Examination papers are set, but no one heeds them very much. The
+real ordeal is the awful interview with the Master and the Dean. The
+former regards you with the eyes of a judge, while the Dean says,
+"Master, I am pleased to say that Mr. Brown's PAPERS are very fair,
+very fair. But in the matters of CHAPELS and of CATECHETICS, Mr.
+Brown sets--for a SCHOLAR--a very bad example to the other
+undergraduates. He has only once attended divine service on Sunday
+morning, and on that occasion, Master, his dress consisted
+exclusively of a long great-coat and a pair of boots." After this
+accusation the Master will turn to the culprit and observe, with
+emphasis ill represented by italics, "Mr. Brown, the COLLEGE cannot
+hear with pleasure of such behaviour on the part of a SCHOLAR. You
+are GATED, Mr. Brown, for the first fortnight of next term." Now why
+should this tribunal of the Master and the Dean, and this dread
+examination, be called collections? Because (Munimenta Academica,
+Oxon., i. 129) in 1331 a statute was passed to the effect that "every
+scholar shall pay at least twelve pence a-year for lectures in logic,
+and for physics eighteenpence a-year," and that "all Masters of Arts
+except persons of royal or noble family, shall be obliged to COLLECT
+their salary from the scholars." This collection would be made at
+the end of term; and the name survives, attached to the solemn day of
+doom we have described, though the college dues are now collected by
+the bursar at the beginning of each term.
+
+By this trivial example the perversions of old customs at Oxford are
+illustrated. To appreciate the life of the place, then, we must
+glance for a moment at the growth of the University. As to its
+origin, we know absolutely nothing. That Master Puleyn began to
+lecture there in 1133 we have seen, and it is not likely that he
+would have chosen Oxford if Oxford had possessed no schools. About
+these schools, however, we have no information. They may have grown
+up out of the seminary which, perhaps, was connected with St.
+Frideswyde's, just as Paris University may have had some connection
+with "the School of the Palace." Certainly to Paris University the
+academic corporation of Oxford, the Universitas, owed many of her
+regulations; while, again, the founder of the college system, Walter
+de Merton (who visited Paris in company with Henry III.), may have
+compared ideas with Robert de Sorbonne, the founder of the college of
+that name. In the early Oxford, however, of the twelfth and most of
+the thirteenth centuries, colleges with their statutes were unknown.
+The University was the only corporation of the learned, and she
+struggled into existence after hard fights with the town, the Jews,
+the Friars, the Papal courts. The history of the University begins
+with the thirteenth century. She may be said to have come into being
+as soon as she possessed common funds and rents, as soon as fines
+were assigned, or benefactions contributed to the maintenance of
+scholars. Now the first recorded fine is the payment of fifty-two
+shillings by the townsmen of Oxford as part of the compensation for
+the hanging of certain clerks. In the year 1214 the Papal Legate, in
+a letter to his "beloved sons in Christ, the burgesses of Oxford,"
+bade them excuse the "scholars studying in Oxford" half the rent of
+their halls, or hospitia, for the space of ten years. The burghers
+were also to do penance, and to feast the poorer students once a
+year; but the important point is, that they had to pay that large
+yearly fine "propter suspendium clericorum"--all for the hanging of
+the clerks. Twenty-six years after this decision of the Legate,
+Robert Grossteste, the great Bishop of Lincoln, organised the payment
+and distribution of the fine, and founded the first of the CHESTS,
+the chest of St. Frideswyde. These chests were a kind of Mont de
+Piete, and to found them was at first the favourite form of
+benefaction. Money was left in this or that chest, from which
+students and masters would borrow, on the security of pledges, which
+were generally books, cups, daggers, and so forth.
+
+Now, in this affair of 1214 we have a strange passage of history,
+which happily illustrates the growth of the University. The
+beginning of the whole affair was the quarrel with the town, which,
+in 1209, had hanged two clerks, "in contempt of clerical liberty."
+The matter was taken up by the Legate--in those bad years of King
+John the Pope's viceroy in England--and out of the humiliation of the
+town the University gained money, privileges, and halls at low
+rental. These were precisely the things that the University wanted.
+About these matters there was a constant strife, in which the Kings,
+as a rule, took part with the University. The University possessed
+the legal knowledge, which the monarchs liked to have on their side,
+and was therefore favoured by them. Thus, in 1231 (Wood, Annals, i.
+205), "the King sent out his Breve to the Mayor and Burghers
+commanding them not to overrate their houses"; and thus gradually the
+University got the command of the police, obtained privileges which
+enslaved the city, and became masters where they had once been
+despised, starveling scholars. The process was always the same. On
+the feast of St. Scholastica, for example, in 1354, Walter de
+Springheuse, Roger de Chesterfield, and other clerks, swaggered into
+the Swyndlestock tavern in Carfax, began to speak ill of John de
+Croydon's wine, and ended by pitching the tankard at the head of that
+vintner. In ten minutes the town bell at St. Martin's was rung, and
+the most terrible of all Town-and-Gown rows began. The Chancellor
+could do no less than bid St. Mary's bell reply to St. Martin's, and
+shooting commenced. The Gown held their own very well at first, and
+"defended themselves till Vespertide," when the citizens called in
+their neighbours, the rustics of Cowley, Headington, and Hincksey.
+The results have been precisely described in anticipation by Homer:
+
+[Greek text which cannot be reproduced]
+
+Which is as much as to say, "The townsfolk call for help to their
+neighbours, the yokels, that were more numerous than they, and better
+men in battle . . . so when the sun turned to the time of the loosing
+of oxen the Town drave in the ranks of the Gown, and won the
+victory." They were strong, the townsmen, but not merciful. "The
+crowns of some chaplains, viz. all the skin so far as the tonsure
+went, these diabolical imps flayed off in scorn of their clergy," and
+"some poor innocents these confounded sons of Satan knocked down,
+beat, and most cruelly wounded." The result, in the long run, was
+that the University received from Edward III. "a most large charter,
+containing many liberties, some that they had before, and OTHERS THAT
+HE HAD TAKEN AWAY FROM THE TOWN." Thus Edward granted to the
+University "the custody of the assize of bread, wine, and ale," the
+supervising of measures and weights, the sole power of clearing the
+streets of the town and suburbs. Moreover, the Mayor and the chief
+Burghers were condemned yearly to a sort of public penance and
+humiliation on St. Scholastica's Day. Thus, by the middle of the
+fourteenth century, the strife of Town and Gown had ended in the
+complete victory of the latter.
+
+Though the University owed its success to its clerkly character, and
+though the Legate backed it with all the power of Rome, yet the
+scholars were Englishmen and Liberals first, Catholics next. Thus
+they had all English sympathy with them when they quarrelled with the
+Legate in 1238, and shot his cook (who, indeed, had thrown hot broth
+at them); and thus, in later days, the undergraduates were with Simon
+de Montfort against King Henry, and aided the barons with a useful
+body of archers. The University, too, constantly withstood the
+Friars, who had settled in Oxford on pretence of wishing to convert
+the Jews, and had attempted to get education into their hands. "The
+Preaching Friars, who had lately obtained from the Pope divers
+privileges, particularly an exemption, as they pretended, from being
+subject to the jurisdiction of the University, began to behave
+themselves very insolent against the Chancellors and Masters."
+(Wood, Annals, i. 399.) The conduct of the Friars caused endless
+appeals to Rome, and in this matter, too, Oxford was stoutly
+national, and resisted the Pope, as it had, on occasions, defied the
+King. The King's Jews, too, the University kept in pretty good
+order, and when, in 1268, a certain Hebrew snatched the crucifix from
+the hand of the Chancellor and trod it under foot, his tribesmen were
+compelled to raise "a fair and stately cross of marble, very
+curiously wrought," on the scene of the sacrilege.
+
+The growth in power and importance of academic corporations having
+now been sketched, let us try to see what the outer aspect of the
+town was like in these rude times, and what manner of life the
+undergraduates led. For this purpose we may be allowed to draw a
+rude, but not unfaithful, picture of a day in a student's life. No
+incident will be introduced for which there is not authority, in
+Wood, or in Mr. Anstey's invaluable documents, the Munimenta
+Academica, published in the collection of the Master of the Rolls.
+Some latitude as to dates must be allowed, it is true, and we are not
+of course to suppose that any one day of life was ever so gloriously
+crowded as that of our undergraduate.
+
+The time is the end of the fourteenth century. The forest and the
+moor stretch to the east gate of the city. Magdalen bridge is not
+yet built, nor of course the tower of Magdalen, which M. Brunet-
+Debaines has sketched from Christ Church walks. Not till about 1473
+was the tower built, and years would pass after that before
+choristers saluted with their fresh voices from its battlements the
+dawn of the first of May, or sermons were preached from the beautiful
+stone pulpit in the open air. When our undergraduate, Walter de
+Stoke, or, more briefly, Stoke, was at Oxford, the spires of the city
+were few. Where Magdalen stands now, the old Hospital of St. John
+then stood--a foundation of Henry III.--but the Jews were no longer
+allowed to bury their dead in the close, which is now the "Physic
+Garden." "In 1289," as Wood says, "the Jews were banished from
+England for various enormities and crimes committed by them." The
+Great and Little Jewries--those dim, populous streets behind the
+modern Post Office--had been sacked and gutted. No clerk would ever
+again risk his soul for a fair Jewess's sake, nor lose his life for
+his love at the hands of that eminent theologian, Fulke de Breaute.
+The beautiful tower of Merton was still almost fresh, and the spires
+of St. Mary's, of old All Saints, of St. Frideswyde, and the strong
+tower of New College on the city wall, were the most prominent
+features in a bird's-eye view of the town. But though part of
+Merton, certainly the chapel tower as we have seen, the odd muniment-
+room with the steep stone roof, and, perhaps, the Library, existed;
+though New was built; and though Balliol and University owned some
+halls, on, or near, the site of the present colleges, Oxford was
+still an university of poor scholars, who lived in town's-people's
+dwellings.
+
+Thus, in the great quarrel with the Legate in 1238, John Currey, of
+Scotland, boarded with Will Maynard, while Hugh le Verner abode in
+the house of Osmund the Miller, with Raynold the Irishman and seven
+of his fellows. John Mortimer and Rob Norensis lodged with Augustine
+Gosse, and Adam de Wolton lodged in Cat Street, where you can still
+see the curious arched doorway of Catte's, or St. Catherine's Hall.
+By the time of my hero, Walter Stoke, the King had not yet decreed
+that all scholars of years of discretion should live in the house of
+some sufficient principal (1421); so let him lodge at Catte Hall, at
+the corner of the street that leads to New College out of the modern
+Broad Street, which was then the City Ditch. It is six o'clock on a
+summer morning, and the bells waken Stoke, who is sleeping on a flock
+bed, in his little camera. His room, though he is not one of the
+luxurious clerks whom the University scolds in various statutes, is
+pretty well furnished. His bed alone is worth not less than
+fifteenpence; he has a "cofer" valued at twopence (we have plenty of
+those old valuations), and in his cofer are his black coat, which no
+one would think dear at fourpence, his tunic, cheap at tenpence, "a
+roll of the seven Psalms," and twelve books only "at his beddes
+heed." Stoke has not
+
+
+"Twenty bookes, clothed in blak and reed,
+Of Aristotil and of his philosophie,"
+
+
+like Chaucer's Undergraduate, who must have been a bibliophile.
+There are not many records of "as many as twenty bookes" in the old
+valuations. The great ornament of the room is a neat trophy of
+buckler, bow, arrows, and two daggers, all hanging conveniently on
+the wall. Stoke opens his eyes, yawns, looks round for his clothes,
+and sees, with no surprise, that his laundress has not sent home his
+clean linen. No; Christina, of the parish of St. Martin, who used to
+be Stoke's lotrix, has been detected at last. "Under pretence of
+washing for scholars, multa mala perpetrata fuerunt," she has
+committed all manner of crimes, and is now in the Spinning House,
+carcerata fuit. Stoke wastes a malediction on the laundress, and,
+dressing as well as he may, runs down to Parson's Pleasure, I hope,
+and has a swim, for I find no tub in his room, or, indeed, in the
+camera of any other scholar. It is now time to go, not to chapel--
+for Catte's has no chapel--but to parish Church, and Stoke goes very
+devoutly to St. Peter's, where we shall find him again, later in the
+day, in another mood. About eight o'clock he "commonises" with a
+Paris man, Henricus de Bourges, who has an admirable mode of cooking
+omelettes, which makes his company much sought after at breakfast-
+time. The University, in old times, was full of French students, as
+Paris was thronged by Englishmen. Lectures begin at nine, and first
+there is lecture in the hall by the principal of Catte's. That
+scholar receives his pupils in a bare room, where it is very doubtful
+whether the students are allowed to sit down. From the curious old
+seal of the University of St. Andrews, however, it appears that the
+luxury of forms was permitted, in Scotland, to all but the servitors,
+who held the lecturer's candles. The principal of Catte's is in
+academic dress, and wears a black cape, boots, and a hood. The
+undergraduates have no distinguishing costume. After an hour or two
+of viva voce exercises in the grammar of Priscian, preparatory
+lecture is over, and a reading man will hurry off to the "schools," a
+set of low-roofed buildings between St. Mary's and Brasenose. There
+he will find the Divinity "school" or lecture-room in the place of
+honour, with Medicine on one hand and Law on the other; the lecture-
+rooms for grammar, rhetoric, logic, arithmetic, music, geometry, and
+astronomy, for metaphysics, ethics, and "the tongues," stretching
+down School Street on either side. Here the Praelectors are holding
+forth, and all newly made Masters of Arts are bound to teach their
+subject regere scholas, whether they like it or not. Our friend,
+Master Stoke, however, is on pleasure bent, and means to pay his fine
+of two-pence for omitting lecture, and go off to the festival of his
+nation (he is of the Southern nation, and hates Scotch, Welsh, and
+Irish) in the parish Church. He stops in the Flower Market and at a
+barber's shop on his way to St. Peter's, and comes forth a wonderful
+pagan figure with a Bacchic mask covering his honest countenance,
+with horns protruding through a wig of tow, with vine-leaves twisted
+in and out of the horns, and roses stuck wherever there is room for
+roses. Henricus de Bourges, and half a dozen Picardy men, with some
+merry souls from the Southern side of the Thames, are jigging down
+the High, playing bag-pipes and guitars. To these Stoke joins
+himself, and they waltz joyously into the church, and in and out of
+the gateways of the different halls, singing, -
+
+
+"Mihi est propositum in taberna mori,
+Vinum sit appositum morientis ori,
+Ut dicant, quum venerint, angelorum chori
+Deus sit propitius huic potatori."
+
+
+The students of the Northern nations mock, of course, at these
+revellers, thumbs are bitten, threats exchanged, and we shall see
+what comes of the quarrel. But the hall bells chime half-past noon;
+it is dinner-time in Oxford, and Stoke, as he throws off his mask
+(larva) and vine-leaves, mutters to himself the equivalent for "there
+WILL be a row about this." There will, indeed, for the penalty is
+not "crossing at the buttery," nor "gating," but--excommunication!
+(Munim. Academ., i. 18.) Dinner is not a very quiet affair, for the
+Catte's men have had to fight for their beer in the public streets
+with some Canterbury College fellows who were set on by their Warden,
+of all people, to commit this violence (ut vi et violentia raperent
+cerevisiam aliorum scholarum in vico): however, Catte's has had the
+best of it, and there is beer in plenty. It is possible, however,
+that fish is scarce, for certain "forestallers" (regratarii) have
+been buying up salmon and soles, and refusing to sell them at less
+than double the proper price. On the whole, however, there a rude
+abundance of meat and bread; indeed, Stoke may have fared better in
+Catte's than the modern undergraduate does in the hall of the college
+protected by St. Catherine. After dinner there would be lecture in
+Lent, but we are not in Lent. A young man's fancy lightly turns to
+the Beaumont, north of the modern Beaumont Street, where there are
+wide playing-fields, and space for archery, foot-ball, stool-ball,
+and other sports. Stoke rushes out of hall, and runs upstairs into
+the camera of Roger de Freshfield, a reading man, but a good fellow.
+He knocks and enters, and finds Freshfield over his favourite work,
+the Posterior Analytics, and a pottle of strawberries. "Come down to
+the Beaumont, old man," he says, "and play pyked staffe." Roger is
+disinclined to move, he MUST finish the Posterior Analytics. Stoke
+lounges about, in the eternal fashion of undergraduates after
+luncheon, and picking up the Philobiblon of Richard de Bury (then
+quite a new book), clinches his argument in favour of pyke and staffe
+with a quotation: "You will perhaps see a stiff-necked youth
+lounging sluggishly in his study . . . He is not ashamed to eat fruit
+and cheese over an open book, and to transfer his cup from side to
+side upon it." Thus addressed, Roger lays aside his Analytics, and
+the pair walk down by Balliol, to the Beaumont, where pyked staffe,
+or sword and buckler, is played. At the Beaumont they find two men
+who say that "sword and buckler can be played sofft and ffayre," that
+is, without hard hitting, and with one of these Stoke begins to
+fence. Alas! a dispute arose about a stroke, the by-standers
+interfered, and Stoke's opponent drew his hanger (extraxit cultellum
+vocatum hangere), and hit one John Felerd over the sconce. On this
+the Proctors come up, and the assailant is put in Bocardo, while
+Stoke goes off to a "pass-supper" given by an inceptor, who has just
+taken his degree. These suppers were not voluntary entertainments,
+but enforced by law. At supper the talk ranges over University
+gossip, they tell of the scholar who lately tried to raise the devil
+in Grope Lane, and was pleased by the gentlemanly manner of the foul
+fiend. They speak of the Queen's man, who has just been plucked for
+maintaining that Ego currit, or ego est currens, is as good Latin as
+ego curro. Then the party breaks up, and Stoke goes towards Merton,
+with some undergraduates of that college, Bridlington, Alderberk, and
+Lymby. At the corner of Grope Lane, out come many men of the
+Northern nations, armed with shields, and bows and arrows. Stoke and
+his friends run into Merton for weapons, and "standing in a window of
+that hall, shot divers arrows, and one that Bridlington shot hit
+Henry de l'Isle, and David Kirkby unmercifully perished, for after
+John de Benton had given him a dangerous wound in the head with his
+faulchion, came Will de la Hyde and wounded him in the knee with his
+sword."
