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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #54023 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/54023)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Cambridge Papers, by Walter William Rouse Ball
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: Cambridge Papers
-
-Author: Walter William Rouse Ball
-
-Release Date: January 19, 2017 [EBook #54023]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CAMBRIDGE PAPERS ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Laura Wisewell, David Wilson and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (The
-original copy of this book was generously made available
-for scanning by the Department of Mathematics at the
-University of Glasgow.)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CAMBRIDGE PAPERS.
-
-
-
-
- MACMILLAN AND CO., Limited
- LONDON · BOMBAY · CALCUTTA · MADRAS
- MELBOURNE
-
- THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
- NEW YORK · BOSTON · CHICAGO
- DALLAS · SAN FRANCISCO
-
- THE MACMILLAN CO. OF CANADA, Ltd.
- TORONTO
-
-
-
-
-CAMBRIDGE PAPERS
-
-BY
-W.W. ROUSE BALL
-FELLOW OF TRINITY COLLEGE, CAMBRIDGE.
-
-
-MACMILLAN AND CO., LIMITED
-ST MARTIN'S STREET, LONDON
-
-1918
-
-[_All rights reserved_]
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE.
-
-
-This volume contains papers on some questions of local history put
-together, mostly for undergraduate societies and magazines, at various
-times during the last twenty-five years. I have included a memoir,
-written for a London Society, on Newton's _Principia_, a work that
-profoundly affected the development of University studies in the
-eighteenth century, and a chapter on the History of the Mathematical
-Tripos, which at one time appeared in my _Mathematical Recreations and
-Essays_, since these are concerned with Cambridge subjects.
-
-I print the papers, whether long or short, and whether read at length
-or, as was more often the case, curtailed in delivery, substantially
-in the form in which they were first written. This leaves allusions
-which bear evidence to their domestic origin, and involves, in those
-of them dealing with cognate subjects, some repetition of facts. If
-these are defects they could be removed only by rewriting much of what
-appears here; it seems to me preferable to let the essays stand in
-their original forms, save occasionally for the addition of a
-paragraph or sentence dealing with what has happened since they were
-first presented. The dates in the text are reckoned in the modern
-style, taking the year as beginning on the first day of January.
-
- W.W. ROUSE BALL.
- Trinity College, Cambridge.
- _January, 1918._
-
-
-
-
-TABLE OF CONTENTS.
-
- PAGE
- Preface v
-
- =Part I. Concerning Trinity College.=
-
- Chapter I. The Foundation of Trinity College 3
- Chapter II. The Tutorial System 26
- Chapter III. The Westminster Scholars 48
- Chapter IV. The Society for the Prevention of
- Cruelty to Undergraduates 71
- Chapter V. The College Chapel 84
- Chapter VI. Some College Treasures 104
- Chapter VII. The College Auditors 127
- Chapter VIII. Wren's Designs for the Library 144
- Chapter IX. A Christmas Journey in 1319 154
- Chapter X. An Outline of the College Story 161
-
- =Part II. Concerning the University.=
-
- Chapter XI. The Beginnings of the University 179
- Chapter XII. Discipline 194
- Chapter XIII. Newton's _Principia_ 225
- Chapter XIV. Newton on University Studies 244
- Chapter XV. The Mathematical Tripos 252
-
- Index 317
-
-
-
-
-PART I.
-
-=Concerning Trinity College.=
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I.
-
-THE FOUNDATION OF TRINITY COLLEGE.
-
-
-Trinity College was founded by Henry VIII in 1546. To obtain a site
-for it, he suppressed King's Hall and Michael-House, two medieval
-colleges which were built on or owned most of the ground now occupied
-by the Great Court, and with their revenues, largely augmented by
-property of dissolved monasteries, he endowed it. The scheme of the
-College and his objects in founding it are stated in his letters
-patent of 19 December 1546, and particulars of the income assigned by
-him to the foundation are set out in his charter of dotation dated
-24 December 1546. These documents have been printed[1] and are readily
-accessible, but the history of the events leading up to the foundation
-of the College is less generally known. I cannot promise that the
-story in itself is interesting but the material facts have never
-before been brought together[2] so its telling is justified.
-
-After the dissolution of the monastic houses, anxiety was felt in
-Cambridge and Oxford lest they should suffer a similar fate. The
-policy of the suppression of the two universities and the confiscation
-of their property was openly advocated by politicians at court, and
-naturally great alarm was felt when in 1544 an Act[3] was passed
-empowering the king to dissolve any college at either university, and
-appropriate its possessions.
-
-The universities were right in thinking that the danger was pressing,
-for Parker, who played a leading part in the affair, has put on
-record[4] the fact that after the passing of the Act certain courtiers
-importunately sued the king to have the possessions of both bodies
-surveyed, meaning afterwards to obtain the same on easy terms. In
-these circumstances the Cambridge authorities, says Strype, "looked
-about them and made all the friends they could at court to save
-themselves." In particular they urgently begged the aid of two of
-their professors, John Cheke, then acting as tutor to the prince of
-Wales, and Thomas Smith, then clerk to the queen's council. Here is
-the letter[5] of the senate to Smith on the subject:
-
- Si tu is es, Clarissime Smithe, in quem Academia haec
- Cantabrigiensis universas vires suas, universa pietatis jura
- exercuerit, si tibi uni omnia doctrinae suae genera, omnia reipub.
- ornamenta libentissime contulerit, si fructum gloriae suae in te uno
- jactaverit, si spem salutis suae in te potissimum reposuerit: age
- ergo, et mente ac cogitatione tua complectere, quid tu vicissim illi
- debes, quid illa, quid literae, quid respublica, quid Deus ipse pro
- tantis pietatis officiis, quibus sic dignitas tua efflorescit,
- justissime requirit: Academia nil debet tibi, imo omnia sua in te
- transfudit. Et propterea abs te non simpliciter petit beneficium,
- sed merito repetit officium: nec unam aliquam causam tibi proponit,
- sed sua omnia, et seipsam tibi committit. Nec sua necesse habet
- aperire tibi consilia, quorum recessus et diverticula nosti
- universa. Age igitur quod scis, et velis quod potes, et perfice
- quod debes. Sic literis, academiae, reipublicae, et religioni; sic
- Christo et Principi rem debitam et expectatam efficies. Jesus te
- diutissime servet incolumem.
-
-Parker tells us that the London friends of the University, among whom
-Smith and Cheke were doubtless conspicuous, wisely took the line of
-welcoming an enquiry, but begged the king to avoid the expense of a
-costly investigation. Their representations were successful, and he
-issued a commission[6] dated 16 January 1546 to Matthew Parker (then
-vice-chancellor, and later archbishop of Canterbury), John Redman
-(warden of King's Hall, chaplain to the king, and later master of
-Trinity), and William Mey (president of Queens', and later
-archbishop-elect of York) to report to him on the revenues of the
-colleges and the numbers of students sustained therewith. The
-commissioners were capable and friendly.
-
-The king must have been impatient to know the facts, for in less than
-a week, on 21 January, he ordered Parker to come to Hampton Court with
-the report. Immediate compliance was impossible, but the command may
-well have stimulated the commissioners to act as rapidly as possible.
-In fact they obtained the services of eleven clerks from the Court of
-Augmentations in London, and at once set to work to collect
-information.
-
-The University was keenly alive to the risks it was incurring. To
-placate the king, the senate, on 13 February, put all its belongings
-at his service, and when forwarding a copy of the grace to Secretary
-Sir William Paget it reminded him of the value of the University to
-the state, and begged his protection. At the same time it addressed
-the queen, Katharine Parr, through Thomas Smith, imploring her
-advocacy.[7]
-
-The queen replied[8] on 26 February. After complaining that he had
-written to her in Latin, though he could equally well have expressed
-himself in the vulgar tongue, she discoursed at length on the duties
-of members of the University, and, saying that she was confident that
-her wishes in these respects would be fulfilled, she concluded her
-letter as follows:
-
- I (according to your desires) have attempted my lord the King's
- Majesty, for the establishment of your livelihood and possessions:
- in which, notwithstanding his Majesty's property and interest,
- through the consent of the high court of parliament, his Highness
- being such a patron to good learning, doth tender you so much, that
- he will rather advance learning and erect new occasion thereof than
- [to] confound those your ancient and godly institutions, so that
- learning may hereafter justly ascribe her very original whole
- conservation and sure stay to our Sovereign Lord.
-
-This was good news, and things now moved rapidly. By the end of
-February the commissioners had drawn up a detailed report giving the
-information required. It is printed[9] at length in the _Cambridge
-Documents_, 1852, and occupies nearly 200 pages.
-
-The commissioners in person presented to the king at Hampton Court a
-brief summary of this report. We do not know the date of this
-interview, but conjecturally it may be put as being early in March.
-Parker has left[10] in his own handwriting a full account of their
-reception as follows:
-
- In the end, the said commissioners resorted up to Hampton Court to
- present to the King a brief summary written in a fair sheet of
- vellum (which very book is yet reserved in the college of Corpus
- Christi) describing the revenues, the reprises, the allowances, and
- number and stipend of every College. Which book the King diligently
- perused; and in a certain admiration said to certain of his lords
- which stood by, that he thought he had not in his realm so many
- persons so honestly maintained in living by so little land and rent:
- and where he asked of us what it meant that the most part of
- Colleges should seem to expend yearly more than their revenues
- amounted to; we answered that it rose partly of fines for leases and
- indentures of the farmers renewing their leases, partly of wood
- sales: whereupon he said to the lords, that pity it were these lands
- should be altered to make them worse; (at which words some were
- grieved, for that they disappointed _lupos quosdam hiantes_). In
- fine, we sued to the King's Majesty to be so gracious lord, that he
- would favour us in the continuance of our possessions such as they
- were, and that no man by his grace's letters should require to
- permute with us to give us worse. He made answer and smiled, that he
- could not but write for his servants and others, doing the service
- for the realm in wars and other affairs, but he said he would put us
- to our choice whether we should gratify them or no, and bade us hold
- our own, for after his writing he would force us no further. With
- which words we were well armed, and so departed.
-
-This important interview was followed by a rumour that it was Henry's
-intention to found at Cambridge a new and magnificent college to serve
-as an enduring record of his interest in learning, and perhaps the
-University may have taken the queen's letter as indicating what was
-coming. It is believed that Henry had long entertained vague ideas of
-the kind, but that the definite suggestion, which was encouraged by
-the queen, originated with Redman, who, as royal chaplain, had
-constant access to the king and considerable influence with him.
-
-The preparations for Henry's proposed foundation were made with
-extreme speed: a wise course in view of his failing health and
-variable temper. It was decided to take advantage of the Act of 1544
-and suppress King's Hall and Michael-House, using their grounds and
-adjoining property as the site of the new college. We have no
-reference to the appointment of commissioners for the business, though
-there is an allusion, quoted later, to receivers: perhaps the matter
-was left in the hands of the officials of the Court of Augmentations.
-Redman was the chief authority at Cambridge in the arrangements that
-had to be made there, and it was intended that he should be the first
-master of the new college when it was founded.
-
-The two Societies above mentioned were (save for Peterhouse) the
-oldest in the University. To Trinity men their history has, naturally,
-great interest, and I interpolate a few remarks on this and their
-position in 1546.
-
-The King's Scholars, normally thirty-two in number and of all ages
-from fourteen upwards, were established by Edward II under a warden in
-1317 and incorporated in 1337. They had for their original home a
-large house (King's Hall) situated on the grass plot and walk in front
-of the present chapel, and rapidly acquired all the adjacent land
-between the High Street (now known as Trinity Street) and the river,
-extending their buildings in various directions. Popular writers
-sometimes assert or assume that all medieval colleges were founded for
-poor students. That is not universally true. No condition of poverty
-was imposed on the scholars of King's Hall, nor was their life here
-penurious: they had a dining-hall, library, common room, chapel,
-kitchens, a brewery, a vineyard, a garden, and a staff of servants
-maintained by the Society, while a good many of them also kept their
-own private servants: they received a liberal allowance for daily
-commons, clothes and bedding were supplied from the royal wardrobe,
-and pocket-money was given to buy other things. They were appointed
-by the crown largely from among the families of court officials,
-nominations being restricted to those who knew Latin. After completing
-their course many of these students entered what we may call the
-higher civil service of the time in church or state.
-
-In the report of the commissioners, the annual income of King's Hall
-was returned as £214. 0s. 3d. and the expenses as £263. 16s. 7d.; and
-it was stated that at the time there were on its boards, a master,
-twenty-five graduate fellows, and seven undergraduate fellows,
-besides servants. The Society owned the patronage of the livings of
-Arrington, Bottisham, St Mary's Cambridge, Chesterton, Fakenham,
-Felmersham, and Grendon. According to the return, the normal annual
-expenditure of King's Hall, if all the scholars resided, required
-£182. 18s. 4d. for the emoluments of the warden and fellows (namely,
-£8. 13s. 4d. for the warden, £5. 10s. 0d. for each of twenty-five
-graduate fellows, and £5. 5s. 0d. for each of seven undergraduate
-fellows); £32. 2s. 0d. for the college servants (namely, the butler,
-barber, baker, brewer, laundress, cook, under-cook, and the warden's
-servant); £3. 1s. 4d. for the estate officers and quit-rents; £3. 19s.
-4d. for the expenses of the chapel services and the bible-clerk; £5.
-0s. 0d. for firing for the hall and kitchen; £5. 0s. 0d. for rushes
-for the hall; £5. 10s. 4d. for the exequies of the founder and the
-following refections; £29. 1s. 4d. for repairs and renewals; and £10
-for extraordinary expenses.
-
-The other College (Michael-House) whose buildings were transferred to
-Trinity was of a different type. It was founded by Hervey de Stanton
-in 1324 for a master and six secular clergy who wished to study in the
-University. Their original home was a large house on the site of the
-present combination room and the land round it; later they acquired
-all the property between Foul Lane and the river. At first the
-Society's means were barely sufficient for its needs, but in time it
-received many gifts, and the foundation was increased to a master and
-eight priests with chaplains and bible-clerks. It had an oratory in
-its House but did not need a chapel as it owned St Michael's Church;
-traces of this ownership will be noticed in the arrangement for stalls
-(to be occupied by members of the Society) in the choir, which is sunk
-below the level of the nave and chancel.
-
-In the report of the commissioners, the annual income of Michael-House
-was returned as £141. 13s. 1¾d. and its expenses as £143. 18s. 0d.;
-and it was stated that there were on its boards a master, eight
-fellows, and three chaplains, besides servants. Besides St Michael's
-Cambridge, the Society owned the patronage of the livings of
-Barrington, Boxworth, Cheadle, Grundisburgh, and Orwell. According to
-the return, the normal annual expenditure of Michael-House required a
-sum of £91. 10s. 8d. for the emoluments of the Society (namely, £7.
-6s. 8d. for the master, £47. 17s. 4d. for the six fellows on the
-original foundation, £11. 6s. 8d. for the two Illegh fellows, £15 for
-three chaplains, one of whom served Barrington, and £10 for four
-bible-clerks), £1 for the auditor, £6. 6s. 8d. for college servants
-(namely, the cook, butler, barber, and laundress), rather more than
-£17 for the exequies of benefactors, £1. 13s. 4d. for the
-commemoration refection, £20 for repairs, and £6. 6s. 8d. for
-extraordinary expenses. A clerical society like Michael-House had no
-difficulty in providing for due celebration of the exequies of its
-friends, and in fact more than twenty benefactors are mentioned by
-name as being thus commemorated every year. In 1544, the House,
-presumably with the object of averting its destruction, began to admit
-students resident elsewhere in the University, and in a couple of
-years no less than forty-eight students matriculated from it; the
-number of admissions must have exceeded this, but what was involved in
-such cases by admission is uncertain.
-
-A scheme containing a "first plott or proportion" for the new College
-was prepared for the king by the Court of Augmentations in London; it
-seems certain that this was worked out in collaboration with Redman.
-The clerk who drew it up was Thomas Ansill. The College, after its
-foundation, recognized its obligation to him in the matter and
-presented him to the vicarage of Barford which was and is in its gift.
-He preserved a copy of his scheme; this was purchased from his son by
-one of the fellows in 1611, and given to the College.
-
-The manuscript of the suggested scheme, to which Mr Bird first called
-my attention, is endorsed _Distribucio Collegii_ and headed "the
-proporcon diuised for Trinite College." It is undated, but in a later
-hand it is added that it was made Anno 37 Hen. 8, and therefore before
-22 April 1546. From internal evidence it must have been composed in or
-after March in that year, since those who graduated in that Lent term
-are described as being of the standing of the degrees then taken. Of
-those who graduated afterwards some are described correctly, others
-not so: doubtless Redman knew about the standing of the members of
-King's Hall and Michael-House, but he may well have made mistakes
-about the standing of some of the junior students of other colleges.
-If however we accept the endorsement as correct, we may fix the date
-of the composition of the plan as being in the early half of April,
-1546. This manuscript has not been printed, and I proceed to describe
-it.
-
-The object of the compilers of this scheme was to see what income
-would be required for the suggested new College, and to arrange how
-the income should be used; incidentally it reveals the general
-organization proposed. The constitution of the College, the various
-offices to be created, and the stipends intended are specified. In
-most cases the names of the proposed fellows, scholars, bedesmen, and
-servants are given, but generally the allocation of the proposed
-principal offices is not indicated and probably had not been then
-arranged. The names of the proposed fellows and scholars agree with
-those appointed later, though the order is not always the same, but
-the provisional list of bedesmen differs from that of those ultimately
-nominated.
-
-The _Distribucio_ begins with a statement of the names and suggested
-stipends of the master and fellows. The stipend of the master was to
-be £100 a year: that of each of the next fifteen fellows (one of those
-proposed being a doctor of divinity, ten bachelors of divinity, and
-four masters of arts) was to be £10 a year and £1 a year for livery:
-that of each of the next twenty-five fellows (twenty-two of those
-nominated being masters of arts and three bachelors of arts) was to be
-£8 a year; that of each of the next twenty fellows and scholars (seven
-of the nominees being bachelors of arts and thirteen junior scholars)
-was to be £6. 13s. 4d. a year. The names are given and agree with
-those in the letters patent of 19 December.
-
-There was to be a schoolmaster (Richard Harman) who was to have £20 a
-year, an usher of grammar (William Boude) who was to have £10 a year,
-and provision was made for forty childer grammarians, whose names are
-given, each of whom was to have £4 a year. This shows that it was
-intended that the foundation should include students in grammar, and
-the two teachers specially responsible for them were to be a
-schoolmaster and usher.
-
-The question arises whether it was intended to found a grammar-school
-connected with the College or whether these grammarians were what we
-should call undergraduate scholars or exhibitioners. The former view
-is the correct one, for the royal commissioners in May 1549 definitely
-asked[11] the College "to surrender the Grammar Schole." This was done
-and the school was then absorbed in the College. Probably at that time
-the distinction between boys at the grammar-school and junior
-undergraduates was not regarded as important--the term grammarian or
-grammaticus being commonly used for a junior undergraduate as well as
-a school-boy[12]. This indifference to the distinction between the two
-classes is illustrated by the fact that of the grammarian school-boys
-named in the _Distribucio_, ten were already matriculated members of
-the University, nine matriculated from Trinity shortly after its
-foundation, and of the others six matriculated in 1548 or 1549 which
-is not inconsistent with their having been students of the University
-in 1546.
-
-In 1547, the accounts include a particular payment for six boys of the
-grammar-school, and wages for one quarter for the schoolmaster and Mr
-Boude; thus showing that the school was then being carried on. In
-1548, the accounts specify forty-two grammatici, in addition to
-certain graduates and dialectici, as being in residence, but in this
-year there is no mention of a schoolmaster or an usher though possibly
-they may be included among the ten lectors for whom provision is made.
-In 1551 the grammatici appear as discipuli, and thenceforth the
-grammarians were treated as undergraduate scholars.
-
-The _Distribucio_ next goes on to enumerate seven readers. Three of
-these were to be public or university readers, of whom one (John
-Maydew) was to read in divinity, one (John Cheke) in Greek, and one
-(Thomas Wakefield) in Hebrew, each at £40 a year. The other four were
-to be fellows of the College, of whom one (Simon Bridges) was to read
-in divinity at £6. 13s. 4d. a year, two in philosophy at £5 a year
-each, and one in logic at £5 a year: such stipends to be in addition
-to their fellowship emoluments. It would seem that Bridges or Briggs
-declined to accept the nomination to a fellowship at Trinity and
-accordingly was not appointed to the office. Provision was also made
-for two under-readers in logic at £2. 3s. 4d. each. Next are mentioned
-two examiners in scholastic acts at £5 a year each; and two chaplains
-at £6. 13s. 4d. a year each, one (Henry Man) for the fellows and the
-other (unnamed) for the childer and bedesmen. I note that Henry Man
-occupied for many years rooms in the Great Court adjoining and on the
-west side of what is now known as the Queen's Gate.
-
-The next entry is that of twenty-four almsmen or bedesmen at £6 a year
-each; the names of all but one are given, but the list differs
-somewhat from that appearing in the account book of 1547 of those
-appointed when the College began work. The unnamed bedesman was the
-cook of Michael-House, and it is impossible not to wonder whether his
-inclusion in this list (which involved his retirement from the
-kitchens) was due to the memory of indifferent dinners eaten by Redman
-when a guest at the high table of that House.
-
-The _Distribucio_ then returns to the enumeration of the officers and
-servants of the College. There were to be two bursars at £4 a year
-each; a vice-master at £5 a year; two deans to direct disputations of
-divinity and philosophy, one at £4 a year, and the other at £3. 6s.
-8d. a year; eight bible-clerks, whose names are given, to serve the
-hall, choir and vestry, and to attend upon the curate when visiting,
-at £2. 13s. 4d. a year each; an organ-player at £6 a year and his
-commons; two butlers, the senior at £5 a year and the junior at £4 a
-year; a manciple at £6. 13s. 4d. a year; a master-cook at £6 a year;
-two under-cooks, one at £4 a year, and the other at £3. 6s. 8d. a
-year; and a turn-spit at £2 a year. There was also to be a barber at
-£5 a year; a laundress at £5 a year; a porter at £6 a year; a
-bricklayer at £4 a year; a carpenter at £4 a year; a mason at £4 a
-year; two stewards of lands at £5 a year each; an auditor for the
-lands at £10 a year; a receiver for the lands at £13. 6s. 8d.; and an
-attorney in the exchequer for the lands at £3. 6s. 8d. Allowance was
-to be made for the yearly distribution of alms to the amount of £20;
-and of another £20 to be spent on the mending of highways. The total
-expenditure contemplated amounts to £1286. At the end in another
-handwriting is added that allowance (amount unspecified) should be
-also made for wine and wax, riding, extraordinary charges, and
-repairs.
-
-It must have been in April, or early in May, 1546, that the
-commissioners, or other officials concerned, took possession of King's
-Hall and Michael-House and the ground adjacent thereto. They at once
-made arrangements to shut up Foul Lane which ran across the present
-Great Court, to purchase such part of that court as did not belong to
-King's Hall and Michael-House, and to enclose the site. Stone and
-other materials for the new work were taken from the church and
-cloisters of the dissolved Franciscan monastery which stood on the
-land now occupied by Sidney Sussex College, and in a survey, dated
-20 May 1546, those buildings are described as having been already
-partially demolished in order to provide "towards the building of the
-King's Majesty's new College."
-
-It is probable that during this time members of King's Hall and
-Michael-House were in residence, and possibly also some of the
-members-elect of Trinity College. The cost of the maintenance of the
-House and the expenses of the alterations must have been heavy, but in
-December 1546, the Court of Augmentations was ordered[13] "to pay Dr
-Redman of your new College in Cambridge £2000 towards the
-establishment and building of the same, and in recompense for revenues
-of their lands for a whole year ended Michaelmas last, because the
-rents were paid to your Majesty's receivers before they had out
-letters patent for their donation." We have no record of these
-expenses, but I conjecture that this grant allowed a clean start to be
-made from Michaelmas 1546.
-
-The members of the new College entered into possession of the
-buildings and began their academic life as members of Trinity College
-about Michaelmas 1546. The surrender of King's Hall and Michael-House
-to the king took place on 28 October, and arrangements were than made
-to pension the master and eight fellows of Michael-House and one
-fellow of King's Hall. Redman was appointed master of the new
-foundation.
-
-The original members of the Society were selected from the whole
-University with the addition of a few Oxonians: it is believed that
-all the nominees were favourable to the new learning and the
-protestant faith. Of the forty childer grammarians named in the
-_Distribucio_ all save one accepted the nomination; of these, six had
-been previously members of Michael-House, one a member of Pembroke,
-one of Peterhouse, one of St John's, and one of some unnamed College.
-Of the sixty students nominated to fellowships or scholarships in the
-letters patent, fourteen did not reside and presumably refused the
-nomination. Of the forty-six who accepted the office, thirty-six were
-graduates and ten were non-graduates. Of these thirty-six nominees,
-three came from Michael-House, one from King's Hall, two from
-Christ's, one from Corpus, one from King's, one from Pembroke, two
-from Peterhouse, one from Queens', one from St Catharine's, and three
-from St John's: of the colleges or hostels from which the remaining
-twenty had graduated, I can find no particulars. Of the ten
-non-graduates who accepted the office, one had been at Pembroke, one
-at Queens', two at St John's, and one at Trinity Hall: of the previous
-history of the remaining five I know nothing. Of the fourteen who did
-not reside and presumably declined the offer, eleven were graduates,
-of whom one had been at Corpus, one at King's, one at Pembroke, three
-at Queens', two at St John's, and two at Oxford, and of the remaining
-graduate I can find no particulars. Of the three non-graduates who did
-not accept the nomination, one had been at Michael-House, one at
-Oxford, and of the other I know nothing. It appears from the
-account-books that there were also still in residence a few
-students[14] who had been members of King's Hall and Michael-House: it
-was only courteous to give these deposed students the hospitality of
-the House, and they occupied a different position to the pensioners
-and fellow-commoners who later were admitted in considerable numbers.
-We cannot prove or disprove the presence at this time of other
-students, but it is most likely that at first there were no residents
-in College other than those mentioned above.
-
-The legal formalities connected with the surrender of the properties
-of King's Hall and Michael-House took a considerable time, and were
-not completed till 17 December 1546. The letters patent founding the
-College and the charter of dotation were signed a few days later[15].
-The actual endowment granted was valued at £1640 net a year, which
-must have been deemed ample to provide for the expenses and the
-maintenance of the House. Comparing this income and the estimated
-expenditure with those of King's Hall and Michael-House we gather how
-much more important than these colleges was the contemplated new
-foundation.
-
-Thus were King's Hall and Michael-House dissolved, but only to be
-merged in a new and nobler Society. The letters patent founding
-Trinity College state that Henry to the glory and honour of Almighty
-God and the Holy and Undivided Trinity, for the amplification and
-establishment of the Christian and true religion, the extirpation of
-heresy and false opinion, the increase and continuance of divine
-learning and all kinds of godliness, the knowledge of language, the
-education of youth in piety virtue discipline and learning, the relief
-of the poor and destitute, the prosperity of the Church of Christ, and
-the common good and happiness of his kingdom and subjects, founded and
-established a College of letters, sciences, philosophy; godliness, and
-sacred theology, for all time to endure. These are noble objects, and
-we may look back with honourable pride to the way in which Trinity
-College has on the whole carried out the intentions of its founder.
-
-The organization of the new College followed closely that outlined in
-the _Distribucio_. To meet the expenses already incurred during the
-Michaelmas term the Court of Augmentations[16] in January 1547 paid
-Redman £590 "towards the exhibition of King's Scholars in Cambridge."
-This was about one-third of the total intended income of the House,
-and presumably cleared matters up to 24 December 1546, when the
-College entered into possession of its endowments. If we may trust the
-sermon preached in London on 12 December 1550, by Thomas Lever,
-subsequently master of St John's College, Trinity had reason to regret
-the death of Henry in January 1547, for the preacher asserted that a
-substantial part of the intended endowment was appropriated by
-courtiers in London; I have never investigated what part (if any) of
-it was thus lost to the College.
-
-The first account-book of the new College covers the civil year 1547,
-but only certain selected items of income and expenditure appear
-therein. It shows total receipts of £786. 16s. 7d. and total payments
-of £799. 11s. 1½d. Most of the income is said to have come from the
-"Tower." I conjecture that rents, etc. were paid to the master who
-kept the college moneys in the treasury in the Tower, and the bursar
-in his book accounted only for such portion of it as was handed to
-him: of other sums received or paid on account of the Society, we
-have no particulars. In most cases the commons (though not the
-stipends or wages) paid to officers are set out, but up to Lady-Day
-instead of giving full details there is an entry of £52. 6s. 10d. paid
-to fellows and scholars for "the first quarter after the erection,
-besides stipends and wages." The account-book for the next year, 1548,
-is better kept. It shows total receipts of £531. 13s. 11½d. and total
-payments of £528. 12s. 8½d. In the accounts of this year are mentioned
-a master, fifty graduate fellows (of whom thirteen were bachelors),
-ten dialectici, forty-two grammarians, and eight bible-clerks. Entries
-appear of payments for commons to six former members of King's Hall
-and Michael-House, but of these only three seem to have been in
-regular residence. An examination of the early account-books allows us
-to see something of the development of the College, but a description
-of this would hardly come within the purview of this paper.
-
-
-[Footnote 1: _Cambridge Documents_ issued by the Royal Commissioners,
-London, 1852, vol. III, pp. 365-410.]
-
-[Footnote 2: This was true some years ago when this paper was written,
-but since then I have given part of the story in a booklet on the
-King's Scholars and King's Hall which, at the request of the College,
-I wrote in 1917 for the meeting held to celebrate the six-hundredth
-anniversary of the execution by Edward II of the writ establishing
-those scholars in the University of Cambridge.]
-
-[Footnote 3: 37 Henry VIII, cap. 4.]
-
-[Footnote 4: _Correspondence of M. Parker_, Cambridge, 1852, p. 34.]
-
-[Footnote 5: _Life of T. Smith_ by J. Strype, Oxford, 1820,
-pp. 29-30.]
-
-[Footnote 6: _State Papers_, Domestic, 1546, vol. XXI, part i, no. 68.
-See also J. Lamb's _Documents_, London, 1838, pp. 58-59;
-_Correspondence of M. Parker_, Cambridge, 1852, p. 34.]
-
-[Footnote 7: _State Papers_, Domestic, 1546, part i, nos. 203, 204.]
-
-[Footnote 8: _Ecclesiastical Memorials_ by J. Strype, Oxford, 1882,
-vol. XI, part i, pp. 207-208; _Correspondence of M. Parker_, p. 36.]
-
-[Footnote 9: _Cambridge Documents_, vol. I, pp. 105-294.]
-
-[Footnote 10: _Correspondence of M. Parker_, pp. 35-36; J. Lamb's
-_Documents_, p. 59.]
-
-[Footnote 11: _State Papers_, Domestic, Edward VI, May 1549.]
-
-[Footnote 12: Senior undergraduates were then commonly termed
-dialectici.]
-
-[Footnote 13: _State Papers_, Domestic, 1546, no. 647 (25).]
-
-[Footnote 14: Three fellow-commoners had matriculated from King's Hall
-in 1544.]
-
-[Footnote 15: The charter of foundation, dated 19 December, and that
-of endowment, dated 24 December, are printed at length in the
-_Cambridge Documents_, vol. III, pp. 365-410.]
-
-[Footnote 16: C.H. Cooper, _Annals of Cambridge_, Cambridge, 1842,
-vol. I, p. 452.]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II.
-
-THE TUTORIAL SYSTEM.
-
-
-The word Tutor is used at Cambridge to describe an officer of a
-College who stands to his pupils in loco parentis; now-a-days he may,
-but does not necessarily, give direct instruction to them. The object
-of this chapter is to describe the development of the office in
-Trinity College.
-
-Trinity College was founded in 1546 by Henry VIII. It is, however,
-essential in dealing with its early history to bear in mind that it
-was founded in a pre-existing[17] University having well-established
-rules and customs. Nearly all the original members of Trinity had been
-educated at Cambridge, they were familiar with its traditions, and
-even the buildings they occupied were associated with the college life
-of earlier times. It was intended that the Society should promote the
-reformed religion and the new learning, but there is no reason to
-suppose that in establishing it, it was wished or proposed to alter
-the existing practice about the tuition, guidance, and care of the
-younger students.
-
-In the system in force in the University shortly before the
-foundation of Trinity, the students corresponding to our scholars and
-sizars lived in endowed colleges (of which eight were founded before
-1353 and seven between 1440 and 1520), most of those corresponding to
-our pensioners in unendowed private hostels (of which in the sixteenth
-century there were twenty-seven and in earlier times possibly a few
-more), and most of those belonging to religious orders in monasteries
-or monastic hostels. A student on admission to the University was
-apprenticed to some master of arts or doctor who directed the lad's
-studies until he took a master's degree. This graduate was known as
-the student's "master": in the case of a member of a college we may
-assume that the master was chosen from among the senior members of the
-House, though it is doubtful if this was necessarily so in the case of
-the hostels. The head of a college or hostel was responsible for the
-conduct and control of the lad in non-scholastic matters, but in
-colleges in later times this work was assigned to a dean. Thus for
-practical purposes a tutorial system already existed in the medieval
-system of apprenticeship and control.
-
-The royal scheme for Trinity College comprised a master, fifteen
-senior fellows, twenty-five middle fellows, twenty junior fellows (of
-whom, in 1546, thirteen were undergraduates), and forty grammarian
-school-boys. In addition to these, there were servant-students (known
-as sizars or subsizars), each being attached as gyp to a particular
-fellow, and receiving education, board, and lodging in lieu of money
-wages. There is nothing to show whether or not the presence of
-pensioners was contemplated.
-
-We have a list, apparently complete, of all the intended officers;
-tutors do not appear among them, though a schoolmaster and usher were
-provided for the grammarians. Hence it would seem that the relation
-between an apprenticed undergraduate and his master was regarded as
-personal, and that the latter was selected and paid by his pupil or
-pupil's guardian, and not by or through the College--I conjecture that
-this was the usual medieval practice. The deans are mentioned as
-officers of the College, and the discipline of the younger members was
-part of their business, though no doubt a lad's master or tutor
-assisted in enforcing it. The formal charter of foundation was given
-by Henry in December 1546, but the grammarians are not mentioned
-therein.
-
-During the next six years, 1546-1552, three important developments
-took place. First, the grammar-school side of the College was
-abandoned, and all boys then in the school were entered as scholars
-of the House; next, and perhaps consequent on the abolition of the
-school, a distinction between fellows and scholars was drawn; and
-finally, following the growing custom of other colleges, the
-admission of pensioners was definitely recognized as desirable, thus
-introducing a class of students below the standing of scholars. Before
-coming to the subject of tutors it will be well to add a word or two
-about the pensioners and scholars of these early days.
-
-With the upset of the medieval scheme of education the number of
-pensioners and fellow-commoners seeking admission to the University
-greatly decreased, and the reception of a limited number of them in
-the colleges fairly met the needs of the University. The private
-hostels were then no longer wanted and being unendowed disappeared.
-Thus when again, as soon happened, the number of would-be pensioners
-increased, it was necessary (unless new non-collegiate arrangements
-were made for their reception in the University) to admit them in
-larger numbers to the colleges. At Trinity a limit was, in theory,
-placed on the number of pensioners admissible, but not on that of
-fellow-commoners. A pensioner at Trinity, and I suppose also at other
-colleges, had to be qualified by learning and morals for admission,
-and I conceive further that his entry was conditional on his finding a
-fellow who would receive him. A pensioner or fellow-commoner had no
-rights, and resided only on such terms and as long as the College or
-the fellow receiving him willed. I believe that students of this class
-did not often stay here for more than three or four years unless in
-due course they became scholars.
-
-A most important question for the new College was how the supply of
-scholars and fellows should be provided. In King's Hall vacancies
-were filled by royal nomination, and boys came into residence as
-scholars-elect. We do not know what was proposed in 1546, but I think
-that, as far as entry to the grammar-school was concerned, nomination
-by the senior fellows was the most likely method to have been
-contemplated. The abandonment of the school and the enrolment of all
-its members as scholars of the House must however have raised the
-question in an acute form, and it was settled in or before 1552 by the
-establishment of an annual examination for the election of scholars.
-Probably from the first it was intended that the new fellows should be
-formally elected and admitted.
-
-The charter of 1546 contains a reference to statutes to be given later
-by the king. There was considerable delay in preparing these, and the
-liberty of action thus left to the Society seems to have been used
-unwisely, for the commissioners of 1549 reported that its state was
-"much out of order, governed at large and pleasure for want of
-statutes ... the fellows for the most part too bad."
-
-In November 1552 the College received the long-expected statutes by
-which it was to be governed: with their appearance we leave the field
-of conjecture and come to facts. The foundation as here described
-included a master, fifty fellows of the standing of master or doctor,
-and sixty bachelor and undergraduate scholars: provision was also made
-for student-servants or sizars. Vacancies in the roll of scholars were
-to be filled by an annual election held at Michaelmas on the result
-of a two days' examination. Bachelors of arts and those insane or
-suffering from contagious disease (a curious conjunction) were
-ineligible: also there could not, at any one time, be more than three
-scholars from any one county. The regulation that a bachelor was not
-eligible for election to a scholarship suggests that a candidate might
-be in residence as an undergraduate, though it does not exclude the
-candidature of those who were not already members of the House, but
-the custom (if it ever existed) of electing non-residents had died out
-before 1560. The admission of pensioners, not exceeding fifty-four in
-number, was definitely recognized in 1552: of these the master might
-take as his pupils four, and each fellow one. The pensioner which
-every fellow might thus receive was in addition to such scholars as
-had been assigned to him as pupils, but though scholars had tutors,
-the fellow responsible for a pensioner is not explicitly described as
-his tutor. It seems that an important part of the duty of a tutor was
-to see that all payments due to the college from his pupils were made
-punctually. Scholars, unlike pensioners, had definite rights.
-
-The following are some of the regulations:
-
- Nemo ex discipulis sine tutore in collegio sit, qui fuerit,
- expellatur. Pupilli tutoribus pareant, honorem paternum et
- reverentiam exhibeant, quorum cura consumitur in illis informandis
- et ad pietatem scientiamque instruendis. Tutores fideliter et
- diligenter quae docenda sunt suos doceant, quae agenda instruant et
- admoneant. Omnia pupillorum expensa tutores collegio praestent, et
- singulis mensibus aes debitum pro se et suis quaestoribus solvant.
- Quod ni fecerint, tantisper commeatu priventur dum pecunia
- dissolvatur. Pupillus neque a tutore rejiciatur, neque tutorem suum
- ubi velit mutet nisi legitima de causa a praeside et senatu
- probanda; qui fecerit collegio excludatur.... In discipulis
- eligendis praecipua ratio ingenii et inopiae sit, in quibus ut
- quisque valet maxime ita ceteris proferatur. Eo adjungatur doctrinae
- studium et mediocris jam profectus, et reliqui temporis spes illum
- fore ad communem reipublicae posthac idoneum. Horum studium sit ut
- vitae innocentiam cum doctrinae veritate conjungant, et in veritate
- rerum inquirendi et honestate persequenda laborent.... Sic sint
- grammaticis et studiis humanitatis instituti ut inquisitiones aulae
- sustinere et domesticas exercitationes suscipere possint....
- Pensionarii et studiorum socii in collegium recipiantur ...
- provideatur ut neque praesidi plures quam quatuor neque singulis
- sociis plures uno pensionario sint.
-
-Grave offences were punishable by expulsion, rustication, etc., and
-those who committed only "minor offences" were liable to penalties of
-extreme severity. Thus we read:
-
- Quicunque in aliqua parte officii sui negligentior fuerit, et
- aliquem e magistratibus bene admonentem non audiverit, aut
- insolentem se ostenderit, si ephoebus sit verberibus sin ex ephoebis
- excesserit decennali victu careat et uterque praeterea poenitentiam
- declamatione tostetur.
-
-The text is corrupt, but the meaning is clear. A marginal note
-suggests the obvious correction that decemdiali should be read for
-decennali. The deans superintended, even if they did not inflict,
-corporal punishment when it was ordered.
-
-Another code of statutes was drawn up in 1554, but was never sealed,
-and thus did not become effective. I need not quote the text which, on
-tutorial matters, does not differ materially from that of 1560. The
-draft contains a clause to the effect that the master of the College
-was not to take more than four pensioners as his pupils, a fellow who
-was a master of arts or of some superior degree was not to take more
-than two, and no one else was to take a pensioner as a pupil. The word
-"two" however has been crossed out and "one" substituted. From this it
-would seem that the question of how many pensioners it was desirable
-to admit was already a matter of debate.
-
-In 1560 new statutes were granted to the College, and its constitution
-as then settled remained practically unaltered till 1861. In this
-code the foundation is described as including a master, sixty fellows,
-four chaplains, sixty-two scholars, and thirteen sizars or gyps,
-namely, three for the master and one for each of the ten senior
-fellows. Henceforth scholars were elected annually in the spring, from
-undergraduates already in residence. By a gracious provision, whose
-disappearance in 1861 I regret, it was ordered that forty of the
-scholarships should be specifically associated with the name of
-Henry VIII, twenty with that of queen Mary, and two with that of
-Thomas Allen as pre-eminent benefactors. Pensioners and subsizars were
-also admissible to the Society on conditions. If fellow-commoners
-dined at the high table, as seems likely, they may have been reckoned
-extra numerum. Every student under the degree of master of arts was
-required to have a tutor, thus regularizing the position of
-fellow-commoners, pensioners, sizars, and subsizars as members of the
-College, and bringing them under the same rule as scholars.
-
-The regulations in point are as follows:
-
- Est ea quidem ineuntis aetatis imbecillitas ut provectiorum consilio
- et prudentia necessario moderanda sit, et propterea statuimus et
- volumus ut nemo ex baccalaureis, discipulis, pensionariis,
- sisatoribus, et subsisatoribus tutore careat: qui autem caruerit,
- nisi intra quindecim dies unum sibi paraverit, e collegio ejiciatur.
- Pupilli tutoribus pareant, honoremque paternum ac reverentiam
- deferant, quorum studium, labor, et diligentia in illis ad pietatem
- et scientiam informandis ponitur. Tutores sedulo quae docenda sunt
- doceant, quaeque etiam agenda instruant admoneantque. Omnia
- pupillorum expensa tutores collegio praestent, et intra decem dies
- cujusque mensis finiti aes debitum pro se ac suis omnibus senescallo
- solvant. Quod ni fecerint, tantisper commeatu priventur dum pecunia
- a se collegio debita dissolvatur. Cautumque esto ne pupillus
- quispiam vel stipendium suum a thesaurariis recipiat vel rationem
- pro se cum eisdem aliquando ineat, sed utrumque per tutorem semper
- sub poena commeatus menstrui a dicto tutore collegio solvendi fieri
- volumus.... Pensionarios ut studiorum socios in collegium
- recipiendos statuimus; sitque in illis recipiendis ratio morum ac
- doctrinae diligenter habita; magistris artium aut superioris gradus
- unum, baccalaureis autem nullum omnino concedimus. Nemo illorum
- admittatur nisi a decano seniore et primario lectore examinatus.
-
-In time, serious discrepancies between the statutes and the practice
-of the College grew up. Some, but not all, of these were removed in
-1844, when the statutes were revised. The sentence above quoted
-"magistris artium aut superioris gradus unum, baccalaureis autem
-nullum omnino concedimus" was then struck out.
-
-In 1861 new statutes were given to the College: these contain no
-mention of pensioners, but merely prescribe that no bachelor or
-undergraduate shall be without a tutor. The present statutes of 1882
-similarly direct that no member of the College in statu pupillari
-shall be without a tutor.
-
-Except by accident, we have no record before 1635 of the names of the
-tutors of the various students, but it is probable that at first the
-master regularly entered some undergraduates as his own pupils:
-certainly Whitgift did so, and so too did some of his successors. It
-seems most likely also that by 1560 it was already usual for the
-master to assign a student to that fellow who was to act as his tutor,
-though of course regard must always have been paid to the wishes of a
-parent or guardian in this matter. This remained the ordinary custom
-for perhaps two hundred years.
-
-Some information on tutorial affairs in the sixteenth century may be
-gathered from an account-book kept by Whitgift, covering parts of the
-years 1570 to 1576, and containing statements of the charges he made
-as tutor: the names of thirty-nine men are given. In the history of
-Trinity College which I wrote for my pupils some years ago, I
-published a few of these bills. I give here a few details illustrative
-of the many matters with which a tutor was then concerned.
-
-The payment made to him as tutor varied in different cases, but 6s.
-8d. a quarter for a sizar, 10s. for a pensioner, and 13s. 4d. for a
-fellow-commoner were usual sums. In a few cases there are records of
-an admission-fee to the College or a fee for entering into commons:
-the normal payment for this was 15s. for a pensioner, and 20s. for a
-fellow-commoner--there is no mention of any such charge in the case of
-a sizar. The cost of the silly ceremony by which the senior
-undergraduates initiated a freshman, known as his salting, was charged
-in the bills, and varied from 8d. for a sizar and 1s. 4d. for a
-pensioner to 4s. for a fellow-commoner. The charge for matriculation
-appears to have been 4d. for a sizar, 1s. for a pensioner, and 2s. for
-a fellow-commoner.
-
-Of course the cost of the purchase of books comes in most of the
-accounts. Aristotle, Plato, Sophocles, and Demosthenes constantly
-appear among Greek writers, Homer and Xenophon only once; Cicero,
-Caesar, Sallust, and Lucian occur often among the Latin authors, Livy
-only once. Euripides and Horace are noticeable by their absence. I
-have not observed any mathematical books. Works by Seton and Erasmus
-are frequently mentioned. Among English books we have a prayer-book
-charged at 1s., a service-book at 1s. 8d., a bible at 9s., and a
-testament at 2s. The charge for a bible in Latin was 7s. and for a new
-testament in Greek 2s. A Greek grammar cost 1s., 1s. 2d., or 1s. 4d.;
-a Hebrew grammar 1s. which seems cheap. Paper was charged 4d. by the
-quire and 2s. 6d. by the half-ream: the cost of a bundle of pens and
-an inkhorn was usually 4d. or 6d.
-
-Clothes appear to have been expensive, but naturally the cost varied
-widely according to the status of the student. Apparently at that time
-the wardrobes of men were fairly extensive: the prices of the various
-articles are set out in full. I hesitate to distinguish academic gowns
-from other robes, but the charge of 4s. to John Waring, a pensioner,
-for his gown and square cap, as also the charge of 2s. 6d. for making
-a gown and hood for Phillip Harrison, another pensioner, must, I
-think, be taken to refer to academic costumes. The cost of a surplice
-to Richard Therald, a sizar, was 4s., but to Henry Gates, a
-fellow-commoner, was as much as 11s. 7d.
-
-As to amusements, the richer students seem to have kept or hired
-horses at considerable cost. Horse-hire to London varied from 4s. to
-8s.; to Lincoln from 3s. 6d. to 4s. 8d. Bows and arrows constantly
-appear in the bills--the price of a bow ranging from 1s. 4d. to 3s.
-Tennis was another popular amusement of the day. The court stood on
-the site of the north end of the present library, and the keeper of
-the court was regarded as a college servant; there are no charges in
-connection with the bats, balls, or use of the court.
-
-It may be interesting to notice that coals were used regularly as well
-as wood: they were sold at 1s. 3d. a sack. Candles were charged at
-either 3d. or 4d. a pound. Among miscellaneous things 6d. was charged
-for an hour-glass; 4d. for a mouse-trap; 10d. for a scabbard for a
-rapier; and 10s. for a lute. A set of singing lessons cost 3s. and a
-set of dancing lessons 6s.
-
-Sickness appears to have been common. In general we have no record of
-the duration of illnesses, and the charges for doctors and chemists
-varied widely. The charge for plucking out one tooth seems to have
-been 1s. 4d., but for two teeth the dentist reduced his charge to 1s.
-a tooth.
-
-We get another aspect of student and tutorial affairs in the next
-century (in 1659) contained in a long letter from which I gave
-extracts in the history of the College to which I have already
-referred. Robert Creighton, pronounced Crickt-on, of Somersetshire, a
-Westminster boy and a scholar of the House, was then a candidate for a
-fellowship. At the time there were in residence a good many zealots,
-introduced into the Society under presbyterian or Cromwellian
-auspices, and one of these, a year senior to Creighton, was also a
-candidate for a fellowship. Just before the election some of the
-scholars were playing tennis in the college court when the ball by
-chance struck one of them in the eye. On this Creighton called out "Oh
-God, Oh God, the scholar's eye is stroke out," whereon his competitor
-accused him to the authorities as a profane person who took God's
-name in vain; and as confirmation added that he never came to the
-private prayer meetings of the students. By good luck the master was
-Wilkins, afterwards bishop of Chester, who owed his appointment more
-to the fact that he had married Cromwell's sister than to his devotion
-to the doctrines of the Independents. It is clear that he disapproved
-of the complaint, but he considered it prudent to summon a meeting of
-the seniority to hear the case and examine witnesses. Creighton's
-tutor, Duport (who gave us our large silver salt-cellar), spoke up for
-his pupil, and thereon the master said that the charge looked like
-malice, and it did not matter much if Creighton did neglect to go to
-the private prayer meetings of undergraduates since he never failed to
-go to chapel and to his tutor's lectures. He then proposed, if we may
-trust our authority, that the seniority should at once reject the
-informer and his friends, and elect to the vacant fellowships the
-accused and his friends, and so it was done. Such were elections then!
-
-It is satisfactory to add that public opinion in the College was
-against those who trumped up this ridiculous charge, and on the day
-after the election the following notice was found on the screens. "He
-that informed against Ds Creighton deserves to have his breech kickt
-on." An amusing glimpse of life under the Commonwealth. Note that the
-tutor gave lectures to his pupils, and from the tutorial point of
-view observe the esteem gained by regular attendance thereat.
-
-No obligation to take pupils seems ever to have been imposed on
-fellows, though a pupil once taken could not be transferred. This, and
-the fact that scholars were elected only from students already in
-residence, made it undesirable to retain any rule to the effect that a
-fellow should not have more than one pensioner as a pupil. Hence in
-time those who liked tutorial work and did it well were allowed to
-have more than one pensioner pupil, and gradually the bulk of the
-entries came to be made under a comparatively few tutors.
-
-The average annual entry of students at Trinity during the years 1551
-to 1600 was fifty-one, during the years 1601 to 1650 was fifty, and
-during the years 1651 to 1700 was thirty-nine. During the years 1701
-to 1750, it sank to twenty-seven: this diminution being partly due to
-the Bentley scandals. During the years 1751 to 1800 the average annual
-entry was thirty-seven, during the years 1801 to 1850 was one hundred
-and sixteen, during the years 1851 to 1900 was one hundred and
-seventy-four, and during the years 1901 to 1913 was one hundred and
-ninety-nine.
-
-Let us see how the men were divided among the tutors. From April to
-December 1635, twenty-eight students were admitted who were
-distributed among seventeen tutors, of whom eleven had only one pupil
-and none had more than four pupils. Taking every tenth year
-thenceforward, we find that in 1645, there were (excluding ten fellows
-intruded by order of parliament) fifty-seven entries; of these
-fifty-one were divided among ten tutors. In 1655, there were
-fifty-three normal entries divided among twelve tutors; in 1665,
-forty-three entries divided among six tutors; in 1675, forty-nine
-entries divided among twelve tutors; in 1685, thirty-four entries
-divided among five tutors; and in 1695, twenty-eight entries divided
-among four tutors. In 1705, there were twenty-nine entries, of these
-twenty-eight students were divided among three tutors. In 1715, there
-were fourteen entries divided among six tutors; in 1725, thirty-four
-entries divided among twelve tutors; in 1735, twenty-eight entries
-divided among six tutors; and in 1745, twenty-one entries divided
-among eight tutors.
-
-In 1755 there were only two fellows acting as tutors, namely
-S. Whisson and J. Backhouse. Thenceforth there were definite tutorial
-"sides," each under one tutor or joint tutors, a tutor being appointed
-to a side when a vacancy occurred; and every admission to the College
-being made on a designated side. In effect the work of a tutor was now
-regarded as being of a character which should occupy a man's whole
-energies, and it was generally held that a tutor, while he held
-office, had not, and ought not to have, leisure during term-time for
-independent work. From 1755 to 1822 there were two sides. In 1822 a
-third side was created. In 1872 one of the sides (being the lineal
-successor of Backhouse's side) was divided into two. These four sides
-are to-day designated in the college office by the letters _A_, _B_,
-_C_, _D_; side _A_ being that created in 1822, sides _B_ and _D_ being
-the two made out of the successor of Backhouse's side, and side _C_
-being the lineal successor of Whisson's side. [In the pre-war days of
-1914 side _A_ was under Dr Barnes, side _B_ under Mr Laurence, side
-_C_ under Mr Whetham, and side _D_ under Dr Fletcher.]
-
-Proceeding by decades in the same way as before, the entries on each
-of the two sides (denoted by _C_ and _BD_) which existed from 1755 to
-1822 were in 1755, nineteen and ten; in 1765, four and six; in 1775,
-twenty-one and twenty-four; in 1785, eighteen and twenty-nine; in
-1795, twenty-nine and seventeen; in 1805, forty-two and twenty-six;
-and in 1815, fifty-one and thirty-six. From 1822 to 1872 there were
-three sides (denoted by _C_, _BD_, _A_): the normal entries on these
-were in 1825, forty-two, fifty-five, forty-one; in 1835, forty,
-forty-five, fifty-three; in 1845, fifty, sixty-eight, forty-nine; in
-1855, fifty-three, forty-eight, fifty; and in 1865, fifty-eight,
-nineteen, sixty. Since 1872 there have been four sides (denoted by
-_C_, _B_, _D_, _A_) which were made approximately equal: the normal
-entries on these were in 1875, forty-one, forty, forty-four, forty; in
-1885, forty-nine, forty-four, forty-five, forty-eight; in 1895,
-forty-eight, thirty-eight, fifty, fifty-one; and in 1905, fifty,
-fifty-three, fifty, fifty-seven.
-
-Until 1755 the number of pupils in residence in any one term assigned
-to an individual tutor was not large, and a tutor interested in any
-particular aspect of a subject likely to be studied was generally
-available: hence it was usually possible for a tutor to give
-personally the teaching and guidance required by his pupils. There
-were then no lecture-rooms in College, so probably all instruction was
-given in the tutor's rooms and was informal in character. With the
-establishment in 1755 of sides, this system of teaching required
-modification, and in the course of the latter half of the eighteenth
-century it became the custom for a tutor to supplement his teaching by
-the services of another fellow or other fellows. These officers, known
-as Assistant-Tutors, were appointed and paid by individual tutors;
-they lectured regularly, took an important part in the life of the
-Society, and occupied a recognized position.
-
-A marked development of the system of formal lectures is indicated by
-the erection in 1835 of a block of four large and four medium-sized
-lecture-rooms. No other important changes were made for another thirty
-years, and until 1868 instruction remained normally organized by
-sides; indeed it was only by arrangement that lectures on one side
-were open to men on the other sides, though in fairness it must be
-added that an arrangement for throwing them open was made as a matter
-of course whenever it seemed desirable. The retention to so late a
-date of appointments by sides was due to the fact that the finances of
-the four sides were then kept as separate accounts.
-
-This scheme, clumsy and illogical though it was, might have worked
-fairly well as long as the great majority of honour men read nothing
-but mathematics, classics, and perhaps theology, but it was condemned
-by the fact that the authorities allowed it to be superseded in
-practice by an elaborate system of private tuition paid for by the
-individual students. With the introduction of new subjects (like law,
-history, and various branches of science) and the development of the
-corresponding triposes, it became necessary to recast the scheme of
-teaching if adequate college instruction on such subjects was to be
-provided. The earliest appointment of a college lecturer (as
-contrasted with an assistant-tutor nominally attached to a particular
-side) was made in 1868, his lectures being open to all students of
-the Society, and his stipend not charged on the funds of a particular
-side. This was soon followed by the placing of all educational
-appointments and finance in the hands of the College without regard to
-sides; and shortly afterwards the lecture-room accommodation was
-considerably extended.
-
-About this time a further step was taken by throwing most of the
-advanced lectures open to members of other colleges. Thus in a few
-years instruction by tutorial sides was replaced by college lectures
-and class-work, and then this, to a large extent, by teaching
-organized on a university basis, supplemented by individual and
-catechetical instruction in college: with this, the custom of using
-private tuition has largely disappeared. Ultimately the title of
-assistant-tutor was dropped; the last appointment under that title was
-made in 1885, but from about 1870 we may say that practically the
-duties of an assistant-tutor were those of a lecturer. Thenceforth
-tutors also took their share of lecturing on subjects connected with
-their own lines of study, and did not confine their instruction to
-their own pupils, though for a year or two lectures on elementary
-mathematics and classics to freshmen on each particular side survived
-as a historic curiosity. These changes led to the existing scheme
-under which tutorial and tuition duties are separated, and thus the
-giving of direct instruction to his pupils is not now necessarily
-part of the duties of a tutor.
-
-The sequence of tutors on each side has been published, and I am
-sorely tempted to add various anecdotes on the way in which some of
-these officers fulfilled their duties, but such additions lie outside
-the object of this essay.
-
-Of course during this long period there have been bad as well as good
-tutors, but I think everyone will admit that on the whole the system
-has worked well. Its special characteristic is a personal relation
-between the tutor and the pupil, materially strengthened by constant
-intercourse and by the fact that practically all the correspondence
-with the parents of the pupil passes through the hands of the tutor:
-experience shows that the tutorial influence has not been weakened by
-the fact that in most cases direct instruction is now given by other
-lecturers.
-
-
-[Footnote 17: The history of the University prior to 1546 covers some
-three centuries and a half, that is, about as long a period as has
-elapsed since 1546.]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III.
-
-THE WESTMINSTER SCHOLARS.
-
-
-The relations between Trinity College and Westminster School have
-always been of an intimate character. Under the Elizabethan statutes
-of the two foundations a limited number of boys from the school were
-entitled, if duly qualified, to election to scholarships at Trinity,
-and later an attempt was made to extend the privilege to fellowships.
-The whole matter is now one of ancient history, but it may be
-interesting to put on record some of the facts connected with it.
-
-The school at Westminster owes its foundation to queen Elizabeth. Of
-course the abbey is many centuries older, and in a sense so is the
-school, for a grammar-school (in addition to the choir-school) had
-been attached to the medieval monastery, though doubtless it existed
-only at the pleasure of the monks. When Henry VIII created the diocese
-of Westminster with the former abbey as its cathedral, he also
-established a school connected with it. The diocese soon disappeared,
-and later the church and buildings were given by queen Mary to the
-Benedictines. The arrangement made by Mary was in turn annulled by
-Elizabeth, who, shortly after her succession founded the collegiate
-Church of St Peter, divided into two branches, one ecclesiastical and
-the other scholastic, the whole being placed under the rule of the
-dean and chapter. Thus Elizabeth is rightly designated as the founder
-of the present school, though a link with the past has been preserved
-in the fact that the sequence of headmasters dates by custom from
-1540. The buildings were divided between the two sides of the College;
-for the scholastic side, one part of the monastic dormitory was made
-into a school-room, the granary was turned into a school dormitory,
-and the boys were allowed the use of the refectory for meals.
-
-The queen interested herself in the school she had established; its
-connection with particular colleges at the universities was suggested
-by the precedents of Winchester and Eton, and it was natural that she
-should desire to associate it closely with the Houses at Cambridge and
-Oxford which had been founded by her father. There is some reason to
-think that the details of the arrangement made were due to Bill, the
-first dean of Westminster, who was at the same time master of Trinity
-and provost of Eton; a fortunate pluralist!
-
-On 29 March 1560, Elizabeth gave new statutes to Trinity College,
-Cambridge, and in statute 13, dealing with the sixty-two scholars of
-the College, she directed as follows:
-
- Sumantur autem potissimum et eligantur ex eorum numero, si modo
- idonei et ceteris pares reperiantur qui Schola Regia Westmonasterii
- educati ... sint.... Ex aliis regni partibus ac locis indifferenter
- ad numerum supplendum qui maxime idonei videbuntur, semper sumantur.
-
-In June 1560, she gave statutes to the Collegiate Church at
-Westminster, and in statute 6, dealing with the forty scholars of the
-school, she directed that three scholars from the school should be
-elected annually to the foundation of Christ Church, Oxford, and three
-to that of Trinity College, Cambridge. It is said that the queen did
-not ratify these statutes. Be this as it may, in the following year,
-on 11 June 1561, she sent to Trinity College letters patent referring
-to the Westminster statutes as indicating her wishes in the matter,
-and expressing her desire that the Society should select as many
-scholars from Westminster as was possible. This then was the position
-in 1561, and it was recognised these letters were binding and
-conferred rights on duly qualified Westminster scholars.
-
-Throughout the three centuries of the existence of these rights,
-candidates usually preferred the Christ Church studentships, which,
-being tenable under certain conditions for life, were much more
-valuable than Trinity scholarships, since the latter ran out in less
-than seven years. Perhaps too the boys were attracted to Christ Church
-rather than to Trinity by the fact that there they formed a larger
-proportion of the whole Society than in Henry's foundation by the Cam.
-Further a boy elected to Christ Church entered sooner into the
-emoluments of his studentship than a boy elected to Trinity--the
-latter not being admitted to his scholarship until the next annual
-election of scholars which took place in the following spring, usually
-some six months after he had commenced residence.
-
-There were only forty scholars at Westminster and a provision for the
-election from them every year of six scholars to the two universities
-was more than ample. Thus in 1561 one scholar was elected to each
-university, during each of the six following years, 1562-67, two
-scholars were elected to each university, in 1568, six scholars were
-for the first time presented, and each university took three. In 1569
-the school again presented three boys for election at Trinity, but the
-master, Whitgift, refused to elect more than two, alleging that there
-were not vacancies in the House for more than that number. Thereon the
-scholar or his friends appealed to Sir William Cecil, the chancellor
-of the University. Correspondence ensued, but the Society refused to
-give way on the particular election. On the general question the
-College addressed a letter[18], dated 3 July 1569, to Cecil
-entreating him to interpose with the queen to lighten the burden
-imposed on Trinity by the royal statutes, and asserting that the
-Westminster scholars took up so many places as to act to the detriment
-of other and more worthy students. The crown assented to this
-proposal, and it was agreed that thenceforth three scholars should be
-chosen every third year, and not necessarily more than two in the
-other years.
-
-This arrangement lasted but a short time, for a year or two later,
-perhaps in 1575, Goodman, dean of Westminster, petitioned[19] the lord
-treasurer to confirm or re-enact the original statutes whereby three
-Westminster scholars were to be elected each year to each of the two
-universities. The petition was granted, and, I conjecture, was the
-occasion of the letters patent sent by the queen on 7 February 1576,
-to Trinity College, Cambridge, and Christ Church, Oxford, wherein she
-repeated and explained her former injunctions. In these letters she
-stated that Westminster scholars were not to be allowed to remain at
-the school after attaining the age of eighteen, and in regard to their
-coming to one of the universities she directed:
-
- Quamvis cupimus plurimos e nostris Discipulis Westmonasterii ad
- Academias in dicta Collegia quotannis promoveri, tamen ne incertus
- sit omnino numerus, sex ad minimum, videlicet, tres in Ecclesiam
- Christi Oxonii et tres in Collegium Trinitatis, singulis annis, si
- aut tot loca vacua ... aut tot idonei e nostris Discipulis
- Westmonasterii reperti fuerint, admitti volumus; Plures autem
- optamus, si ita praefatis Electoribus commodum videbitur.
-
-In fact, however, the former custom of electing three scholars every
-third year and two scholars in each of the other years continued until
-1588 after which it became usual, though the custom was not
-invariable, to elect at least three scholars to each university each
-year. During the forty-seven years from 1561 to 1607 inclusive, one
-hundred and thirteen scholars in all were elected from Westminster to
-Trinity, of whom forty became fellows.
-
-In 1603 James I came to the throne. He interested himself in the
-school and was prepared to intervene in its interests or what he
-regarded as such. The earliest case of difficulty in the new reign
-occurred at the election in 1604 when the king directed the master of
-Trinity, Nevile, to whom in fact he was under some obligations, to
-take a boy, by name Albert Moreton, as one of the scholars of
-Trinity[20]. The boy was ignorant, and Nevile politely but definitely
-refused to accept him. The matter was not urged further, and though on
-some occasions later the Trinity electors consented under pressure to
-alter the order in which candidates were elected, their right to
-reject on the ground of ignorance was not again disputed. Three years
-later, the College was faced by a more serious question concerning its
-connection with Westminster.
-
-In 1607, James I addressed letters patent to Trinity College, in which
-after referring to the letters patent already mentioned, he ordered
-them to be strictly observed, and intimated that thereafter the
-scholars of Trinity should be taken chiefly from Westminster school if
-duly qualified. He then continued that he observed that the scholars
-who had been elected to Christ Church were notable for their learning
-and subsequent distinction, and regretted that this was not so in the
-case of the scholars elected to Trinity, a fact which he attributed to
-their want of succession to fellowships and to their leaving the
-University as soon as they had taken the degree of master. Accordingly
-he ordered that Westminster scholars at Trinity who had taken the
-bachelor's degree should, unless deficient in learning or good
-conduct, be promoted to fellowships in preference to other candidates.
-He further ordered that any Westminster scholar in the College, who
-had not been admitted to a fellowship before taking a master's degree,
-might remain resident an additional two years during which time he
-should be eligible to a fellowship, subject to lawful exceptions. The
-letters are dated 27 June 1607, but it would appear that they were not
-presented until September of that year.
-
-Deep resentment was felt at this order, for Trinity attached great
-importance to the desirability of electing as fellows the best
-candidates, though it was admitted that candidates from places where
-the House had property had statutable claims for special
-consideration. The College took immediate steps to protect itself, and
-in support of its position addressed to the chancellor of the
-University, the earl of Salisbury, a petition accompanied by a
-reasoned memorandum. These documents are not dated, but I think may be
-assigned to the Michaelmas term, 1607.
-
-The petition is briefly to beg the chancellor to assist the College in
-obtaining a review of the letters patent with the object of
-maintaining its ancient privileges and former liberties; the letters
-patent being said to be contrary to the intentions of its founder, and
-to its statutes[21]. The wording is humble and courtly.
-
-The memorandum that accompanied the petition is more outspoken. It is
-long, but it is so interesting that I shall venture to quote from or
-describe it at length. I conjecture that it was composed by Nevile.
-It contains fourteen assertions or arguments to the following effect:
-
- 1. It is inconvenient that so large a College as Trinity should be
- restrained unto a particular School, and it can be easily shown that
- other Schools have furnished Trinity with students of much better
- hope and proof than Westminster hath done or is likely to do, for
- the whole number of Westminster boys who are eligible to both
- Universities are but forty, and there are seldom more than eight or
- nine candidates for the six vacancies at the two Universities.
-
- 2. To alter or subvert the ancient liberties of one of the chiefest
- Colleges in Christendom and to divert from the uses intended by his
- Majesty's Predecessors a foundation like Trinity in order to satisfy
- private humour or under the pretence of benefitting an ordinary
- School is a great indignity to his Majesty's Sacred Person, Power,
- and Prerogative.
-
- 3. The suggestion that boys coming to Trinity do not become Fellows,
- Doctors, Deans, and Bishops as do boys entering Christ Church is
- untrue, frivolous, and unfair: it is untrue, because, in fact, of
- the existing sixty Fellows of the College, more than one-sixth have
- come from Westminster, and at Trinity the custom is to prefer the
- worthy: it is frivolous, for the fact of a man having once been at
- school at Westminster is not the cause of his advancement to the
- position of a Doctor, Dean, or Bishop: and it is unfair, "for
- although Christ Church in Oxford be a most magnificent and royal
- foundation, and hath bred in all ages as learned, wise, and worthy
- prelates as the kingdom hath, yet Trinity College in Cambridge hath
- had no less royal founders, and if we fail in our Westminster brood
- (as otherwise I hope we do not) either the defect hath been in
- themselves or else (which rather we suppose) it may be imputed to
- those good means the other College hath, being also a Cathedral
- Church and having Cannons both richly beneficed and highly dignified
- which doth enable them to Doctorships, Deaneries, and Bishopricks--a
- great blessing of God that our poor College wanteth."
-
- 4. "Howbeit in that kind of fruitfulness we also are not destitute
- of God's gracious blessing; for ... besides Doctors in all faculties
- to the number at the least of sixty, Deans to the number of eleven,
- Publick Professors to the number of ten, the two Archbishops,
- Canterbury and York, the most Reverend Fathers Whitgift and Hutton,
- and seven other principal Prelates of this kingdom, namely, Fletcher
- of London, Still of Bath and Wells, Babington of Worcester, Redman
- of Norwich, Rud of St Davids, Bennet of Hereford, and Gouldesborough
- of Gloucester, all of them simul et semel Bishops of this kingdom
- ... are such a demonstrative instance as we think no other College
- in either University can afford the like--and not one of these
- chosen out of Westminster School."
-
- 5. "It is to be doubted whether there can be the like success if our
- Elections out of a private School shall be indubitate and certain;
- we rather think there can be no readier means to make Droanes and
- Loyterers in Colleges, nor any worse prejudice or more deadly bane
- unto learning and vertue, then when the rewards, and means thereof
- are tyed to persons, times, and places, and made regular and
- certain."
-
- 6. The proposal would do a grave injustice to other students who
- might be men of great abilities.
-
- 7. The proposal would defeat the express wishes of Henry VIII,
- Edward VI, Mary, and Elizabeth, all of whom are to be reckoned as
- founders as well as benefactors of Trinity College.
-
- 8 and 9. The proposal would be contrary to the existing statutes of
- the College, and to the oaths taken by the Master and Fellows on
- admission.
-
- 10. Preferences of this character are injurious to the particular
- School, the College, and the whole University, and a constant source
- of discord and contention.
-
- 11. "It is also against the Policy and common-wealth of a kingdom to
- restrain and abridge places and preferments originally meant,
- founded, and hitherto with good success employed for the common
- benefit of that kingdom to a private School: for benefits and
- privileges are to be amplified and not restrained; publick rewards
- are not to be applied to private places, purposes, or respects."
-
- 12. Interference with the intentions and directions, of previous
- benefactors is contrary to public policy, and tends to prevent
- future benefactions.
-
- 13. This implies that Nevile had accepted the office of master of
- Trinity College under promises which rendered it inequitable that
- the college statutes should, during his tenure of the post, be
- altered against his wishes, but it is stated that this argument,
- though noted, is not to be pressed.
-
- 14. This raises some technical points, especially as to whether
- statutes of a College given under the great seal can be varied by
- letters patent without explicit reference to the clauses altered or
- repealed.
-
- The memorandum concludes with a request that the College may have
- liberty to ask the opinion of the Judges on the questions raised,
- and thus obtain the benefit of the king's "most equal just and
- princely laws."
-
-The use of the personal pronoun in one or two cases and the reference
-in the thirteenth paragraph to Nevile suggest that the document was
-composed by him. I cannot find out anything about the result of the
-petition, but I conjecture that nothing came of it. Nevile however was
-not inclined to let the matter rest, and no doubt the esteem felt for
-him at court and his personal popularity were of great assistance to
-the Society in the negotiations that followed.
-
-It was a few months later, in May 1608, at the annual election of
-scholars at Westminster that Nevile took the next step in defence of
-the college position. The following account of the election is based
-on a paper preserved at Westminster:
-
- The Master of Trinity College (Nevile) refused to take the oath
- which was required, previously to the election, by the Law of the
- land as well as by the local Statutes. He also refused to elect to
- his College the three Scholars ordered by the Letters Patent of the
- Crown. The oath however was taken by the Dean of Westminster (Neile)
- and the Dean of Christ Church (King), as well as by their
- assistants, and by the Master of the School (Ireland). The Dean of
- Westminster then demanded, in writing, that the election should
- proceed; when the Master of Trinity College referred to some
- composition by which he stated he would be governed. To this the
- Dean of Westminster replied, that he knew of no such composition,
- and that, if it had existed, it was necessarily set aside by the
- Letters Patent of Queen Elizabeth and of His Majesty; whereon the
- Master of Trinity College observed, though with much protestation of
- his loyalty, that he did not allow the validity of the Letters
- Patent.
-
- The other Electors, however, having agreed to proceed, the nine
- Scholars who had been examined were called in to hear the Statute
- read for the election to the two Colleges. The Master of Trinity
- then said that he had not places enough vacant in his College. [In
- fact in April he and the Seniority had filled up all scholarships
- then vacant and pre-elected men to succeed to scholarships as
- vacancies occurred.] To this it was replied, that the want of
- vacancies had been occasioned by pre-elections of supernumerary
- Scholars, that the words of the Statute were disjunctive, and there
- was a clause commanding such Scholars to be received if they were
- fit. The Master of Trinity College did not deny the fitness of the
- candidates, but still refused to elect. In this wrangling the whole
- morning was wasted.
-
- At length they went to dinner. After this, a fear having been
- expressed, that this "distraction" might become troublesome to their
- friends, "perhaps to His Majesty," and "not without some obloquy" to
- themselves, the Master of Trinity College proposed a private
- settlement, naming October for it. The suggestion was favourably
- received by the Electors other than the Dean of Westminster. The
- latter however affirmed, that with his consent less than three
- Scholars should never be taken by Trinity College and three by
- Christ Church if the School produced so many fit Scholars: and as to
- that part of the Letters Patent, which related to the election of
- Westminster Scholars at Trinity College to Fellowships, he required
- that they should be taken in preference to others, if their
- qualifications were equal; stating at the same time, that the clause
- declaring them eligible to Fellowships two years after their degree
- of A.M. had arisen solely from the practice of pre-electing so many
- Fellows, that for three or four years together no election took
- place; and the Westminster Scholars at Trinity College were driven
- out to seek a better fortune elsewhere. The Master of Trinity
- College allowed that the practice of pre-elections was wrong; and it
- was at length agreed that if this were discontinued, that part of
- the King's Letters concerning the eligibility of Westminster
- Scholars two years after their degree of A.M. should not be urged
- against the local statute of Trinity College, _De Gradibus
- Suscipiendis_. Thereupon the Master of Trinity College took for his
- College as Scholars three candidates, to wit, Hacket, Shirley, and
- Herbert.
-
-The three scholars so taken obtained fellowships in due course, Hacket
-became chaplain to James I, Charles I, and later to Charles II,
-suffered cruel persecution under the commonwealth, and at the
-restoration was made bishop of Lichfield: the Bishop's Hostel was
-erected at his cost. An incident in Shirley's career is chronicled
-below (see p. 223). Herbert was the well-known poet and divine. If the
-above account is reliable, and there is no reason to doubt its
-accuracy, the most important question in dispute, namely the
-preferential right of Westminsters to election to fellowships at
-Trinity, was left open. Nevile however had no intention to allow the
-matter to drop, and having made his protest at Westminster, he now
-secured the good services of his friend and Cambridge contemporary,
-Richard Bancroft, archbishop of Canterbury, who undertook to act as
-mediator in drawing up a "friendly and full" settlement of the
-question.
-
-An agreement, drafted I feel confident by Nevile, was submitted to the
-archbishop and, after he had made a few alterations, was accepted by
-the dean and chapter of Westminster. The seniority of Trinity College,
-on 5 September 1608, passed a minute that the matter "be referred to
-our Master against the 13^th of October," and the deed is so dated,
-but its execution must have been delayed since there is a minute of
-the seniority, 8 December 1608, ordering that the composition with
-Westminster should be engrossed and sealed at the audit so as to be
-delivered before 1 February 1609.
-
-The deed embodying this agreement was made between the dean and
-chapter of Westminster and Trinity College, and provided that the
-College should take yearly three scholars from Westminster School to
-be scholars of the College, and that there should be no pre-elections
-of supernumerary fellows to the prejudice of the Westminster scholars
-if deserving of fellowships. In consideration of these definite
-obligations the dean and chapter of Westminster agreed that the
-letters patent of 1607 should never be urged against the College by
-the dean and chapter or the schoolmaster or ushers or scholars of
-Westminster, and that the College should have such full power to elect
-fellows as had been previously enjoyed, excepting only the practice of
-pre-elections. To the deed is appended a statement that it was made
-with the privity and approbation of the archbishop of Canterbury, the
-earl of Salisbury (lord high treasurer of England and chancellor of
-the University of Cambridge), and of the earl of Northampton (the lord
-privy seal), all of whom signed it. This conclusion of the affair may
-be regarded as a personal triumph for Nevile.
-
-The arrangement was submitted to the king who in a letter directed to
-the College approved it, but required that the Westminster scholars
-each year should be granted seniority over other scholars of Trinity
-of their year and not be hindered by pre-elections: he did not however
-withdraw or rescind the previous letters patent. I have never seen the
-text of this letter but its contents are indisputable, and there are
-various subsequent references to it. The obligation to allow this
-seniority to the Westminster scholars was henceforth recognized by the
-College as binding on it.
-
-The advisers of Trinity seem to have been doubtful whether it would be
-admitted that this second letter implied the rescission of the letters
-of 1607, and since there was every reason to avoid raising the
-question whether royal letters or mandates could be set aside or
-modified by private arrangements, it was wise to let matters run on as
-long as the agreement of 1608 was carried out by the school
-authorities. There is however a memorandum, ascribed to January 1610
-in the State Papers, showing that "the recent grant by the King for
-the students of Trinity College, Cambridge, to be chosen from the
-Westminster scholars is prejudicial to the interests of Trinity,"
-which seems to imply that further negotiations took place. I have not
-seen the memorandum and know nothing more about this than here
-appears.
-
-During the sixteen years following this settlement, that is, from 1608
-to 1623 inclusive, fifty-eight scholars were elected from Westminster
-to Trinity, of whom sixteen became fellows.
-
-In 1623-24 a fresh dispute occurred. It would appear that while
-Trinity carried out its undertaking relating to the election of
-scholars from Westminster, it again began to pre-elect fellows with
-the object, it was said, of preventing any claim being made on behalf
-of the Westminster scholars in residence. Whether this was done in
-self-protection against unjustifiable claims or was a deliberate
-breach of the agreement of 1608 we do not know. An appeal to the crown
-on behalf of the school ensued, and on 7 September 1623, the king sent
-letters patent to the College as follows:
-
- Trusty and well beloved we greet you well. Being much interested in
- the prosperity and well-fare of that our College which is both our
- immediate Foundation and the fairest in all our kingdoms, and
- furnished, for the most part with the extracions of our own
- free-school at Westminster, we cannot but be very sensible of any
- alteration in the government of the same.
-
- Whereas therefore we are given to understand that younger students
- of that College have of late years been totally disheartened in
- their studies by a new and unwarrantable device of pre-electing more
- Fellows than there are places vacant at the time of that Election
- and the Scholars of our own School (in whose loyalty and affection
- we are so much interested from their cradles) strangely discouraged
- and disgraced by being cast in their seniority behind all the
- Scholars and Fellows in their several Elections though never so
- exceeding in learning and education, we straightly will and require
- you that from this time forward ye do forbear all manner of
- pre-elections whatsoever as the pest and bane of all learning and
- succession; and that also you bear that regard and respect to the
- Scholars of that our own Royal School in giving them in all such
- elections respect and precedency which we are informed they fully
- deserve before all other of what country soever. Lastly, whereas we
- are given to understand that heretofore a corrupt custom hath crept
- into that our College of turning elections into particular
- nominations of the Master and the several Seniors which smells
- altogether of partialitie and corruption we do straightly will and
- require you the said Master of our College of whom we conceive a
- very good opinion, to see that hereafter all elections as well of
- Scholars as of Fellows be done according to the local statutes of
- your College and carried about with that pluralitie of voices
- therein required.
-
-What reply (if any) the College made or could make I do not know, but
-presumably the answer was not satisfactory as these letters were
-followed by the appointment of royal commissioners to enquire into the
-Westminster elections. There is extant a letter from the master of
-Trinity (Richardson) dated 9 June 1624, to one of the commissioners,
-asking to be excused from attending the usual election of Westminster
-scholars, on account of poor health. Probably this was regarded as an
-impertinence, and he must have been reprimanded since we have a letter
-dated 26 June signed by the master and six of the senior fellows,
-deprecating the royal displeasure, offering the most humble
-submission, promising to obey in anything that his majesty might
-command, but begging that present compliance might not be drawn into
-an example against the College. Richardson and James I died in March
-1625, and the enquiry seems to have been then dropped.
-
-The election in 1636 was interesting. It is said that among the
-candidates was Cowley who had already written various poems and a
-comedy showing distinct ability. The story runs that the boy failed
-badly in grammar, and the Trinity electors, insisting that this was
-conclusive, rejected him as a Westminster scholar, but offered him an
-ordinary scholarship at Trinity, which he accepted. Against this are
-the fact that he had been entered at Trinity as a pensioner in April,
-a few weeks before the election at Westminster, and the improbability
-that the electors would have drawn such a distinction between
-Westminster and other scholars of the House. Still old-time anecdotes
-are not to be lightly rejected: at any rate Cowley came into residence
-in due course and was made a scholar in the same term as the four boys
-taken from Westminster by the electors, these five students being the
-only scholars elected by the College in 1637.
-
-During the seventy-seven years from 1624 to 1700 inclusive, three
-hundred and fifty-six scholars were elected from Westminster to
-Trinity, of whom one hundred and twenty-six became fellows. During the
-fifty years, 1701 to 1750, out of one hundred and eighty-seven
-Westminster scholars at Trinity sixty-two became fellows; during the
-fifty years, 1751 to 1800, out of one hundred and eighty, thirty
-became fellows; and during the fifty-six years, 1801 to 1856, out of
-one hundred and seventy, four became fellows. Throughout this long
-period the friendly relations between the College and the school
-suffered no change.
-
-In 1727 there was a curious echo of the controversy of 1607. A strange
-suggestion had been made, apparently with the tacit approval of the
-authorities of Westminster, that new statutes should be given to
-Trinity constituting the dean and chapter of Westminster Visitors of
-the College, and it was decided by the advocates of the movement to
-open the campaign by asking the dean of Westminster to call the
-attention of the master of Trinity (Bentley), to the "Letters Anno
-Quinto Jacobi Primi." Bentley replied on 5 March 1727, denied their
-validity and argued that even if originally valid, they could not be
-pressed after more than a century during which time "they had never
-been acted upon": he added that, if antiquated letters were still
-binding, there were various matters in which he had powers, whose
-exercise might prove singularly inconvenient to those who had raised
-the question. This was really conclusive, but further consideration
-had shown the inherent weakness or folly of the original idea, and the
-chapter was wise enough to proceed no further with the matter.
-
-Shortly afterwards, probably at the following election at Westminster,
-Bentley is said to have referred to the dean's communication, and
-remarked that the authority of the letters of 1607 would doubtless
-have seemed stronger, at any rate to the dean's predecessor
-(Atterbury), if not to the chapter, could they have been described as
-"Anno Primo Jacobi Tertii"--an irrelevant remark, but it carried a
-sting, for Atterbury's devotion to the cause of the Pretender was
-deeply resented by the government.
-
-From an unknown date until the early years of the nineteenth century,
-Westminster scholars at Trinity were allowed the privilege of wearing
-academic gowns of a cut different from those of other undergraduates
-and further distinguished by having on the sleeves a violet button
-with a silk loop. The gowns of all pensioners in the University were
-then black and (except for those worn by Westminsters) cut to a
-common pattern. The Westminster distinction was discontinued when the
-present system of different gowns for different Colleges was
-introduced.
-
-During the first half of the nineteenth century the numbers in the
-school fell seriously, and well-founded complaints were made about the
-standard of scholarship attained by the scholars elected to the
-universities. In 1856, as the result of negotiations, initiated by
-Whewell, the arrangements with Trinity were completely recast, and it
-was agreed on 5 December 1856 that the school should abandon the right
-of Westminster boys to election to scholarships at Trinity, and that
-in filling up open emoluments in Trinity, former Westminster boys
-should enjoy no preference. In consideration of this release, the
-Society undertook to establish at its own cost, exhibitions, not more
-than three to be awarded each year, for boys elected from the school
-who were otherwise qualified for admission to the College; every such
-exhibitioner, if so deserving, to be eligible for a college
-scholarship tenable with the exhibition. This was approved by the
-queen in council on 25 June 1857. It was further agreed that the
-Westminster exhibitioners were to be placed on the same footing as
-exhibitioners elected by open competition before commencing
-residence. The mode of election is settled by the school statutes, but
-it would seem that the Trinity electors have no right to demand
-intellectual attainments beyond those required at the time for
-admission to the College. The exhibitions are not now confined to
-scholars of the school.
-
-So ends the story of Westminster Scholars at Trinity College,
-Cambridge. During the two hundred and ninety-six years from 1561 to
-1856 inclusive, one thousand and sixty-four scholars had been elected
-from Westminster to Trinity (or say 3.6 a year), of whom two hundred
-and seventy-eight (or say one in four) had become fellows. In
-conclusion I may add that in 1869 in virtue of the powers given by the
-Public Schools Act, 1868, the dean and chapter of Westminster, the
-dean of Christ Church, Oxford, and the master of Trinity College,
-Cambridge, created a new Governing Body in whom the governance of the
-school has been since vested.
-
-
-[Footnote 18: See _Life of Whitgift_ by J. Strype, London, 1718,
-pp. 13, 14 and Appendix, pp. 7, 8.]
-
-[Footnote 19: _Life of Whitgift_ by J. Strype, London, 1718, Appendix,
-p. 9.]
-
-[Footnote 20: _State Papers_, Domestic, 1604, p. 185.]
-
-[Footnote 21: According to Dean Peacock, royal letters and orders, at
-variance with college statutes, were binding only if explicitly or
-tacitly accepted by the Society. That may have been technically
-correct, but it is very doubtful if Tudor or Stuart sovereigns would
-have admitted it.]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV.
-
-THE SOCIETY FOR THE PREVENTION OF CRUELTY
-TO UNDERGRADUATES.
-
-
-This is an account of a famous struggle some eighty years ago between
-the authorities and the undergraduates of Trinity College on the
-subject of attendance at chapel. The story is not to the credit of the
-authorities, but, for what it is worth, here it is.
-
-There is a prelude to it concerned with a controversy in 1834 between
-Thirlwall, later the statesman-bishop of St David's, and Wordsworth,
-then master of the House, which raised the question of the
-advisability of compelling undergraduates to be present at religious
-services in College. At that time regular attendance at chapel was
-required--as for centuries previously it had been--from all students
-as a matter of discipline, and the rule in force on the subject was
-embodied in a college order of 22 April 1824, as follows:
-
- Agreed by the Master and Seniors that every Undergraduate not having
- an aegrotat or dormiat do attend Morning Chapel five times at the
- least in every week, or four times at the least including Sunday;
- and the same number of times in the Evening, under penalty that the
- week in which anyone shall not have so attended be not reckoned
- towards keeping the Term of such Undergraduate--unless such omission
- be repaired by extra attendance the week following.
-
-Absentees were punished, and those who offended frequently were liable
-to expulsion.
-
-Until the era of the Reform Bill some regulation like this was
-accepted as a matter of course, but when, in that period of enquiry,
-all things were put to the proof, doubts as to its wisdom began to be
-voiced. In 1834 Thirlwall, then assistant-tutor to Whewell, in an open
-letter dated 21 May, while advocating the admission of dissenters to
-the University, lamented the constant repetition in college chapels of
-a mechanical service, believing the practice to be detrimental to the
-interests of religion: he further expressed the opinion that
-attendance at chapel services should be voluntary. He referred to a
-then recent statement by Wordsworth in which the latter had said "the
-alternative is not here between compulsory religion (as it is called)
-and any other religion, but between compulsory religion and no
-religion at all," and on this remarked:
-
- I cannot indeed draw such delicate distinctions as my friend seems
- to make in this passage; for as the epithet compulsory applied to
- religion appears to me contradictory, the difference between a
- compulsory religion and no religion at all is too subtle for my
- grasp. But if for _religion_ we substitute the word _service_,
- which would probably better express his meaning, then I should quite
- agree with him, that, in this case, a voluntary service would soon
- be changed into no service at all: that is, the persons who are now
- compelled to attend, if they were left at liberty, would stay away.
- And this is the very reason why I think it would be better that they
- should be allowed to do so.
-
-The argument was amplified in a second letter dated 13 June. This was
-skilful enough as a piece of dialectics though hardly likely to
-convince opponents.
-
-That an officer of the college should express such views and in this
-way was regarded by Wordsworth as scandalous, and five days after the
-publication of the first letter, without asking for any explanation,
-he, with the consent or approval of Whewell and the two deans (Thorp
-and Carus), removed Thirlwall from his office of assistant-tutor. This
-arbitrary act was generally resented in the Society even by those who
-disagreed with Thirlwall or thought that he had been indiscreet in his
-advocacy; some too considered the act unstatutable, but Thirlwall
-refused to appeal to the Visitor, and shortly afterwards left
-Cambridge on his appointment, in November 1834, by the lord
-chancellor, to the important living of Kirby-under-dale in Yorkshire.
-
-Two years later, in 1836, while the matter was still a subject of
-debate, Carus was made senior dean. He was a kindly man, leader in
-the University of the school of thought associated with Simeon's name,
-but, whether rightly or wrongly, was regarded as unsympathetic by
-those who did not think as he did on religious questions. Carus
-detested the view taken by Thirlwall, and far from conciliating
-college opinion, which had been outraged by Wordsworth's action, urged
-the seniority (a Board consisting of the master and the eight senior
-resident fellows to which, under the Elizabethan statutes, the
-government of the College was entrusted) to re-draft the rule of 1824
-and make clear or stiffen the penalties for non-obedience. The
-seniority agreed, and on 7 February 1838, issued the following order:
-
- Agreed by the Master and Seniors, that all Undergraduate Scholars,
- and Foundation Sizars do attend Chapel eight times at the least in
- every week, that is twice on Sunday and once every other day; the
- Scholars, on pain of losing _ipso facto_ their statutable allowance
- for Commons, and such additions as have since been made by the
- College in the way of augmentation to the Commons, for every week
- when there has been a failure of such attendance as is above
- described; and the Sizars, on pain of incurring _ipso facto_ an
- equivalent deduction in money from their allowances.
-
- Agreed also, that a like attendance be required from all other
- Undergraduates; and that in case of failure, the Parties so
- offending be forthwith admonished by the Deans; and if, after such
- admonition, irregularity be persisted in, notice be sent by the Dean
- to the Tutor, that a warning from him also may timely be given:
- after which, if both these means shall fail in producing regularity,
- the offender shall be reported by the Dean to the Master (or, in his
- absence, to the Vice-Master) to receive a formal admonition from
- him, in the presence of the Dean, a record of which shall be
- preserved: and finally, in all cases where such formal admonition
- shall have been incurred three times, the offender shall _ipso
- facto_ be removed from the College, either entirely, or for one or
- more Terms, according to the circumstances of the case; a record of
- this sentence being also preserved.
-
- Authority is given to the Deans to grant occasional leave of
- absence, on special application made previously, but not otherwise.
- Also on any casual failure of attendance, it is allowed to Deans to
- accept (in order to make up the deficiency) an equivalent attendance
- on other days during the same week only; any failure on Sundays to
- be compensated by attendance twice on other days.
-
-According to college tradition, which came to me from C.W. King, an
-undergraduate of the time, a deputation of scholars, who remonstrated
-on the severity of these sanctions, was informed by Carus that
-attendance at chapel was not so much a duty as a privilege, which was
-valued the most by those who were oldest and therefore best qualified
-to form an opinion on the subject--a boomerang argument which
-obviously was dangerous unless the fellows themselves attended chapel
-with the regularity desired from undergraduates.
-
-On this rebuff, certain students formed a Society for the Prevention
-of Cruelty to Undergraduates. Its founders issued a notice asking
-whether what was forced on undergraduates was practised by dons; and
-that facts might speak for themselves, they announced that they would
-issue marking-sheets showing the attendance week by week of the
-fellows in chapel. Copies of these marking-sheets were put
-(surreptitiously) on the college screens, sent to London clubs, and
-widely circulated. All efforts by the deans to discover the authors or
-the printer employed failed; I understand, however, that
-W.J. Conybeare, G.E.L. Cotton, J.S. Howson, C.L. Rose, and C.J. Tindal
-were its chief promoters, and that the printer was Metcalfe of
-9 Trinity Street. Copies of these marking-sheets are now very rare,
-but a few years ago one came into the market which I was fortunate
-enough to secure. It is bound in blue calf, stamped with the college
-arms having as supporters two undergraduates in knee breeches waving
-their caps, and with the motto _Nemo me impune lacessit_.
-
-The first sheet is for the week ending 17 February 1838, and shows the
-attendances, morning and evening, of the master and the eighteen
-fellows then in residence. Each of the two deans attended ten times,
-but they were in a peculiar position, for it was their duty, as the
-Society pointed out, to go twice a day and therefore fourteen times in
-each week. Only one of the other fellows, Perry, later bishop of
-Melbourne, complied with the rule imposed on undergraduates, four
-fellows went only once, and four not at all. To this sheet the Society
-appended the following note:
-
- Does then this new regulation of the Master and Seniors proceed from
- any religious motive? Do they practice (_sic_) what they force on
- the Undergraduates? They are very regular in their attendance in
- Hall, but why are their places vacant in Chapel?
-
-The next week showed a slight improvement in the attendances. The
-Society congratulated itself on this, and in some general remarks
-indicated what it expected from the fellows, copying these from the
-notices on the subject issued by Carus. It should be said that in the
-sheets those who were ill or away from Cambridge, were marked with an
-_aeg_ or _abs_, so any such explanation of the absence of the others
-from chapel was impossible.
-
-In the third week the improvement continued, and three fellows in
-addition to the master and the deans complied with the rule, but this
-was the high water-mark of attendance, and after all it did not come
-to much. The Society expressed its gratification at this, which it was
-pleased to treat as the result of its efforts, and at the same time
-issued the following notice:
-
- A prize for general regularity, and good behaviour when in Chapel,
- has been instituted by the Society, who are as anxious to reward
- merit as they are to punish immorality. But whilst they thus wish
- to instil into the minds of the Fellows those Religious feelings
- which, owing to a bad education, they may possibly be without, the
- Society most distinctly declare that they shall not be guided merely
- by an outward show of religion. It is not, therefore, enough to go
- merely eight times a week to Chapel, and when there to utter the
- responses so loud as to attract attention, or otherwise disturb the
- prayers of Undergraduates. Such conduct will at all times be
- severely punished.... For convenience of those members of Trinity
- College now residing in London, six copies of this publication are
- sent weekly to each of the University Clubs there.
-
-In the fourth week, apart from the indefatigable Perry and the two
-deans, no one came up to the prescribed standard. On this result the
-Society remarked:
-
- The Society regret much that during the last week great laxity has
- prevailed among the Fellows in general with regard to their
- attendance in Chapel. This is the more to be lamented, as they had
- been for the two previous weeks so much more regular than usual.
- This irregularity cannot proceed from ill health, for they have been
- constantly to Hall, although they are not compelled to go there more
- than five times in each week. The Society, however, still hopes that
- in the ensuing week they will be able to make a more favourable
- report both of their attendance in Chapel, as also of their good
- conduct when there. As was before stated, any Fellow who shall,
- owing to any wine-party, or other sufficient reason, be prevented
- from attending, will be excused on sending a note previously to the
- Secretary of the Society, and his absence will be counted as
- presence. [The last seven words were a quotation from a note by
- Carus.] It is agreed by the Master and Seniors that all
- Undergraduates do go eight times at least each week! Why then do
- they not set us a better example?
-
-These publications were widely disseminated and led to the production
-of a number of epigrams and lampoons which were scattered broadcast
-in the University. The Society appended to this sheet a note that its
-members had "_no connexion whatever_ with _any_ of those abusive and
-profane publications which have been so industriously circulated
-during the last two weeks."
-
-The sheet for the week ending 17 March, announced the success of the
-movement, though in this return only Carus and Perry came up to the
-standard. Appended to the sheet were the following notes:
-
- The Society in laying the first list of this month before the
- public, have much reason to be pleased with the success of the work
- which they have undertaken, for they have been informed, on very
- good authority, that the Cruelty System will not be continued more
- than a week longer, but that the Master and Seniors have determined
- to come to a new Agreement about Chapels.... If this should be the
- case, the end which the Society had in view will be accomplished,
- and the weekly publications will be discontinued, until called again
- into life by some new act of Cruelty upon the much enduring
- Undergraduates, but not otherwise. The Fellows have been very
- irregular during the last week, in their attendance at Chapel; so
- much so that only two of the whole number in residence have kept the
- number, which the Undergraduates are compelled to keep, on pain of
- being _ipso facto_ rusticated, either entirely, or for one or more
- terms. And yet one Member of Trinity College was really sent away
- during the past week (who had always been seven times each week
- before) because he had the courage to object to compulsory
- attendance at Chapel, especially from those men who had set him such
- an example!
-
-In the course of the next week a printed notice appeared on the
-screens reducing the number of compulsory attendances in chapel to two
-on Sundays and four during the week. The paper, type, and setting look
-as if this were issued by the authorities. I have, however, seen a
-contemporary letter in which it is said that this notice was in fact a
-forgery: the suggestion being that the men were tired of the joke, and
-invented this way of terminating the episode. I cannot say whether the
-deans modified their rule, and the question of the genuineness of this
-notice must be left undecided. It is true that no extant minute of the
-seniority exists about any new regulation, but the records of the
-proceedings of that body are so imperfect that no conclusion can be
-drawn from this.
-
-The Society in publishing its last sheet, namely, that for the week
-ending 24 March, concluded with the following class list and notes:
-
- The examination of the Fellows is now finished: and in arranging the
- different classes the Secretary has attached to each person's name
- his number of marks, in order to do away with any appearance of
- favour shewn more to one than another, as is too often the case in
- other Examinations.
-
- =First Class.=
- *Carus 72
- Perry 66
- *Barnes 50
-
- =Second Class.=
- Heath 42
- Wordsworth Senior 38
- Thorp 35
- Whewell 34
- Blakesley 30
-
- =Third Class.=
- Peacock 28
- Thompson 19
- Brown 17
- Dobson 13
- Martin 12
-
- =Last Class.=
- Wordsworth Junior 9
- Sedgwick 5
- Field 4
- Donaldson 3
-
- Burcham 0
- Walsh 0
-
- * The two gentlemen marked with an asterisk are respectively
- Senior and Junior Dean, whose duty it is to go twice every
- day to Chapel.
-
- The Prize Medal for regular attendance at chapel and good conduct
- when there, has been awarded to Mr Perry, who has passed an
- examination highly creditable to himself and family. He was only 18
- marks below the highest number which he could possibly have gained.
- It is, therefore, to be hoped Mr P. will be more regular and do
- still better next term. With respect to the two Gentlemen who are
- not classed, the Secretary need hardly say that he does not envy
- them their feelings on the present occasion. In consequence of the
- New Agreement, the Chapel Lists will _ipso facto_ be discontinued
- for the future.
-
-In the above list the master is designated as Wordsworth Senior. The
-prize was awarded to Perry the future bishop, but instead of the
-promised medal he was given a bible. This was secured for the College
-in 1906, and now rests in our library. It is bound in calf, stamped
-with the arms and supporters assumed by the Society, and bears the
-inscription "From the Undergraduates of Trinity College to the Rev.
-Charles Perry, M.A., as a mark of affection and esteem for the good
-example which he set them and the _rest_ of the College by his
-constant attendance at Chapel." I have been informed that to each of
-the two fellows who did not attend at all there was sent a small bible
-with an inscription therein of the Society's hope that its presence
-among his books might in the future encourage him to perform tasks
-which he believed to be important even though he found them
-unpleasant.
-
-The doggerel verses to which I have alluded as appearing in connection
-with the struggle were, as far as I have seen them, poor stuff as
-literary productions, and some were highly improper. The author of one
-of the worst of them was discovered and expelled from the College,
-12 March 1838. I possess copies of four or five of these productions,
-their value consists entirely in giving us stories then current about
-dons and things academic--stories, I may add, which appear generally
-to have had no foundation in fact. The best set of verses, supposed to
-be addressed on Saturday evening by a man to his bedmaker, is a parody
-of Tennyson's _May Queen_. It begins: "You must mind and call me
-early--call me early, d'ye hear? For I in morning chapel to-morrow
-must appear," and on the whole runs easily. There is nothing in these
-squibs which deserves remembrance or needs any further notice here.
-
-There ends the story, and no comments on it or the actors in it are
-needed. It may be added as a postscript, that for a long time
-subsequent to this incident some attendance at chapel was required
-from all who had no good reason to ask for exemption, and that as time
-went on the requirements gradually grew less. The question of making
-attendance at chapel compulsory on those who have not yet fully
-attained years of discretion is admittedly difficult, and made more so
-by the fact that while such attendance is approved and rigorously
-imposed every day of the week at most public boarding schools on lads
-up to the age of eighteen or nineteen, it is regarded as unthinkable
-in the case of young graduates of twenty-one or so. Trinity College
-finally adopted the view advocated by Thirlwall, and to-day attendance
-at chapel services is voluntary.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V.
-
-THE COLLEGE CHAPEL.
-
-
-The College Chapel, as it appears to-day, is described in many of the
-guide-books which are pressed on the casual traveller in Cambridge. I
-am not here concerned with the accounts of it there given, for in this
-paper I intend to deal with little beyond its history and traditions.
-
-It is a matter of common knowledge that the present chapel was built
-under the auspices of the Tudor queens, Mary and Elizabeth, on the
-site of the old chapel of King's Hall. Let me begin by tracing briefly
-the history of these successive buildings, and their connection with
-college developments.
-
-King's Hall owed its origin to the establishment of scholars in the
-University of Cambridge by Edward II in 1317, and was put on a
-permanent footing by Edward III in 1337. The original home of the
-Society was a large two-storeyed house, built of wood and thatched,
-bought from Robert de Croyland, and situated on the ground now
-occupied by the walks and grass plot in front of the chapel. No chapel
-or oratory was connected with it, and the Society worshipped in All
-Saints' church which then stood on the green in Trinity Street facing
-our present chapel.
-
-In 1375 the College began the erection on the ground to the north and
-west of its house of a larger building comprising a cloister court
-with various extensions. The west side of this court, some hundred and
-twenty feet long, is still standing and faces the bowling green: the
-other three sides and the extensions have been destroyed. These
-buildings were of three storeys, built of stone, brick, or rubble, and
-tiled: they were finished about 1438, and the old mansion of Robert
-de Croyland was then pulled down. Into the inner quadrangle of this
-cloister court there projected from the middle of its western face a
-wooden erection some fifteen feet long by fifteen feet wide, built in
-1419-24 over what is now the junior combination room, and containing
-on its upper floor an oratory which opened on to a gallery over the
-cloisters on that side of the court. A list of the service-books,
-plate, copes and other vestments, altar-cloths, curtains, gold
-embroidery, etc., kept in this oratory in 1479 is given in my booklet
-of 1917 on King's Hall. The building was small and the Society
-continued to use All Saints' church for its more important services.
-
-The desirability of having a chapel large enough for all college
-purposes was obvious, and in 1464 the Society began the erection of
-such a building, on ground beyond the eastern extension of the
-cloister court. This new chapel, which covered part of the site of our
-present chapel, was about a hundred feet long and thirty feet broad,
-that is roughly half the length of and the same breadth as the present
-chapel: it was built of stones, squared and supplied ready for use,
-which according to Caius came from the large banqueting hall of the
-Castle then being pulled down and probably by purchase from King's
-College to whom these materials had been granted. It was wainscotted,
-and was fitted with stalls and carved woodwork; the high altar, like
-that of the older oratory, was of wood and the interior walls above
-the wainscotting were plastered and whitewashed; the sum spent
-suggests that the fittings were not elaborate. The work was finished
-in 1499, but probably the chapel was used from 1485 onwards: of course
-the plate, service-books, etc., were removed to it from the old
-oratory.
-
-Trinity College, on its foundation in 1546, naturally made use of this
-chapel, for it was the only one available on the site[22] of the new
-College. It is fairly certain that it was then fitted up with
-additional seats and probably redecorated: the provision of a new
-organ and a new lectern happen to be specifically mentioned.
-
-Edward VI ascended the throne in 1547, and barely had the interior of
-the chapel of King's Hall been adapted to the needs of the new
-foundation than the College was required to remove all popish traces
-from it. The altar and steps were taken down, and a communion table
-set up, most likely in the middle of the chapel. The books, copes,
-vestments, and altar ornaments which had come down from old times were
-sold: they realized no less than £140. 8s. 8d., and the magnitude of
-the sum obtained in such unfavourable conditions shows that the
-services must have been conducted with considerable pomp. There is
-to-day in the library a standing censer boat, ascribed to the end of
-the fourteenth century or the early years of the fifteenth century,
-with traces on it of its ancient gilding, but there is no record as to
-how or when it came to us. King's Hall did in fact own among its
-chapel vessels a "ship of silver" which probably means a censer boat,
-and it may be that this is the vessel in question. With this possible
-(but doubtful) exception all our medieval chapel plate has gone.
-
-When in 1553 Mary succeeded her brother, the Roman religion was
-restored, and the chapel again adapted to the old forms of worship.
-Perhaps remonstrance was made by the master, Bill, who had been
-appointed in 1551 on Redman's death and was a strong Anglican: at any
-rate he was deprived of his office. The expulsion was dramatic and
-apparently physical, for as he was sitting in his stall in the chapel
-two members of the House, Mr Boys and Mr Gray, approached and "removed
-him ... in a rude and insolent way." Declining any contest he retired
-to Bedfordshire, and was succeeded as master by Christopherson, the
-queen's chaplain and confessor.
-
-Mary recognized the interest taken by her father in Trinity and, in
-furtherance of his design, decided to rebuild the College on a
-comprehensive plan. She issued orders about this on 24 October 1554,
-and it was arranged in 1555 that the first large task undertaken in
-connection with it should be the erection of a new chapel. Preliminary
-work on this was commenced in 1556 and it was then expected that the
-building would be finished by the end of 1557, but by October of that
-year the walls were only half-way up: delays ensued and ten years
-elapsed before the building was completed. The old chapel was unroofed
-in 1561, and cannot, it would seem, have been used after that date: it
-is possible it was shut up in the course of 1557, but early in that
-year it was still in use, for the royal commissioners in January 1557
-complained of the absence of lights on the altar and of coals to cense
-the sacrament. During the years from the closing of the old chapel to
-1567 it is uncertain whether the services were held in College or in
-one of the town churches.
-
-It was originally intended that the new chapel should be a hundred and
-fifty-seven feet long and thirty-three feet broad, the east end being
-flush with the street frontage of the Great Gate. The roof was to be
-curved, open, and relieved with fretwork and oak pendants. There was
-to be an east window, a west window, eleven windows on the south side,
-and twelve on the north side from which it follows that it was to be
-a detached building save for its abutment on staircase E in the Great
-Court.
-
-It was designed to contain two rows of stalls made after the pattern
-of those at King's College, sixty-eight in the upper row with
-misereres, divided by pillars, and with double crests above, and a
-lower row of stalls not so divided. Unfortunately the contractor got
-into money difficulties and sold much of the timber which had been
-bought for the intended roof and stalls, causing the work to fall into
-arrear.
-
-After the accession of Elizabeth, changes in the plans of the new
-chapel were made, the length being increased to two hundred and five
-feet, thus making it project beyond the east side of the Great Court.
-In 1564 the walls of the building were finished and plastered, and
-the date 1564 cut on the east gable together with the text from the
-Vulgate, Matthew xxi. 13, _Domus mea domus orationis vocabitur_, which
-in the authorized version runs: "My house shall be called the house of
-prayer" and is followed by the clause "but ye have made it a den of
-thieves." Wags have sometimes continued the inscription by adding the
-second clause on the chapel either of Trinity or of St John's as their
-inclinations led them. The roof, put on in 1565, is of a style earlier
-than this date, and Willis came to the conclusion that it is the
-actual roof of the old chapel of King's Hall supplemented by
-additional timber to fit it for the larger building: I like to think
-that we still worship under the roof which sheltered our predecessors
-more than four centuries ago.
-
-In the year last mentioned, 1565, the stones for the pavement were
-brought from Croyland Abbey and maybe some are still there. In the
-next year the interior fittings were taken in hand, and the organ
-screen erected. In the following year, 1567, the windows were glazed
-with white glass bearing inscriptions, coats of arms, and heraldic
-badges such as the fleur-de-lys, portcullis, and rose: the organ (a
-small instrument) and the pulpit were moved from the old chapel, and
-the stalls put in. It would seem that the wainscotting and wall-seats
-in the present antechapel are of this date, and possibly came from
-King's Hall. Moving from west to east in the completed building there
-were in succession an antechapel sixty-five feet long, an organ-screen
-eight feet deep, the chapel seats along some seventy feet, a space of
-twenty-four feet, the communion table, and a space of thirty-six feet
-free of encumbrances. The work was finished by Michaelmas, 1567. There
-is no record of the building having been consecrated.
-
-Mary died in 1558, and on 20 November, the Sunday following the
-proclamation of Elizabeth, Bill, the former master of the College,
-preached at St Paul's Cross in London; the next Sunday, his successor
-Christopherson preached there. Probably the men disliked one another,
-and certainly took different views of the position. Some scandal was
-caused, an the upshot of the affair was that Christopherson was sent
-to prison, while Bill returned to Cambridge, restored to the
-mastership.
-
-Bill, a discreet courtier, was a favourite at court, and held, under
-Elizabeth's favour, the provostship of Eton and the deanery of
-Westminster together with the mastership of Trinity; it was probably
-due to his influence that Elizabeth in 1560 issued a commission to
-procure materials and labour for completing the chapel which had been
-begun on her sister's initiative. Baker praised his prudence and
-temper while master, and added that "if he has shown any frailties or
-failings here, allowances must be made for difficult times and potent
-courtiers that are not easily resisted." In my opinion the services to
-the College of its first three masters, Redman, Bill, and
-Christopherson, were of the greatest value, and have hardly received
-that recognition from posterity which they deserve.
-
-On Bill's death, the crown offered the mastership to Beaumont, a
-calvinist whose views were more pronounced than Cecil supposed at the
-time of the appointment. Beaumont sympathized with the puritan party,
-whose numbers in the University were now rapidly increasing, but did
-little to guide them or to check their intolerance which constantly
-offended public opinion.
-
-The description of the windows in the new chapel does not suggest that
-figures or catholic symbols appeared thereon, but, none the less, the
-"malcontents" thought them objectionable and in November 1565, broke
-"all the windows wherein did appear superstition." In the same term
-occurred the famous surplice disturbance[23]. The puritans objected to
-the use of the surplice in chapel on Sundays, Saints' days, and their
-eves, and on a certain "Sunday (in Dr Whitgift's absence), Mr
-Cartwright and two of his adherents made three sermons on one day in
-the chapel so vehemently inveighing against the ceremonies of the
-church that at evening prayer all the scholars save three [together
-with one of the chaplains] (viz. Dr Leg, Mr West, Whitaker's tutor,
-and the chaplain) cast off their surplices as an abominable relic of
-superstition"--a curious illustration of how little the calvinists
-esteemed the value of academic discipline unless they exercised it
-themselves. The organization of this demonstration was attributed to
-Cartwright, their leader in the University and a fellow of the
-College; it was probably due to the disapproval of his conduct in this
-and similar matters that shortly afterwards he went out of residence
-for two or more years.
-
-Beaumont died in 1567 and at his request was buried "with no vain
-jangling of bells nor any other popish ceremonies" in the new chapel,
-his being the first interment in it. He is commemorated by a carving
-(somewhat difficult to detect) of his face on the tenth principal in
-the chapel roof reckoned from the east end--it is lettered _R. B. Mr._
-He was succeeded by Whitgift and the result of the subsequent bitter
-struggle between him and the puritans settled the constitution and
-policy of the University till the middle of the nineteenth century,
-but the battle was mainly fought in the senate-house and in London,
-and is not specially connected with our chapel.
-
-Alterations to the organ were made in 1594, and elaborate hangings
-placed in the organ loft in 1604. Thenceforward repairs and
-reconstructions of the organ followed one another every few years. The
-history of the instrument has been published in pamphlet form, and I
-shall not again refer to its successive enlargements. The west window
-was blocked up about this time owing to the removal of King Edward's
-Tower to its present position.
-
-There is an account of college doings in chapel in 1635 in the
-following memorandum sent to Laud, and endorsed by him as embodying
-matter which he intended to examine during an intended visit to
-Cambridge in September 1636.
-
- In Trinity College, they have been long noted to be negligent of the
- chapel and of prayers in it; the best come but seldom, and by their
- example the rest make small account of service. In some tutors'
- chambers (who have three or four score pupils), the private prayers
- are longer and louder by far at night than they are at Chapel in the
- evening. Some fellows are there, who scarce see the inside of the
- chapel thrice in a year, nor public hall, nor St Mary's Church, and
- (they say) impugn all.
-
- A quire is there founded for Sundays and holydays, but the quiremen
- are so negligent and unskilful, that, unless it be an anthem, they
- often sing the hymns no otherwise than in the common psalmerie tune.
- And to mend the matter, they have divers dry choristers (as they
- call them), such as never could and never meane to sing a note, and
- yet enjoy, and are put in to take the benefit of those places
- professedly. They have a large chapel, and yet the boyes rows of
- pews are placed just in the middle of the chapel, before and behind
- the Communion-table, which some there are about to reform.
