53
BALLIOL COLLEGE. 
54 
Scholarships were thrown open to public compe- 
tition ; and in 1838 the clerical restriction upon 
Fellowships was so far modified that any man might 
be elected provided that he resigned at the time when 
the Statutes called upon him to receive Holy Orders. 
The Act of Parliament, which reformed alike the 
University and the Colleges, was passed about the 
time of Dr. Jenkyns' death. The Blundell Fellow- 
ships were now thrown open, and the majority of the 
Fellowships exempted from clerical obligations. 
Under the Mastership of Robert Scott, who succeeded 
Jenkyns, Mr. Jowett (who in turn became Master in 
1870) was the leading member of the Tutorial body ; 
and the system of the College was more and more 
adapted to what are understood as liberal principles 
of education. Among more recent institutions may 
be noticed the policy of attracting selected students 
for the Indian Civil Service, and of diversifying the 
common pattern of College life by the admission as 
members of the College of persons of various nation- 
ality who desired only instruction in certain subjects, 
and did not read for a degree. But the example of 
Balliol was soon followed by other Colleges. 
' Every College has its own ideal, and that of
Balliol has been by a steady policy adapted to the 
modern spirit of work, employing the best materials 
not so much for learning as an end in itself, as a 
means towards practical success in life. In this field, 
in the distinctions of the schools, of the courts, and 
of public life, it has been seldom rivalled by any 
other College. ' The College has excelled particularly 
' in its practical men of affairs, diplomatists, judges, 
members of parliament, civil service officials, college 
tutors, and school-masters. At the present moment 
it counts among former members no less than seven 
of her Majesty's Judges, and seven Heads of Oxford 
Colleges. But to show that another side of culture 
has been represented at Balliol in the present reign, 
we must not forget the band of Balliol poets, Arthur 
Hugh Clough, Matthew Arnold, and Algernon Charles 
Swinburne.' 
The foregoing sketch is substantially abridged from a more comprehensive notice of this College by the same writer contained in The Colleges of Oxford, edited by the Rev. A. Clark (Methuen 1891), and passages quoted from it are placed between inverted commas.
REGINALD L. POOLE.
view «Y bekeblock, 1566. {Facsimile from Hearne.]