+
+These were rough times, and it is not improbable that Stoke had a
+brush with the Town before he got safely back to Catte's Hall. The
+old rudeness gave way gradually, as the colleges swallowed up the
+irregular halls, and as the scholars unattached, infando nomine
+Chamber-Dekyns, ceased to exist. Learning, however, dwindled, as
+colleges increased, under the clerical and reactionary rule of the
+House of Lancaster.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III--THE RENAISSANCE AND THE REFORMATION
+
+
+
+We have now arrived at a period in the history of Oxford which is
+confused and unhappy, but for us full of interest, and perhaps of
+instruction. The hundred years that passed by between the age of
+Chaucer and the age of Erasmus were, in Southern Europe, years of the
+most eager life. We hear very often--too often, perhaps--of what is
+called the Renaissance. The energy of delight with which Italy
+welcomed the new birth of art, of literature, of human freedom, has
+been made familiar to every reader. It is not with Italy, but with
+England and with Oxford, that we are concerned. How did the
+University and the colleges prosper in that strenuous time when the
+world ran after loveliness of form and colour, as, in other ages, it
+has run after warlike renown, or the far-off rewards of the saintly
+life? What was Oxford doing when Florence, Venice, and Rome were
+striving towards no meaner goal than perfection?
+
+It must be said that "the spring came slowly up this way." The
+University merely reflected the very practical character of the
+people. In contemplating the events of the fifteenth and sixteenth
+centuries, in their influence on English civilisation, we are
+reminded once more of the futility of certain modern aspirations. No
+amount of University Commissions, nor of well-meant reforms, will
+change the nature of Englishmen. It is impossible, by distributions
+of University prizes and professorships, to attract into the career
+of letters that proportion of industry and ingenuity which, in
+Germany for example, is devoted to the scholastic life. Politics,
+trade, law, sport, religion, will claim their own in England, just as
+they did at the Revival of Letters. The illustrious century which
+Italy employed in unburying, appropriating, and enjoying the
+treasures of Greek literature and art, our fathers gave, in England,
+to dynastic and constitutional squabbles, and to religious broils.
+The Renaissance in England, and chiefly in Oxford, was like a bitter
+and changeful spring. There was an hour of genial warmth, there
+breathed a wind from the south, in the lifetime of Chaucer; then came
+frosts and storms; again the brief sunshine of court favour shone on
+literature for a while, when Henry VIII. encouraged study, and Wolsey
+and Fox founded Christ Church and Corpus Christi College; once more
+the bad days of religious strife returned, and the promise of
+learning was destroyed. Thus the chief result of the awakening
+thought of the fourteenth century in England was not a lively delight
+in literature, but the appearance of the Lollards. The intensely
+practical genius of our race turned not to letters, but to questions
+about the soul and its future, about property and its distribution.
+The Lollards were put down in Oxford; "the tares were weeded out" by
+the House of Lancaster, and in the process the germs of free thought,
+of originality, and of a rational education, were destroyed.
+"Wyclevism did domineer among us," says Wood; and, in fact, the
+intellect of the University was absorbed, like the intellect of
+France during the heat of the Jansenist controversy, in defending or
+assailing "267 damned conclusions," drawn from the books of Wyclif.
+The University "lost many of her children through the profession of
+Wyclevism." Those who remained were often "beneficed clerks." The
+Friars lifted up their heads again, and Oxford was becoming a large
+ecclesiastical school. As the University declared to Archbishop
+Chichele (1438), "Our noble mother, that was blessed in so goodly an
+offspring, is all but utterly destroyed and desolate." Presently the
+foreign wars and the wars of the Roses drained the University of the
+youth of England. The country was overrun with hostile forces, or
+infested by disbanded soldiers. Plague and war, war and plague, and
+confusion, alternate in the annals. Sickly as Oxford is to-day by
+climate and situation, she is a city of health compared to what she
+was in the middle ages. In 1448 "a pestilence broke out, occasioned
+by the overflowing of waters, . . . also by the lying of many
+scholars in one room or dormitory in almost every Hall, which
+occasioned nasty air and smells, and consequently diseases." In the
+general dulness and squalor two things were remarkable: one, the
+last splendour of the feudal time; the other, the first dawn of the
+new learning from Italy. In 1452, George Neville of Balliol, brother
+of the King-maker, gave the most prodigious pass-supper that was ever
+served in Oxford. On the first day there were 600 messes of meat,
+divided into three courses. The second course is worthy of the
+attention of the epicure:
+
+
+SECOND COURSE
+
+Vian in brase. Carcell.
+Crane in sawce. Partrych.
+Young Pocock. Venson baked.
+Coney. Fryed meat in paste.
+Pigeons. Lesh Lumbert.
+Byttor. A Frutor.
+Curlew. A Sutteltee.
+
+
+Against this prodigious gormandising we must set that noble gift, the
+Library presented to Oxford by Duke Humfrey of Gloucester. In the
+Catalogue, drawn up in 1439, we mark many books of the utmost value
+to the impoverished students. Here are the works of Plato, and the
+Ethics and Politics of Aristotle, translated by Leonard the Aretine.
+Here, among the numerous writings of the Fathers, are Tully and
+Seneca, Averroes and Avicenna, Bellum Trojae cum secretis secretorum,
+Apuleius, Aulus Gellius, Livy, Boccaccio, Petrarch. Here, with
+Ovid's verses, is the Commentary on Dante, and his Divine Comedy.
+Here, rarest of all, is a Greek Dictionary, the silent father of
+Liddel's and Scott's to be.
+
+The most hopeful fact in the University annals, after the gift of
+those manuscripts (to which the very beauty of their illuminations
+proved ruinous in Puritan times), was the establishment of a
+printing-press at Oxford, and the arrival of certain Italians, "to
+propagate and settle the studies of true and genuine humanity among
+us." The exact date of the introduction of printing let us leave to
+be determined by the learned writer who is now at work on the history
+of Oxford. The advent of the Italians is dated by Wood in 1488.
+Polydore Virgil had lectured in New College. "He first of all taught
+literature in Oxford. Cyprianus and Nicholaus, Italici, also arrived
+and dined with the Vice-President of Magdalen on Christmas Day. Lily
+and Colet, too, one of them the founder, the other the first Head
+Master, of St. Paul's School, were about this time studying in Italy,
+under the great Politian and Hermolaus Barbarus. Oxford, which had
+so long been in hostile communication with Italy as represented by
+the Papal Courts, at last touched, and was thrilled by the electric
+current of Italian civilisation. At this conjuncture of affairs, who
+but is reminded of the youth and the education of Gargantua? Till
+the very end of the fifteenth century Oxford had been that "huge
+barbarian pupil," and had revelled in vast Rabelaisian suppers: "of
+fat beeves he had killed three hundred sixty seven thousand and
+fourteen, that in the entering in of spring he might have plenty of
+powdered beef." The bill of fare of George Neville's feast is like
+one of the catalogues dear to the Cure of Meudon. For Oxford, as for
+Gargantua, "they appointed a great sophister-doctor, that read him
+Donatus, Theodoletus, and Alanus, in parabolis." Oxford spent far
+more than Gargantua's eighteen years and eleven months over "the book
+de Modis significandis, with the commentaries of Berlinguandus and a
+rabble of others." Now, under Colet, and Erasmus (1497), Oxford was
+put, like Gargantua, under new masters, and learned that the old
+scholarship "had been but brutishness, and the old wisdom but blunt,
+foppish toys serving only to bastardise noble spirits, and to corrupt
+all the flower of youth."
+
+The prospects of classical learning at Oxford (and, whatever may be
+the case to-day, on classical learning depended, in the fifteenth
+century, the fortunes of European literature) now seemed fair enough.
+People from the very source of knowledge were lecturing in Oxford.
+Wolsey was Bursar of Magdalen. The colleges, to which B. N. C. was
+added in 1509, and C. C. C. in 1516, were competing with each other
+for success in the New Learning. Fox, the founder of C. C. C.,
+established in his college two chairs of Greek and Latin, "to
+extirpate barbarism." Meanwhile, Cambridge had to hire an Italian to
+write public speeches at twenty pence each! Henry VIII. in his youth
+was, like Francis I., the patron of literature, as literature was
+understood in Italy. He saw in learning a new splendour to adorn his
+court, a new source of intellectual luxury, though even Henry had an
+eye on the theological aspect of letters. Between 1500 and 1530
+Oxford was noisy with the clink of masons' hammers and chisels.
+Brasenose, Corpus, and the magnificent kitchen of Christ Church, were
+being erected. (The beautiful staircase, which M. Brunet-Debaines
+has sketched, was not finished till 1640. The world owes it to Dr.
+Fell. The Oriel niches, designed in the illustration, are of rather
+later date.) The streets were crowded with carts, dragging in from
+all the neighbouring quarries stones for the future homes of the fair
+humanities. Erasmus found in Oxford a kind of substitute for the
+Platonic Society of Florence. "He would hardly care much about going
+to Italy at all, except for the sake of having been there. When I
+listen to Colet, it seems to me like listening to Plato himself"; and
+he praises the judgment and learning of those Englishmen, Grocyn and
+Linacre, who had been taught in Italy.
+
+In spite of all this promise, the Renaissance in England was rotten
+at the root. Theology killed it, or, at the least, breathed on it a
+deadly blight. Our academic forefathers "drove at practice," and saw
+everything with the eyes of party men, and of men who recognised no
+interest save that of religion. It is Mr. Seebohm (Oxford Reformers,
+1867), I think, who detects, in Colet's concern with the religious
+side of literature, the influence of Savonarola. When in Italy "he
+gave himself entirely to the study of the Holy Scriptures." He
+brought to England from Italy, not the early spirit of Pico of
+Mirandola, the delightful freedom of his youth, but his later
+austerity, his later concern with the harmony of scripture and
+philosophy. The book which the dying Petrarch held wistfully in his
+hands, revering its very material shape, though he could not spell
+its contents, was the Iliad of Homer. The book which the young
+Renaissance held in its hands in England, with reverence and
+eagerness as strong and tender, contained the Epistles of St. Paul.
+It was on the Epistles that Colet lectured in 1496-97, when doctors
+and abbots flocked to hear him, with their note-books in their hands.
+Thus Oxford differed from Florence, England from Italy: the former
+all intent on what it believed to be the very Truth, the latter all
+absorbed on what it knew to be no other than Beauty herself.
+
+We cannot afford to regret the choice that England and Oxford made.
+The search for Truth was as certain to bring "not peace but a sword"
+as the search for Beauty was to bring the decadence of Italy, the
+corruption of manners, the slavery of two hundred years. Still, our
+practical earnestness did rob Oxford of the better side of the
+Renaissance. It is not possible here to tell the story of religious
+and social changes, which followed so hard upon each other, in the
+reigns of Henry VIII., Edward VI., Mary, and Elizabeth. A few
+moments in these stormy years are still memorable for some terrible
+or ludicrous event.
+
+That Oxford was rather "Trojan" than "Greek," that men were more
+concerned about their dinners and their souls than their prosody and
+philosophy, in 1531, is proved by the success of Grynaeus. He
+visited the University and carried off quantities of MSS., chiefly
+Neoplatonic, on which no man set any value. Yet, in 1535, Layton, a
+Commissioner, wrote to Cromwell that he and his companions had
+established the New Learning in the University. A Lecture in Greek
+was founded in Magdalen, two chairs of Greek and Latin in New, two in
+All Souls, and two already existed, as we have seen, in C. C. C.
+This Layton is he that took a Rabelaisian and unquotable revenge on
+that old tyrant of the Schools, Duns Scotus. "We have set Dunce in
+Bocardo, and utterly banished him from Oxford for ever, with all his
+blind glosses . . . And the second time we came to New College we
+found all the great quadrant full of the leaves of Dunce, the wind
+blowing them into every corner. And there we found a certain Mr.
+Greenfield, a gentleman of Buckinghamshire, gathering up part of the
+same books' leaves, as he said, therewith to make him sewers or
+blanshers, to keep the deer within his wood, thereby to have the
+better cry with his hounds." Ah! if the University Commissioners
+would only set Aristotle, and Messrs. Ritter and Preller, "in
+Bocardo," many a young gentleman out of Buckinghamshire and other
+counties would joyously help in the good work, and use the pages, if
+not for blanshers, for other sportive purposes!
+
+"Habent sua fata libelli," as Terentianus Maurus says, in a
+frequently quoted verse. If Cromwell's Commissioners were hard on
+Duns, the Visitors of Edward VI. were ruthless in their condemnation
+of everything that smacked of Popery or of magic. Evangelical
+religion in England has never been very favourable to learning.
+Thus, in 1550 "the ancient libraries were by their appointment
+rifled. Many manuscripts, guilty of no other superstition than red
+letters in the front or titles, were condemned to the fire . . . Such
+books wherein appeared angles were thought sufficient to be
+destroyed, because accounted Papish or diabolical, or both." A cart-
+load of MSS., lucubrations of the Fellows of Merton, chiefly in
+controversial divinity, was taken away; but, by the good services of
+one Herks, a Dutchman, many books were preserved, and, later, entered
+the Bodleian Library. The world can spare the controversial
+manuscripts of the Fellows of Merton, but who knows what invaluable
+scrolls may have perished in the Puritan bonfire! Persons, the
+librarian of Balliol, sold old books to buy Protestant ones. Two
+noble libraries were sold for forty shillings, for waste paper. Thus
+the reign of Edward VI. gave free play to that ascetic and
+intolerable hatred of letters which had now and again made its voice
+heard under Henry VIII. Oxford was almost empty. The schools were
+used by laundresses, as a place wherein clothes might conveniently be
+dried. The citizens encroached on academic property. Some schools
+were quite destroyed, and the sites converted into gardens. Few men
+took degrees. The college plate and the jewels left by pious
+benefactors were stolen, and went to the melting-pot. Thus
+flourished Oxford under Edward VI.
+
+The reign of Mary was scarcely more favourable to letters. No one
+knew what to be at in religion. In Magdalen no one could be found to
+say Mass, the fellows were turned out, the undergraduates were
+whipped--boyish martyrs--and crossed at the buttery. What most
+pleases, in this tragic reign, is the anecdote of Edward Anne of
+Corpus. Anne, with the conceit of youth, had written a Latin satire
+on the Mass. He was therefore sentenced to be publicly flogged in
+the hall of his college, and to receive one lash for each line in his
+satire. Never, surely, was a poet so sharply taught the merit of
+brevity. How Edward Anne must have regretted that he had not knocked
+off an epigram, a biting couplet, or a smart quatrain with the sting
+of the wit in the tail!
+
+Oxford still retains a memory of the hideous crime of this reign. In
+Broad Street, under the windows of Balliol, there is a small stone
+cross in the pavement. This marks the place where, some years ago, a
+great heap of wooden ashes was found. These ashes were the remains
+of the fire of October 16th, 1555--the day when Ridley and Latimer
+were burned. "They were brought," says Wood, "to a place over
+against Balliol College, where now stands a row of poor cottages, a
+little before which, under the town wall, ran so clear a stream that
+it gave the name of Canditch, candida fossa, to the way leading by
+it." To recover the memory of that event, let the reader fancy
+himself on the top of the tower of St. Michael's, that is,
+immediately above the city wall. No houses interfere between him and
+the open country, in which Balliol stands; not with its present
+frontage, but much farther back. A clear stream runs through the
+place where is now Broad Street, and the road above is dark with a
+swaying crowd, out of which rises the vapour of smoke from the
+martyrs' pile. At your feet, on the top of Bocardo prison (which
+spanned the street at the North Gate), Cranmer stands manacled,
+watching the fiery death which is soon to purge away the memory of
+his own faults and crimes. He, too, joined that "noble army of
+martyrs" who fought all, though they knew it not, for one cause--the
+freedom of the human spirit.
+
+It was in a night-battle that they fell, and "confused was the cry of
+the paean," but they won the victory, and we have entered into the
+land for which they contended. When we think of these martyrdoms,
+can we wonder that the Fellows of Lincoln did not spare to ring a
+merry peal on their gaudy-day, the day of St. Hugh, even though Mary
+the Queen had just left her bitter and weary life?
+
+It would be pleasant to have to say that learning returned to Oxford
+on the rising of "that bright Occidental star, Queen Elizabeth." On
+the other hand, the University recovered slowly, after being "much
+troubled," as Wood says, "AND HURRIED UP AND DOWN by the changes of
+religion." We get a glimpse, from Wood, of the Fellows of Merton
+singing the psalms of Sternhold and Hopkins round a fire in the
+College Hall. We see the sub-warden snatching the book out of the
+hands of a junior fellow, and declaring "that he would never dance
+after that pipe." We find Oxford so illiterate, that she could not
+even provide an University preacher! A country gentleman, Richard
+Taverner of Woodeaton, would stroll into St. Mary's, with his sword
+and damask gown, and give the Academicians, destitute of academical
+advice, a sermon beginning with these words:
+
+
+"Arriving at the mount of St. Mary's, I have brought you some fine
+bisketts baked in the Oven of Charitie, carefully conserved for the
+chickens of the Church, the sparrows of the spirit, and the sweet
+swallows of salvation.