-
- They lean, or sit, or kneele at prayers, everyone in a several
- posture as he pleases. At the name of Jesus few will bow, and when
- the creed is repeated, many of the boyes, by some men's directions,
- turn towards the west door. Their surplices and song-books, and
- other furniture for divine service, is very mean. The cloth that
- lies upon the table not worth 14d. He that executes, steps over the
- exhortation and begins, _Wherefore I pray and beseech you, &c._ They
- use no Litany for the most part, but in Lent only, and in Lent only
- upon Sundays, and when they say it, it is at the Communion-table.
- They repeat not the Creed after the Gospel, and instead of the
- _Magnificat_ and the _Nunc Dimittis_, they will at pleasure
- (sometimes when the quiremen are present) sing the 23rd or some
- other riming Psalm.... They have lately taken advice, and are about
- mending their chapel, if it holds.
-
- Fellows ... (when of the degree of M.A.) and fellow-commoners, take
- themselves generally to have a privilege to miss prayers, as well as
- the public table of the hall. From hence it comes to pass, that so
- many of that ranke are to be founde at those times, either in
- taverns and towne-houses, or at some other pleasant imployments,
- where they please.
-
-Whether all this was true or not we cannot say, but at any rate in the
-following year, 1636, the College spent a considerable sum on
-alterations and decorations in the chapel. The communion table was
-removed to the east end and the ground there raised, a pavement of
-stone and marble laid down, the walls were panelled, and rich hangings
-provided. Charles I, with his son the prince of Wales, visited the
-chapel in March 1642, and was much pleased therewith: we read at this
-time of candlesticks, tapers, and a crucifix on the altar; other
-references show that the ritual was high.
-
-The next year 1643 saw a great change, for the parliamentary party
-secured control of the town and district. The order compelling the use
-of the surplice on certain days was now rescinded, and under Dowsing
-the chapel was purged, the altar steps levelled, the altar taken away,
-and a wooden communion table without rails set up in the middle of the
-chapel; the organ and hangings were removed; and certain figures,
-painted on the walls at the east end whitewashed. The zealots did not
-think the reforms had gone far enough, but no other changes were
-forced on the College, and a few months later the Society made a money
-present "to some of Major Scot's souldiers who defended the chappell
-from the rudenesse of the rest." A few years later, on 12 March 1647,
-Sir Thomas Fairfax then in command of the district came, and was
-received "in great state ... in the Chapel, he was presented with a
-rich bible, and in the hall with a sumptuous banquet"--a pleasant
-combination.
-
-At the restoration, the original altar of 1643 was recovered and
-replaced at the east end, a screen of rich mosaic work erected behind
-it, and as far as practicable the chapel restored to its former
-appearance. Doubtless, however, practices continued which to-day would
-strike us as unseemly, for I notice that in 1665 "it was agreed that
-Dod have the place of keeping the dogs out of the chapel."
-
-In the early years of the eighteenth century the condition of the
-fabric caused anxiety; after only a little more than a century's wear
-the roof was found to be in a dangerous condition, and a portion of
-one of the external walls in danger of falling. It was determined to
-place the building, inside as well as outside, in thorough repair.
-Work began in 1706 and was nearly thirty years in progress. The
-fellows and a few friends subscribed a large part of the cost, and the
-rest was paid out of corporate income. In the plan adopted, which is
-associated with the names of Bentley and Cotes, the east window was
-blocked, and the present stalls, baldachino, organ-screen, and
-wainscotting erected: the design of the latter is excellent of its
-kind, though not altogether suited to the architecture of the
-building. Some of the old stalls are said to have been removed to
-St Michael's church, and the tradition may be accepted as probable.
-Later in the century, 1787-88, the roof was painted in white and gold.
-
-The number of residents in College in the early half of this century
-was small, and probably the chapel was in regular use during most of
-its restoration. A trivial incident at this time afforded some
-amusement. Complaints had been made that Bentley--an illustrious
-scholar, genuinely interested in promoting learning, but as master of
-Trinity arrogant, unscrupulous, and dishonest--never went to chapel
-though required to do so by the statutes. This was true enough, and he
-determined to silence his critics by appearing again. But so long had
-he been absent that the door of his stall had got fixed and could not
-be opened till the lock had been wrenched off.
-
-Prof. Hughes has called my attention to some unpublished notes[24] by
-a friendly visitor about the chapel services on Saturday and Sunday
-evenings in the fourth decade of the eighteenth century. The writer
-says that interpolated in the evening prayers were elaborate musical
-performances sometimes involving two symphonies[25] and two anthems
-in which the choir, organ, and six violins took part; he also repeats
-more than once that the building was crowded [by strangers] and the
-noise so great that little of the service could be heard. Thus, to
-quote one instance, under date of 28 May 1738, he writes:
-
- This evening I was at Trinity Colledge Chapple where there was so
- great a crowd that nothing could be heard of the whole service, I
- could see the Readers lips go, but, not so much as heare the least
- sound of his voice, and when Dr Walker read the 2d Leason could I
- only heare the sound of his voice but not to distinguish one word.
- There was great difference in the Musick part from what used to be,
- for the symphony was first by the Organ and then by 6 violins in
- 3 parts to all which the Organ was the base. After the reading the
- first and 2nd Lessons, 3 men sang the [blank] to which the Choire
- was the Corus. Before the Prayer for the King there was another
- Symphony by the Organ, & Violins, and the Anthem was Sung by one
- man, to which the choir was likewise the chorus.
-
-Throughout most of the eighteenth century, a good many of the fellows
-resident in Cambridge held livings in the vicinity. They were
-accustomed to ride out on Sunday to their cures, hold services, and
-return home to a comfortable supper the same evening, but in general
-neglected their parishes during the rest of the week. Thus if a
-parishioner died, the funeral was deferred till the following Sunday;
-and if a marriage-service was to be held in the village, it had to
-wait for a free Sunday. In these circumstances the bride and
-bridegroom often settled the matter by coming into Cambridge for the
-ceremony, and during the first half of this century our chapel was
-constantly borrowed for such marriage services; after the Marriage Act
-of 26 George II, cap. 33, this use of it became illegal unless a
-special license were obtained. Since that Act, it has been used only
-once for such a purpose, namely, for the marriage of Miss Butler on
-18 December 1901.
-
-Coming to the nineteenth century, we have numerous notes about the
-chapel and the services. At the beginning of this period the author of
-_Alma Mater_ (J.M.F. Wright, who commenced residence in 1817) gives an
-unfavourable account of the services, saying that they were gabbled
-through as fast as possible amid a great deal of talking. The first
-part of this statement may be correct, but as to the second probably
-conversation was rare, and such as took place, though not condemned by
-public opinion, was subdued and was held only in recesses, one of
-which was known as iniquity corner. In fact, we may take it that the
-vast majority of the undergraduates acted as gentlemen though they
-attended chapel reluctantly and merely as a matter of discipline.
-Attendance was required at seven o'clock in the morning, not a
-convenient hour, albeit considerably later than that usual in Tudor
-times.
-
-In 1831 the fabric was again thoroughly repaired, the roof
-redecorated, certain stalls elevated, desks at the east end
-constructed, and a new scheme of lighting by candelabra introduced. A
-few years later, in 1838, the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to
-Undergraduates concerned themselves with marking the attendance of
-fellows in chapel. That incident I have described elsewhere.
-
-In 1867-75 the building was again thoroughly overhauled, the south
-side faced with stone, a porch, a new vestry, and a choir-room built,
-the organ screen moved a few feet westward, the walls and roof
-painted, gilding used freely on the panelling, the windows filled with
-stained glass, backed benches and kneeling stools introduced for
-undergraduates, and the building lighted with gas. During part of the
-time occupied by this restoration, the College used St Michael's
-church as its chapel.
-
-According to the scheme of decoration, adopted on the advice of
-Lightfoot and Westcott, if we proceed eastwards up the chapel we are
-supposed to note, in order, the frescoes on the walls (which
-represent old testament heroes and teachers) and paintings on the roof
-(which illustrate the Benedicite), leading up through Jewish history
-to the birth of Christ, and then, returning westward, to have
-suggested to us, by the successive windows, the historical development
-of Christianity and the growth of learning particularly in the
-University and College. A man might worship many years in the chapel
-before he discovered this design.
-
-The panels in the sacrarium are replaced by intarsia work in which all
-the woods used are of their natural colours. The sixteenth-century
-silver cross on the communion table came from Spain. The wrought-iron
-gas standards here and through the chapel are also worthy of note;
-fortunately they were allowed to remain when the electric light was
-introduced. All this, as well as the scheme of decoration of the
-antechapel, is described in guide-books with more or less accuracy.
-
-Probably the services were never rendered more effectively than in the
-years following this restoration. Attendance on Sunday evening was
-required unless absentees could urge conscientious or other good
-reasons for exemption, but a large proportion of those who might have
-obtained exemption did, in fact, take part in the Sunday services.
-More benches were placed in the chapel than are there now, and the
-building, with every seat occupied and everyone (save a few
-privileged visitors) in a surplice, presented a most impressive scene.
-Electric light was introduced in 1893, and has added much to the
-comfort of congregations in winter evenings.
-
-In former days members of the Society who died in College were not
-infrequently buried in the chapel--a shocking thing to permit in a
-building in constant use, though sanctioned by the custom of many
-centuries. There are a good many tombstones scattered over the floor,
-and copies of all the inscriptions have been published. I wonder how
-many members of the Society know that among those here buried is one
-woman, bearing the strange Christian name of Elismar. The last
-interment in the chapel took place in October 1886, and further
-burials are now forbidden unless sanctioned by the Home Office.
-
-The building has always been used for various secular purposes, such
-as elections to scholarships and fellowships; the admission of
-scholars, fellows, and officers; the affixing of the College seal to
-documents, and the delivery of declamations by students. Within recent
-years lectures in the antechapel and an oration in the chapel have
-been delivered. I believe the view that a church or chapel is intended
-only for the performance of religious services is modern and
-unwarranted by history: at any rate our records give no authority for
-it.
-
-
-[Footnote 22: On the site acquired for the College were situated the
-buildings of King's Hall, Michael-House, Physwick's Hostel, and some
-private hostels or boarding houses. Members of private hostels used
-their parish churches. All the students in Physwick's Hostel were
-members of Gonville Hall, and used the chapel of that Hall. The
-members of Michael-House used St Michael's church: this House had been
-founded in 1324 by Hervey de Stanton for a master and six fellows, who
-if not priests at the time of admission, had to take orders within one
-year; and later two more fellows, three chaplains, and four bible
-clerks were added to the foundation, which was intended for secular
-clergy studying in the University. The church of St Michael was
-appropriated to it, and rebuilt by its founder for use as its chapel.
-The fellows had in their House an oratory, and in March 1393, the
-bishop of Ely granted them leave to build a chapel, but their history
-and convenience alike made them wish to continue to use St Michael's
-church as their regular chapel.]
-
-[Footnote 23: Fuller's _History of Cambridge_, reprint 1840, p. 265.
-Fuller mistakenly assigned the disturbance to 1566-67 instead of
-1565-66.]
-
-[Footnote 24: Since published in the _Proceedings_ of the Cambridge
-Antiquarian Society, 22 May 1916, vol. XX, pp. 114-116.]
-
-[Footnote 25: When I first came into residence a survival of this
-interpolated symphony existed in a long organ solo which preceded the
-anthem.]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI.
-
-SOME COLLEGE TREASURES.
-
-
-Those who live among beautiful surroundings and in constant touch with
-works of art are often apt to take their privileges for granted.
-Members of Trinity are proud of the buildings of the College and the
-grounds in which they are placed, and most of us know something of
-their history and characteristic features. But with our art treasures
-there is less general acquaintance, and so perhaps it may not be out
-of place to jot down a few notes on some of them--chiefly pictures and
-plate--in which I take pleasure.
-
-Of the contents of the library I say nothing, for a volume would be
-needed to describe them even briefly. The illuminated manuscripts and
-the early printed books attract most attention, but there are numerous
-other subjects in which the library must be ranked among the most
-important in Great Britain. I have often been told by undergraduates
-that they have never been in the building except once when they signed
-the Admission Book. That is true enough of some men, but those who are
-interested in rare and famous books and yet never visit the Library
-neglect exceptional opportunities.
-
-Of oil portraits--in all nearly two hundred--of former members of
-the College, we own a valuable collection, and they illustrate in a
-remarkable way how many distinguished men have been educated here.
-Identification is easy as labels are placed on most of the pictures.
-Unfortunately we have no gallery in which they can be shown. Some are
-put in the hall, some in the master's lodge, some in the combination
-room, and some in the library, lecture-rooms, etc. Those in the lodge
-are set off well, but the others are not hung to advantage.
-
-About twenty-five years ago a proposal was made to raise subscriptions
-for an art gallery to be built along the edge of the river starting
-from the present north end of the library and extending over the land
-now occupied by the master's stables and the end of his garden. At
-that time the proposal did not receive much favour, but now I
-sometimes wonder if we were wise in putting the plan on one side.
-Certainly we have more canvasses than we can exhibit satisfactorily.
-The hall, too, would look a more dignified apartment if the pictures,
-except for one or two on the dais, were taken away: recently their
-temporary removal was necessitated by repairs to the woodwork, and the
-improvement in the appearance of the room was noticeable. The general
-effect of such a clearance may be judged by a visit to the hall of the
-Middle Temple in London. The dimensions of the body of that hall are
-the same as ours, but instead of pictures on the side walls, each
-small oak panel bears an armorial shield: these harmonise well with
-the architectural lines of the building. Where, as is the case with
-our neighbours at St John's, the panelling is low and there is above
-it a big stretch of stone or painted wall, pictures add to the effect,
-but this is not the case where the panelling is high.
-
-Of all our pictures I suppose the one which attracts most attention is
-that of Henry VIII which hangs over the dais at the north end of the
-hall: it was given us by Robert Beaumont, who held the mastership from
-1561 to 1567. The artist was Hans Eworth, a Dutchman who lived in
-London circ. 1543-75, and worked with or under the influence of
-Antonio Moro: the portrait was taken from or founded on that of the
-king in the fresco painted by Holbein in 1537 on a wall of the privy
-chamber in Whitehall palace. This fresco, which was destroyed in the
-fire of 1698 and till then deservedly treated as one of the art
-treasures of London, contained portraits of Henry VII and Henry VIII
-with their queens, Elizabeth of York and Jane Seymour. Holbein's
-studies for the heads of the two kings have been preserved, and are at
-Chatsworth and Munich. Most of the extant portraits of Henry VIII are
-copied from or founded on this fresco. Signs of deterioration in the
-fresco were noticeable in the reign of Charles II, and by his orders
-it was copied by Remée, a French painter then resident in London. The
-original fresco was on each side of and above a fireplace or window.
-Instead of depicting this, the artist represented this space as
-occupied by a pedestal containing an inscription: his delineation of
-the faces of the sovereigns is poor, but he has preserved Holbein's
-general design. Two copies of the reproduction are extant, one of
-which is in the royal collection and the other at Petworth.
-
-Hardly less notable than the presentation of our founder, and far more
-valuable, is the charming portrait by Joshua Reynolds of the duke of
-Gloucester (1776-1834) as a boy: the duke was a cousin of George III
-and afterwards chancellor of the University. Reynolds wrote in his
-diary that the boy sat for his portrait in March 1780 when he was four
-years old, and that the finished picture was delivered in January
-1788--the charge for it being a hundred guineas. Horace Walpole
-praised it, but thought it "washy," an opinion not shared by modern
-critics who esteem it one of Reynolds's masterpieces. The picture was
-left to the College in 1843 by the will of the duke's sister, the
-Princess Sophia, with a request that it should be hung in the hall.
-The legacy was due to the good offices of a freshman of the time--the
-Hon. Douglas Gordon, son of George, fourth earl of Aberdeen. He
-described the circumstances attending the gift as follows:
-
- When I went up to Trinity in 1842, I used to see a great deal of the
- princess.... [I was then] a freshman full of admiration for my
- College of which I used to boast. One day the old princess shewed me
- the picture, ... and asked if I thought it would look well in the
- Hall. On my saying what a boon it would be, she very graciously said
- "You can tell Mr Whewell that I will leave it to the College through
- you, and I hope you will see this picture placed in a good
- position." At her death I took it down to Trinity where I was still
- an undergraduate.
-
-The portrait of queen Mary on the other side of the dais is a Spanish
-copy of Antonio Moro's famous picture which hangs in Madrid. The
-original is said to have been given to Philip after his engagement to
-her; it presents her as a woman of strong character but far from
-beautiful. When the marriage took place, it was unkindly said by a
-Spanish courtier that whatever were the faults of his master, it must
-at least be admitted that he recognized the obligation of a gentleman
-to keep his word.
-
-Of other pictures in the hall those of Tennyson (1809-92) painted in
-1890 by G.F. Watts, of the earl of Essex (1566-1601) painted in 1590,
-of Isaac Newton (1642-1727) painted in 1725 by John Vanderbank, and of
-Francis Bacon (1561-1626) copied from Van Somer's portrait in Gray's
-Inn are specially noticeable. Newton and Barrow (together with
-Pearson who is mentioned below) played a leading part in the
-intellectual life in the University towards the close of the
-seventeenth century, but I need not talk here about this. Barrow, who
-was a mathematician and divine, had a ready wit. When, previous to his
-admission to holy orders, he was examined on his faith, the dialogue
-is said to have been as follows:--Chaplain: _Quid est fides?_ Barrow:
-_Quod non vides._ Chaplain: _Quid est spes?_ Barrow: _Magna res._
-Chaplain: _Quid est caritas?_ Barrow: _Magna raritas._ On which his
-questioner retired in dudgeon, and reported that there was a candidate
-for ordination who would only give him "rhyming answers to moral
-questions": but the bishop had the sense to recognize that truths can
-be expressed in rhyme as well as in prose, and Barrow was ordained.
-
-A very pleasing picture is that reputed to be of Byron: this looks
-like a Raeburn, though it is ascribed to Thomas Lawrence: its history
-is doubtful, but the absence of any peculiarity in the ear is _prima
-facie_ evidence that it is not of Byron. Another striking portrait is
-that of W.H. Thompson (1810-1886) painted in 1881 by Hubert
-von Herkomer. When Thompson saw the completed portrait of himself, he
-is said to have remarked, "Do I really look as if I held the world so
-cheap" and in a print of it in the house of one of my friends, this is
-inscribed on the frame. I ought also to call attention to the window
-portrait of Richard, duke of York (1411-60), the father of Edward IV
-and Richard III, which probably comes to us from King's Hall.
-
-Among other paintings, which at present hang on the hall panelling,
-are portraits of the following famous members of our College:--Edward
-White Benson (1829-96) archbishop of Canterbury, Isaac Hawkins Browne
-(1706-60), Arthur Cayley (1821-95), the earl of Derby (1826-93),
-Michael Foster (1836-1907), Francis Galton (1822-1911), the earl of
-Halifax (1661-1715), Fenton John Anthony Hort (1828-92), Richard
-Claverhouse Jebb (1841-1905), Joseph Joachim (1831-1907) the musician,
-Thomas Jones (1756-1807), Joseph Barber Lightfoot (1828-89) bishop of
-Durham, Frederick Denison Maurice (1805-72), James Clerk Maxwell
-(1831-79), viscount Melbourne (1779-1849), Matthew Raine (1760-1811),
-Adam Sedgwick (1785-1873), Henry Sidgwick (1838-1900), Charles John
-Vaughan (1816-97), Brooke Foss Westcott (1825-1901) bishop of Durham,
-John Westlake (1828-1908), and William Whewell (1794-1866).
-
-Of these, Raine, Jones, Halifax and Hawkins Browne lived in the
-eighteenth century. The last-named is known to fame through having
-caused a change in the family reigning in the two Sicilies. In fact,
-coming to Naples in his travels he danced at a court ceremony "with
-such inconceivable alacrity and vigour" as to provoke universal
-amusement and amazement: in particular the queen's laughter was so
-immoderate that a miscarriage ensued. On such events may the histories
-of dynasties and empires turn! He is described on this occasion as
-pirouetting in a "dress of volcano silk with lava buttons": perhaps it
-is in this costume that he is depicted on our walls. Having related
-this anecdote I must in fairness add that he was a poet of
-considerable ability, a good talker in an age when the standard of
-conversation was high, and an excellent judge of wine. Most of the
-portraits are, however, of celebrities of the Victorian age. Of these,
-Melbourne and Derby were politicians; Benson, Hort, Lightfoot,
-Vaughan, and Westcott represent the church; Westlake was a lawyer;
-Jebb a scholar; Maurice and Sidgwick represent ethical philosophy;
-while Cayley, Foster, Galton, Maxwell, Sedgwick, and Whewell, were men
-of science.
-
-Among the canvasses above the panelling are portraits of Richard
-Bentley (1662-1742) the scholar, Edward Coke (1549-1634) the lord
-chief justice, Cowley (1618-67) the poet, John Dryden (1631-1701) the
-poet, the earl of Macclesfield (1666-1732), John Pearson (1613-86)
-bishop of Chester, Robert Smith (1689-1768) the mathematician, and
-John Wilkins (1614-72) bishop of Chester. Wilkins is now almost
-unknown but he wrote some interesting books, notably one on the
-ciphers employed in the civil war of the seventeenth century. Another
-work of his on the possibility of a journey to the moon, provoked the
-duchess of Newcastle to ask him where she could find a place to bait
-if she tried the journey: "Madam," said he, "of all the people in the
-world I least expected that question from you, who have built so many
-castles in the air that you may lie every night in one of your own."
-
-The pictures in the large combination room of Isaac Newton by Thomas
-Murray, and of Matthew Prior (1664-1721) by Godfrey Kneller are good:
-the former came to us from a descendant (Mrs Ring) of Newton's
-favourite niece, and its history is given in a letter from Charles
-Simeon to Mansel, master of the College at the time of the gift. The
-other canvasses are too big for a private apartment, but the portraits
-of the "proud" duke of Somerset (1662-1748) by Nathaniel Dance, the
-marquess of Granby (1721-70) by Joshua Reynolds, the duke of
-Gloucester by John Opie, the marquess of Camden (1759-1840) by Thomas
-Lawrence, the duke of Grafton (1760-1844) also by Lawrence, and the
-duke of Sussex (1773-1843) by James Lonsdale, are of some repute: to
-these there was added in 1915 a portrait of Arthur J. Balfour by
-P.A. Laszlö de Lombros.
-
-Of the peers mentioned above the names of Granby and Somerset are
-still well known. Granby fought in the Culloden campaign, was colonel
-of the blues (horse guards) at Minden, 1759; commander of the British
-contingent in the campaigns of 1760, 1761, and 1762; and in 1766
-became commander-in-chief of the army. Delighting in danger, which
-even when in supreme command he deliberately sought, brave to a fault,
-an excellent cavalry leader, rich and lavishly generous, he was the
-idol of the public, and witnesses to his popularity remain in the
-numerous public-houses scattered far and wide over England which bear
-his name and arms. Somerset was of a very different type, being a
-stupid man whose power was chiefly derived from his enormous landed
-possessions. To the Somerset properties he added, by his marriage with
-the sole heiress of the earls of Northumberland, the great estates of
-the Percies. He held the chancellorship of the University for the
-extraordinary term of sixty years. His title of the "proud duke"
-commemorates only his arrogance, and was derived from the fact that
-even to speak to anyone in a menial position was regarded by him as a
-condescension. His servants were trained to understand his wishes by
-signs, and numerous footmen surrounded him when in the streets so as
-to avoid the risk that any people of the lower classes should approach
-or address him. Perhaps the best known of the stories of his
-pretensions refers to his remark to his second wife who once called
-his attention to something by touching him with her fan (or according
-to another version kissed him without asking his leave), "Madam," said
-he, drawing himself apart, "my first wife never dared to take such a
-liberty, and she was a Percy." As another illustration of his
-character I may add that he deprived one of his daughters of £20,000
-because she had sat down in his presence without asking his leave.
-
-In the lodge there are numerous portraits of former masters of the
-College, and obviously this is the proper place for such a collection.
-It is not complete, twelve past masters being unrepresented, but
-portraits of two of these (namely Wilkins and Pearson) hang in the
-hall. The most notable picture in this series is that of Nevile, which
-is properly given the place of honour over the mantelpiece in the
-dining room which he built. He holds a paper in his right hand, and
-I like to think that this is intended to suggest the letter which
-Elizabeth on her death-bed entrusted to him to take to Scotland,
-informing James VI of that kingdom that she designated him as her
-successor. In this room too are portraits of Porson and Thompson with
-whose memories so many excellent academic stories are associated, but
-I must not linger over these. In the drawing room the most striking
-portraits are those of queen Elizabeth by Mark Gerrard, the duke of
-Gloucester (1776-1834) in his undergraduate robes by George Romney,
-and queen Mary probably by Hans Eworth. The painted panels in the
-entrance hall often escape attention, but are worth looking at,
-especially in the case of the portraits of Edward III, Henry VII,
-Elizabeth of York, Mary of Scotland, Edward VI, and queen Mary. The
-collection of portraits, formed by Dr Butler, of Trinity men who have
-held judicial appointments is also interesting, but is not generally
-accessible to visitors.
-
-The pictures in the lecture-rooms and on the walls of the staircase
-leading to them form a sort of overflow collection, and though of
-unequal merit, a few are worth attention. There are also some pictures
-of merit in the library among which I note in particular portraits of
-Tennyson and Lightfoot.
-
-The engravings of former members of the College placed in the small
-combination room will repay study. There are at present between one
-hundred and fifty and two hundred here, but there are many more in
-portfolios in the library. Several of these have been acquired in
-recent years through the generosity and knowledge of John Charrington.
-
-The painted glass in the hall shows numerous coats of arms, and anyone
-acquainted with heraldry will find here a rich field of study. The
-windows could have been filled over and over again with the arms of
-former famous members of the College, but the matter has been managed
-in a haphazard way, and many distinguished sons of the House are
-unrepresented. In spite of some bad glass the collection is
-interesting. Perhaps however any further account of it here would be
-more technical than would be justified in a paper like this. Of other
-glass in the College, the windows in the chapel are typical of the art
-of 1870, and are only moderately satisfactory. The window at the south
-end of the library, executed in 1775, was made by Peckitt of York,
-after a design by Cipriani: it illustrates some curious points in the
-history of the art of stained glass, but the design is impossible, and
-the scheme of colour atrocious.
-
-Sculpture, unless it is absolutely first rate, does not represent a
-man as well as portraiture. The number of pieces of statuary of the
-first class in Great Britain is small, and in the possession of such
-pieces the College is extraordinarily fortunate. The statue of Newton,
-with its proud inscription "Newton qui genus humanum ingenio
-superavit," in the antechapel by Roubiliac--"the marble index of a
-mind for ever voyaging through strange seas of thought alone"--is of
-the highest merit. It was described by Chantrey as "the noblest of
-English statues," and I have never seen any modern piece of statuary
-anywhere which can be ranked superior to it: the man lives and almost
-moves. Thorwaldsen's statue of Byron, rejected by the authorities of
-Westminster Abbey on account of his alleged atheistical opinions,
-which stands in the library, and that of Bacon in the antechapel may
-also be reckoned among examples of first-class statuary. Of these
-three pieces two are by foreigners. There are also in the antechapel
-statues of Barrow, Macaulay, Whewell, and Tennyson, and in the library
-a large number of busts. The statues of Edward III on the clock tower,
-of Henry VIII, James I, Anne of Denmark, and Prince Charles on the
-great gate, and of queen Elizabeth on the queen's gate are
-interesting, though not to be reckoned as works of art.
-
-Old Silver Plate has a peculiar beauty. We have some fine specimens
-though they are fewer and later than from our history we should
-expect. Most of the pieces are kept in the butteries, and can be seen
-by visitors. Twice a year anyone entering the hall will see the junior
-bursar there with all the plate spread before him checking it by his
-lists, a pretty spectacle which always suggests to me the picture of
-the king "in his counting house counting out his money," and formerly
-in "May-week" typical pieces were set out on show in the hall.
-
-We have a catalogue of the plate--a large and valuable
-collection--owned by King's Hall in the fifteenth century, and we may
-reasonably suppose that this, as well as the plate belonging to
-Michael-House, came in due course to us; all this has gone with the
-possible, but doubtful, exception of a censer boat now in the library.
-We know also that some plate was given us in Tudor and early Stuart
-times: of this, only five pieces remained to us at the restoration. I
-take it however that until well into the eighteenth century people
-were accustomed to regard plate, other than pieces of historic
-interest, as a convenient way of keeping portable wealth in a form
-which could be easily turned into coin, and its dispersion in times of
-emergency when money was wanted is not surprising.
-
-It was customary for noblemen and fellow-commoners to present plate to
-the House when they completed their academic career: their
-caution-money being commonly employed for or towards the purpose.
-After the restoration, thanks to this graceful practice, our
-possessions of this kind grew rapidly. Unfortunately a good many of
-our pieces were lost through two burglaries, one in 1795 and the other
-in 1798; for instance, no less than fifty-five drinking cups some of
-great beauty were then taken. During the eighteenth century, in
-colleges and throughout the country, large numbers of "standing
-pieces" of plate were melted down, and the metal used to make spoons
-and forks; this accounts for the disappearance of some of our
-treasures of an earlier date. Until 1870 new pieces continued to be
-added in large numbers: in that year the College abolished the general
-admission of noblemen and fellow-commoners, holding that distinctions
-of rank were undesirable in academic life; and since then our
-collection has increased only by special gifts or by purchase.
-
-Of our pre-commonwealth plate the oldest pieces are two silver-gilt
-flagons, dated 1607-08, given us in 1636 by John and Bernard Stuart,
-sons of the duke of Lennox, then about sixteen and fourteen years old.
-There is in the small combination room a charming print of Vandyke's
-portrait of the brothers: both boys were killed during the Civil War,
-John at Edgehill and Bernard at Rowton Heath. Whistles are placed in
-the handles of these flagons, so they must have been originally
-intended for secular use, but they have been included, as far back as
-our records go, among the communion plate: perhaps the spouts were
-added when the vessels were placed in the chapel. Our next earliest
-piece is the handsome cup, dated 1615-16, given us by Nevile probably
-in 1615: it was originally silver-gilt. The fourth of these pieces is
-a bursarial rose-water basin and ewer dated 1635-36. We owe it to
-Ambrose Aykerod who was bursar in that year: his arms are engraved on
-the cup, and the inscriptions on it refer to vows and pledges by him
-which are now inexplicable. The only other early piece which survived
-the Civil War was a cup given by John Clarkson between 1610 and 1620
-and known from its inscription "Pauper Johannes Dictus Cognomine
-Clarkson Hunc Cyathum Dono Gratuito Dedit" as the "Pauper Joan Pot":
-this was stolen in 1798. Clarkson had matriculated as a sizar in 1553,
-obtained a scholarship in due course, and graduated B.A. in 1560.
-
-Apart from the four pieces mentioned above, the most striking objects
-in our collection are the rose-water basins and ewers, the Duport
-standing salt, the standing or loving cups, the tankards, and the
-punch-bowls.
-
-We have several notable rose-water basins and ewers. The earliest of
-these is the set given by the earl of Kent in 1662 to commemorate the
-passing of the Act of Uniformity. The date is given by a quaint double
-chronogram: and the central inscription Νιψον ανομηματα μη μοναν οψιν
-reads alike forwards and backwards. Another beautiful set is that
-given by the duke of Buckingham in 1671, the circumference of the
-basin being over seven feet. The visitor should also notice a set of
-1740 bequeathed by David Humphrey, and a set of 1748 given by William
-John Bankes. Another set consists of a basin of 1716 given by John
-Bennet, with a graceful ewer probably made about 1675. This ewer must
-have been originally a "standing cup" since a whistle is placed in the
-handle, but a spout was added between 1789 and 1810 with the intention
-of turning it into a flagon: on it are engraved the Trinity and
-Westminster arms, and in an early catalogue it is called the Busby
-cup: its donor is unknown.
-
-There is a curious custom at the high table connected with these
-dishes. At the end of dinner on ordinary nights, before grace is said,
-a rose-water dish with an empty ewer is placed before the fellow
-sitting at the head of each table. I conjecture that this dates from a
-time when napkins and forks were unknown, and diners were accustomed
-to rinse their hands in water before rising from the table. Now the
-appearance of the empty ewer is only a sign that dinner is over. At
-feasts the ewer contains rose-water which is poured into the dish and
-passed round the table.
-
-We have a fine specimen of a standing salt in a piece associated with
-the name of James Duport. Its breadth is nearly ten inches, and its
-height, without the handles, seven inches. It was these massive salts,
-and not "trencher salts," that were originally used to divide the
-company into those that sat above and below the salt; and in the
-middle ages the standing salt was generally the most valued single
-piece in the house and the chief ornament on the table. The medieval
-specimens usually have a cover to protect the salt, and the handles in
-specimens like ours are said to have been introduced for a similar
-reason, as a napkin can be twisted round them so as to cover the salt,
-and thus save it from dust. Our specimen bears the inscription εχετε
-εν εαυτοις ἁλας και ειρηνευετε εν αλληλοις, together with a statement
-that it was given by Duport. Probably his gift was made in 1665, when
-he left the College on his appointment as master of Magdalene. The
-piece, however, bears the hall-mark 1733-34; here, and in some other
-cases, it would seem that the original piece was exchanged for a new
-one, perhaps when repairs were required, and it was the custom in such
-circumstances to engrave the old inscription on the new piece of
-plate.
-
-In spite of our losses at the end of the eighteenth century some fine
-drinking cups and covers still remain in our possession. Notable among
-these is one of 1691-92 given by Charles and George Firebrace, one of
-1697-98 given by Henry Boyle, and one of 1711-12 given by John Verney.
-We have also a cup and cover of 1726 given by the earl of Sandwich,
-another of 1729 given by Samuel Husbands, another of 1763 given by
-John Damer, another of 1771 given by George Augustus Henry Cavendish,
-another of 1776 given by William Greaves, and another of 1780 given by
-the earl of Mexborough. To these I may add the Lyndhurst silver-gilt
-cup and cover of 1876-77 given by Sir Theodore Martin. All these are
-fine specimens of silversmith's work, and can be used at feasts as
-loving cups, with the ceremonial customary to such drinking.
-
-The tankards with lids form another striking group of plate, but the
-larger ones which contain three quarts or more must be regarded as
-being decorative rather than useful. Conspicuous among these pieces is
-one, probably made about 1670, given by Thomas Taylor, one of 1698-99
-given by Peter Pheasaunt, one of 1699-1700 given by Thomas Alston, one
-of 1700-01 given by Thomas Bellot, one of 1739-40 given by Thomas
-Foley, one of 1746-47 given by Francis Vernon, one of 1751-52 given by
-Charles Paulet, one of 1757-58 given by Edward Fitzgerald, and one of
-1762-63 given by Hans Sloane. There is also a fine collection of ale
-plate. Of the smaller tankards, stoups, and drinking cups there are
-innumerable specimens. I will not dwell longer over our other pieces.
-Suffice it is to say that of punch-bowls there are three or four fine
-specimens of the eighteenth century, as also various snuff-boxes,
-silver trays, etc. Of candlesticks there are between two and three
-hundred, many of them beautiful pieces of work. Of ordinary domestic
-plate the stock is large.
-
-There is also a good deal of plate which has been given or assigned
-for use in the lodge: this includes the Perry silver-gilt dessert
-service. In the chapel plate besides the flagons already mentioned
-there are two silver-gilt patens of 1661-62, associated in the early
-catalogues with the names of John and Bernard Stuart; also an
-alms-dish of 1673, and an altar cross given in 1894 and said to be of
-Spanish renaissance work.
-
-I add some particulars of thirteen challenge pieces of plate owned
-by the Boat and Athletic Clubs: of these, five belong to the First
-Trinity Boat Club, and eight to the Athletic Club. These pieces are of
-recent make and their chief interest comes from the inscribed names of
-the successive holders.
-
-Trinity men will recollect that there are various races arranged each
-year by the First Trinity Boat Club, the winners of which receive pots
-or other prizes, and that in five of these events, the winners, in
-addition to receiving the special prizes, hold challenge pieces on
-which are engraved the names of past winners. These challenge pieces
-are: A two-handled silver chased cup and stand (hall-mark 1836), held
-by the winner of a sculling race (the Macnaughten Sculls) rowed in
-the Michaelmas Term, open to all members of the Club who have not
-previously won it or the University Colquhoun Sculls. A two-handled
-silver cup and stand (hall-mark probably 1857 or 1858), which came to
-the club from the now defunct Second Trinity Boat Club, held by the
-winner of a sculling race (the Baines Sculls) rowed in the Lent Term,
-open to all members who have not previously won it or the Macnaughten
-Sculls or the University Colquhoun Sculls. Silver oars (hall-mark
-1860) held by the winners of a pair-oared race (the Wyatt Pairs) rowed
-in the Michaelmas Term, open to all members who have not previously
-won it or the University Magdalene Pairs. Silver oars (hall-mark 1861)
-which came to the Club from Second Trinity, held by the winners of a
-pair-oared race (the Dodington Pairs) rowed in the Lent Term, open to
-all members who have not previously won it or the Wyatt Pairs or the
-University Magdalene Pairs. Silver Sculls (hall-mark 1897) held by the
-winners of a double sculling race (the Taxis Sculls) rowed in the
-Easter Term, open to all members who have not previously won it or the
-University Magdalene pairs.
-
-Similarly among the sports arranged each year by the Trinity Athletic
-Club are seven events, the winners of which in addition to receiving
-special prizes, hold challenge pieces of plate on which are engraved
-the names of past winners. These challenge pieces are: A half-fluted
-silver bowl and plinth (hall-mark 1887) held by the winner of the mile
-race. A half-fluted silver bowl and plinth (hall-mark 1899) held by
-the winner of the half-mile race. A silver chased claret jug with
-handle (hall-mark 1886) held by the winner of the quarter-mile race.
-Four silver candlesticks (hall-mark 1899) held by the winner of the
-hundred yards race. A two-handled half-fluted silver cup (hall-mark
-1888) held by the winner of the hurdles race. A two-handled silver
-bowl (hall-mark 1896) held by the winner of the long jump. A silver
-salver (hall-mark 1896) held by the winner of the high jump. Finally
-there is a two-handled silver chased cup and plinth (hall-mark 1892)
-held by the man who scores most marks in the various events.
-
-It may be thought that I have occupied too much space in giving bare
-lists of pieces of plate, but the shapes of some of the pieces are so
-good and the surface of old silver, when carefully tended, has such a
-beautiful texture that I believe it may be worth calling the attention
-of any interested in such things to some of our possessions of this
-kind. Only societies and families with continuous records dating from
-a distant past can show such collections.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII.
-
-THE COLLEGE AUDITORS.
-
-
-There is no reference in our earliest college statutes--those of
-1552--to an Auditor, but the extant accounts show that the office
-existed from the foundation of the College in 1546. Definite
-regulations for the appointment were proposed in the draft statutes of
-1554, and were embodied in the statutes of 1560. By these the auditor
-was made one of the statutable officers of the Society: the post was
-held for long periods, and it was not permissible to perform the
-duties by proxy. The statute in question was re-enacted in 1844. By
-the statutes of 1861 the office was made annual, and tenable only
-during pleasure. It remains annual under the present statutes, but a
-definite proviso was inserted in 1882 that it is not tenable by a
-fellow or officer of the House, and a clause was introduced providing
-for the appointment from among the fellows of an Assessor or Assessors
-who should be present during the audit.
-
-From the foundation of the College, its financial year ran from
-Michaelmas to Michaelmas, and the audit of each year was concluded in
-the following December. At first the annual honorarium of the auditor
-seems to have been £10 with an allowance of £2 for travelling
-expenses, stationery, etc., but before the end of the sixteenth
-century it had been reduced to £5, with an augmentation of £3. 6s. 8d.
-and some allowances.
-
-The form of the _declaratio computi_ was much as at present, and
-generally, with but small variations, it takes the form now
-stereotyped "and so the said A. B. Senior (or Junior) Bursar upon the
-foot of this his account for one whole year ending Michaelmas ...
-oweth unto the College the sum of...." In some cases, and notably in
-the seventeenth century, the sums include fractions of a penny, even
-as small as one thirty-second part thereof. Presumably the audit was
-always followed by a "feast," as still remains the custom.
-
-Of the occupants of the office from 1546 to 1618 the information in
-the college books is incomplete. The only auditors previous to 1618
-whose names I have noticed, with the years in which they held office,
-are Edward Burnell, 1553, 1561, 1563 and 1564; Adam Winthrop, 1606;
-and Richard Brooke, 1614. I have not, however, read the account-books
-through from cover to cover, and it may be that there are references
-which have escaped me. Luckily Winthrop's diary and some memoranda
-from 1595 to 1621 are extant, and contain references to a few earlier
-dates. From these we can take our continuous record back to the year
-ending Michaelmas 1593, when he was auditor. He resigned in 1610, and
-was succeeded by Brooke. Brooke was acting in 1615, and had commons in
-1616, and I have no doubt acted in 1617. From 1618 onwards we can,
-from one source or another, make out the names of those who held the
-office. The handwritings of the earlier auditors have marked
-characteristics. They suggest that there was one auditor from 1547 to
-1552, another from 1553 to 1578, who must have been Edward Burnell,
-another from 1579 to 1591, and another from 1592 to 1609, who must
-have been Adam Winthrop. But I present these as mere surmises, and I
-do not attempt to go back beyond 1593.
-
-Our roll then is as follows. From 1547 to 1592 we cannot definitely
-say more than that Edward Burnell was auditor for a period which
-included the years 1553 to 1564, for no doubt his tenure was unbroken.
-From 1593 the sequence runs thus:
-
-Adam Winthrop, 1593 (or earlier) to 1609; Richard Brooke, 1610 to
-1617; Robert Spicer, 1618 to 1628; Francis Hughes, 1629 to 1668;
-Samuel Newton, 1669 to 1717, Newton resigned in 1674, and thereon he
-and William Ellis were appointed to the office, with remainder to the
-survivor of them, but apparently William Ellis never acted; Denys
-L'Isle, 1718 to 1726; William Greaves, 1727 to 1778; Robert Graham,
-1779 to 1791; Samuel Knight, 1792 to 1811; Nicholas Conyngham Tindal,
-1812 to 1825; James Parke, 1826 to 1828; Andrew Amos, 1829 to 1836;
-John George Shaw-Lefevre, 1837 to 1851; George Denman, 1852 to 1862;
-George Valentine Yool, 1863 to 1869; Augustus Arthur VanSittart, 1870
-to 1881; John Willis Clark, 1882 to 1908. Since 1908 the office has
-been held by a professional accountant. The dates given indicate the
-ends of the audit year: thus the audit of 1669 was for the year
-1668-69. It will be noticed that during the three hundred and sixteen
-years from 1593 to 1908, there were, if we omit William Ellis, only
-seventeen auditors, giving an average tenure of more than eighteen
-years. Of these seventeen auditors at least eleven have been lawyers
-and four ultimately rose to the Bench. I add a few biographical notes
-on these auditors.
-
-Of Edward Burnell, the earliest holder of the office whose name I have
-given, I know nothing. His successor Adam Winthrop, 1548-1623, the son
-of a prominent London merchant and reformer, had been admitted as a
-fellow-commoner at Magdalene in 1567, and had left the University
-without a degree. He had been called to the bar, but did not practise,
-and was content to fill the rôle of a well-to-do country squire. He
-was an intimate friend of Still, master of Trinity from 1577 to 1593,
-whose sister he married in 1574, and whose wife was his connection by
-marriage. I conjecture that he owed the office to Still's influence.
-Winthrop was a fair scholar, an indifferent poet, and somewhat of a
-pedant. His tomb is at Groton, Suffolk. More than one of his
-descendants were distinguished. In particular his son, John,
-1588-1649, who was admitted to Trinity College in 1602, was the
-founder of the well-known American family of this name; and his
-great-great-grandson, Sir George Downing was the founder of Downing
-College.
-
-Winthrop seems to have done the whole of the audit work at the end of
-the Michaelmas term of each year. Thus in 1601 he wrote:
-
- The ivth of Decemb. I ridde to Cambride & beganne the Auditt the 7th
- beinge Monday. The xiiijth of Decembre I returned from the Auditt &
- did see the Sonne in the Eclips about 12 of the Clock at noone.
-
-Perhaps his resignation was made at the suggestion of the College, for
-early in 1610 he wrote:
-
- Dr Meriton came to speake with me about the resignation of my office
- in Trinity College to Mr Brookes.... I surrendered my Auditorship in
- Trinitye College to the Mr fellows & schollers before a pub.
- notary.... I dyned at Dr Meriton's in Hadley & received of him xxlb
- for my Auditorshippe.... Mr Rich. Brooke the nue Auditor of Trinity
- College was at my house in Groton to whom I dd. divers paper books &
- Roles touchinge his Office.
-
-Of the next three auditors I can discover very little. Richard Brooke
-was appointed in 1610. The following conclusion of 8 June 1615, seems
-to refer to him, "concluded that Mr Brookes in regard of his paines
-taken divers times for the Colledge that he shoulde ... have given him
-Twentye pounds," and during his visits in the following year be
-allowed commons. We may assume that he held office till the end of
-1617. A Richard Brookes had entered at Queens' as a fellow-commoner in
-1587, but whether he was the subsequent auditor there is nothing to
-show. In 1618 we have the copy of the appointment of Robert Spicer. He
-held office till the end of 1628, since a conclusion of 3 June 1629,
-appointed in his place Francis Hughes. Hughes, who held the office
-till his death in October 1669, was admitted a scholar in 1616,
-graduated M.A. in 1623, was one of the esquire-bedells, and occupied
-rooms in College at the time of his death.
-
-The next occupant of the office was Samuel Newton, 1629-1718, a
-prominent attorney in the town and mayor in 1671. He was not a member
-of the University. His diary from 1662 to 1717 preserved in the
-library of Downing College, contains an account of his election to the
-post in the chapel by the master and seniors, he being present in the
-antechapel. He attended next day in his gown, was sworn to the
-faithful discharge of his duties, and signed the roll of college
-officers. He proved thoroughly efficient. For his services at the
-audit in 1669 he received the fee of £5 with the customary
-augmentation of £3. 6s. 8d., a sum of £6. 13s. 4d. for engrossing the
-audit rolls, which henceforth were kept excellently, a sum of £1 for
-preparing a book of arrears, and a sum of £1. 2s. 8d. for stationery.
-He also received from the junior bursar, billets of wood of the value
-of 6s. 8d.; from the steward, a "warp of lyng" of the value of 6s.
-8d.; from the manciple, a "coller of brawne, also a dish of wild fowle
-or 6s. 8d."; and from the brewhouse, "2 barrels of strong beere."
-
-In 1674 Newton surrendered his patent of appointment as auditor, but
-he was immediately reappointed jointly with his cousin, William Ellis,
-with remainder to the survivor of them. They were at the same time
-appointed on the same conditions to the office of college registrar,
-then vacant by the death of a Mr T. Griffith. According to Newton's
-diary, William Ellis proceeded M.A. in 1670, but his name does not
-appear in the list of graduati, unless indeed he is the Wm Ellis who
-received the degree _per lit. reg._ in 1671. The college account-books
-continued to be signed by Newton, and I have not noticed in them
-evidence that Ellis ever took any part in the audit. The Society's
-solicitors and attorneys have frequently acted as registrars, and it
-may be that Ellis was in partnership with Newton, and was for that
-reason made with him joint auditor and registrar.
-
-Samuel Newton died in 1718 in his ninetieth year. For the three years,
-1715, 1716, and 1717, the books were audited by John Newton,
-presumably his son or grandson, as his deputy. No doubt the
-arrangement was made in consequence of the failing health of the old
-gentleman whose signature in 1714 was very shaky. The appointment of a
-deputy was invalid under the statute, but it must have been made with
-the approval of Bentley, and perhaps of the seniority. At any rate
-John Newton conducted the audit, and signed the books as deputy
-auditor.
-
-Newton was succeeded in 1718 as auditor and registrar by Denys L'Isle.
-L'Isle had been a fellow-commoner of Trinity Hall, admitted in 1712,
-graduated LL.B. in 1715, who had gone down and in 1716 taken his name
-off the books. He was a vigorous and not too scrupulous barrister. He
-owed his appointment to Bentley, and he showed "extraordinary activity
-and zeal in promoting all" his benefactor's "wishes and interests" and
-represented him in some of his disputes. Whatever view may be taken of
-Bentley's character, no one can justify his conduct in regard to the
-college finances. A notable scandal occurred in the audit of 1722. In
-the accounts of that year large sums were charged to the College for
-works at the lodge and other sums spent by the master which had not
-been sanctioned by the Society. Undoubtedly the charges were illegal,
-but Bentley and L'Isle refused to allow the accounts to be examined by
-the seniority. In fact in this, as in other matters, L'Isle had no
-scruple in screening Bentley from the consequences of acts which were
-neither legal nor honourable.
-
-L'Isle died in 1727, and was succeeded as auditor, steward of the
-courts, and registrar by William Greaves. Greaves had in 1719 migrated
-to Clare, Cambridge, from Brasenose, Oxford; he graduated B.A. in
-1720, and in 1722 was elected at Clare to a fellowship which he held
-till 1742. He was a barrister and an able man: he too owed his office
-to Bentley, and acted as his counsel in many of his tortuous
-proceedings. Through Bentley's influence Greaves had in 1726 been made
-commissary of the University, an office which he held till 1778. The
-letters patent to the office of college auditor were made out for the
-term of his life, but a question having been raised as to whether this
-was statutable, he surrendered them, and the College granted new
-patents for the term of fifty years if he should live so long. I
-suppose he was duly admitted to the office, for probably an acute
-lawyer would have seen to this, but there is no record of the fact in
-our books.
-
-Greaves seems to have performed his duties as auditor in an
-honourable manner. After the audit of 1778, he surrendered his office
-at the close of fifty years' tenure of it: he then received a present
-of plate from the College, with their thanks for his long and faithful
-services. Six years later he made a donation to the Society of £100 to
-found an annual prize for an essay on the character of King William
-the Third. After nearly a century it was said that the essayists had
-exhausted the subject, and in 1882 the College got leave to substitute
-for it one connected with the history of the British Empire.
-
-Robert Graham, 1744-1836, a lawyer of note, succeeded Greaves. Graham
-had graduated as third wrangler in 1766, and in the following year had
-been elected to a fellowship. He held the office till after the audit
-of 1791. He was made a baron of the exchequer in 1799, and proved a
-singularly inefficient judge. He retired from the bench in 1827.
-
-Graham's chief distinction is said to have been his urbanity, and at
-the Bar it was currently believed that no one but his sempstress had
-power to ruffle his equanimity. He was somewhat pompous, and an
-adventure of his at the assizes at Newcastle afforded much amusement
-to his contemporaries. There, on one occasion just before charging the
-grand jury, he tumbled, unnoticed, into the river from the garden of
-the house where he lodged, but luckily was hauled out by some passing
-watermen. The rough remedies of the quay-side failed to restore
-consciousness, and the bystanders, supposing he was drowned, carted
-him to a dead-house, where he was stripped and laid out. The coroner's
-jury, summoned with unusual celerity, had viewed the body, and were
-considering their verdict when, to their surprise he showed signs of
-life and came to himself. His position was not altogether dignified,
-but realizing at once that it is always incumbent on a judge to move
-in state, he was by his directions fetched from the mortuary in the
-sheriff's carriage, with the trumpeters, and usual ceremonial.
-
-Of Graham's successor, Samuel Knight, 1755-1829, I know little. He had
-been admitted as a pensioner in 1772, became a fellow-commoner in
-1774, and graduated in the poll in 1776. Apparently he had no special
-qualifications for the post beyond being a pleasant member of society.
-He resigned in 1812, and died in 1829.
-
-After Knight's resignation, the post was offered to Nicholas Conyngham
-Tindal, 1776-1846, a lawyer of distinction. He had graduated in 1799
-as eighth wrangler, was a Chancellor's medalist, and had been elected
-to a fellowship in 1801, which, as he did not take orders, he had
-vacated in due course in accordance with the provisions of the
-Elizabethan statutes. The plan of offering the post to a
-distinguished past fellow now became the custom, and all the auditors
-hereafter mentioned were past fellows of the college.
-
-Tindal was one of the counsel for queen Caroline; he is celebrated in
-the history of the courts for having secured to a criminal client the
-right of wager of battle, which had long fallen into disuse but had
-not been abolished by statute. He was member for the University from
-1827 to 1829 in which year he was made chief justice of the Common
-Pleas; he held that office till his death in 1846. Though not
-specially successful as an advocate, he had a profound knowledge of
-law and was an excellent judge. His enormous dimensions are
-commemorated in a print in my possession with the inscription "Judges
-of A Size," representing him standing by Joshua Williams one of his
-colleagues on assize, who was very diminutive; probably this is an
-ancient joke.
-
-The next auditor was James Parke, 1782-1868, a lawyer of even greater
-distinction. He had graduated in 1803 as fifth wrangler, and had been
-Craven scholar, Browne's medalist and Chancellor's medalist. In 1804
-he had been elected to a fellowship. He was one of the counsel briefed
-against queen Caroline. He was made a judge in 1828, and of course
-then resigned the office of auditor, which he thus held for only three
-years.
-
-Parke had a profound knowledge of the common law, and admired, and was
-a rigid adherent of, ancient forms and customs. The fact was well
-known, and led to a curious scene, when on one occasion, while giving
-a judgment, he fainted. Cold water and smelling salts were applied
-without success, whereon a somewhat malicious colleague brought from
-an adjacent room an ancient volume of reports, black with the dust of
-ages, and banged it under the nostrils of the judge. It may have been
-a coincidence, but Parke at once revived, and in a few minutes was
-able to proceed with the business in hand.
-
-At one time when Parke was trying a criminal case the prisoner
-confessed his crime to his advocate, who thereupon (most improperly)
-acquainted the judge with the fact and asked his advice. Parke rebuked
-the barrister for informing him of the prisoner's guilt, but added
-that counsel was not the less bound to defend his client to the best
-of his ability. The case has been often cited, and states the practice
-of the bar; it being of course assumed that nothing is said or done
-for the defence which an honourable man might not say or do.
-
-Parke's subsequent career served to settle a constitutional question
-of great importance. In 1856 he was created Baron Wensleydale with a
-life peerage. It was decided that the power of the crown to create
-life peerages had been lost by disuse. He was then made a baron with
-the usual remainder in tail male.
-
-Parke was followed as auditor by Andrew Amos, 1791-1860, also a lawyer
-of distinction. He had graduated as fifth wrangler in 1813, and in
-1815 had been elected to a fellowship. He was appointed auditor in
-1829. He had a large arbitration practice, acted on the Criminal Law
-Commission, and was professor of English Law in London. In 1837 he was
-appointed legal member of the Indian Council, and on his departure for
-the East had to resign his office in the college. On the first vacancy
-after his return to England, he was, in 1848, elected Downing
-Professor of Laws in Cambridge, and occupied the chair until his
-death.
-
-Amos was succeeded by John George Shaw-Lefevre, 1797-1879.
-Shaw-Lefevre had been senior wrangler and first Smith's prize man in
-1818, and had been elected to a fellowship in the following year. Like
-his predecessors he was a barrister, but most of his time was taken up
-with duties connected with public departments. He settled the county
-divisions under the Reform Act of 1832, and was a member of numerous
-Commissions, notably those connected with compensation for the
-abolition of slavery, with the Poor Law Act, with the creation of
-South Australia, with ecclesiastical affairs, and with the Indian
-Civil Service: till 1875 he was busily engaged in public affairs. He
-stood unsuccessfully for parliament in the university contest of 1847.
-He resigned the auditorship after the audit of 1851. His tenure of the
-post is commemorated by his gift of the chandelier which hangs in the
-large combination room.
-
-The next auditor was the Hon. George Denman, 1819-1896, also a lawyer.
-Denman had been senior classic in 1842, and had been elected to a
-fellowship in the following year. He had always kept up his connection
-with the College, where he had numerous friends. He became auditor in
-1852. Like his predecessor he stood unsuccessfully for parliament as a
-representative of the University: this was in 1856. Subsequently he
-was appointed counsel to the University. He entered parliament in
-1859, and owing to press of work gave up his college office at the
-close of the audit of 1862. After a distinguished legal career he was
-raised in 1872 to the bench. He was a good scholar, had a fine
-presence, and to the end of his life was popular with all classes of
-Cambridge society.
-
-If I may trust my memory Denman told me that among his annual
-perquisites as auditor was a case of audit ale, and that on one
-occasion he gave it to Livingstone who he knew would appreciate it.
-The case travelled with the explorer through Africa, and as long as
-the ale lasted glasses of it were circulated, to the great
-satisfaction of the natives, whenever solemn treaties were ratified.
-
-The next holder of the office was George Valentine Yool, 1829-1897,
-a chancery barrister, who had been third wrangler and second Smith's
-prizeman in 1851, and had been elected to a fellowship in 1853. Yool
-took but little part in public affairs. He was appointed auditor in
-1863, and gave up the office at the end of 1869.
-
-After Yool's resignation the College reverted to its former practice,
-and appointed as auditor a resident, Augustus Arthur VanSittart.
-VanSittart had been bracketed senior classic in 1847, and had been
-elected to a fellowship in the following year. After once standing
-unsuccessfully for parliament, he devoted himself to literary work,
-and among other things collected and collated the various readings of
-the New Testament. His annual speech at the audit feast, wherein he
-gave a witty sketch of the more interesting developments of academic
-life during the preceding year, was one of the features of the time,
-and served somewhat the same purpose as the Tripos verses of earlier
-ages. He held the office till his death in the spring of 1882. He was
-wealthy, and a most generous benefactor of the Fitzwilliam Museum and
-other Cambridge institutions.
-
-On VanSittart's death the post was given to John Willis Clark,
-1833-1910. Clark had come up to Trinity in 1852, obtained a first
-class in the classical tripos, 1856, and was elected to a fellowship
-in 1858. He made his home in Cambridge, and his unceasing activities
-in zoological, library, and theatrical matters are chronicled in the
-local records. He completed the _Architectural History of the
-University_--a permanent and invaluable record of Cambridge
-history--which had been commenced by his uncle, and wrote on various
-library and antiquarian subjects. He held the registraryship of the
-University from 1891 to his death in 1910.
-
-Clark vacated the office of auditor in 1908, and since then the
-College has appointed to the post a professional accountant.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII.
-
-WREN'S DESIGNS FOR THE COLLEGE LIBRARY.
-
-
-In 1914 the College obtained an interesting series of photographs of
-Wren's original drawings and plans for our library in Nevile's Court.
-They will well repay inspection by those who are interested in our
-history or in architecture.
-
-The present library is the third building assigned by Trinity for the
-purpose. During the first half-century of its existence the Society
-used the library[26] of King's Hall, a good first-floor room, some
-twenty feet long by ten feet broad, which had been built in 1416-21
-near the north-west corner of the cloister court of that House. This
-room was connected with the old oratory of King's Hall by a gallery
-over the west cloister.
-
-Soon after the foundation of Trinity the provision of a larger library
-was contemplated, and in the order (about providing building materials
-for the chapel) of queen Elizabeth of 1560, it is said that its
-erection had been already begun. In fact however it was then only
-under discussion.
-
-[Illustration: Wren's Second Design for the College Library.
-Exterior.]
-
-[Illustration: Wren's First Design for the College Library. Exterior.]
-
-[Illustration: Wren's First Design for the College Library. Interior.]
-
-[Illustration: Wren's Design for a Senate House.]
-
-Our predecessors, in their arrangements for the "reconcination" or
-rebuilding of the Great Court, naturally attached great
-importance to not interfering with King Edward's Tower which had long
-been the chief entrance to King's Hall and then stood near the present
-sundial. A suggested way of working this Tower into the scheme of the
-court is shown on the plan which hangs on the staircase leading to the
-library annexe; in this, a block one hundred feet long and thirty-four
-feet broad, was to be built over an open colonnade running eastwards
-from the Tower and ending in front of and a few yards from the Great
-Gate. The first floor of this block might have been used for the new
-library; or alternatively it might have been used for chambers, and
-the new library built elsewhere, for instance, as was suggested, on
-the site of the range of chambers which now stretches from the chapel
-to the turret staircase adjoining the lodge.
-
-Neither of these proposals was then adopted, and our second library
-was not erected till Nevile, between 1594 and 1600, took the matter in
-hand. He provided for it a room seventy-five feet long and thirty feet
-broad on the second floor of the range connecting the Clock Tower and
-the lodge; it has since been converted into chambers.
-
-Less than a century after Nevile's library was finished, the Society
-again found it necessary to provide more book accommodation, and the
-result is the impressive and excellently designed building which
-stands on the west side of Nevile's Court. According to tradition, its
-erection, commenced in February 1676, was due to Barrow, then master
-of the College, who in the previous year had pressed the other heads
-of Houses to provide a room worthy of the University for its meetings,
-and urged that it should be of the best. Such schemes are expensive
-and cannot be effected without public spirit. Caution, it is said,
-carried the day, whereon Barrow, piqued at this faint-heartedness,
-declared that he would go to Trinity, "lay out the foundations of a
-building to enlarge his back court, and close it with a stately
-library, which should be more magnificent and costly than what he had
-proposed.... And he was as good as his word, for that very afternoon
-he ... staked out the very foundation upon which the building now
-stands."
-
-The story may be substantially true, for the long-cherished idea of
-building a university theatre and library was then in the hands of a
-syndicate: on the other hand the extant speech of Barrow in which he
-put forward his policy was not delivered till the Easter term 1676,
-and Wren's designs for such a building are referred to the year 1678
-and indicate that the scheme had not been then abandoned. But whether
-the anecdote be true or not, we may take it that the erection of our
-library was due to Barrow's initiative, and that he personally raised
-a considerable sum towards its cost.
-
-Sir Christopher Wren, a warm personal friend of Barrow, was selected
-as the architect, and placed his services at the disposal of the
-College without remuneration. His original drawings are included in a
-collection of his designs preserved at All Souls' College, Oxford,
-and by the kindness of that Society we have been allowed to take
-photographs of the plans which concern us. These relate to two plans
-for our library and one for a university commencement-house. The two
-plans for Trinity were made not later than 1675; they may have been
-submitted as alternatives, but there is a tradition that the second
-design was prepared only after the first had been rejected.
-
-Nevile's Court, as now arranged, contains three staircases on each of
-its sides, is closed on the east by the hall and small combination
-room block, and on the west by the library. In 1675 only two of the
-staircases on each side had been built, and the western ends of these
-were connected by a blank wall pierced in the middle by a gate, which
-is believed to have been later removed, stone by stone, and finally
-placed as the entrance to the College at the bottom of Trinity lane,
-where it now stands. Beyond this wall and between it and the river was
-the college tennis court. The land between Nevile's Court and the
-river was selected as the site of the library.
-
-Wren's first design shows a double cylindrical shell about sixty-five
-feet across inside and ninety feet high, surmounted by a dome and
-entered through a six-columned Ionic portico facing Nevile's Court. On
-the ground floor was a lobby round which were stone seats. Above this
-the inside of the inner cylindrical shell was lined with bookshelves,
-and for convenience of approach there were three galleries. The room
-was lighted by windows in the dome and a superimposed lantern. The
-east side of the portico was half-way between the western ends of the
-court, and these ends were connected with the body of the library by
-low curved walls surmounted by iron rails. This building is described
-as "a very beautiful and most commodious model," but it strikes the
-ordinary layman as poor in design, and I do not think that all Wren's
-genius could have made it other than unsatisfactory. Why it was
-rejected we do not know, but few will doubt that the decision was
-wise.
-
-Wren's second or alternative design, which was adopted, shows a lofty
-oblong room about one hundred and fifty feet long by thirty-eight feet
-broad supported on a colonnade. Several of his drawings for this were
-engraved for the _Architectural History of Cambridge_ by Willis and
-Clark, but the photographic reproductions of the originals--some with
-Wren's notes attached--which are now available have an interest of
-their own. A careful study will show details which were subsequently
-modified. The present library was placed to the west of the court as
-then built, and the rows of chambers on each side were extended to
-meet it. It is well-known that the shelves, cases, benches, tables,
-and book-rests now used were designed by Wren, and his drawings for
-them are reproduced in this series of photographs. The removal of all
-the bookcases except those fixed against the walls would enable us to
-judge the appearance intended by Wren. How fine the effect must have
-been, may be gathered from the plate in Le Keux's _Memorials_ or the
-engraving in the _University Almanack_ of 1852.
-
-Among Wren's plans is also one for "a Theatre or Commencement-House
-with a Library annexed, according to an Intention for the University
-of Cambridge, about the year 1678, but not executed." Whether this
-represents a sketch of the general plan which it is said that Barrow
-had suggested to the heads of Houses in 1675 it is impossible to say.
-The erection of a building on these lines might have been costly, but
-the result would have been a valuable addition to the architecture of
-Cambridge.
-
-I published in the _Trinity Magazine_ in 1914 the elevations of our
-library according to Wren's two plans and of his suggested
-Commencement or Senate House. I reprint these here (see above,
-pp. 145-148), but add nothing more as it is intended shortly to
-reproduce in book-form various drawings on the subject made by Wren.
-
-
-[Footnote 26: There was an earlier library in King's Hall but we do
-not know where it was situated.]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX.
-
-A CHRISTMAS JOURNEY IN 1319.
-
-
-In the Record Office in London are preserved some money accounts[27]
-concerned with a visit of the scholars of King's Hall to York at
-Christmas in the year 13 Edward II, that is, in 1319. The following
-analysis gives the route followed by one section of the party and the
-expenses of the journey: it is a valuable record of the method and
-cost of travelling in medieval times.
-
-By way of preamble, I may say that the origin of King's Hall is to be
-found in the establishment at Cambridge, in 1317, by Edward II, of a
-body of Scholars or King's Children; that they were regarded as part
-of the royal household; and that the nominations to the office of
-warden and to scholarships were reserved to the king. King's Hall
-was dissolved in 1546, and its buildings and property assigned by
-Henry VIII to Trinity College.
-
-Early in December 1319, the warden and scholars were ordered to spend
-the coming Christmas with the court, then at York, and the sheriff of
-Cambridgeshire was directed to provide for their journey. During the
-preceding Michaelmas term thirty-three members of the House had been
-in residence, and all of them went to York.
-
-The names of the members of the House in 1319 are immaterial to our
-story, but I venture to give them, for these students lived here
-nearly six centuries ago, and doubtless had hopes, plans, and
-ambitions at bottom much the same as we have. They were, in order of
-seniority, John de Bagshot the warden, Nicholas de Durnford, Nicholas
-de Rome, David de Winchester, William Pour, Richard Pour, Nicholas
-Pour, John de Aston, John de Torterold, James de Torterold, Robert
-de Immeworth, Thomas de Windsor, Walter de Nottingham, Roger Parker,
-John de Kelsey, John de Hull, Edward de Kingston, Hugh de Sutton,
-Philip de London, John de Salisbury, Richard de Salisbury, Robert
-de Beverley, John Fort, Ralph de Gretford, Henry de Gretford, Nicholas
-Parker, Nicholas Pull, Richard de Berwick, Andrew Rosekin, Thomas
-Griffon, John Griffon, William Draghswerd, and John de Woodstock. It
-will be noticed that some of the students are designated by surnames
-which were already coming into use and some by place names: the latter
-show from what a wide area the scholars were drawn.
-
-For the purpose of travelling the Society was divided into two
-sections, both of which started from Cambridge on Thursday[28],
-20 December. One party, comprising the warden, John de Bagshot, and
-six of the scholars, went on horseback, and arrived at York on
-Christmas eve. Their journey thus occupied five days and they covered
-about thirty-five miles a day; of it we have no particulars, save that
-the warden paid £1. 3s. 4d. for the hire in Cambridge of seven
-hackneys, and was allowed £1. 9s. 2d. for the other expenses, namely
-10d. a day for each member of the party. The remaining twenty-six
-scholars travelled under the care of one of their number, John
-de Aston, and arrived at York on 28 December. They took with them
-seven and a half lengths of cloth with the furs thereto belonging, and
-four grooms, but whether the grooms went the whole way is not clear.
-It is with this nine days' journey that I here deal.
-
-The cloth and furs which had been purchased on behalf of the crown
-from merchants at Bury were valuable. The former was red in colour
-(_de blodes mixto_) and had cost £21. 2s. 6d.: the latter comprised
-twenty-one lamb skins, bought for £2. 19s. 6d. and six budge skins,
-bought for £1. The carriage of these goods must have been a serious
-hindrance to rapid travelling.
-
-The first two days, Thursday and Friday, 20 and 21 December, were
-occupied in the journey from Cambridge to Spalding. This was made in
-two hired boats (with the services of six men), for which the charge
-was 5s. On 20 December, the travellers paid 2d. for porterage of their
-goods to the boats at Cambridge, 1s. 7d. for bread, 2s. for beer, 1s.
-for herrings, 1s. 4d. for hard fish and codlings, and 4d. for fuel. On
-21 December they paid 1s. 5d. for bread, 2s. 2d. for beer, 1s. 7d. for
-herrings and other fish, 3d. for cheese, 2d. for porterage from the
-boats at Spalding, 5½d. for fuel and candles, and 8d. for beds at
-Spalding.
-
-On Saturday, 22 December, they travelled to Boston. On this day, they
-paid 2s. for hiring two carts for carrying the cloth and fourteen of
-the scholars, and 3s. for twelve hackneys for the rest of the party.
-They also spent 1s. 4d. for bread, 1s. 11d. for beer, 2s. 3d. for
-herrings and other fish, 5d. for fuel and candles, and 8d. for beds
-at Boston.
-
-The next two days, Sunday and Monday, 23 and 24 December, were
-occupied in the journey to Lincoln which was performed in a single
-large boat. On 23 December, they paid 5s. for the hire of this boat,
-4d. for straw to spread on it, 2d. for porterage to the boat, 1s. 6d.
-for bread, 2s. 7d. for beer, 2s. 4d. for meat, 1s. 6¾d. for eight
-hens, and 6d. for fuel. On 24 December, they paid 1s. 2d. for bread,
-2s. for beer, 2s. 1d. for herrings and other fish, 9d. for eels, 3d.
-for porterage from the boat at Lincoln, 6½d. for fuel and candles, and
-8d. for beds at Lincoln.
-
-Tuesday, being Christmas Day, was spent quietly at Lincoln. Their
-expenses for the day were 1s. 4d. for bread, 2s. 1d. for beer, 2s. 3d.
-for meat, 1s. 1¼d. for five hens, 7½d. for candles and fuel, and 8d.
-for beds.
-
-On Wednesday, 26 December, the party travelled to Torksey, making the
-journey in two boats hired at Lincoln. On this day, they paid 2s. 8d.
-for the hire of the boats, 3d. for porterage to the boats, 1s. 8d. for
-bread, 2s. 3d. for beer, 2s. 1d. for meat, 7d. for eggs, 4d. for fuel
-and candles, and 8d. for beds at Torksey.
-
-The next two days, Thursday and Friday, 27 and 28 December, were
-occupied in the journey from Torksey to York, which was made in a
-large boat hired at Torksey. On 27 December, they paid 6s. for the
-hire of this boat, 2d. for porterage to the boat at Torksey, 1s. 7d.
-for bread, 2s. 6d. for beer, 1s. 10d. for meat. On 28 December, they
-paid 1s. for bread, 1s. 5d. for beer, 1s. 4d. for herrings and other
-fish, and 2d. for porterage of their goods at York.
-
-The total cost of the journey came to £4. 5s. 8½d., and this was
-repaid to the warden from the royal exchequer on 31 December. On the
-opposite page is a summary of the daily expenditure described above.
-
- |Dec. |Dec. |Dec. |Dec. |Dec. |Dec. |Dec. |Dec. |Dec.
- | 20.| 21.| 22.| 23.| 24.| 25.| 26.| 27.| 28.
- |s. d.|s. d. |s. d.|s. d. |s. d. |s. d. |s. d.|s. d.|s. d.
- Hire of Boats | 5 0| ... | ... | 5 0 | ... | ... | 2 8| 6 0| ...
- Straw | ... | ... | ... | 4 | ... | ... | ... | ... | ...
- Porterage | 2| 2 | ... | 2 | 3 | ... | 3| 2| 2
- Hire of Carts | ... | ... | 2 0| ... | ... | ... | ... | ... | ...
- Hire of Hackneys| ... | ... | 3 0| ... | ... | ... | ... | ... | ...
- Bread | 1 7| 1 5 | 1 4| 1 6 | 1 2 | 1 4 | 1 8| 1 7| 1 0
- Beer | 2 0| 2 2 | 1 11| 2 7 | 2 0 | 2 1 | 2 3| 2 6| 1 5
- Hard Fish, etc. | 1 4| ... | ... | ... | ... | ... | ... | ... | ...
- Herrings, etc. | 1 0| 1 7 | 2 3| ... | 2 1 | ... | ... | ... | 1 4
- Eels | ... | ... | ... | ... | 9 | ... | ... | ... | ...
- Meat | ... | ... | ... | 2 4 | ... | 2 3 | 2 1| 1 10| ...
- Hens | ... | ... | ... | 1 6¾| ... | 1 1¼| ... | ... | ...
- Eggs | ... | ... | ... | ... | ... | ... | 7| ... | ...
- Cheese | ... | 3 | ... | ... | ... | ... | ... | ... | ...
- Fuel and Candles| 4| 5½| 5| 6 | 6½| 7½| 4| ... | ...
- Beds | ... | 8 | 8| ... | 8 | 8 | 8| ... | ...
- |-----|------|-----|------|------|------|-----|-----|-----
- |11 5| 6 8½|11 7|13 11¾| 7 5½| 8 0¾|10 6|12 1| 3 11
-
-There are no records of the expenses of the Society during the time
-the members were at York; but presumably while there, they were
-treated as members of the royal household. Their visit, however, was
-not devoid of incident since a warrant was issued against one of them,
-Robert de Beverley, for having joined with the prior of the preaching
-friars of Pontefract in an assault on a certain William Hardy: the
-student was left behind at York, and there disappears from our
-history. Two other members of the House, Edward de Kingston and David
-de Winchester, were also left in the city, of whom probably at least
-one was concerned in this disturbance. One new member, Warin Trot, was
-admitted at York. These changes reduced the numbers to thirty-one. Of
-these thirty-one members, twenty-one, under the guidance of John
-de Aston, came back to Cambridge on the festival of St Fabian and
-St Sebastian (_i.e._ 20 January), while the warden and the remaining
-nine scholars, among whom Trot was included, arrived on 9 February,
-and from these dates their stipends in Cambridge during the Lent Term,
-1320, were reckoned.
-
-Why the king summoned the members of the House to York at so
-considerable cost I cannot say, but I think the detailed statement of
-how most of them travelled and their expenses on the journey are
-interesting.
-
-
-[Footnote 27: _Exchequer Accounts_, 552/10.]
-
-[Footnote 28: In my original paper the days of the week were given
-incorrectly.]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X.
-
-AN OUTLINE OF THE COLLEGE STORY[29].
-
-
-I have been asked to take you round Trinity College to-morrow, and by
-way of preface to say to-night something about its history. The first
-of these tasks, to anyone who lives here, is not difficult, but it is
-far from easy to give, in forty minutes, a sketch of a history
-covering centuries of academic life and involving references to the
-lives of many distinguished scholars and men of affairs. If I confined
-myself to an account of the buildings the problem would be simpler,
-but though they must form the chief topic of our talk to-morrow, I
-would prefer to-day to say something about the growth of the College.
-On these lines then I proceed, though necessarily in an incomplete
-way, to state the outline of our story.
-
-2. Trinity College was founded in 1546, just about half-way back in
-the history of the University. Of those pre-Trinity days I will only
-say that the University arose about the end of the twelfth century,
-and that it was nearly a hundred years after its establishment before
-the first college was founded. Colleges were erected for the benefit
-of selected scholars who were maintained at the expense of the
-foundation, and throughout the middle ages, most of the students lived
-in Private Hostels. In Tudor times undergraduates who paid their own
-expenses were admitted to colleges, and finally, every student was
-required to be a member of one of these Houses: the peculiar
-collegiate character of Oxford and Cambridge dates from this change.
-I need hardly add that women were not (and are not) admissible as
-members of the University, and that in former days teachers and
-students alike were unmarried.
-
-3. Towards the close of his reign, Henry VIII determined to found a
-college at Cambridge which should promote his views on religion and
-the new learning. He decided to use for the purpose the buildings and
-land occupied or owned by two of the chief medieval colleges, King's
-Hall and Michael-House. Accordingly, under parliamentary powers, he
-compelled those Societies to surrender to him their charters and
-possessions, purchased such small parts of our present Great Court as
-did not belong to them, and gave all this property to his new college
-together with large revenues from religious houses which he had
-recently dissolved. The proceedings were high-handed, but we may say
-that the result justified him. It is believed that, during these
-proceedings, the university careers of a few of the students, at any
-rate of King's Hall, were not interrupted, and that thus our academic
-life runs without a break from the days of Edward II to the present
-time. Most of the buildings of Michael-House have now disappeared, but
-our connection with King's Hall is still evident through the remains
-of its Cloister Court, our Great Gate which bears an inscription
-commemorating the permanent establishment of King's Hall by
-Edward III, and our Clock Tower on which is a statue of that monarch.
-To this group of buildings we must first direct attention to-morrow.
-
-4. Trinity was far larger than the colleges to whose buildings and
-property it succeeded. Of course it has had ups and downs in its
-career, but it has generally occupied and still occupies a predominant
-position in the University. Thus in 1564, its residents numbered three
-hundred and six out of a total of one thousand two hundred and
-sixty-seven in the University, while last October [1905], it had five
-hundred and sixty-eight undergraduates out of a total of two thousand
-eight hundred and thirty-five in the University, and two hundred
-resident graduates out of one thousand and five in the University: we
-now confine our normal entry to under two hundred a year, and as long
-as this is so, our numbers cannot exceed a certain limit which we
-have long reached, so, as the University grows, the percentage of
-students on our boards decreases. The College has always recognized
-that it was its duty to be a centre of learning as well as one of
-higher education, and thanks to its traditions and the large number of
-resident fellows, it has been able to fulfil this double duty.
-
-5. For the first few years after its foundation, Trinity was occupied
-in settling the many problems which arise in a new foundation. As far
-as accommodation went, the buildings of King's Hall and Michael-House
-were connected, and sufficed for immediate needs. Naturally the
-protestant character of the foundation given by Henry was emphasized
-by the advisers of Edward VI, the altar in the chapel being removed
-and a communion table set up in Huguenot fashion in the middle of the
-building. Queen Mary increased the foundation, and took a warm
-interest in its affairs; of course the Roman service was then
-restored. Under Elizabeth the Anglican services were resumed, and she
-completed the erection of the present chapel which had been begun by
-her sister: it stands to-day externally much in its original form,
-though the interior scheme of decoration is different. We may leave
-till to-morrow the description of it and college doings connected
-therewith. This first chapter of our history ends in 1560 when the
-constitution of the College was definitely established in a form
-which remained practically unaltered till 1861.
-
-6. The next decade was critical. Many of those who had adopted the
-reformed religion desired further changes on presbyterian lines, and
-Cambridge, which had taken so prominent a part in the reformation, was
-their chief intellectual stronghold. Their leader was Cartwright, a
-fellow of Trinity, and their chief opponent was Whitgift, the master
-of the College: thus a contest of national importance was mixed up
-with college politics and carried on partly within the college walls.
-Whitgift's powers as master were large, and he strained them to the
-utmost to remove from the House those who opposed him; times, however,
-were revolutionary and public opinion condoned and even approved his
-actions. At any rate victory remained with him and his party in the
-College, the University, and the State, and the position of the Church
-of England between Rome and Geneva is that for which he fought.
-
-7. Whitgift acted as tutor to some of the students, among whom were
-Francis Bacon and his brother Anthony: you will see the portrait of
-the former (as also that of Whitgift) to-morrow, together with those
-of his contemporaries, Edward Coke subsequently the great lawyer, and
-Robert Devereux earl of Essex the ill-fated favourite of Elizabeth.
-By a happy accident some of Whitgift's tutorial ledgers have been
-preserved, and we have in them details of the expenditure of his
-pupils, which, combined with information from other sources, enables
-us to give a fairly complete account of their daily work, prayers,
-meals, and amusements[30]. A usual age for commencing residence was
-fifteen or sixteen, and it would seem that students then (though of
-course subject in many things to reasonable restraints) were allowed
-that liberty of action which in my opinion is, even though sometimes
-misused, an essential feature of university education as opposed to
-the control of the pupil's doings in every hour of the day which is
-common in many schools. In 1577 Whitgift accepted a bishopric: an
-eloquent farewell sermon preached in College from 2 Corinthians,
-chapter 13, verse 2, revealed sincere affection for the place and
-moved his audience, "insomuch that there were scarce any drie eyes to
-be found amongst the whole number." He left the House prosperous and
-of high repute.
-
-8. In 1593 Nevile was appointed master, and took in hand the needed
-reconstruction of the buildings. It had from the first been
-recognized that the site offered opportunities for the erection of
-buildings worthy of the reputation of the College, and he realized how
-much the effect would depend on making the court large, and above all
-on keeping the chamber frontage only two storeys high with attics
-above. The Great Court as it stands to-day is his creation; the only
-obvious defect in it is the ugly block built in the south-west corner
-in 1770 to replace Nevile's set of combination rooms which had an
-elevation agreeing generally with that of the master's lodge, but
-enriched by a large projecting trefoil oriel. The hall, kitchens,
-combination rooms, and lodge form another group of buildings to which
-we must pay attention to-morrow: the first two of these are in the
-form left by Nevile. The blazoned glass in the hall and our collection
-of pictures in these rooms, especially the portraits of Henry VIII,
-Mary, and Elizabeth, all of whom have played an important part in our
-history, will well repay your study. Nevile also built, at his own
-cost, part of the court situated on the west side of the hall. This
-too we shall see to-morrow on our way to the library: in his day, the
-court was closed on the river side by a low wall, in the middle of
-which stood the stone gateway now used as the entrance to the College
-from Trinity Lane, and beyond this wall were the tennis courts and
-paddocks.
-
-9. The prince of Wales, afterwards Charles I, came to the College to
-inspect these alterations, and he was followed later by James I. These
-visits are commemorated by the statues of James, his wife, and Charles
-placed on the west side of the Great Gate. The king was so pleased
-with his entertainment that he repeated his visit on three subsequent
-occasions. Of Nevile, one of his contemporaries wrote, "He never had
-his like for a splendid courteous and bounteous gentleman," and the
-College still gratefully honours his memory. He was trusted and
-esteemed by Elizabeth, and when dying she selected him to carry to
-Scotland the fateful letter in which she nominated James I to succeed
-her. If you go into the dining room of the lodge you will see Nevile's
-portrait, hung in the place of honour over the mantelpiece,
-representing him as holding this letter in one hand.
-
-10. You must not think that under Nevile's rule the energies of the
-College were wholly directed to material ends. In a memorandum of 1607
-on the use of college emoluments for students, he was able to say that
-of the higher church officials of the day, eleven deans, seven
-bishops, and the two archbishops, were drawn from Trinity. In academic
-distinctions, in legal appointments, and in statesmanship its records
-were equally satisfactory: so the College was worthily maintaining its
-tradition of service in church and state. Under his immediate
-successors the College entered on a period of steady prosperity. In
-the next generation, however, the shadows of the civil disturbances of
-the seventeenth century began to fall; theological disputes increased,
-scholarship in other subjects received but scanty attention, and a
-general slackness in intellectual pursuits was visible, though it is
-fair to say that among the students of the time were three or four who
-later deservedly acquired reputation as poets. Among the latter I
-particularize George Herbert, Abraham Cowley, and Andrew Marvell;
-Dryden entered a few years later.
-
-11. On the outbreak of civil war the town was occupied by the
-parliamentary forces, troops were quartered in the College, and a good
-deal of damage done to the fabric. In 1644 a large number of the
-fellows were expelled, their places being filled by zealots of but
-slight education. It may be put to the credit of a few who were left,
-notably Duport and Ray, that in this time of stress they devoted
-themselves to maintaining the standard of scholarship. On the
-restoration such of the expelled fellows as were still alive and
-unmarried resumed office. They decided that there should be no
-retaliations, and that all those nominated to fellowships under the
-commonwealth should be allowed to remain, provided only they did not
-preach in the chapel unless they were members of the Church of
-England: that was a noble reply to the wrongs suffered.
-
-12. The College took pride in resuming at once its position in the
-world of letters and science, and the following years are famous for
-the work of Pearson and Barrow, two great divines of the time, and
-above all of Isaac Newton. The influence of the last-named philosopher
-on the studies and intellectual life of Cambridge was far reaching.
-His discoveries in pure mathematics, mechanics, physics, and dynamical
-astronomy were of the utmost importance, and made Cambridge the centre
-of mathematical work in England. I will show you to-morrow the rooms
-he occupied and in which he wrote his famous _Principia_. The
-staircase on which these rooms are situated has had other
-distinguished occupants: the rooms on the ground floor on the
-right-hand side on entering it were occupied by Thackeray, and
-subsequently by the late astronomer-royal; those on the opposite side
-by Macaulay; the rooms on the first floor next the gate which once had
-been occupied by Isaac Newton, were used later by Lightfoot, the
-theologian, and Jebb, the Greek scholar; and those on the opposite
-side by Sir James Frazer, who has done so much to investigate the
-beliefs of primitive man. This is an interesting group of men, but in
-fact there are few rooms in College which have not been inhabited at
-some time by those who have made their names famous.
-
-13. Barrow held the mastership from 1673 to 1677. On his initiative
-the College erected, on the west side of Nevile's Court, the
-magnificent library which is now stored with literary treasures. This
-is another building to which we must pay attention to-morrow, and with
-it we may associate the adjoining chambers. From the close of the
-seventeenth century onwards we can describe life in College,
-especially among undergraduates, in considerable detail. The usual age
-of entry had risen to seventeen or eighteen. To the dons the College
-offered a comfortable home until an opportunity occurred of taking a
-college living, and it must be admitted that some were beginning to be
-content to consider it as nothing more. Materials for the history of
-the time and the following century have been published by Christopher
-Wordsworth.
-
-14. Towards the close of the seventeenth century, the number of
-entries fell; this was attributed, and no doubt correctly, to the rise
-to office in College of those fellows appointed by mandatory letters
-from James II--he having filled every fellowship that became vacant
-during his reign. The history of the Society during the early years of
-the eighteenth century may be dismissed with the briefest notice, for
-college energies were largely occupied by domestic disputes, and the
-number of residents still further decreased: these misfortunes were
-mainly due to the scandals inseparably associated with the name of
-Bentley. Bentley held the mastership from 1700 to 1742: his critical
-work can hardly be over-praised, but his career here was marked by
-malversations and many dishonourable transactions. The only scholars
-of the time I need mention are Cotes and Robert Smith who were
-mathematicians of repute. The latter of these scholars, when master,
-did something to restore orderly government and discipline.
-
-15. It was not until near the close of the century that the College
-recovered from the taint of Bentley's misrule, and scholarship again
-flourished within our walls: among the residents of the time was
-Porson, whose wit and conversation must have been delightful features
-of the High Table of his day--he lived in K 5, Great Court.
-Mathematics now afforded the chief avenue to distinction, but some
-acquaintance with classics and moral philosophy was also obligatory.
-This period is famous for the number of eminent judges educated in the
-College: the strict training in formal logic and geometry required for
-success in the mathematical tripos being especially favourable to
-legal work. Out of eleven such Trinity judges of the time the names
-of Tindal, Pollock, Maule, Lyndhurst, Wensleydale, and Cranworth are
-still remembered. Socially, manners were generally coarser than at any
-time during the previous century or than later; though the revival of
-religion under the influence of Simeon did something to ameliorate
-matters.
-
-16. Unlike its predecessor the nineteenth century was one of unbroken
-progress in college achievements and reputation. Near its commencement
-two internal changes of some importance were introduced in the
-imposition of an entrance examination test and of a limit to the
-number of those admitted. None the less our numbers increased, and in
-1823-25, another court (the New Court) was built on the south side of
-that erected by Nevile. At this time, conspicuous among the resident
-fellows were Sedgwick the geologist, Peacock the mathematician,
-Scholefield, Hare, and Thirlwall, Macaulay the historian, and Airy the
-astronomer: it would be difficult to exaggerate their influence on the
-intellectual life of the College and University. The undergraduate
-society a few years later also numbered a group of men of exceptional
-power, notably Trench afterwards archbishop of Dublin, Thackeray,
-Fitzgerald, Monckton Milnes (Lord Houghton), Spedding, Arthur Hallam,
-Kinglake the historian, the three Tennysons (Alfred, Charles, and
-Frederick), and Thompson; while a little later came Alford,
-Lushington, Grote, Tom Taylor, Burnand, and Francis Galton. Materials
-left by these men, and books like J.M.F. Wright's _Alma Mater_,
-C.A. Bristed's _Five years in an English University_, Leslie Stephen's
-_Sketches from Cambridge by a Don_, and W. Everett's _On the Cam_,
-give us full information of college life during the middle of the
-century. In connection with the social life of the early half of the
-nineteenth century I should note that athletic clubs now began to be
-formed--the First Trinity Boat Club, constituted in 1825, being the
-earliest. These societies led to the formulation of definite rules for
-various forms of sport, and to much more attention being paid to
-out-door games. The subsequent growth of organized recreations of this
-kind, increasingly developed in recent years, will strike the future
-historian as one of the outstanding features of the last century.
-
-17. In 1840 Whewell was appointed master. He was of commanding
-abilities and exercised extraordinary influence: to him more than to
-any other single individual is due that development of scientific
-studies at Cambridge which has been so marked in the recent history of
-the University. Under him, the prince of Wales, afterwards Edward VII,
-was entered at the College, and later showed his appreciation of its
-influence by sending his eldest son, the duke of Clarence, here.
-Whewell erected at his own cost the two courts on the east side of
-Trinity Street, the rents being used to encourage the study of
-International Law in the University. During his mastership the old
-order began to crumble, and new ideals of education, study, and
-research arose. The Elizabethan statutes were replaced by transitional
-statutes in 1844 and 1861, and these in turn were replaced by others
-in 1882, under which the College is now governed.
-
-18. Whewell died in 1866, and was succeeded as master by Thompson, and
-he in 1886 by Butler. With their masterships we come to the affairs of
-to-day. The 1882 statutes opened a new chapter in our history;
-restrictions on the marriage of fellows were removed, and successful
-teachers thus encouraged to remain in residence; incidentally, this
-created a new social atmosphere. In this and other ways the conditions
-of academic life were considerably changed. We need not, however, shun
-a comparison with older times: if you want to see how freely Trinity
-during the late Victorian period spent itself in the public service
-look down any list of judges, bishops, statesmen, colonial governors,
-and civil servants of the time, and in all you will find many Trinity
-men conspicuous. Confining ourselves strictly to academic work in
-Cambridge and to those who have now [1906] passed away, I may mention
-the names of Clerk Maxwell in physics, of Cayley in mathematics, of
-Munro and Jebb in classics, of Thompson in Greek philosophy, of
-Sidgwick in ethics, and of Westcott, Lightfoot, and Hort in theology:
-all of these were fellows of the College, and professors in the
-University.
-
-19. This is a bare summary of a complex story. Of the spirit that
-actuates the College, of all that makes it a living Society, I have
-said little. In truth, these are incapable of analysis. The charm that
-the place perennially exercises on those who, generation after
-generation, make it their home, the affection it inspires, are
-intangible: they exist, there are but few members of the House who
-have not felt them, and perhaps that is all I need say on this aspect
-of our history.
-
-
-[Footnote 29: A paper read to a party of north-country students
-visiting the College in 1906.]
-
-[Footnote 30: On some of the items in Whitgift's tutorial ledgers, see
-above, chapter ii, pp. 36-39: the bills are printed at length in
-volumes 32 and 33 of the _British Magazine_, 1847, 1848. Other
-information on the daily life of students of the time is given in the
-statutes of 1560. An interesting list of the outfit and furniture in
-the rooms of a fellow-commoner in 1577 was printed by C.H. Cooper,
-_Annals of Cambridge_, vol. II, pp. 352-356.]
-
-
-
-
-PART II.
-
-=Concerning the University.=
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI.
-
-THE BEGINNINGS OF THE MEDIEVAL UNIVERSITY.
-
-
-The problems connected with the beginnings of the University of
-Cambridge and the conditions of life in its early days have always
-interested me. Much is uncertain and open to various readings[31], but
-the following is a summary of the story, as it appears to me.
-
-First, as to the site of the University. About the end of the eleventh
-century, Cambridge was little more than a village concentrated round
-St Peter's church, having separate hamlets in its vicinity, one near
-St Benet's church and the other at Newnham: at that time there was
-nothing to suggest the likelihood of its being chosen by students as
-a place where they might live and work in security. During the next
-century, however, it became of considerable importance. This was due
-to several causes. The chief of these were the castle erected in it
-by William the Conqueror to overawe the fen-men; its geographical
-location which gave it command of the river passage by which most of
-the traffic between the midlands and the counties of Norfolk and
-Suffolk went; its position as a port of entry for small sea-going
-vessels coming from Lynn, of which a relic still survives in a bonded
-warehouse on the banks of the Cam; its vicinity to Sturbridge common
-on which came to be held one of the chief annual fairs in the kingdom;
-and lastly the establishment here of the large monastic Houses of the
-Augustin Canons, of the Brethren of St John's Hospital, and of the
-Nuns of St Rhadegund: it would seem also that it became[32], maybe
-under the authority of the secular canons of St Giles, the seat of a
-grammar-school or schools. By 1200 the town had spread from castle-end
-to where Christ's, Peterhouse, and Queens' now stand, and along the
-east side of the river there were numerous small wharves, locally
-known as hythes. The writs of Henry I and Henry II and the charter of
-John bear witness to its importance in their reigns, but later this
-tended to diminish relatively to other towns.
-
-The Universities of Cambridge and Oxford were initiated near the end
-of the twelfth century, both arising in towns free from disorder and
-where accommodation for students was obtainable. It was a time when
-men of scholarly tastes, especially those resident in religious
-houses, were conscious of their ignorance of recent developments in
-theology as set out by Peter Lombard and in canon law, and were keen
-to study these subjects and scholastic logic. Schools to meet these
-needs arose in Cambridge and Oxford and became permanent. Like centres
-of instruction were established in other places, but for one reason or
-another did not survive long as degree-granting corporations.
-
-It is not known whether the University of Cambridge began with a few
-teachers taking up their residence in the town, giving instruction,
-and attracting students and other teachers, or whether it started
-ready-made by a migration of a body of discontented teachers and
-students from some existing school. I believe the former view to be
-correct. If so, we may reasonably assume that a considerable
-proportion of the earliest adult students were previously living in
-monastic houses here or in the neighbouring fenland monasteries at
-Ely, Peterborough, or Croyland. It has been suggested that at first
-the lectures were given in the local grammar-schools: this is
-probable, and would fit in with the secular organization of the
-University and the fact that boys learning Latin grammar (glomerels)
-were reckoned among its students. Probably the movement was started
-with the sanction and direct encouragement of the bishop of Ely,
-certainly it was not directly monastic, and more likely the teachers
-were secular clerks and not monks. I conjecture that at first the
-lecturers were strangers to the locality, but this in no way implies
-that a fragment of another university, students as well as teachers,
-migrated here as an organized body.
-
-Whatever the origin of the University, its members organized
-themselves for mutual aid and protection as a _Studium_ on the model
-of that at Paris, with which it seems later to have been frequently
-in touch. If we may trust ancient traditions quoted by Bulaeus and
-Peacock, the early University had also some connection with the
-studium of Orleans: this is possible but speculative. Bologna
-represented another type of organization which, however, was not
-adopted anywhere in England. The University of Cambridge existed in
-working order in 1209, and in my opinion its origin may be safely
-assigned to some time in the previous twenty years.
-
-Of its external history during the century following its organization
-we know little: we read of its chancellor in 1225, of French students
-coming to it in 1229, of special privileges conferred by the crown in
-1231 and 1251, of its recognition by the pope in 1233, and finally of
-a papal grant in 1318--exceptional in extent--of all rights which were
-or could be enjoyed by any university in Christendom. Oxford went
-through somewhat similar stages. The two universities were closely
-connected, and by 1333 their position had become so firmly established
-that they agreed not to recognize any other studium in the kingdom,
-and in fact after that year no other university was established in
-England until less than a century ago.
-
-Originally the main source of university authority was the body of
-active teachers (regents) acting with the concurrence of the
-chancellor who represented the bishop of Ely; their grouping in
-faculties was an obvious development, and probably took place early in
-the thirteenth century. Resident graduates who had ceased to teach
-(non-regents) were allowed a voice on matters of property, rights, and
-privileges. The establishment of monasteries and colleges with
-administrative officers tended to retain in residence graduates who
-were not lecturing; through them the house of non-regents grew in
-power, and finally in many questions obtained concurrent jurisdiction
-with that of the regents--the result was a very complex constitution.
-At first the University had no buildings of its own; the regent and
-non-regent houses met in St Benet's or St Mary's church, and lectures
-were given wherever accommodation could be obtained. After this
-digression I return to the position of the students in the early
-University.
-
-Numerous monasteries were established in Cambridge during the
-thirteenth century, and from this I infer that the number of members
-of the religious Orders studying in the University steadily increased
-during that century. Of monastic Houses in Cambridge previous to the
-foundation of the University I have already mentioned those of the
-Augustin Canons, founded in connection with St Giles' church, about
-1092, and moved in 1112 to Barnwell where their priory became in time
-one of the largest conventual buildings in England, and of the Austin
-Brethren of Frost's or St John's Hospital, built about 1135 on ground
-now occupied by St John's College. Shortly after the organization of
-a studium in the town, five important Orders established Houses here.
-These were the Franciscan or Grey Friars, who, from their first home
-situated near the present Divinity Schools and used from 1224 to 1294,
-removed in 1294 to a site now occupied by Sidney Sussex College, where
-their church was one of the conspicuous architectural features of
-medieval Cambridge; the Dominican or Black Friars, who built in 1274
-on ground now occupied by Emmanuel College; the Carmelite or White
-Friars, who, having previously lived in houses at Chesterton and
-Newnham, removed in 1290 to a site now occupied by Queens' and King's
-Colleges; the Augustine Friars, who built, about 1290, a home on or
-near ground now occupied by the university examination halls and
-lecture rooms, in the basement of which some fragments of the old
-friary may be found; and the Sempringham or White Canons, who about
-1290 obtained possession of St Edmund's Priory which had been built
-before 1278 near the Trumpington Gate. The Houses of the Bethlehem
-Friars, opened in 1257, of the Friars of the Sack, opened in 1258, and
-of the Friars of St Mary, opened in 1273, were suppressed in 1307, and
-probably were never important foundations. I believe that the presence
-in Cambridge of these great establishments, always housing a certain
-number of students, gave stability to the nascent University, and
-tended to prevent its dissipation in times of stress: this is a point
-in our early history which is sometimes overlooked. Students from
-Houses of the Benedictine or Black Monks were also sent to Cambridge,
-but until 1428 they seem to have had no special home of their own: in
-that year the Order built for them a hostel known as Buckingham House
-which now forms part of the first court of Magdalene College.
-
-These conventual Houses were outside town and university authority,
-but their wealth and position made them influential. Striking evidence
-of this is afforded by the facts that they secured to their members
-the right to proceed direct to degrees in divinity without graduating
-in arts--a privilege not granted to students in law or medicine--and
-that at every congregation of the University the senior religious
-doctor present could veto the offer of any grace and so block all
-business. These privileges suggest that monastic students were the
-dominant class in the early days of the University. They were,
-however, naturally distrusted by other students, for admittedly they
-owed allegiance to outside bodies, and no man can serve two masters.
-By the end of the thirteenth century the monastic movement had spent
-its force, and thenceforth the religious students took a constantly
-decreasing share in university activities; of course they disappeared
-at the reformation, when the monasteries throughout the country were
-suppressed.
-
-I come next to the question of the secular students in arts, most or
-all of whom would be clerks in major or minor orders. Rejecting the
-migration theory of the origin of the University, I do not suppose
-that in its earliest days these secular students were numerous, for
-the vicinity cannot have provided many such men, but as soon as the
-University acquired reputation as a centre of higher teaching they
-would be attracted to it from a wide area, and their numbers would
-be increased by many glomerels who would continue their course as
-students in arts. In the course of the thirteenth century these
-secular students became strong enough to assert themselves against the
-position and privileges assumed by the religious students, and after
-that century graces were constantly passed (_ex. gr._ in 1303) to
-prevent monastic interference in academic affairs, or (as in 1369) to
-limit the number of monastic graduates.
-
-A non-graduate student in arts was, before admission, expected to
-know Latin, and, on admission, apprenticed to a master or doctor who
-acted as a tutor in scholastic matters: in 1276 this system of
-apprenticeship was made compulsory. The full medieval course lasted
-several years. Students who entered as boys stayed, if they took the
-full course, till they were grown men, gradually taking up teaching as
-part of their course of study. The bachelors may have assisted in the
-education of the younger arts students and of the glomerels who are
-mentioned below, but normally instruction in the arts course was given
-by masters, and in the higher faculties by doctors. The degree of
-master was a license to teach, and newly created masters were required
-to teach and to reside for two years (or later at least one year) for
-that purpose. This pre-reformation scheme is in marked contrast to the
-modern plan where the students enter as young men, all of about the
-same age, with a normal course lasting three years or so, and with
-their studies sharply differentiated from those of a limited number
-of post-graduate and research students and of a separate body of
-teachers. Mullinger estimated that during the medieval period the
-number of resident regents varied from one hundred to two hundred, and
-the number of students (apparently exclusive of monastic students)
-never exceeded two thousand of whom the great majority were of humble
-birth; no doubt there were wide variations in the numbers at different
-times.
-
-The history of Guilds in the University cannot be given with any
-certainty. It may be that in the early years of the University most
-secular students and teachers from any particular locality were
-associated together as a guild, and perhaps every student on arrival
-was expected to join his local guild, and through it become a member
-of the University. The guilds imposed on their members definite rules
-for their conduct in relation to one another, and enforced such
-regulations by means of money fines, refusal of assistance, and in
-extreme cases expulsion. The relations between the members of
-different guilds were, however, often unfriendly or worse; in
-particular there was constant friction between the guilds connected
-with localities north and south of the Trent. It has been suggested
-that at one time one of the proctors represented the cis-trentine
-guilds and the other the trans-trentine guilds: this seems to have
-been the case at Oxford, but there is no evidence of such a custom at
-Cambridge where, according to Peacock, these trentine disputes were
-less violent than at the sister University.
-
-We may take it that the master to whom a secular non-graduate student
-was apprenticed looked after his studies, and probably officers of the
-guild to which he belonged looked after him when sick or maltreated.
-In other matters, however, he was left to take care of himself, and
-thus was constantly liable to extortion. To meet this evil, the
-University early obtained powers enabling it to settle, without
-consulting the citizens, various local matters such as the prices of
-lodging and food.
-
-Besides students in arts there was also another class of secular
-students consisting of boys, known as glomerels (grammarians) and
-rhetoricians, who were under a special officer of the University
-called the master of glomery. I conjecture that originally these were
-the boys at the local grammar-schools, that after the foundation of
-the University such boys were regularly treated as glomerel members of
-it, and that for this reason we hear nothing more of the local
-grammar-schools which had at first supplied them: most students of
-this type must have lived at home and come from the town or immediate
-neighbourhood. I suppose that in later times the number of glomerels
-was swollen by the entry among them of students who had come to
-Cambridge, and were found to be ignorant of Latin grammar, and so
-inadmissible to the arts faculty.
-
-The chief study of a glomerel was Latin grammar, and on attaining
-reasonable proficiency in it he could change over to the arts faculty
-if he wished. If a student continued in the glomerel faculty, the
-degree of master in grammar (or rhetoric) was open to him, but in
-processions of the University, such graduates took a lower place than
-students in arts, and their inferior position was emphasized by a
-statute which, while regulating the attendance of regents at the
-funeral of a regent master or student in arts, stated that graduates
-and scholars in grammar were not entitled to such recognition--_Illis
-tantummodo exceptis, qui artem solam docent vel audiunt grammaticam,
-ad quorum exequias nisi ex devotione non veniant supradicti_.
-
-The ceremony of graduation in grammar has often been described: it
-involved the beating openly in the schools of a shrewd boy obtained by
-the university officers for the purpose, and the presentation to the
-new master of a ferule: this suggests that the course was regarded as
-a training for a schoolmaster's career, it also facilitated admission
-to orders. As time passed, the glomerels, originally forming a large
-and important section of the University here and at Oxford, decreased
-in numbers, and in the latter half of the fifteenth century they
-ceased to be of much importance in academic life. The faculty of
-rhetoric was constituted on similar lines to that of grammar, and
-practically treated as part of it. The last degrees in rhetoric and
-grammar of which we have notice were conferred in 1493 and 1548
-respectively: probably the office of master of glomery fell into
-disuse about the beginning of the sixteenth century, though it is
-possible that it was held by Sir John Cheke as late as 1547.
-
-The evils consequent on allowing inexperienced students, some of whom
-were quite young, to fend for themselves in all matters outside the
-schools were obvious, and it was not long before steps were taken to
-improve matters by the foundation of colleges and the licensing of
-private hostels.
-
-Colleges were designed for selected scholars partly to provide
-assistance for them, and partly to protect them from pressure to join
-a monastic Order: the advantages offered being shelter, a common
-sitting room properly warmed, regular meals, the use of books, and
-general supervision. The earliest attempt to provide aid and
-protection of this kind for certain scholars was made, about 1275,
-by Hugh de Balsham, who arranged for their reception as members of
-Frost's Hospital; but there were constant quarrels between the two
-sides of the House, and in 1284 he dissolved the union and moved the
-secular students to a building (Peterhouse) of their own. Other
-similar foundations were soon created: the King's Scholars (later
-incorporated as King's Hall) in 1317, Michael-House in 1324, Clare in
-1325, Pembroke in 1347, Gonville in 1348, Trinity Hall in 1350, and
-Corpus Christi in 1352. Every new college that was established
-provided fresh definite ties with the locality, and rendered less
-likely the break-up of the University and the scattering of its
-members--a serious risk to which in early days it was always subject.
-Then came an interval of nearly a hundred years, but in the fifteenth
-century the collegiate movement recommenced, and we have the
-foundation of God's House in 1439, of King's in 1441, of Queens' in
-1448 and 1465, of St Catharine's in 1473, and of Jesus in 1496. In the
-sixteenth century we have the larger and more ambitious foundations of
-Christ's in 1505, St John's in 1511, Magdalene in 1519, Trinity in
-1546, Emmanuel in 1584, and Sidney Sussex in 1596.
-
-The colleges were intended for picked scholars. In the course of the
-fourteenth century the problem of the care of other students was taken
-up, and they were forbidden to live in lodgings selected by themselves
-and under no external supervision. To provide for them, the University
-licensed private hostels which were managed by masters of arts on
-lines somewhat similar to boarding houses in public schools to-day.
-Thenceforth throughout the middle ages the majority of undergraduates
-resided in these hostels. Caius gave the names and sites of
-twenty-seven private hostels which he had known and all of which
-closed their doors during his life, the last in 1540: Fuller
-enumerated thirty-four hostels and two "inns" while his editor
-mentioned fourteen other hostels, but some of these certainly ought
-not to be included under the term. Perhaps we may say that the number
-open at anyone time rarely exceeded thirty or fell short of twenty:
-some were cheap, some expensive; some were well managed, others not
-so. After the development of these hostels the guilds decreased in
-importance, and finally disappeared.
-
-With the establishment of colleges and private hostels the University
-was fairly launched on its career in a form which lasted till the
-middle half of the sixteenth century. My object was to state how, in
-my opinion, it originally took shape, and I do not propose here to
-follow its history further.
-
-
-[Footnote 31: Most of the known facts are given in Mullinger's
-excellent histories, Peacock's _Observations on the Statutes_, and
-Rashdall's _Universities of Europe in the Middle Ages_--but all the
-views of the last-named writer are not universally accepted.]
-
-[Footnote 32: See _passim_ G. Peacock, _Observations on the Statutes_,
-London, 1841, p. xxxv.]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII.
-
-DISCIPLINE.
-
-
-This paper contains some extracts from my notebooks on the way in
-which university and college discipline was maintained in former days
-at Cambridge. The records on the subject are scanty, but I think the
-facts are worth putting together in a connected form. There is no
-reason to suppose that the practices of different colleges varied
-materially, and if in the later period I have taken examples from the
-records of Trinity it is only because I have had easier access to
-them.
-
-In the history of university discipline and social customs abrupt
-changes are not to be expected, and none such are noticeable in the
-transition from the medieval period, _circ._ 1200 to 1525, through
-the renaissance, _circ._ 1525 to 1640, and the period of stagnation,
-_circ._ 1660 to 1820, to the present age of reconstruction and
-extension. I begin naturally with discipline in medieval Cambridge.
-
-In the early days of the University the students lodged in the town
-and were of all ages from twelve or thirteen upwards. Except in
-strictly academic matters, there was little or no supervision of their
-conduct, and, outside the schools, grave disorders were common; the
-University, however, claimed power, when it chose, to take cognizance
-of all offences contrary to good manners, and at any rate in later
-days did so in serious cases. The regulations at Cambridge and Oxford
-were so similar that we may fairly draw illustrations from either
-University, and the records of the chancellor's court at Oxford in the
-fifteenth century show that fines, imprisonment, and, in extreme
-cases, expulsion were customary penalties for serious offences against
-university regulations and customs. I have no doubt that earlier
-records, if extant, would be of the same general character.
-
-The first college to be founded at Cambridge was Peterhouse which took
-its final form in 1284, and during the next century several other
-similar Houses were established: these societies were intended for
-selected scholars. The problem of the control of other students was
-met in the course of the fourteenth century by preventing them from
-living in private lodgings chosen by themselves, and thenceforth,
-throughout the middle ages, those who came from a distance were
-generally required to reside in private hostels run by masters of arts
-on lines somewhat similar to boarding houses in public schools to-day.
-Besides the lay and secular students accommodated in colleges, private
-hostels, and at their homes, there were also in the medieval
-University a considerable number of "religious" students who were
-housed in monasteries or monastic hostels. Some of the colleges in
-later medieval times received as paying members a few wealthy
-pensioners, parochial priests in middle life, and even monks from
-distant convents, but probably the number of such favoured students
-was never large. With the establishment of colleges and the
-organization of private hostels discipline improved; inside their
-walls as well as in the monastic hostels it is probable that order was
-well maintained, but outside them, at least among the students at
-private hostels, discipline was left to the university authorities who
-did little or nothing in the matter.
-
-The colleges took seriously their responsibilities for discipline, and
-all things contrary to good manners and morals were prohibited. For
-the gravest offences, such as contumacy, crimes of violence, and
-heresy, expulsion was usually ordered. Among less serious
-delinquencies, explicitly forbidden and therefore we may assume not
-unknown, were bringing strangers into the house, sleeping out, and
-absence without leave; using insulting language, drunkenness,
-gambling, and frequenting taverns; keeping company with loose women;
-throwing missiles and carrying arms; and the keeping of dogs, hawks,
-falcons, and ferrets. In the regulations of many colleges, a course
-of study was indicated, and directions given that idleness was to be
-punished. Regular attendance at religious exercises was assumed, and
-was explicitly directed on certain occasions: I suppose that students
-performed such duties without much external pressure, and I know no
-record of the infliction of any penalty in early times for
-non-attendance. In the middle ages Latin was the language generally
-enforced, though occasionally French was permitted; this remained the
-rule until the seventeenth century. Conversation during dinner and
-supper was forbidden in many colleges, and of course was impossible in
-those cases where some book was then read aloud. At King's College,
-jumping and ball throwing, and at Clare College meetings in bedrooms
-for feasting and talking were also forbidden. At a somewhat later date
-Caius ordered his students to be in bed by eight o'clock at night, but
-they made up for this by rising very early in the morning. In general
-the punishment for minor faults was left to the discretion of the
-authorities. This was only reasonable, for a medieval college was a
-mixed community of lads and men, the members being of all ages from
-about fourteen or fifteen upwards; and rules enforced on boys of
-fourteen could not be applied to men of twenty-three or twenty-four,
-who were in fact already taking part in the teaching of the junior
-scholars.
-
-For all members, the ultimate penalty for the gravest offences was
-expulsion. For less serious misconduct, fines, restrictions on the
-food supplied, impositions, and confinement within the walls, are
-believed to have been common penalties, at any rate for adolescents;
-but, as I explain below, I think that corporal punishment was
-constantly inflicted on non-adults in lieu of a fine, which indeed
-boys would have had considerable difficulty in paying. As far as the
-younger students and the bachelors at colleges were concerned the
-extant regulations in regard to their exercises, amusements, incomings
-and outgoings, suggest that they were treated much like the junior and
-senior boys in a rather strict public school in the first half of the
-nineteenth century; and perhaps the senior graduate members were
-treated somewhat like residents in colleges at the same period.
-
-Membership of a college was a privilege confined, in general, to
-scholars specially nominated, and no doubt the standards of work and
-discipline there were higher than in the private hostels. Naturally we
-know less of life in these hostels, but it is likely that disciplinary
-rules were originally made by or with the approval of the elder
-residents, and that the normal discipline in them was of the same
-general character as that exercised in colleges, though, as the
-members paid for themselves, money fines were possible and usual
-penalties, especially in the case of the older members. There must
-have been more variety in the discipline of hostels than of colleges,
-and we may safely say that some hostels were well conducted, others
-not so.
