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lays down a series of laws from the first hour of meeting in the morning till the hour of dismissal in the evening. Preparatory to the business of the day, each boy as he entered the school was to offer a short prayer, the form of which was prescribed to him. The school work commenced at seven o'clock, and the first duty of the head master on his entrance was to chastise offenders, either by word or by stripes. This was followed by prelection and by lessons that lasted till nine o'clock, when all were directed to hasten to breakfast. Lessons were resumed from ten to twelve, when all were again dismissed. Work began once more at two, and lasted till six, when the boys ended the day with prayer, as they had begun it.

The enactments in the same directory relating to the scholars entered into minute details. Elementary scholars and neophytes were to observe a Pythagorean silence for a whole year. The seniors, if they spoke at all, were to avoid their own language, but were allowed full liberty in Latin, Greek, Hebrew, French, and Gaelic. They were to engage in no play except in the presence of an usher. All games of chance for serious stakes, money, books, or part of a boy's dinner, were strictly forbidden, except in the case of the senior boys, who might play for trifles, such as leather pins or thongs. A catalogue of offenses that subjected the youth to punishment closed this rigorous directory. The disobedient, those who came late to school, those who had not prepared their lessons, those who unnecessarily shifted from form to form, those who ran about the school, the authors of mischief (an alarmingly vague expression), were the main classes of transgressors.

In the Elgin directory of 1649 (issued by the Presbytery, however, and not by the Magistrates), work began at six o'clock in the morning and went on till six in the evening, with two hours' intermission-one for breakfast and one for dinner. Tuesdays and Thursdays were halfholidays, on which the boys had play from two to four; and Saturday's work was light in comparison with that of the other days of the week. Its programme was as follows:-"Disputes begin at seven o'clock, first in the supreme class (the master being auditor), and the disputants standing the one at the one end and the other at the other end of the school (deep silence meanwhile). Thereafter, a little before eight, the examinators or auditors of the several classes dispute before nine, the master taking account of victors and vanquished, and praising or censuring accordingly. Betwixt ten and twelve all are taken up in writing their author for the next week, and an account is taken before twelve o'clock. At one, afternoon, all meet, and they are dismissed to play at two, afternoon, till five, when they are called, and an account taken of the general censure." The rules for boys were much the same as in Aberdeen. They are not allowed to play except in the presence of an usher or censor, and the offenders liable to punishment were "absentees from school, swearers, English speakers, perturbers, vaguers, the idle, late comers;" and a general class of offenses, involving all other breaches of the law,

is grouped under the expression "delinquencies within and insolencies without the school."

Even Sunday itself was not a day of rest to the teacher. In the Elgin directory the arrangements were as follows:-"Upon the Lord's day masters and scholars shall convene in school at eight o'clock in the morning, and after prayer in the English tongue to be had by the master, the several classes shall be exercised, the seniors in the exposition of a sacred lesson which has been taught betwixt one and two o'clock of the preceding Saturday, out of Buchanan's Paraphrases of the Psalms, or Ursine's or Calvin's Catechisms; and the juniors, in getting by heart some select English psalms, or the ordinary allowed Catechism. Thereafter, at the second bell, all shall go in comely order to church, accompanied with masters before and doctors behind, if any be. Again, they are to return to school in the afternoon at the first bell, where they are to be exercised till the second bell in reading their foresaid sacred lesson, and at the second bell to repair to the church orderly, as in the forenoon. After noon they shall return incontinent after the same order, with master and doctors, to school, when, after a short prayer had by the master, expressing thanks to God for the liberty of his own day, and the use of his ordinances, and supplication for his effectual blessing unto them, the master settling himself in desk, and all the scholars in deep silence, he, according to his discretion, shall call up some of every class, and require of them their observations of both the sermons, and enlarge points to them occasionally for their capacities as they have been taught; and after a large hour's space, having ordained them to keep within doors, exercised in the study of their sacred lessons and meditations of what they have been hearing, he shall dismiss them with psalms and prayer.”