+
+
+In spite of these evil symptoms, a Greek oration and plenty of Latin
+plays were ready for Queen Elizabeth when she visited Oxford in 1566.
+The religious refugees, who had "eaten mice at Zurich" in Mary's
+time, had returned, and their influence was hostile to learning. A
+man who had lived on mice for his faith was above Greek. The court
+which contained Sydney, and which welcomed Bruno, was strong enough
+to make the classics popular. That famed Polish Count, Alasco, was
+"received with Latin orations and disputes (1583) in the best
+manner," and only a scoffing Italian, like Bruno, ventured to call
+the Heads of Houses THE DROWSY HEADS--dormitantes. Bruno was a man
+whom nothing could teach to speak well of people in authority.
+Oxford enjoyed the religious peace (not extended to "Seminarists") of
+Elizabeth's and James's reigns, and did not foresee that she was
+about to become the home of the Court and a place of arms.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV--JACOBEAN OXFORD
+
+
+
+The gardens of Wadham College on a bright morning in early spring are
+a scene in which the memory of old Oxford pleasantly lingers, and is
+easily revived. The great cedars throw their secular shadow on the
+ancient turf, the chapel forms a beautiful background; the whole
+place is exactly what it was two hundred and sixty years ago. The
+stones of Oxford walls, when they do not turn black and drop off in
+flakes, assume tender tints of the palest gold, red, and orange.
+Along a wall, which looks so old that it may well have formed a
+defence of the ancient Augustinian priory, the stars of the yellow
+jasmine flower abundantly. The industrious hosts of the bees have
+left their cells, to labour in this first morning of spring; the
+doves coo, the thrushes are noisy in the trees. All breathes of the
+year renewal, and of the coming April; and all that gladdens us may
+have gladdened some indolent scholar in the time of King James.
+
+In the reign of the first Stuart king of England, Oxford became the
+town that we know. Even in Elizabeth's days, could we ascend the
+stream of centuries, we should find ourselves much at home in Oxford.
+The earliest trustworthy map, that of Agas (1578), is worth studying,
+if we wish to understand the Oxford that Elizabeth left, and that the
+architects of James embellished, giving us the most interesting
+examples of collegiate buildings, which are both stately and
+comfortable. Let us enter Oxford by the Iffley Road, in the year
+1578. We behold, as Agas enthusiastically writes:
+
+
+"A citie seated, rich in everything,
+Girt with wood and water, meadow, corn, and hill."
+
+
+The way is not bordered, of course, by the long, straggling streets
+of rickety cottages, which now stretch from the bridge half-way to
+Cowley and Iffley. The church, called by ribalds "the boiled
+rabbit," from its peculiar shape, lies on the right; there is a gate
+in the city wall, on the place where the road now turns to Holywell.
+At this time the walls still existed, and ran from Magdalen past "St.
+Mary's College, called Newe," through Exeter, through the site of Mr.
+Parker's shop, and all along the south side of Broad Street to St.
+Michael's, and Bocardo Gate. There the wall cut across to the
+castle. On the southern side of the city, it skirted Corpus and
+Merton Gardens, and was interrupted by Christ Church. Probably if it
+were possible for us to visit Elizabethan Oxford, the walls and the
+five castle towers would seem the most curious features in the place.
+Entering the East Gate, Magdalen and Magdalen Grammar School would be
+familiar objects. St. Edmund's Hall would be in its present place,
+and Queen's would present its ancient Gothic front. It is easy to
+imagine the change in the High Street which would be produced by a
+Queen's not unlike Oriel, in the room of the highly classical edifice
+of Wren. All Souls would be less remarkable; at St. Mary's we should
+note the absence of the "scandalous image" of Our Lady over the door.
+At Merton the fellows' quadrangle did not yet exist, and a great
+wood-yard bordered on Corpus. In front of Oriel was an open space
+with trees, and there were a few scattered buildings, such as
+Peckwater's Inn (on the site of "Peck"), and Canterbury College. Tom
+Quad was stately but incomplete. Turning from St. Mary's past B. N.
+C., we miss the attics in Brasenose front, we miss the imposing
+Radcliffe, we miss all the quadrangle of the Schools, except the
+Divinity school, and we miss the Theatre. If we go down South
+Street, past Ch. Ch. we find an open space where Pembroke stands.
+Where Wadham is now, the most uniform, complete, and unchanged of all
+the colleges, there are only the open pleasances, and perhaps a few
+ruins of the Augustinian priory. St. John's lacks its inner
+quadrangle, and Balliol, in place of its new buildings, has its old
+delightful grove. As to the houses of the town, they are not unlike
+the tottering and picturesque old roofs and gables of King Street.
+
+To the Oxford of Elizabeth's reign, then, the founders and architects
+of her successor added, chiefly, the Schools' quadrangle, with the
+great gate of the five orders, a building beautiful, as it were, in
+its own despite. They added a smaller curiosity of the same sort, at
+Merton; they added Wadham, perhaps their most successful achievement.
+Their taste was a medley of new and old: they made a not
+uninteresting effort to combine the exquisiteness of Gothic
+decoration with the proportions of Greek architecture. The tower of
+the five orders reminds the spectator, in a manner, of the style of
+Milton. It is rich and overloaded, yet its natural beauty is not
+abated by the relics out of the great treasures of Greece and Rome,
+which are built into the mass. The Ionic and Corinthian pillars are
+like the Latinisms of Milton, the double-gilding which once covered
+the figures and emblems of the upper part of the tower gave them the
+splendour of Miltonic ornament. "When King James came from Woodstock
+to see this quadrangular pile, he commanded the gilt figures to be
+whitened over," because they were so dazzling, or, as Wood expresses
+it, "so glorious and splendid that none, especially when the sun
+shone, could behold them." How characteristic of James is this
+anecdote! He was by no means le roi soleil, as courtiers called
+Louis XIV., as divines called the pedantic Stuart. It is easy to
+fancy the King issuing from the Library of Bodley, where he has been
+turning over books of theology, prosing, and displaying his learning
+for hours. The rheumy, blinking eyes are dazzled in the sunlight,
+and he peevishly commands the gold work to be "whitened over."
+Certainly the translators of the Bible were but ill-advised when they
+compared his Majesty to the rising sun in all his glory.
+
+James was rather fond of visiting Oxford and the royal residence at
+Woodstock. We shall see that his Court, the most dissolute, perhaps,
+that England ever tolerated, corrupted the manners of the students.
+On one of his Majesty's earliest visits he had a chance of displaying
+the penetration of which he was so proud. James was always finding
+out something or somebody, till it almost seemed as if people had
+discovered that the best way to flatter him was to try to deceive
+him. In 1604, there was in Oxford a certain Richard Haydock, a
+Bachelor of Physic. This Haydock practised his profession during the
+day like other mortals, but varied from the kindly race of men by a
+pestilent habit of preaching all night. It was Haydock's contention
+that he preached unconsciously in his sleep, when he would give out a
+text with the greatest gravity, and declare such sacred matters as
+were revealed to him in slumber, "his preaching coming by
+revelation." Though people went to hear Haydock, they were chiefly
+influenced by curiosity. "His auditory were willing to silence him
+by pulling, haling, and pinching him, yet would he pertinaciously
+persist to the end, and sleep still." The King was introduced into
+Haydock's bedroom, heard him declaim, and next day cross-examined him
+in private. Awed by the royal acuteness, Haydock confessed that he
+was a humbug, and that he had taken to preaching all night by way of
+getting a little notoriety, and because he felt himself to be "a
+buried man in the University."
+
+That a man should hope to get reputation by preaching all night is
+itself a proof that the University, under James, was too
+theologically minded. When has it been otherwise? The religious
+strife of the reigns of Henry VIII., Edward VI., and Mary, was not
+asleep; the troubles of Charles's time were beginning to stir.
+Oxford was as usual an epitome of English opinion. We see the
+struggle of the wildest Puritanism, of Arminianism, of Pelagianism,
+of a dozen "isms," which are dead enough, but have left their
+pestilent progeny to disturb a place of religion, learning, and
+amusement. By whatever names the different sects were called, men's
+ideas and tendencies were divided into two easily recognisable
+classes. Calvinism and Puritanism on one side, with the Puritanic
+haters of letters and art, were opposed to Catholicism in germ, to
+literature, and mundane studies. How difficult it is to take a side
+in this battle, where both parties had one foot on firm ground, the
+other in chaos, where freedom, or what was to become freedom of
+thought, was allied with narrow bigotry, where learning was chained
+to superstition!
+
+As early as 1606, Mr. William Laud, B.D., of St. John's College,
+began to disturb the University. The young man preached a sermon
+which was thought to look Romewards. Laud became SUSPECT, it was
+thought a "scandalous" thing to give him the usual courteous
+greetings in the street or in the college quadrangle. From this time
+the history of Oxford, for forty years, is mixed up with the history
+of Laud. The divisions of Roundhead and of Cavalier have begun. The
+majority of the undergraduates are on the side of Laud; and the
+Court, the citizens, and many of the elder members of the University,
+are with the Puritans.
+
+The Court and the King, we have said, were fond of being entertained
+in the college halls. James went from libraries to academic
+disputations, thence to dinner, and from dinner to look on at
+comedies played by the students. The Cambridge men did not care to
+see so much royal favour bestowed on Oxford. When James visited the
+University in 1641, a Cambridge wit produced a remarkable epigram.
+For some mysterious reason the playful fancies of the sister
+University have never been greatly admired at Oxford, where the brisk
+air, men flatter themselves, breeds nimbler humours. Here is part of
+the Cantab's epigram:
+
+
+"To Oxenford the King has gone,
+With all his mighty peers,
+That hath in peace maintained us,
+These five or six long years."
+
+
+The poem maunders on for half a dozen lines, and "loses itself in the
+sands," like the River Rhine, without coming to any particular point
+or conclusion. How much more lively is the Oxford couplet on the
+King, who, being bored by some amateur theatricals, twice or thrice
+made as if he would leave the hall, where men failed dismally to
+entertain him.
+
+
+"The King himself did offer,"--"What, I pray?"
+"He offered twice or thrice--to go away!"
+
+
+As a result of the example of the Court, the students began to wear
+love-locks. In Elizabeth's time, when men wore their hair "no longer
+than their ears," long locks had been a mark, says Wood, of
+"swaggerers." Drinking and gambling were now very fashionable,
+undergraduates were whipped for wearing boots, while "Puritans were
+many and troublesome," and Laud publicly declared (1614) that
+"Presbyterians were as bad as Papists." Did Laud, after all, think
+Papists so very bad? In 1617 he was President of his college, St.
+John's, on which he set his mark. It is to Laud and to Inigo Jones
+that Oxford owes the beautiful garden-front, perhaps the most lovely
+thing in Oxford. From the gardens--where for so many summers the
+beauty of England has rested in the shadow of the chestnut-trees,
+amid the music of the chimes, and in air heavy with the scent of the
+acacia flowers--from the gardens, Laud's building looks rather like a
+country-house than a college.
+
+If St. John's men have lived in the University too much as if it were
+a large country-house, if they have imitated rather the Toryism than
+the learning of their great Archbishop, the blame is partly Laud's.
+How much harm to study he and Waynflete have unwittingly done, and
+how much they have added to the romance of Oxford! It is easy to
+understand that men find it a weary task to read in sight of the
+beauty of the groves of Magdalen and of St. John's. When Kubla Khan
+"a stately pleasure-dome decreed," he did not mean to settle students
+there, and to ask them for metaphysical essays, and for Greek and
+Latin prose compositions. Kubla Khan would have found a palace to
+his desire in the gardens of Laud, or where Cherwell, "meandering
+with a mazy motion," stirs the green weeds, and flashes from the
+mill-wheel, and flows to the Isis through meadows white and purple
+with fritillaries.
+
+
+"And here are gardens bright with sinuous rills,
+Where blossoms many an incense-bearing tree";
+
+
+but here is scarcely the proper training-ground of first-class men!
+
+Oxford returned to her ancient uses in 1625. Soon after the
+accession of Charles I. the plague broke out in London, and Oxford
+entertained the Parliament, as six hundred years before she had
+received the Witan. There seemed something ominous in all that
+Charles did in his earlier years--the air, or men's minds, was full
+of the presage of fate. It was observed that the House of Commons
+met in the Divinity School, and that the place seemed to have
+infected them with theological passion. After 1625 there was never a
+Parliament but had its committee to discuss religion, and to stray
+into the devious places of divinity. The plague pursued Charles to
+Oxford. In those days, and long afterwards, it was a common
+complaint that the citizens built rows of poor cottages within the
+walls, and that these cottages were crowded by dirty and indigent
+people. Plague was bred almost yearly at Oxford, and Charles really
+seems to have improved the sanitary arrangements of the city.
+
+Laud, the President of St. John's, became, by some intrigue,
+Chancellor of the University. He made Oxford many presents of Greek,
+Chinese, Hebrew, Latin, and Arabic MSS. There may have been--let us
+hope there were--quiet bookworms who enjoyed these gifts, while the
+town and University were bubbling over with religious feuds. People
+grumbled that "Popish darts were whet afresh on a Dutch grindstone."
+A series of anti-Romish and anti-Royal sermons and pamphlets,
+followed as a rule by a series of recantations, kept men's minds in a
+ferment. The good that Laud did by his gifts--and he was a
+munificent patron of learning--he destroyed by his dogmatism.
+Scholars could not decipher Greek texts while they were torturing
+biblical ones into arguments for and against the opinions of the
+Chancellor. What is the true story about the gorgeous vestments
+which were found in a box in the house of the President of St.
+John's, and which are now preserved in the library of that college?
+Did they belong to the last of the old Catholic presidents of what
+was Chichele's College of St. Bernard before the Reformation? Were
+they, on the other hand, the property of Laud himself? It has been
+said that Laud would not have known how to wear them. Fancy sees him
+treasuring that bright ecclesiastical raiment, [Greek text which
+cannot be reproduced], in some place of security. At night, perhaps,
+when candles were lit and curtains drawn, and he was alone, he may
+have arrayed himself in the gorgeous chasuble before the mirror, as
+Hetty wore her surreptitious finery. "There is a great deal of human
+nature in man." If Laud really strutted in solitude, draped rather
+at random in these vestments, the ecclesiastical gear is even more
+interesting than the thin ivory-headed staff which supported him on
+his way to the scaffold; more curious than the diary in which he
+recorded the events of night and day, of dreaming hours and waking.
+In the library at St. John's they show his bust--a tarnished, gilded
+work of art. He has a neat little cocked-up moustache, not like a
+prelate's; the face is that of a Bismarck without strength of
+character.
+
+In speaking of Oxford before the civil war, let us not forget that
+true students and peaceable men found a welcome retreat beyond the
+din of theological fictions. Lord Falkland's house was within ten
+miles of the town. "In this time," says Clarendon, in his immortal
+panegyric, "in this time he contracted familiarity and friendship
+with the most polished men of the University, who found such an
+immenseness of wit and such a solidity of judgment in him, so
+infinite a fancy, bound in by a most logical ratiocination, such a
+vast knowledge that he was not ignorant in anything, yet such an
+excessive humility as if he had known nothing, that they frequently
+resorted and dwelt with him, as in a college situated in a purer air;
+so that his house was a university in a less volume, whither they
+came not so much for repose as study; and to examine and refine those
+grosser propositions, which laziness and consent made current in
+vulgar conversation."
+
+The signs of the times grew darker. In 1636 the King and Queen
+visited Oxford, "with no applause." In 1640 Laud sent the University
+his last present of manuscripts. He was charged with many offences.
+He had repaired crucifixes; he had allowed the "scandalous image" to
+be set up in the porch of St. Mary's; and Alderman Nixon, the Puritan
+grocer, had seen a man bowing to the scandalous image--so he
+declared. In 1642 Charles asked for money from the colleges, for the
+prosecution of the war with the Parliament. The beautiful old
+college plate began its journey to the melting-pot. On August 9th
+the scholars armed themselves. There were two bands of musqueteers,
+one of pikemen, one of halberdiers. In the reign of Henry III. the
+men had been on the other side. Magdalen bridge was blocked up with
+heaps of wood. Stones, for the primitive warfare of the time, were
+transported to the top of Magdalen tower. The stones were never
+thrown at any foemen. Royalists and Roundheads in turn occupied the
+place; and while grocer Nixon fled before the Cavaliers, he came back
+and interceded for All Souls College (which dealt with him for figs
+and sugar) when the Puritans wished to batter the graven images on
+the gate. On October 29th the King came, after Edgehill fight, the
+Court assembled, and Oxford was fortified. The place was made
+impregnable in those days of feeble artillery. The author of the
+Gesta Stephani had pointed out, many centuries before, that Oxford,
+if properly defended, could never be taken, thanks to the network of
+streams that surrounds her. Though the citizens worked grudgingly
+and slowly, the trenches were at last completed. The earthworks--a
+double line--ran in and out of the interlacing streams. A
+Parliamentary force on Headington Hill seems to have been unable to
+play on the city with artillery. Barbed arrows were served out to
+the scholars, who formed a regiment of more than six hundred men.
