<h3> CHAPTER III <br/><br/> YALE PROFESSORS—HARVARD LAW SCHOOL </h3>
<p>The three Yale professors whose names after
all these years stand out most clearly to
me are Thacher, Hadley, and Porter. Professor
Thacher taught Latin. They used to say he
knew Tacitus by heart—perhaps only a boyish
emphasis upon his knowledge of the language
and literature. He was, at any rate, a good
Latinist, and a good teacher. What was perhaps
more rare, he was a genial companion, to whom
the distance between professor and pupil was not
impassable. He won our sympathies because
he gave us his; and our admiration, and almost
our affection, went with our sympathies. He was
one of the few college dignitaries upon whom the
student feels himself privileged to look back as
a friend; for on his side the spirit of friendly
kindness governed the relations between us.</p>
<p>Of Professor Hadley's Hellenism we expressed
our admiration by saying he dreamed in Greek.
To us, so long as we were in his hands, Greek was
the language of the gods. The modern heresies
touching the place of Greek in a liberal education
had at that time not been heard of, or had taken
no hold upon the minds of either teacher or pupil.
<span class="pagenum">{<SPAN id="P21"></SPAN>21}</span>
We learnt Greek, so far as we learnt it, in the same
unquestioning spirit as we read the Bible; so far
as we read it. Hadley taught us something
more than grammar and prosody. He taught us
to look at the world through Greek eyes and to
think Greek thoughts. To him the Greek language
and literature were not dead but alive, and
he sought to make them live again in his pupils.
I don't say that he always succeeded; or often,
but at least we perceived his aim, and we listened
with delight to the roll of Homer's hexameters
from his flexible lips. For the time being he was
a Greek. To this illusion his dark eyes and olive
skin and the soft full tones of his voice
contributed. Some of his enthusiasms, if not much
of his learning, imparted themselves to us. If
we presently forgot what we learned, the influence
remained. "I do not ask," said Sainte-Beuve,
"that a man shall know Latin or Greek. All I
ask is that he shall have known it." A sentence
in which there is a whole philosophy of education;
a philosophy which the universities that have
abolished Greek out of their compulsory courses
forgot to take into account.</p>
<p>Professor Porter's mission was to implant in
our young minds some conception of Moral
Philosophy and of Rhetoric. He taught
persuasively, sometimes eloquently, and always with
a clearness of thought and purpose which made
him intelligible to the dullest and instructive.
He had another means of appeal to his students.
He was human and sympathetic. We looked
<span class="pagenum">{<SPAN id="P22"></SPAN>22}</span>
upon our professors as, for the most part, beings
far removed from us; exalted by their position
and virtues above us, and above mankind in
general; a sort of demigods who had descended
to earth for the good of its inhabitants, to whom,
however, they were not of kin. We never thought
that of Professor Porter. He had a magical
smile; it was the magic of kindness. We fancied
that the Faculty dealt with the students in a
spirit of strict justice; from their point of view
if not always from ours. They were a High
Court of Justice which laid down the law and
enforced penalties out of proportion to the offence.
It was law, and the administration of it was
inexorable. Not so Porter. He was never a
hanging judge. I know it because I owed to him the
privilege of remaining at Yale to the end of my
four years. I have quite forgotten what crime
I committed, but it was one for which, according
to the strict code by which the undergraduates
were governed, expulsion was the proper sentence;
or perhaps only suspension, which in my case
would have meant the same thing. But Professor
Porter intervened. There were mitigating
circumstances. These he pressed upon his
colleagues, and I believe he even made himself
answerable for my good behaviour thereafter.
I stayed on, and if I did not profit as I ought to
have profited by the opportunity I owed to him,
I was at least grateful to him, and still am.</p>
<p>Professor Porter became later President of
Yale: one on the roll of Chief Magistrates of the
<span class="pagenum">{<SPAN id="P23"></SPAN>23}</span>
University to whom not Yale only but the country
is, and for two hundred years has been, indebted.
He ruled wisely, fine administrative qualities
reinforcing his scholarly distinction. He was
beloved, and his name is for ever a part of the
history of this great college.</p>
<p>Looking back on those days and on the
Professors I have known since, at Yale, Harvard,
Columbia, and one or two other American
universities, one thing impresses me beyond all
others. It is the spirit of devotion in those men;
of devotion to learning, to letters, to their colleges,
and to their country. Many of them were, and
many in these days are, men who had before them
other and far more profitable careers. They might
have won much wider fame and made a great
deal more money. They have been content with
the appreciation of their own world, and with
salaries which, I believe, never exceed six
thousand dollars, and are commonly much less. When
English critics, albeit in a friendly spirit, have
commented—in private, not in public—on the
American love of money-making, I have made
this answer, pointing to the absolute unselfishness
of one of the highest types of American citizen,
all over the land, and to their conception of what
is best in American life. I have always added
that though others may speak of their renunciation
as a sacrifice, they never do. So far as I
know them, they are content and more than content;
they rejoice in their work and in the modest
circumstances which alone their income permits.
<span class="pagenum">{<SPAN id="P24"></SPAN>24}</span>
Now and then we hear of some brilliant scholar
as having refused a lucrative post in order to
go on teaching and studying. There are many
more whom we never hear of publicly, to all of
whom the country owes a debt of gratitude if
nothing else, which it does not always pay. But
here in England if you state the facts you will
find them accepted, and welcomed as the best
answer to the reproach of money-ambitions—a
reproach based on conspicuous exceptions to the
general American rule of thrift and simplicity.</p>
<p>After graduating at Yale, and after a year in
Mr. Hoar's office at Worcester, I went to the
Harvard Law School. Harvard was as much
a Unitarian university as ever, but perhaps it
was considered that law was a safeguard against
loose theology, or perhaps the old reasons were
no longer omnipotent. I attempt no comparisons
between Yale and Harvard. There is no kind
of likeness between undergraduate and
post-graduate life. During four years at Yale the
discipline had been rigid. At the Law School
in Cambridge I cannot remember that we were
under any restraint whatever. In New Haven
we lived either in the college dormitories or in
houses approved by the Faculty; and I am not
sure that in my time we did not all sleep within
the college limits, insanitary and uncomfortable
as many of the buildings then were. But the
law student in Cambridge lived where he would
and as he would. He went to chapel or not,
week-days and Sundays alike, to suit himself.