-
-It is possible that finally the University claimed the right to
-examine and supervise the internal regulations of the hostels. A set
-of rules, thus enforced on an unendowed hall at Oxford in the
-fifteenth century, has been discovered and printed by Rashdall: they
-do not differ much from those usual at a college, except that some of
-the penalties specified are pecuniary, and that the principal was
-given explicit permission, if he wished, to flog a student, even
-though the lad's own master (_i.e._ the master to whom he had been
-apprenticed) had certified that he had already corrected him or was
-willing to do so.
-
-Was corporal punishment commonly used in medieval times? Until
-recently it was accepted without argument that this was the case; and
-certainly in the fifteenth century and later when we get detailed
-information on the subject, the younger students were subject to it.
-Rashdall, however, has argued that the absence of its mention in
-earlier times implies that the birch was unknown in the ordinary
-university regulations till towards the end of the sixteenth century
-or later, though he admits in various places that glomerels were
-liable to it: his authority is accepted by Rait. It is true that in
-the statutes given in the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries,
-birching is not mentioned explicitly, but, since the punishments for
-petty offences are rarely specified in detail, this proves nothing. In
-the fifteenth century corporal punishment is mentioned as a recognized
-penalty. For instance, the statutes given by Henry VI to King's
-College, Cambridge, prescribed that scholars and young fellows might
-be punished by stripes, and a year or two later, the statutes of
-Magdalen College, Oxford, directed that the demies should be subject
-to flogging. In later regulations of various colleges, to some of
-which I refer below, whipping is mentioned as a recognized punishment,
-but often as one to which only the younger students were liable.
-
-I have already argued that in medieval colleges discipline must have
-varied according to the age of the offender, and I conjecture that
-adults were never regularly subject to corporal punishment, but that
-boys were always so, and that the use of the rod was regarded as
-needing no explicit statutable authority. Its employment was no
-strange thing, for adult offenders against the law, apprentices, and
-boys at school, were all flogged at times. And what else, it has been
-well asked, could the authorities do with a troublesome boy of
-fourteen? In general a fine was impossible for he had no
-pocket-money. Most of the colleges were designed for poor scholars,
-and in such foundations usually the allowance for commons was so small
-that without risk to health any reduction for more than a day or two
-was difficult; little leisure was allowed for recreation or exercise,
-and thus heavy impositions were impossible; and confinement to the
-precincts of the House was so common that gating was no punishment. A
-lad of seventeen or eighteen had more liberty and privileges, and in
-general on reaching that age was as safe from the chance of corporal
-punishment as was a boy of the same age at a public school fifty years
-ago.
-
-Somewhat similar arguments apply to the private hostels, and the
-regulations of an unendowed hall at Oxford, to which I have already
-referred, show that the use of the rod or birch was recognized there.
-If as I suppose is likely, Clement Paston was at a private hostel, we
-have a definite instance of the similar use of the rod at Cambridge,
-for among the Paston letters is one dated 28 January 1458 from Dame
-Agnes Paston, about her boy, Clement, in which she says "prey
-Grenefeld to send me feythfully word by wrytyn who (how) Clement
-Paston hathe do his dever i lerning. And if he hathe nought do well,
-nor wyll nought amend, prey him that he wyll trewly belassch (_i.e._
-flog) him tyll he wyll amend, and so ded the last Maystur and ye best,
-that ev' he hadd at Cambrege." Clement was born in 1442, so he was
-then fifteen years old.
-
-I asserted above that school-boys in the middle ages were liable to
-the birch or cane. I suppose this will not be questioned, but by way
-of parenthesis I add that this liability seems to have been a
-well-established practice for centuries. It goes back to classical
-times for in the schools of Rome the less serious offences were
-punished by the cane applied to the hand, and graver faults by the
-birch applied to the back; and there is a curious fresco at
-Herculaneum of the application of the latter to a boy, horsed by one
-schoolfellow and with his feet held by another. The royal whipping
-boys in the courts of Western Europe remind us that, at least
-vicariously, princes were subject to this discipline as well as
-commoners.
-
-In more recent times the deeds of Busby and Keate at Westminster and
-Eton respectively are preserved in tradition, while the reputation of
-Udall at an earlier time, _circ._ 1530, may be gathered from the
-remarks of Thomas Tusser, a choirboy at St Paul's Cathedral, who
-subsequently went to Eton: Tusser says, "From Paul's I went, to Eton
-sent, To learn straightways the Latin phrase Where fifty-three stripes
-giv'n to me, at once I had. For faults but small, or none at all, It
-came to pass thus beat I was." The similar vigour of Udall's
-successor, Cox, is mentioned by Ascham. In short, the old saw: "Spare
-the rod, and spoil the child, Solomon said in accents mild, Be it boy
-or be it maid, Whip 'em and wallop 'em Solomon said" represented the
-current belief and practice of former days; though the dictum
-attributed to that king is stronger than the passage in Proverbs,
-xiii, 24 warrants.
-
-In the sixteenth century the colleges opened their doors to the
-admission of pensioners and fellow-commoners. Collegiate teaching and
-arrangements were superior to those of the private hostels, and before
-the middle of the century the latter had disappeared: their revival
-was rendered impossible by a regulation that membership of the
-University should be confined to those who were members of a college.
-Shortly afterwards it became the custom not to require residence for
-degrees after the baccalaureate, and thus a course limited to three or
-four years became usual for the average student. These changes were of
-far-reaching importance.
-
-In the course of this century new statutes were given to the
-University and colleges, and subsequently we possess records, fairly
-complete, of the domestic life of students. Early in the following
-century, the average age of entry began to rise, and before its close,
-it had become common for students to defer entry until about seventeen
-years old.
-
-University decrees regulating the conduct of students in many matters
-now appear, notably one in 1595 by Goad, then vice-chancellor, which
-gives a summary of what was expected. Expulsion, suspension from
-degrees, and refusal of leave to graduate until after a specified
-time, were normal punishments for serious offences, for trivial
-misconduct fines are now constantly prescribed, and physical
-punishments for non-adults are also directed in many cases.
-
-In colleges, the Tudor statutes generally enjoined good conduct on all
-students. The regulations about the punishment of offences were mostly
-concerned with grave matters for which admonitions, and finally
-expulsions, were the recognized punishments. Penalties for the
-non-performance of religious exercises now appear: thus, at Christ's
-College, Cambridge, and at Balliol College, Oxford, whipping was
-prescribed as a penalty for absence from chapel, though probably
-restricted to the younger students; so too at Peterhouse, students
-over eighteen who were absent from prayers were to be fined, while
-younger students so offending were to be deprived of dinner, and if
-persistent in their neglect flogged in hall.
-
-As in medieval times, the authorities were generally left a free hand
-in settling the regulations for the maintenance of normal discipline.
-Probably fines, impositions, restrictions on the food supplied, and
-gatings continued to be ordinarily used. Reading the bible aloud at
-meal times in hall, dining apart on bread and water, and being
-deprived of commons, are definitely mentioned in the 1520 statutes of
-St John's College, Cambridge, as possible penalties; similarly at
-Corpus Christi College, Oxford, being compelled to eat alone at a
-small table in the middle of the hall and restriction to bread and
-water are specified as suitable punishments.
-
-The use of the birch was now constantly prescribed, though probably
-in practice always confined to lads. Thus, at Christ's College,
-Cambridge, a whipping for lads and a fine for adults; and at
-Brasenose, Oxford, a fine or a flogging, at the discretion of the
-principal, were statutable punishments for various faults, including
-at the latter College the making of odious comparisons in
-conversation. At other Houses too, for instance, at Corpus Christi,
-Oxford, Wolsey (Christ Church), Oxford, Trinity College, Cambridge,
-and Gonville and Caius, Cambridge, the use of the cane or birch is
-sanctioned in the case of lads. I have no doubt this was also the
-general rule in earlier days, and nothing in the Tudor codes indicates
-that any material change was made in the existing practice, but on the
-whole I conjecture that the regulations were more humane, and I am
-inclined to think, contrary to Rashdall's view, that discipline was
-less severe after the renaissance than before it. In colleges the
-deans were and are the chief officers responsible for discipline; in
-the University, the proctors.
-
-A part of the fifth chapter of the Trinity statutes of 1560 relating
-to the office of deans may be summarized as indicating what was then
-customary, or at any rate desired, in the matter of chapel attendance
-and in certain questions of petty discipline. The statute, which is in
-Latin, is to the following effect:
-
- In every community regard should be paid to correctness of morals
- and general probity of life, accordingly there shall be two deans to
- give their sedulous attention to these objects; at least one of such
- deans shall be a bachelor of divinity and chosen from the eight
- senior fellows, and the other, a master of arts or a bachelor of
- divinity.
-
- The deans shall provide for the fitting performance of public
- worship; see that all fellows, scholars, pensioners, sizars, and
- subsizars attend on Saints' days and Sundays at morning and evening
- prayers, the litany, the communion, and sermons; and see that the
- same persons are on other days regularly present at prayers between
- five and six o'clock in the morning. Every fellow who is absent
- shall be fined three half-pence, and if he comes in late or goes out
- early, one half-penny. The fine for a bachelor scholar who is absent
- shall be one penny, and for one who comes in late or goes out early,
- one half-penny. Every undergraduate scholar, and every pensioner,
- sizar, and subsizar who is absent shall, if his age exceeds eighteen
- years be fined one half-penny, and if he comes in late or goes out
- early, one farthing; but if such student has not attained this age,
- he shall be chastised with rods in the hall on the following
- Friday. Those are to be deemed as coming late who at evening prayers
- arrive after the first psalm; at morning prayers, after the
- _Venite_; at the Litany, after the words _O Holy Blessed and
- Glorious Trinity_; and at the communion service after the recital of
- the commandments: anyone who, during service, remains in the
- antechapel is to be punished as if he had been absent.
-
- Each week on Friday, at seven o'clock in the evening, the deans
- shall chastise non-adult offenders. All scholars (bachelors
- excepted), pensioners, sizars, and subsizars shall be present during
- the infliction of such corporal punishment, and anyone who does not
- answer to his name when called, and does not stay until all the
- punishments are finished, shall, if an adult, be fined one penny,
- and if non-adult be flogged on the next day.
-
- Each week on Thursday, the deans shall appoint two monitors from
- among the bachelor scholars for noting offences of bachelors; and
- six monitors [from among the undergraduate scholars], two for noting
- offences of undergraduates at public worship, and four for noting
- those who fail to speak Latin: the monitors shall prepare lists of
- all who offend in these particulars. The deans shall also appoint
- each week six scholars and four sizars for service at the fellows'
- table, and one sizar for the organ.
-
- In order to ensure the decorous celebration of public worship, the
- deans shall bring with them to the first vespers of every festival
- a written schedule of the duties of everyone concerned in that
- festival, and shall further appoint an inquisitor who shall remind
- everyone of the duty so assigned to him. Anyone who shall fail in
- such duty shall, if a non-adult, be whipt, and, if an adult, be
- fined fourpence.
-
- One half of all fines inflicted shall go to the College, the other
- half shall be kept by the deans.
-
-The Tudor statutes generally remained in force till the middle of the
-nineteenth century, though in time the practices of the colleges came
-to differ materially from what was there directed. Briefly we may say
-that in the sixteenth century the standard of medieval discipline and
-study sank; but in the early years of the seventeenth century things
-improved until the civil disturbances threw academic work into
-confusion. With the establishment of the commonwealth the age of entry
-rose, and thus the use of corporal and puerile punishments died out,
-and with the disappearance of boys as members of the University, rules
-intended only for young lads became obsolete and inoperative. Most of
-the students henceforth were adolescent. The few who were younger were
-dealt with like school-boys, but the comparison is rather with
-school-boys of recent years than with those of their own period.
-
-As far back as Sir Simon D'Ewes's time--and he entered Cambridge in
-1618--the majority of the students were regarded as responsible, and
-capable of conducting themselves rationally. They reflected the
-virtues and foibles of their time, but they were a select class, and
-compare favourably in manners and morals with their contemporaries
-elsewhere. Almost without exception they speak warmly of their
-development in college from lads to young men, of friendships formed
-with their elders as well as their contemporaries, of the abiding
-influence of the place, and of their affection for it.
-
-From the restoration to the regency was a period of stagnation.
-Discipline deteriorated, and if we may trust contemporary accounts
-drunkenness and immorality were far from uncommon. No doubt there were
-always some residents who maintained high traditions and ideals, but
-on the whole the records of the social life prevalent then at
-Cambridge and Oxford make but sorry reading.
-
-The sixteenth century codes indicate lofty aims, but statutes and
-rules are not always observed literally, and it may be thought that
-those mentioned represented only old customs, perhaps already
-obsolete, or what was deemed desirable but was not enforced. It may be
-well then to turn to contemporary evidence, to regulations passed on
-specific occasions, and to records of definite punishments--though we
-can expect the latter to have been preserved only in grave cases, and
-cannot hope to learn from them much about discipline in petty matters.
-
-Contemporary evidence would serve us best if we could get it, but the
-diarists and letter-writers are mostly silent on the subject. From
-this, however, I conclude that generally the disciplinary regulations
-were thought sensible. Life in the University may have been hard and
-probably was so, but I do not believe that discipline was
-unreasonable. All the evidence is to the contrary. Thus the
-above-mentioned Tusser, a student of no special brilliancy, who
-entered at Trinity Hall in the early half of the sixteenth century
-speaks thankfully of leaving school, and says: "To Cambridge thence
-... I got at last, There joy I felt, there trim I dwelt, There heaven
-from hell, I shifted well, With learned men, a number then, the time I
-passed."
-
-Coming now to definite punishments, I mention successively corporal
-punishments, such as birching, the use of the stocks, and stanging;
-fines, direct and indirect; deprivation of days or standing; gatings;
-impositions; declaratory confessions; and rustications and expulsions.
-
-_Birching, Flogging._ Birching remained a recognized punishment for
-the younger students in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, but I
-think that in practice it was not often inflicted except on boys. One
-or two examples of orders directing it will suffice.
-
-On 8 May 1572, the Vice-Chancellor, Whitgift, issued an order which is
-so detailed that I write it at length. Here it is:
-
- If any scholar shall go into any river, pool, or other water in the
- county of Cambridge; by day or night, to swim or wash, he shall, if
- under the degree of bachelor of arts, for the first offence be
- sharply and severely whipped publicly in the common hall of the
- College in which he dwells, in the presence of all the fellows,
- scholars, and others dwelling in the College, and on the next day
- shall be again openly whipped in the public school, where he was or
- ought to be an auditor, before all the auditors, by one of the
- proctors or some other assigned by the Vice-Chancellor, and for the
- second offence every such delinquent shall be expelled his College
- and the University for ever. But if he shall be a bachelor of arts,
- then for the first offence he shall be put in the stocks for a whole
- day, in the common hall of his College, and shall, before he is
- liberated, pay 10s towards the commons of the College, and for the
- second offence shall be expelled his College and the University. And
- if he shall be a master of arts, or bachelor of law, physic or
- music, or of superior degree, he shall be severely punished, at the
- judgment and discretion of the Master of his College.
-
-From this it is clear that at that time undergraduates, even of mature
-age, were liable to be flogged as a part of the ordinary discipline of
-the University and College, but probably it was unusual to inflict the
-penalty.
-
-Thirty years later, after the disturbances of 20 February 1607,
-following the performance of a comedy in King's College, an order was
-issued that thereafter every ringleader in any similar disturbances
-should be banished from the University: and every less responsible
-offender should, if a graduate, pay for the harm done, be suspended
-from his degree, and for one year refused leave to take a further
-degree; and if a non-graduate should for one year be refused leave to
-graduate, and further, if non-adult, be corrected in the schools by
-the rod, and, if adult, make an open confession of his guilt in the
-schools: also the offender if not a scholar should be set in the
-stocks at the bull ring in the market place. Here, it will be noticed,
-the punishment by the rod is restricted to those non-adulti.
-
-In a list of punishments inflicted at Corpus Christi College in 1622,
-quoted by Lamb, admonitions, fines, suspensions, and whippings are
-mentioned. Even as late as 1648 there is a record of "Benton per
-Tutorem suum Magistrum Johnson virgis castigandis."
-
-In 1648 an undergraduate bible-clerk of Peterhouse, age about
-seventeen, Tobias Conyers by name was "corrected publicly"--which,
-I take it, means flogged--for toasting the king. But times were
-abnormal, and if Conyers ventured into the stirring field of politics,
-he had to take the consequences.
-
-The liability to a flogging still existed after the restoration.
-Thus in the _Poor Scholar_, by R. Nevile, London, 1662, there are
-references to it in Act ii, Scene 6, and Act v, Scene 4, as being
-still in use in colleges though whether adults were so liable is
-uncertain. If the author's statements refer to contemporary matters
-and are trustworthy it would seem that the punishment was then
-common, the culprits being mounted on barrels, and the flogging
-inflicted at the butteries. The birch was also still occasionally used
-in university discipline, for on 20 March 1674, the vice-chancellor
-ordered Ellethorpe of St John's, and Hodges of Sidney Sussex to be
-whipped for having been rude to the junior proctor, Peter Parham, of
-Caius College: neither of the offenders had matriculated.
-
-These references provide the strongest evidence with which I am
-acquainted for the assertions that flogging was a usual punishment at
-Cambridge during the seventeenth century. There is a widely spread
-tradition that when at Christ's College, Milton was flogged, but Peile
-has shown that there is no satisfactory evidence for it, and it is
-intrinsically improbable. In a disciplinary order of Corpus Christi
-College in 1684, the only punishments mentioned are discommonsings,
-admonitions, rustications, deprivation of seniority, and refusal of
-college testimonials, so, comparing this with the orders of 1622 and
-1648 which I have quoted above, perhaps we may take it that the use of
-the rod there had become obsolete.
-
-The above extracts are sufficient to show that corporal punishment was
-recognized under the Elizabethan codes, though it seems probable that
-public opinion was against its use, unless the students were quite
-young; perhaps this was always the practice, and thus, as the age of
-entry rose, the use of the birch died out. Incepting bachelors and
-senior students were usually punished for serious offences by
-deferring their admission to degrees, loss of terms, or rustication:
-being adult, they were in effect regarded as not subject to corporal
-punishment.
-
-_Stocks. Stangs._ A couple of other physical punishments--ignominious
-and sometimes painful--may be mentioned in passing.
-
-One of these was confinement in Stocks. To this allusion has already
-been made in the orders of 1572 and 1607. Another instance is to be
-found in the records of Corpus Christi College, where about 1580, one
-of the students, Tobias Bland, who had libelled the master, was
-compelled to confess his fault publicly, next put in the stocks, and
-then expelled. In the old dining hall of Trinity College there were
-stocks in the minstrel's gallery, but there is no evidence that they
-were re-erected when the hall was rebuilt in 1605; perhaps the
-punishment was then becoming unusual, though against this may be set
-the fact that there are references to the college stocks in 1610 at
-King's, in 1625 at Christ's, and in 1642 at Emmanuel. The stocks at
-King's and Emmanuel, like those at Trinity, were in the hall.
-Allusions to their use are rare. The punishment continued to be
-inflicted after the restoration, for on 10 April 1680, Thomas Grigson,
-who had been rude to the junior proctor, Thomas Verdon of St John's
-College, was ordered to be "sett fast in the stocks, by the heeles for
-one whole houre, which was presently effected by the Constable of
-Saint Bennett's Parish in Cambridge." He had partially atoned for his
-offence by begging pardon on his knees, and so escaped a worse
-punishment.
-
-The Stang was a wooden pole on which the luckless culprit was tied,
-and carried ignominiously through the courts of his college. In John
-Ray's _Collection of English Words not Generally Used_, London, 1674,
-it is said that the "word is still used in some colleges in the
-University of Cambridge; to stang scholars in Christmas, being to
-cause them to ride on a colt-staff or pole for missing of chappel."
-References to the place where the pole was kept occur in the
-account-books of Trinity, St John's, Queens', and Christ's. In Parne's
-unpublished manuscript history of Trinity College, allusion is made to
-stanging as though at the beginning of the eighteenth century it had
-become recently obsolete. From his language it would seem also that
-undergraduates themselves inflicted the punishment on those of their
-members who declined to take part in the Christmas revelries.
-
-_Fines._ Pecuniary fines have been used to enforce discipline from
-the earliest times by the University as well as by the colleges: after
-the renaissance, the increasing age and means of students made fines a
-suitable penalty for many of the less serious offences, such as
-participation in forbidden amusements, visits to places out of bounds,
-walking across the grass in college courts, smoking in public places,
-the failure to wear academic dress when required, non-attendance at
-lectures, chapel, hall, etc. Probably grave misconduct was punished
-otherwise, or by fines combined with additional penalties. A fine, if
-heavy, presses unequally on men of different means; and thus a system
-of fines on a fixed scale cannot be regarded as equitable. Fines are
-still used as penalties for the infraction of rules.
-
-_Discommonsing. Dissizaring._ To be put out of commons was a
-well-recognized penalty, applicable chiefly to scholars and sizars,
-part of whose emolument consisted of a right to dine in hall and, in
-some cases, to have commons (bread, butter, and beer) to a limited
-amount each day. To deprive such a student of the right to dine in
-hall or of his commons was equivalent to a pecuniary fine, and in the
-case of a poor scholar might be a severe, though not a satisfactory,
-punishment; probably a modicum of bread and beer was supplied to
-students even when discommonsed. In some comments, published in 1768,
-on university education at Cambridge, discommonsing is described as
-"one of the most idle and anile punishments ... inflicted rather on
-the parent than on the young man, who being prohibited to eat in Hall
-is driven to purchase a dinner at a tavern or coffee house."
-
-Here is an example of an order of discommonsing at Trinity in the
-seventeenth century: "Agreed that Cassill should be punisht a monthes
-commons.... Agreed at the same time that Pepys besides a monthes
-commons, should have an admonition and pay the charges of the
-chirurgion for the healinge Cassil's head w^h he broke with a key."
-(Conclusion, 1 August 1643.) Its preservation is due to the fact that
-Pepys' punishment was combined with an admonition, and evidence that
-an admonition had been given might be required if subsequently a
-question of expulsion arose. The culprit in question was Thomas Pepys
-(B.A. 1645) and not the Samuel of immortal memory.
-
-In 1815, Mansel, master of Trinity and bishop of Bristol, was
-accustomed to put men out of sizings and commons if they appeared in
-hall in trousers instead of knee breeches, and it would seem then that
-to be put out of sizings further deprived the student of obtaining
-private supplies from the college kitchens. Half a century ago the
-penalty was still in use at Trinity, being imposed on scholars in
-waiting, who failed to appear after hall to say grace.
-
-_Loss of Days._ To qualify for a degree and for an emolument, it is
-and has been generally necessary to keep a certain number of days by
-residence in each of certain specified terms. At one time a common
-form of punishment was to cancel a certain number of days already
-kept. Thus the student would be obliged to stay at Cambridge for so
-many additional days to make up for the requisite number which had to
-be kept in the course of that term. In the seventeenth century the
-authorities went further and sometimes cancelled terms that had been
-kept. I believe this form of punishment has long been obsolete.
-
-_Gating. Walling._ Continuous confinement within the walls of the
-college (walling) or confinement during certain hours (gating) was
-another form of punishment. A case of walling occurred at one of the
-smaller colleges in Cambridge in 1872, but I know of no more recent
-instance. Gating is still in force. It causes some social
-inconvenience. As far as it goes, it promotes regular hours and
-economy, and it has no indirect ill-effects. Accordingly it serves
-well to mark dissatisfaction and act as a warning.
-
-Here is an old-time example from the records of Trinity, 19 July 1652,
-of the infliction of this and other penalties interesting from the
-name of the scholar on whom it was inflicted:
-
- Agreed that Dryden be put out of commons for a fortnight at least,
- and that he goe not out of the colledg during the time aforesaid,
- excepting to sermons, without express leave of the master or
- vice-master; and that at the end of the fortnight he read a
- confession of his crime, in the hall, at the dinner time; at the
- three fellowes tables.
-
-His offence was disobedience to the vice-master, and his contumacy in
-submitting himself to discipline.
-
-_Impositions._ Another tolerably obvious punishment was the setting of
-impositions. The imposition might be the learning of lines by heart or
-the delivery of a declamation on some given subject, or the production
-in writing of so many lines of a classical work or of an analysis of
-some book. Impositions in writing were constantly done vicariously,
-and if so, the punishment was little more than a fine: apparently this
-abuse of the practice was well known.
-
-The tasks set were very heavy. In the _Gradus_, 1803, the learning by
-heart of the first book of the _Iliad_ is mentioned as a possible,
-though very severe imposition. Similarly, according to J.M.F. Wright,
-a thousand lines of Homer would have been regarded in 1815 as an
-unusually sharp punishment, but such as might have been given in lieu
-of rustication. Other impositions mentioned are the learning by heart
-of a satire of Juvenal, and the production of an analysis of Butler's
-_Analogy_.
-
-At Trinity the deans were provided with long sheets of paper on which
-were printed in double columns forms such as the following:
-
- ... to transcribe ... lines of Virgil's Aeneid, beginning at line
- ... book ..., and to deliver it to the Junior Dean after morning
- Chapel on Tuesday.
-
- ... to transcribe ... lines of Homer's Iliad, beginning at line ...
- book ..., and to deliver it to the Senior Dean after Morning Chapel
- on Thursday.
-
- ... to repeat ... lines of ... by order of the Junior (or Senior)
- Dean.
-
-These were filled up by the deans, cut off, and distributed by the
-chapel-clerk to the men concerned. Customarily in Trinity the senior
-dean gave impositions from the _Iliad_ to be delivered on a Thursday,
-an the junior dean from the _Aeneid_ to be delivered on a Tuesday.
-Forms for putting men out of commons, and admonishing them were
-printed in the same way on sheets, to be used as occasions arose.
-
-Impositions were set at Trinity as late as 1830, but I believe the
-custom had died out before 1840, though I am told it was still used in
-certain Cambridge colleges as late as 1855. At Oxford the practice
-continued rather later and indeed at a few colleges seems to have been
-in force till near the close of the nineteenth century, for Rashdall,
-writing in 1895, speaks of the practice as having been in force there
-until recently.
-
-A century ago there seems to have been a sort of recognized scale of
-penalties for cutting lectures or chapel. First, a reprimand was given
-at an interview or sent in writing by a servant; second, an imposition
-was set; third the offender was deprived of commons and sizings. If
-these steps were ineffective, the matter might be regarded as a
-serious offence against college discipline, and lead to "hauling" by
-the tutor, a gating, an interview with the master, a formal
-admonition, and in extreme cases to rustication.
-
-The theory of these petty punishments was set out by Whewell in his
-_Principles of English University Education_, 1837. A punishment,
-according to him, was to be regarded as the visible expression of
-college dissatisfaction with certain conduct: as an infliction it
-might be slight, but it emphasized the discontent expressed, and acted
-as a definite warning. He suggested a most severe scale; namely, for
-the first offence, forfeiture of one month's commons; for the second,
-of three months' commons; and for the third, expulsion; but there is
-no reason to think that this was ever the practice.
-
-_Confessions._ A public confession was another form of punishment once
-used: I believe that this ceased to be employed by the middle of the
-eighteenth century.
-
-_Statutory Admonitions. Rustication. Expulsion._ For the graver
-offences, a statutory admonition, rustication (temporary removal from
-the college), or expulsion were reserved.
-
-A formal admonition was intended to act as a serious warning, and it
-served as a statutory prelude to expulsion. For this reason it was
-usually recorded, and in former times an additional sting was added by
-compelling the culprit to make also a public or written confession of
-his fault. Admonitions are not very common in the records of Trinity:
-some thirty or forty occur in the sixteenth and seventeenth century,
-only a few in the eighteenth century, and they are rare in the
-nineteenth century save for a few relating to irregularity of
-attendances at chapel or lectures. The last admonition at Trinity was
-given in 1881, shortly before the new statutes of 1882 became
-operative. Here are typical instances of the record of admonitions.
-
- Whereas heretofore I have received an admonition from the Master of
- the College for my lewd and outrageous behaviour within the same,
- and have since that time for like rioting and swaggering in the Town
- received another admonition from him before the Vice-Master of the
- College and my Tutor and also therewith all public correction, if
- these admonitions together with due punishment do not work
- reformation in me hereafter, I do likewise willingly acknowledge
- that I am incorrigible and worthy for the next like offence to be
- expelled the College. Galen Browne. Circ. 1601. [Browne was elected
- to a scholarship in 1602, and graduated B.A. and M.A. in due course,
- so presumably he amended his ways.]
-
- Whereas I have very unadvisedly and rashly stricken one Mr Halfhead,
- a College servant, to the shedding of blood, I do acknowledge myself
- to have received an admonition for that fault tending to expulsion.
- Thomas Shirley, 22 February, 1621. [Halfhead was the manciple.
- Shirley was a fellow and master of arts, so the offence was the more
- serious, but perhaps the provocation was great. Shirley was
- subsequently junior bursar and tutor.]
-
- I, Christopher Offley, do confess that often time and many ways I
- have offended against the Statute _de Modestia Morum_ to the
- displeasure of God, hurt to myself, the evil example of others, and
- discredit of the College, and also have broken mine oath taken when
- I was preferred scholar in unreverent behaviour towards some of the
- fellows and specially in giving scandalous and contumelious speeches
- to Mr Hitch, being the Minister and Fellow of this College for which
- misdemeanors and undutiful carriage I am unfainedly sorry and
- heartily desire forgiveness both of God, and him, or any other whom
- I have offended, and confess I have received a just admonition of
- the Master and Seniors by setting my date to this writing. Circ.
- 1622. [Offley graduated B.A., 1624, and M.A., 1627, so presumably he
- amended his ways.]
-
- Whereas we whose names are underwritten, on the fourth of April
- last, were guilty of grave irregularity and misbehaviour by
- insulting the Vice-Master, the Dean, and other officers of the
- College and thereby gave just offence to the Society, we do profess
- ourselves heartily sorry for the same and acknowledge the lenity of
- the Master and Dean in suffering us to return so soon from
- rustication. And we do hereby engage to be strictly observant of our
- duty for the future and take this as our first admonition in order
- to expulsion. James Bensley, John Ambler. 29 May, 1754. [Bensley
- graduated in due course and was elected to a fellowship: Ambler did
- not graduate.]
-
- Ordered that ..., for irregular attendance at lectures and neglect
- of impositions, be admonished a second time previous to rustication
- or expulsion. 29 May, 1844.
-
-Temporary or permanent removal from the College were penalties
-reserved for the gravest offences. They are still recognized as
-possible punishments. The fact that there are but few records of the
-infliction of these extreme penalties indicates how easily discipline
-has always been maintained.
-
-My readers may well think that the results of these notes are somewhat
-scanty, but if that nation is happy which has no history, surely
-universities and colleges are to be congratulated whose records of
-punishment are so few. To sum up the matter, the general effect left
-on my mind is that most of the common offences were due only to
-youthful exuberance of spirits and not to deliberate mischief making;
-and that the rules and sanctions, judged by the standard of their
-time, have been neither harsh nor unreasonable, and have usually been
-approved by public opinion in the University.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII.
-
-NEWTON'S _PRINCIPIA_.
-
-
-Newton's _Principia_ is one of the few scientific books which has
-sensibly affected the methods of scientific research and the ideas of
-men about the universe. It is on this aspect of the subject I propose,
-in this paper, to make a few remarks. The work itself is a classic in
-the history of mathematics: the exposition of the subject, the
-enunciation of the principle of prime and ultimate ratios, the
-creation of mechanics as a science resting on experiments, and the
-theory of universal gravitation with concrete applications to the
-solar system, make it a masterpiece. Here I avoid all technicalities,
-and confine myself to a general description of its genesis and
-contents and the reason why its publication affected scientific
-thought and methods.
-
-Newton's exposition arose from an investigation of the cause of the
-motion of the planets round the sun, and this in due course led to the
-enunciation and establishment of the Newtonian theory of attraction.
-The origin of this theory has been often told, but will bear
-repetition. The fundamental idea occurred to Newton in 1665 or 1666,
-shortly after he had taken his degree at Cambridge, when, as he wrote
-later, "I was in the prime, of my age for invention, and minded
-Mathematicks and Philosophy more than at any time since." His
-reasoning was as follows. He knew that gravity extended to the highest
-hills, he saw no reason why it should cease to act at greater heights,
-accordingly he believed that it would be found in operation as far as
-the moon, and he suspected that it might be the force which retained
-that body in its path round the earth.
-
-This hypothesis he verified thus. If a stone is allowed to fall near
-the surface of the earth, the attraction of the earth causes it to
-move through sixteen feet in one second: also Kepler's Laws, if
-accurate and applicable, involve the conclusion that the attraction
-of the earth on a distant body varies inversely as the square of its
-distance from the earth. Now the radius of the earth and the distance
-of the moon were known to Newton, and therefore, on this hypothesis,
-he could find the magnitude of the earth's attraction on the moon.
-Further, assuming that the moon moved in a circle, he could calculate
-the force required to retain it in its orbit. At this time his
-estimate of the radius of the earth was inaccurate, and, when he made
-the calculation, he found that this force was rather greater than the
-earth's attraction on the moon. The discrepancy did not shake his
-faith in his theory, but he conjectured that the moon's motion was
-also affected by other influences, such for example, as the effect of
-a resisting medium which might itself be in motion as supposed by
-Descartes in his hypothetical vortices.
-
-In 1679 Newton knew with approximate correctness the value of the
-radius of the earth. He repeated his calculations, and found the
-results to be in accordance with his former hypothesis. He then
-proceeded to the general theory of the motion of a particle under a
-force directed to a fixed point, and showed that the vector to the
-particle would sweep over equal areas in equal times. He also proved
-that, if a particle describes an ellipse under a force directed to a
-focus, the law must be that of the inverse square of the distance from
-the focus, and conversely, that the orbit of a particle projected in
-free space under the influence of such a force must be a conic. The
-application to the solar system was obvious, since Kepler had shown
-that the planets describe ellipses with the sun in one focus, and that
-the vectors from the sun to them sweep over equal areas in equal
-times. This investigation was made for his own satisfaction and was
-not published at the time. In it he treated the solar bodies as if
-they were particles, and he must have realized that the results could
-be taken as being only approximately correct.
-
-In 1684 the subject of the planetary orbits was discussed in London
-by Halley, Hooke, and Wren. They were aware that, if Kepler's
-conclusions were correct, the attraction of the sun or earth on a
-distant external particle must vary inversely as the square of the
-distance, but they could not determine the orbit of a particle
-subjected to the action of a central force of this kind. It was
-suggested that Newton might be able to assist them. Accordingly in
-August, Halley went to Cambridge for a talk on the subject, and then
-found that Newton had solved the problem some five years previously,
-and that the path was necessarily a conic. At Halley's request Newton
-wrote out the substance of his argument, and sent it to London.
-
-Halley at once realized the importance of the communication, and later
-in the autumn returned to Cambridge to urge Newton to prosecute the
-theory further. He found that Newton had already done something in the
-matter, the results being contained in a manuscript which he saw.
-Probably this reference is to the holograph manuscript, still
-preserved in the University Library at Cambridge, of Newton's lectures
-in the Michaelmas Term, which served as the basis of his memoir sent
-to the Royal Society a few months later. The great value of these
-investigations was recognized, and Newton was persuaded to attack the
-more general problem. His results are given in the _Principia_.
-
-As yet Newton had dealt with the problem as if the sun and the planets
-might be regarded as heavy masses concentrated at their centres.
-Clearly at the best this was only an approximation, though considering
-the enormous distances involved it was not unreasonable. In January or
-February, 1685, he considered the question of the attraction of bodies
-of finite size, and found, to his surprise and gratification, that
-a sphere or spherical shell attracts an external particle as if
-condensed into a heavy mass at its centre. Hence the results he had
-already proved for the relative motion of particles were true for the
-solar system, save for small errors due partly to the fact that the
-bodies were not perfectly spherical and partly to disturbances caused
-by the planets attracting one another. It was no longer a question of
-rough approximation: the problem was reducible to mathematical
-analysis, subject to the introduction of minute corrections, which,
-given the necessary observations, could be calculated very closely.
-This was a new discovery of first-rate importance, and initiated the
-modern theory of attractions.
-
-The first book of the _Principia_ was finished before the summer of
-1685. It deals with the motion of particles or bodies in free space
-either in known orbits or under the action of known forces. In it
-the law of attraction is generalized into the statement that every
-particle of matter attracts every other particle with a force which
-varies directly as the product of their masses and inversely as the
-square of the distance between them. Thus gravitation was brought into
-the domain of Science.
-
-The second book was completed by the summer of 1686. It treats of
-motion in a resisting medium and of various problems connected with
-waves. At the end of it, it is shown that the Cartesian theory of
-vortices is inconsistent with the laws of motion, and necessarily
-leads to incorrect results. This book opened another world to the
-application of mathematics and, in effect, created the science of
-hydrodynamics.
-
-The third book was finished in March 1687. In this, the theorems
-previously established are applied to the chief phenomena of the
-universe, and briefly we may say that all the facts then known about
-the solar system and, in particular, the motion of the moon with its
-various inequalities, the figure of the earth, and the phenomena of
-the tides, were shown to be in accord with the theory. Much of the
-material for these calculations was collected by Flamsteed and Halley.
-
-The _Principia_, as I have said, is a classic. Like other books to
-which that compliment is paid, it is rarely read: indeed, I doubt
-whether there are a dozen men in Cambridge who have glanced all
-through it, even in a cursory manner. When I was an undergraduate the
-course for the Tripos involved five sections (1, 2, 3, 9, and 11) of
-the first book, but now, probably with good reason, even this slight
-acquaintance with the work is no longer required, and to-day the
-character of these investigations is unfamiliar to most
-mathematicians, while the fact that it is written in Latin tends to
-diminish the number of its readers. I will, then, with your
-permission, describe briefly its frame-work.
-
-First, however, let me remark on how different was the knowledge of
-mathematics, even among experts, at the time it was written from
-that current to-day. In the geometry of the circle and conics
-mathematicians were familiar with the methods of Greek science, and in
-their application Newton was unrivalled among his contemporaries, but
-outside geometry methods of investigation were far to seek. Analysis
-had been but little developed; algebraic notation had only recently
-taken definite form; trigonometry was still used mainly as an adjunct
-to astronomy; analytical geometry had been invented by Descartes, but
-no text-books on it of modern type were available; while nothing about
-the calculus had been published. Mechanics, however, had recently been
-treated as a science--statics by Stevinus and dynamics by Galileo--and
-this paved the way for Newton's investigations. In particular,
-Galileo had established principles which foreshadowed the first two
-laws of motion, and had deduced formulae in linear motion like
-_v² = 2fs_, _s = ½ft²_, and in circular motion like _f = v²/r_.
-
-Newton prefaced the _Principia_ by explaining that the earliest
-problems in natural philosophy which attract attention are connected
-with the phenomena of motion, and it was with motion that the book
-dealt. To discuss motion effectively, it was necessary to give
-precision to the language used, and accordingly he propounded
-definitions of mass, momentum, inertia, and so on, which have settled
-the language of the subject. He next enunciated his three well-known
-laws of motion, and described the experiments on which he based them.
-He followed this up by deducing rules for the composition and
-resolution of forces, and discussed relative motion.
-
-This preliminary matter is followed by the first book, concerned with
-the motion of bodies in an unresisting medium. It is divided into
-fourteen sections containing ninety-eight propositions with various
-interpolated lemmas, corollaries, and scholia.
-
-The first section is on the method of prime and ultimate ratios, by
-the use of which Newton was able, in effect, to integrate. He applied
-this to the curvature and the areas of curves, and proved that, at
-the very beginning of the motion of a body from rest under any force,
-the space described is proportional to the force and the square of the
-time.
-
-The second section is concerned with the motion of a particle under a
-central force. It contains the well-known propositions that if the
-force is central the area swept out by the vector to the centre is
-proportional to the time, and conversely that if such area is
-proportional to the time the particle is acted on by a central force.
-Newton further discussed particular cases of circular, elliptic, and
-spiral motion. In the third section he dealt with motion in a conic
-under a central force to the focus, showed that in this case the force
-must vary inversely as the square of the distance, and conversely that
-if a particle be projected from any point in any direction with any
-velocity under such a force it must describe a conic about the centre
-of force as a focus, and that in such elliptic orbits the periodic
-times are in the sesquiplicate ratio of the major axes of the
-ellipses. He also explained how to treat the problem if disturbing
-forces are introduced. These two sections solved the problem of
-planetary motion if the planets could be treated as particles and did
-not disturb one another's motions.
-
-The fourth and fifth sections are given up to the proof of certain
-geometrical propositions in conics required for subsequent
-discussions: in particular the construction of a conic when a focus
-and three other conditions or when five points on it or five tangents
-to it are given.
-
-In the sixth section Newton returned to the problem of the motion of a
-particle in an ellipse under a central force to a focus, and discussed
-how to determine the position of the particle at any given time.
-(Kepler's Problem.)
-
-The seventh and eighth sections are devoted to the motion of a
-particle under a central force which is any function of the distance.
-The geometrical treatment of these problems is ingenious, but
-necessarily more involved than when modern analysis is used.
-
-In the ninth section Newton dealt with the motion of particles in
-orbits which are revolving about the centre of force, and on the
-motion of the apses of such orbits: this introduced the theory of
-disturbing forces. The tenth section is concerned with constrained
-motion, and particularly with the motion of pendulums. The eleventh
-section deals with the motion of particles under their mutual
-attractions and incidentally with the problem of three bodies. These
-three sections afford a notable illustration of Newton's analytical
-powers.
-
-The twelfth and thirteenth sections deal with the attraction under
-various laws of force of spherical bodies, circular laminae, and
-solids of revolution. These sections brought the problem of the solar
-system, consisting of solid bodies of finite size and approximately
-spherical in form, into the domain of mathematics, and led up to the
-generalization that all particles of matter attract one another with a
-force proportional to the product of their masses and inversely
-proportional to the square of the distance between them, from which
-law it would seem that all the known phenomena of the motions of the
-solar system can be deduced.
-
-The fourteenth section is concerned with the motion of minute
-corpuscles, with applications to the corpuscular theory of light.
-
-The second book is devoted to the discussion of the motion of bodies
-in resisting mediums: there are fifty-three propositions besides
-lemmas, scholia, etc.
-
-In the first section, Newton considered the motion of a particle or
-sphere moving in a medium whose resistance varies as the velocity of
-the particle: in the second section the resistance is assumed to vary
-as the square of the velocity: and in the third section the resistance
-is supposed to consist of two terms, one varying as the velocity and
-the other as the square of the velocity. The fourth section is on
-spiral motion caused by resistance of the medium.
-
-The fifth section deals with the density and pressure of liquids and
-gases at rest (Hydrostatics).
-
-The sixth section treats of the motion of pendulums in a resisting
-medium; and the seventh section is concerned with the motion of
-fluids, and the resistance they offer to the motion of projectiles.
-The latter section contains the celebrated statement of the form of
-the solid of least resistance, whose demonstration proved a puzzle to
-mathematicians until the invention of the calculus of variations.
-Newton's solution is in the Portsmouth papers, and elsewhere I have
-published it: it involves the use of fluxions, and it is probable that
-it was his failure to translate this demonstration into geometrical
-language that led him to give the result without a proof.
-
-The eighth section deals with the motion of waves with applications to
-the theory of sound and the undulatory theory of light; and the ninth
-section deals with vortices; it is here shown that the theory of
-vortices suggested by Descartes to explain the motion of the solar
-system is untenable.
-
-This book created the theory of hydrodynamics. Much of it is
-incomplete, but it is astonishing that Newton proved as much as he
-did; of course to-day no one would suggest that the best way of
-attacking these problems is by Newtonian geometrical methods.
-
-The third book contains the practical application of the propositions
-in the two earlier books to the solar system. I need not describe this
-in detail. In order to justify this application, Newton commenced by
-laying down four rules which have since been accepted as binding in
-scientific investigations. These, as given in the third edition, are
-to the following effect: (1) We are not to assume more causes than are
-sufficient and necessary for the explanation of observed facts.
-(2) Hence, as far as possible, similar effects must be assigned to the
-same cause; for instance, the fall of stones in Europe and America.
-(3) Properties common to all bodies within reach of our experiments
-are to be assumed as pertaining to all bodies; for instance,
-extension. (4) Propositions in science obtained by a wide induction
-are to be regarded as exactly or approximately true, until phenomena
-or experiments show that they may be corrected or are liable to
-exceptions. The substance of these rules is now accepted as the basis
-of scientific investigation. Their formal enunciation here serves as a
-landmark in the history of thought.
-
-As soon as the Copernican view of the solar system was accepted, it
-was natural for men to seek to explain the reason why the planets
-moved as they did. Descartes, in 1644, had suggested that the
-explanation might be found in the existence of vortices in space. This
-conjecture, although based on arbitrary assumptions, and in fact
-untenable, played an important part in the history of the subject,
-for it accustomed men to think that planetary phenomena might be
-explicable by the same laws as are found to be true on the earth.
-That this was so was established by Newton in his _Principia_, where
-all the motions of the solar system were made to depend on one
-assumption as to the law of attraction. The question whether this law
-could itself be deduced from some more fundamental assumption was
-raised by Newton, but he could not devise a satisfactory hypothesis.
-It has been discussed again and again since his time, and the problem
-is still unsolved.
-
-Newton's conclusions were immediately accepted in Britain, and very
-rapidly by the leading mathematicians in Europe: indeed Huygens came
-expressly from Holland in order to make the personal acquaintance of
-a writer whose work promised to revolutionize the history of science.
-The refutation of the Cartesian hypothesis ran, however, counter to
-the sentiments and wishes of a certain number of philosophers, and
-some few years elapsed before the truth of the gravitation theory was
-universally admitted, but it would be ungracious to dwell further on
-this. In Britain the work exercised a profound influence in philosophy
-as well as in science, and educated men of all schools of thought
-acquainted themselves with the general line of Newton's reasoning and
-his deductions.
-
-That men of science and philosophers should have approved Newton's
-theory is not surprising, but it is somewhat curious that it excited
-so little opposition among theologians. Galileo's discoveries of
-hills, vales, and (supposed) seas on the moon and planets had already
-suggested that life might exist there, and in the popular (but
-illogical) view this involved the idea of the existence of beings with
-spiritual and intellectual faculties not unlike those of men. Newton's
-results seemed to show that there was nothing in the nature of things
-to differentiate the earth from the other planets, and therefore
-considerably strengthened the view that life might be found on them.
-It might well be asked whether such life, and indeed whether the
-mechanism of the solar system as expounded by Newton, was in
-accordance with Scripture. That these difficulties were not pressed
-against Newton's conclusions is, I think, attributable to the fact
-that his theory was explicitly concerned only with non-organic matter.
-His own opinion was that the extension of the reign of law was an
-additional argument in favour of a divine creation: this view, set out
-at the end of the _Principia_ and in his five letters to Bentley in
-1692-93, was generally accepted by the leaders of religious thought in
-Britain.
-
-Lagrange more than once remarked that Newton was not only the greatest
-mathematician of former days, but the most fortunate, since, as there
-is but one universe, it can happen to but one man in the world's
-history to be the interpreter of its laws. It is true that Newton
-applied his theory only to the solar system for which alone he had the
-necessary data, but after the publication of the _Principia_, no one
-doubted that gravity extended to the most distant regions of space.
-The work of Sir William Herschel and that of all later astronomers on
-binary and other systems rests on this hypothesis.
-
-The influence of the _Principia_ on dynamical astronomy has been
-permanent. It is not too much to say that when it was published, the
-theory, as there set out, had outstripped observation, but during the
-succeeding century large numbers of new facts were collected, and
-applications of the theory to new problems were made, notably by
-Clairaut, Euler, and Lagrange. All these researches tended to confirm
-it.
-
-The demonstrations in the _Principia_ are expressed in the language of
-classical geometry, and, though unnecessarily concise and difficult,
-their correctness is unimpeachable. That Newton could carry his
-calculations so far with the limited mathematics then at his command
-is not the least wonderful part of the performance, but it is the
-prerogative of genius to get great results with but scanty equipment.
-
-Newton's methods, which even in the seventeenth century were archaic,
-became in time quite out of date. This reason, the growth of the
-subject, and the development of analysis made it desirable to expound
-dynamical astronomy afresh. Towards the end of the eighteenth century
-the task was undertaken by Laplace in his _Mécanique Céleste_. This is
-far more than the translation of the _Principia_ into the language of
-modern analysis, for it greatly extends the theory of some branches of
-the subject which had been left incomplete by Newton, either on
-account of his not having the requisite analysis at his command or
-because the necessary facts were not available. Laplace acknowledged
-his debt to Newton, and expressed his deliberate opinion that the
-_Principia_ was pre-eminent over every previous production of human
-genius--"so near the gods, man cannot nearer go." A century later a
-fresh exposition of the subject embodying the discoveries of the
-nineteenth century was given by F.F. Tisserand in his _Mécanique
-Céleste_; this presents the subject in its modern form.
-
-Newton had applied his theory to the solar system as it existed, and
-had not investigated its origin. We owe to Laplace the enunciation of
-a hypothesis as to its evolution. According to this conjecture, the
-solar system originated in a quantity of incandescent gas rotating
-round an axis through its centre of mass. Laplace assumed that as this
-gas cooled, it would contract, and that successive rings would break
-off from its outer edge; these rings in their turn would cool, and
-finally condense into the planets with their satellites; while the sun
-represents the central core which would be left. Recent investigations
-show that this cannot be taken as correct without numerous
-modifications. Moreover every extension of our knowledge requires the
-introduction of alterations in the hypothesis, and this clearly
-suggests that the conjecture is untenable. It played, however, a
-useful part in its day, as suggesting a common origin for all members
-of the system. Perhaps I ought to add that a nebular origin had been
-previously outlined by Kant, who had also suggested meteoric
-aggregations and tidal friction as agents concerned, but these were
-little more than vague conjectures.
-
-The _Principia_ convinced its readers that the laws of mechanics,
-discovered by experiment on the earth, were operative throughout the
-solar system. It was reserved for the nineteenth century to extend the
-reign of law to other celestial phenomena. Newton and his successors
-had proved that the law of gravity extends through all parts of space
-where observations are possible. That the sun, stars, and planets are
-constituted of similar materials was generally believed; and this has
-now been confirmed by the use of the spectroscope which has enabled us
-to calculate the temperature of gaseous stars, and specify the
-chemical elements comprised in them. Thus the composition of
-far-distant suns has been reduced to problems to be settled in our
-laboratories. The scientific world, however, in admitting the validity
-of the theory of universal gravity had implicitly accepted the
-principle that the reign of law, as investigated on the earth, extends
-throughout the universe. Thus the daring which permits us, living on a
-medium-sized planet attached to one of the smaller suns, to analyse
-the universe is, I venture to say, the direct outcome of the genius of
-Newton as displayed in his _Principia_.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV.
-
-ISAAC NEWTON ON UNIVERSITY STUDIES.
-
-
-Among the Portsmouth papers in the University Library at Cambridge[33]
-is a memorandum by Isaac Newton, drawn up, I conjecture, towards the
-close of the seventeenth century, on the organization of the studies
-and on the discipline of the University.
-
-Conditions then differed so widely from those now in force that the
-value of the memorandum is only historical, but notwithstanding this,
-its interest is considerable. I have no reason to suppose that it was
-formally brought before the regent or the non-regent house, and
-possibly the plan never got beyond discussion by a few friends. I have
-modernized the spelling, made the use of capitals uniform, allowed
-myself to break paragraphs, and sometimes inserted punctuation or
-altered it--otherwise the paper is as originally written. I give it
-without further comment.
-
-
-_Newton's Memorandum._
-
-"Undergraduates to be instructed by a Tutor, a Humanity Lecturer, a
-Greek Lecturer, a Philosophy Lecturer, and a Mathematic Lecturer.
-
-"The Tutor to read logic, ethics, the globes and principles of
-geography and chronology in order to understand history, unless the
-Lecturers have time for any of these things.
-
-"The Humanity and Greek Lecturers to set tasks in Latin and Greek
-authors once a day to the first year, and once a week to the rest; and
-to examine diligently and instruct briefly; and to punish by exercises
-such faults as concern lectures; and to appoint the reading of the
-best historians.
-
-"The Philosophy Lecturer to read first of things introductory to
-natural philosophy--time, space, body, place, motion and its laws,
-force, mechanical powers, gravity and its laws, hydrostatics,
-projectiles solid and fluid, circular motions and the forces
-relating to them. And then to read natural philosophy, beginning with
-the general system of the world, and thence proceeding to the
-particular constitution of this earth and the things therein--meteors,
-elements, minerals, vegetables, animals, and ending with anatomy if he
-have skill therein. Also to examine in logic and ethics.
-
-"The Mathematic Lecturer to read first some easy and useful practical
-hings; then Euclid, spherics, the projections of the sphere, the
-construction of maps, trigonometry, astronomy, optics, music, algebra,
-etc. Also to examine and (if the Tutor be deficient) to instruct in
-the principles of chronology and geography.
-
-"Several sciences which depend not on one another are all learnt in
-less time together than successively, the mind being diverted and
-recreated by the variety, and put more upon the stretch. And
-therefore divers of these Lecturers may proceed together: suppose the
-Tutor's [lectures] after morning chapel, the Greek or Philosophy
-Lecturer's two hours after, and the Humanity and Mathematic
-[Lecturers'] in the afternoon. The Tutor to accompany his pupils to
-the philosophy and mathematic lectures, and to examine them the next
-morning both in those lectures and in his own, and make them
-understand where they hesitate. These two Lecturers to read five days
-in the week and with the other two [Lecturers] to examine the sixth.
-Each Lecturer to read the same day successively to two or three years
-[_i.e._, to Freshmen, Junior Sophs, or Senior Sophs as the case may
-be] under [their] several Tutors. Their lectures to begin with [the]
-Michaelmas Term and continue till the Commencement [_i.e._ the end of
-the Easter Term]: the Tutors to begin the Commencement before. The
-Greek and Humanity Lecturers to set bigger tasks in the vacations than
-in the reading-time, proportionally to the spare hours of the
-students.
-
-"A Monitor to note those who miss lectures, and give their names to
-the Humanity Lecturer, who shall punish them, not by pecuniary mulcts,
-but by tasks [, such as] by making verses, themes, epistles, or
-getting anything without book. All pecuniary mulcts of Undergraduates
-to be abolished; and exercises, admonitions, recantations, and
-expulsions (according to the nature of the crime) to succeed in their
-room.
-
-"In the Long Vacation, between the Commencement and Michaelmas, the
-Tutor shall take care that his Pupils read over all the last year's
-lessons again by themselves, and at the end of the vacation they shall
-be examined again, and those, who are at any time found not fit to go
-on, turned down to the lectures of the year below, that they do not
-retard the Lecturer and be an ill example to others.
-
-"The Lecturers to be chosen every three years, and the elections after
-the first institution to be on this manner. All those who have at any
-time been Lecturers shall choose four out of their number, one for
-each office, and the Master and Seniors of the College shall choose
-other four who have not yet executed the office, and those eight with
-the Master shall, by balancing, choose four out their number. [There
-shall be] no regard to seniority or anything but merit. The Lecturers
-to choose yearly a Public Tutor, and to reprehend or displace him if
-there be reason. This Tutor without a new election to take none but
-those admitted in his year of office until their course of lectures be
-gone through. No Private Tutor to take two years together. All sizars,
-poor scholars, and scholars of the House to be under Public Tutors,
-except Westminster scholars of Trinity College when the Tutor is of
-another school.
-
-"For encouraging able and fit men to accept of the Readers' places,
-their fellowships during their office shall be doubled by the
-addition of four other fellowships kept vacant for the purpose, one,
-for each, unless some other competent provision be made for any of
-them. And because the Philosophy and Mathematic Lecturers' office is
-laborious, for encouraging them to diligence none shall be compelled
-to come to their lectures, but all that will be auditors shall offer
-each of them a quarterly gratuity; suppose of 10s. the sizar, 12s. or
-15s. the pensioner, and 20s. or 25s. the fellow-commoner. And to
-encourage auditors those shall be preferred to scholarships and
-fellowships which are best skilled in all sciences, _caeteris
-paribus_, and shall have seniority of those that come not to lectures.
-This institution to begin in the greater colleges, and be carried on
-in the rest as men qualified and revenues can be had. In smaller
-colleges the Mathematic Lecturer may be omitted, and only a power
-granted the College of instituting one when they can. Also the Greek
-Lecturer's office may be supplied by the Humanity Lecturer when it
-shall be thought fit. A gratuity to be given by all the first year to
-the Greek and Humanity Lecturers.
-
-"For securing the Tutor and making his office desirable by fit
-persons, every student at his admission to deposit caution money in
-the hands of the bursar of the College; suppose £10 or £12 the sizar,
-£16 or £20 the pensioner, and £30 or £40 the fellow-commoner. And in
-case any pupil at the end of any quarter be in his Tutor's debt, and
-do not discharge it within six weeks after his receipt of the quarter
-bill, the Bursar to discharge it, and return back the residue upon
-demand, and the Tutor forthwith upon pain of forfeiting his office, to
-send home the pupil. Yet may the pupil be received again with a new
-supply of money. This institution to be universal. The Master and
-Seniors to regulate the expenses of all under tuition by certain
-limits common to them all, and the Senior Dean to read over and sign
-all their quarter bills. Extravagant pupils, after one admonition,
-to be sent away.
-
-"Fellow-commoners to perform all exercises in their courses, and to be
-equally subject to their Tutors and Governors with other scholars and
-alike punishable by exercises, and those who are resty or idle to be
-sent away lest they spoil others by their bad example. They shall read
-geography, chronology, and mathematics the first year.
-
-"All students who will be admitted to lectures in natural philosophy
-to learn first geometry and mechanics. By mechanics I mean here the
-demonstrative doctrine of forces and motions, including hydrostatics.
-For without a judgment in these things a man can have none in
-philosophy.
-
-"Whenever the major part of the Mathematic Lecturers in the University
-shall desire [it] a Master [shall be appointed] to teach
-fellow-commoners and others arithmetic and designing. The University
-shall allow him £10 yearly out of their Common Chest, and he shall
-observe the orders of the Mathematic Lecturers and be placed or
-displaced by the major part of them at pleasure.
-
-"All graduates without exception found by the Proctors in taverns or
-other drinking houses, unless with travellers at their inns, shall at
-least have their names given in to the Vice-Chancellor, who shall
-summon them to answer it before the next Consistory.
-
-"The Deans to visit the chambers of all undergraduates once at least
-every week, upon pain of forfeiting 10s. to the Lecturers for every
-omission.
-
-"Fasting nights have a shadow of religion without any substance. 'Tis
-only supping more pleasantly out of the public hall. And this does
-great mischief by sending young students to find suppers abroad, where
-they get into company and grow debauched. Whether would it not be
-better to license undergraduates to sup together in such places as the
-Dean shall appoint, with a Monitor to note the names of the absent?
-
-"All these lectures to consist in extemporary explications of books in
-such an easy, short, and clear manner as may be most profitable to the
-auditors. And if any Lecturer or other person shall compose any
-treatise which shall be preferred and used by the major part of the
-Mathematic or Philosophic Lecturers, the University shall give the
-author either £20, or if those Lecturers request it, £30, £40 or £50,
-out of their Common Chest.
-
-"Commissioners to be appointed for some years to set on foot, inspect,
-and amend the institution.
-
-"No oaths of office to be imposed on the Lecturers. I do not know a
-greater abuse of religion than that sort of oaths: they being harder
-to be kept than the Jewish Law, so that yearly absolutions have been
-instituted. The papists, who believe such absolutions, might be
-excused for instituting such oaths, but we have no such doctrine, and
-yet continue their practices. Admonitions and pecuniary mulcts for
-neglect of duty are less cruel punishments than the consequence of
-perjury, and may be as effectual."
-
-
-[Footnote 33: Camb. Univ. Library, Newton MSS. section viii, No. 5.
-Add. 4005/6, A.]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV.
-
-THE HISTORY OF THE MATHEMATICAL TRIPOS.
-
-
-The Mathematical Tripos has played so prominent a part in the history
-of education at Cambridge and of mathematics in England, that a sketch
-of its development[34] may be interesting to general readers.
-
-So far as mathematics is concerned the history of the University
-before Newton may be summed up very briefly. The University was
-founded towards the end of the twelfth century. Throughout the middle
-ages, the instruction given to students was organized on lines similar
-to those current at Paris and Oxford, and to qualify for a degree it
-was necessary to perform various exercises, and especially to keep a
-number of _acts_ or to oppose acts kept by other students. An act
-consisted in effect of a debate in Latin, thrown, at any rate in
-later times, into syllogistic form. It was commenced by one student,
-the _respondent_, stating some proposition, often propounded in the
-form of a thesis, which was attacked by an _opponent_ or _opponents_,
-the discussion being controlled by a senior graduate. The teaching was
-largely in the hands of young graduates--every master of arts being
-compelled to reside and teach for at least one year--though no doubt
-colleges and private hostels supplemented this instruction in the case
-of their own students.
-
-The reformation in England was largely the work of Cambridge divines,
-and in the University the renaissance was warmly welcomed. In spite of
-the disorder and confusion of the Tudor period, new studies and a
-system of professional instruction were introduced. The earliest
-lectureships created by the University seem to have been one in Latin
-established in or before 1492 and one in mathematics established in or
-before 1501: they mark the beginning of the system of teaching by
-experts which has superseded the medieval system of compulsory
-teaching by all regent masters. The fact that one of these
-lectureships was in mathematics shows that as early as 1500 the
-subject was regarded as important. Tunstall, subsequently the most
-eminent English arithmetician of his time, migrated in 1496 from
-Oxford to Cambridge, and most of the subsequent English
-mathematicians of the Tudor period were at Cambridge; of these I may
-mention Record (who migrated, probably about 1535, from Oxford), Dee,
-Digges, Blundeville, Buckley, Billingsley, Hill, Bedwell, Hood,
-Richard and John Harvey, Edward Wright, Briggs, and Oughtred. Under
-the Elizabethan statutes of 1570, notwithstanding many disadvantages,
-the mathematical school continued to grow. Horrox, Seth Ward, Foster,
-Rooke, Gilbert Clerke, Pell, Wallis, Barrow, Dacres, and Morland may
-be cited as prominent Cambridge mathematicians of the succeeding
-century.
-
-Newton's mathematical career dates from 1665; his reputation,
-abilities, and influence attracted general attention to the subject.
-He created a school of mathematics and mathematical physics, among the
-earliest members of which I note the names of Laughton, Samuel Clarke,
-Craig, Flamsteed, Whiston, Saunderson, Jurin, Taylor, Cotes, and
-Robert Smith. Since then Cambridge has been regarded as, in a special
-sense, the home of English mathematicians, and from 1706 onwards we
-have fairly complete accounts of the course of reading and work of
-mathematical students.
-
-Until less than a century ago the form of the method of qualifying for
-a degree remained substantially unaltered, but the subject-matter of
-the discussions varied from time to time with the prevalent studies
-of the place.
-
-After the renaissance some of the statutable exercises were "huddled,"
-that is, were reduced to a mere form. To huddle an act, the proctor
-generally asked some question such as _Quid est nomen?_ to which the
-answer usually expected was _Nescio_. In these exercises considerable
-license was allowed, particularly if there were any play on the words
-involved. For example, J. Brass, of Trinity, was accosted with the
-question, _Quid est aes?_ to which he answered, _Nescio nisi finis
-examinationis_. It should be added that retorts such as these were
-only allowed in the pretence exercises, and a candidate who in the
-actual examination was asked to give a definition of happiness and
-replied, "An exemption from Payne"--that being the name of his
-questioner--was plucked for want of discrimination in time and place.
-In earlier years even the farce of huddling seems to have been
-unnecessary, for it was said in 1675 that it was not uncommon for the
-proctors to take "cautions for the performance of the statutable
-exercises, and accept the forfeit of the money so deposited in lieu of
-their performance."
-
-In medieval times acts had been usually kept on some scholastic
-question or on a proposition taken from the _Sentences_. About the
-end of the fifteenth century religious questions, such as the
-interpretation of biblical texts, began to be introduced. Some fifty
-or sixty years later the favourite subjects were drawn either from
-dogmatic theology or from philosophy. In the seventeenth century the
-questions were usually philosophical, but in the eighteenth century,
-under the influence of the Newtonian school, a large proportion of
-them were mathematical.
-
-Further details about these exercises and specimens of acts kept in
-the eighteenth century are given in my _History of Mathematics at
-Cambridge_. Here I will only say that they provided an admirable
-training in the art of presenting an argument, and in dialectical
-skill in attack and defence. The mental strain involved in keeping a
-contested act was severe. De Morgan, describing his act kept in 1826,
-wrote[35]:
-
- I was badgered for two hours with arguments given and answered in
- Latin--or what we call Latin--against Newton's first section,
- Lagrange's derived functions, and Locke on innate principles. And
- though I took off everything, and was pronounced by the moderator to
- have disputed _magno honore_, I never had such a strain of thought
- in my life. For the inferior opponents were made as sharp as their
- betters by their tutors, who kept lists of queer objections drawn
- from all quarters.
-
-Had the language of the discussions been changed to English, as was
-repeatedly urged from 1774 onwards, these exercises might have been
-retained with advantage, but the barbarous Latin and the syllogistic
-form in which they were carried on prejudiced their retention.
-
-About 1830 a custom arose for the respondent and opponents to meet
-previously and arrange their arguments together. The discussions then
-became an elaborate farce, and were a mere public performance of what
-had been already rehearsed. Accordingly the moderators of 1839 took
-the responsibility of abandoning them. This action was singularly
-high-handed, since a report of 30 May 1838, had recommended that they
-should be continued, and there was no reason why they should not have
-been reformed and retained as a useful feature in the scheme of study.
-
-On the result of the acts, a list of those qualified to receive
-degrees was drawn up. This list was not arranged strictly in order of
-merit, because the proctors could insert names anywhere in it, but by
-the beginning of the eighteenth century this power had become
-restricted to the right reserved to the vice-chancellor, the senior
-regent, and each proctor to place in the list one candidate anywhere
-he liked--a right which continued to exist till 1828, though it was
-not exercised after 1792. Except for the names of these "honorary
-optimes," this final list was, until 1752, arranged in order of merit
-into wranglers and senior optimes, junior optimes, and poll-men;
-after 1752, the wranglers and senior optimes were placed in separate
-classes. The bachelors on admission to their degrees took seniority
-according to their order on this list. The title _wrangler_ is derived
-from these contentious discussions; the title _optime_ from the
-customary compliment given by the moderator to a successful disputant,
-_Domine ..., optime disputasti_, or even _optime quidem disputasti_,
-and the title of _poll-man_ from the description of this class as οἱ
-πολλοί.
-
-The final exercises for the bachelor of arts degree were never
-huddled, and until 1839 were carried out strictly. University
-officials were responsible for approving the subject-matter of these
-acts. Stupid men offered some irrefutable truism, but the ambitious
-student courted reputation by affirming some paradox. Probably all
-honour men kept acts, but poll-men were deemed to comply with the
-regulations by keeping opponencies. The proctors were responsible for
-presiding at these acts, or seeing that competent graduates did so.
-In and after 1649 two examiners were specially appointed for this
-purpose. In 1680[36] these examiners were appointed by the senate with
-the title of moderator, and with the joint stipend of four shillings
-for everyone graduating as a bachelor of arts during their year of
-office. In 1688 the joint stipend of the moderators was fixed at £40
-a year. The moderators, like the proctors, were nominated by the
-colleges in rotation.
-
-From the earliest times the proctors had the power of questioning a
-candidate at the end of a disputation, and probably all candidates for
-a degree attended the public schools on certain days to give an
-opportunity to the proctors (or any master who liked to take part in
-the examination) to examine them[37], though the opportunity was not
-always used. Such examinations were conducted in Latin, and originally
-different candidates attended on different days. Soon after 1710[38]
-the moderators or proctors began the custom of summoning on one day in
-January all candidates whom they proposed to question, and conducting
-the examination in English and in public: the examination did not last
-more than one day, and was partly on philosophy and partly on
-mathematics. It was from this examination that the Mathematical Tripos
-developed.
-
-This introduction of a regular oral examination seems to have been
-mainly due to the fact that when, in 1710, George I gave the Ely
-library to the University, it was decided to assign for its reception
-the old senate-house--now the catalogue room in the library--and to
-build a new room for the meetings of the senate. Pending the building
-of the new senate-house the books were stored in the Schools, which
-thus were rendered unavailable for keeping acts. In consequence of
-this, considerable difficulty was found in arranging for all the
-candidates to keep the full number of statutable exercises, and
-obtaining opportunities to compare them one with another: hence the
-introduction or extension of a supplementary oral examination. The
-advantages of this examination as providing a ready means of testing
-the knowledge and abilities of the candidates were so patent that it
-was retained when the necessity for some system of the kind had passed
-away, and finally it became systematized into an organized test to
-which all questionists were subjected.
-
-In 1731 the University raised the joint stipend of the moderators to
-£60 "in consideration of their additional trouble in the Lent Term."
-This would seem to indicate that the senate-house examination had then
-taken formal shape, and perhaps that a definite scheme for its conduct
-had become customary.
-
-As long as the order of the list of those approved for degrees was
-settled on the result of impressions derived from acts kept by the
-different candidates at different times and on different subjects, it
-was impossible to arrange the men in strict order of merit, nor was
-much importance attached to the order. But, with the introduction of
-an examination of all the candidates on one day, much closer attention
-was paid to securing an accurate classification, and more confidence
-felt in the published order. It seems to have been consequent on this
-that in and after 1748 the final lists were regarded as authoritative
-and important and that the names of the honorary optimes were
-definitely indicated: the lists from this time appeared in the
-_University Calendars_. The lists from 1748 to 1910, with the earlier
-Ordines Senioritatis from 1499 to 1747, are printed in the _Historical
-Register of the University_.
-
-Of the detailed history of the examination until the middle of the
-eighteenth century we know nothing. From 1750 onwards, however, we
-have more definite accounts of it. At this time, it would seem that
-all the men from each college were taken together as a class, and
-questions passed down by the proctors or moderators till they were
-answered: but the examination remained entirely oral, and technically
-was regarded as subsidiary to the discussions which had been
-previously held in the schools.
-
-Each class contained men of very different abilities, and to meet
-difficulties thus caused, a custom grew up by which every candidate
-was liable to be taken aside to be questioned by any master of arts
-who wished to do so, and this was regarded as an important part of the
-examination. The examination now continued for two days and a half,
-the subjects, as before, being mathematics and philosophy. At the
-conclusion of the second day the moderators received the reports of
-those masters of arts who had voluntarily taken part in the
-examination, and provisionally settled the final list. The last
-half-day was used in revising and rearranging the order of merit.
-
-Richard Cumberland has left an account of the tests to which he was
-subjected when he took his bachelor degree in 1751. Clearly the
-disputations still played an important part, and it is difficult to
-say what weight was attached to the subsequent senate-house
-examination; his reference to it is only of a general character. After
-saying that he kept two acts and two opponencies he continued[39]:
-
- The last time I was called upon to keep an act in the schools I sent
- in three questions to the Moderator, which he withstood as being all
- mathematical, and required me to conform to the usage of proposing
- one metaphysical question in the place of that, which I should think
- fit to withdraw. This was ground I never liked to take, and I
- appealed against his requisition: the act was accordingly put by
- till the matter of right should be ascertained by the statutes of
- the university, and in the result of that enquiry it was given for
- me, and my question stood.... I yielded now to advice, and paid
- attention to my health, till we were cited to the senate house to be
- examined for our Bachelor's degree. It was hardly ever my lot during
- that examination to enjoy any respite. I seemed an object singled
- out as every man's mark, and was kept perpetually at the table under
- the process of question and answer.
-
-It was found possible by means of the new examination to differentiate
-the better men more accurately than before; and accordingly, in 1753,
-as above stated, the first class was subdivided into two, called
-respectively wranglers and senior optimes, a division which is still
-maintained.
-
-The semi-official examination by masters of arts was regarded as the
-more important part of the test, and the most eminent residents in the
-University took part in it. Thus John Fenn, of Caius, 5th wrangler in
-1761, wrote[40]:
-
- On the following Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday, we sat in the
- Senate-house for public examination; during this time I was
- officially examined by the Proctors and Moderators, and had the
- honour of being taken out for examination by Mr Abbot, the
- celebrated mathematical tutor of St John's College, by the eminent
- professor of mathematics Mr Waring, of Magdalene, and by Mr Jebb of
- Peterhouse, a man thoroughly versed in the academical studies.
-
-This irregular examination by any master who chose to take part in it
-constantly gave rise to accusations of partiality.
-
-In 1763 the traditional rules for the conduct of the examination took
-more definite shape. Henceforth the examiners used the disputations
-only as a means of classifying the men roughly. On the result of their
-"acts," and probably partly also of their general reputation, the
-candidates were divided into eight classes, each arranged in
-alphabetical order. The subsequent position of the men in the class
-was determined solely by the senate-house examination. The first two
-classes comprised all who were expected to be wranglers, the next four
-classes included the other candidates for honours, and the last two
-classes consisted of poll-men only. Practically anyone placed in
-either of the first two classes was allowed, if he wished, to take an
-aegrotat senior optime, and thus escape all further examination: this
-was called gulphing it.
-
-All the men from one college were no longer taken together, but each
-class was examined separately and _vivâ voce_; and hence, since all
-the students comprised in each class were of about equal attainments,
-it was possible to make the examination more effective. Richard
-Watson, of Trinity, claimed that this change was made by him when
-acting as moderator in 1763. He said[41]:
-
- There was more room for partiality ... then [_i.e._ in 1759] than
- there is now; and I attribute the change, in a great degree, to an
- alteration which I introduced the first year I was moderator [_i.e._
- in 1763], and which has been persevered in ever since. At the time
- of taking their Bachelor of Arts' degree, the young men are examined
- in classes, and the classes are now formed according to the
- abilities shown by individuals in the schools. By this arrangement,
- persons of nearly equal merits are examined in the presence of each
- other, and flagrant acts of partiality cannot take place. Before I
- made this alteration, they were examined in classes, but the classes
- consisted of members of the same College, and the best and worst
- were often examined together.
-
-It is probable that before the examination in the senate-house began
-a candidate, if manifestly placed in too low a class, was allowed the
-privilege of challenging the class to which he was assigned. Perhaps
-this began as a matter of favour, and was only granted in exceptional
-cases, but a few years later it became a right which every candidate
-could exercise; and I think that it is partly to its development that
-the ultimate predominance of the tripos over the other exercises for
-the degree is due.
-
-In the same year, 1763, it was decided that the relative position of
-the senior and second wranglers, namely, Paley, of Christ's, and
-Frere, of Caius, was to be decided by the senate-house examination and
-not by the disputations. Henceforward distinction in that examination
-was regarded as the most important honour open to undergraduates.
-
-In 1768 Robert Smith, of Trinity College, founded prizes for
-mathematics and natural philosophy open to two commencing bachelors.
-The examination followed immediately after the senate-house
-examination, and the distinction, being much coveted, tended to
-emphasize the mathematical side of the normal university education of
-the best men. Since 1883 the prizes have been awarded on the result of
-dissertations[42]. Additional prizes, awarded at the same time, and
-associated with the name of Lord Rayleigh[43], were founded in 1909.
-
-Until about 1770, the senate-house examination had been oral, but it
-began now to be the custom to dictate some or all of the questions and
-to require answers to be written. Only one question was dictated at a
-time, and a fresh one was not given out until some student had solved
-that previously read: a custom which by causing perpetual
-interruptions to take down new questions must have proved very
-harassing. We are perhaps apt to think that an examination conducted
-by written papers is so natural that the custom is of long
-continuance, but I know no record of any in Europe earlier than the
-eighteenth century. Until 1830 the questions for the Smith's prizes
-were dictated.
-
-The following description of the senate-house examination as it
-existed in 1772 was given by Jebb[44]:
-
- The moderators, some days before the arrival of the time prescribed
- by the vice-chancellor, meet for the purpose of forming the students
- into divisions of six, eight, or ten, according to their performance
- in the schools, with a view to the ensuing examination.
-
- Upon the first of the appointed days, at eight o'clock in the
- morning, the students enter the senate-house, preceded by a master
- of arts from each college, who ... is called the "father" of the
- college....
-
- After the proctors have called over the names, each of the
- moderators sends for a division of the students: they sit with him
- round a table, with pens, ink, and paper, before them: he enters
- upon his task of examination, and does not dismiss the set till the
- hour is expired. This examination has now for some years been held
- in the English language.
-
- The examination is varied according to the abilities of the
- students. The moderator generally begins with proposing some
- questions from the six books of Euclid, plain (_sic_) trigonometry,
- and the first rules of algebra. If any person fails in an answer,
- the question goes to the next. From the elements of mathematics,
- a transition is made to the four branches of philosophy, viz.
- mechanics, hydrostatics, apparent astronomy, and optics, as
- explained in the works of Maclaurin, Cotes, Helsham, Hamilton,
- Rutherforth, Keill, Long, Ferguson, and Smith. If the moderator
- finds the set of questionists, under examination, capable of
- answering him, he proceeds to the eleventh and twelfth books of
- Euclid, conic sections, spherical trigonometry, the higher parts of
- Algebra, and sir Isaac Newton's Principia; more particularly those
- sections, which treat of the motion of bodies in eccentric and
- revolving orbits; the mutual action of spheres, composed of
- particles attracting each other according to various laws; the
- theory of pulses, propagated through elastic mediums; and the
- stupendous fabric of the world. Having closed the philosophical
- examination, he sometimes asks a few questions in Locke's Essay on
- the human understanding, Butler's Analogy, or Clarke's Attributes.
- But as the highest academical distinctions are invariably given to
- the best proficients in mathematics and natural philosophy, a very
- superficial knowledge in morality and metaphysics will suffice.
-
- When the division under examination is one of the highest classes,
- problems are also proposed, with which the student retires to a
- distant part of the senate-house, and returns, with his solution
- upon paper, to the moderator, who, at his leisure, compares it with
- the solutions of other students, to whom the same problems have been
- proposed.
-
- The extraction of roots, the arithmetic of surds, the invention of
- divisers, the resolution of quadratic, cubic, and biquadratic
- equations; together with the doctrine of fluxions, and its
- application to the solution of questions "de maximis et minimis,"
- to the finding of areas, to the rectification of curves, the
- investigation of the centers of gravity and oscillation, and to the
- circumstances of bodies, agitated, according to various laws, by
- centripetal forces, as unfolded, and exemplified, in the fluxional
- treatises of Lyons, Saunderson, Simpson, Emerson, Maclaurin, and
- Newton, generally form the subject matter of these problems.
-
- When the clock strikes nine, the questionists are dismissed to
- breakfast: they return at half-past nine, and stay till eleven; they
- go in again at half-past one, and stay till three; and, lastly, they
- return at half-past three, and stay till five.
-
- The hours of attendance are the same upon the subsequent day.
-
- On the third day they are finally dismissed at eleven.
-
- During the hours of attendance, every division is twice examined in
- form, once by each of the moderators, who are engaged for the whole
- time in this employment.
-
- As the questionists are examined in divisions of only six or eight
- at a time, but a small portion of the whole number is engaged, at
- any particular hour, with the moderators; and, therefore, if there
- were no further examination, much time would remain unemployed.
-
- But the moderator's inquiry into the merits of the candidates forms
- the least material part of the examination.
-
- The "fathers" of the respective colleges, zealous for the credit of
- the societies, of which they are the guardians, are incessantly
- employed in examining those students, who appear most likely to
- contest the palm of glory with their sons.
-
- This part of the process is as follows:
-
- The father of a college takes a student of a different college
- aside, and, sometimes for an hour and an half together, strictly
- examines him in every part of mathematics and philosophy, which he
- professes to have read.
-
- After he hath, from this examination, formed an accurate idea of the
- student's abilities and acquired knowledge, he makes a report of his
- absolute or comparative merit to the moderators, and to every other
- father who shall ask him the question.
-
- Besides the fathers, all masters of arts, and doctors, of whatever
- faculty they be, have the liberty of examining whom they please; and
- they also report the event of each trial, to every person who shall
- make the inquiry.
-
- The moderators and fathers meet at breakfast, and at dinner. From
- the variety of reports, taken in connection with their own
- examination, the former are enabled, about the close of the second
- day, so far to settle the comparative merits of the candidates, as
- to agree upon the names of four-and-twenty, who to them appear most
- deserving of being distinguished by marks of academical approbation.
-
- These four-and-twenty [wranglers and senior optimes] are recommended
- to the proctors for their private examination; and, if approved by
- them, and no reason appears against such placing of them from any
- subsequent inquiry, their names are set down in two divisions,
- according to that order, in which they deserve to stand; are
- afterwards printed; and read over upon a solemn day, in the presence
- of the vice-chancellor, and of the assembled university.
-
- The names of the twelve [junior optimes], who, in the course of the
- examination, appear next in desert, are also printed, and are read
- over, in the presence of the vice-chancellor, and of the assembled
- university, upon a day subsequent to the former....
-
- The students, who appear to have merited neither praise nor censure
- [the poll-men], pass unnoticed: while those, who have taken no pains
- to prepare themselves for the examination, and have appeared with
- discredit in the schools, are distinguished by particular tokens of
- disgrace.
-
-Jebb's statement about the number of wranglers and senior optimes is
-only approximate.
-
-It may be added that it was now frankly recognized that the
-examination was competitive[45]. Also that though it was open to any
-member of the senate to take part in it, yet the determination of the
-relative merit of the students was entirely in the hands of the
-moderators[46]. Although the examination did not occupy more than
-three days it must have been a severe physical trial to anyone who was
-delicate. It was held in winter and in the senate-house: that building
-was then noted for its draughts, and was not warmed in any way; and,
-according to tradition, on one occasion the candidates on entering in
-the morning found the ink frozen in the pots on their desks.
-
-The University was not altogether satisfied[47] with the regulations,
-and in 1779[48] the scheme of examination was amended in various
-respects. In particular the examination was extended to four days,
-a third day being given up entirely to natural religion, moral
-philosophy, and Locke's _Essay_. It was further announced[49] that a
-candidate would not receive credit for advanced subjects unless he had
-satisfied the examiners in Euclid's _Elements_ and elementary natural
-philosophy.
-
-A system of brackets or "classes quam minimae" was now introduced.
-Under this system the examiners issued on the morning of the fourth
-day a provisional list of men who had obtained honours, with the names
-of those of about equal merit bracketed, and that day was devoted to
-arranging the names in each bracket in order of merit: the examiners
-being given explicit authority to invite the assistance of others in
-this work. Whether at this time a candidate could request to be
-re-examined with the view of being moved from one bracket to another
-is uncertain, but later this also was allowed.
-
-The number of examiners was also increased to four, the moderators of
-one year becoming, as a matter of course, the examiners of the next.
-Thus of the four examiners in each year, two had taken part in the
-examination of the previous year, and the continuity of the system of
-examination was maintained. The names of the moderators appear on the
-tripos lists, but the names of the examiners were not printed on the
-lists till some years later.
-
-The right of any master of arts to take part in the examination was
-not affected, though henceforth it was exercised more sparingly, and I
-believe was not insisted on after 1785. But it became a regular custom
-for the moderators to invite particular residents to examine and
-compare specified candidates: Milner, of Queens', was constantly asked
-to assist in this way.
-
-It was not long before it became an established custom that a
-candidate, who was dissatisfied with the class in which he had been
-placed as the result of his disputations, might challenge it before
-the examination began. This power seems to have been used but rarely;
-it was, however, a recognition of the fact that a place in the tripos
-list was to be determined by the senate-house examination alone, and
-the examiners soon acquired the habit of settling the preliminary
-classes without exclusive reference to the previous disputations.
-
-The earliest extant paper actually set in the senate-house, to which
-we can with certainty refer, is a problem paper set in 1785 or 1786 by
-W. Hodson, of Trinity, then a proctor. The autograph copy from which
-he gave out the questions was luckily preserved, and is in the
-library[50] of Trinity College. It must be almost the last problem
-paper which was dictated, instead of being printed and given as a
-whole to the candidates. The paper is as follows:
-
- 1. To determine the velocity with which a Body must be thrown, in
- a direction parallel to the Horizon, so as to become a secondary
- planet to the Earth; as also to describe a parabola, and never
- return.
-
- 2. To demonstrate, supposing the force to vary as _1/D²_ how far a
- body must fall both within and without the Circle to acquire the
- Velocity with which a body revolves in a Circle.
-
- 3. Suppose a body to be turned (_sic_) upwards with the Velocity
- with which it revolves in an Ellipse, how high will it ascend? The
- same is asked supposing it to move in a parabola.
-
- 4. Suppose a force varying first as _1/D³_, secondly in a greater
- ratio than _1/D²_ but less than _1/D³_, and thirdly in a less ratio
- than _1/D²_, in each of these Cases to determine whether at all, and
- where the body parting from the higher Apsid will come to the lower.
-
- 5. To determine in what situation of the moon's Apsid they go most
- forwards, and in what situation of her Nodes the Nodes go most
- backwards, and why?
-
- 6. In the cubic equation _x³ + qx + r = 0_ which wants the second
- term; supposing _x = a + b_ and _3ab = -q_, to determine the value
- of _x_. (_sic._)
-
- 7. To find the fluxion of _x^r × (y^n + z^m)^{1/q}_.
-
- 8. To find the fluent of _aẋ / (a + x)_.
-
- 9. To find the fluxion of the _m_^th power of the Logarithm of _x_.
-
- 10. Of right-angled Triangles containing a given Area to find that
- whereof the sum of the two legs _AB + BC_ shall be the least
- possible. [This and the two following questions are illustrated by
- diagrams. The angle at _B_ is the right angle.]
-
- 11. To find the Surface of the Cone _ABC_. [The cone is a right one
- on a circular base.]
-
- 12. To rectify the arc _DB_ of the semicircle _DBV_.
-
-In cases of equality in the senate-house examination, the acts were
-still taken into account in settling the tripos order: and in 1786,
-when the second, third, and fourth wranglers came out equal in the
-examination, a memorandum was published that the second place was
-given to that candidate who _dialectis magis est versatus_, and the
-third place to that one who _in scholis sophistarum melius
-disputavit_.
-
-At this time there were various intervals in the examination by the
-moderators, and the examinations by the extraneous examiners took
-place in these intervals. Those candidates who at any time were not
-being examined occupied themselves with amusements, provided they were
-not too boisterous and obvious: probably dice and cards played a large
-part in them. Gunning in an amusing account of his examination in 1788
-talks of playing with a teetotum[51] on the Wednesday (when specified
-works by Locke and Paley formed the subjects of examination), and says
-this game "was carried on with great spirit ... by considerable
-numbers during the whole of the examination."
-
-About this period, 1790, the custom of printing the problem papers was
-introduced, but until 1828 the other papers continued to be dictated.
-Since then all the papers have been printed.
-
-I insert here the following letter[52] from William Gooch, of Caius,
-in which he described his examination in the senate-house in 1791. It
-must be remembered that it is the letter of an undergraduate addressed
-to his father and mother, and was not intended either for preservation
-or publication: a fact which certainly does not detract from its
-value.
-
- _Monday_ ¼ aft. 12.
-
- We have been examin'd this Morning in pure Mathematics & I've
- hitherto kept just about even with Peacock which is much more than
- I expected. We are going at 1 o'clock to be examin'd till 3 in
- Philosophy.
-
- From 1 till 7 I did more than Peacock; But who did most at
- Moderator's Rooms this Evening from 7 till 9, I don't know yet;--but
- I did above three times as much as the Sen^r Wrangler last year, yet
- I'm afraid not so much as Peacock.
-
- Between One & three o'Clock I wrote up 9 sheets of Scribbling Paper
- so you may suppose I was pretty fully employ'd.
-
- _Tuesday Night._
-
- I've been shamefully us'd by Lax to-day;--Tho' his anxiety for
- Peacock must (of course) be very great, I never suspected that his
- Partially (_sic_) w^d get the better of his Justice. I had
- entertain'd too high an opinion of him to suppose it.--he gave
- Peacock a long private Examination & then came to me (I hop'd) on
- the same subject, but 'twas only to _Bully_ me as much as he
- could,--whatever I said (tho' right) he tried to convert into
- Nonsense by seeming to misunderstand me. However I don't entirely
- dispair of being first, tho' you see Lax seems determin'd that I
- shall not.--I had no Idea (before I went into the Senate-House) of
- being able to contend at all with Peacock.
-
- _Wednesday evening._
-
- Peacock & I are still in perfect Equilibrio & the Examiners
- themselves can give no guess yet who is likely to be first;--a New
- Examiner (Wood of St. John's, who is reckon'd the first
- Mathematician in the University, for Waring doesn't reside) was
- call'd solely to examine Peacock & me only.--but by this new Plan
- nothing is yet determin'd.--So Wood is to examine us again to-morrow
- morning.
-
- _Thursday evening._
-
- Peacock is declar'd first & I second,--Smith of this Coll. is either
- 8^th or 9^th & Lucas is either 10^th or 11^th.--Poor Quiz Carver is
- one of the οἱ πολλοί;--I'm perfectly _satisfied_ that the Senior
- Wranglership is Peacock's due, but _certainly_ not so very
- undisputably as Lax pleases to represent it--I understand that _he_
- asserts 'twas 5 to 4 in Peacock's favor. Now Peacock & I have
- explain'd to each other how we went on, & can _prove indisputably_
- that it wasn't 20 to 19 in his favor;--I _cannot_ therefore be
- displeas'd for being plac'd second, tho' I'm provov'd (_sic_) with
- Lax for his false report (so much beneath the Character of a
- Gentleman.)--
-
- N.B. it is my very _particular Request_ that you dont mention Lax's
- behaviour to me to any one.
-
-Such was the form ultimately taken by the senate-house examination, a
-form which it retained substantially without alteration for nearly
-half-a-century. It soon became the sole test by which candidates were
-judged. The University was not obliged to grant a degree to anyone who
-performed the statutable exercises, and it was open to the senate to
-refuse to pass a supplicat for a bachelor's degree in arts unless the
-candidate had presented himself for the senate-house examination. In
-1790 James Blackburn, of Trinity, a questionist of exceptional
-abilities, was informed that in spite of his good disputations he
-would not be allowed a degree unless he also satisfied the examiners
-in the tripos. He accordingly solved one "very hard problem," though
-in consequence of a dispute with the authorities he refused to attempt
-any more[53].
-
-Henceforth the examination was compulsory on all candidates pursuing
-the normal course for the B.A. degree. In 1791 the University laid
-down rules[54] for its conduct, so far as it concerned poll-men,
-decreeing that those who passed were to be classified in four
-divisions or classes, the names in each class to be arranged
-alphabetically, but not to be printed on the official tripos lists.
-The classes in the final lists must be distinguished from the eight
-preliminary classes issued before the commencement of the examination.
-The men in the first six preliminary classes were expected to take
-honours; those in the seventh and eighth preliminary classes were
-_primâ facie_ poll-men.
-
-In 1799 the moderators announced[55] that for the future they would
-require every candidate to show a competent knowledge of the first
-book of Euclid's _Elements_, arithmetic, vulgar and decimal fractions,
-simple and quadratic equations, and selected books by Locke and Paley.
-Paley's works seem to be held in esteem by modern divines, and his
-_Evidences_, though not his _Philosophy_, still remains (1917) one of
-the subjects of the Previous Examination, but his contemporaries
-thought less highly of his writings, or at any rate of his philosophy.
-Thus Best is quoted by Wordsworth[56] as saying of Paley's
-_Philosophy_, "The tutors of Cambridge no doubt neutralize by their
-judicious remarks, when they read it to their pupils, all that is
-pernicious in its principles": so also Richard Watson, bishop of
-Llandaff, in his anecdotal autobiography[57], says, in describing the
-senate-house examination in which Paley was senior wrangler, that
-Paley was afterwards known to the world by many excellent productions,
-"though there are some ... principles in his philosophy which I by no
-means approve."
-
-In 1800 the moderators extended to all men in the first four
-preliminary classes the privilege of being allowed to attempt the
-problem papers: hitherto this privilege had been confined to
-candidates placed in the first two classes. Until 1828 the problem
-papers were set in the evenings, and in the rooms of the moderator,
-but many of the so-called problems were really pieces of bookwork or
-easy riders. No problems were ever set to the men in the seventh and
-eighth preliminary classes, which contained the poll-men.
-
-The _University Calendars_ date from 1796, and from 1802 to 1882
-inclusive contain the printed tripos papers of the previous January.
-The papers from 1801 to 1820 and from 1838 to 1849 inclusive were also
-published in separate volumes, which are to be found in most public
-libraries. None of the bookwork papers of this time are now extant,
-but it is believed that they contained few, if any, riders. In looking
-at these papers to form an opinion of the knowledge current at the
-time it is necessary to bear in mind that the text-books then in
-circulation were far from satisfactory.
-
-The _Calendar_ of 1802 contains a diffuse account of the examination.
-It commences as follows:
-
- On the Monday morning, a little before eight o'clock, the students,
- generally about a hundred, enter the Senate-House, preceded by a
- master of arts, who on this occasion is styled the father of the
- College to which he belongs. On two pillars at the entrance of the
- Senate-House are hung the classes and a paper denoting the hours of
- examination of those who are thought most competent to contend for
- honours. Immediately after the University clock has struck eight,
- the names are called over, and the absentees, being marked, are
- subject to certain fines. The classes to be examined are called
- out, and proceed to their appointed tables, where they find pens,
- ink, and paper provided in great abundance. In this manner, with the
- utmost order and regularity, two-thirds of the young men are set to
- work within less than five minutes after the clock has struck eight.
- There are three chief tables, at which six examiners preside. At the
- first, the senior moderator of the present year and the junior
- moderator of the preceding year. At the second, the junior moderator
- of the present, and the senior moderator of the preceding year. At
- the third, two moderators of the year previous to the two last, or
- two examiners appointed by the Senate. The two first tables are
- chiefly allotted to the six first classes; the third, or largest, to
- the οἱ πολλοί.
-
- The young men hear the propositions or questions delivered by the
- examiners; they instantly apply themselves; demonstrate, prove, work
- out and write down, fairly and legibly (otherwise their labour is of
- little avail) the answers required. All is silence; nothing heard
- save the voice of the examiners; or the gentle request of some one,
- who may wish a repetition of the enunciation. It requires every
- person to use the utmost dispatch; for as soon as ever the examiners
- perceive anyone to have finished his paper and subscribed his name
- to it another question is immediately given....
-
- The examiners are not seated, but keep moving round the tables, both
- to judge how matters proceed and to deliver their questions at
- proper intervals. The examination, which embraces arithmetic,
- algebra, fluxions, the doctrine of infinitesimals and increments,
- geometry, trigonometry, mechanics, hydrostatics, optics, and
- astronomy, in all their various gradations, is varied according to
- circumstances: no one can anticipate a question, for in the course
- of five minutes he may be dragged from Euclid to Newton, from the
- humble arithmetic of Bonnycastle to the abstruse analytics of
- Waring. While this examination is proceeding at the three tables
- between the hours of eight and nine, printed problems are delivered
- to each person of the first and second classes; these he takes with
- him to any window he pleases, where there are pens, ink, and paper
- prepared for his operations.
-
-The examination began at eight o'clock in the morning. At nine the
-papers had to be given up, and half-an-hour was allowed for breakfast.
-At half-past nine the candidates came back, and were examined in the
-way described above till eleven, when the senate-house was again
-cleared. An interval of two hours then took place. At one o'clock all
-returned to be again examined. At three the senate-house was cleared
-for half-an-hour, and, on the return of the candidates, the
-examination was continued till five. At seven in the evening the first
-four classes went to the senior moderator's rooms to solve problems.
-They were finally dismissed for the day at nine, after eight hours of
-examination. The work of Tuesday was similar to that of Monday:
-Wednesday was partly devoted to logic and moral philosophy.
-
-At eight o'clock on Thursday morning a first list was published with
-all candidates of about equal merits bracketed. Until nine o'clock a
-candidate had the right to challenge anyone above him to an
-examination to see which was the better. At nine a second list came
-out, and a candidate's right of challenge was then confined to the
-bracket immediately above his own. If he proved himself the equal of
-or better than the man so challenged his name was transferred to the
-upper bracket. To challenge and then to fail to substantiate the claim
-to removal to a higher bracket was considered rather ridiculous.
-Revised lists were published at eleven, three, and five, according to
-the results of the examination during that day. At five the whole
-examination ended. The proctors, moderators, and examiners then
-retired to a room under the public library to prepare the list of
-honours, which was sometimes settled in a few hours, but sometimes not
-before two or three the next morning. The name of the senior wrangler
-was generally announced at midnight, and the rest of the list the next
-morning. In 1802 there were eighty-six candidates for honours, and
-they were divided into fifteen brackets, the first and second brackets
-containing each one name only, and the third bracket four names.
-
-It is clear from the above account that the competition fostered by
-the examination had developed so much as to threaten to impair its
-usefulness as guiding the studies of the men. On the other hand, there
-can be no doubt that the carefully devised arrangements for obtaining
-an accurate order of merit stimulated the best men to throw all their
-energies into the work for the examination. It is easy to point out
-the double-edged result of a strict order of merit. The problem before
-the University was to retain its advantages while checking any abuses
-to which it might lead.
-
-It was the privilege of the moderators to entertain the proctors and
-some of the leading resident mathematicians the night before the issue
-of the final list, and to communicate that list in confidence to their
-guests. This pleasant custom survived till 1884. I revived the
-practice in 1890 when acting as senior moderator, but it seems to have
-now ceased.
-
-In 1806 Sir Frederick Pollock was senior wrangler, and in 1869 in
-answer to an appeal from De Morgan for an account of the mathematical
-study of men at the beginning of the century he wrote a letter[58]
-which is sufficiently interesting to bear reproduction:
-
- I shall write in answer to your inquiry, _all_ about my books,
- my study, and my degree, and leave you to settle all about the
- proprieties which my letter may give rise to, as to egotism,
- modesty, &c. The only books I read the first year were Wood's
- _Algebra_ (as far as quadratic equations), Bonnycastle's ditto,
- and _Euclid_ (Simpson's). In the second year I read Wood (beyond
- quadratic equations), and Wood and Vince, for what they called the
- _branches_. In the third year I read the _Jesuit's_ Newton and
- Vince's _Fluxions_; these were all the _books_, but there were
- certain MSS. floating about which I copied--which belonged to
- Dealtry, second wrangler in Kempthorne's year. I have no doubt that
- I had read less and seen fewer books than any senior wrangler of
- about my time, or any period since; but what I knew I knew
- thoroughly, and it was completely at my fingers' ends. I consider
- that I was the last _geometrical_ and _fluxional_ senior wrangler;
- I was not up to the _differential_ calculus, and never acquired it.
- I went up to college with a knowledge of Euclid and algebra to
- quadratic equations, nothing more; and I never read any second
- year's lore during my first year, nor any third year's lore during
- my second; my _forte_ was, that what I _did_ know I _could produce
- at any moment with PERFECT accuracy_. I could repeat the first book
- of Euclid word by word and letter by letter. During my first year
- I was not a "_reading_" man (so called); I had no expectation of
- honours or a fellowship, and I attended all the lectures on all
- subjects--Harwood's anatomical, Wollaston's chemical, and Farish's
- mechanical lectures--but the examination at the end of the first
- year revealed to me my powers. I was not only in the first class,
- but it was generally understood I was _first_ in the first class;
- neither I nor anyone for me expected I should get in at all. Now, as
- I had taken no pains to prepare (taking, however, marvellous pains
- while the examination was going on), I knew better than anyone else
- the value of my _examination qualities_ (great rapidity and perfect
- accuracy); and I said to myself, "If you're not an ass, you'll be
- senior wrangler"; and _I took to "reading" accordingly_. A curious
- circumstance occurred when the Brackets came out in the Senate-house
- declaring the result of the examination: I saw at the top the name
- of Walter _bracketed alone_ (as he was); in the bracket below were
- _Fiott_, _Hustler_, _Jephson_. I looked down and could not find my
- own name till I got to Bolland, when my pride took fire, and I said,
- "I must have beaten _that man_, so I will look up again"; and on
- looking up carefully I found the nail had been passed through my
- name, and I was at the top bracketed _alone_, even above Walter. You
- may judge what my feelings were at this discovery; it is the only
- instance of two such brackets, and it made my fortune--that is, made
- me independent, and gave me an immense college reputation. It was
- said I was more than half of the examination before anyone else. The
- two moderators were Hornbuckle, of St John's, and Brown (Saint
- Brown), of Trinity. The Johnian congratulated me. I said perhaps
- I might be challenged; he said, "Well, if you are you're quite
- safe--you may sit down and do nothing, and no one would get up to
- you in a whole day." ...
-
- Latterly the Cambridge examinations seem to turn upon very different
- matters from what prevailed in my time. I think a Cambridge
- education has for its object to make good members of society--not
- to extend science and make profound mathematicians. The tripos
- questions in the Senate-house ought not to go beyond certain limits,
- and geometry ought to be cultivated and encouraged much more than
- it is.
-
-To this De Morgan replied:
-
- Your letter suggests much, because it gives possibility of answer.
- The _branches_ of algebra of course mainly refer to the second part
- of Wood, now called the theory of equations. Waring was his guide.
- Turner--whom you must remember as head of Pembroke, senior wrangler
- of 1767--told a young man in the hearing of my informant to be sure
- and attend to quadratic equations. "It was a quadratic," said he,
- "made me senior wrangler." It seems to me that the Cambridge
- _revivers_ were [Woodhouse,] Waring, Paley, Vince, Milner.
-
- You had Dealtry's MSS. He afterwards published a very good book on
- fluxions. He merged his mathematical fame in that of a Claphamite
- Christian. It is something to know that the tutor's MS. was in vogue
- in 1800-1806.
-
- Now--how did you get your conic sections? How much of Newton did you
- read? From Newton direct, or from tutor's manuscript?
-
- Surely Fiott was our old friend Dr Lee. I missed being a pupil of
- Hustler by a few weeks. He retired just before I went up in February
- 1823. The echo of Hornbuckle's answer to you about the challenge has
- lighted on Whewell, who, it is said, wanted to challenge Jacob, and
- was answered that he could not beat [him] if he were to write the
- whole day and the other wrote nothing. I do not believe that Whewell
- would have listened to any such dissuasion.
-
- I doubt your being the last fluxional senior wrangler. So far as I
- know, Gipps, Langdale, Alderson, Dicey, Neale, may contest this
- point with you.
-
-The answer, dated 7 August 1869, of Sir Frederick Pollock to these
-questions was as follows:
-
- You have put together as _revivers_ five very different men.
- Woodhouse was better than Waring, who could not prove Wilson's
- (Judge of C. P.) guess about the property of prime numbers; but
- Woodhouse (I think) did prove it, and a beautiful proof it is.
- Vince was a bungler, and I think utterly insensible of mathematical
- beauty.
-
- Now for your questions. I did not get my conic sections from Vince.
- I copied a MS. of Dealtry. I fell in love with the cone and its
- sections, and everything about it. I have never forsaken my
- favourite pursuit; I delighted in such problems as two spheres
- touching each other and also the inside of a hollow cone, &c. As to
- Newton, I read a good deal (men _now_ read nothing), but I read much
- of the notes. I detected a blunder which nobody seemed to be aware
- of. Tavel, tutor of Trinity, was not; and he argued very favourably
- of me in consequence. The application of the Principia I got from
- MSS. The blunder was this: in calculating the resistance of a globe
- at the end of a cylinder oscillating in a resisting medium they had
- forgotten to notice that there is a difference between the
- resistance to a globe and a circle of the same diameter.
-
- The story of Whewell and Jacob cannot be true. Whewell was a very,
- _very_ considerable man, I think not a _great_ man. I have no doubt
- Jacob beat him in accuracy, but the supposed answer _cannot_ be
- true; it is a mere echo of what actually passed between me and
- Hornbuckle on the day the Tripos came out--for the truth of which I
- vouch. I think the examiners are taking too _practical_ a turn; it
- is a waste of time to calculate _actually_ a longitude by the help
- of logarithmic tables and lunar observations. It would be a fault
- not to know _how_, but a greater to be handy at it.
-
-A few minor changes in the senate-house examination were made in
-1808[59]. A fifth day was added to the examination. Of the five days
-thus given up to it three were devoted to mathematics, one to logic,
-philosophy, and religion, and one to the arrangement of the brackets.
-Apart from the evening paper the examination on each of the first
-three days lasted six hours: of these eighteen hours, eleven were
-assigned to bookwork and seven to problems. The problem papers were
-set from six to ten in the evening.
-
-A letter from Whewell, dated 19 January 1816, thus describes his
-examination in the senate-house[60]:
-
- Jacob. Whewell. Such is the order in which we are fixed after a
- week's examination.... I had before been given to understand that a
- great deal depended upon being able to write the greatest possible
- quantity in the smallest time, but of the rapidity which was
- actually necessary I had formed the most distant idea. I am upon no
- occasion a quick writer, and upon subjects where I could not go on
- without sometimes thinking a little I soon found myself considerably
- behind. I was therefore surprised, and even astonished, to find
- myself bracketed off, as it is called, in the second place; that is,
- on the day when a new division of the classes is made for the
- purpose of having a closer examination of the respective merits of
- men who come pretty near to each other, I was not classed with
- anybody, but placed alone in the second bracket. The man who is at
- the head of the list is of Caius College, and was always expected to
- be very high, though I do not know that anybody expected to see him
- so decidedly superior as to be bracketed off by himself.
-
-The tendency to cultivate mechanical rapidity was a grave evil, and
-lasted long after Whewell's time. According to rumour the highest
-honours in 1845 were obtained by assiduous practice in writing[61].
-
-The devotion of the Cambridge school to geometrical and fluxional
-methods had led to its isolation from contemporary continental
-mathematicians. Early in the nineteenth century the evil consequence
-of this began to be recognized; and it was felt to be little less than
-a scandal that the researches of Lagrange, Laplace, and Legendre were
-unknown to many Cambridge mathematicians save by repute. An attempt to
-explain the notation and methods of the calculus as used on the
-continent was made by Woodhouse, later professor in the University,
-who stands out as the apostle of the new movement.
-
-It is doubtful if Woodhouse could have brought analytical methods into
-vogue by himself; but his views were enthusiastically adopted by three
-students, Peacock, Babbage, and Herschel, who succeeded in carrying
-out the reforms he had suggested. They created an Analytical Society
-which Babbage explained was formed to advocate "the principles of pure
-_d_-ism as opposed to the _dot_-age of the University." The character
-of the instruction in mathematics at the University has at all times
-largely depended on the text-books in use, and the importance of good
-books of this class was emphasized by a traditional rule that
-questions should not be set on a new subject in the tripos unless it
-had been discussed in some treatise suitable and available for
-Cambridge students[62]. Hence the importance attached to the
-publication of the work on analytical trigonometry by Woodhouse in
-1809, and of the works on the differential calculus issued by members
-of the Analytical Society in 1816 and 1820.
-
-In 1817 Peacock, who was moderator, introduced the symbols for
-differentiation into the papers set in the senate-house examination;
-his colleague, however, continued to use the fluxional notation.
-Peacock himself wrote on 17 March 1817 (_i.e._ shortly after the
-examination) on the subject as follows[63]:
-
- I assure you ... that I shall never cease to exert myself to the
- utmost in the cause of reform, and that I will never decline any
- office which may increase my power to effect it. I am nearly certain
- of being nominated to the office of Moderator in the year 1818-19,
- and as I am an examiner in virtue of my office, for the next year I
- shall pursue a course even more decided than hitherto, since I shall
- feel that men have been prepared for the change, and will then be
- enabled to have acquired a better system by the publication of
- improved elementary books. I have considerable influence as a
- lecturer, and I will not neglect it. It is by silent perseverance
- only that we can hope to reduce the many-headed monster of
- prejudice, and make the University answer her character as the
- loving mother of good learning and science.
-
-In 1818 all candidates for honours, that is, all men in the first six
-preliminary classes, were allowed to attempt the problems: this change
-was made by the moderators.
-
-In 1819 Peacock, who was again moderator, induced his colleague to
-adopt the new notation. It was employed in the next year by Whewell,
-and in the following year by Peacock again. Henceforth the calculus
-in its modern language and analytical methods were freely used, new
-subjects were introduced, and for many years the examination provided
-a mathematical training fairly abreast of the times.
-
-By this time the disputations had ceased to have any immediate effect
-on a man's place in the tripos. Thus Whewell[64], writing about his
-duties as moderator in 1820, said:
-
- You would get very exaggerated ideas of the importance attached to
- it [an Act] if you were to trust Cumberland; I believe it was
- formerly more thought of than it is now. It does not, at least
- immediately, produce any effect on a man's place in the tripos, and
- is therefore considerably less attended to than used to be the case,
- and in most years is not very interesting after the five or six best
- men: so that I look for a considerable exercise of, or rather demand
- for, patience on my part. The other part of my duty in the Senate
- House consists in manufacturing wranglers, senior optimes, etc. and
- is, while it lasts, very laborious.
-
-Of the examination itself in this year he wrote as follows[65]:
-
- The examination in the Senate House begins to-morrow, and is rather
- close work while it lasts. We are employed from seven in the morning
- till five in the evening in giving out questions and receiving
- written answers to them; and when that is over, we have to read over
- all the papers which we have received in the course of the day, to
- determine who have done best, which is a business that in numerous
- years has often kept the examiners up the half of every night; but
- this year is not particularly numerous. In addition to all this, the
- examination is conducted in a building which happens to be a very
- beautiful one, with a marble floor and a highly ornamented ceiling;
- and as it is on the model of a Grecian temple, and as temples had no
- chimneys, and as a stove or a fire of any kind might disfigure the
- building, we are obliged to take the weather as it happens to be,
- and when it is cold we have the full benefit of it--which is likely
- to be the case this year. However, it is only a few days, and we
- have done with it.
-
-A sketch of the examination in the previous year from the point of
-view of an examinee was given by J.M.F. Wright[66], but there is
-nothing of special interest in it.
-
-Sir George B. Airy[67] gave the following sketch of his recollections
-of the reading and studies of undergraduates of his time and of the
-tripos of 1823, in which he had been senior wrangler:
-
- At length arrived the Monday morning on which the examination for
- the B.A. degree was to begin.... We were all marched in a body to
- the Senate-House and placed in the hands of the Moderators. How the
- "candidates for honours" were separated from the οἱ πολλοί I do not
- know, I presume that the Acts and the Opponencies had something to
- do with it. The honour candidates were divided into six groups: and
- of these Nos. 1 and 2 (united), Nos. 3 and 4 (united), and Nos. 5
- and 6 (united), received the questions of one Moderator. No. 1,
- Nos. 2 and 3 (united), Nos. 4 and 5 (united), and No. 6, received
- those of the other Moderator. The Moderators were reversed on
- alternate days. There were no printed question-papers: each examiner
- had his bound manuscript of questions, and he read out his first
- question; each of the examinees who thought himself able proceeded
- to write out his answer, and then orally called out "Done." The
- Moderator, as soon as he thought proper, proceeded with another
- question. I think there was only one course of questions on each day
- (terminating before 3 o'clock, for the Hall dinner). The examination
- continued to Friday mid-day. On Saturday morning, about 8 o'clock,
- the list of honours (manuscript) was nailed on the door of the
- Senate House.
-
-It must be remembered that for students pursuing the normal course the
-senate-house examination still provided the only avenue to a degree.
-That examination involved a knowledge of the elements of moral
-philosophy and theology, an acquaintance with the rules of formal
-logic, and the power of reading and writing scholastic Latin, but
-mathematics was the predominant subject, and this led to a certain
-one-sidedness in education. The evil of this was generally recognized,
-and in 1822 various reforms were introduced in the university
-curriculum; in particular the Previous Examination was established for
-students in their second year, the subjects being prescribed Greek and
-Latin works, a Gospel, and Paley's _Evidences_. Set classical books
-were introduced in the final examination of poll-men; and another
-honour or tripos examination was established for classical students.
-These alterations came into effect in 1824; and henceforth the
-senate-house examination, so far as it related to mathematical
-students, was known as the Mathematical Tripos.
-
-In 1827 the scheme of examination in the mathematical tripos was
-revised. By regulations[68] which came into operation in January 1828,
-four days, exclusive of the day of arranging the brackets, were
-devoted to the examination; the number of hours of examination was
-twenty-three, of which seven were assigned to problems. On the first
-two days all the candidates had the same questions proposed to them,
-inclusive of the evening problems, and the examination on those days
-excluded the higher and more difficult parts of mathematics, in order,
-in the words of the report, "that the candidates for honours may not
-be induced to pursue the more abstruse and profound mathematics, to
-the neglect of more elementary knowledge." Accordingly, only such
-questions as could be solved without the aid of the differential
-calculus were set on the first day, and those set on the second day
-involved only its elementary applications. The classes were reduced
-to four, determined as before by the exercises in the schools.