+The Queen held her little court in Merton, in the Warden's lodgings.
+Clarendon gives rather a humorous account of the discontent of the
+fine ladies "The town was full of lords (besides those of the
+Council), and of persons of the best quality, with very many ladies,
+who, when not pleased themselves, kept others from being so." Oxford
+never was so busy and so crowded; letters, society, war, were all
+confused; there were excursions against Brown at Abingdon, and alarms
+from Fairfax on Headington Hill. The siege, from May 22nd to June
+5th, was almost a farce. The Parliamentary generals "fought with
+perspective glasses." Neither Cromwell at Wytham, nor Brown at
+Wolvercot, pushed matters too hard. When two Puritan regiments
+advanced on Hinksey, Mr. Smyth blazed away at them from his house.
+As in Zululand, any building made a respectable fort, when cannon-
+balls had so little penetrative power, or when artillery was not at
+the front. Oxford was surrendered, with other places of arms, after
+Naseby, and--Presbyterians became heads of colleges!
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V--SOME SCHOLARS OF THE RESTORATION
+
+
+
+In Merton Chapel a little mural tablet bears the crest, the name, and
+the dates of the birth and death, of Antony Wood. He has been our
+guide in these sketches of Oxford life, as he must be the guide of
+the gravest and most exact historians. No one who cares for the past
+of the University should think without pity and friendliness of this
+lonely scholar, who in his lifetime was unpitied and unbefriended.
+We have reached the period in which he lived and died, in the midst
+of changes of Church and State, and surrounded by more worldly
+scholars, whose letters remain to testify that, in the reign of the
+Second Charles, Oxford was modern Oxford. In the epistles of
+Humphrey Prideaux, student of Christ Church, we recognise the foibles
+of the modern University, the love of gossip, the internecine
+criticism, the greatness of little men whom rien ne peut plaire.
+
+Antony Wood was a scholar of a different sort, of a sort that has
+never been very common in Oxford. He was a perfect dungeon of books;
+but he wrote as well as read, which has never been a usual practice
+in his University. Wood was born in 1632, in one of the old houses
+opposite Merton, perhaps in the curious ancient hall which has been
+called Beham, Bream, and Bohemiae Aula, by various corruptions of the
+original spelling. As a boy, Wood must have seen the siege of
+Oxford, which he describes not without humour. As a young man, he
+watched the religious revolution which introduced Presbyterian Heads
+of Houses, and sent Puritanical captains of horse, like Captain James
+Wadsworth, to hunt for "Papistical reliques" and "massing stuffs"
+among the property of the President of C. C. C. and the Dean of Ch.
+Ch. (1646-1648). In 1650 he saw the Chancellorship of Oliver
+Cromwell; in 1659 he welcomed the Restoration, and rejoiced that "the
+King had come to his own again." The tastes of an antiquary
+combined, with the natural reaction against Puritanism, to make
+Antony Wood a High Churchman, and not averse to Rome, while he had
+sufficient breadth of mind to admire Thomas Hobbes, the patriarch of
+English learning. But Wood had little room in his heart or mind for
+any learning save that connected with the University. Oxford, the
+city, and the colleges, the remains of the old religious art, the
+customs, the dresses--these things he adored with a loverlike
+devotion, which was utterly unrewarded. He owed no office to the
+University, and he was even expelled (1693) for having written
+sharply against Clarendon. This did not abate his zeal, nor prevent
+him from passing all his days, and much of his nights, in the study
+and compilation of University history.
+
+The author of Wood's biography has left a picture of his sombre and
+laborious old age. He rose at four o'clock every morning. He
+scarcely tasted food till supper-time. At the hour of the college
+dinner he visited the booksellers' shops, where he was sure not to be
+disturbed by the gossip of dons, young and old. After supper he
+would smoke his pipe and drink his pot of ale in a tavern. It was
+while he took this modest refreshment, before old age came upon him,
+that Antony once fell in, and fell out, with Dick Peers. This Dick
+was one of the men employed by Dr. Fell, the Dean of Ch. Ch., to
+translate Wood's History and Antiquities of the University of Oxford
+into Latin. The translation gave rise to a number of literary
+quarrels. As Dean of Ch. Ch., Dr. Fell yielded to the besetting sin
+of deans, and fancied himself the absolute master of the University,
+if not something superior to mortal kind. An autocrat of this sort
+had no scruples about changing Wood's copy whenever he differed from
+Wood in political or religious opinion. Now Antony, as we said, had
+eyes to discern the greatness of Hobbes, whom the Dean considered no
+better than a Deist or an Atheist. The Dean therefore calmly altered
+all that Wood had written of the Philosopher of Malmesbury, and so
+maligned Hobbes that the old man, meeting the King in Pall Mall,
+begged leave to reply in his own defence. Charles allowed the
+dispute to go on, and Hobbes hit Fell rather hard. The Dean retorted
+with the famous expression about irritabile illud et vanissimum
+Malmesburiense animal. This controversy amused Oxford, but bred bad
+feeling between Antony Wood and Dick Peers, the translator of his
+work, and the tool of the Dean of Ch. Ch. Prideaux (Letters to John
+Ellis; Camden Society, 1875) describes the battles in city taverns
+between author and translator:
+
+
+"I suppose that you have heard of the continuall feuds, and often
+battles, between the author and the translator; they had a skirmish
+at Sol Hardeing [keeper of a tavern in All Saints' parish], another
+at the printeing house [the Sheldonian theatre], and several other
+places."
+
+
+From the record of these combats, we learn that the recluse Antony
+was a man of his hands:
+
+
+"As Peers always cometh off with a bloody nose or a black eye, he was
+a long time afraid to goe annywhere where he might chance to meet his
+too powerful adversary, for fear of another drubbing, till he was
+pro-proctor, and now Woods (sic) is as much afraid to meet him, least
+he should exercise his authority upon him. And although he be a good
+bowzeing blad, yet it hath been observed that never since his
+adversary hath been in office hath he dared to be out after nine,
+least he should meet him and exact the rigor of the statute upon
+him."
+
+
+The statute required all scholars to be in their rooms before Tom had
+ceased ringing. It was, perhaps, too rash to say that the Oxford of
+the Restoration was already modern Oxford. The manners of the
+students were, so to speak, more accentuated. However much the
+lecturer in Idolology may dislike the method and person of the Reader
+in the Mandingo language, these two learned men do not box in
+taverns, nor take off their coats if they meet each other at the
+Clarendon Press. People are careful not to pitch into each other in
+that way, though the temper which confounds opponents for their
+theory of irregular verbs is not at all abated. As Wood grew in
+years he did not increase in honours. "He was a mere scholar," and
+consequently might expect from the greater number of men disrespect.
+When he was but sixty-four, he looked eighty at least. His dress was
+not elegant, "cleanliness being his chief object." He rarely left
+his rooms, that were papered with MSS., and where every table and
+chair had its load of books and yellow parchments from the College
+muniment rooms. When strangers came to Oxford with letters of
+recommendation, the recluse would leave his study, and gladly lead
+them about the town, through Logic Lane to Queen's, which had not
+then the sublimely classical front, built by Hawksmoor, "but
+suggested by Sir Christopher Wren." It is worthy of his genius.
+Wood died in 1695, "forgiving every one." He could well afford to do
+so. In his Athenae Oxonienses he had written the lives of all his
+enemies.
+
+Wood, "being a mere scholar," could, of course, expect nothing but
+disrespect in a place like Oxford. His younger contemporary,
+Humphrey Prideaux, was, in the Oxford manner, a man of the world. He
+was the son of a Cornish squire, was educated at Westminster under
+Busby (that awful pedagogue, whose birch seems so near a memory), got
+a studentship at Christ Church in 1668, and took his B.A. degree in
+1672. Here it may be observed that men went up quite as late in life
+then as they do now, for Prideaux was twenty-four years old when he
+took his degree. Fell was Dean of Christ Church, and was showing
+laudable zeal in working the University Press. What a pity it is
+that the University Press of to-day has become a trading concern, a
+shop for twopenny manuals and penny primers! It is scarcely proper
+that the University should at once organise examinations and sell the
+manuals which contain the answers to the questions most likely to be
+set. To return to Fell; he made Prideaux edit Lucius Florus, and
+publish the Marmora Oxoniensia, which came out 1676. We must not
+suppose, however, that Prideaux was an enthusiastic archaeologist.
+He did the Marmora because the Dean commanded it, and because
+educated people were at that period not uninterested in Greek art.
+At the present hour one may live a lifetime in Oxford and only learn,
+by the accident of examining passmen in the Arundel Room, that the
+University possesses any marbles. In the walls of the Arundel Room
+(on the ground-floor in the Schools' quadrangle) these touching
+remains of Hellas are interred. There are the funereal stelae, with
+their quiet expression of sorrow, of hope, of resignation. The young
+man, on his tombstone, is represented in the act of rising and taking
+the hand of a friend. He is bound on his latest journey.
+
+
+"He goeth forth unto the unknown land,
+Where wife nor child may follow; thus far tell
+The lingering clasp of hand in faithful hand,
+And that brief carven legend, Friend, farewell.
+
+O pregnant sign, profound simplicity!
+All passionate pain and fierce remonstrating
+Being wholly purged, leave this mere memory,
+Deep but not harsh, a sad and sacred thing." {1}
+
+
+The lady chooses from a coffer a trinket, or a ribbon. It is her
+last toilette she is making, with no fear and no regret. Again, the
+long-severed souls are meeting with delight in the home of the just
+made perfect.
+
+Even in the Schools these scraps of Greek lapidary's work seem
+beautiful to us, in their sober and cheerful acceptance of life and
+death. We hope, in Oxford, that the study of ancient art, as well as
+of ancient literature, may soon be made possible. These tangible
+relics of the past bring us very near to the heart and the life of
+Greece, and waken a kindly enthusiasm in every one who approaches
+them. In Humphrey Prideaux's letters there is not a trace of any
+such feeling. He does his business, but it is hack-work. In this he
+differs from the modern student, but in his caustic description of
+the rude and witless society of the place he is modern enough. In
+his letters to his friend, John Ellis, of the State Paper Office, it
+is plain that Prideaux wants to get preferment. His taste and his
+ambition alike made him detest the heavy, beer-drinking doctors, the
+fast "All Souls gentlemen," and the fossils of stupidity who are
+always plentifully imbedded in the soil of University life.
+Fellowships were then sold, at Magdalen and New, when they were not
+given by favour. Prideaux grumbles (July 28th, 1674) at the laxness
+of the Commissioners, who should have exposed this abuse: "In town,
+one of their inquirys is whether any of the scholars weare pantaloons
+or periwigues, or keep dogs." The great dispute about dogs, which
+raged at a later date in University College, had already begun to
+disturb dons and undergraduates. The choice language of Oxford
+contempt was even then extant, and Prideaux, like Grandison in Daniel
+Deronda, spoke curtly of the people whom he did not like as "brutes."
+"Pembroke--the fittest colledge in the town for brutes." The
+University did not encourage certain "players" who had paid the place
+a visit, and the players, in revenge, had gone about the town at
+night and broken the windows.
+
+When the journey from London to Oxford is so easily performed, it is
+amusing to read of Prideaux's miserable adventures, in the diligence,
+between a lady of easy manners, a "pitiful rogue," and two
+undergraduates who "sordidly affected debauchery."
+
+
+"This ill company made me very miserable all the way. Only once I
+could not but heartily laugh to see Fincher be sturdyly belaboured by
+five or six carmen with whips and prong staves for provoking them
+with some of his extravagant frolics."
+
+
+The "violent affection to vice" in the University, or in the country,
+was, of course, the reaction against the godliness of Puritan
+captains of horse. Another form of the reaction is discernible in
+the revived High Church sentiments of Prideaux, Wood, and most of the
+students of the time.
+
+The manners of the undergraduates were not much better than those of
+the pot-house-haunting seniors. Dr. Good, the Master of Balliol, "a
+good old toast," had much trouble with his students.
+
+
+"There is, over against Balliol College, a dingy, horrid, scandalous
+ale-house, fit for none but draymen and tinkers, and such as, by
+going there, have made themselves equally scandalous. Here the
+Balliol men continually, and by perpetuall bubbing, add art to their
+natural stupidity, to make themselves perfect sots."
+
+
+The envy and jealousy of the inferior colleges, alas! have put about
+many things, in these latter days, to the discredit of the Balliol
+men, but not even Humphrey Prideaux would, out of all his stock of
+epithets, choose "sottish" and "stupid." In these old times,
+however, Dr. Good had to call the men together, and -
+
+
+"Inform them of the mischiefs of that hellish liquor called ale; but
+one of them, not so tamely to be preached out of his beloved liquor,
+made answer that the Vice-Chancelour's men drank ale at the "Split
+Crow," and why should not they too?"
+
+
+On this, old Dr. Good posted off to the Vice-Chancellor, who, "being
+a lover of old ale" himself, returned a short answer to the head of
+Balliol. The old man went back to his college, and informed his
+fellows, "that he was assured there were no hurt in ale, so that now
+they may be sots by authority." Christ Church men were not more
+sober. David Whitford, who had been the tutor of Shirley the poet,
+was found lying dead in his bed: "he had been going to take a dram
+for refreshment, but death came between the cup and the lips, and
+this is the end of Davy." Prideaux records, in the same feeling
+style, that smallpox carried off many of the undergraduates, "besides
+my brother," a student at Corpus.
+
+The University Press supplied Prideaux with gossip. They printed "a
+book against Hobs," written by Clarendon. Hobbes was the heresiarch
+of the time, and when an unhappy fellow of Merton hanged himself, the
+doctrines of Hobbes were said to have prompted him to the deed. To
+return to the Press. "Our Christmas book will be Cornelius Nepos . .
+. Our marbles are now printing." Prideaux, as has been said, took no
+interest in his own work.
+
+
+"I coat (quote) a multitude of authors; if people think the better of
+me for that, I will think the worse of them for their judgement. It
+beeing soe easyly a thinge to make this specious show, he must be a
+fool that cannot gain whatsoever repute is to be gotten by it. If
+people will admire him for this, they may; I shall admire such for
+nothing else but their good indexs. As long as books have these, on
+what subject may we not coat as many others as we please, and never
+have read one of them?"
+
+
+It is not easy to gather from this confession whether Prideaux had or
+had not read the books he "coated." It is certain that Dean Aldrich
+(and here again we recognise the eternal criticism of modern Oxford)
+held a poor opinion of Humphrey Prideaux. Aldrich said Prideaux was
+"incorrect," "muddy-headed," "he would do little or nothing besides
+heaping up notes"; "as for MSS. he would not trouble himself about
+any, but rest wholly upon what had been done to his hands by former
+editors." This habit of carping, this trick of collecting notes,
+this inability to put a work through, this dawdling erudition, this
+horror of manuscripts, every Oxford man knows them, and feels those
+temptations which seem to be in the air. Oxford is a discouraging
+place. College drudgery absorbs the hours of students in proportion
+to their conscientiousness. They have only the waste odds-and-ends
+of time for their own labours. They live in an atmosphere of
+criticism. They collect notes, they wait, they dream; their youth
+goes by, and the night comes when no man can work. The more praise
+to the tutors and lecturers who decipher the records of Assyria, or
+patiently collate the manuscripts of the Iliad, who not only teach
+what is already known, but add to the stock of knowledge, and advance
+the boundaries of scholarship and science.
+
+One lesson may be learned from Prideaux's cynical letters, which is
+still worth the attention of every young Oxford student who is
+conscious of ambition, of power, and of real interest in letters. He
+can best serve his University by coming out of her, by declining
+college work, and by devoting himself to original study in some less
+exhausted air, in some less critical society.
+
+Among the aversions of Humphrey Prideaux were the "gentlemen of All
+Souls." They certainly showed extraordinary impudence when they
+secretly employed the University Press to print off copies of Marc
+Antonio's engravings after Giulio Romano's drawings. It chanced that
+Fell visited the press rather late one evening, and found "his press
+working at such an imployment. The prints and plates he hath seased,
+and threatened the owners of them with expulsion." "All Souls," adds
+Prideaux, "is a scandalous place." Yet All Souls was the college of
+young Mr. Guise, an Arabic scholar, "the greatest miracle in the
+knowledge of that I ever heard of." Guise died of smallpox while
+still very young.
+
+Thus Prideaux prattles on, about Admiral Van Tromp, "a drunken greazy
+Dutchman," whom Speed, of St. John's, conquered in boozing; of the
+disputes about races in Port Meadow; of the breaking into the Mermaid
+Tavern. "We Christ Church men bear the blame of it, our ticks, as
+the noise of the town will have it, amounting to 1,500 pounds." Thus
+Christ Church had little cause to throw the first stone at Balliol.
+Prideaux shows little interest in letters, little in the press,
+though he lived in palmy days of printing, in the time of the
+Elzevirs; none at all in the educational work of the place. He
+sneers at the Puritans, and at the controversy on "The Foundations of
+Hell Torments shaken and removed." He admits that Locke "is a man of
+very good converse, but is chiefly concerned to spy out the movements
+of the philosopher, suspected of sedition, and to report them to
+Ellis in town. About the new buildings, as of the beautiful western
+gateway, where Great Tom is hung, the work of Wren, Prideaux says
+little; St. Mary's was suffering restoration, and "the old men,"
+including Wood, we may believe, "exceedingly exclaim against it."
