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Proposed Peroration for Mr Cullen's Information for The College of Glasgow v. Professor John Anderson

Author(s): Anonymous

Text

The Defrs have now submitted to your [¿] the grounds of
their conduct in the cases complained of: or they have laid open, to use
the language of the Pursr, that sustem of tyranny and oppreſsion
which they have carried on against him for many years past. Frivolous
and groundleſs, they are persuaded, these complaints must now appear
to your Lordships; but they have been productive of real evils to the
Defenders. They have been made use of as instruments for traducing
their characters as men, and for injuring the credit and interests of the
society to which they belong. Your Lordships, probably till this time
unacquainted with the peculiar art and industry which this pursuer
has long practised, may justly be surprised to find, that a mere difference
of opinion about conferring degrees, about extracts and statutes
of the College, or even that the paſsing a slight censure upon him for
conduct unacademical in the highest degree, should have been made
the occasion of rebellion among the students, of appeals to the tradesmen
and day-labourers in Glasgow and its neighbourhood, of an application
to the Throne, and lastly of a proceſs before your Lordships for
damages estimated by the Pursuer at no leſs a sum than 6 or 7000 £.
But your Lordships wil be still more astonished to learn, that the
Pursuer by his aſsiduity, his intrigues and cabals, and by the groundleſs
and exaggerated pictures which he drew of his own suffering, and of
the persecutions that were carried on against him, obtained such an
ascendency over the paſsions of the lower ranks in Glasgow, that during
the short time the delusion lasted, the defenders could hardly appear on
the streets without meeting with some marks of their displeasure.
Your Lordships will also observe that from the manner in which
the pursuer managed his attacks, the defenders had mo means of stopping
or interrupting the current of abuse that bore down upon them. To enter
into a defence of their own conduct before such judges as the mob of
Glasgow, or to retaliate upon the aggreſsor and his abettors in their
own way by paragraphs, squibs and advertisements in the News-papers,
& abusive hand-bills, would have been a mode of defence derogatory to themselves,
and would probably have afforded the Pursuer the very gratification
he most earnestly desired. They accordingly submitted with patience
to the calumnies and reproaches that were vented against them, confining
themselves to the duties of their respective offices, in the persuasion
that the temporary delusion of the multitude would soon be
over, though not without fear that it would not end without some
daring act of outrage.
Upon one occasion, indeed, when the Trades-house of Glasgow,
influenced by the misrepresentations of the Pursuer had
made a strange and unwarrantable attack upon the College in a
News-paper, the Principal in name of the Defenders protested against
them. Upon this occasion too the Ordinary [¿] of the College thought
it their duty to interpose, and in a paper, remarkable in the midst of
such provocation for its mildneſs and moderation, contradicted some
of the strange allegations by which the people had been hood-winked,
and which they knew, from what

had occurred to them in the exercise of their office to be false and
groundleſs. The Principal's Protest occasioned a long and scurrilous
invective against the members of the College, about which they have given
themselves no concern, though they can now easily trace out its author.
The paper written by the Visitors brought up on them the vengeance of
the Pursuer in a manner still more unguarded and unqualified,
and for his conduct towards them he has been obliged to answer,
in another proceſs now depending before your Lordships.
The Defenders humbly hope, that after fully considering the
Merits of this cause, your Lordships, actuated by the same views with
his Majesty and his Ministers, will not only refuse the conclusion
of the libel, but will also, by your sentence, discourage such frivolous
and imaginary complaints, and secure the defenders from being again
exposed to similar injuries to their characters and interests, and prevent
the neceſsity of their being obliged hereafter to spend so much of their
time and of the Public funds in vexatious lawsuits, and in combating
the restleſsneſs and turbulence of the Pursuer.

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APA Style:

Proposed Peroration for Mr Cullen's Information for The College of Glasgow v. Professor John Anderson. 2024. In The Corpus of Modern Scottish Writing. Glasgow: University of Glasgow. Retrieved 20 April 2024, from http://www.scottishcorpus.ac.uk/cmsw/document/?documentid=578.

MLA Style:

"Proposed Peroration for Mr Cullen's Information for The College of Glasgow v. Professor John Anderson." The Corpus of Modern Scottish Writing. Glasgow: University of Glasgow, 2024. Web. 20 April 2024. http://www.scottishcorpus.ac.uk/cmsw/document/?documentid=578.

Chicago Style

The Corpus of Modern Scottish Writing, s.v., "Proposed Peroration for Mr Cullen's Information for The College of Glasgow v. Professor John Anderson," accessed 20 April 2024, http://www.scottishcorpus.ac.uk/cmsw/document/?documentid=578.

If your style guide prefers a single bibliography entry for this resource, we recommend:

The Corpus of Modern Scottish Writing. 2024. Glasgow: University of Glasgow. http://www.scottishcorpus.ac.uk/cmsw/.

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Proposed Peroration for Mr Cullen's Information for The College of Glasgow v. Professor John Anderson

Document Information

Document ID 578
Title Proposed Peroration for Mr Cullen's Information for The College of Glasgow v. Professor John Anderson
Year group 1750-1800
Genre Administrative prose
Year of publication 1787
Place of publication Glasgow, Scotland
Wordcount 724

Author information: Anonymous

Author ID 401
Surname Anonymous