-
-The regulations of 1827 definitely prescribed that all the papers
-should be printed. They are also noticeable as being the last which
-gave the examiners power to ask _vivâ voce_ questions, though such
-questions "were restricted to asking about propositions contained in
-the mathematical works commonly in use at the University, or examples
-and explanations of such propositions." It was further recommended
-that no paper should contain more questions than well-prepared
-students could be expected to answer within the time allowed for it,
-but that if any candidate, before the end of the time, had answered
-all the questions in the paper, the examiners might propose additional
-questions _vivâ voce_. The power of granting honorary optime degrees
-now ceased; it had already fallen into abeyance. Henceforth the
-examination was conducted under definite rules, and I no longer
-concern myself with its traditions.
-
-In the same year as these changes became effective the examination for
-the poll degree was separated from the tripos with different sets of
-papers and a different schedule of subjects[69]. It was, however,
-still nominally considered as forming part of the senate-house
-examination, and until 1858 those who obtained a poll degree were
-arranged in four classes, described as fourth, fifth, sixth, and
-seventh, as if in continuation of the junior optimes or third class of
-the tripos.
-
-In the course henceforth ordained for the poll or ordinary degree, the
-examination, later known as "the General," represents that part of the
-old senate-house examination which was intended for the poll-men, but
-gradually it was moved to an earlier period in the normal course taken
-by the men. In 1851 admission to the classical tripos[70] was allowed
-to others than those who passed the mathematical tripos, and this
-provided another avenue to a degree entirely independent of the old
-senate-house examination. In 1852 another set of examinations, at
-first called "the Professor's Examinations," and now somewhat modified
-and known as "the Specials," was instituted for all poll-men to take
-before they could qualify for a degree.
-
-In 1858 the fiction that the poll examinations were part of the
-senate-house examination was abandoned, and subsequently they have
-been treated as providing an independent method of obtaining the
-degree: thus now the mathematical tripos is the sole representative of
-the old senate-house examination. Since 1858 numerous other ways of
-obtaining a degree in arts have been established, and it is now
-possible to graduate by showing proficiency in very special, or even
-technical subjects.
-
-Further changes in the mathematical tripos were introduced in
-1833[71]. The duration of the examination, before the issue of the
-brackets, was extended to five days, and the number of hours of
-examination on each day was fixed at five and a half: seven and a half
-hours were assigned to problems. The examination on the first day was
-confined to subjects that did not require the differential calculus,
-and only the simplest applications of the calculus were permitted on
-the second and third days. During the first four days of the
-examination the same papers were set to all the candidates alike, but
-on the fifth day the examination was conducted according to classes.
-No reference was made to _vivâ voce_ questions, though permission was
-reserved to re-examine candidates if it were found necessary: this
-right remained in force till 1848, but in fact was never used. In
-December 1834, a few unimportant details were amended.
-
-Mr Earnshaw, the senior moderator in 1836, informed me that he
-believed that the tripos of that year was the earliest one in which
-all the papers were marked, and that in previous years the examiners
-had partly relied on their impression of the answers given.
-
-New regulations came into force[72] in 1839. The examination now
-lasted for six days, and continued as before for five hours and a half
-each day: eight and a half hours were assigned to problems. Throughout
-the whole examination the same papers were set to all candidates, and
-no reference was made to any preliminary classes. It was no doubt in
-accordance with the spirit of these changes that the acts in the
-schools should be abolished, but they were discontinued by the
-moderators of 1839 without the authority of the senate. The
-examination was for the future confined[73] to mathematics.
-
-In the same year in which the new scheme came into force a proposal to
-reopen the subject was rejected on 6 March 1839.
-
-The difficulty of bringing professorial lectures into relation with
-the needs of students has more than once been before the University.
-The desirability of it was emphasized by a syndicate in February 1843,
-which recommended conferences at stated intervals between the
-mathematical professors and examiners. This report, which
-foreshadowed the creation of a Mathematical Board, was rejected by the
-senate on 31 March.
-
-A few years later the scheme of the examination was again
-reconstructed by regulations[74] which came into effect in 1848. The
-duration of the examination was extended to eight days. The
-examination lasted in all forty-four and a half hours, twelve of which
-were devoted to problems. The first three days were assigned to
-specified elementary subjects; in the papers set on these days riders
-were to be set as well as bookwork, but the methods of analytical
-geometry and the calculus were excluded. After the first three days
-there was a short interval, at the end of which the examiners issued a
-list of those who had so acquitted themselves as to deserve
-mathematical honours. Only those whose names were contained in this
-list were admitted to the last five days of the examination, which was
-devoted to the higher parts of mathematics. After the conclusion of
-the examination the examiners, taking into account the whole eight
-days, brought out the list arranged in order of merit. No provision
-was made for any rearrangement of this list corresponding to the
-examination of the brackets. The arrangements of 1848 remained in
-force till 1873.
-
-In the same year as these regulations came into force, a Board of
-Mathematical Studies (consisting of the mathematical professors,
-with the moderators and examiners for the current year and the two
-preceding years) was constituted[75] by the senate. From that time
-forward their minutes supply a permanent record of the changes
-gradually introduced into the tripos. I do not allude to subsequent
-changes which only concern unimportant details of the examination.
-
-In May 1849, the board issued a report in which, after giving a review
-of the past and existing state of the mathematical studies in the
-University, they recommended that the mathematical theories of
-electricity, magnetism, and heat should not be admitted as subjects of
-examination. In the following year they issued a second report, in
-which they recommended the omission of elliptic integrals, Laplace's
-coefficients, capillary attraction, and the figure of the earth
-considered as heterogeneous, as well as a definite limitation of
-the questions in the lunar and planetary theories. In making these
-recommendations the board were only recognizing what had become the
-practice in the examination.
-
-I may, in passing, mention a curious attempt which was made in 1853
-and 1854 to assist candidates to estimate the relative difficulty of
-the questions asked. This was effected by giving to the candidates,
-at the same time as the examination paper, a slip of paper on which
-the marks assigned for the bookwork and rider for each question were
-printed. I mention the fact merely because these things are rapidly
-forgotten and not because it is of any intrinsic value. I possess a
-complete set of slips which came to me from Todhunter.
-
-In 1856 there was an amusing difference of opinion between the
-vice-chancellor and the moderators. The vice-chancellor issued a
-notice to say that for the convenience of the University he had
-directed the tripos lists to be published at 8.0 a.m. as well as at
-9.0 a.m., but when members of the senate arrived at 8.0 the moderators
-said that the list should not be read until 9.0.
-
-Considerable changes in the scheme of examination were introduced in
-1873. On 5 December 1865, the board had recommended the addition of
-Laplace's coefficients and the figure of the earth considered as
-heterogeneous as subjects of the examination; the report does not seem
-to have been brought before the senate, but attention was called to
-the fact that certain departments of mathematics and mathematical
-physics found no place in the tripos schedules, and were neglected by
-most students. Accordingly, a syndicate was appointed on 6 June 1867,
-to consider the matter, and a scheme drawn up by them was approved in
-1868[76] and came into effect in 1873.
-
-The new scheme of examination was framed on the same lines as that of
-1848. The subjects in the first three days were left unchanged, but an
-extra day was added, devoted to the elements of mathematical physics.
-The essence of the modification was the greatly extended range of
-subjects introduced into the schedule of subjects for the last five
-days, and their arrangement in divisions; the total marks awarded to
-the questions in each of the five divisions being approximately in a
-proportion to the total marks assigned to the questions in the first
-three days as 2, 1, 1, 1, 2/3 to 1 respectively. Under these
-regulations the number of examiners was increased from four to five.
-
-The assignment of marks to groups of subjects was made under the
-impression that the best candidates would concentrate their abilities
-on a selection of subjects from the various divisions. But it was
-found that, unless the questions were made extremely difficult, more
-marks could be obtained by reading superficially all the subjects in
-the five divisions than by attaining real proficiency in a few of the
-higher ones: while the wide range of subjects rendered it practically
-impossible to cover all the ground thoroughly in the time allowed.
-The failure was so pronounced that in 1877 another syndicate was
-appointed to consider the mathematical studies and examinations of the
-University. They presented an elaborate scheme, but on 13 May 1878,
-some of the most important parts of it were rejected; their subsequent
-proposals, accepted on 21 November 1878 (by 62 to 49), represented a
-compromise which pleased few members of the senate[77].
-
-Under the new scheme which came into force in 1882 the tripos was
-divided into two portions: the first portion was taken at the end of
-the third year of residence, the range of subjects being practically
-the same as in the regulations of 1848, and the result brought out in
-the customary order of merit. The second portion was held in the
-following January, and was open only to those who had been wranglers
-in the preceding June. This portion was confined to higher mathematics
-and appealed chiefly to specialists: the result was brought out in
-three classes, each arranged in alphabetical order. The moderators and
-examiners conducted the whole examination without any extraneous aid.
-
-In the next year or two further amendments were made[78], the second
-part of the examination being moved to the June of the fourth year,
-and thrown open to all men who had graduated in the tripos of the
-previous June. At the same time the conduct of the examination in
-part II was transferred to four examiners nominated by the board: this
-put it largely under the control of the professors. The range of
-subjects of part II was also greatly extended, and candidates were
-encouraged to select only a few of them. It was further arranged that
-part I might be taken at the end of a man's second year of residence,
-though in that case it would not qualify for a degree. A student who
-availed himself of this leave could take part II at the end either of
-his third or of his fourth year as he pleased.
-
-The general effect of these changes was to destroy the homogeneity of
-the tripos. Objections to the new scheme were soon raised. Especially,
-it was said--whether rightly or wrongly--that part I contained too
-many technical subjects to serve as a general educational training for
-any save mathematicians; that the distinction of a high place in the
-historic list produced on its results tended to prevent the best men
-taking it in their second year, though by this time they had read
-enough to be able to do so; and that part II was so constructed as to
-appeal only to professional mathematicians, and thus the higher
-branches of mathematics were neglected in the University by all save
-a few specialists.
-
-Whatever value be attached to these opinions, the number of students
-studying mathematics fell rapidly under the scheme of 1886. In 1899
-the board proposed[79] further changes. These seemed to some members
-of the senate to be likely still further to decrease the number of men
-who took up the subject as one of general education; and the two main
-proposals were rejected, 15 February 1900 by votes of 151 to 130 and
-161 to 129.
-
-A few years later, in 1907[80], the board brought forward another
-scheme, proposing changes so sweeping as almost to destroy the
-identity of the tripos. Under this the examination in part II was
-abolished--a change on which all parties were agreed. There was
-introduced an examination, called part I, confined to elementary
-mathematics, which could be taken as early as the second term of
-residence, and for which in certain cases of failure a student could
-present himself again, but this, although an examination for honours,
-did not qualify for a degree. In the new part II, taken normally at
-the end of the third year of residence and qualifying for a degree,
-candidates were given some option in the subjects of their
-examination, and order of merit was abolished. The first examination
-under this scheme was held in 1908.
-
-A remarkable feature in the history of the Cambridge mathematical
-school is the fact that for nearly two hundred years most students
-were accustomed to rely for preparation for it on work done with a
-private tutor or "Coach." Towards the close of the seventeenth century
-we first read of these "pupil-mongers" (among whom Laughton of Clare
-was the most famous) who made it their business to prepare men for
-their "acts."
-
-With the rise of the senate-house examination the importance of this
-class of teachers increased, for success in that examination was
-regarded as the crown of the academic course, and brought with it, in
-the shape of a fellowship, an immediate competence with a reasonable
-prospect of an assured career. It was the business of private tutors
-to prepare their pupils for the examination, and among those who in
-this way came to the front shortly after the middle of the eighteenth
-century were Richard Watson, John Wilson whose name is still known by
-its association with a proposition in the theory of numbers, and
-Robert Thorp. The last named teacher was described, about 1761, as
-being "of eminent use to young men in preparing them for the
-Senate-House Examinations and peculiarly successful"; and it was added
-that "one young man of no shining reputation with the assistance of
-Mr Thorp's tuition had stood at the head of wranglers."
-
-In a grace of the senate, passed in 1781, it is stated that almost all
-sophs then resorted to private tuition, and for more than a century
-subsequently, the practice was well established. These were the men
-who really directed the reading of the students. Even non-residents,
-if reputed to be successful coaches, drew pupils. Thus John Dawson, a
-medical practitioner at Sedbergh, regularly prepared pupils in the
-vacations for the senate-house examination, and at least eleven of the
-senior wranglers between 1781 and 1800 are known to have studied under
-him.
-
-During the nineteenth century the system developed under two
-remarkable teachers, William Hopkins, 1793-1866, and Edward John
-Routh, 1831-1907, to whom the vast majority of the better known
-Cambridge mathematicians of this century owed most of what they learnt
-in their undergraduate days. Hopkins in the twenty-two years from
-1828-49, had among his pupils one hundred and seventy-five wranglers,
-of whom seventeen were senior, forty-four in one of the first three
-places, and one hundred and eight in one of the first ten places.
-So too Routh, in the thirty-one years from 1858-88, had between six
-hundred and seven hundred pupils, most of whom became wranglers,
-twenty-seven being senior in the tripos and forty-one Smith's
-prizemen. To organize teaching on this scale demanded rare gifts.
-
-Perhaps it may be of interest to describe, by way of example, the
-general features of Routh's system. He gave catechetical lectures
-three times a week to classes of eight or ten men of approximately
-equal knowledge and ability. The work to be done between two lectures
-was heavy, and included the solution of some eight or nine fairly hard
-examples on the subject of the lectures. Examination papers were also
-constantly set on tripos lines (bookwork and riders), while there was
-a weekly paper of problems set to all pupils alike. All papers sent up
-were marked in public, the comments on them in class were generally
-brief, and, to save time, solutions of the questions were circulated
-in manuscript. Teaching also was supplemented by manuscripts on the
-subjects. Finally to the more able students he was accustomed, shortly
-before their tripos, to give memoirs or books for analyses and
-commentaries. The course for the first three years and the two earlier
-long vacations covered all the subjects of the examination--the last
-long vacation and the first term of the fourth year were devoted to a
-thorough revision.
-
-Under Hopkins and Routh there was no trace of what is called cramming;
-they might say that a particular demonstration was so long that it
-could not be required in the tripos, but none the less they expected
-their pupils to master it. The system had faults, but it had the merit
-of providing a systematic grounding in a wide field of subjects. The
-effectiveness of teaching of this kind was dependent on intimate
-constant personal intercourse, and the importance of this cannot be
-overrated. The scandal of the system consisted in the fact that a man
-was compelled to pay heavy fees to the University and his College for
-instruction, and yet found it advantageous at his own expense to go
-elsewhere to get it.
-
-During the last quarter of the nineteenth century college lecturers
-began to share with the coaches the general direction of studies.
-Post-graduate work was also to some extent brought under the influence
-of professors and university lecturers--these not uncommonly
-suggesting subjects for dissertations for fellowships, Smith's prizes,
-etc. But the students thus influenced were not numerous, and it still
-remains true that the majority of mathematical undergraduates are so
-out of touch with the professors in the subject as to be unacquainted
-even with their personal appearance.
-
-Such was the mathematical tripos and its history. Whatever its
-demerits, it dominated the situation, and Cambridge mathematics and
-mathematicians of the nineteenth century were the direct product of
-the system it embodied. Judged by the output, I do not think it can
-be said to have resulted in failure; and perhaps Cayley, Sylvester,
-Adams, Green, Stokes, Kelvin, and Maxwell--to mention no others--were
-none the worse for having been compelled to go through the course.
-
-The reconstitution in 1907 of the tripos, and the destruction of many
-of its distinctive features must profoundly modify the future history
-of mathematics at Cambridge, but forecasts on such a theme would be
-useless.
-
-The curious origin of the term tripos has been repeatedly told, and an
-account of it may fitly close this chapter. Formerly there were three
-principal occasions on which questionists were admitted to the title
-or degree of bachelor. The first of these was at the comitia priora,
-held on Ash-Wednesday, for the best men in the year. The next was at
-the comitia posteriora, which was held a few weeks later, and at which
-any student who had distinguished himself in the quadragesimal
-exercises subsequent to Ash-Wednesday had his seniority reserved to
-him. Lastly, there was the comitia minora, for students who had in no
-special way distinguished themselves.
-
-In the fifteenth century an important part in the ceremony on each of
-these occasions was taken by a certain "ould bachilour," who sat upon
-a three-legged stool or tripos before the proctors and tested the
-abilities of the would-be graduates by arguing some question with the
-"eldest son," who was selected from them as their representative. To
-assist the latter in what might be an unequal contest his "father,"
-that is, the officer of his college who was to present him for his
-degree, was allowed to come to his assistance.
-
-The discussion took place in Great St Mary's Church, and marked the
-admission of the student to a position with new responsibilities,
-while the season of Lent was chosen with a view to bring this into
-prominence. The puritan party objected to the semi-ecclesiastical
-character of the proceedings, and in the course of the sixteenth
-century set themselves to bring the ceremony into disrepute. The part
-played by the questionist now became purely formal, though a serious
-debate still sometimes took place between the father of the senior
-questionist and a regent master who represented the University: this,
-however, came to be prefaced by a speech by the bachelor, who was now
-called Mr Tripos, just as we speak of a judge as the bench, or of a
-rower as an oar. Ultimately public opinion permitted Mr Tripos to say
-pretty much what he pleased, so long as it was not dull and was
-scandalous. The speeches he delivered or the verses he recited were
-generally printed and preserved by the registrary, and were known as
-the tripos verses: originally they referred to the subjects of the
-disputations then propounded. The earliest copies now extant are those
-for 1575.
-
-The university officials, to whom the personal criticisms in which
-Mr Tripos indulged were by no means pleasing, repeatedly exhorted him
-to remember "while exercising his privilege of humour, to be modest
-withal." In 1710, says Mullinger[81], "the authorities after
-condemning the excessive license of the tripos announced that the
-comitia at Lent would in future be conducted in the Senate-House; and
-all members of the University, of whatever order or degree, were
-forbidden to assail or mock the disputants with scurrilous jokes or
-unseemly witticisms. About the year 1747-8, the moderators initiated
-the practice of printing the honour lists on the back of the sheets
-containing the tripos verses, and after the year 1755 this became the
-invariable practice. By virtue of this purely arbitrary connection
-these lists themselves became known as the tripos; and eventually the
-examination itself, of which they represented the results, also became
-known by the same designation."
-
-Mr Tripos ceased to deliver his speech about 1750, but the issue of
-tripos verses continued for nearly 150 years longer. During the latter
-part of this time they consisted of four sets of verses, usually in
-Latin, but occasionally in Greek, in which current topics in the
-University were treated lightly or seriously as the writer thought
-fit. They were written for the proctors and moderators by
-undergraduates or commencing bachelors, each of whom was supposed to
-receive a pair of white kid gloves in recognition of his labours. Thus
-gradually the word tripos changed its meaning "from a thing of wood to
-a man, from a man to a speech, from a speech to sets of verses, from
-verses to a sheet of coarse foolscap paper, from a paper to a list of
-names, and from a list of names to a system of examination[82]."
-
-In 1895 the proctors and moderators, without consulting the senate,
-sent in no verses, and thus, in spite of widespread regret, an
-interesting custom of many centuries standing was destroyed. In
-defence of this action, it was said that the custom had never been
-embodied in statute or ordinance, and thus was not obligatory, and
-further that its continuance was not of material benefit to anybody.
-Such arguments are not conclusive, and we may well regret the
-disappearance of historic ties unless it can be shown that they cause
-inconvenience, which of course in this case could not be asserted.
-
-By way of supplement to the foregoing account, I append a list of
-those who have held or hold the various university mathematical chairs
-and lectureships.
-
- The _Lucasian Professorship of Mathematics_ was founded in 1663 by
- Henry Lucas. The successive occupants of the chair have been: Isaac
- Barrow, 1664-1669; Isaac Newton, 1669-1702; William Whiston,
- 1702-1711; Nicholas Saunderson (Sanderson), 1711-1739; John Colson,
- 1739-1760; Edward Waring, 1760-1798; Isaac Milner, 1798-1820; Robert
- Woodhouse, 1820-1822; Thomas Turton, 1822-1826; George Biddell Airy,
- 1826-1828; Charles Babbage, 1828-1839; Joshua King, 1839-1849;
- George Gabriel Stokes, 1849-1903; Joseph Larmor, 1903 _et seq._
-
- The _Plumian Professorship of Astronomy and Experimental Philosophy_
- was founded in 1704 by Thomas Plume. The successive occupants of the
- chair have been: Roger Cotes, 1707-1716; Robert Smith, 1716-1760;
- Anthony Shepherd, 1760-1796; Samuel Vince, 1796-1822; Robert
- Woodhouse, 1822-1828; George Biddell Airy, 1828-1836; James Challis,
- 1836-1883; George Howard Darwin, 1883-1912; Arthur Stanley
- Eddington, 1913 _et seq._
-
- The _Lowndean Professorship of Astronomy and Geometry_ was founded
- in 1749 by Thomas Lowndes. The successive occupants of the chair
- have been: Roger Long, 1750-1771; John Smith, 1771-1795; William
- Lax, 1795-1836; George Peacock, 1836-1858; John Couch Adams,
- 1858-1892; Robert Stawell Ball, 1892-1913; Henry Frederick Baker,
- 1914 _et seq._
-
- The _Sadleirian Professorship of Pure Mathematics_ was founded, in
- 1863 from a benefaction given in 1710 by Lady Sadleir. The
- successive occupants of the chair have been: Arthur Cayley,
- 1863-1895; Andrew Russell Forsyth, 1895-1910; Ernest William Hobson,
- 1910 _et seq._
-
- The _Cavendish Professorship of Experimental Physics_ was founded in
- 1871 by the University; the laboratory attached being built at the
- expense of the then Chancellor, the Duke of Devonshire. The
- successive occupants of the chair have been: James Clerk Maxwell,
- 1871-1879; John William, Baron Rayleigh, 1879-1884; Joseph John
- Thomson, 1884 _et seq._
-
- The _Professorship of Mechanism and Applied Mechanics_, with
- laboratories and shops attached, was founded by the University in
- 1875. The successive occupants of the chair have been: James Stuart,
- 1875-1890; James Alfred Ewing, 1890-1903; Bertram Hopkinson, 1903
- _et seq._
-
- Five _Lectureships in Mathematics_ were created in 1882 under the
- directions of Royal Commissioners, and subsequently two others (now
- reduced to one other) tenable, if desired, with one of the above,
- were founded. The successive holders have been: Joseph John Thomson,
- 1884; Andrew Russell Forsyth, 1884-1895; William Herrick Macaulay,
- 1884-1887; Richard Tetley Glazebrook, 1884-1898; Ernest William
- Hobson, 1884-1910; Joseph Larmor, 1885-1903; Richard Pendlebury,
- 1888-1901; Henry Frederick Baker, 1895-1914; Augustus Edward Hough
- Love, 1898-1899; Hector Munro Macdonald, 1899-1904; Herbert William
- Richmond, 1901 _et seq._; George Ballard Mathews, 1903-1905; James
- Hopwood Jeans, 1904-1906, 1910-1912; John Gaston Leathem, 1905-1909;
- Robert Alfred Herman, 1906 _et seq._; Edmund Taylor Whittaker,
- 1905-1906; Thomas James I'Anson Bromwich, 1909 _et seq._; John
- Hilton Grace, 1901 _et seq._; Godfrey Harold Hardy, 1914 _et seq._;
- Arthur Berry, 1914 _et seq._
-
-
-[Footnote 34: The greater part of this chapter formerly appeared in my
-_Mathematical Recreations and Essays_, but a few paragraphs on
-"coaching" have been taken from a paper which I wrote for distribution
-to those who attended the International Congress of Mathematicians
-held in England in 1912. The subject is treated in Whewell's _Liberal
-Education_, Cambridge, three parts, 1845, 1850, 1853; Wordsworth's
-_Scholae Academicae_, Cambridge, 1877; my own _Origin and History of
-the Mathematical Tripos_, Cambridge, 1880; Glaisher's Presidential
-Address to the London Mathematical Society, _Transactions_,
-vol. XVIII, 1886, pp. 4-38; and my _History of the Study of
-Mathematics at Cambridge_, Cambridge, 1889.]
-
-[Footnote 35: _Budget of Paradoxes_, by A. De Morgan, London, 1872,
-p. 305.]
-
-[Footnote 36: See grace of 25 October 1680.]
-
-[Footnote 37: _Ex. gr._ see De la Pryme's account of his graduation in
-1694, _Surtees Society_, vol. LIV, 1870, p. 32.]
-
-[Footnote 38: W. Reneu, in his letters of 1708-10 describing the
-course for the B.A. degree, makes no mention of the senate-house
-examination, and I think it is a reasonable inference that it had not
-then been established.]
-
-[Footnote 39: _Memoirs of Richard Cumberland_, London, 1806,
-pp. 78-79.]
-
-[Footnote 40: Quoted by C. Wordsworth, _Scholae Academicae_,
-Cambridge, 1877, pp. 30-31.]
-
-[Footnote 41: _Anecdotes of the Life of Richard Watson_, London, 1817,
-pp. 18-19.]
-
-[Footnote 42: See grace of 25 October 1883; and the _Cambridge
-University Reporter_, 23 October 1883.]
-
-[Footnote 43: See grace of 11 February 1909, and the _Cambridge
-University Reporter_, 8 December 1908.]
-
-[Footnote 44: _The Works of J. Jebb_, London, 1787, vol. II,
-pp. 290-297.]
-
-[Footnote 45: "Emulation, which is the principle upon which the plan
-is constructed." _The Works of J. Jebb_, London, 1787, vol. III,
-p. 261.]
-
-[Footnote 46: _The Works of J. Jebb_, London, 1787, vol. III, p. 272.]
-
-[Footnote 47: See graces of 5 July 1773, and of 17 February 1774.]
-
-[Footnote 48: See graces of 19, 20 March 1779.]
-
-[Footnote 49: Notice issued by the vice-chancellor, dated 19 May
-1779.]
-
-[Footnote 50: The _Challis Manuscripts_, III, 61. There are two copies
-almost identical, one dated 1785, the other 1786. Probably the paper
-printed in the text was set in 1786.]
-
-[Footnote 51: H. Gunning, _Reminiscences_, second edition, London,
-1855, vol. I, p. 82.]
-
-[Footnote 52: C. Wordsworth, _Scholae Academicae_, Cambridge, 1877,
-pp. 322-323.]
-
-[Footnote 53: H. Gunning, _Reminiscences_, second edition, London,
-1855, vol. I, p. 182.]
-
-[Footnote 54: See grace of 8 April 1791.]
-
-[Footnote 55: Communicated by the moderators to fathers of colleges on
-18 January 1799, and agreed to by the latter.]
-
-[Footnote 56: C. Wordsworth, _Scholae Academicae_, Cambridge, 1817,
-p. 123.]
-
-[Footnote 57: _Anecdotes of the Life of Richard Watson_, London, 1817,
-p. 19.]
-
-[Footnote 58: _Memoir of A. De Morgan_, London, 1882, pp. 387-392.]
-
-[Footnote 59: See graces, 15 December 1808.]
-
-[Footnote 60: S. Douglas, _Life of W. Whewell_, London, 1881, p. 20.]
-
-[Footnote 61: For a contemporary account of this, see C.A. Bristed,
-_Five Years in an English University_, New York, 1852, pp. 233-239.]
-
-[Footnote 62: See _ex. gr._ the grace of 14 November 1827, referred to
-below.]
-
-[Footnote 63: _Proceedings of the Royal Society_, London, 1859,
-vol. IX, pp. 538-539.]
-
-[Footnote 64: _Whewell's Writings and Correspondence_, ed. Todhunter,
-London, 1876, vol. II, p. 36.]
-
-[Footnote 65: S. Douglas, _Life of Whewell_, London, 1881, p. 56.]
-
-[Footnote 66: _Alma Mater_, London, 1827, vol. II, pp. 58-98.]
-
-[Footnote 67: See _Nature_, vol. XXXV, 24 February 1887, pp. 397-399.
-See also his _Autobiography_, Cambridge, 1896, chapter ii.]
-
-[Footnote 68: See grace, 14 November 1827.]
-
-[Footnote 69: See grace, 21 May 1828, confirming a report of 27 March
-1828.]
-
-[Footnote 70: See grace of 31 October 1849.]
-
-[Footnote 71: See grace of 6 April 1832.]
-
-[Footnote 72: See grace of 30 May 1838.]
-
-[Footnote 73: Under a badly-worded grace passed on 11 May 1842, on the
-recommendation of a syndicate on theological studies, candidates for
-mathematical honours were, after 1846, required to attend the poll
-examination on Paley's _Moral Philosophy_, the new testament and
-ecclesiastical history. This had not been the intention of the senate,
-and on 14 March 1855, a grace was passed making this clear.]
-
-[Footnote 74: See grace of 13 May 1846, confirming a report of
-23 March 1846.]
-
-[Footnote 75: See grace of 31 October 1848.]
-
-[Footnote 76: See grace of 2 June 1868. It was carried by a majority
-of only five in a house of 75.]
-
-[Footnote 77: See graces of 17 May 1877; 29 May 1878; and 21 November
-1878; and the _Cambridge University Reporter_, 2 April, 14 May,
-4 June, 29 October, 12 November, and 26 November 1878.]
-
-[Footnote 78: See graces of 13 December 1883; 12 June 1884;
-10 February 1885; 29 October 1885; and 1 June 1886.]
-
-[Footnote 79: See reports dated 7 November 1899, and 20 January 1900.]
-
-[Footnote 80: See the reports of the special board, _Cambridge
-University Reporter_, 29 May and 20 November 1906, and the graces of
-2 February 1907. The voting on the first grace was 776 placet and 644
-non-placet.]
-
-[Footnote 81: J.B. Mullinger, _The University of Cambridge_,
-Cambridge, vol. I, 1873, pp. 175-176.]
-
-[Footnote 82: C. Wordsworth, _Scholae Academicae_, Cambridge, 1877,
-p. 21.]
-
-
-
-
-INDEX
-
- Abbot, Wm, 263.
- Acts, Scholastic, ch XV.
- Adams, J.C, 311, 315.
- Admonitions, Statutory, 221-4.
- Airy, G.B, 173, 293, 315.
- Alford, Hen, 174.
- Allen, Thos, 34.
- All Saints' Ch, Camb, 85.
- Alston Tankard, The, 123.
- Ambler, John, 224.
- Amos, Andrew, 130, 140.
- Analytical Society, 290.
- Anne of Denmark, 117.
- Ansill, Thos, 13.
- Apprenticeship, 187, 189.
- Arrington Vicarage, 11.
- Artistic Treasures, ch VI.
- Arts, Students in, 187, 188.
- Ascham, Roger, 203.
- Assessors, Trin. Coll, 127.
- Assistant Tutors, 44.
- Athletic Club, Trinity, 125, 126.
- Athletic Clubs, 174.
- Atterbury, Fras, 68.
- Attractions, Theory, 229, 234, 235.
- Auditors, Trin. Coll, ch VII.
- Aykerod Cup, The, 120.
-
- Babbage, Chas, 290, 315.
- Babington, Gervase, 57.
- Backhouse, Jas, 42.
- Bacon, Arth, 165.
- Bacon, Fras, 108, 117, 165.
- Baker, H.F, 315, 316.
- Balfour, A.J, 112.
- Ball, R.S, 315.
- Balsham, Hugh de, 191.
- Bancroft, Rich, 61, 62.
- Bankes Ewer, The, 121.
- Barnes, E.W, 43.
- Barnes, J.W, 81.
- Barrington Vicarage, 12.
- Barrow, Isaac, 108, 109, 117, 150, 170, 171, 254, 315.
- Beaumont, Robt, 92, 93, 94, 106.
- Bedesmen, 18.
- Bedwell, Thos, 254.
- Bellot Tankard, The, 123.
- Bennet, Bishop, 57.
- Bennet Ewer, The, 121.
- Bensley, Jas, 224.
- Benson, E.W, 110, 111.
- Bentley, Rich, 41, 67, 68, 98, 111, 134, 135, 172, 239.
- Benton, Dan, 212.
- Berry, Art, 316.
- Best, H.D, 279.
- Bill, Wm, 49, 88, 91, 92.
- Billingsley, Hen, 254.
- Birching, 199-208, 210-214.
- Blackburn, Jas, 278.
- Blakesley, J.W, 81.
- Bland, Tobias, 214.
- Blundeville, Thos, 254.
- Board, Mathematical, 300, 301.
- Boat Club, The, 124, 125, 174.
- Bolland, Wm, 285.
- Bonnycastle's _Algebra_, 281, 284.
- Bottisham Vicarage, 11.
- Boude, Wm, 15, 16.
- Boxworth Rectory, 12.
- Boyle Cup, The, 122.
- Boys, Wm, 88.
- Brackets, System of, 271-272, 282-288, 295, 300.
- Brass, John, 255.
- Bridges, Simon, 17.
- Briggs, Hen, 254.
- Briggs, Simon, 17.
- Bristed, C.A, 174, 289.
- Bromwich, T.J.I'A, 316.
- Brooke, Rich, 128, 129, 131, 132.
- Brown, John, 81, 286.
- Browne, Galen, 223.
- Browne, I. Hawkins, 110, 111.
- Buckingham Ewer, The, 120.
- Buckley, Wm, 254.
- Bulaeus, 182.
- Burcham, T.B, 81.
- Burials in College, 103.
- Burnand, F.C, 174.
- Burnell, Edw, 128, 129, 130.
- Busby Cup, The, 121.
- Busby, Rich, 202.
- Butler, H.M, 115, 175.
- Butler, Miss, 100.
- Butler's _Analogy_, 219, 268.
- Byron, Lord, 109, 117.
-
- Calculus, The, 289-292.
- Cambridge University, Beginnings of, ch XI.
- Camden, Marquess of, 112.
- Caroline, Queen, 138.
- Cartwright, Thos, 93, 165.
- Carus, Wm, 73, 74, 79, 81.
- Carver, Chas, 277.
- Cavendish Cup, The, 123.
- Cavendish Professorship, 316.
- Cayley, Art, 110, 111, 176, 311, 315.
- Cecil, Sir Wm, 51.
- Censer Boat, 87, 118.
- Central Forces, ch XIII.
- Challenge Plate, 124-126.
- Challis, Jas, 315.
- Challis MSS, 273.
- Chantrey, Fras, 116.
- Chapel Attendance, ch IV, 102.
- Chapel, Compulsory, ch IV, 204, 206, 207.
- Chapel, Trinity, ch V.
- Charles I, 96, 168.
- Charles II, 96, 107, 117.
- Charrington, John, 115.
- Cheadle Rectory, 12.
- Cheke, John, 4, 5, 17, 191.
- Chesterton Vicarage, 11.
- Christ Church Westminsters, ch III.
- Christopherson, John, 88, 91, 92.
- Cipriani, G.B, 116.
- Clairaut, A.C, 240.
- Clarence, Duke of, 174.
- Clark, J.W, 130, 143.
- Clarke, Sam, 254.
- Clarke's _Attributes_, 268.
- Clarkson Cup, The, 120.
- Classical Tripos, 295, 297.
- Clerke, Gilbert, 254.
- Coaches, Private, 307-310.
- Coke, Edw, 111, 165.
- Colleges, Early, 27, 191, 192.
- Colson, John, 315.
- Combination Rooms, 167.
- Commencement-House, 153.
- Commons, Out of, 216, 217, 219.
- Confessions, 219, 221.
- Conybeare, W.J, 76.
- Conyers, Tobias, 212.
- Corporal Punishments, 199-208, 210-215.
- Cotes, Roger, 98, 172, 254, 267, 315.
- Cotton, G.E.L, 76.
- Cowley, Abraham, 66, 111, 169.
- Cox, Rich, 202.
- Craig, John, 254.
- Cranworth, Lord, 173.
- Creighton, Robt, 39.
- Croyland Abbey, 91, 181.
- Cumberland, Rich, 262.
-
- Dacres, Art, 254.
- Damer Cup, The, 123.
- Dance, Nath, 112.
- Darwin, G.H, 315.
- Dawson, John, 308.
- Days, Loss of, 217.
- Dealtry, Wm, 285, 286, 287.
- Deans, College, 28, 206-8, 219-20.
- De Aston, John, 155, 156, 160.
- De Bagshot, John, 155, 156.
- De Balsham, Hugh, 191.
- De Berwick, Rich, 155.
- De Beverley, Robt, 155, 160.
- Declaratio Computi, 128.
- De Croyland, Robt, 84, 85.
- De Durnford, Nich, 155.
- Dee, John, 254.
- De Gretford, Hen, 155.
- De Gretford, Ralph, 155.
- De Hull, John, 155.
- De Immeworth, John, 155.
- De Kelsey, John, 155.
- De Kingston, Edw, 155, 160.
- De la Pryme, Abraham, 259.
- De London, Phil, 155.
- De Morgan, Aug, 256, 284, 286.
- Denman, Geo, 130, 141.
- De Nottingham, Walter, 155.
- Derby, Henry Earl of, 110, 111.
- De Rome, Nich, 155.
- De Salisbury, John, 155.
- De Salisbury, Rich, 155.
- Descartes, René, 227, 236, 237.
- De Stanton, Hervey, 87.
- De Sutton, Hugh, 155.
- De Torterold, Jas, 155.
- De Torterold, John, 155.
- Devereux, Robt, 108, 165.
- Devonshire, Duke of, 316.
- D'Ewes, Simon, 208.
- De Winchester, David, 155, 160.
- De Windsor, Thos, 155.
- De Woodstock, John, 155.
- Dialectici, 16.
- Digges, Thos, 254.
- Discipline, ch XII, 27, 32, 33.
- Discommonsing, 216, 217, 219.
- Dissizaring, 216, 217.
- Distribucio Collegii, 13-22.
- Dobson, Wm, 81.
- Donaldson, J.W, 81.
- Douglas, Stair, 288, 292.
- Downing, Sir Geo, 131.
- Draghswerd, Wm, 155.
- Dryden, John, 111, 169, 219.
- Duport, Jas, 40, 169.
- Duport Salt, The, 121, 122.
-
- Early University History, ch XI.
- Earnshaw, Sam, 298.
- Eddington, A.S, 315.
- Edward II, 84, 154.
- Edward III, 84, 115, 117, 163.
- Edward IV, 110.
- Edward VI, 87, 115, 164.
- Edward VII, 174.
- Elizabeth of York, 106, 115.
- Elizabeth, Queen, 48, 49, 90, 91, 92, 114, 115, 117, 144, 164,
- 167, 168.
- Ellethorpe, 213.
- Ellis, Wm, 129, 130, 133.
- Emerson, Wm, 268.
- Euclid's _Elements_, 271, 279, 281.
- Euler, Leonhard, 240.
- Essex, Earl of, 108, 165.
- Everett, Wm, 174.
- Ewing, J.A, 316.
- Eworth, Hans, 106, 115.
- Expulsions, 221-224.
-
- Fairfax, Sir Thos, 97.
- Fakenham Rectory, 11.
- Farish, Wm, 285.
- Fees, College, in 1570, 36-37.
- Fellow-Commoners, 29, 34, 119.
- Fellows, Election of, 30.
- Fellowship Election in 1659, 39.
- Felmersham Vicarage, 11.
- Fenn, John, 263.
- Ferguson, Jas, 267.
- Field, Fred, 81.
- Fines, 215-216.
- Fiott (Lee), John, 285, 287.
- Firebrace Cup, The, 122.
- First Trinity Boat Club, 124, 125, 174.
- Fitzgerald, Edw, 173.
- Fitzgerald Tankard, The, 122.
- Flamsteed, John, 230, 254.
- Fletcher, Bishop, 57.
- Fletcher, W.M, 43.
- Flogging, 199-208, 210-214.
- Fluxions, 289-292.
- Foley Tankard, The, 123.
- Forsyth, A.R, 315, 316.
- Fort, John, 155.
- Foster, Michael, 110, 111.
- Foster, Sam, 254.
- Foundation of Trinity, ch I.
- Franciscan Monastery, 19, 184.
- Frazer, Sir Jas, 170.
- Frere, John, 265.
- Fuller, Thos, 93.
-
- Galileo, 231, 232, 239.
- Galton, Fras, 110, 111, 174.
- Gating, 218-219.
- General Examination, 297.
- George I, 259.
- George III, 107.
- Gerrard, Mark, 115.
- Glaisher, J.W.L, 252.
- Glazebrook, R.T, 316.
- Glomerels, 181, 189-191.
- Gloucester, Duke of, 107, 112, 115.
- Goad, Roger, 204.
- Gooch, Wm, 276.
- Goodman, Gabriel, 52.
- Gordon, Douglas, 107.
- Gouldesborough, Edw, 57.
- Grace, J.H, 316.
- Graham, Robt, 129, 136.
- Grammar, Degrees in, 190, 191.
- Grammarians, 15, 16, 17, 28, 181, 189-191.
- Grammar School at Trinity, 15-17, 28, 30.
- Grammatici, 15, 16, 17, 28.
- Granby, Marquess of, 112, 113.
- Gravitation, Law of, ch XIII.
- Gray, 88.
- Greaves Cup, The, 123.
- Greaves, Wm, 129, 135, 136.
- Greek Authors read in 1570, 37.
- Green, Geo, 311.
- Grendon Vicarage, 11.
- Griffith, T, 133.
- Griffon, John, 155.
- Griffon, Thos, 155.
- Grigson, Thos, 215.
- Grote, John, 174.
- Grundisburgh Rectory, 12.
- Guilds, University, 188.
- Gulphing, 264.
- Gunning, Hen, 275, 278.
-
- Hacket, John, 61.
- Halfhead, 223.
- Halifax, Earl of, 110.
- Hallam, A.H, 173.
- Halley, Edmund, 228, 230.
- Hamilton, Hugh, 267.
- Hardy, G.H, 316.
- Hare, J.C, 173.
- Harman, Rich, 15.
- Harvey, John, 254.
- Harwood, Busick, 285.
- Heath, J.M, 81.
- Helsham, Rich, 267.
- Henry I, 180.
- Henry II, 180.
- Henry VII, 106, 115.
- Henry VIII, 3, 48, 106, 162, 167.
- Herbert, Geo, 61, 169.
- Herkomer, H. von, 109.
- Herman, R.A, 316.
- Herschel, John, 290.
- Herschel, Wm, 240.
- Hill, Thos, 254.
- Hitch, Robt, 223.
- Hobson, E.W, 315, 316.
- Hodges, 213.
- Hodson, Wm, 273.
- Holbein, 106.
- Hon. Optimes, 257, 261, 296.
- Hood, Thos, 254.
- Hooke, Robt, 228.
- Hopkins, Wm, 308-310.
- Hopkinson, B, 316.
- Hornbuckle, T.W, 286, 287, 288.
- Horrox, Jeremiah, 254.
- Hort, F.J.A, 110, 111, 176.
- Hostels, Private, 27, 29, 192, 193, 195, 198, 199.
- Houghton, Lord, 173.
- Howson, J.S, 76.
- Huddling, 255, 258.
- Hughes, Fras, 129, 132.
- Humphrey Ewer, The, 120.
- Husbands Cup, The, 122.
- Hustler, J.D, 285.
- Hutton, Archbishop, 57.
- Huygens, Christian, 238.
- Hydrodynamics, Theory of, 230, 235, 236.
-
- Impositions, 219-221.
- Ireland, Rich, 59.
-
- Jacob, Edw, 287, 288, 289.
- James I, 54, 64, 66, 114, 117, 168.
- James II, 171.
- Jeans, J.H, 316.
- Jebb, John, 263, 267, 270, 271.
- Jebb, R.C, 110, 111, 170, 176.
- Jephson, Thos, 285.
- Joachim, Joseph, 110.
- John, King, 180.
- Johnson, 212.
- Jones, Thos, 110.
- Jurin, Jas, 254.
-
- Kant, Immanuel, 242.
- Keate, John, 202.
- Keill, John, 267.
- Kelvin, Lord, 311.
- Kempthorne, John, 285.
- Kent Ewer, The, 120.
- Kepler's Problem, 234.
- King, C.W, 75.
- King, Joshua, 315.
- King, John, 59.
- Kinglake, A.W, 173.
- King's Hall, 3, 9-11, 20, 84-86, 144, 154-160, 162, 163.
- King's Scholars, _see_ King's Hall.
- Kneller, Godfrey, 112.
- Knight, Sam, 130, 137.
-
- Lagrange, J.L, 239, 240, 290.
- Laplace, P.S, 241, 242, 290.
- Larmor, Joseph, 315, 316.
- Laszlö de Lombros, P.A, 112.
- Latin Authors read in 1570, 37.
- Laud, Wm, 94.
- Laughton, Rich, 254, 307.
- Laurence, R.V, 43.
- Lawrence, Thos, 112.
- Lax, Wm, 276, 315.
- Least Resistance, Solid of, 236.
- Leathem, J.G, 316.
- Lecture-Rooms, College, 44, 45.
- Lectures, College, 44-46.
- Lectureships, Mathematical, 253, 316.
- Lee (Fiott), John, 287.
- Leg, Thos, 93.
- Legendre, A.M, 290.
- Lever, Thos, 24.
- Library, Trinity, ch VIII, 104.
- Lightfoot, J.B, 101, 110, 111, 115, 170, 176.
- L'Isle, Denys, 129, 134, 135.
- Locke's _Essay_, 268, 275, 279.
- Lombard, Peter, 181.
- Long, Roger, 267, 315.
- Lonsdale, John, 112.
- Loss of Days or Terms, 218.
- Love, A.E.H, 316.
- Lowndes, Thos, 315.
- Lowndean Professorship, 315.
- Lucas, Hen, 315.
- Lucas, Rich, 277.
- Lucasian Professorship, 315.
- Lushington, E.L, 174.
- Lyndhurst Cup, The, 123.
- Lyndhurst, Lord, 173.
- Lyons, Israel, 268.
-
- Macaulay, T.B, 117, 173.
- Macaulay, W.H, 316.
- Macclesfield, Earl of, 111.
- Macdonald, H.M, 316.
- Maclaurin, Colin, 267, 268.
- Man, Henry, 17.
- Mansel, W.L, 112, 217.
- Martin, Fras, 81.
- Martin, Theodore, 123.
- Marvell, Andrew, 169.
- Mary, Queen, 48, 88, 91, 108, 115, 164, 167.
- Mary of Scotland, 115.
- Mathematical Board, 300, 301.
- Mathematical Tripos, ch XV.
- Mathematics, Cambridge, ch XV.
- Mathews, G.B, 316.
- Maule, W.H, 173.
- Maurice, F.D, 110, 111.
- Maxwell, J. Clerk, 110, 111, 176, 311, 316.
- Maydew, John, 17.
- Mechanics, Theory of, 231-232.
- Mechanism Professorship, 316.
- Medieval Tutorial System, 27.
- Medieval University, Beginnings of, ch XI.
- Melbourne, Viscount, 110, 111.
- Merit, Order of, in Examinations, 261, 307.
- Mexborough Cup, The, 123.
- Mey, Wm, 5.
- Michael-House, 3, 11-13, 20, 86, 87, 162, 163.
- Milner, Isaac, 272, 315.
- Milnes, Monckton, 173.
- Milton, John, 213.
- Moderators, Mathematical, 258, 259, 260.
- Monasteries at Cambridge, 180, 181, 184, 185.
- Monks at University, 181, 185, 186, 187, 196.
- Moreton, Albert, 53.
- Morland, Sam, 254.
- Moro, Antonio, 106, 108.
- Motion, Laws of, 232.
- Mullinger, J.B, 179, 188, 313.
- Munro, H.A.J, 176.
- Murray, Thos, 112.
-
- Nebular Hypothesis, 241, 242.
- Neile, Rich, 59.
- Nevile Cup, The, 119.
- Nevile, Robt, 212.
- Nevile, Thos, 53, 55, 58, 59, 60, 61, 62, 114, 149, 166, 167, 168.
- Nevile's Court, 151, 152.
- Newton, Isaac, 108, 112, 116, 170, 244-251, 267, 268, 281, 284,
- 287, 315.
- Newton, John, 134.
- Newton, Sam, 129, 132, 133, 134.
- Newton's _Principia_, ch XIII.
- Non-Regents, 183.
- Northampton, Earl of, 62.
- Numbers of Students, 41-44, 188.
-
- Offley, Chris, 223.
- Opie, John, 112.
- Opponencies, 253.
- Optimes, ch XV.
- Optimes, Honorary, 257, 261, 296.
- Ordines Senioritatis, 261.
- Orleans, University of, 182.
- Orwell Rectory, 12.
- Oughtred, Wm, 252.
-
- Paget, Sir Wm, 6.
- Paley, Wm, 265, 275, 279, 299.
- Parham, Peter, 213.
- Paris, University of, 182, 252.
- Parke, Jas, 130, 138, 139, 173.
- Parker, Matthew, 4, 5, 6, 7.
- Parker, Nich, 155.
- Parker, Roger, 155.
- Parne, Thos, 215.
- Parr, Queen Katherine, 6, 7.
- Paston, Clement, 201.
- Paulet Tankard, The, 123.
- Payne, 255.
- Peacock, Geo, 55, 81, 173, 179, 180, 182, 189, 276, 277, 290,
- 291, 315.
- Pearson, John, 108, 111, 170.
- Peckitt of York, 116.
- Peile, John, 213.
- Pell, John, 254.
- Penalties, ch XII.
- Pendlebury, Rich, 316.
- Pensioners, 29, 31, 33, 34.
- Pepys, Thos, 217.
- Perry, Chas, 76, 78, 79, 81, 82.
- Perry Plate, The, 124.
- Pheasaunt Tankard, The, 123.
- Philip of Spain, 108.
- Physwick's Hostel, 86, 87.
- Plate, College, ch VI.
- Plume, Thos, 315.
- Plumian Professorship, 315.
- Poll-Men, _see_ ch XV.
- Pollock, J.F, 173, 284, 287.
- Porson, Rich, 114, 172.
- Portraits, College, ch VI.
- Pour, Nich, 155.
- Pour, Rich, 155.
- Pour, Wm, 155.
- Pre-elections, 59, 60, 62, 64.
- Prime and Ultimate Ratios, 232.
- _Principia_ of Newton, ch XIII.
- Prior, Matthew, 112.
- Private Tutors, 307-310.
- Professors' Examinations, 297.
- Pull, Nich, 155.
-
- Raeburn, Hen, 109.
- Raine, Matthew, 110.
- Rait, R.S, 200.
- Rashdall, Hastings, 179, 199, 220.
- Ray, John, 169, 215.
- Rayleigh, Lord, 316.
- Rayleigh Prizes, 266.
- Record, Robt, 254.
- Redman, Bishop, 57.
- Redman, John, 5, 9, 11, 13, 20, 24, 88, 92.
- Regents, 183.
- Religious Students, 27.
- Remée, 107.
- Reneu, Wm, 259.
- Resisting Mediums, 235-236.
- Respondents, 253.
- Reynolds, Joshua, 107, 112.
- Rhetoric, Degrees in, 190, 191.
- Richard III, 110.
- Richard, Duke of York, 110.
- Richardson, John, 65, 66.
- Richmond, H.W, 316.
- Ring, Mrs, 112.
- Rod, Punishment by, 199-208, 210-214.
- Romney, Geo, 115.
- Rooke, Laurence, 254.
- Rose, C.L, 76.
- Rosekin, Andrew, 155.
- Roubiliac, L.F, 116.
- Routh, E.J, 308-310.
- Rud, Bishop, 57.
- Rustication, 221-224.
- Rutherford, Wm, 267.
-
- Sadleir, Lady, 315.
- Sadleirian Professorship, 315.
- St Mary's Ch, Camb, 11.
- St Michael's Ch, Camb, 12, 87, 98, 101.
- Salisbury, Earl of, 55, 62.
- Sanderson, Nich, _see_ Saunderson.
- Sandwich Cup, The, 122.
- Saunderson, Nich, 254, 268, 315.
- Scholars, Election of, 30, 31.
- Scholefield, Jas, 173.
- Scot, Major, 97.
- Sedgwick, Adam, 81, 110, 111, 173.
- Senate-House, 153, 260.
- Senate-House Examination, ch XV.
- Servant Students, 28.
- Seymour, Queen Jane, 106.
- Shaw-Lefevre, J.G, 130, 140, 141.
- Shepherd, Anth, 315.
- Shirley, Walsingham, 61, 223.
- Sides, Tutorial, 42, 43.
- Sidgwick, Hen, 110, 111, 176.
- Simeon, Chas, 74, 112.
- Simpson, Thos, 268, 284.
- Sizars, 28.
- Sloane Tankard, The, 123.
- Smith, Elismar, 103.
- Smith, John, 315.
- Smith, Robt, 111, 172, 254, 265, 267, 315.
- Smith, Thos, 4, 5.
- Smith's Prizes, 266.
- Solar System, ch XIII.
- Solomon, Proverbs of, 203.
- Somerset, Duke of, 112, 113, 114.
- Sophia, Princess, 107, 108.
- S.P.C.U. ch IV, 101.
- Special Examinations, 297.
- Spectrum Analysis, 242-243.
- Spedding, Jas, 173.
- Spicer, Robt, 129, 132.
- Stangs, 214-215.
- Statutes, Trinity, 1552, 30, 31.
- " " 1554, 33.
- " " 1560, 33, 34.
- " " 1844, 35, 175,
- " " 1861, 35, 175.
- " " 1882, 35, 175.
- Stephen, Leslie, 174.
- Stevinus, Simon, 231.
- Still, Bishop, 57.
- Stocks, 214-215.
- Stokes, G.G, 315.
- Stuart, Bernard, 119, 124.
- Stuart, Jas, 316.
- Stuart, John, 119, 124.
- Subsizars, 28.
- Sussex, Duke of, 112.
- Sylvester, J.J, 311.
-
- Tavel, G.F, 287.
- Taylor, Brook, 254.
- Taylor Tankard, The, 123.
- Taylor, Tom, 174.
- Tennyson, Alf, 108, 115, 117, 174.
- Tennyson, Chas, 174.
- Tennyson, Fred, 174.
- Terms, loss of, 217.
- Thackeray, W.M, 170, 173.
- Thirlwall, Connop, 71, 72, 73, 83, 173.
- Thompson, W.H, 81, 109, 114, 174, 175, 176.
- Thomson, J.J, 316.
- Thomson, Wm, 311.
- Thorp, Thos, 73, 81, 307, 308.
- Thorwaldsen, Bertel, 117.
- Tindal, N.C, 76, 130, 137, 173.
- Tisserand, F.T, 241.
- Todhunter, Isaac, 302.
- Treasures, College, ch VI.
- Trench, R.C, 173.
- Trentine Disputes, 188, 189.
- Trinity Athletic Clubs, 124-126, 174.
- Trinity College, Foundation, ch I.
- Trinity College, History of, ch X.
- Trinity College, Numbers at, 163.
- Tripos, Mathematical, ch XV.
- Tripos, Origin of Name, 311-314.
- Trot, Warin, 160.
- Tunstall, Cuthbert, 253.
- Turner, Joseph, 286.
- Turton, Thos, 315.
- Tusser, Thos, 202, 210.
- Tutorial System, ch II.
- Tutors, College, ch II.
- Tutors, Private, 45, 307-310.
-
- Udall, Nich, 202.
-
- Vanderbank, John, 108.
- Vandyke, A, 119.
- VanSittart, A.A, 130, 140.
- Van Somer, Paul, 108.
- Vaughan, C.J, 110, 111.
- Verdon, Thos, 215.
- Verney Cup, The, 122.
- Vernon Tankard, The, 123.
- Victoria, Queen, 69.
- Vince, Sam, 284, 287, 315.
- Vortices, Cartesian, 227, 230, 236, 237, 238.
-
- Wakefield, Thos, 17.
- Walker, Rich, 99.
- Walling, 218.
- Wallis, John, 254.
- Walpole, Horace, 107.
- Walsh, B.D, 81.
- Walter, Hen, 285, 286.
- Ward, Seth, 254.
- Waring, Edw, 263, 277, 281, 286, 287, 315.
- Watson, Rich, 264, 279, 307.
- Watts, G.F, 108.
- Waves, 230, 236.
- Wensleydale, Lord, 130, 138, 139, 173.
- West, Robt, 93.
- Westcott, B.F, 101, 110, 111, 176.
- Westlake, John, 110, 111.
- Westminster Gowns, 68.
- Westminster Scholars, ch III, 248.
- Westminster School, ch III.
- Whetham, W.C.D, 43.
- Whewell, Wm, 69, 72, 73, 81, 108, 110, 111, 117, 174, 175, 221,
- 252, 287, 288, 289, 291, 292.
- Whisson, Stephen, 42.
- Whiston, Wm, 254, 315.
- Whitgift, John, 36, 51, 93, 94, 165, 166, 210.
- Whittaker, E.T, 316.
- Wilkins, John, 40, 111, 112.
- William I, 179.
- Williams, Joshua, 138.
- Willis and Clark, 143, 152.
- Willis, Robt, 90.
- Wilson, John, 287, 307.
- Windows, Chapel, 91, 93, 102, 115, 116.
- Winthrop, Adam, 128, 129, 130, 131.
- Wollaston, F.J.H, 285.
- Wood, Jas, 277, 284, 286.
- Woodhouse, Robt, 286, 287, 290, 315.
- Wordsworth, Chris (1), 71, 72, 73, 74, 81.
- Wordsworth, Chris (2), 252, 263, 275, 279, 314.
- Wordsworth, John, 81.
- Wranglers, ch XV.
- Wren, Chris, ch VIII, 228.
- Wright, Edw, 254.
- Wright, J.M.F, 100, 174, 219, 293.
-
- Yool, G.V, 130, 142.
- York, Richard Duke of, 110.
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-<pre>
-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Cambridge Papers, by Walter William Rouse Ball
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: Cambridge Papers
-
-Author: Walter William Rouse Ball
-
-Release Date: January 19, 2017 [EBook #54023]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CAMBRIDGE PAPERS ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Laura Wisewell, David Wilson and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (The
-original copy of this book was generously made available
-for scanning by the Department of Mathematics at the
-University of Glasgow.)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
-
-
-
-
-<hr class="ww" />
-<div class="covernote">
-<h2 title="">Transcriber’s Note</h2>
-
-<p>The cover image was created by the transcriber and is placed in the public domain.</p>
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="halftitle">
-<h1 title="CAMBRIDGE PAPERS"><a name="png.001" id="png.001" href="#png.001"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>i<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>CAMBRIDGE PAPERS.</h1>
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="publisher">
-<p><a name="png.002" id="png.002" href="#png.002"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>ii<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
- <img id="logo" src="images/macmillan.jpg"
- alt="McM&amp;Co" title="Publisher's device" /></p>
-<p><span class="smc">MACMILLAN AND CO., Limited</span><br
- /><small>LONDON · BOMBAY · CALCUTTA · MADRAS<br
- />MELBOURNE</small></p>
-<p>THE MACMILLAN COMPANY<br
- /><small>NEW YORK · BOSTON · CHICAGO<br
- />DALLAS · SAN FRANCISCO</small></p>
-<p><span class="smc">THE MACMILLAN CO. OF CANADA, Ltd.</span><br
- /><small>TORONTO</small></p>
-</div>
-
-
-
-<div class="titlepage">
-<p class="h2"><a name="png.003" id="png.003" href="#png.003"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>iii<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>CAMBRIDGE PAPERS</p>
-
-<p class="byline"><small>BY</small><br
- />W. W. ROUSE BALL<br
- /><small class="smaller">FELLOW OF TRINITY COLLEGE, CAMBRIDGE.</small></p>
-
-<p class="published">MACMILLAN AND CO., LIMITED<br
- />ST MARTIN’S STREET, LONDON<br
- />1918<br
- /><small>[<i>All rights reserved</i>]</small></p>
-</div>
-
-
-
-<div class="chap">
-<h2 title="Preface"><a name="png.005" id="png.005" href="#png.005"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>v<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>PREFACE.</h2>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap-preface"><span class="uc">This</span> volume contains papers on some questions
-of local history put together, mostly for undergraduate
-societies and magazines, at various times
-during the last twenty-five years. I have included a
-memoir, written for a London Society, on Newton’s
-<cite>Principia</cite>, a work that profoundly affected the development
-of University studies in the eighteenth
-century, and a chapter on the History of the
-Mathematical Tripos, which at one time appeared
-in my <cite>Mathematical Recreations and Essays</cite>, since
-these are concerned with Cambridge subjects.</p>
-
-<p>I print the papers, whether long or short, and
-whether read at length or, as was more often the
-case, curtailed in delivery, substantially in the
-form in which they were first written. This leaves
-allusions which bear evidence to their domestic
-origin, and involves, in those of them dealing with
-cognate subjects, some repetition of facts. If these
-are defects they could be removed only by rewriting
-much of what appears here; it seems to me preferable
-to let the essays stand in their original forms,
-save occasionally for the addition of a paragraph or
-<a name="png.006" id="png.006" href="#png.006"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>vi<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>sentence dealing with what has happened since they
-were first presented. The dates in the text are
-reckoned in the modern style, taking the year as
-beginning on the first day of January.</p>
-
-<p class="signature">W. W. ROUSE BALL.</p>
-
-<div class="sigblock">
-<small><span class="smc">Trinity College, Cambridge.</span><br
- /><i>January</i>, 1918.</small>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="toc">
-<h2 title="Contents"><a name="png.007" id="png.007" href="#png.007"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>vii<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>TABLE OF CONTENTS.</h2>
-
-
-<table id="toc" summary="Contents">
- <tr>
- <th>&nbsp;</th>
- <th>&nbsp;</th>
- <th>PAGE</th>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="chapnum">Preface</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="chappg"><a href="#png.005">v</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="part" colspan="3"><b>Part I.  Concerning Trinity College.</b></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="chapnum">Chapter I.</td>
- <td><a href="#png.011">The Foundation of Trinity College</a></td>
- <td class="chappg"><a href="#png.011">3</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="chapnum">Chapter II.</td>
- <td><a href="#png.034">The Tutorial System</a></td>
- <td class="chappg"><a href="#png.034">26</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="chapnum">Chapter III.</td>
- <td><a href="#png.056">The Westminster Scholars</a></td>
- <td class="chappg"><a href="#png.056">48</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="chapnum">Chapter IV.</td>
- <td><a href="#png.079">The Society for the Prevention of
-Cruelty to Undergraduates</a></td>
- <td class="chappg"><a href="#png.079">71</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="chapnum">Chapter V.</td>
- <td><a href="#png.092">The College Chapel</a></td>
- <td class="chappg"><a href="#png.092">84</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="chapnum">Chapter VI.</td>
- <td><a href="#png.112">Some College Treasures</a></td>
- <td class="chappg"><a href="#png.112">104</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="chapnum">Chapter VII.</td>
- <td><a href="#png.135">The College Auditors</a></td>
- <td class="chappg"><a href="#png.135">127</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="chapnum">Chapter VIII.</td>
- <td><a href="#png.152">Wren’s Designs for the Library</a></td>
- <td class="chappg"><a href="#png.152">144</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="chapnum">Chapter IX.</td>
- <td><a href="#png.162">A Christmas Journey in 1319</a></td>
- <td class="chappg"><a href="#png.162">154</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="chapnum">Chapter X.</td>
- <td><a href="#png.169">An Outline of the College Story</a></td>
- <td class="chappg"><a href="#png.169">161</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="part" colspan="3"><b>Part II.  Concerning the University.</b></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="chapnum">Chapter XI.</td>
- <td><a href="#png.187">The Beginnings of the University</a></td>
- <td class="chappg"><a href="#png.187">179</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="chapnum">Chapter XII.</td>
- <td><a href="#png.202">Discipline</a></td>
- <td class="chappg"><a href="#png.202">194</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="chapnum">Chapter XIII.</td>
- <td><a href="#png.233">Newton’s <cite>Principia</cite></a></td>
- <td class="chappg"><a href="#png.233">225</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="chapnum">Chapter XIV.</td>
- <td><a href="#png.252">Newton on University Studies</a></td>
- <td class="chappg"><a href="#png.252">244</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="chapnum">Chapter XV.</td>
- <td><a href="#png.260">The Mathematical Tripos</a></td>
- <td class="chappg"><a href="#png.260">252</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="index">Index</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="chappg"><a href="#png.325">317</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="partpage">
-
-<big><a name="png.009" id="png.009" href="#png.009"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>1<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>PART I.<br
- /><span class="h2">Concerning Trinity College.</span></big>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chap">
-<h2 title="I. The Foundation of Trinity College"><a name="png.011" id="png.011" href="#png.011"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>3<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>CHAPTER I.<br
- /><small>THE FOUNDATION OF TRINITY COLLEGE.</small></h2>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="allsc">Trinity College</span> was founded by Henry VIII
-in 1546. To obtain a site for it, he suppressed
-King’s Hall and Michael-House, two medieval
-colleges which were built on or owned most
-of the ground now occupied by the Great Court, and
-with their revenues, largely augmented by property
-of dissolved monasteries, he endowed it. The scheme
-of the College and his objects in founding it are stated
-in his letters patent of 19 December 1546, and particulars
-of the income assigned by him to the foundation
-are set out in his charter of dotation dated
-24 December 1546. These documents have been
-printed<sup class="fn"><a href="#fn1" id="fna1" name="fna1">1</a></sup> and are readily accessible, but the history
-of the events leading up to the foundation of the
-College is less generally known. I cannot promise
-that the story in itself is interesting but the material
-facts have never before been brought together<sup class="fn"><a href="#fn2" id="fna2" name="fna2">2</a></sup> so
-its telling is justified.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.012" id="png.012" href="#png.012"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>4<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>After the dissolution of the monastic houses,
-anxiety was felt in Cambridge and Oxford lest they
-should suffer a similar fate. The policy of the suppression
-of the two universities and the confiscation
-of their property was openly advocated by politicians
-at court, and naturally great alarm was felt
-when in 1544 an Act<sup class="fn"><a href="#fn3" id="fna3" name="fna3">3</a></sup> was passed empowering the
-king to dissolve any college at either university,
-and appropriate its possessions.</p>
-
-<p>The universities were right in thinking that the
-danger was pressing, for Parker, who played a
-leading part in the affair, has put on record<sup class="fn"><a href="#fn4" id="fna4" name="fna4">4</a></sup> the
-fact that after the passing of the Act certain courtiers
-importunately sued the king to have the possessions
-of both bodies surveyed, meaning afterwards
-to obtain the same on easy terms. In these circumstances
-the Cambridge authorities, says Strype,
-“looked about them and made all the friends they
-could at court to save themselves.” In particular
-they urgently begged the aid of two of their professors,
-John Cheke, then acting as tutor to the
-prince of Wales, and Thomas Smith, then clerk to
-the queen’s council. Here is the letter<sup class="fn"><a href="#fn5" id="fna5" name="fna5">5</a></sup> of the
-senate to Smith on the subject:</p>
-
-<blockquote xml:lang="lat" lang="lat">
-<p>Si tu is es, Clarissime Smithe, in quem Academia haec
-Cantabrigiensis universas vires suas, universa pietatis jura
-<a name="png.013" id="png.013" href="#png.013"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>5<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>exercuerit, si tibi uni omnia doctrinae suae genera, omnia
-reipub. ornamenta libentissime contulerit, si fructum gloriae
-suae in te uno jactaverit, si spem salutis suae in te
-potissimum reposuerit: age ergo, et mente ac cogitatione
-tua complectere, quid tu vicissim illi debes, quid illa, quid
-literae, quid respublica, quid Deus ipse pro tantis pietatis
-officiis, quibus sic dignitas tua efflorescit, justissime requirit:
-Academia nil debet tibi, imo omnia sua in te transfudit.
-Et propterea abs te non simpliciter petit beneficium, sed
-merito repetit officium: nec unam aliquam causam tibi proponit,
-sed sua omnia, et seipsam tibi committit. Nec sua
-necesse habet aperire tibi consilia, quorum recessus et diverticula
-nosti universa. Age igitur quod scis, et velis quod
-potes, et perfice quod debes. Sic literis, academiae, reipublicae,
-et religioni; sic Christo et Principi rem debitam et expectatam
-efficies. Jesus te diutissime servet incolumem.</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p>Parker tells us that the London friends of the
-University, among whom Smith and Cheke were
-doubtless conspicuous, wisely took the line of welcoming
-an enquiry, but begged the king to avoid
-the expense of a costly investigation. Their representations
-were successful, and he issued a commission<sup class="fn"><a href="#fn6" id="fna6" name="fna6">6</a></sup>
-dated 16 January 1546 to Matthew Parker
-(then vice-chancellor, and later archbishop of Canterbury),
-John Redman (warden of King’s Hall,
-chaplain to the king, and later master of Trinity),
-and William Mey (president of Queens’, and later
-archbishop-elect of York) to report to him on the
-<a name="png.014" id="png.014" href="#png.014"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>6<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>revenues of the colleges and the numbers of students
-sustained therewith. The commissioners were capable
-and friendly.</p>
-
-<p>The king must have been impatient to know the
-facts, for in less than a week, on 21 January, he
-ordered Parker to come to Hampton Court with the
-report. Immediate compliance was impossible, but
-the command may well have stimulated the commissioners
-to act as rapidly as possible. In fact
-they obtained the services of eleven clerks from the
-Court of Augmentations in London, and at once set
-to work to collect information.</p>
-
-<p>The University was keenly alive to the risks it
-was incurring. To placate the king, the senate,
-on 13 February, put all its belongings at his service,
-and when forwarding a copy of the grace to Secretary
-Sir William Paget it reminded him of the value
-of the University to the state, and begged his protection.
-At the same time it addressed the queen,
-Katharine Parr, through Thomas Smith, imploring
-her advocacy.<sup class="fn"><a href="#fn7" id="fna7" name="fna7">7</a></sup></p>
-
-<p>The queen replied<sup class="fn"><a href="#fn8" id="fna8" name="fna8">8</a></sup> on 26 February. After
-complaining that he had written to her in Latin,
-though he could equally well have expressed himself
-in the vulgar tongue, she discoursed at length on the
-duties of members of the University, and, saying that
-<a name="png.015" id="png.015" href="#png.015"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>7<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>she was confident that her wishes in these respects
-would be fulfilled, she concluded her letter as follows:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p>I (according to your desires) have attempted my lord
-the King’s Majesty, for the establishment of your livelihood
-and possessions: in which, notwithstanding his Majesty’s
-property and interest, through the consent of the high court
-of parliament, his Highness being such a patron to good
-learning, doth tender you so much, that he will rather advance
-learning and erect new occasion thereof than [to]
-confound those your ancient and godly institutions, so that
-learning may hereafter justly ascribe her very original whole
-conservation and sure stay to our Sovereign Lord.</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p>This was good news, and things now moved
-rapidly. By the end of February the commissioners
-had drawn up a detailed report giving the information
-required. It is printed<sup class="fn"><a href="#fn9" id="fna9" name="fna9">9</a></sup> at length in the
-<cite>Cambridge Documents</cite>, 1852, and occupies nearly
-200 pages.</p>
-
-<p>The commissioners in person presented to the
-king at Hampton Court a brief summary of this
-report. We do not know the date of this interview,
-but conjecturally it may be put as being early in
-March. Parker has left<sup class="fn"><a href="#fn10" id="fna10" name="fna10">10</a></sup> in his own handwriting a
-full account of their reception as follows:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p>In the end, the said commissioners resorted up to
-Hampton Court to present to the King a brief summary
-written in a fair sheet of vellum (which very book is yet
-<a name="png.016" id="png.016" href="#png.016"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>8<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>reserved in the college of Corpus Christi) describing the
-revenues, the reprises, the allowances, and number and stipend
-of every College. Which book the King diligently
-perused; and in a certain admiration said to certain of his
-lords which stood by, that he thought he had not in his
-realm so many persons so honestly maintained in living by
-so little land and rent: and where he asked of us what it
-meant that the most part of Colleges should seem to expend
-yearly more than their revenues amounted to; we answered
-that it rose partly of fines for leases and indentures of the
-farmers renewing their leases, partly of wood sales: whereupon
-he said to the lords, that pity it were these lands
-should be altered to make them worse; (at which words some
-were grieved, for that they disappointed <i xml:lang="lat" lang="lat">lupos quosdam
-hiantes</i>). In fine, we sued to the King’s Majesty to be so
-gracious lord, that he would favour us in the continuance
-of our possessions such as they were, and that no man by
-his grace’s letters should require to permute with us to give
-us worse. He made answer and smiled, that he could not
-but write for his servants and others, doing the service for
-the realm in wars and other affairs, but he said he would
-put us to our choice whether we should gratify them or no,
-and bade us hold our own, for after his writing he would
-force us no further. With which words we were well armed,
-and so departed.</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p>This important interview was followed by a
-rumour that it was Henry’s intention to found at
-Cambridge a new and magnificent college to serve
-as an enduring record of his interest in learning,
-and perhaps the University may have taken the
-queen’s letter as indicating what was coming. It is
-believed that Henry had long entertained vague
-<a name="png.017" id="png.017" href="#png.017"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>9<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>ideas of the kind, but that the definite suggestion,
-which was encouraged by the queen, originated with
-Redman, who, as royal chaplain, had constant access
-to the king and considerable influence with him.</p>
-
-<p>The preparations for Henry’s proposed foundation
-were made with extreme speed: a wise course in
-view of his failing health and variable temper. It
-was decided to take advantage of the Act of 1544
-and suppress King’s Hall and Michael-House, using
-their grounds and adjoining property as the site of
-the new college. We have no reference to the appointment
-of commissioners for the business, though
-there is an allusion, quoted later, to receivers: perhaps
-the matter was left in the hands of the officials
-of the Court of Augmentations. Redman was the
-chief authority at Cambridge in the arrangements
-that had to be made there, and it was intended that
-he should be the first master of the new college when
-it was founded.</p>
-
-<p>The two Societies above mentioned were (save
-for Peterhouse) the oldest in the University. To
-Trinity men their history has, naturally, great interest,
-and I interpolate a few remarks on this and
-their position in 1546.</p>
-
-<p>The King’s Scholars, normally thirty-two in
-number and of all ages from fourteen upwards, were
-established by Edward II under a warden in 1317
-and incorporated in 1337. They had for their
-<a name="png.018" id="png.018" href="#png.018"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>10<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>original home a large house (King’s Hall) situated
-on the grass plot and walk in front of the present
-chapel, and rapidly acquired all the adjacent land
-between the High Street (now known as Trinity
-Street) and the river, extending their buildings
-in various directions. Popular writers sometimes
-assert or assume that all medieval colleges were
-founded for poor students. That is not universally
-true. No condition of poverty was imposed on the
-scholars of King’s Hall, nor was their life here penurious:
-they had a dining-hall, library, common room,
-chapel, kitchens, a brewery, a vineyard, a garden,
-and a staff of servants maintained by the Society,
-while a good many of them also kept their own
-private servants: they received a liberal allowance
-for daily commons, clothes and bedding were supplied
-from the royal wardrobe, and pocket-money was
-given to buy other things. They were appointed
-by the crown largely from among the families of
-court officials, nominations being restricted to those
-who knew Latin. After completing their course
-many of these students entered what we may call
-the higher civil service of the time in church or state.</p>
-
-<p>In the report of the commissioners, the annual
-income of King’s Hall was returned as <i>£</i>214. 0<i>s.</i> 3<i>d.</i>
-and the expenses as <i>£</i>263. 16<i>s.</i> 7<i>d.</i>; and it was
-stated that at the time there were on its boards,
-a master, twenty-five graduate fellows, and seven
-<a name="png.019" id="png.019" href="#png.019"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>11<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>undergraduate fellows, besides servants. The Society
-owned the patronage of the livings of Arrington,
-Bottisham, St Mary’s Cambridge, Chesterton, Fakenham,
-Felmersham, and Grendon. According to
-the return, the normal annual expenditure of King’s
-Hall, if all the scholars resided, required <i>£</i>182. 18<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i>
-for the emoluments of the warden and fellows (namely,
-<i>£</i>8. 13<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i> for the warden, <i>£</i>5. 10<i>s.</i> 0<i>d.</i> for each of
-twenty-five graduate fellows, and <i>£</i>5. 5<i>s.</i> 0<i>d.</i> for each
-of seven undergraduate fellows); <i>£</i>32. 2<i>s.</i> 0<i>d.</i> for the
-college servants (namely, the butler, barber, baker,
-brewer, laundress, cook, under-cook, and the warden’s
-servant); <i>£</i>3. 1<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i> for the estate officers and quit-rents;
-<i>£</i>3. 19<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i> for the expenses of the chapel services
-and the bible-clerk; <i>£</i>5. 0<i>s.</i> 0<i>d.</i> for firing for the
-hall and kitchen; <i>£</i>5. 0<i>s.</i> 0<i>d.</i> for rushes for the hall;
-<i>£</i>5. 10<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i> for the exequies of the founder and the
-following refections; <i>£</i>29. 1<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i> for repairs and
-renewals; and <i>£</i>10 for extraordinary expenses.</p>
-
-<p>The other College (Michael-House) whose buildings
-were transferred to Trinity was of a different
-type. It was founded by Hervey de Stanton in
-1324 for a master and six secular clergy who wished
-to study in the University. Their original home
-was a large house on the site of the present combination
-room and the land round it; later they
-acquired all the property between Foul Lane and
-the river. At first the Society’s means were barely
-<a name="png.020" id="png.020" href="#png.020"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>12<span class="ns">]
- </span></span>s</a>ufficient for its needs, but in time it received many
-gifts, and the foundation was increased to a master
-and eight priests with chaplains and bible-clerks.
-It had an oratory in its House but did not need a
-chapel as it owned St Michael’s Church; traces of
-this ownership will be noticed in the arrangement
-for stalls (to be occupied by members of the Society)
-in the choir, which is sunk below the level of the
-nave and chancel.</p>
-
-<p>In the report of the commissioners, the annual
-income of Michael-House was returned as <i>£</i>141. 13<i>s.</i> 1¾<i>d.</i>
-and its expenses as <i>£</i>143. 18<i>s.</i> 0<i>d.</i>; and it was stated
-that there were on its boards a master, eight fellows,
-and three chaplains, besides servants. Besides
-St Michael’s Cambridge, the Society owned the
-patronage of the livings of Barrington, Boxworth,
-Cheadle, Grundisburgh, and Orwell. According to
-the return, the normal annual expenditure of
-Michael-House required a sum of <i>£</i>91. 10<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i> for
-the emoluments of the Society (namely, <i>£</i>7. 6<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i>
-for the master, <i>£</i>47. 17<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i> for the six fellows
-on the original foundation, <i>£</i>11. 6<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i> for the
-two Illegh fellows, <i>£</i>15 for three chaplains, one of
-whom served Barrington, and <i>£</i>10 for four bible-clerks),
-<i>£</i>1 for the auditor, <i>£</i>6. 6<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i> for college
-servants (namely, the cook, butler, barber, and
-laundress), rather more than <i>£</i>17 for the exequies
-of benefactors, <i>£</i>1. 13<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i> for the commemoration
-<a name="png.021" id="png.021" href="#png.021"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>13<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>refection, <i>£</i>20 for repairs, and <i>£</i>6. 6<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i> for extraordinary
-expenses. A clerical society like Michael-House
-had no difficulty in providing for due
-celebration of the exequies of its friends, and in
-fact more than twenty benefactors are mentioned
-by name as being thus commemorated every year.
-In 1544, the House, presumably with the object of
-averting its destruction, began to admit students
-resident elsewhere in the University, and in a couple
-of years no less than forty-eight students matriculated
-from it; the number of admissions must have
-exceeded this, but what was involved in such cases
-by admission is uncertain.</p>
-
-<p>A scheme containing a “first plott or proportion”
-for the new College was prepared for the king
-by the Court of Augmentations in London; it seems
-certain that this was worked out in collaboration
-with Redman. The clerk who drew it up was
-Thomas Ansill. The College, after its foundation,
-recognized its obligation to him in the matter and
-presented him to the vicarage of Barford which was
-and is in its gift. He preserved a copy of his scheme;
-this was purchased from his son by one of the fellows
-in 1611, and given to the College.</p>
-
-<p>The manuscript of the suggested scheme, to
-which Mr Bird first called my attention, is endorsed
-<cite xml:lang="lat" lang="lat">Distribucio Collegii</cite> and headed “the proporcon
-diuised for Trinite College.” It is undated,
-<a name="png.022" id="png.022" href="#png.022"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>14<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>but in a later hand it is added that it was made
-Anno 37 Hen. 8, and therefore before 22 April 1546.
-From internal evidence it must have been composed
-in or after March in that year, since those who
-graduated in that Lent term are described as being
-of the standing of the degrees then taken. Of
-those who graduated afterwards some are described
-correctly, others not so: doubtless Redman knew
-about the standing of the members of King’s Hall
-and Michael-House, but he may well have made
-mistakes about the standing of some of the junior
-students of other colleges. If however we accept
-the endorsement as correct, we may fix the date
-of the composition of the plan as being in the early
-half of April, 1546. This manuscript has not been
-printed, and I proceed to describe it.</p>
-
-<p>The object of the compilers of this scheme was
-to see what income would be required for the suggested
-new College, and to arrange how the income
-should be used; incidentally it reveals the general
-organization proposed. The constitution of the
-College, the various offices to be created, and the
-stipends intended are specified. In most cases
-the names of the proposed fellows, scholars, bedesmen,
-and servants are given, but generally the
-allocation of the proposed principal offices is not
-indicated and probably had not been then arranged.
-The names of the proposed fellows and scholars
-<a name="png.023" id="png.023" href="#png.023"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>15<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>agree with those appointed later, though the order
-is not always the same, but the provisional list of
-bedesmen differs from that of those ultimately
-nominated.</p>
-
-<p>The <cite xml:lang="lat" lang="lat">Distribucio</cite> begins with a statement of the
-names and suggested stipends of the master and
-fellows. The stipend of the master was to be <i>£</i>100
-a year: that of each of the next fifteen fellows (one
-of those proposed being a doctor of divinity, ten
-bachelors of divinity, and four masters of arts) was
-to be <i>£</i>10 a year and <i>£</i>1 a year for livery: that of
-each of the next twenty-five fellows (twenty-two of
-those nominated being masters of arts and three
-bachelors of arts) was to be <i>£</i>8 a year; that of each
-of the next twenty fellows and scholars (seven of
-the nominees being bachelors of arts and thirteen
-junior scholars) was to be <i>£</i>6. 13<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i> a year. The
-names are given and agree with those in the letters
-patent of 19 December.</p>
-
-<p>There was to be a schoolmaster (Richard Harman)
-who was to have <i>£</i>20 a year, an usher of
-grammar (William Boude) who was to have <i>£</i>10 a
-year, and provision was made for forty childer
-grammarians, whose names are given, each of whom
-was to have <i>£</i>4 a year. This shows that it was intended
-that the foundation should include students
-in grammar, and the two teachers specially responsible
-for them were to be a schoolmaster and usher.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.024" id="png.024" href="#png.024"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>16<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>The question arises whether it was intended to
-found a grammar-school connected with the College
-or whether these grammarians were what we should
-call undergraduate scholars or exhibitioners. The
-former view is the correct one, for the royal commissioners
-in May 1549 definitely asked<sup class="fn"><a href="#fn11" id="fna11" name="fna11">11</a></sup> the College
-“to surrender the Grammar Schole.” This was done
-and the school was then absorbed in the College.
-Probably at that time the distinction between boys
-at the grammar-school and junior undergraduates
-was not regarded as important—the term grammarian
-or grammaticus being commonly used for
-a junior undergraduate as well as a school-boy<sup class="fn"><a href="#fn12" id="fna12" name="fna12">12</a></sup>.
-This indifference to the distinction between the two
-classes is illustrated by the fact that of the grammarian
-school-boys named in the <cite xml:lang="lat" lang="lat">Distribucio</cite>, ten
-were already matriculated members of the University,
-nine matriculated from Trinity shortly after its
-foundation, and of the others six matriculated in
-1548 or 1549 which is not inconsistent with their
-having been students of the University in 1546.</p>
-
-<p>In 1547, the accounts include a particular payment
-for six boys of the grammar-school, and wages
-for one quarter for the schoolmaster and Mr Boude;
-thus showing that the school was then being
-carried on. In 1548, the accounts specify forty-two
-<a name="png.025" id="png.025" href="#png.025"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>17<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>grammatici, in addition to certain graduates and
-dialectici, as being in residence, but in this year there
-is no mention of a schoolmaster or an usher though
-possibly they may be included among the ten
-lectors for whom provision is made. In 1551 the
-grammatici appear as discipuli, and thenceforth
-the grammarians were treated as undergraduate
-scholars.</p>
-
-<p>The <cite xml:lang="lat" lang="lat">Distribucio</cite> next goes on to enumerate seven
-readers. Three of these were to be public or university
-readers, of whom one (John Maydew) was
-to read in divinity, one (John Cheke) in Greek, and
-one (Thomas Wakefield) in Hebrew, each at <i>£</i>40
-a year. The other four were to be fellows of the
-College, of whom one (Simon Bridges) was to read
-in divinity at <i>£</i>6. 13<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i> a year, two in philosophy
-at <i>£</i>5 a year each, and one in logic at <i>£</i>5 a year:
-such stipends to be in addition to their fellowship
-emoluments. It would seem that Bridges
-or Briggs declined to accept the nomination to a
-fellowship at Trinity and accordingly was not appointed
-to the office. Provision was also made for
-two under-readers in logic at <i>£</i>2. 3<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i> each. Next
-are mentioned two examiners in scholastic acts at
-<i>£</i>5 a year each; and two chaplains at <i>£</i>6. 13<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i> a
-year each, one (Henry Man) for the fellows and the
-other (unnamed) for the childer and bedesmen.
-I note that Henry Man occupied for many years
-<a name="png.026" id="png.026" href="#png.026"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>18<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>rooms in the Great Court adjoining and on the west
-side of what is now known as the Queen’s Gate.</p>
-
-<p>The next entry is that of twenty-four almsmen
-or bedesmen at <i>£</i>6 a year each; the names of all
-but one are given, but the list differs somewhat
-from that appearing in the account book of 1547
-of those appointed when the College began work.
-The unnamed bedesman was the cook of Michael-House,
-and it is impossible not to wonder whether
-his inclusion in this list (which involved his retirement
-from the kitchens) was due to the memory of
-indifferent dinners eaten by Redman when a guest
-at the high table of that House.</p>
-
-<p>The <cite xml:lang="lat" lang="lat">Distribucio</cite> then returns to the enumeration
-of the officers and servants of the College. There
-were to be two bursars at <i>£</i>4 a year each; a vice-master
-at <i>£</i>5 a year; two deans to direct disputations
-of divinity and philosophy, one at <i>£</i>4 a year,
-and the other at <i>£</i>3. 6<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i> a year; eight bible-clerks,
-whose names are given, to serve the hall,
-choir and vestry, and to attend upon the curate
-when visiting, at <i>£</i>2. 13<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i> a year each; an organ-player
-at <i>£</i>6 a year and his commons; two butlers,
-the senior at <i>£</i>5 a year and the junior at <i>£</i>4 a year;
-a manciple at <i>£</i>6. 13<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i> a year; a master-cook at
-<i>£</i>6 a year; two under-cooks, one at <i>£</i>4 a year, and
-the other at <i>£</i>3. 6<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i> a year; and a turn-spit at
-<i>£</i>2 a year. There was also to be a barber at <i>£</i>5
-<a name="png.027" id="png.027" href="#png.027"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>19<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>a year; a laundress at <i>£</i>5 a year; a porter at <i>£</i>6
-a year; a bricklayer at <i>£</i>4 a year; a carpenter at <i>£</i>4
-a year; a mason at <i>£</i>4 a year; two stewards of lands
-at <i>£</i>5 a year each; an auditor for the lands at <i>£</i>10
-a year; a receiver for the lands at <i>£</i>13. 6<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i>; and
-an attorney in the exchequer for the lands at
-<i>£</i>3. 6<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i> Allowance was to be made for the
-yearly distribution of alms to the amount of <i>£</i>20;
-and of another <i>£</i>20 to be spent on the mending of
-highways. The total expenditure contemplated
-amounts to <i>£</i>1286. At the end in another handwriting
-is added that allowance (amount unspecified)
-should be also made for wine and wax, riding, extraordinary
-charges, and repairs.</p>
-
-<p>It must have been in April, or early in May,
-1546, that the commissioners, or other officials concerned,
-took possession of King’s Hall and Michael-House
-and the ground adjacent thereto. They at
-once made arrangements to shut up Foul Lane
-which ran across the present Great Court, to purchase
-such part of that court as did not belong to
-King’s Hall and Michael-House, and to enclose the
-site. Stone and other materials for the new work
-were taken from the church and cloisters of the
-dissolved Franciscan monastery which stood on the
-land now occupied by Sidney Sussex College, and
-in a survey, dated 20 May 1546, those buildings
-are described as having been already partially
-<a name="png.028" id="png.028" href="#png.028"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>20<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>demolished in order to provide “towards the building
-of the King’s Majesty’s new College.”</p>
-
-<p>It is probable that during this time members of
-King’s Hall and Michael-House were in residence,
-and possibly also some of the members-elect of
-Trinity College. The cost of the maintenance of
-the House and the expenses of the alterations must
-have been heavy, but in December 1546, the Court
-of Augmentations was ordered<sup class="fn"><a href="#fn13" id="fna13" name="fna13">13</a></sup> “to pay Dr Redman
-of your new College in Cambridge <i>£</i>2000 towards
-the establishment and building of the same, and
-in recompense for revenues of their lands for a
-whole year ended Michaelmas last, because the
-rents were paid to your Majesty’s receivers before
-they had out letters patent for their donation.”
-We have no record of these expenses, but I conjecture
-that this grant allowed a clean start to be
-made from Michaelmas 1546.</p>
-
-<p>The members of the new College entered into
-possession of the buildings and began their academic
-life as members of Trinity College about Michaelmas
-1546. The surrender of King’s Hall and Michael-House
-to the king took place on 28 October, and
-arrangements were than made to pension the master
-and eight fellows of Michael-House and one fellow
-of King’s Hall. Redman was appointed master of
-the new foundation.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.029" id="png.029" href="#png.029"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>21<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>The original members of the Society were selected
-from the whole University with the addition
-of a few Oxonians: it is believed that all the nominees
-were favourable to the new learning and the protestant
-faith. Of the forty childer grammarians
-named in the <cite xml:lang="lat" lang="lat">Distribucio</cite> all save one accepted the
-nomination; of these, six had been previously
-members of Michael-House, one a member of Pembroke,
-one of Peterhouse, one of St John’s, and
-one of some unnamed College. Of the sixty
-students nominated to fellowships or scholarships
-in the letters patent, fourteen did not reside and
-presumably refused the nomination. Of the forty-six
-who accepted the office, thirty-six were graduates
-and ten were non-graduates. Of these
-thirty-six nominees, three came from Michael-House,
-one from King’s Hall, two from Christ’s, one
-from Corpus, one from King’s, one from Pembroke,
-two from Peterhouse, one from Queens’, one from
-St Catharine’s, and three from St John’s: of the
-colleges or hostels from which the remaining twenty
-had graduated, I can find no particulars. Of the
-ten non-graduates who accepted the office, one had
-been at Pembroke, one at Queens’, two at St John’s,
-and one at Trinity Hall: of the previous history of
-the remaining five I know nothing. Of the fourteen
-who did not reside and presumably declined the
-offer, eleven were graduates, of whom one had been
-<a name="png.030" id="png.030" href="#png.030"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>22<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>at Corpus, one at King’s, one at Pembroke, three at
-Queens’, two at St John’s, and two at Oxford, and
-of the remaining graduate I can find no particulars.
-Of the three non-graduates who did not accept the
-nomination, one had been at Michael-House, one at
-Oxford, and of the other I know nothing. It appears
-from the account-books that there were also
-still in residence a few students<sup class="fn"><a href="#fn14" id="fna14" name="fna14">14</a></sup> who had been
-members of King’s Hall and Michael-House: it was
-only courteous to give these deposed students the
-hospitality of the House, and they occupied a
-different position to the pensioners and fellow-commoners
-who later were admitted in considerable
-numbers. We cannot prove or disprove the presence
-at this time of other students, but it is most
-likely that at first there were no residents in College
-other than those mentioned above.</p>
-
-<p>The legal formalities connected with the surrender
-of the properties of King’s Hall and Michael-House
-took a considerable time, and were not completed
-till 17 December 1546. The letters patent
-founding the College and the charter of dotation
-were signed a few days later<sup class="fn"><a href="#fn15" id="fna15" name="fna15">15</a></sup>. The actual endowment
-granted was valued at <i>£</i>1640 net a year,
-<a name="png.031" id="png.031" href="#png.031"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>23<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>which must have been deemed ample to provide
-for the expenses and the maintenance of the House.
-Comparing this income and the estimated expenditure
-with those of King’s Hall and Michael-House
-we gather how much more important than these
-colleges was the contemplated new foundation.</p>
-
-<p>Thus were King’s Hall and Michael-House dissolved,
-but only to be merged in a new and nobler
-Society. The letters patent founding Trinity College
-state that Henry to the glory and honour of
-Almighty God and the Holy and Undivided Trinity,
-for the amplification and establishment of the
-Christian and true religion, the extirpation of
-heresy and false opinion, the increase and continuance
-of divine learning and all kinds of godliness,
-the knowledge of language, the education of
-youth in piety virtue discipline and learning, the
-relief of the poor and destitute, the prosperity of
-the Church of Christ, and the common good and
-happiness of his kingdom and subjects, founded and
-established a College of letters, sciences, philosophy;
-godliness, and sacred theology, for all time to endure.
-These are noble objects, and we may look back with
-honourable pride to the way in which Trinity College
-has on the whole carried out the intentions of its
-founder.</p>
-
-<p>The organization of the new College followed
-closely that outlined in the <cite xml:lang="lat" lang="lat">Distribucio</cite>. To meet
-<a name="png.032" id="png.032" href="#png.032"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>24<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>the expenses already incurred during the Michaelmas
-term the Court of Augmentations<sup class="fn"><a href="#fn16" id="fna16" name="fna16">16</a></sup> in January
-1547 paid Redman <i>£</i>590 “towards the exhibition of
-King’s Scholars in Cambridge.” This was about
-one-third of the total intended income of the House,
-and presumably cleared matters up to 24 December
-1546, when the College entered into possession of
-its endowments. If we may trust the sermon
-preached in London on 12 December 1550, by
-Thomas Lever, subsequently master of St John’s
-College, Trinity had reason to regret the death of
-Henry in January 1547, for the preacher asserted
-that a substantial part of the intended endowment
-was appropriated by courtiers in London; I have
-never investigated what part (if any) of it was thus
-lost to the College.</p>
-
-<p>The first account-book of the new College covers
-the civil year 1547, but only certain selected items
-of income and expenditure appear therein. It
-shows total receipts of <i>£</i>786. 16<i>s.</i> 7<i>d.</i> and total payments
-of <i>£</i>799. 11<i>s.</i> 1½<i>d.</i> Most of the income is said
-to have come from the “Tower.” I conjecture
-that rents, etc. were paid to the master who kept
-the college moneys in the treasury in the Tower,
-and the bursar in his book accounted only for such
-portion of it as was handed to him: of other sums
-<a name="png.033" id="png.033" href="#png.033"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>25<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>received or paid on account of the Society, we have
-no particulars. In most cases the commons (though
-not the stipends or wages) paid to officers are set
-out, but up to Lady-Day instead of giving full details
-there is an entry of <i>£</i>52. 6<i>s.</i> 10<i>d.</i> paid to fellows
-and scholars for “the first quarter after the erection,
-besides stipends and wages.” The account-book
-for the next year, 1548, is better kept. It shows
-total receipts of <i>£</i>531. 13<i>s.</i> 11½<i>d.</i> and total payments
-of <i>£</i>528. 12<i>s.</i> 8½<i>d.</i> In the accounts of this year are
-mentioned a master, fifty graduate fellows (of whom
-thirteen were bachelors), ten dialectici, forty-two
-grammarians, and eight bible-clerks. Entries appear
-of payments for commons to six former
-members of King’s Hall and Michael-House, but of
-these only three seem to have been in regular residence.
-An examination of the early account-books
-allows us to see something of the development of
-the College, but a description of this would hardly
-come within the purview of this paper.</p>
-
-
-<div class="footnotes">
-<p><a class="parnumber" href="#fna1" id="fn1" name="fn1" title="Back">1</a> <cite>Cambridge Documents</cite> issued by the Royal Commissioners,
-London, 1852, vol. III, pp. 365–410.</p>
-
-<p><a class="parnumber" href="#fna2" id="fn2" name="fn2" title="Back">2</a> This was true some years ago when this paper was written, but
-since then I have given part of the story in a booklet on the King’s
-Scholars and King’s Hall which, at the request of the College, I wrote
-in 1917 for the meeting held to celebrate the six-hundredth anniversary
-of the execution by Edward II of the writ establishing those
-scholars in the University of Cambridge.</p>
-
-<p><a class="parnumber" href="#fna3" id="fn3" name="fn3" title="Back">3</a> 37 Henry VIII, cap. 4.</p>
-
-<p><a class="parnumber" href="#fna4" id="fn4" name="fn4" title="Back">4</a> <cite>Correspondence of M. Parker</cite>, Cambridge, 1852, p. 34.</p>
-
-<p><a class="parnumber" href="#fna5" id="fn5" name="fn5" title="Back">5</a> <cite>Life of T. Smith</cite> by J. Strype, Oxford, 1820, pp. 29–30.</p>
-
-<p><a class="parnumber" href="#fna6" id="fn6" name="fn6" title="Back">6</a> <cite>State Papers</cite>, Domestic, 1546, vol. <span class="allsc">XXI</span>, part i, no. 68. See also
-J. Lamb’s <cite>Documents</cite>, London, 1838, pp. 58–59; <cite>Correspondence of
-M. Parker</cite>, Cambridge, 1852, p. 34.</p>
-
-<p><a class="parnumber" href="#fna7" id="fn7" name="fn7" title="Back">7</a> <cite>State Papers</cite>, Domestic, 1546, part i, nos. 203, 204.</p>
-
-<p><a class="parnumber" href="#fna8" id="fn8" name="fn8" title="Back">8</a> <cite>Ecclesiastical Memorials</cite> by J. Strype, Oxford, 1882, vol. XI,
-part i, pp. 207–208; <cite>Correspondence of M. Parker</cite>, p. 36.</p>
-
-<p><a class="parnumber" href="#fna9" id="fn9" name="fn9" title="Back">9</a> <cite>Cambridge Documents</cite>, vol. I, pp. 105–294.</p>
-
-<p><a class="parnumber" href="#fna10" id="fn10" name="fn10" title="Back">10</a> <cite>Correspondence of M. Parker</cite>, pp. 35–36; J. Lamb’s <cite>Documents</cite>,
-p. 59.</p>
-
-<p><a class="parnumber" href="#fna11" id="fn11" name="fn11" title="Back">11</a> <cite>State Papers</cite>, Domestic, Edward VI, May 1549.</p>
-
-<p><a class="parnumber" href="#fna12" id="fn12" name="fn12" title="Back">12</a> Senior undergraduates were then commonly termed dialectici.</p>
-
-<p><a class="parnumber" href="#fna13" id="fn13" name="fn13" title="Back">13</a> <cite>State Papers</cite>, Domestic, 1546, no. 647 (25).</p>
-
-<p><a class="parnumber" href="#fna14" id="fn14" name="fn14" title="Back">14</a> Three fellow-commoners had matriculated from King’s Hall in
-1544.</p>
-
-<p><a class="parnumber" href="#fna15" id="fn15" name="fn15" title="Back">15</a> The charter of foundation, dated 19 December, and that of
-endowment, dated 24 December, are printed at length in the
-<cite>Cambridge Documents</cite>, vol. <span class="allsc">III</span>, pp. 365–410.</p>
-
-<p><a class="parnumber" href="#fna16" id="fn16" name="fn16" title="Back">16</a> C. H. Cooper, <cite>Annals of Cambridge</cite>, Cambridge, 1842, vol. <span class="allsc">I</span>,
-p. 452.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="chap">
-<h2 title="II. The Tutorial System"><a name="png.034" id="png.034" href="#png.034"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>26<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>CHAPTER II.<br
- /><small>THE TUTORIAL SYSTEM.</small></h2>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="allsc">The</span> word Tutor is used at Cambridge to describe
-an officer of a College who stands to his
-pupils in loco parentis; now-a-days he may, but
-does not necessarily, give direct instruction to them.
-The object of this chapter is to describe the development
-of the office in Trinity College.</p>
-
-<p>Trinity College was founded in 1546 by Henry VIII.
-It is, however, essential in dealing with its early
-history to bear in mind that it was founded in a pre-existing<sup class="fn"><a href="#fn17" id="fna17" name="fna17">17</a></sup>
-University having well-established rules
-and customs. Nearly all the original members of
-Trinity had been educated at Cambridge, they were
-familiar with its traditions, and even the buildings
-they occupied were associated with the college life
-of earlier times. It was intended that the Society
-should promote the reformed religion and the new
-learning, but there is no reason to suppose that in
-establishing it, it was wished or proposed to alter
-the existing practice about the tuition, guidance,
-and care of the younger students.</p>
-
-<p>In the system in force in the University shortly
-<a name="png.035" id="png.035" href="#png.035"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>27<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>before the foundation of Trinity, the students corresponding
-to our scholars and sizars lived in endowed
-colleges (of which eight were founded before 1353 and
-seven between 1440 and 1520), most of those corresponding
-to our pensioners in unendowed private
-hostels (of which in the sixteenth century there were
-twenty-seven and in earlier times possibly a few
-more), and most of those belonging to religious
-orders in monasteries or monastic hostels. A student
-on admission to the University was apprenticed to
-some master of arts or doctor who directed the
-lad’s studies until he took a master’s degree. This
-graduate was known as the student’s “master”:
-in the case of a member of a college we may assume
-that the master was chosen from among the senior
-members of the House, though it is doubtful if this
-was necessarily so in the case of the hostels. The
-head of a college or hostel was responsible for the
-conduct and control of the lad in non-scholastic
-matters, but in colleges in later times this work
-was assigned to a dean. Thus for practical purposes
-a tutorial system already existed in the
-medieval system of apprenticeship and control.</p>
-
-<p>The royal scheme for Trinity College comprised
-a master, fifteen senior fellows, twenty-five middle
-fellows, twenty junior fellows (of whom, in 1546,
-thirteen were undergraduates), and forty grammarian
-school-boys. In addition to these, there were
-<a name="png.036" id="png.036" href="#png.036"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>28<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>servant-students (known as sizars or subsizars), each
-being attached as gyp to a particular fellow, and
-receiving education, board, and lodging in lieu of
-money wages. There is nothing to show whether or
-not the presence of pensioners was contemplated.</p>
-
-<p>We have a list, apparently complete, of all the
-intended officers; tutors do not appear among them,
-though a schoolmaster and usher were provided for
-the grammarians. Hence it would seem that the
-relation between an apprenticed undergraduate and
-his master was regarded as personal, and that the
-latter was selected and paid by his pupil or pupil’s
-guardian, and not by or through the College—I conjecture
-that this was the usual medieval practice.
-The deans are mentioned as officers of the College,
-and the discipline of the younger members was part
-of their business, though no doubt a lad’s master or
-tutor assisted in enforcing it. The formal charter
-of foundation was given by Henry in December
-1546, but the grammarians are not mentioned
-therein.</p>
-
-<p>During the next six years, 1546–1552, three important
-developments took place. First, the grammar-school
-side of the College was abandoned, and
-all boys then in the school were entered as scholars
-of the House; next, and perhaps consequent on the
-abolition of the school, a distinction between fellows
-and scholars was drawn; and finally, following the
-<a name="png.037" id="png.037" href="#png.037"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>29<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>growing custom of other colleges, the admission of
-pensioners was definitely recognized as desirable,
-thus introducing a class of students below the
-standing of scholars. Before coming to the subject
-of tutors it will be well to add a word or two about
-the pensioners and scholars of these early days.</p>
-
-<p>With the upset of the medieval scheme of education
-the number of pensioners and fellow-commoners
-seeking admission to the University greatly
-decreased, and the reception of a limited number
-of them in the colleges fairly met the needs of the
-University. The private hostels were then no
-longer wanted and being unendowed disappeared.
-Thus when again, as soon happened, the number
-of would-be pensioners increased, it was necessary
-(unless new non-collegiate arrangements were made
-for their reception in the University) to admit them
-in larger numbers to the colleges.<!-- TN: period invisible in scan --> At Trinity a limit
-was, in theory, placed on the number of pensioners
-admissible, but not on that of fellow-commoners.
-A pensioner at Trinity, and I suppose also at other
-colleges, had to be qualified by learning and morals
-for admission, and I conceive further that his entry
-was conditional on his finding a fellow who would
-receive him. A pensioner or fellow-commoner had
-no rights, and resided only on such terms and as
-long as the College or the fellow receiving him
-willed. I believe that students of this class did not
-<a name="png.038" id="png.038" href="#png.038"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>30<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>often stay here for more than three or four years
-unless in due course they became scholars.</p>
-
-<p>A most important question for the new College
-was how the supply of scholars and fellows should
-be provided. In King’s Hall vacancies were filled
-by royal nomination, and boys came into residence
-as scholars-elect. We do not know what was proposed
-in 1546, but I think that, as far as entry
-to the grammar-school was concerned, nomination
-by the senior fellows was the most likely method
-to have been contemplated. The abandonment of
-the school and the enrolment of all its members
-as scholars of the House must however have raised
-the question in an acute form, and it was settled
-in or before 1552 by the establishment of an annual
-examination for the election of scholars. Probably
-from the first it was intended that the new
-fellows should be formally elected and admitted.</p>
-
-<p>The charter of 1546 contains a reference to
-statutes to be given later by the king. There was
-considerable delay in preparing these, and the
-liberty of action thus left to the Society seems to
-have been used unwisely, for the commissioners of
-1549 reported that its state was “much out of
-order, governed at large and pleasure for want of
-statutes ... the fellows for the most part too
-bad.”</p>
-
-<p>In November 1552 the College received the long-expected
-<a name="png.039" id="png.039" href="#png.039"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>31<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>statutes by which it was to be governed:
-with their appearance we leave the field of conjecture
-and come to facts. The foundation as here
-described included a master, fifty fellows of the
-standing of master or doctor, and sixty bachelor
-and undergraduate scholars: provision was also made
-for student-servants or sizars. Vacancies in the roll
-of scholars were to be filled by an annual election
-held at Michaelmas on the result of a two days’
-examination. Bachelors of arts and those insane
-or suffering from contagious disease (a curious conjunction)
-were ineligible: also there could not, at
-any one time, be more than three scholars from any
-one county. The regulation that a bachelor was
-not eligible for election to a scholarship suggests
-that a candidate might be in residence as an undergraduate,
-though it does not exclude the candidature
-of those who were not already members of the
-House, but the custom (if it ever existed) of electing
-non-residents had died out before 1560. The admission
-of pensioners, not exceeding fifty-four in
-number, was definitely recognized in 1552: of these
-the master might take as his pupils four, and each
-fellow one. The pensioner which every fellow
-might thus receive was in addition to such scholars
-as had been assigned to him as pupils, but though
-scholars had tutors, the fellow responsible for a
-pensioner is not explicitly described as his tutor.
-<a name="png.040" id="png.040" href="#png.040"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>32<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>It seems that an important part of the duty of a
-tutor was to see that all payments due to the
-college from his pupils were made punctually.
-Scholars, unlike pensioners, had definite rights.</p>
-
-<p>The following are some of the regulations:</p>
-
-<blockquote xml:lang="lat" lang="lat">
-<p>Nemo ex discipulis sine tutore in collegio sit, qui fuerit,
-expellatur. Pupilli tutoribus pareant, honorem paternum
-et reverentiam exhibeant, quorum cura consumitur in illis
-informandis et ad pietatem scientiamque instruendis. Tutores
-fideliter et diligenter quae docenda sunt suos doceant,
-quae agenda instruant et admoneant. Omnia pupillorum
-expensa tutores collegio praestent, et singulis mensibus aes
-debitum pro se et suis quaestoribus solvant. Quod ni fecerint,
-tantisper commeatu priventur dum pecunia dissolvatur.
-Pupillus neque a tutore rejiciatur, neque tutorem
-suum ubi velit mutet nisi legitima de causa a praeside et
-senatu probanda; qui fecerit collegio <span class="nw">excludatur....</span> In discipulis
-eligendis praecipua ratio ingenii et inopiae sit, in
-quibus ut quisque valet maxime ita ceteris proferatur. Eo
-adjungatur doctrinae studium et mediocris jam profectus,
-et reliqui temporis spes illum fore ad communem reipublicae
-posthac idoneum. Horum studium sit ut vitae innocentiam
-cum doctrinae veritate conjungant, et in veritate rerum
-inquirendi et honestate persequenda <span class="nw">laborent....</span> Sic sint
-grammaticis et studiis humanitatis instituti ut inquisitiones
-aulae sustinere et domesticas exercitationes suscipere <span class="nw">possint....</span>
-Pensionarii et studiorum socii in collegium recipiantur ...
-provideatur ut neque praesidi plures quam quatuor neque
-singulis sociis plures uno pensionario sint.</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p>Grave offences were punishable by expulsion,
-rustication, etc., and those who committed only
-<a name="png.041" id="png.041" href="#png.041"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>33<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>“minor offences” were liable to penalties of extreme
-severity. Thus we read:</p>
-
-<blockquote xml:lang="lat" lang="lat">
-<p>Quicunque in aliqua parte officii sui negligentior fuerit,
-et aliquem e magistratibus bene admonentem non audiverit,
-aut insolentem se ostenderit, si ephoebus sit verberibus sin
-ex ephoebis excesserit decennali victu careat et uterque
-praeterea poenitentiam declamatione tostetur.</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p class="noindent">The text is corrupt, but the meaning is clear. A
-marginal note suggests the obvious correction that
-decemdiali should be read for decennali. The deans
-superintended, even if they did not inflict, corporal
-punishment when it was ordered.</p>
-
-<p>Another code of statutes was drawn up in 1554,
-but was never sealed, and thus did not become
-effective. I need not quote the text which, on
-tutorial matters, does not differ materially from
-that of 1560. The draft contains a clause to the
-effect that the master of the College was not to take
-more than four pensioners as his pupils, a fellow
-who was a master of arts or of some superior degree
-was not to take more than two, and no one else
-was to take a pensioner as a pupil. The word
-“two” however has been crossed out and “one”
-substituted. From this it would seem that the
-question of how many pensioners it was desirable
-to admit was already a matter of debate.</p>
-
-<p>In 1560 new statutes were granted to the
-College, and its constitution as then settled remained
-<a name="png.042" id="png.042" href="#png.042"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>34<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>practically unaltered till 1861. In this code the
-foundation is described as including a master,
-sixty fellows, four chaplains, sixty-two scholars,
-and thirteen sizars or gyps, namely, three for the
-master and one for each of the ten senior fellows.
-Henceforth scholars were elected annually in the
-spring, from undergraduates already in residence.
-By a gracious provision, whose disappearance in
-1861 I regret, it was ordered that forty of the
-scholarships should be specifically associated with
-the name of Henry VIII, twenty with that of queen
-Mary, and two with that of Thomas Allen as pre-eminent
-benefactors. Pensioners and subsizars were
-also admissible to the Society on conditions. If
-fellow-commoners dined at the high table, as seems
-likely, they may have been reckoned extra numerum.
-Every student under the degree of master
-of arts was required to have a tutor, thus regularizing
-the position of fellow-commoners, pensioners,
-sizars, and subsizars as members of the College,
-and bringing them under the same rule as
-scholars.</p>
-
-<p>The regulations in point are as follows:</p>
-
-<blockquote xml:lang="lat" lang="lat">
-<p>Est ea quidem ineuntis aetatis imbecillitas ut provectiorum
-consilio et prudentia necessario moderanda sit, et
-propterea statuimus et volumus ut nemo ex baccalaureis,
-discipulis, pensionariis, sisatoribus, et subsisatoribus tutore
-careat: qui autem caruerit, nisi intra quindecim dies unum
-sibi paraverit, e collegio ejiciatur. Pupilli tutoribus pareant,
-<a name="png.043" id="png.043" href="#png.043"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>35<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>honoremque paternum ac reverentiam deferant, quorum
-studium, labor, et diligentia in illis ad pietatem et scientiam
-informandis ponitur. Tutores sedulo quae docenda sunt
-doceant, quaeque etiam agenda instruant admoneantque.
-Omnia pupillorum expensa tutores collegio praestent, et intra
-decem dies cujusque mensis finiti aes debitum pro se ac suis
-omnibus senescallo solvant. Quod ni fecerint, tantisper commeatu
-priventur dum pecunia a se collegio debita dissolvatur.
-Cautumque esto ne pupillus quispiam vel stipendium suum
-a thesaurariis recipiat vel rationem pro se cum eisdem aliquando
-ineat, sed utrumque per tutorem semper sub poena
-commeatus menstrui a dicto tutore collegio solvendi fieri
-<span class="nw">volumus....</span> Pensionarios ut studiorum socios in collegium
-recipiendos statuimus; sitque in illis recipiendis ratio morum
-ac doctrinae diligenter habita; magistris artium aut superioris
-gradus unum, baccalaureis autem nullum omnino concedimus.
-Nemo illorum admittatur nisi a decano seniore
-et primario lectore examinatus.</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p>In time, serious discrepancies between the statutes
-and the practice of the College grew up. Some,
-but not all, of these were removed in 1844, when
-the statutes were revised. The sentence above
-quoted “magistris artium aut superioris gradus
-unum, baccalaureis autem nullum omnino concedimus”
-was then struck out.</p>
-
-<p>In 1861 new statutes were given to the College:
-these contain no mention of pensioners, but merely
-prescribe that no bachelor or undergraduate shall
-be without a tutor. The present statutes of 1882
-similarly direct that no member of the College in
-statu pupillari shall be without a tutor.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.044" id="png.044" href="#png.044"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>36<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>Except by accident, we have no record before
-1635 of the names of the tutors of the various
-students, but it is probable that at first the master
-regularly entered some undergraduates as his own
-pupils: certainly Whitgift did so, and so too did
-some of his successors. It seems most likely also
-that by 1560 it was already usual for the master
-to assign a student to that fellow who was to act
-as his tutor, though of course regard must always
-have been paid to the wishes of a parent or guardian
-in this matter. This remained the ordinary custom
-for perhaps two hundred years.</p>
-
-<p>Some information on tutorial affairs in the sixteenth
-century may be gathered from an account-book
-kept by Whitgift, covering parts of the years
-1570 to 1576, and containing statements of the
-charges he made as tutor: the names of thirty-nine
-men are given. In the history of Trinity
-College which I wrote for my pupils some years ago,
-I published a few of these bills. I give here a few
-details illustrative of the many matters with
-which a tutor was then concerned.</p>
-
-<p>The payment made to him as tutor varied in
-different cases, but 6<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i> a quarter for a sizar,
-10<i>s.</i> for a pensioner, and 13<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i> for a fellow-commoner
-were usual sums. In a few cases there are
-records of an admission-fee to the College or a fee
-for entering into commons: the normal payment
-<a name="png.045" id="png.045" href="#png.045"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>37<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>for this was 15<i>s.</i> for a pensioner, and 20<i>s.</i> for a
-fellow-commoner—there is no mention of any such
-charge in the case of a sizar. The cost of the silly
-ceremony by which the senior undergraduates initiated
-a freshman, known as his salting, was charged
-in the bills, and varied from 8<i>d.</i> for a sizar and
-1<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i> for a pensioner to 4<i>s.</i> for a fellow-commoner.
-The charge for matriculation appears to have been
-4<i>d.</i> for a sizar, 1<i>s.</i> for a pensioner, and 2<i>s.</i> for a
-fellow-commoner.</p>
-
-<p>Of course the cost of the purchase of books
-comes in most of the accounts. Aristotle, Plato,
-Sophocles, and Demosthenes constantly appear
-among Greek writers, Homer and Xenophon only
-once; Cicero, Caesar, Sallust, and Lucian occur
-often among the Latin authors, Livy only once.
-Euripides and Horace are noticeable by their absence.
-I have not observed any mathematical
-books. Works by Seton and Erasmus are frequently
-mentioned. Among English books we have
-a prayer-book charged at 1<i>s.</i>, a service-book at
-1<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i>, a bible at 9<i>s.</i>, and a testament at 2<i>s.</i> The
-charge for a bible in Latin was 7<i>s.</i> and for a new
-testament in Greek 2<i>s.</i> A Greek grammar cost 1<i>s.</i>,
-1<i>s.</i> 2<i>d.</i>, or 1<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i>; a Hebrew grammar 1<i>s.</i> which
-seems cheap. Paper was charged 4<i>d.</i> by the quire
-and 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> by the half-ream: the cost of a bundle
-of pens and an inkhorn was usually 4<i>d.</i> or 6<i>d.</i></p>
-
-<p><a name="png.046" id="png.046" href="#png.046"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>38<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>Clothes appear to have been expensive, but
-naturally the cost varied widely according to the
-status of the student. Apparently at that time
-the wardrobes of men were fairly extensive: the
-prices of the various articles are set out in full.
-I hesitate to distinguish academic gowns from other
-robes, but the charge of 4<i>s.</i> to John Waring, a
-pensioner, for his gown and square cap, as also the
-charge of 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> for making a gown and hood for
-Phillip Harrison, another pensioner, must, I think,
-be taken to refer to academic costumes. The cost
-of a surplice to Richard Therald, a sizar, was 4<i>s.</i>,
-but to Henry Gates, a fellow-commoner, was as
-much as 11<i>s.</i> 7<i>d.</i></p>
-
-<p>As to amusements, the richer students seem to
-have kept or hired horses at considerable cost.
-Horse-hire to London varied from 4<i>s.</i> to 8<i>s.</i>;
-to Lincoln from 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> to 4<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i> Bows and
-arrows constantly appear in the bills—the price of
-a bow ranging from 1<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i> to 3<i>s.</i> Tennis was
-another popular amusement of the day. The court
-stood on the site of the north end of the present
-library, and the keeper of the court was regarded
-as a college servant; there are no charges in connection
-with the bats, balls, or use of the court.</p>
-
-<p>It may be interesting to notice that coals were
-used regularly as well as wood: they were sold at
-1<i>s.</i> 3<i>d.</i> a sack. Candles were charged at either
-<a name="png.047" id="png.047" href="#png.047"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>39<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>3<i>d.</i> or 4<i>d.</i> a pound. Among miscellaneous things
-6<i>d.</i> was charged for an hour-glass; 4<i>d.</i> for a mouse-trap;
-10<i>d.</i> for a scabbard for a rapier; and 10<i>s.</i> for
-a lute. A set of singing lessons cost 3<i>s.</i> and a set
-of dancing lessons 6<i>s.</i></p>
-
-<p>Sickness appears to have been common. In
-general we have no record of the duration of illnesses,
-and the charges for doctors and chemists
-varied widely. The charge for plucking out one
-tooth seems to have been 1<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i>, but for two teeth
-the dentist reduced his charge to 1<i>s.</i> a tooth.</p>
-
-<p>We get another aspect of student and tutorial
-affairs in the next century (in 1659) contained in a
-long letter from which I gave extracts in the history of
-the College to which I have already referred. Robert
-Creighton, pronounced Crickt-on, of Somersetshire,
-a Westminster boy and a scholar of the House, was
-then a candidate for a fellowship. At the time there
-were in residence a good many zealots, introduced
-into the Society under presbyterian or Cromwellian
-auspices, and one of these, a year senior to Creighton,
-was also a candidate for a fellowship. Just
-before the election some of the scholars were playing
-tennis in the college court when the ball by chance
-struck one of them in the eye. On this Creighton
-called out “Oh God, Oh God, the scholar’s eye is
-stroke out,” whereon his competitor accused him
-to the authorities as a profane person who took
-<a name="png.048" id="png.048" href="#png.048"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>40<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>God’s name in vain; and as confirmation added that
-he never came to the private prayer meetings of
-the students. By good luck the master was Wilkins,
-afterwards bishop of Chester, who owed his
-appointment more to the fact that he had married
-Cromwell’s sister than to his devotion to the doctrines
-of the Independents. It is clear that he disapproved
-of the complaint, but he considered it
-prudent to summon a meeting of the seniority to
-hear the case and examine witnesses. Creighton’s
-tutor, Duport (who gave us our large silver salt-cellar),
-spoke up for his pupil, and thereon the
-master said that the charge looked like malice,
-and it did not matter much if Creighton did neglect
-to go to the private prayer meetings of undergraduates
-since he never failed to go to chapel and
-to his tutor’s lectures. He then proposed, if we may
-trust our authority, that the seniority should at
-once reject the informer and his friends, and elect
-to the vacant fellowships the accused and his friends,
-and so it was done. Such were elections then!</p>
-
-<p>It is satisfactory to add that public opinion in
-the College was against those who trumped up this
-ridiculous charge, and on the day after the election
-the following notice was found on the screens.
-“He that informed against Ds Creighton deserves to
-have his breech kickt on.” An amusing glimpse of
-life under the Commonwealth. Note that the tutor
-<a name="png.049" id="png.049" href="#png.049"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>41<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>gave lectures to his pupils, and from the tutorial
-point of view observe the esteem gained by regular
-attendance thereat.</p>
-
-<p>No obligation to take pupils seems ever to have
-been imposed on fellows, though a pupil once taken
-could not be transferred. This, and the fact that
-scholars were elected only from students already in
-residence, made it undesirable to retain any rule
-to the effect that a fellow should not have more
-than one pensioner as a pupil. Hence in time those
-who liked tutorial work and did it well were allowed
-to have more than one pensioner pupil, and gradually
-the bulk of the entries came to be made under
-a comparatively few tutors.</p>
-
-<p>The average annual entry of students at Trinity
-during the years 1551 to 1600 was fifty-one, during
-the years 1601 to 1650 was fifty, and during the
-years 1651 to 1700 was thirty-nine. During the
-years 1701 to 1750, it sank to twenty-seven: this
-diminution being partly due to the Bentley scandals.
-During the years 1751 to 1800 the average
-annual entry was thirty-seven, during the years
-1801 to 1850 was one hundred and sixteen, during
-the years 1851 to 1900 was one hundred and seventy-four,
-and during the years 1901 to 1913 was one
-hundred and ninety-nine.</p>
-
-<p>Let us see how the men were divided among the
-tutors. From April to December 1635, twenty-eight
-<a name="png.050" id="png.050" href="#png.050"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>42<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>students were admitted who were distributed
-among seventeen tutors, of whom eleven had only
-one pupil and none had more than four pupils.
-Taking every tenth year thenceforward, we find that
-in 1645, there were (excluding ten fellows intruded
-by order of parliament) fifty-seven entries; of these
-fifty-one were divided among ten tutors. In 1655,
-there were fifty-three normal entries divided among
-twelve tutors; in 1665, forty-three entries divided
-among six tutors; in 1675, forty-nine entries divided
-among twelve tutors; in 1685, thirty-four entries
-divided among five tutors; and in 1695, twenty-eight
-entries divided among four tutors. In 1705, there
-were twenty-nine entries, of these twenty-eight
-students were divided among three tutors. In 1715,
-there were fourteen entries divided among six tutors;
-in 1725, thirty-four entries divided among twelve
-tutors; in 1735, twenty-eight entries divided among
-six tutors; and in 1745, twenty-one entries divided
-among eight tutors.</p>
-
-<p>In 1755 there were only two fellows acting as
-tutors, namely S. Whisson and J. Backhouse.
-Thenceforth there were definite tutorial “sides,”
-each under one tutor or joint tutors, a tutor being
-appointed to a side when a vacancy occurred; and
-every admission to the College being made on a designated
-side. In effect the work of a tutor was now
-regarded as being of a character which should occupy
-<a name="png.051" id="png.051" href="#png.051"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>43<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>a man’s whole energies, and it was generally held that
-a tutor, while he held office, had not, and ought not
-to have, leisure during term-time for independent
-work. From 1755 to 1822 there were two sides. In
-1822 a third side was created. In 1872 one of the
-sides (being the lineal successor of Backhouse’s side)
-was divided into two. These four sides are to-day
-designated in the college office by the letters <i>A</i>, <i>B</i>, <i>C</i>,
-<i>D</i>; side <i>A</i> being that created in 1822, sides <i>B</i> and <i>D</i>
-being the two made out of the successor of Backhouse’s
-side, and side <i>C</i> being the lineal successor
-of Whisson’s side. [In the pre-war days of 1914
-side <i>A</i> was under Dr Barnes, side <i>B</i> under Mr
-Laurence, side <i>C</i> under Mr Whetham, and side <i>D</i>
-under Dr Fletcher.]</p>
-
-<p>Proceeding by decades in the same way as
-before, the entries on each of the two sides (denoted
-by <i>C</i> and <i>BD</i>) which existed from 1755 to 1822 were
-in 1755, nineteen and ten; in 1765, four and six;
-in 1775, twenty-one and twenty-four; in 1785,
-eighteen and twenty-nine; in 1795, twenty-nine and
-seventeen; in 1805, forty-two and twenty-six; and
-in 1815, fifty-one and thirty-six. From 1822 to
-1872 there were three sides (denoted by <i>C</i>, <i>BD</i>, <i>A</i>):
-the normal entries on these were in 1825, forty-two,
-fifty-five, forty-one; in 1835, forty, forty-five, fifty-three;
-in 1845, fifty, sixty-eight, forty-nine; in 1855,
-fifty-three, forty-eight, fifty; and in 1865, fifty-eight,
-<a name="png.052" id="png.052" href="#png.052"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>44<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>nineteen, sixty. Since 1872 there have been four
-sides (denoted by <i>C</i>, <i>B</i>, <i>D</i>, <i>A</i>) which were made
-approximately equal: the normal entries on these
-were in 1875, forty-one, forty, forty-four, forty; in
-1885, forty-nine, forty-four, forty-five, forty-eight;
-in 1895, forty-eight, thirty-eight, fifty, fifty-one; and
-in 1905, fifty, fifty-three, fifty, fifty-seven.</p>
-
-<p>Until 1755 the number of pupils in residence in
-any one term assigned to an individual tutor was
-not large, and a tutor interested in any particular
-aspect of a subject likely to be studied was generally
-available: hence it was usually possible for a tutor
-to give personally the teaching and guidance required
-by his pupils. There were then no lecture-rooms
-in College, so probably all instruction was
-given in the tutor’s rooms and was informal in
-character. With the establishment in 1755 of
-sides, this system of teaching required modification,
-and in the course of the latter half of the eighteenth
-century it became the custom for a tutor to supplement
-his teaching by the services of another fellow
-or other fellows. These officers, known as Assistant-Tutors,
-were appointed and paid by individual
-tutors; they lectured regularly, took an important
-part in the life of the Society, and occupied a recognized
-position.</p>
-
-<p>A marked development of the system of formal
-lectures is indicated by the erection in 1835 of a
-<a name="png.053" id="png.053" href="#png.053"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>45<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>block of four large and four medium-sized lecture-rooms.
-No other important changes were made
-for another thirty years, and until 1868 instruction
-remained normally organized by sides; indeed it
-was only by arrangement that lectures on one side
-were open to men on the other sides, though in
-fairness it must be added that an arrangement for
-throwing them open was made as a matter of course
-whenever it seemed desirable. The retention to so
-late a date of appointments by sides was due to the
-fact that the finances of the four sides were then
-kept as separate accounts.</p>
-
-<p>This scheme, clumsy and illogical though it was,
-might have worked fairly well as long as the great
-majority of honour men read nothing but mathematics,
-classics, and perhaps theology, but it was
-condemned by the fact that the authorities allowed
-it to be superseded in practice by an elaborate
-system of private tuition paid for by the individual
-students. With the introduction of new
-subjects (like law, history, and various branches of
-science) and the development of the corresponding
-triposes, it became necessary to recast the scheme
-of teaching if adequate college instruction on such
-subjects was to be provided. The earliest appointment
-of a college lecturer (as contrasted with an
-assistant-tutor nominally attached to a particular
-side) was made in 1868, his lectures being open to all
-<a name="png.054" id="png.054" href="#png.054"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>46<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>students of the Society, and his stipend not charged
-on the funds of a particular side. This was soon
-followed by the placing of all educational appointments
-and finance in the hands of the College without
-regard to sides; and shortly afterwards the lecture-room
-accommodation was considerably extended.</p>
-
-<p>About this time a further step was taken by
-throwing most of the advanced lectures open to
-members of other colleges. Thus in a few years
-instruction by tutorial sides was replaced by college
-lectures and class-work, and then this, to a large
-extent, by teaching organized on a university basis,
-supplemented by individual and catechetical instruction
-in college: with this, the custom of using
-private tuition has largely disappeared. Ultimately
-the title of assistant-tutor was dropped; the
-last appointment under that title was made in 1885,
-but from about 1870 we may say that practically
-the duties of an assistant-tutor were those of a
-lecturer. Thenceforth tutors also took their share
-of lecturing on subjects connected with their own
-lines of study, and did not confine their instruction
-to their own pupils, though for a year or two lectures
-on elementary mathematics and classics to freshmen
-on each particular side survived as a historic curiosity.
-These changes led to the existing scheme
-under which tutorial and tuition duties are separated,
-and thus the giving of direct instruction to
-<a name="png.055" id="png.055" href="#png.055"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>47<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>his pupils is not now necessarily part of the duties
-of a tutor.</p>
-
-<p>The sequence of tutors on each side has been
-published, and I am sorely tempted to add various
-anecdotes on the way in which some of these officers
-fulfilled their duties, but such additions lie outside
-the object of this essay.</p>
-
-<p>Of course during this long period there have
-been bad as well as good tutors, but I think everyone
-will admit that on the whole the system has
-worked well. Its special characteristic is a personal
-relation between the tutor and the pupil, materially
-strengthened by constant intercourse and by the
-fact that practically all the correspondence with
-the parents of the pupil passes through the hands
-of the tutor: experience shows that the tutorial
-influence has not been weakened by the fact that
-in most cases direct instruction is now given by
-other lecturers.</p>
-
-<div class="footnotes">
-<p><a class="parnumber" href="#fna17" id="fn17" name="fn17" title="Back">17</a> The history of the University prior to 1546 covers some three
-centuries and a half, that is, about as long a period as has elapsed
-since 1546.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="chap">
-<h2 title="III. The Westminster Scholars"><a name="png.056" id="png.056" href="#png.056"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>48<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>CHAPTER III.<br
- /><small>THE WESTMINSTER SCHOLARS.</small></h2>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="allsc">The</span> relations between Trinity College and Westminster
-School have always been of an intimate
-character. Under the Elizabethan statutes
-of the two foundations a limited number of boys
-from the school were entitled, if duly qualified, to
-election to scholarships at Trinity, and later an
-attempt was made to extend the privilege to fellowships.
-The whole matter is now one of ancient
-history, but it may be interesting to put on record
-some of the facts connected with it.</p>
-
-<p>The school at Westminster owes its foundation
-to queen Elizabeth. Of course the abbey
-is many centuries older, and in a sense so is the
-school, for a grammar-school (in addition to the
-choir-school) had been attached to the medieval
-monastery, though doubtless it existed only at the
-pleasure of the monks. When Henry VIII created
-the diocese of Westminster with the former abbey
-as its cathedral, he also established a school connected
-with it. The diocese soon disappeared, and
-later the church and buildings were given by queen
-Mary to the Benedictines. The arrangement made
-<a name="png.057" id="png.057" href="#png.057"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>49<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>by Mary was in turn annulled by Elizabeth, who,
-shortly after her succession founded the collegiate
-Church of St Peter, divided into two branches, one
-ecclesiastical and the other scholastic, the whole
-being placed under the rule of the dean and chapter.
-Thus Elizabeth is rightly designated as the founder
-of the present school, though a link with the past
-has been preserved in the fact that the sequence of
-headmasters dates by custom from 1540. The
-buildings were divided between the two sides of the
-College; for the scholastic side, one part of the
-monastic dormitory was made into a school-room,
-the granary was turned into a school dormitory,
-and the boys were allowed the use of the refectory
-for meals.</p>
-
-<p>The queen interested herself in the school she
-had established; its connection with particular
-colleges at the universities was suggested by the
-precedents of Winchester and Eton, and it was
-natural that she should desire to associate it closely
-with the Houses at Cambridge and Oxford which
-had been founded by her father. There is some
-reason to think that the details of the arrangement
-made were due to Bill, the first dean of Westminster,
-who was at the same time master of Trinity and
-provost of Eton; a fortunate pluralist!</p>
-
-<p>On 29 March 1560, Elizabeth gave new statutes
-to Trinity College, Cambridge, and in statute 13,
-<a name="png.058" id="png.058" href="#png.058"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>50<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>dealing with the sixty-two scholars of the College,
-she directed as follows:</p>
-
-<blockquote xml:lang="lat" lang="lat">
-<p>Sumantur autem potissimum et eligantur ex eorum
-numero, si modo idonei et ceteris pares reperiantur qui
-Schola Regia Westmonasterii educati ... <span class="nw">sint....</span> Ex aliis
-regni partibus ac locis indifferenter ad numerum supplendum
-qui maxime idonei videbuntur, semper sumantur.</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p class="noindent">In June 1560, she gave statutes to the Collegiate
-Church at Westminster, and in statute 6, dealing
-with the forty scholars of the school, she directed
-that three scholars from the school should be elected
-annually to the foundation of Christ Church,
-Oxford, and three to that of Trinity College, Cambridge.
-It is said that the queen did not ratify these
-statutes. Be this as it may, in the following year,
-on 11 June 1561, she sent to Trinity College letters
-patent referring to the Westminster statutes as
-indicating her wishes in the matter, and expressing
-her desire that the Society should select as many
-scholars from Westminster as was possible. This
-then was the position in 1561, and it was
-recognised these letters were binding and conferred
-rights on duly qualified Westminster scholars.</p>
-
-<p>Throughout the three centuries of the existence
-of these rights, candidates usually preferred the
-Christ Church studentships, which, being tenable
-under certain conditions for life, were much more
-valuable than Trinity scholarships, since the latter
-<a name="png.059" id="png.059" href="#png.059"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>51<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>ran out in less than seven years. Perhaps too the
-boys were attracted to Christ Church rather than to
-Trinity by the fact that there they formed a larger
-proportion of the whole Society than in Henry’s
-foundation by the Cam. Further a boy elected to
-Christ Church entered sooner into the emoluments
-of his studentship than a boy elected to Trinity—the
-latter not being admitted to his scholarship
-until the next annual election of scholars which took
-place in the following spring, usually some six
-months after he had commenced residence.</p>
-
-<p>There were only forty scholars at Westminster
-and a provision for the election from them every
-year of six scholars to the two universities was
-more than ample. Thus in 1561 one scholar was
-elected to each university, during each of the six
-following years, 1562–67, two scholars were elected
-to each university, in 1568, six scholars were for
-the first time presented, and each university took
-three. In 1569 the school again presented three
-boys for election at Trinity, but the master,
-Whitgift, refused to elect more than two, alleging
-that there were not vacancies in the House for
-more than that number. Thereon the scholar or
-his friends appealed to Sir William Cecil, the chancellor
-of the University. Correspondence ensued,
-but the Society refused to give way on the particular
-election. On the general question the College
-<a name="png.060" id="png.060" href="#png.060"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>52<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>addressed a letter<sup class="fn"><a href="#fn18" id="fna18" name="fna18">18</a></sup>, dated 3 July 1569, to Cecil
-entreating him to interpose with the queen to lighten
-the burden imposed on Trinity by the royal statutes,
-and asserting that the Westminster scholars
-took up so many places as to act to the detriment of
-other and more worthy students. The crown assented
-to this proposal, and it was agreed that thenceforth
-three scholars should be chosen every third year, and
-not necessarily more than two in the other years.</p>
-
-<p>This arrangement lasted but a short time, for a
-year or two later, perhaps in 1575, Goodman, dean
-of Westminster, petitioned<sup class="fn"><a href="#fn19" id="fna19" name="fna19">19</a></sup> the lord treasurer to
-confirm or re-enact the original statutes whereby
-three Westminster scholars were to be elected each
-year to each of the two universities. The petition
-was granted, and, I conjecture, was the occasion of
-the letters patent sent by the queen on 7 February
-1576, to Trinity College, Cambridge, and Christ
-Church, Oxford, wherein she repeated and explained
-her former injunctions. In these letters she stated
-that Westminster scholars were not to be allowed to
-remain at the school after attaining the age of
-eighteen, and in regard to their coming to one of
-the universities she directed:</p>
-
-<blockquote xml:lang="lat" lang="lat">
-<p>Quamvis cupimus plurimos e nostris Discipulis Westmonasterii
-ad Academias in dicta Collegia quotannis
-<a name="png.061" id="png.061" href="#png.061"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>53<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>promoveri, tamen ne incertus sit omnino numerus, sex ad
-minimum, videlicet, tres in Ecclesiam Christi Oxonii et
-tres in Collegium Trinitatis, singulis annis, si aut tot loca
-vacua ... aut tot idonei e nostris Discipulis Westmonasterii
-reperti fuerint, admitti volumus; Plures autem
-optamus, si ita praefatis Electoribus commodum videbitur.</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p>In fact, however, the former custom of electing
-three scholars every third year and two scholars in
-each of the other years continued until 1588 after
-which it became usual, though the custom was not
-invariable, to elect at least three scholars to each
-university each year. During the forty-seven years
-from 1561 to 1607 inclusive, one hundred and
-thirteen scholars in all were elected from Westminster
-to Trinity, of whom forty became fellows.</p>
-
-<p>In 1603 James I came to the throne. He interested
-himself in the school and was prepared to
-intervene in its interests or what he regarded as
-such. The earliest case of difficulty in the new
-reign occurred at the election in 1604 when the
-king directed the master of Trinity, Nevile, to whom
-in fact he was under some obligations, to take a
-boy, by name Albert Moreton, as one of the scholars
-of Trinity<sup class="fn"><a href="#fn20" id="fna20" name="fna20">20</a></sup>. The boy was ignorant, and Nevile
-politely but definitely refused to accept him. The
-matter was not urged further, and though on some
-occasions later the Trinity electors consented under
-<a name="png.062" id="png.062" href="#png.062"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>54<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>pressure to alter the order in which candidates were
-elected, their right to reject on the ground of ignorance
-was not again disputed. Three years later,
-the College was faced by a more serious question
-concerning its connection with Westminster.</p>
-
-<p>In 1607, James I addressed letters patent to
-Trinity College, in which after referring to the letters
-patent already mentioned, he ordered them to be
-strictly observed, and intimated that thereafter
-the scholars of Trinity should be taken chiefly from
-Westminster school if duly qualified. He then continued
-that he observed that the scholars who had
-been elected to Christ Church were notable for their
-learning and subsequent distinction, and regretted
-that this was not so in the case of the scholars
-elected to Trinity, a fact which he attributed to
-their want of succession to fellowships and to their
-leaving the University as soon as they had taken the
-degree of master. Accordingly he ordered that
-Westminster scholars at Trinity who had taken the
-bachelor’s degree should, unless deficient in learning
-or good conduct, be promoted to fellowships in preference
-to other candidates. He further ordered
-that any Westminster scholar in the College, who
-had not been admitted to a fellowship before taking
-a master’s degree, might remain resident an additional
-two years during which time he should be
-eligible to a fellowship, subject to lawful exceptions.
-<a name="png.063" id="png.063" href="#png.063"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>55<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>The letters are dated 27 June 1607, but it would
-appear that they were not presented until September
-of that year.</p>
-
-<p>Deep resentment was felt at this order, for
-Trinity attached great importance to the desirability
-of electing as fellows the best candidates,
-though it was admitted that candidates from places
-where the House had property had statutable
-claims for special consideration. The College took
-immediate steps to protect itself, and in support of
-its position addressed to the chancellor of the University,
-the earl of Salisbury, a petition accompanied
-by a reasoned memorandum. These documents
-are not dated, but I think may be assigned
-to the Michaelmas term, 1607.</p>
-
-<p>The petition is briefly to beg the chancellor to
-assist the College in obtaining a review of the
-letters patent with the object of maintaining its
-ancient privileges and former liberties; the letters
-patent being said to be contrary to the intentions
-of its founder, and to its statutes<sup class="fn"><a href="#fn21" id="fna21" name="fna21">21</a></sup>. The wording
-is humble and courtly.</p>
-
-<p>The memorandum that accompanied the petition
-is more outspoken. It is long, but it is so interesting
-that I shall venture to quote from or describe it at
-<a name="png.064" id="png.064" href="#png.064"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>56<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>length. I conjecture that it was composed by
-Nevile. It contains fourteen assertions or arguments
-to the following effect:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p><span class="parnumber">1.</span> It is inconvenient that so large a College as Trinity
-should be restrained unto a particular School, and it can
-be easily shown that other Schools have furnished Trinity
-with students of much better hope and proof than Westminster
-hath done or is likely to do, for the whole number
-of Westminster boys who are eligible to both Universities
-are but forty, and there are seldom more than eight or nine
-candidates for the six vacancies at the two Universities.</p>
-
-<p><span class="parnumber">2.</span> To alter or subvert the ancient liberties of one of
-the chiefest Colleges in Christendom and to divert from the
-uses intended by his Majesty’s Predecessors a foundation
-like Trinity in order to satisfy private humour or under
-the pretence of benefitting an ordinary School is a great
-indignity to his Majesty’s Sacred Person, Power, and
-Prerogative.</p>
-
-<p><span class="parnumber">3.</span> The suggestion that boys coming to Trinity do not
-become Fellows, Doctors, Deans, and Bishops as do boys
-entering Christ Church is untrue, frivolous, and unfair: it
-is untrue, because, in fact, of the existing sixty Fellows of
-the College, more than one-sixth have come from Westminster,
-and at Trinity the custom is to prefer the worthy:
-it is frivolous, for the fact of a man having once been at
-school at Westminster is not the cause of his advancement
-to the position of a Doctor, Dean, or Bishop: and it is unfair,
-“for although Christ Church in Oxford be a most magnificent
-and royal foundation, and hath bred in all ages as learned,
-wise, and worthy prelates as the kingdom hath, yet
-Trinity College in Cambridge hath had no less royal
-founders, and if we fail in our Westminster brood (as
-otherwise I hope we do not) either the defect hath been
-<a name="png.065" id="png.065" href="#png.065"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>57<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>in themselves or else (which rather we suppose) it may
-be imputed to those good means the other College hath,
-being also a Cathedral Church and having Cannons both
-richly beneficed and highly dignified which doth enable
-them to Doctorships, Deaneries, and Bishopricks—a great
-blessing of God that our poor College wanteth.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="parnumber">4.</span> “Howbeit in that kind of fruitfulness we also are not
-destitute of God’s gracious blessing; for ... besides Doctors
-in all faculties to the number at the least of sixty, Deans to
-the number of eleven, Publick Professors to the number of
-ten, the two Archbishops, Canterbury and York, the most
-Reverend Fathers Whitgift and Hutton, and seven other
-principal Prelates of this kingdom, namely, Fletcher of
-London, Still of Bath and Wells, Babington of Worcester,
-Redman of Norwich, Rud of St Davids, Bennet of Hereford,
-and Gouldesborough of Gloucester, all of them simul et
-semel Bishops of this kingdom ... are such a demonstrative
-instance as we think no other College in either University
-can afford the like—and not one of these chosen out of
-Westminster School.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="parnumber">5.</span> “It is to be doubted whether there can be the like
-success if our Elections out of a private School shall be
-indubitate and certain; we rather think there can be no
-readier means to make Droanes and Loyterers in Colleges,
-nor any worse prejudice or more deadly bane unto learning
-and vertue, then when the rewards, and means thereof are
-tyed to persons, times, and places, and made regular and
-certain.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="parnumber">6.</span> The proposal would do a grave injustice to other
-students who might be men of great abilities.</p>
-
-<p><span class="parnumber">7.</span> The proposal would defeat the express wishes of
-Henry VIII, Edward VI, Mary, and Elizabeth, all of whom
-are to be reckoned as founders as well as benefactors of
-Trinity College.</p>
-
-<p><span class="parnumber"><a name="png.066" id="png.066" href="#png.066"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>58<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>8 and 9.</span> The proposal would be contrary to the existing
-statutes of the College, and to the oaths taken by the Master
-and Fellows on admission.</p>
-
-<p><span class="parnumber">10.</span> Preferences of this character are injurious to the
-particular School, the College, and the whole University,
-and a constant source of discord and contention.</p>
-
-<p><span class="parnumber">11.</span> “It is also against the Policy and common-wealth of
-a kingdom to restrain and abridge places and preferments
-originally meant, founded, and hitherto with good success
-employed for the common benefit of that kingdom to a
-private School: for benefits and privileges are to be
-amplified and not restrained; publick rewards are not to
-be applied to private places, purposes, or respects.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="parnumber">12.</span> Interference with the intentions and directions, of
-previous benefactors is contrary to public policy, and tends
-to prevent future benefactions.</p>
-
-<p><span class="parnumber">13.</span> This implies that Nevile had accepted the office of
-master of Trinity College under promises which rendered it
-inequitable that the college statutes should, during his tenure
-of the post, be altered against his wishes, but it is stated that
-this argument, though noted, is not to be pressed.</p>
-
-<p><span class="parnumber">14.</span> This raises some technical points, especially as to
-whether statutes of a College given under the great seal
-can be varied by letters patent without explicit reference
-to the clauses altered or repealed.</p>
-
-<p>The memorandum concludes with a request that the
-College may have liberty to ask the opinion of the Judges
-on the questions raised, and thus obtain the benefit of the
-king’s “most equal just and princely laws.”</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p>The use of the personal pronoun in one or two
-cases and the reference in the thirteenth paragraph
-to Nevile suggest that the document was composed
-by him. I cannot find out anything about the result
-<a name="png.067" id="png.067" href="#png.067"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>59<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>of the petition, but I conjecture that nothing came of
-it. Nevile however was not inclined to let the matter
-rest, and no doubt the esteem felt for him at court
-and his personal popularity were of great assistance
-to the Society in the negotiations that followed.</p>
-
-<p>It was a few months later, in May 1608, at
-the annual election of scholars at Westminster that
-Nevile took the next step in defence of the college
-position. The following account of the election is
-based on a paper preserved at Westminster:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p>The Master of Trinity College (Nevile) refused to take
-the oath which was required, previously to the election, by
-the Law of the land as well as by the local Statutes. He also
-refused to elect to his College the three Scholars ordered by
-the Letters Patent of the Crown. The oath however was
-taken by the Dean of Westminster (Neile) and the Dean of
-Christ Church (King), as well as by their assistants, and by
-the Master of the School (Ireland). The Dean of Westminster
-then demanded, in writing, that the election should
-proceed; when the Master of Trinity College referred to some
-composition by which he stated he would be governed. To
-this the Dean of Westminster replied, that he knew of no
-such composition, and that, if it had existed, it was necessarily
-set aside by the Letters Patent of Queen Elizabeth
-and of His Majesty; whereon the Master of Trinity College
-observed, though with much protestation of his loyalty,
-that he did not allow the validity of the Letters Patent.</p>
-
-<p>The other Electors, however, having agreed to proceed,
-the nine Scholars who had been examined were called in to
-hear the Statute read for the election to the two Colleges.
-The Master of Trinity then said that he had not places
-<a name="png.068" id="png.068" href="#png.068"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>60<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>enough vacant in his College. [In fact in April he and the
-Seniority had filled up all scholarships then vacant and pre-elected
-men to succeed to scholarships as vacancies occurred.]
-To this it was replied, that the want of vacancies
-had been occasioned by pre-elections of supernumerary
-Scholars, that the words of the Statute were disjunctive,
-and there was a clause commanding such Scholars to be
-received if they were fit. The Master of Trinity College did
-not deny the fitness of the candidates, but still refused to
-elect. In this wrangling the whole morning was wasted.</p>
-
-<p>At length they went to dinner. After this, a fear having
-been expressed, that this “distraction” might become troublesome
-to their friends, “perhaps to His Majesty,” and “not
-without some obloquy” to themselves, the Master of Trinity
-College proposed a private settlement, naming October for
-it. The suggestion was favourably received by the Electors
-other than the Dean of Westminster. The latter however
-affirmed, that with his consent less than three Scholars
-should never be taken by Trinity College and three by Christ
-Church if the School produced so many fit Scholars: and
-as to that part of the Letters Patent, which related to the
-election of Westminster Scholars at Trinity College to
-Fellowships, he required that they should be taken in preference
-to others, if their qualifications were equal; stating
-at the same time, that the clause declaring them eligible to
-Fellowships two years after their degree of A.M. had arisen
-solely from the practice of pre-electing so many Fellows,
-that for three or four years together no election took place;
-and the Westminster Scholars at Trinity College were driven
-out to seek a better fortune elsewhere. The Master of
-Trinity College allowed that the practice of pre-elections
-was wrong; and it was at length agreed that if this were
-discontinued, that part of the King’s Letters concerning the
-eligibility of Westminster Scholars two years after their
-<a name="png.069" id="png.069" href="#png.069"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>61<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>degree of A.M. should not be urged against the local statute
-of Trinity College, <cite xml:lang="lat" lang="lat">De Gradibus Suscipiendis</cite>. Thereupon
-the Master of Trinity College took for his College as Scholars
-three candidates, to wit, Hacket, Shirley, and Herbert.</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p>The three scholars so taken obtained fellowships
-in due course, Hacket became chaplain to James I,
-Charles I, and later to Charles II, suffered cruel
-persecution under the commonwealth, and at the
-restoration was made bishop of Lichfield: the
-Bishop’s Hostel was erected at his cost. An incident
-in Shirley’s career is chronicled below (see p. 223).
-Herbert was the well-known poet and divine. If the
-above account is reliable, and there is no reason to
-doubt its accuracy, the most important question
-in dispute, namely the preferential right of Westminsters
-to election to fellowships at Trinity, was left
-open. Nevile however had no intention to allow the
-matter to drop, and having made his protest at Westminster,
-he now secured the good services of his
-friend and Cambridge contemporary, Richard Bancroft,
-archbishop of Canterbury, who undertook to
-act as mediator in drawing up a “friendly and full”
-settlement of the question.</p>
-
-<p>An agreement, drafted I feel confident by Nevile,
-was submitted to the archbishop and, after he had
-made a few alterations, was accepted by the dean
-and chapter of Westminster. The seniority of
-Trinity College, on 5 September 1608, passed a
-<a name="png.070" id="png.070" href="#png.070"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>62<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>minute that the matter “be referred to our Master
-against the 13<sup>th</sup> of October,” and the deed is so
-dated, but its execution must have been delayed
-since there is a minute of the seniority, 8 December
-1608, ordering that the composition with Westminster
-should be engrossed and sealed at the audit
-so as to be delivered before 1 February 1609.</p>
-
-<p>The deed embodying this agreement was made
-between the dean and chapter of Westminster and
-Trinity College, and provided that the College
-should take yearly three scholars from Westminster
-School to be scholars of the College, and that there
-should be no pre-elections of supernumerary fellows
-to the prejudice of the Westminster scholars if deserving
-of fellowships. In consideration of these
-definite obligations the dean and chapter of Westminster
-agreed that the letters patent of 1607 should
-never be urged against the College by the dean and
-chapter or the schoolmaster or ushers or scholars
-of Westminster, and that the College should have
-such full power to elect fellows as had been previously
-enjoyed, excepting only the practice of pre-elections.
-To the deed is appended a statement
-that it was made with the privity and approbation
-of the archbishop of Canterbury, the earl of Salisbury
-(lord high treasurer of England and chancellor
-of the University of Cambridge), and of the earl of
-Northampton (the lord privy seal), all of whom signed
-<a name="png.071" id="png.071" href="#png.071"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>63<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>it. This conclusion of the affair may be regarded
-as a personal triumph for Nevile.</p>
-
-<p>The arrangement was submitted to the king
-who in a letter directed to the College approved it,
-but required that the Westminster scholars each
-year should be granted seniority over other scholars
-of Trinity of their year and not be hindered by pre-elections:
-he did not however withdraw or rescind
-the previous letters patent. I have never seen the
-text of this letter but its contents are indisputable,
-and there are various subsequent references to it.
-The obligation to allow this seniority to the Westminster
-scholars was henceforth recognized by the
-College as binding on it.</p>
-
-<p>The advisers of Trinity seem to have been doubtful
-whether it would be admitted that this second
-letter implied the rescission of the letters of 1607,
-and since there was every reason to avoid raising the
-question whether royal letters or mandates could be
-set aside or modified by private arrangements, it was
-wise to let matters run on as long as the agreement of
-1608 was carried out by the school authorities. There
-is however a memorandum, ascribed to January 1610
-in the State Papers, showing that “the recent grant
-by the King for the students of Trinity College,
-Cambridge, to be chosen from the Westminster
-scholars is prejudicial to the interests of Trinity,”
-which seems to imply that further negotiations took
-<a name="png.072" id="png.072" href="#png.072"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>64<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>place. I have not seen the memorandum and know
-nothing more about this than here appears.</p>
-
-<p>During the sixteen years following this settlement,
-that is, from 1608 to 1623 inclusive, fifty-eight
-scholars were elected from Westminster to
-Trinity, of whom sixteen became fellows.</p>
-
-<p>In 1623–24 a fresh dispute occurred. It would
-appear that while Trinity carried out its undertaking
-relating to the election of scholars from Westminster,
-it again began to pre-elect fellows with the object,
-it was said, of preventing any claim being made on
-behalf of the Westminster scholars in residence.
-Whether this was done in self-protection against
-unjustifiable claims or was a deliberate breach of
-the agreement of 1608 we do not know. An appeal
-to the crown on behalf of the school ensued, and on
-7 September 1623, the king sent letters patent to
-the College as follows:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p>Trusty and well beloved we greet you well. Being much
-interested in the prosperity and well-fare of that our College
-which is both our immediate Foundation and the fairest in
-all our kingdoms, and furnished, for the most part with the
-extracions of our own free-school at Westminster, we cannot
-but be very sensible of any alteration in the government of
-the same.</p>
-
-<p>Whereas therefore we are given to understand that
-younger students of that College have of late years been
-totally disheartened in their studies by a new and unwarrantable
-device of pre-electing more Fellows than there
-are places vacant at the time of that Election and the
-<a name="png.073" id="png.073" href="#png.073"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>65<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>Scholars of our own School (in whose loyalty and affection
-we are so much interested from their cradles) strangely discouraged
-and disgraced by being cast in their seniority
-behind all the Scholars and Fellows in their several Elections
-though never so exceeding in learning and education, we
-straightly will and require you that from this time forward
-ye do forbear all manner of pre-elections whatsoever as the
-pest and bane of all learning and succession; and that also
-you bear that regard and respect to the Scholars of that our
-own Royal School in giving them in all such elections respect
-and precedency which we are informed they fully deserve
-before all other of what country soever. Lastly, whereas we
-are given to understand that heretofore a corrupt custom
-hath crept into that our College of turning elections into
-particular nominations of the Master and the several Seniors
-which smells altogether of partialitie and corruption we do
-straightly will and require you the said Master of our College
-of whom we conceive a very good opinion, to see that
-hereafter all elections as well of Scholars as of Fellows
-be done according to the local statutes of your College
-and carried about with that pluralitie of voices therein
-required.</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p>What reply (if any) the College made or could
-make I do not know, but presumably the answer
-was not satisfactory as these letters were followed by
-the appointment of royal commissioners to enquire
-into the Westminster elections. There is extant
-a letter from the master of Trinity (Richardson)
-dated 9 June 1624, to one of the commissioners,
-asking to be excused from attending the usual
-election of Westminster scholars, on account of
-<a name="png.074" id="png.074" href="#png.074"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>66<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>poor health. Probably this was regarded as an
-impertinence, and he must have been reprimanded
-since we have a letter dated 26 June signed by the
-master and six of the senior fellows, deprecating
-the royal displeasure, offering the most humble
-submission, promising to obey in anything that his
-majesty might command, but begging that present
-compliance might not be drawn into an example
-against the College. Richardson and James I died
-in March 1625, and the enquiry seems to have been
-then dropped.</p>
-
-<p>The election in 1636 was interesting. It is said
-that among the candidates was Cowley who had
-already written various poems and a comedy showing
-distinct ability. The story runs that the boy failed
-badly in grammar, and the Trinity electors, insisting
-that this was conclusive, rejected him as a Westminster
-scholar, but offered him an ordinary scholarship
-at Trinity, which he accepted. Against this
-are the fact that he had been entered at Trinity as a
-pensioner in April, a few weeks before the election at
-Westminster, and the improbability that the electors
-would have drawn such a distinction between Westminster
-and other scholars of the House. Still old-time
-anecdotes are not to be lightly rejected: at any
-rate Cowley came into residence in due course and
-was made a scholar in the same term as the four boys
-taken from Westminster by the electors, these five
-<a name="png.075" id="png.075" href="#png.075"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>67<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>students being the only scholars elected by the
-College in 1637.</p>
-
-<p>During the seventy-seven years from 1624 to
-1700 inclusive, three hundred and fifty-six scholars
-were elected from Westminster to Trinity, of
-whom one hundred and twenty-six became fellows.
-During the fifty years, 1701 to 1750, out of one
-hundred and eighty-seven Westminster scholars at
-Trinity sixty-two became fellows; during the fifty
-years, 1751 to 1800, out of one hundred and eighty,
-thirty became fellows; and during the fifty-six years,
-1801 to 1856, out of one hundred and seventy, four
-became fellows. Throughout this long period the
-friendly relations between the College and the school
-suffered no change.</p>
-
-<p>In 1727 there was a curious echo of the controversy
-of 1607. A strange suggestion had been
-made, apparently with the tacit approval of the
-authorities of Westminster, that new statutes
-should be given to Trinity constituting the dean
-and chapter of Westminster Visitors of the College,
-and it was decided by the advocates of the movement
-to open the campaign by asking the dean of
-Westminster to call the attention of the master of
-Trinity (Bentley), to the “Letters Anno Quinto
-Jacobi Primi.” Bentley replied on 5 March 1727,
-denied their validity and argued that even if originally
-valid, they could not be pressed after more
-<a name="png.076" id="png.076" href="#png.076"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>68<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>than a century during which time “they had never
-been acted upon”: he added that, if antiquated
-letters were still binding, there were various matters
-in which he had powers, whose exercise might
-prove singularly inconvenient to those who had
-raised the question. This was really conclusive,
-but further consideration had shown the inherent
-weakness or folly of the original idea, and the
-chapter was wise enough to proceed no further
-with the matter.</p>
-
-<p>Shortly afterwards, probably at the following
-election at Westminster, Bentley is said to have referred
-to the dean’s communication, and remarked
-that the authority of the letters of 1607 would
-doubtless have seemed stronger, at any rate to
-the dean’s predecessor (Atterbury), if not to the
-chapter, could they have been described as “Anno
-Primo Jacobi Tertii”—an irrelevant remark, but
-it carried a sting, for Atterbury’s devotion to the
-cause of the Pretender was deeply resented by the
-government.</p>
-
-<p>From an unknown date until the early years
-of the nineteenth century, Westminster scholars at
-Trinity were allowed the privilege of wearing academic
-gowns of a cut different from those of other
-undergraduates and further distinguished by having
-on the sleeves a violet button with a silk loop. The
-gowns of all pensioners in the University were then
-<a name="png.077" id="png.077" href="#png.077"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>69<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>black and (except for those worn by Westminsters)
-cut to a common pattern. The Westminster distinction
-was discontinued when the present system
-of different gowns for different Colleges was introduced.</p>
-
-<p>During the first half of the nineteenth century
-the numbers in the school fell seriously, and well-founded
-complaints were made about the standard
-of scholarship attained by the scholars elected to
-the universities. In 1856, as the result of negotiations,
-initiated by Whewell, the arrangements with
-Trinity were completely recast, and it was agreed
-on 5 December 1856 that the school should abandon
-the right of Westminster boys to election to scholarships
-at Trinity, and that in filling up open emoluments
-in Trinity, former Westminster boys should
-enjoy no preference. In consideration of this release,
-the Society undertook to establish at its
-own cost, exhibitions, not more than three to be
-awarded each year, for boys elected from the
-school who were otherwise qualified for admission
-to the College; every such exhibitioner, if so
-deserving, to be eligible for a college scholarship
-tenable with the exhibition. This was approved by
-the queen in council on 25 June 1857. It was further
-agreed that the Westminster exhibitioners were to
-be placed on the same footing as exhibitioners
-elected by open competition before commencing
-<a name="png.078" id="png.078" href="#png.078"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>70<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>residence. The mode of election is settled by the
-school statutes, but it would seem that the Trinity
-electors have no right to demand intellectual attainments
-beyond those required at the time for admission
-to the College. The exhibitions are not now
-confined to scholars of the school.</p>
-
-<p>So ends the story of Westminster Scholars at
-Trinity College, Cambridge. During the two hundred
-and ninety-six years from 1561 to 1856 inclusive,
-one thousand and sixty-four scholars had
-been elected from Westminster to Trinity (or say
-3.6 a year), of whom two hundred and seventy-eight
-(or say one in four) had become fellows. In conclusion
-I may add that in 1869 in virtue of the
-powers given by the Public Schools Act, 1868, the
-dean and chapter of Westminster, the dean of
-Christ Church, Oxford, and the master of Trinity
-College, Cambridge, created a new Governing Body
-in whom the governance of the school has been since
-vested.</p>
-
-
-<div class="footnotes">
-<p><a class="parnumber" href="#fna18" id="fn18" name="fn18" title="Back">18</a> See <cite>Life of Whitgift</cite> by J. Strype, London, 1718, pp. 13, 14
-and Appendix, pp. 7, 8.</p>
-
-<p><a class="parnumber" href="#fna19" id="fn19" name="fn19" title="Back">19</a> <cite>Life of Whitgift</cite> by J. Strype, London, 1718, Appendix, p. 9.</p>
-
-<p><a class="parnumber" href="#fna20" id="fn20" name="fn20" title="Back">20</a> <cite>State Papers</cite>, Domestic, 1604, p. 185.</p>
-
-<p><a class="parnumber" href="#fna21" id="fn21" name="fn21" title="Back">21</a> According to Dean Peacock, royal letters and orders, at variance
-with college statutes, were binding only if explicitly or tacitly accepted
-by the Society. That may have been technically correct, but it is
-very doubtful if Tudor or Stuart sovereigns would have admitted it.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="chap">
-<h2 title="IV. The Society for the Prevention of Cruelty
-to Undergraduates"><a name="png.079" id="png.079" href="#png.079"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>71<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>CHAPTER IV.<br
- /><small>THE SOCIETY FOR THE PREVENTION OF CRUELTY
-TO UNDERGRADUATES.</small></h2>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="allsc">This</span> is an account of a famous struggle some
-eighty years ago between the authorities and
-the undergraduates of Trinity College on the subject
-of attendance at chapel. The story is not to the
-credit of the authorities, but, for what it is worth,
-here it is.</p>
-
-<p>There is a prelude to it concerned with a controversy
-in 1834 between Thirlwall, later the statesman-bishop
-of St David’s, and Wordsworth, then
-master of the House, which raised the question of
-the advisability of compelling undergraduates to be
-present at religious services in College. At that
-time regular attendance at chapel was required—as
-for centuries previously it had been—from all
-students as a matter of discipline, and the rule in
-force on the subject was embodied in a college order
-of 22 April 1824, as follows:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p>Agreed by the Master and Seniors that every Undergraduate
-not having an aegrotat or dormiat do attend
-Morning Chapel five times at the least in every week, or
-four times at the least including Sunday; and the same
-number of times in the Evening, under penalty that the
-week in which anyone shall not have so attended be not
-<a name="png.080" id="png.080" href="#png.080"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>72<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>reckoned towards keeping the Term of such Undergraduate—unless
-such omission be repaired by extra attendance the
-week following.</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p class="noindent">Absentees were punished, and those who offended
-frequently were liable to expulsion.</p>
-
-<p>Until the era of the Reform Bill some regulation
-like this was accepted as a matter of course, but
-when, in that period of enquiry, all things were put
-to the proof, doubts as to its wisdom began to be
-voiced. In 1834 Thirlwall, then assistant-tutor to
-Whewell, in an open letter dated 21 May, while
-advocating the admission of dissenters to the University,
-lamented the constant repetition in college
-chapels of a mechanical service, believing the
-practice to be detrimental to the interests of religion:
-he further expressed the opinion that attendance
-at chapel services should be voluntary.
-He referred to a then recent statement by Wordsworth
-in which the latter had said “the alternative
-is not here between compulsory religion (as it is
-called) and any other religion, but between compulsory
-religion and no religion at all,” and on
-this remarked:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p>I cannot indeed draw such delicate distinctions as my
-friend seems to make in this passage; for as the epithet
-compulsory applied to religion appears to me contradictory,
-the difference between a compulsory religion and no religion
-at all is too subtle for my grasp. But if for <em>religion</em> we substitute
-<a name="png.081" id="png.081" href="#png.081"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>73<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>the word <em>service</em>, which would probably better express
-his meaning, then I should quite agree with him, that, in
-this case, a voluntary service would soon be changed into
-no service at all: that is, the persons who are now compelled
-to attend, if they were left at liberty, would stay away.
-And this is the very reason why I think it would be better
-that they should be allowed to do so.</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p class="noindent">The argument was amplified in a second letter
-dated 13 June. This was skilful enough as a piece
-of dialectics though hardly likely to convince opponents.</p>
-
-<p>That an officer of the college should express such
-views and in this way was regarded by Wordsworth
-as scandalous, and five days after the publication
-of the first letter, without asking for any explanation,
-he, with the consent or approval of Whewell
-and the two deans (Thorp and Carus), removed
-Thirlwall from his office of assistant-tutor. This
-arbitrary act was generally resented in the Society
-even by those who disagreed with Thirlwall or
-thought that he had been indiscreet in his advocacy;
-some too considered the act unstatutable,
-but Thirlwall refused to appeal to the Visitor, and
-shortly afterwards left Cambridge on his appointment,
-in November 1834, by the lord chancellor,
-to the important living of Kirby-under-dale in
-Yorkshire.</p>
-
-<p>Two years later, in 1836, while the matter was
-still a subject of debate, Carus was made senior dean.
-<a name="png.082" id="png.082" href="#png.082"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>74<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>He was a kindly man, leader in the University of
-the school of thought associated with Simeon’s name,
-but, whether rightly or wrongly, was regarded as
-unsympathetic by those who did not think as he
-did on religious questions. Carus detested the view
-taken by Thirlwall, and far from conciliating college
-opinion, which had been outraged by Wordsworth’s
-action, urged the seniority (a Board consisting of
-the master and the eight senior resident fellows to
-which, under the Elizabethan statutes, the government
-of the College was entrusted) to re-draft the
-rule of 1824 and make clear or stiffen the penalties
-for non-obedience. The seniority agreed, and on
-7 February 1838, issued the following order:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p>Agreed by the Master and Seniors, that all Undergraduate
-Scholars, and Foundation Sizars do attend Chapel
-eight times at the least in every week, that is twice on
-Sunday and once every other day; the Scholars, on pain of
-losing <i xml:lang="lat" lang="lat">ipso facto</i> their statutable allowance for Commons,
-and such additions as have since been made by the College
-in the way of augmentation to the Commons, for every
-week when there has been a failure of such attendance as
-is above described; and the Sizars, on pain of incurring <i xml:lang="lat" lang="lat">ipso
-facto</i> an equivalent deduction in money from their allowances.</p>
-
-<p>Agreed also, that a like attendance be required from all
-other Undergraduates; and that in case of failure, the Parties
-so offending be forthwith admonished by the Deans; and
-if, after such admonition, irregularity be persisted in, notice
-be sent by the Dean to the Tutor, that a warning from him
-<a name="png.083" id="png.083" href="#png.083"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>75<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>also may timely be given: after which, if both these means
-shall fail in producing regularity, the offender shall be reported
-by the Dean to the Master (or, in his absence, to the
-Vice-Master) to receive a formal admonition from him, in
-the presence of the Dean, a record of which shall be preserved:
-and finally, in all cases where such formal admonition shall
-have been incurred three times, the offender shall <i xml:lang="lat" lang="lat">ipso facto</i>
-be removed from the College, either entirely, or for one or
-more Terms, according to the circumstances of the case; a
-record of this sentence being also preserved.</p>
-
-<p>Authority is given to the Deans to grant occasional leave
-of absence, on special application made previously, but not
-otherwise. Also on any casual failure of attendance, it is
-allowed to Deans to accept (in order to make up the deficiency)
-an equivalent attendance on other days during the
-same week only; any failure on Sundays to be compensated
-by attendance twice on other days.</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p>According to college tradition, which came to me
-from C. W. King, an undergraduate of the time, a
-deputation of scholars, who remonstrated on the
-severity of these sanctions, was informed by Carus
-that attendance at chapel was not so much a duty
-as a privilege, which was valued the most by those
-who were oldest and therefore best qualified to form
-an opinion on the subject—a boomerang argument
-which obviously was dangerous unless the fellows
-themselves attended chapel with the regularity
-desired from undergraduates.</p>
-
-<p>On this rebuff, certain students formed a Society
-for the Prevention of Cruelty to Undergraduates.
-<a name="png.084" id="png.084" href="#png.084"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>76<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>Its founders issued a notice asking whether what was
-forced on undergraduates was practised by dons;
-and that facts might speak for themselves, they announced
-that they would issue marking-sheets showing
-the attendance week by week of the fellows in
-chapel. Copies of these marking-sheets were put
-(surreptitiously) on the college screens, sent to
-London clubs, and widely circulated. All efforts by
-the deans to discover the authors or the printer
-employed failed; I understand, however, that
-W. J. Conybeare, G. E. L. Cotton, J. S. Howson,
-C. L. Rose, and C. J. Tindal were its chief promoters,
-and that the printer was Metcalfe of 9 Trinity
-Street. Copies of these marking-sheets are now
-very rare, but a few years ago one came into the
-market which I was fortunate enough to secure.
-It is bound in blue calf, stamped with the college
-arms having as supporters two undergraduates in
-knee breeches waving their caps, and with the motto
-<i xml:lang="lat" lang="lat">Nemo me impune lacessit</i>.</p>
-
-<p>The first sheet is for the week ending 17 February
-1838, and shows the attendances, morning
-and evening, of the master and the eighteen fellows
-then in residence. Each of the two deans attended
-ten times, but they were in a peculiar position, for it
-was their duty, as the Society pointed out, to go
-twice a day and therefore fourteen times in each
-week. Only one of the other fellows, Perry, later
-<a name="png.085" id="png.085" href="#png.085"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>77<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>bishop of Melbourne, complied with the rule imposed
-on undergraduates, four fellows went only
-once, and four not at all. To this sheet the Society
-appended the following note:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p>Does then this new regulation of the Master and Seniors
-proceed from any religious motive? Do they practice (<i>sic</i>)
-what they force on the Undergraduates? They are very
-regular in their attendance in Hall, but why are their places
-vacant in Chapel?</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p>The next week showed a slight improvement in
-the attendances. The Society congratulated itself
-on this, and in some general remarks indicated what
-it expected from the fellows, copying these from
-the notices on the subject issued by Carus. It
-should be said that in the sheets those who were ill
-or away from Cambridge, were marked with an <i>aeg</i>
-or <i>abs</i>, so any such explanation of the absence of
-the others from chapel was impossible.</p>
-
-<p>In the third week the improvement continued,
-and three fellows in addition to the master and the
-deans complied with the rule, but this was the high
-water-mark of attendance, and after all it did not
-come to much. The Society expressed its gratification
-at this, which it was pleased to treat as the
-result of its efforts, and at the same time issued the
-following notice:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p>A prize for general regularity, and good behaviour when
-in Chapel, has been instituted by the Society, who are as
-anxious to reward merit as they are to punish immorality.
-<a name="png.086" id="png.086" href="#png.086"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>78<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>But whilst they thus wish to instil into the minds of the
-Fellows those Religious feelings which, owing to a bad education,
-they may possibly be without, the Society most distinctly
-declare that they shall not be guided merely by an
-outward show of religion. It is not, therefore, enough to
-go merely eight times a week to Chapel, and when there to
-utter the responses so loud as to attract attention, or otherwise
-disturb the prayers of Undergraduates. Such conduct
-will at all times be severely <span class="nw">punished....</span> For convenience
-of those members of Trinity College now residing in London,
-six copies of this publication are sent weekly to each of the
-University Clubs there.</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p>In the fourth week, apart from the indefatigable
-Perry and the two deans, no one came up to the
-prescribed standard. On this result the Society
-remarked:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p>The Society regret much that during the last week great
-laxity has prevailed among the Fellows in general with
-regard to their attendance in Chapel. This is the more to
-be lamented, as they had been for the two previous weeks
-so much more regular than usual. This irregularity cannot
-proceed from ill health, for they have been constantly to
-Hall, although they are not compelled to go there more
-than five times in each week. The Society, however, still
-hopes that in the ensuing week they will be able to make a
-more favourable report both of their attendance in Chapel,
-as also of their good conduct when there. As was before
-stated, any Fellow who shall, owing to any wine-party, or
-other sufficient reason, be prevented from attending, will
-be excused on sending a note previously to the Secretary of
-the Society, and his absence will be counted as presence.
-[The last seven words were a quotation from a note by
-<a name="png.087" id="png.087" href="#png.087"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>79<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>Carus.] It is agreed by the Master and Seniors that all
-Undergraduates do go eight times at least each week! Why
-then do they not set us a better example?</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p>These publications were widely disseminated
-and led to the production of a number of epigrams
-and lampoons which were scattered broadcast in
-the University. The Society appended to this
-sheet a note that its members had “<em>no connexion
-whatever</em> with <em>any</em> of those abusive and profane
-publications which have been so industriously circulated
-during the last two weeks.”</p>
-
-<p>The sheet for the week ending 17 March, announced
-the success of the movement, though in
-this return only Carus and Perry came up to the
-standard. Appended to the sheet were the following
-notes:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p>The Society in laying the first list of this month before
-the public, have much reason to be pleased with the success
-of the work which they have undertaken, for they have
-been informed, on very good authority, that the Cruelty
-System will not be continued more than a week longer, but
-that the Master and Seniors have determined to come to a
-new Agreement about <span class="nw">Chapels....</span> If this should be the case,
-the end which the Society had in view will be accomplished,
-and the weekly publications will be discontinued, until called
-again into life by some new act of Cruelty upon the much
-enduring Undergraduates, but not otherwise. The Fellows
-have been very irregular during the last week, in their attendance
-at Chapel; so much so that only two of the whole
-number in residence have kept the number, which the
-<a name="png.088" id="png.088" href="#png.088"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>80<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>Undergraduates are compelled to keep, on pain of being <i xml:lang="lat" lang="lat">ipso
-facto</i> rusticated, either entirely, or for one or more terms.
-And yet one Member of Trinity College was really sent away
-during the past week (who had always been seven times
-each week before) because he had the courage to object to
-compulsory attendance at Chapel, especially from those
-men who had set him such an example!</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p>In the course of the next week a printed notice
-appeared on the screens reducing the number of
-compulsory attendances in chapel to two on Sundays
-and four during the week. The paper, type,
-and setting look as if this were issued by the authorities.
-I have, however, seen a contemporary letter in
-which it is said that this notice was in fact a forgery:
-the suggestion being that the men were tired of the
-joke, and invented this way of terminating the episode.
-I cannot say whether the deans modified their
-rule, and the question of the genuineness of this
-notice must be left undecided. It is true that no
-extant minute of the seniority exists about any new
-regulation, but the records of the proceedings of that
-body are so imperfect that no conclusion can be drawn
-from this.</p>
-
-<p>The Society in publishing its last sheet, namely,
-that for the week ending 24 March, concluded with
-the following class list and notes:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p>The examination of the Fellows is now finished: and in
-arranging the different classes the Secretary has attached
-to each person’s name his number of marks, in order to do
-<a name="png.089" id="png.089" href="#png.089"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>81<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>away with any appearance of favour shewn more to one
-than another, as is too often the case in other Examinations.</p>
-
-<div class="chap4">
-<table id="chap4" summary="Order of Merit">
-<tr>
- <th colspan="2">First Class.</th>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td>*Carus</td>
- <td class="marks">72</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td>Perry</td>
- <td class="marks">66</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td>*Barnes</td>
- <td class="marks">50</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <th colspan="2">Second Class.</th>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td>Heath</td>
- <td class="marks">42</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td>Wordsworth Senior</td>
- <td class="marks">38</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td>Thorp</td>
- <td class="marks">35</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td>Whewell</td>
- <td class="marks">34</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td>Blakesley</td>
- <td class="marks">30</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <th colspan="2">Third Class.</th>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td>Peacock</td>
- <td class="marks">28</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td>Thompson</td>
- <td class="marks">19</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td>Brown</td>
- <td class="marks">17</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td>Dobson</td>
- <td class="marks">13</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td>Martin</td>
- <td class="marks">12</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <th colspan="2">Last Class.</th>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td>Wordsworth Junior</td>
- <td class="marks">9</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td>Sedgwick</td>
- <td class="marks">5</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td>Field</td>
- <td class="marks">4</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td>Donaldson</td>
- <td class="marks">3</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <th colspan="2">&nbsp;</th>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td>Burcham</td>
- <td class="marks">0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td>Walsh</td>
- <td class="marks">0</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-<p id="chap4fn">* The two gentlemen marked
-with an asterisk are respectively
-Senior and Junior Dean, whose
-duty it is to go twice every day
-to Chapel.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The Prize Medal for regular attendance at chapel and
-good conduct when there, has been awarded to Mr Perry,
-who has passed an examination highly creditable to himself
-and family. He was only 18 marks below the highest
-number which he could possibly have gained. It is, therefore,
-to be hoped Mr P. will be more regular and do still
-better next term. With respect to the two Gentlemen who
-are not classed, the Secretary need hardly say that he does
-not envy them their feelings on the present occasion. In
-consequence of the New Agreement, the Chapel Lists will
-<i xml:lang="lat" lang="lat">ipso facto</i> be discontinued for the future.</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p>In the above list the master is designated as
-Wordsworth Senior. The prize was awarded to
-Perry the future bishop, but instead of the promised
-medal he was given a bible. This was secured for
-the College in 1906, and now rests in our library.
-It is bound in calf, stamped with the arms and
-<a name="png.090" id="png.090" href="#png.090"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>82<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>supporters assumed by the Society, and bears the
-inscription “From the Undergraduates of Trinity
-College to the Rev. Charles Perry, M.A., as a
-mark of affection and esteem for the good example
-which he set them and the <em>rest</em> of the
-College by his constant attendance at Chapel.”
-I have been informed that to each of the two fellows
-who did not attend at all there was sent a small
-bible with an inscription therein of the Society’s
-hope that its presence among his books might in
-the future encourage him to perform tasks which he
-believed to be important even though he found
-them unpleasant.</p>
-
-<p>The doggerel verses to which I have alluded as
-appearing in connection with the struggle were, as
-far as I have seen them, poor stuff as literary productions,
-and some were highly improper. The
-author of one of the worst of them was discovered
-and expelled from the College, 12 March 1838.
-I possess copies of four or five of these productions,
-their value consists entirely in giving us stories then
-current about dons and things academic—stories,
-I may add, which appear generally to have had no
-foundation in fact. The best set of verses, supposed
-to be addressed on Saturday evening by a man to
-his bedmaker, is a parody of Tennyson’s <cite>May Queen</cite>.
-It begins: “You must mind and call me early—call
-me early, d’ye hear? For I in morning chapel to-morrow
-<a name="png.091" id="png.091" href="#png.091"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>83<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>must appear,” and on the whole runs easily.
-There is nothing in these squibs which deserves remembrance
-or needs any further notice here.</p>
-
-<p>There ends the story, and no comments on it or
-the actors in it are needed. It may be added as a
-postscript, that for a long time subsequent to this
-incident some attendance at chapel was required
-from all who had no good reason to ask for exemption,
-and that as time went on the requirements
-gradually grew less. The question of making attendance
-at chapel compulsory on those who have
-not yet fully attained years of discretion is admittedly
-difficult, and made more so by the fact that
-while such attendance is approved and rigorously
-imposed every day of the week at most public boarding
-schools on lads up to the age of eighteen or nineteen,
-it is regarded as unthinkable in the case of
-young graduates of twenty-one or so. Trinity
-College finally adopted the view advocated by
-Thirlwall, and to-day attendance at chapel services
-is voluntary.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chap">
-
-<h2 title="V. The College Chapel"><a name="png.092" id="png.092" href="#png.092"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>84<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>CHAPTER V.<br
- /><small>THE COLLEGE CHAPEL.</small></h2>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="allsc">The</span> College Chapel, as it appears to-day, is
-described in many of the guide-books which
-are pressed on the casual traveller in Cambridge.
-I am not here concerned with the accounts of it
-there given, for in this paper I intend to deal with
-little beyond its history and traditions.</p>
-
-<p>It is a matter of common knowledge that the
-present chapel was built under the auspices of the
-Tudor queens, Mary and Elizabeth, on the site
-of the old chapel of King’s Hall. Let me begin
-by tracing briefly the history of these successive
-buildings, and their connection with college
-developments.</p>
-
-<p>King’s Hall owed its origin to the establishment
-of scholars in the University of Cambridge by Edward
-II in 1317, and was put on a permanent footing
-by Edward III in 1337. The original home of
-the Society was a large two-storeyed house, built
-of wood and thatched, bought from Robert de Croyland,
-and situated on the ground now occupied
-by the walks and grass plot in front of the chapel.
-No chapel or oratory was connected with it, and the
-<a name="png.093" id="png.093" href="#png.093"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>85<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>Society worshipped in All Saints’ church which
-then stood on the green in Trinity Street facing
-our present chapel.</p>
-
-<p>In 1375 the College began the erection on the
-ground to the north and west of its house of a
-larger building comprising a cloister court with
-various extensions. The west side of this court,
-some hundred and twenty feet long, is still
-standing and faces the bowling green: the other
-three sides and the extensions have been destroyed.
-These buildings were of three storeys,
-built of stone, brick, or rubble, and tiled: they were
-finished about 1438, and the old mansion of Robert
-de Croyland was then pulled down. Into the inner
-quadrangle of this cloister court there projected
-from the middle of its western face a wooden
-erection some fifteen feet long by fifteen feet wide,
-built in 1419–24 over what is now the junior combination
-room, and containing on its upper floor
-an oratory which opened on to a gallery over the
-cloisters on that side of the court. A list of the
-service-books, plate, copes and other vestments,
-altar-cloths, curtains, gold embroidery, etc., kept in
-this oratory in 1479 is given in my booklet of 1917 on
-King’s Hall. The building was small and the Society
-continued to use All Saints’ church for its more
-important services.</p>
-
-<p>The desirability of having a chapel large enough
-<a name="png.094" id="png.094" href="#png.094"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>86<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>for all college purposes was obvious, and in 1464 the
-Society began the erection of such a building,
-on ground beyond the eastern extension of the
-cloister court. This new chapel, which covered
-part of the site of our present chapel, was about
-a hundred feet long and thirty feet broad, that is
-roughly half the length of and the same breadth
-as the present chapel: it was built of stones, squared
-and supplied ready for use, which according to
-Caius came from the large banqueting hall of the
-Castle then being pulled down and probably by
-purchase from King’s College to whom these materials
-had been granted. It was wainscotted, and
-was fitted with stalls and carved woodwork; the
-high altar, like that of the older oratory, was of
-wood and the interior walls above the wainscotting
-were plastered and whitewashed; the sum spent
-suggests that the fittings were not elaborate. The
-work was finished in 1499, but probably the chapel
-was used from 1485 onwards: of course the plate,
-service-books, etc., were removed to it from the
-old oratory.</p>
-
-<p>Trinity College, on its foundation in 1546,
-naturally made use of this chapel, for it was the
-only one available on the site<sup class="fn"><a href="#fn22" id="fna22" name="fna22">22</a></sup> of the new College.
-<a name="png.095" id="png.095" href="#png.095"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>87<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>It is fairly certain that it was then fitted up with
-additional seats and probably redecorated<!-- TN: hyphen removed -->: the
-provision of a new organ and a new lectern happen
-to be specifically mentioned.</p>
-
-<p>Edward VI ascended the throne in 1547, and
-barely had the interior of the chapel of King’s Hall
-been adapted to the needs of the new foundation
-than the College was required to remove all popish
-traces from it. The altar and steps were taken
-down, and a communion table set up, most likely
-in the middle of the chapel. The books, copes,
-vestments, and altar ornaments which had come
-down from old times were sold: they realized no
-less than <i>£</i>140. 8<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i>, and the magnitude of the
-sum obtained in such unfavourable conditions shows
-that the services must have been conducted with
-considerable pomp. There is to-day in the library
-a standing censer boat, ascribed to the end of
-the fourteenth century or the early years of the
-<a name="png.096" id="png.096" href="#png.096"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>88<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>fifteenth century, with traces on it of its ancient
-gilding, but there is no record as to how or when it
-came to us. King’s Hall did in fact own among its
-chapel vessels a “ship of silver” which probably
-means a censer boat, and it may be that this is the
-vessel in question. With this possible (but doubtful)
-exception all our medieval chapel plate has gone.</p>
-
-<p>When in 1553 Mary succeeded her brother, the
-Roman religion was restored, and the chapel again
-adapted to the old forms of worship. Perhaps remonstrance
-was made by the master, Bill, who had
-been appointed in 1551 on Redman’s death and
-was a strong Anglican: at any rate he was deprived
-of his office. The expulsion was dramatic and apparently
-physical, for as he was sitting in his stall
-in the chapel two members of the House, Mr Boys
-and Mr Gray, approached and “removed him ... in
-a rude and insolent way.” Declining any contest
-he retired to Bedfordshire, and was succeeded as
-master by Christopherson, the queen’s chaplain and
-confessor.</p>
-
-<p>Mary recognized the interest taken by her father
-in Trinity and, in furtherance of his design, decided
-to rebuild the College on a comprehensive plan.
-She issued orders about this on 24 October 1554,
-and it was arranged in 1555 that the first large task
-undertaken in connection with it should be the
-erection of a new chapel. Preliminary work on this
-<a name="png.097" id="png.097" href="#png.097"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>89<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>was commenced in 1556 and it was then expected
-that the building would be finished by the end of
-1557, but by October of that year the walls were
-only half-way up: delays ensued and ten years
-elapsed before the building was completed. The
-old chapel was unroofed in 1561, and cannot, it
-would seem, have been used after that date: it is
-possible it was shut up in the course of 1557, but
-early in that year it was still in use, for the royal
-commissioners in January 1557 complained of the
-absence of lights on the altar and of coals to cense
-the sacrament. During the years from the closing
-of the old chapel to 1567 it is uncertain whether
-the services were held in College or in one of the
-town churches.</p>
-
-<p>It was originally intended that the new chapel
-should be a hundred and fifty-seven feet long and
-thirty-three feet broad, the east end being flush
-with the street frontage of the Great Gate. The
-roof was to be curved, open, and relieved with fretwork
-and oak pendants. There was to be an east
-window, a west window, eleven windows on the
-south side, and twelve on the north side from which
-it follows that it was to be a detached building save
-for its abutment on staircase E in the Great Court.</p>
-
-<p>It was designed to contain two rows of stalls made
-after the pattern of those at King’s College, sixty-eight
-in the upper row with misereres, divided by
-<a name="png.098" id="png.098" href="#png.098"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>90<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>pillars, and with double crests above, and a lower
-row of stalls not so divided. Unfortunately the
-contractor got into money difficulties and sold much
-of the timber which had been bought for the intended
-roof and stalls, causing the work to fall into
-arrear.</p>
-
-<p>After the accession of Elizabeth, changes in the
-plans of the new chapel were made, the length being
-increased to two hundred and five feet, thus making
-it project beyond the east side of the Great Court.
-In 1564 the walls of the building were finished and
-plastered, and the date 1564 cut on the east gable
-together with the text from the Vulgate, Matthew
-xxi. 13, <i xml:lang="lat" lang="lat">Domus mea domus orationis vocabitur</i>, which
-in the authorized version runs: “My house shall be
-called the house of prayer” and is followed by the
-clause “but ye have made it a den of thieves.”
-Wags have sometimes continued the inscription by
-adding the second clause on the chapel either of
-Trinity or of St John’s as their inclinations led them.
-The roof, put on in 1565, is of a style earlier than
-this date, and Willis came to the conclusion that it
-is the actual roof of the old chapel of King’s Hall
-supplemented by additional timber to fit it for the
-larger building: I like to think that we still worship
-under the roof which sheltered our predecessors
-more than four centuries ago.</p>
-
-<p>In the year last mentioned, 1565, the stones
-<a name="png.099" id="png.099" href="#png.099"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>91<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>for the pavement were brought from Croyland
-Abbey and maybe some are still there. In the
-next year the interior fittings were taken in hand,
-and the organ screen erected. In the following year,
-1567, the windows were glazed with white glass
-bearing inscriptions, coats of arms, and heraldic
-badges such as the fleur-de-lys, portcullis, and rose:
-the organ (a small instrument) and the pulpit were
-moved from the old chapel, and the stalls put in.
-It would seem that the wainscotting and wall-seats
-in the present antechapel are of this date, and possibly
-came from King’s Hall. Moving from west to
-east in the completed building there were in succession
-an antechapel sixty-five feet long, an organ-screen
-eight feet deep, the chapel seats along some
-seventy feet, a space of twenty-four feet, the communion
-table, and a space of thirty-six feet free of
-encumbrances. The work was finished by Michaelmas,
-1567. There is no record of the building having
-been consecrated.</p>
-
-<p>Mary died in 1558, and on 20 November, the
-Sunday following the proclamation of Elizabeth,
-Bill, the former master of the College, preached at
-St Paul’s Cross in London; the next Sunday, his
-successor Christopherson preached there. Probably
-the men disliked one another, and certainly
-took different views of the position. Some scandal
-was caused, an the upshot of the affair was that
-<a name="png.100" id="png.100" href="#png.100"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>92<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>Christopherson was sent to prison, while Bill returned
-to Cambridge, restored to the mastership.</p>
-
-<p>Bill, a discreet courtier, was a favourite at
-court, and held, under Elizabeth’s favour, the provostship
-of Eton and the deanery of Westminster
-together with the mastership of Trinity; it was probably
-due to his influence that Elizabeth in 1560
-issued a commission to procure materials and labour
-for completing the chapel which had been begun on
-her sister’s initiative. Baker praised his prudence
-and temper while master, and added that “if he
-has shown any frailties or failings here, allowances
-must be made for difficult times and potent
-courtiers that are not easily resisted.” In my
-opinion the services to the College of its first three
-masters, Redman, Bill, and Christopherson, were
-of the greatest value, and have hardly received
-that recognition from posterity which they deserve.</p>
-
-<p>On Bill’s death, the crown offered the mastership
-to Beaumont, a calvinist whose views were more
-pronounced than Cecil supposed at the time of the
-appointment. Beaumont sympathized with the
-puritan party, whose numbers in the University
-were now rapidly increasing, but did little to guide
-them or to check their intolerance which constantly
-offended public opinion.</p>
-
-<p>The description of the windows in the new chapel
-does not suggest that figures or catholic symbols
-<a name="png.101" id="png.101" href="#png.101"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>93<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>appeared thereon, but, none the less, the “malcontents”
-thought them objectionable and in November
-1565, broke “all the windows wherein did
-appear superstition.” In the same term occurred
-the famous surplice disturbance<sup class="fn"><a href="#fn23" id="fna23" name="fna23">23</a></sup>. The puritans
-objected to the use of the surplice in chapel on
-Sundays, Saints’ days, and their eves, and on a
-certain “Sunday (in Dr Whitgift’s absence), Mr
-Cartwright and two of his adherents made three
-sermons on one day in the chapel so vehemently
-inveighing against the ceremonies of the church
-that at evening prayer all the scholars save three
-[together with one of the chaplains] (viz. Dr Leg,
-Mr West, Whitaker’s tutor, and the chaplain) cast
-off their surplices as an abominable relic of superstition”—a
-curious illustration of how little the
-calvinists esteemed the value of academic discipline
-unless they exercised it themselves. The organization
-of this demonstration was attributed to Cartwright,
-their leader in the University and a fellow of the
-College; it was probably due to the disapproval of his
-conduct in this and similar matters that shortly afterwards
-he went out of residence for two or more years.</p>
-
-<p>Beaumont died in 1567 and at his request was
-buried “with no vain jangling of bells nor any other
-popish ceremonies” in the new chapel, his being
-<a name="png.102" id="png.102" href="#png.102"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>94<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>the first interment in it. He is commemorated by
-a carving (somewhat difficult to detect) of his face
-on the tenth principal in the chapel roof reckoned
-from the east end—it is lettered <i>R. B. Mr.</i> He was
-succeeded by Whitgift and the result of the subsequent
-bitter struggle between him and the puritans
-settled the constitution and policy of the University
-till the middle of the nineteenth century, but the
-battle was mainly fought in the senate-house and
-in London, and is not specially connected with our
-chapel.</p>
-
-<p>Alterations to the organ were made in 1594,
-and elaborate hangings placed in the organ loft
-in 1604. Thenceforward repairs and reconstructions
-of the organ followed one another every few
-years. The history of the instrument has been published
-in pamphlet form, and I shall not again refer
-to its successive enlargements. The west window
-was blocked up about this time owing to the removal
-of King Edward’s Tower to its present
-position.</p>
-
-<p>There is an account of college doings in chapel
-in 1635 in the following memorandum sent to Laud,
-and endorsed by him as embodying matter which
-he intended to examine during an intended visit to
-Cambridge in September 1636.</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p>In Trinity College, they have been long noted to be
-negligent of the chapel and of prayers in it; the best come
-<a name="png.103" id="png.103" href="#png.103"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>95<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>but seldom, and by their example the rest make small account
-of service. In some tutors’ chambers (who have three
-or four score pupils), the private prayers are longer and
-louder by far at night than they are at Chapel in the evening.
-Some fellows are there, who scarce see the inside of the
-chapel thrice in a year, nor public hall, nor St Mary’s Church,
-and (they say) impugn all.</p>
-
-<p>A quire is there founded for Sundays and holydays, but
-the quiremen are so negligent and unskilful, that, unless it
-be an anthem, they often sing the hymns no otherwise than
-in the common psalmerie tune. And to mend the matter,
-they have divers dry choristers (as they call them), such as
-never could and never meane to sing a note, and yet enjoy,
-and are put in to take the benefit of those places professedly.
-They have a large chapel, and yet the boyes rows of pews
-are placed just in the middle of the chapel, before and behind
-the Communion-table, which some there are about to reform.</p>
-
-<p>They lean, or sit, or kneele at prayers, everyone in
-a several posture as he pleases. At the name of Jesus few
-will bow, and when the creed is repeated, many of the
-boyes, by some men’s directions, turn towards the west
-door. Their surplices and song-books, and other furniture
-for divine service, is very mean. The cloth that lies upon
-the table not worth 14d. He that executes, steps over the
-exhortation and begins, <i>Wherefore I pray and beseech you, &amp;c.</i>
-They use no Litany for the most part, but in Lent
-only, and in Lent only upon Sundays, and when they say
-it, it is at the Communion-table. They repeat not the Creed
-after the Gospel, and instead of the <cite xml:lang="lat" lang="lat">Magnificat</cite> and the <cite xml:lang="lat" lang="lat">Nunc
-Dimittis</cite>, they will at pleasure (sometimes when the quiremen
-are present) sing the 23rd or some other riming <span class="nw">Psalm....</span>
-They have lately taken advice, and are about mending their
-chapel, if it holds.</p>
-
-<p>Fellows ... (when of the degree of M.A.) and fellow-commoners,
-<a name="png.104" id="png.104" href="#png.104"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>96<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>take themselves generally to have a privilege to
-miss prayers, as well as the public table of the hall. From
-hence it comes to pass, that so many of that ranke are to be
-founde at those times, either in taverns and towne-houses, or
-at some other pleasant imployments, where they please.</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p>Whether all this was true or not we cannot say,
-but at any rate in the following year, 1636, the
-College spent a considerable sum on alterations and
-decorations in the chapel. The communion table
-was removed to the east end and the ground there
-raised, a pavement of stone and marble laid down,
-the walls were panelled, and rich hangings provided.
-Charles I, with his son the prince of Wales, visited
-the chapel in March 1642, and was much pleased
-therewith: we read at this time of candlesticks,
-tapers, and a crucifix on the altar; other references
-show that the ritual was high.</p>
-
-<p>The next year 1643 saw a great change, for the
-parliamentary party secured control of the town
-and district. The order compelling the use of the
-surplice on certain days was now rescinded, and
-under Dowsing the chapel was purged, the altar
-steps levelled, the altar taken away, and a wooden
-communion table without rails set up in the middle
-of the chapel; the organ and hangings were removed;
-and certain figures, painted on the walls
-at the east end whitewashed. The zealots did
-not think the reforms had gone far enough, but
-<a name="png.105" id="png.105" href="#png.105"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>97<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>no other changes were forced on the College, and
-a few months later the Society made a money
-present “to some of Major Scot’s souldiers who
-defended the chappell from the rudenesse of the
-rest.” A few years later, on 12 March 1647, Sir
-Thomas Fairfax then in command of the district
-came, and was received “in great state ... in the
-Chapel, he was presented with a rich bible, and in
-the hall with a sumptuous banquet”—a pleasant
-combination.</p>
-
-<p>At the restoration, the original altar of 1643
-was recovered and replaced at the east end, a screen
-of rich mosaic work erected behind it, and as far as
-practicable the chapel restored to its former appearance.
-Doubtless, however, practices continued which
-to-day would strike us as unseemly, for I notice that
-in 1665 “it was agreed that Dod have the place of
-keeping the dogs out of the chapel.”</p>
-
-<p>In the early years of the eighteenth century the
-condition of the fabric caused anxiety; after only
-a little more than a century’s wear the roof was
-found to be in a dangerous condition, and a portion
-of one of the external walls in danger of falling.
-It was determined to place the building, inside as
-well as outside, in thorough repair. Work began in
-1706 and was nearly thirty years in progress. The
-fellows and a few friends subscribed a large part of
-the cost, and the rest was paid out of corporate
-<a name="png.106" id="png.106" href="#png.106"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>98<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>income. In the plan adopted, which is associated
-with the names of Bentley and Cotes, the east
-window was blocked, and the present stalls, baldachino,
-organ-screen, and wainscotting erected: the
-design of the latter is excellent of its kind, though
-not altogether suited to the architecture of the
-building. Some of the old stalls are said to have been
-removed to St Michael’s church, and the tradition
-may be accepted as probable. Later in the century,
-1787–88, the roof was painted in white and gold.</p>
-
-<p>The number of residents in College in the early
-half of this century was small, and probably the
-chapel was in regular use during most of its restoration.
-A trivial incident at this time afforded some
-amusement. Complaints had been made that
-Bentley—an illustrious scholar, genuinely interested
-in promoting learning, but as master of Trinity
-arrogant, unscrupulous, and dishonest—never went
-to chapel though required to do so by the statutes.
-This was true enough, and he determined to silence
-his critics by appearing again. But so long had
-he been absent that the door of his stall had got
-fixed and could not be opened till the lock had been
-wrenched off.</p>
-
-<p>Prof. Hughes has called my attention to some
-unpublished notes<sup class="fn"><a href="#fn24" id="fna24" name="fna24">24</a></sup> by a friendly visitor about the
-<a name="png.107" id="png.107" href="#png.107"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>99<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>chapel services on Saturday and Sunday evenings
-in the fourth decade of the eighteenth century.
-The writer says that interpolated in the evening
-prayers were elaborate musical performances sometimes
-involving two symphonies<sup class="fn"><a href="#fn25" id="fna25" name="fna25">25</a></sup> and two anthems
-in which the choir, organ, and six violins took part;
-he also repeats more than once that the building was
-crowded [by strangers] and the noise so great that
-little of the service could be heard. Thus, to quote
-one instance, under date of 28 May 1738, he writes:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p>This evening I was at Trinity Colledge Chapple where
-there was so great a crowd that nothing could be heard of
-the whole service, I could see the Readers lips go, but, not
-so much as heare the least sound of his voice, and when
-Dr Walker read the 2d Leason could I only heare the sound
-of his voice but not to distinguish one word. There was
-great difference in the Musick part from what used to be,
-for the symphony was first by the Organ and then by 6
-violins in 3 parts to all which the Organ was the base. After
-the reading the first and 2nd Lessons, 3 men sang the [blank]
-to which the Choire was the Corus. Before the Prayer for
-the King there was another Symphony by the Organ, &amp;
-Violins, and the Anthem was Sung by one man, to which
-the choir was likewise the chorus.</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p>Throughout most of the eighteenth century, a
-good many of the fellows resident in Cambridge held
-livings in the vicinity. They were accustomed to
-ride out on Sunday to their cures, hold services,
-<a name="png.108" id="png.108" href="#png.108"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>100<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>and return home to a comfortable supper the same
-evening, but in general neglected their parishes
-during the rest of the week. Thus if a parishioner
-died, the funeral was deferred till the following
-Sunday; and if a marriage-service was to be held
-in the village, it had to wait for a free Sunday.
-In these circumstances the bride and bridegroom
-often settled the matter by coming into Cambridge
-for the ceremony, and during the first half of this
-century our chapel was constantly borrowed for
-such marriage services; after the Marriage Act of
-26 George II, cap. 33, this use of it became illegal
-unless a special license were obtained. Since that
-Act, it has been used only once for such a purpose,
-namely, for the marriage of Miss Butler on 18 December
-1901.</p>
-
-<p>Coming to the nineteenth century, we have
-numerous notes about the chapel and the services.
-At the beginning of this period the author of <cite>Alma
-Mater</cite> (J. M. F. Wright, who commenced residence
-in 1817) gives an unfavourable account of the
-services, saying that they were gabbled through as
-fast as possible amid a great deal of talking. The
-first part of this statement may be correct, but as to
-the second probably conversation was rare, and such
-as took place, though not condemned by public
-opinion, was subdued and was held only in recesses,
-one of which was known as iniquity corner. In fact,
-<a name="png.109" id="png.109" href="#png.109"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>101<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>we may take it that the vast majority of the undergraduates
-acted as gentlemen though they attended
-chapel reluctantly and merely as a matter of
-discipline. Attendance was required at seven o’clock
-in the morning, not a convenient hour, albeit considerably
-later than that usual in Tudor times.</p>
-
-<p>In 1831 the fabric was again thoroughly repaired,
-the roof redecorated, certain stalls elevated,
-desks at the east end constructed, and a new scheme
-of lighting by candelabra introduced. A few years
-later, in 1838, the Society for the Prevention of
-Cruelty to Undergraduates concerned themselves
-with marking the attendance of fellows in chapel.
-That incident I have described elsewhere.</p>
-
-<p>In 1867–75 the building was again thoroughly
-overhauled, the south side faced with stone, a
-porch, a new vestry, and a choir-room built, the
-organ screen moved a few feet westward, the walls
-and roof painted, gilding used freely on the panelling,
-the windows filled with stained glass, backed benches
-and kneeling stools introduced for undergraduates,
-and the building lighted with gas. During part of
-the time occupied by this restoration, the College
-used St Michael’s church as its chapel.</p>
-
-<p>According to the scheme of decoration, adopted
-on the advice of Lightfoot and Westcott, if we
-proceed eastwards up the chapel we are supposed
-to note, in order, the frescoes on the walls (which
-<a name="png.110" id="png.110" href="#png.110"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>102<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>represent old testament heroes and teachers) and
-paintings on the roof (which illustrate the Benedicite),
-leading up through Jewish history to the
-birth of Christ, and then, returning westward, to
-have suggested to us, by the successive windows,
-the historical development of Christianity and the
-growth of learning particularly in the University
-and College. A man might worship many years in
-the chapel before he discovered this design.</p>
-
-<p>The panels in the sacrarium are replaced by
-intarsia work in which all the woods used are of
-their natural colours. The sixteenth-century silver
-cross on the communion table came from Spain.
-The wrought-iron gas standards here and through
-the chapel are also worthy of note; fortunately
-they were allowed to remain when the electric light
-was introduced. All this, as well as the scheme
-of decoration of the antechapel, is described in
-guide-books with more or less accuracy.</p>
-
-<p>Probably the services were never rendered more
-effectively than in the years following this restoration.
-Attendance on Sunday evening was required
-unless absentees could urge conscientious or other
-good reasons for exemption, but a large proportion
-of those who might have obtained exemption did,
-in fact, take part in the Sunday services. More
-benches were placed in the chapel than are there
-now, and the building, with every seat occupied and
-<a name="png.111" id="png.111" href="#png.111"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>103<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>everyone (save a few privileged visitors) in a surplice,
-presented a most impressive scene. Electric light
-was introduced in 1893, and has added much to the
-comfort of congregations in winter evenings.</p>
-
-<p>In former days members of the Society who died
-in College were not infrequently buried in the
-chapel—a shocking thing to permit in a building in
-constant use, though sanctioned by the custom of
-many centuries. There are a good many tombstones
-scattered over the floor, and copies of all the
-inscriptions have been published. I wonder how
-many members of the Society know that among
-those here buried is one woman, bearing the strange
-Christian name of Elismar. The last interment in
-the chapel took place in October 1886, and further
-burials are now forbidden unless sanctioned by the
-Home Office.</p>
-
-<p>The building has always been used for various
-secular purposes, such as elections to scholarships
-and fellowships; the admission of scholars, fellows,
-and officers; the affixing of the College seal to documents,
-and the delivery of declamations by students.
-Within recent years lectures in the antechapel
-and an oration in the chapel have been delivered.
-I believe the view that a church or chapel is intended
-only for the performance of religious services
-is modern and unwarranted by history: at any
-rate our records give no authority for it.</p>
-
-
-<div class="footnotes">
-<p><a class="parnumber" href="#fna22" id="fn22" name="fn22" title="Back">22</a> On the site acquired for the College were situated the buildings
-of King’s Hall, Michael-House, Physwick’s Hostel, and some private
-hostels or boarding houses. Members of private hostels used their
-parish churches. All the students in Physwick’s Hostel were members
-of Gonville Hall, and used the chapel of that Hall. The
-members of Michael-House used St Michael’s church: this House
-had been founded in 1324 by Hervey de Stanton for a master and
-six fellows, who if not priests at the time of admission, had to take
-orders within one year; and later two more fellows, three chaplains,
-and four bible clerks were added to the foundation, which was intended
-for secular clergy studying in the University. The church of
-St Michael was appropriated to it, and rebuilt by its founder for use
-as its chapel. The fellows had in their House an oratory, and in
-March 1393, the bishop of Ely granted them leave to build a chapel,
-but their history and convenience alike made them wish to continue
-to use St Michael’s church as their regular chapel.</p>
-
-<p><a class="parnumber" href="#fna23" id="fn23" name="fn23" title="Back">23</a> Fuller’s <cite>History of Cambridge</cite>, reprint 1840, p. 265. Fuller
-mistakenly assigned the disturbance to 1566–67 instead of 1565–66.</p>
-
-<p><a class="parnumber" href="#fna24" id="fn24" name="fn24" title="Back">24</a> Since published in the <cite>Proceedings</cite> of the Cambridge Antiquarian
-Society, 22 May 1916, vol. <span class="allsc">XX</span>, pp. 114–116.</p>
-
-<p><a class="parnumber" href="#fna25" id="fn25" name="fn25" title="Back">25</a> When I first came into residence a survival of this interpolated
-symphony existed in a long organ solo which preceded the anthem.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="chap">
-<h2 title="VI. Some College Treasures"><a name="png.112" id="png.112" href="#png.112"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>104<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>CHAPTER VI.<br
- /><small>SOME COLLEGE TREASURES.</small></h2>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="allsc">Those</span> who live among beautiful surroundings
-and in constant touch with works of art are
-often apt to take their privileges for granted.
-Members of Trinity are proud of the buildings of
-the College and the grounds in which they are
-placed, and most of us know something of their
-history and characteristic features. But with our
-art treasures there is less general acquaintance, and
-so perhaps it may not be out of place to jot down a
-few notes on some of them—chiefly pictures and
-plate—in which I take pleasure.</p>
-
-<p>Of the contents of the library I say nothing, for
-a volume would be needed to describe them even
-briefly. The illuminated manuscripts and the early
-printed books attract most attention, but there are
-numerous other subjects in which the library must
-be ranked among the most important in Great
-Britain. I have often been told by undergraduates
-that they have never been in the building except
-once when they signed the Admission Book. That
-is true enough of some men, but those who are interested
-in rare and famous books and yet never
-visit the Library neglect exceptional opportunities.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.113" id="png.113" href="#png.113"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>105<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>Of oil portraits—in all nearly two hundred—of
-former members of the College, we own a valuable
-collection, and they illustrate in a remarkable way
-how many distinguished men have been educated
-here. Identification is easy as labels are placed on
-most of the pictures. Unfortunately we have no
-gallery in which they can be shown. Some are put
-in the hall, some in the master’s lodge, some in the
-combination room, and some in the library, lecture-rooms,
-etc. Those in the lodge are set off well, but
-the others are not hung to advantage.</p>
-
-<p>About twenty-five years ago a proposal was made
-to raise subscriptions for an art gallery to be built
-along the edge of the river starting from the present
-north end of the library and extending over the
-land now occupied by the master’s stables and the
-end of his garden. At that time the proposal did
-not receive much favour, but now I sometimes
-wonder if we were wise in putting the plan on one
-side. Certainly we have more canvasses than we
-can exhibit satisfactorily. The hall, too, would
-look a more dignified apartment if the pictures,
-except for one or two on the dais, were taken
-away: recently their temporary removal was necessitated
-by repairs to the woodwork, and the improvement
-in the appearance of the room was
-noticeable. The general effect of such a clearance
-may be judged by a visit to the hall of the Middle
-<a name="png.114" id="png.114" href="#png.114"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>106<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>Temple in London. The dimensions of the body
-of that hall are the same as ours, but instead of
-pictures on the side walls, each small oak panel
-bears an armorial shield: these harmonise well with
-the architectural lines of the building. Where, as
-is the case with our neighbours at St John’s, the
-panelling is low and there is above it a big stretch
-of stone or painted wall, pictures add to the effect,
-but this is not the case where the panelling is high.</p>
-
-<p>Of all our pictures I suppose the one which
-attracts most attention is that of Henry VIII which
-hangs over the dais at the north end of the hall: it
-was given us by Robert Beaumont, who held the
-mastership from 1561 to 1567. The artist was Hans
-Eworth, a Dutchman who lived in London circ.
-1543–75, and worked with or under the influence of
-Antonio Moro: the portrait was taken from or
-founded on that of the king in the fresco painted
-by Holbein in 1537 on a wall of the privy chamber
-in Whitehall palace. This fresco, which was destroyed
-in the fire of 1698 and till then deservedly
-treated as one of the art treasures of London, contained
-portraits of Henry VII and Henry VIII with
-their queens, Elizabeth of York and Jane Seymour.
-Holbein’s studies for the heads of the two kings
-have been preserved, and are at Chatsworth and
-Munich. Most of the extant portraits of Henry VIII
-are copied from or founded on this fresco. Signs
-<a name="png.115" id="png.115" href="#png.115"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>107<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>of deterioration in the fresco were noticeable in the
-reign of Charles II, and by his orders it was copied
-by Remée, a French painter then resident in London.
-The original fresco was on each side of and above
-a fireplace or window. Instead of depicting this,
-the artist represented this space as occupied by a
-pedestal containing an inscription: his delineation
-of the faces of the sovereigns is poor, but he has
-preserved Holbein’s general design. Two copies of
-the reproduction are extant, one of which is in the
-royal collection and the other at Petworth.</p>
-
-<p>Hardly less notable than the presentation of
-our founder, and far more valuable, is the charming
-portrait by Joshua Reynolds of the duke of Gloucester
-(1776–1834) as a boy: the duke was a cousin
-of George III and afterwards chancellor of the
-University. Reynolds wrote in his diary that the
-boy sat for his portrait in March 1780 when he was
-four years old, and that the finished picture was
-delivered in January 1788—the charge for it being
-a hundred guineas. Horace Walpole praised it,
-but thought it “washy,” an opinion not shared by
-modern critics who esteem it one of Reynolds’s
-masterpieces. The picture was left to the College
-in 1843 by the will of the duke’s sister, the Princess
-Sophia, with a request that it should be hung in
-the hall. The legacy was due to the good offices of
-a freshman of the time—the Hon. Douglas Gordon,
-<a name="png.116" id="png.116" href="#png.116"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>108<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>son of George, fourth earl of Aberdeen. He described
-the circumstances attending the gift as follows:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p>When I went up to Trinity in 1842, I used to see a
-great deal of the <span class="nw">princess....</span> [I was then] a freshman full
-of admiration for my College of which I used to boast.
-One day the old princess shewed me the picture, ... and
-asked if I thought it would look well in the Hall. On my
-saying what a boon it would be, she very graciously said
-“You can tell Mr Whewell that I will leave it to the College
-through you, and I hope you will see this picture placed in
-a good position.” At her death I took it down to Trinity
-where I was still an undergraduate.</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p>The portrait of queen Mary on the other side
-of the dais is a Spanish copy of Antonio Moro’s
-famous picture which hangs in Madrid. The
-original is said to have been given to Philip after
-his engagement to her; it presents her as a woman
-of strong character but far from beautiful. When
-the marriage took place, it was unkindly said by
-a Spanish courtier that whatever were the faults of
-his master, it must at least be admitted that he
-recognized the obligation of a gentleman to keep
-his word.</p>
-
-<p>Of other pictures in the hall those of Tennyson
-(1809–92) painted in 1890 by G. F. Watts, of the
-earl of Essex (1566–1601) painted in 1590, of Isaac
-Newton (1642–1727) painted in 1725 by John
-Vanderbank, and of Francis Bacon (1561–1626)
-copied from Van Somer’s portrait in Gray’s Inn are
-<a name="png.117" id="png.117" href="#png.117"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>109<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>specially noticeable. Newton and Barrow (together
-with Pearson who is mentioned below) played a
-leading part in the intellectual life in the University
-towards the close of the seventeenth century, but
-I need not talk here about this. Barrow, who was
-a mathematician and divine, had a ready wit. When,
-previous to his admission to holy orders, he was
-examined on his faith, the dialogue is said to have
-been as follows:—Chaplain: <i xml:lang="lat" lang="lat">Quid est fides?</i> Barrow:
-<i xml:lang="lat" lang="lat">Quod non vides.</i> Chaplain: <i xml:lang="lat" lang="lat">Quid est spes?</i> Barrow:
-<i xml:lang="lat" lang="lat">Magna res.</i> Chaplain: <i xml:lang="lat" lang="lat">Quid est caritas?</i> Barrow:
-<i xml:lang="lat" lang="lat">Magna raritas.</i> On which his questioner retired in
-dudgeon, and reported that there was a candidate
-for ordination who would only give him “rhyming
-answers to moral questions”: but the bishop had
-the sense to recognize that truths can be expressed in
-rhyme as well as in prose, and Barrow was ordained.</p>
-
-<p>A very pleasing picture is that reputed to be
-of Byron: this looks like a Raeburn, though it is
-ascribed to Thomas Lawrence: its history is doubtful,
-but the absence of any peculiarity in the ear is
-<i xml:lang="lat" lang="lat">prima facie</i> evidence that it is not of Byron. Another
-striking portrait is that of W. H. Thompson (1810–1886)
-painted in 1881 by Hubert von Herkomer.
-When Thompson saw the completed portrait of
-himself, he is said to have remarked, “Do I really
-look as if I held the world so cheap” and in a print
-of it in the house of one of my friends, this is inscribed
-<a name="png.118" id="png.118" href="#png.118"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>110<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>on the frame. I ought also to call attention to the
-window portrait of Richard, duke of York (1411–60),
-the father of Edward IV and Richard III, which
-probably comes to us from King’s Hall.</p>
-
-<p>Among other paintings, which at present hang
-on the hall panelling, are portraits of the following
-famous members of our College:—Edward White
-Benson (1829–96) archbishop of Canterbury, Isaac
-Hawkins Browne (1706–60), Arthur Cayley (1821–95),
-the earl of Derby (1826–93), Michael Foster
-(1836–1907), Francis Galton (1822–1911), the earl
-of Halifax (1661–1715), Fenton John Anthony
-Hort (1828–92), Richard Claverhouse Jebb (1841–1905),
-Joseph Joachim (1831–1907) the musician,
-Thomas Jones (1756–1807), Joseph Barber Lightfoot
-(1828–89) bishop of Durham, Frederick Denison
-Maurice (1805–72), James Clerk Maxwell (1831–79),
-viscount Melbourne (1779–1849), Matthew Raine
-(1760–1811), Adam Sedgwick (1785–1873), Henry
-Sidgwick (1838–1900), Charles John Vaughan (1816–97),
-Brooke Foss Westcott (1825–1901) bishop of
-Durham, John Westlake (1828–1908), and William
-Whewell (1794–1866).</p>
-
-<p>Of these, Raine, Jones, Halifax and Hawkins
-Browne lived in the eighteenth century. The last-named
-is known to fame through having caused a
-change in the family reigning in the two Sicilies.
-In fact, coming to Naples in his travels he danced
-<a name="png.119" id="png.119" href="#png.119"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>111<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>at a court ceremony “with such inconceivable alacrity
-and vigour” as to provoke universal amusement
-and amazement: in particular the queen’s
-laughter was so immoderate that a miscarriage ensued.
-On such events may the histories of dynasties
-and empires turn! He is described on this occasion
-as pirouetting in a “dress of volcano silk
-with lava buttons”: perhaps it is in this costume
-that he is depicted on our walls. Having related
-this anecdote I must in fairness add that he was
-a poet of considerable ability, a good talker in an
-age when the standard of conversation was high, and
-an excellent judge of wine. Most of the portraits
-are, however, of celebrities of the Victorian age.
-Of these, Melbourne and Derby were politicians;
-Benson, Hort, Lightfoot, Vaughan, and Westcott
-represent the church; Westlake was a lawyer; Jebb
-a scholar; Maurice and Sidgwick represent ethical
-philosophy; while Cayley, Foster, Galton, Maxwell,
-Sedgwick, and Whewell, were men of science.</p>
-
-<p>Among the canvasses above the panelling are
-portraits of Richard Bentley (1662–1742) the scholar,
-Edward Coke (1549–1634) the lord chief justice,
-Cowley (1618–67) the poet, John Dryden (1631–1701)
-the poet, the earl of Macclesfield (1666–1732),
-John Pearson (1613–86) bishop of Chester, Robert
-Smith (1689–1768) the mathematician, and John
-Wilkins (1614–72) bishop of Chester. Wilkins is
-<a name="png.120" id="png.120" href="#png.120"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>112<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>now almost unknown but he wrote some interesting
-books, notably one on the ciphers employed in the
-civil war of the seventeenth century. Another work
-of his on the possibility of a journey to the moon,
-provoked the duchess of Newcastle to ask him where
-she could find a place to bait if she tried the journey:
-“Madam,” said he, “of all the people in the world
-I least expected that question from you, who have
-built so many castles in the air that you may lie
-every night in one of your own.”</p>
-
-<p>The pictures in the large combination room of
-Isaac Newton by Thomas Murray, and of Matthew
-Prior (1664–1721) by Godfrey Kneller are good:
-the former came to us from a descendant (Mrs
-Ring) of Newton’s favourite niece, and its history
-is given in a letter from Charles Simeon to Mansel,
-master of the College at the time of the gift. The
-other canvasses are too big for a private apartment,
-but the portraits of the “proud” duke of
-Somerset (1662–1748) by Nathaniel Dance, the
-marquess of Granby (1721–70) by Joshua Reynolds,
-the duke of Gloucester by John Opie, the
-marquess of Camden (1759–1840) by Thomas Lawrence,
-the duke of Grafton (1760–1844) also by
-Lawrence, and the duke of Sussex (1773–1843) by
-James Lonsdale, are of some repute: to these there
-was added in 1915 a portrait of Arthur J. Balfour
-by P. A. Laszlö de Lombros.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.121" id="png.121" href="#png.121"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>113<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>Of the peers mentioned above the names of
-Granby and Somerset are still well known. Granby
-fought in the Culloden campaign, was colonel of the
-blues (horse guards) at Minden, 1759; commander of
-the British contingent in the campaigns of 1760, 1761,
-and 1762; and in 1766 became commander-in-chief
-of the army. Delighting in danger, which even when
-in supreme command he deliberately sought, brave
-to a fault, an excellent cavalry leader, rich and
-lavishly generous, he was the idol of the public,
-and witnesses to his popularity remain in the
-numerous public-houses scattered far and wide over
-England which bear his name and arms. Somerset
-was of a very different type, being a stupid man
-whose power was chiefly derived from his enormous
-landed possessions. To the Somerset properties he
-added, by his marriage with the sole heiress of the
-earls of Northumberland, the great estates of the
-Percies. He held the chancellorship of the University
-for the extraordinary term of sixty years.
-His title of the “proud duke” commemorates only
-his arrogance, and was derived from the fact that
-even to speak to anyone in a menial position was
-regarded by him as a condescension. His servants
-were trained to understand his wishes by signs,
-and numerous footmen surrounded him when in
-the streets so as to avoid the risk that any people
-of the lower classes should approach or address him.
-<a name="png.122" id="png.122" href="#png.122"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>114<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>Perhaps the best known of the stories of his pretensions
-refers to his remark to his second wife
-who once called his attention to something by
-touching him with her fan (or according to another
-version kissed him without asking his leave),
-“Madam,” said he, drawing himself apart, “my
-first wife never dared to take such a liberty, and
-she was a Percy.” As another illustration of his
-character I may add that he deprived one of his
-daughters of <i>£</i>20,000 because she had sat down in
-his presence without asking his leave.</p>
-
-<p>In the lodge there are numerous portraits of
-former masters of the College, and obviously this
-is the proper place for such a collection. It is not
-complete, twelve past masters being unrepresented,
-but portraits of two of these (namely Wilkins and
-Pearson) hang in the hall. The most notable
-picture in this series is that of Nevile, which is properly
-given the place of honour over the mantelpiece
-in the dining room which he built. He holds
-a paper in his right hand, and I like to think that
-this is intended to suggest the letter which Elizabeth
-on her death-bed entrusted to him to take to
-Scotland, informing James VI of that kingdom that
-she designated him as her successor. In this room
-too are portraits of Porson and Thompson with
-whose memories so many excellent academic stories
-are associated, but I must not linger over these. In
-<a name="png.123" id="png.123" href="#png.123"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>115<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>the drawing room the most striking portraits are
-those of queen Elizabeth by Mark Gerrard, the duke
-of Gloucester (1776–1834) in his undergraduate
-robes by George Romney, and queen Mary probably
-by Hans Eworth. The painted panels in the
-entrance hall often escape attention, but are worth
-looking at, especially in the case of the portraits of
-Edward III, Henry VII, Elizabeth of York, Mary
-of Scotland, Edward VI, and queen Mary. The
-collection of portraits, formed by Dr Butler, of
-Trinity men who have held judicial appointments
-is also interesting, but is not generally accessible
-to visitors.</p>
-
-<p>The pictures in the lecture-rooms and on the
-walls of the staircase leading to them form a sort
-of overflow collection, and though of unequal merit,
-a few are worth attention. There are also some
-pictures of merit in the library among which I note
-in particular portraits of Tennyson and Lightfoot.</p>
-
-<p>The engravings of former members of the College
-placed in the small combination room will repay
-study. There are at present between one hundred
-and fifty and two hundred here, but there are many
-more in portfolios in the library. Several of these
-have been acquired in recent years through the
-generosity and knowledge of John Charrington.</p>
-
-<p>The painted glass in the hall shows numerous
-coats of arms, and anyone acquainted with heraldry
-<a name="png.124" id="png.124" href="#png.124"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>116<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>will find here a rich field of study. The windows
-could have been filled over and over again with the
-arms of former famous members of the College, but
-the matter has been managed in a haphazard way,
-and many distinguished sons of the House are unrepresented.
-In spite of some bad glass the collection
-is interesting. Perhaps however any further
-account of it here would be more technical than
-would be justified in a paper like this. Of other
-glass in the College, the windows in the chapel are
-typical of the art of 1870, and are only moderately
-satisfactory. The window at the south end of the
-library, executed in 1775, was made by Peckitt
-of York, after a design by Cipriani: it illustrates
-some curious points in the history of the art of
-stained glass, but the design is impossible, and the
-scheme of colour atrocious.</p>
-
-<p>Sculpture, unless it is absolutely first rate, does
-not represent a man as well as portraiture. The
-number of pieces of statuary of the first class in
-Great Britain is small, and in the possession of such
-pieces the College is extraordinarily fortunate. The
-statue of Newton, with its proud inscription “Newton
-qui genus humanum ingenio superavit,” in
-the antechapel by Roubiliac—“the marble index
-of a mind for ever voyaging through strange
-seas of thought alone”—is of the highest merit.
-It was described by Chantrey as “the noblest of
-<a name="png.125" id="png.125" href="#png.125"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>117<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>English statues,” and I have never seen any
-modern piece of statuary anywhere which can be
-ranked superior to it: the man lives and almost
-moves. Thorwaldsen’s statue of Byron, rejected
-by the authorities of Westminster Abbey on account
-of his alleged atheistical opinions, which stands in
-the library, and that of Bacon in the antechapel
-may also be reckoned among examples of first-class
-statuary. Of these three pieces two are by foreigners.
-There are also in the antechapel statues
-of Barrow, Macaulay, Whewell, and Tennyson, and
-in the library a large number of busts. The statues
-of Edward III on the clock tower, of Henry VIII,
-James I, Anne of Denmark, and Prince Charles on
-the great gate, and of queen Elizabeth on the
-queen’s gate are interesting, though not to be
-reckoned as works of art.</p>
-
-<p>Old Silver Plate has a peculiar beauty. We
-have some fine specimens though they are fewer
-and later than from our history we should expect.
-Most of the pieces are kept in the butteries, and
-can be seen by visitors. Twice a year anyone
-entering the hall will see the junior bursar there
-with all the plate spread before him checking it by
-his lists, a pretty spectacle which always suggests
-to me the picture of the king “in his counting house
-counting out his money,” and formerly in “May-week”
-typical pieces were set out on show in the hall.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.126" id="png.126" href="#png.126"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>118<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>We have a catalogue of the plate—a large and
-valuable collection—owned by King’s Hall in the
-fifteenth century, and we may reasonably suppose
-that this, as well as the plate belonging to Michael-House,
-came in due course to us; all this has gone
-with the possible, but doubtful, exception of a
-censer boat now in the library. We know also that
-some plate was given us in Tudor and early Stuart
-times: of this, only five pieces remained to us at
-the restoration. I take it however that until well
-into the eighteenth century people were accustomed
-to regard plate, other than pieces of historic
-interest, as a convenient way of keeping portable
-wealth in a form which could be easily turned into
-coin, and its dispersion in times of emergency when
-money was wanted is not surprising.</p>
-
-<p>It was customary for noblemen and fellow-commoners
-to present plate to the House when they
-completed their academic career: their caution-money
-being commonly employed for or towards
-the purpose. After the restoration, thanks to this
-graceful practice, our possessions of this kind grew
-rapidly. Unfortunately a good many of our pieces
-were lost through two burglaries, one in 1795 and
-the other in 1798; for instance, no less than fifty-five
-drinking cups some of great beauty were then
-taken. During the eighteenth century, in colleges
-and throughout the country, large numbers of
-<a name="png.127" id="png.127" href="#png.127"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>119<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>“standing pieces” of plate were melted down, and
-the metal used to make spoons and forks; this
-accounts for the disappearance of some of our
-treasures of an earlier date. Until 1870 new
-pieces continued to be added in large numbers: in
-that year the College abolished the general admission
-of noblemen and fellow-commoners, holding
-that distinctions of rank were undesirable in academic
-life; and since then our collection has
-increased only by special gifts or by purchase.</p>
-
-<p>Of our pre-commonwealth plate the oldest pieces
-are two silver-gilt flagons, dated 1607–08, given us
-in 1636 by John and Bernard Stuart, sons of the
-duke of Lennox, then about sixteen and fourteen
-years old. There is in the small combination room
-a charming print of Vandyke’s portrait of the
-brothers: both boys were killed during the Civil
-War, John at Edgehill and Bernard at Rowton
-Heath. Whistles are placed in the handles of these
-flagons, so they must have been originally intended
-for secular use, but they have been included, as far
-back as our records go, among the communion plate:
-perhaps the spouts were added when the vessels
-were placed in the chapel. Our next earliest piece
-is the handsome cup, dated 1615–16, given us by
-Nevile probably in 1615: it was originally silver-gilt.
-The fourth of these pieces is a bursarial rose-water
-basin and ewer dated 1635–36. We owe it to Ambrose
-<a name="png.128" id="png.128" href="#png.128"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>120<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>Aykerod who was bursar in that year: his arms are
-engraved on the cup, and the inscriptions on it
-refer to vows and pledges by him which are now
-inexplicable. The only other early piece which survived
-the Civil War was a cup given by John Clarkson
-between 1610 and 1620 and known from its
-inscription “Pauper Johannes Dictus Cognomine
-Clarkson Hunc Cyathum Dono Gratuito Dedit”
-as the “Pauper Joan Pot”: this was stolen in 1798.
-Clarkson had matriculated as a sizar in 1553, obtained
-a scholarship in due course, and graduated
-B.A. in 1560.</p>
-
-<p>Apart from the four pieces mentioned above, the
-most striking objects in our collection are the rose-water
-basins and ewers, the Duport standing salt,
-the standing or loving cups, the tankards, and the
-punch-bowls.</p>
-
-<p>We have several notable rose-water basins and
-ewers. The earliest of these is the set given by the
-earl of Kent in 1662 to commemorate the passing of
-the Act of Uniformity. The date is given by a
-quaint double chronogram: and the central inscription
-<span title="[Greek: Nipson anomêmata mê monan opsin]"
- xml:lang="grc" lang="grc">Νιψον ανομηματα μη μοναν οψιν</span> reads alike
-forwards and backwards. Another beautiful set is
-that given by the duke of Buckingham in 1671, the
-circumference of the basin being over seven feet.
-The visitor should also notice a set of 1740 bequeathed by
-David Humphrey, and a set of 1748
-<a name="png.129" id="png.129" href="#png.129"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>121<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>given by William John Bankes. Another set consists
-of a basin of 1716 given by John Bennet, with
-a graceful ewer probably made about 1675. This
-ewer must have been originally a “standing cup”
-since a whistle is placed in the handle, but a spout
-was added between 1789 and 1810 with the intention
-of turning it into a flagon: on it are engraved
-the Trinity and Westminster arms, and in an early
-catalogue it is called the Busby cup: its donor is
-unknown.</p>
-
-<p>There is a curious custom at the high table connected
-with these dishes. At the end of dinner on
-ordinary nights, before grace is said, a rose-water
-dish with an empty ewer is placed before the fellow
-sitting at the head of each table. I conjecture that
-this dates from a time when napkins and forks were
-unknown, and diners were accustomed to rinse their
-hands in water before rising from the table. Now
-the appearance of the empty ewer is only a sign
-that dinner is over. At feasts the ewer contains
-rose-water which is poured into the dish and passed
-round the table.</p>
-
-<p>We have a fine specimen of a standing salt in
-a piece associated with the name of James Duport.
-Its breadth is nearly ten inches, and its height,
-without the handles, seven inches. It was these
-massive salts, and not “trencher salts,” that were
-originally used to divide the company into those
-<a name="png.130" id="png.130" href="#png.130"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>122<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>that sat above and below the salt; and in the middle
-ages the standing salt was generally the most valued
-single piece in the house and the chief ornament on
-the table. The medieval specimens usually have
-a cover to protect the salt, and the handles in specimens
-like ours are said to have been introduced for
-a similar reason, as a napkin can be twisted round
-them so as to cover the salt, and thus save it from
-dust. Our specimen bears the inscription
-<span title="[Greek: echete en eautois halas kai eirêneuete en allêlois]"
- xml:lang="grc" lang="grc">εχετε εν εαυτοις ἁλας και ειρηνευετε εν αλληλοις</span>, together
-with a statement that it was given by Duport.
-Probably his gift was made in 1665, when he left
-the College on his appointment as master of
-Magdalene. The piece, however, bears the hall-mark
-1733–34; here, and in some other cases, it would
-seem that the original piece was exchanged for a
-new one, perhaps when repairs were required,
-and it was the custom in such circumstances to
-engrave the old inscription on the new piece of
-plate.</p>
-
-<p>In spite of our losses at the end of the eighteenth
-century some fine drinking cups and covers still
-remain in our possession. Notable among these is
-one of 1691–92 given by Charles and George Firebrace,
-one of 1697–98 given by Henry Boyle, and one
-of 1711–12 given by John Verney. We have also
-a cup and cover of 1726 given by the earl of Sandwich,
-another of 1729 given by Samuel Husbands,
-<a name="png.131" id="png.131" href="#png.131"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>123<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>another of 1763 given by John Damer, another of
-1771 given by George Augustus Henry Cavendish,
-another of 1776 given by William Greaves, and
-another of 1780 given by the earl of Mexborough.
-To these I may add the Lyndhurst silver-gilt cup
-and cover of 1876–77 given by Sir Theodore Martin.
-All these are fine specimens of silversmith’s work,
-and can be used at feasts as loving cups, with the
-ceremonial customary to such drinking.</p>
-
-<p>The tankards with lids form another striking
-group of plate, but the larger ones which contain
-three quarts or more must be regarded as being
-decorative rather than useful. Conspicuous among
-these pieces is one, probably made about 1670, given
-by Thomas Taylor, one of 1698–99 given by Peter
-Pheasaunt, one of 1699–1700 given by Thomas
-Alston, one of 1700–01 given by Thomas Bellot,
-one of 1739–40 given by Thomas Foley, one of
-1746–47 given by Francis Vernon, one of 1751–52
-given by Charles Paulet, one of 1757–58 given by
-Edward Fitzgerald, and one of 1762–63 given by
-Hans Sloane. There is also a fine collection of ale
-plate. Of the smaller tankards, stoups, and drinking
-cups there are innumerable specimens. I will
-not dwell longer over our other pieces. Suffice it
-is to say that of punch-bowls there are three or four
-fine specimens of the eighteenth century, as also
-various snuff-boxes, silver trays, etc. Of candlesticks
-<a name="png.132" id="png.132" href="#png.132"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>124<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>there are between two and three hundred,
-many of them beautiful pieces of work. Of ordinary
-domestic plate the stock is large.</p>
-
-<p>There is also a good deal of plate which has been
-given or assigned for use in the lodge: this includes
-the Perry silver-gilt dessert service. In the chapel
-plate besides the flagons already mentioned there
-are two silver-gilt patens of 1661–62, associated in
-the early catalogues with the names of John and
-Bernard Stuart; also an alms-dish of 1673, and an
-altar cross given in 1894 and said to be of Spanish
-renaissance work.</p>
-
-<p>I add some particulars of thirteen challenge
-pieces of plate owned by the Boat and Athletic
-Clubs: of these, five belong to the First Trinity
-Boat Club, and eight to the Athletic Club. These
-pieces are of recent make and their chief interest
-comes from the inscribed names of the successive
-holders.</p>
-
-<p>Trinity men will recollect that there are various
-races arranged each year by the First Trinity Boat
-Club, the winners of which receive pots or other
-prizes, and that in five of these events, the winners,
-in addition to receiving the special prizes, hold challenge
-pieces on which are engraved the names of
-past winners. These challenge pieces are: A two-handled
-silver chased cup and stand (hall-mark
-1836), held by the winner of a sculling race (the
-<a name="png.133" id="png.133" href="#png.133"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>125<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>Macnaughten Sculls) rowed in the Michaelmas Term,
-open to all members of the Club who have not
-previously won it or the University Colquhoun
-Sculls. A two-handled silver cup and stand (hall-mark
-probably 1857 or 1858), which came to the
-club from the now defunct Second Trinity Boat
-Club, held by the winner of a sculling race (the
-Baines Sculls) rowed in the Lent Term, open to
-all members who have not previously won it or
-the Macnaughten Sculls or the University Colquhoun
-Sculls. Silver oars (hall-mark 1860) held by the
-winners of a pair-oared race (the Wyatt Pairs)
-rowed in the Michaelmas Term, open to all members
-who have not previously won it or the University
-Magdalene Pairs. Silver oars (hall-mark 1861)
-which came to the Club from Second Trinity, held
-by the winners of a pair-oared race (the Dodington
-Pairs) rowed in the Lent Term, open to all members
-who have not previously won it or the Wyatt Pairs
-or the University Magdalene Pairs. Silver Sculls
-(hall-mark 1897) held by the winners of a double
-sculling race (the Taxis Sculls) rowed in the Easter
-Term, open to all members who have not previously
-won it or the University Magdalene pairs.</p>
-
-<p>Similarly among the sports arranged each year
-by the Trinity Athletic Club are seven events, the
-winners of which in addition to receiving special
-prizes, hold challenge pieces of plate on which are
-<a name="png.134" id="png.134" href="#png.134"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>126<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>engraved the names of past winners. These challenge
-pieces are: A half-fluted silver bowl and plinth
-(hall-mark 1887) held by the winner of the mile
-race. A half-fluted silver bowl and plinth (hall-mark
-1899) held by the winner of the half-mile
-race. A silver chased claret jug with handle (hall-mark
-1886) held by the winner of the quarter-mile
-race. Four silver candlesticks (hall-mark 1899) held
-by the winner of the hundred yards race. A two-handled
-half-fluted silver cup (hall-mark 1888) held
-by the winner of the hurdles race. A two-handled
-silver bowl (hall-mark 1896) held by the winner of
-the long jump. A silver salver (hall-mark 1896)
-held by the winner of the high jump. Finally there
-is a two-handled silver chased cup and plinth (hall-mark
-1892) held by the man who scores most marks
-in the various events.</p>
-
-<p>It may be thought that I have occupied too
-much space in giving bare lists of pieces of plate,
-but the shapes of some of the pieces are so good and
-the surface of old silver, when carefully tended,
-has such a beautiful texture that I believe it may
-be worth calling the attention of any interested in
-such things to some of our possessions of this kind.
-Only societies and families with continuous records
-dating from a distant past can show such collections.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chap">
-<h2 title="VII. The College Auditors"><a name="png.135" id="png.135" href="#png.135"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>127<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>CHAPTER VII.<br
- /><small>THE COLLEGE AUDITORS.</small></h2>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="allsc">There</span> is no reference in our earliest college
-statutes—those of 1552—to an Auditor, but
-the extant accounts show that the office existed from
-the foundation of the College in 1546. Definite regulations
-for the appointment were proposed in the
-draft statutes of 1554, and were embodied in the
-statutes of 1560. By these the auditor was made
-one of the statutable officers of the Society: the
-post was held for long periods, and it was not permissible
-to perform the duties by proxy. The
-statute in question was re-enacted in 1844. By the
-statutes of 1861 the office was made annual, and
-tenable only during pleasure. It remains annual
-under the present statutes, but a definite proviso
-was inserted in 1882 that it is not tenable by a
-fellow or officer of the House, and a clause was
-introduced providing for the appointment from
-among the fellows of an Assessor or Assessors who
-should be present during the audit.</p>
-
-<p>From the foundation of the College, its financial
-year ran from Michaelmas to Michaelmas, and the
-audit of each year was concluded in the following
-December. At first the annual honorarium of the
-<a name="png.136" id="png.136" href="#png.136"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>128<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>auditor seems to have been <i>£</i>10 with an allowance
-of <i>£</i>2 for travelling expenses, stationery, etc., but
-before the end of the sixteenth century it had been
-reduced to <i>£</i>5, with an augmentation of <i>£</i>3. 6<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i>
-and some allowances.</p>
-
-<p>The form of the <i xml:lang="lat" lang="lat">declaratio computi</i> was much as
-at present, and generally, with but small variations,
-it takes the form now stereotyped “and so the said
-A. B. Senior (or Junior) Bursar upon the foot of
-this his account for one whole year ending Michaelmas
-... oweth unto the College the sum <span class="nw">of....”</span>
-In some cases, and notably in the seventeenth
-century, the sums include fractions of a penny,
-even as small as one thirty-second part thereof.
-Presumably the audit was always followed by a
-“feast,” as still remains the custom.</p>
-
-<p>Of the occupants of the office from 1546 to 1618
-the information in the college books is incomplete.
-The only auditors previous to 1618 whose names
-I have noticed, with the years in which they held
-office, are Edward Burnell, 1553, 1561, 1563 and
-1564; Adam Winthrop, 1606; and Richard Brooke,
-1614. I have not, however, read the account-books
-through from cover to cover, and it may be
-that there are references which have escaped me.
-Luckily Winthrop’s diary and some memoranda from
-1595 to 1621 are extant, and contain references to
-a few earlier dates. From these we can take our
-<a name="png.137" id="png.137" href="#png.137"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>129<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>continuous record back to the year ending Michaelmas
-1593, when he was auditor. He resigned in 1610,
-and was succeeded by Brooke. Brooke was acting
-in 1615, and had commons in 1616, and I have no
-doubt acted in 1617. From 1618 onwards we can,
-from one source or another, make out the names of
-those who held the office. The handwritings of
-the earlier auditors have marked characteristics.
-They suggest that there was one auditor from 1547
-to 1552, another from 1553 to 1578, who must have
-been Edward Burnell, another from 1579 to 1591,
-and another from 1592 to 1609, who must have been
-Adam Winthrop. But I present these as mere
-surmises, and I do not attempt to go back beyond
-1593.</p>
-
-<p>Our roll then is as follows. From 1547 to 1592
-we cannot definitely say more than that Edward
-Burnell was auditor for a period which included the
-years 1553 to 1564, for no doubt his tenure was
-unbroken. From 1593 the sequence runs thus:</p>
-
-<p>Adam Winthrop, 1593 (or earlier) to 1609; Richard
-Brooke, 1610 to 1617; Robert Spicer, 1618 to 1628;
-Francis Hughes, 1629 to 1668; Samuel Newton,
-1669 to 1717, Newton resigned in 1674, and thereon
-he and William Ellis were appointed to the office,
-with remainder to the survivor of them, but
-apparently William Ellis never acted; Denys L’Isle,
-1718 to 1726; William Greaves, 1727 to 1778; Robert
-<a name="png.138" id="png.138" href="#png.138"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>130<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>Graham, 1779 to 1791; Samuel Knight, 1792 to 1811;
-Nicholas Conyngham Tindal, 1812 to 1825; James
-Parke, 1826 to 1828; Andrew Amos, 1829 to 1836;
-John George Shaw-Lefevre, 1837 to 1851; George
-Denman, 1852 to 1862; George Valentine Yool, 1863
-to 1869; Augustus Arthur VanSittart, 1870 to 1881;
-John Willis Clark, 1882 to 1908. Since 1908 the
-office has been held by a professional accountant.
-The dates given indicate the ends of the audit year:
-thus the audit of 1669 was for the year 1668–69. It
-will be noticed that during the three hundred and
-sixteen years from 1593 to 1908, there were, if we
-omit William Ellis, only seventeen auditors, giving
-an average tenure of more than eighteen years.
-Of these seventeen auditors at least eleven have
-been lawyers and four ultimately rose to the Bench.
-I add a few biographical notes on these auditors.</p>
-
-<p>Of Edward Burnell, the earliest holder of the
-office whose name I have given, I know nothing.
-His successor Adam Winthrop, 1548–1623, the son
-of a prominent London merchant and reformer,
-had been admitted as a fellow-commoner at Magdalene
-in 1567, and had left the University without
-a degree. He had been called to the bar, but did
-not practise, and was content to fill the rôle of a
-well-to-do country squire. He was an intimate
-friend of Still, master of Trinity from 1577 to 1593,
-whose sister he married in 1574, and whose wife
-<a name="png.139" id="png.139" href="#png.139"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>131<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>was his connection by marriage. I conjecture that
-he owed the office to Still’s influence. Winthrop
-was a fair scholar, an indifferent poet, and somewhat
-of a pedant. His tomb is at Groton, Suffolk.
-More than one of his descendants were distinguished.
-In particular his son, John, 1588–1649, who was
-admitted to Trinity College in 1602, was the founder
-of the well-known American family of this name;
-and his great-great-grandson, Sir George Downing
-was the founder of Downing College.</p>
-
-<p>Winthrop seems to have done the whole of the
-audit work at the end of the Michaelmas term of
-each year. Thus in 1601 he wrote:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p>The ivth of Decemb. I ridde to Cambride &amp; beganne the
-Auditt the 7th beinge Monday. The xiiijth of Decembre I
-returned from the Auditt &amp; did see the Sonne in the Eclips
-about 12 of the Clock at noone.</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p class="noindent">Perhaps his resignation was made at the suggestion
-of the College, for early in 1610 he wrote:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p>Dr Meriton came to speake with me about the resignation
-of my office in Trinity College to Mr <span class="nw">Brookes....</span>
-I surrendered my Auditorship in Trinitye College to the Mr
-fellows &amp; schollers before a pub. <span class="nw">notary....</span> I dyned at Dr
-Meriton’s in Hadley &amp; received of him xxlb for my <span class="nw">Auditorshippe....</span>
-Mr Rich. Brooke the nue Auditor of Trinity
-College was at my house in Groton to whom I dd. divers
-paper books &amp; Roles touchinge his Office.</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p>Of the next three auditors I can discover very
-little. Richard Brooke was appointed in 1610.
-<a name="png.140" id="png.140" href="#png.140"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>132<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>The following conclusion of 8 June 1615, seems to
-refer to him, “concluded that Mr Brookes in regard
-of his paines taken divers times for the Colledge
-that he shoulde ... have given him Twentye
-pounds,” and during his visits in the following
-year be allowed commons. We may assume that
-he held office till the end of 1617. A Richard
-Brookes had entered at Queens’ as a fellow-commoner
-in 1587, but whether he was the subsequent
-auditor there is nothing to show. In 1618 we have
-the copy of the appointment of Robert Spicer.
-He held office till the end of 1628, since a conclusion
-of 3 June 1629, appointed in his place Francis
-Hughes. Hughes, who held the office till his death
-in October 1669, was admitted a scholar in 1616,
-graduated M.A. in 1623, was one of the esquire-bedells,
-and occupied rooms in College at the time
-of his death.</p>
-
-<p>The next occupant of the office was Samuel
-Newton, 1629–1718, a prominent attorney in the
-town and mayor in 1671. He was not a member
-of the University. His diary from 1662 to 1717
-preserved in the library of Downing College, contains
-an account of his election to the post in the
-chapel by the master and seniors, he being present
-in the antechapel. He attended next day in his
-gown, was sworn to the faithful discharge of his
-duties, and signed the roll of college officers. He
-<a name="png.141" id="png.141" href="#png.141"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>133<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>proved thoroughly efficient. For his services at the
-audit in 1669 he received the fee of <i>£</i>5 with the customary
-augmentation of <i>£</i>3. 6<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i>, a sum of <i>£</i>6. 13<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i>
-for engrossing the audit rolls, which henceforth
-were kept excellently, a sum of <i>£</i>1 for preparing a
-book of arrears, and a sum of <i>£</i>1. 2<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i> for stationery.
-He also received from the junior bursar,
-billets of wood of the value of 6<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i>; from the
-steward, a “warp of lyng” of the value of 6<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i>;
-from the manciple, a “coller of brawne, also a dish
-of wild fowle or 6<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i>”; and from the brewhouse,
-“2 barrels of strong beere.”</p>
-
-<p>In 1674 Newton surrendered his patent of appointment
-as auditor, but he was immediately reappointed
-jointly with his cousin, William Ellis,
-with remainder to the survivor of them. They
-were at the same time appointed on the same conditions
-to the office of college registrar, then vacant
-by the death of a Mr T. Griffith. According to
-Newton’s diary, William Ellis proceeded M.A. in
-1670, but his name does not appear in the list of
-graduati, unless indeed he is the Wm Ellis who received
-the degree <i>per lit. reg.</i> in 1671. The college
-account-books continued to be signed by Newton,
-and I have not noticed in them evidence that Ellis
-ever took any part in the audit. The Society’s
-solicitors and attorneys have frequently acted as
-registrars, and it may be that Ellis was in partnership
-<a name="png.142" id="png.142" href="#png.142"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>134<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>with Newton, and was for that reason made
-with him joint auditor and registrar.</p>
-
-<p>Samuel Newton died in 1718 in his ninetieth
-year. For the three years, 1715, 1716, and 1717,
-the books were audited by John Newton, presumably
-his son or grandson, as his deputy. No doubt
-the arrangement was made in consequence of the
-failing health of the old gentleman whose signature
-in 1714 was very shaky. The appointment of a
-deputy was invalid under the statute, but it must
-have been made with the approval of Bentley, and
-perhaps of the seniority. At any rate John Newton
-conducted the audit, and signed the books as deputy
-auditor.</p>
-
-<p>Newton was succeeded in 1718 as auditor and
-registrar by Denys L’Isle. L’Isle had been a fellow-commoner
-of Trinity Hall, admitted in 1712, graduated
-LL.B. in 1715, who had gone down and in
-1716 taken his name off the books. He was a
-vigorous and not too scrupulous barrister. He
-owed his appointment to Bentley, and he showed
-“extraordinary activity and zeal in promoting all”
-his benefactor’s “wishes and interests” and represented
-him in some of his disputes. Whatever view
-may be taken of Bentley’s character, no one can
-justify his conduct in regard to the college finances.
-A notable scandal occurred in the audit of 1722. In
-the accounts of that year large sums were charged
-<a name="png.143" id="png.143" href="#png.143"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>135<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>to the College for works at the lodge and other sums
-spent by the master which had not been sanctioned
-by the Society. Undoubtedly the charges were
-illegal, but Bentley and L’Isle refused to allow the
-accounts to be examined by the seniority. In fact
-in this, as in other matters, L’Isle had no scruple in
-screening Bentley from the consequences of acts
-which were neither legal nor honourable.</p>
-
-<p>L’Isle died in 1727, and was succeeded as auditor,
-steward of the courts, and registrar by William
-Greaves. Greaves had in 1719 migrated to Clare,
-Cambridge, from Brasenose, Oxford; he graduated
-B.A. in 1720, and in 1722 was elected at Clare to a
-fellowship which he held till 1742. He was a barrister
-and an able man: he too owed his office to
-Bentley, and acted as his counsel in many of his
-tortuous proceedings. Through Bentley’s influence
-Greaves had in 1726 been made commissary of the
-University, an office which he held till 1778. The
-letters patent to the office of college auditor were
-made out for the term of his life, but a question
-having been raised as to whether this was statutable,
-he surrendered them, and the College granted
-new patents for the term of fifty years if he should
-live so long. I suppose he was duly admitted to the
-office, for probably an acute lawyer would have seen
-to this, but there is no record of the fact in our books.</p>
-
-<p>Greaves seems to have performed his duties as
-<a name="png.144" id="png.144" href="#png.144"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>136<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>auditor in an honourable manner. After the audit
-of 1778, he surrendered his office at the close of fifty
-years’ tenure of it: he then received a present of plate
-from the College, with their thanks for his long and
-faithful services. Six years later he made a donation
-to the Society of <i>£</i>100 to found an annual prize
-for an essay on the character of King William the
-Third. After nearly a century it was said that the
-essayists had exhausted the subject, and in 1882
-the College got leave to substitute for it one connected
-with the history of the British Empire.</p>
-
-<p>Robert Graham, 1744–1836, a lawyer of note,
-succeeded Greaves. Graham had graduated as
-third wrangler in 1766, and in the following year
-had been elected to a fellowship. He held the
-office till after the audit of 1791. He was made
-a baron of the exchequer in 1799, and proved a
-singularly inefficient judge. He retired from the
-bench in 1827.</p>
-
-<p>Graham’s chief distinction is said to have been
-his urbanity, and at the Bar it was currently believed
-that no one but his sempstress had power to
-ruffle his equanimity. He was somewhat pompous,
-and an adventure of his at the assizes at Newcastle
-afforded much amusement to his contemporaries.
-There, on one occasion just before charging the
-grand jury, he tumbled, unnoticed, into the river
-from the garden of the house where he lodged, but
-<a name="png.145" id="png.145" href="#png.145"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>137<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>luckily was hauled out by some passing watermen.
-The rough remedies of the quay-side failed to restore
-consciousness, and the bystanders, supposing
-he was drowned, carted him to a dead-house, where
-he was stripped and laid out. The coroner’s jury,
-summoned with unusual celerity, had viewed the
-body, and were considering their verdict when, to
-their surprise he showed signs of life and came to
-himself. His position was not altogether dignified,
-but realizing at once that it is always incumbent on
-a judge to move in state, he was by his directions
-fetched from the mortuary in the sheriff’s carriage,
-with the trumpeters, and usual ceremonial.</p>
-
-<p>Of Graham’s successor, Samuel Knight, 1755–1829,
-I know little. He had been admitted as a
-pensioner in 1772, became a fellow-commoner in
-1774, and graduated in the poll in 1776. Apparently
-he had no special qualifications for the post
-beyond being a pleasant member of society. He
-resigned in 1812, and died in 1829.</p>
-
-<p>After Knight’s resignation, the post was offered
-to Nicholas Conyngham Tindal, 1776–1846, a lawyer
-of distinction. He had graduated in 1799 as eighth
-wrangler, was a Chancellor’s medalist, and had been
-elected to a fellowship in 1801, which, as he did not
-take orders, he had vacated in due course in accordance
-with the provisions of the Elizabethan statutes.
-The plan of offering the post to a distinguished
-<a name="png.146" id="png.146" href="#png.146"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>138<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>past fellow now became the custom, and all the
-auditors hereafter mentioned were past fellows of
-the college.</p>
-
-<p>Tindal was one of the counsel for queen Caroline;
-he is celebrated in the history of the courts for
-having secured to a criminal client the right of
-wager of battle, which had long fallen into disuse
-but had not been abolished by statute. He was
-member for the University from 1827 to 1829 in
-which year he was made chief justice of the Common
-Pleas; he held that office till his death in 1846.
-Though not specially successful as an advocate, he
-had a profound knowledge of law and was an excellent
-judge. His enormous dimensions are commemorated
-in a print in my possession with the
-inscription “Judges of A Size,” representing him
-standing by Joshua Williams one of his colleagues
-on assize, who was very diminutive; probably this
-is an ancient joke.</p>
-
-<p>The next auditor was James Parke, 1782–1868,
-a lawyer of even greater distinction. He had
-graduated in 1803 as fifth wrangler, and had been
-Craven scholar, Browne’s medalist and Chancellor’s
-medalist. In 1804 he had been elected to a fellowship.
-He was one of the counsel briefed against
-queen Caroline. He was made a judge in 1828,
-and of course then resigned the office of auditor,
-which he thus held for only three years.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.147" id="png.147" href="#png.147"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>139<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>Parke had a profound knowledge of the common
-law, and admired, and was a rigid adherent of,
-ancient forms and customs. The fact was well
-known, and led to a curious scene, when on one occasion,
-while giving a judgment, he fainted. Cold
-water and smelling salts were applied without
-success, whereon a somewhat malicious colleague
-brought from an adjacent room an ancient volume
-of reports, black with the dust of ages, and banged
-it under the nostrils of the judge. It may have
-been a coincidence, but Parke at once revived, and
-in a few minutes was able to proceed with the
-business in hand.</p>
-
-<p>At one time when Parke was trying a criminal
-case the prisoner confessed his crime to his advocate,
-who thereupon (most improperly) acquainted the
-judge with the fact and asked his advice. Parke
-rebuked the barrister for informing him of the
-prisoner’s guilt, but added that counsel was not the
-less bound to defend his client to the best of his
-ability. The case has been often cited, and states
-the practice of the bar; it being of course assumed
-that nothing is said or done for the defence which
-an honourable man might not say or do.</p>
-
-<p>Parke’s subsequent career served to settle a
-constitutional question of great importance. In
-1856 he was created Baron Wensleydale with a life
-peerage. It was decided that the power of the
-<a name="png.148" id="png.148" href="#png.148"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>140<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>crown to create life peerages had been lost by disuse.
-He was then made a baron with the usual remainder
-in tail male.</p>
-
-<p>Parke was followed as auditor by Andrew Amos,
-1791–1860, also a lawyer of distinction. He had
-graduated as fifth wrangler in 1813, and in 1815
-had been elected to a fellowship. He was appointed
-auditor in 1829. He had a large arbitration practice,
-acted on the Criminal Law Commission, and
-was professor of English Law in London. In 1837
-he was appointed legal member of the Indian
-Council, and on his departure for the East had to
-resign his office in the college. On the first vacancy
-after his return to England, he was, in 1848, elected
-Downing Professor of Laws in Cambridge, and
-occupied the chair until his death.</p>
-
-<p>Amos was succeeded by John George Shaw-Lefevre,
-1797–1879. Shaw-Lefevre had been senior
-wrangler and first Smith’s prize man in 1818, and had
-been elected to a fellowship in the following year.
-Like his predecessors he was a barrister, but most
-of his time was taken up with duties connected with
-public departments. He settled the county divisions
-under the Reform Act of 1832, and was a
-member of numerous Commissions, notably those
-connected with compensation for the abolition of
-slavery, with the Poor Law Act, with the creation of
-South Australia, with ecclesiastical affairs, and with
-<a name="png.149" id="png.149" href="#png.149"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>141<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>the Indian Civil Service: till 1875 he was busily
-engaged in public affairs. He stood unsuccessfully
-for parliament in the university contest of 1847.
-He resigned the auditorship after the audit of 1851.
-His tenure of the post is commemorated by his gift
-of the chandelier which hangs in the large combination
-room.</p>
-
-<p>The next auditor was the Hon. George Denman,
-1819–1896, also a lawyer. Denman had been
-senior classic in 1842, and had been elected to a
-fellowship in the following year. He had always
-kept up his connection with the College, where
-he had numerous friends. He became auditor in
-1852. Like his predecessor he stood unsuccessfully
-for parliament as a representative of the University:
-this was in 1856. Subsequently he was
-appointed counsel to the University. He entered
-parliament in 1859, and owing to press of work gave
-up his college office at the close of the audit of 1862.
-After a distinguished legal career he was raised in
-1872 to the bench. He was a good scholar, had a
-fine presence, and to the end of his life was popular
-with all classes of Cambridge society.</p>
-
-<p>If I may trust my memory Denman told me that
-among his annual perquisites as auditor was a case
-of audit ale, and that on one occasion he gave it to
-Livingstone who he knew would appreciate it. The
-case travelled with the explorer through Africa,
-<a name="png.150" id="png.150" href="#png.150"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>142<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>and as long as the ale lasted glasses of it were circulated,
-to the great satisfaction of the natives,
-whenever solemn treaties were ratified.</p>
-
-<p>The next holder of the office was George Valentine
-Yool, 1829–1897, a chancery barrister, who had
-been third wrangler and second Smith’s prizeman
-in 1851, and had been elected to a fellowship in 1853.
-Yool took but little part in public affairs. He was
-appointed auditor in 1863, and gave up the office
-at the end of 1869.</p>
-
-<p>After Yool’s resignation the College reverted to
-its former practice, and appointed as auditor a
-resident, Augustus Arthur VanSittart. VanSittart
-had been bracketed senior classic in 1847, and had
-been elected to a fellowship in the following year.
-After once standing unsuccessfully for parliament,
-he devoted himself to literary work, and among
-other things collected and collated the various
-readings of the New Testament. His annual speech
-at the audit feast, wherein he gave a witty sketch
-of the more interesting developments of academic
-life during the preceding year, was one of the
-features of the time, and served somewhat the same
-purpose as the Tripos verses of earlier ages. He
-held the office till his death in the spring of 1882.
-He was wealthy, and a most generous benefactor
-of the Fitzwilliam Museum and other Cambridge
-institutions.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.151" id="png.151" href="#png.151"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>143<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>On VanSittart’s death the post was given to
-John Willis Clark, 1833–1910. Clark had come up
-to Trinity in 1852, obtained a first class in the
-classical tripos, 1856, and was elected to a fellowship
-in 1858. He made his home in Cambridge, and his
-unceasing activities in zoological, library, and theatrical
-matters are chronicled in the local records.
-He completed the <cite>Architectural History of the
-University</cite>—a permanent and invaluable record of
-Cambridge history—which had been commenced by
-his uncle, and wrote on various library and antiquarian
-subjects. He held the registraryship of
-the University from 1891 to his death in 1910.</p>
-
-<p>Clark vacated the office of auditor in 1908, and
-since then the College has appointed to the post a
-professional accountant.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chap">
-
-<h2 title="VIII. Wren’s Designs for the College Library"><a name="png.152" id="png.152" href="#png.152"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>144<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>CHAPTER VIII.<br
- /><small>WREN’S DESIGNS FOR THE COLLEGE LIBRARY.</small></h2>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="allsc">In</span> 1914 the College obtained an interesting series
-of photographs of Wren’s original drawings and
-plans for our library in Nevile’s Court. They will
-well repay inspection by those who are interested
-in our history or in architecture.</p>
-
-<p>The present library is the third building assigned
-by Trinity for the purpose. During the first half-century
-of its existence the Society used the library<sup class="fn"><a href="#fn26" id="fna26" name="fna26">26</a></sup>
-of King’s Hall, a good first-floor room, some twenty
-feet long by ten feet broad, which had been built
-in 1416–21 near the north-west corner of the cloister
-court of that House. This room was connected with
-the old oratory of King’s Hall by a gallery over the
-west cloister.</p>
-
-<p>Soon after the foundation of Trinity the provision
-of a larger library was contemplated, and in
-the order (about providing building materials for
-the chapel) of queen Elizabeth of 1560, it is said
-that its erection had been already begun. In fact
-however it was then only under discussion.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="plate">
-<a name="png.153" id="png.153" href="#png.153"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>145<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a><img src="images/illo1.jpg" id="illo1"
- alt="Elevation and floor plans for rectangular library building in classical style with many arched windows" title=""
- /><br
- />Wren’s Second Design for the College Library. Exterior.
-</div>
-<div class="plate">
-<a name="png.154" id="png.154" href="#png.154"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>146<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a><img src="images/illo2.jpg" id="illo2"
- alt="Elevation of circular classical building dominated by domed roof" title=""
- /><br
- />Wren’s First Design for the College Library. Exterior.
-</div>
-<div class="plate">
-<a name="png.155" id="png.155" href="#png.155"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>147<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a><img src="images/illo3.jpg" id="illo3"
- alt="Cross-section through four-storey, domed circular library" title=""
- /><br
- />Wren’s First Design for the College Library. Interior.
-</div>
-<div class="plate">
-<a name="png.156" id="png.156" href="#png.156"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>148<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a><img src="images/illo4.jpg" id="illo4"
- alt="Elevation of elaborate four-storey classical building" title=""
- /><br
- />Wren’s Design for a Senate House.
-</div>
-
-<div class="chap"><!-- note not actually a new chapter -->
-<p>Our predecessors, in their arrangements for the
-“reconcination” or rebuilding of the Great Court,
-<a name="png.157" id="png.157" href="#png.157"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>149<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>naturally attached great importance to not interfering
-with King Edward’s Tower which had long
-been the chief entrance to King’s Hall and then
-stood near the present sundial. A suggested way
-of working this Tower into the scheme of the court
-is shown on the plan which hangs on the staircase
-leading to the library annexe; in this, a block one
-hundred feet long and thirty-four feet broad, was
-to be built over an open colonnade running eastwards
-from the Tower and ending in front of and
-a few yards from the Great Gate. The first floor of
-this block might have been used for the new library;
-or alternatively it might have been used for chambers,
-and the new library built elsewhere, for instance, as
-was suggested, on the site of the range of chambers
-which now stretches from the chapel to the turret
-staircase adjoining the lodge.</p>
-
-<p>Neither of these proposals was then adopted,
-and our second library was not erected till Nevile,
-between 1594 and 1600, took the matter in hand.
-He provided for it a room seventy-five feet long and
-thirty feet broad on the second floor of the range
-connecting the Clock Tower and the lodge; it has
-since been converted into chambers.</p>
-
-<p>Less than a century after Nevile’s library was
-finished, the Society again found it necessary to
-provide more book accommodation, and the result
-is the impressive and excellently designed building
-<a name="png.158" id="png.158" href="#png.158"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>150<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>which stands on the west side of Nevile’s Court.
-According to tradition, its erection, commenced in
-February 1676, was due to Barrow, then master of
-the College, who in the previous year had pressed
-the other heads of Houses to provide a room worthy
-of the University for its meetings, and urged that
-it should be of the best. Such schemes are expensive
-and cannot be effected without public
-spirit. Caution, it is said, carried the day, whereon
-Barrow, piqued at this faint-heartedness, declared
-that he would go to Trinity, “lay out the foundations
-of a building to enlarge his back court, and
-close it with a stately library, which should be
-more magnificent and costly than what he had
-<span class="nw">proposed....</span> And he was as good as his word, for
-that very afternoon he ... staked out the very
-foundation upon which the building now stands.”</p>
-
-<p>The story may be substantially true, for the long-cherished
-idea of building a university theatre and
-library was then in the hands of a syndicate: on the
-other hand the extant speech of Barrow in which he
-put forward his policy was not delivered till the
-Easter term 1676, and Wren’s designs for such a
-building are referred to the year 1678 and indicate
-that the scheme had not been then abandoned. But
-whether the anecdote be true or not, we may take
-it that the erection of our library was due to
-Barrow’s initiative, and that he personally raised
-a considerable sum towards its cost.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.159" id="png.159" href="#png.159"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>151<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>Sir Christopher Wren, a warm personal friend
-of Barrow, was selected as the architect, and placed
-his services at the disposal of the College without
-remuneration. His original drawings are included
-in a collection of his designs preserved at All Souls’
-College, Oxford, and by the kindness of that Society
-we have been allowed to take photographs of the
-plans which concern us. These relate to two plans for
-our library and one for a university commencement-house.
-The two plans for Trinity were made not later
-than 1675; they may have been submitted as alternatives,
-but there is a tradition that the second design
-was prepared only after the first had been rejected.</p>
-
-<p>Nevile’s Court, as now arranged, contains three
-staircases on each of its sides, is closed on the east
-by the hall and small combination room block, and
-on the west by the library. In 1675 only two of
-the staircases on each side had been built, and the
-western ends of these were connected by a blank
-wall pierced in the middle by a gate, which is believed
-to have been later removed, stone by stone,
-and finally placed as the entrance to the College at
-the bottom of Trinity lane, where it now stands.
-Beyond this wall and between it and the river was the
-college tennis court. The land between Nevile’s Court
-and the river was selected as the site of the library.</p>
-
-<p>Wren’s first design shows a double cylindrical
-shell about sixty-five feet across inside and ninety
-<a name="png.160" id="png.160" href="#png.160"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>152<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>feet high, surmounted by a dome and entered
-through a six-columned Ionic portico facing Nevile’s
-Court. On the ground floor was a lobby round
-which were stone seats. Above this the inside of
-the inner cylindrical shell was lined with bookshelves,
-and for convenience of approach there were
-three galleries. The room was lighted by windows
-in the dome and a superimposed lantern. The
-east side of the portico was half-way between the
-western ends of the court, and these ends were connected
-with the body of the library by low curved
-walls surmounted by iron rails. This building is
-described as “a very beautiful and most commodious
-model,” but it strikes the ordinary layman as poor
-in design, and I do not think that all Wren’s genius
-could have made it other than unsatisfactory. Why
-it was rejected we do not know, but few will doubt
-that the decision was wise.</p>
-
-<p>Wren’s second or alternative design, which was
-adopted, shows a lofty oblong room about one
-hundred and fifty feet long by thirty-eight feet
-broad supported on a colonnade. Several of his
-drawings for this were engraved for the <cite>Architectural
-History of Cambridge</cite> by Willis and Clark, but the
-photographic reproductions of the originals—some
-with Wren’s notes attached—which are now available
-have an interest of their own. A careful study
-will show details which were subsequently modified.
-The present library was placed to the west of the
-<a name="png.161" id="png.161" href="#png.161"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>153<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>court as then built, and the rows of chambers on each
-side were extended to meet it. It is well-known that
-the shelves, cases, benches, tables, and book-rests
-now used were designed by Wren, and his drawings
-for them are reproduced in this series of photographs.
-The removal of all the bookcases except those fixed
-against the walls would enable us to judge the appearance
-intended by Wren. How fine the effect
-must have been, may be gathered from the plate
-in Le Keux’s <cite>Memorials</cite> or the engraving in the
-<cite>University Almanack</cite> of 1852.</p>
-
-<p>Among Wren’s plans is also one for “a Theatre
-or Commencement-House with a Library annexed,
-according to an Intention for the University of
-Cambridge, about the year 1678, but not executed.”
-Whether this represents a sketch of the general
-plan which it is said that Barrow had suggested to
-the heads of Houses in 1675 it is impossible to say.
-The erection of a building on these lines might have
-been costly, but the result would have been a
-valuable addition to the architecture of Cambridge.</p>
-
-<p>I published in the <cite>Trinity Magazine</cite> in 1914 the
-elevations of our library according to Wren’s two
-plans and of his suggested Commencement or Senate
-House. I reprint these here (see above, pp. 145–148),
-but add nothing more as it is intended shortly to
-reproduce in book-form various drawings on the
-subject made by Wren.</p>
-
-
-<div class="footnotes">
-<p><a class="parnumber" href="#fna26" id="fn26" name="fn26" title="Back">26</a> There was an earlier library in King’s Hall but we do not know
-where it was situated.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="chap">
-
-<h2 title="IX. A Christmas Journey in 1319"><a name="png.162" id="png.162" href="#png.162"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>154<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>CHAPTER IX.<br
- /><small>A CHRISTMAS JOURNEY IN 1319.</small></h2>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="allsc">In</span> the Record Office in London are preserved some
-money accounts<sup class="fn"><a href="#fn27" id="fna27" name="fna27">27</a></sup> concerned with a visit of the
-scholars of King’s Hall to York at Christmas in the
-year 13 Edward II, that is, in 1319. The following
-analysis gives the route followed by one section of
-the party and the expenses of the journey: it is a
-valuable record of the method and cost of travelling
-in medieval times.</p>
-
-<p>By way of preamble, I may say that the origin
-of King’s Hall is to be found in the establishment at
-Cambridge, in 1317, by Edward II, of a body of
-Scholars or King’s Children; that they were regarded
-as part of the royal household; and that the
-nominations to the office of warden and to scholarships
-were reserved to the king. King’s Hall was
-dissolved in 1546, and its buildings and property
-assigned by Henry VIII to Trinity College.</p>
-
-<p>Early in December 1319, the warden and scholars
-were ordered to spend the coming Christmas with
-the court, then at York, and the sheriff of Cambridgeshire
-was directed to provide for their journey.
-During the preceding Michaelmas term thirty-three
-<a name="png.163" id="png.163" href="#png.163"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>155<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>members of the House had been in residence, and
-all of them went to York.</p>
-
-<p>The names of the members of the House in 1319
-are immaterial to our story, but I venture to give
-them, for these students lived here nearly six centuries
-ago, and doubtless had hopes, plans, and ambitions
-at bottom much the same as we have. They
-were, in order of seniority, John de Bagshot the
-warden, Nicholas de Durnford, Nicholas de Rome,
-David de Winchester, William Pour, Richard Pour,
-Nicholas Pour, John de Aston, John de Torterold,
-James de Torterold, Robert de Immeworth, Thomas
-de Windsor, Walter de Nottingham, Roger Parker,
-John de Kelsey, John de Hull, Edward de Kingston,
-Hugh de Sutton, Philip de London, John de Salisbury,
-Richard de Salisbury, Robert de Beverley,
-John Fort, Ralph de Gretford, Henry de Gretford,
-Nicholas Parker, Nicholas Pull, Richard de Berwick,
-Andrew Rosekin, Thomas Griffon, John Griffon,
-William Draghswerd, and John de Woodstock. It
-will be noticed that some of the students are designated
-by surnames which were already coming into
-use and some by place names: the latter show from
-what a wide area the scholars were drawn.</p>
-
-<p>For the purpose of travelling the Society was
-divided into two sections, both of which started
-from Cambridge on Thursday<sup class="fn"><a href="#fn28" id="fna28" name="fna28">28</a></sup>, 20 December. One
-<a name="png.164" id="png.164" href="#png.164"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>156<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>party, comprising the warden, John de Bagshot,
-and six of the scholars, went on horseback, and
-arrived at York on Christmas eve. Their journey thus
-occupied five days and they covered about thirty-five
-miles a day; of it we have no particulars, save
-that the warden paid <i>£</i>1. 3<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i> for the hire in
-Cambridge of seven hackneys, and was allowed
-<i>£</i>1. 9<i>s.</i> 2<i>d.</i> for the other expenses, namely 10<i>d.</i> a day
-for each member of the party. The remaining
-twenty-six scholars travelled under the care of one
-of their number, John de Aston, and arrived at York
-on 28 December. They took with them seven and
-a half lengths of cloth with the furs thereto belonging,
-and four grooms, but whether the grooms went
-the whole way is not clear. It is with this nine
-days’ journey that I here deal.</p>
-
-<p>The cloth and furs which had been purchased
-on behalf of the crown from merchants at Bury were
-valuable. The former was red in colour (<i xml:lang="lat" lang="lat">de blodes
-mixto</i>) and had cost <i>£</i>21. 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>: the latter comprised
-twenty-one lamb skins, bought for <i>£</i>2. 19<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>
-and six budge skins, bought for <i>£</i>1. The carriage
-of these goods must have been a serious hindrance
-to rapid travelling.</p>
-
-<p>The first two days, Thursday and Friday, 20 and
-21 December, were occupied in the journey from
-Cambridge to Spalding. This was made in two
-hired boats (with the services of six men), for which
-<a name="png.165" id="png.165" href="#png.165"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>157<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>the charge was 5<i>s.</i> On 20 December, the travellers
-paid 2<i>d.</i> for porterage of their goods to the boats at
-Cambridge, 1<i>s.</i> 7<i>d.</i> for bread, 2<i>s.</i> for beer, 1<i>s.</i> for
-herrings, 1<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i> for hard fish and codlings, and 4<i>d.</i>
-for fuel. On 21 December they paid 1<i>s.</i> 5<i>d.</i> for
-bread, 2<i>s.</i> 2<i>d.</i> for beer, 1<i>s.</i> 7<i>d.</i> for herrings and other
-fish, 3<i>d.</i> for cheese, 2<i>d.</i> for porterage from the boats
-at Spalding, 5½<i>d.</i> for fuel and candles, and 8<i>d.</i> for
-beds at Spalding.</p>
-
-<p>On Saturday, 22 December, they travelled to
-Boston. On this day, they paid 2<i>s.</i> for hiring two
-carts for carrying the cloth and fourteen of the
-scholars, and 3<i>s.</i> for twelve hackneys for the rest of
-the party. They also spent 1<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i> for bread,
-1<i>s.</i> 11<i>d.</i> for beer, 2<i>s.</i> 3<i>d.</i> for herrings and other fish,
-5<i>d.</i> for fuel and candles, and 8<i>d.</i> for beds at Boston.</p>
-
-<p>The next two days, Sunday and Monday, 23 and
-24 December, were occupied in the journey to Lincoln
-which was performed in a single large boat. On
-23 December, they paid 5<i>s.</i> for the hire of this boat,
-4<i>d.</i> for straw to spread on it, 2<i>d.</i> for porterage to the
-boat, 1<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> for bread, 2<i>s.</i> 7<i>d.</i> for beer, 2<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i> for meat,
-1<i>s.</i> 6¾<i>d.</i> for eight hens, and 6<i>d.</i> for fuel. On 24 December,
-they paid 1<i>s.</i> 2<i>d.</i> for bread, 2<i>s.</i> for beer, 2<i>s.</i> 1<i>d.</i>
-for herrings and other fish, 9<i>d.</i> for eels, 3<i>d.</i> for porterage
-from the boat at Lincoln, 6½<i>d.</i> for fuel and
-candles, and 8<i>d.</i> for beds at Lincoln.</p>
-
-<p>Tuesday, being Christmas Day, was spent quietly
-<a name="png.166" id="png.166" href="#png.166"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>158<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>at Lincoln. Their expenses for the day were 1<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i>
-for bread, 2<i>s.</i> 1<i>d.</i> for beer, 2<i>s.</i> 3<i>d.</i> for meat, 1<i>s.</i> 1¼<i>d.</i>
-for five hens, 7½<i>d.</i> for candles and fuel, and 8<i>d.</i> for
-beds.</p>
-
-<p>On Wednesday, 26 December, the party travelled
-to Torksey, making the journey in two boats
-hired at Lincoln. On this day, they paid 2<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i>
-for the hire of the boats, 3<i>d.</i> for porterage to the
-boats, 1<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i> for bread, 2<i>s.</i> 3<i>d.</i> for beer, 2<i>s.</i> 1<i>d.</i> for
-meat, 7<i>d.</i> for eggs, 4<i>d.</i> for fuel and candles, and 8<i>d.</i>
-for beds at Torksey.</p>
-
-<p>The next two days, Thursday and Friday, 27 and
-28 December, were occupied in the journey from
-Torksey to York, which was made in a large boat
-hired at Torksey. On 27 December, they paid 6<i>s.</i>
-for the hire of this boat, 2<i>d.</i> for porterage to the boat
-at Torksey, 1<i>s.</i> 7<i>d.</i> for bread, 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> for beer, 1<i>s.</i> 10<i>d.</i>
-for meat. On 28 December, they paid 1<i>s.</i> for bread,
-1<i>s.</i> 5<i>d.</i> for beer, 1<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i> for herrings and other fish,
-and 2<i>d.</i> for porterage of their goods at York.</p>
-
-<p>The total cost of the journey came to <i>£</i>4. 5<i>s.</i> 8½<i>d.</i>,
-and this was repaid to the warden from the royal
-exchequer on 31 December. On the opposite page
-is a summary of the daily expenditure described
-above.</p>
-
-
-<div class="chap9">
-<a name="png.167" id="png.167" href="#png.167"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>159<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-<table id="chap9" summary="Daily expenditure">
-<tr>
- <th> </th>
- <th colspan="3">Dec. 20.</th><th class="nix"></th>
- <th colspan="3">Dec. 21.</th><th class="nix"></th>
- <th colspan="3">Dec. 22.</th><th class="nix"></th>
- <th colspan="3">Dec. 23.</th><th class="nix"></th>
- <th colspan="3">Dec. 24.</th><th class="nix"></th>
- <th colspan="3">Dec. 25.</th><th class="nix"></th>
- <th colspan="3">Dec. 26.</th><th class="nix"></th>
- <th colspan="3">Dec. 27.</th><th class="nix"></th>
- <th colspan="3">Dec. 28.</th>
-</tr>
-<tr class="h2">
- <th> </th>
- <th><i>s.</i></th><th class="pence" colspan="2"><i>d.</i></th><th class="nix"></th>
- <th><i>s.</i></th><th class="pence" colspan="2"><i>d.</i></th><th class="nix"></th>
- <th><i>s.</i></th><th class="pence" colspan="2"><i>d.</i></th><th class="nix"></th>
- <th><i>s.</i></th><th class="pence" colspan="2"><i>d.</i></th><th class="nix"></th>
- <th><i>s.</i></th><th class="pence" colspan="2"><i>d.</i></th><th class="nix"></th>
- <th><i>s.</i></th><th class="pence" colspan="2"><i>d.</i></th><th class="nix"></th>
- <th><i>s.</i></th><th class="pence" colspan="2"><i>d.</i></th><th class="nix"></th>
- <th><i>s.</i></th><th class="pence" colspan="2"><i>d.</i></th><th class="nix"></th>
- <th><i>s.</i></th><th class="pence" colspan="2"><i>d.</i></th>
-</tr>
-<tr class="firstrow">
- <td class="stuff">Hire of Boats</td>
- <td> 5</td><td class="pence"> 0</td><td> </td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td class="nix" colspan="2">...</td><td> </td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td class="nix" colspan="2">...</td><td> </td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td> 5</td><td class="pence"> 0</td><td> </td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td class="nix" colspan="2">...</td><td> </td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td class="nix" colspan="2">...</td><td> </td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td> 2</td><td class="pence"> 8</td><td> </td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td> 6</td><td class="pence"> 0</td><td> </td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td class="nix" colspan="2">...</td><td> </td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="stuff">Straw</td>
- <td class="nix" colspan="2">...</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td class="nix" colspan="2">...</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td class="nix" colspan="2">...</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td></td><td class="pence"> 4</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td class="nix" colspan="2">...</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td class="nix" colspan="2">...</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td class="nix" colspan="2">...</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td class="nix" colspan="2">...</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td class="nix" colspan="2">...</td><td></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="stuff">Porterage</td>
- <td></td><td class="pence"> 2</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td></td><td class="pence"> 2</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td class="nix" colspan="2">...</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td></td><td class="pence"> 2</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td></td><td class="pence"> 3</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td class="nix" colspan="2">...</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td></td><td class="pence"> 3</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td></td><td class="pence"> 2</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td></td><td class="pence"> 2</td><td></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="stuff">Hire of Carts</td>
- <td class="nix" colspan="2">...</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td class="nix" colspan="2">...</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td> 2</td><td class="pence"> 0</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td class="nix" colspan="2">...</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td class="nix" colspan="2">...</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td class="nix" colspan="2">...</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td class="nix" colspan="2">...</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td class="nix" colspan="2">...</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td class="nix" colspan="2">...</td><td></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="stuff">Hire of Hackneys</td>
- <td class="nix" colspan="2">...</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td class="nix" colspan="2">...</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td> 3</td><td class="pence"> 0</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td class="nix" colspan="2">...</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td class="nix" colspan="2">...</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td class="nix" colspan="2">...</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td class="nix" colspan="2">...</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td class="nix" colspan="2">...</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td class="nix" colspan="2">...</td><td></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="stuff">Bread</td>
- <td> 1</td><td class="pence"> 7</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td> 1</td><td class="pence"> 5</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td> 1</td><td class="pence"> 4</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td> 1</td><td class="pence"> 6</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td> 1</td><td class="pence"> 2</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td> 1</td><td class="pence"> 4</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td> 1</td><td class="pence"> 8</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td> 1</td><td class="pence"> 7</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td> 1</td><td class="pence"> 0</td><td></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="stuff">Beer</td>
- <td> 2</td><td class="pence"> 0</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td> 2</td><td class="pence"> 2</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td> 1</td><td class="pence"> 11</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td> 2</td><td class="pence"> 7</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td> 2</td><td class="pence"> 0</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td> 2</td><td class="pence"> 1</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td> 2</td><td class="pence"> 3</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td> 2</td><td class="pence"> 6</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td> 1</td><td class="pence"> 5</td><td></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="stuff">Hard Fish, etc.</td>
- <td> 1</td><td class="pence"> 4</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td class="nix" colspan="2">...</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td class="nix" colspan="2">...</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td class="nix" colspan="2">...</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td class="nix" colspan="2">...</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td class="nix" colspan="2">...</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td class="nix" colspan="2">...</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td class="nix" colspan="2">...</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td class="nix" colspan="2">...</td><td></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="stuff">Herrings, etc.</td>
- <td> 1</td><td class="pence"> 0</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td> 1</td><td class="pence"> 7</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td> 2</td><td class="pence"> 3</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td class="nix" colspan="2">...</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td> 2</td><td class="pence"> 1</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td class="nix" colspan="2">...</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td class="nix" colspan="2">...</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td class="nix" colspan="2">...</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td> 1</td><td class="pence"> 4</td><td></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="stuff">Eels</td>
- <td class="nix" colspan="2">...</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td class="nix" colspan="2">...</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td class="nix" colspan="2">...</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td class="nix" colspan="2">...</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td></td><td class="pence"> 9</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td class="nix" colspan="2">...</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td class="nix" colspan="2">...</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td class="nix" colspan="2">...</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td class="nix" colspan="2">...</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="stuff">Meat</td>
- <td class="nix" colspan="2">...</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td class="nix" colspan="2">...</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td class="nix" colspan="2">...</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td> 2</td><td class="pence"> 4</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td class="nix" colspan="2">...</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td> 2</td><td class="pence"> 3</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td> 2</td><td class="pence"> 1</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td> 1</td><td class="pence"> 10</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td class="nix" colspan="2">...</td><td></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="stuff">Hens</td>
- <td class="nix" colspan="2">...</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td class="nix" colspan="2">...</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td class="nix" colspan="2">...</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td> 1</td><td class="pence"> 6</td><td>¾</td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td class="nix" colspan="2">...</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td> 1</td><td class="pence"> 1</td><td>¼</td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td class="nix" colspan="2">...</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td class="nix" colspan="2">...</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td class="nix" colspan="2">...</td><td></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="stuff">Eggs</td>
- <td class="nix" colspan="2">...</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td class="nix" colspan="2">...</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td class="nix" colspan="2">...</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td class="nix" colspan="2">...</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td class="nix" colspan="2">...</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td class="nix" colspan="2">...</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td></td><td class="pence"> 7</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td class="nix" colspan="2">...</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td class="nix" colspan="2">...</td><td></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="stuff">Cheese</td>
- <td class="nix" colspan="2">...</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td></td><td class="pence"> 3</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td class="nix" colspan="2">...</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td class="nix" colspan="2">...</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td class="nix" colspan="2">...</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td class="nix" colspan="2">...</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td class="nix" colspan="2">...</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td class="nix" colspan="2">...</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td class="nix" colspan="2">...</td><td></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="stuff">Fuel and Candles</td>
- <td></td><td class="pence"> 4</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td></td><td class="pence"> 5</td><td>½</td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td></td><td class="pence"> 5</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td></td><td class="pence"> 6</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td></td><td class="pence"> 6</td><td>½</td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td></td><td class="pence"> 7</td><td>½</td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td></td><td class="pence"> 4</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td class="nix" colspan="2">...</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td class="nix" colspan="2">...</td><td></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="stuff">Beds</td>
- <td class="nix" colspan="2">...</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td></td><td class="pence"> 8</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td></td><td class="pence"> 8</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td class="nix" colspan="2">...</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td></td><td class="pence"> 8</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td></td><td class="pence"> 8</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td></td><td class="pence"> 8</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td class="nix" colspan="2">...</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td class="nix" colspan="2">...</td><td></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="totalrow">
- <td class="stuff"> </td>
- <td> 11</td><td class="pence"> 5</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td> 6</td><td class="pence"> 8</td><td>½</td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td> 11</td><td class="pence"> 7</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td> 13</td><td class="pence"> 11</td><td>¾</td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td> 7</td><td class="pence"> 5</td><td>½</td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td> 8</td><td class="pence"> 0</td><td>¾</td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td> 10</td><td class="pence"> 6</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td> 12</td><td class="pence"> 1</td><td></td><td class="nix"></td>
- <td> 3</td><td class="pence"> 11</td><td></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<p>There are no records of the expenses of the
-Society during the time the members were at York;
-but presumably while there, they were treated as
-<a name="png.168" id="png.168" href="#png.168"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>160<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>members of the royal household. Their visit, however,
-was not devoid of incident since a warrant
-was issued against one of them, Robert de Beverley,
-for having joined with the prior of the preaching
-friars of Pontefract in an assault on a certain William
-Hardy: the student was left behind at York,
-and there disappears from our history. Two other
-members of the House, Edward de Kingston and
-David de Winchester, were also left in the city, of
-whom probably at least one was concerned in this
-disturbance. One new member, Warin Trot, was
-admitted at York. These changes reduced the
-numbers to thirty-one. Of these thirty-one members,
-twenty-one, under the guidance of John de Aston,
-came back to Cambridge on the festival of
-St Fabian and St Sebastian (<i>i.e.</i> 20 January), while
-the warden and the remaining nine scholars, among
-whom Trot was included, arrived on 9 February,
-and from these dates their stipends in Cambridge
-during the Lent Term, 1320, were reckoned.</p>
-
-<p>Why the king summoned the members of the
-House to York at so considerable cost I cannot say,
-but I think the detailed statement of how most of
-them travelled and their expenses on the journey
-are interesting.</p>
-
-
-<div class="footnotes">
-<p><a class="parnumber" href="#fna27" id="fn27" name="fn27" title="Back">27</a> <cite>Exchequer Accounts</cite>, 552/10.</p>
-
-<p><a class="parnumber" href="#fna28" id="fn28" name="fn28" title="Back">28</a> In my original paper the days of the week were given incorrectly.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="chap">
-
-<h2 title="X An Outline of the College Story"><a name="png.169" id="png.169" href="#png.169"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>161<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>CHAPTER X.<br
- /><small>AN OUTLINE OF THE COLLEGE STORY<sup class="fn"><a href="#fn29" id="fna29" name="fna29">29</a></sup>.</small></h2>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="allsc">I have</span> been asked to take you round Trinity
-College to-morrow, and by way of preface to say
-to-night something about its history. The first of
-these tasks, to anyone who lives here, is not difficult,
-but it is far from easy to give, in forty minutes,
-a sketch of a history covering centuries of academic
-life and involving references to the lives of many
-distinguished scholars and men of affairs. If I confined
-myself to an account of the buildings the
-problem would be simpler, but though they must
-form the chief topic of our talk to-morrow, I would
-prefer to-day to say something about the growth
-of the College. On these lines then I proceed,
-though necessarily in an incomplete way, to state
-the outline of our story.</p>
-
-<p><span class="parnumber">2.</span> Trinity College was founded in 1546, just
-about half-way back in the history of the University.
-Of those pre-Trinity days I will only say that
-the University arose about the end of the twelfth
-century, and that it was nearly a hundred years
-after its establishment before the first college was
-<a name="png.170" id="png.170" href="#png.170"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>162<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>founded. Colleges were erected for the benefit of
-selected scholars who were maintained at the expense
-of the foundation, and throughout the middle
-ages, most of the students lived in Private Hostels.
-In Tudor times undergraduates who paid their own
-expenses were admitted to colleges, and finally, every
-student was required to be a member of one of
-these Houses: the peculiar collegiate character of
-Oxford and Cambridge dates from this change.
-I need hardly add that women were not (and are
-not) admissible as members of the University, and
-that in former days teachers and students alike
-were unmarried.</p>
-
-<p><span class="parnumber">3.</span> Towards the close of his reign, Henry VIII
-determined to found a college at Cambridge which
-should promote his views on religion and the new
-learning. He decided to use for the purpose the
-buildings and land occupied or owned by two of the
-chief medieval colleges, King’s Hall and Michael-House.
-Accordingly, under parliamentary powers,
-he compelled those Societies to surrender to him
-their charters and possessions, purchased such small
-parts of our present Great Court as did not belong
-to them, and gave all this property to his new
-college together with large revenues from religious
-houses which he had recently dissolved. The proceedings
-were high-handed, but we may say that
-the result justified him. It is believed that, during
-<a name="png.171" id="png.171" href="#png.171"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>163<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>these proceedings, the university careers of a few of
-the students, at any rate of King’s Hall, were not
-interrupted, and that thus our academic life runs
-without a break from the days of Edward II to the
-present time. Most of the buildings of Michael-House
-have now disappeared, but our connection
-with King’s Hall is still evident through the remains
-of its Cloister Court, our Great Gate which
-bears an inscription commemorating the permanent
-establishment of King’s Hall by Edward III, and
-our Clock Tower on which is a statue of that
-monarch. To this group of buildings we must first
-direct attention to-morrow.</p>
-
-<p><span class="parnumber">4.</span> Trinity was far larger than the colleges to
-whose buildings and property it succeeded. Of
-course it has had ups and downs in its career, but
-it has generally occupied and still occupies a predominant
-position in the University. Thus in 1564,
-its residents numbered three hundred and six out of
-a total of one thousand two hundred and sixty-seven
-in the University, while last October [1905],
-it had five hundred and sixty-eight undergraduates
-out of a total of two thousand eight hundred and
-thirty-five in the University, and two hundred resident
-graduates out of one thousand and five in the
-University: we now confine our normal entry to
-under two hundred a year, and as long as this is so,
-our numbers cannot exceed a certain limit which we
-<a name="png.172" id="png.172" href="#png.172"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>164<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>have long reached, so, as the University grows, the
-percentage of students on our boards decreases.
-The College has always recognized that it was its
-duty to be a centre of learning as well as one of
-higher education, and thanks to its traditions and
-the large number of resident fellows, it has been
-able to fulfil this double duty.</p>
-
-<p><span class="parnumber">5.</span> For the first few years after its foundation,
-Trinity was occupied in settling the many problems
-which arise in a new foundation. As far as accommodation
-went, the buildings of King’s Hall and
-Michael-House were connected, and sufficed for immediate
-needs. Naturally the protestant character
-of the foundation given by Henry was emphasized
-by the advisers of Edward VI, the altar in the chapel
-being removed and a communion table set up in
-Huguenot fashion in the middle of the building.
-Queen Mary increased the foundation, and took a
-warm interest in its affairs; of course the Roman
-service was then restored. Under Elizabeth the
-Anglican services were resumed, and she completed
-the erection of the present chapel which had been
-begun by her sister: it stands to-day externally
-much in its original form, though the interior scheme
-of decoration is different. We may leave till to-morrow
-the description of it and college doings
-connected therewith. This first chapter of our
-history ends in 1560 when the constitution of the
-<a name="png.173" id="png.173" href="#png.173"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>165<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>College was definitely established in a form which
-remained practically unaltered till 1861.</p>
-
-<p><span class="parnumber">6.</span> The next decade was critical. Many of
-those who had adopted the reformed religion desired
-further changes on presbyterian lines, and
-Cambridge, which had taken so prominent a part
-in the reformation, was their chief intellectual
-stronghold. Their leader was Cartwright, a fellow
-of Trinity, and their chief opponent was Whitgift,
-the master of the College: thus a contest of national
-importance was mixed up with college politics and
-carried on partly within the college walls. Whitgift’s
-powers as master were large, and he strained them
-to the utmost to remove from the House those who
-opposed him; times, however, were revolutionary
-and public opinion condoned and even approved
-his actions. At any rate victory remained with
-him and his party in the College, the University,
-and the State, and the position of the Church of
-England between Rome and Geneva is that for
-which he fought.</p>
-
-<p><span class="parnumber">7.</span> Whitgift acted as tutor to some of the
-students, among whom were Francis Bacon and his
-brother Anthony: you will see the portrait of the
-former (as also that of Whitgift) to-morrow, together
-with those of his contemporaries, Edward Coke subsequently
-the great lawyer, and Robert Devereux
-earl of Essex the ill-fated favourite of Elizabeth.
-<a name="png.174" id="png.174" href="#png.174"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>166<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>By a happy accident some of Whitgift’s tutorial
-ledgers have been preserved, and we have in them
-details of the expenditure of his pupils, which, combined
-with information from other sources, enables
-us to give a fairly complete account of their daily
-work, prayers, meals, and amusements<sup class="fn"><a href="#fn30" id="fna30" name="fna30">30</a></sup>. A usual
-age for commencing residence was fifteen or sixteen,
-and it would seem that students then (though of
-course subject in many things to reasonable restraints)
-were allowed that liberty of action which in
-my opinion is, even though sometimes misused, an
-essential feature of university education as opposed
-to the control of the pupil’s doings in every hour of
-the day which is common in many schools. In 1577
-Whitgift accepted a bishopric: an eloquent farewell
-sermon preached in College from 2 Corinthians,
-chapter 13, verse 2, revealed sincere affection
-for the place and moved his audience, “insomuch
-that there were scarce any drie eyes to be found
-amongst the whole number.” He left the House
-prosperous and of high repute.</p>
-
-<p><span class="parnumber">8.</span> In 1593 Nevile was appointed master, and
-took in hand the needed reconstruction of the
-<a name="png.175" id="png.175" href="#png.175"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>167<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>buildings. It had from the first been recognized
-that the site offered opportunities for the erection of
-buildings worthy of the reputation of the College,
-and he realized how much the effect would depend
-on making the court large, and above all on keeping
-the chamber frontage only two storeys high with
-attics above. The Great Court as it stands to-day
-is his creation; the only obvious defect in it is the
-ugly block built in the south-west corner in 1770
-to replace Nevile’s set of combination rooms which
-had an elevation agreeing generally with that of the
-master’s lodge, but enriched by a large projecting
-trefoil oriel. The hall, kitchens, combination rooms,
-and lodge form another group of buildings to which
-we must pay attention to-morrow: the first two of
-these are in the form left by Nevile. The blazoned
-glass in the hall and our collection of pictures in
-these rooms, especially the portraits of Henry VIII,
-Mary, and Elizabeth, all of whom have played an
-important part in our history, will well repay your
-study. Nevile also built, at his own cost, part of the
-court situated on the west side of the hall. This too
-we shall see to-morrow on our way to the library:
-in his day, the court was closed on the river side by
-a low wall, in the middle of which stood the stone
-gateway now used as the entrance to the College
-from Trinity Lane, and beyond this wall were the
-tennis courts and paddocks.</p>
-
-<p><span class="parnumber"><a name="png.176" id="png.176" href="#png.176"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>168<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>9.</span> The prince of Wales, afterwards Charles I,
-came to the College to inspect these alterations,
-and he was followed later by James I. These visits
-are commemorated by the statues of James, his
-wife, and Charles placed on the west side of the
-Great Gate. The king was so pleased with his
-entertainment that he repeated his visit on three
-subsequent occasions. Of Nevile, one of his contemporaries
-wrote, “He never had his like for a
-splendid courteous and bounteous gentleman,”
-and the College still gratefully honours his memory.
-He was trusted and esteemed by Elizabeth, and
-when dying she selected him to carry to Scotland
-the fateful letter in which she nominated James I
-to succeed her. If you go into the dining room of
-the lodge you will see Nevile’s portrait, hung in the
-place of honour over the mantelpiece, representing
-him as holding this letter in one hand.</p>
-
-<p><span class="parnumber">10.</span> You must not think that under Nevile’s
-rule the energies of the College were wholly directed
-to material ends. In a memorandum of 1607 on
-the use of college emoluments for students, he
-was able to say that of the higher church officials
-of the day, eleven deans, seven bishops, and the two
-archbishops, were drawn from Trinity. In academic
-distinctions, in legal appointments, and in
-statesmanship its records were equally satisfactory:
-so the College was worthily maintaining its tradition
-<a name="png.177" id="png.177" href="#png.177"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>169<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>of service in church and state. Under his immediate
-successors the College entered on a period of steady
-prosperity. In the next generation, however, the
-shadows of the civil disturbances of the seventeenth
-century began to fall; theological disputes increased,
-scholarship in other subjects received but scanty
-attention, and a general slackness in intellectual
-pursuits was visible, though it is fair to say that
-among the students of the time were three or four
-who later deservedly acquired reputation as poets.
-Among the latter I particularize George Herbert,
-Abraham Cowley, and Andrew Marvell; Dryden
-entered a few years later.</p>
-
-<p><span class="parnumber">11.</span> On the outbreak of civil war the town was
-occupied by the parliamentary forces, troops were
-quartered in the College, and a good deal of damage
-done to the fabric. In 1644 a large number of the
-fellows were expelled, their places being filled by
-zealots of but slight education. It may be put to
-the credit of a few who were left, notably Duport
-and Ray, that in this time of stress they devoted
-themselves to maintaining the standard of scholarship.
-On the restoration such of the expelled
-fellows as were still alive and unmarried resumed
-office. They decided that there should be no retaliations,
-and that all those nominated to fellowships
-under the commonwealth should be allowed
-to remain, provided only they did not preach in
-<a name="png.178" id="png.178" href="#png.178"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>170<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>the chapel unless they were members of the Church
-of England: that was a noble reply to the wrongs
-suffered.</p>
-
-<p><span class="parnumber">12.</span> The College took pride in resuming at once
-its position in the world of letters and science, and
-the following years are famous for the work of Pearson
-and Barrow, two great divines of the time, and
-above all of Isaac Newton. The influence of the
-last-named philosopher on the studies and intellectual
-life of Cambridge was far reaching. His
-discoveries in pure mathematics, mechanics, physics,
-and dynamical astronomy were of the utmost importance,
-and made Cambridge the centre of
-mathematical work in England. I will show you
-to-morrow the rooms he occupied and in which he
-wrote his famous <cite>Principia</cite>. The staircase on
-which these rooms are situated has had other distinguished
-occupants: the rooms on the ground floor
-on the right-hand side on entering it were occupied
-by Thackeray, and subsequently by the late
-astronomer-royal; those on the opposite side by
-Macaulay; the rooms on the first floor next the
-gate which once had been occupied by Isaac Newton,
-were used later by Lightfoot, the theologian,
-and Jebb, the Greek scholar; and those on the
-opposite side by Sir James Frazer, who has done so
-much to investigate the beliefs of primitive man.
-This is an interesting group of men, but in fact
-<a name="png.179" id="png.179" href="#png.179"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>171<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>there are few rooms in College which have not
-been inhabited at some time by those who have
-made their names famous.</p>
-
-<p><span class="parnumber">13.</span> Barrow held the mastership from 1673 to
-1677. On his initiative the College erected, on the
-west side of Nevile’s Court, the magnificent library
-which is now stored with literary treasures. This is
-another building to which we must pay attention to-morrow,
-and with it we may associate the adjoining
-chambers. From the close of the seventeenth century
-onwards we can describe life in College, especially
-among undergraduates, in considerable detail. The
-usual age of entry had risen to seventeen or eighteen.
-To the dons the College offered a comfortable home
-until an opportunity occurred of taking a college
-living, and it must be admitted that some were
-beginning to be content to consider it as nothing
-more. Materials for the history of the time and the
-following century have been published by Christopher
-Wordsworth.</p>
-
-<p><span class="parnumber">14.</span> Towards the close of the seventeenth century,
-the number of entries fell; this was attributed,
-and no doubt correctly, to the rise to office in College
-of those fellows appointed by mandatory letters from
-James II—he having filled every fellowship that became
-vacant during his reign. The history of the
-Society during the early years of the eighteenth
-century may be dismissed with the briefest notice,
-<a name="png.180" id="png.180" href="#png.180"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>172<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>for college energies were largely occupied by domestic
-disputes, and the number of residents still
-further decreased: these misfortunes were mainly
-due to the scandals inseparably associated with the
-name of Bentley. Bentley held the mastership
-from 1700 to 1742: his critical work can hardly be
-over-praised, but his career here was marked by
-malversations and many dishonourable transactions.
-The only scholars of the time I need mention
-are Cotes and Robert Smith who were mathematicians
-of repute. The latter of these scholars, when
-master, did something to restore orderly government
-and discipline.</p>
-
-<p><span class="parnumber">15.</span> It was not until near the close of the
-century that the College recovered from the taint of
-Bentley’s misrule, and scholarship again flourished
-within our walls: among the residents of the time
-was Porson, whose wit and conversation must have
-been delightful features of the High Table of his
-day—he lived in K 5, Great Court. Mathematics
-now afforded the chief avenue to distinction, but
-some acquaintance with classics and moral philosophy
-was also obligatory. This period is famous
-for the number of eminent judges educated in the
-College: the strict training in formal logic and geometry
-required for success in the mathematical tripos
-being especially favourable to legal work. Out of
-eleven such Trinity judges of the time the names
-<a name="png.181" id="png.181" href="#png.181"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>173<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>of Tindal, Pollock, Maule, Lyndhurst, Wensleydale,
-and Cranworth are still remembered. Socially,
-manners were generally coarser than at any time
-during the previous century or than later; though
-the revival of religion under the influence of Simeon
-did something to ameliorate matters.</p>
-
-<p><span class="parnumber">16.</span> Unlike its predecessor the nineteenth century
-was one of unbroken progress in college achievements
-and reputation. Near its commencement two
-internal changes of some importance were introduced
-in the imposition of an entrance examination
-test and of a limit to the number of those admitted.
-None the less our numbers increased, and in
-1823–25, another court (the New Court) was built on
-the south side of that erected by Nevile. At this
-time, conspicuous among the resident fellows were
-Sedgwick the geologist, Peacock the mathematician,
-Scholefield, Hare, and Thirlwall, Macaulay the historian,
-and Airy the astronomer: it would be difficult
-to exaggerate their influence on the intellectual life
-of the College and University. The undergraduate
-society a few years later also numbered a group of
-men of exceptional power, notably Trench afterwards
-archbishop of Dublin, Thackeray, Fitzgerald,
-Monckton Milnes (Lord Houghton), Spedding, Arthur
-Hallam, Kinglake the historian, the three Tennysons
-(Alfred, Charles, and Frederick), and Thompson;
-while a little later came Alford, Lushington, Grote,
-<a name="png.182" id="png.182" href="#png.182"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>174<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>Tom Taylor, Burnand, and Francis Galton. Materials
-left by these men, and books like J. M. F. Wright’s
-<cite>Alma Mater</cite>, C. A. Bristed’s <cite>Five years in an English
-University</cite>, Leslie Stephen’s <cite>Sketches from Cambridge
-by a Don</cite>, and W. Everett’s <cite>On the Cam</cite>, give us full
-information of college life during the middle of the
-century. In connection with the social life of the
-early half of the nineteenth century I should note
-that athletic clubs now began to be formed—the
-First Trinity Boat Club, constituted in 1825, being
-the earliest. These societies led to the formulation
-of definite rules for various forms of sport, and to
-much more attention being paid to out-door games.
-The subsequent growth of organized recreations of
-this kind, increasingly developed in recent years, will
-strike the future historian as one of the outstanding
-features of the last century.</p>
-
-<p><span class="parnumber">17.</span> In 1840 Whewell was appointed master.
-He was of commanding abilities and exercised extraordinary
-influence: to him more than to any other
-single individual is due that development of scientific
-studies at Cambridge which has been so marked in
-the recent history of the University. Under him, the
-prince of Wales, afterwards Edward VII, was entered
-at the College, and later showed his appreciation of
-its influence by sending his eldest son, the duke of
-Clarence, here. Whewell erected at his own cost the
-two courts on the east side of Trinity Street, the
-<a name="png.183" id="png.183" href="#png.183"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>175<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>rents being used to encourage the study of International
-Law in the University. During his mastership
-the old order began to crumble, and new ideals
-of education, study, and research arose. The Elizabethan
-statutes were replaced by transitional statutes
-in 1844 and 1861, and these in turn were replaced
-by others in 1882, under which the College is now
-governed.</p>
-
-<p><span class="parnumber">18.</span> Whewell died in 1866, and was succeeded as
-master by Thompson, and he in 1886 by Butler.
-With their masterships we come to the affairs of to-day.
-The 1882 statutes opened a new chapter in our
-history; restrictions on the marriage of fellows were
-removed, and successful teachers thus encouraged to
-remain in residence; incidentally, this created a new
-social atmosphere. In this and other ways the conditions
-of academic life were considerably changed.
-We need not, however, shun a comparison with
-older times: if you want to see how freely Trinity
-during the late Victorian period spent itself in the
-public service look down any list of judges, bishops,
-statesmen, colonial governors, and civil servants of
-the time, and in all you will find many Trinity men
-conspicuous. Confining ourselves strictly to academic
-work in Cambridge and to those who have now [1906]
-passed away, I may mention the names of Clerk
-Maxwell in physics, of Cayley in mathematics, of
-Munro and Jebb in classics, of Thompson in Greek
-<a name="png.184" id="png.184" href="#png.184"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>176<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>philosophy, of Sidgwick in ethics, and of Westcott,
-Lightfoot, and Hort in theology: all of these were
-fellows of the College, and professors in the University.</p>
-
-<p><span class="parnumber">19.</span> This is a bare summary of a complex story.
-Of the spirit that actuates the College, of all that
-makes it a living Society, I have said little. In
-truth, these are incapable of analysis. The charm
-that the place perennially exercises on those who,
-generation after generation, make it their home, the
-affection it inspires, are intangible: they exist, there
-are but few members of the House who have not
-felt them, and perhaps that is all I need say on this
-aspect of our history.</p>
-
-
-<div class="footnotes">
-<p><a class="parnumber" href="#fna29" id="fn29" name="fn29" title="Back">29</a> A paper read to a party of north-country students visiting the
-College in 1906.</p>
-
-<p><a class="parnumber" href="#fna30" id="fn30" name="fn30" title="Back">30</a> On some of the items in Whitgift’s tutorial ledgers, see above,
-chapter ii, pp. 36–39: the bills are printed at length in volumes 32
-and 33 of the <cite>British Magazine</cite>, 1847, 1848. Other information on
-the daily life of students of the time is given in the statutes of
-1560. An interesting list of the outfit and furniture in the rooms
-of a fellow-commoner in 1577 was printed by C. H. Cooper, <cite>Annals
-of Cambridge</cite>, vol. <span class="allsc">II</span>, pp. 352–356.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-
-
-<div class="partpage">
-<big><a name="png.185" id="png.185" href="#png.185"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>177<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>PART II.<br
- /><span class="h2">Concerning the University.</span></big>
-</div>
-
-
-
-<div class="chap">
-
-<h2 title="XI. The Beginnings of the Medieval University"><a name="png.187" id="png.187" href="#png.187"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>179<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>CHAPTER XI.<br
- /><small>THE BEGINNINGS OF THE MEDIEVAL UNIVERSITY.</small></h2>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="allsc">The</span> problems connected with the beginnings of
-the University of Cambridge and the conditions
-of life in its early days have always interested
-me. Much is uncertain and open to various readings<sup class="fn"><a href="#fn31" id="fna31" name="fna31">31</a></sup>,
-but the following is a summary of the story,
-as it appears to me.</p>
-
-<p>First, as to the site of the University. About the
-end of the eleventh century, Cambridge was little
-more than a village concentrated round St Peter’s
-church, having separate hamlets in its vicinity,
-one near St Benet’s church and the other at Newnham:
-at that time there was nothing to suggest the
-likelihood of its being chosen by students as a place
-where they might live and work in security. During
-the next century, however, it became of considerable
-importance. This was due to several causes.
-The chief of these were the castle erected in it by
-William the Conqueror to overawe the fen-men; its
-geographical location which gave it command of the
-<a name="png.188" id="png.188" href="#png.188"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>180<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>river passage by which most of the traffic between
-the midlands and the counties of Norfolk and Suffolk
-went; its position as a port of entry for small sea-going
-vessels coming from Lynn, of which a relic still
-survives in a bonded warehouse on the banks of the
-Cam; its vicinity to Sturbridge common on which
-came to be held one of the chief annual fairs in the
-kingdom; and lastly the establishment here of the
-large monastic Houses of the Augustin Canons, of
-the Brethren of St John’s Hospital, and of the Nuns of
-St Rhadegund: it would seem also that it became<sup class="fn"><a href="#fn32" id="fna32" name="fna32">32</a></sup>,
-maybe under the authority of the secular canons of
-St Giles, the seat of a grammar-school or schools.
-By 1200 the town had spread from castle-end to
-where Christ’s, Peterhouse, and Queens’ now stand,
-and along the east side of the river there were
-numerous small wharves, locally known as hythes.
-The writs of Henry I and Henry II and the charter
-of John bear witness to its importance in their reigns,
-but later this tended to diminish relatively to other
-towns.</p>
-
-<p>The Universities of Cambridge and Oxford
-were initiated near the end of the twelfth century,
-both arising in towns free from disorder and where
-accommodation for students was obtainable. It
-was a time when men of scholarly tastes, especially
-<a name="png.189" id="png.189" href="#png.189"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>181<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>those resident in religious houses, were conscious
-of their ignorance of recent developments in theology
-as set out by Peter Lombard and in canon law,
-and were keen to study these subjects and scholastic
-logic. Schools to meet these needs arose in Cambridge
-and Oxford and became permanent. Like
-centres of instruction were established in other
-places, but for one reason or another did not survive
-long as degree-granting corporations.</p>
-
-<p>It is not known whether the University of
-Cambridge began with a few teachers taking up
-their residence in the town, giving instruction, and
-attracting students and other teachers, or whether
-it started ready-made by a migration of a body of
-discontented teachers and students from some existing
-school. I believe the former view to be
-correct. If so, we may reasonably assume that a
-considerable proportion of the earliest adult students
-were previously living in monastic houses
-here or in the neighbouring fenland monasteries at
-Ely, Peterborough, or Croyland. It has been suggested
-that at first the lectures were given in the
-local grammar-schools: this is probable, and would
-fit in with the secular organization of the University
-and the fact that boys learning Latin grammar
-(glomerels) were reckoned among its students. Probably
-the movement was started with the sanction
-and direct encouragement of the bishop of Ely,
-<a name="png.190" id="png.190" href="#png.190"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>182<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>certainly it was not directly monastic, and more
-likely the teachers were secular clerks and not
-monks. I conjecture that at first the lecturers were
-strangers to the locality, but this in no way implies
-that a fragment of another university, students
-as well as teachers, migrated here as an organized
-body.</p>
-
-<p>Whatever the origin of the University, its members
-organized themselves for mutual aid and protection
-as a <i>Studium</i> on the model of that at Paris,
-with which it seems later to have been frequently
-in touch. If we may trust ancient traditions quoted
-by Bulaeus and Peacock, the early University had
-also some connection with the studium of Orleans:
-this is possible but speculative. Bologna represented
-another type of organization which, however, was
-not adopted anywhere in England. The University
-of Cambridge existed in working order in 1209, and
-in my opinion its origin may be safely assigned to
-some time in the previous twenty years.</p>
-
-<p>Of its external history during the century following
-its organization we know little: we read of
-its chancellor in 1225, of French students coming
-to it in 1229, of special privileges conferred by the
-crown in 1231 and 1251, of its recognition by the
-pope in 1233, and finally of a papal grant in 1318—exceptional
-in extent—of all rights which were or
-could be enjoyed by any university in Christendom.
-<a name="png.191" id="png.191" href="#png.191"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>183<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>Oxford went through somewhat similar stages. The
-two universities were closely connected, and by 1333
-their position had become so firmly established that
-they agreed not to recognize any other studium in
-the kingdom, and in fact after that year no other
-university was established in England until less than
-a century ago.</p>
-
-<p>Originally the main source of university authority
-was the body of active teachers (regents)
-acting with the concurrence of the chancellor who
-represented the bishop of Ely; their grouping in
-faculties was an obvious development, and probably
-took place early in the thirteenth century. Resident
-graduates who had ceased to teach (non-regents)
-were allowed a voice on matters of property,
-rights, and privileges. The establishment of
-monasteries and colleges with administrative officers
-tended to retain in residence graduates who were
-not lecturing; through them the house of non-regents
-grew in power, and finally in many questions
-obtained concurrent jurisdiction with that of
-the regents—the result was a very complex constitution.
-At first the University had no buildings of its
-own; the regent and non-regent houses met in
-St Benet’s or St Mary’s church, and lectures were
-given wherever accommodation could be obtained.
-After this digression I return to the position of the
-students in the early University.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.192" id="png.192" href="#png.192"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>184<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>Numerous monasteries were established in Cambridge
-during the thirteenth century, and from this
-I infer that the number of members of the religious
-Orders studying in the University steadily
-increased during that century. Of monastic Houses
-in Cambridge previous to the foundation of the
-University I have already mentioned those of the
-Augustin Canons, founded in connection with St
-Giles’ church, about 1092, and moved in 1112 to
-Barnwell where their priory became in time one
-of the largest conventual buildings in England,
-and of the Austin Brethren of Frost’s or St John’s
-Hospital, built about 1135 on ground now occupied
-by St John’s College. Shortly after the organization
-of a studium in the town, five important Orders
-established Houses here. These were the Franciscan
-or Grey Friars, who, from their first home
-situated near the present Divinity Schools and used
-from 1224 to 1294, removed in 1294 to a site now
-occupied by Sidney Sussex College, where their
-church was one of the conspicuous architectural
-features of medieval Cambridge; the Dominican or
-Black Friars, who built in 1274 on ground now
-occupied by Emmanuel College; the Carmelite or
-White Friars, who, having previously lived in
-houses at Chesterton and Newnham, removed in
-1290 to a site now occupied by Queens’ and King’s
-Colleges; the Augustine Friars, who built, about
-<a name="png.193" id="png.193" href="#png.193"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>185<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>1290, a home on or near ground now occupied
-by the university examination halls and lecture
-rooms, in the basement of which some fragments
-of the old friary may be found; and the Sempringham
-or White Canons, who about 1290 obtained
-possession of St Edmund’s Priory which had been
-built before 1278 near the Trumpington Gate. The
-Houses of the Bethlehem Friars, opened in 1257,
-of the Friars of the Sack, opened in 1258, and of
-the Friars of St Mary, opened in 1273, were suppressed
-in 1307, and probably were never important
-foundations. I believe that the presence in Cambridge
-of these great establishments, always housing
-a certain number of students, gave stability to the
-nascent University, and tended to prevent its dissipation
-in times of stress: this is a point in our early
-history which is sometimes overlooked. Students
-from Houses of the Benedictine or Black Monks
-were also sent to Cambridge, but until 1428 they
-seem to have had no special home of their own: in
-that year the Order built for them a hostel known
-as Buckingham House which now forms part of
-the first court of Magdalene College.</p>
-
-<p>These conventual Houses were outside town
-and university authority, but their wealth and
-position made them influential. Striking evidence
-of this is afforded by the facts that they secured to
-their members the right to proceed direct to degrees
-<a name="png.194" id="png.194" href="#png.194"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>186<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>in divinity without graduating in arts—a privilege
-not granted to students in law or medicine—and that
-at every congregation of the University the senior
-religious doctor present could veto the offer of any
-grace and so block all business. These privileges
-suggest that monastic students were the dominant
-class in the early days of the University. They were,
-however, naturally distrusted by other students, for
-admittedly they owed allegiance to outside bodies,
-and no man can serve two masters. By the end of
-the thirteenth century the monastic movement had
-spent its force, and thenceforth the religious students
-took a constantly decreasing share in university
-activities; of course they disappeared at the reformation,
-when the monasteries throughout the country
-were suppressed.</p>
-
-<p>I come next to the question of the secular
-students in arts, most or all of whom would be clerks
-in major or minor orders. Rejecting the migration
-theory of the origin of the University, I do not suppose
-that in its earliest days these secular students
-were numerous, for the vicinity cannot have provided
-many such men, but as soon as the University
-acquired reputation as a centre of higher teaching
-they would be attracted to it from a wide area, and
-their numbers would be increased by many glomerels
-who would continue their course as students
-in arts. In the course of the thirteenth century
-<a name="png.195" id="png.195" href="#png.195"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>187<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>these secular students became strong enough to
-assert themselves against the position and privileges
-assumed by the religious students, and after
-that century graces were constantly passed (<i>ex. gr.</i>
-in 1303) to prevent monastic interference in academic
-affairs, or (as in 1369) to limit the number of
-monastic graduates.</p>
-
-<p>A non-graduate student in arts was, before
-admission, expected to know Latin, and, on admission,
-apprenticed to a master or doctor who
-acted as a tutor in scholastic matters: in 1276 this
-system of apprenticeship was made compulsory.
-The full medieval course lasted several years.
-Students who entered as boys stayed, if they took
-the full course, till they were grown men, gradually
-taking up teaching as part of their course of study.
-The bachelors may have assisted in the education of
-the younger arts students and of the glomerels who
-are mentioned below, but normally instruction in
-the arts course was given by masters, and in the
-higher faculties by doctors. The degree of master
-was a license to teach, and newly created masters
-were required to teach and to reside for two years
-(or later at least one year) for that purpose. This
-pre-reformation scheme is in marked contrast to
-the modern plan where the students enter as young
-men, all of about the same age, with a normal
-course lasting three years or so, and with their
-<a name="png.196" id="png.196" href="#png.196"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>188<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>studies sharply differentiated from those of a limited
-number of post-graduate and research students
-and of a separate body of teachers. Mullinger estimated
-that during the medieval period the number
-of resident regents varied from one hundred to two
-hundred, and the number of students (apparently
-exclusive of monastic students) never exceeded two
-thousand of whom the great majority were of
-humble birth; no doubt there were wide variations
-in the numbers at different times.</p>
-
-<p>The history of Guilds in the University cannot
-be given with any certainty. It may be that in
-the early years of the University most secular students
-and teachers from any particular locality were
-associated together as a guild, and perhaps every
-student on arrival was expected to join his local guild,
-and through it become a member of the University.
-The guilds imposed on their members definite rules
-for their conduct in relation to one another, and
-enforced such regulations by means of money fines,
-refusal of assistance, and in extreme cases expulsion.
-The relations between the members of different
-guilds were, however, often unfriendly or worse;
-in particular there was constant friction between
-the guilds connected with localities north and south
-of the Trent. It has been suggested that at one
-time one of the proctors represented the cis-trentine
-guilds and the other the trans-trentine guilds: this
-<a name="png.197" id="png.197" href="#png.197"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>189<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>seems to have been the case at Oxford, but there is
-no evidence of such a custom at Cambridge where,
-according to Peacock, these trentine disputes were
-less violent than at the sister University.</p>
-
-<p>We may take it that the master to whom
-a secular non-graduate student was apprenticed
-looked after his studies, and probably officers of
-the guild to which he belonged looked after him
-when sick or maltreated. In other matters, however,
-he was left to take care of himself, and thus was
-constantly liable to extortion. To meet this evil,
-the University early obtained powers enabling it to
-settle, without consulting the citizens, various local
-matters such as the prices of lodging and food.</p>
-
-<p>Besides students in arts there was also another
-class of secular students consisting of boys,
-known as glomerels (grammarians) and rhetoricians,
-who were under a special officer of the University
-called the master of glomery. I conjecture that
-originally these were the boys at the local grammar-schools,
-that after the foundation of the University
-such boys were regularly treated as glomerel members
-of it, and that for this reason we hear nothing
-more of the local grammar-schools which had at
-first supplied them: most students of this type must
-have lived at home and come from the town or immediate
-neighbourhood. I suppose that in later
-times the number of glomerels was swollen by the
-<a name="png.198" id="png.198" href="#png.198"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>190<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>entry among them of students who had come to
-Cambridge, and were found to be ignorant of Latin
-grammar, and so inadmissible to the arts faculty.</p>
-
-<p>The chief study of a glomerel was Latin grammar,
-and on attaining reasonable proficiency in it he
-could change over to the arts faculty if he wished.
-If a student continued in the glomerel faculty, the
-degree of master in grammar (or rhetoric) was open
-to him, but in processions of the University, such
-graduates took a lower place than students in arts,
-and their inferior position was emphasized by a
-statute which, while regulating the attendance of
-regents at the funeral of a regent master or student
-in arts, stated that graduates and scholars in grammar
-were not entitled to such recognition—<i xml:lang="lat" lang="lat">Illis
-tantummodo exceptis, qui artem solam docent vel
-audiunt grammaticam, ad quorum exequias nisi ex
-devotione non veniant supradicti</i>.</p>
-
-<p>The ceremony of graduation in grammar has
-often been described: it involved the beating openly
-in the schools of a shrewd boy obtained by the university
-officers for the purpose, and the presentation
-to the new master of a ferule: this suggests that the
-course was regarded as a training for a schoolmaster’s
-career, it also facilitated admission to
-orders. As time passed, the glomerels, originally
-forming a large and important section of the University
-here and at Oxford, decreased in numbers,
-<a name="png.199" id="png.199" href="#png.199"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>191<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>and in the latter half of the fifteenth century they
-ceased to be of much importance in academic life.
-The faculty of rhetoric was constituted on similar
-lines to that of grammar, and practically treated as
-part of it. The last degrees in rhetoric and grammar
-of which we have notice were conferred in 1493
-and 1548 respectively: probably the office of master
-of glomery fell into disuse about the beginning of
-the sixteenth century, though it is possible that it
-was held by Sir John Cheke as late as 1547.</p>
-
-<p>The evils consequent on allowing inexperienced
-students, some of whom were quite young, to fend
-for themselves in all matters outside the schools
-were obvious, and it was not long before steps were
-taken to improve matters by the foundation of
-colleges and the licensing of private hostels.</p>
-
-<p>Colleges were designed for selected scholars
-partly to provide assistance for them, and partly
-to protect them from pressure to join a monastic
-Order: the advantages offered being shelter,
-a common sitting room properly warmed, regular
-meals, the use of books, and general supervision.
-The earliest attempt to provide aid and protection
-of this kind for certain scholars was made, about
-1275, by Hugh de Balsham, who arranged for their
-reception as members of Frost’s Hospital; but there
-were constant quarrels between the two sides of
-the House, and in 1284 he dissolved the union and
-<a name="png.200" id="png.200" href="#png.200"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>192<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>moved the secular students to a building (Peterhouse)
-of their own. Other similar foundations were soon
-created: the King’s Scholars (later incorporated as
-King’s Hall) in 1317, Michael-House in 1324, Clare
-in 1325, Pembroke in 1347, Gonville in 1348, Trinity
-Hall in 1350, and Corpus Christi in 1352. Every new
-college that was established provided fresh definite
-ties with the locality, and rendered less likely the
-break-up of the University and the scattering of its
-members—a serious risk to which in early days it
-was always subject. Then came an interval of nearly
-a hundred years, but in the fifteenth century the
-collegiate movement recommenced, and we have
-the foundation of God’s House in 1439, of King’s in
-1441, of Queens’ in 1448 and 1465, of St Catharine’s
-in 1473, and of Jesus in 1496. In the sixteenth
-century we have the larger and more ambitious
-foundations of Christ’s in 1505, St John’s in 1511,
-Magdalene in 1519, Trinity in 1546, Emmanuel in
-1584, and Sidney Sussex in 1596.</p>
-
-<p>The colleges were intended for picked scholars.
-In the course of the fourteenth century the problem
-of the care of other students was taken up, and they
-were forbidden to live in lodgings selected by themselves
-and under no external supervision. To provide
-for them, the University licensed private hostels
-which were managed by masters of arts on lines
-somewhat similar to boarding houses in public schools
-<a name="png.201" id="png.201" href="#png.201"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>193<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>to-day. Thenceforth throughout the middle ages the
-majority of undergraduates resided in these hostels.
-Caius gave the names and sites of twenty-seven private
-hostels which he had known and all of which
-closed their doors during his life, the last in 1540:
-Fuller enumerated thirty-four hostels and two “inns”
-while his editor mentioned fourteen other hostels,
-but some of these certainly ought not to be included
-under the term. Perhaps we may say that the
-number open at anyone time rarely exceeded thirty
-or fell short of twenty: some were cheap, some expensive;
-some were well managed, others not so.
-After the development of these hostels the guilds
-decreased in importance, and finally disappeared.</p>
-
-<p>With the establishment of colleges and private
-hostels the University was fairly launched on its
-career in a form which lasted till the middle half of
-the sixteenth century. My object was to state how,
-in my opinion, it originally took shape, and I do not
-propose here to follow its history further.</p>
-
-
-<div class="footnotes">
-<p><a class="parnumber" href="#fna31" id="fn31" name="fn31" title="Back">31</a> Most of the known facts are given in Mullinger’s excellent
-histories, Peacock’s <cite>Observations on the Statutes</cite>, and Rashdall’s
-<cite>Universities of Europe in the Middle Ages</cite>—but all the views of the
-last-named writer are not universally accepted.</p>
-
-<p><a class="parnumber" href="#fna32" id="fn32" name="fn32" title="Back">32</a> See <i>passim</i> G. Peacock, <cite>Observations on the Statutes</cite>, London,
-1841, p. xxxv.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="chap">
-
-<h2 title="XII. Discipline"><a name="png.202" id="png.202" href="#png.202"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>194<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>CHAPTER XII.<br
- /><small>DISCIPLINE.</small></h2>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="allsc">This</span> paper contains some extracts from my notebooks
-on the way in which university and college
-discipline was maintained in former days at
-Cambridge. The records on the subject are scanty,
-but I think the facts are worth putting together in
-a connected form. There is no reason to suppose
-that the practices of different colleges varied materially,
-and if in the later period I have taken examples
-from the records of Trinity it is only because
-I have had easier access to them.</p>
-
-<p>In the history of university discipline and social
-customs abrupt changes are not to be expected, and
-none such are noticeable in the transition from the
-medieval period, <i>circ.</i> 1200 to 1525, through the
-renaissance, <i>circ.</i> 1525 to 1640, and the period of
-stagnation, <i>circ.</i> 1660 to 1820, to the present age
-of reconstruction and extension. I begin naturally
-with discipline in medieval Cambridge.</p>
-
-<p>In the early days of the University the students
-lodged in the town and were of all ages from twelve
-or thirteen upwards. Except in strictly academic
-matters, there was little or no supervision of their
-conduct, and, outside the schools, grave disorders
-<a name="png.203" id="png.203" href="#png.203"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>195<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>were common; the University, however, claimed
-power, when it chose, to take cognizance of all
-offences contrary to good manners, and at any rate
-in later days did so in serious cases. The regulations
-at Cambridge and Oxford were so similar that
-we may fairly draw illustrations from either University,
-and the records of the chancellor’s court at
-Oxford in the fifteenth century show that fines,
-imprisonment, and, in extreme cases, expulsion
-were customary penalties for serious offences against
-university regulations and customs. I have no
-doubt that earlier records, if extant, would be of
-the same general character.</p>
-
-<p>The first college to be founded at Cambridge was
-Peterhouse which took its final form in 1284, and
-during the next century several other similar Houses
-were established: these societies were intended for
-selected scholars. The problem of the control of
-other students was met in the course of the fourteenth
-century by preventing them from living in private
-lodgings chosen by themselves, and thenceforth,
-throughout the middle ages, those who came from a
-distance were generally required to reside in private
-hostels run by masters of arts on lines somewhat
-similar to boarding houses in public schools to-day.
-Besides the lay and secular students accommodated
-in colleges, private hostels, and at their homes, there
-were also in the medieval University a considerable
-<a name="png.204" id="png.204" href="#png.204"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>196<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>number of “religious” students who were housed
-in monasteries or monastic hostels. Some of the
-colleges in later medieval times received as paying
-members a few wealthy pensioners, parochial priests
-in middle life, and even monks from distant convents,
-but probably the number of such favoured
-students was never large. With the establishment
-of colleges and the organization of private hostels
-discipline improved; inside their walls as well as in
-the monastic hostels it is probable that order was
-well maintained, but outside them, at least among
-the students at private hostels, discipline was left to
-the university authorities who did little or nothing
-in the matter.</p>
-
-<p>The colleges took seriously their responsibilities
-for discipline, and all things contrary to good manners
-and morals were prohibited. For the gravest
-offences, such as contumacy, crimes of violence, and
-heresy, expulsion was usually ordered. Among less
-serious delinquencies, explicitly forbidden and therefore
-we may assume not unknown, were bringing
-strangers into the house, sleeping out, and absence
-without leave; using insulting language, drunkenness,
-gambling, and frequenting taverns; keeping
-company with loose women; throwing missiles and
-carrying arms; and the keeping of dogs, hawks,
-falcons, and ferrets. In the regulations of many colleges,
-a course of study was indicated, and directions
-<a name="png.205" id="png.205" href="#png.205"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>197<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>given that idleness was to be punished. Regular
-attendance at religious exercises was assumed, and
-was explicitly directed on certain occasions: I suppose
-that students performed such duties without
-much external pressure, and I know no record
-of the infliction of any penalty in early times for
-non-attendance. In the middle ages Latin was
-the language generally enforced, though occasionally
-French was permitted; this remained the rule
-until the seventeenth century. Conversation during
-dinner and supper was forbidden in many colleges,
-and of course was impossible in those cases where
-some book was then read aloud. At King’s College,
-jumping and ball throwing, and at Clare College
-meetings in bedrooms for feasting and talking were
-also forbidden. At a somewhat later date Caius
-ordered his students to be in bed by eight o’clock
-at night, but they made up for this by rising
-very early in the morning. In general the punishment
-for minor faults was left to the discretion
-of the authorities. This was only reasonable, for
-a medieval college was a mixed community of
-lads and men, the members being of all ages from
-about fourteen or fifteen upwards; and rules enforced
-on boys of fourteen could not be applied
-to men of twenty-three or twenty-four, who were
-in fact already taking part in the teaching of the
-junior scholars.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.206" id="png.206" href="#png.206"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>198<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>For all members, the ultimate penalty for the
-gravest offences was expulsion. For less serious
-misconduct, fines, restrictions on the food supplied,
-impositions, and confinement within the walls, are
-believed to have been common penalties, at any
-rate for adolescents; but, as I explain below, I think
-that corporal punishment was constantly inflicted
-on non-adults in lieu of a fine, which indeed boys
-would have had considerable difficulty in paying.
-As far as the younger students and the bachelors
-at colleges were concerned the extant regulations in
-regard to their exercises, amusements, incomings
-and outgoings, suggest that they were treated much
-like the junior and senior boys in a rather strict
-public school in the first half of the nineteenth
-century; and perhaps the senior graduate members
-were treated somewhat like residents in colleges at
-the same period.</p>
-
-<p>Membership of a college was a privilege confined,
-in general, to scholars specially nominated, and no
-doubt the standards of work and discipline there
-were higher than in the private hostels. Naturally
-we know less of life in these hostels, but it is likely
-that disciplinary rules were originally made by or
-with the approval of the elder residents, and that the
-normal discipline in them was of the same general
-character as that exercised in colleges, though, as
-the members paid for themselves, money fines were
-<a name="png.207" id="png.207" href="#png.207"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>199<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>possible and usual penalties, especially in the case
-of the older members. There must have been more
-variety in the discipline of hostels than of colleges,
-and we may safely say that some hostels were well
-conducted, others not so.</p>
-
-<p>It is possible that finally the University claimed
-the right to examine and supervise the internal regulations
-of the hostels. A set of rules, thus enforced on
-an unendowed hall at Oxford in the fifteenth century,
-has been discovered and printed by Rashdall: they do
-not differ much from those usual at a college, except
-that some of the penalties specified are pecuniary,
-and that the principal was given explicit permission,
-if he wished, to flog a student, even though
-the lad’s own master (<i>i.e.</i> the master to whom he
-had been apprenticed) had certified that he had
-already corrected him or was willing to do so.</p>
-
-<p>Was corporal punishment commonly used in
-medieval times? Until recently it was accepted
-without argument that this was the case; and certainly
-in the fifteenth century and later when we
-get detailed information on the subject, the younger
-students were subject to it. Rashdall, however, has
-argued that the absence of its mention in earlier
-times implies that the birch was unknown in the
-ordinary university regulations till towards the end
-of the sixteenth century or later, though he admits
-in various places that glomerels were liable to it: his
-<a name="png.208" id="png.208" href="#png.208"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>200<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>authority is accepted by Rait. It is true that in the
-statutes given in the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries,
-birching is not mentioned explicitly, but, since
-the punishments for petty offences are rarely specified
-in detail, this proves nothing. In the fifteenth century
-corporal punishment is mentioned as a recognized
-penalty. For instance, the statutes given by
-Henry VI to King’s College, Cambridge, prescribed
-that scholars and young fellows might be punished
-by stripes, and a year or two later, the statutes of
-Magdalen College, Oxford, directed that the demies
-should be subject to flogging. In later regulations
-of various colleges, to some of which I refer below,
-whipping is mentioned as a recognized punishment,
-but often as one to which only the younger students
-were liable.</p>
-
-<p>I have already argued that in medieval colleges
-discipline must have varied according to the age
-of the offender, and I conjecture that adults were
-never regularly subject to corporal punishment, but
-that boys were always so, and that the use of the
-rod was regarded as needing no explicit statutable
-authority. Its employment was no strange thing,
-for adult offenders against the law, apprentices, and
-boys at school, were all flogged at times. And what
-else, it has been well asked, could the authorities
-do with a troublesome boy of fourteen? In general
-a fine was impossible for he had no pocket-money.
-<a name="png.209" id="png.209" href="#png.209"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>201<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>Most of the colleges were designed for poor scholars,
-and in such foundations usually the allowance for
-commons was so small that without risk to health
-any reduction for more than a day or two was
-difficult; little leisure was allowed for recreation
-or exercise, and thus heavy impositions were impossible;
-and confinement to the precincts of the
-House was so common that gating was no punishment.
-A lad of seventeen or eighteen had more
-liberty and privileges, and in general on reaching
-that age was as safe from the chance of corporal
-punishment as was a boy of the same age at a public
-school fifty years ago.</p>
-
-<p>Somewhat similar arguments apply to the private
-hostels, and the regulations of an unendowed hall at
-Oxford, to which I have already referred, show that
-the use of the rod or birch was recognized there. If as
-I suppose is likely, Clement Paston was at a private
-hostel, we have a definite instance of the similar use
-of the rod at Cambridge, for among the Paston letters
-is one dated 28 January 1458 from Dame Agnes
-Paston, about her boy, Clement, in which she says
-“prey Grenefeld to send me feythfully word by
-wrytyn who (how) Clement Paston hathe do his
-dever i lerning. And if he hathe nought do well,
-nor wyll nought amend, prey him that he wyll
-trewly belassch (<i>i.e.</i> flog) him tyll he wyll amend,
-and so ded the last Maystur and ye best, that ev’
-<a name="png.210" id="png.210" href="#png.210"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>202<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>he hadd at Cambrege.” Clement was born in 1442,
-so he was then fifteen years old.</p>
-
-<p>I asserted above that school-boys in the middle
-ages were liable to the birch or cane. I suppose this
-will not be questioned, but by way of parenthesis
-I add that this liability seems to have been a well-established
-practice for centuries. It goes back to
-classical times for in the schools of Rome the less
-serious offences were punished by the cane applied
-to the hand, and graver faults by the birch applied
-to the back; and there is a curious fresco at Herculaneum
-of the application of the latter to a boy,
-horsed by one schoolfellow and with his feet held by
-another. The royal whipping boys in the courts of
-Western Europe remind us that, at least vicariously,
-princes were subject to this discipline as well as
-commoners.</p>
-
-<p>In more recent times the deeds of Busby
-and Keate at Westminster and Eton respectively
-are preserved in tradition, while the reputation
-of Udall at an earlier time, <i>circ.</i> 1530, may be
-gathered from the remarks of Thomas Tusser, a
-choirboy at St Paul’s Cathedral, who subsequently
-went to Eton: Tusser says, “From Paul’s I went,
-to Eton sent, To learn straightways the Latin
-phrase Where fifty-three stripes giv’n to me, at
-once I had. For faults but small, or none at all,
-It came to pass thus beat I was.” The similar
-<a name="png.211" id="png.211" href="#png.211"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>203<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>vigour of Udall’s successor, Cox, is mentioned by
-Ascham. In short, the old saw: “Spare the rod,
-and spoil the child, Solomon said in accents mild,
-Be it boy or be it maid, Whip ’em and wallop ’em
-Solomon said” represented the current belief and
-practice of former days; though the dictum attributed
-to that king is stronger than the passage in
-Proverbs, xiii, 24 warrants.</p>
-
-<p>In the sixteenth century the colleges opened their
-doors to the admission of pensioners and fellow-commoners.
-Collegiate teaching and arrangements
-were superior to those of the private hostels, and
-before the middle of the century the latter had disappeared:
-their revival was rendered impossible by
-a regulation that membership of the University
-should be confined to those who were members of
-a college. Shortly afterwards it became the custom
-not to require residence for degrees after the baccalaureate,
-and thus a course limited to three or four
-years became usual for the average student. These
-changes were of far-reaching importance.</p>
-
-<p>In the course of this century new statutes were
-given to the University and colleges, and subsequently
-we possess records, fairly complete, of the
-domestic life of students. Early in the following
-century, the average age of entry began to rise, and
-before its close, it had become common for students
-to defer entry until about seventeen years old.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.212" id="png.212" href="#png.212"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>204<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>University decrees regulating the conduct of
-students in many matters now appear, notably one
-in 1595 by Goad, then vice-chancellor, which gives
-a summary of what was expected. Expulsion,
-suspension from degrees, and refusal of leave to
-graduate until after a specified time, were normal
-punishments for serious offences, for trivial misconduct
-fines are now constantly prescribed, and
-physical punishments for non-adults are also directed
-in many cases.</p>
-
-<p>In colleges, the Tudor statutes generally enjoined
-good conduct on all students. The regulations
-about the punishment of offences were mostly concerned
-with grave matters for which admonitions,
-and finally expulsions, were the recognized punishments.