+That is the way of Oxford, a college is constantly rebuilding amid
+the protests of the rest of the University. There is no question
+more common, or less agreeable than this, "What are you doing to your
+tower?" or "What are you doing to your hall, library, or chapel?" No
+one ever knows; but we are always doing something, and working men
+for ever sit, and drink beer, on the venerable roofs.
+
+Long intercourse with Prideaux's letters, and mournful memories of
+Oxford new buildings, tempt a writer to imitate Prideaux's spirit.
+Let us shut up his book, where he leaves Oxford, in 1686, to become
+rector of Saham-Toney, in Norfolk, and marry a wife, though, says he,
+"I little thought I should ever come to this."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI--HIGH TORY OXFORD
+
+
+
+The name of her late Majesty Queen Anne has for some little time been
+a kind of party watch-word. Many harmless people have an innocent
+loyalty to this lady, make themselves her knights (as Mary Antoinette
+has still her sworn champions in France and Mary Stuart in Scotland),
+buy the plate of her serene period, and imitate the dress. To many
+moral critics in the press, however, Queen Anne is a kind of
+abomination. I know not how it is, but the terms "Queen Anne
+furniture and blue china" have become words of almost slanderous
+railing. Any didactic journalist who uses them is certain at once to
+fall heavily on the artistic reputation of Mr. Burne Jones, to rebuke
+the philosophy of Mr. Pater, and to hint that the entrance-hall of
+the Grosvenor Gallery is that "by-way" with which Bunyan has made us
+familiar. In the changes of things our admiration of the Augustan
+age of our literature, the age of Addison and Steele, of Marlborough
+and Aldrich, has become a sort of reproach. It may be that our
+modern preachers know but little of that which they traduce. At all
+events, the Oxford of Queen Anne's time was not what they call "un-
+English," but highly conservative, and as dull and beer-bemused as
+the most manly taste could wish it to be.
+
+The Spectator of the ingenious Sir Richard Steele gives us many a
+glimpse of non-juring Oxford. The old fashion of Sanctity (Mr.
+Addison says, in the Spectator, No. 494) had passed away; nor were
+appearances of Mirth and Pleasure looked upon as the Marks of a
+Carnal Mind. Yet the Puritan Rule was not so far forgotten, but that
+Mr. Anthony Henley (a Gentleman of Property) could remember how he
+had stood for a Fellowship in a certain College whereof a great
+Independent Minister was Governor. As Oxford at this Moment is much
+vexed in her Mind about Examinations, wherein, indeed, her whole
+Force is presently expended, I make no scruple to repeat the account
+of Mr. Henley's Adventure:
+
+
+"The Youth, according to Custom, waited on the Governor of his
+College, to be examined. He was received at the Door by a Servant,
+who was one of that gloomy Generation that were then in Fashion. He
+conducted him with great Silence and Seriousness to a long Gallery
+which was darkened at Noon-day, and had only a single Candle burning
+in it. After a short stay in this melancholy Apartment, he was led
+into a Chamber hung with black, where he entertained himself for some
+time by the glimmering of a Taper, till at length the Head of the
+College came out to him from an inner Room, with half a dozen Night
+Caps upon his Head, and a religious Horror in his Countenance. The
+Young Man trembled; but his Fears increased when, instead of being
+asked what progress he had made in Learning, he was ask'd "how he
+abounded in Grace?" His Latin and Greek stood him in little stead.
+He was to give an account only of the state of his Soul--whether he
+was of the Number of the Elect; what was the Occasion of his
+Conversion; upon what Day of the Month and Hour of the Day it
+happened; how it was carried on, and when completed. The whole
+Examination was summed up in one short Question, namely, WHETHER HE
+WAS PREPARED FOR DEATH? The Boy, who had been bred up by honest
+Parents, was frighted out of his wits by the solemnity of the
+Proceeding, and by the last dreadful Interrogatory, so that, upon
+making his Escape out of this House of Mourning, he could never be
+brought a second Time to the Examination, as not being able to go
+through the Terrors of it."
+
+
+By the year 1705, when Tom Hearne, of St. Edmund's Hall, began to
+keep his diary, the "honest folk"--that is, the High Churchmen--had
+the better of the Independent Ministers. The Dissenters had some
+favour at Court, but in the University they were looked upon as
+utterly reprobate. From the Reliquiae of Hearne (an antiquarian
+successor of Antony Wood, a bibliophile, an archaeologist, and as
+honest a man as Jacobitism could make him) let us quote an example of
+Heaven's wrath against Dissenters
+
+
+"Aug. 6, 1706. We have an account from Whitchurch, in Shropshire,
+that the Dissenters there having prepared a great quantity of bricks
+to erect a spacious conventicle, a destroying angel came by night and
+spoiled them all, and confounded their Babel in the beginning, to
+their great mortification.
+
+
+Hearne's common-place books are an amusing source of information
+about Oxford society in the years of Queen Anne, and of the
+Hanoverian usurper. Tom Hearne was a Master of Arts of St. Edmund's
+Hall, and at one time Deputy-Librarian of the Bodleian. He lost this
+post because he would not take "the wicked oaths" required of him,
+but he did not therefore leave Oxford. His working hours were passed
+in preparing editions of antiquarian books, to be printed in very
+limited number, on ordinary and LARGE PAPER. It was the joy of Tom's
+existence to see his editions become first scarce, then VERY SCARCE,
+while the price augmented in proportion to the rarity. When he was
+not reading in his rooms he was taking long walks in the country,
+tracing Roman walls and roads, and exploring Woodstock Park for the
+remains of "the labyrinth," as he calls the Maze of Fair Rosamund.
+In these strolls he was sometimes accompanied by undergraduates, even
+gentlemen of noble family, "which gave cause to some to envy our
+happiness." Hearne was a social creature, and had a heart, as he
+shows by the entry about the death of his "very dear friend, Mr.
+Thomas Cherry, A.M., to the great grief of all that knew him, being a
+gentleman of great beauty, singular modesty, of wonderful good
+nature, and most excellent principles."
+
+The friends of Hearne were chiefly, perhaps solely, what he calls
+"honest men," supporters of the Stuart family, and always ready to
+drink his Majesty's (King James') health. They would meet in
+"Antiquity Hall," an old house near Wadham, and smoke their honest
+pipes. They held certain of the opinions of "the Hebdomadal
+Meeting," satirised by Steele in the Spectator (No. 43). "We are
+much offended at the Act for importing French wines. A bottle or two
+of good solid Edifying Port, at honest George's, made a Night
+cheerful, and threw off Reserve. But this plaguy French Claret will
+not only cost us more Money but do us less good." Hearne had a poor
+opinion of "Captain Steele," and of "one Tickle: this Tickle is a
+pretender to poetry." He admits that, though "Queen's people are
+angry at the Spectator, and the common-room say 'tis silly dull
+stuff, men that are indifferent commend it highly, as it deserves."
+Some other satirist had a plate etched, representing Antiquity Hall--
+a caricature of Tom's antiquarian engravings. It may be seen in
+Skelton's book.
+
+Thanks to Hearne, it is easy to reproduce the common-room gossip, and
+the more treasonable talk of honest men at Antiquity Hall. The
+learned were much interested, as they usually are at Oxford, in
+theological discussion. Some one proved, by an ingenious syllogism,
+that all men are to be saved; but Hearne had the better of this
+Latitudinarian, easily demonstrating that the comfortable argument
+does not meet the case of madmen, and of deaf-mutes, whom Tom did not
+expect to meet in a future state. The ingenious, though depressing
+speculations of Mr. Dodwell were also discussed: "He makes the air
+the receptacle of all souls, good and bad, and that they are under
+the power of the D--l, he being prince of the air." "The less
+perfectly good" hang out, if we may say so, "in the space between
+earth and the clouds," all which is subtle, and creditable to Mr.
+Dodwell's invention, but not susceptible of exact demonstration. The
+whole controversy is an interesting specimen of Queen Anne
+philosophy, which, with all respect for the taste of the period, we
+need not wish to see revived. The Bishop of Worcester, for example,
+"expects the end of the world about nine years hence." While the
+theology of Oxford is being mentioned, the zeal of Dr. Miller, Regius
+Professor of Greek, must not be forgotten. The learned Professor
+endeavoured to convert, and even "writ a Letter to Mrs. Bracegirdle,
+giving her great encomiums (as having himself been often to see plays
+acted whilst they continued here) upon account of her excellent
+qualifications, and persuading her to give over this loose way of
+living, and betake herself to such a kind of life as was more
+innocent, and would gain her more credit." The Professor's advice
+was wasted on "Bracegirdle the brown."
+
+Politics were naturally much discussed in these doubtful years, when
+the Stuarts, it was thought, had still a chance to win their own
+again. In 1706, Tom says, "The great health now is "The Cube of
+Three," which is the number 27, i.e. the number of the protesting
+Lords." The University was most devoted, as far as drinking toasts
+constitutes loyalty. In Hearne's common-place book is carefully
+copied out this "Scotch Health to K. J.":
+
+
+"He's o'er the seas and far awa',
+He's o'er the seas and far awa';
+Altho' his back be at the wa'
+We'll drink his health that's far awa'."
+
+
+The words live, and ring strangely out of that dusty past. The song
+survives the throne, and sounds pathetically, somehow, as one has
+heard it chanted, in days as dead as the year 1711, at suppers that
+seem as ancient almost as the festivities of Thomas Hearne. It is
+not unpleasant to remember that the people who sang could also fight,
+and spilt their blood as well as their "edifying port." If the
+Southern "honest men" had possessed hearts for anything but tippling,
+the history of England would have been different.
+
+When "the allyes and the French fought a bloudy battle near Mons"
+(1709, "Malplaquet"), the Oxford honest men, like Colonel Henry
+Esmond, thought "there was not any the least reason of bragging."
+The young King of England, under the character of the Chevalier St.
+George, "shewed abundance of undaunted courage and resolution, led up
+his troups with unspeakable bravery, appeared in the utmost dangers,
+and at last was wounded." Marlborough's victories were sneered at,
+his new palace of Blenheim was said to be not only ill-built, but
+haunted by signs of evil omen.
+
+It was not always safe to say what one thought about politics at
+Oxford. One Mr. A. going to one Mr. Tonson, a barber, put the barber
+and his wife in a ferment (they being rascally Whigs) by maintaining
+that the hereditary right was in the P. of W. Tonson laid
+information against the gentleman; "which may be a warning to honest
+men not to enter into topicks of this nature with barbers." One
+would not willingly, even now, discuss the foreign policy of her
+Majesty's Ministers with the person who shaves one. There are
+opportunities and temptations to which no decent person should be
+wantonly exposed. The bad effect of Whiggery on the temper was
+evident in this, that "the Mohocks are all of the Whiggish gang, and
+indeed all Whigs are looked upon as such Mohocks, their principles
+and doctrines leading thus to all manner of barbarity and
+inhumanity." So true is it that Conservatives are all lovers of
+peace and quiet, that (May 29th, 1715) "last night a good part of the
+Presbyterian meeting-house in Oxford was pulled down. The people ran
+up and down the streets, crying, King James the Third! The true
+king! No Usurper. In the evening they pulled a good part of the
+Quakers' and Anabaptists' meeting-houses down. The heads of houses
+have represented that it was begun by the Whiggs." Probably the
+heads of houses reasoned on a priori principles when they arrived at
+this remarkable conclusion.
+
+In consequence of the honesty, frankness, and consistency of his
+opinions, Mr. Hearne ran his head in danger when King George came to
+the throne, which has ever since been happily settled in the
+possession of the Hanoverian line. A Mr. Urry, a Non-juror, had to
+warn him, saying, "Do you not know that they have a mind to hang you
+if they can, and that you have many enemies who are very ready to do
+it?" In spite of this, Hearne, in his diaries, still calls George I.
+the Duke of Brunswick, and the Whigs, "that fanatical crew." John,
+Duke of Marlborough, he styles "that villain the Duke." We have had
+enough, perhaps, of Oxford politics, which were not much more
+prejudiced in the days of the Duke than in those of Mr. Gladstone.
+Hearne's allusions to the contemporary state of buildings and of
+college manners are often rather instructive. In All Souls the Whigs
+had a feast on the day of King Charles's martyrdom. They had a
+dinner dressed of woodcock, "whose heads they cut off, in contempt of
+the memory of the blessed martyr." These men were "low Churchmen,
+more shame to them." The All Souls men had already given up the
+custom of wandering about the College on the night of January 14th,
+with sticks and poles, in quest of the mallard. That "swopping"
+bird, still justly respected, was thought, for many ages, to linger
+in the college of which he is the protector. But now all hope of
+recovering him alive is lost, and it is reserved for the excavator of
+the future to marvel over the fossil bones of the "swopping, swopping
+mallard."
+
+As an example of the paganism of Queen Anne's reign--quite a
+different thing from the "Neo-paganism" which now causes so much
+anxiety to the moral press-man--let us note the affecting instance of
+Geffery Ammon. "He was a merry companion, and his conversation was
+much courted." Geffery had but little sense of religion. He is now
+buried on the west side of Binsey churchyard, near St. Margaret's
+well. Geffery selected Binsey for the place of his sepulchre,
+because he was partial to the spot, having often shot snipe there.
+In order to moisten his clay, he desired his friend Will Gardner, a
+boatman of Oxford, who was accustomed to row him down the river, to
+put now and then a bottle of ale by his grave when he came that way;
+an injunction which was punctually complied with.
+
+Oxford lost in Hearne's time many of her old buildings. It is said,
+with a dreadful appearance of truth, that Oxford is now to lose some
+of the few that are left. Corpus and Merton, if they are not belied,
+mean to pull down the old houses opposite Merton, halls and houses
+consecrated to the memory of Antony Wood, and to build lecture-rooms
+AND HOUSES FOR MARRIED DONS on the site. The topic, for one who is
+especially bound to pray for Merton (and who now does so with unusual
+fervour), is most painful. A view of the "proposed new buildings,"
+in the Exhibition of the Royal Academy (1879), depresses the soul.
+In the same spirit Hearne says (March 28th, 1671), "It always grieves
+me when I go through Queen's College, to see the ruins of the old
+chapell next to High Street, the area of which now lies open (the
+building being most of it pulled down) and trampled upon by dogs,
+etc., as if the ground had never been consecrated. Nor do the
+Queen's Coll. people take any care, but rather laught at it when 'tis
+mentioned." In 1722 "the famous postern-gate called the Turl Gate"
+(a corruption for Thorold Gate) was "pulled down by one Dr. Walker,
+who lived by it, and pretended that it was a detriment to his house.
+As long ago as 1705, they had pulled down the building of Peckwater
+quadrangle, in Ch. Ch." Queen's also "pulled down the old refectory,
+which was on the west side of the old quadrangle, and was a fine old
+structure that I used to admire much." It appears that the College
+was also anxious to pull down the chamber of King Henry V. This is a
+strange craze for destruction, that some time ago endangered the
+beautiful library of Merton, a place where one can fancy that Chaucer
+or Wyclif may have studied. Oxford will soon have little left of the
+beauty and antiquity of Patey's Quad in Merton, as represented in our
+illustration. What the next generation will think of the
+multitudinous new buildings, it is not hard to conjecture. Imitative
+experiments, without style or fancy in structure or decoration, and
+often more than medievally uncomfortable, they will seem but
+evidences of Oxford's love of destruction. People of Hearne's way of
+thinking, people who respect antiquity, protest in vain, and, like
+Hearne, must be content sadly to enjoy what is left of grace and
+dignity. He died before Oxford had quite become the Oxford of
+Gibbon's autobiography.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII--GEORGIAN OXFORD
+
+
+
+Oxford has usually been described either by her lovers or her
+malcontents. She has suffered the extremes of filial ingratitude and
+affection. There is something in the place that makes all her
+children either adore or detest her; and it is difficult, indeed, to
+pick out the truth concerning her past social condition from the
+satires and the encomiums. Nor is it easy to say what qualities in
+Oxford, and what answering characteristics in any of her sons, will
+beget the favourable or the unfavourable verdict. Gibbon, one might
+have thought, saw the sunny, and Johnson the shady, side of the
+University. With youth, and wealth, and liberty, with a set of three
+beautiful rooms in that "stately pile, the new building of Magdalen
+College," Gibbon found nothing in Oxford to please him--nothing to
+admire, nothing to love. From his poor and lofty rooms in Pembroke
+Gate-tower the hypochondriac Johnson--rugged, anxious, and conscious
+of his great unemployed power--looked down on a much more pleasant
+Oxford, on a city and on schools that he never ceased to regard with
+affection. This contrast is found in the opinions of our
+contemporaries. One man will pass his time in sneering at his tutors
+and his companions, in turning listlessly from study to study, in
+following false tendencies, and picking up scraps of knowledge which
+he despises, and in later life he will detest his University. There
+are wiser and more successful students, who yet bear away a grudge
+against the stately mother of us all, that so easily can disregard
+our petty spleens and ungrateful rancour. Mr. Lowe's most bitter
+congratulatory addresses to the "happy Civil Engineers," and his
+unkindest cuts at ancient history, and at the old philosophies which
+"on Argive heights divinely sung," move her not at all. Meanwhile,
+the majority of men are more kindly compact, and have more natural
+affections, and on them the memory of their earliest friendships, and
+of that beautiful environment which Oxford gave to their years of
+youth, is not wholly wasted.
+
+There are more Johnsons, happily, in this matter, than Gibbons.
