of the chancery; as keeper of the privy seal, and
privy councillor; as one of the commissioners for codifying
the laws, and again—for in the semi-anarchic
state of Scotland, government had to do everything
in the way of organisation—in the committee
for promulgating a standard Latin grammar; in the
committee for reforming the University of St. Andrew’s:
in all these Buchanan’s talents were again and
again called for; and always ready. The value
of his work, especially that for the reform of St.
Andrew’s, must be judged by Scotsmen, rather
than by an Englishman; but all that one knows of it
justifies Melville’s sentence in the well-known
passage in his memoirs, wherein he describes the tutors
and household of the young king. “Mr.
George was a Stoic philosopher, who looked not far
before him;” in plain words, a high-minded and
right-minded man, bent on doing the duty which lay
nearest him. The worst that can be said against
him during these times is, that his name appears with
the sum of 100 pounds against it, as one of those
“who were to be entertained in Scotland by pensions
out of England;” and Ruddiman, of course, comments
on the fact by saying that Buchanan “was at
length to act under the threefold character of malcontent,
reformer, and pensioner:” but it gives no
proof whatsoever that Buchanan ever received any such
bribe; and in the very month, seemingly, in which
that list was written—10th March, 1579—Buchanan
had given a proof to the world that he was not likely
to be bribed or bought, by publishing a book, as offensive
probably to Queen Elizabeth as it was to his own royal
pupil; namely, his famous “De Jure Regni apud
Scotos,” the very primer, according to many
great thinkers, of constitutional liberty. He
dedicates that book to King James, “not only
as his monitor, but also as an importunate and bold
exactor, which in these his tender and flexible years
may conduct him in safety past the rocks of flattery.”
He has complimented James already on his abhorrence
of flattery, “his inclination far above his
years for undertaking all heroical and noble attempts,
his promptitude in obeying his instructors and governors,
and all who give him sound admonition, and his judgment
and diligence in examining affairs, so that no man’s
authority can have much weight with him unless it
be confirmed by probable reasons.” Buchanan
may have thought that nine years of his stern rule
had eradicated some of James’s ill conditions;
the petulance which made him kill the Master of Mar’s
sparrow, in trying to wrest it out of his hand; the
carelessness with which—if the story told
by Chytraeus, on the authority of Buchanan’s
nephew, be true—James signed away his crown
to Buchanan for fifteen days, and only discovered
his mistake by seeing Bachanan act in open court the
character of King of Scots. Buchanan had at last
made him a scholar; he may have fancied that he had
made him likewise a manful man: yet he may have
dreaded that, as James grew up, the old inclinations