-Penalties for the non-performance of religious
-exercises now appear: thus, at Christ’s
-College, Cambridge, and at Balliol College, Oxford,
-whipping was prescribed as a penalty for absence
-from chapel, though probably restricted to the
-younger students; so too at Peterhouse, students
-over eighteen who were absent from prayers were
-to be fined, while younger students so offending
-were to be deprived of dinner, and if persistent in
-their neglect flogged in hall.</p>
-
-<p>As in medieval times, the authorities were generally
-left a free hand in settling the regulations for
-the maintenance of normal discipline. Probably
-<a name="png.213" id="png.213" href="#png.213"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>205<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>fines, impositions, restrictions on the food supplied,
-and gatings continued to be ordinarily used. Reading
-the bible aloud at meal times in hall, dining apart on
-bread and water, and being deprived of commons,
-are definitely mentioned in the 1520 statutes of St
-John’s College, Cambridge, as possible penalties;
-similarly at Corpus Christi College, Oxford, being
-compelled to eat alone at a small table in the middle
-of the hall and restriction to bread and water are
-specified as suitable punishments.</p>
-
-<p>The use of the birch was now constantly prescribed,
-though probably in practice always confined
-to lads. Thus, at Christ’s College, Cambridge, a
-whipping for lads and a fine for adults; and at
-Brasenose, Oxford, a fine or a flogging, at the discretion
-of the principal, were statutable punishments
-for various faults, including at the latter College the
-making of odious comparisons in conversation. At
-other Houses too, for instance, at Corpus Christi,
-Oxford, Wolsey (Christ Church), Oxford, Trinity
-College, Cambridge, and Gonville and Caius, Cambridge,
-the use of the cane or birch is sanctioned
-in the case of lads. I have no doubt this was also
-the general rule in earlier days, and nothing in
-the Tudor codes indicates that any material change
-was made in the existing practice, but on the whole
-I conjecture that the regulations were more humane,
-and I am inclined to think, contrary to Rashdall’s
-<a name="png.214" id="png.214" href="#png.214"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>206<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>view, that discipline was less severe after the renaissance
-than before it. In colleges the deans were
-and are the chief officers responsible for discipline;
-in the University, the proctors.</p>
-
-<p>A part of the fifth chapter of the Trinity statutes
-of 1560 relating to the office of deans may be summarized
-as indicating what was then customary, or at
-any rate desired, in the matter of chapel attendance
-and in certain questions of petty discipline. The
-statute, which is in Latin, is to the following effect:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p>In every community regard should be paid to correctness
-of morals and general probity of life, accordingly there
-shall be two deans to give their sedulous attention to these
-objects; at least one of such deans shall be a bachelor of
-divinity and chosen from the eight senior fellows, and the
-other, a master of arts or a bachelor of divinity.</p>
-
-<p>The deans shall provide for the fitting performance of
-public worship; see that all fellows, scholars, pensioners,
-sizars, and subsizars attend on Saints’ days and Sundays at
-morning and evening prayers, the litany, the communion,
-and sermons; and see that the same persons are on other
-days regularly present at prayers between five and six o’clock
-in the morning. Every fellow who is absent shall be fined
-three half-pence, and if he comes in late or goes out early,
-one half-penny. The fine for a bachelor scholar who is absent
-shall be one penny, and for one who comes in late or goes
-out early, one half-penny. Every undergraduate scholar,
-and every pensioner, sizar, and subsizar who is absent shall,
-if his age exceeds eighteen years be fined one half-penny,
-and if he comes in late or goes out early, one farthing; but
-if such student has not attained this age, he shall be chastised
-<a name="png.215" id="png.215" href="#png.215"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>207<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>with rods in the hall on the following Friday. Those
-are to be deemed as coming late who at evening prayers
-arrive after the first psalm; at morning prayers, after the
-<cite xml:lang="lat" lang="lat">Venite</cite>; at the Litany, after the words <i>O Holy Blessed and
-Glorious Trinity</i>; and at the communion service after the
-recital of the commandments: anyone who, during service,
-remains in the antechapel is to be punished as if he had
-been absent.</p>
-
-<p>Each week on Friday, at seven o’clock in the evening,
-the deans shall chastise non-adult offenders. All scholars
-(bachelors excepted), pensioners, sizars, and subsizars shall
-be present during the infliction of such corporal punishment,
-and anyone who does not answer to his name when called,
-and does not stay until all the punishments are finished,
-shall, if an adult, be fined one penny, and if non-adult be
-flogged on the next day.</p>
-
-<p>Each week on Thursday, the deans shall appoint two
-monitors from among the bachelor scholars for noting
-offences of bachelors; and six monitors [from among the
-undergraduate scholars], two for noting offences of undergraduates
-at public worship, and four for noting those who
-fail to speak Latin: the monitors shall prepare lists of all
-who offend in these particulars. The deans shall also appoint
-each week six scholars and four sizars for service at the
-fellows’ table, and one sizar for the organ.</p>
-
-<p>In order to ensure the decorous celebration of public
-worship, the deans shall bring with them to the first vespers
-of every festival a written schedule of the duties of everyone
-concerned in that festival, and shall further appoint an inquisitor
-who shall remind everyone of the duty so assigned
-to him. Anyone who shall fail in such duty shall, if a non-adult,
-be whipt, and, if an adult, be fined fourpence.</p>
-
-<p>One half of all fines inflicted shall go to the College, the
-other half shall be kept by the deans.</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p><a name="png.216" id="png.216" href="#png.216"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>208<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>The Tudor statutes generally remained in force
-till the middle of the nineteenth century, though in
-time the practices of the colleges came to differ
-materially from what was there directed. Briefly we
-may say that in the sixteenth century the standard of
-medieval discipline and study sank; but in the early
-years of the seventeenth century things improved
-until the civil disturbances threw academic work
-into confusion. With the establishment of the
-commonwealth the age of entry rose, and thus the
-use of corporal and puerile punishments died out,
-and with the disappearance of boys as members of
-the University, rules intended only for young lads
-became obsolete and inoperative. Most of the students
-henceforth were adolescent. The few who
-were younger were dealt with like school-boys, but
-the comparison is rather with school-boys of recent
-years than with those of their own period.</p>
-
-<p>As far back as Sir Simon D’Ewes’s time—and
-he entered Cambridge in 1618—the majority of the
-students were regarded as responsible, and capable
-of conducting themselves rationally. They reflected
-the virtues and foibles of their time, but they were a
-select class, and compare favourably in manners and
-morals with their contemporaries elsewhere. Almost
-without exception they speak warmly of their
-development in college from lads to young men, of
-friendships formed with their elders as well as their
-<a name="png.217" id="png.217" href="#png.217"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>209<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>contemporaries, of the abiding influence of the place,
-and of their affection for it.</p>
-
-<p>From the restoration to the regency was a
-period of stagnation. Discipline deteriorated, and
-if we may trust contemporary accounts drunkenness
-and immorality were far from uncommon. No
-doubt there were always some residents who maintained
-high traditions and ideals, but on the whole
-the records of the social life prevalent then at Cambridge
-and Oxford make but sorry reading.</p>
-
-<p>The sixteenth century codes indicate lofty aims,
-but statutes and rules are not always observed
-literally, and it may be thought that those mentioned
-represented only old customs, perhaps already
-obsolete, or what was deemed desirable but was not
-enforced. It may be well then to turn to contemporary
-evidence, to regulations passed on specific
-occasions, and to records of definite punishments—though
-we can expect the latter to have been
-preserved only in grave cases, and cannot hope
-to learn from them much about discipline in petty
-matters.</p>
-
-<p>Contemporary evidence would serve us best if we
-could get it, but the diarists and letter-writers are
-mostly silent on the subject. From this, however,
-I conclude that generally the disciplinary regulations
-were thought sensible. Life in the University
-may have been hard and probably was so, but I do
-<a name="png.218" id="png.218" href="#png.218"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>210<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>not believe that discipline was unreasonable. All
-the evidence is to the contrary. Thus the above-mentioned
-Tusser, a student of no special brilliancy,
-who entered at Trinity Hall in the early half of the
-sixteenth century speaks thankfully of leaving
-school, and says: “To Cambridge thence ... I got at
-last, There joy I felt, there trim I dwelt, There
-heaven from hell, I shifted well, With learned men,
-a number then, the time I passed.”</p>
-
-<p>Coming now to definite punishments, I mention
-successively corporal punishments, such as birching,
-the use of the stocks, and stanging; fines, direct and
-indirect; deprivation of days or standing; gatings;
-impositions; declaratory confessions; and rustications
-and expulsions.</p>
-
-<div class="runin">
-<h3 title="Birching, Flogging"><i>Birching, Flogging.</i></h3>
-<p>Birching remained a recognized
-punishment for the younger students in the
-sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, but I think
-that in practice it was not often inflicted except on
-boys. One or two examples of orders directing it
-will suffice.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>On 8 May 1572, the Vice-Chancellor, Whitgift,
-issued an order which is so detailed that I write
-it at length. Here it is:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p>If any scholar shall go into any river, pool, or other
-water in the county of Cambridge; by day or night, to swim
-or wash, he shall, if under the degree of bachelor of arts,
-for the first offence be sharply and severely whipped publicly
-<a name="png.219" id="png.219" href="#png.219"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>211<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>in the common hall of the College in which he dwells, in the
-presence of all the fellows, scholars, and others dwelling in the
-College, and on the next day shall be again openly whipped
-in the public school, where he was or ought to be an auditor,
-before all the auditors, by one of the proctors or some other
-assigned by the Vice-Chancellor, and for the second offence
-every such delinquent shall be expelled his College and the
-University for ever. But if he shall be a bachelor of arts,
-then for the first offence he shall be put in the stocks for a
-whole day, in the common hall of his College, and shall,
-before he is liberated, pay 10s towards the commons of the
-College, and for the second offence shall be expelled his
-College and the University. And if he shall be a master of
-arts, or bachelor of law, physic or music, or of superior
-degree, he shall be severely punished, at the judgment and
-discretion of the Master of his College.</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p class="noindent">From this it is clear that at that time undergraduates,
-even of mature age, were liable to be flogged as a
-part of the ordinary discipline of the University and
-College, but probably it was unusual to inflict the
-penalty.</p>
-
-<p>Thirty years later, after the disturbances of
-20 February 1607, following the performance of a
-comedy in King’s College, an order was issued that
-thereafter every ringleader in any similar disturbances
-should be banished from the University: and
-every less responsible offender should, if a graduate,
-pay for the harm done, be suspended from his
-degree, and for one year refused leave to take a
-further degree; and if a non-graduate should for
-<a name="png.220" id="png.220" href="#png.220"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>212<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>one year be refused leave to graduate, and further,
-if non-adult, be corrected in the schools by the
-rod, and, if adult, make an open confession of his
-guilt in the schools: also the offender if not a
-scholar should be set in the stocks at the bull ring
-in the market place. Here, it will be noticed, the
-punishment by the rod is restricted to those non-adulti.</p>
-
-<p>In a list of punishments inflicted at Corpus
-Christi College in 1622, quoted by Lamb, admonitions,
-fines, suspensions, and whippings are mentioned.
-Even as late as 1648 there is a record of
-“Benton per Tutorem suum Magistrum Johnson
-virgis castigandis.”</p>
-
-<p>In 1648 an undergraduate bible-clerk of Peterhouse,
-age about seventeen, Tobias Conyers by
-name was “corrected publicly”—which, I take it,
-means flogged—for toasting the king. But times
-were abnormal, and if Conyers ventured into the
-stirring field of politics, he had to take the consequences.</p>
-
-<p>The liability to a flogging still existed after the
-restoration. Thus in the <cite>Poor Scholar</cite>, by R. Nevile,
-London, 1662, there are references to it in
-Act ii, Scene 6, and Act v, Scene 4, as being still
-in use in colleges though whether adults were so
-liable is uncertain. If the author’s statements refer
-to contemporary matters and are trustworthy it
-<a name="png.221" id="png.221" href="#png.221"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>213<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>would seem that the punishment was then common,
-the culprits being mounted on barrels, and the
-flogging inflicted at the butteries. The birch was
-also still occasionally used in university discipline,
-for on 20 March 1674, the vice-chancellor ordered
-Ellethorpe of St John’s, and Hodges of Sidney
-Sussex to be whipped for having been rude to the
-junior proctor, Peter Parham, of Caius College:
-neither of the offenders had matriculated.</p>
-
-<p>These references provide the strongest evidence
-with which I am acquainted for the assertions that
-flogging was a usual punishment at Cambridge
-during the seventeenth century. There is a widely
-spread tradition that when at Christ’s College, Milton
-was flogged, but Peile has shown that there is no
-satisfactory evidence for it, and it is intrinsically
-improbable. In a disciplinary order of Corpus
-Christi College in 1684, the only punishments mentioned
-are discommonsings, admonitions, rustications,
-deprivation of seniority, and refusal of college
-testimonials, so, comparing this with the orders of
-1622 and 1648 which I have quoted above, perhaps
-we may take it that the use of the rod there had
-become obsolete.</p>
-
-<p>The above extracts are sufficient to show that
-corporal punishment was recognized under the Elizabethan
-codes, though it seems probable that public
-opinion was against its use, unless the students
-<a name="png.222" id="png.222" href="#png.222"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>214<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>were quite young; perhaps this was always the
-practice, and thus, as the age of entry rose, the
-use of the birch died out. Incepting bachelors and
-senior students were usually punished for serious
-offences by deferring their admission to degrees,
-loss of terms, or rustication: being adult, they
-were in effect regarded as not subject to corporal
-punishment.</p>
-
-<div class="runin">
-<h3 title="Stocks; Stangs"><i>Stocks. Stangs.</i></h3>
-<p>A couple of other physical
-punishments—ignominious and sometimes painful—may
-be mentioned in passing.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>One of these was confinement in Stocks. To this
-allusion has already been made in the orders of 1572
-and 1607. Another instance is to be found in the
-records of Corpus Christi College, where about 1580,
-one of the students, Tobias Bland, who had libelled
-the master, was compelled to confess his fault publicly,
-next put in the stocks, and then expelled. In
-the old dining hall of Trinity College there were
-stocks in the minstrel’s gallery, but there is no evidence
-that they were re-erected when the hall was
-rebuilt in 1605; perhaps the punishment was then
-becoming unusual, though against this may be set
-the fact that there are references to the college
-stocks in 1610 at King’s, in 1625 at Christ’s, and
-in 1642 at Emmanuel. The stocks at King’s and
-Emmanuel, like those at Trinity, were in the hall.
-Allusions to their use are rare. The punishment
-<a name="png.223" id="png.223" href="#png.223"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>215<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>continued to be inflicted after the restoration, for
-on 10 April 1680, Thomas Grigson, who had been
-rude to the junior proctor, Thomas Verdon of
-St John’s College, was ordered to be “sett fast in
-the stocks, by the heeles for one whole houre, which
-was presently effected by the Constable of Saint
-Bennett’s Parish in Cambridge.” He had partially
-atoned for his offence by begging pardon on his
-knees, and so escaped a worse punishment.</p>
-
-<p>The Stang was a wooden pole on which the luckless
-culprit was tied, and carried ignominiously
-through the courts of his college. In John Ray’s
-<cite>Collection of English Words not Generally Used</cite>,
-London, 1674, it is said that the “word is still used
-in some colleges in the University of Cambridge; to
-stang scholars in Christmas, being to cause them to
-ride on a colt-staff or pole for missing of chappel.”
-References to the place where the pole was kept
-occur in the account-books of Trinity, St John’s,
-Queens’, and Christ’s. In Parne’s unpublished
-manuscript history of Trinity College, allusion is
-made to stanging as though at the beginning of the
-eighteenth century it had become recently obsolete.
-From his language it would seem also that undergraduates
-themselves inflicted the punishment on
-those of their members who declined to take part in
-the Christmas revelries.</p>
-
-<div class="runin">
-<h3 title="Fines"><i>Fines.</i></h3>
-<p>Pecuniary fines have been used to
-<a name="png.224" id="png.224" href="#png.224"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>216<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>enforce discipline from the earliest times by the
-University as well as by the colleges: after the
-renaissance, the increasing age and means of students
-made fines a suitable penalty for many of the less
-serious offences, such as participation in forbidden
-amusements, visits to places out of bounds, walking
-across the grass in college courts, smoking in public
-places, the failure to wear academic dress when required,
-non-attendance at lectures, chapel, hall, etc.
-Probably grave misconduct was punished otherwise,
-or by fines combined with additional penalties.
-A fine, if heavy, presses unequally on men of
-different means; and thus a system of fines on a
-fixed scale cannot be regarded as equitable. Fines
-are still used as penalties for the infraction of
-rules.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="runin">
-<h3 title="Discommonsing; Dissizaring"><i>Discommonsing. Dissizaring.</i></h3>
-<p>To be put out of
-commons was a well-recognized penalty, applicable
-chiefly to scholars and sizars, part of whose emolument
-consisted of a right to dine in hall and, in
-some cases, to have commons (bread, butter, and
-beer) to a limited amount each day. To deprive
-such a student of the right to dine in hall or of his
-commons was equivalent to a pecuniary fine, and in
-the case of a poor scholar might be a severe, though
-not a satisfactory, punishment; probably a modicum
-of bread and beer was supplied to students even
-when discommonsed. In some comments, published
-<a name="png.225" id="png.225" href="#png.225"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>217<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>in 1768, on university education at Cambridge,
-discommonsing is described as “one of the most
-idle and anile punishments ... inflicted rather on
-the parent than on the young man, who being
-prohibited to eat in Hall is driven to purchase
-a dinner at a tavern or coffee house.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Here is an example of an order of discommonsing
-at Trinity in the seventeenth century: “Agreed that
-Cassill should be punisht a monthes <span class="nw">commons....</span>
-Agreed at the same time that Pepys besides a
-monthes commons, should have an admonition
-and pay the charges of the chirurgion for the
-healinge Cassil’s head w<sup>h</sup> he broke with a key.”
-(Conclusion, 1 August 1643.) Its preservation is due
-to the fact that Pepys’ punishment was combined
-with an admonition, and evidence that an admonition
-had been given might be required if subsequently
-a question of expulsion arose. The culprit in question
-was Thomas Pepys (B.A. 1645) and not the
-Samuel of immortal memory.</p>
-
-<p>In 1815, Mansel, master of Trinity and bishop of
-Bristol, was accustomed to put men out of sizings
-and commons if they appeared in hall in trousers
-instead of knee breeches, and it would seem then
-that to be put out of sizings further deprived the
-student of obtaining private supplies from the
-college kitchens. Half a century ago the penalty
-was still in use at Trinity, being imposed on
-<a name="png.226" id="png.226" href="#png.226"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>218<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>scholars in waiting, who failed to appear after hall
-to say grace.</p>
-
-<div class="runin">
-<h3 title="Loss of Days"><i>Loss of Days.</i></h3>
-<p>To qualify for a degree and for an
-emolument, it is and has been generally necessary to
-keep a certain number of days by residence in each
-of certain specified terms. At one time a common
-form of punishment was to cancel a certain number
-of days already kept. Thus the student would be
-obliged to stay at Cambridge for so many additional
-days to make up for the requisite number which had
-to be kept in the course of that term. In the seventeenth
-century the authorities went further and
-sometimes cancelled terms that had been kept.
-I believe this form of punishment has long been
-obsolete.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="runin">
-<h3 title="Gating; Walling"><i>Gating. Walling.</i></h3>
-<p>Continuous confinement within
-the walls of the college (walling) or confinement
-during certain hours (gating) was another form of
-punishment. A case of walling occurred at one of
-the smaller colleges in Cambridge in 1872, but I
-know of no more recent instance. Gating is still in
-force. It causes some social inconvenience. As far
-as it goes, it promotes regular hours and economy,
-and it has no indirect ill-effects. Accordingly it
-serves well to mark dissatisfaction and act as a
-warning.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Here is an old-time example from the records of
-Trinity, 19 July 1652, of the infliction of this and
-<a name="png.227" id="png.227" href="#png.227"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>219<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>other penalties interesting from the name of the
-scholar on whom it was inflicted:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p>Agreed that Dryden be put out of commons for a fortnight
-at least, and that he goe not out of the colledg during
-the time aforesaid, excepting to sermons, without express
-leave of the master or vice-master; and that at the end of
-the fortnight he read a confession of his crime, in the hall,
-at the dinner time; at the three fellowes tables.</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p class="noindent">His offence was disobedience to the vice-master, and
-his contumacy in submitting himself to discipline.</p>
-
-<div class="runin">
-<h3 title="Impositions"><i>Impositions.</i></h3>
-<p>Another tolerably obvious punishment
-was the setting of impositions. The imposition
-might be the learning of lines by heart or the
-delivery of a declamation on some given subject,
-or the production in writing of so many lines of a
-classical work or of an analysis of some book. Impositions
-in writing were constantly done vicariously,
-and if so, the punishment was little more than a
-fine: apparently this abuse of the practice was well
-known.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The tasks set were very heavy. In the <cite>Gradus</cite>,
-1803, the learning by heart of the first book of the
-<cite>Iliad</cite> is mentioned as a possible, though very severe
-imposition. Similarly, according to J. M. F. Wright,
-a thousand lines of Homer would have been regarded
-in 1815 as an unusually sharp punishment, but such
-as might have been given in lieu of rustication.
-Other impositions mentioned are the learning by
-<a name="png.228" id="png.228" href="#png.228"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>220<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>heart of a satire of Juvenal, and the production of
-an analysis of Butler’s <cite>Analogy</cite>.</p>
-
-<p>At Trinity the deans were provided with long
-sheets of paper on which were printed in double
-columns forms such as the following:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p>... to transcribe ... lines of Virgil’s Aeneid, beginning at
-line ... book ..., and to deliver it to the Junior Dean after
-morning Chapel on Tuesday.</p>
-
-<p>... to transcribe ... lines of Homer’s Iliad, beginning at
-line ... book ..., and to deliver it to the Senior Dean after
-Morning Chapel on Thursday.</p>
-
-<p>... to repeat ... lines of ... by order of the Junior (or
-Senior) Dean.</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p class="noindent">These were filled up by the deans, cut off, and distributed
-by the chapel-clerk to the men concerned.
-Customarily in Trinity the senior dean gave impositions
-from the <cite>Iliad</cite> to be delivered on a Thursday,
-an the junior dean from the <cite>Aeneid</cite> to be
-delivered on a Tuesday. Forms for putting men out
-of commons, and admonishing them were printed in
-the same way on sheets, to be used as occasions
-arose.</p>
-
-<p>Impositions were set at Trinity as late as 1830,
-but I believe the custom had died out before 1840,
-though I am told it was still used in certain Cambridge
-colleges as late as 1855. At Oxford the practice
-continued rather later and indeed at a few
-colleges seems to have been in force till near the
-close of the nineteenth century, for Rashdall, writing
-<a name="png.229" id="png.229" href="#png.229"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>221<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>in 1895, speaks of the practice as having been in
-force there until recently.</p>
-
-<p>A century ago there seems to have been a sort of
-recognized scale of penalties for cutting lectures or
-chapel. First, a reprimand was given at an interview
-or sent in writing by a servant; second, an
-imposition was set; third the offender was deprived
-of commons and sizings. If these steps were ineffective,
-the matter might be regarded as a serious
-offence against college discipline, and lead to “hauling”
-by the tutor, a gating, an interview with the
-master, a formal admonition, and in extreme cases
-to rustication.</p>
-
-<p>The theory of these petty punishments was
-set out by Whewell in his <cite>Principles of English
-University Education</cite>, 1837. A punishment, according
-to him, was to be regarded as the visible
-expression of college dissatisfaction with certain
-conduct: as an infliction it might be slight, but it
-emphasized the discontent expressed, and acted as
-a definite warning. He suggested a most severe
-scale; namely, for the first offence, forfeiture of
-one month’s commons; for the second, of three
-months’ commons; and for the third, expulsion;
-but there is no reason to think that this was ever
-the practice.</p>
-
-<div class="runin">
-<h3 title="Confessions"><i>Confessions.</i></h3>
-<p>A public confession was another
-form of punishment once used: I believe that
-<a name="png.230" id="png.230" href="#png.230"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>222<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>this ceased to be employed by the middle of the
-eighteenth century.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="runin">
-<h3 title="Statutory Admonitions; Rustication; Expulsion"><i>Statutory Admonitions. Rustication. Expulsion.</i></h3>
-<p>For the graver offences, a statutory admonition,
-rustication (temporary removal from the college),
-or expulsion were reserved.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>A formal admonition was intended to act as a
-serious warning, and it served as a statutory prelude
-to expulsion. For this reason it was usually recorded,
-and in former times an additional sting was
-added by compelling the culprit to make also a
-public or written confession of his fault. Admonitions
-are not very common in the records of Trinity:
-some thirty or forty occur in the sixteenth and
-seventeenth century, only a few in the eighteenth
-century, and they are rare in the nineteenth century
-save for a few relating to irregularity of attendances
-at chapel or lectures. The last admonition at Trinity
-was given in 1881, shortly before the new statutes
-of 1882 became operative. Here are typical instances
-of the record of admonitions.</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p>Whereas heretofore I have received an admonition from
-the Master of the College for my lewd and outrageous behaviour
-within the same, and have since that time for like
-rioting and swaggering in the Town received another admonition
-from him before the Vice-Master of the College
-and my Tutor and also therewith all public correction, if
-these admonitions together with due punishment do not
-work reformation in me hereafter, I do likewise willingly
-<a name="png.231" id="png.231" href="#png.231"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>223<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>acknowledge that I am incorrigible and worthy for the next
-like offence to be expelled the College. Galen Browne.
-Circ. 1601. [Browne was elected to a scholarship in 1602,
-and graduated B.A. and M.A. in due course, so presumably
-he amended his ways.]</p>
-
-<p>Whereas I have very unadvisedly and rashly stricken one
-Mr Halfhead, a College servant, to the shedding of blood,
-I do acknowledge myself to have received an admonition
-for that fault tending to expulsion. Thomas Shirley,
-22 February, 1621. [Halfhead was the manciple. Shirley
-was a fellow and master of arts, so the offence was the more
-serious, but perhaps the provocation was great. Shirley
-was subsequently junior bursar and tutor.]</p>
-
-<p>I, Christopher Offley, do confess that often time and
-many ways I have offended against the Statute <cite xml:lang="lat" lang="lat">de Modestia
-Morum</cite> to the displeasure of God, hurt to myself, the evil
-example of others, and discredit of the College, and also
-have broken mine oath taken when I was preferred scholar
-in unreverent behaviour towards some of the fellows and
-specially in giving scandalous and contumelious speeches to
-Mr Hitch, being the Minister and Fellow of this College for
-which misdemeanors and undutiful carriage I am unfainedly
-sorry and heartily desire forgiveness both of God, and him,
-or any other whom I have offended, and confess I have
-received a just admonition of the Master and Seniors by
-setting my date to this writing. Circ. 1622. [Offley graduated
-B.A., 1624, and M.A., 1627, so presumably he amended
-his ways.]</p>
-
-<p>Whereas we whose names are underwritten, on the fourth
-of April last, were guilty of grave irregularity and misbehaviour
-by insulting the Vice-Master, the Dean, and other
-officers of the College and thereby gave just offence to the
-Society, we do profess ourselves heartily sorry for the same
-and acknowledge the lenity of the Master and Dean in
-<a name="png.232" id="png.232" href="#png.232"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>224<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>suffering us to return so soon from rustication. And we do
-hereby engage to be strictly observant of our duty for the
-future and take this as our first admonition in order to
-expulsion. James Bensley, John Ambler. 29 May, 1754.
-[Bensley graduated in due course and was elected to a fellowship:
-Ambler did not graduate.]</p>
-
-<p>Ordered that ..., for irregular attendance at lectures
-and neglect of impositions, be admonished a second time
-previous to rustication or expulsion. 29 May, 1844.</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p>Temporary or permanent removal from the
-College were penalties reserved for the gravest
-offences. They are still recognized as possible
-punishments. The fact that there are but few
-records of the infliction of these extreme penalties
-indicates how easily discipline has always been
-maintained.</p>
-
-<p>My readers may well think that the results of
-these notes are somewhat scanty, but if that nation
-is happy which has no history, surely universities
-and colleges are to be congratulated whose records
-of punishment are so few. To sum up the matter,
-the general effect left on my mind is that most of
-the common offences were due only to youthful
-exuberance of spirits and not to deliberate mischief
-making; and that the rules and sanctions, judged
-by the standard of their time, have been neither
-harsh nor unreasonable, and have usually been
-approved by public opinion in the University.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chap">
-
-<h2 title="XIII. Newton’s ‘Principia’"><a name="png.233" id="png.233" href="#png.233"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>225<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>CHAPTER XIII.<br
- /><small>NEWTON’S <cite>PRINCIPIA</cite>.</small></h2>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="allsc">Newton’s</span> <cite>Principia</cite> is one of the few scientific
-books which has sensibly affected the methods
-of scientific research and the ideas of men about the
-universe. It is on this aspect of the subject I propose,
-in this paper, to make a few remarks. The
-work itself is a classic in the history of mathematics:
-the exposition of the subject, the enunciation of the
-principle of prime and ultimate ratios, the creation
-of mechanics as a science resting on experiments,
-and the theory of universal gravitation with concrete
-applications to the solar system, make it a
-masterpiece. Here I avoid all technicalities, and
-confine myself to a general description of its genesis
-and contents and the reason why its publication
-affected scientific thought and methods.</p>
-
-<p>Newton’s exposition arose from an investigation
-of the cause of the motion of the planets round the
-sun, and this in due course led to the enunciation
-and establishment of the Newtonian theory of attraction.
-The origin of this theory has been often told,
-but will bear repetition. The fundamental idea
-occurred to Newton in 1665 or 1666, shortly after
-he had taken his degree at Cambridge, when, as he
-<a name="png.234" id="png.234" href="#png.234"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>226<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>wrote later, “I was in the prime, of my age for invention,
-and minded Mathematicks and Philosophy
-more than at any time since.” His reasoning was
-as follows. He knew that gravity extended to the
-highest hills, he saw no reason why it should cease
-to act at greater heights, accordingly he believed
-that it would be found in operation as far as the
-moon, and he suspected that it might be the force
-which retained that body in its path round the earth.</p>
-
-<p>This hypothesis he verified thus. If a stone is
-allowed to fall near the surface of the earth, the
-attraction of the earth causes it to move through
-sixteen feet in one second: also Kepler’s Laws, if
-accurate and applicable, involve the conclusion that
-the attraction of the earth on a distant body varies
-inversely as the square of its distance from the
-earth. Now the radius of the earth and the
-distance of the moon were known to Newton, and
-therefore, on this hypothesis, he could find the
-magnitude of the earth’s attraction on the moon.
-Further, assuming that the moon moved in a circle,
-he could calculate the force required to retain it in
-its orbit. At this time his estimate of the radius of
-the earth was inaccurate, and, when he made the
-calculation, he found that this force was rather
-greater than the earth’s attraction on the moon.
-The discrepancy did not shake his faith in his theory,
-but he conjectured that the moon’s motion was also
-<a name="png.235" id="png.235" href="#png.235"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>227<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>affected by other influences, such for example, as
-the effect of a resisting medium which might itself
-be in motion as supposed by Descartes in his hypothetical
-vortices.</p>
-
-<p>In 1679 Newton knew with approximate correctness
-the value of the radius of the earth. He repeated
-his calculations, and found the results to be
-in accordance with his former hypothesis. He then
-proceeded to the general theory of the motion of a
-particle under a force directed to a fixed point, and
-showed that the vector to the particle would sweep
-over equal areas in equal times. He also proved
-that, if a particle describes an ellipse under a force
-directed to a focus, the law must be that of the inverse
-square of the distance from the focus, and conversely,
-that the orbit of a particle projected in free
-space under the influence of such a force must be a
-conic. The application to the solar system was
-obvious, since Kepler had shown that the planets
-describe ellipses with the sun in one focus, and that
-the vectors from the sun to them sweep over equal
-areas in equal times. This investigation was made
-for his own satisfaction and was not published at the
-time. In it he treated the solar bodies as if they
-were particles, and he must have realized that the
-results could be taken as being only approximately
-correct.</p>
-
-<p>In 1684 the subject of the planetary orbits was
-<a name="png.236" id="png.236" href="#png.236"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>228<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>discussed in London by Halley, Hooke, and Wren.
-They were aware that, if Kepler’s conclusions were
-correct, the attraction of the sun or earth on a distant
-external particle must vary inversely as the
-square of the distance, but they could not determine
-the orbit of a particle subjected to the action of a
-central force of this kind. It was suggested that
-Newton might be able to assist them. Accordingly
-in August, Halley went to Cambridge for a talk on
-the subject, and then found that Newton had solved
-the problem some five years previously, and that the
-path was necessarily a conic. At Halley’s request
-Newton wrote out the substance of his argument,
-and sent it to London.</p>
-
-<p>Halley at once realized the importance of the
-communication, and later in the autumn returned to
-Cambridge to urge Newton to prosecute the theory
-further. He found that Newton had already done
-something in the matter, the results being contained
-in a manuscript which he saw. Probably this reference
-is to the holograph manuscript, still preserved
-in the University Library at Cambridge, of Newton’s
-lectures in the Michaelmas Term, which served as
-the basis of his memoir sent to the Royal Society a
-few months later. The great value of these investigations
-was recognized, and Newton was persuaded
-to attack the more general problem. His results
-are given in the <cite>Principia</cite>.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.237" id="png.237" href="#png.237"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>229<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>As yet Newton had dealt with the problem as if
-the sun and the planets might be regarded as heavy
-masses concentrated at their centres. Clearly at
-the best this was only an approximation, though
-considering the enormous distances involved it was
-not unreasonable. In January or February, 1685,
-he considered the question of the attraction of bodies
-of finite size, and found, to his surprise and gratification,
-that a sphere or spherical shell attracts an
-external particle as if condensed into a heavy mass
-at its centre. Hence the results he had already
-proved for the relative motion of particles were true
-for the solar system, save for small errors due partly
-to the fact that the bodies were not perfectly
-spherical and partly to disturbances caused by the
-planets attracting one another. It was no longer a
-question of rough approximation: the problem was
-reducible to mathematical analysis, subject to the
-introduction of minute corrections, which, given the
-necessary observations, could be calculated very
-closely. This was a new discovery of first-rate
-importance, and initiated the modern theory of
-attractions.</p>
-
-<p>The first book of the <cite>Principia</cite> was finished before
-the summer of 1685. It deals with the motion
-of particles or bodies in free space either in known
-orbits or under the action of known forces. In
-it the law of attraction is generalized into the
-<a name="png.238" id="png.238" href="#png.238"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>230<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>statement that every particle of matter attracts
-every other particle with a force which varies
-directly as the product of their masses and inversely
-as the square of the distance between them.
-Thus gravitation was brought into the domain of
-Science.</p>
-
-<p>The second book was completed by the summer
-of 1686. It treats of motion in a resisting medium
-and of various problems connected with waves. At
-the end of it, it is shown that the Cartesian theory of
-vortices is inconsistent with the laws of motion, and
-necessarily leads to incorrect results. This book
-opened another world to the application of mathematics
-and, in effect, created the science of hydrodynamics.</p>
-
-<p>The third book was finished in March 1687. In
-this, the theorems previously established are applied
-to the chief phenomena of the universe, and briefly
-we may say that all the facts then known about the
-solar system and, in particular, the motion of the
-moon with its various inequalities, the figure of the
-earth, and the phenomena of the tides, were shown
-to be in accord with the theory. Much of the
-material for these calculations was collected by
-Flamsteed and Halley.</p>
-
-<p>The <cite>Principia</cite>, as I have said, is a classic. Like
-other books to which that compliment is paid, it is
-rarely read: indeed, I doubt whether there are a
-<a name="png.239" id="png.239" href="#png.239"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>231<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>dozen men in Cambridge who have glanced all
-through it, even in a cursory manner. When I was
-an undergraduate the course for the Tripos involved
-five sections (1, 2, 3, 9, and 11) of the first book, but
-now, probably with good reason, even this slight
-acquaintance with the work is no longer required,
-and to-day the character of these investigations is
-unfamiliar to most mathematicians, while the fact
-that it is written in Latin tends to diminish the
-number of its readers. I will, then, with your permission,
-describe briefly its frame-work.</p>
-
-<p>First, however, let me remark on how different
-was the knowledge of mathematics, even among
-experts, at the time it was written from that current
-to-day. In the geometry of the circle and conics
-mathematicians were familiar with the methods of
-Greek science, and in their application Newton was
-unrivalled among his contemporaries, but outside
-geometry methods of investigation were far to seek.
-Analysis had been but little developed; algebraic
-notation had only recently taken definite form;
-trigonometry was still used mainly as an adjunct to
-astronomy; analytical geometry had been invented
-by Descartes, but no text-books on it of modern type
-were available; while nothing about the calculus had
-been published. Mechanics, however, had recently
-been treated as a science—statics by Stevinus and
-dynamics by Galileo—and this paved the way for
-<a name="png.240" id="png.240" href="#png.240"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>232<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>Newton’s investigations. In particular, Galileo had
-established principles which foreshadowed the first
-two laws of motion, and had deduced formulae in
-linear motion like <span class="maths"><i>v</i>² = 2<i>fs</i>,</span>
-<span class="maths"><i>s</i> = ½<i>ft</i>²,</span> and in circular
-motion like <span class="maths"><i>f</i> = <i>v</i>² / <i>r</i>.</span></p>
-
-<p>Newton prefaced the <cite>Principia</cite> by explaining
-that the earliest problems in natural philosophy
-which attract attention are connected with the phenomena
-of motion, and it was with motion). that the
-book dealt. To discuss motion effectively, it was
-necessary to give precision to the language used,
-and accordingly he propounded definitions of mass,
-momentum, inertia, and so on, which have settled
-the language of the subject. He next enunciated
-his three well-known laws of motion, and described
-the experiments on which he based them. He
-followed this up by deducing rules for the composition
-and resolution of forces, and discussed relative
-motion.</p>
-
-<p>This preliminary matter is followed by the first
-book, concerned with the motion of bodies in an
-unresisting medium. It is divided into fourteen
-sections containing ninety-eight propositions with
-various interpolated lemmas, corollaries, and scholia.</p>
-
-<p>The first section is on the method of prime and
-ultimate ratios, by the use of which Newton was
-able, in effect, to integrate. He applied this to the
-curvature and the areas of curves, and proved that,
-<a name="png.241" id="png.241" href="#png.241"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>233<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>at the very beginning of the motion of a body from
-rest under any force, the space described is proportional
-to the force and the square of the time.</p>
-
-<p>The second section is concerned with the motion
-of a particle under a central force. It contains the
-well-known propositions that if the force is central
-the area swept out by the vector to the centre is proportional
-to the time, and conversely that if such
-area is proportional to the time the particle is
-acted on by a central force. Newton further discussed
-particular cases of circular, elliptic, and spiral
-motion. In the third section he dealt with motion
-in a conic under a central force to the focus, showed
-that in this case the force must vary inversely as the
-square of the distance, and conversely that if a particle
-be projected from any point in any direction
-with any velocity under such a force it must describe
-a conic about the centre of force as a focus, and that
-in such elliptic orbits the periodic times are in the
-sesquiplicate ratio of the major axes of the ellipses.
-He also explained how to treat the problem if disturbing
-forces are introduced. These two sections
-solved the problem of planetary motion if the planets
-could be treated as particles and did not disturb one
-another’s motions.</p>
-
-<p>The fourth and fifth sections are given up to the
-proof of certain geometrical propositions in conics
-required for subsequent discussions: in particular
-<a name="png.242" id="png.242" href="#png.242"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>234<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>the construction of a conic when a focus and three
-other conditions or when five points on it or five
-tangents to it are given.</p>
-
-<p>In the sixth section Newton returned to the
-problem of the motion of a particle in an ellipse
-under a central force to a focus, and discussed how
-to determine the position of the particle at any given
-time. (Kepler’s Problem.)</p>
-
-<p>The seventh and eighth sections are devoted to
-the motion of a particle under a central force which
-is any function of the distance. The geometrical
-treatment of these problems is ingenious, but necessarily
-more involved than when modern analysis is
-used.</p>
-
-<p>In the ninth section Newton dealt with the
-motion of particles in orbits which are revolving
-about the centre of force, and on the motion of the
-apses of such orbits: this introduced the theory of
-disturbing forces. The tenth section is concerned
-with constrained motion, and particularly with the
-motion of pendulums. The eleventh section deals
-with the motion of particles under their mutual
-attractions and incidentally with the problem of
-three bodies. These three sections afford a notable
-illustration of Newton’s analytical powers.</p>
-
-<p>The twelfth and thirteenth sections deal with the
-attraction under various laws of force of spherical
-bodies, circular laminae, and solids of revolution.
-<a name="png.243" id="png.243" href="#png.243"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>235<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>These sections brought the problem of the solar
-system, consisting of solid bodies of finite size and
-approximately spherical in form, into the domain
-of mathematics, and led up to the generalization
-that all particles of matter attract one another with
-a force proportional to the product of their masses
-and inversely proportional to the square of the distance
-between them, from which law it would seem
-that all the known phenomena of the motions of the
-solar system can be deduced.</p>
-
-<p>The fourteenth section is concerned with the
-motion of minute corpuscles, with applications to
-the corpuscular theory of light.</p>
-
-<p>The second book is devoted to the discussion of
-the motion of bodies in resisting mediums: there are
-fifty-three propositions besides lemmas, scholia, etc.</p>
-
-<p>In the first section, Newton considered the
-motion of a particle or sphere moving in a medium
-whose resistance varies as the velocity of the particle:
-in the second section the resistance is assumed
-to vary as the square of the velocity: and in the third
-section the resistance is supposed to consist of two
-terms, one varying as the velocity and the other
-as the square of the velocity. The fourth section
-is on spiral motion caused by resistance of the
-medium.</p>
-
-<p>The fifth section deals with the density and pressure
-of liquids and gases at rest (Hydrostatics).</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.244" id="png.244" href="#png.244"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>236<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>The sixth section treats of the motion of pendulums
-in a resisting medium; and the seventh section
-is concerned with the motion of fluids, and the resistance
-they offer to the motion of projectiles. The
-latter section contains the celebrated statement of
-the form of the solid of least resistance, whose
-demonstration proved a puzzle to mathematicians
-until the invention of the calculus of variations.
-Newton’s solution is in the Portsmouth papers, and
-elsewhere I have published it: it involves the use of
-fluxions, and it is probable that it was his failure to
-translate this demonstration into geometrical language
-that led him to give the result without a proof.</p>
-
-<p>The eighth section deals with the motion of waves
-with applications to the theory of sound and the undulatory
-theory of light; and the ninth section deals
-with vortices; it is here shown that the theory of vortices
-suggested by Descartes to explain the motion
-of the solar system is untenable.</p>
-
-<p>This book created the theory of hydrodynamics.
-Much of it is incomplete, but it is astonishing that
-Newton proved as much as he did; of course to-day
-no one would suggest that the best way of attacking
-these problems is by Newtonian geometrical methods.</p>
-
-<p>The third book contains the practical application
-of the propositions in the two earlier books to the
-solar system. I need not describe this in detail.
-In order to justify this application, Newton commenced
-<a name="png.245" id="png.245" href="#png.245"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>237<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>by laying down four rules which have since
-been accepted as binding in scientific investigations.
-These, as given in the third edition, are to the
-following effect: (1) We are not to assume more
-causes than are sufficient and necessary for the
-explanation of observed facts. (2) Hence, as far
-as possible, similar effects must be assigned to the
-same cause; for instance, the fall of stones in Europe
-and America. (3) Properties common to all bodies
-within reach of our experiments are to be assumed
-as pertaining to all bodies; for instance, extension.
-(4) Propositions in science obtained by a wide induction
-are to be regarded as exactly or approximately
-true, until phenomena or experiments show that they
-may be corrected or are liable to exceptions. The
-substance of these rules is now accepted as the basis
-of scientific investigation. Their formal enunciation
-here serves as a landmark in the history of thought.</p>
-
-<p>As soon as the Copernican view of the solar
-system was accepted, it was natural for men to seek
-to explain the reason why the planets moved as they
-did. Descartes, in 1644, had suggested that the
-explanation might be found in the existence of vortices
-in space. This conjecture, although based on
-arbitrary assumptions, and in fact untenable, played
-an important part in the history of the subject,
-for it accustomed men to think that planetary
-phenomena might be explicable by the same laws
-<a name="png.246" id="png.246" href="#png.246"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>238<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>as are found to be true on the earth. That this was
-so was established by Newton in his <cite>Principia</cite>, where
-all the motions of the solar system were made to depend
-on one assumption as to the law of attraction.
-The question whether this law could itself be deduced
-from some more fundamental assumption was raised
-by Newton, but he could not devise a satisfactory
-hypothesis. It has been discussed again and again
-since his time, and the problem is still unsolved.</p>
-
-<p>Newton’s conclusions were immediately accepted
-in Britain, and very rapidly by the leading mathematicians
-in Europe: indeed Huygens came expressly
-from Holland in order to make the personal
-acquaintance of a writer whose work promised to
-revolutionize the history of science. The refutation
-of the Cartesian hypothesis ran, however, counter
-to the sentiments and wishes of a certain number of
-philosophers, and some few years elapsed before the
-truth of the gravitation theory was universally admitted,
-but it would be ungracious to dwell further
-on this. In Britain the work exercised a profound
-influence in philosophy as well as in science, and
-educated men of all schools of thought acquainted
-themselves with the general line of Newton’s reasoning
-and his deductions.</p>
-
-<p>That men of science and philosophers should
-have approved Newton’s theory is not surprising,
-but it is somewhat curious that it excited so little
-<a name="png.247" id="png.247" href="#png.247"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>239<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>opposition among theologians. Galileo’s discoveries
-of hills, vales, and (supposed) seas on the moon and
-planets had already suggested that life might exist
-there, and in the popular (but illogical) view this
-involved the idea of the existence of beings with
-spiritual and intellectual faculties not unlike those
-of men. Newton’s results seemed to show that
-there was nothing in the nature of things to differentiate
-the earth from the other planets, and therefore
-considerably strengthened the view that life
-might be found on them. It might well be asked
-whether such life, and indeed whether the mechanism
-of the solar system as expounded by Newton,
-was in accordance with Scripture. That these difficulties
-were not pressed against Newton’s conclusions
-is, I think, attributable to the fact that his
-theory was explicitly concerned only with non-organic
-matter. His own opinion was that the
-extension of the reign of law was an additional
-argument in favour of a divine creation: this view,
-set out at the end of the <cite>Principia</cite> and in his
-five letters to Bentley in 1692–93, was generally
-accepted by the leaders of religious thought in
-Britain.</p>
-
-<p>Lagrange more than once remarked that Newton
-was not only the greatest mathematician of former
-days, but the most fortunate, since, as there is but
-one universe, it can happen to but one man in the
-<a name="png.248" id="png.248" href="#png.248"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>240<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>world’s history to be the interpreter of its laws. It
-is true that Newton applied his theory only to the
-solar system for which alone he had the necessary
-data, but after the publication of the <cite>Principia</cite>, no
-one doubted that gravity extended to the most distant
-regions of space. The work of Sir William
-Herschel and that of all later astronomers on binary
-and other systems rests on this hypothesis.</p>
-
-<p>The influence of the <cite>Principia</cite> on dynamical
-astronomy has been permanent. It is not too
-much to say that when it was published, the theory,
-as there set out, had outstripped observation, but
-during the succeeding century large numbers of new
-facts were collected, and applications of the theory
-to new problems were made, notably by Clairaut,
-Euler, and Lagrange. All these researches tended
-to confirm it.</p>
-
-<p>The demonstrations in the <cite>Principia</cite> are expressed
-in the language of classical geometry, and,
-though unnecessarily concise and difficult, their
-correctness is unimpeachable. That Newton could
-carry his calculations so far with the limited mathematics
-then at his command is not the least wonderful
-part of the performance, but it is the prerogative of
-genius to get great results with but scanty equipment.</p>
-
-<p>Newton’s methods, which even in the seventeenth
-century were archaic, became in time quite out of
-<a name="png.249" id="png.249" href="#png.249"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>241<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>date. This reason, the growth of the subject, and
-the development of analysis made it desirable to
-expound dynamical astronomy afresh. Towards
-the end of the eighteenth century the task was undertaken
-by Laplace in his <cite xml:lang="fra" lang="fra">Mécanique Céleste</cite>. This
-is far more than the translation of the <cite>Principia</cite>
-into the language of modern analysis, for it greatly
-extends the theory of some branches of the subject
-which had been left incomplete by Newton, either on
-account of his not having the requisite analysis at
-his command or because the necessary facts were
-not available. Laplace acknowledged his debt to
-Newton, and expressed his deliberate opinion that
-the <cite>Principia</cite> was pre-eminent over every previous
-production of human genius—“so near the
-gods, man cannot nearer go.” A century later a
-fresh exposition of the subject embodying the discoveries
-of the nineteenth century was given by
-F. F. Tisserand in his <cite xml:lang="fra" lang="fra">Mécanique Céleste</cite>; this presents
-the subject in its modern form.</p>
-
-<p>Newton had applied his theory to the solar
-system as it existed, and had not investigated its
-origin. We owe to Laplace the enunciation of a
-hypothesis as to its evolution. According to this
-conjecture, the solar system originated in a quantity
-of incandescent gas rotating round an axis through
-its centre of mass. Laplace assumed that as this gas
-cooled, it would contract, and that successive rings
-<a name="png.250" id="png.250" href="#png.250"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>242<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>would break off from its outer edge; these rings in
-their turn would cool, and finally condense into the
-planets with their satellites; while the sun represents
-the central core which would be left. Recent
-investigations show that this cannot be taken as
-correct without numerous modifications. Moreover
-every extension of our knowledge requires the introduction
-of alterations in the hypothesis, and this
-clearly suggests that the conjecture is untenable.
-It played, however, a useful part in its day, as
-suggesting a common origin for all members of the
-system. Perhaps I ought to add that a nebular
-origin had been previously outlined by Kant, who
-had also suggested meteoric aggregations and tidal
-friction as agents concerned, but these were little
-more than vague conjectures.</p>
-
-<p>The <cite>Principia</cite> convinced its readers that the laws
-of mechanics, discovered by experiment on the
-earth, were operative throughout the solar system.
-It was reserved for the nineteenth century to extend
-the reign of law to other celestial phenomena.
-Newton and his successors had proved that the law
-of gravity extends through all parts of space where
-observations are possible. That the sun, stars, and
-planets are constituted of similar materials was
-generally believed; and this has now been confirmed
-by the use of the spectroscope which has enabled us
-to calculate the temperature of gaseous stars, and
-<a name="png.251" id="png.251" href="#png.251"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>243<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>specify the chemical elements comprised in them.
-Thus the composition of far-distant suns has been
-reduced to problems to be settled in our laboratories.
-The scientific world, however, in admitting the validity
-of the theory of universal gravity had implicitly
-accepted the principle that the reign of law, as investigated
-on the earth, extends throughout the
-universe. Thus the daring which permits us, living
-on a medium-sized planet attached to one of the
-smaller suns, to analyse the universe is, I venture
-to say, the direct outcome of the genius of Newton
-as displayed in his <cite>Principia</cite>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chap">
-
-<h2 title="XIV. Isaac Newton on University Studies"><a name="png.252" id="png.252" href="#png.252"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>244<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>CHAPTER XIV.<br
- /><small>ISAAC NEWTON ON UNIVERSITY STUDIES.</small></h2>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap-A"><span class="allsc">Among</span> the Portsmouth papers in the University
-Library at Cambridge<sup class="fn"><a href="#fn33" id="fna33" name="fna33">33</a></sup> is a memorandum by
-Isaac Newton, drawn up, I conjecture, towards the
-close of the seventeenth century, on the organization
-of the studies and on the discipline of the University.</p>
-
-<p>Conditions then differed so widely from those now in
-force that the value of the memorandum is only
-historical, but notwithstanding this, its interest is
-considerable. I have no reason to suppose that it
-was formally brought before the regent or the non-regent
-house, and possibly the plan never got beyond
-discussion by a few friends. I have modernized the
-spelling, made the use of capitals uniform, allowed
-myself to break paragraphs, and sometimes inserted
-punctuation or altered it—otherwise the paper is
-as originally written. I give it without further
-comment.</p>
-
-<h3 title="Newton’s Memorandum"><i>Newton’s Memorandum.</i></h3>
-
-<p>“Undergraduates to be instructed by a Tutor, a
-Humanity Lecturer, a Greek Lecturer, a Philosophy
-Lecturer, and a Mathematic Lecturer.</p>
-
-<p>“The Tutor to read logic, ethics, the globes and
-<a name="png.253" id="png.253" href="#png.253"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>245<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>principles of geography and chronology in order to
-understand history, unless the Lecturers have time
-for any of these things.</p>
-
-<p>“The Humanity and Greek Lecturers to set
-tasks in Latin and Greek authors once a day to the
-first year, and once a week to the rest; and to examine
-diligently and instruct briefly; and to punish
-by exercises such faults as concern lectures; and to
-appoint the reading of the best historians.</p>
-
-<p>“The Philosophy Lecturer to read first of things
-introductory to natural philosophy—time, space,
-body, place, motion and its laws, force, mechanical
-powers, gravity and its laws, hydrostatics, projectiles
-solid and fluid, circular motions and the
-forces relating to them. And then to read natural
-philosophy, beginning with the general system of the
-world, and thence proceeding to the particular constitution
-of this earth and the things therein—meteors,
-elements, minerals, vegetables, animals,
-and ending with anatomy if he have skill therein.
-Also to examine in logic and ethics.</p>
-
-<p>“The Mathematic Lecturer to read first some
-easy and useful practical things; then Euclid,
-spherics, the projections of the sphere, the construction
-of maps, trigonometry, astronomy, optics,
-music, algebra, etc. Also to examine and (if the
-Tutor be deficient) to instruct in the principles of
-chronology and geography.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.254" id="png.254" href="#png.254"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>246<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>“Several sciences which depend not on one another
-are all learnt in less time together than successively,
-the mind being diverted and recreated by the
-variety, and put more upon the stretch. And therefore
-divers of these Lecturers may proceed together:
-suppose the Tutor’s [lectures] after morning chapel,
-the Greek or Philosophy Lecturer’s two hours after,
-and the Humanity and Mathematic [Lecturers’] in
-the afternoon. The Tutor to accompany his pupils
-to the philosophy and mathematic lectures, and to
-examine them the next morning both in those lectures
-and in his own, and make them understand where
-they hesitate. These two Lecturers to read five
-days in the week and with the other two [Lecturers]
-to examine the sixth. Each Lecturer to read the
-same day successively to two or three years [<i>i.e.</i>, to
-Freshmen, Junior Sophs, or Senior Sophs as the
-case may be] under [their] several Tutors. Their
-lectures to begin with [the] Michaelmas Term and
-continue till the Commencement [<i>i.e.</i> the end of the
-Easter Term]: the Tutors to begin the Commencement
-before. The Greek and Humanity Lecturers
-to set bigger tasks in the vacations than in the
-reading-time, proportionally to the spare hours of
-the students.</p>
-
-<p>“A Monitor to note those who miss lectures, and
-give their names to the Humanity Lecturer, who
-shall punish them, not by pecuniary mulcts, but by
-<a name="png.255" id="png.255" href="#png.255"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>247<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>tasks [, such as] by making verses, themes, epistles, or
-getting anything without book. All pecuniary mulcts
-of Undergraduates to be abolished; and exercises,
-admonitions, recantations, and expulsions (according
-to the nature of the crime) to succeed in their room.</p>
-
-<p>“In the Long Vacation, between the Commencement
-and Michaelmas, the Tutor shall take care that
-his Pupils read over all the last year’s lessons again
-by themselves, and at the end of the vacation they
-shall be examined again, and those, who are at any
-time found not fit to go on, turned down to the
-lectures of the year below, that they do not retard
-the Lecturer and be an ill example to others.</p>
-
-<p>“The Lecturers to be chosen every three years,
-and the elections after the first institution to be on
-this manner. All those who have at any time been
-Lecturers shall choose four out of their number, one
-for each office, and the Master and Seniors of the
-College shall choose other four who have not yet
-executed the office, and those eight with the Master
-shall, by balancing, choose four out their number.
-[There shall be] no regard to seniority or anything
-but merit. The Lecturers to choose yearly a Public
-Tutor, and to reprehend or displace him if there be
-reason. This Tutor without a new election to take
-none but those admitted in his year of office until
-their course of lectures be gone through. No
-Private Tutor to take two years together. All
-<a name="png.256" id="png.256" href="#png.256"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>248<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>sizars, poor scholars, and scholars of the House to
-be under Public Tutors, except Westminster scholars
-of Trinity College when the Tutor is of another school.</p>
-
-<p>“For encouraging able and fit men to accept of
-the Readers’ places, their fellowships during their
-office shall be doubled by the addition of four other
-fellowships kept vacant for the purpose, one, for
-each, unless some other competent provision be
-made for any of them. And because the Philosophy
-and Mathematic Lecturers’ office is laborious, for
-encouraging them to diligence none shall be compelled
-to come to their lectures, but all that will be
-auditors shall offer each of them a quarterly gratuity;
-suppose of 10s. the sizar, 12s. or 15s. the pensioner,
-and 20s. or 25s. the fellow-commoner. And to encourage
-auditors those shall be preferred to scholarships
-and fellowships which are best skilled in all
-sciences, <i xml:lang="lat" lang="lat">caeteris paribus</i>, and shall have seniority of
-those that come not to lectures. This institution
-to begin in the greater colleges, and be carried on in
-the rest as men qualified and revenues can be had.
-In smaller colleges the Mathematic Lecturer may
-be omitted, and only a power granted the College
-of instituting one when they can. Also the Greek
-Lecturer’s office may be supplied by the Humanity
-Lecturer when it shall be thought fit. A gratuity
-to be given by all the first year to the Greek and
-Humanity Lecturers.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.257" id="png.257" href="#png.257"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>249<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>“For securing the Tutor and making his office
-desirable by fit persons, every student at his admission
-to deposit caution money in the hands of the
-bursar of the College; suppose <i>£</i>10 or <i>£</i>12 the sizar,
-<i>£</i>16 or <i>£</i>20 the pensioner, and <i>£</i>30 or <i>£</i>40 the fellow-commoner.
-And in case any pupil at the end of any
-quarter be in his Tutor’s debt, and do not discharge it
-within six weeks after his receipt of the quarter bill,
-the Bursar to discharge it, and return back the
-residue upon demand, and the Tutor forthwith upon
-pain of forfeiting his office, to send home the pupil.
-Yet may the pupil be received again with a new
-supply of money. This institution to be universal.
-The Master and Seniors to regulate the expenses of
-all under tuition by certain limits common to them
-all, and the Senior Dean to read over and sign all
-their quarter bills. Extravagant pupils, after one
-admonition, to be sent away.</p>
-
-<p>“Fellow-commoners to perform all exercises in
-their courses, and to be equally subject to their
-Tutors and Governors with other scholars and alike
-punishable by exercises, and those who are resty
-or idle to be sent away lest they spoil others by their
-bad example. They shall read geography, chronology,
-and mathematics the first year.</p>
-
-<p>“All students who will be admitted to lectures
-in natural philosophy to learn first geometry and
-mechanics. By mechanics I mean here the demonstrative
-<a name="png.258" id="png.258" href="#png.258"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>250<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>doctrine of forces and motions, including
-hydrostatics. For without a judgment in these
-things a man can have none in philosophy.</p>
-
-<p>“Whenever the major part of the Mathematic
-Lecturers in the University shall desire [it] a Master
-[shall be appointed] to teach fellow-commoners and
-others arithmetic and designing. The University
-shall allow him <i>£</i>10 yearly out of their Common
-Chest, and he shall observe the orders of the Mathematic
-Lecturers and be placed or displaced by the
-major part of them at pleasure.</p>
-
-<p>“All graduates without exception found by the
-Proctors in taverns or other drinking houses, unless
-with travellers at their inns, shall at least have their
-names given in to the Vice-Chancellor, who shall
-summon them to answer it before the next Consistory.</p>
-
-<p>“The Deans to visit the chambers of all undergraduates
-once at least every week, upon pain of
-forfeiting 10s. to the Lecturers for every omission.</p>
-
-<p>“Fasting nights have a shadow of religion without
-any substance. ’Tis only supping more pleasantly
-out of the public hall. And this does great
-mischief by sending young students to find suppers
-abroad, where they get into company and grow
-debauched. Whether would it not be better to
-license undergraduates to sup together in such
-places as the Dean shall appoint, with a Monitor
-to note the names of the absent?</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.259" id="png.259" href="#png.259"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>251<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>“All these lectures to consist in extemporary
-explications of books in such an easy, short, and
-clear manner as may be most profitable to the
-auditors. And if any Lecturer or other person
-shall compose any treatise which shall be preferred
-and used by the major part of the Mathematic or
-Philosophic Lecturers, the University shall give the
-author either <i>£</i>20, or if those Lecturers request it,
-<i>£</i>30, <i>£</i>40 or <i>£</i>50, out of their Common Chest.</p>
-
-<p>“Commissioners to be appointed for some years
-to set on foot, inspect, and amend the institution.</p>
-
-<p>“No oaths of office to be imposed on the Lecturers.
-I do not know a greater abuse of religion
-than that sort of oaths: they being harder to be kept
-than the Jewish Law, so that yearly absolutions
-have been instituted. The papists, who believe
-such absolutions, might be excused for instituting
-such oaths, but we have no such doctrine, and yet
-continue their practices. Admonitions and pecuniary
-mulcts for neglect of duty are less cruel punishments
-than the consequence of perjury, and may be
-as effectual.”</p>
-
-
-<div class="footnotes">
-<p><a class="parnumber" href="#fna33" id="fn33" name="fn33" title="Back">33</a> Camb. Univ. Library, Newton MSS. section viii, No. 5. Add.
-4005/6, A.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="chap">
-
-<h2 title="XV. The History of the Mathematical Tripos"><a name="png.260" id="png.260" href="#png.260"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>252<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>CHAPTER XV.<br
- /><small>THE HISTORY OF THE MATHEMATICAL TRIPOS.</small></h2>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="allsc">The</span> Mathematical Tripos has played so prominent
-a part in the history of education at
-Cambridge and of mathematics in England, that a
-sketch of its development<sup class="fn"><a href="#fn34" id="fna34" name="fna34">34</a></sup> may be interesting to
-general readers.</p>
-
-<p>So far as mathematics is concerned the history
-of the University before Newton may be summed up
-very briefly. The University was founded towards
-the end of the twelfth century. Throughout the
-middle ages, the instruction given to students was
-organized on lines similar to those current at Paris
-and Oxford, and to qualify for a degree it was
-necessary to perform various exercises, and especially
-to keep a number of <em>acts</em> or to oppose acts kept
-by other students. An act consisted in effect of a
-<a name="png.261" id="png.261" href="#png.261"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>253<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>debate in Latin, thrown, at any rate in later times,
-into syllogistic form. It was commenced by one
-student, the <em>respondent</em>, stating some proposition,
-often propounded in the form of a thesis, which
-was attacked by an <em>opponent</em> or <em>opponents</em>, the discussion
-being controlled by a senior graduate. The
-teaching was largely in the hands of young
-graduates—every master of arts being compelled to reside and
-teach for at least one year—though no doubt colleges
-and private hostels supplemented this instruction in
-the case of their own students.</p>
-
-<p>The reformation in England was largely the
-work of Cambridge divines, and in the University
-the renaissance was warmly welcomed. In spite
-of the disorder and confusion of the Tudor period,
-new studies and a system of professional instruction
-were introduced. The earliest lectureships created
-by the University seem to have been one in Latin
-established in or before 1492 and one in mathematics
-established in or before 1501: they mark
-the beginning of the system of teaching by experts
-which has superseded the medieval system of compulsory
-teaching by all regent masters. The fact
-that one of these lectureships was in mathematics
-shows that as early as 1500 the subject was regarded
-as important. Tunstall, subsequently the
-most eminent English arithmetician of his time,
-migrated in 1496 from Oxford to Cambridge, and
-<a name="png.262" id="png.262" href="#png.262"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>254<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>most of the subsequent English mathematicians
-of the Tudor period were at Cambridge; of these
-I may mention Record (who migrated, probably
-about 1535, from Oxford), Dee, Digges, Blundeville,
-Buckley, Billingsley, Hill, Bedwell, Hood, Richard
-and John Harvey, Edward Wright, Briggs, and
-Oughtred. Under the Elizabethan statutes of 1570,
-notwithstanding many disadvantages, the mathematical
-school continued to grow. Horrox, Seth
-Ward, Foster, Rooke, Gilbert Clerke, Pell, Wallis,
-Barrow, Dacres, and Morland may be cited as
-prominent Cambridge mathematicians of the succeeding
-century.</p>
-
-<p>Newton’s mathematical career dates from 1665;
-his reputation, abilities, and influence attracted
-general attention to the subject. He created a
-school of mathematics and mathematical physics,
-among the earliest members of which I note the
-names of Laughton, Samuel Clarke, Craig, Flamsteed,
-Whiston, Saunderson, Jurin, Taylor, Cotes,
-and Robert Smith. Since then Cambridge has been
-regarded as, in a special sense, the home of English
-mathematicians, and from 1706 onwards we have
-fairly complete accounts of the course of reading and
-work of mathematical students.</p>
-
-<p>Until less than a century ago the form of the
-method of qualifying for a degree remained substantially
-unaltered, but the subject-matter of the
-<a name="png.263" id="png.263" href="#png.263"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>255<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>discussions varied from time to time with the prevalent
-studies of the place.</p>
-
-<p>After the renaissance some of the statutable
-exercises were “huddled,” that is, were reduced to
-a mere form. To huddle an act, the proctor
-generally asked some question such as <i xml:lang="lat" lang="lat">Quid est
-nomen?</i> to which the answer usually expected was
-<i xml:lang="lat" lang="lat">Nescio</i>. In these exercises considerable license was
-allowed, particularly if there were any play on the
-words involved. For example, J. Brass, of Trinity,
-was accosted with the question, <i xml:lang="lat" lang="lat">Quid est aes?</i> to
-which he answered, <i xml:lang="lat" lang="lat">Nescio nisi finis examinationis</i>.
-It should be added that retorts such as these
-were only allowed in the pretence exercises, and
-a candidate who in the actual examination was
-asked to give a definition of happiness and replied,
-“An exemption from Payne”—that being the name
-of his questioner—was plucked for want of discrimination
-in time and place. In earlier years
-even the farce of huddling seems to have been
-unnecessary, for it was said in 1675 that it was not
-uncommon for the proctors to take “cautions for
-the performance of the statutable exercises, and
-accept the forfeit of the money so deposited in lieu
-of their performance.”</p>
-
-<p>In medieval times acts had been usually kept on
-some scholastic question or on a proposition taken
-from the <cite>Sentences</cite>. About the end of the fifteenth
-<a name="png.264" id="png.264" href="#png.264"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>256<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>century religious questions, such as the interpretation
-of biblical texts, began to be introduced. Some
-fifty or sixty years later the favourite subjects were
-drawn either from dogmatic theology or from philosophy.
-In the seventeenth century the questions
-were usually philosophical, but in the eighteenth
-century, under the influence of the Newtonian school,
-a large proportion of them were mathematical.</p>
-
-<p>Further details about these exercises and specimens
-of acts kept in the eighteenth century are
-given in my <cite>History of Mathematics at Cambridge</cite>.
-Here I will only say that they provided an admirable
-training in the art of presenting an argument, and
-in dialectical skill in attack and defence. The
-mental strain involved in keeping a contested act
-was severe. De Morgan, describing his act kept in
-1826, wrote<sup class="fn"><a href="#fn35" id="fna35" name="fna35">35</a></sup>:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p>I was badgered for two hours with arguments given and
-answered in Latin—or what we call Latin—against Newton’s
-first section, Lagrange’s derived functions, and Locke on
-innate principles. And though I took off everything, and
-was pronounced by the moderator to have disputed <i xml:lang="lat" lang="lat">magno
-honore</i>, I never had such a strain of thought in my life. For
-the inferior opponents were made as sharp as their betters
-by their tutors, who kept lists of queer objections drawn
-from all quarters.</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p class="indent">Had the language of the discussions been changed
-to English, as was repeatedly urged from 1774
-<a name="png.265" id="png.265" href="#png.265"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>257<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>onwards, these exercises might have been retained
-with advantage, but the barbarous Latin and the
-syllogistic form in which they were carried on prejudiced
-their retention.</p>
-
-<p>About 1830 a custom arose for the respondent
-and opponents to meet previously and arrange their
-arguments together. The discussions then became
-an elaborate farce, and were a mere public performance
-of what had been already rehearsed. Accordingly
-the moderators of 1839 took the responsibility
-of abandoning them. This action was
-singularly high-handed, since a report of 30 May
-1838, had recommended that they should be continued,
-and there was no reason why they should
-not have been reformed and retained as a useful
-feature in the scheme of study.</p>
-
-<p>On the result of the acts, a list of those qualified
-to receive degrees was drawn up. This list was not
-arranged strictly in order of merit, because the
-proctors could insert names anywhere in it, but by
-the beginning of the eighteenth century this power
-had become restricted to the right reserved to the
-vice-chancellor, the senior regent, and each proctor
-to place in the list one candidate anywhere he liked—a
-right which continued to exist till 1828, though
-it was not exercised after 1792. Except for the
-names of these “honorary optimes,” this final list
-was, until 1752, arranged in order of merit into
-<a name="png.266" id="png.266" href="#png.266"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>258<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>wranglers and senior optimes, junior optimes, and
-poll-men; after 1752, the wranglers and senior
-optimes were placed in separate classes. The
-bachelors on admission to their degrees took seniority
-according to their order on this list. The title
-<em>wrangler</em> is derived from these contentious discussions;
-the title <em>optime</em> from the customary compliment
-given by the moderator to a successful disputant,
-<i xml:lang="lat" lang="lat">Domine ..., optime disputasti</i>, or even <i xml:lang="lat" lang="lat">optime
-quidem disputasti</i>, and the title of <em>poll-man</em> from the
-description of this class as
-<span title="[Greek: hoi polloi]" xml:lang="grc" lang="grc">οἱ πολλοί</span>.</p>
-
-<p>The final exercises for the bachelor of arts degree
-were never huddled, and until 1839 were carried out
-strictly. University officials were responsible for
-approving the subject-matter of these acts. Stupid
-men offered some irrefutable truism, but the ambitious
-student courted reputation by affirming
-some paradox. Probably all honour men kept acts,
-but poll-men were deemed to comply with the regulations
-by keeping opponencies. The proctors were
-responsible for presiding at these acts, or seeing that
-competent graduates did so. In and after 1649 two
-examiners were specially appointed for this purpose.
-In 1680<sup class="fn"><a href="#fn36" id="fna36" name="fna36">36</a></sup> these examiners were appointed by the
-senate with the title of moderator, and with the
-joint stipend of four shillings for everyone graduating
-as a bachelor of arts during their year of office.
-<a name="png.267" id="png.267" href="#png.267"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>259<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>In 1688 the joint stipend of the moderators was
-fixed at <i>£</i>40 a year. The moderators, like the
-proctors, were nominated by the colleges in rotation.</p>
-
-<p>From the earliest times the proctors had the
-power of questioning a candidate at the end of a
-disputation, and probably all candidates for a
-degree attended the public schools on certain days
-to give an opportunity to the proctors (or any
-master who liked to take part in the examination)
-to examine them<sup class="fn"><a href="#fn37" id="fna37" name="fna37">37</a></sup>, though the opportunity was not
-always used. Such examinations were conducted in
-Latin, and originally different candidates attended
-on different days. Soon after 1710<sup class="fn"><a href="#fn38" id="fna38" name="fna38">38</a></sup> the moderators
-or proctors began the custom of summoning on one
-day in January all candidates whom they proposed
-to question, and conducting the examination in
-English and in public: the examination did not
-last more than one day, and was partly on philosophy
-and partly on mathematics. It was from
-this examination that the Mathematical Tripos
-developed.</p>
-
-<p>This introduction of a regular oral examination
-seems to have been mainly due to the fact that
-when, in 1710, George I gave the Ely library to the
-<a name="png.268" id="png.268" href="#png.268"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>260<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>University, it was decided to assign for its reception
-the old senate-house—now the catalogue room in the
-library—and to build a new room for the meetings
-of the senate. Pending the building of the new
-senate-house the books were stored in the Schools,
-which thus were rendered unavailable for keeping
-acts. In consequence of this, considerable difficulty
-was found in arranging for all the candidates to keep
-the full number of statutable exercises, and obtaining
-opportunities to compare them one with
-another: hence the introduction or extension of a
-supplementary oral examination. The advantages
-of this examination as providing a ready means of
-testing the knowledge and abilities of the candidates
-were so patent that it was retained when the necessity
-for some system of the kind had passed away, and
-finally it became systematized into an organized test
-to which all questionists were subjected.</p>
-
-<p>In 1731 the University raised the joint stipend of
-the moderators to <i>£</i>60 “in consideration of their
-additional trouble in the Lent Term.” This would
-seem to indicate that the senate-house examination
-had then taken formal shape, and perhaps that a
-definite scheme for its conduct had become customary.</p>
-
-<p>As long as the order of the list of those approved
-for degrees was settled on the result of impressions
-derived from acts kept by the different candidates
-<a name="png.269" id="png.269" href="#png.269"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>261<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>at different times and on different subjects, it was
-impossible to arrange the men in strict order of
-merit, nor was much importance attached to the
-order. But, with the introduction of an examination
-of all the candidates on one day, much closer
-attention was paid to securing an accurate classification,
-and more confidence felt in the published order.
-It seems to have been consequent on this that in and
-after 1748 the final lists were regarded as authoritative
-and important and that the names of the
-honorary optimes were definitely indicated: the lists
-from this time appeared in the <cite>University Calendars</cite>.
-The lists from 1748 to 1910, with the earlier Ordines
-Senioritatis from 1499 to 1747, are printed in the
-<cite>Historical Register of the University</cite>.</p>
-
-<p>Of the detailed history of the examination until
-the middle of the eighteenth century we know
-nothing. From 1750 onwards, however, we have
-more definite accounts of it. At this time, it would
-seem that all the men from each college were taken
-together as a class, and questions passed down by
-the proctors or moderators till they were answered:
-but the examination remained entirely oral, and
-technically was regarded as subsidiary to the discussions
-which had been previously held in the schools.</p>
-
-<p>Each class contained men of very different
-abilities, and to meet difficulties thus caused, a
-custom grew up by which every candidate was
-<a name="png.270" id="png.270" href="#png.270"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>262<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>liable to be taken aside to be questioned by any
-master of arts who wished to do so, and this was
-regarded as an important part of the examination.
-The examination now continued for two days and
-a half, the subjects, as before, being mathematics
-and philosophy. At the conclusion of the second
-day the moderators received the reports of those
-masters of arts who had voluntarily taken part in
-the examination, and provisionally settled the final
-list. The last half-day was used in revising and rearranging
-the order of merit.</p>
-
-<p>Richard Cumberland has left an account of the
-tests to which he was subjected when he took his
-bachelor degree in 1751. Clearly the disputations
-still played an important part, and it is difficult to
-say what weight was attached to the subsequent
-senate-house examination; his reference to it is only
-of a general character. After saying that he kept
-two acts and two opponencies he continued<sup class="fn"><a href="#fn39" id="fna39" name="fna39">39</a></sup>:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p>The last time I was called upon to keep an act in the
-schools I sent in three questions to the Moderator, which
-he withstood as being all mathematical, and required me
-to conform to the usage of proposing one metaphysical
-question in the place of that, which I should think fit to
-withdraw. This was ground I never liked to take, and I
-appealed against his requisition: the act was accordingly
-put by till the matter of right should be ascertained by the
-statutes of the university, and in the result of that enquiry
-<a name="png.271" id="png.271" href="#png.271"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>263<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>it was given for me, and my question <span class="nw">stood....</span> I yielded now
-to advice, and paid attention to my health, till we were
-cited to the senate house to be examined for our Bachelor’s
-degree. It was hardly ever my lot during that examination
-to enjoy any respite. I seemed an object singled out as
-every man’s mark, and was kept perpetually at the table
-under the process of question and answer.</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p>It was found possible by means of the new
-examination to differentiate the better men more
-accurately than before; and accordingly, in 1753,
-as above stated, the first class was subdivided
-into two, called respectively wranglers and senior
-optimes, a division which is still maintained.</p>
-
-<p>The semi-official examination by masters of arts
-was regarded as the more important part of the
-test, and the most eminent residents in the University
-took part in it. Thus John Fenn, of Caius,
-5th wrangler in 1761, wrote<sup class="fn"><a href="#fn40" id="fna40" name="fna40">40</a></sup>:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p>On the following Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday, we
-sat in the Senate-house for public examination; during this
-time I was officially examined by the Proctors and Moderators,
-and had the honour of being taken out for examination
-by Mr Abbot, the celebrated mathematical tutor of St
-John’s College, by the eminent professor of mathematics
-Mr Waring, of Magdalene, and by Mr Jebb of Peterhouse,
-a man thoroughly versed in the academical studies.</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p class="noindent">This irregular examination by any master who chose
-to take part in it constantly gave rise to accusations
-of partiality.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.272" id="png.272" href="#png.272"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>264<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>In 1763 the traditional rules for the conduct of
-the examination took more definite shape. Henceforth
-the examiners used the disputations only as a
-means of classifying the men roughly. On the result
-of their “acts,” and probably partly also of their
-general reputation, the candidates were divided into
-eight classes, each arranged in alphabetical order.
-The subsequent position of the men in the class was
-determined solely by the senate-house examination.
-The first two classes comprised all who were expected
-to be wranglers, the next four classes included the
-other candidates for honours, and the last two
-classes consisted of poll-men only. Practically anyone
-placed in either of the first two classes was
-allowed, if he wished, to take an aegrotat senior
-optime, and thus escape all further examination:
-this was called gulphing it.</p>
-
-<p>All the men from one college were no longer
-taken together, but each class was examined separately
-and <i xml:lang="lat" lang="lat">vivâ voce</i>; and hence, since all the students
-comprised in each class were of about equal attainments,
-it was possible to make the examination more
-effective. Richard Watson, of Trinity, claimed that
-this change was made by him when acting as
-moderator in 1763. He said<sup class="fn"><a href="#fn41" id="fna41" name="fna41">41</a></sup>:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p>There was more room for partiality ... then [<i>i.e.</i> in 1759]
-<a name="png.273" id="png.273" href="#png.273"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>265<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>than there is now; and I attribute the change, in a great
-degree, to an alteration which I introduced the first year
-I was moderator [<i>i.e.</i> in 1763], and which has been persevered
-in ever since. At the time of taking their Bachelor of Arts’
-degree, the young men are examined in classes, and the
-classes are now formed according to the abilities shown by
-individuals in the schools. By this arrangement, persons
-of nearly equal merits are examined in the presence of each
-other, and flagrant acts of partiality cannot take place.
-Before I made this alteration, they were examined in classes,
-but the classes consisted of members of the same College,
-and the best and worst were often examined together.</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p class="noindent">It is probable that before the examination in the
-senate-house began a candidate, if manifestly placed
-in too low a class, was allowed the privilege of
-challenging the class to which he was assigned.
-Perhaps this began as a matter of favour, and was
-only granted in exceptional cases, but a few years
-later it became a right which every candidate could
-exercise; and I think that it is partly to its development
-that the ultimate predominance of the tripos
-over the other exercises for the degree is due.</p>
-
-<p>In the same year, 1763, it was decided that the
-relative position of the senior and second wranglers,
-namely, Paley, of Christ’s, and Frere, of Caius, was
-to be decided by the senate-house examination and
-not by the disputations. Henceforward distinction
-in that examination was regarded as the most important
-honour open to undergraduates.</p>
-
-<p>In 1768 Robert Smith, of Trinity College, founded
-<a name="png.274" id="png.274" href="#png.274"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>266<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>prizes for mathematics and natural philosophy open
-to two commencing bachelors. The examination
-followed immediately after the senate-house examination,
-and the distinction, being much coveted,
-tended to emphasize the mathematical side of the
-normal university education of the best men. Since
-1883 the prizes have been awarded on the result of
-dissertations<sup class="fn"><a href="#fn42" id="fna42" name="fna42">42</a></sup>. Additional prizes, awarded at the
-same time, and associated with the name of Lord
-Rayleigh<sup class="fn"><a href="#fn43" id="fna43" name="fna43">43</a></sup>, were founded in 1909.</p>
-
-<p>Until about 1770, the senate-house examination
-had been oral, but it began now to be the custom to
-dictate some or all of the questions and to require
-answers to be written. Only one question was
-dictated at a time, and a fresh one was not given
-out until some student had solved that previously
-read: a custom which by causing perpetual interruptions
-to take down new questions must have
-proved very harassing. We are perhaps apt to
-think that an examination conducted by written
-papers is so natural that the custom is of long
-continuance, but I know no record of any in
-Europe earlier than the eighteenth century. Until
-1830 the questions for the Smith’s prizes were
-dictated.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.275" id="png.275" href="#png.275"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>267<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>The following description of the senate-house examination
-as it existed in 1772 was given by Jebb<sup class="fn"><a href="#fn44" id="fna44" name="fna44">44</a></sup>:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p>The moderators, some days before the arrival of the
-time prescribed by the vice-chancellor, meet for the purpose
-of forming the students into divisions of six, eight, or ten,
-according to their performance in the schools, with a view
-to the ensuing examination.</p>
-
-<p>Upon the first of the appointed days, at eight o’clock in
-the morning, the students enter the senate-house, preceded
-by a master of arts from each college, who ... is called the
-“father” of the <span class="nw">college....</span></p>
-
-<p>After the proctors have called over the names, each of
-the moderators sends for a division of the students: they
-sit with him round a table, with pens, ink, and paper, before
-them: he enters upon his task of examination, and does not
-dismiss the set till the hour is expired. This examination
-has now for some years been held in the English language.</p>
-
-<p>The examination is varied according to the abilities of
-the students. The moderator generally begins with proposing
-some questions from the six books of Euclid, plain
-(<i>sic</i>) trigonometry, and the first rules of algebra. If any
-person fails in an answer, the question goes to the next.
-From the elements of mathematics, a transition is made to
-the four branches of philosophy, viz. mechanics, hydrostatics,
-apparent astronomy, and optics, as explained in the
-works of Maclaurin, Cotes, Helsham, Hamilton, Rutherforth,
-Keill, Long, Ferguson, and Smith. If the moderator finds
-the set of questionists, under examination, capable of answering
-him, he proceeds to the eleventh and twelfth books of
-Euclid, conic sections, spherical trigonometry, the higher
-parts of Algebra, and sir Isaac Newton’s Principia; more
-particularly those sections, which treat of the motion of
-<a name="png.276" id="png.276" href="#png.276"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>268<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>bodies in eccentric and revolving orbits; the mutual action
-of spheres, composed of particles attracting each other according
-to various laws; the theory of pulses, propagated
-through elastic mediums; and the stupendous fabric of the
-world. Having closed the philosophical examination, he
-sometimes asks a few questions in Locke’s Essay on the
-human understanding, Butler’s Analogy, or Clarke’s Attributes.
-But as the highest academical distinctions are invariably
-given to the best proficients in mathematics and
-natural philosophy, a very superficial knowledge in morality
-and metaphysics will suffice.</p>
-
-<p>When the division under examination is one of the
-highest classes, problems are also proposed, with which the
-student retires to a distant part of the senate-house, and
-returns, with his solution upon paper, to the moderator,
-who, at his leisure, compares it with the solutions of other
-students, to whom the same problems have been proposed.</p>
-
-<p>The extraction of roots, the arithmetic of surds, the invention
-of divisers, the resolution of quadratic, cubic, and
-biquadratic equations; together with the doctrine of fluxions,
-and its application to the solution of questions “de maximis
-et minimis,” to the finding of areas, to the rectification of
-curves, the investigation of the centers of gravity and oscillation,
-and to the circumstances of bodies, agitated, according
-to various laws, by centripetal forces, as unfolded, and
-exemplified, in the fluxional treatises of Lyons, Saunderson,
-Simpson, Emerson, Maclaurin, and Newton, generally form
-the subject matter of these problems.</p>
-
-<p>When the clock strikes nine, the questionists are dismissed
-to breakfast: they return at half-past nine, and stay
-till eleven; they go in again at half-past one, and stay till
-three; and, lastly, they return at half-past three, and stay
-till five.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.277" id="png.277" href="#png.277"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>269<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>The hours of attendance are the same upon the subsequent
-day.</p>
-
-<p>On the third day they are finally dismissed at eleven.</p>
-
-<p>During the hours of attendance, every division is twice
-examined in form, once by each of the moderators, who are
-engaged for the whole time in this employment.</p>
-
-<p>As the questionists are examined in divisions of only
-six or eight at a time, but a small portion of the whole
-number is engaged, at any particular hour, with the moderators;
-and, therefore, if there were no further examination,
-much time would remain unemployed.</p>
-
-<p>But the moderator’s inquiry into the merits of the candidates
-forms the least material part of the examination.</p>
-
-<p>The “fathers” of the respective colleges, zealous for the
-credit of the societies, of which they are the guardians, are
-incessantly employed in examining those students, who
-appear most likely to contest the palm of glory with their
-sons.</p>
-
-<p>This part of the process is as follows:</p>
-
-<p>The father of a college takes a student of a different
-college aside, and, sometimes for an hour and an half together,
-strictly examines him in every part of mathematics
-and philosophy, which he professes to have read.</p>
-
-<p>After he hath, from this examination, formed an accurate
-idea of the student’s abilities and acquired knowledge, he
-makes a report of his absolute or comparative merit to the
-moderators, and to every other father who shall ask him
-the question.</p>
-
-<p>Besides the fathers, all masters of arts, and doctors, of
-whatever faculty they be, have the liberty of examining
-whom they please; and they also report the event of each
-trial, to every person who shall make the inquiry.</p>
-
-<p>The moderators and fathers meet at breakfast, and at
-dinner. From the variety of reports, taken in connection
-<a name="png.278" id="png.278" href="#png.278"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>270<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>with their own examination, the former are enabled, about
-the close of the second day, so far to settle the comparative
-merits of the candidates, as to agree upon the names of
-four-and-twenty, who to them appear most deserving of
-being distinguished by marks of academical approbation.</p>
-
-<p>These four-and-twenty [wranglers and senior optimes]
-are recommended to the proctors for their private examination;
-and, if approved by them, and no reason appears
-against such placing of them from any subsequent inquiry,
-their names are set down in two divisions, according to
-that order, in which they deserve to stand; are afterwards
-printed; and read over upon a solemn day, in the presence
-of the vice-chancellor, and of the assembled university.</p>
-
-<p>The names of the twelve [junior optimes], who, in the
-course of the examination, appear next in desert, are also
-printed, and are read over, in the presence of the vice-chancellor,
-and of the assembled university, upon a day
-subsequent to the <span class="nw">former....</span></p>
-
-<p>The students, who appear to have merited neither praise
-nor censure [the poll-men], pass unnoticed: while those,
-who have taken no pains to prepare themselves for the examination,
-and have appeared with discredit in the schools,
-are distinguished by particular tokens of disgrace.</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p class="noindent">Jebb’s statement about the number of wranglers
-and senior optimes is only approximate.</p>
-
-<p>It may be added that it was now frankly recognized
-that the examination was competitive<sup class="fn"><a href="#fn45" id="fna45" name="fna45">45</a></sup>. Also
-that though it was open to any member of the
-senate to take part in it, yet the determination of
-the relative merit of the students was entirely in the
-<a name="png.279" id="png.279" href="#png.279"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>271<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>hands of the moderators<sup class="fn"><a href="#fn46" id="fna46" name="fna46">46</a></sup>. Although the examination
-did not occupy more than three days it
-must have been a severe physical trial to anyone
-who was delicate. It was held in winter and in
-the senate-house: that building was then noted for
-its draughts, and was not warmed in any way; and,
-according to tradition, on one occasion the candidates
-on entering in the morning found the ink
-frozen in the pots on their desks.</p>
-
-<p>The University was not altogether satisfied<sup class="fn"><a href="#fn47" id="fna47" name="fna47">47</a></sup>
-with the regulations, and in 1779<sup class="fn"><a href="#fn48" id="fna48" name="fna48">48</a></sup> the scheme of
-examination was amended in various respects. In
-particular the examination was extended to four
-days, a third day being given up entirely to natural
-religion, moral philosophy, and Locke’s <cite>Essay</cite>. It
-was further announced<sup class="fn"><a href="#fn49" id="fna49" name="fna49">49</a></sup> that a candidate would not
-receive credit for advanced subjects unless he had
-satisfied the examiners in Euclid’s <cite>Elements</cite> and
-elementary natural philosophy.</p>
-
-<p>A system of brackets or “classes quam minimae”
-was now introduced. Under this system the examiners
-issued on the morning of the fourth day a
-provisional list of men who had obtained honours,
-with the names of those of about equal merit
-bracketed, and that day was devoted to arranging
-<a name="png.280" id="png.280" href="#png.280"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>272<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>the names in each bracket in order of merit: the
-examiners being given explicit authority to invite
-the assistance of others in this work. Whether at
-this time a candidate could request to be re-examined
-with the view of being moved from one
-bracket to another is uncertain, but later this also
-was allowed.</p>
-
-<p>The number of examiners was also increased
-to four, the moderators of one year becoming, as
-a matter of course, the examiners of the next.
-Thus of the four examiners in each year, two had
-taken part in the examination of the previous year,
-and the continuity of the system of examination
-was maintained. The names of the moderators
-appear on the tripos lists, but the names of the
-examiners were not printed on the lists till some
-years later.</p>
-
-<p>The right of any master of arts to take part in
-the examination was not affected, though henceforth
-it was exercised more sparingly, and I believe
-was not insisted on after 1785. But it became a
-regular custom for the moderators to invite particular
-residents to examine and compare specified
-candidates: Milner, of Queens’, was constantly
-asked to assist in this way.</p>
-
-<p>It was not long before it became an established
-custom that a candidate, who was dissatisfied with
-the class in which he had been placed as the result
-<a name="png.281" id="png.281" href="#png.281"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>273<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>of his disputations, might challenge it before the
-examination began. This power seems to have been
-used but rarely; it was, however, a recognition of the
-fact that a place in the tripos list was to be determined
-by the senate-house examination alone, and
-the examiners soon acquired the habit of settling the
-preliminary classes without exclusive reference to
-the previous disputations.</p>
-
-<p>The earliest extant paper actually set in the
-senate-house, to which we can with certainty refer,
-is a problem paper set in 1785 or 1786 by W. Hodson,
-of Trinity, then a proctor. The autograph
-copy from which he gave out the questions was
-luckily preserved, and is in the library<sup class="fn"><a href="#fn50" id="fna50" name="fna50">50</a></sup> of Trinity
-College. It must be almost the last problem paper
-which was dictated, instead of being printed and
-given as a whole to the candidates. The paper is
-as follows:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p><span class="parnumber">1.</span> To determine the velocity with which a Body must
-be thrown, in a direction parallel to the Horizon, so as to
-become a secondary planet to the Earth; as also to describe
-a parabola, and never return.</p>
-
-<p><span class="parnumber">2.</span> To demonstrate, supposing the force to vary as
-<span class="maths">1 / <i>D</i>²</span> how far a body must fall both within and without the
-Circle to acquire the Velocity with which a body revolves
-in a Circle.</p>
-
-<p><span class="parnumber"><a name="png.282" id="png.282" href="#png.282"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>274<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>3.</span> Suppose a body to be turned (<i>sic</i>) upwards with the
-Velocity with which it revolves in an Ellipse, how high will
-it ascend? The same is asked supposing it to move in a
-parabola.</p>
-
-<p><span class="parnumber">4.</span> Suppose a force varying first as <span class="maths">1 / <i>D</i>³,</span> secondly in a
-greater ratio than <span class="maths">1 / <i>D</i>²</span> but less than
-<span class="maths">1 / <i>D</i>³,</span> and thirdly in a
-less ratio than <span class="maths">1 / <i>D</i>²,</span> in each of these Cases to determine
-whether at all, and where the body parting from the higher
-Apsid will come to the lower.</p>
-
-<p><span class="parnumber">5.</span> To determine in what situation of the moon’s Apsid
-they go most forwards, and in what situation of her Nodes
-the Nodes go most backwards, and why?</p>
-
-<p><span class="parnumber">6.</span> In the cubic equation <span class="maths"><i>x</i>³ + <i>qx</i> + <i>r</i> = 0</span> which wants
-the second term; supposing <span class="maths"><i>x = a + b</i></span> and
-<span class="maths">3<i>ab = −q</i>,</span> to
-determine the value of <span class="maths"><i>x</i>.</span> (<i>sic.</i>)</p>
-
-<p><span class="parnumber">7.</span> To find the fluxion of <span class="maths"><i>x<sup>r</sup></i> × (<i>y<sup>n</sup> + z<sup>m</sup></i>)<sup>1/<i>q</i></sup>.</span></p>
-
-<p><span class="parnumber">8.</span> To find the fluent of <span class="maths" title="a[xdot]/(a+x)"><i>aẋ</i> / (<i>a + x</i>).</span></p>
-
-<p><span class="parnumber">9.</span> To find the fluxion of the <span class="maths"><i>m</i><sup>th</sup></span> power of the Logarithm
-of <span class="maths"><i>x</i>.</span></p>
-
-<p><span class="parnumber">10.</span> Of right-angled Triangles containing a given Area
-to find that whereof the sum of the two legs <span class="maths"><i>AB + BC</i></span> shall
-be the least possible. [This and the two following questions
-are illustrated by diagrams. The angle at <span class="maths"><i>B</i></span> is the right
-angle.]</p>
-
-<p><span class="parnumber">11.</span> To find the Surface of the Cone <span class="maths"><i>ABC</i>.</span> [The cone
-is a right one on a circular base.]</p>
-
-<p><span class="parnumber">12.</span> To rectify the arc <span class="maths"><i>DB</i></span> of the semicircle <span class="maths"><i>DBV</i>.</span></p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p>In cases of equality in the senate-house examination,
-the acts were still taken into account in settling
-<a name="png.283" id="png.283" href="#png.283"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>275<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>the tripos order: and in 1786, when the second, third,
-and fourth wranglers came out equal in the examination,
-a memorandum was published that the second
-place was given to that candidate who <i xml:lang="lat" lang="lat">dialectis magis
-est versatus</i>, and the third place to that one who <i xml:lang="lat" lang="lat">in
-scholis sophistarum melius disputavit</i>.</p>
-
-<p>At this time there were various intervals in
-the examination by the moderators, and the examinations
-by the extraneous examiners took place
-in these intervals. Those candidates who at any
-time were not being examined occupied themselves
-with amusements, provided they were not too
-boisterous and obvious: probably dice and cards
-played a large part in them. Gunning in an amusing
-account of his examination in 1788 talks of playing
-with a teetotum<sup class="fn"><a href="#fn51" id="fna51" name="fna51">51</a></sup> on the Wednesday (when specified
-works by Locke and Paley formed the subjects of
-examination), and says this game “was carried on
-with great spirit ... by considerable numbers during
-the whole of the examination.”</p>
-
-<p>About this period, 1790, the custom of printing
-the problem papers was introduced, but until 1828
-the other papers continued to be dictated. Since
-then all the papers have been printed.</p>
-
-<p>I insert here the following letter<sup class="fn"><a href="#fn52" id="fna52" name="fna52">52</a></sup> from William
-<a name="png.284" id="png.284" href="#png.284"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>276<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>Gooch, of Caius, in which he described his examination
-in the senate-house in 1791. It must be remembered
-that it is the letter of an undergraduate
-addressed to his father and mother, and was not
-intended either for preservation or publication: a
-fact which certainly does not detract from its value.</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p class="h3"><i>Monday</i> ¼ aft. 12.</p>
-
-<p>We have been examin’d this Morning in pure Mathematics
-&amp; I’ve hitherto kept just about even with Peacock
-which is much more than I expected. We are going at
-1 o’clock to be examin’d till 3 in Philosophy.</p>
-
-<p>From 1 till 7 I did more than Peacock; But who did
-most at Moderator’s Rooms this Evening from 7 till 9, I
-don’t know yet;—but I did above three times as much as
-the Sen<sup>r</sup> Wrangler last year, yet I’m afraid not so much as
-Peacock.</p>
-
-<p>Between One &amp; three o’Clock I wrote up 9 sheets of
-Scribbling Paper so you may suppose I was pretty fully
-employ’d.</p>
-
-<p class="h3"><i>Tuesday Night.</i></p>
-
-<p>I’ve been shamefully us’d by Lax to-day;—Tho’ his
-anxiety for Peacock must (of course) be very great, I never
-suspected that his Partially (<i>sic</i>) w<sup>d</sup> get the better of his
-Justice. I had entertain’d too high an opinion of him to
-suppose it.—he gave Peacock a long private Examination &amp;
-then came to me (I hop’d) on the same subject, but ’twas
-only to <em>Bully</em> me as much as he could,—whatever I said
-(tho’ right) he tried to convert into Nonsense by seeming to
-misunderstand me. However I don’t entirely dispair of
-being first, tho’ you see Lax seems determin’d that I shall
-not.—I had no Idea (before I went into the Senate-House)
-of being able to contend at all with Peacock.</p>
-
-<p class="h3"><a name="png.285" id="png.285" href="#png.285"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>277<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a><i>Wednesday evening.</i></p>
-
-<p>Peacock &amp; I are still in perfect Equilibrio &amp; the Examiners
-themselves can give no guess yet who is likely to be
-first;—a New Examiner (Wood of St. John’s, who is reckon’d
-the first Mathematician in the University, for Waring doesn’t
-reside) was call’d solely to examine Peacock &amp; me only.—but
-by this new Plan nothing is yet determin’d.—So Wood
-is to examine us again to-morrow morning.</p>
-
-<p class="h3"><i>Thursday evening.</i></p>
-
-<p>Peacock is declar’d first &amp; I second,—Smith of this Coll.
-is either 8<sup>th</sup> or 9<sup>th</sup> &amp; Lucas is either 10<sup>th</sup> or 11<sup>th</sup>.—Poor
-Quiz Carver is one of the
-<span title="[Greek: hoi polloi]" xml:lang="grc" lang="grc">οἱ πολλοί</span>;—I’m perfectly <em>satisfied</em>
-that the Senior Wranglership is Peacock’s due, but <em>certainly</em>
-not so very undisputably as Lax pleases to represent it—I
-understand that <em>he</em> asserts ’twas 5 to 4 in Peacock’s favor.
-Now Peacock &amp; I have explain’d to each other how we went
-on, &amp; can <em>prove indisputably</em> that it wasn’t 20 to 19 in
-his favor;—I <em>cannot</em> therefore be displeas’d for being plac’d
-second, tho’ I’m provov’d (<i>sic</i>) with Lax for his false report
-(so much beneath the Character of a <span class="nw">Gentleman.)—</span></p>
-
-<p>N.B. it is my very <em>particular Request</em> that you dont
-mention Lax’s behaviour to me to any one.</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p>Such was the form ultimately taken by the
-senate-house examination, a form which it retained
-substantially without alteration for nearly half-a-century.
-It soon became the sole test by which
-candidates were judged. The University was not
-obliged to grant a degree to anyone who performed
-the statutable exercises, and it was open
-to the senate to refuse to pass a supplicat for a
-bachelor’s degree in arts unless the candidate had
-<a name="png.286" id="png.286" href="#png.286"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>278<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>presented himself for the senate-house examination.
-In 1790 James Blackburn, of Trinity, a questionist
-of exceptional abilities, was informed that in spite
-of his good disputations he would not be allowed a
-degree unless he also satisfied the examiners in the
-tripos. He accordingly solved one “very hard
-problem,” though in consequence of a dispute with
-the authorities he refused to attempt any more<sup class="fn"><a href="#fn53" id="fna53" name="fna53">53</a></sup>.</p>
-
-<p>Henceforth the examination was compulsory on
-all candidates pursuing the normal course for the
-B.A. degree. In 1791 the University laid down
-rules<sup class="fn"><a href="#fn54" id="fna54" name="fna54">54</a></sup> for its conduct, so far as it concerned poll-men,
-decreeing that those who passed were to be
-classified in four divisions or classes, the names in
-each class to be arranged alphabetically, but not to
-be printed on the official tripos lists. The classes
-in the final lists must be distinguished from the
-eight preliminary classes issued before the commencement
-of the examination. The men in the
-first six preliminary classes were expected to take
-honours; those in the seventh and eighth preliminary
-classes were <i xml:lang="lat" lang="lat">primâ facie</i> poll-men.</p>
-
-<p>In 1799 the moderators announced<sup class="fn"><a href="#fn55" id="fna55" name="fna55">55</a></sup> that for the
-future they would require every candidate to show
-<a name="png.287" id="png.287" href="#png.287"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>279<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>a competent knowledge of the first book of Euclid’s
-<cite>Elements</cite>, arithmetic, vulgar and decimal fractions,
-simple and quadratic equations, and selected books
-by Locke and Paley. Paley’s works seem to be
-held in esteem by modern divines, and his <cite>Evidences</cite>,
-though not his <cite>Philosophy</cite>, still remains (1917) one
-of the subjects of the Previous Examination, but his
-contemporaries thought less highly of his writings, or
-at any rate of his philosophy. Thus Best is quoted by
-Wordsworth<sup class="fn"><a href="#fn56" id="fna56" name="fna56">56</a></sup> as saying of Paley’s <cite>Philosophy</cite>, “The
-tutors of Cambridge no doubt neutralize by their
-judicious remarks, when they read it to their pupils,
-all that is pernicious in its principles”: so also
-Richard Watson, bishop of Llandaff, in his anecdotal
-autobiography<sup class="fn"><a href="#fn57" id="fna57" name="fna57">57</a></sup>, says, in describing the senate-house
-examination in which Paley was senior wrangler, that
-Paley was afterwards known to the world by many
-excellent productions, “though there are some ...
-principles in his philosophy which I by no means
-approve.”</p>
-
-<p>In 1800 the moderators extended to all men in
-the first four preliminary classes the privilege of
-being allowed to attempt the problem papers:
-hitherto this privilege had been confined to candidates
-placed in the first two classes. Until 1828
-the problem papers were set in the evenings, and
-<a name="png.288" id="png.288" href="#png.288"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>280<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>in the rooms of the moderator, but many of the
-so-called problems were really pieces of bookwork
-or easy riders. No problems were ever set to the
-men in the seventh and eighth preliminary classes,
-which contained the poll-men.</p>
-
-<p>The <cite>University Calendars</cite> date from 1796, and
-from 1802 to 1882 inclusive contain the printed
-tripos papers of the previous January. The papers
-from 1801 to 1820 and from 1838 to 1849 inclusive
-were also published in separate volumes, which are
-to be found in most public libraries. None of the
-bookwork papers of this time are now extant, but
-it is believed that they contained few, if any, riders.
-In looking at these papers to form an opinion of
-the knowledge current at the time it is necessary
-to bear in mind that the text-books then in circulation
-were far from satisfactory.</p>
-
-<p>The <cite>Calendar</cite> of 1802 contains a diffuse account
-of the examination. It commences as follows:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p>On the Monday morning, a little before eight o’clock,
-the students, generally about a hundred, enter the Senate-House,
-preceded by a master of arts, who on this occasion
-is styled the father of the College to which he belongs. On
-two pillars at the entrance of the Senate-House are hung
-the classes and a paper denoting the hours of examination
-of those who are thought most competent to contend for
-honours. Immediately after the University clock has struck
-eight, the names are called over, and the absentees, being
-marked, are subject to certain fines. The classes to be
-<a name="png.289" id="png.289" href="#png.289"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>281<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>examined are called out, and proceed to their appointed
-tables, where they find pens, ink, and paper provided in
-great abundance. In this manner, with the utmost order
-and regularity, two-thirds of the young men are set to work
-within less than five minutes after the clock has struck
-eight. There are three chief tables, at which six examiners
-preside. At the first, the senior moderator of the present
-year and the junior moderator of the preceding year. At
-the second, the junior moderator of the present, and the
-senior moderator of the preceding year. At the third, two
-moderators of the year previous to the two last, or two
-examiners appointed by the Senate. The two first tables
-are chiefly allotted to the six first classes; the third, or
-largest, to the <span title="[Greek: hoi polloi]" xml:lang="grc" lang="grc">οἱ πολλοί</span>.</p>
-
-<p>The young men hear the propositions or questions delivered
-by the examiners; they instantly apply themselves;
-demonstrate, prove, work out and write down, fairly and
-legibly (otherwise their labour is of little avail) the answers
-required. All is silence; nothing heard save the voice of
-the examiners; or the gentle request of some one, who may
-wish a repetition of the enunciation. It requires every
-person to use the utmost dispatch; for as soon as ever the
-examiners perceive anyone to have finished his paper and
-subscribed his name to it another question is immediately
-<span class="nw">given....</span></p>
-
-<p>The examiners are not seated, but keep moving round
-the tables, both to judge how matters proceed and to deliver
-their questions at proper intervals. The examination, which
-embraces arithmetic, algebra, fluxions, the doctrine of
-infinitesimals and increments, geometry, trigonometry,
-mechanics, hydrostatics, optics, and astronomy, in all their
-various gradations, is varied according to circumstances:
-no one can anticipate a question, for in the course of five
-minutes he may be dragged from Euclid to Newton, from
-<a name="png.290" id="png.290" href="#png.290"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>282<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>the humble arithmetic of Bonnycastle to the abstruse
-analytics of Waring. While this examination is proceeding
-at the three tables between the hours of eight and nine,
-printed problems are delivered to each person of the first
-and second classes; these he takes with him to any window
-he pleases, where there are pens, ink, and paper prepared
-for his operations.</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p>The examination began at eight o’clock in the
-morning. At nine the papers had to be given up, and
-half-an-hour was allowed for breakfast. At half-past
-nine the candidates came back, and were examined
-in the way described above till eleven, when the
-senate-house was again cleared. An interval of two
-hours then took place. At one o’clock all returned
-to be again examined. At three the senate-house
-was cleared for half-an-hour, and, on the return of
-the candidates, the examination was continued till
-five. At seven in the evening the first four classes
-went to the senior moderator’s rooms to solve problems.
-They were finally dismissed for the day at
-nine, after eight hours of examination. The work
-of Tuesday was similar to that of Monday: Wednesday
-was partly devoted to logic and moral philosophy.</p>
-
-<p>At eight o’clock on Thursday morning a first
-list was published with all candidates of about
-equal merits bracketed. Until nine o’clock a candidate
-had the right to challenge anyone above him
-to an examination to see which was the better. At
-<a name="png.291" id="png.291" href="#png.291"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>283<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>nine a second list came out, and a candidate’s right
-of challenge was then confined to the bracket immediately
-above his own. If he proved himself the
-equal of or better than the man so challenged his
-name was transferred to the upper bracket. To
-challenge and then to fail to substantiate the claim
-to removal to a higher bracket was considered rather
-ridiculous. Revised lists were published at eleven,
-three, and five, according to the results of the
-examination during that day. At five the whole
-examination ended. The proctors, moderators, and
-examiners then retired to a room under the public
-library to prepare the list of honours, which was
-sometimes settled in a few hours, but sometimes not
-before two or three the next morning. The name
-of the senior wrangler was generally announced at
-midnight, and the rest of the list the next morning.
-In 1802 there were eighty-six candidates for honours,
-and they were divided into fifteen brackets, the first
-and second brackets containing each one name only,
-and the third bracket four names.</p>
-
-<p>It is clear from the above account that the competition
-fostered by the examination had developed
-so much as to threaten to impair its usefulness as
-guiding the studies of the men. On the other hand,
-there can be no doubt that the carefully devised
-arrangements for obtaining an accurate order of
-merit stimulated the best men to throw all their
-<a name="png.292" id="png.292" href="#png.292"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>284<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>energies into the work for the examination. It is
-easy to point out the double-edged result of a strict
-order of merit. The problem before the University
-was to retain its advantages while checking any
-abuses to which it might lead.</p>
-
-<p>It was the privilege of the moderators to entertain
-the proctors and some of the leading resident
-mathematicians the night before the issue of the
-final list, and to communicate that list in confidence
-to their guests. This pleasant custom survived till
-1884. I revived the practice in 1890 when acting
-as senior moderator, but it seems to have now
-ceased.</p>
-
-<p>In 1806 Sir Frederick Pollock was senior wrangler,
-and in 1869 in answer to an appeal from De
-Morgan for an account of the mathematical study
-of men at the beginning of the century he wrote a
-letter<sup class="fn"><a href="#fn58" id="fna58" name="fna58">58</a></sup> which is sufficiently interesting to bear
-reproduction:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p>I shall write in answer to your inquiry, <em>all</em> about my
-books, my study, and my degree, and leave you to settle all
-about the proprieties which my letter may give rise to, as
-to egotism, modesty, &amp;c. The only books I read the first
-year were Wood’s <cite>Algebra</cite> (as far as quadratic equations),
-Bonnycastle’s ditto, and <cite>Euclid</cite> (Simpson’s). In the second
-year I read Wood (beyond quadratic equations), and Wood
-and Vince, for what they called the <em>branches</em>. In the third
-year I read the <cite>Jesuit’s</cite> Newton and Vince’s <cite>Fluxions</cite>; these
-were all the <em>books</em>, but there were certain <span class="allsc">MSS.</span> floating about
-<a name="png.293" id="png.293" href="#png.293"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>285<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>which I copied—which belonged to Dealtry, second wrangler
-in Kempthorne’s year. I have no doubt that I had read
-less and seen fewer books than any senior wrangler of about
-my time, or any period since; but what I knew I knew
-thoroughly, and it was completely at my fingers’ ends. I
-consider that I was the last <em>geometrical</em> and <em>fluxional</em> senior
-wrangler; I was not up to the <em>differential</em> calculus, and never
-acquired it. I went up to college with a knowledge of
-Euclid and algebra to quadratic equations, nothing more;
-and I never read any second year’s lore during my first year,
-nor any third year’s lore during my second; my <i>forte</i> was,
-that what I <em>did</em> know I <em>could produce at any moment with</em>
-<span class="allsc">PERFECT</span> <em>accuracy</em>. I could repeat the first book of Euclid
-word by word and letter by letter. During my first year I
-was not a “<em>reading</em>” man (so called); I had no expectation
-of honours or a fellowship, and I attended all the lectures
-on all subjects—Harwood’s anatomical, Wollaston’s chemical,
-and Farish’s mechanical lectures—but the examination
-at the end of the first year revealed to me my powers. I
-was not only in the first class, but it was generally understood
-I was <em>first</em> in the first class; neither I nor anyone for
-me expected I should get in at all. Now, as I had taken
-no pains to prepare (taking, however, marvellous pains
-while the examination was going on), I knew better than
-anyone else the value of my <em>examination qualities</em> (great
-rapidity and perfect accuracy); and I said to myself, “If
-you’re not an ass, you’ll be senior wrangler”; and <em>I took to
-“reading” accordingly</em>. A curious circumstance occurred
-when the Brackets came out in the Senate-house declaring
-the result of the examination: I saw at the top the name
-of Walter <em>bracketed alone</em> (as he was); in the bracket below
-were <em>Fiott</em>, <em>Hustler</em>, <em>Jephson</em>. I looked down and could not
-find my own name till I got to Bolland, when my pride took
-fire, and I said, “I must have beaten <em>that man</em>, so I will
-<a name="png.294" id="png.294" href="#png.294"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>286<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>look up again”; and on looking up carefully I found the
-nail had been passed through my name, and I was at the
-top bracketed <em>alone</em>, even above Walter. You may judge
-what my feelings were at this discovery; it is the only instance
-of two such brackets, and it made my fortune—that
-is, made me independent, and gave me an immense college
-reputation. It was said I was more than half of the examination
-before anyone else. The two moderators were
-Hornbuckle, of St John’s, and Brown (Saint Brown), of
-Trinity. The Johnian congratulated me. I said perhaps
-I might be challenged; he said, “Well, if you are you’re
-quite safe—you may sit down and do nothing, and no
-one would get up to you in a whole <span class="nw">day.” ...</span></p>
-
-<p>Latterly the Cambridge examinations seem to turn upon
-very different matters from what prevailed in my time. I
-think a Cambridge education has for its object to make good
-members of society—not to extend science and make profound
-mathematicians. The tripos questions in the Senate-house
-ought not to go beyond certain limits, and geometry
-ought to be cultivated and encouraged much more than it is.</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p>To this De Morgan replied:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p>Your letter suggests much, because it gives possibility
-of answer. The <em>branches</em> of algebra of course mainly refer
-to the second part of Wood, now called the theory of equations.
-Waring was his guide. Turner—whom you must
-remember as head of Pembroke, senior wrangler of 1767—told
-a young man in the hearing of my informant to be sure
-and attend to quadratic equations. “It was a quadratic,”
-said he, “made me senior wrangler.” It seems to me that
-the Cambridge <em>revivers</em> were [Woodhouse,] Waring, Paley,
-Vince, Milner.</p>
-
-<p>You had Dealtry’s <span class="allsc">MSS.</span> He afterwards published a
-very good book on fluxions. He merged his mathematical
-<a name="png.295" id="png.295" href="#png.295"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>287<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>fame in that of a Claphamite Christian. It is something
-to know that the tutor’s <span class="allsc">MS.</span> was in vogue in 1800–1806.</p>
-
-<p>Now—how did you get your conic sections? How much
-of Newton did you read? From Newton direct, or from
-tutor’s manuscript?</p>
-
-<p>Surely Fiott was our old friend Dr Lee. I missed being
-a pupil of Hustler by a few weeks. He retired just before
-I went up in February 1823. The echo of Hornbuckle’s
-answer to you about the challenge has lighted on Whewell,
-who, it is said, wanted to challenge Jacob, and was answered
-that he could not beat [him] if he were to write the whole
-day and the other wrote nothing. I do not believe that
-Whewell would have listened to any such dissuasion.</p>
-
-<p>I doubt your being the last fluxional senior wrangler.
-So far as I know, Gipps, Langdale, Alderson, Dicey, Neale,
-may contest this point with you.</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p>The answer, dated 7 August 1869, of Sir Frederick
-Pollock to these questions was as follows:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p>You have put together as <em>revivers</em> five very different
-men. Woodhouse was better than Waring, who could not
-prove Wilson’s (Judge of C. P.) guess about the property
-of prime numbers; but Woodhouse (I think) did prove it,
-and a beautiful proof it is. Vince was a bungler, and I
-think utterly insensible of mathematical beauty.</p>
-
-<p>Now for your questions. I did not get my conic sections
-from Vince. I copied a <span class="allsc">MS.</span> of Dealtry. I fell in love with
-the cone and its sections, and everything about it. I have
-never forsaken my favourite pursuit; I delighted in such
-problems as two spheres touching each other and also the
-inside of a hollow cone, &amp;c. As to Newton, I read a good deal
-(men <em>now</em> read nothing), but I read much of the notes. I detected
-a blunder which nobody seemed to be aware of. Tavel,
-tutor of Trinity, was not; and he argued very favourably
-<a name="png.296" id="png.296" href="#png.296"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>288<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>of me in consequence. The application of the Principia
-I got from <span class="allsc">MSS.</span> The blunder was this: in calculating the
-resistance of a globe at the end of a cylinder oscillating in
-a resisting medium they had forgotten to notice that there
-is a difference between the resistance to a globe and a circle
-of the same diameter.</p>
-
-<p>The story of Whewell and Jacob cannot be true. Whewell
-was a very, <em>very</em> considerable man, I think not a <em>great</em>
-man. I have no doubt Jacob beat him in accuracy, but
-the supposed answer <em>cannot</em> be true; it is a mere echo of
-what actually passed between me and Hornbuckle on the
-day the Tripos came out—for the truth of which I vouch.
-I think the examiners are taking too <em>practical</em> a turn; it is
-a waste of time to calculate <em>actually</em> a longitude by the help
-of logarithmic tables and lunar observations. It would be
-a fault not to know <em>how</em>, but a greater to be handy at it.</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p>A few minor changes in the senate-house examination
-were made in 1808<sup class="fn"><a href="#fn59" id="fna59" name="fna59">59</a></sup>. A fifth day was added
-to the examination. Of the five days thus given up
-to it three were devoted to mathematics, one to
-logic, philosophy, and religion, and one to the
-arrangement of the brackets. Apart from the
-evening paper the examination on each of the first
-three days lasted six hours: of these eighteen
-hours, eleven were assigned to bookwork and seven
-to problems. The problem papers were set from
-six to ten in the evening.</p>
-
-<p>A letter from Whewell, dated 19 January 1816,
-thus describes his examination in the senate-house<sup class="fn"><a href="#fn60" id="fna60" name="fna60">60</a></sup>:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p><a name="png.297" id="png.297" href="#png.297"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>289<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>Jacob. Whewell. Such is the order in which we are
-fixed after a week’s <span class="nw">examination....</span> I had before been given
-to understand that a great deal depended upon being able
-to write the greatest possible quantity in the smallest time,
-but of the rapidity which was actually necessary I had
-formed the most distant idea. I am upon no occasion a
-quick writer, and upon subjects where I could not go on
-without sometimes thinking a little I soon found myself
-considerably behind. I was therefore surprised, and even
-astonished, to find myself bracketed off, as it is called, in
-the second place; that is, on the day when a new division
-of the classes is made for the purpose of having a closer
-examination of the respective merits of men who come pretty
-near to each other, I was not classed with anybody, but
-placed alone in the second bracket. The man who is at
-the head of the list is of Caius College, and was always expected
-to be very high, though I do not know that anybody
-expected to see him so decidedly superior as to be bracketed
-off by himself.</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p class="noindent">The tendency to cultivate mechanical rapidity was
-a grave evil, and lasted long after Whewell’s time.
-According to rumour the highest honours in 1845
-were obtained by assiduous practice in writing<sup class="fn"><a href="#fn61" id="fna61" name="fna61">61</a></sup>.</p>
-
-<p>The devotion of the Cambridge school to geometrical
-and fluxional methods had led to its isolation
-from contemporary continental mathematicians.
-Early in the nineteenth century the evil consequence
-of this began to be recognized; and it was felt to be
-little less than a scandal that the researches of
-<a name="png.298" id="png.298" href="#png.298"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>290<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>Lagrange, Laplace, and Legendre were unknown to
-many Cambridge mathematicians save by repute.
-An attempt to explain the notation and methods of
-the calculus as used on the continent was made by
-Woodhouse, later professor in the University, who
-stands out as the apostle of the new movement.</p>
-
-<p>It is doubtful if Woodhouse could have brought
-analytical methods into vogue by himself; but
-his views were enthusiastically adopted by three
-students, Peacock, Babbage, and Herschel, who
-succeeded in carrying out the reforms he had suggested.
-They created an Analytical Society which
-Babbage explained was formed to advocate “the
-principles of pure <i>d</i>-ism as opposed to the <i>dot</i>-age of
-the University.” The character of the instruction
-in mathematics at the University has at all times
-largely depended on the text-books in use, and
-the importance of good books of this class was
-emphasized by a traditional rule that questions
-should not be set on a new subject in the tripos
-unless it had been discussed in some treatise suitable
-and available for Cambridge students<sup class="fn"><a href="#fn62" id="fna62" name="fna62">62</a></sup>. Hence the
-importance attached to the publication of the work
-on analytical trigonometry by Woodhouse in 1809,
-and of the works on the differential calculus issued
-by members of the Analytical Society in 1816 and
-1820.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.299" id="png.299" href="#png.299"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>291<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>In 1817 Peacock, who was moderator, introduced
-the symbols for differentiation into the papers set in
-the senate-house examination; his colleague, however,
-continued to use the fluxional notation.
-Peacock himself wrote on 17 March 1817 (<i>i.e.</i> shortly
-after the examination) on the subject as follows<sup class="fn"><a href="#fn63" id="fna63" name="fna63">63</a></sup>:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p>I assure you ... that I shall never cease to exert myself
-to the utmost in the cause of reform, and that I will never
-decline any office which may increase my power to effect
-it. I am nearly certain of being nominated to the office of
-Moderator in the year 1818–19, and as I am an examiner in
-virtue of my office, for the next year I shall pursue a course
-even more decided than hitherto, since I shall feel that men
-have been prepared for the change, and will then be enabled
-to have acquired a better system by the publication of improved
-elementary books. I have considerable influence as
-a lecturer, and I will not neglect it. It is by silent perseverance
-only that we can hope to reduce the many-headed
-monster of prejudice, and make the University answer her
-character as the loving mother of good learning and science.</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p>In 1818 all candidates for honours, that is, all
-men in the first six preliminary classes, were allowed
-to attempt the problems: this change was made by
-the moderators.</p>
-
-<p>In 1819 Peacock, who was again moderator, induced
-his colleague to adopt the new notation. It
-was employed in the next year by Whewell, and in
-the following year by Peacock again. Henceforth
-<a name="png.300" id="png.300" href="#png.300"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>292<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>the calculus in its modern language and analytical
-methods were freely used, new subjects were introduced,
-and for many years the examination provided
-a mathematical training fairly abreast of the
-times.</p>
-
-<p>By this time the disputations had ceased to have
-any immediate effect on a man’s place in the tripos.
-Thus Whewell<sup class="fn"><a href="#fn64" id="fna64" name="fna64">64</a></sup>, writing about his duties as moderator
-in 1820, said:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p>You would get very exaggerated ideas of the importance
-attached to it [an Act] if you were to trust Cumberland;
-I believe it was formerly more thought of than it is now.
-It does not, at least immediately, produce any effect on a
-man’s place in the tripos, and is therefore considerably less
-attended to than used to be the case, and in most years is
-not very interesting after the five or six best men: so that
-I look for a considerable exercise of, or rather demand for,
-patience on my part. The other part of my duty in the
-Senate House consists in manufacturing wranglers, senior
-optimes, etc. and is, while it lasts, very laborious.</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p>Of the examination itself in this year he wrote as
-follows<sup class="fn"><a href="#fn65" id="fna65" name="fna65">65</a></sup>:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p>The examination in the Senate House begins to-morrow,
-and is rather close work while it lasts. We are employed
-from seven in the morning till five in the evening in giving
-out questions and receiving written answers to them; and
-when that is over, we have to read over all the papers which
-<a name="png.301" id="png.301" href="#png.301"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>293<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>we have received in the course of the day, to determine who
-have done best, which is a business that in numerous years
-has often kept the examiners up the half of every night;
-but this year is not particularly numerous. In addition
-to all this, the examination is conducted in a building which
-happens to be a very beautiful one, with a marble floor and
-a highly ornamented ceiling; and as it is on the model of a
-Grecian temple, and as temples had no chimneys, and as a
-stove or a fire of any kind might disfigure the building, we
-are obliged to take the weather as it happens to be, and when
-it is cold we have the full benefit of it—which is likely to
-be the case this year. However, it is only a few days, and
-we have done with it.</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p class="noindent">A sketch of the examination in the previous year
-from the point of view of an examinee was given by
-J. M. F. Wright<sup class="fn"><a href="#fn66" id="fna66" name="fna66">66</a></sup>, but there is nothing of special
-interest in it.</p>
-
-<p>Sir George B. Airy<sup class="fn"><a href="#fn67" id="fna67" name="fna67">67</a></sup> gave the following sketch of
-his recollections of the reading and studies of undergraduates
-of his time and of the tripos of 1823, in
-which he had been senior wrangler:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p>At length arrived the Monday morning on which the
-examination for the B.A. degree was to <span class="nw">begin....</span> We were
-all marched in a body to the Senate-House and placed in
-the hands of the Moderators. How the “candidates for
-honours” were separated from the <span title="[Greek: hoi polloi]" xml:lang="grc" lang="grc">οἱ πολλοί</span> I do not know,
-I presume that the Acts and the Opponencies had something
-to do with it. The honour candidates were divided into
-<a name="png.302" id="png.302" href="#png.302"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>294<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>six groups: and of these Nos. 1 and 2 (united), Nos. 3 and 4
-(united), and Nos. 5 and 6 (united), received the questions
-of one Moderator. No. 1, Nos. 2 and 3 (united), Nos. 4 and
-5 (united), and No. 6, received those of the other Moderator.
-The Moderators were reversed on alternate days. There
-were no printed question-papers: each examiner had his
-bound manuscript of questions, and he read out his first
-question; each of the examinees who thought himself able
-proceeded to write out his answer, and then orally called
-out “Done.” The Moderator, as soon as he thought proper,
-proceeded with another question. I think there was only
-one course of questions on each day (terminating before
-3 o’clock, for the Hall dinner). The examination continued
-to Friday mid-day. On Saturday morning, about 8 o’clock,
-the list of honours (manuscript) was nailed on the door of
-the Senate House.</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p>It must be remembered that for students pursuing
-the normal course the senate-house examination
-still provided the only avenue to a degree.
-That examination involved a knowledge of the
-elements of moral philosophy and theology, an acquaintance
-with the rules of formal logic, and the
-power of reading and writing scholastic Latin, but
-mathematics was the predominant subject, and this
-led to a certain one-sidedness in education. The
-evil of this was generally recognized, and in 1822
-various reforms were introduced in the university
-curriculum; in particular the Previous Examination
-was established for students in their second year,
-the subjects being prescribed Greek and Latin works,
-<a name="png.303" id="png.303" href="#png.303"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>295<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>a Gospel, and Paley’s <cite>Evidences</cite>. Set classical books
-were introduced in the final examination of poll-men;
-and another honour or tripos examination was
-established for classical students. These alterations
-came into effect in 1824; and henceforth the senate-house
-examination, so far as it related to mathematical
-students, was known as the Mathematical
-Tripos.</p>
-
-<p>In 1827 the scheme of examination in the mathematical
-tripos was revised. By regulations<sup class="fn"><a href="#fn68" id="fna68" name="fna68">68</a></sup> which
-came into operation in January 1828, four days,
-exclusive of the day of arranging the brackets, were
-devoted to the examination; the number of hours of
-examination was twenty-three, of which seven were
-assigned to problems. On the first two days all the
-candidates had the same questions proposed to them,
-inclusive of the evening problems, and the examination
-on those days excluded the higher and more
-difficult parts of mathematics, in order, in the words
-of the report, “that the candidates for honours may
-not be induced to pursue the more abstruse and
-profound mathematics, to the neglect of more
-elementary knowledge.” Accordingly, only such
-questions as could be solved without the aid of the
-differential calculus were set on the first day, and
-those set on the second day involved only its elementary
-applications. The classes were reduced
-<a name="png.304" id="png.304" href="#png.304"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>296<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>to four, determined as before by the exercises in the
-schools.</p>
-
-<p>The regulations of 1827 definitely prescribed that
-all the papers should be printed. They are also
-noticeable as being the last which gave the examiners
-power to ask <i xml:lang="lat" lang="lat">vivâ voce</i> questions, though
-such questions “were restricted to asking about
-propositions contained in the mathematical works
-commonly in use at the University, or examples
-and explanations of such propositions.” It was
-further recommended that no paper should contain
-more questions than well-prepared students could
-be expected to answer within the time allowed for
-it, but that if any candidate, before the end of
-the time, had answered all the questions in the
-paper, the examiners might propose additional
-questions <i xml:lang="lat" lang="lat">vivâ voce</i>. The power of granting honorary
-optime degrees now ceased; it had already
-fallen into abeyance. Henceforth the examination
-was conducted under definite rules, and I no longer
-concern myself with its traditions.</p>
-
-<p>In the same year as these changes became effective
-the examination for the poll degree was separated
-from the tripos with different sets of papers
-and a different schedule of subjects<sup class="fn"><a href="#fn69" id="fna69" name="fna69">69</a></sup>. It was, however,
-still nominally considered as forming part of
-the senate-house examination, and until 1858 those
-<a name="png.305" id="png.305" href="#png.305"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>297<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>who obtained a poll degree were arranged in four
-classes, described as fourth, fifth, sixth, and seventh,
-as if in continuation of the junior optimes or third
-class of the tripos.</p>
-
-<p>In the course henceforth ordained for the poll
-or ordinary degree, the examination, later known
-as “the General,” represents that part of the old
-senate-house examination which was intended for
-the poll-men, but gradually it was moved to an
-earlier period in the normal course taken by the
-men. In 1851 admission to the classical tripos<sup class="fn"><a href="#fn70" id="fna70" name="fna70">70</a></sup>
-was allowed to others than those who passed the
-mathematical tripos, and this provided another
-avenue to a degree entirely independent of the old
-senate-house examination. In 1852 another set of
-examinations, at first called “the Professor’s Examinations,”
-and now somewhat modified and
-known as “the Specials,” was instituted for all
-poll-men to take before they could qualify for a
-degree.</p>
-
-<p>In 1858 the fiction that the poll examinations
-were part of the senate-house examination was
-abandoned, and subsequently they have been
-treated as providing an independent method of
-obtaining the degree: thus now the mathematical
-tripos is the sole representative of the old senate-house
-examination. Since 1858 numerous other
-<a name="png.306" id="png.306" href="#png.306"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>298<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>ways of obtaining a degree in arts have been
-established, and it is now possible to graduate by
-showing proficiency in very special, or even technical
-subjects.</p>
-
-<p>Further changes in the mathematical tripos were
-introduced in 1833<sup class="fn"><a href="#fn71" id="fna71" name="fna71">71</a></sup>. The duration of the examination,
-before the issue of the brackets, was extended
-to five days, and the number of hours of examination
-on each day was fixed at five and a half: seven and
-a half hours were assigned to problems. The examination
-on the first day was confined to subjects
-that did not require the differential calculus, and
-only the simplest applications of the calculus were
-permitted on the second and third days. During
-the first four days of the examination the same
-papers were set to all the candidates alike, but on
-the fifth day the examination was conducted according
-to classes. No reference was made to <i xml:lang="lat" lang="lat">vivâ
-voce</i> questions, though permission was reserved to
-re-examine candidates if it were found necessary:
-this right remained in force till 1848, but in fact
-was never used. In December 1834, a few unimportant
-details were amended.</p>
-
-<p>Mr Earnshaw, the senior moderator in 1836, informed
-me that he believed that the tripos of that
-year was the earliest one in which all the papers
-were marked, and that in previous years the
-<a name="png.307" id="png.307" href="#png.307"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>299<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>examiners had partly relied on their impression of
-the answers given.</p>
-
-<p>New regulations came into force<sup class="fn"><a href="#fn72" id="fna72" name="fna72">72</a></sup> in 1839. The
-examination now lasted for six days, and continued
-as before for five hours and a half each day: eight
-and a half hours were assigned to problems.
-Throughout the whole examination the same papers
-were set to all candidates, and no reference was
-made to any preliminary classes. It was no doubt
-in accordance with the spirit of these changes that
-the acts in the schools should be abolished, but they
-were discontinued by the moderators of 1839 without
-the authority of the senate. The examination was
-for the future confined<sup class="fn"><a href="#fn73" id="fna73" name="fna73">73</a></sup> to mathematics.</p>
-
-<p>In the same year in which the new scheme came
-into force a proposal to reopen the subject was
-rejected on 6 March 1839.</p>
-
-<p>The difficulty of bringing professorial lectures
-into relation with the needs of students has more
-than once been before the University. The desirability
-of it was emphasized by a syndicate in
-February 1843, which recommended conferences at
-stated intervals between the mathematical professors
-<a name="png.308" id="png.308" href="#png.308"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>300<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>and examiners. This report, which foreshadowed
-the creation of a Mathematical Board, was rejected
-by the senate on 31 March.</p>
-
-<p>A few years later the scheme of the examination
-was again reconstructed by regulations<sup class="fn"><a href="#fn74" id="fna74" name="fna74">74</a></sup> which came
-into effect in 1848. The duration of the examination
-was extended to eight days. The examination
-lasted in all forty-four and a half hours, twelve of
-which were devoted to problems. The first three
-days were assigned to specified elementary subjects;
-in the papers set on these days riders were to be set
-as well as bookwork, but the methods of analytical
-geometry and the calculus were excluded. After
-the first three days there was a short interval, at the
-end of which the examiners issued a list of those who
-had so acquitted themselves as to deserve mathematical
-honours. Only those whose names were
-contained in this list were admitted to the last five
-days of the examination, which was devoted to the
-higher parts of mathematics. After the conclusion
-of the examination the examiners, taking into
-account the whole eight days, brought out the
-list arranged in order of merit. No provision
-was made for any rearrangement of this list
-corresponding to the examination of the brackets.
-The arrangements of 1848 remained in force till
-1873.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.309" id="png.309" href="#png.309"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>301<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>In the same year as these regulations came into
-force, a Board of Mathematical Studies (consisting
-of the mathematical professors, with the moderators
-and examiners for the current year and the two preceding
-years) was constituted<sup class="fn"><a href="#fn75" id="fna75" name="fna75">75</a></sup> by the senate. From
-that time forward their minutes supply a permanent
-record of the changes gradually introduced into the
-tripos. I do not allude to subsequent changes
-which only concern unimportant details of the
-examination.</p>
-
-<p>In May 1849, the board issued a report in which,
-after giving a review of the past and existing state
-of the mathematical studies in the University, they
-recommended that the mathematical theories of
-electricity, magnetism, and heat should not be admitted
-as subjects of examination. In the following
-year they issued a second report, in which they
-recommended the omission of elliptic integrals,
-Laplace’s coefficients, capillary attraction, and the
-figure of the earth considered as heterogeneous,
-as well as a definite limitation of the questions in
-the lunar and planetary theories. In making these
-recommendations the board were only recognizing
-what had become the practice in the examination.</p>
-
-<p>I may, in passing, mention a curious attempt
-which was made in 1853 and 1854 to assist candidates
-to estimate the relative difficulty of the
-<a name="png.310" id="png.310" href="#png.310"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>302<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>questions asked. This was effected by giving to
-the candidates, at the same time as the examination
-paper, a slip of paper on which the marks assigned
-for the bookwork<!-- TN: hyphen removed based on frequency --> and rider for each question were
-printed. I mention the fact merely because these
-things are rapidly forgotten and not because it is of
-any intrinsic value. I possess a complete set of
-slips which came to me from Todhunter.</p>
-
-<p>In 1856 there was an amusing difference of
-opinion between the vice-chancellor and the moderators.
-The vice-chancellor issued a notice to say that
-for the convenience of the University he had directed
-the tripos lists to be published at 8.0 a.m. as well as
-at 9.0 a.m., but when members of the senate arrived
-at 8.0 the moderators said that the list should not
-be read until 9.0.</p>
-
-<p>Considerable changes in the scheme of examination
-were introduced in 1873. On 5 December 1865,
-the board had recommended the addition of Laplace’s
-coefficients and the figure of the earth considered
-as heterogeneous as subjects of the examination;
-the report does not seem to have been brought
-before the senate, but attention was called to the
-fact that certain departments of mathematics and
-mathematical physics found no place in the tripos
-schedules, and were neglected by most students.
-Accordingly, a syndicate was appointed on 6 June
-1867, to consider the matter, and a scheme drawn
-<a name="png.311" id="png.311" href="#png.311"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>303<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>up by them was approved in 1868<sup class="fn"><a href="#fn76" id="fna76" name="fna76">76</a></sup> and came into
-effect in 1873.</p>
-
-<p>The new scheme of examination was framed on
-the same lines as that of 1848. The subjects in
-the first three days were left unchanged, but an
-extra day was added, devoted to the elements of
-mathematical physics. The essence of the modification
-was the greatly extended range of subjects
-introduced into the schedule of subjects for the last
-five days, and their arrangement in divisions; the
-total marks awarded to the questions in each of
-the five divisions being approximately in a proportion
-to the total marks assigned to the questions
-in the first three days as 2, 1, 1, 1, 2/3 to 1 respectively.
-Under these regulations the number of
-examiners was increased from four to five.</p>
-
-<p>The assignment of marks to groups of subjects
-was made under the impression that the best candidates
-would concentrate their abilities on a selection
-of subjects from the various divisions. But it was
-found that, unless the questions were made extremely
-difficult, more marks could be obtained by
-reading superficially all the subjects in the five
-divisions than by attaining real proficiency in a
-few of the higher ones: while the wide range of
-subjects rendered it practically impossible to
-<a name="png.312" id="png.312" href="#png.312"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>304<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>cover all the ground thoroughly in the time allowed.
-The failure was so pronounced that in 1877 another
-syndicate was appointed to consider the mathematical
-studies and examinations of the University.
-They presented an elaborate scheme, but on 13 May
-1878, some of the most important parts of it were
-rejected; their subsequent proposals, accepted on
-21 November 1878 (by 62 to 49), represented a
-compromise which pleased few members of the
-senate<sup class="fn"><a href="#fn77" id="fna77" name="fna77">77</a></sup>.</p>
-
-<p>Under the new scheme which came into force in
-1882 the tripos was divided into two portions: the
-first portion was taken at the end of the third year
-of residence, the range of subjects being practically
-the same as in the regulations of 1848, and the
-result brought out in the customary order of merit.
-The second portion was held in the following
-January, and was open only to those who had been
-wranglers in the preceding June. This portion was
-confined to higher mathematics and appealed chiefly
-to specialists: the result was brought out in three
-classes, each arranged in alphabetical order. The
-moderators and examiners conducted the whole
-examination without any extraneous aid.</p>
-
-<p>In the next year or two further amendments
-<a name="png.313" id="png.313" href="#png.313"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>305<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>were made<sup class="fn"><a href="#fn78" id="fna78" name="fna78">78</a></sup>, the second part of the examination
-being moved to the June of the fourth year, and
-thrown open to all men who had graduated in the
-tripos of the previous June. At the same time
-the conduct of the examination in part <span class="allsc">II</span> was transferred
-to four examiners nominated by the board:
-this put it largely under the control of the professors.
-The range of subjects of part <span class="allsc">II</span> was also greatly
-extended, and candidates were encouraged to select
-only a few of them. It was further arranged that
-part <span class="allsc">I</span> might be taken at the end of a man’s second
-year of residence, though in that case it would not
-qualify for a degree. A student who availed himself
-of this leave could take part <span class="allsc">II</span> at the end either
-of his third or of his fourth year as he pleased.</p>
-
-<p>The general effect of these changes was to destroy
-the homogeneity of the tripos. Objections to the
-new scheme were soon raised. Especially, it was
-said—whether rightly or wrongly—that part <span class="allsc">I</span> contained
-too many technical subjects to serve as a
-general educational training for any save mathematicians;
-that the distinction of a high place in
-the historic list produced on its results tended to
-prevent the best men taking it in their second year,
-though by this time they had read enough to be
-able to do so; and that part <span class="allsc">II</span> was so constructed as
-<a name="png.314" id="png.314" href="#png.314"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>306<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>to appeal only to professional mathematicians, and
-thus the higher branches of mathematics were
-neglected in the University by all save a few
-specialists.</p>
-
-<p>Whatever value be attached to these opinions,
-the number of students studying mathematics fell
-rapidly under the scheme of 1886. In 1899 the
-board proposed<sup class="fn"><a href="#fn79" id="fna79" name="fna79">79</a></sup> further changes. These seemed
-to some members of the senate to be likely still
-further to decrease the number of men who took up
-the subject as one of general education; and the
-two main proposals were rejected, 15 February
-1900 by votes of 151 to 130 and 161 to 129.</p>
-
-<p>A few years later, in 1907<sup class="fn"><a href="#fn80" id="fna80" name="fna80">80</a></sup>, the board brought forward
-another scheme, proposing changes so sweeping
-as almost to destroy the identity of the tripos.
-Under this the examination in part <span class="allsc">II</span> was abolished—a
-change on which all parties were agreed. There
-was introduced an examination, called part <span class="allsc">I</span>, confined
-to elementary mathematics, which could be
-taken as early as the second term of residence, and
-for which in certain cases of failure a student could
-present himself again, but this, although an examination
-for honours, did not qualify for a degree.
-<a name="png.315" id="png.315" href="#png.315"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>307<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>In the new part <span class="allsc">II</span>, taken normally at the end of
-the third year of residence and qualifying for a
-degree, candidates were given some option in the
-subjects of their examination, and order of merit
-was abolished. The first examination under this
-scheme was held in 1908.</p>
-
-<p>A remarkable feature in the history of the
-Cambridge mathematical school is the fact that for
-nearly two hundred years most students were
-accustomed to rely for preparation for it on work
-done with a private tutor or “Coach.” Towards
-the close of the seventeenth century we first read
-of these “pupil-mongers” (among whom Laughton
-of Clare was the most famous) who made it their
-business to prepare men for their “acts.”</p>
-
-<p>With the rise of the senate-house examination
-the importance of this class of teachers increased,
-for success in that examination was regarded as the
-crown of the academic course, and brought with it,
-in the shape of a fellowship, an immediate competence
-with a reasonable prospect of an assured
-career. It was the business of private tutors to
-prepare their pupils for the examination, and among
-those who in this way came to the front shortly after
-the middle of the eighteenth century were Richard
-Watson, John Wilson whose name is still known by
-its association with a proposition in the theory of
-numbers, and Robert Thorp. The last named
-<a name="png.316" id="png.316" href="#png.316"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>308<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>teacher was described, about 1761, as being “of
-eminent use to young men in preparing them for
-the Senate-House Examinations and peculiarly
-successful”; and it was added that “one young
-man of no shining reputation with the assistance
-of Mr Thorp’s tuition had stood at the head of
-wranglers.”</p>
-
-<p>In a grace of the senate, passed in 1781, it is
-stated that almost all sophs then resorted to private
-tuition, and for more than a century subsequently,
-the practice was well established. These were the
-men who really directed the reading of the students.
-Even non-residents, if reputed to be successful
-coaches, drew pupils. Thus John Dawson, a
-medical practitioner at Sedbergh, regularly prepared
-pupils in the vacations for the senate-house
-examination, and at least eleven of the senior
-wranglers between 1781 and 1800 are known to
-have studied under him.</p>
-
-<p>During the nineteenth century the system
-developed under two remarkable teachers, William
-Hopkins, 1793–1866, and Edward John Routh,
-1831–1907, to whom the vast majority of the better
-known Cambridge mathematicians of this century
-owed most of what they learnt in their undergraduate
-days. Hopkins in the twenty-two years
-from 1828–49, had among his pupils one hundred
-and seventy-five wranglers, of whom seventeen were
-<a name="png.317" id="png.317" href="#png.317"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>309<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>senior, forty-four in one of the first three places, and
-one hundred and eight in one of the first ten places.
-So too Routh, in the thirty-one years from 1858–88,
-had between six hundred and seven hundred pupils,
-most of whom became wranglers, twenty-seven being
-senior in the tripos and forty-one Smith’s prizemen.
-To organize teaching on this scale demanded rare
-gifts.</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps it may be of interest to describe, by way
-of example, the general features of Routh’s system.
-He gave catechetical lectures three times a week to
-classes of eight or ten men of approximately equal
-knowledge and ability. The work to be done between
-two lectures was heavy, and included the
-solution of some eight or nine fairly hard examples
-on the subject of the lectures. Examination papers
-were also constantly set on tripos lines (bookwork
-and riders), while there was a weekly paper of problems
-set to all pupils alike. All papers sent up were
-marked in public, the comments on them in class
-were generally brief, and, to save time, solutions of
-the questions were circulated in manuscript. Teaching
-also was supplemented by manuscripts on the
-subjects. Finally to the more able students he was
-accustomed, shortly before their tripos, to give
-memoirs or books for analyses and commentaries.
-The course for the first three years and the two
-earlier long vacations covered all the subjects of the
-<a name="png.318" id="png.318" href="#png.318"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>310<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>examination—the last long vacation and the first
-term of the fourth year were devoted to a thorough
-revision.</p>
-
-<p>Under Hopkins and Routh there was no trace
-of what is called cramming; they might say that
-a particular demonstration was so long that it could
-not be required in the tripos, but none the less they
-expected their pupils to master it. The system had
-faults, but it had the merit of providing a systematic
-grounding in a wide field of subjects. The effectiveness
-of teaching of this kind was dependent on
-intimate constant personal intercourse, and the importance
-of this cannot be overrated. The scandal
-of the system consisted in the fact that a man
-was compelled to pay heavy fees to the University
-and his College for instruction, and yet found it
-advantageous at his own expense to go elsewhere
-to get it.</p>
-
-<p>During the last quarter of the nineteenth
-century college lecturers began to share with the
-coaches the general direction of studies. Post-graduate
-work was also to some extent brought
-under the influence of professors and university
-lecturers—these not uncommonly suggesting subjects
-for dissertations for fellowships, Smith’s prizes,
-etc. But the students thus influenced were not
-numerous, and it still remains true that the majority
-of mathematical undergraduates are so out of touch
-<a name="png.319" id="png.319" href="#png.319"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>311<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>with the professors in the subject as to be unacquainted
-even with their personal appearance.</p>
-
-<p>Such was the mathematical tripos and its history.
-Whatever its demerits, it dominated the situation,
-and Cambridge mathematics and mathematicians of
-the nineteenth century were the direct product of the
-system it embodied. Judged by the output, I do
-not think it can be said to have resulted in failure;
-and perhaps Cayley, Sylvester, Adams, Green,
-Stokes, Kelvin, and Maxwell—to mention no others—were
-none the worse for having been compelled
-to go through the course.</p>
-
-<p>The reconstitution in 1907 of the tripos, and the
-destruction of many of its distinctive features must
-profoundly modify the future history of mathematics
-at Cambridge, but forecasts on such a theme
-would be useless.</p>
-
-<p>The curious origin of the term tripos has been
-repeatedly told, and an account of it may fitly close
-this chapter. Formerly there were three principal
-occasions on which questionists were admitted to the
-title or degree of bachelor. The first of these was at
-the comitia priora, held on Ash-Wednesday, for the
-best men in the year. The next was at the comitia
-posteriora, which was held a few weeks later, and
-at which any student who had distinguished himself
-in the quadragesimal exercises subsequent to Ash-Wednesday
-had his seniority reserved to him.
-<a name="png.320" id="png.320" href="#png.320"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>312<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>Lastly, there was the comitia minora, for students
-who had in no special way distinguished themselves.</p>
-
-<p>In the fifteenth century an important part in the
-ceremony on each of these occasions was taken by a
-certain “ould bachilour,” who sat upon a three-legged
-stool or tripos before the proctors and tested
-the abilities of the would-be graduates by arguing
-some question with the “eldest son,” who was
-selected from them as their representative. To
-assist the latter in what might be an unequal contest
-his “father,” that is, the officer of his college
-who was to present him for his degree, was allowed
-to come to his assistance.</p>
-
-<p>The discussion took place in Great St Mary’s
-Church, and marked the admission of the student to
-a position with new responsibilities, while the season
-of Lent was chosen with a view to bring this into
-prominence. The puritan party objected to the
-semi-ecclesiastical character of the proceedings, and
-in the course of the sixteenth century set themselves
-to bring the ceremony into disrepute. The
-part played by the questionist now became purely
-formal, though a serious debate still sometimes took
-place between the father of the senior questionist
-and a regent master who represented the University:
-this, however, came to be prefaced by a speech by
-the bachelor, who was now called Mr Tripos, just
-as we speak of a judge as the bench, or of a rower
-<a name="png.321" id="png.321" href="#png.321"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>313<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>as an oar. Ultimately public opinion permitted
-Mr Tripos to say pretty much what he pleased, so
-long as it was not dull and was scandalous. The
-speeches he delivered or the verses he recited were
-generally printed and preserved by the registrary,
-and were known as the tripos verses: originally
-they referred to the subjects of the disputations then
-propounded. The earliest copies now extant are
-those for 1575.</p>
-
-<p>The university officials, to whom the personal
-criticisms in which Mr Tripos indulged were by no
-means pleasing, repeatedly exhorted him to remember
-“while exercising his privilege of humour,
-to be modest withal.” In 1710, says Mullinger<sup class="fn"><a href="#fn81" id="fna81" name="fna81">81</a></sup>,
-“the authorities after condemning the excessive
-license of the tripos announced that the comitia
-at Lent would in future be conducted in the
-Senate-House; and all members of the University,
-of whatever order or degree, were forbidden to
-assail or mock the disputants with scurrilous jokes
-or unseemly witticisms. About the year 1747–8,
-the moderators initiated the practice of printing
-the honour lists on the back of the sheets containing
-the tripos verses, and after the year 1755
-this became the invariable practice. By virtue
-of this purely arbitrary connection these lists
-<a name="png.322" id="png.322" href="#png.322"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>314<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>themselves became known as the tripos; and
-eventually the examination itself, of which they
-represented the results, also became known by
-the same designation.”</p>
-
-<p>Mr Tripos ceased to deliver his speech about
-1750, but the issue of tripos verses continued for
-nearly 150 years longer. During the latter part of
-this time they consisted of four sets of verses, usually
-in Latin, but occasionally in Greek, in which current
-topics in the University were treated lightly or
-seriously as the writer thought fit. They were
-written for the proctors and moderators by undergraduates
-or commencing bachelors, each of whom
-was supposed to receive a pair of white kid gloves
-in recognition of his labours. Thus gradually the
-word tripos changed its meaning “from a thing of
-wood to a man, from a man to a speech, from a
-speech to sets of verses, from verses to a sheet of
-coarse foolscap paper, from a paper to a list of
-names, and from a list of names to a system of
-examination<sup class="fn"><a href="#fn82" id="fna82" name="fna82">82</a></sup>.”</p>
-
-<p>In 1895 the proctors and moderators, without
-consulting the senate, sent in no verses, and thus,
-in spite of widespread regret, an interesting custom
-of many centuries standing was destroyed. In
-defence of this action, it was said that the custom
-had never been embodied in statute or ordinance,
-<a name="png.323" id="png.323" href="#png.323"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>315<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>and thus was not obligatory, and further that its
-continuance was not of material benefit to anybody.
-Such arguments are not conclusive, and we may well
-regret the disappearance of historic ties unless it
-can be shown that they cause inconvenience, which
-of course in this case could not be asserted.</p>
-
-<p>By way of supplement to the foregoing account,
-I append a list of those who have held or hold the
-various university mathematical chairs and lectureships.</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p>The <cite>Lucasian Professorship of Mathematics</cite> was founded in 1663
-by Henry Lucas. The successive occupants of the chair have
-been: Isaac Barrow, 1664–1669; Isaac Newton, 1669–1702; William
-Whiston, 1702–1711; Nicholas Saunderson (Sanderson), 1711–1739;
-John Colson, 1739–1760; Edward Waring, 1760–1798; Isaac Milner,
-1798–1820; Robert Woodhouse, 1820–1822; Thomas Turton, 1822–1826;
-George Biddell Airy, 1826–1828; Charles Babbage, 1828–1839;
-Joshua King, 1839–1849; George Gabriel Stokes, 1849–1903; Joseph
-Larmor, 1903 <i>et seq.</i></p>
-
-<p>The <cite>Plumian Professorship of Astronomy and Experimental
-Philosophy</cite> was founded in 1704 by Thomas Plume. The successive
-occupants of the chair have been: Roger Cotes, 1707–1716; Robert
-Smith, 1716–1760; Anthony Shepherd, 1760–1796; Samuel Vince,
-1796–1822; Robert Woodhouse, 1822–1828; George Biddell Airy,
-1828–1836; James Challis, 1836–1883; George Howard Darwin,
-1883–1912; Arthur Stanley Eddington, 1913 <i>et seq.</i></p>
-
-<p>The <cite>Lowndean Professorship of Astronomy and Geometry</cite> was
-founded in 1749 by Thomas Lowndes. The successive occupants of
-the chair have been: Roger Long, 1750–1771; John Smith, 1771–1795;
-William Lax, 1795–1836; George Peacock, 1836–1858; John
-Couch Adams, 1858–1892; Robert Stawell Ball, 1892–1913; Henry
-Frederick Baker, 1914 <i>et seq.</i></p>
-
-<p>The <cite>Sadleirian Professorship of Pure Mathematics</cite> was founded, in
-1863 from a benefaction given in 1710 by Lady Sadleir. The successive
-occupants of the chair have been: Arthur Cayley, 1863–1895;
-Andrew Russell Forsyth, 1895–1910; Ernest William Hobson, 1910
-<i>et seq.</i></p>
-
-<p><a name="png.324" id="png.324" href="#png.324"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>316<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>The <cite>Cavendish Professorship of Experimental Physics</cite> was founded
-in 1871 by the University; the laboratory attached being built at
-the expense of the then Chancellor, the Duke of Devonshire. The
-successive occupants of the chair have been: James Clerk Maxwell,
-1871–1879; John William, Baron Rayleigh, 1879–1884; Joseph John
-Thomson, 1884 <i>et seq.</i></p>
-
-<p>The <cite>Professorship of Mechanism and Applied Mechanics</cite>, with
-laboratories and shops attached, was founded by the University in
-1875. The successive occupants of the chair have been: James
-Stuart, 1875–1890; James Alfred Ewing, 1890–1903; Bertram
-Hopkinson, 1903 <i>et seq.</i></p>
-
-<p>Five <cite>Lectureships in Mathematics</cite> were created in 1882 under the
-directions of Royal Commissioners, and subsequently two others
-(now reduced to one other) tenable, if desired, with one of the above,
-were founded. The successive holders have been: Joseph John
-Thomson, 1884; Andrew Russell Forsyth, 1884–1895; William
-Herrick Macaulay, 1884–1887; Richard Tetley Glazebrook, 1884–1898;
-Ernest William Hobson, 1884–1910; Joseph Larmor, 1885–1903;
-Richard Pendlebury, 1888–1901; Henry Frederick Baker,
-1895–1914; Augustus Edward Hough Love, 1898–1899; Hector
-Munro Macdonald, 1899–1904; Herbert William Richmond, 1901
-<i>et seq.</i>; George Ballard Mathews, 1903–1905; James Hopwood Jeans,
-1904–1906, 1910–1912; John Gaston Leathem, 1905–1909; Robert
-Alfred Herman, 1906 <i>et seq.</i>; Edmund Taylor Whittaker, 1905–1906;
-Thomas James I’Anson Bromwich, 1909 <i>et seq.</i>; John Hilton Grace,
-1901 <i>et seq.</i>; Godfrey Harold Hardy, 1914 <i>et seq.</i>; Arthur Berry,
-1914 <i>et seq.</i></p>
-</blockquote>
-
-
-<div class="footnotes">
-<p><a class="parnumber" href="#fna34" id="fn34" name="fn34" title="Back">34</a> The greater part of this chapter formerly appeared in my
-<cite>Mathematical Recreations and Essays</cite>, but a few paragraphs on
-“coaching” have been taken from a paper which I wrote for distribution
-to those who attended the International Congress of Mathematicians
-held in England in 1912. The subject is treated in
-Whewell’s <cite>Liberal Education</cite>, Cambridge, three parts, 1845, 1850,
-1853; Wordsworth’s <cite xml:lang="lat" lang="lat">Scholae Academicae</cite>, Cambridge, 1877; my own
-<cite>Origin and History of the Mathematical Tripos</cite>, Cambridge, 1880;
-Glaisher’s Presidential Address to the London Mathematical Society,
-<cite>Transactions</cite>, vol. XVIII, 1886, pp. 4–38; and my <cite>History of the Study
-of Mathematics at Cambridge</cite>, Cambridge, 1889.</p>
-
-<p><a class="parnumber" href="#fna35" id="fn35" name="fn35" title="Back">35</a> <cite>Budget of Paradoxes</cite>, by A. De Morgan, London, 1872, p. 305.</p>
-
-<p><a class="parnumber" href="#fna36" id="fn36" name="fn36" title="Back">36</a> See grace of 25 October 1680.</p>
-
-<p><a class="parnumber" href="#fna37" id="fn37" name="fn37" title="Back">37</a> <i>Ex. gr.</i> see De la Pryme’s account of his graduation in 1694,
-<cite>Surtees Society</cite>, vol. <span class="allsc">LIV</span>, 1870, p. 32.</p>
-
-<p><a class="parnumber" href="#fna38" id="fn38" name="fn38" title="Back">38</a> W. Reneu, in his letters of 1708–10 describing the course for
-the B.A. degree, makes no mention of the senate-house examination,
-and I think it is a reasonable inference that it had not then been
-established.</p>
-
-<p><a class="parnumber" href="#fna39" id="fn39" name="fn39" title="Back">39</a> <cite>Memoirs of Richard Cumberland</cite>, London, 1806, pp. 78–79.</p>
-
-<p><a class="parnumber" href="#fna40" id="fn40" name="fn40" title="Back">40</a> Quoted by C. Wordsworth, <cite xml:lang="lat" lang="lat">Scholae Academicae</cite>, Cambridge,
-1877, pp. 30–31.</p>
-
-<p><a class="parnumber" href="#fna41" id="fn41" name="fn41" title="Back">41</a> <cite>Anecdotes of the Life of Richard Watson</cite>, London, 1817,
-pp. 18–19.</p>
-
-<p><a class="parnumber" href="#fna42" id="fn42" name="fn42" title="Back">42</a> See grace of 25 October 1883; and the <cite>Cambridge University
-Reporter</cite>, 23 October 1883.</p>
-
-<p><a class="parnumber" href="#fna43" id="fn43" name="fn43" title="Back">43</a> See grace of 11 February 1909, and the <cite>Cambridge University
-Reporter</cite>, 8 December 1908.</p>
-
-<p><a class="parnumber" href="#fna44" id="fn44" name="fn44" title="Back">44</a> <cite>The Works of J. Jebb</cite>, London, 1787, vol. <span class="allsc">II</span>, pp. 290–297.</p>
-
-<p><a class="parnumber" href="#fna45" id="fn45" name="fn45" title="Back">45</a> “Emulation, which is the principle upon which the plan is
-constructed.” <cite>The Works of J. Jebb</cite>, London, 1787, vol. <span class="allsc">III</span>, p. 261.</p>
-
-<p><a class="parnumber" href="#fna46" id="fn46" name="fn46" title="Back">46</a> <cite>The Works of J. Jebb</cite>, London, 1787, vol. <span class="allsc">III</span>, p. 272.</p>
-
-<p><a class="parnumber" href="#fna47" id="fn47" name="fn47" title="Back">47</a> See graces of 5 July 1773, and of 17 February 1774.</p>
-
-<p><a class="parnumber" href="#fna48" id="fn48" name="fn48" title="Back">48</a> See graces of 19, 20 March 1779.</p>
-
-<p><a class="parnumber" href="#fna49" id="fn49" name="fn49" title="Back">49</a> Notice issued by the vice-chancellor, dated 19 May 1779.</p>
-
-<p><a class="parnumber" href="#fna50" id="fn50" name="fn50" title="Back">50</a> The <cite>Challis Manuscripts</cite>, <span class="allsc">III</span>, 61. There are two copies almost
-identical, one dated 1785, the other 1786. Probably the paper
-printed in the text was set in 1786.</p>
-
-<p><a class="parnumber" href="#fna51" id="fn51" name="fn51" title="Back">51</a> H. Gunning, <cite>Reminiscences</cite>, second edition, London, 1855,
-vol. <span class="allsc">I</span>, p. 82.</p>
-
-<p><a class="parnumber" href="#fna52" id="fn52" name="fn52" title="Back">52</a> C. Wordsworth, <cite xml:lang="lat" lang="lat">Scholae Academicae</cite>, Cambridge, 1877, pp. 322–323.</p>
-
-<p><a class="parnumber" href="#fna53" id="fn53" name="fn53" title="Back">53</a> H. Gunning, <cite>Reminiscences</cite>, second edition, London, 1855,
-vol. <span class="allsc">I</span>, p. 182.</p>
-
-<p><a class="parnumber" href="#fna54" id="fn54" name="fn54" title="Back">54</a> See grace of 8 April 1791.</p>
-
-<p><a class="parnumber" href="#fna55" id="fn55" name="fn55" title="Back">55</a> Communicated by the moderators to fathers of colleges on
-18 January 1799, and agreed to by the latter.</p>
-
-<p><a class="parnumber" href="#fna56" id="fn56" name="fn56" title="Back">56</a> C. Wordsworth, <cite xml:lang="lat" lang="lat">Scholae Academicae</cite>, Cambridge, 1817, p. 123.</p>
-
-<p><a class="parnumber" href="#fna57" id="fn57" name="fn57" title="Back">57</a> <cite>Anecdotes of the Life of Richard Watson</cite>, London, 1817, p. 19.</p>
-
-<p><a class="parnumber" href="#fna58" id="fn58" name="fn58" title="Back">58</a> <cite>Memoir of A. De Morgan</cite>, London, 1882, pp. 387–392.</p>
-
-<p><a class="parnumber" href="#fna59" id="fn59" name="fn59" title="Back">59</a> See graces, 15 December 1808.</p>
-
-<p><a class="parnumber" href="#fna60" id="fn60" name="fn60" title="Back">60</a> S. Douglas, <cite>Life of W. Whewell</cite>, London, 1881, p. 20.</p>
-
-<p><a class="parnumber" href="#fna61" id="fn61" name="fn61" title="Back">61</a> For a contemporary account of this, see C. A. Bristed, <cite>Five
-Years in an English University</cite>, New York, 1852, pp. 233–239.</p>
-
-<p><a class="parnumber" href="#fna62" id="fn62" name="fn62" title="Back">62</a> See <i>ex. gr.</i> the grace of 14 November 1827, referred to below.</p>
-
-<p><a class="parnumber" href="#fna63" id="fn63" name="fn63" title="Back">63</a> <cite>Proceedings of the Royal Society</cite>, London, 1859, vol. <span class="allsc">IX</span>, pp. 538–539.</p>
-
-<p><a class="parnumber" href="#fna64" id="fn64" name="fn64" title="Back">64</a> <cite>Whewell’s Writings and Correspondence</cite>, ed. Todhunter, London,
-1876, vol. <span class="allsc">II</span>, p. 36.</p>
-
-<p><a class="parnumber" href="#fna65" id="fn65" name="fn65" title="Back">65</a> S. Douglas, <cite>Life of Whewell</cite>, London, 1881, p. 56.</p>
-
-<p><a class="parnumber" href="#fna66" id="fn66" name="fn66" title="Back">66</a> <cite>Alma Mater</cite>, London, 1827, vol. <span class="allsc">II</span>, pp. 58–98.</p>
-
-<p><a class="parnumber" href="#fna67" id="fn67" name="fn67" title="Back">67</a> See <cite>Nature</cite>, vol. <span class="allsc">XXXV</span>, 24 February 1887, pp. 397–399. See
-also his <cite>Autobiography</cite>, Cambridge, 1896, chapter ii.</p>
-
-<p><a class="parnumber" href="#fna68" id="fn68" name="fn68" title="Back">68</a> See grace, 14 November 1827.</p>
-
-<p><a class="parnumber" href="#fna69" id="fn69" name="fn69" title="Back">69</a> See grace, 21 May 1828, confirming a report of 27 March 1828.</p>
-
-<p><a class="parnumber" href="#fna70" id="fn70" name="fn70" title="Back">70</a> See grace of 31 October 1849.</p>
-
-<p><a class="parnumber" href="#fna71" id="fn71" name="fn71" title="Back">71</a> See grace of 6 April 1832.</p>
-
-<p><a class="parnumber" href="#fna72" id="fn72" name="fn72" title="Back">72</a> See grace of 30 May 1838.</p>
-
-<p><a class="parnumber" href="#fna73" id="fn73" name="fn73" title="Back">73</a> Under a badly-worded grace passed on 11 May 1842, on the
-recommendation of a syndicate on theological studies, candidates
-for mathematical honours were, after 1846, required to attend the
-poll examination on Paley’s <cite>Moral Philosophy</cite>, the new testament
-and ecclesiastical history. This had not been the intention of the
-senate, and on 14 March 1855, a grace was passed making this clear.</p>
-
-<p><a class="parnumber" href="#fna74" id="fn74" name="fn74" title="Back">74</a> See grace of 13 May 1846, confirming a report of 23 March 1846.</p>
-
-<p><a class="parnumber" href="#fna75" id="fn75" name="fn75" title="Back">75</a> See grace of 31 October 1848.</p>
-
-<p><a class="parnumber" href="#fna76" id="fn76" name="fn76" title="Back">76</a> See grace of 2 June 1868. It was carried by a majority of
-only five in a house of 75.</p>
-
-<p><a class="parnumber" href="#fna77" id="fn77" name="fn77" title="Back">77</a> See graces of 17 May 1877; 29 May 1878; and 21 November
-1878; and the <cite>Cambridge University Reporter</cite>, 2 April, 14 May,
-4 June, 29 October, 12 November, and 26 November 1878.</p>
-
-<p><a class="parnumber" href="#fna78" id="fn78" name="fn78" title="Back">78</a> See graces of 13 December 1883; 12 June 1884; 10 February
-1885; 29 October 1885; and 1 June 1886.</p>
-
-<p><a class="parnumber" href="#fna79" id="fn79" name="fn79" title="Back">79</a> See reports dated 7 November 1899, and 20 January 1900.</p>
-
-<p><a class="parnumber" href="#fna80" id="fn80" name="fn80" title="Back">80</a> See the reports of the special board, <cite>Cambridge University
-Reporter</cite>, 29 May and 20 November 1906, and the graces of
-2 February 1907. The voting on the first grace was 776 placet
-and 644 non-placet.</p>
-
-<p><a class="parnumber" href="#fna81" id="fn81" name="fn81" title="Back">81</a> J. B. Mullinger, <cite>The University of Cambridge</cite>, Cambridge, vol. <span class="allsc">I</span>,
-1873, pp. 175–176.</p>
-
-<p><a class="parnumber" href="#fna82" id="fn82" name="fn82" title="Back">82</a> C. Wordsworth, <cite xml:lang="lat" lang="lat">Scholae Academicae</cite>, Cambridge, 1877, p. 21.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<h2 title="Index"><a name="png.325" id="png.325" href="#png.325"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>317<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>INDEX</h2>
-
-
-<div class="index">
-
-<p>Abbot, Wm, <a href="#png.271">263</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Acts, Scholastic, <a href="#png.260">ch <span class="allsc">XV</span></a>.</p>
-
-<p>Adams, J. C, <a href="#png.319">311</a>, <a href="#png.323">315</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Admonitions, Statutory, <a href="#png.229">221–4</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Airy, G. B, <a href="#png.181">173</a>, <a href="#png.301">293</a>,
- <a href="#png.323">315</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Alford, Hen, <a href="#png.182">174</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Allen, Thos, <a href="#png.042">34</a>.</p>
-
-<p>All Saints’ Ch, Camb, <a href="#png.093">85</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Alston Tankard, The, <a href="#png.131">123</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Ambler, John, <a href="#png.232">224</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Amos, Andrew, <a href="#png.138">130</a>, <a href="#png.148">140</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Analytical Society, <a href="#png.298">290</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Anne of Denmark, <a href="#png.125">117</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Ansill, Thos, <a href="#png.021">13</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Apprenticeship, <a href="#png.195">187</a>, <a href="#png.197">189</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Arrington Vicarage, <a href="#png.019">11</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Artistic Treasures, <a href="#png.112">ch <span class="allsc">VI</span></a>.</p>
-
-<p>Arts, Students in, <a href="#png.195">187</a>, <a href="#png.196">188</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Ascham, Roger, <a href="#png.211">203</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Assessors, Trin. Coll, <a href="#png.135">127</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Assistant Tutors, <a href="#png.052">44</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Athletic Club, Trinity, <a href="#png.133">125</a>, <a href="#png.134">126</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Athletic Clubs, <a href="#png.182">174</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Atterbury, Fras, <a href="#png.076">68</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Attractions, Theory, <a href="#png.237">229</a>, <a href="#png.242">234</a>,
- <a href="#png.243">235</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Auditors, Trin. Coll, <a href="#png.135">ch <span class="allsc">VII</span></a>.</p>
-
-<p>Aykerod Cup, The, <a href="#png.128">120</a>.</p>
-
-</div>
-<div class="index">
-
-<p class="letter"><span class="ns"><br
- /></span>Babbage, Chas, <a href="#png.298">290</a>, <a href="#png.323">315</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Babington, Gervase, <a href="#png.065">57</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Backhouse, Jas, <a href="#png.050">42</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Bacon, Arth, <a href="#png.173">165</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Bacon, Fras, <a href="#png.116">108</a>, <a href="#png.125">117</a>,
- <a href="#png.173">165</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Baker, H. F, <a href="#png.323">315</a>, <a href="#png.324">316</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Balfour, A. J, <a href="#png.120">112</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Ball, R. S, <a href="#png.323">315</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Balsham, Hugh de, <a href="#png.199">191</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Bancroft, Rich, <a href="#png.069">61</a>, <a href="#png.070">62</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Bankes Ewer, The, <a href="#png.129">121</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Barnes, E. W, <a href="#png.051">43</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Barnes, J. W, <a href="#png.089">81</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Barrington Vicarage, <a href="#png.020">12</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Barrow, Isaac, <a href="#png.116">108</a>, <a href="#png.117">109</a>,
- <a href="#png.125">117</a>, <a href="#png.158">150</a>, <a href="#png.178">170</a>,
- <a href="#png.179">171</a>, <a href="#png.262">254</a>, <a href="#png.323">315</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Beaumont, Robt, <a href="#png.100">92</a>, <a href="#png.101">93</a>,
- <a href="#png.102">94</a>, <a href="#png.114">106</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Bedesmen, <a href="#png.026">18</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Bedwell, Thos, <a href="#png.262">254</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Bellot Tankard, The, <a href="#png.131">123</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Bennet, Bishop, <a href="#png.065">57</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Bennet Ewer, The, <a href="#png.129">121</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Bensley, Jas, <a href="#png.232">224</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Benson, E. W, <a href="#png.118">110</a>, <a href="#png.119">111</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Bentley, Rich, <a href="#png.049">41</a>, <a href="#png.075">67</a>,
- <a href="#png.076">68</a>, <a href="#png.106">98</a>, <a href="#png.119">111</a>,
- <a href="#png.142">134</a>, <a href="#png.143">135</a>, <a href="#png.180">172</a>,
- <a href="#png.247">239</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Benton, Dan, <a href="#png.220">212</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Berry, Art, <a href="#png.324">316</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Best, H. D, <a href="#png.287">279</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Bill, Wm, <a href="#png.057">49</a>, <a href="#png.096">88</a>, <a href="#png.099">91</a>,
- <a href="#png.100">92</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Billingsley, Hen, <a href="#png.262">254</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Birching, <a href="#png.207">199–208</a>, <a href="#png.218">210–214</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Blackburn, Jas, <a href="#png.286">278</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Blakesley, J. W, <a href="#png.089">81</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Bland, Tobias, <a href="#png.222">214</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Blundeville, Thos, <a href="#png.262">254</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Board, Mathematical, <a href="#png.308">300</a>, <a href="#png.309">301</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Boat Club, The, <a href="#png.132">124</a>, <a href="#png.133">125</a>,
- <a href="#png.182">174</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Bolland, Wm, <a href="#png.293">285</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Bonnycastle’s <cite>Algebra</cite>, <a href="#png.289">281</a>,
- <a href="#png.292">284</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Bottisham Vicarage, <a href="#png.019">11</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Boude, Wm, <a href="#png.023">15</a>, <a href="#png.024">16</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Boxworth Rectory, <a href="#png.020">12</a>.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.326" id="png.326" href="#png.326"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>318<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>Boyle Cup, The, <a href="#png.130">122</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Boys, Wm, <a href="#png.096">88</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Brackets, System of, <a href="#png.279">271–272</a>, <a href="#png.290">282–288</a>,
- <a href="#png.303">295</a>, <a href="#png.308">300</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Brass, John, <a href="#png.263">255</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Bridges, Simon, <a href="#png.025">17</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Briggs, Hen, <a href="#png.262">254</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Briggs, Simon, <a href="#png.025">17</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Bristed, C. A, <a href="#png.182">174</a>, <a href="#png.297">289</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Bromwich, T. J. I’A, <a href="#png.324">316</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Brooke, Rich, <a href="#png.136">128</a>, <a href="#png.137">129</a>,
- <a href="#png.139">131</a>, <a href="#png.140">132</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Brown, John, <a href="#png.089">81</a>, <a href="#png.294">286</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Browne, Galen, <a href="#png.231">223</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Browne, I. Hawkins, <a href="#png.118">110</a>, <a href="#png.119">111</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Buckingham Ewer, The, <a href="#png.128">120</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Buckley, Wm, <a href="#png.262">254</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Bulaeus, <a href="#png.190">182</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Burcham, T. B, <a href="#png.089">81</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Burials in College, <a href="#png.111">103</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Burnand, F. C, <a href="#png.182">174</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Burnell, Edw, <a href="#png.136">128</a>, <a href="#png.137">129</a>,
- <a href="#png.138">130</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Busby Cup, The, <a href="#png.129">121</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Busby, Rich, <a href="#png.210">202</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Butler, H. M, <a href="#png.123">115</a>, <a href="#png.183">175</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Butler, Miss, <a href="#png.108">100</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Butler’s <cite>Analogy</cite>, <a href="#png.227">219</a>,
- <a href="#png.276">268</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Byron, Lord, <a href="#png.117">109</a>, <a href="#png.125">117</a>.</p>
-
-</div>
-<div class="index">
-
-<p class="letter"><span class="ns"><br
- /></span>Calculus, The, <a href="#png.297">289–292</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Cambridge University, Beginnings of, <a href="#png.187">ch <span class="allsc">XI</span></a>.</p>
-
-<p>Camden, Marquess of, <a href="#png.120">112</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Caroline, Queen, <a href="#png.146">138</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Cartwright, Thos, <a href="#png.101">93</a>, <a href="#png.173">165</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Carus, Wm, <a href="#png.081">73</a>, <a href="#png.082">74</a>,
- <a href="#png.087">79</a>, <a href="#png.089">81</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Carver, Chas, <a href="#png.285">277</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Cavendish Cup, The, <a href="#png.131">123</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Cavendish Professorship, <a href="#png.324">316</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Cayley, Art, <a href="#png.118">110</a>, <a href="#png.119">111</a>,
- <a href="#png.184">176</a>, <a href="#png.319">311</a>, <a href="#png.323">315</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Cecil, Sir Wm, <a href="#png.059">51</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Censer Boat, <a href="#png.095">87</a>, <a href="#png.126">118</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Central Forces, <a href="#png.233">ch <span class="allsc">XIII</span></a>.</p>
-
-<p>Challenge Plate, <a href="#png.132">124–126</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Challis, Jas, <a href="#png.323">315</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Challis MSS, <a href="#png.281">273</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Chantrey, Fras, <a href="#png.124">116</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Chapel Attendance, <a href="#png.079">ch <span class="allsc">IV</span></a>,
- <a href="#png.110">102</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Chapel, Compulsory, <a href="#png.079">ch <span class="allsc">IV</span></a>,
- <a href="#png.212">204</a>, <a href="#png.214">206</a>, <a href="#png.215">207</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Chapel, Trinity, <a href="#png.092">ch <span class="allsc">V</span></a>.</p>
-
-<p>Charles I, <a href="#png.104">96</a>, <a href="#png.176">168</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Charles II, <a href="#png.104">96</a>, <a href="#png.115">107</a>,
- <a href="#png.125">117</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Charrington, John, <a href="#png.123">115</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Cheadle Rectory, <a href="#png.020">12</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Cheke, John, <a href="#png.012">4</a>, <a href="#png.013">5</a>,
- <a href="#png.025">17</a>, <a href="#png.199">191</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Chesterton Vicarage, <a href="#png.019">11</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Christ Church Westminsters, <a href="#png.056">ch <span class="allsc">III</span></a>.</p>
-
-<p>Christopherson, John, <a href="#png.096">88</a>, <a href="#png.099">91</a>,
- <a href="#png.100">92</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Cipriani, G. B, <a href="#png.124">116</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Clairaut, A. C, <a href="#png.248">240</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Clarence, Duke of, <a href="#png.182">174</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Clark, J. W, <a href="#png.138">130</a>, <a href="#png.151">143</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Clarke, Sam, <a href="#png.262">254</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Clarke’s <cite>Attributes</cite>, <a href="#png.276">268</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Clarkson Cup, The, <a href="#png.128">120</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Classical Tripos, <a href="#png.303">295</a>, <a href="#png.305">297</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Clerke, Gilbert, <a href="#png.262">254</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Coaches, Private, <a href="#png.315">307–310</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Coke, Edw, <a href="#png.119">111</a>, <a href="#png.173">165</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Colleges, Early, <a href="#png.035">27</a>, <a href="#png.199">191</a>,
- <a href="#png.200">192</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Colson, John, <a href="#png.323">315</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Combination Rooms, <a href="#png.175">167</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Commencement-House, <a href="#png.161">153</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Commons, Out of, <a href="#png.224">216</a>, <a href="#png.225">217</a>,
- <a href="#png.227">219</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Confessions, <a href="#png.227">219</a>, <a href="#png.229">221</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Conybeare, W. J, <a href="#png.084">76</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Conyers, Tobias, <a href="#png.220">212</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Corporal Punishments, <a href="#png.207">199–208</a>, <a href="#png.218">210–215</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Cotes, Roger, <a href="#png.106">98</a>, <a href="#png.180">172</a>,
- <a href="#png.262">254</a>, <a href="#png.275">267</a>, <a href="#png.323">315</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Cotton, G. E. L, <a href="#png.084">76</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Cowley, Abraham, <a href="#png.074">66</a>, <a href="#png.119">111</a>,
- <a href="#png.177">169</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Cox, Rich, <a href="#png.210">202</a>.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.327" id="png.327" href="#png.327"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>319<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>Craig, John, <a href="#png.262">254</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Cranworth, Lord, <a href="#png.181">173</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Creighton, Robt, <a href="#png.047">39</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Croyland Abbey, <a href="#png.099">91</a>, <a href="#png.189">181</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Cumberland, Rich, <a href="#png.270">262</a>.</p>
-
-</div>
-<div class="index">
-
-<p class="letter"><span class="ns"><br
- /></span>Dacres, Art, <a href="#png.262">254</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Damer Cup, The, <a href="#png.131">123</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Dance, Nath, <a href="#png.120">112</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Darwin, G. H, <a href="#png.323">315</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Dawson, John, <a href="#png.316">308</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Days, Loss of, <a href="#png.225">217</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Dealtry, Wm, <a href="#png.293">285</a>, <a href="#png.294">286</a>,
- <a href="#png.295">287</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Deans, College, <a href="#png.036">28</a>, <a href="#png.214">206–8</a>,
- <a href="#png.227">219–20</a>.</p>
-
-<p>De Aston, John, <a href="#png.163">155</a>, <a href="#png.164">156</a>,
- <a href="#png.168">160</a>.</p>
-
-<p>De Bagshot, John, <a href="#png.163">155</a>, <a href="#png.164">156</a>.</p>
-
-<p>De Balsham, Hugh, <a href="#png.199">191</a>.</p>
-
-<p>De Berwick, Rich, <a href="#png.163">155</a>.</p>
-
-<p>De Beverley, Robt, <a href="#png.163">155</a>, <a href="#png.168">160</a>.</p>
-
-<p><span xml:lang="lat" lang="lat">Declaratio Computi</span>, <a href="#png.136">128</a>.</p>
-
-<p>De Croyland, Robt, <a href="#png.092">84</a>, <a href="#png.093">85</a>.</p>
-
-<p>De Durnford, Nich, <a href="#png.163">155</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Dee, John, <a href="#png.262">254</a>.</p>
-
-<p>De Gretford, Hen, <a href="#png.163">155</a>.</p>
-
-<p>De Gretford, Ralph, <a href="#png.163">155</a>.</p>
-
-<p>De Hull, John, <a href="#png.163">155</a>.</p>
-
-<p>De Immeworth, John, <a href="#png.163">155</a>.</p>
-
-<p>De Kelsey, John, <a href="#png.163">155</a>.</p>
-
-<p>De Kingston, Edw, <a href="#png.163">155</a>, <a href="#png.168">160</a>.</p>
-
-<p>De la Pryme, Abraham, <a href="#png.267">259</a>.</p>
-
-<p>De London, Phil, <a href="#png.163">155</a>.</p>
-
-<p>De Morgan, Aug, <a href="#png.264">256</a>, <a href="#png.292">284</a>,
- <a href="#png.294">286</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Denman, Geo, <a href="#png.138">130</a>, <a href="#png.149">141</a>.</p>
-
-<p>De Nottingham, Walter, <a href="#png.163">155</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Derby, Henry Earl of, <a href="#png.118">110</a>, <a href="#png.119">111</a>.</p>
-
-<p>De Rome, Nich, <a href="#png.163">155</a>.</p>
-
-<p>De Salisbury, John, <a href="#png.163">155</a>.</p>
-
-<p>De Salisbury, Rich, <a href="#png.163">155</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Descartes, René, <a href="#png.235">227</a>, <a href="#png.244">236</a>,
- <a href="#png.245">237</a>.</p>
-
-<p>De Stanton, Hervey, <a href="#png.095">87</a>.</p>
-
-<p>De Sutton, Hugh, <a href="#png.163">155</a>.</p>
-
-<p>De Torterold, Jas, <a href="#png.163">155</a>.</p>
-
-<p>De Torterold, John, <a href="#png.163">155</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Devereux, Robt, <a href="#png.116">108</a>, <a href="#png.173">165</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Devonshire, Duke of, <a href="#png.324">316</a>.</p>
-
-<p>D’Ewes, Simon, <a href="#png.216">208</a>.</p>
-
-<p>De Winchester, David, <a href="#png.163">155</a>, <a href="#png.168">160</a>.</p>
-
-<p>De Windsor, Thos, <a href="#png.163">155</a>.</p>
-
-<p>De Woodstock, John, <a href="#png.163">155</a>.<!-- TN: period invisible in scan --></p>
-
-<p><span xml:lang="lat" lang="lat">Dialectici</span>, <a href="#png.024">16</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Digges, Thos, <a href="#png.262">254</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Discipline, <a href="#png.202">ch <span class="allsc">XII</span></a>,
- <a href="#png.035">27</a>, <a href="#png.040">32</a>, <a href="#png.041">33</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Discommonsing, <a href="#png.224">216</a>, <a href="#png.225">217</a>,
- <a href="#png.227">219</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Dissizaring, <a href="#png.224">216</a>, <a href="#png.225">217</a>.</p>
-
-<p><span xml:lang="lat" lang="lat">Distribucio Collegii</span>,
- <a href="#png.021">13–22</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Dobson, Wm, <a href="#png.089">81</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Donaldson, J. W, <a href="#png.089">81</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Douglas, Stair, <a href="#png.296">288</a>, <a href="#png.300">292</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Downing, Sir Geo, <a href="#png.139">131</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Draghswerd, Wm, <a href="#png.163">155</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Dryden, John, <a href="#png.119">111</a>, <a href="#png.177">169</a>,
- <a href="#png.227">219</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Duport, Jas, <a href="#png.048">40</a>, <a href="#png.177">169</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Duport Salt, The, <a href="#png.129">121</a>, <a href="#png.130">122</a>.</p>
-
-</div>
-<div class="index">
-
-<p class="letter"><span class="ns"><br
- /></span>Early University History, <a href="#png.187">ch <span class="allsc">XI</span></a>.</p>
-
-<p>Earnshaw, Sam, <a href="#png.306">298</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Eddington, A. S, <a href="#png.323">315</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Edward II, <a href="#png.092">84</a>, <a href="#png.162">154</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Edward III, <a href="#png.092">84</a>, <a href="#png.123">115</a>,
- <a href="#png.125">117</a>, <a href="#png.171">163</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Edward IV, <a href="#png.118">110</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Edward VI, <a href="#png.095">87</a>, <a href="#png.123">115</a>,
- <a href="#png.172">164</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Edward VII, <a href="#png.182">174</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Elizabeth of York, <a href="#png.114">106</a>, <a href="#png.123">115</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Elizabeth, Queen, <a href="#png.056">48</a>, <a href="#png.057">49</a>,
- <a href="#png.098">90</a>, <a href="#png.099">91</a>, <a href="#png.100">92</a>,
- <a href="#png.122">114</a>, <a href="#png.123">115</a>, <a href="#png.125">117</a>,
- <a href="#png.152">144</a>, <a href="#png.172">164</a>, <a href="#png.175">167</a>,
- <a href="#png.176">168</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Ellethorpe, <a href="#png.221">213</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Ellis, Wm, <a href="#png.137">129</a>, <a href="#png.138">130</a>,
- <a href="#png.141">133</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Emerson, Wm, <a href="#png.276">268</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Euclid’s <cite>Elements</cite>, <a href="#png.279">271</a>, <a href="#png.287">279</a>,
- <a href="#png.289">281</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Euler, Leonhard, <a href="#png.248">240</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Essex, Earl of, <a href="#png.116">108</a>, <a href="#png.173">165</a>.<!-- TN: out of alphabetical order in original --></p>
-
-<p>Everett, Wm, <a href="#png.182">174</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Ewing, J. A, <a href="#png.324">316</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Eworth, Hans, <a href="#png.114">106</a>, <a href="#png.123">115</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Expulsions, <a href="#png.229">221–224</a>.</p>
-
-</div>
-<div class="index">
-
-<p class="letter"><a name="png.328" id="png.328" href="#png.328"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns"><br
- />[</span>320<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>Fairfax, Sir Thos, <a href="#png.105">97</a>.<!-- TN: period invisible in scan --></p>
-
-<p>Fakenham Rectory, <a href="#png.019">11</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Farish, Wm, <a href="#png.293">285</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Fees, College, in 1570, <a href="#png.044">36–37</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Fellow-Commoners, <a href="#png.037">29</a>, <a href="#png.042">34</a>,
- <a href="#png.127">119</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Fellows, Election of, <a href="#png.038">30</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Fellowship Election in 1659, <a href="#png.047">39</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Felmersham Vicarage, <a href="#png.019">11</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Fenn, John, <a href="#png.271">263</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Ferguson, Jas, <a href="#png.275">267</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Field, Fred, <a href="#png.089">81</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Fines, <a href="#png.223">215–216</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Fiott (Lee), John, <a href="#png.293">285</a>, <a href="#png.295">287</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Firebrace Cup, The, <a href="#png.130">122</a>.</p>
-
-<p>First Trinity Boat Club, <a href="#png.132">124</a>, <a href="#png.133">125</a>,
- <a href="#png.182">174</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Fitzgerald, Edw, <a href="#png.181">173</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Fitzgerald Tankard, The, <a href="#png.130">122</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Flamsteed, John, <a href="#png.238">230</a>, <a href="#png.262">254</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Fletcher, Bishop, <a href="#png.065">57</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Fletcher, W. M, <a href="#png.051">43</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Flogging, <a href="#png.207">199–208</a>, <a href="#png.218">210–214</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Fluxions, <a href="#png.297">289–292</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Foley Tankard, The, <a href="#png.131">123</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Forsyth, A. R, <a href="#png.323">315</a>, <a href="#png.324">316</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Fort, John, <a href="#png.163">155</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Foster, Michael, <a href="#png.118">110</a>, <a href="#png.119">111</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Foster, Sam, <a href="#png.262">254</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Foundation of Trinity, <a href="#png.011">ch <span class="allsc">I</span></a>.</p>
-
-<p>Franciscan Monastery, <a href="#png.027">19</a>, <a href="#png.192">184</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Frazer, Sir Jas, <a href="#png.178">170</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Frere, John, <a href="#png.273">265</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Fuller, Thos, <a href="#png.101">93</a>.</p>
-
-</div>
-<div class="index">
-
-<p class="letter"><span class="ns"><br
- /></span>Galileo, <a href="#png.239">231</a>, <a href="#png.240">232</a>,
- <a href="#png.247">239</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Galton, Fras, <a href="#png.118">110</a>, <a href="#png.119">111</a>,
- <a href="#png.182">174</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Gating, <a href="#png.226">218–219</a>.</p>
-
-<p>General Examination, <a href="#png.305">297</a>.</p>
-
-<p>George I, <a href="#png.267">259</a>.</p>
-
-<p>George III, <a href="#png.115">107</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Gerrard, Mark, <a href="#png.123">115</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Glaisher, J. W. L, <a href="#png.260">252</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Glazebrook, R. T, <a href="#png.324">316</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Glomerels, <a href="#png.189">181</a>, <a href="#png.197">189–191</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Gloucester, Duke of, <a href="#png.115">107</a>, <a href="#png.120">112</a>,
- <a href="#png.123">115</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Goad, Roger, <a href="#png.212">204</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Gooch, Wm, <a href="#png.284">276</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Goodman, Gabriel, <a href="#png.060">52</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Gordon, Douglas, <a href="#png.115">107</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Gouldesborough, Edw, <a href="#png.065">57</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Grace, J. H, <a href="#png.324">316</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Graham, Robt, <a href="#png.137">129</a>, <a href="#png.144">136</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Grammar, Degrees in, <a href="#png.198">190</a>, <a href="#png.199">191</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Grammarians, <a href="#png.023">15</a>, <a href="#png.024">16</a>,
- <a href="#png.025">17</a>, <a href="#png.036">28</a>, <a href="#png.189">181</a>,
- <a href="#png.197">189–191</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Grammar School at Trinity, <a href="#png.023">15–17</a>, <a href="#png.036">28</a>,
- <a href="#png.038">30</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Grammatici, <a href="#png.023">15</a>, <a href="#png.024">16</a>,
- <a href="#png.025">17</a>, <a href="#png.036">28</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Granby, Marquess of, <a href="#png.120">112</a>, <a href="#png.121">113</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Gravitation, Law of, <a href="#png.233">ch <span class="allsc">XIII</span></a>.</p>
-
-<p>Gray, <a href="#png.096">88</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Greaves Cup, The, <a href="#png.131">123</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Greaves, Wm, <a href="#png.137">129</a>, <a href="#png.143">135</a>,
- <a href="#png.144">136</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Greek Authors read in 1570, <a href="#png.045">37</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Green, Geo, <a href="#png.319">311</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Grendon Vicarage, <a href="#png.019">11</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Griffith, T, <a href="#png.141">133</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Griffon, John, <a href="#png.163">155</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Griffon, Thos, <a href="#png.163">155</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Grigson, Thos, <a href="#png.223">215</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Grote, John, <a href="#png.182">174</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Grundisburgh Rectory, <a href="#png.020">12</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Guilds, University, <a href="#png.196">188</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Gulphing, <a href="#png.272">264</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Gunning, Hen, <a href="#png.283">275</a>, <a href="#png.286">278</a>.</p>
-
-</div>
-<div class="index">
-
-<p class="letter"><span class="ns"><br
- /></span>Hacket, John, <a href="#png.069">61</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Halfhead, <a href="#png.231">223</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Halifax, Earl of, <a href="#png.118">110</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Hallam, A. H, <a href="#png.181">173</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Halley, Edmund, <a href="#png.236">228</a>, <a href="#png.238">230</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Hamilton, Hugh, <a href="#png.275">267</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Hardy, G. H, <a href="#png.324">316</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Hare, J. C, <a href="#png.181">173</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Harman, Rich, <a href="#png.023">15</a>.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.329" id="png.329" href="#png.329"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>321<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>Harvey, John, <a href="#png.262">254</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Harwood, Busick, <a href="#png.293">285</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Heath, J. M, <a href="#png.089">81</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Helsham, Rich, <a href="#png.275">267</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Henry I, <a href="#png.188">180</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Henry II, <a href="#png.188">180</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Henry VII, <a href="#png.114">106</a>, <a href="#png.123">115</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Henry VIII, <a href="#png.011">3</a>, <a href="#png.056">48</a>,
- <a href="#png.114">106</a>, <a href="#png.170">162</a>, <a href="#png.175">167</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Herbert, Geo, <a href="#png.069">61</a>, <a href="#png.177">169</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Herkomer, H. von, <a href="#png.117">109</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Herman, R. A, <a href="#png.324">316</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Herschel, John, <a href="#png.298">290</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Herschel, Wm, <a href="#png.248">240</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Hill, Thos, <a href="#png.262">254</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Hitch, Robt, <a href="#png.231">223</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Hobson, E. W, <a href="#png.323">315</a>, <a href="#png.324">316</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Hodges, <a href="#png.221">213</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Hodson, Wm, <a href="#png.281">273</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Holbein, <a href="#png.114">106</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Hon. Optimes, <a href="#png.265">257</a>, <a href="#png.269">261</a>,
- <a href="#png.304">296</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Hood, Thos, <a href="#png.262">254</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Hooke, Robt, <a href="#png.236">228</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Hopkins, Wm, <a href="#png.316">308–310</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Hopkinson, B, <a href="#png.324">316</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Hornbuckle, T. W, <a href="#png.294">286</a>, <a href="#png.295">287</a>,
- <a href="#png.296">288</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Horrox, Jeremiah, <a href="#png.262">254</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Hort, F. J. A, <a href="#png.118">110</a>, <a href="#png.119">111</a>,
- <a href="#png.184">176</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Hostels, Private, <a href="#png.035">27</a>, <a href="#png.037">29</a>,
- <a href="#png.200">192</a>, <a href="#png.201">193</a>, <a href="#png.203">195</a>,
- <a href="#png.206">198</a>, <a href="#png.207">199</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Houghton, Lord, <a href="#png.181">173</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Howson, J. S, <a href="#png.084">76</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Huddling, <a href="#png.263">255</a>, <a href="#png.266">258</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Hughes, Fras, <a href="#png.137">129</a>, <a href="#png.140">132</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Humphrey Ewer, The, <a href="#png.128">120</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Husbands Cup, The, <a href="#png.130">122</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Hustler, J. D, <a href="#png.293">285</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Hutton, Archbishop, <a href="#png.065">57</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Huygens, Christian, <a href="#png.246">238</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Hydrodynamics, Theory of, <a href="#png.238">230</a>, <a href="#png.243">235</a>,
- <a href="#png.244">236</a>.</p>
-
-</div>
-<div class="index">
-
-<p class="letter"><span class="ns"><br
- /></span>Impositions, <a href="#png.227">219–221</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Ireland, Rich, <a href="#png.067">59</a>.</p>
-
-</div>
-<div class="index">
-
-<p class="letter"><span class="ns"><br
- /></span>Jacob, Edw, <a href="#png.295">287</a>, <a href="#png.296">288</a>,
- <a href="#png.297">289</a>.</p>
-
-<p>James I, <a href="#png.062">54</a>, <a href="#png.072">64</a>,
- <a href="#png.074">66</a>, <a href="#png.122">114</a>, <a href="#png.125">117</a>,
- <a href="#png.176">168</a>.</p>
-
-<p>James II, <a href="#png.179">171</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Jeans, J. H, <a href="#png.324">316</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Jebb, John, <a href="#png.271">263</a>, <a href="#png.275">267</a>,
- <a href="#png.278">270</a>, <a href="#png.279">271</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Jebb, R. C, <a href="#png.118">110</a>, <a href="#png.119">111</a>,
- <a href="#png.178">170</a>, <a href="#png.184">176</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Jephson, Thos, <a href="#png.293">285</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Joachim, Joseph, <a href="#png.118">110</a>.</p>
-
-<p>John, King, <a href="#png.188">180</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Johnson, <a href="#png.220">212</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Jones, Thos, <a href="#png.118">110</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Jurin, Jas, <a href="#png.262">254</a>.</p>
-
-</div>
-<div class="index">
-
-<p class="letter"><span class="ns"><br
- /></span>Kant, Immanuel, <a href="#png.250">242</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Keate, John, <a href="#png.210">202</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Keill, John, <a href="#png.275">267</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Kelvin, Lord, <a href="#png.319">311</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Kempthorne, John, <a href="#png.293">285</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Kent Ewer, The, <a href="#png.128">120</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Kepler’s Problem, <a href="#png.242">234</a>.</p>
-
-<p>King, C. W, <a href="#png.083">75</a>.</p>
-
-<p>King, Joshua, <a href="#png.323">315</a>.</p>
-
-<p>King, John, <a href="#png.067">59</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Kinglake, A. W, <a href="#png.181">173</a>.</p>
-
-<p>King’s Hall, <a href="#png.011">3</a>, <a href="#png.017">9–11</a>,
- <a href="#png.028">20</a>, <a href="#png.092">84–86</a>, <a href="#png.152">144</a>,
- <a href="#png.162">154–160</a>, <a href="#png.170">162</a>, <a href="#png.171">163</a>.</p>
-
-<p>King’s Scholars, <i>see</i> King’s Hall.</p>
-
-<p>Kneller, Godfrey, <a href="#png.120">112</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Knight, Sam, <a href="#png.138">130</a>, <a href="#png.145">137</a>.</p>
-
-</div>
-<div class="index">
-
-<p class="letter"><span class="ns"><br
- /></span>Lagrange, J. L, <a href="#png.247">239</a>, <a href="#png.248">240</a>,
- <a href="#png.298">290</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Laplace, P. S, <a href="#png.249">241</a>, <a href="#png.250">242</a>,
- <a href="#png.298">290</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Larmor, Joseph, <a href="#png.323">315</a>, <a href="#png.324">316</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Laszlö de Lombros, P. A, <a href="#png.120">112</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Latin Authors read in 1570, <a href="#png.045">37</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Laud, Wm, <a href="#png.102">94</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Laughton, Rich, <a href="#png.262">254</a>, <a href="#png.315">307</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Laurence, R. V, <a href="#png.051">43</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Lawrence, Thos, <a href="#png.120">112</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Lax, Wm, <a href="#png.284">276</a>, <a href="#png.323">315</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Least Resistance, Solid of, <a href="#png.244">236</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Leathem, J. G, <a href="#png.324">316</a>.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.330" id="png.330" href="#png.330"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>322<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>Lecture-Rooms, College, <a href="#png.052">44</a>,
- <a href="#png.053">45</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Lectures, College, <a href="#png.052">44–46</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Lectureships, Mathematical, <a href="#png.261">253</a>, <a href="#png.324">316</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Lee (Fiott), John, <a href="#png.295">287</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Leg, Thos, <a href="#png.101">93</a>.</p><!-- TN: corrected, original reads 29 -->
-
-<p>Legendre, A. M, <a href="#png.298">290</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Lever, Thos, <a href="#png.032">24</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Library, Trinity, <a href="#png.152">ch <span class="allsc">VIII</span></a>,
- <a href="#png.112">104</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Lightfoot, J. B, <a href="#png.109">101</a>, <a href="#png.118">110</a>,
- <a href="#png.119">111</a>, <a href="#png.123">115</a>, <a href="#png.178">170</a>,
- <a href="#png.184">176</a>.</p>
-
-<p>L’Isle, Denys, <a href="#png.137">129</a>, <a href="#png.142">134</a>,
- <a href="#png.143">135</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Locke’s <cite>Essay</cite>, <a href="#png.276">268</a>, <a href="#png.283">275</a>,
- <a href="#png.287">279</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Lombard, Peter, <a href="#png.189">181</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Long, Roger, <a href="#png.275">267</a>, <a href="#png.323">315</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Lonsdale, John, <a href="#png.120">112</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Loss of Days or Terms, <a href="#png.226">218</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Love, A. E. H, <a href="#png.324">316</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Lowndes, Thos, <a href="#png.323">315</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Lowndean Professorship, <a href="#png.323">315</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Lucas, Hen, <a href="#png.323">315</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Lucas, Rich, <a href="#png.285">277</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Lucasian Professorship, <a href="#png.323">315</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Lushington, E. L, <a href="#png.182">174</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Lyndhurst Cup, The, <a href="#png.131">123</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Lyndhurst, Lord, <a href="#png.181">173</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Lyons, Israel, <a href="#png.276">268</a>.</p>
-
-</div>
-<div class="index">
-
-<p class="letter"><span class="ns"><br
- /></span>Macaulay, T. B, <a href="#png.125">117</a>, <a href="#png.181">173</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Macaulay, W. H, <a href="#png.324">316</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Macclesfield, Earl of, <a href="#png.119">111</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Macdonald, H. M, <a href="#png.324">316</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Maclaurin, Colin, <a href="#png.275">267</a>, <a href="#png.276">268</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Man, Henry, <a href="#png.025">17</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Mansel, W. L, <a href="#png.120">112</a>, <a href="#png.225">217</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Martin, Fras, <a href="#png.089">81</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Martin, Theodore, <a href="#png.131">123</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Marvell, Andrew, <a href="#png.177">169</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Mary, Queen, <a href="#png.056">48</a>, <a href="#png.096">88</a>,
- <a href="#png.099">91</a>, <a href="#png.116">108</a>, <a href="#png.123">115</a>,
- <a href="#png.172">164</a>, <a href="#png.175">167</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Mary of Scotland, <a href="#png.123">115</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Mathematical Board, <a href="#png.308">300</a>, <a href="#png.309">301</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Mathematical Tripos, <a href="#png.260">ch <span class="allsc">XV</span></a>.</p>
-
-<p>Mathematics, Cambridge, <a href="#png.260">ch <span class="allsc">XV</span></a>.</p>
-
-<p>Mathews, G. B, <a href="#png.324">316</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Maule, W. H, <a href="#png.181">173</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Maurice, F. D, <a href="#png.118">110</a>, <a href="#png.119">111</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Maxwell, J. Clerk, <a href="#png.118">110</a>, <a href="#png.119">111</a>,
- <a href="#png.184">176</a>, <a href="#png.319">311</a>, <a href="#png.324">316</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Maydew, John, <a href="#png.025">17</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Mechanics, Theory of, <a href="#png.239">231–232</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Mechanism Professorship, <a href="#png.324">316</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Medieval Tutorial System, <a href="#png.035">27</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Medieval University, Beginnings of, <a href="#png.187">ch <span class="allsc">XI</span></a>.</p>
-
-<p>Melbourne, Viscount, <a href="#png.118">110</a>, <a href="#png.119">111</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Merit, Order of, in Examinations, <a href="#png.269">261</a>,
- <a href="#png.315">307</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Mexborough Cup, The, <a href="#png.131">123</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Mey, Wm, <a href="#png.013">5</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Michael-House, <a href="#png.011">3</a>, <a href="#png.019">11–13</a>,
- <a href="#png.028">20</a>, <a href="#png.094">86</a>, <a href="#png.095">87</a>,
- <a href="#png.170">162</a>, <a href="#png.171">163</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Milner, Isaac, <a href="#png.280">272</a>, <a href="#png.323">315</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Milnes, Monckton, <a href="#png.181">173</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Milton, John, <a href="#png.221">213</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Moderators, Mathematical, <a href="#png.266">258</a>, <a href="#png.267">259</a>,
- <a href="#png.268">260</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Monasteries at Cambridge, <a href="#png.188">180</a>, <a href="#png.189">181</a>,
- <a href="#png.192">184</a>, <a href="#png.193">185</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Monks at University, <a href="#png.189">181</a>, <a href="#png.193">185</a>,
- <a href="#png.194">186</a>, <a href="#png.195">187</a>, <a href="#png.204">196</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Moreton, Albert, <a href="#png.061">53</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Morland, Sam, <a href="#png.262">254</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Moro, Antonio, <a href="#png.114">106</a>, <a href="#png.116">108</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Motion, Laws of, <a href="#png.240">232</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Mullinger, J. B, <a href="#png.187">179</a>, <a href="#png.196">188</a>,
- <a href="#png.321">313</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Munro, H. A. J, <a href="#png.184">176</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Murray, Thos, <a href="#png.120">112</a>.</p>
-
-</div>
-<div class="index">
-
-<p class="letter"><span class="ns"><br
- /></span>Nebular Hypothesis, <a href="#png.249">241</a>, <a href="#png.250">242</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Neile, Rich, <a href="#png.067">59</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Nevile Cup, The, <a href="#png.127">119</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Nevile, Robt, <a href="#png.220">212</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Nevile, Thos, <a href="#png.061">53</a>, <a href="#png.063">55</a>,
- <a href="#png.066">58</a>, <a href="#png.067">59</a>, <a href="#png.068">60</a>,
- <a href="#png.069">61</a>, <a href="#png.070">62</a>, <a href="#png.122">114</a>,
- <a href="#png.157">149</a>, <a href="#png.174">166</a>, <a href="#png.175">167</a>,
- <a href="#png.176">168</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Nevile’s Court, <a href="#png.159">151</a>, <a href="#png.160">152</a>.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.331" id="png.331" href="#png.331"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>323<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>Newton, Isaac, <a href="#png.116">108</a>, <a href="#png.120">112</a>,
- <a href="#png.124">116</a>, <a href="#png.178">170</a>, <a href="#png.252">244–251</a>,
- <a href="#png.275">267</a>, <a href="#png.276">268</a>, <a href="#png.289">281</a>,
- <a href="#png.292">284</a>, <a href="#png.295">287</a>, <a href="#png.323">315</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Newton, John, <a href="#png.142">134</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Newton, Sam, <a href="#png.137">129</a>, <a href="#png.140">132</a>,
- <a href="#png.141">133</a>, <a href="#png.142">134</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Newton’s <cite>Principia</cite>, <a href="#png.233">ch <span class="allsc">XIII</span></a>.</p>
-
-<p>Non-Regents, <a href="#png.191">183</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Northampton, Earl of, <a href="#png.070">62</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Numbers of Students, <a href="#png.049">41–44</a>, <a href="#png.196">188</a>.</p>
-
-</div>
-<div class="index">
-
-<p class="letter"><span class="ns"><br
- /></span>Offley, Chris, <a href="#png.231">223</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Opie, John, <a href="#png.120">112</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Opponencies, <a href="#png.261">253</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Optimes, <a href="#png.260">ch <span class="allsc">XV</span></a>.</p>
-
-<p>Optimes, Honorary, <a href="#png.265">257</a>, <a href="#png.269">261</a>,
- <a href="#png.304">296</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Ordines Senioritatis, <a href="#png.269">261</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Orleans, University of, <a href="#png.190">182</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Orwell Rectory, <a href="#png.020">12</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Oughtred, Wm, <a href="#png.260">252</a>.</p>
-
-</div>
-<div class="index">
-
-<p class="letter"><span class="ns"><br
- /></span>Paget, Sir Wm, <a href="#png.014">6</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Paley, Wm, <a href="#png.273">265</a>, <a href="#png.283">275</a>,
- <a href="#png.287">279</a>, <a href="#png.307">299</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Parham, Peter, <a href="#png.221">213</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Paris, University of, <a href="#png.190">182</a>, <a href="#png.260">252</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Parke, Jas, <a href="#png.138">130</a>, <a href="#png.146">138</a>,
- <a href="#png.147">139</a>, <a href="#png.181">173</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Parker, Matthew, <a href="#png.012">4</a>, <a href="#png.013">5</a>,
- <a href="#png.014">6</a>, <a href="#png.015">7</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Parker, Nich, <a href="#png.163">155</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Parker, Roger, <a href="#png.163">155</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Parne, Thos, <a href="#png.223">215</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Parr, Queen Katherine, <a href="#png.014">6</a>, <a href="#png.015">7</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Paston, Clement, <a href="#png.209">201</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Paulet Tankard, The, <a href="#png.131">123</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Payne, <a href="#png.263">255</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Peacock, Geo, <a href="#png.063">55</a>, <a href="#png.089">81</a>,
- <a href="#png.181">173</a>, <a href="#png.187">179</a>, <a href="#png.188">180</a>,
- <a href="#png.190">182</a>, <a href="#png.197">189</a>, <a href="#png.284">276</a>,
- <a href="#png.285">277</a>, <a href="#png.298">290</a>, <a href="#png.299">291</a>,
- <a href="#png.323">315</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Pearson, John, <a href="#png.116">108</a>, <a href="#png.119">111</a>,
- <a href="#png.178">170</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Peckitt of York, <a href="#png.124">116</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Peile, John, <a href="#png.221">213</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Pell, John, <a href="#png.262">254</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Penalties, <a href="#png.202">ch <span class="allsc">XII</span></a>.</p>
-
-<p>Pendlebury, Rich, <a href="#png.324">316</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Pensioners, <a href="#png.037">29</a>, <a href="#png.039">31</a>,
- <a href="#png.041">33</a>, <a href="#png.042">34</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Pepys, Thos, <a href="#png.225">217</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Perry, Chas, <a href="#png.084">76</a>, <a href="#png.086">78</a>,
- <a href="#png.087">79</a>, <a href="#png.089">81</a>, <a href="#png.090">82</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Perry Plate, The, <a href="#png.132">124</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Pheasaunt Tankard, The, <a href="#png.131">123</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Philip of Spain, <a href="#png.116">108</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Physwick’s Hostel, <a href="#png.094">86</a>, <a href="#png.095">87</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Plate, College, <a href="#png.112">ch <span class="allsc">VI</span></a>.</p>
-
-<p>Plume, Thos, <a href="#png.323">315</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Plumian Professorship, <a href="#png.323">315</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Poll-Men, <i>see</i> <a href="#png.260">ch <span class="allsc">XV</span></a>.</p>
-
-<p>Pollock, J. F, <a href="#png.181">173</a>, <a href="#png.292">284</a>,
- <a href="#png.295">287</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Porson, Rich, <a href="#png.122">114</a>, <a href="#png.180">172</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Portraits, College, <a href="#png.112">ch <span class="allsc">VI</span></a>.</p>
-
-<p>Pour, Nich, <a href="#png.163">155</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Pour, Rich, <a href="#png.163">155</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Pour, Wm, <a href="#png.163">155</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Pre-elections, <a href="#png.067">59</a>, <a href="#png.068">60</a>,
- <a href="#png.070">62</a>, <a href="#png.072">64</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Prime and Ultimate Ratios, <a href="#png.240">232</a>.</p>
-
-<p><cite>Principia</cite> of Newton, <a href="#png.233">ch <span class="allsc">XIII</span></a>.</p>
-
-<p>Prior, Matthew, <a href="#png.120">112</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Private Tutors, <a href="#png.315">307–310</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Professors’ Examinations, <a href="#png.305">297</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Pull, Nich, <a href="#png.163">155</a>.</p>
-
-</div>
-<div class="index">
-
-<p class="letter"><span class="ns"><br
- /></span>Raeburn, Hen, <a href="#png.117">109</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Raine, Matthew, <a href="#png.118">110</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Rait, R. S, <a href="#png.208">200</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Rashdall, Hastings, <a href="#png.187">179</a>, <a href="#png.207">199</a>,
- <a href="#png.228">220</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Ray, John, <a href="#png.177">169</a>, <a href="#png.223">215</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Rayleigh, Lord, <a href="#png.324">316</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Rayleigh Prizes, <a href="#png.274">266</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Record, Robt, <a href="#png.262">254</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Redman, Bishop, <a href="#png.065">57</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Redman, John, <a href="#png.013">5</a>, <a href="#png.017">9</a>,
- <a href="#png.019">11</a>, <a href="#png.021">13</a>, <a href="#png.028">20</a>,
- <a href="#png.032">24</a>, <a href="#png.096">88</a>, <a href="#png.100">92</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Regents, <a href="#png.191">183</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Religious Students, <a href="#png.035">27</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Remée, <a href="#png.115">107</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Reneu, Wm, <a href="#png.267">259</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Resisting Mediums, <a href="#png.243">235–236</a>.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.332" id="png.332" href="#png.332"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>324<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>Respondents, <a href="#png.261">253</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Reynolds, Joshua, <a href="#png.115">107</a>, <a href="#png.120">112</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Rhetoric, Degrees in, <a href="#png.198">190</a>, <a href="#png.199">191</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Richard III, <a href="#png.118">110</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Richard, Duke of York, <a href="#png.118">110</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Richardson, John, <a href="#png.073">65</a>, <a href="#png.074">66</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Richmond, H. W, <a href="#png.324">316</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Ring, Mrs, <a href="#png.120">112</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Rod, Punishment by, <a href="#png.207">199–208</a>, <a href="#png.218">210–214</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Romney, Geo, <a href="#png.123">115</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Rooke, Laurence, <a href="#png.262">254</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Rose, C. L, <a href="#png.084">76</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Rosekin, Andrew, <a href="#png.163">155</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Roubiliac, L. F, <a href="#png.124">116</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Routh, E. J, <a href="#png.316">308–310</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Rud, Bishop, <a href="#png.065">57</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Rustication, <a href="#png.229">221–224</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Rutherford, Wm, <a href="#png.275">267</a>.</p>
-
-</div>
-<div class="index">
-
-<p class="letter"><span class="ns"><br
- /></span>Sadleir, Lady, <a href="#png.323">315</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Sadleirian Professorship, <a href="#png.323">315</a>.</p>
-
-<p>St Mary’s Ch, Camb, <a href="#png.019">11</a>.</p>
-
-<p>St Michael’s Ch, Camb, <a href="#png.020">12</a>, <a href="#png.095">87</a>,
- <a href="#png.106">98</a>, <a href="#png.109">101</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Salisbury, Earl of, <a href="#png.063">55</a>, <a href="#png.070">62</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Sanderson, Nich, <i>see</i> Saunderson.</p>
-
-<p>Sandwich Cup, The, <a href="#png.130">122</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Saunderson, Nich, <a href="#png.262">254</a>, <a href="#png.276">268</a>,
- <a href="#png.323">315</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Scholars, Election of, <a href="#png.038">30</a>, <a href="#png.039">31</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Scholefield, Jas, <a href="#png.181">173</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Scot, Major, <a href="#png.105">97</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Sedgwick, Adam, <a href="#png.089">81</a>, <a href="#png.118">110</a>,
- <a href="#png.119">111</a>, <a href="#png.181">173</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Senate-House, <a href="#png.161">153</a>, <a href="#png.268">260</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Senate-House Examination, <a href="#png.260">ch <span class="allsc">XV</span></a>.</p>
-
-<p>Servant Students, <a href="#png.036">28</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Seymour, Queen Jane, <a href="#png.114">106</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Shaw-Lefevre, J. G, <a href="#png.138">130</a>, <a href="#png.148">140</a>,
- <a href="#png.149">141</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Shepherd, Anth, <a href="#png.323">315</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Shirley, Walsingham, <a href="#png.069">61</a>, <a href="#png.231">223</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Sides, Tutorial, <a href="#png.050">42</a>, <a href="#png.051">43</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Sidgwick, Hen, <a href="#png.118">110</a>, <a href="#png.119">111</a>,
- <a href="#png.184">176</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Simeon, Chas, <a href="#png.082">74</a>, <a href="#png.120">112</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Simpson, Thos, <a href="#png.276">268</a>, <a href="#png.292">284</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Sizars, <a href="#png.036">28</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Sloane Tankard, The, <a href="#png.131">123</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Smith, Elismar, <a href="#png.111">103</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Smith, John, <a href="#png.323">315</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Smith, Robt, <a href="#png.119">111</a>, <a href="#png.180">172</a>,
- <a href="#png.262">254</a>, <a href="#png.273">265</a>, <a href="#png.275">267</a>,
- <a href="#png.323">315</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Smith, Thos, <a href="#png.012">4</a>, <a href="#png.013">5</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Smith’s Prizes, <a href="#png.274">266</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Solar System, <a href="#png.233">ch <span class="allsc">XIII</span></a>.</p>
-
-<p>Solomon, Proverbs of, <a href="#png.211">203</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Somerset, Duke of, <a href="#png.120">112</a>, <a href="#png.121">113</a>,
- <a href="#png.122">114</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Sophia, Princess, <a href="#png.115">107</a>, <a href="#png.116">108</a>.</p>
-
-<p>S.P.C.U. <a href="#png.079">ch <span class="allsc">IV</span></a>, <a href="#png.109">101</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Special Examinations, <a href="#png.305">297</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Spectrum Analysis, <a href="#png.250">242–243</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Spedding, Jas, <a href="#png.181">173</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Spicer, Robt, <a href="#png.137">129</a>, <a href="#png.140">132</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Stangs, <a href="#png.222">214–215</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Statutes, Trinity, 1552, <a href="#png.038">30</a>, <a href="#png.039">31</a>.</p>
-<p><span class="spacer">Statutes, Trinity,</span> 1554, <a href="#png.041">33</a>.</p>
-<p><span class="spacer">Statutes, Trinity,</span> 1560, <a href="#png.041">33</a>,
- <a href="#png.042">34</a>.</p>
-<p><span class="spacer">Statutes, Trinity,</span> 1844, <a href="#png.043">35</a>,
- <a href="#png.183">175</a>,</p>
-<p><span class="spacer">Statutes, Trinity,</span> 1861, <a href="#png.043">35</a>,
- <a href="#png.183">175</a>.</p>
-<p><span class="spacer">Statutes, Trinity,</span> 1882, <a href="#png.043">35</a>,
- <a href="#png.183">175</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Stephen, Leslie, <a href="#png.182">174</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Stevinus, Simon, <a href="#png.239">231</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Still, Bishop, <a href="#png.065">57</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Stocks, <a href="#png.222">214–215</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Stokes, G. G, <a href="#png.323">315</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Stuart, Bernard, <a href="#png.127">119</a>, <a href="#png.132">124</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Stuart, Jas, <a href="#png.324">316</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Stuart, John, <a href="#png.127">119</a>, <a href="#png.132">124</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Subsizars, <a href="#png.036">28</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Sussex, Duke of, <a href="#png.120">112</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Sylvester, J. J, <a href="#png.319">311</a>.</p>
-
-</div>
-<div class="index">
-
-<p class="letter"><span class="ns"><br
- /></span>Tavel, G. F, <a href="#png.295">287</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Taylor, Brook, <a href="#png.262">254</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Taylor Tankard, The, <a href="#png.131">123</a>.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.333" id="png.333" href="#png.333"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>325<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>Taylor, Tom, <a href="#png.182">174</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Tennyson, Alf, <a href="#png.116">108</a>, <a href="#png.123">115</a>,
- <a href="#png.125">117</a>, <a href="#png.182">174</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Tennyson, Chas, <a href="#png.182">174</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Tennyson, Fred, <a href="#png.182">174</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Terms, loss of, <a href="#png.225">217</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Thackeray, W. M, <a href="#png.178">170</a>, <a href="#png.181">173</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Thirlwall, Connop, <a href="#png.079">71</a>, <a href="#png.080">72</a>,
- <a href="#png.081">73</a>, <a href="#png.091">83</a>, <a href="#png.181">173</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Thompson, W. H, <a href="#png.089">81</a>, <a href="#png.117">109</a>,
- <a href="#png.122">114</a>, <a href="#png.182">174</a>, <a href="#png.183">175</a>,
- <a href="#png.184">176</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Thomson, J. J, <a href="#png.324">316</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Thomson, Wm, <a href="#png.319">311</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Thorp, Thos, <a href="#png.081">73</a>, <a href="#png.089">81</a>,
- <a href="#png.315">307</a>, <a href="#png.316">308</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Thorwaldsen, Bertel, <a href="#png.125">117</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Tindal, N. C, <a href="#png.084">76</a>, <a href="#png.138">130</a>,
- <a href="#png.145">137</a>, <a href="#png.181">173</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Tisserand, F. T, <a href="#png.249">241</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Todhunter, Isaac, <a href="#png.310">302</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Treasures, College, <a href="#png.112">ch <span class="allsc">VI</span></a>.</p>
-
-<p>Trench, R. C, <a href="#png.181">173</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Trentine Disputes, <a href="#png.196">188</a>, <a href="#png.197">189</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Trinity Athletic Clubs, <a href="#png.132">124–126</a>, <a href="#png.182">174</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Trinity College, Foundation, <a href="#png.011">ch <span class="allsc">I</span></a>.</p>
-
-<p>Trinity College, History of, <a href="#png.169">ch <span class="allsc">X</span></a>.</p>
-
-<p>Trinity College, Numbers at, <a href="#png.171">163</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Tripos, Mathematical, <a href="#png.260">ch <span class="allsc">XV</span></a>.</p>
-
-<p>Tripos, Origin of Name, <a href="#png.319">311–314</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Trot, Warin, <a href="#png.168">160</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Tunstall, Cuthbert, <a href="#png.261">253</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Turner, Joseph, <a href="#png.294">286</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Turton, Thos, <a href="#png.323">315</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Tusser, Thos, <a href="#png.210">202</a>, <a href="#png.218">210</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Tutorial System, <a href="#png.034">ch <span class="allsc">II</span></a>.</p>
-
-<p>Tutors, College, <a href="#png.034">ch <span class="allsc">II</span></a>.</p>
-
-<p>Tutors, Private, <a href="#png.053">45</a>, <a href="#png.315">307–310</a>.</p>
-
-</div>
-<div class="index">
-
-<p class="letter"><span class="ns"><br
- /></span>Udall, Nich, <a href="#png.210">202</a>.</p>
-
-</div>
-<div class="index">
-
-<p class="letter"><span class="ns"><br
- /></span>Vanderbank, John, <a href="#png.116">108</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Vandyke, A, <a href="#png.127">119</a>.</p>
-
-<p>VanSittart, A. A, <a href="#png.138">130</a>, <a href="#png.148">140</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Van Somer, Paul, <a href="#png.116">108</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Vaughan, C. J, <a href="#png.118">110</a>, <a href="#png.119">111</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Verdon, Thos, <a href="#png.223">215</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Verney Cup, The, <a href="#png.130">122</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Vernon Tankard, The, <a href="#png.131">123</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Victoria, Queen, <a href="#png.077">69</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Vince, Sam, <a href="#png.292">284</a>, <a href="#png.295">287</a>,
- <a href="#png.323">315</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Vortices, Cartesian, <a href="#png.235">227</a>, <a href="#png.238">230</a>,
- <a href="#png.244">236</a>, <a href="#png.245">237</a>, <a href="#png.246">238</a>.</p>
-
-</div>
-<div class="index">
-
-<p class="letter"><span class="ns"><br
- /></span>Wakefield, Thos, <a href="#png.025">17</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Walker, Rich, <a href="#png.107">99</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Walling, <a href="#png.226">218</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Wallis, John, <a href="#png.262">254</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Walpole, Horace, <a href="#png.115">107</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Walsh, B. D, <a href="#png.089">81</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Walter, Hen, <a href="#png.293">285</a>, <a href="#png.294">286</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Ward, Seth, <a href="#png.262">254</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Waring, Edw, <a href="#png.271">263</a>, <a href="#png.285">277</a>,
- <a href="#png.289">281</a>, <a href="#png.294">286</a>, <a href="#png.295">287</a>,
- <a href="#png.323">315</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Watson, Rich, <a href="#png.272">264</a>, <a href="#png.287">279</a>,
- <a href="#png.315">307</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Watts, G. F, <a href="#png.116">108</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Waves, <a href="#png.238">230</a>, <a href="#png.244">236</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Wensleydale, Lord, <a href="#png.138">130</a>, <a href="#png.146">138</a>,
- <a href="#png.147">139</a>, <a href="#png.181">173</a>.</p>
-
-<p>West, Robt, <a href="#png.101">93</a>.</p><!-- TN: corrected, original reads 31 -->
-
-<p>Westcott, B. F, <a href="#png.109">101</a>, <a href="#png.118">110</a>,
- <a href="#png.119">111</a>, <a href="#png.184">176</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Westlake, John, <a href="#png.118">110</a>, <a href="#png.119">111</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Westminster Gowns, <a href="#png.076">68</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Westminster Scholars, <a href="#png.056">ch <span class="allsc">III</span></a>,
- <a href="#png.256">248</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Westminster School, <a href="#png.056">ch <span class="allsc">III</span></a>.</p>
-
-<p>Whetham, W. C. D, <a href="#png.051">43</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Whewell, Wm, <a href="#png.077">69</a>, <a href="#png.080">72</a>,
- <a href="#png.081">73</a>, <a href="#png.089">81</a>, <a href="#png.116">108</a>,
- <a href="#png.118">110</a>, <a href="#png.119">111</a>, <a href="#png.125">117</a>,
- <a href="#png.182">174</a>, <a href="#png.183">175</a>, <a href="#png.229">221</a>,
- <a href="#png.260">252</a>, <a href="#png.295">287</a>, <a href="#png.296">288</a>,
- <a href="#png.297">289</a>, <a href="#png.299">291</a>, <a href="#png.300">292</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Whisson, Stephen, <a href="#png.050">42</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Whiston, Wm, <a href="#png.262">254</a>, <a href="#png.323">315</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Whitgift, John, <a href="#png.044">36</a>, <a href="#png.059">51</a>,
- <a href="#png.101">93</a>, <a href="#png.102">94</a>, <a href="#png.173">165</a>,
- <a href="#png.174">166</a>, <a href="#png.218">210</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Whittaker, E. T, <a href="#png.324">316</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Wilkins, John, <a href="#png.048">40</a>, <a href="#png.119">111</a>,
- <a href="#png.120">112</a>.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.334" id="png.334" href="#png.334"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>326<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>William I, <a href="#png.187">179</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Williams, Joshua, <a href="#png.146">138</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Willis and Clark, <a href="#png.151">143</a>, <a href="#png.160">152</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Willis, Robt, <a href="#png.098">90</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Wilson, John, <a href="#png.295">287</a>, <a href="#png.315">307</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Windows, Chapel, <a href="#png.099">91</a>, <a href="#png.101">93</a>,
- <a href="#png.110">102</a>, <a href="#png.123">115</a>, <a href="#png.124">116</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Winthrop, Adam, <a href="#png.136">128</a>, <a href="#png.137">129</a>,
- <a href="#png.138">130</a>, <a href="#png.139">131</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Wollaston, F. J. H, <a href="#png.293">285</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Wood, Jas, <a href="#png.285">277</a>, <a href="#png.292">284</a>,
- <a href="#png.294">286</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Woodhouse, Robt, <a href="#png.294">286</a>, <a href="#png.295">287</a>,
- <a href="#png.298">290</a>, <a href="#png.323">315</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Wordsworth, Chris (1), <a href="#png.079">71</a>, <a href="#png.080">72</a>,
- <a href="#png.081">73</a>, <a href="#png.082">74</a>, <a href="#png.089">81</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Wordsworth, Chris (2), <a href="#png.260">252</a>, <a href="#png.271">263</a>,
- <a href="#png.283">275</a>, <a href="#png.287">279</a>, <a href="#png.322">314</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Wordsworth, John, <a href="#png.089">81</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Wranglers, <a href="#png.260">ch <span class="allsc">XV</span></a>.</p>
-
-<p>Wren, Chris, <a href="#png.152">ch <span class="allsc">VIII</span></a>,
- <a href="#png.236">228</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Wright, Edw, <a href="#png.262">254</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Wright, J. M. F, <a href="#png.108">100</a>, <a href="#png.182">174</a>,
- <a href="#png.227">219</a>, <a href="#png.301">293</a>.</p>
-
-</div>
-<div class="index">
-
-<p class="letter"><span class="ns"><br
- /></span>Yool, G. V, <a href="#png.138">130</a>, <a href="#png.150">142</a>.</p>
-
-<p>York, Richard Duke of, <a href="#png.118">110</a>.</p>
-
-
-</div>
-
-<div id="indexend">
-<div class="printed">
-<small>CAMBRIDGE: PRINTED BY J. B. PEACE, M.A., AT THE UNIVERSITY PRESS</small>
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-<p class="adverttitle"><big><cite>A History of Trinity College, Cambridge.</cite></big></p>
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-<p>Both “primâ facie” and “prima facie” retained in line with the author’s
-inconsistent usage. Hyphenation of commonwealth/common-wealth not
-regularised because the latter form occurs only within a quote from a
-seventeenth-century source. The author's inconsistent use of italics for abbreviating
-shillings and pence retained.</p>
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