+There is little need to repeat the familiar story of Johnson's life
+at Pembroke. He went up in the October term of 1728, being then
+nineteen years of age, and already full of that wide and
+miscellaneous classical reading which the Oxford course, then as now,
+somewhat discouraged. "His figure and manner appeared strange" to
+the company in which he found himself; and when he broke silence it
+was with a quotation from Macrobius. To his tutor's lectures, as a
+later poet says, "with freshman zeal he went"; but his zeal did not
+last out the discovery that the tutor was "a heavy man," and the fact
+that there was "sliding on Christ Church Meadow." Have any of the
+artists who repeat, with perseverance, the most famous scenes in the
+Doctor's life--drawn him sliding on Christ Church meadows, sliding in
+these worn and clouted shoes of his, and with that figure which even
+the exercise of skating could not have made "swan-like," to quote the
+young lady in "Pickwick"? Johnson was "sconced" in the sum of
+twopence for cutting lecture; and it is rather curious that the
+amount of the fine was the same four hundred years earlier, when
+Master Stoke, of Catte Hall (whose career we touched on in the second
+of these sketches), deserted his lessons. It was when he was thus
+sconced that Johnson made that reply which Boswell preserves "as a
+specimen of the antithetical character of his wit"--"Sir, you have
+sconced me twopence for non-attendance on a lecture not worth a
+penny."
+
+Sconcing seems to have been the penalty for offences very various in
+degree. "A young fellow of Balliol College having, upon some
+discontent, cut his throat very dangerously, the master of his
+College sent his servitor to the buttery-book to sconce him five
+shillings; and," says the Doctor, "tell him that the next time he
+cuts his throat I'll sconce him ten!" This prosaic punishment might
+perhaps deter some Werthers from playing with edged tools.
+
+From Boswell's meagre account of Johnson's Oxford career we gather
+some facts which supplement the description of Gibbon. The future
+historian went into residence twenty-three years after Johnson
+departed without taking his degree. Gibbon was a gentleman commoner,
+and was permitted by the easy discipline of Magdalen to behave just
+as he pleased. He "eloped," as he says, from Oxford, as often as he
+chose, and went up to town, where he was by no means the ideal of
+"the Manly Oxonian in London." The fellows of Magdalen, possessing a
+revenue which private avarice might easily have raised to 30,000
+pounds, took no interest in their pupils. Gibbon's tutor read a few
+Latin plays with his pupil, in a style of dry and literal
+translation. The other fellows, less conscientious, passed their
+lives in tippling and tattling, discussing the "Oxford Toasts," and
+drinking other toasts to the king over the water. "Some duties,"
+says Gibbon, "may possibly have been imposed on the poor scholars,"
+but "the velvet cap was the cap of liberty," and the gentleman
+commoner consulted only his own pleasure. Johnson was a poor
+scholar, and on him duties were imposed. He was requested to write
+an ode on the Gunpowder Plot, and Boswell thinks "his vivacity and
+imagination must have produced something fine." He neglected,
+however, with his usual indolence, this opportunity of producing
+something fine. Another exercise imposed on the poor was the
+translation of Mr. Pope's "Messiah," in which the young Pembroke man
+succeeded so well that, by Mr. Pope's own generous confession, future
+ages would doubt whether the English or the Latin piece was the
+original. Johnson complained that no man could be properly inspired
+by the Pembroke "coll," or college beer, which was then commonly
+drunk by undergraduates, still guiltless of Rhine wines, and of
+collecting Chinese monsters.
+
+
+Carmina vis nostri scribant meliora poetae
+Ingenium jubeas purior baustus alat.
+
+
+In spite of the muddy beer, the poverty, and the "bitterness mistaken
+for frolic," with which Johnson entertained the other undergraduates
+round Pembroke gate, he never ceased to respect his college. "His
+love and regard for Pembroke he entertained to the last," while of
+his old tutor he said, "a man who becomes Jorden's pupil becomes his
+son." Gibbon's sneer is a foil to Johnson's kindliness. "I applaud
+the filial piety which it is impossible for me to imitate . . . To
+the University of Oxford I acknowledge no obligations, and she will
+as cheerfully renounce me for a son, as I am willing to disclaim her
+for a mother."
+
+Johnson was a man who could take the rough with the smooth, and, to
+judge by all accounts, the Oxford of the earlier half of the
+eighteenth century was excessively rough. Manners were rather
+primitive: a big fire burned in the centre of Balliol Hall, and
+round this fire, one night in every year, it is said that all the
+world was welcome to a feast of ale and bread and cheese. Every
+guest paid his shot by singing a song or telling a story; and one can
+fancy Johnson sharing in this barbaric hospitality. "What learning
+can they have who are destitute of all principles of civil
+behaviour?" says a writer from whose journal (printed in 1746)
+Southey has made some extracts. The diarist was a Puritan of the old
+leaven, who visited Oxford shortly before Johnson's period, and who
+speaks of "a power of gross darkness that may be felt constantly
+prevailing in that place of wisdom and of subtlety, but not of God .
+. . In this wicked place the scholars are the rudest, most giddy, and
+unruly rabble, and most mischievous." But this strange and
+unfriendly critic was a Nonconformist, in times when good Churchmen
+showed their piety by wrecking chapels and "rabbling" ministers. In
+our days only the Davenport Brothers and similar professors of
+strange creeds suffer from the manly piety of the undergraduates.
+
+Of all the carping, cross-grained, scandal-loving, Whiggish
+assailants of Alma Mater, the author of Terrae Filius was the most
+persistent. The first little volume which contains the numbers of
+this bi-weekly periodical (printed for R. Franklin, under Tom's
+Coffee-house, in Russell Street, Covent Garden, MDCCXXVI.) is not at
+all rare, and is well worth a desultory reading. What strikes one
+most in Terrae Filius is the religious discontent of the bilious
+author. One thinks, foolishly of course, of even Georgian Whigs as
+orthodox men, at least in their undergraduate days. The mere aspect
+of Mr. Leslie Stephen's work on the philosophers of the eighteenth
+century is enough to banish this pleasing delusion. The Deists and
+Freethinkers had their followers in Johnson's day among the
+undergraduates, though scepticism, like Whiggery, was unpopular, and
+might be punished. Johnson says, that when he was a boy he was a lax
+TALKER, rather than a lax THINKER, against religion; "but lax talking
+against religion at Oxford would not be suffered." The author of
+Terrae Filius, however, never omits a chance of sneering at our
+faith, and at the Church of England as by law established. In his
+description of the exercises of the Club of Wits, only one
+respectably clever epigram is quoted, beginning, -
+
+
+"Since in religion all men disagree,
+And some one God believe, some thirty, and some three."
+
+
+This production "was voted heretical," and burned by the hands of the
+small-beer drawer, while the author was expelled. In the author's
+advice to freshmen, he gives a not uninteresting sketch of these
+rudimentary creatures. The chrysalis, as described by the preacher
+of a University sermon, "never, in his wildest moments, dreamed of
+being a butterfly"; but the public schoolboy of the last century
+sometimes came up in what he conceived to be gorgeous attire. "I
+observe, in the first place, that you no sooner shake off the
+authority of the birch but you affect to distinguish yourselves from
+your dirty school-fellows by a new drugget, a pair of prim ruffles, a
+new bob-wig, and a brazen-hilted sword." As soon as they arrived in
+Oxford, these youths were hospitably received "amongst a parcel of
+honest, merry fellows, who think themselves obliged, in honour and
+common civility, to make you DAMNABLE DRUNK, and carry you, as they
+call it, a CORPSE to bed." When this period of jollity is ended, the
+freshman must declare his views. He must see that he is in the
+fashion; "and let your declarations be, that you are CHURCHMEN, and
+that you believe as the CHURCH believes. For instance, you have
+subscribed the Thirty-nine Articles; but never venture to explain the
+sense in which you subscribed them, because there are various senses;
+so many, indeed, that scarce two men understand them in the same, and
+no TRUE CHURCHMAN in that which the words bear, and in that which
+they were written."
+
+This is pretty plain speaking, and Terrae Filius enforces, by an
+historical example, the dangers of even political freethought. In
+1714 the Constitution Club kept King George's birthday. The
+Constitutional Party was then the name which the Whigs took to
+themselves, though, thanks to the advance of civilisation, the Tories
+have fallen back upon the same. The Conservative undergraduates
+attacked the club, sallying forth from their Jacobite stronghold in
+Brasenose (as seen in our illustration), where the "silly statue," as
+Hearne calls it, was about that time erected. The Whigs took refuge
+in Oriel, the Tories assaulted the gates, and an Oriel man, firing
+out of his window, wounded a gownsman of Brasenose. The Tories,
+"under terror of this dangerous and unexpected resistance, retreated
+from Oriel." Yet such was the academic strength of the Jacobites and
+the Churchmen, that a Freethinker, or a "Constitutioner," could
+scarcely take his degree.
+
+Terrae Filius, who lashes the dons for covetousness, greed,
+dissipation, rudeness, and stupidity, often corroborates the
+Puritan's report about the bad manners of the undergraduates. Yet
+Oxford, then as now, did not lack her exquisites, and her admirers of
+the fair. Terrae Filius thus describes a "smart," as these dandies
+were called--Mr. Frippery:
+
+
+"He is one of those who come in their academical undress, every
+morning between ten and eleven, to Lyne's Coffee-house; after which
+he takes a turn or two upon the park, or under Merton Wall, whilst
+the dull REGULARS are at dinner in their hall, according to statute;
+about one he dines alone in his chamber upon a boiled chicken or some
+pettitoes; after which he allows himself an hour at least to dress
+in, to make his afternoon's appearance at Lyne's; from whence he
+adjourns to Hamilton's about five; from whence (after strutting about
+the room for a while, and drinking a dram of citron), he goes to
+chapel, to show how genteelly he dresses, and how well he can chaunt.
+After prayers he drinks tea with some celebrated toast, and then
+waits upon her to Magdalen Grove or Paradise Garden, and back again.
+He seldom eats any supper, and never reads anything but novels and
+romances."
+
+
+The dress of this hero and his friends must have made the streets
+more gay than do the bright-coloured flannel coats of our boating
+men.
+
+
+"He is easily distinguished by a stiff silk gown, which rustles in
+the wind as he struts along; a flax tie-wig, or sometimes a long
+natural one, which reaches down below his [well, say below his
+waist]; a broad bully-cock'd hat, or a square cap of about twice the
+usual size; white stockings; thin Spanish leather shoes. His clothes
+lined with tawdry silk, and his shirt ruffled down the bosom as well
+as at the wrists."
+
+
+These "smarts" cut no such gallant figure when they first arrived in
+Oxford, with their fathers (rusty old country farmers), in linsey-
+woolsey coats, greasy, sun-burnt heads of hair, clouted shoes, yarn
+stockings, flapping hats, with silver hatbands, and long muslin neck-
+cloths run with red at the bottom.
+
+After this satire of the undergraduates we may look at the
+contemporary account-book of a Proctor. In 1752 Gilbert White of
+Selborne was Proctor, and may have fined young Gibbon of Magdalen,
+who little thought that Oxford boasted an official who was to become
+an English classic. White paid some attention to dress, and got a
+feather-topp'd, grizzled wig from London; cost him 2 pounds, 5s. He
+bought "mountain wine, very old and good," and had his crest engraved
+on his teaspoons, that everything might be handsome about him. When
+he treated the Masters of Arts in Oriel Hall they ate a hundred
+pounds weight of biscuits--not, we trust, without marmalade. "A bowl
+of rum-punch from Horsman's" cost half a crown. Fancy a jolly
+Proctor sending out for bowls of rum-punch, and that in April! Eggs
+cost a penny each, and "three oranges and a mouse-trap" ninepence.
+
+White, a generous man, gave the Vice-Chancellor "seven pounds of
+double-refined white sugar." I like to fancy my learned friend, the
+Proctor, going to the present Vice-Chancellor's with a donation of
+white sugar! Manners have certainly changed in the direction of
+severity. "Share of the expense for Mr. Butcher's release" came to
+ten and sixpence. What had Mr. Butcher been doing? The Proctor went
+"to Blenheim with Nan," and it cost him fifteen and sixpence.
+Perhaps she was one of the "Oxford Toasts" of a contemporary satire.
+Strawberries were fourpence a basket on the ninth of June; and on
+November 6, White lost one shilling "at cards, in common room." He
+went from Selborne to Oxford, "in a post-chaise with Jenny Croke";
+and he gave Jenny a "round Chinaturene." Tea cost eight shillings a
+pound in 1752, while rum-punch was but half a crown a bowl. White's
+highest terminal battels were but 12 pounds, though he was a
+hospitable man, and would readily treat the other Proctor to a bowl
+of punch. It is well to remember White and Johnson when the Gibbon
+of that or any other day bewails the intellectual poverty of Oxford.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII--POETS AT OXFORD: SHELLEY AND LANDOR
+
+
+
+At any given time a large number of poets may be found among the
+undergraduates at Oxford, and the younger dons. It is not easy to
+say what becomes of all these pious bards, who are a marked and
+peculiar people while they remain in residence. The undergraduate
+poet is a not uninteresting study. He wears his hair long, and
+divides it down the middle. His eye is wild and wandering, and his
+manner absent, especially when he is called on to translate a piece
+of an ancient author in lecture. He does not "read" much, in the
+technical sense of the term, but consumes all the novels that come in
+his way, and all the minor poetry. His own verses the poet may be
+heard declaiming aloud, at unholy midnight hours, so that his
+neighbours have been known to break his windows with bottles, and
+then to throw in all that remained of the cold meats of a supper
+party, without interfering with the divine afflatus. When the
+college poet has composed a sonnet, ode, or what not, he sends it to
+the Editor of the Nineteenth Century, and it returns to him after
+many days. At last it appears in print, in College Rhymes, a
+collection of mild verse, which is (or was) printed at regular or
+irregular intervals, and was never seen except in the rooms of
+contributors. The poet also speaks at the Union, where his
+sentiments are either revolutionary, or so wildly conservative that
+he looks on Magna Charta as the first step on the path that leads to
+England's ruin. As a politician, the undergraduate poet knows no
+mean between Mr. Peter Taylor and King John. He has been known to
+found a Tory club, and shortly afterwards to swallow the formulae of
+Mr. Bradlaugh.
+
+The life of the poet is, not unnaturally, one long warfare with his
+dons. He cannot conform himself to pedantic rules, which demand his
+return to college before midnight. Though often the possessor of a
+sweet vein of clerical and Kebleian verse, the poet does not
+willingly attend chapel; for indeed, as he sits up all night, it is
+cruel to expect him to arise before noon. About the poet's late
+habits a story is told, which seems authentic. A remarkable and
+famous contemporary singer was known to his fellow-undergraduates
+only by this circumstance, that his melodious voice was heard
+declaiming anapaests all through the ambrosial night. When the voice
+of the singer was lulled, three sharp taps were heard in the silence.
+This noise was produced by the bard's Scotch friend and critic in
+knocking the ashes out of his pipe. These feasts of reason are
+almost incompatible with the early devotion which, strangely enough,
+Shelley found time and inclination to attend.
+
+Now it is (or was) the belief of undergraduates that you might break
+the decalogue and the laws of man in every direction with safety and
+the approval of the dons, if you only went regularly to chapel. As
+the poet cannot do this (unless he is a "sleepless man"), his
+existence is a long struggle with the fellows and tutors of his
+college. The manners of poets vary, of course, with the tastes of
+succeeding generations. I have heard of two (Thyrsis and Corydon)
+"who lived in Oxford as if it were a large country-house."
+
+Of other singers, the latest of the heavenly quire, it is invidiously
+said that they build shrines to Blue China and other ceramic
+abominations of the Philistine, and worship the same in their rooms.
+Of this sort it is not the moment to speak. Time has not proved
+them. But the old poets of ten years ago lived a militant life; they
+rarely took good classes (though they competed industriously for the
+Newdigate, writing in the metre of Dolores), and it not uncommonly
+happened that they left Oxford without degrees. They were often very
+agreeable fellows, as long as one was in no way responsible for them;
+but it was almost impossible--human nature being what it is--that
+they should be much appreciated by tutors, proctors, and heads of
+houses. How could these worthy, learned, and often kind and
+courteous persons know when they were dealing with a lad of genius,
+and when they had to do with an affected and pretentious donkey?
+
+These remarks are almost the necessary preface to a consideration of
+the existence of Shelley and Landor at Oxford--the Oxford of 1793-
+1810. Whatever the effects may be on Shelleyan commentators, it must
+be said that, to the donnish eye, Percy Bysshe Shelley was nothing
+more or less than the ordinary Oxford poet, of the quieter type. In
+Walter Savage Landor, authority recognised a noisier and rowdier
+specimen of the same class. People who have to do with hundreds of
+young men at a time are unavoidably compelled to generalise. No don,
+that was a don, could have seen Shelley or Landor as they are
+described to us without hastily classing them in the category of
+poets who would come to no good and do little credit to the college.
+Landor went up to Trinity College in 1793. It was the dreadful year
+of the Terror, when good Englishmen hated the cruel murderers of
+kings and queens. Landor was a good Englishman, of course, and he
+never forgave the French the public assassination of Marie
+Antoinette. But he must needs be a Jacobin, and wear his own
+unpowdered hair--the Poet thus declaring himself at once in the
+regular recognised fashion. "For a portion of the time he certainly
+read hard, but the results he kept to himself; for here, as at Rugby,
+he declined everything in the shape of competition." (Now
+competition is the essence of modern University study.) "Though I
+wrote better Latin verses than any undergraduate or graduate in the
+University," says Landor, "I could never be persuaded by my tutor or
+friends to contend for any prize whatever." The pleasantest and most
+profitable hours that Landor could remember at Oxford "were passed
+with Walter Birch in the Magdalen Walk, by the half-hidden Cherwell."