<span class="pagenum">{<SPAN id="P25"></SPAN>25}</span>
Not even attendance at the law lectures was
compulsory. It seems to have been held that students
had come to the school upon serious business,
and that their own interest and the success of
their future careers would be enough to ensure
their presence. It was not always so. The very
freedom which ought to have put men on their
honour sometimes became a temptation. And
Boston was a temptation; as it was, and must
always be, to undergraduates and graduates alike.</p>
<p>The years were drawing on—it was now 1854—and
the sectional antagonism of which there had
been evidence enough at Yale was increasing.
We were older, and the crisis was nearer. There
was a kind of Law School Parliament in which
all things were put to the issue of debate, and the
air often grew hot. Angry words were exchanged
between Southerners and Northerners. The
rooted belief of the Southerner, or of many
Southerners, that they had a monopoly of courage,
was sometimes expressed. More than once
challenges were talked of, though I believe none was
actually sent. There was a choleric young
gentleman from Missouri who put himself forward as
champion of slavery, and there was an attempt
to deny to us of the North the right to express
our opinions on our own soil, which did not
succeed. The Missourian was the exception.
Of the Southerners in general at Harvard I should
say what I have said of those at Yale: if they
felt themselves of a superior race they accepted
the obligations of superiority, and treated their
<span class="pagenum">{<SPAN id="P26"></SPAN>26}</span>
inferiors with an amiable condescension for which
we were not always grateful.</p>
<p>These were not matters of which the authorities
of Dane Law School took notice. Their business
was to teach Law. Judge Parker was a real
lawyer, who afterwards revised the General
Statutes of Massachusetts into something like
coherence and the symmetry of a Code. He handled
the law in a scientific spirit, without emphasis,
not without dry humour, and had ever a luminous
method of exposition which grew more luminous
as the subjects grew more abstruse. His colleague,
Mr. Theophilus Parsons, was, I think, what is
called a case lawyer, to whom the <i>chose jugée</i> was
as sacred as it was more recently to the
anti-Dreyfusards. There are always, and I suppose
always will be, lawyers to whom decisions are
more than principles. Parsons was one of these,
while Parker's aim was to present to the student
the entire body of law as a homogeneous whole,
organic, capable of abstract treatment, capable
of being set forth in the dry light of reason.
Whether it was the difference in the men or in
their methods I know not, but there can be no
doubt that Judge Parker's lectures were better
attended and more devoutly listened to by the
students, and that his system bore fruit. For
it created a habit of mind, and under his teaching
a legal mind was formed, and became a better
instrument for use at the Bar.</p>
<p>The Bar of Massachusetts was at that time in a
period of splendour, as it had been for generations.
<span class="pagenum">{<SPAN id="P27"></SPAN>27}</span>
Webster was gone, and there was no second
Webster; he was the leader not only of the
Massachusetts Bar but of the American Bar. But
Rufus Choate was still in his prime, whose
eccentricities of manner and of speech could not
disguise forensic abilities of almost the first order.
Sydney Bartlett, his rival, was as sound as Choate
was showy. But Choate also was sound, though
he had a spirit of adventure which carried him
too far, and a rhetoric not seldom flamboyant.
Some of his phrases are historical, as of a witness
who sought to palliate his dishonesty by declaring
that he never disclosed his iniquitous scheme.
"A soliloquy of fraud," retorted Choate. I heard
one of his brethren at the Bar say to him as he
came into court: "I suppose you will give us a
great sensation to-day, Mr. Choate." "No,"
answered Choate, "it is too great a case for
sensation." And he tried it all day with sedateness.
Chief Justice Shaw disliked him, or disliked his
methods, and sometimes showed his dislike,
overruling him rather roughly. The great judge was
not an Apollo, and there came a day when
Mr. Choate, smarting under judicial censure, remarked
in an audible aside to his associate counsel:
"The Chief Justice suggests to me an Indian
idol. We feel that he is great and we see that
he is ugly." But amenities like that were unusual.</p>
<p>General Butler, afterward too famous at New
Orleans and Fort Fisher, yet after that the
Democratic Governor of Whig Massachusetts, had a
none too savoury renown at the Bar. Yet it was
<span class="pagenum">{<SPAN id="P28"></SPAN>28}</span>
said of him by an opponent: "If you try your
case fairly, Butler will try his side of it fairly;
but if you play tricks he can play more tricks
than you can." His sense of humour was his
own, sometimes effective and sometimes not.
Defending a railway against an action by a farmer
whose waggon had been run over by a train, and
who alleged that the look-out sign was not, as
required by law, in letters five inches long, Butler
made him admit he had not looked at the sign.
"Then," said Butler to the jury, "it could not
have availed had the sign been in letters of living
light—five inches long."</p>
<p>The best contrast to Butler was Richard H. Dana,
as good a lawyer, or better, and with the
best traditions of a high-minded Bar, pursued
in the best spirit. But I will leave Dana till I
come to the Burns case.</p>
<p><br/><br/><br/></p>
<p><SPAN id="chap04"></SPAN></p>
<p><span class="pagenum">{<SPAN id="P29"></SPAN>29}</span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />