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To discuss in any detail the
history of Harvard College would be, of course, quite outside the
province of a
book on Colonial Boston. But, as an institution of which Increase
Mather, one
of Boston's most noted divines, was for a number of years president, as
an
enterprise to which Cotton Mather longed throughout his later life to
give
himself as head, and as a school in which almost all the men who made
deep
marks upon Boston's early history were educated, Harvard has,
undeniably, a
certain claim upon our attention. This, too, quite apart from the fact
that it
memorializes an early Puritan minister to whom we owe it to ourselves
here to
pay at least a passing tribute.
Only seven years after the
arrival
of Governor Winthrop with the first charter of the colony the
General Court
voted (1636) "four hundred pounds towards a school or college."
Two years later, John
Harvard, a young graduate of Emmanuel College, Cambridge, who
had emigrated to
Charlestown, died, and bequeathed one-half of his whole
property and his
entire library to the proposed institution. His estate amounted to
£779 17s.
2d., which. shows he must have been among the most wealthy of the early
settlers, — and his library consisted of three hundred and
twenty volumes. Of
this goodly collection of books but one survives to-day,
— Downame's
"Christian Warfare," — all the others having been
destroyed in the
fire of 1764. At the time of his death Harvard was assistant minister
to Rev. Z.
Symmes in the first church at Charlestown. He was buried in the old
Charlestown
burying ground and to his memory the alumni of
Harvard University there
erected September 26, 1828, what was then regarded as a very
impressive
granite monument.
The munificence of the Rev.
John Harvard inspired further enthusiasm in the magistrates and made
the common
people, also, very anxious to give their mites towards the new
institution of
learning. There is, indeed, something very touching in these
early gifts, which
reflect the simplicity of the necessities in that period as well as the
earnest
colonists to help on the good work of education. One man
bequeathed a number
of sheep, another a quantity of cotton cloth worth nine shillings,
another a
pewter flagon worth ton shillings and not a few their household
treasures
amounting to perhaps a pound or so when sold.
In 1642 a Board of
Overseers, consisting of the Governor and Deputy Governor, all the
magistrates
and the teaching elders of the six adjoining towns was established. In
1650, a
charter was granted by the General Court, empowering a corporation,
consisting
of the President, the treasurer, five fellows and the overseers to
perpetuate
themselves and govern the affairs of the college. The first president
was Henry
Dunster, whose pathetic end has already been referred to in the chapter
on the
religious persecutions. Dunster deserves always to be
recalled, however, when
Harvard in the making is being discussed for he contributed,
at a time of its
utmost need, one hundred acres of land towards the support of the
college and
for many years served the institution unweariedly for scarcely any
recompense.
How the college rewarded him we have seen.
But if they treated their
presidents differently hundred and fifty years ago they also maintained
quite a
different attitude, from today, towards their students. In the
college records
are preserved several documents which throw interesting side-lights
upon the
academic life of that early period. None of these is more illuminating
than
"Dunster's Rules" printed in President Josiah Quincy's "History
of Harvard University," but quite worth reprinting here
because that
volume is now so rare.
The original rules were in
Latin and all continued in force at least until the revision
of 1734 when a
few were made less harsh. In translation they read:
"The Laws, Liberties
and Orders of Harvard College, Confirmed by the Overseers and
President of the
College in the years 1642, 1643, 1644, 1645, and 1646, and Published to
the
Scholars for the Perpetual Preservation of their Welfare and
Government."
"1. When any scholar is
able to read Tully, or such like classical Latin author, extempore, and
make
and speak true Latin in verse and prose suo (ut aiunt) Marte, and
decline perfectly
the paradigms of nouns and verbs in the Greek tongue, then may he be
admitted
into the college, nor shall any claim admission before such
qualifications.
"2. Everyone shall
consider the Main end of his life and studies, to know God and Jesus
Christ,
which is eternal life; John xvii., 3.
"3. Seeing the Lord
giveth wisdom, everyone shall seriously, by prayer in secret,
seek wisdom of
Him; Proverbs ii., 2, 3, etc.
"4. Everyone shall so
exercise himself in reading the Scriptures twice a day, that they be
ready to
give an account of their proficiency therein, both in theoretical
observations
of language and logic, and in practical and spiritual truths,
as their tutor
shall require, according to their several abilities
respectively, seeing the
entrance of the word giveth light, etc.; Psalm cxix., 130.
"5. In the public
church assembly they shall carefully shun all gestures that show any
contempt
or neglect of God's ordinances, and be ready to give an account to
their tutors
of their profiting, and to use the helps of storing themselves
with knowledge,
as their tutors shall direct them. And all sophisters and bachelors
(until
themselves make common place) shall publicly repeat sermons in the
hall,
whenever they are called forth.
"6. They shall eschew
all profanation of God's holy name, attributes, word, ordinances and
times of
worship; and study, with reverence and love, carefully to retain God an
truth
in their minds.
"7. They shall honour
as their parents, magistrates, elders, tutors and aged persons, by
being silent
in their presence (except they be called on to answer), not gainsaying;
Showing
all those laudable expressions of honour and reverence in their
presence that
are in use, as bowing before them, standing uncovered, or the like.
"8. They shall be slow
to speak, and eschew not only oaths, lies and uncertain rumours, but
likewise
all idle, foolish, bitter scoffing, frothy, wanton words and offensive
gestures.
"9. None shall
pragmatically intrude or intermeddle in other men's affairs.
"10. During their residence
they shall studiously redeem their time, observe the general
hours appointed
for all the scholars, and the special hour for their own lecture, and
then
diligently attend the lectures, without any disturbance by
word or gesture;
and, if of anything they doubt, they shall inquire of their
fellows, or in
case of non-resolution, modestly of their tutors.
"11. None shall, under
any pretence what-soever, frequent the company and society of such men
as lead
an ungirt and dissolute life. Neither shall any, without the license of
the
overseers of the college, be of the artillery or trainband. Nor shall
any,
without the license of the overseers of the college, his tutor's leave,
or, in
his absence, the call of parents or guardians, go out to another town.
"12. No scholar shall
buy, sell or exchange anything, to the value of sixpence, without the
allowance
of his parents, guardians or tutors; and whosoever is found to have
sold or
bought any such things without acquainting their tutors or parents,
shall forfeit
the value of the commodity, or the restoring of it, according to the
discretion
of the president.
"13. The scholars shall
never use their mother tongue, except that in public exercises of
oratory, or
such like, they be called to make them in English.
"14. If any scholar,
being in good health, shall be absent from prayers or lectures,
except in case
of urgent necessity, or by the leave of his tutor, he shall be liable
to
admonition (or such punishment as the president shall think meet), if
he offend
above once a week.
"15. Every scholar
shall be called by his surname only, till he be invested with his first
degree,
except he be a fellow commoner or knight's eldest son, or of superior
nobility.
"16.
No
scholar shall, under any pretence of
recreation or other cause whatever (unless foreshowed and allowed by
the
president or his tutor), be absent from his studies or
appointed exercises,
above an hour at morning never, half an hour at afternoon never, an
hour and a
half at dinner, and so long at supper.
"17. If any scholar
shall transgress any of the laws of God, or the House out of
perverseness, or
apparent negligence, after twice admonition, he shall be
liable, if not
adultus, to correction; if adultus, his name shall be given up to the
overseers
of the college, that he may be publicly dealt with after the desert of
his
fault; but in greater offences such gradual proceeding shall not be
exercised.
"18. Every scholar,
that on proof is found able to read the original of the Old and New
Testament
into the Latin tongue and to resolve them logically, withal being of
honest
life and conversation, and at any public act hath the approbation of
the
overseers and master of the college, may be invested with his first
degree.
"19. Every scholar that
giveth up in writing a synopsis or summary of logic, natural
and moral
philosophy, arithmetic, geometry, and astronomy, and is ready to defend
his
theses or positions, withal skilled in the originals as aforesaid, and
still
continues honest and studious, at any public act after trial, he shall
be
capable of the second degree, of Master of Arts."
By orders of the overseers
in 1650, it was provided among other things that "no scholar whatever,
without the fore-acquaintance and leave of the president and his tutor,
shall be present at any of the
public civil meetings, or concourse of people, as courts of justice,
elections,
fairs, or at military exercise, in the time or hours of the college
exercise,
public or private. Neither shall any scholar exercise
himself in any military
band, unless of known gravity, and of approved sober and virtuous
conversation,
and that with the leave of the president and his tutor.
"No scholar shall take
tobacco, unless permitted by the president, with the consent
of their parents
or guardians, and on good reason first given by a physician, and then
in a
sober and private manner."
At a meeting of the
corporation in 1659, it was voted that, "whereas there are great
complaints
of the exorbitant practices of some students of this college,
by their abusive
words and actions to the watch of this town.'' The Cambridge town watch
were
authorized to exercise their powers within the precincts of
the college. It
was provided, however, that none "of the said watchmen should lay
violent
hands on any of the students being found within the precinct of the
college
yards, otherwise than so that they may secure then, until they
may inform the
president or some of the fellows." It was also voted that "in case
any student of this college shall be found absent from his lodging
after nine
o'clock at night, he shall be responsible for and to all complaints of
disorder
in this kind, that, by testimony of the watch or others shall appear to
be done
by any student of the college, and shall be adjudged guilty of
the said crime,
unless he can Purge himself by sufficient witness." In 1682, the civil
authority "was formally recognized as the last resort for enforcing, in
extreme cases," college discipline.
In October, 1656, the
president and fellows were empowered by statute "to punish all
misdemeanours
of the youth in their society, either by fines, or whipping in the hall
openly,
as the nature of the offence shall require, not exceeding ten
shillings, or
ten stripes for one offence." The tutors "chastised at
discretion,
and on very solemn occasions the overseers were called together, either
to
authorize or to witness the execution of the severer
punishments." An old
diary tells of the punishment, in 1674, of one who had been guilty of
"speaking blasphemous words." The sentence of the overseers
was read
twice in the library. Then, "the offender having kneeled, the president
prayed, and then Publicly whipped, before all the scholars," the
blasphemer. "The solemnities were closed by another prayer
from the
president."
Although this public
flogging by the president gradually fell into disuse, it was
not formally
abolished until 1734 when the right of punishing undergraduates by
"boxing" was "expressly reserved to the president, professors,
and tutors." In 1755, the doing away with this form of punishment was
considered; but no decisive action was taken, although the practice was
gradually given up.
The system of imposing fines
for infractions of the rules continued. Here is the schedule.
"List of pecuniary
mulcts:
"Absence from prayers,
2d; tardiness at prayers, 1d; absence from professor's public lecture,
4d;
tardiness at professor's public lecture, 2d; profanation of Lord's Day,
not
exceeding 3s; absence from public worship, 9d; tardiness at public
worship, 3d;
ill behaviour at public worship, not exceeding 1s 6d; going to meeting
before
bell-ringing, 6d; neglecting to repeat the sermon, 9d;
irreverent behaviour at
prayers, or public divinity lectures, 1s 6d; absence from
chambers, etc., not
exceeding 6d; not declaiming, not exceeding 1s 6d; not giving up a
declamation,
not exceeding 1s 6d; absence from recitation, not exceeding 1s
6d; neglecting
analyzing, not exceeding 3s; bachelors neglecting disputations, not
exceeding
1s 6d; respondents neglecting disputations, from 1s 6d to 3s;
undergraduates
out of town without leave, not exceeding 2s 6d; undergraduates tarrying
out of
town without leave, not exceeding, per diem, 1s 3d;
undergraduates tarrying
out of town one week without leave, not exceeding 10s;
undergraduates tarrying
out of town one month without leave, not exceeding £2 10s;
lodging strangers
without leave, not exceeding 1s 6d; entertaining persons of
ill character, not
exceeding 1s 6d; going out of college without proper garb, not
exceeding 6d;
frequenting taverns, not exceeding 1s 6d; profane cursing, not
exceeding 2s
6d; graduates playing cards, not exceeding 5s; undergraduates playing
cards,
not exceeding 2s 6d; undergraduates playing any game money, not
exceeding 1s
6d; selling and exchanging without leave, not exceeding 1s 6d; lying,
not
exceeding 1s 6d; opening door by pick-locks, not exceeding 5s;
drunkenness, not
exceeding 1s 6d; liquors prohibited under penalty, not
exceeding 1s 6d; second
offence, not exceeding 3s; keeping prohibited liquors, not exceeding 1s
6d;
sending for prohibited liquors, not exceeding 6d; fetching prohibited
liquors,
not exceeding 1s 6d; going upon the top of the college, 1s 6d; cutting
off the
lead, 1s 6d; concealing the transgression of the 19th law, 1s 6d;
tumultuous
noises, 1s 6d; second offence, 3s; refusing to give evidence, 3s;
rudeness at
meals, 1s; butler and cook to keep utensils clean, not exceeding 5s;
not
lodging at their chambers, not exceeding 1s 6d; sending
freshmen in studying
time, 9d; keeping guns, and going on skating, 1s; firing guns or
pistols in
college yard, 2s 6d; fighting or hurting any person, not
exceeding 1s
6d."
It is noteworthy that
"undergraduates playing cards" (whether merely "for pins"
or "for money") were punished by a fine of 2s 6d; but that
"lying an offence of which very few students are now guilty, and for
which
Suspension, if not expulsion, is now considered a mild
punishment — made the
liar liable only to a fine of 1s 6d.
Naturally students were
little disturbed by these fines. They proved so annoying to
parents, however,
that in 1761 a committee was appointed to consider some other method of
punishing offenders. Although mulcts were not entirely abolished, a
system was
adopted which resembled somewhat the present methods of enforcing
discipline by
"admonition," "probation," "suspension,"
"dismissal," or "expulsion."
In addition to the formal
rules, a system of "Ancient Customs of Harvard College,
Established by
the Government of It," grew up, was recognized by the authorities and
soon
had all the force of law. As these had to do chiefly with the conduct
of
freshmen, and as it was to the interest of all the "seniors" that
these customs should be observed, doubtless they were more scrupulously
lived
up to than President Dunster's rules. Here is a copy of these
customs as they
appear in the official records:
"l. No freshman shall
wear his hat in the college yard, unless it rains, hails, or snows,
provided he
be on foot, and have not both hands full.
"2. No undergraduate
shall wear his hat in the college yard, when any of the governors of
the
college are there; and no bachelor shall wear his hat when the
president is
there.
"3. Freshmen are to
consider all the other classes as their seniors.
"4. No freshmen shall
speak to a senior with his hat on; or have it on in a senior's chamber,
or in
his own if a senior be there.
"5. All the
undergraduates shall treat those in the government of the college with
respect
and deference; particularly they shall not be seated without leave in
their
presence; they shall be uncovered when they speak to them or are spoken
to by
them.
"6. All freshmen
(except those employed by the immediate government of the college)
shall be
obliged to go on any errand (except such as shall be judged improper by
some
one in the government of the college) for any of his seniors,
graduates or
undergraduates, at any time, except in studying hours, or after nine
o'clock in
the evening.
"7. A senior sophister
has authority to take a freshman from a sophomore, a middle bachelor
from a
junior sophister, a master from a senior sophister, and any governor of
the college
from a master.
"8. Every freshman
before he goes for the person who takes him away (unless it be one in
the
government of the college), shall return and inform the person from
whom he is
taken.
"9. No freshman, when
sent on an errand, shall make any unnecessary delay, neglect to make
due
return, or go away till dismissed by the person who sent him.
"10. No freshman shall
be detained by a senior when not actually employed on some suitable
errand.
"11. No freshman shall
be obliged to observe any order of a senior to come to him, or go on
any errand
for him, unless he be wanted immediately.
"12. No freshman, when
sent on an errand, shall tell who he is going for, unless he be asked;
nor be
obliged to tell what he is going for, unless asked by a governor of the
college.
"13. When any person
knocks at a freshman's door, except in studying time, he shall
immediately
open the door, without inquiring who is there.
"14. No scholar shall
call up or down, to or from, any chamber in the college.
"15. No scholar shall
play football or any other game in the college yard, or throw
anything across
the yard.
"16. The freshmen shall
furnish bats, balls and footballs for the use of the students, to be
kept at
the buttery.
"17. Every freshman
shall pay the butler for putting up his name in the buttery.
"18. Strict attention
shall be paid by all the students to the common rules of cleanliness,
decency
and politeness.
"The sophomores shall
publish these customs to the freshmen in the chapel, whenever
ordered by any
in the government of the college; at which time the freshmen
are enjoined to
keep their places in their seats, and attend with decency to the
reading."
About 1772, after the
overseers
had repeatedly recommended abolishing the custom of allowing
the upper classes
to send freshmen on errands, the president and fellows voted that
"after
deliberate consideration and weighing all circumstances, they are not
able to
project any plan in the room of this long and ancient custom, that will
not be
attended with equal, if not greater inconveniences." Indeed, in 1786,
"the retaining men or boys to perform the services for which freshmen
had
been heretofore employed" was declared to be a
growing evil, and was
prohibited by the corporation. In extenuation of the Dunster rules it
should be
borne in mind, of course, that Harvard, instead of being the university
for
young men which we now know, was then little more than a "seminary"
for boys. It was indeed the puerility of the students which made it
difficult,
for a long time, to get a man of first class powers to act as president
at
Cambridge. Increase Mather, of whose dallying with the office we shall
hear
much a few pages on, finally said frankly, when pushed to it, that he
had no
mind whatever to "leave preaching to 1,500 souls... only to expound to
40
or 50 children, few of them capable of edification by such exercises."
Dunster, however, gladly
consecrated fourteen years of his life to the upbuilding of
the college. In
this task he had the devoted cooperation of his wife, a woman
of such parts as
to entitle her to respectful notice on her own account. For Elizabeth
Dunster
was, by her first marriage, Elizabeth Glover, wife of Rev. Joseph
Glover, —
rector of the church at Sutton in Surrey, England, — who in
1638 resigned as
minister and came to found the first printing-press ever known in New
England.
During the voyage over Rev. Joseph Glover passed away, and his wife was
therefore confronted with the necessity of setting up her
press alone. Her
husband had already arranged with Stephen Daye of London to
have a share in
the undertaking, and it is his imprint — S. D. —
which all the early
productions of the press bear. But President Dunster give accommodation
in his
own house to the plant and very likely had a good deal to do with its
early
output. It is even conceivable that between planning out his
rigid
"Rules" he relaxed by "holding copy" for the fair widow to
whose heart he soon laid siege.
Certainly he would have
assisted with unction in turning out the famous "Freeman's
Oath"
given on the broadside which was the very first issue of the press.
This oath,
printed in 1639, splendidly reflects the sturdy character of
the early
colonists and is indeed just as pertinent to-day as it was then. One of
the
most stirring sights I have ever seen is its administration
each spring, at
Faneuil Hall, Boston, on the occasion of the New Voters
Festival. It reads in
part: "I do solemnly bind myself in the sight of God, when I shall be
called to give my voice touching any such matter of this
state, in which
Free-men are to deal, I will give my vote and suffrage as I shall judge
in mine
own conscience may best conduce and tend to the public weal of the
body,
without respect of persons, or favour of any man."
After Dunster had been
driven out, Chauncey, Hoar, and Oakes were successively
presidents of the
college, but there is little of interest to us, in the conduct
of the
institution, until the election in 1685 of Increase Mather as its head.
Mather
took the place with the understanding that he should not
reside at Cambridge,
and should be permitted to continue, at the same time, his work as
pastor of
the second church in Boston. He was still president when sent
on his mission
to England, and in July, 1688, in an interview with James II he brought
his
long-continued efforts to secure a royal charter for the college to
what he
thought to be a head. For he then asked the king directly to grant a
charter
for a non-conformist institution. Yet when the new charter really
materialized,
was signed by Sir William Phips and went back to England for
ratification, the
king vetoed it (July, 1696) for the reason that it provided no visiting
board.
Still Mather was not in the least discouraged; opportunity for another
appointment to England seemed thus provided.
The object of the
preacher-president in all this matter of the new charter —
which it is not
worth our while here to follow in detail — was to make the
college at Cambridge
distinctly the stamping-ground of his own particular
brand of dissent. The
king, however, had an eye to the recognition of episcopacy at
Cambridge, and so
would not grant the kind of charter for which Mather yearned. Moreover,
during
the absence abroad of the president, certain lay members, who
were not enslaved
to him, gained power on the board. In spite of all that he could do,
therefore,
Mather gradually lost his hold upon the college.
The occasion but not the
cause of his enforced resignation was his refusal to live in
Cambridge. For
several years the legislature had been steadily passing resolutions
requiring
the president to go into residence, but these Mather, for the most
part,
blandly ignored. Then, in 1698, they voted the president the
liberal salary,
for that age, of two hundred pounds annually and appointed a committee
to wait
upon him. Judge Sewall describes the ensuing interview: "Aft. President
expostulated with Mr. Speaker... about the votes being altered
from 250.... We
urged his going all we could; I told him of his birth and education
here; that
he look'd at work rather than wages, all met in desiring him.... [He]
Objected
want of a house, bill for corporation not pass'd... must needs preach
once
every week, which he preferred before the gold and silver of the West
Indies. I
told him would preach twice a day to the students. He said that
[exposition]
was nothing like preaching."
The real reason why Mather
fought off settling in Cambridge was however his lingering
hope that he might
still get the English mission he so ardently desired. But the
Massachusetts
Assembly was about at the end of its patience, and on July 10, 1700,
they voted
Mather two hundred and twenty pounds a year, at the same time
appointing a
committee to obtain from him a categorical answer. This time the
president
apparently complied with the request of the authorities, and after a
"suitable place... for his reception and entertainment" had
been
prepared at the public expense, he moved to Cambridge. By the last of
October
he was back in town again, however, professing to Stoughton that
Cambridge did
not suit his health and suggesting that another president be found.
To his great surprise the
General Court "took him up" and resolved that "forasmuch as the
Constitution requires that the President reside at Cambridge, which is
now
altered by his removal from thence, and to the intent that a, present
necessary
oversight be taken of the College,... in case of Mr. Mather's refusal
absence,
sickness or death, that Mr. Samuel Willard be Vice-President."
Stimulated
by this Increase Mather managed to sustain residence in Cambridge for
three
months more. Then, in a characteristic note to Stoughton, who was then
acting
governor, he expressed his determination to "return to Boston the next
week and no more to reside in Cambridge; for it is not reasonable to
desire me
to be (as out of respect to the public interest I have been six months
within
this twelve) any longer absent from my family.... I do therefore
earnestly
desire that the General Court would... think of another president."
"But," warns our reluctantly
retiring official, "it would be
fatal to the interest of religion, if a person disaffected to
the order of the
Gospel, professed and practiced in these churches, should preside over
this society."
This letter proved Mather's
undoing, for when he made it clear to the Court that he could "with no
conveniency any longer reside at Cambridge and take care of the College
there,
a committee was promptly appointed to wait upon the Rev. Samuel Willard
and to
desire him to accept the care and charge of the said College and to
reside in
Cambridge in order thereunto." The outcome of the whole matter was that
Mather, who for years would neither reside nor resign, was succeeded at
length
by Mr. Samuel Willard, who promised to stay at the college two
days and nights
a week. This appointing was made on September 6, 1701, by the
General Court
Council of which Sewall was a member. That worthy had, therefore, to
hay the
price of the decision. The manner of this is amusingly told in his
Diary:
"1701, Oct. 20. Mr.
Cotton Mather came to Mr. Wilkins's shop and there talked very sharply
against
me as if I had used his father worse than a neger; spake so loud that
people in
the street might hear him.... I had read in the morn Mr. Dod's saying;
Sanctified afflictions are good Promotions. I found it a
cordial.
"Oct. 6. I sent Mr.
Increase Mather a hanch of good venison; I hope in that I did not treat
him as
a negro.
"Oct. 22, 1701. I, with
Major Walley and Capt. Saml. Checkly, speak with Mr. Cotton Mather at
Mr.
Wilkins's.... I told him of his book of the Law of Kindness for the
Tongue,
whether this were corresponding with that. Whether correspondent with
Christ's
rule: He said, having spoken to me before there was no need to speak to
me
again; and so justified his reviling me behind my back. Charg'd the
council
with lying, hypocrisy, tricks and I know not what all... and then
show'd my
share which was in my speech in council; viz. If Mr. Mather should goe
to Cambridge
again to reside there with a resolution not to read the Scriptures and
expound
in the Hall: I fear the example of it will do more hurt than his going
thither
will doe good. This speech I owned.... I ask'd him if I should supose
he had
done something amiss in his church as an officer; whether it would be
well for
me to exclaim against him in the street for it." Samuel Sewall, a mere
layman, thus rebuking the impeccable Mathers must certainly
have been a
spectacle for gods and men!
The truth is, however, that,
in this matter of the college, Cotton Mather put himself, on this
occasion and
again on a later one, hopelessly in the wrong. For the thing
did not end with
the defeat of his father for president. He himself soon began to look
with
covetous eyes on the executive chair at Cambridge. And when, after the
death of
Willard in 1707, John Leverett, the right-hand man of Governor Joseph
Dudley,
was elected to the office the wrath of the younger Mather knew no
bounds. The
fact that thirty-nine ministers, presumably as interested in the
welfare of the
college as even he could be, had enthusiastically endorsed Dudley's
choice of
Leverett, counted for nothing as against his wounded pride.
Sewall describes with
unction Dudley's inauguration of his friend: "The govr. prepar'd a
Latin
speech for instalment of the president. Then took the president by the
hand and
led him down into the hall.... The govr. sat with his back against a
noble
fire.... Then the govr. read his speech... and mov'd the books in token
of
their delivery. Then president made a short Latin speech, importing the
difficulties discouraging and yet he did accept:... Clos'd with the
hymn to the
Trinity. Had a very good dinner upon 3 or 4 tables.... Got home very
well. Laus
Deo."
The Mathers were now
thoroughly beaten, but they could not seem to understand that a man
Might
honestly fail in appreciation of them, and they proceeded to charge
Dudley with
all manner of bribery, hypocrisy and corruption. Their letters
to the governor
at this time seem to me so pitiful an exhibition of narrowness that I
will not
reproduce them. For I still. feet that both father and son were
sincere, and
that to bury them beneath such adjectives as "dastardly" and
"venomous" — after the manner of many writers — is
not to reproduce
faithfully this interesting contention. Dudley, however, was
an able man, even
if his political career had not, in every particular, been
above reproach. And
this time he happened to be right. So we cannot do better than
close our
chapter with his admirably dignified answer to the accusations of the
Mathers,
a reply which is also, as it seems to me, a deserved rebuke to the
claims of
the theocracy as regards the college.
"GENTLEMEN, Yours of
the 20th instant received; and the contents, both as to the
matter and manner,
astonish me to the last degree. I must think you have extremely forgot
your own
station, as well as my character; otherwise it had been
impossible to have
made such an open breach upon all the laws of decency, honour, justice
and
Christianity, as you have done in treating me with an air of
superiority and
contempt, which would have been greatly culpable towards a Christian of
lowest
order, and is insufferably rude toward one whom divine
Providence has honoured
with the character of your governour....
"Why, gentlemen, have
you been so long silent? and suffered sin to lie upon me years after
years? You
cannot pretend any new information as to the main of your charge; for
you have
privately given your tongues a loose upon these heads, I am well
assured, when
you thought you could serve yourselves by exposing me. Surely
murder,
robberies and other such flaming immoralities were as reprovable then
as
now....
"Really, gentlemen,
conscience and religion are things too solemn, venerable or sacred, to
be
played with, or made a covering for actions so disagreeable to the
gospel, as
these your endeavours to expose me and my most faithful
services to contempt;
nay, to unhinge the government....
"I desire you will keep
your station, and let fifty or sixty good ministers, your equals in the
province, have a share in the government of the college, and
advise
thereabouts as well as yourselves, and I hope all will be well.... I am
your
humble servant,