+Hours like these are indeed the pleasantest and most profitable that
+any of us pass at Oxford. The one duty which that University, by
+virtue of its very nature, has never neglected, is the assembling of
+young men together from all over England, and giving them three years
+of liberty of life, of leisure, and of discussion, in scenes which
+are classical and peaceful. For these hours, the most fruitful of
+our lives, we are grateful to Oxford, as long as friendship lives;
+that is, as long as life and memory remain with us. And, "if
+anything endure, if hope there be," our conscious existence in the
+after-world would ask for no better companions than those who walked
+with us by the Isis and the Cherwell.
+
+Landor called himself "a Jacobin," though his own letters show that
+he was as far as the most insolent young "tuft" from relishing
+doctrines of human equality. He had the reputation, however, of
+being not only a Jacobin, but "a mad Jacobin"; too mad for Southey,
+who was then young, and a Liberal. "Landor was obliged to leave the
+University for shooting at one of the Fellows through a window," is
+the account which Southey gave of Landor's rustication. Now fellows
+often put up with a great deal of horse-play. There is scarcely a
+more touching story than that of the don who for the first time found
+himself "screwed up," and fastened within his own oak. "What am I to
+do?" the victim asked his sympathising scout, who was on the other,
+the free side of the oak. "Well, sir, Mr. Muff, sir, when 'e's
+screwed up 'e sends for the blacksmith," replied the servant. What a
+position for a man having authority, to be in the constant habit of
+sending for the blacksmith! Fellows have not very unfrequently been
+fired at with Roman candles, or bombarded with soda-water bottles
+full of gunpowder. One has also known sparrows shot from Balliol
+windows on the Martyrs' Memorial of our illustration. In this case,
+too, the sportsman was a poet. But deliberately to pot at a fellow,
+"to go for him with a shot gun," as the repentant American said he
+would do in future, after his derringer missed fire, is certainly a
+strong measure. No college which pretended to maintain discipline
+could allow even a poet to shoot thus wildly. In truth, Landor's
+offence has been exaggerated by Southey. It was nothing out of the
+common. The poet was giving "an after-dinner party" in his rooms.
+The men were mostly from Christ Church; for Landor was intimate, he
+says, with only one undergraduate of his own college, Trinity. On
+the opposite side of the quadrangle a Tory and a butt, named Leeds,
+was entertaining persons whom the Jacobin Landor calls "servitors and
+other raff of every description." The guests at the rival wine-
+parties began to "row" each other, Landor says, adding, "All the time
+I was only a spectator, for I should have blushed to have had any
+conversation with them, particularly out of a window. But my gun was
+lying on a table in the room, and I had in a back closet some little
+shot. I proposed, as they had closed the casements, and as the
+shutters were on the outside, to fire a volley. It was thought a
+good trick, and accordingly I went into my bedroom and fired." Mr.
+Leeds very superfluously complained to the President. Landor adopted
+the worst possible line of defence, and so the University and this
+poet parted company.
+
+It seems to have been generally understood that Landor's affair was a
+boyish escapade. A copious literature is engaged with the subject of
+Shelley's expulsion. As the story is told by Mr. Hogg, in his
+delightful book, the Life of Shelley, that poet's career at Oxford
+was a typical one. There are in every generation youths like him, in
+unworldliness, wildness, and dreaminess, though unlike him, of
+course, in genius. The divine spark has not touched them, but they,
+like Shelley, are still of the band whom the world has not tamed. As
+Mr. Hogg's book is out of print, and rare, it would be worth while,
+did space permit, to reproduce some of his wonderfully life-like and
+truthful accounts of Oxford as she was in 1810. The University has
+changed in many ways, and in most ways for the better. Perhaps that
+old, indolent, and careless Oxford was better adapted to the life of
+such an almost unexampled genius as Shelley. When his Eton friends
+asked him whether he still meant to be "the Atheist," that is, the
+rebel he had been at school, he said, "No; the college authorities
+were civil, and left him alone." Let us remember this when the
+learned Professor of Poetry at Oxford, Mr. Shairp, calls Shelley "an
+Atheist." Mr. Hogg sometimes complains that undergraduates were left
+too much alone. But who could have safely advised or securely guided
+Shelley?
+
+Undergraduates are now more closely looked after, as far as reading
+goes, than perhaps they like--certainly much more than Shelley would
+have liked. But when we turn from study to the conduct of life, is
+it not plain that no OFFICIAL interference can be of real value?
+Friendship and confidence may, and often does, exist between tutors
+and pupils. There are tutors so happily gifted with sympathy, and
+with a kind of eternal youth of heart and intellect, that they become
+the friends of generation after generation of freshmen. This is
+fortunate; but who can wonder that middle-aged men, seeing the
+generations succeed and resemble each other, lose their powers of
+understanding, of directing, of aiding the young, who are thus cast
+at once on their own resources? One has occasionally heard clever
+men complain that they were neglected by their seniors, that their
+hearts and brains were full of perilous stuff, which no one helped
+them to unpack. And it is true that modern education, when it meets
+the impatience of youth, often produces an unhappy ferment in the
+minds of men. To put it shortly, clever students have to go through
+their age of Sturm und Drang, and they are sometimes disappointed
+when older people, their tutors, for example, do not help them to
+weather the storm. It is a tempest in which every one must steer for
+himself, after all; and Shelley "was borne darkly, fearfully afar,"
+into unplumbed seas of thought and experience. When Mr. Hogg
+complains that his friend was too much left to himself to study and
+think as he pleased, let us remember that no one could have helped
+Shelley. He was better at Oxford without his old Dr. Lind, "with
+whom he used to curse George III. after tea."
+
+There are few chapters in literary history more fascinating than
+those which tell the story of Shelley at Oxford. We see him entering
+the hall of University College--a tall, shy stripling, bronzed with
+the September sun, with long elf-locks. He takes his seat by a
+stranger, and in a moment holds him spell-bound, while he talks of
+Plato, and Goethe, and Alfieri, of Italian poetry, and Greek
+philosophy. Mr. Hogg draws a curious sketch of Shelley at work in
+his rooms, where seven-shilling pieces were being dissolved in acid
+in the teacups, where there was a great hole in the floor that the
+poet had burned with his chemicals. The one-eyed scout, "the
+Arimaspian," must have had a time of tribulation (being a
+conscientious and fatherly man) with this odd master. How
+characteristic of Shelley it was to lend the glow of his fancy to
+science, to declare that things, not thoughts, mineralogy, not
+literature, must occupy human minds for the future, and then to leave
+a lecture on mineralogy in the middle, and admit that "stones are
+dull things after all!" Not less Shelleyan was the adventure on
+Magdalen Bridge, the beautiful bridge of our illustration, from which
+Oxford, with the sunset behind it, looks like a fairy city of the
+Arabian Nights--a town of palaces and princesses, rather than of
+proctors.
+
+
+"One Sunday we had been reading Plato together so diligently, that
+the usual hour of exercise passed away unperceived: we sallied forth
+hastily to take the air for half-an-hour before dinner. In the
+middle of Magdalen Bridge we met a woman with a child in her arms.
+Shelley was more attentive at that instant to our conduct in a life
+that was past, or to come, than to a decorous regulation of the
+present, according to the established usages of society, in that
+fleeting moment of eternal duration styled the nineteenth century.
+With abrupt dexterity he caught hold of the child. The mother, who
+might well fear that it was about to be thrown over the parapet of
+the bridge into the sedgy waters below, held it fast by its long
+train.
+
+""Will your baby tell us anything about pre-existence, Madam?" he
+asked, in a piercing voice, and with a wistful look."
+
+
+Shelley and Hogg seem almost to have lived in reality the life of the
+Scholar Gipsy. In Mr. Arnold's poem, which has made permanent for
+all time the charm, the sentiment of Oxfordshire scenery, the poet
+seems to be following the track of Shelley. In Mr. Hogg's memoirs we
+hear little of summer; it seems always to have been in winter that
+the friends took their long rambles, in which Shelley set free, in
+talk, his inspiration. One thinks of him
+
+
+"in winter, on the causeway chill,
+Where home through flooded fields foot travellers go,"
+
+
+returning to the supper in Hogg's rooms, to the curious desultory
+meals, the talk, and the deep slumber by the roaring fire, the small
+head lying perilously near the flames. One would not linger here
+over the absurd injustice of his expulsion from the University. It
+is pleasant to know, on Mr. Hogg's testimony, that "residence at
+Oxford was exceedingly delightful to Shelley, and on all accounts
+most beneficial." At Oxford, at least, he seems to have been happy,
+he who so rarely knew happiness, and who, if he made another suffer,
+himself suffered so much for others. The memory of Shelley has
+deeply entered into the sentiment of Oxford. Thinking of him in his
+glorious youth, and of his residence here, may we not say, with the
+shepherd in Theocritus, of the divine singer:
+
+[Greek verse which cannot be reproduced]
+
+"Ah, would that in my days thou hadst been numbered with the living,
+how gladly on the hills would I have herded thy pretty she-goats, and
+listened to thy voice, whilst thou, under oaks and pine-trees lying,
+didst sweetly sing, divine Comatas!"
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX--A GENERAL VIEW
+
+
+
+We have looked at Oxford life in so many different periods, that now,
+perhaps, we may regard it, like our artist, as a whole, and take a
+bird's-eye view of its present condition. We may ask St. Bernard's
+question, WHITHER HAST THOU COME? a question to which there are so
+many answers readily given, from within and without the University.
+It is not probable that the place will vary, in essential character,
+from that which has all along been its own. We shall have considered
+Oxford to very little purpose, if it is not plain that the University
+has been less a home of learning, on the whole, than a microcosm of
+English intellectual life. At Oxford the men have been thinking what
+England was to think a few months later, and they have been thinking
+with the passion and the energy of youth. The impulse to thought has
+not, perhaps, very often been given by any mind or minds within the
+college walls; it has come from without--from Italy, from France,
+from London, from a country vicarage, perhaps, from the voice of a
+wandering preacher. Whencesoever the leaven came, Oxford (being so
+small, and in a way so homogeneous) has always fermented readily, and
+promptly distributed the new forces, religious or intellectual,
+throughout England.
+
+It is characteristic of England that the exciting topics, the
+questions that move the people most, have always been religious, or
+deeply tinctured with religion. Conservative as Oxford is, the home
+of "impossible causes," she has always given asylum to new doctrines,
+to all the thoughts which comfortable people call "dangerous." We
+have seen her agitated by Lollardism, which never quite died,
+perhaps, till its eager protest against the sacerdotal ideal was
+fused into the fire of the Reformation. Oxford was literally
+devastated by that movement, and by the Catholic reaction, and then
+was disturbed for a century and a half by the war of Puritanism, and
+of Tory Anglicanism. The latter had scarcely had time to win the
+victory, and to fall into a doze by her pipe of port, when
+Evangelical religion came to vex all that was moderate, mature, and
+fond of repose. The revolutionary enthusiasm of Shelley's time was
+comparatively feeble, because it had no connection with religion; or,
+at least, no connection with the religion to which our countrymen
+were accustomed. Between the era of the Revolution and our own day,
+two religious tempests and one secular storm of thought have swept
+over Oxford, and the University is at present, if one may say so,
+like a ship in a heavy swell, the sea looking much more tranquil than
+it really is.
+
+The Tractarian movement was, of course, the first of the religious
+disturbances to which we refer, and much the most powerful.
+
+It is curious to read about that movement in the Apologia, for
+example, of Cardinal Newman. On what singular topics men's minds
+were bent! what queer survivals of the speculations of the Schools
+agitated them as they walked round Christ Church meadows! They
+enlightened each other on things transcendental, yet material, on
+matters unthinkable, and, properly speaking, unspeakable. It is as
+if they "spoke with tongues," which had a meaning then, and for them,
+but which to us, some forty years later, seem as meaningless as the
+inscriptions of Easter Island.
+
+This was the shape, the Tractarian movement was the shape, in which
+the great Romantic reaction laid hold on England and Oxford. The
+father of all the revival of old doctrines and old rituals in our
+Church, the originator of that wistful return to things beautiful and
+long dead, was--Walter Scott. Without him, and his wonderful wand
+which made the dry bones of history live, England and France would
+not have known this picturesque reaction. The stir in these two
+countries was curiously characteristic of their genius. In France it
+put on, in the first place, the shape of art, of poetry, painting,
+sculpture. Romanticism blossomed in 1830, and bore fruit for ten
+years. The religious reaction was a punier thing; the great Abbe,
+who was the Newman of France, was himself unable to remain within the
+fantastic church that he built out of medieval ruins. In England,
+and especially in Oxford, the aesthetic admiration of the Past was
+promptly transmuted into religion. Doctrines which men thought dead
+were resuscitated; and from Oxford came, not poetry or painting, but
+the sermons of Newman, the Tracts, the whole religious force which
+has transformed and revivified the Church of England. That force is
+still working, it need hardly be said, in the University of to-day,
+under conditions much changed, but not without thrills of the old
+volcanic energy.
+
+Probably the Anglican ideas ceased to be the most powerfully
+agitating of intellectual forces in Oxford about 1845. A new current
+came in from Rugby, and the influence of Dr. Arnold and the natural
+tide of reaction began to run very strong. If we had the apologiae
+of the men who thought most, about the time when Clough was an
+undergraduate, we should see that the influence of the Anglican
+divines had become a thing of sentiment and curiosity. The life had
+not died out of it, but the people whom it could permanently affect
+were now limited in number and easily recognisable. This form of
+religion might tempt and attract the strongest men for a while, but
+it certainly would not retain them. It is by this time a matter of
+history, though we are speaking of our contemporaries, that the abyss
+between the Lives of the English Saints, and the Nemesis of Faith,
+was narrow, and easily crossed. There was in Oxford that enthusiasm
+for certain German ideas which had previously been felt for medieval
+ideas. Liberalism in history, philosophy, and religion was the
+ruling power; and people believed in Liberalism. What is, or used to
+be, called the Broad Church, was the birth of some ten or fifteen
+years of Liberalism in religion at Oxford. The Essays and Reviews
+were what the Tracts had been; and Homeric battles were fought over
+the income of the Regius Professor of Greek. When that affair was
+settled Liberalism had had her innings, there was no longer a single
+dominant intellectual force; but the old storms, slowly subsiding,
+left the ship of the University lurching and rolling in a heavy
+swell.
+
+People believed in Liberalism! Their faith worked miracles; and the
+great University Commission performed many wonderful works, bidding
+close fellowships be open, and giving all power into the hands of
+Examiners. Their dispensation still survives; the large examining-
+machine works night and day, in term time and vacation, and yet we
+are not happy. The age in Oxford, as in the world at large, is the
+age of collapsed opinions. Never men believed more fervidly in any
+revelation than the men of twenty years ago believed in political
+economy, free trade, open competition, and the reign of Common-sense
+and of Mr. Cobden. Where is that faith now? Many of the middle-aged
+disciples of the Church of Common-sense are still in our midst. They
+say the old sayings, they intone the old responses, but somehow it
+seems that scepticism is abroad; it seems that the world is wider
+than their system. Not even open examinations for fellowships and
+scholarships, not half a dozen new schools, and science, and the
+Museum, and the Slade Professorship of Art, have made Oxford that
+ideal University which was expected to come down from Heaven like the
+New Jerusalem.
+
+We have glanced at the history of Oxford to little purpose if we have
+not learned that it is an eminently discontented place. There is
+room in colleges and common rooms for both sorts of discontent--the
+ignoble, which is the child of vanity and weakness; and the noble,
+which is the unassuaged thirst for perfection. The present result of
+the last forty years in Oxford is a discontent which is constantly
+trying to improve the working, and to widen the intellectual
+influence, of the University. There are more ways than one in which
+this feeling gets vent. The simplest, and perhaps the most honest
+and worthy impulse, is that which makes the best of the present
+arrangements. Great religious excitement and religious discussion
+being in abeyance, for once, the energy of the place goes out in
+teaching. The last reforms have made Oxford a huge collection of
+schools, in which physical science, history, philosophy, philology,
+scholarship, theology, and almost everything in the world but
+archaeology, are being taught and learned with very great vigour.
+The hardest worked of men is a conscientious college tutor; and
+almost all tutors are conscientious. The professors being an
+ornamental, but (with few exceptions) MERELY ornamental, order of
+beings, the tutors have to do the work of a University, which, for
+the moment, is a teaching-machine. They deliver I know not how many
+sets of lectures a year, and each lecture demands a fresh and full
+acquaintance with the latest ideas of French, German, and Italian
+scholars. No one can afford, or is willing, to lag behind; every one
+is "gladly learning," like Chaucer's clerk, as well as earnestly
+teaching. The knowledge and the industry of these gentlemen is a
+perpetual marvel to the "bellelettristic trifler." New studies, like
+that of Celtic, and of the obscurer Oriental tongues, have sprung up
+during recent years, have grown into strength and completeness. It
+is unnecessary to say, perhaps, that these facts dispose of the
+popular idea about the luxury of the long vacation. During the more
+part of the long vacation the conscientious teacher must be toiling
+after the great mundane movement in learning. He must be acquiring
+the very freshest ideas about Sanscrit and Greek; about the Ogham
+characters and the Cyprian syllabary; about early Greek inscriptions
+and the origins of Roman history, in addition to reading the familiar
+classics by the light of the latest commentaries.
+
+What is the tangible result, and what the gain of all these labours?
+The answer is the secret of University discontent. All this
+accumulated knowledge goes out in teaching, is scattered abroad in
+lectures, is caught up in note-books, and is poured out, with a
+difference, in examinations. There is not an amount of original
+literary work produced by the University which bears any due
+proportion to the solid materials accumulated. It is just the
+reverse of Falstaff's case--but one halfpenny-worth of sack to an
+intolerable deal of bread; but a drop of the spirit of learning to
+cart-loads of painfully acquired knowledge. The time and energy of
+men is occupied in amassing facts, in lecturing, and then in eternal
+examinations. Even if the results are satisfactory on the whole,
+even if a hundred well-equipped young men are turned out of the
+examining-machine every year, these arrangements certainly curb
+individual ambition. If a resident in Oxford is to make an income
+that seems adequate, he must lecture, examine, and write manuals and
+primers, till he is grey, and till the energy that might have added
+something new and valuable to the acquisitions of the world has
+departed.
+
+This state of things has produced the demand for the "Endowment of
+Research." It is not necessary to go into that controversy.
+Englishmen, as a rule, believe that endowed cats catch no mice. They
+would rather endow a theatre than a Gelehrter, if endow something
+they must. They have a British sympathy with these beautiful, if
+useless beings, the heads of houses, whom it would be necessary to
+abolish if Researchers were to get the few tens of thousands they
+require. Finally, it is asked whether the learned might not find
+great endowment in economy; for it is a fact that a Frenchman, a
+German, or an Italian will "research" for life on no larger income
+than a simple fellowship bestows.
+
+The great obstacle to this "plain living" is perhaps to be found in
+the traditional hospitality of Oxford. All her doors are open, and
+every stranger is kindly entreated by her, and she is like the
+"discreet housewife" in Homer -
+
+
+[Greek text which cannot be reproduced]
+
+
+In some languages the same word serves for "stranger" and "enemy,"
+but in the Oxford dialect "stranger" and "guest" are synonymous.
+Such is the custom of the place, and it does not make plain living
+very easy. Some critics will be anxious here to attack the
+"aesthetic" movement. One will be expected to say that, after the
+ideas of Newman, after the ideas of Arnold, and of Jowett, came those
+of the wicked, the extravagant, the effeminate, the immoral "Blue
+China School." Perhaps there is something in this, but sermons on
+the subject are rather luxuries than necessaries in the present
+didactic mood of the Press. "They were friends of ours, moreover,"
+as Aristotle says, "who brought these ideas in"; so the subject may
+be left with this brief notice. As a piece of practical advice, one
+may warn the young and ardent advocate of the Endowment of Research
+that he will find it rather easier to curtail his expenses than to
+get a subsidy from the Commission.
+
+The last important result of the "modern spirit" at Oxford, the last
+stroke of the sanguine Liberal genius, was the removal of the
+celibate condition from certain fellowships. One can hardly take a
+bird's-eye view of Oxford without criticising the consequences of
+this innovation. The topic, however, is, for a dozen reasons, very
+difficult to handle. One reason is, that the experiment has not been
+completely tried. It is easy enough to marry on a fellowship, a
+tutorship, and a few small miscellaneous offices. But how will it be
+when you come to forty years, or even fifty? No materials exist
+which can be used by the social philosopher who wants an answer to
+this question. In the meantime, the common rooms are perhaps more
+dreary than of old, in many a college, for lack of the presence of
+men now translated to another place. As to the "society" of Oxford,
+that is, no doubt, very much more charming and vivacious than it used
+to be in the days when Tony Wood was the surly champion of celibacy.
+
+Looking round the University, then, one finds in it an activity that
+would once have seemed almost feverish, a highly conscientious
+industry, doing that which its hand finds to do, but not absolutely
+certain that it is not neglecting nobler tasks. Perhaps Oxford has
+never been more busy with its own work, never less distracted by
+religious politics. If we are to look for a less happy sign, we
+shall find it in the tendency to run up "new buildings." The
+colleges are landowners: they must suffer with other owners of real
+property in the present depression; they will soon need all their
+savings. That is one reason why they should be chary of building;
+another is, that the fellows of a college at any given moment are not
+necessarily endowed with architectural knowledge and taste. They
+should think twice, or even thrice, before leaving on Oxford for many
+centuries the uncomely mark of an unfortunate judgment.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X--UNDERGRADUATE LIFE--CONCLUSION
+
+
+
+A hundred pictures have been drawn of undergraduate life at Oxford,
+and a hundred caricatures. Novels innumerable introduce some Oxford
+scenes. An author generally writes his first romance soon after
+taking his degree; he writes about his own experience and his own
+memories; he mixes his ingredients at will and tints according to
+fancy. This is one of the two reasons why pictures of Oxford, from
+the undergraduate side, are generally false. They are either drawn
+by an aspirant who is his own hero, and who idealises himself and his
+friends, or they are designed by ladies who have read Verdant Green,
+and who, at some period, have paid a flying visit to Cambridge. An
+exhaustive knowledge of Verdant Green, and a hasty view of the
+Fitzwilliam Museum and "the backs of the Colleges" (which are to
+Cambridge what the Docks are to Liverpool), do not afford sufficient
+materials for an accurate sketch of Oxford. The picture daubed by
+the emancipated undergraduate who dabbles in fiction is as
+unrecognisable. He makes himself and his friends too large, too
+noisy, too bibulous, too learned, too extravagant, too pugnacious.
+They seem to stride down the High, prodigious, disproportionate
+figures, like the kings of Egypt on the monuments, overshadowing the
+crowd of dons, tradesmen, bargees, and cricket-field or river-side
+cads. Often one dimly recognises the scenes, and the acquaintances
+of years ago, in University novels. The mildest of men suddenly pose
+as heroes of the Guy Livingstone type, fellows who "screw up" timid
+dons, box with colossal watermen, and read all night with wet towels
+bound round their fevered brows. These sketches are all nonsense.
+Men who do these things do not write about them; and men who write
+about them never did them.
+
+There is yet another cause which increases the difficulty of
+describing undergraduate life with truth. There are very many
+varieties of undergraduates, who have very various ways of occupying
+and amusing themselves. A steady man that reads his five or six
+hours a day, and takes his pastime chiefly on the river, finds that
+his path scarcely ever crosses that of him who belongs to the
+Bullingdon Club, hunts thrice a week, and rarely dines in hall. Then
+the "pale student," who is hard at work in his rooms or in the
+Bodleian all day, and who has only two friends, out-college men, with
+whom he takes walks and tea,--he sees existence in a very different
+aspect. The Union politician, who is for ever hanging about his
+club, dividing the house on questions of blotting-paper and quill
+pens, discussing its affairs at breakfast, intriguing for the place
+of Librarian, writing rubbish in the suggestion-book, to him Oxford
+is only a soil carefully prepared for the growth of that fine flower,
+the Union. He never encounters the undergraduate who haunts
+billiard-rooms and shy taverns, who buys jewelry for barmaids, and
+who is admired for the audacity with which he smuggled a fox-terrier
+into college in a brown-paper parcel. There are many other species
+of undergraduate, scarcely more closely resembling each other in
+manners and modes of thought than the little Japanese student
+resembles the metaphysical Scotch exhibitioner, or than the
+hereditary war minister of Siam (whose career, though brief, was
+vivacious) resembled the Exeter Sioux, a half-reclaimed savage, who
+disappeared on the warpath after failing to scalp the Junior Proctor.
+When The Wet Blanket returned to his lodge in the land of Sitting
+Bull, he doubtless described Oxford life in his own way to the other
+Braves, while the squaws hung upon his words and the papooses played
+around. His account would vary, in many ways, from that of
+
+
+"Whiskered Tomkins from the hail
+Of seedy Magdalene."
+
+
+And he, again, would not see Oxford life steadily, and see it whole,
+as a more cultivated and polished undergraduate might. Thus there
+are countless pictures of the works and ways of undergraduates at the
+University. The scene is ever the same--boat-races and foot-ball
+matches, scouts, schools, and proctors, are common to all,--but in
+other respects the sketches must always vary, must generally be one-
+sided, and must often seem inaccurate.
+
+It appears that a certain romance is attached to the three years that
+are passed between the estate of the freshman and that of the
+Bachelor of Arts. These years are spent in a kind of fairyland,
+neither quite within nor quite outside of the world. College life is
+somewhat, as has so often been said, like the old Greek city life.
+For three years men are in the possession of what the world does not
+enjoy--leisure; and they are supposed to be using that leisure for
+the purposes of perfection. They are making themselves and their
+characters. We are all doing that, all the days of our lives; but at
+the Universities there is, or is expected to be, more deliberate and
+conscious effort. Men are in a position to "try all things" before
+committing themselves to any. Their new-found freedom does not
+merely consist in the right to poke their own fires, order their own
+breakfasts, and use their own cheque-books. These things, which make
+so much impression on the mind at first, are only the outward signs
+of freedom. The boy who has just left school, and the thoughtless
+life of routine in work and play, finds himself in the midst of
+books, of thought, and discussion. He has time to look at all the
+common problems of the hour, and yet he need not make up his mind
+hurriedly, nor pledge himself to anything. He can flirt with young
+opinions, which come to him with candid faces, fresh as Queen
+Entelechy in Rabelais, though, like her, they are as old as human
+thought. Here first he meets Metaphysics, and perhaps falls in love
+with that enchantress, "who sifts time with a fine large blue silk
+sieve." There is hardly a clever lad but fancies himself a
+metaphysician, and has designs on the Absolute. Most fall away very
+early from this, their first love; and they follow Science down one
+of her many paths, or concern themselves with politics, and take a
+side which, as a rule, is the opposite of that to which they
+afterwards adhere. Thus your Christian Socialist becomes a Court
+preacher, and puts his trust in princes; the young Tory of the old
+type will lapse into membership of a School Board. It is the time of
+liberty, and of intellectual attachments too fierce to last long.
+
+Unluckily there are subjects more engrossing, and problems more
+attractive, than politics, and science, art, and pure metaphysics.
+The years of undergraduate life are those in which, to many men, the
+enigmas of religion present themselves. They bring their boyish
+faith into a place (if one may quote Pantagruel's voyage once more)
+like the Isle of the Macraeones. On that mournful island were
+confusedly heaped the ruins of altars, fanes, temples, shrines,
+sacred obelisks, barrows of the dead, pyramids, and tombs. Through
+the ruins wandered, now and again, the half-articulate words of the
+Oracle, telling how Pan was dead. Oxford, like the Isle of the
+Macraeones, is a lumber-room of ruinous philosophies, decrepit
+religions, forlorn beliefs. The modern system of study takes the
+pupil through all the philosophic and many of the religious systems
+of belief, which, in the distant and the nearer past, have been
+fashioned by men, and have sheltered men for a day. You are taught
+to mark each system crumbling, to watch the rise of the new temple of
+thought on its ruins, and to see that also perish, breached by
+assaults from without or sapped by the slow approaches of Time. This
+is not the place in which we can well discuss the merits of modern
+University education. But no man can think of his own University
+days, or look with sympathetic eyes at those who fill the old halls
+and rooms, and not remember, with a twinge of the old pain, how
+religious doubt insists on thrusting itself into the colleges. And
+it is fair to say that, for this, no set of teachers or tutors is
+responsible. It is the modern historical spirit that must be blamed,
+that too clear-sighted vision which we are all condemned to share of
+the past of the race. We are compelled to look back on old
+philosophies, on India, Athens, Alexandria, and on the schools of men
+who thought so hard within our own ancient walls. We are compelled
+to see that their systems were only plausible, that their truths were
+but half-truths. It is the long vista of failure thus revealed which
+suggests these doubts that weary, and torture, and embitter the
+naturally happy life of discussion, amusement, friendship, sport, and
+study. These doubts, after all, dwell on the threshold of modern
+existence, and on the threshold--namely, at the Universities--men
+subdue them, or evade them.
+
+The amusements of the University have been so often described that
+little need be said of them here. Unhealthy as the site of Oxford
+is, the place is rather fortunately disposed for athletic purposes.
+The river is the chief feature in the scenery, and in the life of
+amusement. From the first day of term, in October, it is crowded
+with every sort of craft. The freshman admires the golden colouring
+of the woods and Magdalen tower rising, silvery, through the blue
+autumnal haze. As soon as he appears on the river, his weight,
+strength, and "form" are estimated. He soon finds himself pulling in
+a college "challenge four," under the severe eye of a senior cox, and
+by the middle of December he has rowed his first race, and is
+regularly entered for a serious vocation. The thorough-going
+boating-man is the creature of habit. Every day, at the same hour,
+after a judicious luncheon, he is seen, in flannels, making for the
+barge. He goes out, in a skiff, or a pair, or a four-oar, or to a
+steeplechase through the hedges when Oxford, as in our illustration,
+is under water. The illustration represents Merton, and the writer
+recognises his old rooms, with the Venetian blinds which Mr. Ruskin
+denounced. Chief of all the boating-man goes out in an eight, and
+rows down to Iffley, with the beautiful old mill and Norman church,
+or accomplishes "the long course." He rows up again, lounges in the
+barge, rows down again (if he has only pulled over the short course),
+and goes back to dinner in hall. The table where men sit who are in
+training is a noisy table, and the athletes verge on "bear-fighting"
+even in hall. A statistician might compute how many steaks, chops,
+pots of beer, and of marmalade, an orthodox man will consume in the
+course of three years. He will, perhaps, pretend to suffer from the
+monotony of boating shop, boating society, and broad-blown boating
+jokes. But this appears to be a harmless affectation. The old
+breakfasts, wines, and suppers, the honest boating slang, will always
+have an attraction for him. The summer term will lose its delight
+when the May races are over. Boating-men are the salt of the
+University, so steady, so well disciplined, so good-tempered are
+they. The sport has nothing selfish or personal in it; men row for
+their college, or their University; not like running--men, who run,
+as it were, each for his own hand. Whatever may be his work in life,
+a boating-man will stick to it. His favourite sport is not
+expensive, and nothing can possibly be less luxurious. He is often a
+reading man, though it may be doubted whether "he who runs may read"
+as a rule. Running is, perhaps, a little overdone, and Strangers'
+cups are, or lately were, given with injudicious generosity. To the
+artist's eye, however, few sights in modern life are more graceful
+than the University quarter-of-a-mile race. Nowhere else, perhaps,
+do you see figures so full of a Hellenic grace and swiftness.
+
+The cream of University life is the first summer term. Debts, as
+yet, are not; the Schools are too far off to cast their shadow over
+the unlimited enjoyment, which begins when lecture is over, at one
+o'clock. There are so many things to do, -
+
+
+"When wickets are bowled and defended,
+When Isis is glad with the eights,
+When music and sunset are blended,
+When Youth and the Summer are mates,
+When freshmen are heedless of "Greats,"
+When note-books are scribbled with rhyme,
+Ah! these are the hours that one rates
+Sweet hours, and the fleetest of Time!"
+
+
+There are drags at every college gate to take college teams down to
+Cowley. There is the beautiful scenery of the "stripling Thames" to
+explore; the haunts of the immortal "Scholar Gipsy," and of Shelley,
+and of Clough's Piper, who -
+
+
+"Went in his youth and the sunshine rejoicing, to Nuneham and
+Godstowe."
+
+
+Further afield men seldom go in summer, there is so much to delight
+and amuse in Oxford. {2} What day can be happier than that of which
+the morning is given (after a lively college breakfast, or a
+"commonising" with a friend) to study, while cricket occupies the
+afternoon, till music and sunset fill the grassy stretches above
+Iffley, and the college eights flash past among cheering and
+splashing? Then there is supper in the cool halls, darkling, and
+half-lit up; and after supper talk, till the birds twitter in the
+elms, and the roofs and the chapel spire look unfamiliar in the blue
+of dawn. How long the days were then! almost like the days of
+childhood; how distinct is the impression all experience used to
+make! In later seasons Care is apt to mount the college staircase,
+and the "oak" which Shelley blessed cannot keep out this visitor.
+She comes in many a shape--as debt, and doubt, and melancholy; and
+often she comes as bereavement. Life and her claims wax importunate;
+to many men the Schools mean a cruel and wearing anxiety, out of all
+proportion to the real importance of academic success. We cannot see
+things as they are, and estimate their value, in youth; and if
+pleasures are more keen then, grief is more hopeless, doubt more
+desolate, uncertainty more gnawing, than in later years, when we have
+known and survived a good deal of the worst of mortal experience.
+Often on men still in their pupilage the weight of the first
+misfortunes falls heavily; the first touch of Dame Fortune's whip is
+the most poignant. We cannot recover the first summer term; but it
+has passed into ourselves and our memories, into which Oxford, with
+her beauty and her romance, must also quickly pass. He is not to be
+envied who has known and does not love her. Where her children have
+quarrelled with her the fault is theirs, not hers. They have chosen
+the accidental evils to brood on, in place of acquiescing in her
+grace and charm. These are crowded and hustled out of modern life;
+the fever and the noise of our struggles fill all the land, leaving
+still, at the Universities, peace, beauty, and leisure.
+
+If any word in these papers has been unkindly said, it has only been
+spoken, I hope, of the busybodies who would make Oxford cease to be
+herself; who would rob her of her loveliness and her repose.
+
+
+
+Footnotes:
+
+{1} Poems by Ernest Myers. London, 1877.
+
+{2} A very pleasing account of the scenery near Oxford appeared in
+the Cornhill for September 1879.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of The Project Gutenberg Etext of Oxford[City/Univ], by Andrew Lang
+
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