The directory of Peebles Grammar School in 1655, was almost identical with that of Elgin, both for Sunday and week-days, and will be found in the special report on the school. The regulations of Dunbar in 1679 entered minutely into the question of discipline, and defined the exact temper and method with which punishment should be inflicted. "If children," they say, "may be won by words or threatenings, it is expected that the masters will make use of prudence in their actions, and spare the rod as long as it may consist with the good of the children; but if neither fair words nor threats will gain them, then shall the masters show, both by their words and countenance, an aversation to passion and a dislike to the action, with suitable expressions to that purpose, in which humor they may correct; so that they may be as angry as they will when they intend not to correct, but not to be passionate when they correct, mere necessity for the welfare of the children compelling them to it, but not for every trifle to stupefy them with strokes." The same regulations also limited the ordinary play time to an hour and a half on Tuesdays and Thursdays, and the afternoon on Saturday.

Early Morning and Sunday Work.

In Edinburgh the hour of meeting was first changed about 1640 from

six to seven o'clock. In 1696 a further innovation was made in the winter months, when the school did not open till nine o'clock. The afternoon attendance was also gradually curtailed, and the school hours in 1754 were, in winter, from nine till twelve, and again from three till five; and in summer from seven till nine, from ten to one, and from three to five. In 1790 the summer hour of meeting was the same. This is incidentally mentioned by Lord Cockburn in his Memorials of his Time. "They had the barbarity," he says, "to make us be in school during summer at seven in the morning. I once started out of bed, thinking I was too late, and got out of the house unquestioned. On reaching the High School gate, I found it locked, and saw the yards through the bars silent and motionless. I withdrew alarmed, and went near the Tron Church to see the clock. It was only about two or three. Not a creature was on the street, not even watchmen, who were of much later introduction. I came home awed, as if I had seen a dead city, and the impression of that hour has never been effaced."

We find traces of the Sunday work imposed on teachers in Edinburgh in 1597, in the regulations of that year, which prescribe the teaching on Sundays of the Catechism in Latin, and of Buchanan's Psalms, but say nothing of the master's accompanying the boys to church. But in Aberdeen the masters continued to do so down at least till the year 1797. There is a letter of that year from Dr. Adam, Rector of Edinburgh High School, to Mr. Dun, his contemporary in Aberdeen, which shows the difference in practice then between the two schools. "The same reasons," he says, "which induce your patrons to devolve on parents the care of instructing their children in the principles of religion, should have led them to leave your scholars to the charge of their relations likewise on Sunday. It is hard that your attendance in a particular place should always be exacted on that day, and that you should not have it in your power to attend what church and hear what clergyman you think proper. Our masters have no charge of their pupils on Sunday. We do indeed usually prescribe to those boys that are sufficiently advanced a lesson to be learnt on Sunday and said on Monday morning, either in Castalio's Sacred Dialogues or in Buchanan's Psalms, and we also occasionally exercise them on the principles of religion, but we have no absolute regulations requiring it."

Traces of the custom of boys and masters going together to church are to be found in Elgin and Peebles at the end of last century. The master of the Grammar School of the former burgh, in 1793, was threatened with dismissal if he did not desist from preaching on Sundays, and was only continued in office on condition that in place of preaching he should "every Lord's day convene his scholars, instruct them in the principles of religion, and attend divine worship with them in the loft erected for their accommodation." The order to the schoolmaster of Peebles in 1799 was exactly to the same effect. But time and circumstances, which have modified the school hours on week-days and in

creased those assigned to leisure or play, have long since abolished the enforced Sunday labor of the schoolmaster.

Salaries and Fees.

The two sources of income were the salaries paid by the Town-Council and the fees of the scholars. Endowments either did not exist at all, or were so scanty and inadequate where they did exist, that they can not be taken into acconnt. The poverty of Scotch schools in this respect contrasts with the wealth of those in England. A single foundation,* such as that of Eton or Winchester, possesses larger revenues from endowments or bequests than all the Burgh schools and universities taken together.

The salaries paid by the public authorities varied with the position and ability of the burghs themselves. In no case were they excessive, but were calculated very much on the necessities of the schoolmaster, and regulated by the humble estimation in which his services were held. Prior to 1680 the master of the Edinburgh High Schools had an annual salary of 300 merks (1007.), and the four doctors had as much amongst them. About 1680 the head master's salary was increased to 500 merks, and his doctors had each £100 Scots; thirty years later, in 1709, the salaries fixed by the Town-Council were 300 merks for the rector and 250 to each of the under masters. In 1749 a petition was presented from the whole of the teachers to the Town-Council, praying for an increase of their stipends, and it was agreed that the rector should have 600 merks and each of the other masters £20 sterling. The rector's salary was increased in 1845 to £100, but no addition for a hundred years was made to the salaries of other masters. Subsequent changes have since been made, from time to time, tending on the whole to the better endowment both of rector and masters. In Aberdeen the salaries of the Grammar-schoolmasters have been exceptionally good. This was due, however, to the endowment of Dr. Dun, in 1631. Its annual value was 1,200 merks, divided among the rector and three classical masters, in certain proportions. The lands which yielded this income are now very valuable, and had they remained in the possession of the city the masterships would have been the best endowed of any school in Scotland. They were disposed of, however, in 1752, for an annual feu-duty of £169, which since that time has afforded the rector £82 and three other masters £27 a year, and the Town-Council, in addition, have, in the present century, at least supplemented these sums by salaries nearly equal in amount.

* Eton has an income from landed property of £20,569, besides thirty-seven livings in her exclusive gift worth £10,000 a year, with a probable accession of income from lands of £10,000 a year. Winchester has an income of £17,622, besides livings in her gift worth £3,888, and the lion's share in one of the wealthiest houses in Oxford, New College. The Universities of Edinburgh, Glasgow, Aberdeen, St. Andrews, for Arts, Law, Medicine, and Divinity, have in round numbers £25,000 a year; but of this sum, £10,000 is not an endowment, but an annual Parliamentary grant. The endowments of the Burgh schools (that is to say, of schools in burghs) under the partial or exclusive management of Town Councils, are, at the utmost, £3,000 a year, and Parliamentary grants of an uncertain kind add about £750 more.

In proportion to their means the smaller burghs were probably as liberal as Edinburgh and Aberdeen. In Haddington the schoolmaster's salary in 1673, was 400 merks, out of which, however, he had to pay his doctor, or assistant, 50 merks a year. The present rector has a free house and a salary of £45, out of which he pays an assistant £20. In Peebles, in 1628, the rector and doctor had between them 250 merks. At present, their representatives, the English master and the Grammarschoolmaster, have together £63, of salary, and a house valued at £40. In Linlithgow, prior to 1652, the master's salary was 200 merks. It was increased in that year to 250, and subsequently to 400 merks, but the Town-Council, feeling this to be too heavy a burden on the public funds, requested the master, in 1707, to accept a smaller stipend, and on his declining to do so declared the school vacant and looked out for a cheaper master, at 250 merks. The present salary is £50, including an allow

ance for house-rent.

Some of the smallest and least liberal burghs give us a curious view of the estimate of the schoolmaster's office. In Burntisland, in 1596, the schoolmaster had no settled allowance in money, but for his support the Council nominated the "honestest men" of the town to lodge him in their houses by turns. It is due to the burgh to mention that forty years later he had a salary of 100 merks in lieu of this itinerant and casual mode of sustenance. In Dunfermline, the salary of the master, in 1610, was £100 Scots, from the endowment of Queen Anne, and this was supplemented by the Town-Council, but since 1835 they have withdrawn all payments to the school, except the original endowment of Queen Anne, which is not derived from the burgh funds. In Kirkcaldy, in 1582, a contract was made between the Town-Council and the minister, in accordance with which the latter was to take up and teach a grammar school, with himself as principal and a doctor under him. There is no mention made of salary, but he himself was to be paid by the scholars at the beginning of the year, while his doctor was "to have his meat about in the town, to wit, of every bairn a day's meat." A similar custom still prevails in some outlying districts of the Highlands, where a schoolmaster is engaged to teach the children at a very moderate fee, and is boarded by turns with the cotters whose boys and girls attend his classes.

The fees paid by the scholars varied just as the salaries did. A distinction was long made between the children of burgesses and of landward parents. The former paid a smaller sum than the latter, in consideration of the circumstance that it was the town alone that paid the master's salary, and consequently its youth were entitled to some advantage. There was a distinction also between citizens and men of rank, so long as the latter continued as a rule to send their sons to the Burgh school. In Aberdeen, for instance, the quarterly fee of each scholar was limited to thirteen shillings and fourpence Scots, unless he were the son of a marquis, earl, viscount, lord, or baron, from whom the masters were.

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