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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #60832 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/60832)
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-Project Gutenberg's Essays on Educational Reformers, by Robert Hebert Quick
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll
-have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using
-this ebook.
-
-
-
-Title: Essays on Educational Reformers
-
-Author: Robert Hebert Quick
-
-Release Date: December 2, 2019 [EBook #60832]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ESSAYS ON EDUCATIONAL REFORMERS ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Turgut Dincer and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by The
-Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-International Education Series
-
-EDITED BY
-
-WILLIAM T. HARRIS, A. M., LL. D.
-
-_Volume XVII._
-
-
-
-
-THE INTERNATIONAL EDUCATION SERIES.
-
-12mo, cloth, uniform binding.
-
-
-The International Education Series was projected for the purpose of
-bringing together in orderly arrangement the best writings, new and old,
-upon educational subjects, and presenting a complete course of reading
-and training for teachers generally. It is edited by W. T. HARRIS, LL.
-D., United States Commissioner of Education, who has contributed for the
-different volumes in the way of introductions, analysis, and commentary.
-The volumes are tastefully and substantially bound in uniform style.
-
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-_VOLUMES NOW READY._
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- Second edition, revised, with Commentary and complete Analysis.
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- Va. $1.50.
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- WITH A SURVEY OF MEDIÆVAL EDUCATION. By S. S. LAURIE, LL.
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- University of Edinburgh. $1.50.
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- and annotated by W. N. HAILMANN, A. M., Superintendent of
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-
-
-
-
- _INTERNATIONAL EDUCATION SERIES_
-
- ESSAYS ON
- EDUCATIONAL REFORMERS
-
- BY
- ROBERT HEBERT QUICK
- M. A. TRIN. COLL., CAMBRIDGE
-
- FORMERLY ASSISTANT MASTER AT HARROW, AND LECTURER ON
- THE HISTORY OF EDUCATION AT CAMBRIDGE
- LATE VICAR OF SEDBERGH
-
- _ONLY AUTHORIZED EDITION OF THE WORK
- AS REWRITTEN IN 1890_
-
- NEW YORK
- D. APPLETON AND COMPANY
- 1896
-
- COPYRIGHT, 1890,
- BY D. APPLETON AND COMPANY.
-
-
-
-
- To
-
- DR. HENRY BARNARD,
-
- _The first United States Commissioner of Education_,
-
- WHO IN A LONG LIFE OF
- SELF-SACRIFICING LABOUR HAS GIVEN TO THE ENGLISH
- LANGUAGE AN EDUCATIONAL LITERATURE,
- THIS VOLUME IS DEDICATED,
-
- WITH THE ESTEEM AND ADMIRATION OF
-
- THE AUTHOR.
-
-
-
-
- Οὺ γὰρ ἔστι περὶ ὅτου θειοτέρου ἄνθρωπος ἄν βουλεύσαιτο, ὴ
- περὶ παιδείας καὶ τῶν αὑτοῦ και τῶν οἰκείων. _Plato in initio
- Theagis_ (p. 122 B).
-
- Socrates saith plainlie, that “no man goeth about a more godlie
- purpose, than he that is mindfull of the good bringing up both
- of hys owne and other men’s children.”—_Ascham’s Scholemaster.
- Preface._
-
- _Fundamentum totius reipublicæ est recta juventutis educatio._
-
- The very foundation of the whole commonwealth is the proper
- bringing up of the young.—_Cic._
-
-
-
-
-EDITOR’S PREFACE.
-
-
-Many years ago I proposed to my friend Mr. Quick to rewrite his
-Educational Reformers, making some additions (Sturm and Froebel, for
-example), and allow me to place it in this series of educational works.
-I had read his essays when they first appeared, and noted their great
-value as a contribution to the right kind of educational literature.
-They showed admirable tact in the selection of the materials; the
-“epoch-making” writers were chosen and the things that had been said and
-done of permanent value were brought forward. Better than all was the
-running commentary on these materials by Mr. Quick himself. His style
-was popular, taking the reader, as it were, into confidential relations
-with him from the start, and offering now and then a word of criticism in
-the most judicial spirit, leaning neither to the extreme of destructive
-radicalism, which seeks revolution rather than reform, nor, on the other
-hand, to the extreme of blind conservatism, which wishes to preserve the
-vesture of the past rather than its wisdom.
-
-I have called this book of Mr. Quick the most valuable history of
-education in our mother-tongue, fit only to be compared with Karl von
-Raumer’s Geschichte der Pädagogik for its presentation of essentials and
-for the sanity of its verdicts.
-
-I made my proposal that he “rewrite” his book because I knew that he
-considered his first edition hastily written and, in many respects, not
-adequate to the ideal he had conceived of the book. I knew, moreover,
-that years of continued thinking on a theme necessarily modifies one’s
-views. He would wish to make some changes in matter presented, some in
-judgments rendered, and many more in style of presentation.
-
-Hence it has come about that after this lapse of time Mr. Quick has
-produced a substantially new book, which, retaining all or nearly all
-of the admirable features of the first edition, has brought up to their
-standard of excellence many others.
-
-The history of education is a vast field, and we are accustomed to demand
-bulky treatises as the only adequate ones. But the obvious disadvantage
-of such works has led to the clearly defined ideal of a book like Mr.
-Quick’s, which separates the gold from the dross, and offers it small in
-bulk but precious in value.
-
-The educational reformers are the men above all others who stimulate
-us to think about education. Every one of these was an extremist, and
-erred in his judgment as to the value of the methods which prevailed in
-his time, and also overestimated the effects of the new education that
-he proposed in the place of the old. But thought begins with negations,
-and originality shows itself first not in creating something new, but in
-removing the fettering limitations of its existing environment. The old
-is attacked—its good and its bad are condemned alike. It has been imposed
-on us by authority, and we have not been allowed to summon it before
-the bar of our reason and ask of it its credentials. It informs us that
-it presented these credentials ages ago to our ancestors—men older and
-wiser than we are. Such imposition of authority leaves us no choice but
-to revolt. We, too, have a right to think as well as our ancestors; we,
-too, must clear up the ground of our belief and substitute insight for
-blind faith in tradition.
-
-These educational reformers are prophets of the clearing-up period
-(_Aufklärung_) of revolution against mere authority.
-
-While we are inspired to think for ourselves, however, we must not
-neglect that more important matter of thinking the truth. Free-thinking,
-if it does not reach the truth, is not of great value. It sets itself
-as puny individual against the might of the race, which preserves its
-experience in the forms of institutions—the family, the social organism,
-the state, the Church.
-
-Hence our wiser and more scientific method studies everything that is,
-or exists, in its history, and endeavors to discover how it came to be
-what it is. It inquires into its evolution. The essential truth is not
-the present fact, but the entire process by which the present fact grew
-to be what it is. For the living force that made the present fact made
-also the past facts antecedent to the present, and it will go on making
-subsequent facts. The revelation of the living forces which make the
-facts of existence is the object of science. It takes all these facts to
-reveal the living force that is acting and producing them.
-
-Hence the scientific attitude is superior to the attitude of these
-educational reformers, and we shall in our own minds weigh these men
-in our scales, asking first of all: What is their view of the world?
-How much do they value human institutions? How much do they know of
-the substantial good that is wrought by those institutions? If they
-know nothing of these things, if they see only incumbrance in these
-institutions, if to them the individual is the measure of all things, we
-can not do reverence to their proposed remedies, but must account their
-value to us chiefly this, that they have stimulated us to thinking, and
-helped us to discover what they have not discovered—namely, the positive
-value of institutions.
-
-All education deals with the boundary between ignorance and knowledge and
-between bad habits and good ones. The pupil as pupil brings with him the
-ignorance and the bad habits, and is engaged in acquiring good habits and
-correct knowledge.
-
-This situation gives us a general recipe for a frequently recurring type
-of educational reformer. Any would-be reformer may take his stand on the
-boundary mentioned, and, casting an angry look at the realm of ignorance
-and bad habit not yet conquered, condemn in wholesale terms the system of
-education that has not been efficient in removing this mental and moral
-darkness.
-
-Such a reformer selects an examination paper written by a pupil whose
-ignorance is not yet vanquished, and parades the same as a product of
-the work of the school, taking great pains to avoid an accurate and
-just admeasurement of the actual work done by the school. The reformer
-critic assumes that there is one factor here, whereas there are three
-factors—namely, (_a_) the pupil’s native and acquired powers of learning,
-(_b_) his actual knowledge acquired, and (_c_) the instruction given
-by the school. The school is not responsible for the first and second
-of these factors, but it is responsible only for what increment has
-grown under its tutelage. How much and what has the pupil increased his
-knowledge, and how much his power of acquiring knowledge and of doing?
-
-The educational reformer is always telling us to leave words and take
-up things. He dissuades from the study of language, and also undervalues
-the knowledge of manners and customs and laws and usages. He dislikes
-the study of institutions even. He “loves Nature,” as he informs us.
-Herbert Spencer wants us to study the body, and to be more interested
-in biology than in formal logic; more interested in natural history
-than in literature. But I think he would be indignant if one were to
-ask him whether he thought the study of the habits and social instincts
-of bees and ants is less important than the study of insect anatomy and
-physiology. Anatomy and physiology are, of course, important, but the
-social organism is more important than the physiological organism, even
-in bees and ants.
-
-So in man the social organism is transcendent as compared with human
-physiology, and social hygiene compared with physiological hygiene is
-supreme.
-
-To suppose that the habits of plants and insects are facts, and that the
-structure of human languages, the logical structure of the mind itself as
-revealed in the figures and modes of the syllogism and the manners and
-customs of social life, the deep ethical principles which govern peoples
-as revealed in works of literature—to suppose that these and the like
-of these are not real facts and worthy of study is one of the strangest
-delusions that has ever prevailed.
-
-But it is a worse delusion to suppose that the study of Nature is more
-practical than the study of man, though this is often enough claimed by
-the educational reformers.
-
-The knowledge of most worth is first and foremost the knowledge of how
-to behave—a knowledge of social customs and usages. Any person totally
-ignorant in this regard would not escape imprisonment—perhaps I should
-say decapitation—for one day in any city of the world—say in London,
-in Pekin, in Timbuctoo, or in a _pueblo_ of Arizona. A knowledge of
-human customs and usages, next a knowledge of human views of Nature and
-man—these are of primordial necessity to an individual, and are means of
-direct self-preservation.
-
-The old trivium or threefold course of study at the university taught
-grammar, logic, and rhetoric—namely, (1) the structure of language, (2)
-the structure of mind and the art of reasoning, (3) the principles and
-art of persuasion. These may be seen at once to be lofty subjects and
-worthy objects of science. They will always remain such, but they are
-not easy for the child. In the course of mastering them he must learn to
-master himself and gain great intellectual stature. Pedagogy has wisely
-graded the road to these heights, and placed much easier studies at the
-beginning and also made the studies more various. Improvements in methods
-and in grading—devices for interesting the pupil—so essential to his
-self-activity, for these we have to thank the Educational Reformers.
-
- W. T. HARRIS.
-
- WASHINGTON, D. C., 1890.
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE TO EDITION OF 1868.
-
-
-“_It is clear that in whatever it is our duty to act, those matters
-also it is our duty to study._” These words of Dr. Arnold’s seem to
-me incontrovertible. So a sense of duty, as well as fondness for the
-subject, has led me to devote a period of leisure to the study of
-_Education_, in the practice of which I have been for some years engaged.
-
-There are countries where it would be considered a truism that a teacher
-in order to exercise his profession intelligently should know something
-about the chief authorities in it. Here, however, I suppose such an
-assertion will seem paradoxical; but there is a good deal to be said
-in defence of it. De Quincey has pointed out that a man who takes up
-any pursuit without knowing what advances others have made in it works
-at a great disadvantage. He does not apply his strength in the right
-direction, he troubles himself about small matters and neglects great,
-he falls into errors that have long since been exploded. An educator is,
-I think, liable to these dangers if he brings to his task no knowledge
-but that which he learnt for the tripos, and no skill but that which
-he acquired in the cricket ground or on the river. If his pupils are
-placed entirely in his hands, his work is one of great difficulty, with
-heavy penalties attached to all blundering in it; though here, as in the
-case of the ignorant doctor and the careless architect, the penalties,
-unfortunately, are paid by his victims. If (as more commonly happens)
-he has simply to give a class prescribed instruction, his smaller scope
-of action limits proportionally the mischief that may ensue; but even
-then it is obviously desirable that his teaching should be as good as
-possible, and he is not likely to employ the best methods if he invents
-as he goes along, or simply falls back on his remembrance of how he
-was taught himself, perhaps in very different circumstances. I venture
-to think, therefore, that practical men in education, as in most other
-things, may derive benefit from the knowledge of what has already been
-said and done by the leading men engaged in it, both past and present.
-
-All study of this kind, however, is very much impeded by want of books.
-“Good books are in German,” says Professor Seeley. I have found that on
-the history of Education, not only _good_ books but _all_ books are in
-German or some other foreign language.[1] I have, therefore, thought
-it worth while to publish a few such imperfect sketches as these, with
-which the reader can hardly be less satisfied than the author. They may,
-however, prove useful till they give place to a better book.
-
-Several of the following essays are nothing more than compilations.
-Indeed, a hostile critic might assert that I had used the scissors with
-the energy of Mr. Timbs and without his discretion. The reader, however,
-will probably agree with me that I have done wisely in putting before
-him the opinions of great writers in their own language. Where I am
-simply acting as reporter, the author’s own way of expressing himself
-is obviously the best; and if, following the example of the gipsies and
-Sir Fretful Plagiary, I had disfigured other people’s offspring to make
-them pass for my own, success would have been fatal to the purpose I have
-steadily kept in view. The sources of original ideas in any subject, as
-the student is well aware, are few, but for irrigation we require troughs
-as well as water-springs, and these essays are intended to serve in the
-humbler capacity.
-
-A word about the incomplete handling of my subjects. I have not attempted
-to treat any subject completely, or even with anything like completeness.
-In giving a sketch of the opinions of an author one of two methods
-must be adopted; we may give an epitome of all that he has said, or by
-confining ourselves to his more valuable and characteristic opinions, may
-gain space to give these fully. As I detest epitomes, I have adopted the
-latter method exclusively, but I may sometimes have failed in selecting
-an author’s most characteristic principles; and probably no two readers
-of a book would entirely agree as to what was most valuable in it: so
-my account must remain, after all, but a poor substitute for the author
-himself.
-
-For the part of a critic I have at least one qualification—practical
-acquaintance with the subject. As boy or master, I have been connected
-with no less than eleven schools, and my perception of the blunders of
-other teachers is derived mainly from the remembrance of my own. Some of
-my mistakes have been brought home to me by reading works on education,
-even those with which I do not in the main agree. Perhaps there are
-teachers who on looking through the following pages may meet with a
-similar experience.
-
-Had the essays been written in the order in which they stand, a good deal
-of repetition might have been avoided, but this repetition has at least
-the advantage of bringing out points which seem to me important; and as
-no one will read the book as carefully as I have done, I hope no one will
-be so much alive to this and other blemishes in it.
-
-I much regret that in a work which is nothing if it is not practically
-useful, I have so often neglected to mark the exact place from which
-quotations are taken. I have myself paid the penalty of this carelessness
-in the trouble it has cost me to verify passages which seemed inaccurate.
-
-The authority I have had recourse to most frequently is Raumer
-(_Geschichte der Pädagogik_). In his first two volumes he gives an
-account of the chief men connected with education, from Dante to
-Pestalozzi. The third volume contains essays on various parts of
-education, and the fourth is devoted to German Universities. There is an
-English translation, published in America, of the fourth volume only.
-I confess to a great partiality for Raumer—a partiality which is not
-shared by a Saturday Reviewer and by other competent authorities in this
-country. But surely a German author who is not profound, and is almost
-perspicuous, has some claim on the gratitude of English readers, if he
-gives information which we cannot get in our own language. To Raumer I am
-indebted for all that I have written about Ratke, and almost all about
-Basedow. Elsewhere his history has been used, though not to the same
-extent.
-
-C. A. Schmid’s _Encyclopädie des Erziehungs-und-Unterrichtswesens_ is
-a vast mine of information on everything connected with education. The
-work is still in progress. The part containing _Rousseau_ has only just
-reached me. I should have been glad of it when I was giving an account of
-the Emile, as Raumer was of little use to me.
-
-Those for whom Schmid is too diffuse and expensive will find Carl Gottlob
-Hergang’s _Pädagogische Realencyclopädie_ useful. This is in two thick
-volumes, and costs, to the best of my memory, about eighteen shillings.
-It was finished in 1847.
-
-The best sketch I have met with of the general history of education is in
-the article on _Pädagogik_ in _Meyers Conversations-Lexicon_.[2] I wish
-someone would translate this article; and I should be glad to draw the
-attention of the editor of an educational periodical, say the _Museum_ or
-the _Quarterly Journal of Education_, to it.
-
-I have come upon references to many other works on the history of
-Education, but of these the only ones I have seen are Theodore Fritz’s
-_Esquisse d’un Système complet d’instruction et d’éducation et de leur
-histoire_ (3 vols., Strasburg, 1843), and Carl Schmidt’s _Geschichte
-der Pädagogik_ (4 vols.). The first of these gives only the outline of
-the subject. The second is, I believe, considered a standard work. It
-does not seem to me so readable as Raumer’s history, but it is much more
-complete, and comes down to quite recent times.
-
-For my account of the Jesuit schools and of Pestalozzi, the authorities
-will be found elsewhere (pp. 34 and 383). In writing about Comenius
-I have had much assistance from a life of him prefixed to an English
-translation of his _School of Infancy_, by Daniel Benham (London, 1858).
-For almost all the information given about Jacotot, I am indebted to
-Mr. Payne’s papers, which I should not have ventured to extract from so
-freely if they had been before the public in a more permanent form.
-
-I am sorry I cannot refer to any English works on the history of
-Education, except the essays of Mr. Parker and Mr. Furnivall, and
-_Christian Schools and Scholars_, which are mentioned above, but we have
-a very good treatise on the principles of education in Marcel’s _Language
-as a Means of Mental Culture_ (2 vols., London, 1853). Edgeworth’s
-_Practical Education_ seems falling into undeserved neglect, and Mr.
-Spencer’s recent work is not universally known even by schoolmasters.
-
-If the following pages attract but few readers, it will be some
-consolation, though rather a melancholy one, that I share the fate of my
-betters.
-
- R. H. Q.
-
- INGATESTONE, ESSEX, _May, 1868_.
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE TO EDITION OF 1890.
-
-
-When I was a young man (_i.e._, nearly forty years ago), I once did
-what those who know the ground would declare a very risky, indeed,
-a fool-hardy thing. I was at the highest point of the Gemmi Pass in
-Switzerland, above the Rhone Valley; and being in a hurry to get down
-and overtake my party I ran from the top to the bottom. The path in those
-days was not so good as it is now, and it is so near the precipice that
-a few years afterwards a lady in descending lost her head and fell over.
-No doubt I was in great danger of a drop of a thousand feet or so. But
-of this I was totally unconscious. I was in a thick mist, and saw the
-path for a few yards in front of me _and nothing more_. When I think of
-the way in which this book was written three and twenty years ago I can
-compare it to nothing but my first descent of the Gemmi. I did a very
-risky thing without knowing it. My path came into view little by little
-as I went on. All else was hid from me by a thick mist of ignorance. When
-I began the book I knew next to nothing of the Reformers, but I studied
-hard and wrote hard, and I turned out the essays within the year. This
-feat I now regard with amazement, almost with horror. Since that time
-I have given more years of work to the subject than I had then given
-months, and the consequence is I find I can write fast no longer. The
-mist has in a measure cleared off, and I cannot jog along in comfort as
-I did when I saw less. At the same time I have no reason to repent of
-the adventure. Being fortunate in my plan and thoroughly interested by
-my subject, I succeeded beyond my wildest expectations in getting others
-to take an interest in it also. The small English edition of 500 copies
-was, as soon as I reduced the price, sold off immediately, and the book
-has been, in England, for twenty years “out of print.” But no less than
-three publishing firms in the United States have reprinted it (one quite
-recently) without my consent, and, except in the edition of Messrs. R.
-Clarke & Co., Cincinnati, with omissions and additions made without my
-knowledge. It seems then that the book will live for some years yet,
-whether I like it or not; and while it lives I wish it to be in a form
-somewhat less defective than at its first appearance. I have therefore
-in a great measure re-written it, beside filling in a gap here and there
-with an additional essay. Perhaps some critics will call it a new book
-with an old title. If they do, they will I trust allow that the new book
-has at least two merits which went far to secure the success of the old,
-1st, a good title, and 2nd, a good plan. My plan in both editions has
-been to select a few people who seemed specially worth knowing about,
-and to tell concerning them in some detail just that which seemed to me
-specially worth knowing. So I have given what I thought very valuable or
-very interesting, and everything I thought not particularly valuable or
-interesting I have ruthlessly omitted. I have not attempted a _complete_
-account of anybody or anything; and as for what the examiner may “set,” I
-have not once given his questions a thought.
-
-As the book is likely to have more readers in the country of its adoption
-than in the country of its birth, I have persuaded my friend Dr. William
-T. Harris, the United States Commissioner of Education, to put it
-into “The International Education Series” which he edits. So the only
-authorized editions of the book are the English edition, and the American
-edition published by Messrs. D. Appleton & Co.
-
- R. H. Q.
-
- EARLSWOOD COTTAGE, REDHILL, SURREY, ENGLAND, _28th July, 1890_.
-
-
-
-
-TABLE OF CONTENTS.
-
-
- PAGE
-
- =Chapter I.—Effects of the Renascence= 1-21
-
- No escape from the Past 2
-
- “Discovery” of the Classics 3
-
- Mark Pattison’s account of Renascence 4
-
- Revival of taste for beauty in Literature 5
-
- What is Literature? 6
-
- Renascence loved beauty of expression 7
-
- No translations. The “educated” 8
-
- Spread of literature by printing 9
-
- School course settled before Bacon 10
-
- First defect: Learner above Doer 11
-
- Second: Over-estimate of literature 12
-
- Literary taste not common 13
-
- Third: Literature banished from school 14
-
- Translations would be literature 15
-
- The classics not written for children 16
-
- Language _versus_ Literature 17
-
- Fourth: “Miss as good as a mile” 18
-
- Fifth: Neglect of children 19
-
- Child’s study of his surroundings 20
-
- Aut Cæsar aut nihil 21
-
-
- =Chapter II.—Renascence Tendencies= 22-26
-
- Reviving the Past. The Scholars 23
-
- The _Scholars_: things for words 24
-
- _Verbal Realists_: things through words 25
-
- _Stylists_: words for themselves 26
-
-
- =Chapter III.—Sturmius. (1507-1589)= 27-32
-
- His early life. Settles in Strassburg 28
-
- His course of Latin. Dismissed 29
-
- The Schoolmaster taught Latin mainly 30
-
- Resulting verbalism 31
-
- Some books about Sturm 32
-
-
- =Chapter IV.—Schools of the Jesuits= 33-62
-
- Importance of the Jesuit Schools 34
-
- The Society in part educational 35
-
- “Ratio atque Institutio.” Societas Professa 36
-
- The Jesuit teacher: his preparation, &c. 37
-
- Supervision. Maintenance. Lower Schools 38
-
- Free instruction. Equality. Boarders 39
-
- Classes. Curriculum. Latin only used 40
-
- Teacher Lectured. Exercises. Saying by heart 41
-
- Emulation. “Æmuli.” Concertations 42
-
- “Academies.” Expedients. School-hours 43
-
- Method of teaching. An example 44
-
- Attention. Extra work. “Repetitio” 45
-
- Repetition. Thoroughness 46
-
- Yearly examinations. Moral training 47
-
- Care of health. Punishments 48
-
- English want of system 49
-
- Jesuit limitations 50
-
- Gains from memorizing 51
-
- Popularity. Kindness 52
-
- Sympathy with each pupil 53
-
- Work moderate in amount and difficulty 54
-
- The Society the Army of the Church 55
-
- Their pedagogy not disinterested 56
-
- Practical 57
-
- The forces: 1. Master’s influence. 2. Emulation 57-58
-
- A pupil’s summing-up 59
-
- Some books 60
-
- Barbier’s advice to new master 61
-
- Loyola and Montaigne. Port-Royal 62
-
-
- =Chapter V.—Rabelais. (1483-1553.)= 63-69
-
- Rabelais’ ideal. A new start 64
-
- Religion. Study of Things 65
-
- “Anschauung.” Hand-work. Books and Life 66
-
- Training the body 67
-
- Rabelais’ Curriculum 68
-
- Study of Scripture. Piety 69
-
-
- =Chapter VI.—Montaigne. (1533-1592.)= 70-79
-
- Writers and doers. Montaigne _versus_ Renascence 71
-
- Character before knowledge. True knowledge 72
-
- Athens and Sparta. Wisdom before knowledge 73
-
- Knowing, and knowing by heart 74
-
- Learning necessary as employment 75
-
- Montaigne and our Public Schools 76
-
- Pressure from Science and Examinations 77
-
- Danger from knowledge 78
-
- Montaigne and Lord Armstrong 79
-
-
- =Chapter VII.—Ascham. (1515-1568.)= 80-89
-
- Wolsey on teaching 81
-
- History of Methods useful 82
-
- Our three celebrities 83
-
- Ascham’s method for Latin: first stage 84
-
- Second stage. The six points 85
-
- Value of double translating and writing 86
-
- Study of a model book. Queen Elizabeth 87, 88
-
- “A dozen times at the least” 88
-
- “Impressionists” and “Retainers” 89
-
-
- =Chapter VIII.—Mulcaster. (1531(?)-1611.)= 90-102
-
- Old books in English on education 91
-
- Mulcaster’s wisdom hidden by his style 92
-
- Education and “learning” 93
-
- 1. Development 2. Child-study 94
-
- 3. Groundwork by best workman 95
-
- 4. No forcing of young plants 96
-
- 5. The elementary course. English 97
-
- 6. Girls as well as Boys 98
-
- 7. Training of Teachers 99
-
- Training college at the Universities 100
-
- Mulcaster’s reasons for training teachers 101
-
- Mulcaster’s Life and Writings 102
-
-
- =Chapter IX.—Ratichius. (1571-1635.)= 103-118
-
- Principles of the Innovators 104
-
- Ratke’s Address to the Diet 105
-
- At Augsburg. At Koethen 106
-
- Failure at Koethen 107
-
- German in the school. Ratichius’s services 108
-
- 1. Follow Nature. 2. One thing at a time 109
-
- 3. Over and over again 110
-
- 4. Everything through the mother-tongue 111
-
- 5. Nothing on compulsion 112
-
- 6. Nothing to be learnt by heart 113
-
- 7. Uniformity. 8. Ne modus rei ante rem 114
-
- 9. Per inductionem omnia 115
-
- Ratke’s method for language 116
-
- Ratke’s method and Ascham’s 117
-
- Slow progress in methods 118
-
-
- =Chapter X.—Comenius. (1592-1671.)= 119-171
-
- Early years. His first book 120
-
- Troubles. Exile 121
-
- Pedagogic studies at Leszna 122
-
- Didactic written. _Janua_ published. Pansophy 123
-
- Samuel Hartlib 124
-
- The _Prodromus_ and _Dilucidatio_ 125
-
- Comenius in London. Parliamentary schemes 126
-
- Comenius driven away by Civil War 127
-
- In Sweden. Interviews with Oxenstiern 128
-
- Oxenstiern criticises 129
-
- Comenius at Elbing 130
-
- At Leszna again 131
-
- Saros-Patak. Flight from Leszna 132
-
- Last years at Amsterdam 133
-
- Comenius sought true foundation 134
-
- Threefold life. Seeds of learning, virtue, piety 135
-
- Omnia sponte fluant. Analogies 136
-
- Analogies of growth 137
-
- Senses. Foster desire of knowledge 138
-
- No punishments. Words and Things together 139
-
- Languages. System of schools 140
-
- Mother-tongue School. Girls 141
-
- School teaching. Mother’s teaching 142
-
- Comenius and the Kindergarten 143
-
- Starting-points of the sciences 144
-
- Beginnings in Geography, History, &c. 145
-
- Drawing. Education for all 146
-
- Scientific and Religious Agreement 147
-
- Bishop Butler on Educating the Poor 148
-
- Comenius and Bacon 149
-
- “Everything Through the Senses” 150
-
- Error of Neglecting the Senses 151
-
- Insufficiency of the Senses 152
-
- Comenius undervalued the Past 153
-
- Literature and Science 154
-
- Comenius’s use of Analogies 155
-
- Thought-studies and Label-studies 156
-
- Unity of Knowledges 157
-
- Theory and the Practical Man 158
-
- Mother-tongue. Words and Things together 159
-
- Janua Linguarum 160
-
- The Jesuits’ Janua 161
-
- Comenius adapts Jesuits’ Janua 162
-
- Anchoran’s edition of Comenius’s Janua 163
-
- Change to be made by Janua 164
-
- Popularity of Janua shortlived 165
-
- Lubinus projector of Orbis Pictus 166
-
- Orbis Pictus described 167
-
- Why Comenius’s schoolbooks failed 168
-
- “Compendia Dispendia” 169
-
- Comenius and Science of Education 170
-
- Books on Comenius 171
-
-
- =Chapter XI.—The Gentlemen of Port-Royal= 172-196
-
- The Jesuits and the Arnaulds 173
-
- Saint-Cyran and Port-Royal 174
-
- Saint-Cyran an “Evangelical” 175
-
- Short career of the Little Schools 176
-
- Saint-Cyran and Locke on Public Schools 177
-
- Shadow-side of Public Schools 178
-
- The Little Schools for the few only 179
-
- Advantages of great schools 180
-
- Choice of masters and servants. Watch and pray 181
-
- No rivalry or pressure. Freedom from routine 182
-
- Study a delight. Reading French first 183
-
- Literature. Mother-tongue first 184
-
- Beginners’ difficulties lightened 185
-
- Begin with Latin into Mother-tongue 186
-
- Sense before sound. Reason must rule 187
-
- Not Baconian. The body despised 188
-
- Pedagogic writings of Port-Royalists 189
-
- Arnauld. Nicole 190
-
- Light from within. Teach by the Senses 191
-
- Best teaching escapes common tests 192
-
- Studying impossible without a will 193
-
- Against making beginnings bitter 194
-
- Port-Royal advance. Books on Port-Royal 195
-
- Rollin, Compayré, &c. 196
-
-
- =Chapter XII.—Some English Writers before Locke= 197-218
-
- Birth of Realism 198
-
- Realist Leaders not schoolmasters 199
-
- John Brinsley. Charles Hoole 200
-
- Hoole’s Realism 201
-
- Art of teaching. Abraham Cowley 202
-
- Authors and schoolmasters. J. Dury 203
-
- Disorderly use of our natural faculties 204
-
- Dury’s watch simile 205
-
- Senses, 1st; imagination, 2nd; memory, 3rd 206
-
- Petty’s battlefield simile 207
-
- Petty’s realism 208
-
- Cultivate observation 209
-
- Petty on children’s activities 210
-
- Hand-work. Education for all. Bellers 211
-
- Milton and School-Reform 212
-
- Milton as spokesman of Christian Realists 213
-
- Language an instrument. Object of education 214
-
- Milton for barrack life and Verbal Realism 215
-
- Milton succeeded as man not master 216
-
- He did not advance Science of Education 217
-
- Milton an educator of mankind 218
-
-
- =Chapter XIII.—Locke. (1632-1704.)= 219-238
-
- Locke’s two main characteristics 220
-
- 1st, Truth for itself. 2nd, Reason for Truth 221
-
- Locke’s definition of knowledge 222
-
- Knowing without seeing 223
-
- “Discentem credere oportet” 224
-
- Locke’s “Knowledge” and the schoolmaster’s 225
-
- “Knowledge” in Geography 226
-
- For children, health and habits 227
-
- Everything educative forms habits 228
-
- Confusion about special cases. Wax 229
-
- Locke behind Comenius 230
-
- Humanists, Realists, and Trainers 231
-
- Caution against classifiers 232
-
- Locke and development 233
-
- Was Locke a utilitarian? 234
-
- Utilitarianism defined 235
-
- Locke not utilitarian in education 236
-
- Locke’s Pisgah Vision 237
-
- Science and education. Names of books 238
-
-
- =Chapter XIV.—Jean-Jacques Rousseau. (1712-1778.)= 239-272
-
- Middle Age system fell in 18th century 240
-
- Do the opposite to the usual 241
-
- Family life. No education before reason 242
-
- Rousseau “neglects” essentials. Lose time 243
-
- Early education negative 244
-
- Childhood the sleep of reason 245
-
- Start from study of the child 246
-
- Rousseau’s paradoxes un-English 247
-
- Man the corrupter. The three educations 248
-
- The aim, living thoroughly 249
-
- Children not small men 250
-
- Schoolmasters’ contempt for childhood 251
-
- Schoolroom rubbish 252
-
- Ideas before symbols 253
-
- Right ideas for children 254
-
- Child-gardening. Child’s activity 255
-
- No sitting still or reading 256
-
- Memory without books 257
-
- Use of the senses in childhood 258
-
- Intellect based on the senses 259
-
- Cultivation of the senses 260
-
- Music and drawing 261
-
- Drawing from objects. Morals 262
-
- Contradictory statements on morals 263
-
- The material world and the moral 264
-
- Shun over-directing 265
-
- Lessons out of school. Questioning. At 12 266
-
- No book-learning. Study of nature 267
-
- Against didactic teaching 268
-
- Rousseau exaggerates about self-teaching 269
-
- Learn with effort 270
-
- Hand-work. The “New Education” 271
-
- The Teacher’s business 272
-
-
- =Chapter XV.—Basedow and the Philanthropinum= 273-289
-
- Basedow tries to mend religion and teaching 274
-
- Reform needed. Subscription for “Elementary” 275
-
- A journey with Goethe 276
-
- Goethe on Basedow 277
-
- The Philanthropinum opened 278
-
- Basedow’s “Elementary” and “Book of Method” 279
-
- Subjects to be taught 280
-
- French and Latin. Religion 281
-
- “Fred’s Journey to Dessau” 282
-
- At the Philanthropinum 283
-
- Methods in the Philanthropinum 284
-
- The Philanthropinum criticised 285
-
- Basedow’s improvements in teaching children 286
-
- Basedow’s successors 287
-
- Kant on the Philanthropinum 288
-
- Influence of Philanthropinists 289
-
-
- =Chapter XVI.—Pestalozzi. (1746-1827.)= 290-383
-
- His childhood and student-life 291
-
- A Radical Student 292
-
- Turns farmer. Bluntschli’s warning 293
-
- New ideas in farming. A love letter 294
-
- Resolutions. Buys land and marries 295
-
- Pestalozzi turns to education 296
-
- Neuhof filled with children 297
-
- Appeal for the new Institution 298
-
- Bankruptcy. The children sent away 299
-
- Eighteen years of poverty and distress 300
-
- “Gertrude” to the rescue. Pestalozzi’s religion 301
-
- He turns author. “E. H. of Hermit” 302
-
- Pestalozzi’s belief 303
-
- The “Hermit” a Christian 304
-
- Success of “Leonard and Gertrude” 305
-
- Gertrude’s patience tried 306
-
- Being and doing before knowing 307
-
- Pestalozzi’s severity. Women Commissioners 308
-
- Pestalozzi’s seven years of authorship 309
-
- “Citizen of French Republic.” Doubts 310
-
- Waiting. Pestalozzi’s “Inquiry” 311
-
- Pestalozzi’s “Fables” 312
-
- Pestalozzi’s own principles 313
-
- Pestalozzi’s return to action 314
-
- The French at Stanz 315
-
- Pestalozzi at Stanz 316
-
- Success and expulsion 317
-
- At Stanz: Pestalozzi’s own account 318-332
-
- Value of the five months’ experience 333
-
- Pestalozzi a strange Schoolmaster 334
-
- At Burgdorf. First official approval 335
-
- A child’s notion of Pestalozzi’s teaching 336
-
- Pestalozzi engineering a new road 337
-
- Psychologizing instruction 338
-
- School course. Singing; and the beautiful 339
-
- Pestalozzi’s poverty. Kruesi joins him 340
-
- Pestalozzi’s assistants. The Burgdorf Institute 341
-
- Success of the Burgdorf Institute 342
-
- Reaction. Pestalozzi and Napoleon I 343
-
- Fellenberg, Pestalozzi goes to Yverdun 344
-
- A portrait of Pestalozzi 345
-
- Prussia adopts Pestalozzianism 346
-
- Ritter and others at Yverdun 347
-
- Causes of failure at Yverdun 348
-
- Report made by Father Girard 349
-
- Girard’s mistake. Schmid in flight 350
-
- Schmid’s return. Pestalozzi’s fame found useful 351
-
- Dr. Bell’s visit. Death of Mrs. Pestalozzi 352
-
- Works republished. Clindy. Yverdun left. Death 353, 354
-
- New aim: develop organism 354
-
- True dignity of man 355
-
- Education for all. Mothers’ part. Jacob’s Ladder 356
-
- Educator only superintends 357
-
- First, moral development 358
-
- Moral and religious the same 359
-
- Second, intellectual development 360
-
- Learning by “intuition” 361
-
- Buisson and Jullien on intuition 362
-
- Pestalozzi and Locke 363
-
- Subjects for, and art of, teaching 364
-
- “Mastery” 365
-
- The body’s part in education 366
-
- Learning must not be play 367
-
- Singing and drawing 368
-
- Morf’s summing-up 369
-
- Joseph Payne’s summing-up 370
-
- The “two nations.” Mother’s lessons 371
-
- Mistakes in teaching children 372
-
- Children and their teachers 373
-
- “Preparatory” Schools 374
-
- Young boys ill taught at school 375
-
- English folk-schools not Pestalozzian 376
-
- Schools judged by results 377
-
- Pupil-teachers. Teaching not educating 378
-
- Lowe or Pestalozzi? 379
-
- Chief force, personality of the teacher 380
-
- English care for unessentials 381
-
- Aim at the ideal 382
-
- Use of theorists. Books 383
-
-
- =Chapter XVII.—Friedrich Froebel. (1783-1852.)= 384-413
-
- Difficulty in understanding Froebel 385
-
- A lad’s quest of unity 386
-
- Froebel wandering without rest 387
-
- Finds his vocation. With Pestalozzi 388
-
- Froebel at the Universities 389
-
- Through the Freiheits-krieg. Mineralogy 390
-
- The “New Education” started 391
-
- At Keilhau. “Education of Man” published 392
-
- Froebel fails in Switzerland 393
-
- The first Kindergarten 394
-
- Froebel’s last years. Prussian edict against him. His end 395
-
- Author’s attitude towards Reformers 396
-
- Difficulties with Froebel 397
-
- “Cui omnia unum sunt” 398
-
- Froebel’s ideal 399
-
- Theory of development 400
-
- Development through self-activity 401
-
- True idea found in Nature 402
-
- God acts and man acts 403
-
- The formative and creative instinct 404
-
- Rendering the inner outer 405
-
- Care for “young plants.” Kindergarten 406
-
- Child’s restlessness: how to use it 407
-
- Employments in Kindergarten 408
-
- No schoolwork in Kindergarten 409
-
- Without the idea the “gifts” fail 410
-
- The New Education and the old 411
-
- The old still vigorous 412
-
- Science the thought of God. Some Froebelians 413
-
-
- =Chapter XVIII.—Jacotot, a Methodizer. (1770-1840.)= 414-438
-
- Self-teaching 415
-
- 1. All can learn 416
-
- 2. Everyone can teach 417
-
- Can he teach facts he does not know? 418
-
- Languages? Sciences? 419
-
- Arts such as drawing and music? 420
-
- True teacher within the learner 421
-
- Training rather than teaching 422
-
- 3. “Tout est dans tout.” Quidlibet ex quolibet 423
-
- Connexion of knowledges 424
-
- Connect with model book. Memorizing 425
-
- Ways of studying the model book 426
-
- Should the book be made or chosen? 427
-
- Robertsonian plan 428
-
- Hints for exercises 429
-
- The good of having learnt 430
-
- The old Cambridge “mathematical man” 431
-
- Waste of memory at school 432
-
- How to stop this waste 433
-
- Multum, non multa. De Morgan. Helps. Stephen 434
-
- Jacotot’s plan for reading and writing 435
-
- For the mother-tongue 436
-
- Method of investigation 437
-
- Jacotot’s last days 438
-
-
- =Chapter XIX.—Herbert Spencer= 439-469
-
- Same knowledge for discipline and use? 440
-
- Different stages, different knowledges 441
-
- Relative value of knowledges 442
-
- Knowledge for self-preservation 443
-
- Useful knowledge _versus_ the classics 444
-
- Special instruction _versus_ education 445
-
- Scientific knowledge and money-making 446
-
- Knowledge about rearing offspring 447
-
- Knowledge of history: its nature and use 448
-
- Use of history 449
-
- Employment of leisure hours 450
-
- Poetry and the Arts 451
-
- More than science needed for complete living 452
-
- Objections to Spencer’s curriculum 453
-
- Citizen’s duties. Things not to teach 454
-
- Need of a science of education 455
-
- Hope of a science 456
-
- From simple to complex: known to unknown 457
-
- Connecting schoolwork with life outside 458
-
- Books and life 459
-
- Mistakes in grammar teaching 460
-
- From indefinite to definite: concrete to abstract 461
-
- The Individual and the Race. Empirical beginning 462
-
- Against “telling.” Effect of bad teaching 463
-
- Learning should be pleasurable 464
-
- Can learning be made interesting? 465
-
- Apathy from bad teaching 466
-
- Should learning be made interesting? 467
-
- Difference between theory and practice 468
-
- Importance of Herbert Spencer’s work 469
-
-
- =Chapter XX.—Thoughts and Suggestions= 470-491
-
- Want of an ideal 471
-
- Get pupils to work hard 472
-
- For this arouse interest. Wordsworth 473
-
- Interest needed for activity 474
-
- Teaching young children 475
-
- Value of pictures 476
-
- Dr. Vater at Leipzig 477
-
- Dr. Vogel and Dr. Vater 478
-
- First knowledge of numbers. Grubé 479
-
- Measuring and weighing. Reading-books 480
-
- Respect for books. Grammar. Reading 481
-
- Silent and Vocal Reading 482
-
- Memorising poetry. Composition 483
-
- Correcting exercises. Three kinds of books 484
-
- No epitomes 485
-
- Ascham, Bacon, Goldsmith, against them 486
-
- Arouse interest. Dr. Arnold’s historical primer 487
-
- A Macaulay, not Mangnall, wanted 488
-
- Beginnings in history and geography 489
-
- Tales of Travelers 490
-
- Results positive and negative 491
-
-
- =Chapter XXI.—The Schoolmaster’s Moral and Religious Influence= 492-503
-
- Master’s power, how gained and lost 493
-
- Masters, the open and the reserved 494
-
- Danger of excess either way 495
-
- High ideal. Danger of low practice 496
-
- Harm from overworking teachers 497
-
- Refuge in routine work. Small schools 498
-
- Influence through the Sixth. Day schools wanted 499
-
- Teaching religion in England and Germany 500
-
- Religious teaching connected with worship 501
-
- Education to goodness and piety 502
-
- How to avoid narrowmindedness 503
-
-
- =Chapter XXII.—Conclusion= 504-526
-
- A growing science of education 505
-
- Jesuits the first Reformers 506
-
- The Jesuits cared for more than classics 507
-
- Rabelais for “intuition” 508
-
- Montaigne for educating mind and body 509
-
- 17th century reaction against books 510
-
- Reaction not felt in schools and the Universities 511
-
- Comenius begins science of education 512
-
- Locke’s teacher a disposer of influence 513
-
- Locke and public schools. Escape from “idols” 514
-
- Rousseau’s clean sweep 515
-
- Benevolence of Nature. Man disturbs 516
-
- We arrange sequences, capitalise ideas 517
-
- Loss and gain from tradition 518
-
- Rousseau for observing and following 519
-
- Rousseau exposed “school-learning” 520
-
- Function of “things” in education 521
-
- “New Education” started by Rousseau 522
-
- Drawing out. Man and the other animals 523
-
- Intuition. Man an organism, a doer and creator 524
-
- Antithesis of Old and New Education 525
-
- Drill needed. What the Thinkers do for us 526
-
-
- =Appendix.= Class Matches. Words and Things. Books for
- Teachers, &c. 527-547
-
-
-
-
-I
-
-EFFECTS OF THE RENASCENCE.
-
-
-§ 1. The history of education, much as it has been hitherto neglected,
-especially in England, must have a great future before it. If we ignore
-the Past we cannot understand the Present, or forecast the Future. In
-this book I am going to speak of Reformers or Innovators who aimed at
-changing what was handed down to them; but the Radical can no more escape
-from the Past, than the Conservative can stereotype it. It acts not by
-attraction only, but no less by repulsion. There have been thinkers in
-latter times who have announced themselves as the executioners of the
-Past and laboured to destroy all it has bequeathed to us. They have
-raised the ferocious cry, “_Vive la destruction! Vive la mort! Place à
-l’avenir!_ Hurrah for destruction! Hurrah for death! Make room for the
-world that is to be!” But their very hatred of the Past has brought
-them under the influence of it. “Do just the opposite of what has been
-done and you will do right,” said Rousseau; and this rule of negation
-would make the Past regulate the Present and the Future no less than its
-opposite, “Do always what is usual.”
-
-If we cannot get free from the Past in the domain of thought, still less
-can we in action. Custom is to all our activities what the mainspring is
-to the watch. We may bring forces into play to make the watch go faster
-or slower, but if we took out the mainspring it would not go at all. For
-_our_ mainspring we are indebted to the Past.
-
-§ 2. In studying the Past we must give our special attention to those
-periods in which the course of ideas takes, as the French say, a new
-bend.[3] Such a period was the Renascence. Then it was that the latest
-bend was given to the educational ideal of the civilized world; and
-though we seem now again to have arrived at a period of change, we are
-still, perhaps far more than we are aware, affected by the ideas of the
-great scholars who guided the intellect of Europe in the Revival of
-Learning.
-
-§ 3. From the beginning to the end of the fifteenth century the balance
-was trembling between two kinds of culture, and the fate of the schoolboy
-depended on the result. In this century men first got a correct
-conception of the globe they were inhabiting. Hitherto they had not even
-professed to have any knowledge of geography; there is no mention of it
-in the Trivium and Quadrivium which were then supposed to form the cycle
-of things known, if not of things knowable. But Columbus and Vasco da
-Gama were grand teachers of geography, and their lessons were learnt as
-far as civilization extended.
-
-The impetus thus given to the study of the earth might, at the beginning
-of the sixteenth century, have engrossed the mind of Europe with the
-material world, had not the leaning to physical science been encountered
-and overcome by an impulse derived from another discovery. About the
-time of the discovery of America there also came to light the literatures
-of Greece and Rome.
-
-§ 4. When I speak of the discovery of the ancient literatures as
-rivalling that of America, this use of the word “discovery” may be
-disputed. It may be urged that though the Greek language and literature
-were unknown in the West of Europe till they were brought there by the
-fugitives after the fall of Constantinople in 1453, yet the works of the
-great Latin writers had always been known in Italy, and Dante declares
-himself the disciple of Virgil. And yet I cannot give up the word
-“discovery.” In the life of an individual it sometimes happens that he
-suddenly acquires as it were a new sense. The world around him remains
-the same as before, but it is not the same to him. A film passes from
-his eyes, and what has been ordinary and unmeaning suddenly becomes a
-source of wonder and delight to him. Something similar happens at times
-in the history of the general mind; indeed our own century has seen a
-remarkable instance of it. In reading the thoughts of great writers of
-earlier times, we cannot but be struck, not only with their ignorance of
-the material world, but also with their ignorance of their ignorance.
-Little as they know, they often speak as if they knew everything. Newton
-could see that he was like a child discovering a few shells while the
-unexplored ocean lay before him; but in those days it required the
-intellect of a Newton to understand this. To the other children the
-ocean seemed to conceal nothing, and they innocently thought that all
-the shells, or nearly all, had been picked up. It was reserved for the
-people of our own century to become aware of the marvels which lie around
-us in the material world, and to be fascinated by the discovery. If the
-human race could live through several civilizations without opening its
-eyes to the wonders of the earth it inhabits, and then could suddenly
-become aware of them, we may well understand its retaining unheeded the
-literatures of Greece and Rome for centuries, and at length as it were
-discovering them, and turning to them with unbounded enthusiasm and
-delight.
-
-As students of education we can hardly attach too much importance to
-this great revolution. For nearly three centuries the curriculum in the
-public schools of Europe remained what the Renascence had made it. We
-have again entered on an age of change, but we are still much influenced
-by the ideas of the Renascence, and the best way to understand the forces
-now at work is to trace them where possible to their origin. Let us then
-consider what the Renascence was, and how it affected the educational
-system.
-
-§ 5. In endeavouring to understand the Renascence, we cannot do
-better than listen to what Mark Pattison says of it in his “Life of
-Casaubon”:—“In the fifteenth century was revealed to a world which had
-hitherto been trained to logical analysis, the beauty of literary form.
-The conception of style or finished expression had died out with the
-pagan schools of rhetoric. It was not the despotic act of Justinian in
-closing the schools of Athens which had suppressed it. The sense of art
-in language decayed from the same general causes which had been fatal
-to all artistic perception. Banished from the Roman Empire in the sixth
-century or earlier, the classical conception of beauty of form re-entered
-the circle of ideas after near a thousand years of oblivion and abeyance.
-Cicero and Virgil, Livius and Ovid, had been there all along, but the
-idea of composite harmony on which their works were constructed was
-wanting. The restored conception, as if to recoup itself for its long
-suppression, took entire possession of the mind of Europe. The first
-period of the Renascence passed in adoration of the awakened beauty, and
-in efforts to copy and multiply it.”
-
-§ 6. Here Mark Pattison speaks as if the conception of beauty of form
-belonged exclusively to the ancients and those who learnt of them. This
-seems to require some abatement. There are points in which mediæval
-art far excelled the art of the Renascence. The thirteenth century, as
-Archbishop Trench has said, was “rich in glorious creations of almost
-every kind;” and in that century our great English architect, Street,
-found the root of all that is best in modern art. (See “Dublin Afternoon
-Lectures,” 1868.)
-
-But there are expressions of beauty to which the Greeks, and those who
-caught their spirit, were keenly alive, and to which the people of the
-Middle Age seem to have been blind. The first is beauty in the human
-form; the second is beauty in literature.
-
-The old delight in beauty in the human form has never come back to us.
-Mr. Ruskin tells us we are an ugly race, with ill-shapen limbs, and
-well pleased with our ugliness and deformity, and in reply we only
-mutter something about the necessity of clothing both for warmth and
-decency. But as to the other expression of beauty, beauty in literature,
-the mind of Europe again became conscious of it in the fifteenth and
-sixteenth centuries. The re-awakening of this sense of beauty we call the
-Renascence.
-
-§ 7. Before we consider the effect of this intellectual revolution on
-education, let us be sure that we are not “paying ourselves with words,”
-and that we know exactly what we mean by “literature.”
-
-When the conceptions of an individual mind are expressed in a permanent
-form of words, we get literature. The sum total of all the permanent
-forms of expression in one language make up the literature of that
-language; and if no one has given his conceptions a form which has
-been preserved, the language is without a literature. There are then
-two things essential to a literary work: first, the conceptions of an
-individual mind; second, a permanent form of expression. Hence it follows
-that the domain of literature is distinct from the domain of natural or
-mathematical science. Science does not give us the conceptions of an
-individual mind, but it tells us what every rational person who studies
-the subject must think. And science is entirely independent of any form
-of words: a proposition of Euclid is science; a sonnet of Wordsworth’s
-is literature. We learn from Euclid certain truths which we should
-have learnt from some one else if Euclid had never existed, and the
-propositions may be conveyed equally well in different forms of words
-and in any language. But a sonnet of Wordsworth’s conveys thought and
-feeling peculiar to the poet; and even if the same thought and feeling
-were conveyed to us in other words, we should lose at least half of what
-he has given us. Poetry is indeed only one kind of literature, but it is
-the highest kind; and what is true of literary works in verse, is true
-also in a measure of literary works in prose. So great is the difference
-between science and literature, that in literature, as the first Lord
-Lytton said, the best books are generally the oldest; in science they are
-the newest.
-
-§ 8. At present we are concerned with literature only. There are two ways
-in which a work of literature may excite our admiration and affect our
-minds. These are, first, by the beauty of the conceptions it conveys to
-us; and second, by the beauty of the language in which it conveys them.
-In the greatest works the two excellences will be combined.[4]
-
-Now the literary taste proper fastens especially on the second of the
-two, _i.e._, on beauty of expression; and the Renascence was the revival
-of literary taste. “It was,” as Mark Pattison says, “the conception of
-style or finished expression which had died out with the pagan schools
-of rhetoric, and which re-entered the circle of ideas after a thousand
-years of oblivion and abeyance.” If we lose sight of this, we shall be
-perplexed by the unbounded enthusiasm which we find in the sixteenth
-century for the old classics. What great evangel, we may ask, had Cicero
-and Virgil and Ovid, or even Plato and the Greek dramatists, for men who
-lived when Europe had experienced a thousand years of Christianity? The
-answer is simple. They had none whatever. Their thoughts and conceptions
-were not adapted to the wants of the new world. The civilization of the
-Christian nations of the sixteenth century was a very different thing
-from the civilization of Greece and Rome. It had its own thoughts, its
-own problems, its own wants. The old-world thoughts could not be thought
-over again by it. This indeed was felt though not admitted by the
-Renascence scholars themselves. Had it been the thoughts of the ancients
-which seemed to them so valuable they would have made some effort to
-diffuse those thoughts in the languages of the modern world. Much as
-a great literary work loses by translation, there may still be enough
-left of it to be a source of instruction and delight. The thoughts of
-Aristotle, conveyed in a Latin translation of an Arabic translation,
-profoundly affected the mind of Europe in the Middle Ages. The Bible, or
-Book _par excellence_, is known to few indeed in its original form. Some
-great writers—Cervantes, and Shakespeare, and the author of the “Arabian
-Nights”—please and instruct nations who know not the sound of the
-languages wherein their works are composed. If then the great writers of
-Greece and Rome had been valued for their matter, their works would have
-been translated by the Renascence scholars as the Bible was translated
-by the Reformers, and the history of modern education would have taken a
-very different turn from that which awaited it. But it was not so. The
-Renascence scholars did all they could to discourage translations. For
-the grand discovery which we call the Revival of Learning was, not that
-the ancients had something to say, but that whatever they had to say they
-knew how to say it.
-
-§ 9. And thus it happens that in the period of change, when Europe was
-re-arranging its institutions, developing new ideas and settling into new
-grooves of habit, we find the men most influential in education entirely
-fascinated by beauty of expression, and this in two ancient languages, so
-that the one thing needful for the young seemed to them an introduction
-to the study of ancient writings. The inevitable consequence was this:
-education became a mere synonym for instruction in Latin and Greek. The
-only ideal set up for the “educated” was the classical scholar.
-
-§ 10. Perhaps the absurdity of taking this ideal, an ideal which is
-obviously fitted for a small class of men only, and proposing it for
-general adoption, was partly concealed from the Renascence scholars
-by the peculiar circumstances of their age. No doubt they thought
-literature would in the future be a force capable of much wider
-application than it had ever been before. True, literature had till
-then affected a small class only. Literature meant books, books meant
-MSS., and MSS. were rare and costly. Literature, the embodiment of grand
-thoughts in grand words, had existed before letters, or at least without
-letters. The Homeric poems, for example, had been known to thousands
-who could not read or write. But beauty of expression naturally got
-associated and indeed confounded with the art by which it was preserved;
-so the creations of the mind, when embodied in particular combinations
-of words, acquired the name of literature or letters, and became
-almost exclusively the affair of those who had opportunities of study,
-opportunities afforded only to the few. During the Middle Ages every
-one who could read was allowed his “privilege of clergy;” that is, he
-was assumed to be a clergyman. Literature then was not thought of as a
-means of instruction. But at the very time that the beauty of the ancient
-writings dawned on the mind of Europe, a mechanical invention seemed to
-remove all hindrances to the spread of literature. The scholars seized on
-the printing press and thought by means of it to give all “the educated”
-a knowledge of classics.
-
-§ 11. We cannot help speculating what would have been the effect of the
-discovery of printing if it had been made at another time. As there may
-be literature without books, so there may be books without literature. If
-at the time of the invention of printing there had been no literature,
-no creations of individual minds embodied in permanent forms of speech,
-books might have been used as apparatus in a mental gymnasium, or they
-might have been made the means of conveying information. But just then
-the intellect of Europe was tired of mental gymnastics. It had taken
-exercise in the Trivium like a squirrel in its revolving cage, and was
-vexed to find it made no progress.[5] As for information there was little
-to be had. The age of observation and of physical science was not yet.
-So the printing press was entirely at the service of the new passion for
-literature and the scholars dreamed of the general diffusion of literary
-culture by means of printed books.
-
-§ 12. For some two centuries the literary spirit had supreme control
-over the intellect of Europe, and the literary spirit could then find
-satisfaction nowhere but in the study of the ancient classics. The
-natural consequence was that throughout this period the “educated man”
-was supposed to be identified with the classical scholar. The great rival
-of the literary spirit, the scientific spirit which cares for nothing
-but sequences independent of the human mind, began to show itself early
-in the seventeenth century: its first great champion was Francis Bacon.
-But by this time the school course of study had been settled, and two
-centuries had to elapse before the scientific spirit could unsettle it
-again. Even now when we speak of a man as “well-educated” we are commonly
-understood to mean that in his youth he was taught the two classical
-languages.
-
-§ 13. The taking of the classical scholar as the only ideal of the
-educated man has been a fruitful source of evil in the history of
-education.
-
-I. This ideal exalted the learner above the doer. As far back as
-Xenophon, we find a contest between the passive ideal and the active,
-between the excellence which depends on a knowledge of what others have
-thought and done and the excellence which comes of thinking and doing.
-But the excellence derived from learning had never been highly esteemed.
-To be able to repeat Homer’s poetry was regarded in Greece as we now
-regard a pleasing accomplishment; but the dignity of the learned man as
-such was not within the range of Greek ideas. Many of the Romans after
-they began to study Greek literature certainly piqued themselves on being
-good Greek scholars, and Cicero occasionally quotes with all the airs
-of a pedant; but so thoroughly was the contrary ideal, the ideal of the
-_doer_, established at Rome, that nobody ever dreamt of placing its rival
-above it. In the decline of the Empire, especially at Alexandria, we
-find for the first time honours paid to the learned man; but he was soon
-lost sight of again. At the Renascence he burst into sudden blaze, and
-it was then discovered that he was what every man would wish to be. Thus
-the Renascence scholars, notwithstanding their admiration of the great
-nations of antiquity, set up an ideal which those nations would heartily
-have despised. The schoolmaster very readily adopted this ideal; and
-schools have been places of learning, not training, ever since.
-
-§ 14. II. The next defect I observe in the Renascence ideal is this:
-it attributes to literature more direct power over common life than
-literature has ever had, or is ever likely to have.
-
-I say _direct_ power, for indirectly literature is one of the grand
-forces which act on all of us; but it acts on us through others, its
-most important function being to affect great intellects, the minds of
-those who think out and act out important changes. Its direct action
-on the mass of mankind is after all but insignificant. We have seen
-that literature consists in permanent forms of words, expressing the
-conceptions of individual minds; and these forms will be studied only by
-those who are interested in the conceptions or find pleasure in the mode
-in which they are expressed. Now the vast majority of ordinary people are
-without these inducements to literary study. They take a keen interest
-in everything connected with their relations and intimate friends, and
-a weaker interest in the thinkings and sayings and doings of every one
-else who is personally known to them; but as to the mental conceptions
-of those who lived in other times, or if now alive are not known even
-by sight, the ordinary person is profoundly indifferent to them; and
-of course delight in expression, as such, is out of the question. The
-natural consequence is that the habit of reading books is by no means
-common. Mark Pattison observes that there are few books to be found in
-most English middle-class homes, and he says: “The dearth of books is
-only the outward and visible sign of the mental torpor which reigns in
-those destitute regions” (see “Fortnightly Review,” November, 1877).
-I much doubt if he would have found more books in the middle-class
-homes of the Continent. There is only one kind of reading that is
-nearly universal—the reading of newspapers; and the newspaper lacks the
-element of permanence, and belongs to the domain of talk rather than of
-literature.
-
-Even when we get among the so-called “educated,” we find that those who
-care for literature form a very small minority. The rest _have_ of
-course read Shakespeare and Milton and Walter Scott and Tennyson, but
-_they do not read them_. The lion’s share of our time and thoughts and
-interests must be given to our business or profession, whatever that may
-be; and in few instances is this connected with literature. For the rest,
-whatever time or thought a man can spare from his calling is mostly given
-to his family, or to society, or to some hobby which is not literature.
-
-And love of literature is not shown in such reading as is common. The
-literary spirit shows itself, as I said, in appreciating beauty of
-expression, and how far beauty of expression is cared for we may estimate
-from the fact that few people think of reading anything a second time.
-The ordinary reader is profoundly indifferent about style, and will not
-take the trouble to understand ideas. He keeps to periodicals or light
-fiction, which enables the mind to loll in its easy chair (so to speak)
-and see pass before it a series of pleasing images. An idea, as Mark
-Pattison says, “is an excitant, comes from mind and calls forth mind;
-an image is a sedative;” and most people when they take up a book are
-seeking a sedative.
-
-So literature is after all a very small force in the lives of most men,
-and perhaps even less in the lives of most women. Why then are the
-employments of the school-room arranged on the supposition that it is
-the grand force of all? The reason is, that we have inherited from the
-Renascence a false notion of the function of literature.
-
-§ 15. III. I must now point out a fault in the Renascence ideal which is
-perhaps the most remarkable of all. Those by whom this ideal was set up
-were entirely possessed by an enthusiasm for literature, and they made
-the mistake of attributing to literature a share in general culture
-which literature seems incapable of taking. After this we could little
-have expected that the new ideal would exclude literature from the
-schoolroom, and yet so it has actually turned out.
-
-As a literary creation contains the conceptions of an individual mind
-expressed in a permanent form of words, it exists only for those who can
-understand the words or at least the conceptions.
-
-From this it follows that literature for the young must have its
-expression in the vernacular. The instances are rare indeed in which any
-one below the age of fifteen or sixteen (perhaps I might put the limit a
-year or two higher) understands any but the mother tongue. In the mother
-tongue indeed some forms of literature exercise a great influence over
-young minds. Ballad literature seems especially to belong to youth, the
-youth of nations and of individuals. Aristotle educated Alexander with
-Homer; and we can easily imagine the effect which the _Iliad_ must have
-had on the young Greeks. Although in the days of Plato instruction was
-not confined to literature, he gives this account of part of the training
-in the Athenian schools: “Placing the pupils on benches, the instructors
-make them read and learn by heart the poems of good poets in which are
-many moral lessons, many tales and eulogies and lays of the brave men of
-old; that the boys may imitate them with emulation and strive to become
-such themselves.” Here we see a very important function attributed to
-literature in the bringing up of the young; but the literature so used
-must obviously be in the language of the learners.
-
-The influence of a literary work may, however, extend itself far beyond
-the limits of its own language. When our minds can receive and take
-pleasure in the conceptions of a great writer, he may speak to us by an
-interpreter. At the Renascence there were books in the world which might
-have affected the minds of the young—Plutarch, Herodotus, and above all
-Homer. But, as I have already said, it was not the conceptions, but the
-literary form of the ancients, which seemed to the Renascence scholars
-of such inestimable value, so they refused to give the conceptions in
-any but the original words. “Studying the ancients in translations,”
-says Melancthon, “is merely looking at the shadow.” He could not have
-made a greater mistake. As far as the young are concerned the truth
-is exactly the reverse. The translation would give the substance: the
-original can give nothing but the shadow. Let us take the experience of
-Mr. Kinglake, the author of “Eothen.” This distinguished Eton man, fired
-by his remembrances of Homer, visited the Troad. He had, as he tells us,
-“clasped the _Iliad_ line by line to his brain with reverence as well
-as love.” Well done, Eton! we are tempted to exclaim when we read this
-passage: here at least is proof that some _literature_ was taught in
-those days of the dominion of the classics. But stop! It seems that this
-clasping did not take place at Eton, but in happy days before Eton, when
-Kinglake knew no Greek and read translations. “Heroic days are these,”
-he writes, “but the Dark Ages of schoolboy life come closing over them.
-I suppose it’s all right in the end: yet, by Jove! at first sight it
-does seem a sad intellectual fall.... The dismal change is ordained and
-thin meagre Latin (the same for everybody) with small shreds and patches
-of Greek, is thrown like a pauper’s pall over all your early lore;
-instead of sweet knowledge, vile monkish doggrel, grammars and graduses,
-dictionaries and lexicons, horrible odds and ends of dead languages
-are given you for your portion, and down you fall from Roman story to a
-three-inch scrap of ‘Scriptores Romani’—from Greek poetry down, down, to
-the cold rations of ‘Poetæ Græci,’ cut up by commentators and served out
-by schoolmasters!” (“Eothen,” the Troad.)
-
-We see from this how the Renascence ideal had the extraordinary effect
-of banishing literature from the school-room. Literature has indeed not
-ceased to influence the young; it still counts for much more in their
-lives than in the lives of their seniors; but we all know who are the
-writers who affected our own minds in childhood and youth, and who affect
-the minds of our pupils now—not Eutropius or Xenophon, or Cæsar or
-Cicero, but Defoe and Swift and Marryatt and Walter Scott. The ancient
-writings which were literature to Melancthon and Erasmus, as they are
-still to many in our universities and elsewhere, can never be literature
-to the young. Most of the classical authors read in the schoolroom could
-not be made literature to young people even by means of translations,
-for they were men who wrote for men and women only. We see that it
-would be absurd to make an ordinary boy of twelve or fourteen study
-Burke or Pope. And if we do not make him read Burke, whose language he
-understands, why do we make him read Cicero whose language he does not
-understand? If he cannot appreciate Pope, why do we teach him Horace?
-The Renascence gives us the explanation of this singular anomaly. The
-scholars of that age were so delighted with the “composite harmony” of
-the ancient classics that the study of these classics seemed to them the
-one thing worth living for. The main, if not the only object they kept
-in view in bringing up the young was to gain for them admission to the
-treasure house; and though young people could not understand the ancient
-writings as literature, they might at least study them as language
-and thus be ready to enjoy them as literature in after-life. Thus the
-subject of instruction in the schoolroom came to be, not the classics
-but, the classical languages. The classics were used as school books,
-but the only meaning thought of was the meaning of the detached word or
-at best of the detached sentence. You ask a child learning to read if he
-understands what he is reading about, and he says, “I can’t think of the
-meaning because I am thinking of the words.” The same thing happened in
-the schoolboy’s study of the classics, and so it has come to pass that to
-this day the great writers of antiquity discharge a humble function which
-they certainly never contemplated.
-
- “Great Cæsar’s body dead and turned to clay
- May stop a hole to keep the wind away.”
-
-And great Cæsar’s mind has been turned to uses almost as paltry. He
-has in fact written for the schoolroom not a commentary on the Wars
-of Gaul—nothing of the kind—but simply a book of exercises in Latin
-construing; and an excellent book it would be if he had only graduated
-the difficulties better.
-
-§ 16. IV. There is yet another weakness about the Renascence ideal—a
-weakness from which most ideals are free.
-
-Most ideals have this merit at least, that he who makes even a feeble and
-abortive attempt to reach them is benefited in proportion to his advance,
-however small that advance may be. If he fails to seize the coat of gold,
-he carries away, as the proverb tells us, at least one of the sleeves;
-or, to use George Herbert’s metaphor—
-
- “ ... Who aimeth at the sky,
- Shoots higher far than he who means a tree.”
-
-But the learned ideal has not even this advantage. The first stage, the
-study of the ancient languages, is so totally different from the study of
-the ancient literatures to which it is the preliminary, that the student
-who never goes beyond this first stage either gets no benefit at all, or
-a benefit which is not of the kind intended. Suppose I am within a walk,
-though a long one, of the British Museum, and hearing of some valuable
-books in the library, which I can see nowhere else, I set off to consult
-them. In this case it makes no difference to me how valuable the books
-are if I do not get as far as the Museum.[6] My friends may comfort me
-with the assurance that the walk must have done me good. Perhaps so;
-but I left home to get a knowledge of certain books, not to exercise my
-legs. Had exercise been my object I should probably have chosen another
-direction.
-
-Now schoolmasters, since the Renascence, have been in the habit of
-leading all their pupils through the back slums of the Seven Dials and
-Soho in the direction of the British Museum, with the avowed purpose of
-taking them to the library, although they knew full well that not one
-pupil in ten, not one in fifty, would ever reach the door. To produce
-a few scholars able to appreciate the classics of Greece and Rome they
-have sacrificed everybody else; and according to their own showing they
-have condemned a large portion of the upper classes, nearly all the
-middle classes, and quite all the poorer classes to remain “uneducated.”
-And, according to the theory of the schoolroom, one-half of the human
-race—the women—have not been supposed to need education. For them
-“accomplishments” have been held sufficient.
-
-§ 17. V. In conclusion I must point out one effect of the Renascence
-ideal which seems to me no less mischievous than those I have already
-mentioned. This ideal led the schoolmasters to attach little importance
-to the education of _children_. Directly their pupils were old enough for
-Latin Grammar the schoolmasters were quite at home; but till then the
-children’s time seemed to them of small value, and they neither knew nor
-cared to know how to employ it. If the little ones could learn by heart
-forms of words which would afterwards “come in useful,” the schoolmasters
-were ready to assist such learning by unsparing application of the rod,
-but no other learning seemed worthy even of a caning. Absorbed in the
-world of books they overlooked the world of nature. Galileo complains
-that he could not induce them to look through his telescope, for they
-held that truth could be arrived at only by comparison of MSS. No wonder
-then that they had so little sympathy with children, and did not know how
-to teach them. It is by slow degrees that we are breaking away from the
-bad tradition then established, are getting to understand children, and
-with such leaders as Rousseau, Pestalozzi, and Froebel, are investigating
-the best education for them. We no longer think of them as immature men
-and women, but see that each stage has its own completeness, and that
-there is a perfection in childhood which must precede the perfection of
-manhood just as truly as the flower goes before the fruit. “Childhood,”
-says Rousseau, “has its own ways of seeing, feeling, thinking;” and it
-is by studying these that we find out how children should be educated.
-Our connexion with the world of nature seems much closer in our early
-years than ever afterwards. The child’s mind seems drawn out to its
-surroundings. He is intensely interested in the new world in which he
-finds himself, and whilst so many of us grown people need a flapper,
-like the sages of Laputa, to call our attention from our own thoughts to
-anything that meets the eye or ear, the child sees and hears everything,
-and everything seen or heard becomes associated in his mind not so much
-with thought as with feeling. Hence it is that we most of us look back
-wistfully to our early days, and confess sorrowfully that though years
-may have brought “the philosophic mind,”
-
- “ ... Nothing can bring back the hour
- Of splendour in the grass, of glory in the flower.”
-
-The material world then seems to supply just those objects, whether
-birds, beasts, or flowers, by which the child is attracted, and on which
-his faculties will therefore be most naturally and healthily employed.
-But the Renascence schoolmasters had little notion of this. If you think
-that the greatest scholar is the greatest man, you will, as a matter of
-course, place at the other end of the scale those who are not scholars at
-all. An English inspector, who seems to have thought children had been
-created with due regard to the Revised Code of the Privy Council, spoke
-of the infants who could not be classed by their performances in “the
-three R’s” as “the fag end of the school;” and no doubt the Renascence
-schoolmasters considered the children the fag end of humanity. The great
-scholars were indeed far above the race of pedants; but the schoolmasters
-who adopted their ideal were not. And what is a pedant? “A man who has
-got rid of his brains to make room for his learning.”[7] The pedantic
-schoolmasters of the Renascence wished the mind of the pupil to be
-cleared of everything else, that it might have room for the languages
-of Greece and Rome. But what if the mind failed to take in its destined
-freight? In that case the schoolmasters had nothing else for it, and were
-content that it should go empty.
-
-
-
-
-II.
-
-RENASCENCE TENDENCIES.
-
-
-§ 1. In considering and comparing the two great epochs of intellectual
-activity and change in modern times, viz., the sixteenth century and
-the nineteenth, we cannot but be struck with one fundamental difference
-between them.
-
-§ 2. It will affect all our thoughts, as Sir Henry Maine has said,
-whether we place the Golden Age in the Past or in the Future. In the
-nineteenth century the “good time” is supposed to be “coming,” but in
-the sixteenth century all thinkers looked backwards. The great Italian
-scholars gazed with admiration and envy on the works of ancient Greece
-and Rome, and longed to restore the old languages, and as much as
-possible the old world, so that such works might be produced again. Many
-were suspected, not altogether perhaps without reason, of wishing to
-uproot Christianity itself,[8] that they might bring back the Golden Age
-of Pericles.
-
-§ 3. At the same time another movement was going on, principally in
-Germany. Here too, men were endeavouring to throw off the immediate past
-in order to revive the remote past. The religious reformers, like the
-scholars, wished to restore a golden age, only a different age, not the
-age of the Antigone, but the age of the Apostles’ Creed. Thus it happened
-that the scholars and the reformers joined in attaching the very highest
-importance to the ancient languages. Through these languages, and, as
-they thought, through them alone, was it possible to get a glimpse into
-the bygone world in which their soul delighted.
-
-§ 4. But though all joined in extolling the ancient writings, we find at
-the Renascence great differences in the way of regarding these writings
-and in the objects for which they were employed. A consideration of these
-differences will help us to understand the course of education when the
-Renascence was a force no longer.
-
-§ 5. Very powerful in education were the great scholars, of whom Erasmus
-was perhaps the greatest, certainly the most celebrated. In devoting
-their lives to the study of the ancients their object was not merely to
-appreciate literary style, though this was a source of boundless delight
-to them, but also to _understand_ the classical writings and the ancient
-world through them. These men, whom we may call _par excellence_ the
-Scholars, cared indeed before all things for literature; but with all
-their delight in the form they never lost sight of the substance. They
-knew the truth that Milton afterwards expressed in these memorable words:
-“Though a linguist should pride himself to have all the tongues that
-Babel cleft the world into, yet if he have not studied the solid things
-in them as well as the words and lexicons, he were nothing so much to be
-esteemed a learned man as any yeoman or tradesman competently wise in his
-mother dialect only.” (Tractate to Hartlib, § 4).
-
-So Erasmus and the scholars would have all the educated _understand_ the
-classical authors. But to understand words you must know the things to
-which the words refer. Thus the Scholars were led to advocate a partial
-study of things a kind of realism. But we must carefully observe a
-peculiarity of this scholastic realism which distinguished it from the
-realism of a later date—the realism of Bacon. The study of things was
-undertaken not for its own sake, but simply in order to understand books.
-Perhaps some of us are conscious that this kind of literary realism
-has not wholly passed away. We may have observed wild flowers, or the
-changes in tree or cloud, because we find that the best way to understand
-some favourite author, as Wordsworth or Tennyson. This will help us to
-understand the realism of the sixteenth century. The writings of great
-authors have been compared to the plaster globes (“celestial globes” as
-we call them), which assist us in understanding the configuration of the
-stars (_Guesses at Truth_, j. 47). Adopting this simile we may say that
-the Scholars loved to study the globe for its own sake, and when they
-looked at stars they did so with the object of understanding the globe.
-Thus we read of doctors who recommended their pupils to look at actual
-cases of disease as the best commentary on the works of Hippocrates and
-Galen. This kind of realism was good as far as it went, but it did not go
-far. Of course the end in view limited the study, and the Scholars took
-no interest in things except those which were mentioned in the classics.
-They had no desire to investigate the material universe and make
-discoveries for themselves. This is why Galileo could not induce them to
-look through his telescope; for the ancients had no telescopes, and the
-Scholars wished to see nothing that had not been seen by their favourite
-authors. First then we have the Scholars, headed by Erasmus.
-
-§ 6. Next we find a party less numerous and for a time less influential,
-who did care about things for the sake of the things themselves; but
-carried away by the literary current of their age, they sought to learn
-about them not directly, but only by reading. Here again we have a kind
-of realism which is not yet extinct. Some years ago I was assured by a
-Graduate of the University of London who had passed in chemistry, that,
-as far as he knew, he had never seen a chemical in his life: he had got
-all his knowledge from books. While such a thing is possible among us,
-we need not wonder if those who in the sixteenth century prized the
-knowledge of things, allowed books to come between the learner and the
-object of his study, if they regarded Nature as a far-off country of
-which we could know nothing but what great authors reported to us.
-
-As this party, unlike the Scholars, did not delight in literature as
-such, but simply as a means of acquiring knowledge, literary form was
-not valued by them, and they preferred Euclid to Sophocles, Columella
-to Virgil. Seeking to learn about things, not immediately, but through
-words, they have received from Raumer a name they are likely to
-keep—Verbal Realists. In the sixteenth century the greatest of the Verbal
-Realists also gave a hint of Realism proper; for he was no less a man
-than Rabelais.
-
-§ 7. Lastly we come to those who, as it turned out, were to have more
-influence in the schoolroom than the Scholars and the Verbal Realists
-combined. I do not know that these have had any name given them, but for
-distinction sake we may call them _Stylists_. In studying literature
-the Scholars cared both for form and substance, the Verbal Realists for
-substance only, and the Stylists for form only. The Stylists gave up
-their lives, not, like the scholars, to gain a thorough understanding
-of the ancient writings and of the old world, but to an attempted
-reproduction of the ancient languages and of the classical literary form.
-
-§ 8. In marking these tendencies at the Renascence, we must remember
-that though distinguished by their tendencies, these Scholars, Verbal
-Realists, and Stylists, were not divided into clearly defined parties.
-Categories like these no doubt assist us in gaining precision of thought,
-but we must not gain precision at the expense of accuracy. The tendencies
-we have been considering did not act in precisely opposite directions,
-and all were to some extent affected by them. But one tendency was
-predominant in one man and another in another; and this justifies us in
-calling Sturm a Stylist, Erasmus a Scholar, and Rabelais a Verbal Realist.
-
-§ 9. In one respect they were all agreed. The world was to be regenerated
-by means of books. Nothing pleased them more than to think of their age
-as the Revival of Learning.
-
-
-
-
-III.
-
-STURMIUS.
-
-1507-1589.
-
-
-§ 1. The curriculum bequeathed by the Renascence and stereotyped in
-the School Codes of Germany, in the _Ratio_ of the Jesuits, and in the
-English public school system, was greatly influenced by the most famous
-schoolmaster of the fifteen hundreds, John Sturm, who was for over forty
-years Rector of the Strassburg Gymnasium.
-
-§ 2. Sturm was a fine specimen of the successful man: he knew what
-his contemporaries wanted, and that was just what he wanted. “He was
-a blessed fellow,” as Prince Hal says of Poins, “to think as every
-man thought,” and he not only “kept the roadway” himself, but he also
-“personally conducted” great bands of pupils over it, at one time “200
-noblemen, 24 counts and barons, and 3 princes.” What could schoolmaster
-desire more?
-
-§ 3. But I frankly own that Sturm is no favourite of mine, and that I
-think that he did much harm to education. However, his influence in the
-schoolroom was so great that I must not leave him unnoticed; and I give
-some information, taken mainly from Raumer’s account of him, which is
-translated in Henry Barnard’s “German Teachers and Educators.” I have
-also looked at the exhaustive article by Dr. Bossier in K. A. Schmid’s
-_Encyklopädie_ (_sub v._)
-
-§ 4. John Sturm, born at Schleiden in the Eifel, not far from Cologne,
-in 1507, was one of 15 children, and would not have had much teaching
-had not his father been steward to a nobleman, with whose sons he was
-brought up. He always spoke with reverence and affection of his early
-teachers, and from them no doubt he acquired his thirst for learning.
-With the nobleman’s sons and under the guidance of a tutor he was sent
-to Liège, and there he attended a school of the “Brethren of the Life in
-Common,” _alias_ Hieronymites. Many of the arrangements of this school he
-afterwards reproduced in the Strassburg Gymnasium, and in this way the
-good Brethren gained an influence over classical education throughout the
-world.
-
-§ 5. Between the age of 15 and 20 Sturm was at Lyons, and before the end
-of this period he was forced into teaching for a maintenance. He then,
-like many other learned men of the time, turned printer. We next find
-him at the University of Paris, where he thought of becoming a doctor
-of medicine, but was finally carried away from natural science by the
-Renascence devotion to literature, and he became a popular lecturer on
-the classics. From Paris he was called to Strassburg (then, as now, in
-Germany) in 1537. In 1538 he published his plan of a Gymnasium or Grammar
-School, with the title, “The right way of opening schools of literature
-(_De Literarum Ludis recte aperiendis_),” and some years afterwards
-(1565) he published his Letters (_Classicæ Epistolæ_) to the different
-form-masters in his school.
-
-§ 6. The object of teaching is three-fold, says Sturm, “piety, knowledge,
-and the art of expression.” The student should be distinguished by
-reasonable and neat speech (_ratione et oratione_). To attain this the
-boys in his school had to give seven years to the acquirement of a pure
-Latin style; then two years more were devoted to elegance; then five
-years of collegiate life were to be given to the art of Latin speech.
-This course is for ten years carefully mapped out by Sturm in his Letters
-to the masters. The foundation is to be laid in the tenth class, which
-the child enters at seven years old, and in which he learns to read,
-and is turned on to the declensions and conjugations. We have for all
-classes the exact “pensum,” and also specimens of the questions put in
-examination by the _top boy of the next class above_, a hint which was
-not thrown away upon the Jesuits.
-
-§ 7. Sturm cries over the superior advantages of the Roman children.
-“Cicero was but twenty when he delivered his speeches in behalf of
-Quintius and Roscius; but in these days where is there the man even of
-eighty, who could make such speeches? Yet there are books enough and
-intellect enough. What need we further? We need the Latin language and a
-correct method of teaching. Both these we must have before we can arrive
-at the summit of eloquence.”
-
-§ 8. Sturm did not, like Rabelais, put Greek on a level with Latin or
-above it. The reading of Greek words is begun in the sixth class. Hebrew,
-Sturm did not himself learn till he was nearly sixty.
-
-§ 9. With a thousand boys in his school, and carrying on correspondence
-with the leading sovereigns of his age, Sturm was a model of the
-successful man. But in the end “the religious difficulty” was too much
-even for him, and he was dismissed from his post by his opponents “for
-old age and other causes.” Surely the “other causes” need not have been
-mentioned. Sturm was then eighty years old.
-
-§ 10. The successful man in every age is the man who chooses a popular
-and attainable object, and shows tremendous energy in pursuit of it.
-Most people don’t know precisely what they want; and among the few who
-do, nine-tenths or more fail through lack of energy. But Sturm was quite
-clear in his aim, and having settled the means, he showed immense energy
-and strength of will in going through with them. He wanted to restore
-the language of Cicero and Ovid and to give his pupils great power of
-elegant expression in that language. Like all schoolmasters he professed
-that piety and knowledge (which in more modern phrase would be wisdom and
-knowledge) should come first, but like most schoolmasters he troubled
-himself mainly, if not exclusively, about the art of expression. As
-an abstract proposition the schoolmaster admits that to have in your
-head something worth saying is more important than to have the power
-of expression ready in case anything worth saying should “come along.”
-But the schoolmaster’s art always has taken, and I suppose, in the
-main, always will take for its material the means of expression; and
-by preference it chooses a tongue not vulgar or “understanded of the
-people.” Thus the schoolmasters with Sturm at their head set themselves
-to teach _words_—foreign words, and allowed their pupils to study nothing
-else, not even the mother tongue. The satirist who wrote Hudibras has
-stated for us the result—
-
- “No sooner are the organs of the brain
- Quick to receive and stedfast to retain
- Best knowledges, but all’s laid out upon
- Retrieving of the curse of Babylon.
- ...
- And he that is but able to express
- No sense in several languages
- Will pass for learneder than he that’s known
- To speak the strongest reason in his own.”[9]
-
-§ 11. One of the scholars of the Renascence, Hieronymus Wolf, was wise
-enough to see that there might be no small merit in a boy’s silence:
-“Nec minima pueri virtus est tacere cum recte loqui nesciat” (Quoted by
-Parker). But this virtue of silence was not encouraged by Sturm, and
-he determined that by the age of sixteen his pupils should have a fair
-command of expression in Latin and some knowledge of Greek.[10] Latin
-indeed was to supplant the mother tongue, and boys were to be severely
-punished for using their own language. By this we may judge of the
-pernicious effects of following Sturm. And it is a mistake to suppose
-that the unwisdom of tilting at the vernacular was not so much Sturm’s,
-as of the age in which he lived. The typical English schoolmaster of the
-century, Mulcaster, was in this and many other ways greatly in advance of
-Sturm. To him it was plain that we should “care for that most which we
-ever use most, because we need it most.”[11] The only need recognized by
-Sturm was need of the classical languages. Thus he and his admirers led
-the unlucky schoolboy straight into that “slough of Despond”—verbalism,
-in which he has struggled ever since;
-
- “Plunged for some sense, but found no bottom there,
- So learned and floundered on in mere despair.”[12]
-
-
-
-
-IV.
-
-SCHOOLS OF THE JESUITS.
-
-
-§ 1. Since the Revival of Learning, no body of men has played so
-prominent a part in education as the Jesuits. With characteristic
-sagacity and energy they soon seized on education as a stepping-stone
-to power and influence; and with their talent for organization, they
-framed a system of schools which drove all important competitors from the
-field, and made Jesuits the instructors of Catholic, and even, to some
-extent, of Protestant Europe. Their skill in this capacity is attested
-by the highest authorities, by Bacon[13] and by Descartes, the latter of
-whom had himself been their pupil; and it naturally met with its reward:
-for more than one hundred years nearly all the foremost men throughout
-Christendom, both among the clergy and laity, had received the Jesuit
-training, and in most cases retained for life an attachment to their old
-masters.
-
-§ 2. About these Jesuit schools—once so celebrated and so powerful, and
-still existing in great numbers, though little remains of their original
-importance—there does not seem to be much information accessible to the
-English reader. I have, therefore, collected the following particulars
-about them; and refer any one who is dissatisfied with so meagre an
-account, to the works which I have consulted.[14] The Jesuit schools, as
-I said, still exist, but they did their great work in other centuries;
-and I therefore prefer to speak of them as things of the past.[15]
-
-§ 3. When the Jesuits were first formally recognized by a Bull of
-Paul III in 1540, the Bull stated that the Order was formed, among
-other things, “especially for the purpose of instructing boys and
-ignorant persons in the Christian religion.” But the Society well
-understood that secular was more in demand than religious learning;
-and they offered the more valued instruction, that they might have the
-opportunity of inculcating lessons which, to the Society at least, were
-the more valuable. From various Popes they obtained powers for founding
-schools and colleges, for giving degrees, and for lecturing publicly
-at universities. Their foundations rapidly extended in the Romance
-countries, except in France, where they were long in overcoming the
-opposition of the Regular clergy and of the University of Paris. Over
-the Teutonic and Slavonic countries they spread their influence first by
-means of national colleges at Rome, where boys of the different nations
-were trained as missionaries. But, in time, the Jesuits pushed their
-camps forward, even into the heart of the enemy’s country.
-
-§ 4. The system of education to be adopted in all the Jesuit institutions
-was settled during the Generalship of Aquaviva. In 1584 that General
-appointed a School Commission, consisting of six distinguished Jesuits
-from the various countries of Europe. These spent nearly a year in
-Rome, in study and consultation; and the fruit of their labours was
-the ground-work of the _Ratio atque Institutio Studiorum Societatis
-Jesu_. This, however, did not take its final form till twelve other
-commissioners had been at work upon it. It was then (1599) revised and
-approved by Aquaviva and the Fifth and Sixth General Assemblies. By this
-code the Jesuit schools were governed till 1832, when the curriculum was
-enlarged so as to include physical science and modern languages.
-
-§ 5. The Jesuits who formed the _Societas Professa_, _i.e._, those who
-had taken all the vows, had spent from fifteen to eighteen years in
-preparation, viz., two years as novices and one as approved scholars,
-during which they were engaged chiefly in religious exercises, three
-years in the study of philosophy and mathematics, four years of theology,
-and, in the case of the more distinguished students, two years more in
-repetition and private theological study. At some point in this course,
-mostly after the philosophy, the students were sent, for a while, to
-teach the “lower studies” to boys.[16] The method of teaching was to be
-learnt in the training schools, called Juvenats,[17] one of which was
-founded in each province.
-
-Few, even of the most distinguished students, received dispensation from
-giving elementary instruction. Salmeron and Bobadilla performed this duty
-in Naples, Lainez in Florence, Borgia (who had been Viceroy of Catalonia)
-in Cordova, Canisius in Cologne.
-
-§ 6. During the time the Jesuit held his post as teacher he was to give
-himself up entirely to the work. His private studies were abandoned; his
-religious exercises shortened. He began generally with the boys in the
-lowest form, and that he might be able to study the character of his
-pupils he went up the school with them, advancing a step every year, as
-in the system now common in Scotland. But some forms were always taught,
-as the highest is in Scotland, by the same master, who remained a teacher
-for life.
-
-§ 7. Great care was to be taken that the frequent changes in the staff
-of masters did not lead to alteration in the conduct of the school.
-Each teacher was bound to carry on the established instruction by the
-established methods. All his personal peculiarities and opinions were
-to be as much as possible suppressed. To secure this a rigid system of
-supervision was adopted, and reports were furnished by each officer to
-his immediate superior. Over all stood the General of the Order. Next
-came the Provincial, appointed by the General. Over each college was
-the Rector, who was appointed (for three years) by the General, though
-he was responsible to the Provincial, and made his reports to him. Next
-came the Prefect of Studies, appointed, not by the Rector, but by the
-Provincial. The teachers were carefully watched both by the Rector and
-the Prefect of Studies, and it was the duty of the latter to visit each
-teacher in his class at least once a fortnight, to hear him teach. The
-other authorities, besides the masters of classes, were usually a House
-Prefect, and Monitors selected from the boys, one in each form.
-
-§ 8. The school or college was to be built and maintained by gifts and
-bequests which the Society might receive for this purpose only. Their
-instruction was always given gratuitously. When sufficient funds were
-raised to support the officers, teachers, and at least twelve scholars,
-no effort was to be made to increase them; but if they fell short of
-this, donations were to be sought by begging from house to house. Want of
-money, however, was not a difficulty which the Jesuits often experienced.
-
-§ 9. The Jesuit education included two courses of study, _studia
-superiora et inferiora_. In the smaller colleges only the _studia
-inferiora_ were carried on; and it is to these _lower schools_ that the
-following account mainly refers. The boys usually began this course at
-ten years old and ended it at sixteen.[18]
-
-§ 10. The pupils in the Jesuit colleges were of two kinds: 1st, those
-who were training for the Order, and had passed the Novitiate; 2nd, the
-externs, who were pupils merely. When the building was not filled by the
-first of these (the Scholastici, or _Nostri_, as they are called in the
-Jesuit writings), other pupils were taken in to board, who had to pay
-simply the cost of their living, and not even this unless they could
-well afford it. Instruction, as I said, was gratuitous to all. “Gratis
-receive, gratis give,” was the Society’s rule; so they would neither make
-any charge for instruction, nor accept any gift that was burdened with
-conditions.
-
-§ 11. Faithful to the tradition of the Catholic Church, the Society did
-not estimate a man’s worth simply according to his birth and outward
-circumstances. The Constitutions expressly laid down that poverty and
-mean extraction were never to be any hindrance to a pupil’s admission;
-and Sacchini says: “Do not let any favouring of the higher classes
-interfere with the care of meaner pupils, since the birth of all is equal
-in Adam, and the inheritance in Christ.”[19]
-
-§ 12. The externs who could not be received into the building were
-boarded in licensed houses, which were always liable to an unexpected
-visit from the Prefect of Studies.
-
-§ 13. The “lower school” was arranged in five classes (since increased to
-eight), of which the lowest usually had two divisions. Parallel classes
-were formed wherever the number of pupils was too great for five masters.
-The names given to the several divisions were as follows:
-
- 1. Infima }
- 2. Media } Classis Grammaticæ.
- 3. Suprema }
- 4. Humanitas.
- 5. Rhetorica.
-
-Each was “absolved” in a year, except Rhetorica, which required two years
-(Stöckl, p. 237).
-
-Jesuits and Protestants alike in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries
-thought of little but literary instruction, and that too connected
-only with Latin and Greek. The subject-matter of the teaching in the
-Jesuit schools was to be “præter Grammaticam, quod ad Rhetoricam, Poësim
-et Historiam pertinet,” in addition to Grammar, whatever related to
-Rhetoric, Poetry, and History. Reading and writing the mother-tongue
-might not be taught without special leave from the Provincial. Latin was
-as much as possible to supersede all other languages, even in speaking;
-and nothing else might be used by the pupils in the higher forms on any
-day but a holiday.[20] To gain a supply of Latin words for ordinary
-use, the pupils committed to memory Latin conversations on general
-topics, such as Francis Pomey’s “Indiculus Universalis” and “Colloquia
-Scholastica.”
-
-§ 14. Although many good school-books were written by the Jesuits, a
-great part of their teaching was given orally. The master was, in fact,
-a lecturer, who expounded sometimes a piece of a Latin or Greek author,
-sometimes the rules of grammar. The pupils were required to get up the
-substance of these lectures, and to learn the grammar-rules and parts of
-the classical authors by heart. The master for his part had to bestow
-great pains on the preparation of his lectures.[21]
-
-§ 15. Written exercises, translations, &c., were given in on every day,
-except Saturday; and the master had, if possible, to go over each one
-with its writer and his appointed rival or _æmulus_.
-
-§ 16. The method of hearing the rules, &c., committed to memory was
-this:—Certain boys in each class, who were called Decurions, repeated
-their tasks to the master, and then in his presence heard the other boys
-repeat theirs. The master meanwhile corrected the written exercises.[22]
-
-§ 17. One of the leading peculiarities in the Jesuits’ system was the
-pains they took to foster emulation—“cotem ingenii puerilis, calcar
-industriæ—the whetstone of talent, the spur of industry.” For this
-purpose all the boys in the lower part of the school were arranged in
-pairs, each pair being rivals (_æmuli_) to one another. Every boy was
-to be constantly on the watch to catch his rival tripping, and was
-immediately to correct him. Besides this individual rivalry, every class
-was divided into two hostile camps, called Rome and Carthage, which had
-frequent pitched battles of questions on set subjects. These were the
-“Concertations,” in which the boys sometimes had to put questions to the
-opposite camp, sometimes to expose erroneous answers when the questions
-were asked by the master[23] (see Appendix: Class Matches, p. 529).
-Emulation, indeed, was encouraged to a point where, as it seems to me,
-it must have endangered the good feeling of the boys among themselves.
-Jouvency mentions a practice of appointing mock defenders of any
-particularly bad exercise, who should make the author of it ridiculous by
-their excuses; and any boy whose work was very discreditable, was placed
-on a form by himself, with a daily punishment, until he could show that
-some one deserved to change places with him.
-
-§ 18. In the higher classes a better kind of rivalry was cultivated
-by means of “Academies,” _i.e._, voluntary associations for study,
-which met together, under the superintendence of a master, to read
-themes, translations, &c., and to discuss passages from the classics.
-The new members were elected by the old, and to be thus elected was a
-much-coveted distinction. In these Academies the cleverer students got
-practice for the disputations, which formed an important part of the
-school work of the higher classes.
-
-§ 19. There was a vast number of other expedients by which the Jesuits
-sought to work on their pupils’ _amour propre_, such as, on the one hand,
-the weekly publication of offences _per præconem_, and, on the other,
-besides prizes (which could be won only by the externs), titles and
-badges of honour, and the like. “There are,” says Jouvency, “hundreds
-of expedients of this sort, all tending to sharpen the boys’ wits, to
-lighten the labour of the master, and to free him from the invidious and
-troublesome necessity of punishing.”
-
-§ 20. The school-hours were remarkably short: two hours and a half in
-the morning, and the same in the afternoon; with a whole holiday a week
-in summer, and a half holiday in winter. The time was spent in the
-first form after the following manner:—During the first half-hour the
-master corrected the exercises of the previous day, while the Decurions
-heard the lesson which had been learnt by heart. Then the master heard
-the piece of Latin which he had explained on the previous day. With
-this construing, was connected a great deal of parsing, conjugating,
-declining, &c. The teacher then explained the piece for the following
-day, which, in this form, was never to exceed four lines. The last
-half-hour of the morning was spent in explaining grammar. This was done
-very slowly and carefully: in the words of the _Ratio Studd._: “Pluribus
-diebus fere singula præcepta inculcanda sunt”—“Generally take a single
-rule and drive it in, several days.” For the first hour of the afternoon
-the master corrected exercises, and the boys learnt grammar. If there
-was time, the master put questions about the grammar he had explained
-in the morning. The second hour was taken up with more explanations of
-grammar, and the school closed with half an hour’s concertation, or the
-master corrected the notes which the pupils had taken during the day. In
-the other forms, the work was very similar to this, except that Greek was
-added, and also in the higher classes a little mathematics.
-
-§ 21. It will be observed from the above account, that almost all
-the strength of the Jesuit teaching was thrown into the study of the
-Latin language, which was to be used, not only for reading, but also
-in writing and speaking. But under the name of “erudition” some amount
-of instruction in other subjects, especially in history and geography,
-was given in explaining, or rather lecturing on, the classical authors.
-Jouvency says that this lecture must consist of the following parts:—1st,
-the general meaning of the whole passage; 2nd, the explanation of each
-clause, both as to the meaning and construction; 3rd, any information,
-such as accounts of historical events, or of ancient manners and customs,
-which could be connected with the text; 4th, in the higher forms,
-applications of the rules of rhetoric and poetry; 5th, an examination of
-the Latinity; 6th, the inculcation of some moral lesson. This treatment
-of a subject he illustrates by examples. Among these is an account of
-a lesson for the first (_i.e._, lowest) class in the Fable of the Fox
-and the Mask:—1st, comes the argument and the explanation of words;
-2nd, the grammar and parsing, as _vulpes_, a substantive of the third
-declension, &c., like _proles_, _clades_, &c. (here the master is always
-to give among his examples some which the boys already know); 3rd, comes
-the _eruditio_—something about foxes, about tragedy, about the brain,
-and hence about other parts of the head; 4th, Latinity, the order of
-the words, choice of the words, synonyms, &c. Then the sentences may be
-parodied; other suitable substantives may be found for the adjectives and
-_vice versâ_; and every method is to be adopted of showing the boys how
-to _use_ the words they have learnt. Lastly, comes the moral.
-
-§ 22. The practical teacher will be tempted to ask, How is the attention
-of the class to be kept up whilst all this information is given? This
-the Jesuits did partly by punishing the inattentive. Every boy was
-subsequently required to reproduce what the teacher had said, and to
-show his written notes of it. But no doubt this matter of attention was
-found a difficulty. Jouvency tells the teachers to break off from time to
-time in their lectures, and to ask questions; and he adds: “Variæ sunt
-artes excitandæ attentionis quas docebit usus et sua cuique industria
-suggeret.—Very various are the devices for arousing attention. These will
-occur with practice and pains.”
-
-For private study, besides written exercises and learning by heart, the
-pupils were recommended subjects to get up in their own time; and in
-this, and also as to the length of some of the regular lessons, they were
-permitted to decide for themselves. Here, as everywhere, the Jesuits
-trusted to the sense of honour and emulation—those who did extra work
-were praised and rewarded.
-
-§ 23. One of the maxims of this system was: “Repetitio mater studiorum.”
-Every lesson was connected with two repetitions—one before it began,
-of preceding work, and the other at the close, of the work just done.
-Besides this, one day a week was devoted entirely to repetition. In the
-three lowest classes the desire of laying a solid foundation even led to
-the second six months in the year being given to again going over the
-work of the first six months.[24] By this means boys of extraordinary
-ability could pass through these forms in eighteen months, instead of
-three years.
-
-§ 23. _Thoroughness_ in work was the one thing insisted on. Sacchini says
-that much time should be spent in going over the more important things,
-which are “veluti multorum fontes et capita (as it were the sources and
-starting points of many others)”; and that the master should prefer to
-teach a few things perfectly, to giving indistinct impressions of many
-things.[25] We should remember, however, that the pupils of the Jesuits
-were not _children_. Subjects such as grammar cannot, by any expenditure
-of time and trouble, be perfectly taught to children, because children
-cannot perfectly understand them; so that the Jesuit thoroughness is not
-always attainable.
-
-§ 24. The usual duration of the course in the lower schools was six
-years—_i.e._, one year in each of the four lower classes, and two years
-in the highest class. Every year closed with a very formal examination.
-Before this examination took place, the pupils had lessons in the manner
-of it, so that they might come prepared, not only with a knowledge of the
-subjects, but also of the laws of writing for examination (“scribendi ad
-examen leges”). The examination was conducted by a commission appointed
-for the purpose, of which commission the Prefect of Studies was an _ex
-officio_ member. The masters of the classes, though they were present,
-and could make remarks, were not of the examining body. For the _vivâ
-voce_ the boys were ushered in, three at a time, before the solemn
-conclave. The results of the examination, both written and verbal, were
-joined with the records of the work done in the past year; and the names
-of those pupils who had distinguished themselves were then published in
-order of merit, but the poll was arranged alphabetically, or according to
-birthplace.
-
-§ 25. As might be expected, the Jesuits were to be very careful of the
-moral and religious training of their pupils. “Quam maxime in vitæ
-probitate ac bonis artibus doctrinaque proficiant ad Dei gloriam.”
-(_Ratio Studd._, quoted by Schmid.) And Sacchini tells the master to
-remember how honourable his office is; as it has to do, not with grammar
-only, but also with the science and practice of a Christian and religious
-life: “atque eo quidem ordine ut ipsa ingenii eruditio sit expolitio
-morum, et humana literatura divinæ ancilletur sapientiæ.”[26]
-
-Each lesson was to begin with prayer or the sign of the Cross. The
-pupils were to hear Mass every morning, and were to be urged to frequent
-confession and receiving of the Holy Communion. The Father Confessor was
-always a Jesuit, but he was not a master in the school.
-
-§ 26. The bodily health also was to be carefully attended to. The pupils
-were not to study too much or too long at a time. Nothing was to be done
-for a space of from one or two hours after dinner. On holidays excursions
-were made to farms in the country.[27]
-
-§ 27. Punishments were to be as light as possible, and the master was to
-shut his eyes to offences whenever he thought he might do so with safety.
-Grave offences were to be visited with corporal punishment, performed by
-a “corrector,” who was not a member of the Order. Where this chastisement
-did not have a good effect, the pupil was to be expelled.[28]
-
-§ 28. The dry details into which I have been drawn by faithfully copying
-the manner of the _Ratio Studiorum_ may seem to the reader to afford
-no answer to the question which naturally suggests itself—To what did
-the school-system of the Jesuits owe its enormous popularity? But in
-part, at least, these details do afford an answer. They show us that the
-Jesuits were intensely practical. The _Ratio Studiorum_ hardly contains
-a single principle; but what it does is this—it points out a perfectly
-attainable goal, and carefully defines the road by which that goal
-is to be approached. For each class was prescribed not only the work
-to be done, but also the end to be kept in view. Thus method reigned
-throughout—perhaps not the best method, as the object to be attained was
-assuredly not the highest object—but the method, such as it was, was
-applied with undeviating exactness. In this particular the Jesuit schools
-contrasted strongly with their rivals of old, as indeed with the ordinary
-school of the present day. The Head Master, who is to the modern English
-school what the General, Provincial, Rector, Prefect of Studies, and
-_Ratio Studiorum_ combined were to a school of the Jesuits, has perhaps
-no standard in view up to which the boy should have been brought when his
-school course is completed.[29] The masters of forms teach just those
-portion of their subject in which they themselves are interested, in any
-way that occurs to them, with by no means uniform success; so that when
-two forms are examined with the same examination paper, it is no very
-uncommon occurrence for the lower to be found superior to the higher. It
-is, perhaps, to be expected that a course in which uniform method tends
-to a definite goal would on the whole be more successful than one in
-which a boy has to accustom himself by turns to half-a-dozen different
-methods, invented at haphazard by individual masters with different aims
-in view, if indeed they have any aim at all.
-
-§ 29. I have said that the object which the Jesuits proposed in their
-teaching was not the highest object. They did not aim at developing
-_all_ the faculties of their pupils, but mainly the receptive and
-reproductive faculties. When the young man had acquired a thorough
-mastery of the Latin language for all purposes, when he was well versed
-in the theological and philosophical opinions of his preceptors, when
-he was skilful in dispute, and could make a brilliant display from the
-resources of a well-stored memory, he had reached the highest point to
-which the Jesuits sought to lead him.[30] Originality and independence of
-mind, love of truth for its own sake, the power of reflecting, and of
-forming correct judgments were not merely neglected—they were suppressed
-in the Jesuits’ system. But in what they attempted they were eminently
-successful, and their success went a long way towards securing their
-popularity.[31]
-
-§ 30. Their popularity was due, moreover, to the means employed, as
-well as to the result attained. The Jesuit teachers were to _lead_, not
-drive their pupils, to make their learning, not merely endurable, but
-even acceptable, “disciplinam non modo tolerabilem, sed etiam amabilem.”
-Sacchini expresses himself very forcibly on this subject. “It is,” says
-he, “the unvarying decision of wise men, whether in ancient or modern
-times, that the instruction of youth will be always best when it is
-pleasantest: whence this application of the word _ludus_. The tenderness
-of youth requires of us that we should not overstrain it, its innocence
-that we should abstain from harshness.... That which enters into willing
-ears the mind as it were runs to welcome, seizes with avidity, carefully
-stows away, and faithfully preserves.”[32] The pupils were therefore
-to be encouraged in every way to take kindly to their learning. With
-this end in view (and no doubt other objects also), the masters were
-carefully to seek the boys’ affections. “When pupils love the master,”
-says Sacchini, “they will soon love his teaching. Let him, therefore,
-show an interest in everything that concerns them and not merely in
-their studies. Let him rejoice with those that rejoice, and not disdain
-to weep with those that weep. After the example of the Apostle let him
-become a little one amongst little ones, that he may make them adult in
-Christ, and Christ adult in them ... Let him unite the grave kindness and
-authority of a father with a mother’s tenderness.”[33]
-
-§ 31. In order that learning might be pleasant to the pupils, it was
-necessary that they should not be overtasked. To avoid this, the master
-had to study the character and capacity of each boy in his class, and to
-keep a book with all particulars about him, and marks from one to six
-indicating proficiency. Thus the master formed an estimate of what should
-be required, and the amount varied considerably with the pupil, though
-the quality of the work was always to be good.
-
-§ 32. Not only was the work not to be excessive, it was never to be of
-great difficulty. Even the grammar was to be made as easy and attractive
-as possible. “I think it a mistake” says Sacchini, “to introduce at an
-early stage the more thorny difficulties of grammar: ... for when the
-pupils have become familiar with the earlier parts, use will, by degrees,
-make the more difficult clear to them. His mind expanding and his
-judgment ripening as he grows older the pupil will often see for himself
-that which he could hardly be made to see by others. Moreover, in reading
-an author, examples of grammatical difficulties will be more easily
-observed in connection with the context, and will make more impression on
-the mind, than if they are taught in an abstract form by themselves. Let
-them then, be carefully explained whenever they occur.”[34]
-
-§ 33. Perhaps no body of men in Europe (the Thugs may, in this respect,
-rival them in Asia) have been so hated as the Jesuits. I once heard
-Frederick Denison Maurice say he thought Kingsley could find good in
-every one except the Jesuits, and, he added, he thought _he_ could find
-good even in them. But why should a devoted Christian find a difficulty
-in seeing good in the Jesuits, a body of men whose devotion to their
-idea of Christian duty has never been surpassed?[35] The difficulty
-arose from differences in ideal. Both held that the ideal Christian
-would do everything “to the greater glory of God,” or as the Jesuits
-put it in their business-like fashion, “A.M.D.G.,” (_i.e._, _ad majorem
-Dei gloriam_). But Maurice and Kingsley thought of a divine idea for
-every man. The Jesuits’ idea lost sight of the individual. Like their
-enemy, Carlyle, the Jesuits in effect worshipped strength, but Carlyle
-thought of the strength of the individual, the Jesuits of the strength of
-“the Catholic Church.” “The Catholic Church” was to them the manifested
-kingdom of God. Everything therefore that gave power to the Church tended
-“A.M.D.G.” The Company of Jesus was the regular army of the Church, so,
-arguing logically from their premises, they made the glory of God and the
-success of the Society convertible terms.
-
-§ 34. Thus their conception was a purely military conception. A
-commander-in-chief, if he were an ardent patriot and a great general,
-would do all he could to make the army powerful. He would care much
-for the health, morals, and training of the soldiers, but always with
-direct reference to the army. He would attend to everything that made a
-man a better soldier; beyond this he would not concern himself. In his
-eyes the army would be everything, and a soldier nothing but a part of
-it, just as a link is only a part of a chain. Paulsen, speaking of the
-Jesuits, says truly that no great organization can exist without a root
-idea. The root idea of the army is the sacrifice and annihilation of the
-individual, that the body may be fused together and so gain a strength
-greater than that of any number of individuals. Formed on this idea the
-army acts all together and in obedience to a single will, and no mob can
-stand its charge. Ignatius Loyola and succeeding Generals took up this
-idea and formed an army for the Church, an army that became the wonder
-and the terror of all men. Never, as Compayré says, had a body been so
-sagaciously organized, or had wielded so great resources for good and for
-evil.[36] (_See_ Buisson, ij, 1419.)
-
-§ 35. To the English schoolmaster the Jesuits must always be interesting,
-if for no other reason at least for this—that they were so intensely
-practical. “_Les Jésuites ne sont pas des pédagogues assez desintéressés
-pour nous plaire._—The Jesuits as schoolmasters,” says M. Compayré, “are
-not disinterested enough for us.” (Buisson, sub v. _Jésuites_, ad f.).
-But disinterested pedagogy is not much to the mind of the Englishman.
-It does not seem to know quite what it would be after, and deals in
-generalities, such as “Education is not a means but an end;” and the
-end being somewhat indefinite, the means are still more wanting in
-precision. This vagueness is what the English master hates. He prefers
-not to trouble himself about the end. The wisdom of his ancestors has
-settled that, and he can direct his attention to what really interests
-him—the practical details. In this he resembles the Jesuits. The end
-has been settled for them by their founder. They revel in practical
-details, in which they are truly great, and here we may learn much
-from them. “_Ratio_ applied to studies” says Father Eyre,[37] “more
-naturally means _Method_ than _Principle_; and our _Ratio Studiorum_
-is essentially a Method or System of teaching and learning.” Here is
-a method that has been worked uniformly and with singular success for
-three centuries, and can still give a good account of its old rivals. But
-will it hold its own against the late Reformers? As regards intellectual
-training the new school seeks to draw out the faculties of the young
-mind by employing them on subjects in which it is _interested_. The
-Jesuits fixed a course of study which, as they frankly recognized,
-could not be made interesting. So they endeavoured to secure accuracy
-by constant repetition, and relied for industry on two motive powers:
-1st, the personal influence of the master; and, 2nd, “the spur of
-industry”—emulation.
-
-§ 36. To acquire “influence” has ever been the main object of the
-Society, and his devotion to this object makes a great distinction
-between the Jesuit and most other instructors. His notion of the task was
-thus expressed by Father Gerard, S. J., at the Educational Conference
-of 1884: “Teaching is an art amongst arts. To be worthy of the name it
-must be the work of an individual upon individuals. The true teacher must
-understand, appreciate, and sympathize with those who are committed to
-him. He must be daily discovering what there is (and undoubtedly there
-is something in each of them) capable of fruitful development, and
-contriving how better to get at them and to evoke whatever possibilities
-there are in them for good.” The Jesuit master, then, tried to gain
-influence over the boys and to use that influence for many purposes;
-to make them work well being one of these, but not perhaps the most
-important.
-
-§ 37. As for emulation, no instructors have used it so elaborately as
-the Jesuits. In most English schools the prizes have no effect whatever
-except on the first three or four boys, and the marking is so arranged
-that those who take the lead in the first few lessons can keep their
-position without much effort. This clumsy system would not suit the
-Jesuits. They often for prize-giving divide a class into a number of
-small groups, the boys in each group being approximately equal, and a
-prize is offered for each group. The class matches, too, stimulate the
-weaker pupils even more than the strong.
-
-§ 38. In conclusion, I will give the chief points of the system in the
-words of one of its advocates and admirers, who was himself educated at
-Stonyhurst:
-
-“Let us now try to put together the various pieces of this school
-machinery and study the effect. We have seen that the boys have masters
-entirely at their disposition, not only at class time, but at recreation
-time after supper in the night Reading Rooms. Each day they record
-victory or defeat in the recurring exercises or themes upon various
-matters. By the quarterly papers or examinations in composition, for
-which nine hours are assigned, the order of merit is fixed, and this
-order entails many little privileges and precedencies, in chapel,
-refectory, class room, and elsewhere. Each master, if he prove a success
-and his health permit, continues to be the instructor of the boys in
-his class during the space of six years. ‘It is obvious’ says Sheil,
-in his account of Stonyhurst, ‘that much of a boy’s acquirements, and
-a good deal of the character of his taste, must have depended upon
-the individual to whose instructions he was thus almost exclusively
-confined.’ And in many cases the effects must be a greater interest
-felt in the students by their teachers, a mutual attachment founded on
-long acquaintance, and a more thorough knowledge, on the part of the
-master, of the weak and strong points of his pupils. Add to the above,
-the ‘rival’ and ‘side’ system, the effect of challenges and class
-combats; of the wearing of decorations and medals by the Imperators
-on Sundays, Festival Days, Concertation Days, and Examination Days;
-of the extraordinary work—done much more as _private_ than as _class_
-work—helping to give individuality to the boy’s exertions, which might
-otherwise be merged in the routine work of the class; and the ‘free
-time’ given for improvement on wet evenings and after night prayers;
-add the Honours Matter; the Reports read before the Rector and all
-subordinate Superiors, the Professors, and whole body of Students; add
-the competition in each class and between the various classes, and even
-between the various colleges in England of the Society; and only one
-conclusion can be arrived at. It is a system which everyone is free to
-admire or think inferior to some other preferred by him; but it _is_ a
-system.” (_Stonyhurst College, Present and Past_, by A. Hewitson, 2nd
-edition, 1878, pp. 214, ff.)
-
-§ 39. Yes, it _is_ a system, a system built up by the united efforts
-of many astute intellects and showing marvellous skill in selecting
-means to attain a clearly conceived end. There is then in the history
-of education little that should be more interesting or might be more
-instructive to the master of an English public school than the chapter
-about the Jesuits.[38]
-
-
-
-
-V.
-
-RABELAIS.
-
-(1483-1553.)
-
-
-§ 1. To great geniuses it is given to think themselves in a measure free
-from the ordinary notions of their time and often to anticipate the
-discoveries of a future age. In all literature there is perhaps hardly
-a more striking instance of this “detached” thinking than we find in
-Rabelais’ account of the education of Gargantua.
-
-§ 2. We see in Rabelais an enthusiasm for learning and a tendency to
-verbal realism; that is, he turned to the old writers for instruction
-about _things_. So far he was a child of the Renascence. But in other
-respects he advanced far beyond it.
-
-§ 3. After a scornful account of the ordinary school books and methods by
-which Gargantua “though he studied hard, did nevertheless profit nothing,
-but only grew thereby foolish, simple, dolted, and blockish,” Rabelais
-decides that “it were better for him to learn nothing at all than to
-be taught suchlike books under suchlike schoolmasters.” All this old
-lumber must be swept away, and in two years a youth may acquire a better
-judgment, a better manner, and more command of language than could ever
-have been obtained by the old method.
-
-We are then introduced to the model pupil. The end of education has been
-declared to be _sapiens et eloquens pietas_; and we find that though
-Rabelais might have substituted knowledge for piety, he did care for
-piety, and valued very highly both wisdom and eloquence. The eloquent
-Roman was the ideal of the Renascence, and Rabelais’ model pupil
-expresses himself “with gestures so proper, pronunciation so distinct, a
-voice so eloquent, language so well turned _and in such good Latin_ that
-he seemed rather a Gracchus, a Cicero, an Æmilius of the time past than a
-youth of the present age.”
-
-§ 4. So a Renascence tutor is appointed for Gargantua and administers to
-him a potion that makes him forget all he has ever learned. He then puts
-him through a very different course. Like all wise instructors he first
-endeavours to secure the will of the pupil. He allows Gargantua to go
-the accustomed road till he can convince him it is the wrong one. This
-seems to me a remarkable proof of wisdom. How often does the “new master”
-break abruptly with the past, and raise the opposition of the pupil by
-dispraise of all he has already done! By degrees Ponocrates, the model
-tutor, inspired in his pupil a great desire for improvement. This he did
-by bringing him into the society of learned men, who filled him with
-ambition to be like them. Thereupon Gargantua “put himself into such a
-train of study that he lost not any hour in the day, but employed all his
-time in learning and honest knowledge.” The day was to begin at 4 a.m.,
-with reading of “some chapter of the Holy Scripture, and oftentimes he
-gave himself to revere, adore, pray, and send up his supplications to
-that good God, whose word did show His majesty and marvellous judgments.”
-This is the only hint we get in this part of the book on the subject of
-religious or moral education: the training is directed to the intellect
-and the body.
-
-§ 5. The remarkable feature in Rabelais’ curriculum is this, that it is
-concerned mainly with _things_. Of the Seven Liberal Arts of the Middle
-Ages, the first three were purely formal: grammar, logic, rhetoric; while
-the following course: arithmetic, geometry, astronomy, and music, were
-not. The effect of the Renascence was to cause increasing neglect of
-the Quadrivium, but Rabelais cares for the Quadrivium only; Gargantua
-studies arithmetic, geometry, astronomy, and music, and the Trivium is
-not mentioned. Great use is made of books and Gargantua learned them by
-heart; but all that he learned he at once “applied to practical cases
-concerning the estate of man.” It was the substance of the reading, not
-the form, that was thought of. At dinner “if they thought good they
-continued reading or began to discourse merrily together; speaking
-first of the virtue, propriety, efficacy, and nature of all that was
-served in at that table; of bread, of wine, of water, of salt, of flesh,
-fish, fruits, herbs, roots, and of their dressing. By means whereof he
-learned in a little time all the passages that on these subjects are to
-be found in Pliny, Athenæus, &c. Whilst they talked of these things,
-many times to be more certain they caused the very books to be brought
-to the table; and so well and perfectly did he in his memory retain the
-things above said, that in that time there was not a physician that knew
-half so much as he did.” Again, out of doors he was to observe trees and
-plants, and “compare them with what is written of them in the books of
-the ancients, such as Theophrastus, Dioscorides, &c.” Here again, actual
-realism was to be joined with verbal realism, for Gargantua was to carry
-home with him great handfuls for herborising. Rabelais even recommends
-studying the face of the heavens at night, and then observing the change
-that has taken place at 4 in the morning. So he seems to have been the
-first writer on education (and the first by a long interval), who would
-teach about things by observing the things themselves. It was this
-_Anschauungs-prinzip_—use of sense-impressions—that Pestalozzi extended
-and claimed as his invention two centuries and a half later. Rabelais
-also gives a hint of the use of hand-work as well as head-work. Gargantua
-and his fellows “did recreate themselves in bottling hay, in cleaving
-and sawing wood, and in threshing sheaves of corn in the barn. They also
-studied the art of painting or carving.” The course was further connected
-with life by visits to the various handicraftsmen, in whose workshops
-“they did learn and consider the industry and invention of the trader.”
-
-Thus, even in the time of the Renascence, Rabelais saw that the life of
-the intellect might be nourished by many things besides books. But books
-were still kept in the highest place. Even on a holiday, which occurred
-on some fine and clear day once a month, “though spent without books or
-lecture, yet was the day not without profit; for in the meadows they
-repeated certain pleasant verses of Virgil’s _Agriculture_, of Hesiod,
-of Politian’s _Husbandry_.” They also turned Latin epigrams into French
-_rondeaux_.
-
-This course of study, “although at first it seemed difficult, yet soon
-became so sweet, so easy, and so delightful, that it seemed rather the
-recreation of a king than the study of a scholar.”
-
-In preferring the Quadrivial studies to the Trivial, and still more
-in his use of actual things, Rabelais separates himself from all the
-teachers of his time.
-
-§ 6. Very remarkable too is the attention he pays to physical education.
-A day does not pass on which Gargantua does not gallantly exercise his
-body as he has already exercised his mind. The exercises prescribed are
-very various, and include running, jumping, swimming, with practice on
-the horizontal bar and with dumb-bells, &c. But in one respect Rabelais
-seems behind our own writer, Richard Mulcaster. Mulcaster trained the
-body simply with a view to health. Rabelais is thinking of the gentleman,
-and all his physical exercises are to prepare him for the gentleman’s
-occupation, war. The constant preparation for war had a strong and in
-some respects a very beneficial influence on the education of gentlemen
-in the fifteen and sixteen hundreds, as it has had on that of the Germans
-in the eighteen hundreds. But to be ready to slaughter one’s fellow
-creatures is not an ideal aim in education; and besides this, one half of
-the human race can never (as far as we can judge at present) be affected
-by it. We therefore prefer the physical training recommended by the
-Englishman.
-
- Mr. Walter Besant by his _Readings in Rabelais_ (Blackwood,
- 1883), has put Rabelais’ wit and wisdom where we can get at
- most of it without searching in the dung-hill. But he has
- unfortunately omitted Gargantua’s letter to Pantagruel at Paris
- (book ij, chap. 8), where we get the curriculum as proposed by
- Rabelais, a chapter in which no scavenger is needed.
-
- I will give some extracts from it:—
-
- “Although my deceased father of happy memory, Grangousier, had
- bent his best endeavours to make me profit in all perfection
- and political knowledge, and that my labour and study was fully
- correspondent to, yea, went beyond his desire; nevertheless,
- the time then was not so proper and fit for learning as it is
- at present, neither had I plenty of such good masters as thou
- hast had; for that time was darksome, obscured with clouds of
- ignorance and savouring a little of the infelicity and calamity
- of the Goths, who had, wherever they set footing, destroyed all
- good literature, which in my age hath by the Divine Goodness
- been restored unto its former light and dignity, and that
- with such amendment and increase of knowledge that now hardly
- should I be admitted unto the first form of the little grammar
- school boys (_des petits grimaulx_): I say, I, who in my
- youthful days was (and that justly) reputed the most learned
- of that age. Now it is that the old knowledges (_disciplines_)
- are restored, the languages revived. Greek (without which
- it is a shame for any one to call himself learned), Hebrew,
- Chaldee, Latin. Printing (_Des impressions_) too, so elegant
- and exact, is in use, which in my day was invented by divine
- inspiration, as cannon were by suggestion of the devil. All the
- world is full of men of knowledge, of very learned teachers,
- of large libraries; so that it seems to me that neither in the
- age of Plato, nor of Cicero, nor of Papinian was there such
- convenience for studying as there is now. I see the robbers,
- hangmen, adventurers, ostlers of to-day more learned then the
- doctors and the preachers of my youth. Why, women and girls
- have aspired to the heavenly manna of good learning ... I mean
- you to learn the languages perfectly first of all, the Greek
- as Quintilian wishes, then the Latin, then Hebrew for the
- Scriptures, and Chaldee and Arabic at the same time; and that
- thou form thy style in Greek on Plato, in Latin on Cicero. Let
- there be no history which thou hast not ready in thy memory, in
- which cosmography will aid thee. Of the Liberal Arts, geometry,
- arithmetic, music, I have given thee a taste when thou wast
- still a child, at the age of five or six [Pantagruel was a
- giant, we must remember]; carry them on; and know’st thou all
- the rules of astronomy? Don’t touch astrology for divination
- and the art of Lullius, which are mere vanity. In the civil law
- thou must know the five texts by heart.
-
- “ ... As for knowledge of the works of Nature, I would have
- thee devote thyself to them so that there may be no sea, river,
- or spring of which thou knowest not the fishes; all the birds
- of the air, all the trees, forest or orchard, all the herbs of
- the field, all the metals hid in the bowels of the earth, all
- the precious stones of the East and the South, let nothing be
- unknown to thee.
-
- “Then turn again with diligence to the books of the Greek
- physicians, and the Arabs, and the Latin, without despising
- the Talmudists and the Cabalists; and by frequent dissections
- acquire a perfect knowledge of the other world, which is Man.
- And some hours a-day begin to read the Sacred Writings, first
- in Greek the New Testament and Epistles of the Apostles; then
- in Hebrew the Old Testament. In brief, let me see thee an
- abyss and bottomless pit of knowledge, for from henceforth as
- thou growest great and becomest a man thou must part from this
- tranquillity and rest of study ... And because, as Solomon
- saith, wisdom entereth not into a malicious mind, and science
- without conscience is but the ruin of the soul, thou shouldst
- serve, love, and fear God, and in Him centre all thy thoughts,
- all thy hope; and by faith rooted in charity be joined to Him,
- so as never to be separated from Him by sin.”
-
- The influence of Rabelais on Montaigne, Locke, and Rousseau has
- been well traced by Dr. F. A. Arnstädt. (_François Rabelais_,
- Leipzig, Barth, 1872.)
-
-
-
-
-VI.
-
-MONTAIGNE.
-
-(1533-1592.)
-
-
-§ 1. The learned ideal established by the Renascence was accepted by
-Rabelais, though he made some suggestions about _Realien_[39] that seem
-to us much in advance of it. When he quotes the saying “Magis magnos
-clericos non sunt magis magnos sapientes” (“the greatest clerks are not
-the greatest sages”), this singular piece of Latinity is appropriately
-put into the mouth of a monk, who represents everything the Renascence
-scholars despised. In Montaigne we strike into a new vein of thought,
-and we find that what the monk alleges in defence of his ignorance the
-cultured gentleman adopts as the expression of an important truth.
-
-§ 2. We ordinary people see truths indeed, but we see them indistinctly,
-and are not completely guided by them. It is reserved for men of genius
-to see truths, some truths that is, often a very few, with intense
-clearness. Some of these men have no great talent for speech or writing,
-and they try to express the truths they see, not so much by books as by
-action. Such men in education were Comenius, Pestalozzi, and Froebel. But
-sometimes the man of genius has a great power over language, and then
-he finds for the truths he has seen, fitting expression, which becomes
-almost as lasting as the truths themselves. Such men were Montaigne and
-Rousseau. If the historian of education is asked “What did Montaigne do?”
-he will answer “Nothing.” “What did Froebel say?” “He said a great deal,
-but very few people can read him and still fewer understand him.” Both,
-however, are and must remain forces in education. Montaigne has given to
-some truths imperishable form in his _Essays_, and Froebel’s ideas come
-home to all the world in the Kindergarten.
-
-§ 3. The ideal set up by the Renascence attached the highest importance
-to learning. Montaigne maintained that the resulting training _even at
-its best_ was not suited to a gentleman or man of action. Virtue, wisdom,
-and intellectual activity should be thought of before learning. Education
-should be first and foremost the development and exercise of faculties.
-And even if the acquirement of knowledge is thought of, Montaigne
-maintains that the pedants do not understand the first conditions of
-knowledge and give a semblance not the true thing.—“_Il ne faut pas
-attacher le savoir à l’âme, il faut l’incorporer._—Knowledge cannot be
-fastened on to the mind; it must become part and parcel of the mind
-itself.”[40]
-
-Here then we have two separate counts against the Renascence education:
-
-1st.—Knowledge is not the main thing.
-
-2nd.—True knowledge is something very different from knowing by heart.
-
-§ 4. It is a pity Montaigne’s utterances about education are to be found
-in English only in the complete translation of his essays. Seeing that a
-good many millions of people read English, and are most of them concerned
-in education, one may hope that some day the sayings of the shrewd old
-Frenchman may be offered them in a convenient form.
-
-§ 5. Here are some of them: “The evil comes of the foolish way in which
-our [instructors] set to work; and on the plan on which we are taught no
-wonder if neither scholars nor masters become more able, whatever they
-may do in becoming more learned. In truth the trouble and expense of our
-fathers are directed only to furnish our heads with knowledge: not a word
-of judgment or virtue. Cry out to our people about a passer-by, ‘There’s
-a learned man!’ and about another ‘There’s a good man!’ they will be all
-agog after the learned man, and will not look at the good man. One might
-fairly raise a third cry: ‘There’s a set of numskulls!’ We are ready
-enough to ask ‘Does he know Greek or know Latin? Does he write verse or
-write prose?’ But whether he has become wiser or better should be the
-first question, and that is always the last. We ought to find out, not
-who knows _most_ but who knows _best_.” (I, chap. 24, _Du Pédantisme_,
-page or two beyond _Odi homines_.)
-
-§ 6. The true educators, according to Montaigne, were the Spartans, who
-despised literature, and cared only for character and action. At Athens
-they thought about words, at Sparta about things. At Athens boys learnt
-to speak well, at Sparta to do well: at Athens to escape from sophistical
-arguments, and to face all attempts to deceive them; at Sparta to escape
-from the allurements of pleasure, and to face the slings and arrows
-of outrageous fortune, even death itself. In the one system there was
-constant exercise of the tongue, in the other of the soul. “So it is not
-strange that when Antipater demanded of the Spartans fifty children as
-hostages they replied they would sooner give twice as many grown men,
-such store did they set by their country’s training.” (_Du Pédantisme_,
-ad f.)
-
-§ 7. It is odd to find a man of the fifteen hundreds who quotes from
-the old authors at every turn, and yet maintains that “we lean so much
-on the arm of other people that we lose our own strength.” The thing a
-boy should learn is not what the old authors say, but “what he himself
-ought to do when he becomes a man.” Wisdom, not knowledge! “We may become
-learned from the learning of others; wise we can never be except by our
-own wisdom.” (Bk. j, chap. 24).
-
-§ 8. So entirely was Montaigne detached from the thought of the
-Renascence that he scoffs at his own learning, and declares that true
-learning has for its subject, not the past or the future, but the
-present. “We are truly learned from knowing the present, not from knowing
-the past any more than the future.” And yet “we toil only to stuff the
-memory and leave the conscience and the understanding void. And like
-birds who fly abroad to forage for grain bring it home in their beak,
-without tasting it themselves, to feed their young, so our pedants go
-picking knowledge here and there out of several authors, and hold it
-at their tongue’s end, only to spit it out and distribute it amongst
-their pupils.” (_Du Pédantisme._) “We are all richer than we think, but
-they drill us in borrowing and begging, and lead us to make more use of
-other people’s goods than of our own.”[41] (Bk. iij, chap. 12, _De la
-Physionomie_, beg. of 3rd paragraph).
-
-§ 9. So far Montaigne. What do we schoolmasters say to all this? If
-we would be quite candid I think we must allow that, after reading
-Montaigne’s essay, we put it down with the conviction that in the main he
-was right, and that he had proved the error and absurdity of a vast deal
-that goes on in the schoolroom. But from this first view we have had on
-reflection to make several drawbacks.
-
-§ 10. Montaigne, like Locke and Rousseau, who followed in his steps,
-arranges for every boy to have a tutor entirely devoted to him. We may
-question whether this method of bringing up children is desirable, and
-we may assert, without question, that in most cases it is impossible.
-It seems ordained that at every stage of life we should require the
-companionship of those of our own age. If we take two beings as little
-alike as a man and a child and force them to be each other’s companions,
-so great is the difference in their thoughts and interests that they
-will fall into inevitable boredom and restraint. So we see that this
-plan, even in the few cases in which it would be possible, would not
-be desirable; and for the great majority of boys it would be out of
-the question. We must then arrange for the young to be taught, not as
-individuals, but in classes, and this greatly changes the conditions
-of the problem. One of the first conditions is this, that we have to
-employ each class regularly and uniformly for some hours every day.
-Schoolmasters know what their non-scholastic mentors forget: we can make
-a class learn, but, broadly speaking, we cannot make a class think,
-still less can we make it judge. As a great deal of occupation has to be
-provided, we are therefore forced to make our pupils learn. Whatever may
-be the value of the learning in itself it is absolutely necessary _as
-employment_.
-
-§ 11. No doubt it will make a vast difference whether we consider
-the learning mainly as employment, as a means of taking up time and
-preventing “sauntering,” as Locke boldly calls it, or whether we are
-chiefly anxious to secure some special results. The knowledge of the
-Latin and Greek languages and the Latin and Greek authors was a result
-so highly prized by the Renascence scholars that they insisted on a
-prodigious quantity of learning, not as employment, but simply as the
-means of acquiring this knowledge. As the knowledge got to be less
-esteemed the pressure was by degrees relaxed. In our public schools
-fifty or sixty years ago the learning was to some extent retained as
-employment, but there certainly was no pressure, and the majority of
-the boys never learnt the ancient languages. So the masters of that
-time had given up the Renascence enthusiasm for the classics, and on the
-negative side of his teaching had come to an agreement with Montaigne.
-Any one inclined to sarcasm might say that on the positive side they
-were still totally opposed to him, for _he_ thought virtue and judgment
-were the main things to be cared for, and _they_ did not care for these
-things at all. But this is not a fair statement. The one thing gained,
-or supposed to be gained, in the public schools was the art of living,
-and this art, though it does not demand heroic virtue, requires at least
-prudence and self-control. Montaigne’s system was a revolt against the
-_bookishness_ of the Renascence. “In our studies,” says he, “whatever
-presents itself before us is book enough; a roguish trick of a page,
-a blunder of a servant, a jest at table, are so many new subjects.”
-So the education _out of school_ was in his eyes of more value than
-the education in school. And this was acknowledged also in our public
-schools: “It is not the Latin and Greek they learn or don’t learn that
-we consider so important,” the masters used to say, “but it is the tone
-of the school and the discipline of the games.” But of late years this
-virtual agreement with Montaigne has been broken up. School work is no
-longer mere employment, but it is done under pressure, and with penalties
-if the tale of brick turned out does not pass the inspector.
-
-§ 12. What has produced this great change? It is due mainly to two causes:
-
-1. The pressure put on the young to attain classical knowledge was
-relaxed when it was thought that they could get through life very well
-without this knowledge. But in these days new knowledge has awakened a
-new enthusiasm. The knowledge of science promises such great advantages
-that the latest reformers, headed by Mr. Herbert Spencer, seem to make
-the well-being of the grown person depend mainly on the amount of
-scientific knowledge he stored up in his youth. This is the first cause
-of educational pressure.
-
-§ 13. 2. The second and more urgent cause is the rapid development
-of our system of examinations. Everybody’s educational status is now
-settled by the examiner, a potentate whose influence has brought back
-in a very malignant form all the evils of which Montaigne complains.
-Do what we will, the faculty chiefly exercised in preparing for
-ordinary examinations is the “carrying memory.” So the acquisition of
-knowledge—mere memory or examination knowledge—has again come to be
-regarded as the one thing needful in education, and there is great danger
-of everything else being neglected for it. Of the fourfold results of
-education—virtue, wisdom, good manners, learning—the last alone can be
-fairly tested in examinations; and as the schoolmaster’s very bread
-depends nowadays first on his getting through examinations himself
-and then on getting his pupils through, he would be more than human,
-if with Locke he thought of learning “last and least.” A great change
-has come over our public schools. The amount of work required from the
-boys is far greater than it used to be and masters again measure their
-success by the amount of knowledge the average boy takes away with him.
-It seems to me high time that another Montaigne arose to protest that
-a man’s intellectual life does not consist in the number of things he
-remembers, and that his true life is not his intellectual life only, but
-embraces his power of will and action and his love of what is noble and
-right. “Wisdom cried of old, I am the mother of fair Love and Fear and
-Knowledge and holy Hope” (_Ecclesiasticus_). In these days of science
-and examinations does there not seem some danger lest knowledge should
-prove the sole survivor? May not Knowledge, like another Cain, raise
-its hand against its brethren “fair Love and Fear and holy Hope?” This
-is perhaps the great danger of our time, a danger especially felt in
-education. Every school parades its scholarships at the public schools or
-at the universities, or its passes in the Oxford and Cambridge Locals, or
-its percentage at the last Inspection, and asks to be judged by these.
-And yet these are not the one thing or indeed the chief thing needful:
-and it will be the ruin of true education if, as Mark Pattison said, the
-master’s attention is concentrated on the least important part of his
-duty.[42]
-
-
-
-
-VII.
-
-ASCHAM.
-
-(1515-1568.)
-
-
-§ 1. Masters and scholars who sigh over what seem to them the intricacies
-and obscurities of modern grammars may find some consolation in thinking
-that, after all, matters might have been worse, and that our fate is
-enviable indeed compared with that of the students of Latin 400 years
-ago. Did the reader ever open the _Doctrinale_ of Alexander de Villa Dei,
-which was the grammar in general use from the middle of the thirteenth
-to the end of the fifteenth century? (_v._ Appendix, p. 532). If so, he
-is aware how great a step towards simplicity was made by our grammatical
-reformers, Lily, Colet, and Erasmus. Indeed, those whom we now regard as
-the forgers of our chains were, in their own opinion and that of their
-contemporaries, the champions of freedom (Appendix, p. 533).
-
-§ 2. I have given elsewhere (Appendix, p. 533) a remarkable passage
-from Colet, in which he recommends the leaving of rules, and the study
-of examples in good Latin authors. Wolsey also, in his directions to
-the masters of Ipswich School (dated 1528), proposes that the boys
-should be exercised in the eight parts of speech in the first form, and
-should begin to speak Latin and translate from English into Latin in
-the second. If the masters think fit, they may also let the pupils read
-Lily’s _Carmen Monitorium_, or Cato’s _Distichs_. From the third upwards
-a regular course of classical authors was to be read, and Lily’s rules
-were to be introduced by degrees. “Although I confess such things are
-necessary,” writes Wolsey, “yet, as far as possible, we could wish them
-so appointed as not to occupy the more valuable part of the day.” Only
-in the sixth form, the highest but two, Lily’s syntax was to be begun.
-In these schools the boys’ time was wholly taken up with Latin, and
-the speaking of Latin was enforced even in play hours, so we see that
-anomalies in the accidence as taught in the _As in præsenti_ were not
-given till the boys had been some time using the language; and the syntax
-was kept till they had a good practical knowledge of the usages to which
-the rules referred.[43]
-
-§ 3. But although there was a great stir in education throughout this
-century, and several English books were published about it, we come
-to 1570 before we find anything that has lived till now. We then have
-Roger Ascham’s _Scholemaster_, a posthumous work brought out by Ascham’s
-widow, and republished in 1571 and 1589. The book was then lost sight
-of, but reappeared, with James Upton as editor, in 1711,[44] and has
-been regarded as an educational classic ever since. Dr. Johnson says “it
-contains perhaps the best advice that was ever given for the study of
-languages,” and Professor J. E. B. Mayor, who on this point is a higher
-authority than Dr. Johnson, declares that “this book sets forth the only
-sound method of acquiring a dead language.”
-
-§ 4. With all their contempt for theory, English schoolmasters might
-have been expected to take an interest in one part of the history
-of education, viz., the history of methods. There is a true saying
-attributed by Marcel to Talleyrand, “_Les Méthodes sont les maîtres
-des maîtres_—Method is the master’s master.” The history of education
-shows us that every subject of instruction has been taught in various
-ways, and further, that the contest of methods has not uniformly ended
-in the survival of the fittest. Methods then might often teach the
-teachers, if the teachers cared to be taught; but till within the last
-half century or so an unintelligent traditional routine has sufficed for
-them. There has no doubt been a great change since men now old were at
-school, but in those days the main strength of the teaching was given
-to Latin, and the masters knew of no better method of starting boys in
-this language than making them learn by heart Lily’s, or as it was then
-called, the Eton Latin Grammar. If reason had had anything to do with
-teaching, this book would have been demolished by Richard Johnson’s
-_Grammatical Commentaries_ published in 1706; but worthless as Johnson
-proved it to be, the Grammar was for another 150 years treated by English
-schoolmasters as the only introduction to the Latin tongue. The books
-that have recently been published show a tendency to revert to methods
-set forth in Elizabeth’s reign in Ascham’s _Scholemaster_ (1570) and
-William Kempe’s _Education of Children_ (1588), but the innovators have
-not as a rule been drawn to these methods by historical inquiry.
-
-§ 5. There seem to be only three English writers on education who have
-caught the ear of other nations, and these are Ascham, Locke, and Herbert
-Spencer. Of a contemporary we do well to speak with the same reserve as
-of “present company,” but of the other two we may say that the choice
-has been somewhat capricious. Locke’s _Thoughts_ perhaps deserves the
-reputation and influence it has always had, but in it he hardly does
-himself justice as a philosopher of the mind; and much of the advice
-which has been considered his exclusively, is to be found in his English
-predecessors whose very names are unknown except to the educational
-antiquarian. Ascham wrote a few pages on method which entitle him to
-mention in an account of methods of language-learning. He also wrote a
-great many pages about things in general which would have shared the
-fate of many more valuable but long forgotten books had he not had one
-peculiarity in which the other writers were wanting, that indescribable
-something which Matthew Arnold calls “charm.”
-
-§ 6. Ascham has been very fortunate in his editors, Professor Arber and
-Professor Mayor, and the last editions[45] give everyone an opportunity
-of reading the _Scholemaster_. I shall therefore speak of nothing but the
-method.
-
-§ 7. Latin is to be taught as follows:—First, let the child learn
-the eight parts of speech, and then the right joining together of
-substantives with adjectives, the noun with the verb, the relative with
-the antecedent. After the concords are learned, let the master take
-Sturm’s selection of Cicero’s Epistles, and read them after this manner:
-“first, let him teach the child, cheerfully and plainly, the cause and
-matter of the letter; then, let him construe it into English so oft as
-the child may easily carry away the understanding of it; lastly, parse
-it over perfectly. This done, then let the child by and by both construe
-and parse it over again; so that it may appear that the child doubteth in
-nothing that his master has taught him before. After this, the child must
-take a paper book, and, sitting in some place where no man shall prompt
-him, by himself let him translate into English his former lesson. Then
-showing it to his master, let the master take from him his Latin book,
-and pausing an hour at the least, then let the child translate his own
-English into Latin again in another paper book. When the child bringeth
-it turned into Latin, the master must compare it with Tully’s book, and
-lay them both together, and where the child doth well, praise him,” where
-amiss point out why Tully’s use is better. Thus the child will easily
-acquire a knowledge of grammar, “and also the ground of almost all the
-rules that are so busily taught by the master, and so hardly learned by
-the scholar in all common schools.... We do not contemn rules, but we
-gladly teach rules; and teach them more plainly, sensibly, and orderly,
-than they be commonly taught in common schools. For when the master shall
-compare Tully’s book with the scholar’s translation, let the master at
-the first lead and teach the scholar to join the rules of his grammar
-book with the examples of his present lesson, until the scholar by
-himself be able to fetch out of his grammar every rule for every example;
-and let the grammar book be ever in the scholars hand, and also used by
-him as a dictionary for every present use. This is a lively and perfect
-way of teaching of rules; where the common way used in common schools
-to read the grammar alone by itself is tedious for the master, hard for
-the scholar, cold and uncomfortable for them both.” And elsewhere Ascham
-says: “Yea, I do wish that all rules for young scholars were shorter
-than they be. For, without doubt, _grammatica_ itself is sooner and
-surer learned by examples of good authors than by the naked rules of
-grammarians.”
-
-§ 8. “As you perceive your scholar to go better on away, first, with
-understanding his lesson more quickly, with parsing more readily, with
-translating more speedily and perfectly than he was wont; after, give
-him longer lessons to translate, and, withal, begin to teach him, both
-in nouns and verbs, what is _proprium_ and what is _translatum_, what
-_synonymum_, what _diversum_, which be _contraria_, and which be most
-notable _phrases_, in all his lectures, as—
-
- Proprium Rex sepultus est magnifice.
-
- Translatum Cum illo principe, sepulta est et gloria et salus
- reipublicæ.
-
- Synonyma Ensis, gladius: laudare, prædicare.
-
- Diversa Diligere, amare: calere, exardescere: inimicus,
- hostis.
-
- Contraria Acerbum et luctuosum bellum, dulcis et læta pax.
-
- Phrases Dare verba, adjicere obedientiam.”
-
-Every lesson is to be thus carefully analysed, and entered under these
-headings in a third MS. book.
-
-§ 9. Here Ascham leaves his method, and returns to it only at the
-beginning of Book II. He there supposes the first stage to be finished
-and “your scholar to have come indeed, first to a ready perfectness in
-translating, then to a ripe and skilful choice in marking out his six
-points.” He now recommends a course of Cicero, Terence, Cæsar, and Livy
-which is to be read “a good deal at every lecture.” And the master is to
-give passages “put into plain natural English.” These the scholar shall
-“not know where to find” till he shall have tried his hand at putting
-them into Latin; then the master shall “bring forth the place in Tully.”
-
-§ 10. In the Second Book of the _Scholemaster_, Ascham discusses the
-various branches of the study then common, viz.: 1. Translatio linguarum;
-2. Paraphrasis; 3. Metaphrasis; 4. Epitome; 5. Imitatio; 6. Declamatio.
-He does not lay much stress on any of these, except _translatio_ and
-_imitatio_. Of the last he says: “All languages, both learned and
-mother-tongue, be gotten, and gotten only, by imitation. For, as ye use
-to hear, so ye use to speak; if ye hear no other, ye speak not yourself;
-and whom ye only hear, of them ye only learn.” But translation was
-his great instrument for all kinds of learning. “The translation,” he
-says, “is the most common and most commendable of all other exercises
-for youth; most common, for all your constructions in grammar schools
-be nothing else but translations, but because they be not _double_
-translations (as I do require) they bring forth but simple and single
-commodity: and because also they lack the daily use of writing, which
-is the only thing that breedeth deep root, both in the wit for good
-understanding and in the memory for sure keeping of all that is learned;
-most commendable also, and that by the judgment of all authors which
-entreat of these exercises.”
-
-§ 11. After quoting Pliny,[46] he says: “You perceive how Pliny
-teacheth that by this exercise of double translating is learned easily,
-sensibly, by little and little, not only all the hard congruities of
-grammar, the choice of ablest words, the right pronouncing of words and
-sentences, comeliness of figures, and forms fit for every matter and
-proper for every tongue: but, that which is greater also, in marking
-daily and following diligently thus the footsteps of the best authors,
-like invention of arguments, like order in disposition, like utterance
-in elocution, is easily gathered up; and hereby your scholar shall be
-brought not only to like eloquence, but also to all true understanding
-and rightful judgment, both for writing and speaking.”
-
-Again he says: “For speedy attaining, I durst venture a good wager if a
-scholar in whom is aptness, love, diligence, and constancy, would but
-translate after this sort some little book in Tully (as _De Senectute_,
-with two Epistles, the first ‘Ad Quintum Fratrem,’ the other ‘Ad
-Lentulum’), that scholar, I say, should come to a better knowledge in
-the Latin tongue than the most part do that spend from five to six years
-in tossing all the rules of grammar in common schools.” After quoting
-the instance of Dion Prussæus, who came to great learning and utterance
-by reading and following only two books, the _Phædo_, and _Demosthenes
-de Falsa Legatione_, he goes on: “And a better and nearer example
-herein may be our most noble Queen Elizabeth, who never took yet Greek
-nor Latin grammar in her hand after the first declining of a noun and a
-verb; but only by this double translating of Demosthenes and Isocrates
-daily, without missing, every forenoon, and likewise some part of Tully
-every afternoon, for the space of a year or two, hath attained to such a
-perfect understanding in both the tongues, and to such a ready utterance
-of the Latin, and that with such a judgment, as there be few now in both
-Universities or elsewhere in England that be in both tongues comparable
-with Her Majesty.” Ascham’s authority is indeed not conclusive on this
-point, as he, in praising the Queen’s attainments, was vaunting his
-own success as a teacher, and, moreover, if he flattered her he could
-plead prevailing custom. But we have, I believe, abundant evidence that
-Elizabeth was an accomplished scholar.
-
-§ 12. Before I leave Ascham I must make one more quotation, to which I
-shall more than once have occasion to refer. Speaking of the plan of
-double translation, he says: “Ere the scholar have construed, parsed,
-twice translated over by good advisement, marked out his six points by
-skilful judgment, he shall have necessary occasion to read over every
-lecture a _dozen times at the least_; which because he shall do always in
-order, he shall do it always with pleasure. And pleasure allureth love:
-love hath lust to labour; labour always obtaineth his purpose.”
-
-§ 13. A good deal has been said, and perhaps something learnt, about the
-teaching of Latin since the days of Ascham. As far as I know the method
-which Ascham denounced, and which most English schoolmasters stuck to for
-more than two centuries longer, has now been abandoned. No one thinks
-of making the beginner learn by heart all the Latin Grammar before he is
-introduced to the Latin language. To understand the machinery of which
-an account is given in the grammar, the learner must see it at work, and
-must even endeavour in a small way to work it himself. So it seems pretty
-well agreed that the information given in the grammar must be joined
-with some construing and some exercises from the very first. But here
-the agreement ends. Our teachers, consciously or in ignorance, follow
-one or more of a number of methodizers who have examined the problem
-of language-learning, such men as Ascham, Ratke, Comenius, Jacotot,
-Hamilton, Robertson, and Prendergast. These naturally divide themselves
-into two parties, which I have ventured to call “Rapid Impressionists,”
-and “Complete Retainers.” The first of these plunge the beginner into the
-language, and trust to the great mass of vague impressions clearing and
-defining themselves as he goes along. The second insist on his learning
-at the first a very small portion of the language, and mastering and
-retaining everything he learns. It will be seen that in the first stage
-of the course Ascham is a “Complete Retainer.” He does not talk, like
-Prendergast, of “mastery,” nor, like Jacotot, does he require the learner
-to begin every lesson at the beginning of the book: but he makes the
-pupil go over each lesson “a dozen times at the least,” before he may
-advance beyond it. As for his practice of double translation, for the
-advanced pupil it is excellent, but if it is required from the beginner,
-it leads to unintelligent memorizing. I think I shall be able to show
-later on that other methodizers have advanced beyond Ascham. (_Infra_,
-246 _n._)
-
-
-
-
-VIII.
-
-MULCASTER.
-
-(1531(?)-1611.)
-
-
-§ 1. The history of English thought on education has yet to be written.
-In the literature of education the Germans have been the pioneers, and
-have consequently settled the routes; and when a track has once been
-established few travellers will face the risk and trouble of leaving it.
-So up to the present time, writers on the history of European education
-after the Renascence have occupied themselves chiefly with men who lived
-in Germany, or wrote in German. But the French are at length exploring
-the country for themselves; and in time, no doubt, the English-speaking
-races will show an interest in the thoughts and doings of their common
-ancestors.
-
-We know what toils and dangers men will encounter in getting to the
-source of great rivers; and although, as Mr. Widgery truly says, “the
-study of origins is not everybody’s business,”[47] we yet may hope that
-students will be found ready to give time and trouble to an investigation
-of great interest and perhaps some utility—the origin of the school
-course which now affects the millions who have English for their
-mother-tongue.
-
-§ 2. In the fifteen hundreds there were published several works on
-education, three of which, Elyot’s _Governour_, Ascham’s _Scholemaster_,
-and Mulcaster’s _Positions_, have been recently reprinted.[48] Others,
-such as Edward Coote’s _English Schoolmaster_, and Mulcaster’s
-_Elementarie_, are pretty sure to follow, without serious loss, let us
-hope, to their editors, though neither Coote nor Mulcaster are likely to
-become as well-known writers as Roger Ascham.
-
-§ 3. Henry Barnard, whose knowledge of our educational literature no
-less than his labours in it, makes him the greatest living authority,
-says that Mulcaster’s _Positions_ is “one of the earliest, and still one
-of the best treatises in the English language.” (_English Pedagogy_,
-2nd series, p. 177.) Mulcaster was one of the most famous of English
-schoolmasters, and by his writings he proved that he was far in advance
-of the schoolmasters of his own time, and of the times which succeeded.
-But he paid the penalty of thinking of himself more highly than he
-should have thought; and whether or no the conjecture is right that
-Shakespeare had him in his mind when writing _Love’s Labour’s Lost_,
-there is an affectation in Mulcaster’s style which is very irritating,
-for it has caused even the master of Edmund Spenser to be forgotten. In
-a curious and interesting allegory on the progress of language (in the
-_Elementarie_, pp. 66, ff.), Mulcaster says that Art selects the best
-age of a language to draw rules from, such as the age of Demosthenes
-in Greece and of Tully in Rome; and he goes on: “Such a period in the
-English tongue I take to be in our days for both the pen and the speech.”
-And he suggests that the English language, having reached its zenith,
-is seen to advantage, not in the writings of Shakespeare or Spenser,
-but in those of Richard Mulcaster. After enumerating the excellencies
-of the language, he adds: “I need no example in any of these, whereof
-my own penning is a general pattern.” Here we feel tempted to exclaim
-with Armado in _Love’s Labour’s Lost_ (Act 5, sc. 2): “I protest the
-schoolmaster is exceeding fantastical: too too vain, too too vain.” He
-speaks elsewhere of his “so careful, I will not say so curious writing”
-(_Elementarie_, p. 253), and says very truly: “Even some of reasonable
-study can hardly understand the couching of my sentence, and the depth of
-my conceit” (_ib._, 235). And this was the death-warrant of his literary
-renown.
-
-§ 4. But there is good reason why Mulcaster should not be forgotten.
-When we read his books we find that wisdom which we are importing in
-the nineteenth century was in a great measure offered us by an English
-schoolmaster in the sixteenth. The latest advances in pedagogy have
-established (1) that the end and aim of education is to develop the
-faculties of the mind and body; (2) that all teaching processes should
-be carefully adapted to the mental constitution of the learner; (3) that
-the first stage in learning is of immense importance and requires a very
-high degree of skill in the teacher; (4) that the brain of children,
-especially of clever children, should not be subjected to “pressure”; (5)
-that childhood should not be spent in learning foreign languages, but
-that its language should be the mother-tongue, and its exercises should
-include handwork, especially drawing; (6) that girls’ education should
-be cared for no less than boys’; (7) that the only hope of improving
-our schools lies in providing training for our teachers. These are all
-regarded as planks in the platform of “the new education,” and these were
-all advocated by Mulcaster.
-
-§ 5. Before I point this out in detail I may remark how greatly education
-has suffered from being confounded with learning. There are interesting
-passages both in Ascham and Mulcaster which prove that the class-ideal
-of the “scholar and gentleman” was of later growth. In the fifteen
-hundreds learning was thought suitable, not for the rich, but for the
-clever. Still, learning, and therefore education, was not for the many,
-but the few. Mulcaster considers at some length how the number of the
-educated is to be kept down (_Positions_, chapp. 36, 37, 39), though even
-here he is in the van, and would have everyone taught to read and write
-(_Positions_, chapp. 5, 36). But the true problem of education was not
-faced till it was discovered that every human being was to be considered
-in it. This was, I think, first seen by Comenius.
-
-With this abatement we find Mulcaster’s sixteenth-century notions not
-much behind our nineteenth.
-
-§ 6. (1 & 2) “Why is it not good,” he asks, “to have every part of the
-body and every power of the soul to be fined to his best?” (_PP._,
-p. 34[49]). Elsewhere he says: “The end of education and train is to
-help Nature to her perfection, which is, when all her abilities be
-perfected in their habit, whereunto right elements be right great helps.
-Consideration and judgment must wisely mark whereunto Nature is either
-evidently given or secretly affectionate and must frame an education
-consonant thereto.” (_El._, p. 28).
-
-Michelet has with justice claimed for Montaigne that he drew the
-teacher’s attention from the thing to be learnt to the _learner_: “_Non
-l’objet, le savoir, mais le sujet, c’est l’homme._” (_Nos Fils_, p. 170.)
-Mulcaster has a claim to share this honour with his great contemporary.
-He really laid the foundation of a science of education. Discussing our
-natural abilities, he says: “We have a perceiving by outward sense to
-feel, to hear, to see, to smell, to taste all sensible things; which
-qualities of the outward, being received in by the _common sense_ and
-examined by _fantsie_, are delivered to _remembrance_, and afterward
-prove our great and only grounds unto further knowledge.”[50] (_El._,
-p. 32.) Here we see Mulcaster endeavouring to base education, or as he
-so well calls it, “train,” on what we receive from Nature. Elsewhere he
-speaks of the three things which we “find peering out of the little young
-souls,” viz: “wit to take, memory to keep, and discretion to discern.”
-(_PP._, p. 27.)
-
-§ 7. (3) I have pointed out that the false ideal of the Renascence led
-schoolmasters to neglect children. Mulcaster remarks that the ancients
-considered the training of children should date from the birth; but he
-himself begins with the school age. Here he has the boldness to propose
-that those who teach the beginners should have the smallest number
-of pupils, and should receive the highest pay. “The first groundwork
-would be laid by the best workman,” says Mulcaster (_PP._, 130),
-here expressing a truth which, like many truths that are not quite
-convenient, is seldom denied but almost systematically ignored.[51]
-
-§ 8. (4) In the _Nineteenth Century_ Magazine for November, 1888,
-appeared a vigorous protest with nearly 400 signatures, many of which
-carried great weight with them, against our _sacrifice of education to
-examination_. Our present system, whether good or bad, is the result
-of accident. Winchester and Eton had large endowments, and naturally
-endeavoured by means of these endowments to get hold of clever boys. At
-first no doubt they succeeded fairly well; but other schools felt bound
-to compete for juvenile brains, and as the number of prizes increased,
-many of our preparatory schools became mere racing stables for children
-destined at 12 or 14 to run for “scholarship stakes.” Thus, in the
-scramble for the money all thought of education has been lost sight of;
-injury has been done in many cases to those who have succeeded, still
-greater injury to those who have failed or who have from the first been
-considered “out of the running.” These very serious evils would have
-been avoided had we taken counsel with Mulcaster: “Pity it were for so
-petty a gain to forego a greater; to win an hour in the morning and lose
-the whole day after; as those people most commonly do which start out
-of their beds too early before they be well awaked or know what it is
-o’clock; and be drowsy when they are up for want of their sleep.” (_PP._,
-p. 19; see also _El._, xi., pp. 52 ff.)
-
-§ 9. (5) It would have been a vast gain to all Europe if Mulcaster had
-been followed instead of Sturm. He was one of the earliest advocates of
-the use of English instead of Latin (see Appendix, p. 534), and good
-reading and writing in English were to be secured before Latin was begun.
-His elementary course included these five things: English reading,
-English writing, drawing, singing, playing a musical instrument. If the
-first course were made to occupy the school-time up to the age of 12,
-Mulcaster held that more would be done between 12 and 16 than between 7
-and 17 in the ordinary way. There would be the further gain that the
-children would not be set against learning. “Because of the too timely
-onset too little is done in too long a time, and the school is made a
-torture, which as it brings forth delight in the end when learning is
-held fast, so should it pass on very pleasantly by the way, while it is
-in learning.”[52] (_PP._, 33.)
-
-§ 10. (6) Among the many changes brought about in the nineteenth century
-we find little that can compare in importance with the advance in the
-education of women. In the last century, whenever a woman exercised
-her mental powers she had to do it by stealth,[53] and her position
-was degraded indeed when compared not only with her descendants of the
-nineteenth century, but also with her ancestors of the sixteenth. This I
-know has been disputed by some authorities, _e.g._, by the late Professor
-Brewer: but to others, _e.g._, to a man who, as regards honesty and
-wisdom, has had few equals and no superiors in investigating the course
-of education, I mean the late Joseph Payne, this educational superiority
-of the women of Elizabeth’s time has seemed to be entirely beyond
-question. On this point Mulcaster’s evidence is very valuable, and, to me
-at least, conclusive. He not only “admits young maidens to learn,” but
-says that “custom stands for him,” and that “the custom of my country ...
-hath made the maidens’ train her own approved travail.” (_PP._, p. 167.)
-
-§ 11. (7) Of all the educational reforms of the nineteenth century by
-far the most fruitful and most expansive is, in my opinion, the training
-of teachers. In this, as in most educational matters, the English,
-though advancing, are in the rear. Far more is made of “training” on
-the Continent and in the United States than in England. And yet we
-made a good start. Our early writers on education saw that the teacher
-has immense influence, and that to turn this influence to good account
-he must have made a study of his profession and have learnt “the best
-that has been thought and done” in it. Every occupation in life has a
-traditional capital of knowledge and experience, and those who intend
-to follow the business, whatever it may be, are required to go through
-some kind of training or apprenticeship before they earn wages. To this
-rule there is but one exception. In English elementary schools children
-are paid to “teach” children, and in the higher schools the beginner is
-allowed to blunder at the expense of his first pupils into whatever skill
-he may in the end manage to pick up. But our English practice received no
-encouragement from the early English writers, Mulcaster, Brinsley,[54]
-and Hoole.
-
-As far as I am aware the first suggestion of a training college for
-teachers came from Mulcaster. He schemed seven special colleges at the
-University; and of these one is for teachers. Some of his suggestions,
-_e.g._, about “University Readers” have lately been adopted, though
-without acknowledgment; and as the University of Cambridge has since
-1879 acknowledged the existence of teachers, and appointed a “Teachers’
-Training Syndicate,” we may perhaps in a few centuries more carry out his
-scheme, and have training colleges at Oxford and Cambridge.[55] Some of
-the reasons he gives us have not gone out of date with his English. They
-are as follows:—
-
-“And why should not these men (the teachers) have both this sufficiency
-in learning, and such room to rest in, thence to be chosen and set forth
-for the common service? Be either children or schools so small a portion
-of our multitude? or is the framing of young minds, and the training
-of their bodies so mean a point of cunning? Be schoolmasters in this
-Realm such a paucity, as they are not even in good sadness to be soundly
-thought on? If the chancel have a minister, the belfry hath a master:
-and where youth is, as it is eachwhere, there must be trainers, or there
-will be worse. He that will not allow of this careful provision for such
-a seminary of masters, is most unworthy either to have had a good master
-himself, or hereafter to have a good one for his. Why should not teachers
-be well provided for, to continue their whole life in the school, as
-_Divines_, _Lawyers_, _Physicians_ do in their several professions?
-Thereby judgment, cunning, and discretion will grow in them: and masters
-would prove old men, and such as _Xenophon_ setteth over children in the
-schooling of _Cyrus_. Whereas now, the school being used but for a shift,
-afterward to pass thence to the other professions, though it send out
-very sufficient men to them, itself remaineth too too naked, considering
-the necessity of the thing. I conclude, therefore, that this trade
-requireth a particular college, for these four causes. 1. First, for the
-subject being the mean to make or mar the whole fry of our State. 2.
-Secondly, for the number, whether of them that are to learn, or of them
-that are to teach. 3. Thirdly, for the necessity of the profession, which
-may not be spared. 4. Fourthly, for the matter of their study, which is
-comparable to the greatest professions, for language, for judgment, for
-skill how to train, for variety in all points of learning, wherein the
-framing of the mind, and the exercising of the body craveth exquisite
-consideration, beside the staidness of the person.” (_PP._, 9 pp. 248, 9.)
-
-§ 12. Though once a celebrated man, and moreover the master of Edmund
-Spenser, Mulcaster has been long forgotten; but when the history of
-education in England comes to be written, the historian will show that
-few schoolmasters in the fifteen hundreds or since were so enlightened as
-the first headmaster of Merchant Taylors’.[56]
-
-
-
-
-IX.
-
-RATICHIUS.
-
-(1571-1635.)
-
-
-§ 1. The history of Education in the fifteen hundreds tells chiefly of
-two very different classes of men. First we have the practical men,
-who set themselves to supply the general demand for instruction in
-the classical languages. This class includes most of the successful
-schoolmasters, such as Sturm, Trotzendorf, Neander, and the Jesuits.
-The other class were thinkers, who never attempted to teach, but merely
-gave form to truths which would in the end affect teaching. These were
-especially Rabelais and Montaigne.
-
-§ 2. With the sixteen hundreds we come to men who have earned for
-themselves a name unpleasant in our ears, although it might fittingly be
-applied to all the greatest benefactors of the human race. I mean the
-name of _Innovators_. These men were not successful; at least they seemed
-unsuccessful to their contemporaries, who contrasted the promised results
-with the actual. But their efforts were by no means thrown away: and
-posterity at least, has acknowledged its obligations to them. One sees
-now that they could hardly have expected justice in their own time. It is
-safe to adopt the customary plan; it is safe to speculate how that plan
-may and should be altered; but it is dangerous to attempt to translate
-new thought into new action, and boldly to advance without a track,
-trusting to principles which may, like the compass, show you the right
-direction, but, like the compass, will give you no hint of the obstacles
-that lie before you.
-
-The chief demands made by the Innovators have been: 1st, that the study
-of _things_ should precede, or be united with, the study of _words_ (_v._
-Appendix, p. 538); 2nd, that knowledge should be communicated, where
-possible, by appeals to the senses; 3rd, that all linguistic study should
-begin with that of the mother-tongue; 4th, that Latin and Greek should
-be taught to such boys only as would be likely to complete a learned
-education; 5th, that physical education should be attended to in all
-classes of society for the sake of health, not simply with a view to
-gentlemanly accomplishments; 6th, that a new method of teaching should be
-adopted, framed “according to Nature.”
-
-Their notions of method have, of course, been very various; but their
-systems mostly agree in these particulars:—
-
-1. They proceed from the concrete to the abstract, giving some knowledge
-of the thing itself before the rules which refer to it. 2. They employ
-the student in analysing matter put before him, rather than in working
-synthetically according to precept. 3. They require the student to _teach
-himself_ and investigate for himself under the superintendence and
-guidance of the master, rather than be taught by the master and receive
-anything on the master’s authority. 4. They rely on the interest excited
-in the pupil by the acquisition of knowledge, and renounce coercion. 5.
-Only that which is understood may be committed to memory (_v. supra, p.
-74, n._)
-
-§ 3. The first of the Innovators was Wolfgang Ratichius, who, oddly
-enough, is known to posterity by a name he and his contemporaries never
-heard of. His father’s name was Radtké or Ratké, and the son having
-received a University education, translated this into Ratichius. With
-our usual impatience of redundant syllables, we have attempted to reduce
-the word to its original dimensions, and in the process have hit upon
-_Ratich_, which is a new name altogether.
-
-Ratke (to adopt the true form of the original) was connected, as Basedow
-was a hundred and fifty years later, with Holstein and Hamburg. He was
-born at Wilster in Holstein in 1571, and studied at Hamburg and at the
-University of Rostock. He afterwards travelled to Amsterdam and to
-England, and it was perhaps owing to his residence in this country that
-he was acquainted with the new philosophy of Bacon. We next hear of him
-at the Electoral Diet, held as usual in Frankfurt-on-Main, in 1612. He
-was then over forty years old, and he had elaborated a new scheme for
-teaching. Like all inventors, he was fully impressed with the importance
-of his discovery, and he sent to the assembled Princes an address, in
-which he undertook some startling performances. He was able, he said: (1)
-to teach young or old Hebrew, Greek, and Latin, or other languages, in
-a very short time and without any difficulty; (2) to establish schools
-in which all arts should be taught and extended; (3) to introduce and
-peaceably establish throughout the German Empire a uniform speech, a
-uniform government, and (still more wonderful) a uniform religion.
-
-§ 4. Naturally enough the address arrested the attention of the Princes.
-The Landgraf Lewis of Darmstadt thought the matter worthy of examination,
-and he deputed two learned men, Jung and Helwig, to confer with Ratke.
-Their report was entirely favourable, and they did all they could to get
-for Ratke the means of carrying his scheme into execution. “We are,”
-writes Helwig, “in bondage to Latin. The Greeks and Saracens would
-never have done so much for posterity if they had spent their youth in
-acquiring a foreign tongue. We must study our own language, and then
-sciences. Ratichius has discovered the art of teaching according to
-Nature. By his method, languages will be quickly learned, so that we
-shall have time for science; and science will be learned even better
-still, as the natural system suits best with science, which is the study
-of Nature.” Moved by this report the Town Council of Augsburg agreed to
-give Ratke the necessary power over their schools, and accompanied by
-Helwig, he accordingly went to Augsburg and set to work. But the good
-folks of Augsburg were like children, who expect a plant as soon as they
-have sown the seed. They were speedily dissatisfied, and Ratke and Helwig
-left Augsburg, the latter much discouraged but still faithful to his
-friend. Ratke went to Frankfurt again, and a Commission was appointed
-to consider his proposals, but by its advice Ratke was “allowed to try
-elsewhere.”
-
-§ 5. He would never have had a fair chance had he not had a firm friend
-in the Duchess Dorothy of Weimar. Then, as now, we find women taking the
-lead in everything which promises to improve education, and this good
-Duchess sent for Ratke and tested his method by herself taking lessons
-of him in Hebrew. With this adult pupil his plans seem to have answered
-well, and she always continued his admirer and advocate. By her advice
-her brother, Prince Lewis of Anhalt-Koethen, decided that the great
-discovery should not be lost for want of a fair trial; so he called Ratke
-to Koethen and complied with all his demands. A band of teachers sworn
-to secrecy were first of all instructed in the art by Ratke himself.
-Next, schools with very costly appliances were provided, and lastly some
-500 little Koetheners—boys and girls—were collected and handed over to
-Ratke to work his wonders with.
-
-§ 6. It never seems to have occurred either to Ratke or his friends or
-the Prince that all the principles and methods that ever were or ever
-will be established could not enable a man without experience to organize
-a school of 500 children. A man who had never been in the water might
-just as well plunge into the sea at once and trust to his knowledge of
-the laws of fluid pressure to save him from drowning. There are endless
-details to be settled which would bewilder any one without experience.
-Some years ago school-buildings were provided for one of our county
-schools, and the council consulted a master of great experience who
-strongly urged them not to start as they had intended with 300 boys.
-“_I_ would not undertake such a thing,” said he. When pressed for his
-reason, he said quietly, “I would not be responsible for the _boots_.”
-I have no doubt Ratke had to come down from his principles and his new
-method to deal with numberless little questions of caps, bonnets, late
-children, broken windows, and the like; and he was without the tact and
-the experience which enable many ordinary men and women, who know nothing
-of principles, to settle such matters satisfactorily.
-
-§ 7. Years afterwards there was another thinker much more profound and
-influential than Ratke, who was quite as incompetent to organize. I
-mean Pestalozzi. But Pestalozzi had one great advantage over Ratke. He
-attached all his assistants to him by inspiring them with love and
-reverence of himself. This made up for many deficiencies. But Ratke
-was not like the fatherly, self-sacrificing Pestalozzi. He leads us to
-suspect him of being an impostor by making a mystery of his invention,
-and he never could keep the peace with his assistants.
-
-§ 8. So, as might have been expected, the grand experiment failed. The
-Prince, exasperated at being placed in a somewhat ridiculous position,
-and possibly at the serious loss of money into the bargain, revenged
-himself on Ratke by throwing him into prison, nor would he release him
-till he had made him sign a paper in which he admitted that he had
-undertaken more than he was able to fulfil.
-
-§ 9. This was no doubt the case; and yet Ratke had done more for the
-Prince than the Prince for Ratke. In Koethen had been opened the first
-German school in which the children were taught to make a study of the
-German language.
-
-Ratke never recovered from his failure at Koethen, and nothing memorable
-is recorded of him afterwards. He died in 1635.
-
-§ 10. Much was written by Ratke; much has been written about him; and
-those who wish to know more than the few particulars I have given may
-find all they want in Raumer or Barnard. The Innovator failed in gaining
-the applause of his contemporaries, and he does not seem to stand high in
-the respect of posterity; but he was a pioneer in the art of didactics,
-and the rules which Raumer has gathered from the _Methodus Institutionis
-nova ... Ratichii et Ratichianorum_, published by Rhenius at Leipzig
-in 1626, raise some of the most interesting points to which a teachers
-attention can be directed. I will therefore state them, and say briefly
-what I think of them.
-
-§ 11. I. _In everything we should follow the order of Nature. There is
-a certain natural sequence along which the human intelligence moves in
-acquiring knowledge. This sequence must be studied, and instruction must
-be based on the knowledge of it._
-
-Here, as in all teaching of the Reformers, we find “Nature” used as if
-the word stood for some definite idea. From the time of the Stoics we
-have been exhorted to “follow Nature.” In more modern times the demand
-was well formulated by Picus of Mirandola: “Take no heed what thing
-many men do, but what thing the _very law of Nature_, what thing _very
-reason_, what thing _our Lord Himself_ showeth thee to be done.” (Trans.
-by Sir Thomas More, quoted in Seebohm, _Oxford Reformers_.)
-
-Pope, always happy in expression but not always clear in thought, talks
-of—
-
- “Unerring Nature, still divinely bright,
- One clear, unchanged, and universal light.”
-
- (_Essay on C._, i, 70.)
-
-But as Dr. W. T. Harris has well pointed out (_St. Louis, Mo., School
-Report, ’78, ’79_, p. 217), with this word “Nature” writers on education
-do a great deal of juggling. Some times they use it for the external
-world, including in it man’s _unconscious_ growth, sometimes they make it
-stand for the ideal. What sense does Ratke attach to it? One might have
-some difficulty in determining. Perhaps the best meaning we can nowadays
-find for his rule is: _study Psychology_.
-
-§ 12. II. _One thing at a time._ Master one subject before you take up
-another. For each language master a single book. Go over it again and
-again till you have completely made it your own.
-
-In its crude form this rule could not be carried out. If the attempt were
-made the results would be no better than from the six months’ course
-of Terence under Ratke. It is “against all Nature” to go on hammering
-away at one thing day after day without any change; and there is a point
-beyond which any attempt at thoroughness must end in simple stagnation.
-The rule then would have two fatal drawbacks: 1st, it would lead to
-monotony; 2nd, it would require a completeness of learning which to
-the young would be impossible. But in these days no one follows Ratke.
-On the other hand, concentration in study is often neglected, and our
-time-tables afford specimens of the most ingenious mosaic work, in which
-everything has a place, but in so small a quantity that the learners
-never find out what each thing really is. School subjects are like
-the clubs of the eastern tale, which did not give out their medicinal
-properties till the patient got warm in the use of them.
-
-When a good hold on a subject has once been secured, short study, with
-considerable intervals between, may suffice to keep up and even increase
-the knowledge already obtained; but in matters of any difficulty, _e.g._,
-in a new language, no start is ever made without allotting to it much
-more than two or three hours a week. It is perhaps a mistake to suppose
-that if a good deal of the language may be learnt by giving it ten hours
-a week, twice that amount might be acquired in twenty hours. It is a
-much greater mistake if we think that one-fifth of the amount might be
-acquired in two hours.
-
-§ 13. III. _The same thing should be repeated over and over again._
-
-This is like the Jesuits’ _Repetitio Mater Studiorum_; and the same
-notion was well developed 200 years later by Jacotot.
-
-By Ratke’s application of this rule some odd results were produced. The
-little Koetheners were drilled for German in a book of the Bible (Genesis
-was selected), and then for Latin in a play of Terence.
-
-Unlike many “theoretical notions” this precept of Ratke’s comes more and
-more into favour as the schoolmaster increases in age and experience. But
-we must be careful to take our pupils with us; and this repeating the
-same thing over and over may seem to them what marking time would seem
-to soldiers who wanted to march. Even more than the last rule this is
-open to the objections that monotony is deadening, and perfect attainment
-of anything but words impossible. In keeping to a subject then we must
-not rely on simple repetition. The rule now accepted is thus stated by
-Diesterweg:—“Every subject of instruction should be viewed from as many
-sides as possible, and as varied exercises as possible should be set on
-one and the same thing.” The art of the master is shown in disguising
-repetition and bringing known things into new connection, so that they
-may partially at least retain their freshness.
-
-§ 14. IV. _First let the mother-tongue be studied, and teach everything
-through the mother-tongue, so that the learners attention may not be
-diverted to the language._
-
-We saw that Sturm, the leading schoolmaster of Renascence, tried to
-suppress the mother-tongue and substitute Latin for it. Against this a
-vigorous protest was made in this country by Mulcaster. And our language
-was never conquered by a foreign language, as German was conquered first
-by Latin and then by French. But “the tongues” have always had the
-lion’s share of attention in the schoolroom, and though many have seen
-and Milton has said that “our understanding cannot in this body found
-itself but on sensible things,” this truth is only now making its way
-into the schoolroom. Hitherto the foundation has hardly been laid before
-“the schoolmaster has stept in and staid the building by confounding the
-language.”[57] Ratke’s protest against this will always be put to his
-credit in the history of education.
-
-§ 15. V. _Everything without constraint._ “The young should not be beaten
-to make them learn or for not having learnt. It is compulsion and stripes
-that set young people against studying. Boys are often beaten for not
-having learnt, but they would have learnt had they been well taught. The
-human understanding is so formed that it has pleasure in receiving what
-it should retain: and this pleasure you destroy by your harshness. Where
-the master is skilful and judicious, the boys will take to him and to
-their lessons. Folly lurks indeed in the heart of the child and must be
-driven out with the rod; but not by the _teacher_.”
-
-Here at least there is nothing original in Ratke’s precept. A goodly
-array of authorities have condemned learning “upon compulsion.” This
-array extends at least as far as from Plato to Bishop Dupanloup. “In the
-case of the mind, no study pursued under compulsion remains rooted in
-the memory,” says Plato.[58] “Everything depends,” says Dupanloup, “on
-what the teacher induces his pupils to do _freely_: for authority is not
-constraint—it ought to be inseparable from respect and devotion. I will
-respect human liberty in the smallest child.” As far as I have observed
-there is only one class of persons whom the authorities from Plato to
-Dupanloup have failed to convince, and that is the schoolmasters. This
-is the class to which I have belonged, and I should not be prepared
-to take Plato’s counsel: “Bring up your boys in their studies without
-constraint and in a playful manner.” (_Ib._) At the same time I see the
-importance of self-activity, and there is no such thing as self-activity
-upon compulsion. You can no more hurry thought with the cane than you
-can hurry a snail with a pin. So without interest there can be no proper
-learning. Interest must be aroused—even in Latin Grammar. But if they
-could choose their own occupation, the boys, however interested in their
-work, would probably find something else more interesting still. We
-cannot get on, and never shall, without the _must_.
-
-§ 16. VI. _Nothing may be learnt by heart._
-
-It has always been a common mistake in the schoolroom to confound the
-power of running along a sequence of sounds with a mastery of the thought
-with which those sounds should be connected. But, as I have remarked
-elsewhere (_supra_, p. 74, note), the two things, though different, are
-not opposed. Too much is likely to be made of learning by heart, for of
-the two things the pupils find it the easier, and the teacher the more
-easily tested. We may, however, guard against the abuse without giving up
-the use.
-
-§ 17. VII.[59] _Uniformity in all things._
-
-Both in the way of learning, and in the books, and the rules, a uniform
-method should be observed, says Ratke.
-
-The right plan is for the learner to acquire familiar knowledge of one
-subject or part of a subject, and then use this for comparison when he
-learns beyond it. If the same method of learning is adopted throughout,
-this will render comparison more easy and more striking.[60]
-
-§ 18. VIII. _The thing itself should come first, then whatever explains
-it._
-
-To those who do not with closed eyes cling to the method of their
-predecessors, this rule may seem founded on common-sense. Would any
-one but a “teacher,” or a writer of school books, ever think of making
-children who do not know a word of French, learn about the French
-accents? And yet what Ratke said 250 years ago has not been disproved
-since: “Accidens rei priusquam rem ipsam quaerere prorsus absonum et
-absurdum esse videtur,” which I take to mean: “Before the learner has a
-notion of the thing itself, it is folly to worry him about its accidents
-or even its properties, essential or unessential.” _Ne modus rei ante
-rem._[61]
-
-This rule of Ratke’s warns teachers against a very common mistake.
-The subject is _to them_ in full view, and they make the most minute
-observations on it. But these things cannot be seen by their pupils;
-and even if the beginner could see these minutiæ, he would find in them
-neither interest nor advantage. But when we apply Ratke’s principle more
-widely, we find ourselves involved in the great question whether our
-method should be based on synthesis or analysis, a question which Ratke’s
-method did not settle for us.
-
-§ 19. IX. _Everything by experience and examination of the parts._ Or as
-he states the rule in Latin: _Per inductionem et experimentum omnia._
-
-Nothing was to be received on authority, and this disciple of Bacon went
-beyond his master and took for his motto: _Vetustas cessit, ratio vicit_
-(“Age has yielded, reason prevailed”); as if reason must be brand-new,
-and truth might wax old and be ready to vanish away.
-
-§ 20. From these rules of his we see that Ratke did much to formulate the
-main principles of Didactics. He also deserves to be remembered among the
-methodizers who have tackled the problem—how to teach a language.
-
-At Köthen the instructor of the lowest class had to talk with the
-children, and to take pains with their pronunciation. When they knew
-their letters (Ickelsamer’s plan for reading Ratke seems to have
-neglected) the teacher read the Book of Genesis through to them, each
-chapter twice over, requiring the children to follow with eye and finger.
-Then the teacher began the chapter again, and read about four lines
-only, which the children read after him. When the book had been worked
-over in this way, the children were required to read it through without
-assistance. Reading once secured, the master proceeded to grammar. He
-explained, say, what a substantive was, and then showed instances in
-Genesis, and next required the children to point out others. In this way
-the grammar was verified throughout from Genesis, and the pupils were
-exercised in declining and conjugating words taken from the Book.
-
-When they advanced to the study of Latin, they were given a _translation_
-of a play of Terence, and worked over it several times before they were
-shown the Latin.
-
-The master then translated the play to them, each half-hour’s work twice
-over. At the next reading, the master translated the first half-hour,
-and the boys translated the same piece the second. Having thus got
-through the play, they began again, and only the boys translated. After
-this there was a course of grammar, which was applied to the Terence,
-as the grammar of the mother-tongue had been to Genesis. Finally, the
-pupils were put through a course of exercises, in which they had to turn
-into Latin sentences imitated from the Terence, and differing from the
-original only in the number or person used.
-
-Raumer gives other particulars, and quotes largely from the almost
-unreadable account of Kromayer, one of Ratke’s followers, in order that
-we may have, as he says, a notion of the tediousness of the method. No
-doubt anyone who has followed me hitherto, will consider that this point
-has been brought out already with sufficient distinctness.
-
-§ 21. When we compare Ratke’s method with Ascham’s, we find several
-points of agreement. Ratke would begin the study of a language by taking
-a model book, and working through it with the pupil a great many times.
-Ascham did the same. Each lecture according to his plan would be gone
-over “a dozen times at the least.” Both construed to the pupil instead of
-requiring him to make out the sense for himself. Both Ratke and Ascham
-taught grammar not by itself, but in connection with the model book.
-
-But the points of difference are still more striking. In one respect
-Ratke’s plan was weak. It gave the pupils little to do, and made no
-use of the pen. Ascham’s was better in this and also as a training in
-accuracy. Ascham was, as I have pointed out, a “complete retainer.” Ratke
-was a “rapid impressionist.” His system was a good deal like that which
-had great vogue in the early part of this century as the “Hamiltonian
-System.” From the first the language was to be laid on “very thick,” in
-the belief that “some of it was sure to stick.” The impressions would be
-slight, and there would at first be much confusion between words which
-had a superficial resemblance, but accuracy it was thought would come in
-time.
-
-§ 22. The contest between the two schools of thought of which Ascham and
-Ratke may be taken as representatives has continued till now, and within
-the last few years both parties have made great advances in method. But
-in nothing does progress seem slower than in education; and the plan of
-grammar-teaching in vogue fifty years ago was inferior to the methods
-advocated by the old writers.[62]
-
-
-
-
-X.
-
-COMENIUS.
-
-(1592-1671).
-
-
-§ 1. One of the most hopeful signs of the improvement of education is the
-rapid advance in the last thirty years of the fame of Comenius, and the
-growth of a large literature about the man and his ideas. Twenty-three
-years ago, when I first became interested in him, his name was hardly
-known beyond Germany. In English there was indeed an excellent life of
-him prefixed to a translation of his _School of Infancy_; but this work,
-by Daniel Benham (London, 1858), had not then, and has not now, anything
-like the circulation it deserves. A much more successful book has been
-Professor S. S. Laurie’s _John Amos Comenius_ (Cambridge University
-Press), and this is known to most, and should be to all, English students
-of education. By the Germans and French Comenius is now recognised as
-the man who first treated education in a scientific spirit, and who
-bequeathed the rudiments of a science to later ages. On this account the
-great library of pedagogy at Leipzig has been named in his honour the
-“Comenius Stiftung.”
-
-§ 2. John Amos Komensky or Comenius, the son of a miller, who belonged
-to the Moravian Brethren, was born, at the Moravian village of Niwnic,
-in 1592. Of his early life we know nothing but what he himself tells
-us in the following passage:—“Losing both my parents while I was yet a
-child, I began, through the neglect of my guardians, but at sixteen years
-of age to taste of the Latin tongue. Yet by the goodness of God, that
-taste bred such a thirst in me, that I ceased not from that time, by all
-means and endeavours, to labour for the repairing of my lost years; and
-now not only for myself, but for the good of others also. For I could
-not but pity others also in this respect, especially in my own nation,
-which is too slothful and careless in matter of learning. Thereupon
-I was continually full of thoughts for the finding out of some means
-whereby more might be inflamed with the love of learning, and whereby
-learning itself might be made more compendious, both in matter of the
-charge and cost, and of the labour belonging thereto, that so the youth
-might be brought by a more easy method, unto some notable proficiency in
-learning.”[63] With these thoughts in his head, he pursued his studies in
-several German towns, especially at Herborn in Nassau. Here he saw the
-Report on Ratke’s method published in 1612 for the Universities of Jena
-and Giessen; and we find him shortly afterwards writing his first book,
-_Grammaticæ facilioris Præcepta_, which was published at Prag in 1616.
-On his return to Moravia, he was appointed to the Brethren’s school at
-Prerau, but (to use his own words) “being shortly after at the age of
-twenty-four called to the service of the Church, because _that divine
-function_ challenged all my endeavours (divinumque HOC AGE præ oculis
-erat) these scholastic cares were laid aside.”[64] His pastoral charge
-was at Fulneck, the headquarters of the Brethren. As such it soon felt
-the effects of the Battle of Prag, being in the following year (1621)
-taken and plundered by the Spaniards. On this occasion Comenius lost his
-MSS. and almost everything he possessed. The year after his wife died,
-and then his only child. In 1624 all Protestant ministers were banished,
-and in 1627 a new decree extended the banishment to Protestants of every
-description. Comenius bore up against wave after wave of calamity with
-Christian courage and resignation, and his writings at this period were
-of great value to his fellow-sufferers.
-
-§ 3. For a time he found a hiding-place in the family of a Bohemian
-nobleman, Baron Sadowsky, at Slaupna, in the Bohemian mountains, and
-in this retirement, his attention was again directed to the science
-of teaching. The Baron had engaged Stadius, one of the proscribed, to
-educate his three sons, and, at Stadius’ request, Comenius wrote “some
-canons of a better method,” for his use. We find him, too, endeavouring
-to enrich the literature of his mother-tongue, making a metrical
-translation of the Psalms of David, and even writing imitations of
-Virgil, Ovid, and Cato’s _Distichs_.
-
-In 1627, however, the persecution waxed so hot, that Comenius, with most
-of the Brethren, had to flee their country, never to return. On crossing
-the border, Comenius and the exiles who accompanied him knelt down, and
-prayed that God would not suffer His truth to fail out of their native
-land.
-
-§ 4. Comenius had now, as Michelet says, lost his country and found his
-country, which was the world. Many of the banished, and Comenius among
-them, settled at the Polish town of Leszna, or, as the Germans call it,
-Lissa, near the Silesian frontier. Here there was an old-established
-school of the Brethren, in which Comenius found employment. Once more
-engaged in education, he earnestly set about improving the traditional
-methods. As he himself says,[65] “Being by God’s permission banished
-my country with divers others, and forced for my sustenance to apply
-myself to the instruction of youth, I gave my mind to the perusal of
-divers authors, and lighted upon many which in this age have made a
-beginning in reforming the method of studies, as Ratichius, Helvicus,
-Rhenius, Ritterus, Glaumius, Cæcilius, and who indeed should have had
-the first place, Joannes Valentinus Andreæ, a man of a nimble and clear
-brain; as also Campanella and the Lord Verulam, those famous restorers
-of philosophy;—by reading of whom I was raised in good hope, that at
-last those so many various sparks would conspire into a flame; yet
-observing here and there some defects and gaps as it were, I could
-not contain myself from attempting something that might rest upon an
-immovable foundation, and which, if it could be once found out, should
-not be subject to any ruin. Therefore, after many workings and tossings
-of my thoughts, by reducing everything to the immovable laws of Nature,
-I lighted upon my _Didactica Magna_, which shows the art of readily and
-solidly teaching all men all things.”
-
-§ 5. This work did not immediately see the light, but in 1631 Comenius
-published a book which made him and the little Polish town where he lived
-known throughout Europe and beyond it. This was the _Janua Linguarum
-Reserata_, or “Gate of Tongues unlocked.” Writing about it many years
-afterwards he says that he never could have imagined that that little
-work, fitted only for children (_puerile istud opusculum_), would
-have been received with applause by all the learned world. Letters
-of congratulation came to him from every quarter; and the work was
-translated not only into Greek, Bohemian, Polish, Swedish, Belgian,
-English, French, Spanish, Italian, Hungarian, but also into Turkish,
-Arabic, Persian, and even “Mongolian, which is familiar to all the East
-Indies.” (Dedication of _Schola Ludus_ in vol. i. of collected works.)
-
-§ 6. Incited by the applause of the learned, Comenius now planned a
-scheme of universal knowledge, to impart which a series of works would
-have to be written, far exceeding what the resources and industry of
-one man, however great a scholar, could produce. He therefore looked
-about for a patron to supply money for the support of himself and his
-assistants, whilst these works were in progress. “The vastness of the
-labours I contemplate,” he writes to a Polish nobleman, “demands that I
-should have a wealthy patron, whether we look at their extent, or at the
-necessity of securing assistants, or at the expenses generally.”
-
-§ 7. At Leszna there seemed no prospect of his obtaining the aid he
-required; but his fame now procured him invitations from distant
-countries. First he received a call to improve the schools of Sweden.
-After declining this he was induced by his English friends to undertake a
-journey to London, where Parliament had shown its interest in the matter
-of education, and had employed Hartlib,[66] an enthusiastic admirer of
-Comenius, to attempt a reform. Probably through his family connections,
-Hartlib was on intimate terms with Comenius, and he had much influence
-on his career. It would seem that Comenius, though never tired of forming
-magnificent schemes, hung back from putting anything into a definite
-shape. After the appearance of the _Janua Linguarum Reserata_, he
-planned a _Janua Rerum_, and even allowed that title to appear in “the
-list of new books to come forth at the next Mart at Frankford.”[67] But
-again he hesitated, and withdrew the announcement. Here Hartlib came
-in, and forced him into print without his intending or even knowing it
-(“præter meam spem et me inconsulto”; preface to _Conatuum Pansophicorum
-Dilucidatio_, 1638). Hartlib begged of Comenius a sketch of his great
-scheme, and with apologies to the author for not awaiting his consent,
-he published it at Oxford in 1637, under the title of _Conatuum
-Comenianorum Præludia_. Comenius accepted the _fait accompli_ with the
-best grace he could—pleased at the stir the book made in the learned
-world, but galled by criticisms, especially by doubts of his orthodoxy.
-To refute the cavillers, he wrote a tract called _Conatuum Pansophicorum
-Dilucidatio_ which was published in 1638. In 1639 Hartlib issued in
-London a new duodecimo edition of the _Præludia_ (or as he then called
-it, _Prodromus_) and the _Dilucidatio_, adding a dissertation by Comenius
-on the study of Latin. Now, when everything seemed ripe for a change
-in education, and Comenius himself was on his way to England, Hartlib
-translated the _Prodromus_, and when Comenius had come he published it
-with the title, _A Reformation of Schools_, 1642.[68]
-
-§ 8. It was no doubt by Hartlib’s influence that Parliament had been led
-to summon Comenius, and at any other time the visit might have been “the
-occasion of great good to this island,” but _inter arma silent magistri_,
-and Comenius went away again. This is the account he himself has left us:—
-
-“When seriously proposing to abandon the thorny studies of Didactics,
-and pass on to the pleasing studies of philosophical truth, I find
-myself again among the same thorns.... After the _Pansophiæ Prodromus_
-had been published and dispersed through various kingdoms of Europe,
-many of the learned approved of the object and plan of the work, but
-despaired of its ever being accomplished by one man alone, and therefore
-advised that a college of learned men should be instituted to carry it
-into effect. Mr. S. Hartlib, who had forwarded the publication of the
-_Pansophiæ Prodromus_ in England, laboured earnestly in this matter,
-and endeavoured, by every possible means, to bring together for this
-purpose a number of men of intellectual activity. And at length, having
-found one or two, he invited me also, with many very strong entreaties.
-My people having consented to the journey, I came to London on the very
-day of the autumnal equinox (September 22, 1641), and there at last
-learnt that I had been invited by the order of the Parliament. But as
-the Parliament, the King having then gone to Scotland [August 10], was
-dismissed for a three months’ recess [not quite three months, but from
-September 9 to October 20], I was detained there through the winter,
-my friends mustering what pansophic apparatus they could, though it
-was but slender.... The Parliament meanwhile, having re assembled, and
-our presence being known, I had orders to wait until they should have
-sufficient leisure from other business to appoint a Commission of
-learned and wise men from their body for hearing us and considering the
-grounds of our design. They communicated also beforehand their thoughts
-of assigning to us some college with its revenues, whereby a certain
-number of learned and industrious men called from all nations might be
-honourably maintained, either for a term of years or in perpetuity.
-There was even named for the purpose _The Savoy_ in London; _Winchester
-College_ out of London was named; and again nearer the city, _Chelsea
-College_, inventories of which and of its revenues were communicated to
-us, so that nothing seemed more certain than that the design of the great
-Verulam, concerning the opening somewhere of a Universal College, devoted
-to the advancement of the Sciences could be carried out. But the rumour
-of the Insurrection in Ireland, and of the massacre in one night of more
-than 200,000 English [October, November], and the sudden departure of the
-King from London [January 10, 1641-2], and the plentiful signs of the
-bloody war about to break out disturbed these plans, and obliged me to
-hasten my return to my own people.”[69]
-
-§ 9. While Comenius was in England, where he stayed till August, 1642,
-he received an invitation to France. This invitation, which he did not
-accept, came perhaps through his correspondent Mersenne, a man of great
-learning, who is said to have been highly esteemed and often consulted
-by Descartes. It is characteristic of the state of opinion in such
-matters in those days, that Mersenne tells Comenius of a certain Le
-Maire, by whose method a boy of six years old, might, with nine months’
-instruction, acquire a perfect knowledge of three languages. Mersenne
-also had dreams of a universal alphabet, and even of a universal language.
-
-§ 10. Comenius’ hopes of assistance in England being at an end, he
-thought of returning to Leszna; but a letter now reached him from a
-rich Dutch merchant, Lewis de Geer, who offered him a home and means
-for carrying out his plans. This Lewis de Geer, “the Grand Almoner of
-Europe,” as Comenius calls him, displayed a princely munificence in the
-assistance he gave the exiled Protestants. At this time he was living at
-Nordcoping in Sweden. Comenius having now found such a patron as he was
-seeking, set out from England and joined him there.
-
-§ 11. Soon after the arrival of Comenius in Sweden, the great Oxenstiern
-sent for him to Stockholm, and with John Skyte, the Chancellor of Upsal
-University, examined him and his system. “These two,” as Comenius says,
-“exercised me in colloquy for four days, and chiefly the most illustrious
-Oxenstiern, that eagle of the North (_Aquila Aquilonius_). He inquired
-into the foundations of both my schemes, the Didactic and the Pansophic,
-so searchingly, that it was unlike anything that had been done before
-by any of my learned critics. In the first two days he examined the
-Didactics, and finally said: ‘From an early age I perceived that our
-Method of Studies generally in use is a harsh and crude one (_violentum
-quiddam_), but where the thing stuck I could not find out. At length,
-having been sent by my King of glorious memory [_i.e._, by Gustavus
-Adolphus], as ambassador into Germany, I conversed on the subject with
-various learned men. And when I had heard that Wolfgang Ratichius was
-toiling at an amended Method I had no rest of mind till I had him before
-me, but instead of talking on the subject, he put into my hands a big
-quarto volume. I swallowed this trouble, and having turned over the whole
-book, I saw that he had detected well enough the maladies of our schools
-but the remedies he proposed did not seem to me sufficient. Yours, Mr.
-Comenius, rest on firmer foundations. Go on with the work.’ I answered
-that I had done all I could in those matters, and must now go on to
-others. ‘I know,’ said he, ‘that you are toiling at greater affairs, for
-I have read your _Prodromus Pansophiæ_. That we will discuss to-morrow, I
-must now to public business.’ Next day he began on my Pansophic attempts,
-and examined them with still greater severity. ‘Are you a man,’ he asked,
-‘who can bear contradiction?’ ‘I can,’ said I, ‘and for that reason my
-_Prodromus_ or preliminary sketch was sent out first (not indeed that I
-sent it out myself, this was done by friends), that it might meet with
-criticism. And if we seek the criticism of all and sundry, how much
-more from men of mature wisdom and heroic reason?’ He began accordingly
-to discourse against the hope of a better state of things arising from
-a rightly instituted study of Pansophia; first, objecting political
-reasons, then what was said in Scripture about ‘the last times.’ All
-which objections I so answered that he ended with these words: ‘Into no
-one’s mind do I think such things have come before. Stand upon these
-grounds of yours; so shall we some time come to agreement, or there
-will be no way left. My advice, however,’ added he, ‘is that you first
-do something for the schools, and bring the study of the Latin tongue
-to a greater facility; thus you will prepare the way for those greater
-matters.’” As Skyte and afterwards De Geer gave the same advice, Comenius
-felt himself constrained to follow it; so he agreed to settle at Elbing,
-in Prussia, and there write a work on teaching, in which the principles
-of the _Didactica Magna_ should be worked out with especial reference
-to teaching languages. Notwithstanding the remonstrances of his English
-friends, to which Comenius would gladly have listened, he was kept by
-Oxenstiern and De Geer strictly to his agreement, and thus, much against
-his will, he was held fast for eight years in what he calls the “miry
-entanglements of logomachy.”
-
-§ 12. Elbing, where, after a journey to Leszna to fetch his family
-(for he had married again), Comenius now settled, is in West Prussia,
-thirty-six miles south-east of Dantzic. From 1577 to 1660 an English
-trading company was settled here, with which the family of Hartlib was
-connected. This perhaps was one reason why Comenius chose this town
-for his residence. But although he had a grant of £300 a year from
-Parliament, Hartlib, instead of assisting with money, seems at this time
-to have himself needed assistance, for in October, 1642, Comenius writes
-to De Geer that he fears Fundanius and Hartlib are suffering from want,
-and that he intends for them £200 promised by the London booksellers; he
-suggests that De Geer shall give them £30 each meanwhile. (Benham, p. 63.)
-
-§ 13. The relation between Comenius and his patron naturally proved
-a difficult one. The Dutchman thought that as he supported Comenius,
-and contributed something more for the assistants, he might expect of
-Comenius that he would devote all his time to the scholastic treatise
-he had undertaken. Comenius, however, was a man of immense energy and
-of widely extended sympathies and connections. He was a “Bishop” of the
-religious body to which he belonged, and in this capacity he engaged
-in controversy, and attended some religious conferences. Then again,
-pupils were pressed upon him, and as money to pay five writers whom
-he kept at work was always running short, he did not decline them. De
-Geer complained of this, and supplies were not furnished with wonted
-regularity. In 1647 Comenius writes to Hartlib that he is almost
-overwhelmed with cares, and sick to death of writing begging-letters.
-Yet in this year he found means to publish a book _On the Causes of
-this_ (_i.e._, the Thirty Years) _War_, in which the Roman Catholics are
-attacked with great bitterness—a bitterness for which the position of the
-writer affords too good an excuse.
-
-§ 14. The year 1648 brought with it the downfall of all Comenius’ hopes
-of returning to his native land. The Peace of Westphalia was concluded
-without any provision being made for the restoration of the exiles. But
-though thus doomed to pass the remaining years of his life in banishment,
-Comenius, in this year, seemed to have found an escape from all his
-pecuniary difficulties. The Senior Bishop, the head of the Moravian
-Brethren, died, and Comenius was chosen to succeed him. In consequence
-of this, Comenius returned to Leszna, where due provision was made for
-him by the Brethren. Before he left Elbing, however, the fruit of his
-residence there, the _Methodus Linguarum Novissima_, had been submitted
-to a commission of learned Swedes, and approved of by them. The MS. went
-with him to Leszna, where it was published.
-
-§ 15. As head of the Moravian Church, there now devolved upon Comenius
-the care of all the exiles, and his widespread reputation enabled him to
-get situations for many of them in all Protestant countries. But he was
-now so much connected with the science of education, that even his post
-at Leszna did not prevent his receiving and accepting a call to reform
-the schools in Transylvania. A model school was formed at Saros-Patak,
-where there was a settlement of the banished Brethren, and in this school
-Comenius laboured from 1650 till 1654. At this time he wrote his most
-celebrated book, which is indeed only an abridgment of his _Janua_ with
-the important addition of pictures, and sent it to Nürnberg, where it
-appeared three years later (1657). This was the famous _Orbis Pictus_.
-
-§ 16. Full of trouble as Comenius’ life had hitherto been, its greatest
-calamity was still before him. After he was again settled at Leszna,
-Poland was invaded by the Swedes, on which occasion the sympathies of the
-Brethren were with their fellow-Protestants, and Comenius was imprudent
-enough to write a congratulatory address to the Swedish King. A peace
-followed, by the terms of which, several towns, and Leszna among them,
-were made over to Sweden; but when the King withdrew, the Poles took up
-arms again, and Leszna, the headquarters of the Protestants, the town
-in which the chief of the Moravian Brethren had written his address
-welcoming the enemy, was taken and plundered.
-
-Comenius and his family escaped, but his house was marked for special
-violence, and nothing was preserved. His sole remaining possessions were
-the clothes in which he and his family travelled. All his books and
-manuscripts were burnt, among them his valued work on Pansophia, and a
-Latin-Bohemian and Bohemian-Latin Dictionary, giving words, phrases,
-idioms, adages, and aphorisms—a book on which he had been labouring for
-forty years. “This loss,” he writes, “I shall cease to lament only when I
-cease to breathe.”
-
-§ 17. After wandering for some time about Germany, and being prostrated
-by fever at Hamburg, he at length came to Amsterdam, where Lawrence De
-Geer, the son of his deceased patron, gave him an asylum. Here were spent
-the remaining years of his life in ease and dignity. Compassion for
-his misfortunes was united with veneration for his learning and piety.
-He earned a sufficient income by giving instruction in the families
-of the wealthy; and by the liberality of De Geer he was enabled to
-publish a fine folio edition of all his writings on Education (1657).
-His political works, however, were to the last a source of trouble to
-him. His hostility to the Pope and the House of Hapsburg made him the
-dupe of certain “prophets” whose soothsayings he published as _Lux in
-Tenebris_. One of these prophets, who had announced that the Turk was
-to take Vienna, was executed at Pressburg, and the _Lux in Tenebris_ at
-the same time burnt by the hangman. Before the news of this disgrace
-reached Amsterdam, Comenius was no more. He died in the year 1671, at
-the advanced age of eighty, and with him terminated the office of Chief
-Bishop among the Moravian Brethren.
-
-§ 18. His long life had been full of trouble, and he saw little of the
-improvements he so earnestly desired and laboured after, but he continued
-the struggle hopefully to the end. In his seventy-seventh year he wrote
-these memorable words: “I thank God that I have all my life been a man
-of aspirations.... For the longing after good, however it spring up in
-the heart, is always a rill flowing from the Fountain of all good—from
-God.”[70] Labouring in this spirit he did not toil in vain, and the
-historians of education have agreed in ranking him among the most
-influential as well as the most noble-minded of the Reformers.
-
-§ 19. Before Comenius, no one had brought the mind of a philosopher to
-bear practically on the subject of education. Montaigne and Bacon had
-advanced principles, leaving others to see to their application. A few
-able schoolmasters, Ascham, _e.g._, had investigated new methods, but had
-made success in teaching the test to which they appealed, rather than any
-abstract principle. Comenius was at once a philosopher who had learnt
-of Bacon, and a schoolmaster who had earned his livelihood by teaching
-the rudiments. Dissatisfied with the state of education as he found it,
-he sought for a better system by an examination of the laws of Nature.
-Whatever is thus established is indeed on an immovable foundation, and,
-as Comenius himself says, “not liable to any ruin.” It will hardly be
-disputed, when broadly stated, that there are laws of Nature which must
-be obeyed in dealing with the mind, as with the body. No doubt these laws
-are not so easily established in the first case as in the second, nor can
-we find them without much “groping” and some mistakes; but whoever in
-any way assists or even tries to assist in the discovery, deserves our
-gratitude; and greatly are we indebted to him who first boldly set about
-the task, and devoted to it years of patient labour.
-
-§ 20. Comenius has left voluminous Latin writings. Professor Laurie
-gives us the titles of the books connected with education, and they
-are in number forty-two: so there must be much repetition and indeed
-retractation; for Comenius was always learning, and one of his last books
-was _Ventilabrum Sapientiæ, sive sapienter sua retractandi Ars_—_i.e._,
-“Wisdom’s Winnowing-machine, or the Art of wisely withdrawing one’s
-own assertions.” We owe much to Professor Laurie, who has served as a
-_ventilabrum_ and left us a succinct and clear account of the Reformer’s
-teaching. I have read little of the writings of Comenius except the
-German translation of the “Great Didactic,” from which the following is
-taken.
-
-§ 21. We live, says Comenius, a threefold life—a vegetative, an animal,
-and an intellectual or spiritual. Of these, the first is perfect in the
-womb, the last in heaven. He is happy who comes with healthy body into
-the world, much more he who goes with healthy spirit out of it. According
-to the heavenly idea, man should (1) know all things; (2) should be
-master of all things, and of himself; (3) should refer everything to God.
-So that within us Nature has implanted the seeds of (1) learning, (2)
-virtue, and (3) piety. To bring these seeds to maturity is the object of
-education. All men require education, and God has made children unfit for
-other employments that they may have leisure to learn.
-
-§ 22. But schools have failed, and instead of keeping to the true object
-of education, and teaching the foundations, relations, and intentions
-of all the most important things, they have neglected even the mother
-tongue, and confined the teaching to Latin; and yet that has been so
-badly taught, and so much time has been wasted over grammar rules and
-dictionaries, that from ten to twenty years are spent in acquiring as
-much knowledge of Latin as is speedily acquired of any modern tongue.
-
-§ 23. The cause of this want of success is that the system does not
-follow Nature. Everything natural goes smoothly and easily. There must
-therefore be no pressure. Learning should come to children as swimming to
-fish, flying to birds, running to animals. As Aristotle says, the desire
-of knowledge is implanted in man: and the mind grows as the body does—by
-taking proper nourishment, not by being stretched on the rack.
-
-§ 24. If we would ascertain how teaching and learning are to have good
-results, we must look to the known processes of Nature and Art. A man
-sows seed, and it comes up he knows not how, but in sowing it he must
-attend to the requirements of Nature. Let us then look to Nature to
-find out how knowledge takes root in young minds. We find that Nature
-waits for the fit time. Then, too, she has prepared the material before
-she gives it form. In our teaching we constantly run counter to these
-principles of hers. We give instruction before the young minds are ready
-to receive it. We give the form before the material. Words are taught
-before the things to which they refer. When a foreign tongue is to be
-taught, we commonly give the form, _i.e._, the grammatical rules, before
-we give the material, _i.e._, the language, to which the rules apply. We
-should begin with an author, or properly prepared translation-book, and
-abstract rules should never come before the examples.
-
-§ 25. Again, Nature begins each of her works with its inmost part.
-Moreover, the crude form comes first, then the elaboration of the parts.
-The architect, acting on this principle, first makes a rough plan or
-model, and then by degrees designs the details; last of all he attends to
-the ornamentation. In teaching, then, let the inmost part, _i.e._, the
-understanding of the subject, come first; then let the thing understood
-be used to exercise the memory, the speech, and the hands; and let every
-language, science, and art be taught first in its rudimentary outline;
-then more completely with examples and rules; finally, with exceptions
-and anomalies. Instead of this, some teachers are foolish enough to
-require beginners to get up all the anomalies in Latin Grammar, and the
-dialects in Greek.
-
-§ 26. Again, as Nature does nothing _per saltum_, nor halts when she
-has begun, the whole course of studies should be arranged in strict
-order, so that the earlier studies prepare the way for the later. Every
-year, every month, every day and hour even, should have its task marked
-out beforehand, and the plan should be rigidly carried out. Much loss
-is occasioned by absence of boys from school, and by changes in the
-instruction. Iron that might be wrought with one heating should not be
-allowed to get cold, and be heated over and over again.
-
-§ 27. Nature protects her work from injurious influences, so boys should
-be kept from injurious companionships and books.
-
-§ 28. In a chapter devoted to the principles of easy teaching, Comenius
-lays down, among rules similar to the foregoing, that children will
-learn if they are taught only what they have a desire to learn, with due
-regard to their age and the method of instruction, and especially when
-everything is first taught by means of the senses. On this point Comenius
-laid great stress, and he was the first who did so. Education should
-proceed, he said, in the following order: first, educate the senses, then
-the memory, then the intellect; last of all the critical faculty. This
-is the order of Nature. The child first perceives through the senses.
-“_Nihil est in intellectu quod non prius fuerit in sensu._ Everything in
-the intellect must have come through the senses.” These perceptions are
-stored in the memory, and called up by the imagination.[71] By comparing
-one with another, the understanding forms general ideas, and at length
-the judgment decides between the false and the true. By keeping to this
-order, Comenius believed it would be possible to make learning entirely
-pleasant to the pupils, however young. Here Comenius went even further
-than the Jesuits. They wished to make learning pleasant, but despaired
-of doing this except by external influences, emulation and the like.
-Comenius did not neglect external means to make the road to learning
-agreeable. Like the Jesuits, he would have short school-hours, and would
-make great use of praise and blame, but he did not depend, as they did
-almost exclusively, on emulation. He would have the desire of learning
-fostered in every possible way—by parents, by teachers, by school
-buildings and apparatus, by the subjects themselves, by the method of
-teaching them, and lastly, by the public authorities. (1) The parents
-must praise learning and learned men, must show children beautiful books,
-&c., must treat the teachers with great respect. (2) The teacher must be
-kind and fatherly, he must distribute praise and reward, and must always,
-where it is possible, give the children something to look at. (3) The
-school buildings must be light, airy, and cheerful, and well furnished
-with apparatus, as pictures, maps, models, collections of specimens. (4)
-The subjects taught must not be too hard for the learner’s comprehension,
-and the more entertaining parts of them must be especially dwelt upon.
-(5) The method must be natural, and everything that is not essential to
-the subject or is beyond the pupil must be omitted. Fables and allegories
-should be introduced, and enigmas given for the pupils to guess. (6) The
-authorities must appoint public examinations and reward merit.
-
-§ 29. Nature helps herself in various ways, so the pupils should have
-every assistance given them. It should especially be made clear what the
-pupils are to learn, and how they should learn it.
-
-§ 30. The pupils should be punished for offences against morals only. If
-they do not learn, the fault is with the teacher.
-
-§ 31. One of Comenius’s most distinctive principles was that there should
-no longer be “_infelix divortium rerum et verborum_, the wretched divorce
-of words from things” (the phrase, I think, is Campanella’s), but that
-knowledge of _things_ and words should go together. This, together with
-his desire of submitting everything to the pupil’s senses, would have
-introduced a great change into the course of instruction, which was then,
-as it has for the most part continued, purely literary. We should learn,
-says Comenius, as much as possible, not from books, but from the great
-book of Nature, from heaven and earth, from oaks and beeches.
-
-§ 32. When languages are to be learnt, he would have them taught
-separately. Till the pupil is from eight to ten years old, he should
-be instructed only in the mother-tongue, and about things. Then other
-languages can be acquired in about a year each; Latin (which is to be
-studied more thoroughly) in about two years. Every language must be
-learnt by use rather than by rules, _i.e._, it must be learnt by hearing,
-reading and re-reading, transcribing, attempting imitations in writing
-and orally, and by using the language in conversation. Rules assist and
-confirm practice, but they must come after, not before it. The first
-exercises in a language should take for their subject something of which
-the sense is already known, so that the mind may be fixed on the words
-and their connections.[72] The Catechism and Bible History may be used
-for this purpose.
-
-§ 33. Considering the classical authors not suited to boys’
-understanding, and not fit for the education of Christians, Comenius
-proposed writing a set of Latin manuals for the different stages between
-childhood and manhood: these were to be called “Vestibulum,” “Janua,”
-“Palatium” or “Atrium,” “Thesaurus.” The “Vestibulum,” “Janua,” and
-“Atrium” were really carried out.
-
-§ 34. In Comenius’s scheme there were to be four kinds of schools for a
-perfect educational course:—1st, the mother’s breast for infancy; 2nd,
-the public vernacular school for children, to which all should be sent
-from six years old till twelve; 3rd, the Latin school or Gymnasium; 4th,
-residence at a University and travelling, to complete the course. The
-public schools were to be for all classes alike, and for girls[73] as
-well as boys.
-
-§ 35. Most boys and girls in every community would stop at the vernacular
-school; and as this school is a very distinctive feature in Comenius’s
-plan, it may be worth while to give his programme of studies. In this
-school the children should learn—1st, to read and write the mother-tongue
-_well_, both with writing and printing letters; 2nd, to compose
-grammatically; 3rd, to cipher; 4th, to measure and weigh; 5th, to sing,
-at first popular airs, then from music; 6th, to say by heart, sacred
-psalms and hymns; 7th, Catechism, Bible History, and texts; 8th, moral
-rules, with examples; 9th, economics and politics, as far as they could
-be understood; 10th, general history of the world; 11th, figure of the
-earth and motion of stars, &c., physics and geography, especially of
-native land; 12th, general knowledge of arts and handicrafts.
-
-§ 36. Each school was to be divided into six classes, corresponding to
-the six years the pupil should spend in it. The hours of work were to be,
-in school, two hours in the morning and two in the afternoon, with nearly
-the same amount of private study. In the morning the mind and memory were
-to be exercised, in the afternoon the hands and voice. Each class was to
-have its proper lesson-book written expressly for it, so as to contain
-everything that class had to learn. When a lesson was to be got by heart
-from the book, the teacher was first to read it to the class, explain it,
-and re-read it; the boys then to read it aloud by turns till one of them
-offered to repeat it without book; the others were to do the same as soon
-as they were able, till all had repeated it. This lesson was then to be
-worked over again as a writing lesson, &c. In the higher forms of the
-vernacular school a modern language was to be taught and duly practised.
-
-§ 37. Here we see a regular school course projected which differed
-essentially from the only complete school course still earlier, that of
-the Jesuits. In education Comenius was immeasurably in advance of Loyola
-and Aquaviva. Like the great thinkers, Pestalozzi and Froebel, who most
-resemble him, he thought of the development of the child from its birth;
-and in a singularly wise little book, called _Schola materni gremii_,
-or “School of the Mother’s Breast,” he has given advice for bringing up
-children to the age of six.[74]
-
-§ 38. Very interesting are the hints here given, in which we get the
-first approaches to Kindergarten training. Comenius saw that, much
-as their elders might do to develop children’s powers of thought and
-expression, “yet children of the same age and the same manners and
-habits are of greater service still. When they talk or play together,
-they sharpen each other more effectually; for the one does not surpass
-the other in depth of invention, and there is among them no assumption
-of superiority of the one over the other, only love, candour, free
-questionings and answers” (_School of Infancy_, vi, 12, p. 38).[75] The
-constant activity of children must be provided for. “It is better to play
-than to be idle, for during play the mind is intent on some object which
-often sharpens the abilities. In this way children may be early exercised
-to an active life without any difficulty, since Nature herself stirs them
-up to be doing something” (_Ib._ ix, 15, p. 55). “In the second, third,
-fourth years, &c., let their spirits be stirred up by means of agreeable
-play with them or their playing among themselves.... Nay, if some little
-occupation can be conveniently provided for the child’s eyes, ears, or
-other senses, these will contribute to its vigour of mind and body”
-(_Ib._ vi, 21, p. 31).
-
-§ 39. We have the usual cautions against forcing. “Early fruit is useful
-for the day, but will not keep; whereas late fruit may be kept all the
-year. As some natural capacities would fly, as it were, before the sixth,
-the fifth, or even the fourth year, yet it will be beneficial rather to
-restrain than permit this; but very much worse to enforce it.” “It is
-safer that the brain be rightly consolidated before it begin to sustain
-labours: in a little child the whole _bregma_ is scarcely closed and the
-brain consolidated within the fifth or sixth year. It is sufficient,
-therefore, for this age to comprehend spontaneously, imperceptibly and as
-it were in play, so much as is employed in the domestic circle” (_Ib._
-chap. xi).
-
-§ 40. One disastrous tendency has always shown itself in the
-schoolroom—the tendency to sever all connection between studies in the
-schoolroom and life outside. The young pack away their knowledge as it
-were in water-tight compartments, where it may lie conveniently till the
-scholastic voyage is over and it can be again unshipped.[76] Against
-this tendency many great teachers have striven, and none more vigorously
-than Comenius. Like Pestalozzi he sought to resolve everything into its
-simplest elements, and he finds the commencements before the school
-age. In the _School of Infancy_ he says (speaking of rhetoric), “My aim
-is to shew, although this is not generally attended to, that the roots
-of all sciences and arts in every instance arise as early as in the
-tender age, and that on these foundations it is neither impossible nor
-difficult for the whole superstructure to be laid; provided always that
-we act reasonably with a reasonable creature” (viij, 6, p. 46). This
-principle he applies in his chapter, “How children ought to be accustomed
-to an active life and perpetual employment” (chap. vij). In the fourth
-and fifth year their powers are to be drawn out in mechanical or
-architectural efforts, in drawing and writing, in music, in arithmetic,
-geometry, and dialectics. For arithmetic in the fourth, fifth, or sixth
-year, it will be sufficient if they count up to twenty; and they may
-be taught to play at “odd and even.” In geometry they may learn in the
-fourth year what are lines, what are squares, what are circles; also
-the usual measures—foot, pint, quart, &c., and soon they should try to
-measure and weigh for themselves. Similar beginnings are found for other
-sciences such as physics, astronomy, geography, history, economics, and
-politics. “The elements of _geography_ will be during the course of
-the first year and thenceforward, when children begin to distinguish
-between their cradles and their mother’s bosom” (vj, 6, p. 34). As this
-geographical knowledge extends, they discover “what a field is, what
-a mountain, forest, meadow, river” (iv, 9, p. 17). “The beginning of
-_history_ will be, to be able to remember what was done yesterday, what
-recently, what a year ago.”[77] (_Ib._)
-
-§ 41. In this book Comenius is careful to provide children with
-occupation for “_mind and hand_” (iv, 10, p. 18). Drawing is to be
-practised by all. “It matters not,” says Comenius, “whether the objects
-be correctly drawn or otherwise _provided that they afford delight to the
-mind_.”[78]
-
-§ 42. We see then that this restless thinker considered the entire course
-of a child’s bringing-up from the cradle to maturity; and we cannot doubt
-that Raumer is right in saying, “The influence of Comenius on subsequent
-thinkers and workers in education, especially on the Methodizers, is
-incalculable.” (_Gesch. d. P._, ij, “Comenius,” § 10.)
-
-Before we think of his methods and school books, let us inquire what he
-did for education that has proved to be on a solid foundation and “not
-liable to any ruin.”
-
-§ 43. He was the first to reach a standpoint which was and perhaps always
-will be above the heads of “the practical men,” and demand _education
-for all_. “We design for all who have been born human beings, general
-instruction to fit them for everything human. They must, therefore, as
-far as possible be taught together, so that they may mutually draw each
-other out, enliven and stimulate. Of the ‘mother-tongue school’ the end
-and aim will be, that all the youth of both sexes between the sixth and
-the twelfth or thirteenth years be taught those things which will be
-useful to them all their life long.”[79]
-
-In these days we often hear controversies between the men of science and
-the ministers of religion. It is as far beyond my intention as it is
-beyond my abilities to discuss how far the antithesis between religion
-and science is a true one; but our subject sometimes forces us to observe
-that religion and science often bring thinkers by different paths to the
-same result; _e.g._, they both refuse to recognise class distinctions
-and make us see an essential unity underlying superficial variations.
-In Comenius we have an earnest Christian minister who was also an
-enthusiast for science. Moreover he was without social and virtually
-without national restrictions, and he was thus in a good position for
-expressing freely and without bias what both his science and his religion
-taught him. “Not only are the children of the rich and noble to be drawn
-to the school, but all alike, gentle and simple, rich and poor, boys
-and girls, in great towns and small, down to the country villages. And
-for this reason. Every one who is born a human being is born with this
-intent—that he should be a human being, that is, a reasonable creature
-ruling over the other creatures and bearing the likeness of his Maker.”
-(_Didactica M._ ix, § 1.) This sounds to me nobler than the utterances
-of Rousseau and the French Revolutionists, not to mention Locke who fell
-back on considering merely “the gentleman’s calling.” Even Bishop Butler
-a century after Comenius hardly takes so firm a ground, though he lays it
-down that “children have as much right to some proper education as to
-have their lives preserved.”[80]
-
-§ 44. The first man who demanded training for every human being _because
-he or she was a human being_ must always be thought of with respect and
-gratitude by all who care either for science or religion. It has taken
-us 250 years to reach the standpoint of Comenius; but we have reached
-it, or almost reached it at last, and when we have once got hold of the
-idea we are not likely to lose it again. The only question is whether
-we shall not go on and in the end agree with Comenius that the primary
-school shall be for rich and poor alike. At present the practical
-men, in England especially, have things all their own way; but their
-horizon is and must be very limited. They have already had to adjust
-themselves to many things which their predecessors declared to be “quite
-impracticable—indeed impossible.” May not their successors in like manner
-get accustomed to other “impossible” things, this scheme of Comenius
-among them?
-
-§ 45. The champions of realism have always recognised Comenius as one
-of their earliest leaders. Bacon had just given voice to the scientific
-spirit which had at length rebelled against the literary spirit dominant
-at the Renascence, and had begun to turn from all that had been thought
-and said about Nature, straight to Nature herself. Comenius was the
-professed disciple of “the noble Verulam, who,” said he, “has given
-us the true key of Nature.” Furnished with this key, Comenius would
-unlock the door of the treasure-house for himself. “It grieved me,” he
-says, “that I saw most noble Verulam present us indeed with a true key
-of Nature, but not to open the secrets of Nature, only shewing us by a
-few examples how they were to be opened, and leave [_i.e._, leaving]
-the rest to depend on observations and inductions continued for several
-ages.” Comenius thought that by the light of the senses, of reason, and
-of the Bible, he might advance faster. “For what? Are not we as well as
-the old philosophers placed in Nature’s garden? Why then do we not cast
-about our eyes, nostrils, and ears as well as they? Why should we learn
-the works of Nature of any other master rather than of these our senses?
-Why do we not, I say, turn over the living book of the world instead
-of dead papers? In it we may contemplate more things and with greater
-delight and profit than any one can tell us. If we have anywhere need of
-an interpreter, the Maker of Nature is the best interpreter Himself.”
-(Preface to _Naturall Philosophie reformed_. English trans., 1651.)
-
-§ 46. Several things are involved in this so-called “realism.” First,
-Comenius would fix the mind of learners on material objects. Secondly,
-he would have them acquire their notions of these for themselves through
-the senses. From these two principles he drew the corollary that the
-vast accumulation of traditional learning and literature must be thrown
-overboard.
-
-§ 47. The demand for the study of things has been best formulated by one
-of the greatest masters of words, by Milton. “Because our understanding
-cannot in the body found itself but on sensible things, nor arrive so
-clearly to the knowledge of God and things invisible, as by orderly
-conning over the visible and inferior creature, the same method is
-necessarily to be followed in all discreet teaching.” (_To Hartlib._) Its
-material surroundings then are to be the subjects on which the mind of
-the child must be fixed. This being settled, Comenius demands that the
-child’s knowledge shall not be _verbal_ but _real_ realism, knowledge
-derived at first hand through the senses.[81]
-
-§ 48. On this subject Comenius may speak for himself: “The ground of
-this business is, that sensual objects [we now say _sensible_: why not
-_sensuous_?] be rightly presented to the senses, for fear they may not be
-received. I say, and say it again aloud, that this last is the foundation
-of all the rest: because we can neither act nor speak wisely, unless we
-first rightly understand all the things which are to be done and whereof
-we have to speak. Now there is nothing in the understanding which was not
-before in the sense. And therefore to exercise the senses well about the
-right perceiving the differences of things will be to lay the grounds
-for all wisdom and all wise discourse and all discreet actions in one’s
-course of life. Which, because it is commonly neglected in Schools, and
-the things that are to be learned are offered to scholars without their
-being understood or being rightly presented to the senses, it cometh to
-pass that the work of teaching and learning goeth heavily onward and
-affordeth little benefit.” (Preface to _Orbis Pictus_, Hoole’s trans.
-A.D. 1658.)
-
-§ 49. Without going into any metaphysical discussion, we must all
-agree that a vast amount of impressions come to children through the
-senses, and that it is by the exercise of the senses that they learn
-most readily. As Comenius says: “The senses (being the main guides of
-childhood, because therein the mind doth not as yet raise up it self to
-an abstracted contemplation of things) evermore seek their own objects;
-and if these be away, they grow dull, and wry themselves hither and
-thither out of a weariness of themselves: but when their objects are
-present, they grow merry, wax lively, and willingly suffer themselves
-to be fastened upon them till the thing be sufficiently discerned.”
-(P. to _Orbis._) This truth lay at the root of most of the methods of
-Pestalozzi; and though it has had little effect on teaching in England
-(where for the word _anschaulich_ there is no equivalent), everything
-that goes on in a German Folkschool has reference to it.
-
-§ 50. For children then Comenius gave good counsel when he would have
-their senses exercised on the world about them. But after all, whatever
-may be thought of the proposition that all knowledge comes through the
-senses, we must not ignore what is bequeathed to us, both in science
-and in literature. Comenius says: “And now I beseech you let this be
-our business that the schools may cease to _persuade_ and begin to
-_demonstrate_; cease to _dispute_ and begin to _look_; cease lastly to
-_believe_ and begin to _know_. For that Aristotellical maxim ‘_Discentem
-oportet credere_, A learner must believe,’ is as tyrannical as it is
-dangerous; so also is that same Pythagorean ‘_Ipse dixit_, The Master has
-said it.’ Let no man be compelled to swear to his Masters words, but let
-the things themselves constrain the intellect.” (P. to _Nat. Phil. R._)
-But the things themselves will not take us far. Even in Natural Science
-we need teachers, for Science is not reached through the senses but
-through the intellectual grasp of knowledge which has been accumulating
-for centuries. If the education of times past has neglected the senses,
-we must not demand that the education of the future should care for the
-senses only. There is as yet little danger of our thinking too much of
-physical education; but we sometimes hear reformers talking as if the
-true ideal were sketched in “Locksley Hall:”
-
- “Iron-jointed, supple-sinew’d, they shall dive, and they shall run,
- Catch the wild goat by the hair, and hurl their lances in the sun,
- Whistle back the parrot’s call, and leap the rainbows of the brooks;
- Not with blinded eyesight poring over miserable books.”
-
-There seems, however, still some reason for counting “the gray barbarian
-lower than the Christian child.” And the reason is that we are “the heirs
-of all the ages.” Our education must enable every child to enter in some
-measure on his inheritance; and not a few of our most precious heirlooms
-will be found not only in scientific discoveries but also in those great
-works of literature which the votaries of science are apt to despise as
-“miserable books.” This truth was not duly appreciated by Comenius. As
-Professor Laurie well says, “he accepted only in a half-hearted way the
-products of the genius of past ages.” (Laurie’s _C._, p. 22.) In his day
-there was a violent reaction from the Renascence passion for literature,
-and Comenius would entirely banish from education the only literatures
-which were then important, the “heathen” literatures of Greece and Rome.
-“Our most learned men,” says he, “even among the theologians take from
-Christ only the mask: the blood and life they draw from Aristotle and a
-crowd of other heathens.” (See Paulsen’s _Gesch._, pp. 312, ff.) So for
-Cicero and Virgil he would substitute, and his contemporaries at first
-seemed willing to accept, the _Janua Linguarum_. But though there may be
-much more “real” knowledge in the _Janua_, the classics have survived
-it.[82] In these days there is a passion for the study of things which
-in its intensity resembles the Renascence passion for literature. There
-is a craving for knowledge, and we know only the truths we can verify; so
-this craving must be satisfied, not by words, but things. And yet that
-domain which the physicists contemptuously describe as the study of words
-must not be lost sight of, indeed cannot be, either by young or old. As
-Matthew Arnold has said, “those who are for giving to natural knowledge
-the chief place in the education of the majority of mankind leave one
-important thing out of their account—the constitution of human nature.”
-
- “We live by Admiration, Hope, and Love,
- And e’en as these are well and wisely fixed,
- In dignity of being we ascend.”
-
-So says Wordsworth, and if this assertion cannot be verified, no more
-can it be disproved; that the words have become almost proverbial shows
-that it commends itself to the general consciousness. Whatever knowledge
-we may acquire, it will have little effect on our lives unless we can
-“relate it” (again to use Matthew Arnold’s words), “to our sense of
-conduct and our sense of beauty.” (_Discourses in America._ “Literature
-and Science.”) So long as we retain our sense for these, “the humanities”
-are safe. Like Milton we may have no inclination to study “modern
-Januas,” but we shall not cease to value many of the works which the
-Janua of Comenius was supposed to have supplanted.[83]
-
-§ 51. “Analogies are good for illustration, not for proof.” If Comenius
-had accepted this caution, he would have escaped much useless labour,
-and might have had a better foundation for his rules than fanciful
-applications of what he observed in the external world. “Comenius”
-as August Vogel has said, “is unquestionably right in wishing to draw
-his principles of education from Nature; but instead of examining the
-proper constitution and nature of man, and taking that as the basis
-of his theory, he watches the life of birds, the growth of trees, or
-the quiet influence of the sun, and thus substitutes for the nature of
-man nature _without_ man (_die objective Natur_). And yet by Nature he
-understands that first and primordial state to which as to our original
-[idea] we should be restored, and by the voice of Nature he understands
-the universal Providence of God or the ceaseless influence of the
-Divine Goodness working all in all, that is, leading every creature to
-the state ordained for it. The vegetative and animal life in Nature is
-according to Comenius himself not life at all in its highest sense, but
-the only true life is the intellectual or spiritual life of Man. No doubt
-in the two lower kinds of life certain analogies may be found for the
-higher; but nothing can be less worthy of reliance and less scientific
-than a method which draws its principles for the higher life from what
-has been observed in the lower.” (A. Vogel’s _Gesch. d. Pädagogik als
-Wissenschaft_, p. 94.)
-
-§ 52. This seems to me judicious criticism; but whatever mistakes he may
-have made, Comenius, like Froebel long after him, strove after a higher
-unity which should embrace knowledge of every kind. The connexion of
-knowledges (so constantly overlooked in the schoolroom) was always in his
-thoughts. “We see that the branches of a tree cannot live unless they
-all alike suck their juices from a common trunk with common roots. And
-can we hope that the branches of Wisdom can be torn asunder with safety
-to their life, that is to truth? Can one be a Natural Philosopher who
-is not also a Metaphysician? or an Ethical Thinker who does not know
-something of Physical Science? or a Logician who has no knowledge of real
-matters? or a Theologian, a jurisconsult, or a Physician, who is not
-first a Philosopher? or an Orator or Poet, who is not all these at once?
-He deprives himself of light, of hand, and of regulation, who pushes away
-from him any shred of the knowable.” (Quoted in Masson’s _L. of Milton_
-vol. iij., p. 213 from the Delineatio, [i.e., _Pansophiæ Prodromus_].
-Conf. J. H. Newman, _Idea of a University_, Disc. iij.)
-
-§ 53. We see then that on the side of theory, Comenius was truly great.
-But the practical man who has always been the tyrant of the schoolroom
-cared nothing for theory and held, with a modern English minister
-responsible for education, who proved his ignorance of theory by his “New
-Code,” that there was, and could be no such thing. So the reputation of
-Comenius became pretty much what our great authority Hallam has recorded,
-that he was a person of some ingenuity and little judgment who invented
-a new way of learning Latin. This estimate of him enables us to follow
-some windings in the stream of thought about education. Comenius faced
-the whole problem in its double bearing, theory and practice: he asked,
-What is the educator’s task? How can he best accomplish it? But his
-contemporaries had not yet recovered from the idolatry of Latin which
-had been bequeathed to them by their fathers from the Renascence, and
-they too saw in Comenius chiefly an inventor of a new way of learning
-Latin. He sought to train up children for this world and the next; they
-supposed, as Oxenstiern himself said, that the main thing to be remedied
-was the clumsy way of teaching Latin. So Comenius was little understood.
-His books were seized upon as affording at once an introduction to the
-knowledge of _things_ and a short way of learning Latin. But in the
-long run they were found more tiresome than the old classics: so they
-went out of fashion, and their author was forgotten with them. Now that
-schoolmasters are forming a more worthy conception of their office, they
-are beginning to do justice to Comenius.
-
-§ 54. As the Jesuits kept to Latin as the common language of the Church,
-so Comenius thought to use it as a means of inter-communication for
-the instructed of every nationality. But he was singularly free from
-over-estimating the value of Latin, and he demanded that all nations
-should be taught in their own language wherein they were born. On this
-subject he expresses himself with great emphasis. “We desire and protest
-that studies of wisdom be no longer committed to Latin alone, and kept
-shut up in the schools, as has hitherto been done, to the greatest
-contempt and injury of the people at large, and the popular tongues. Let
-all things be delivered to each nation in its own speech.” (_Delineatio_
-[_Prodromus_] in Masson _ut supra_.)
-
-§ 55. Comenius was then neither a verbalist nor a classicist, and yet his
-contemporaries were not entirely wrong in thinking of him as “a man who
-had invented a new way of learning Latin.” His great principle was that
-instruction in words and things should go together.[84] The young were to
-learn about things, and _at the same time_ were to acquire both in the
-vernacular and also in Latin, the international tongue, the words which
-were connected with the things. Having settled on this plan of concurrent
-instruction in words and things, Comenius determined to write a book
-for carrying it out. Just then there fell into his hands a book which a
-less open-minded man might have thrown aside on account of its origin,
-for it was written by the bitter foes and persecutors of the Bohemian
-Protestants, by the Jesuits. But Comenius says truly, “I care not whether
-I teach or whether I learn,” and he gave a marvellous proof of this by
-adopting the linguistic method of the Jesuits’ _Janua Linguarum_.[85]
-This “Noah’s Ark for words,” treated in a series of proverbs of all kinds
-of subjects, in such a way as to introduce in a natural connection every
-common word in the Latin language. “The idea,” says Comenius, “was better
-than the execution. Nevertheless, inasmuch as they (the Jesuits) were
-the prime inventors, we thankfully acknowledge it, nor will we upbraid
-them with those errors they have committed.” (Preface to Anchoran’s
-trans. of _Janua_.)
-
-§ 56. The plan commended itself to Comenius on various grounds. First, he
-had a notion of giving an outline of all knowledge before anything was
-taught in detail. Next, he could by such a book connect the teaching
-about simple things with instruction in the Latin words which applied
-to them. And thirdly, he hoped by this means to give such a complete
-Latin vocabulary as to render the use of Latin easy for all requirements
-of modern society. He accordingly wrote a short account of things in
-general, which he put in the form of a dialogue, and this he published in
-Latin and German at Leszna in 1531. The success of this work, as we have
-already seen, was prodigious. No doubt the spirit which animated Bacon
-was largely diffused among educated men in all countries, and they hailed
-the appearance of a book which called the youth from the study of old
-philosophical ideas to observe the facts around them.
-
-§ 57. The countrymen of Bacon were not backward in adopting the new
-work, as the following, from the title-page of a volume in the British
-Museum, will show: “The Gate of Tongues Unlocked and Opened; or else,
-a Seminary or Seed-plot of all Tongues and Sciences. That is, a short
-way of teaching and thoroughly learning, within a yeare and a half at
-the furthest, the Latine, English, French and any other tongue, with
-the ground and foundation of arts and sciences, comprised under a
-hundred titles and 1058 periods. In Latin first, and now, as a token of
-thankfulness, brought to light in Latine, English and French, in the
-behalfe of the most illustrious Prince Charles, and of British, French,
-and Irish youth. The 4th edition, much enlarged, by the labour and
-industry of John Anchoran, Licentiate in Divinity, London. Printed by
-Edward Griffin for Michael Sparke, dwelling at the Blew Bible in Green
-Arbor, 1639.” The first edition must have been some years earlier, and
-the work contains a letter to Anchoran from Comenius dated “Lessivæ
-polonorum (Leszna) 11th Oct, 1632.” So we see that, however the connexion
-arose, it was Anchoran not Hartlib who first made Comenius known in
-England.
-
-§ 58. In the preface to the volume (signed by Anchoran and Comenius) we
-read of the complaints of “Ascam, Vives, Erasmus, Sturmius, Frisclinus,
-Dornavius and others.” The Scaligers and Lipsius did climb but left no
-track. “Hence it is that the greater number of schools (howsoever some
-boast the happinesse of the age and the splendour of learning) have not
-as yet shaked off their ataxies. The youth was held off, nay distracted,
-and is yet in many places delayed with grammar precepts infinitely
-tedious, perplexed, obscure, and (for the most part) unprofitable, and
-that for many years.” The names of things were taught to those who were
-in total ignorance of the things themselves.
-
-§ 59. From this barren region the pupil was to escape to become
-acquainted with things. “Come on,” says the teacher in the opening
-dialogue, “let us go forth into the open air. There you shall view
-whatsoever God produced from the beginning, and doth yet effect by
-nature. Afterwards we will go into towns, shops, schools, where you shall
-see how men do both apply those Divine works to their uses, and also
-instruct themselves in arts, manners, tongues. Then we will enter into
-houses, courts, and palaces of princes, to see in what manner communities
-of men are governed. At last we will visit temples, where you shall
-observe how diversely mortals seek to worship their Creator and to be
-spiritually united unto Him, and how He by His Almightiness disposeth all
-things.” (This is from the 1656 edition, by “W.D.”)
-
-The book is still amusing, but only from the quaint manner in which the
-mode of life two hundred years ago is described in it.[86]
-
-§ 60. But though parts of the book may on first reading have gratified
-the youth of the seventeenth century, a great deal of it gave scanty
-information about difficult subjects, such as physiology, geometry,
-logic, rhetoric, and that too in the driest and dullest way. Moreover,
-in his first version (much modified at Saros-Patak) Comenius following
-the Jesuit boasts that no important word occurs twice; so that the book,
-to attain the end of giving a perfect stock of Latin words, would have
-to be read and re-read till it was almost known by heart; and however
-amusing boys might find an account of their toys written in Latin the
-first time of reading, the interest would somewhat wear away by the
-fifth or sixth time. We cannot then feel much surprised on reading this
-“general verdict,” written some years later, touching those earlier works
-of Comenius: “They are of singular use, and very advantageous to those
-of more discretion (especially to such as have already got a smattering
-in Latin), to help their memories to retain what they have scatteringly
-gotten here and there, and to furnish them with many words which perhaps
-they had not formerly read or so well observed; but to young children
-(whom we have chiefly to instruct, as those that are ignorant altogether
-of most things and words), they prove rather a mere toil and burden than
-a delight and furtherance.” (Chas. Hoole’s preface to his trans. of
-_Orbis Pictus_, dated “From my school in _Lothbury_, London, Jan. 25,
-1658.”)
-
-§ 61. The “_Janua_” would, therefore, have had but a short-lived
-popularity with teachers, and a still shorter with learners, if Comenius
-had not carried out his principle of appealing to the senses, and adopted
-a plan which had been suggested, nearly 50 years earlier, by a Protestant
-divine, Lubinus,[87] of Rostock. The artist was called in, and with
-Endter at Nürnberg in 1657 was published the first edition of a book
-which long outlived the _Janua_. This was the famous _Orbis Sensualium
-Pictus_, which was used for a century at least in many a schoolroom,
-and lives in imitations to the present day. Comenius wrote this book on
-the same lines as the _Janua_, but he goes into less detail, and every
-subject is illustrated by a small engraving. The text is mostly on the
-opposite page to the picture, and is connected with it by a series of
-corresponding numbers. Everything named in the text is numbered as
-in the picture. The artist employed must have been a bold man, as he
-sticks at nothing; but in skill he was not the equal of many of his
-contemporaries; witness the pictures in the Schaffhausen _Janua_ (Editio
-secunda, SchaffhusI, 1658), in Daniel’s edition of the _Janua_, 1562,
-and the very small but beautiful illustrations in the _Vestibulum_ of
-“Jacob Redinger and J. S.” (Amsterdam, 1673). However, the _Orbis Pictus_
-gives such a quaint delineation of life 200 years ago that copies with
-the original engravings keep rising in value, and an American publisher
-(Bardeen of Syracuse, New York), has lately reproduced the old book with
-the help of photography.
-
-§ 62. And yet as instruments of teaching, these books, _i.e._ the
-_Vestibulum_ and the _Janua_ and even the _Orbis Pictus_ which in a great
-measure superseded both, proved a failure. How shall we account for this?
-
-Comenius immensely over-estimated the importance of knowledge and
-the power of the human mind to acquire knowledge. He took it for the
-heavenly idea that _man should know all things_. This notion started him
-on the wrong road for forming a scheme of instruction, and it needed
-many years and much experience to show him his error. When he wrote the
-_Orbis Pictus_ he said of it: “It is _a little book_, as you see, of
-no great bulk, yet a brief of the whole world and a whole language;”
-(Hoole’s trans. Preface); and he afterwards speaks of “this our _little
-encyclopædia_ of things subject to the senses.” But in his old age he saw
-that his text-books were too condensed and attempted too much (Laurie,
-p. 59); and he admitted that after all Seneca was right: “Melius est
-scire pauca et iis recté uti quam scire multa, quorum ignores usum. It is
-better to know a few things and have the right use of them than to know
-many things which you cannot use at all.”
-
-§ 63. The attempt to give “information” has been the ruin of a vast
-number of professing educators since Comenius. Masters “of the old
-school” whom some of us can still remember made boys learn Latin and
-Greek Grammar and _nothing else_. Their successors seem to think that
-boys should not learn Latin and Greek Grammar but _everything else_: and
-the last error I take to be much worse than the first. As Ruskin has
-neatly said, education is not teaching people to know what they do not
-know, but to behave as they do not behave. It is to be judged not by the
-knowledge acquired, but the habits, powers, interests: knowledge must be
-thought of “last and least.”
-
-§ 64. So the attempt to teach about everything was unwise. The means
-adopted were unwise also. It is a great mistake to suppose that
-a “general view” should come first; this is not the right way to
-give knowledge in any subject. “A child begins by seeing bits of
-everything—here a little and there a little; it makes up its wholes out
-of its own littles, and is long in reaching the fulness of a whole; and
-in this we are children all our lives in much.” (Dr. John Brown in _Horæ
-Subsecivæ_, p. 5.) So nothing could have been much more unfortunate than
-an attempt to give the young “a brief of the whole world.” _Compendia,
-dispendia._
-
-§ 65. Corresponding to “a brief of the whole world,” Comenius offers “a
-brief of a whole language.” The two mistakes were well matched. In “the
-whole world” there are a vast number of things of which we must, and
-a good number of which we very advantageously _may_ be ignorant. In a
-language there are many words which we cannot know and many more which we
-do not want to know. The language lives for us in a small vocabulary of
-essential words, and our hold upon the language depends upon the power
-we have in receiving and expressing thought by means of those words. But
-the Jesuit Bath, and after him Comenius, made the tremendous mistake of
-treating all Latin words as of equal value, and took credit for using
-each word once and once only! Moreover, Comenius wrote not simply to
-teach the Latin language, but also to stretch the Latin language till it
-covered the whole area of modern life. He aimed at two things and missed
-them both.
-
-§ 66. We see then that Comenius was not what Hallam calls him, “a man who
-invented a new way of learning Latin.” He did not do this, but he did
-much more than this. He saw that every human creature should be trained
-up to become a reasonable being, and that the training should be such
-as to draw out God-given faculties. Thus he struck the key-note of the
-science of education.
-
- The quantity and the diffuseness of the writings of Comenius
- are truly bewildering. In these days eminent men, Carlyle,
- _e.g._, sometimes find it difficult to get into print; but
- printing-presses all over Europe seemed to be at the service
- of Comenius. An account of the various editions of the _Janua_
- would be an interesting piece of bibliography, but the task of
- making it would not be a light one. The earliest copy of which
- I can find a trace is entered in the catalogue of the Bodleian:
- “Comenius J. A. _Janua Linguarum_, 8vo, Lips (Leipzig) 1632.” I
- also find there another copy entered “per Anchoranum, cum clave
- per W. Saltonstall, London, 1633.”
-
- The fame of Comenius is increasing and many interesting works
- have now been written about him. I have already mentioned
- the English books of Benham and Laurie. In German I have the
- following books, but not the time to read them all:—
-
- Daniel, H. A. _Zerstreute Blätter._ Halle, 1866.
-
- Free, H. _Pädagogik d. Comenius._ Bernburg, 1884.
-
- Hiller, R. _Latein Methode d. J. A. Comenius._ Zschopau, 1883.
- (v. g. and terse; only 46 pp.)
-
- Müller, Walter. _Comenius ein Systematiker in d. Päd._ Dresden,
- 1887.
-
- Pappenheim, E. _Amos Comenius._ Berlin, 1871.
-
- Seyffarth, L. W. _J. A. Comenius._ Leipzig, 2nd edition, 1871.
- (A careful and, as far as I can judge in haste, an excellent
- piece of work.)
-
- Zoubek, Fr. J. _J. A. Comenius._ _Eine quellenmässige
- Lebensskizze_, (Prefixed to trans. of _Didac. M._ in Richter’s
- _Päd. Bibliothek_.)
-
- For a Port-Royalist’s criticism of the _Janua_, see infra. (p.
- 185 _note_.)
-
-
-
-
-XI.
-
-THE GENTLEMEN OF PORT-ROYAL.[88]
-
-
-§ 1. In the sixteen-hundreds by far the most successful schoolmasters
-were the Jesuits. In spite of their exclusion from the University, they
-had in the Province of Paris some 14,000 pupils, and in Paris itself at
-the Collège de Clermont, 1,800. Might they not have neglected “the Little
-Schools,” which were organized by the friends and disciples of the Abbé
-de Saint-Cyran, schools in which the numbers were always small, about
-twenty or twenty-five, and only once increasing to fifty? And yet the
-Jesuits left no stone unturned, no weapon unemployed, in their attack on
-“the Little Schools.” The conflict seems to us like an engagement between
-a man-of-war and a fishing-boat. That the poor fishing-boat would soon
-be beneath the waves, was clear enough from the beginning, and she did
-indeed speedily disappear; but the victors have never recovered from
-their victory and never will. Whenever we think of Jesuitism we are not
-more forcibly reminded of Loyola than of Pascal. All educated Frenchmen,
-most educated people everywhere, get their best remembered impressions of
-the Society of Loyola from the Provincial Letters.[89]
-
-§ 2. The Society had a long standing rivalry with the University of
-Paris, and the University not only refused to admit the Jesuits, but
-several times petitioned the Parliament to chase them out of France. On
-one of these occasions the advocate who was retained by the University
-was Antoine Arnauld, a man of renowned eloquence; and he threw himself
-into the attack with all his heart. From that time the Jesuits had a
-standing feud with the house of Arnauld.
-
-§ 3. But it was no mere personal dislike that separated the
-Port-Royalists and the Jesuits. Port-Royal with which the Arnauld
-family was so closely united, became the stronghold of a theology which
-was unlike that of the Jesuits, and was denounced by them as heresy.
-The daughter of Antoine Arnauld was made, at the age of eleven years,
-Abbess of Port-Royal, a Cistercian convent not far from Versailles.
-This position was obtained for her by a fraud of Marion, Henry IV’s
-advocate-general, who thought only of providing comfortably for one of
-the twenty children to whom his daughter, Made. Arnauld, had made him
-grandfather. Never was a nomination more scandalously obtained or used to
-better purpose. The Mère Angélique is one of the saints of the universal
-church, and she soon became the restorer of the religious life first in
-her own and then by her influence and example in other convents of her
-Order.
-
-§ 4. In these reforms she had nothing to fear from her hereditary foes
-the Jesuits; but she soon came under the influence of a man whose theory
-of life was as much opposed to the Jesuits’ theory as to that of the
-world which found in the Jesuits the most accommodating father confessors.
-
-Duvergier de Hauranne (1581-1643) better known by the name of his
-“abbaye,” Saint-Cyran, was one of those commanding spirits who seem born
-to direct others and form a distinct society. In vain Richelieu offered
-him the posts most likely to tempt him. The prize that Saint-Cyran had
-set his heart upon was not of this world, and Richelieu could assist him
-in one way only—by persecution. This assistance the Cardinal readily
-granted, and by his orders Saint-Cyran was imprisoned at Vincennes, and
-not set at liberty till Richelieu was himself summoned before a higher
-tribunal.
-
-§ 5. Driven by prevailing sickness from Port-Royal des Champs, the Mère
-Angélique transported her community (in 1626) to a house purchased for
-them in Paris by her mother who in her widowhood became one of the
-Sisters. In Paris Angélique sought for herself and her convent the
-spiritual direction of Saint-Cyran (not yet a prisoner), and from that
-time Saint-Cyran added the Abbess and Sisters of Port-Royal to the number
-of those who looked up to him as their pattern and guide in all things.
-
-Port-Royal des Champs was in course of time occupied by a band of
-solitaries who at the bidding of Saint-Cyran renounced the world and
-devoted themselves to prayer and study. To them we owe the works of “the
-Gentlemen of Port-Royal.”
-
-§ 6. It is then to Saint-Cyran we must look for the ideas which became
-the distinctive mark of the Port-Royalists.
-
-Saint-Cyran was before all things a theologian. In his early days
-at Bayonne his studies had been shared by a friend who afterwards
-was professor of theology at Louvain, and then Bishop of Ypres. This
-friend was Jansenius. Their searches after truth had brought them to
-opinions which in the England of the nineteenth century are known as
-“Evangelical.” According to “Catholic” teaching all those who receive
-the creed and the sacraments of the Church and do not commit “mortal”
-sin are in a “state of salvation,” that is to say the great majority
-of Christians are saved. This teaching is rejected by those of another
-school of thought who hold that only a few “elect” are saved and that the
-great body even of Christians are doomed to perdition.
-
-§ 7. Such a belief as this would seem to be associated of necessity with
-harshness and gloom; but from whatever cause, there has been found in
-many, even in most, cases no such connexion. Those who have held that the
-great mass of their fellow-creatures had no hope in a future world, have
-thrown themselves lovingly into all attempts to improve their condition
-in this world. Still, their main effort has always been to increase
-the number of the converted and to preserve them from the wiles of the
-enemy. This Saint-Cyran sought to do by selecting a few children and
-bringing them up in their tender years like hot-house plants, in the hope
-that they would be prepared when older and stronger, to resist the evil
-influences of the world.
-
-§ 8. His first plan was to choose out of all Paris six children and
-to confide them to the care of a priest appointed to direct their
-consciences, and a tutor of not more than twenty-five years old, to teach
-them Latin. “I should think,” says he, “it was doing a good deal if I
-did not advance them far in Latin before the age of twelve, and made
-them pass their first years confined to one house or a monastery in the
-country where they might be allowed all the pastimes suited to their age
-and where they might see only the example of a good life set by those
-about them.” (Letter quoted by Carré, p. 20.)
-
-§ 9. His imprisonment put a stop to this plan, “but,” says Saint-Cyran,
-“I do not lightly break off what I undertake for God;” so when intrusted
-with the disposal of 2,000 francs by M. Bignon, he started the first
-“Little School,” in which two small sons of M. Bignon’s were taken as
-pupils. The name of “Little Schools,” was given partly perhaps because
-according to their design the numbers in any school could never be large,
-partly no doubt to deprecate any suspicion of rivalry with the schools of
-the University. The children were to be taken at an early age, nine or
-ten, before they could have any guilty knowledge of evil, and Saint-Cyran
-made in all cases a stipulation that at any time a child might be
-returned to his friends; but in cases where the master’s care seemed
-successful, the pupils were to be kept under it till they were grown up.
-
-§ 10. The Little Schools had a short and troubled career of hardly more
-than fifteen years. They were not fully organized till 1646; they were
-proscribed a few years later and in 1661 were finally broken up by Louis
-XIV, who was under the influence of their enemies the Jesuits. But in
-that time the Gentlemen of Port-Royal had introduced new ideas which have
-been a force in French education and indeed in all literary education
-ever since.
-
-To Saint-Cyran then we trace the attempt at a particular kind of school,
-and to his followers some new departures in the training of the intellect.
-
-§ 11. Basing his system on the Fall of Man, Saint-Cyran came to a
-conclusion which was also reached by Locke though by a different road.
-To both of them it seemed that children require much more individual care
-and watching than they can possibly get in a public school. Saint-Cyran
-would have said what Locke said: “The difference is great between two or
-three pupils in the same house and three or four score boys lodged up
-and down: for let the master’s industry and skill be never so great, it
-is impossible he should have fifty or one hundred scholars under his eye
-any longer than they are in school together: Nor can it be expected that
-he should instruct them successfully in anything but their books; the
-forming of their minds and manners [preserving them from the danger of
-the enemy, Saint-Cyran would have said] requiring a constant attention
-and particular application to every single boy, which is impossible in a
-numerous flock, and would be wholly in vain (could he have time to study
-and correct everyone’s peculiar defects and wrong inclinations) when the
-lad was to be left to himself or the prevailing infection of his fellows
-the greater part of the four-and-twenty hours.” (_Thoughts c. Ed._ § 70.)
-
-§ 12. An English public schoolmaster told the Commission on Public
-Schools, that he stood _in loco parentis_ to fifty boys. “Rather a large
-family,” observed one of the Commissioners drily. The truth is that in
-the bringing up of the young there is the place of the schoolmaster and
-of the school-fellows, as well as that of the parents; and of these
-several forces one cannot fulfil the functions of the others.
-
-§ 13. According to the theory or at least the practice of English public
-schools, boys are left in their leisure hours to organize their life for
-themselves, and they form a community from which the masters are, partly
-by their own over-work, partly by the traditions of the school, utterly
-excluded. From this the intellectual education of the boys no doubt
-suffers. “Engage them in conversation with men of parts and breeding,”
-says Locke; and this was the old notion of training when boys of good
-family grew up as pages in the household of some nobleman. But, except
-in the holidays, the young aristocrats of the present day talk only with
-other boys, and servants, and tradesmen. Hence the amount of thought and
-conversation given to school topics, especially the games, is out of
-all proportion to the importance of such things; and this does much to
-increase what Matthew Arnold calls “the barbarians’” inaptitude for ideas.
-
-§ 14. What are we to say about the effects of the system on the morals
-of the boys? If we were to start like Saint-Cyran from the doctrine
-of human depravity, we should entirely condemn the system and predict
-from it the most disastrous results;[90] but from experience we come to
-a very different conclusion. Bishop Dupanloup, indeed, spoke of the
-public schools of France as “_ces gouffres_.” This is not what is said
-or thought of the English schools, and they are filled with boys whose
-fathers and grandfathers were brought up in them, and desire above all
-things to maintain the old traditions.
-
-§ 15. The Little Schools of Port-Royal aimed at training a few boys very
-differently; each master had the charge of five or six only, and these
-were never to be out of his presence day or night.[91]
-
-§ 16. It may reasonably be objected that such schools would be
-possible only for a few children of well-to-do parents, and that men
-who would thus devote themselves could be found only at seasons of
-great enthusiasm. Under ordinary circumstances small schools have most
-of the drawbacks and few of the advantages which are to be found in
-large schools. As I have already said, parents, schoolmasters, and
-school-fellows have separate functions in education; and even in the
-smallest school the master can never take the place of the parent, or the
-school become the home. Children at home enter into the world of their
-father and mother; the family friends are _their_ friends, the family
-events affect them as a matter of course. But in the school, however
-small, the children’s interests are unconnected with the master and the
-master’s family. The boys may be on the most intimate, even affectionate
-terms with the grown people who have charge of them; but the mental
-horizon of the two parties is very different, and their common area of
-vision but small. In such cases the young do not rise into the world of
-the adults, and it is almost impossible for the adults to descend into
-theirs. They are “no company” the one for the other, and to be constantly
-in each other’s presence would subject both to very irksome restraint.
-When left to themselves, boys in small numbers are far more likely to get
-into harm than boys in large numbers. In large communities even of boys,
-“the common sense of most” is a check on the badly disposed. So as it
-seems to me if from any cause the young cannot live at home and attend
-a day-school, they will be far better off in a large boarding school
-than in one that would better fulfil the requirements of Erasmus,[92]
-Saint-Cyran, and Locke.
-
-§ 17. As Saint-Cyran attributed immense importance to the part of the
-master in education, he was not easily satisfied with his qualifications.
-“There is no occupation in the Church that is more worthy of a Christian;
-next to giving up one’s life there is no greater charity.... The charge
-of the soul of one of these little ones is a higher employment than the
-government of all the world.” (Cadet, 2.) So thought Saint-Cyran, and he
-was ready to go to the ends of the earth to find the sort of teacher he
-wanted.
-
-§ 18. He was so anxious that the children should see only that which was
-good that the servants were chosen with peculiar care.
-
-§ 19. For the masters his favourite rule was: “Speak little; put up
-with much; pray still more.” Piety was not to be instilled so much by
-precepts as by the atmosphere in which the children grew up. “Do not
-spend so much time in speaking to them about God as to God about them:”
-so formal instruction was never to be made wearisome. But there was to be
-an incessant watch against evil influences and for good. “In guarding the
-citadel,” says Lancelot, “we fail if we leave open a single gateway by
-which the enemy might enter.”
-
-§ 20. Though anxious, like the Jesuits, to make their boys’ studies
-“not only endurable, but even delightful,” the Gentlemen of Port-Royal
-banished every form of rivalry. Each pupil was to think of one whom
-he should try to catch up, but this was not a school-fellow, but his
-own higher self, his ideal. Here Pascal admits that the exclusion
-of competition had its drawbacks and that the boys sometimes became
-indifferent—“tombent dans la nonchalance,” as he says.
-
-§ 21. As for the instruction it was founded on this principle: the object
-of schools being piety rather than knowledge there was to be no pressure
-in studying, but the children were to be taught what was sound and
-enduring.
-
-§ 22. In all occupations there is of necessity a tradition. In the higher
-callings the tradition may be of several kinds. First there may be a
-tradition of noble thoughts and high ideals, which will be conveyed in
-the words of the greatest men who have been engaged in that calling,
-or have thought out the theory of it. Next there will be the tradition
-of the very best workers in it. And lastly there is the tradition of
-the common man who learns and passes on just the ordinary views of his
-class and the ordinary expedients for getting through ordinary work. Of
-these different kinds of tradition, the school-room has always shown
-a tendency to keep to this last, and the common man is supreme. Young
-teachers are mostly required to fulfil their daily tasks without the
-smallest preparation for them; so they have to get through as best they
-can, and have no time to think of any high ideal, or of any way of doing
-their work except that which gives them least trouble. “Practice makes
-perfect,” says the proverb, but it would be truer to say that practice in
-doing work badly soon makes perfect in contentment with bad workmanship.
-Thus it is that the tradition of the school-room settles down for the
-most part into a deadly routine, and teachers who have long been engaged
-in carrying it on seem to lose their powers of vision like horses who
-turn mills in the dark.
-
-The Gentlemen of Port-Royal worked free from school-room tradition.
-“If the want of emulation was a drawback,” says Sainte-Beuve, “it was a
-clear gain to escape from all routine, from all pedantry. _La crasse et
-la morgue des régents n’en approchaient pas._” (_P.R._ vol. iij, p. 414)
-Piety as we have seen was their main object. Next to it they wished to
-“carry the intellects of their pupils to the highest point they could
-attain to.”
-
-§ 23. In doing this they profited by their freedom from routine to try
-experiments. They used their own judgments and sought to train the
-judgment of their pupils. Themselves knowing the delights of literature,
-they resolved that their pupils should know them also. They would banish
-all useless difficulties and do what they could to “help the young and
-make study even more pleasant to them than play and pastime.” (Preface to
-Cic.’s _Billets_, quoted by Sainte-Beuve, vol. iij, p. 423.)
-
-§ 24. One of their innovations, though startling to their contemporaries,
-does not seem to us very surprising. It was the custom to begin reading
-with a three or four years’ course of reading Latin, because in that
-language all the letters were pronounced. The connexion between sound
-and sense is in our days not always thought of, but even among teachers
-no advocates would now be found for the old method which kept young
-people for the first three or four years uttering sounds they could by no
-possibility understand. The French language might have some disadvantage
-from its silent letters, but this was small compared with the
-disadvantage felt in Latin from its silent sense. So the Port-Royalists
-began reading with French.
-
-§ 25. Further than this, they objected to reading through spelling,
-and pointed out that as consonants cannot be pronounced by themselves
-they should be taken only in connexion with the adjacent vowel. Pascal
-applied himself to the subject and invented the method described in the
-6th chap. of the General Grammar (Carré, p. xxiij) and introduced by his
-sister Jacqueline at Port-Royal des Champs.
-
-§ 26. When the child could read French, the Gentlemen of Port-Royal
-sought for him books within the range of his intelligence. There was
-nothing suitable in French, so they set to work to produce translations
-in good French of the most readable Latin books, “altering them just a
-little—_en y changeant fort peu de chose_,” as said the chief translator
-De Saci, for the sake of purity. In this way they gallicised the
-Fables of Phædrus, three Comedies of Terence, and the Familiar Letters
-(_Billets_) of Cicero.
-
-§ 27. In this we see an important innovation. As I have tried to explain
-(_supra_ pp. 14 ff.) the effect of the Renascence was to banish both the
-mother-tongue and literature proper from the school-room; for no language
-was tolerated but Latin, and no literature was thought possible except
-in Latin or Greek. Before any literature could be known, or indeed,
-instruction in any subject could be given, the pupils had to learn Latin.
-This neglect of the mother-tongue was one of the traditional mistakes
-pointed out and abandoned by the Port-Royalists. “People of quality
-complain,” says De Saci, “and complain with reason, that in giving their
-children Latin we take away French, and to turn them into citizens of
-ancient Rome we make them strangers in their native land. After learning
-Latin and Greek for 10 or 12 years, we are often obliged at the age of 30
-to learn French.” (Cadet, 10.) So Port-Royal proposed breaking through
-this bondage to Latin, and laid down the principle, new in France, though
-not in the country of Mulcaster or of Ratke, that everything should be
-taught through the mother-tongue.
-
-Next, the Port-Royalists sought to give their pupils an early and a
-pleasing introduction to literature. The best literature in those days
-was the classical; and suitable works from that literature might be made
-intelligible _by means of translations_. In this way the Port-Royalists
-led their pupils to look upon some of the classical authors not as
-inventors of examples in syntax, but as writers of books that _meant_
-something. And thus both the mother-tongue and literature were brought
-into the school-room.
-
-§ 28. When the boys had by this means got some feeling for literature
-and some acquaintance with the world of the ancients, they began the
-study of Latin. Here again all needless difficulties were taken out of
-their way. No attempt indeed was made to teach language without grammar,
-the rationale of language, but the science of grammar was reduced to
-first principles (set forth in the _Grammaire Générale et Raisonnée_ of
-Arnauld and Lancelot), and the special grammar of the Latin language was
-no longer taught by means of the work established in the University,
-the _Latin_ Latin Grammar of Despautère, but by a “New Method” written
-in French which gave essentials only and had for its motto: “Mihi inter
-virtutes grammatici habebitur aliqua nescire—To me it will be among the
-grammarian’s good points not to know everything.” (Quintil.)[93]
-
-§ 29. With this minimum of the essentials of the grammar and with
-a previous acquaintance with the sense of the book the pupils were
-introduced to the Latin language and were taught to translate a Latin
-author into French. This was a departure from the ordinary route, which
-after a course of learning grammar-rules in Latin went to the “theme,”
-_i.e._, to composition in Latin.
-
-The art of translating into the mother-tongue was made much of. School
-“construes,” which consist in substituting a word for a word, were
-entirely forbidden, and the pupils had to produce the old writer’s
-thoughts _in French_.[94]
-
-§30. From this we see that the training was literary. But in the study of
-form the Port-Royalists did not neglect the inward for the outward. Their
-great work, which still stands the attacks of time, is the Port-Royal
-_Logic, or the Art of Thinking_ (see Trans, by T. Spencer Baynes, 1850).
-This was substantially the work of Arnauld; and it was Arnauld who led
-the Port-Royalists in their rupture with the philosophy of the Middle
-Age, and who openly followed Descartes. In the _Logic_ we find the claims
-of reason asserted as if in defiance of the Jesuits. “It is a heavy
-bondage to think oneself forced to agree in everything with Aristotle and
-to take him as the standard of truth in philosophy.... The world cannot
-long continue in this restraint, and is recovering by degrees its natural
-and reasonable liberty, which consists in accepting that which we judge
-to be true and rejecting that which we judge to be false.” (Quoted by
-Cadet, p. 31.)[95]
-
-§ 31. To mark the change, the Port-Royalists called their book not “the
-Art of Reasoning,” but “the Art of Thinking,” and it was in this art
-of thinking that they endeavoured to train their scholars. They paid
-great attention to geometry, and Arnauld wrote a book (“New Elements of
-Geometry”) which so well satisfied Pascal that after reading the MS. he
-burnt a similar work of his own.
-
-§ 32. The Port-Royalists then sought to introduce into the school-room a
-“sweet reasonableness.” They were not touched, as Comenius was, by the
-spirit of Bacon, and knew nothing of a key for opening the secrets of
-Nature. They loved literature and resolved that their pupils should love
-it also; and with this end they would give the first notions of it in the
-mother-tongue; but the love of literature still bound them to the past,
-and they aimed simply at making the best of the Old Education without any
-thought of a New.
-
-§ 33. In one respect they seem less wise than Rabelais and Mulcaster,
-less wise perhaps than their foes the Jesuits. They gave little heed to
-training the body, and thought of the soul and the mind only; or if they
-thought of the body they were concerned merely that it should do no harm.
-“Not only must we form the minds of our pupils to virtue,” says Nicole,
-“we must also bend their bodies to it, that is, we must endeavour that
-the body do not prove a hindrance to their leading a well-regulated life
-or draw them by its weight to any disorder. For we should know that as
-men are made up of mind and body, a wrong turn given to the body in youth
-is often in after life a great hindrance to piety.” (_Vues p. bien élever
-un prince_, quoted by Cadet, p. 206.)
-
-§ 34. But let us not underrate the good effect produced by this united
-effort of Christian toil and Christian thought. “Nothing should be
-more highly esteemed than good sense,” (Preface to the _Logique_), and
-Port-Royal did a great work in bringing good sense and reason to bear on
-the practice of the school-room. When the Little Schools were dispersed
-the Gentlemen still continued to teach, but the lessons they gave were
-now in the “art of thinking” and in the art of teaching; and all the
-world might learn of them, for they taught in the only way left open to
-them; they published books.
-
-§ 35. Of these writers on pedagogy the most distinguished was “the great
-Arnauld,” _i.e._, Antoine Arnauld, (1612-1694) brother of the Mère
-Angélique. His “_Règlement des Études_” shows us how literary instruction
-was given at Port-Royal. In these directions we have not so much the
-rules observed in the Little Schools as the experience of the Little
-Schools rendered available for the schools of the University. On this
-account Sainte-Beuve speaks of the _Règlement_ of Arnauld as forming a
-preface to the _Treatise on Studies_ (_Traité des Études_) of Rollin.
-In the _Règlement_ we see Arnauld yielding to what seems a practical
-necessity and admitting competition and prizes. Some excellent advice is
-given, especially on practice in the use of the mother-tongue. The young
-people are to question and answer each other about the substance of what
-they have read, about the more remarkable thoughts in their author or the
-more beautiful expressions. Each day two of the boys are to narrate a
-story which they themselves have selected from a classical author.[96]
-
-§ 36. With the notable exception of Pascal, Arnauld was the most
-distinguished writer among the Gentlemen of Port-Royal. A writer less
-devoted to controversy than Arnauld, less attached to the thought of
-Saint-Cyran and of Descartes, but of wider popularity, was Nicole, who
-had Made. de Sévigné for an admirer, and Locke for one of his translators.
-
-Nicole has given us a valuable contribution to pedagogy in his essay on
-the right bringing-up of a prince. (_Vues générales pour bien élever un
-prince._) In this essay he shows us with what thought and care he had
-applied himself to the art of instruction, and he gives us hints that all
-teachers may profit by. Take the following:—
-
-§ 37. “Properly speaking it is not the masters, it is no instruction
-from without, that makes things understood; at the best the masters do
-nothing but expose the things to the interior light of the mind, by which
-alone they can be understood. It follows that where this light is wanting
-instruction is as useless as trying to shew pictures in the dark. The
-very greatest minds are nothing but lights in confinement, and they have
-always sombre and shady spots; but in children the mind is nearly full
-of shade and emits but little rays of light. So everything depends on
-making the most of these rays, on increasing them and exposing to them
-what one wishes to have understood. For this reason it is hard to give
-general rules for instructing anyone, because the instruction must be
-adapted to the mixture of light and darkness, which differs widely in
-different minds, especially with children. We must look where the day
-is breaking and bring to it what we wish them to understand; and to do
-this we must try a variety of ways for getting at their minds and must
-persevere with such as we find have most success.
-
-“But generally speaking we may say that, as in children the light depends
-greatly on their senses, we should as far as possible attach to the
-senses the instruction we give them, and make it enter not only by the
-ear but also by the sight, as there is no sense which makes so lively an
-impression on the mind and forms such sharp and clear ideas.”
-
-This is excellent. There is a wise proverb that warns us that “however
-soon we get up in the morning the sunrise comes never the earlier.” A
-vast amount of instruction is thrown away because the instructors will
-not wait for the day-break.
-
-§ 38. For the moral training of the young there is one qualification
-in the teacher which is absolutely indispensable—goodness.
-Similarly for the intellectual training, there is an indispensable
-qualification—intelligence. This is the qualification required by the
-system of Port-Royal, but not required in working the ordinary machinery
-of the school-room either in those days or in ours. When Nicole has
-described how instruction should be given so as to train the judgment and
-cultivate the taste, he continues:
-
-“As this kind of instruction comes without observation, so is the profit
-derived from it likely to escape observation also; that is, it will not
-announce itself by anything on the surface and palpable to the common
-man. And on this account persons of small intelligence are mistaken
-about it and think that a boy thus instructed is no better than another,
-because he cannot make a better translation from Latin into French, or
-beat him in saying his Virgil. Thus judging of the instruction by these
-trifles only, they often make less account of a really able teacher than
-of one of little science and of a mind without light.” (Nicole in Cadet,
-p. 204; Carré, p. 187.)
-
-In these days of marks and percentages we seem agreed that it must be
-all right if the children can stand the tests of the examiner or the
-inspector. Something may no doubt be got at by these tests; but we cannot
-hope for any genuine care for education while everything is estimated
-“_par des signes grossiers et extérieurs_.”
-
-§ 39. Whatever was required to adapt the thought of Port-Royal to the
-needs of classical schools, especially the schools of the University
-of Paris was supplied by Rollin (1661-1741) whose _Traité des Études_
-or “Way of teaching and studying Literature,” united the lessons of
-Port-Royal with much material drawn from his own experience and from his
-acquaintance with the writings of other authors, especially Quintilian
-and Seneca. Having been twice Rector of the University (in 1694 and
-1695) Rollin had managed to bring into the schools much that was due to
-Port-Royal; and in his _Traité_ he has the tact to give the improved
-methods as the ordinary practice of his colleagues.
-
-§ 40. Much that Rollin has said applies only to classical or at most
-to literary instruction; but some of his advice will be good for all
-teachers as long as the human mind needs instruction. I have met with
-nothing that seems to me to go more truly to the very foundation of the
-art of teaching than the following:
-
-“We should never lose sight of this grand principle that STUDY DEPENDS
-ON THE WILL, and the will does not endure constraint: ‘_Studium discendi
-voluntate quæ cogi non potest constat._’ (Quint. j, 1, cap. 3.)[97] We
-can, to be sure, put constraint on the body and make a pupil, however
-unwilling, stick to his desk, can double his toil by punishment, compel
-him to finish a task imposed upon him, and with this object we can
-deprive him of play and recreation. But is this work of the galley-slave
-studying? And what remains to the pupil from this kind of study but a
-hatred of books, of learning, and of masters, often till the end of his
-days? It is then the will that we must draw on our side, and this we
-must do by gentleness, by friendliness, by persuasion, and above all by
-the allurement of pleasure.” (_Traité_, 8th Bk. _Du Gouvernement des
-Classes_, 1re Partie, Art. x.)
-
-§ 41. The passage I have quoted is from the _Article_ “on giving a taste
-for study (_rendre l’étude aimable_);” and if some masters do not agree
-that this is “one of the most important points concerning education,”
-they will not deny that “it is at the same time one of the most
-difficult.” As Rollin truly says, “among a very great number of masters
-who in other respects are highly meritorious there will be found very few
-who manage to get their pupils to like their work.”
-
-§ 42. One of the great causes of the disinclination for school work is
-to be found according to Rollin and Quintilian, in the repulsive form in
-which children first become acquainted with the elements of learning. “In
-this matter success depends very much on first impressions; and the main
-effort of the masters who teach the first rudiments should be so to do
-this, that the child who cannot as yet love study should at least not get
-an aversion for it from that time forward, for fear lest the bitter taste
-once acquired should still be in his mouth when he grows older.”[98]
-(Begin. of Art. x, as above.)
-
-§ 43. In this matter Rollin was more truly the disciple of the
-Port-Royalists than of Quintilian. They it was who protested against the
-dismal “grind” of learning to read first in an unknown tongue, and of
-studying the rules of Latin in Latin with no knowledge of Latin, a course
-which professed to lead, as Sainte-Beuve puts it, “to the unknown through
-the unintelligible.” They directed their highly-trained intellects to
-the teaching of the elements, and succeeded in proving that the ordinary
-difficulties were due not to the dulness of the learners, but to the
-stupidity of the masters. They showed how much might be done to remove
-these difficulties by following not routine but the dictates of thought,
-and study and love of the little ones.
-
- There is an excellent though condensed account of the
- Port-Royalists under “Jansenists” in Sonnenschein’s _Cyclopædia
- of Education_. In vol. ij, of Charles Beard’s Port-Royal, (2
- vols., 1861) there is a chapter on the Little Schools. The most
- pleasing account I have seen in English of the Port-Royalists
- (without reference to education) is in Sir Jas. Stephen’s
- _Essays on Ecclesiastical Biography_. In French the great work
- on the subject is Sainte-Beuve’s _Port-Royal_, 5 vols. (71 ed.,
- 6 vols.) The account of the Schools is in 4th bk., in vol. iij,
- of 1st ed. Very useful for studying the pedagogy of Port-Royal
- are _L’Education à Port-Royal_ by Félix Cadet (Hachette, 1887)
- and _Les Pédagogues de Port-Royal_, by I. Carré (Delagrave,
- 1887). These last give extracts from the main writings on
- education by Arnauld, Nicole, Lancelot, Coustel, &c. The
- article, _Port-Royal_, in Buisson’s _D._, is the “Introduction”
- to Carré’s book. A 3-vol. ed. of Rollin’s _Traité_ was
- published (Paris, Didot) in 1872. The more interesting parts
- of this book are contained in F. Cadet’s _Rollin: Traité
- des Études_ (Delagrave, 1882). Rollin’s work was at one time
- well-known in the English trans., and copies of it are often
- to be found “second-hand.” The best part comes last; which may
- account for the neglect into which the book has fallen. The
- accounts of Port-Royal and of Rollin in G. Compayré’s _Histoire
- Critique_ are very good parts of a very good book. Vérin’s
- _Étude sur Lancelot_ I have not seen, and it is only too
- probable that I have not given to Lancelot the attention due to
- him.
-
-
-
-
-XII.
-
-SOME ENGLISH WRITERS BEFORE LOCKE.
-
-
-§ 1. The beginning of the 17th century brought with it a change in
-the main direction of thought and interest. As we have seen, the 16th
-century adored literature and was thrown back on the remote past. Some
-of the great scholars like Sturm had indeed visions of literary works
-to be written, that would rival the old models on which they were
-fashioned; but whether they hoped or not to bring back the Golden Age
-all the scholars of the Renascence thought of it as _having been_. With
-the change of century, however, a new conception came into men’s minds.
-Might not this worship of the old writers after all be somewhat of a
-superstition? The languages in which they wrote were beautiful languages,
-no doubt, but they were ill adapted to express the ideas and wants of
-the modern world. As for the substance of these old writings, this did
-not satisfy the cravings of men’s minds. It left unsolved all the main
-problems of existence, and offered for knowledge mere speculations
-or poetic fancies or polished rhetoric. Man needed to understand his
-position with regard to God and to Nature; but on both of these topics
-the classics were either silent or misleading. Revelation had supplied
-what the classics could not give concerning man’s relation to God;
-but nothing had as yet thrown light on his relation to Nature. And yet
-with his material body and animal life he could not but see how close
-that relation was, and could not but wish that something about it might
-be _known_, not simply guessed or feigned. Hence the demand for _real_
-knowledge, that is, a knowledge of the facts of the universe as distinct
-from the knowledge of what men have thought and said. We have heard of
-the mathematician who put down Paradise Lost with the remark that it
-seemed to him a poor book, for it did not prove anything; and it was just
-in this spirit that the new school of thinkers, the Realists, looked upon
-the classics. They wanted to know Nature’s laws: and words which did not
-convey such knowledge seemed to them of little value.
-
-§ 2. Here was a tremendous revolution from the mode of thought prevalent
-in the Renascence. No longer was the Golden Age in the past. In science
-the Golden Age must always be in the future. Scientific men start with
-what has been discovered and add to it. Every discovery passes into the
-common stock of knowledge, and becomes the property of everyone who knows
-it just as much as of the discoverer. Harvey had no more property in the
-circulation of the blood, Newton and Leibnitz no more property in the
-Differential Calculus than Columbus in the Continent of America; indeed
-not so much, for Columbus gained some exclusive rights in America, but
-Harvey gained none over the blood.
-
-So we see that whereas the literary spirit made the dominant minds
-reverence the past, the scientific spirit led them to despise the past;
-and whereas the literary spirit raised the value of words and led to
-the study of celebrated writings, the scientific spirit was totally
-careless about words and prized only physical truths which were entirely
-independent of words. Again, the literary spirit naturally favoured
-the principle of authority, for its oracles had already spoken: the
-scientific spirit set aside all authority and accepted nothing that did
-not of itself satisfy the reason. (Compare Comenius, _supra_ p. 152.)
-
-§ 3. The first great leader in this revolution was an Englishman, Francis
-Bacon. But the school-room felt his influence only through those who
-learnt from him; and among educational reformers, the chief advocates of
-realism have been found on the Continent, _e.g._, Ratke and Comenius.[99]
-But the desire to learn by “things, not words” affected the minds of many
-English writers on education, and we find this spirit showing itself even
-in Milton and Locke, and far more clearly in some writers less known to
-fame.
-
-§ 4. There is a wide distinction in educational writers between those who
-were schoolmasters and those who were not. Schoolmasters have to come
-to terms with what exists and to make a livelihood by it. So they are
-conservatives by position, and rarely get beyond an attempt at showing
-how that which is now done badly might be done well. Suggestions of
-radical change usually come from those who never belonged to the class of
-teachers, or who, not without disgust, have left it.
-
-Among English schoolmasters of the olden times the chief writers I have
-met with besides Mulcaster are John Brinsley the elder, and Charles
-Hoole.
-
-§ 5. John Brinsley the elder, a Puritan schoolmaster at
-Ashby-de-la-Zouch, a brother-in-law of Bishop Hall’s, and father of John
-Brinsley the younger who became a leading Puritan minister and author,
-was a veritable reformer, but only with reference to methods. His most
-interesting books are _Ludus Literarius or the Grammar Schoole_, 1612
-(written after 20 years’ experience in teaching, as we learn from the
-_Consolation_, p. 45), and _A Consolation for our Grammar Schooles: or
-a faithfull and most comfortable incouragement for laying of a sure
-foundation of all good learning in our schooles and for prosperous
-building thereupon_, 1622. The first of these, when reprinted, as it
-is sure to be, will always secure for its author the notice and the
-gratitude of students of the history of our education; for in this
-book he tells us not only what should be done in the school-room, but
-also what was done. In a dialogue with the ordinary schoolmaster the
-reformer draws to light the usual practice, criticizes it, and suggests
-improvements.
-
-§ 6. In Brinsley we get no hint of realism; but by the middle of
-the sixteen hundreds we find the realistic spirit is felt even by a
-schoolmaster, Charles Hoole,[100] who was a kinsman of Bishop Sanderson,
-the Casuist, and was master first of the Grammar School at Rotherham,
-then of a private Grammar School in London, published besides a number
-of school books, a translation of the _Orbis Pictus_ (date of preface,
-January, 1658), and also “A New Discovery of the old art of teaching
-schoole ... published for the general profit, especially of young
-Schoolemasters” (date of preface, December, 1659). In these books we find
-that Hoole succeeded even in the school-room in keeping his mind open.
-He complains of the neglect of English, and evidently in theory at least
-went a long way with the realistic reformers. “Comenius,” he says, “hath
-proceeded (as Nature itself doth) in an orderly way, first to exercise
-the senses well by presenting their objects to them, and then to fasten
-upon the intellect by impressing the first notions of things upon it and
-linking them one to another by a rational discourse; whereas indeed we
-generally, missing this way, do teach children as we do parrots to speak
-they know not what, nay, which is worse, we taking the way of teaching
-little ones by grammar only, at the first do puzzle their imaginations
-with abstractive terms and secondary intentions, which, till they be
-somewhat acquainted with things, and the words belonging to them in the
-language which they learn, they cannot apprehend what they mean. And this
-I guess to be the reason why many greater persons do resolve sometimes
-not to put a child to school till he be at least eleven or twelve years
-of age.... You then, that have the care of little children, do not too
-much trouble their thoughts and clog their memories with bare grammar
-rudiments, which to them are harsh in getting, and fluid in retaining;
-because indeed to them they signifie nothing but a meer swimming notion
-of a general term, which they know not what it meaneth till they
-comprehend all particulars: but by this [_i.e._, the _Orbis P._] or the
-like subsidiarie inform them first with some knowledge of things and
-words wherewith to express them; and then their rules of speaking will be
-better understood and more firmly kept in mind. Else how should a child
-conceive what a rule meaneth when he neither knoweth what the Latine
-word importeth, nor what manner of thing it is which is signified to
-him in his own native language which is given him thereby to understand
-the rule? for rules consisting of generalities are delivered (as I may
-say) at a third hand, presuming first the things and then the words to
-be already apprehended touching which they are made.” This subject Hoole
-wisely commends to the consideration of teachers, “it being _the very
-basis of our profession to search into the way of children’s taking
-hold by little and little of what we teach them_, that so we may apply
-ourselves to their reach.” (Preface to trans. of _Orbis Pictus_.)
-
-§ 7. “Good Lord! how many good and clear wits of children be now-a-days
-perished by ignorant schoolmasters!” So said Sir Thomas Elyot in his
-_Governor_ in 1531, and the complaint would not have been out of date in
-the 17th century, possibly not in the 19th. In the sixteen hundreds we
-certainly find little advance in practice, though in theory many bold
-projects were advanced, some of which pointed to the study of things, to
-the training of the hand, and even to observation of the “educands.”
-
-§ 8. The poet Cowley’s “proposition for the advancement of experimental
-philosophy” is a scheme of a college near London to which is to be
-attached a school of 200 boys. “And because it is deplorable to consider
-the loss which children make of their time at most schools, employing
-or rather casting away six or seven years in the learning of words
-only, and that too very imperfectly; that a method be here established
-for the infusing knowledge and language at the same time, [Is this an
-echo of Comenius?] and that this may be their apprenticeship in Natural
-Philosophy.”[101]
-
-§ 9. Rarely indeed have those who either theoretically or practically
-have made a study of education ever acquired sufficient literary skill
-to catch the ear of the public or (what is at least as difficult) the
-ear of the teaching body. And among the eminent writers who have spoken
-on education, as Rabelais, Montaigne, Milton, Locke, Rousseau, Herbert
-Spencer, we cannot find one who has given to it more than passing, if not
-accidental, attention. Schoolmasters are, as I said, conservative, at
-least in the school-room; and moreover, they seldom find the necessary
-time, money, or inclination for publishing on the work of their calling.
-The current thought at any period must then be gathered from books only
-to be found in our great libraries, books in which writers now long
-forgotten give hints of what was wanted out of the school-room and
-grumble at what went on in it.
-
-§ 10. One of the most original of these writers that have come in my way
-is John Dury, a Puritan, who was at one time Chaplain to the English
-Company of Merchants at Elbing, and laboured with Comenius and Hartlib to
-promote unity among the various Christian bodies of the reformed faith
-(see Masson’s _Life of Milton_, vol. iii). About 1649 Dury published
-_The Reformed Schoole_ which gives the scheme of an association for the
-purpose of educating a number of boys and girls “in a Christian way.”
-
-§ 11. That Dury was not himself a schoolmaster is plain from the first
-of his “rules of education.” “The chief rule of the whole work is that
-nothing be made tedious and grievous to the children, but all the
-toilsomeness of their business the Governor and Ushers are to take upon
-themselves; that by diligence and industry all things may be so prepared,
-methodized and ordered for their apprehension, that this work may unto
-them be as a delightful recreation by the variety and easiness thereof.”
-
-§ 12. “The things to be looked unto in the care of their education,” he
-enumerates in the order of importance: “1. Their advancement in piety;
-2. The preservation of their health; 3. The forming of their manners;
-4. Their proficiency in learning” (p. 24). “Godliness and bodily health
-are absolutely necessary,” says Dury; “the one for spiritual and the
-other for their temporal felicitie” (p. 31): so great care is to be taken
-in “exercising their bodies in husbandry or manufactures or military
-employments.”[102]
-
-§ 13. About instruction we find the usual complaints which like “mother’s
-truth keep constant youth.” “Children,” says Dury, “are taught to read
-authors and learn words and sentences before they can have any notion
-of the things signified by those words and sentences or of the author’s
-strain and wit in setting them together; and they are made to learn by
-heart the generall rules, sentences and precepts of Arts before they are
-furnished with any matter whereunto to apply those rules and precepts”
-(p. 38). Dury would entirely sweep away the old routine, and in all
-instruction he would keep in view the following end: “the true end of all
-human learning is to supply in ourselves and others the defects which
-proceed from our ignorance of the nature and use of the creatures, and
-the disorderliness of our natural faculties in using them and reflecting
-upon them” (p. 41).
-
-§ 14. “Our natural faculties”—here Dury struck a new note, which has now
-become the keynote in the science of education. He enforces his point
-with the following ingenious illustration:—“As in a watch one wheel
-rightly set doth with its teeth take hold of another and sets that a-work
-towards a third; and so all move one by another when they are in their
-right places for the end for which the watch is made; so is it with the
-faculties of the human nature being rightly ordered to the ends for which
-God hath created them. But contrariwise, if the wheels be not rightly
-set, or the watch not duly wound up, it is useless to him that hath it.
-And so it is with the faculties of Man; if his wheels be not rightly
-ordered and wound up by the ends of sciences in their subordination
-leading him to employ the same according to his capacity to make use of
-the creatures for that whereunto God hath made them, he becomes not only
-useless, but even a burthen and hurtful unto himself and others by the
-misusing of them” (p. 43).
-
-§ 15. “As in Nature sense is the servant of imagination; imagination of
-memory; memory of reason; so in teaching arts and sciences we must set
-these faculties a-work in this order towards their proper objects in
-everything which is to be taught. Whence this will follow, that as the
-faculties of Man’s soul naturally perfect each other by their mutual
-subordination; so the Arts which perfect those faculties should be
-gradually suggested: and the objects wherewith the faculties are to be
-conversant according to the rules of Art should be offered in that order
-which is answerable to their proper ends and uses and not otherwise.”
-
-§ 16. In this and much else that Dury says we see a firm grasp of
-the principle that the instruction given should be regulated by the
-gradual development of the learner’s faculties. The three sources of our
-knowledge, says he, are—1. Sense; 2. Tradition; 3. Reason; and Sense
-comes first. “Art or sciences which may be learnt by mere sense should
-not be learnt any other way.” “As children’s faculties break forth in
-them by degrees to be vigorous with their years and the growth of their
-bodies, so they are to be filled with objects whereof they are capable,
-and plied with arts; whence followeth that while children are not
-capable of the acts of reasoning, the method of filling their senses and
-imaginations with outward objects should be plied. Nor is their memory at
-this time to be charged further with any objects than their imagination
-rightly ordered and fixed doth of itself impress the same upon them.”
-After speaking of the common abuse of general rules, he says: “So far as
-those faculties (viz., sense, imagination, and memory) are started with
-matters of observation, so far rules may be given to direct the mind in
-the use of the same, and no further.” “The arts and sciences which lead
-us to reflect upon the use of our own faculties are not to be taught till
-we are fully acquainted with their proper objects, and the direct acts
-of the faculties about them.” So “it is a very absurd and preposterous
-course to teach Logick and Metaphysicks before or with other Humane
-Sciences which depend more upon Sense and Imagination than reasoning” (p.
-46).
-
-§ 17. In all this it seems to me that the worthy Puritan, of whom
-nobody but Dr. Barnard and Professor Masson has ever heard, has truly
-done more to lay a foundation for the art of teaching than his famous
-contemporaries Milton and Locke.
-
-§ 18. Another writer of that day better known than Dury and with far
-more power of expression was Sir William Petty. He is the “W.P.,” who
-in an Epistle “to his honoured friend Master Samuel Hartlib,” set down
-his “thoughts concerning the advancement of real learning” (1647). This
-letter is to be shown only “to those few that are Reall Friends to the
-Designe of Realities.”[103]
-
-§ 19. Petty sees the need of intercommunication of those who wish to
-advance any art or science. He complains that “the wits and endeavours of
-the world are as so many scattered coals or fire-brands, which for want
-of union are soon quenched, whereas being but laid together they would
-yield a comfortable light and heat.” This is a thought which may well
-be applied to the bringing up of the young; and the following passage
-might have been written to secure a training for teachers: “Methinks
-the present condition of men is like a field where a battle hath been
-lately fought, where we may see many legs and arms and eyes lying here
-and there, which for want of a union and a soul to quicken and enliven
-them are good for nothing but to feed ravens and infect the air. So we
-see many wits and ingenuities lying scattered up and down the world,
-whereof some are now labouring to do what is already done, and puzzling
-themselves to re-invent what is already invented. Others we see quite
-stuck fast in difficulties for want of a few directions which some other
-man (might he be met withal) both could and would most easily give him.”
-I wonder how many young teachers are now wasting their own and their
-pupils’ time in this awkward predicament.
-
-§ 20. “As for ... education,” says Petty, “we cannot but hope that those
-who make it their trade will supply it and render the idea thereof much
-more perfect.” His own contributions to the more perfect idea consist
-mainly in making the study of “realities” precede literature, and thus
-announcing the principle which in later times has led to the introduction
-of “object lessons.” The Baconians thought that the good time was at
-hand, and that they had found the right road at last. By experiments they
-would learn to interpret Nature. After scheming a “Gymnasium, Mechanicum,
-or College of Tradesmen,” Petty says, “What experiments and stuff would
-all those shops and operations afford to active and philosophical heads,
-out of which to extract that interpretation of nature whereof there is so
-little, and that so bad, as yet extant in the world!”[104] And this study
-of things was to affect the work of the school-room, and redeem it from
-the dismal state into which it was fallen. “As for the studies to which
-children are now-a-days put,” says Petty, “they are altogether unfit for
-want of judgment which is but weak in them, and also for want of will,
-which is sufficiently seen ... by the difficulty of keeping them at
-schools and the punishment they will endure rather than be altogether
-debarred from the pleasure which they take in things.”
-
-§ 21. The grand reform required is thus set forth; “Since few children
-have need of reading before they know or can be acquainted with the
-things they read of; or of writing before their thoughts are worth the
-recording or they are able to put them into any form (which we call
-inditing); much less of learning languages when there be books enough
-for their present use in their own mother-tongue; our opinion is that
-those things being withal somewhat above their capacity (as being to be
-attained by judgment which is weakest in children) be deferred awhile,
-and others more needful for them, such as are in the order of Nature
-before those afore-mentioned, and are attainable by the help of memory
-which is either most strong or unpreoccupied in children, be studied
-before them. We wish, therefore, that the educands be taught to observe
-and remember all sensible objects and actions, whether they be natural
-or artificial, which the educators must upon all occasions expound unto
-them.”
-
-§ 22. In proposing this great change Petty was influenced not merely
-by his own delight in the study of things but by something far more
-important for education, by observation of the children themselves. This
-study of things instead of “a rabble of words” would be “more easy and
-pleasant to the young as the more suitable to the natural propensions we
-observe in them. For we see children do delight in drums, pipes, fiddles,
-guns made of elder sticks, and bellows’ noses, piped keys, &c., painting
-flags and ensigns with elderberries and cornpoppy, making ships with
-paper, and setting even nut-shells a-swimming, handling the tools of
-workmen as soon as they turn their backs and trying to work themselves;
-fishing, fowling, hunting, setting springes and traps for birds and other
-animals, making pictures in their writing-books, making tops, gigs and
-whirligigs, gilting balls, practising divers juggling tricks upon the
-cards, &c., with a million more besides. And for the females they will
-be making pies with clay, making their babies’ clothes and dressing them
-therewith; they will spit leaves on sticks as if they were roasting meat;
-they will imitate all the talk and actions which they observe in their
-mother and her gossips, and punctually act the comedy or the tragedy (I
-know not whether to call it) of a woman’s lying-in. By all which it is
-most evident that children do most naturally delight in things and are
-most capable of learning them, having quick senses to receive them and
-unpreoccupied memories to retain them” (_ad f._).
-
-§ 23. In these writers, Dury and Petty, we find a wonderful advance in
-the theory of instruction. Children are to be taught about _things_ and
-this because their inward constitution determines them towards things.
-Moreover the subjects of instruction are to be graduated to accord with
-the development of the learner’s faculties. The giving of rules and
-incomprehensible statements that will come in useful at a future stage
-is entirely forbidden. All this is excellent, and greatly have children
-suffered, greatly do they suffer still, from their teachers’ neglect of
-it. There seems to me to have been no important advance on the thought of
-these men till Pestalozzi and Froebel fixed their attention on the mind
-of the child, and valued things not in themselves but simply as the means
-best fitted for drawing out the child’s self-activity.
-
-§ 24. In several other matters we find Sir William Petty’s
-recommendations in advance of the practice of his own time and ours. He
-advises “that the business of education be not (as now) committed to the
-worst and unworthiest of men [here at least we have improved] but that
-it be seriously studied and practised by the best and abler persons.” To
-this standard we have not yet attained.
-
-§ 25. Handwork is to be practised, but its educational value is not
-clearly perceived. “All children, though of the highest rank, are to be
-taught some gentle manufacture in their minority.” _Ergastula Literaria_,
-literary workhouses, are to be instituted where children may be taught as
-well to do something towards their living as to read and write.[105]
-
-§ 26. Education was to be universal, but chiefly with the object of
-bringing to the front the clever sons of poor parents. The rule he would
-lay down is “that all children of above seven years old may be presented
-to this kind of education, none being to be excluded by reason of the
-poverty and unability of their parents, for hereby it hath come to pass
-that many are now holding the plough which might have been made fit to
-steer the state.”[106]
-
-§ 27. From these enthusiasts for realities we find a change when we turn
-to their contemporary, a schoolmaster and author of a Latin Accidence,
-who was perhaps the most notable Englishman who ever kept a school or
-published a school-book.
-
-§ 28. Milton was not only a great poet: he was also a great scholar.
-Everything he said or wrote bore traces of his learning. The world of
-books then rather than the world of the senses is his world. He has
-benefited as he says “among old renowned authors” and “his inclination
-leads him not” to read modern _Januas_ and _Didactics_, or apparently
-the writings of any of his contemporaries including those of his great
-countryman, Bacon. But, as Professor Laurie reminds us, no man, not even
-a Milton, however he may ignore the originators of ideas can keep himself
-outside the influence of the ideas themselves when they are in the air;
-and so we find Milton using his incomparable power of expression in the
-service of the Realists.
-
-§ 29. But brief he endeavours to be, and paying the Horatian penalty he
-becomes obscure. In the “few observations which flowered off and were the
-burnishing of many studious and contemplative years,” Milton touches only
-on the bringing up of gentlemen’s sons between the ages of 12 and 21, and
-his suggestions do not, like those of Comenius, deal with the education
-of the people, or of both sexes.[107] This limit of age, sex, and station
-deprives Milton’s plan of much of its interest, as the absence of detail
-deprives it of much of its value.
-
-§ 30. Still, we find in the _Tractate_ a very great advance on the ideas
-current at the Renascence. Learning is no longer the aim of education but
-is regarded simply as a means. No finer expression has been given in our
-literature to the main thesis of the Christian and of the Realist and to
-the Realist’s contempt of verbalism, than this: “The end of learning is
-to repair the ruins of our first parents by regaining to know God aright,
-and out of that knowledge to love Him, to imitate Him, to be like Him, as
-we may the nearest by possessing our souls of true virtue, which being
-united to the heavenly grace of faith makes up the highest perfection.
-But because our understanding cannot in this body found itself but on
-sensible things, nor arrive so clearly to the knowledge of God and things
-invisible, as by orderly conning over the visible and inferior creature,
-the same method is necessarily to be followed in all discreet teaching.
-And seeing every Nation affords not experience and tradition enough for
-all kind of learning, therefore we are chiefly taught the languages of
-those people who have at any time been most industrious after wisdom; so
-that language is but the instrument conveying to us things useful to be
-known. And though a linguist should pride himself to have all the tongues
-that Babel cleft the world into, yet, if he have not studied the solid
-things in them as well as the words and lexicons, he were nothing so much
-to be esteemed a learned man as any yeoman or tradesman competently wise
-in his mother-dialect only.”
-
-§ 31. The several propositions here implied have thus been “disentangled”
-by Professor Laurie (_John Milton_ in _Addresses_, &c., p. 167).
-
-1. The aim of education is the _knowledge_ of God and _likeness_ to God.
-
-2. _Likeness_ to God we attain by possessing our souls of true virtue and
-by the Heavenly Grace of Faith.
-
-3. _Knowledge_ of God we attain by the study of the visible things of God.
-
-4. Teaching then has for its aim _this_ knowledge.
-
-5. Language is merely an instrument or vehicle for the knowledge of
-things.
-
-6. The linguist may be less _learned_ (_i.e._, educated) in the true
-sense than a man who can make good use of his mother-tongue though he
-knows no other.
-
-§ 32. Elsewhere, Milton gives his idea of “a complete and generous
-education;” it “fits a man to perform justly, skilfully, and
-magnanimously all the offices both private and public of Peace and
-War.” (Browning’s edition, p. 8.) Here and indeed in all that Milton
-says we feel that “the noble moral glow that pervades the _Tractate
-on Education_, the mood of magnanimity in which it is conceived and
-written, and the faith it inculcates in the powers of the young human
-spirit, if rightly nurtured and directed, are merits everlasting.”
-(Masson iij, p. 252.)
-
-§ 33. But in this moral glow and in an intense hatred of verbalism
-lie as it seems to me the chief merits of the Tractate. The practical
-suggestions are either incomprehensible or of doubtful wisdom. The
-reforming of education was, as Milton says, one of the greatest and
-noblest designs that could be thought on, but he does not take the
-right road when he proposes for every city in England a joint school
-and university for about 120 boarders. The advice to keep boys between
-12 and 21 in this barrack life I consider, with Professor Laurie, to be
-“fundamentally unsound;” and the project of uniting the military training
-of Sparta with the humanistic training of Athens seems to me a pure
-chimæra.
-
-§ 34. When we come to instruction we find that Milton after announcing
-the distinctive principle of the Realists proves to be himself the last
-survivor of the Verbal Realists. (See _supra_, p. 25.) No doubt
-
- “His daily teachers had been woods and rills,”
-
-but his thoughts had been even more in his books; and for the young he
-sketches out a purely bookish curriculum. The young are to learn about
-things, but they are to learn through books; and the only books to which
-Milton attaches importance are written in Latin, Greek, or Hebrew. He
-held, probably with good reason, that far too much time “is now bestowed
-in pure trifling at grammar and sophistry.” “We do amiss,” he says, “to
-spend 7 or 8 years merely in scraping together so much miserable Latin
-and Greek as might be learned otherwise easily and delightfully in one
-year.” Without an explanation of the “otherwise” this statement is a
-truism, and what Milton says further hardly amounts to an explanation.
-His plan, if plan it can be called, is as follows: “If after some
-preparatory grounds of speech by their certain forms got into memory, the
-boys were led to the praxis thereof in some chosen short book lessoned
-thoroughly to them, they might then proceed to learn the substance of
-good things and arts in due order, which would bring the whole language
-quickly into their power. This,” adds Milton, “I take to be the most
-rational and most profitable way of learning languages.” It is, however,
-not the most intelligible.
-
-§ 35. “I doubt not but ye shall have more ado to drive our dullest and
-laziest youth, our stocks and stubbs, from the infinite desire of such
-a happy nurture than we have now to hale and drag our choicest and
-hopefullest wits to that asinine feast of sow thistles and brambles which
-is commonly set before them as all the food and entertainment of their
-tenderest and most docible age.” We cannot but wonder whether this belief
-survived the experience of “the pretty garden-house in Aldersgate.” From
-the little we are told by his nephew and old pupil Edward Phillips we
-should infer that Milton was not unsuccessful as a schoolmaster. In this
-we have a striking proof how much more important is the teacher than the
-teaching. A character such as Milton’s in which we find the noblest aims
-united with untiring energy in pursuit of them could not but dominate the
-impressionable minds of young people brought under its influence. But
-whatever success he met with could not have been due to the things he
-taught nor to his method in teaching them. In spite of the “moral glow”
-about his recommendations they are “not a bow for every [or any] man to
-shoot in that counts himself a teacher.”
-
-§ 36. Nor did he do much for the science of education. His scheme is
-vitiated, as Mark Pattison says, by “the information fallacy.” In the
-literary instruction there is no thought of training the faculties of all
-or the special faculties of the individual. “It requires much observation
-of young minds to discover that the rapid inculcation of unassimilable
-information stupefies the faculties instead of training them,” says
-Pattison; and Milton absorbed by his own thoughts and the thoughts of the
-ancients did not observe the minds of the young, and knew little of the
-powers of any mind but his own.
-
-For information the youths are not required to observe for themselves
-but are to be taught “a general compact of physicks.” “Also in course
-might be read to them out of some not tedious writer the Institution of
-Physick; that they may know the tempers, the humours, the seasons, and
-how to manage a crudity.”
-
-§ 37. Even the study of the classics is advocated by Milton on false
-grounds. If, like the Port-Royalists, he had recommended the study of
-the classical authors for the sake of pure Latin and Greek or as models
-of literary style, the means would have been suited to the end; but it
-was very different when he directed boys to study Virgil and Columella
-in order to learn about bees and farming. In after-life they would find
-these authorities a little out of date; and if they ever attempted to
-improve tillage, “to recover the bad soil and to remedy the waste that is
-made of good, which was one of Hercules’s praises,” they would have found
-a knowledge of the methods of Hercules about as useful as of the methods
-of the Romans.
-
-§ 38. Milton was then a reformer “for his own hand;” and notwithstanding
-his moral and intellectual elevation and his superb power of rhetoric, he
-seems to me a less useful writer on education than the humble Puritans
-whom he probably would not deign to read. In his haughty self-reliance,
-he, like Carlyle with whom Seeley has well compared him (_Lectures and
-Addresses: Milton_), addressed his contemporaries _de haut en bas_, and
-though ready to teach could learn only among the old renowned authors
-with whom he associated himself and we associate him.
-
-§ 39. Judged from our present standpoint the Tractate is found with many
-weaknesses to be strong in this, that it co-ordinates physical, moral,
-mental and æsthetic training.
-
-§ 40. But nothing of Milton’s can be judged by our ordinary canons. He
-soars far above them and raises us with him “to mysterious altitudes
-above the earth” (_supra_, p. 153, _note_). Whatever we little people may
-say about the suggestions of the Tractate, Milton will remain one of the
-great educators of mankind.[108]
-
-
-
-
-XIII.
-
-LOCKE.
-
-(1632-1704).
-
-
-§ 1. When an English University established an examination for future
-teachers,[109] the “special subjects” first set were “Locke and Dr.
-Arnold.” The selection seems to me a very happy one. Arnold greatly
-affected the spirit and even the organization of our public schools at
-a time when the old schools were about to have new life infused into
-them, and when new schools were to be started on the model of the old.
-He is perhaps the greatest educator of the English type, _i.e._, the
-greatest educator who had accepted the system handed down to him and
-tried to make the best of it. Locke on the other hand, whose reputation
-is more European than English, belongs rather to the continental type.
-Like his disciple Rousseau and like Rousseau’s disciples the French
-Revolutionists, Locke refused the traditional system and appealed from
-tradition and authority to reason. We English revere Arnold, but so long
-as the history of education continues to be written, as it has been
-written hitherto, on the Continent, the only Englishman celebrated in it
-will be as now not the great schoolmaster but the great philosopher.
-
-§ 2. In order to understand Locke we must always bear in mind what I may
-call his two main characteristics; 1st, his craving to know and to speak
-the truth and the whole truth in everything, truth not for a purpose but
-for itself[110]; 2nd, his perfect trust in the reason as the guide, the
-only guide, to truth.[111]
-
-§ 3. 1st. Those who have not reflected much on the subject will naturally
-suppose that the desire to know the truth is common to all men, and the
-desire to speak the truth common to most. But this is very far from being
-the case. If we had any earnest desire for truth we should examine things
-carefully before we admitted them as truths; in other words our opinions
-would be the growth of long and energetic thought. But instead of this
-they are formed for the most part quite carelessly and at haphazard, and
-we value them not on account of their supposed agreement with fact but
-because though “poor things” they are “our own” or those of our sect or
-party. Locke on the other hand was always endeavouring to get at the
-truth for its own sake. This separated him from men in general. And he
-brought great powers of mind to bear on the investigation. This raised
-him above them.
-
-§ 4. 2nd. Locke’s second characteristic was his entire reliance on the
-guidance of reason. “The faculty of reasoning,” says he, “seldom or
-never deceives those who trust to it.” Elsewhere, borrowing a metaphor
-from Solomon (Prov. xx, 27), he speaks of this faculty as “the candle of
-the Lord set up by Himself in men’s minds.” (F. B. ij., 129). In a fine
-passage in the _Conduct of the Understanding_ he calls it “the touchstone
-of truth” (§ iij, Fowler’s edition, p. 10). He even goes so far in his
-correspondence with Molyneux as to maintain that intelligent honest men
-cannot possibly differ.[112]
-
-But if we consider it from one point of view the treatise on the _Conduct
-of the Understanding_ is itself a witness that human reason is a compass
-liable to incalculable variations and likely enough to shipwreck those
-who steer by it alone. In this book Locke shows us that to come to a
-true result the understanding (1) must be perfectly trained, (2) must
-not be affected by any feeling in favour of or against any particular
-result, and (3) must have before it all the data necessary for forming a
-judgment. In practice these conditions are seldom (if ever) fulfilled;
-and Locke himself, when he wants an instance of a mind that can acquiesce
-in the certainty of its conclusions, takes it from “angels and separate
-spirits who may be endowed with more comprehensive faculties” than we are
-(C. of U. § iij, 3).
-
-§ 5. It seems to me then that Locke much exaggerates the power of
-the individual reason for getting at the truth. And to exaggerate
-the importance of one function of the mind is to unduly diminish the
-importance of the rest. Thus we find that in Locke’s scheme of education
-little thought is taken for the play of the affections and feelings; and
-as for the imagination it is treated merely as a source of mischief.
-
-§ 6. Locke, as it has often been pointed out, differs from the
-schoolmaster in making small account of the knowledge to be acquired
-by those under education. But it has not been so often remarked that
-the fundamental difference is much deeper than this and lies in the
-conception of knowledge itself. With the ordinary schoolmaster the test
-of knowledge is the power of reproduction. Whatever pupils can reproduce
-with difficulty they know imperfectly; whatever they can reproduce with
-ease they know thoroughly. But Locke’s definition of knowledge confines
-it to a much smaller area. According to him knowledge is “the internal
-perception of the mind” (Locke to Stillingfleet _v._ F. B. ij, 432).
-“Knowing is seeing; and if it be so, it is madness to persuade ourselves
-we do so by another man’s eyes, let him use never so many words to tell
-us that what he asserts is very visible. Till we ourselves see it with
-our own eyes, and perceive it by our own understandings, we are as much
-in the dark and as void of knowledge as before, let us believe any
-learned authors as much as we will” (C. of U. § 24).[113]
-
-§ 7. Here Locke makes no distinction between different classes of truths.
-But surely very important differences exist.
-
-About some physical facts our knowledge is at once most certain and
-most definite when we derive it through the evidence of our own senses.
-“Seeing is believing,” says the proverb. It may be believing, but it is
-not knowing. That certainty which we call knowledge we often arrive at
-better by the testimony of others than by that of our own senses.
-
-Miss Martineau in her Autobiography tells us that as a child of ten she
-entirely and unaccountably failed to see a comet which was visible to all
-other people; but, although her own senses were at fault, the evidence
-for the comet was so conclusive that she may be said to have _known_
-there was a comet in the sky.
-
-On sufficient evidence we can know anything, just as we know there is
-a great water-fall at Niagara though we may never have crossed the
-Atlantic. But we cannot be so certain simply on the evidence of our
-senses. If we trusted entirely to them we might take the earth for a
-plane and “know” that the sun moved round it.
-
-§ 8. But Locke probably considers as the subject of knowledge not so much
-physical facts as the great body of truths which are ascertained by the
-intellect. It is the eye of the mind by which alone knowledge is to be
-gained. Of these truths the purest specimens are the truths of geometry.
-It may be said that only those who have followed the proofs _know_
-that the area of the square on the side opposite the right angle in a
-right-angled triangle is equal to the sum of the squares on the other
-sides. But even in pure reasoning like this, the tiro often seems to see
-what he does not really see; and where his own reason brings him to a
-conclusion different from the one established he _knows_ only that he is
-mistaken.
-
-§ 9. It must be admitted then that first-hand knowledge, knowledge
-derived from the vision of the eye or of the mind, is not the only
-knowledge the young require. Every learner must take things on trust, as
-even Lord Bacon admits. _Discentem credere oportet._ To use Locke’s own
-words:—“I do not say, to be a good geographer that a man should visit
-every mountain, river, promontory, and creek upon the face of the earth,
-view the buildings and survey the land everywhere as if he were going
-to make a purchase” (C. of U., iij, _ad f._). So that even according to
-Locke’s own shewing we must use the eyes of others as well as our own,
-and this is true not in geography only, but in all other branches of
-knowledge.
-
-§ 10. But are we driven to the alternative of agreeing either with Locke
-or with the schoolmaster? I do not see that we are. The thought which
-underlies Locke’s system of education is this: true knowledge can be
-acquired only by the exercise of the reason: in childhood the reasoning
-power is not strong enough for the pursuit of knowledge: knowledge,
-therefore, is out of the question at that age, and the only thing to
-be thought of is the formation of habits. Opposed to this we have the
-schoolmaster’s ideal which is governed by examinations. According to this
-ideal the object of the school course is to give certain “knowledge,”
-linguistic and other, and to fix it in the memory in such a manner that
-it can be displayed on the day of examination. “Knowledge” of this kind
-often makes no demand whatever on the reasoning faculty, or indeed on any
-faculty but that of remembering and reproducing what the learner has been
-told; in extreme cases the memory of mere sounds or symbols suffices.
-
-But after all we are not compelled to choose between these two theories.
-Take, _e.g._, the subject which Locke has mentioned, geography. The
-schoolmasters of the olden time began with the use of the globes, a plan
-which, by the way, Locke himself seems to have winked at. His disciple
-Molyneux tells him of the performances of the small Molyneux. When he was
-but just turned five he could read perfectly well, and on the globe could
-have traced out and pointed at all the noted ports, countries, and cities
-of the world, both land and sea; by five and a half could perform many
-of the plainest problems on the globe, as the longitude and latitude,
-the Antipodes, the time with them and other countries, &c. (Molyneux to
-L., 24th August, 1695.) Here we find a child brought up, without any
-protest from Locke, on mere examination knowledge, which according to
-Locke himself is not knowledge at all. It is strange that Locke did not
-at once point out to Molyneux that the child was not really learning what
-the father supposed him to be learning. When the child turned over the
-plaster ball and found the word “Paris,” the father no doubt attributed
-to the child much that was in his own mind only. To the child “the Globe”
-(as Rousseau afterwards said), was nothing but a plaster ball; “Paris”
-was nothing but some letters marked on that ball. Comenius had already
-got a notion how children may be given some knowledge of geography.
-“Children begin geography,” said he, “when they get to understand what
-a hill, a valley, a field, a river, a village, a town is.” (_Supra_, p.
-145.) When this beginning has been made, geographical knowledge is at
-once possible to the child, and not before.
-
-Perfect knowledge in geography, as in most other things, is out of every
-one’s reach. Nobody knows, _e.g._, all that could be known about Paris.
-The knowledge its inhabitants have of it is very various, but in all
-cases this knowledge is far greater than that of a visitor. The visitor’s
-knowledge again is far greater than that of strangers who have never
-seen Paris. Nobody, then, can know everything even about Paris; but a
-child who knows what a large town is, and can fancy to himself a big town
-called Paris, which is the biggest and most important town in France has
-some knowledge about it. This must be maintained against Locke. Against
-the schoolmaster it may be pointed out that making an Eskimo say the
-words:—“Paris is the capital of France,” would not be giving him any
-knowledge at all; and the same may be said of many “lessons” in the
-school-room. If a common sailor were to teach an Eskimo English, he
-would very likely suppose that when he had taught the sounds “Paris is
-the capital of France,” he had conveyed to his pupil all the ideas which
-those sounds suggested to his own mind. A common schoolmaster may fall
-into a similar error.
-
-§ 11. In the most celebrated work which has been affected by the
-_Thoughts_ of Locke, Rousseau’s _Emile_, we find childhood treated in a
-manner altogether different from youth: the child’s education is mainly
-physical, and instruction is not given till the age of twelve. Locke’s
-system on first sight seems very different to this, but there is a
-deeper connection between the two than is usually observed. We have seen
-that Locke allowed nothing to be knowledge that was not acquired by the
-perception of the intellect. But in children the intellectual power is
-not yet developed; so according to Locke knowledge properly so-called is
-not within their reach. What then can the educator do for them? He can
-prepare them for the age of reason in two ways, by caring first for their
-physical health, second for the formation of good habits.
-
-§ 12. 1st. On the Continent Locke has always been considered one of the
-first advocates of physical education, and he does, it is true, give
-physical education the first place, a feature in his system, which we
-naturally connect with his study of medicine, and also with the trouble
-he had all his life with his own health. But care of the body, and
-especially bodily exercises, were always much thought of in this country,
-and the main writers on education before Locke, _e.g._, Sir Thos. Elyot,
-Mulcaster, Milton, were very emphatic about physical training.
-
-In the autobiography of Lord Herbert of Cherbury, we may see what
-attention was paid in Locke’s own century to this part of education.[114]
-
-§ 13. 2nd. “That, and that only, is educative which moulds forms or
-modifies the soul or mind.” (Mark Pattison in _New Quarterly Magazine_,
-January, 1880.)
-
-Here we have a proposition which is perhaps seldom denied, but very
-commonly ignored by those who bring up the young. But Locke seems to
-have been entirely possessed with this notion, and the greater part of
-the _Thoughts_ is nothing but a long application of it. The principle
-which lies at the root of most of his advice, he has himself expressed as
-follows: “That which I cannot too often inculcate is, that whatever the
-matter be about which it is conversant whether great or small, the main,
-I had almost said only thing, to be considered in every action of a child
-is what influence it will have upon his mind; what habit it tends to, and
-is likely to settle in him: how it will become him when he is bigger,
-and if it be encouraged, whither it will lead him when he is grown up.”
-(_Thoughts_, § 107, p. 86.)
-
-Here we see that Locke differed widely from the schoolmasters of his
-time, perhaps of all time. A man must be a philosopher indeed if he can
-spend his life in teaching boys, and yet always think more about what
-they will _be_ and what they will _do_ when their schooling is over than
-what they will _know_. And in these days if we stopped to think at all we
-should be trodden on by the examiner.[115]
-
-In this respect Locke has not been surpassed. Like his predecessor
-Montaigne he took for his centre not the object, knowledge, but the
-subject, man.[116]
-
-§ 14. In some other respects he does not seem so happy. He makes little
-attempt to reach a scientific standpoint and to establish general
-truths about our common human nature. He thinks not so much of the man
-as the gentleman, not so much of the common laws of the mind as of the
-peculiarities of the individual child. He even hints that differences of
-disposition in children render treatises on education defective if not
-useless. “There are a thousand other things that may need consideration”
-he writes “especially if one should take in the various tempers,
-different inclinations, and particular defaults that are to be found in
-children and prescribe proper remedies. The variety is so great that it
-would require a volume, nor would that reach it. Each man’s mind has
-some peculiarity as well as his face, that distinguishes him from all
-others; and there are possibly scarce two children who can be conducted
-by exactly the same method: besides that I think a prince, a nobleman, or
-an ordinary gentleman’s son should have different ways of breeding. But
-having had here only some general views in reference to the main end and
-aims in education, and those designed for a gentleman’s son, whom being
-then very little I considered only as white paper or wax to be moulded
-and fashioned as one pleases, I have touched little more than those
-heads which I judged necessary for the breeding of a young gentleman of
-his condition in general.” (_Thoughts_, § 217, p. 187.)
-
-No language could bring out more clearly the inferiority of Locke’s
-standpoint to that of later thinkers. He makes little account of our
-common nature and wishes education to be based upon an estimate of the
-peculiarities of the individual pupil and of his social needs. And no
-one with an adequate notion of education could ever compare the young
-child to “white paper or wax.” Perhaps the development of an organism
-was a conception that could not have been formed without a great advance
-in physical science. Froebel who makes most of it learnt it from the
-scientific study of trees and from mineralogy. We need not then be
-surprised that Locke does not say, as Pestalozzi said a hundred years
-later, “Education instead of merely considering what is to be imparted
-to children ought to consider first what they already possess.” But if
-he had read Comenius he would have been saved from comparing the child
-to wax or white paper in the hands of the educator. Comenius had said:
-“Nature has implanted within us the seeds of learning, of virtue, and of
-piety. The object of education is to bring these seeds to perfection.”
-(_Supra_, p. 135.) This seems to me a higher conception than any that I
-meet with in Locke.
-
-§ 15. But if our philosopher did not learn from Comenius he certainly
-learnt from Montaigne.[117] Indeed Dr. Arnstädt (_v. supra_, p. 69)
-has put him into a series of thinkers who have much in common. This
-succession is as follows: Rabelais, Montaigne, Locke, Rousseau; and,
-according to Mr. Browning’s division, they form a school by themselves.
-“Thinkers on education,” says Mr. Browning,[118] “are 1st those who wish
-to educate through the study of the classics, or 2nd those who wish to
-educate through the study of the works of Nature, or 3rd those who aim
-at an education independent of study and knowledge, and think rather
-of the training of character and the attaining to the Greek ideal, the
-man beautiful and good.” To the three schools Mr. Browning gives the
-names Humanist, Realist, and Naturalist, (“nos autres naturalistes,”
-Montaigne says). Locke he considers one of the principal writers of the
-“naturalistic” school, and says, Locke “has given a powerful bias to
-naturalistic education both in England and on the Continent for the last
-200 years.” (_Ed. Theories_, p. 85.)
-
-This use of the word “naturalistic” seems to me somewhat misleading, or
-at best vague, and it is a word overworked already: so I should prefer to
-speak of the “developing” or “training” school. The classification itself
-certainly has its uses but it must be employed with caution. If caught
-up by those who have only an elementary acquaintance with the subject a
-class of persons apt to delight in such arrangements as an aid to memory,
-these divisions may easily prove a hindrance to light.
-
-§ 16. This subject of classification is so important to students that
-it may be worth while to make a few remarks upon it. The only thoroughly
-consistent people are the people of fiction. We can know all about
-_them_. Directly we understand their central thought or peculiarity
-we may be sure that everything they say and do will be strictly in
-accordance with it, will indeed be explainable by it. To take a bald and
-simple instance, directly we know that Mrs. Jellaby in _Bleak House_
-is absorbed by her interest in an African Mission, we know all that is
-to be known about her; and everything she does or omits to do has some
-reference to Borrioboola Ghar. But in real life not only are people much
-less easily understood, but when we actually have seized their main
-idea or peculiarity or interest we must not expect to find them always
-consistent: and they will say and do much which if not inconsistent with
-the main idea or peculiarity or interest has at least no connection with
-it. Suppose, _e.g._, you can make out with some certainty that Locke
-belonged to the developing school, you must not expect him to pay little
-heed to instruction as such. Again, suppose you find that his philosophy
-was utilitarian; you must not suppose that in everything he says he will
-be thinking of utility.
-
-Now the historian is tempted to treat real men and women as the writer
-of fiction treats his puppets. Having fastened, quite correctly let us
-suppose, on their main peculiarity he considers it necessary to square
-everything with his theory of them, and whatever will not fall in with
-it he, if he is unscrupulous, misrepresents, or if he is scrupulous,
-suppresses.
-
-Again, we are too apt to read into words meanings derived from
-controversies unknown at the time when the words were uttered. This is
-a well-known fact in the history of religious thought. We must always
-consider not merely the words used but the time when they were used.
-What a man might say quite naturally and orthodoxly at one period would
-be sufficient to convict him of sympathizing with some terrible heresy if
-uttered half a century later. We find something like this in the history
-of education. If anyone nowadays speaks of the pleasure with which as a
-young man he read Tacitus, he is understood to mean that he is opposed
-to the introduction of “modern studies” into the school-room. If on the
-other hand he extols botany, or regrets that he never learned chemistry,
-this is taken for an assault on classical instruction. But, of course,
-no such inference could be drawn if we went back to a time when the
-antithesis between classics and natural science had not been accentuated.
-In many other instances we have to be on our guard against forcing into
-language meaning which belongs rather to a later date.
-
-§ 17. With these cautions in mind let us see how far Locke may be said
-(1) to be a trainer, and (2) how far a utilitarian.
-
-§ 18. I. Mr. Browning attributes to Rabelais, Montaigne, and Locke the
-desire to bring up a well-developed man rather than a good scholar. But
-Rabelais certainly craved for the knowledge of _things_; and if he is
-to be classed at all I should put him rather with the Realists, albeit
-he lived before the realistic spirit became powerful. Montaigne went
-more on the lines of developing rather than teaching, and, shrewd man of
-the world as he was, he thought a great deal about the art of living.
-But his ideal was not so much the man as the gentleman. This was true
-also of Locke; and here we see some explanation why both Montaigne and
-Locke do not value classical learning.[119] On the Continent classical
-learning has never been associated with the character of an accomplished
-gentleman; and, as far as I know, the conception that the highest type
-of excellence is found in the union of “the scholar and the gentleman”
-is peculiar to this country. In the society of Locke’s day this union
-does not seem to have been recognized, and Locke observes: “A great part
-of the learning now in fashion in the schools of Europe, and that goes
-ordinarily into the round of education, a gentleman may in a good measure
-be unfurnished with, without any great disparagement to himself or
-prejudice to his affairs.” (_Thoughts_, § 94, p. 74.) So Locke sought as
-the true essential for the young gentleman “prudence and good breeding.”
-He puts his requisites in the following order of importance:—1, virtue;
-2, wisdom; 3, manners; 4, learning; and so “places learning last and
-least.” Here he shews himself far ahead of those who still held to
-the learned ideal; but his notions of development were cramped by his
-thinking only of the gentleman and what was requisite for him.
-
-§ 19. II. Was Locke a utilitarian in education? It is the fashion (and
-in history as in other things fashion is a powerful force), it is the
-fashion to treat of Locke as a great champion of utilitarianism. We
-might expect this in the ordinary historians, for “when they do agree
-their unanimity is” not perhaps very wonderful. But there is one great
-English authority quite uninfluenced by them who has said the same
-thing, viz.—Cardinal Newman. The Cardinal, as the champion of authority,
-is perhaps prejudiced against Locke, who holds that “the faculty of
-reasoning seldom or never deceived those who trusted to it.” Be this as
-it may, Newman asserts that “the tone of Locke’s remarks is condemnatory
-of any teaching which tends to the general cultivation of the mind.”
-(_Idea of a University._ Discourse vij., § 4; see also § 6.) A very
-interesting point for us to consider is then, Is this reputation of
-Locke’s for utilitarianism well deserved?
-
-§ 20. First let us be quite certain of our definition.
-
-In learning anything there are two points to be considered; 1st, the
-advantage we shall find from knowing that subject or having that skill,
-and 2nd, the effect which the study of that subject or practising for
-that skill will have on the mind or the body.
-
-These two points are in themselves distinct, though it is open to anyone
-to maintain that they need not be considered separately. Nature has
-provided that the bodies of most animals should get the exercise best for
-them in procuring food. So Mr. Herbert Spencer has come to the conclusion
-that it would be contrary to “the economy of nature” if one set of
-occupations were needed as gymnastics and another for utility. In other
-words he considers that it is in learning the most useful things we get
-the best training.
-
-The utilitarian view of instruction is that we should teach things useful
-in themselves and either neglect the result on the mind and body of the
-learner or assume Mr. Spencer’s law of “the economy of nature.”
-
-Again, when the subjects are settled the utilitarian thinks how the
-knowledge or skill may be most speedily acquired, and not how this
-method or that method of acquisition will affect the faculties.
-
-§ 21. This being utilitarianism in education the question is how far was
-Locke the utilitarian he is generally considered?
-
-If we take by itself what he says under the head of “Learning” in the
-_Thoughts concerning Education_ no doubt we should pronounce him a
-utilitarian. He considers each subject of instruction and pronounces
-for or against it according as it seems likely or unlikely to be useful
-to a gentleman. And in the methods he suggests he simply points out the
-quickest route, as if the knowledge were the only thing to be thought of.
-Hence his utilitarian reputation.
-
-But two very important considerations have been lost sight of.
-
-1st. Learning is with him “the last and least part” in education.
-
-2nd. Intellectual education was not for childhood but for the age when
-we can teach ourselves. “When a man has got an entrance into any of the
-sciences,” says he, “it will be time then to depend on himself and rely
-upon his own understanding and exercise his own faculties, which is the
-only way to improvement and mastery.” (L. to Peterborough, quoted in
-Camb. edition of _Thoughts_, p. 229.) “So,” he says, “the business of
-education is not, as I think, to make the young perfect in any one of the
-sciences but so to open and dispose their minds as may best make them
-capable of any when they shall apply themselves to it.” The studies he
-proposes in the _Conduct of the Understanding_ (which is his treatise on
-intellectual education) have for their object “an increase of the powers
-and activity of the mind, not an enlargement of its possessions” (_C. of
-U._ § 19, _ad f._).
-
-Thus strange to say the supposed leader of the Utilitarians has actually
-propounded in so many words the doctrine of their opponents.
-
-§ 22. When Locke is more studied it will be found that the _Thoughts_ are
-misleading if we neglect his other works, more particularly the _Conduct
-of the Understanding_.
-
-§ 23. Towards the end of his days, Locke was conscious of gleams of the
-“untravelled world” which lay before the generations to come. With great
-pathos he writes to a friend: “When I consider how much of my life has
-been trifled away in beaten tracks where I vamped on with others only to
-follow those who went before me, I cannot but think I have just as much
-reason to be proud as if I had travelled all England and, if you will,
-all France too, only to acquaint myself with the roads, and be able to
-tell how the highways lie wherein those of equipage, and even the common
-herd too, travel. Now, methinks—and these are often old men’s dreams—I
-see openings to truth and direct paths leading to it, wherein a little
-application and industry would settle one’s mind with satisfaction and
-leave no darkness or doubt. But this is the end of my day when my sun is
-setting: and though the prospect it has given me be what I would not for
-anything be without—there is so much truth, beauty, and consistency in
-it—yet it is for one of your age, I think I ought to say for yourself, to
-set about” (L. to Bolde, quoted by Fowler, _Locke_, p. 120). But another
-200 years have not sufficed to put us in possession of the Promised Land
-of which Locke had these Pisgah visions. We still “vamp on,” following
-those who went before us and getting small help from expounders of
-“Education as a Science.” But as it would seem the days of vamping on
-blindly in the beaten track are drawing to a close. We cannot doubt that
-if Locke had known the wonderful advance which various sciences have
-made since his day he would have seen in them “openings to truth and
-direct paths leading to it” for many purposes, certainly for education.
-It is for our age and ages to come to set about applying our scientific
-knowledge to the bringing up of children; and thinkers such as Froebel
-will shew us how.
-
- Locke’s _Thoughts concerning Education_ and his _Conduct of
- the Understanding_ should be in the hands of all students of
- education who know the English language. I have therefore not
- attempted to epitomise what he has said, but have endeavoured
- to get at the main thoughts which are, so to speak, the
- taproot of his system. Of the _Thoughts_ there is an edition
- published by the National Society and another by the Pitt
- Press, Cambridge. The Cambridge edition gives from Fox-Bourne’s
- Life Locke’s scheme of “Working Schools” and from Lord King’s
- the essay “Of Study.” Of the _Conduct_ there is an edition
- published by the Clarendon Press. “F.B.” in the references
- above stands for Fox-Bourne’s _Life of Locke_.
-
- In the above essay I have not treated of Locke as a methodizer;
- but he advocated teaching foreign languages _without grammar_,
- and he published “Æsop’s Fables in English and Latin,
- interlineary. For the benefit of those, who not having a
- master would learn either of these Tongues.” When I edited the
- _Thoughts_ for Pitt Press I did not know of this book or I
- should have mentioned it.
-
-
-
-
-XIV.
-
-JEAN-JACQUES ROUSSEAU.
-
-(1712-1778).
-
-
-§ 1. The great men whom we meet with in the history of education may
-be divided into two classes, thinkers and doers. There would seem
-no good reason why the thinker should not be great as a doer or the
-doer as a thinker; and yet we hardly find any records of men who have
-been successful both in investigating theory and directing practice.
-History tells us of first-rate practical schoolmasters like Sturm and
-the Jesuits; but they did not think out their own theory of their
-task: they accepted the current theory of their time. On the other
-hand, men who like Montaigne and Locke rejected the current theory and
-sought to establish a better by an appeal to reason were not practical
-schoolmasters. Whenever the thinker tries to turn his thought into action
-he has cause to be disappointed with the result. We saw this in the
-disastrous failure of Ratke; and even the books in which Comenius tried
-to work out his principles, the _Vestibulum, Janua_ and the rest, with
-the exception of the _Orbis Pictus_, were speedily forgotten. In the
-world of education as elsewhere it takes time to find for great thoughts
-the practice which gives effect to them. The course of great thoughts is
-in some ways like the course of great rivers. Most romantic and beautiful
-near their source, they are not most useful. They must leave the
-mountains in which they first appeared, and must flow not in cataracts
-but smoothly along the plain among the dwellings of common men before
-they can be turned to account in the every-day business of life.
-
-§ 2. The eighteenth century was soon distinguished by boundless activity
-of thought; and this thought was directed mainly to a great work of
-destruction. Europe had outgrown the ideas of the Middle Age, and the
-framework of Society, which the Middle Age had bequeathed, had waxed old
-and was ready to vanish as soon as any strong force could be found to
-push it out of the way. As Matthew Arnold has described it—
-
- “It’s frame yet stood without a breach
- “When blood and warmth were fled;
- “And still it spake it’s wonted speech—
- “But every word was dead.”
-
-Here then there was need of some destructive power that should remove and
-burn up much that had become mere obstacle and incumbrance. This power
-was found in the writings which appeared in France about the middle of
-the century; and among the authors of them none spoke with more effect
-than one who differed from all the rest, a vagabond without family
-ties or social position of any kind, with no literary training, with
-little knowledge and in conduct at least, with no morals. The writings
-of Rousseau and the results produced by them are among the strangest
-things in history; and especially in matters of education it is more
-than doubtful if the wise man of the world Montaigne, the Christian
-philanthropist Comenius, or that “slave of truth and reason” the
-philosopher Locke, had half as much influence as this depraved serving
-man.
-
-§ 3. The work by which Rousseau became famous was a prize essay in which
-he maintained that civilization, the arts and all human institutions were
-from first to last pernicious in their effects, and that no happiness
-was possible for the human race without giving them all up and returning
-to what he called the state of Nature. He glorified the “noble savage.”
-If man had brought himself to a state of misery bordering on despair by
-following his own many inventions, take away all these inventions and you
-will have man in his proper condition. The argument seems something of
-this kind: Man was once happy: Man is now miserable: undo everything that
-has been done and Man will be happy again.
-
-§ 4. This principle of a so-called “natural” state existing before man’s
-many inventions, Rousseau applied boldly to education, and he deduced
-this general rule: “Do precisely the opposite to what is usually done,
-and you will have hit on the right plan.” Not reform but revolution
-was his advice. He took the ordinary school teaching and held it up to
-ridicule, and certainly he did prove its absurdity. And a most valuable
-service he thus rendered to teachers. Every employment while it makes us
-see some things clearly, also provides us with blinkers, so to speak,
-which prevent our seeing other things at all. The school teacher’s
-blinkers often prevent his seeing much that is plain enough to other
-people; and when a writer like Rousseau takes off our blinkers for us and
-makes us look about us, he does us a great deal of good. But we need more
-than this: if we have children entrusted to us we must do something with
-them, and Rousseau’s rule of doing the opposite to what is usual will not
-be found universally applicable. So we consult Rousseau again, and what
-is his advice?
-
-§ 5. Rousseau would bring everything back to the “natural” state, and
-unfortunately he never pauses to settle whether he means by this a state
-of ideal perfection, or of simply savagery. The savage, he says, gets his
-education without any one’s troubling about it, and so he infers that all
-the trouble taken by the civilized is worse than thrown away. (Girardin’s
-_Rousseau_, ij., 85.) But he does not fall back on _laisser faire_. He
-urges on parents the duty of _themselves_ attending to the bringing up of
-their children. “Point de mère, point d’enfant—no mother, no child,” says
-he; and he would have the father see to the training of the child whom
-the mother has suckled.
-
-§ 6. Rousseau’s picture of family life is given us where few Englishmen
-are likely to find it, enveloped in the _Nouvelle Héloïse_. Here we read
-how Julie always has her children with her, and while seeming to let
-them do as they like, conceals with the air of apparent carelessness the
-most vigilant observation. Possessed by the notion that there can be
-no intellectual education before the age of reason, she proclaims: “La
-fonction dont je suis chargée n’est pas d’élever mes fils, mais de les
-préparer pour être élevés: My business is not to educate my sons, but to
-prepare them for being educated.” (_N. Héloïse_, 5th P., Lett. 3.)[120]
-
-§ 7. There is much that is very pleasing in this picture of ideal
-family life; but when Rousseau comes formally to propound his ideas on
-education, he gives up family life to attain greater simplicity. “Je m’en
-tiens à ce qui est plus simple,” says he: “What I stick to is the more
-_simple_.” He tries to state everything in its lowest terms, so to speak;
-and this method is excellent so long as he puts on one side only what
-is accidental, and retains all the essentials of the problem. But his
-rage for simplicity sometimes carried him beyond this. There is an old
-Cambridge story of a problem introducing an elephant “whose weight may
-be neglected.” This is after the manner of Rousseau. In the bringing up
-of the model child, he “neglects” parents, brothers and sisters, young
-companions; and though he says that the needful qualities of a master
-may be expected only in “un homme de génie,” he hands over Émile to a
-governor to live an isolated life in the country.
-
-§ 8. This governor is to devote himself, for some years, entirely to
-imparting to his pupil these difficult arts—the art of being ignorant and
-of losing time. Till he is twelve years old, Émile is to have no direct
-instruction whatever. “At that age he shall not know what a book is,”
-says Rousseau; though elsewhere we are told that he will learn to read of
-his own accord by the time he is ten, if no attempt is made to teach him.
-He is to be under no restraint, and is to do nothing but what he sees to
-be useful.
-
-§ 9. Freedom from restraint is, however, to be apparent, not real. As
-in ordinary education the child employs all its faculties in duping
-the master, so in education “according to Nature” the master is to
-devote himself to duping the child. “Let him always be his own master
-in appearance, and do you take care to be so in reality. There is no
-subjection so complete as that which preserves the appearance of liberty;
-it is by this means even the will is led captive.”
-
-§ 10. “The most critical interval of human nature is that between the
-hour of our birth and twelve years of age. This is the time wherein vice
-and error take root without our being possessed of any instrument to
-destroy them.” (_Ém._ ij., 79.) Throughout this season, the governor is
-to be at work training the pupil in the art of being ignorant and losing
-time. “The first education should be purely negative. It consists by no
-means in teaching virtue or truth, but in securing the heart from vice
-and the intellect from error. If you could do nothing and let nothing be
-done, if you could bring on your pupil healthy and strong to the age of
-12 without his being able to tell his right hand from his left, from your
-very first lessons the eyes of his understanding would open to reason.
-Being without prejudices and without habits he would have nothing in him
-to thwart the effect of your care; and by beginning with doing nothing
-you would have made an educational prodigy.”[121]
-
-“Exercise his body, his organs, his senses, his powers; but keep his mind
-passive as long as possible. Mistrust all his sentiments formed before
-the judgment which determines their value. Restrain, avoid all foreign
-impressions, and to prevent the birth of evil be in no hurry to cause
-good; for good is good only in the light of reason. Look on all delays
-as so many advantages: it is a great gain to advance towards the goal
-without loss: let childhood ripen in children. In short, whatever lesson
-they may need, be sure not to give it them to-day if you can safely put
-it off till to-morrow.”[122]
-
-“Do not, then, alarm yourself much about this apparent idleness. What
-would you say of the man, who, in order to make the most of life, should
-determine never to go to sleep? You would say, The man is mad: he is not
-enjoying the time; he is depriving himself of it: to avoid sleep he is
-hurrying towards death. Consider, then, that it is the same here, and
-that childhood is the sleep of reason.”[123]
-
-§ 11. We have now reached the climax (or shall we say the nadir?) in
-negation. Rousseau has given the _coup de grâce_ to the ideal of the
-Renascence. Comenius was the first to take a comprehensive view of the
-educator’s task and to connect it with man’s nature and destiny; but he
-could not get clear from an over-estimate of the importance of knowledge.
-According to his ideal, man should know all things; so in practice he
-thought too much of imparting knowledge. Then came Locke and treated the
-imparting of knowledge as of trifling importance when compared with the
-formation of character; but he too in practice hardly went so far as this
-principle might have led him. He was much under the influence of social
-distinctions, and could not help thinking of what it was necessary for a
-gentleman to know. So that Rousseau was the very first to shake himself
-entirely free from the notion which the Renascence had handed down that
-man was mainly a _learning_ animal. Rousseau has the courage to deny this
-in the most emphatic manner possible, and to say: “For the first 12 years
-the educator must teach the child _nothing_.”
-
-§ 12. In this reaction against the Renascence Rousseau puts the truth
-in the form of such a violent paradox that we start back in terror. But
-it was perhaps necessary thus to sweep away the ordinary schoolroom
-rubbish before the true nature of the educator’s task could be fairly
-considered. The rubbish having been cleared away what was to take its
-place? No longer having his mind engrossed by the knowledge he wished
-to communicate, the educator had now an eye for something else not less
-worthy of his attention, viz., the child itself. Rousseau was the first
-to base education entirely on a study of the child to be educated; and by
-doing this he became, as I believe, one of the greatest of educational
-Reformers.
-
-§ 13. It was, however, purely as a thinker, or rather as a _voice_
-giving expression to the general discontent that Rousseau became such a
-tremendous force in Europe. He has indeed often been called the father
-of the first French Revolution which he did not live to see. But, as
-Macaulay has well said, a good deal besides eloquent writing is needed
-to cause such a convulsion; and we can no more attribute the French
-Revolution to the writings of Rousseau than we can attribute the shock
-of an explosion of gunpowder to the lucifer match without which it might
-never have happened (_v._ Macaulay’s _Barrère_). Rousseau did in the
-world of ideas what the French Revolutionists afterwards did in the world
-of politics; he made a clean sweep and endeavoured to start afresh.
-
-§ 14. I have already said that as regards education I think his labours
-in destruction were of very great value. But what shall we say of his
-efforts at construction? There would not be the least difficulty in
-showing that most of his proposals are impracticable. It is no more
-“natural” to treat as a typical case a child brought up in solitude than
-it would be to write a treatise on the rearing of a bee cut off from the
-hive.[124] Rousseau requires impossibilities, _e.g._, he postulates that
-the child is never to be brought into contact with anyone who might set
-a bad example. Modern science has shown us that the young are liable to
-take diseases from impurities in the air they breathe: but as yet no
-one has proposed that all children should be kept at an elevation of
-5,000 feet above the level of the sea. Yet the advice would be about
-as practicable as the advice of Rousseau. A method which always starts
-with paradox and not infrequently ends with platitude might seem to have
-little in its favour; and Rousseau has had far less influence since (in
-the words of Herman Merivale) “he was dethroned with the fall of his
-extravagant child, the [First] Republic.” No doubt the great exponent
-of English opinion was right in calling Rousseau “the most un-English
-stranger who ever landed on our shores” (_Times_, 29 Aug., 1873); and the
-torch of his eloquence will never cause a conflagration, still less an
-explosion, here. His disregard for “appearances”—or rather his evident
-purpose of making an impression by defying “appearances” and saying just
-the opposite of what is expected, is simply distressing to us. But there
-is no denying Rousseau’s genius. His was one of the original voices
-that go on sounding and awakening echoes in all lands. Willingly or
-unwillingly, at first hand or from imperfect echoes, everyone who studies
-education must study Rousseau.
-
-§ 15. As specimens of Rousseau’s teaching I will give a few
-characteristic passages from the Émile.
-
-“Everything is good as it leaves the hands of the Creator: everything
-degenerates in the hands of man.”[125] These are the first words of the
-“Émile,” and the key-note of Rousseau’s philosophy.
-
-§ 16. “We are born weak, we have need of strength; we are born destitute
-of everything, we have need of assistance; we are born stupid, we have
-need of understanding. All that we have not at our birth, and which we
-require when grown up, is bestowed on us by education. This education we
-receive from nature, from men, or from things. The internal development
-of our organs and faculties is the education of nature: the use we are
-taught to make of that development is the education given us by men;
-and in the acquisitions made by our own experience on the objects that
-surround us, consists our education from things.”[126] “Since the
-concurrence of these three kinds of education is necessary to their
-perfection, it is by that one which is entirely independent of us, we
-must regulate the two others.”[127]
-
-§ 17. Now “to live is not merely to breathe; it is to act, it is to make
-use of our organs, our senses, our faculties, and of all those parts of
-ourselves which give us the feeling of our existence. The man who has
-lived most, is not he who has counted the greatest number of years, but
-he who has most thoroughly felt life.”[128]
-
-§ 18. The aim of education, then, must be complete living.
-
-But ordinary education, instead of seeking to develop the life of the
-child, sacrifices childhood to the acquirement of knowledge, or rather
-the semblance of knowledge, which it is thought will prove useful to the
-youth or the man. Rousseau’s great merit lies in his having exposed this
-fundamental error. He says, very truly, “We do not understand childhood,
-and pursuing false ideas of it our every step takes us further astray.
-The wisest among us fix upon what it concerns men to know without ever
-considering what children are capable of learning. They always expect to
-find the man in the child without thinking of what the child is before
-it is a man. And this is the study to which I have especially devoted
-myself, in order that should my entire method be false and visionary, my
-observations might always turn to account. I may not have seen aright
-what ought to be done: but I believe I have seen aright the subject on
-which we have to act. Begin then by studying your pupils better, for
-most certainly you do not understand them.”[129] “Nature wills that
-children should be _children_ before they are _men_. If we seek to
-pervert this order we shall produce forward fruits without ripeness or
-flavour, and tho’ not ripe, soon rotten: we shall have young _savans_ and
-old children. Childhood has ways of seeing, thinking, feeling peculiar
-to itself; nothing is more absurd than to wish to substitute ours in
-their place.”[130] “We never know how to put ourselves in the place of
-children; we do not enter into their ideas, we attribute to them our own;
-and following always our own train of thought, even with syllogisms we
-manage to fill their heads with nothing but extravagance and error.”[131]
-“I wish some discreet person would give us a treatise on the art of
-observing children—an art which would be of immense value to us, but of
-which fathers and schoolmasters have not as yet learnt the very first
-rudiments.”[132]
-
-§ 19. In these passages, Rousseau strikes the key-note of true education.
-The first thing necessary for us is to see aright the subject on which
-we have to act. Unfortunately, however, this subject has often been the
-subject most neglected in the schoolroom. Children have been treated as
-if they were made for their school books, not their school books for
-them. As education has been thought of as learning, childhood has been
-treated as unimportant, a necessary stage in existence no doubt, but
-far more troublesome and hardly more interesting than the state of the
-chrysalis. If some forms of words, tables, declensions, county towns, and
-the like can be drummed into children, this is, say educators of the old
-school, a clear gain. For the rest nothing can be done with them except
-teaching them to read, write, and say the multiplication table.
-
-But since the publication of the Émile, there has been in the world a
-very different view of education. According to this view, the importance
-of childhood is not to be measured by the amount of _our_ knowledge, or
-even the number of _our_ words, we can force it to remember. According to
-this view, in dealing with children we must not think of our knowledge
-or of our notions at all. We must think not of our own minds, but of the
-minds of the little ones.[133]
-
-§ 20. The absurd results in which the opposite course has ended, Rousseau
-exposes with great severity. “All the studies demanded from the poor
-unfortunates lead to such things as are entirely beyond the range of
-their ideas, so you may judge what amount of attention they can give to
-them. Schoolmasters who make a great display of the instruction they
-give their pupils are paid to differ from me; but we see from what they
-do that they are entirely of my opinion. For what do they really teach?
-Words, words, for ever words. Among the various knowledges which they
-boast of giving, they are careful not to include such as would be of use;
-because these would involve a knowledge of things, and there they would
-be sure to fail; but they choose subjects that seem to be known when the
-terms are known such as heraldry, geography, chronology, languages and
-the like; all of them studies so foreign to a man, and still more to a
-child, that it is a great chance if anything of the whole lot ever proves
-useful to him on a single occasion in his whole life.”[134] “Whatever
-the study may be, without the idea of the things represented the signs
-representing them go for nothing. And yet the child is always kept to
-these signs without our being able to make him comprehend any of the
-things they represent.”[135] What does a child understand by “the globe”?
-An old geography book says candidly, that it is a round thing made of
-plaster; and this is the only notion children have of it. What a fearful
-waste, and worse than waste, it is to make them learn the signs without
-the things, when if they ever learn the things, they must at the same
-time acquire the signs! (Conf. Ruskin _supra_ p. 159, _note_.) “No! if
-Nature gives to the child’s brain this pliability which makes it capable
-of receiving impressions of every kind, this is not that we may engrave
-on it the names of kings, dates, the technical words of heraldry, of
-astronomy, of geography, and all those words meaningless at his age and
-useless at any age, with which we oppress his sad and sterile childhood;
-but that all the ideas which he can conceive and which are useful to
-him, all those which relate to his happiness and will one day make his
-duty plain to him, may trace themselves there in characters never to
-be effaced, and may assist him in conducting himself through life in a
-manner appropriate to his nature and his faculties.”[136]
-
-§ 21. With Rousseau, as afterwards with Froebel, education was a kind
-of “child-gardening.” “Plants are developed by cultivation,” says he,
-“men by education: On façonne les plantes par la culture, et les hommes
-par l’éducation” (_Ém._ j., 6). The governor, who is the child-gardener,
-is to aim at three things: first, he is to shield the child from all
-corrupting influences; second, he is to devote himself to developing
-in the child a healthy and strong body in which the senses are to be
-rendered acute by exercise; third, he is, by practice not precept, to
-cultivate the child’s sense of duty.
-
-§ 22. In his study of children Rousseau fixed on their never-resting
-activity. “The failing energy concentrates itself in the heart of the
-old man; in the heart of the child energy is overflowing and spreads
-outwards; he feels in him life enough to animate all his surroundings.
-Whether he makes or mars it is all one to him: it is enough that he has
-changed the state of things, and every change is an action. If he seems
-by preference to destroy, this is not from mischief; but the act of
-construction is always slow, and the act of destruction being quicker is
-more suited to his vivacity.”[137]
-
-One of the first requisites in the care of the young is then to provide
-for the expansion of their activity. All restraints such as swaddling
-clothes for infants and “school” and “lessons” for children are to be
-entirely done away with.[138] Literary instruction must not be thought
-of. “There must be no other book than the world,” says Rousseau, “no
-other instruction than facts. The child who reads does not think, he does
-nothing but read, he gets no instruction; he learns words: Point d’autre
-livre que le monde, point d’autre instruction que les faits. L’enfant qui
-lit ne pense pas, il ne fait que lire; il ne s’instruit pas, il apprend
-les mots.” (_Ém._ iij., 181.)[139]
-
-§ 23. If it be objected that, according to Rousseau’s plan, there would
-be a neglect of memory, he replies: “Without the study of books the kind
-of memory that a child should have will not remain inactive; all he sees,
-all he hears, strikes him, and he remembers it; he keeps a record in
-himself of people’s actions and people’s talk; and all around him makes
-the book by which without thinking of it he is constantly enriching
-his memory against the time that his judgment may benefit by it: Sans
-étudier dans les livres, l’espèce de mémoire que peut avoir un enfant ne
-reste pas pour cela oisive; tout ce qu’il voit, tout ce qu’il entend le
-frappe, et il s’en souvient; il tient registre en lui-même des actions,
-des discours des hommes; et tout ce qui l’environne est le livre, dans
-lequel, sans y songer, il enrichit continuellement sa mémoire, en
-attendant que son jugement puisse en profiter.” (_Ém._ ij., 106.) We
-should be most careful not to commit to our memory anything we do not
-understand, for if we do, we can never tell what part of our stores
-really belong to us. (_Ém._ iij., 236.)
-
-§ 24. On the positive side the most striking part of Rousseau’s advice
-relates to the training of the senses. “The first faculties which become
-strong in us,” says he, “are our senses. These then are the first that
-should be cultivated; they are in fact the only faculties we forget
-or at least those which we neglect most completely.” We find that the
-young child “wants to touch and handle everything. By no means check
-this restlessness; it points to a very necessary apprenticeship. Thus
-it is that the child gets to be conscious of the hotness or coldness,
-the hardness or softness, the heaviness or lightness of bodies, to
-judge of their size and shape and all their sensible properties by
-looking, feeling, listening, especially by comparing sight and touch,
-and combining the sensations of the eye with those of the fingers.”[140]
-“See a cat enter a room for the first time; she examines round and stares
-and sniffs about without a moment’s rest, she is satisfied with nothing
-before she has tried it and made it out. This is just what a child does
-when he begins to walk, and enters, so to say, the chamber of the world.
-The only difference is that to the sight which is common to the child
-and the cat the first joins in his observations the hands which nature
-has given him, and the other animal that subtle sense of smell which has
-been bestowed upon her. It is this tendency, according as it is well
-cultivated or the reverse, that makes children either sharp or dull,
-active or slow, giddy or thoughtful.
-
-“The first natural movements of the child being then to measure himself
-with his surroundings and to test in everything he sees all its
-sensible properties which may concern him, his first study is a kind of
-experimental physics relating to his own preservation; and from this we
-divert him to speculative studies before he feels himself at home here
-below. So long as his delicate and flexible organs can adjust themselves
-to the bodies on which they ought to act, so long as his senses as yet
-uncorrupted are free from illusion, this is the time to exercise them all
-in their proper functions; this is the time to learn to understand the
-sensuous relations which things have with us. As everything that enters
-the mind finds its way through the senses, the first reason of a human
-being is a reason of sensations; this it is which forms the basis of the
-intellectual reason; our first masters in philosophy are our feet, our
-hands, our eyes. Substituting books for all this is not teaching us to
-reason, but simply to use the reason of other people; it teaches us to
-take a great deal on trust and never to know anything.
-
-“In order to practise an art we must begin by getting the proper
-implements; and that we may have good use of these implements they must
-be made strong enough to stand wear and tear. That we may learn to think
-we must then exercise our members, our senses, our organs, as these are
-the implements of our intelligence; and that we may make the most of
-these implements the body which supplies them must be strong and healthy.
-We see then that far from man’s true reason forming itself independently
-of his body, it is the sound constitution of the body that makes the
-operations of the mind easy and certain.”[141]
-
-§ 25. Rousseau does not confine himself to advising that the senses
-should be cultivated; he also gives some hints of the _way_ in which
-they should be cultivated, and many modern experiments, such as “object
-lessons” and the use of actual weights and measures, may be directly
-traced to him. “As soon as a child begins to distinguish objects, a
-proper choice should be made in those which are presented to him.”
-Elsewhere he says, “To exercise the senses is not simply to make use of
-them; it is to learn to judge aright by means of them; it is to learn,
-so to say, to perceive; for we can only touch and see and hear according
-as we have learnt how. There is a kind of exercise perfectly natural and
-mechanical which serves to make the body strong without giving anything
-for the judgment to lay hold of: swimming, running, jumping, whip-top,
-stone throwing; all this is capital; but have we nothing but arms and
-legs? have we not also eyes and ears? and are these organs not needed
-in our use of the others? Do not then merely exercise the strength but
-exercise all the senses which direct it; get all you can out of each
-of them, and then check the impressions of one by the impressions of
-another. Measure, reckon, weigh, compare.”[142]
-
-§ 26. Two subjects there were in which Émile was to receive instruction,
-viz.: music and drawing. Rousseau’s advice about drawing is well worth
-considering. He says: “Children who are great imitators all try to
-draw. I should wish my child to cultivate this art, not exactly for
-the art itself, but to make his eye correct and his hand supple: Les
-enfants, grands imitateurs, essayent tous de dessiner: je voudrais que
-le mien cultivât cet art, non précisément pour l’art même, mais pour se
-rendre l’œil juste et la main flexible.” (_Ém._ ij., 149). But Émile is
-to be kept clear of the ordinary drawing-master who would put him to
-imitate imitations; and there is a striking contrast between Rousseau’s
-suggestions and those of the authorities at South Kensington. Technical
-skill he cares for less than the training of the eye; so Émile is always
-to draw _from the object_, and, says Rousseau, “my intention is not
-so much that he should get to _imitate_ the objects, as get to _know_
-them: mon intention n’est pas tant qu’il sache imiter les objets que les
-connaître.” (_Ém._ ij., 150).
-
-§ 27. Before we pass the age of twelve years, at which point, as someone
-says, Rousseau substitutes another Émile for the one he has hitherto
-spoken of, let us look at his proposals for moral training. Rousseau
-is right, beyond question, in desiring that children should be treated
-as children. But what are children? What can they understand? What is
-the world in which they live? Is it the material world only, or is the
-moral world also open to them? (Girardin’s _R._, vol. ij., 136). On the
-subject of morals Rousseau seems to have admirable instincts,[143] but
-no principles, and moral as he is “on instinct,” there is always some
-confusion in what he Says. At one time he asserts that “there is only
-one knowledge to give children, and that is a knowledge of duty: Il n’y
-a qu’une science à enseigner aux enfants: c’est celle des devoirs de
-l’homme.” (_Ém._ j., 26). Elsewhere he says: “To know right from wrong,
-to be conscious of the reason of duty is not the business of a child:
-Connaître le bien et le mal, sentir la raison des devoirs de l’homme,
-n’est pas l’affaire d’un enfant.” (_Ém._ ij., 75).[144] In another place
-he mounts his hobby that “the most sublime virtues are negative” (_Ém._
-ij., 95), and that about the best man who ever lived (till he found
-Friday?) was Robinson Crusoe. The outcome of all Rousseau’s teaching
-on this subject seems that we should in every way develop the child’s
-animal or physical life, retard his intellectual life, and ignore his
-life as a spiritual and moral being.
-
-§ 28. A variety of influences had combined, as they combine still, to
-draw attention away from the importance of physical training; and by
-placing the child’s bodily organs and senses as the first things to
-be thought of in education, Rousseau did much to save us from the bad
-tradition of the Renascence. But there were more things in heaven and
-earth than were dreamt of in his philosophy, and whatever Rousseau might
-say, Émile could never be restrained from inquiring after them. Every boy
-will _think_; _i.e._, he will think _for himself_, however unable he may
-seem to think in the direction in which his instructors try to urge him.
-The wise elders who have charge of him must take this into account, and
-must endeavour to guide him into thinking modestly and thinking right.
-Then again, as soon as the child can speak, or before, the world of
-sensation becomes for him a world, not of sensations only, but also of
-sentiments, of sympathies, of affections, of consciousness of right and
-wrong, good and evil. All these feelings, it is true, may be affected by
-traditional prejudices. The air the child breathes may also contain much
-that is noxious; but we have no more power to exclude the atmosphere of
-the moral world than of the physical. All we can do is to take thought
-for fresh air in both cases. As for Rousseau’s notion that we can
-withdraw the child from the moral atmosphere, we see in it nothing but a
-proof how little he understood the problems he professed to solve.[145]
-
-§ 29. Although the governor is to devote himself to a single child,
-Rousseau is careful to protest against over-direction. “You would stupify
-the child,” says he, “if you were constantly directing him, if you
-were always saying to him, ‘Come here! Go there! Stop! Do this! Don’t
-do that!’ If your head always directs his arms, his own head becomes
-useless to him.” (_Ém._, ij., 114). Here we have a warning which should
-not be neglected by those who maintain the _Lycées_ in France, and the
-ordinary private boarding-schools in England. In these schools a boy
-is hardly called upon to exercise his will all day long. He rises in
-the morning when he must; at meals he eats till he is obliged to stop;
-he is taken out for exercise like a horse; he has all his indoor work
-prescribed for him both as to time and quantity. In this kind of life he
-never has occasion to think or act for himself. He is therefore without
-self-reliance. So much care is taken to prevent his doing wrong, that
-he gets to think only of checks from without. He is therefore incapable
-of self-restraint. In the English public schools boys have much less
-supervision from their elders, and organise a great portion of their
-lives for themselves. This proves a better preparation for life after
-the school age; and most public schoolmasters would agree with Rousseau
-that “the lessons the boys get from each other in the playground are a
-hundred times more useful to them than the lessons given them in school:
-les leçons que les écoliers prennent entre eux dans la cour du collège
-leur sont cent fois plus utiles que tout ce qu’on leur dira jamais dans
-la classe.” (_Ém._ ij., 123.)
-
-§ 30. On questions put by children, Rousseau says: “The art of
-questioning is not so easy as it may be thought; it is rather the art of
-the master than of the pupil. We must have learnt a good deal of a thing
-to be able to ask what we do not know. The learned know and inquire, says
-an Indian proverb, but the ignorant know not what to inquire about.” And
-from this he infers that children learn less from asking than from being
-asked questions. (_N. H._, 5th p. 490.)
-
-§ 31. At twelve years old Émile is said to be fit for instruction. “Now
-is the time for labour, for instruction, for study; and observe that it
-is not I who arbitrarily make this choice; it is pointed out to us by
-Nature herself.”
-
-§ 32. What novelties await us here? As we have seen Rousseau was
-determined to recommend nothing that would harmonise with ordinary
-educational practice; but even a genius, though he may abandon previous
-practice, cannot keep clear of previous thought, and Rousseau’s plan for
-instruction is obviously connected with the thoughts of Montaigne and of
-Locke. But while on the same lines with these great writers Rousseau goes
-beyond them and is both clearer and bolder than they are.
-
-§ 33. Rousseau’s proposals for instruction have the following main
-features.
-
-1st. Instruction is to be no longer literary or linguistic. The teaching
-about words is to disappear, and the young are not to learn by books or
-about books.
-
-2nd. The subjects to be studied are to be mathematics and physical
-science.
-
-3rd. The method to be adopted is not the didactic but the method of
-_self-teaching_.
-
-4th. The hands are to be called into play as a means of learning.
-
-§ 34. 1st. Till quite recently the only learning ever given in schools
-was book-learning, a fact to which the language of the people still bears
-witness: when a child does not profit by school instruction he is always
-said to be “no good at his book.” Now-a-days the tendency is to change
-the character of the schools so that they may become less and less mere
-“Ludi Literarii.” In this Rousseau seems to have been a century and
-more in advance of us; and yet we cannot credit him with any remarkable
-wisdom or insight about literature. He himself used books as a means of
-“collecting a store of ideas, true or false, but at any rate clear” (J.
-Morley’s _Rousseau_, j. chap. 3, p. 85), and he has recorded for us his
-opinion that “the sensible and interesting conversations of a young woman
-of merit are more proper to form a young man than all the pedantical
-philosophy of books” (_Confessions_, quoted by Morley j., 87). After
-this, whatever we may think of the merit of his suggestions we can sit at
-the Sage’s feet no longer.
-
-§ 35. 2nd. Rousseau had himself little knowledge of mathematics and
-natural science, but he was strongly in favour of the “study of Nature”;
-and in his last years his devotion to botany became a passion. His
-curriculum for Émile is in the air, but the chief thing is to get him to
-attend to the phenomena of nature, and “to foster his curiosity by being
-in no hurry to satisfy it.”
-
-§ 36. 3rd. About teaching and learning, there is one point on which we
-find a consensus of great authorities extending from the least learned of
-writers who was probably Rousseau to the most learned who was probably
-Friedrich August Wolf. In one form or other these assert that there is no
-true teaching but _self_-teaching.
-
-Past a doubt the besetting weakness of teachers is “telling.” They can
-hardly resist the tendency to be didactic. They have the knowledge which
-they desire to find in their pupils, and they cannot help expressing
-it and endeavouring to pass it on to those who need it, “like wealthy
-men who care not how they give.” But true “teaching,” as Jacotot and
-his disciple Joseph Payne were never tired of testifying, is “causing
-to learn,” and it is seldom that “didactic” teaching has this effect.
-Rousseau saw this clearly, and clearly pointed out the danger of
-didacticism. As usual he by exaggeration laid himself open to an answer
-that seems to refute him, but in spite of this we feel that there is
-valuable truth underlying what he says. “I like not explanations given
-in long discourses,” says he; “young people pay little attention to
-them and retain little from them. The things themselves! The things
-themselves! I shall never repeat often enough that we attach too much
-importance to words: with our chattering education we make nothing but
-chatterers.”[146] Accordingly Rousseau lays down the rule that Émile is
-not to learn science but to invent it (qu’il n’apprenne pas la science;
-qu’il l’invente); and he even expects him to invent geometry. As Émile
-is not supposed to be a young Pascal but only an ordinary boy with
-extraordinary _physical_ development such a requirement is obviously
-absurd, and Herbart has reckoned it among Rousseau’s _Hauptfehler_ (_Päd.
-Schriften_, ij., 242). The training prescribed is in fact the training
-of the intellectual athlete; and the trainer may put the body through
-its exercises much more easily than the mind. Of this the practical
-teacher is only too conscious, and he will accept Rousseau’s advice, if
-at all, only as “counsels of perfection.” Rousseau says: “Émile, obliged
-to learn of himself, makes use of his own reason and not that of others;
-for to give no weight to opinion, none must be given to authority; and
-the more part of our mistakes come less from ourselves than from other
-people. From this constant exercise there should result a vigour of mind
-like that which the body gets from labour and fatigue. Another advantage
-is that we advance only in proportion to our strength. The mind like
-the body carries that only which it can carry. When the understanding
-makes things its own before they are committed to memory, whatever it
-afterwards draws forth belongs to it; but if the memory is burdened with
-what the understanding knows nothing about we are in danger of bringing
-from it things which the understanding declines to acknowledge.”[147]
-Again he writes: “Beyond contradiction we get much more clear and certain
-notions of the things we learn thus of ourselves than of those we derive
-from other people’s instruction, and besides not accustoming our reason
-to bow as a slave before authority, we become more ingenious in finding
-connexions, in uniting ideas, and in inventing our implements, than when
-we take all that is given us and let our minds sink into indifference,
-like the body of a man who always has his clothes put on for him, is
-waited on by his servants and drawn about by his horses till at length he
-loses the strength and use of his limbs. Boileau boasted of having taught
-Racine to find difficulty in rhyming. Among all the admirable methods of
-shortening the study of the sciences we might have need that some one
-should give us a way of learning them _with effort_.”[148]
-
-§ 37. 4th. However highly we may value our gains from the use of books we
-must admit that in some ways the use of books tends to the neglect of
-powers that should not be neglected. As Rousseau wished to see the young
-brought up without books he naturally looked to other means of learning,
-especially to learning by the eye and by the hand. Much is now said
-about using the hand for education, and many will agree with Rousseau:
-“If instead of making a child stick to his books I employ him in a
-workshop, his hands work to the advantage of his intellect: he becomes
-a philosopher while he thinks he is becoming simply an artisan: Au lieu
-de coller un enfant sur des livres, si je l’occupe dans un atelier, ses
-mains travaillent au profit de son esprit: il devient philosophe, et
-croît n’être qu’un ouvrier.” (_Ém._ iij., 193).
-
-§ 38. In these essays I have done what I could to shew the best that each
-reformer has left us. In Rousseau’s case I have been obliged to confine
-myself to his words. “We attach far too much importance to words,” said
-Rousseau, and yet it is by words and words only that Rousseau still
-lives; and for the sake of his words we forget his deeds. Of the _Émile_
-Mr. Morley says: “It is one of the seminal books in the history of
-literature. It cleared away the accumulation of clogging prejudices and
-obscure inveterate usage which made education one of the dark formalistic
-arts; and it admitted floods of light and air into tightly-closed
-nurseries and schoolrooms” (_Rousseau_, ij., 248). In the region of
-thought it set us free from the Renascence; and it did more than this, it
-announced the true nature of the teacher’s calling, “_Study the subject
-you have to act upon._” In these words we have the starting point of
-the “New Education.” From them the educator gets a fresh conception of
-his task. We grown people have received innumerable impressions which,
-forgotten as they are, have left their mark behind in our way of looking
-at things; and as we advance in life these experiences and associations
-cluster around everything to which we direct our attention, till in the
-end the past seems to dominate the present and to us “nothing is but
-what is not.” But to the child the present with its revelations and the
-future which will be “something more, a bringer of new things,” are all
-engrossing. It is our business as teachers to try to realize how the
-world looks from the child’s point of view. We may know a great many
-things and be ready to teach them, but we shall have little success
-unless we get another knowledge which we cannot teach and can learn only
-by patient observation, a knowledge of “the subject to be acted on,” of
-the mind of our pupils and what goes on there. When we set out on this
-path, which was first clearly pointed out by Rousseau, teaching becomes a
-new occupation with boundless possibilities and unceasing interest in it.
-Every teacher becomes a learner, for we have to study the minds of the
-young, their way of looking at things, their habits, their difficulties,
-their likes and dislikes, how they are stimulated to exertion, how they
-are discouraged, how one mood succeeds another. What we need we may well
-devote a lifetime to acquiring; it is a knowledge of the human mind with
-the object of influencing it.
-
-
-
-
-XV.
-
-BASEDOW AND THE PHILANTHROPINUM.
-
-
-§ 1. One of the most famous movements ever made in educational reform
-was started in the last century by John Bernard Basedow. Basedow was
-born at Hamburg in 1723, the son of a wigmaker. His early years were not
-spent in the ordinary happiness of childhood. His mother he describes
-as melancholy, almost to madness, and his father was severe almost to
-brutality. It was the father’s intention to bring up his son to his own
-business, but the lad ran away, and engaged himself as servant to a
-gentleman in Holstein. The master soon perceived what had never occurred
-to the father, viz., that the youth had very extraordinary abilities.
-Sent home with a letter from his master pointing out this notable
-discovery, Basedow was allowed to renounce the paternal calling, and
-to go to the Hamburg Grammar School (_Gymnasium_), where he was under
-Reimarus, the author of the “Wolfenbüttel Fragment.” In due course his
-friends managed to send him to the University of Leipzig to prepare
-himself for the least expensive of the learned professions—the clerical.
-Basedow, however, was not a man to follow the beaten tracks. After an
-irregular life he left the university too unorthodox to think of being
-ordained, and in 1749 became private tutor to the children of Herr von
-Quaalen in Holstein. In this situation his talent for inventing new
-methods of teaching first showed itself. He knew how to adapt himself to
-the capacity of the children, and he taught them much by conversation,
-and in the way of play, connecting his instruction with surrounding
-objects in the house, garden, and fields. Through Quaalen’s influence, he
-next obtained a professorship at Soroe, in Denmark, where he lectured for
-eight years, but his unorthodox writings raised a storm of opposition,
-and the Government finally removed him to the Gymnasium at Altona. Here
-he still continued his efforts to change the prevailing opinions in
-religious matters; and so great a stir was made by the publication of
-his “Philalethia,” and his “Methodical Instruction in both Natural and
-Biblical Religion,” that he and his family were refused the Communion at
-Altona, and his books were excluded, under a heavy penalty, from Lübeck.
-
-§ 2. About this time Basedow, incited by Rousseau’s “Emile,” turned
-his attention to a fresh field of activity, in which he was to make
-as many friends as in theology he had found enemies. A very general
-dissatisfaction was then felt with the condition of the schools. Physical
-education was not attempted in them. The mother-tongue was neglected.
-Instruction in Latin and Greek, which was the only instruction given,
-was carried on in a mechanical way, without any thought of improvement.
-The education of the poor and of the middle classes received but little
-attention. “Youth,” says Raumer, “was in those days, for most children,
-a sadly harassed period. Instruction was hard and heartlessly severe.
-Grammar was caned into the memory, so were portions of Scripture and
-poetry. A common school punishment was to learn by heart Psalm cxix.
-School-rooms were dismally dark. No one conceived it possible that the
-young could find pleasure in any kind of work, or that they had eyes for
-aught besides reading and writing. The pernicious age of Louis XIV. had
-inflicted on the poor children of the upper class, hair curled by the
-barber and messed with powder and pomade, braided coats, knee breeches,
-silk stockings, and a dagger by the side—for active, lively children a
-perfect torture” (_Gesch. d. Pädagogik_, ii. 297). Kant gave expression
-to a very wide-spread feeling when he said that what was wanted in
-education was no longer a reform but a revolution. Here, then, was a good
-scope offered for innovators, and Basedow was a prince of innovators.
-
-§ 3. Having succeeded in interesting the Danish minister, Bernstorff,
-in his plans, he was permitted to devote himself entirely to a work on
-the subject of education whilst retaining his income from the Altona
-Gymnasium. The result was his “Address to Philanthropists and Men of
-Property on Schools and Studies and their Influence on the Public Weal”
-(1766), in which he announces the plan of his “Elementary.”[149] In this
-address he calls upon princes, governments, town-councils, dignitaries
-of the Church, freemasons’ lodges, &c., &c., if they loved their
-fellow-creatures, to come to his assistance in bringing out his book. Nor
-did he call in vain. When the “Elementary” at length appeared (in 1774),
-he had to acknowledge contributions from the Emperor Joseph II., from
-Catherine II. of Russia, from Christian VII. of Denmark, from the Grand
-Prince Paul, and many other celebrities, the total sum received being
-over 2,000_l._
-
-§ 4. While Basedow was travelling about (in 1774) to get subscriptions,
-he spent some time in Frankfurt, and thence made an excursion to Ems
-with two distinguished companions, one of them Lavater, and the other a
-young man of five-and-twenty, already celebrated as the author of “Götz
-von Berlichingen,” and the “Sorrows of Werther.” Of Basedow’s personal
-peculiarities at this time Goethe has left us an amusing description
-in the “Wahrheit und Dichtung;” but we must accept the portrait with
-caution: the sketch was thrown in as an artistic contrast with that of
-Lavater, and no doubt exaggerates those features in which the antithesis
-could be brought out with best effect.
-
-“One could not see,” writes Goethe, “a more marked contrast than between
-Lavater and Basedow. As the lines of Lavater’s countenance were free
-and open to the beholder, so were Basedow’s contracted, and as it were
-drawn inwards, Lavater’s eye, clear and benign, under a very wide
-eye-lid; Basedow’s, on the other hand, deep in his head, small, black,
-sharp, gleaming out from under shaggy eyebrows, whilst Lavater’s frontal
-bone seemed bounded by two arches of the softest brown hair. Basedow’s
-impetuous rough voice, his rapid and sharp utterances, a certain derisive
-laugh, an abrupt changing of the topic of conversation, and whatever
-else distinguished him, all were opposed to the peculiarities and the
-behaviour by which Lavater had been making us over-fastidious.”
-
-§ 5. Goethe approved of Basedow’s desire to make all instruction lively
-and natural, and thought that his system would promote mental activity
-and give the young a fresher view of the world: but he finds fault with
-the “Elementary,” and prefers the “Orbis Pictus” of Comenius, in which
-subjects are presented in their natural connection. Basedow himself,
-says Goethe, was not a man either to edify or to lead other people.
-Although the object of his journey was to interest the public in his
-philanthropic enterprise, and to open not only hearts but purses,
-and he was able to speak eloquently and convincingly on the subject
-of education, he spoilt everything by his tirades against prevalent
-religious belief, especially on the subject of the Trinity.
-
-§ 6. Goethe found in Basedow’s society an opportunity of “exercising, if
-not enlightening,” his mind, so he bore with his personal peculiarities,
-though apparently with great difficulty. Basedow seems to have delighted
-in worrying his associates. “He would never see anyone quiet but he
-provoked him with mocking irony, in a hoarse voice, or put him to
-confusion by an unexpected question, and laughed bitterly when he had
-gained his end; yet he was pleased when the object of his jests was quick
-enough to collect himself, and answer in the same strain.” So far Goethe
-was his match; but he was nearly routed by Basedow’s use of bad tobacco,
-and of some tinder still worse with which he was constantly lighting his
-pipe and poisoning the air insufferably. He soon discovered Goethe’s
-dislike to this preparation of his, so he took a malicious pleasure in
-using it and dilating upon its merits.
-
-§ 7. Here is an odd account of their intercourse. During their stay at
-Ems Goethe went a great deal into fashionable society. “To make up for
-these dissipations,” he writes, “I always passed a part of the night
-with Basedow. He never went to bed, but dictated without cessation.
-Occasionally he cast himself on the couch and slumbered, while his
-amanuensis sat quietly, pen in hand, ready to continue his work when the
-half-awakened author should once more give free course to his thoughts.
-All this took place in a close confined chamber, filled with the fumes of
-tobacco and the odious tinder. As often as I was disengaged from a dance
-I hastened up to Basedow, who was ready at once to speak and dispute on
-any question; and when after a time I hurried again to the ball-room,
-before I had closed the door behind me he would resume the thread of his
-essay as composedly as if he had been engaged with nothing else.”
-
-§ 8. It was through a friend of Goethe’s, Behrisch, whose acquaintance we
-make in the “Wahrheit und Dichtung,” that Basedow became connected with
-Prince Leopold of Dessau. Behrisch was tutor to the Prince’s son, and by
-him the Prince was so interested in Basedow’s plans that he determined
-to found an Institute in which they should be realised. Basedow was
-therefore called to Dessau, and under his direction was opened the famous
-Philanthropinum. Then for the first, and probably for the last time,
-a school was started in which use and wont were entirely set aside,
-and everything done on “improved principles.” Such a bold enterprise
-attracted the attention of all interested in education, far and near:
-but it would seem that few parents considered their own children _vilia
-corpora_ on whom experiments might be made for the public good. When, in
-May 1776, a number of schoolmasters and others collected from different
-parts of Germany, and even from beyond Germany, to be present by
-Basedow’s invitation at an examination of the children, they found only
-thirteen pupils in the Philanthropinum, including Basedow’s own son and
-daughter.
-
-§ 9. Before we investigate how Basedow’s principles were embodied in the
-Philanthropinum, let us see the form in which he had already announced
-them. The great work from which all children were to be taught was the
-“Elementary.” As a companion to this was published the “Book of Method”
-(_Methodenbuch_) for parents and teachers. The “Elementary” is a work in
-which a great deal of information about things in general is given in
-the form of dialogue, interspersed with tales and easy poetry. Except
-in bulk, it does not seem to me to differ very materially from many of
-the reading-books, which, in late years, have been published in this
-country. It had the advantage, however, of being accompanied by a set
-of engravings to which the text referred, though they were too large to
-be bound up with it. The root-ideas of Basedow put forth in his “Book
-of Method,” and other writings, are those of Rousseau. For example,
-“You should attend to nature in your children far more than to art. The
-elegant manners and usages of the world are for the most part unnatural
-(_Unnatur_). These come of themselves in later years. Treat children
-like children, that they may remain the longer uncorrupted. A boy whose
-acutest faculties are his senses, and who has no perception of anything
-abstract, must first of all be made acquainted with the world as it
-presents itself to the senses. Let this be shown him in nature herself,
-or where this is impossible, in faithful drawings or models. Thereby
-can he, even in play, learn how the various objects are to be named.
-Comenius alone has pointed out the right road in this matter. By all
-means reduce the wretched exercises of the memory.” Elsewhere he gives
-instances of the sort of things to which this method should be applied.
-1st. Man. Here he would use pictures of foreigners and wild men, also a
-skeleton, a hand in spirits, and other objects still more appropriate
-to a surgical museum. 2nd. Animals. Only such animals are to be depicted
-as it is useful to know about, because there is much that ought to be
-known, and a good method of instruction must shorten rather than increase
-the hours of study. Articles of commerce made from the animals may also
-be exhibited. 3rd. Trees and plants. Only the most important are to be
-selected. Of these the seeds also must be shown, and cubes formed of the
-different woods. Gardeners’ and farmers’ implements are to be explained.
-4th. Minerals and chemical substances. 5th. Mathematical instruments for
-weighing and measuring; also the air-pump, siphon, and the like. The form
-and motion of the earth are to be explained with globes and maps. 6th.
-Trades. The use of various tools is to be taught. 7th. History. This is
-to be illustrated by engravings of historical events. 8th. Commerce.
-Samples of commodities may be produced. 9th. The younger children
-should be shown pictures of familiar objects about the house and its
-surroundings.
-
-§ 10. We see from this list that Basedow contemplated giving his
-educational course the charm of variety. Indeed, with that candour in
-acknowledging mistakes which partly makes amends for the effrontery too
-common in the trumpetings of his own performances, past, present, and to
-come, he confesses that when he began the “Elementary” he had exaggerated
-notions of the amount boys were capable of learning, and that he had
-subsequently very much contracted his proposed curriculum. And even
-“the Revolution,” which was to introduce so much new learning into the
-schools, could not afford entirely to neglect the old. However pleased
-parents might be with the novel acquirements of their children, they were
-not likely to be satisfied without the usual knowledge of Latin, and
-still less would they tolerate the neglect of French, which in German
-polite society of the eighteenth century was the recognised substitute
-for the vulgar tongue. These, then, must be taught. But the old methods
-might be abandoned, if not the old subjects. Basedow proposed to teach
-both French and Latin by _conversation_. Let a cabinet of models, or
-something of the kind, be shown the children; let them learn the names of
-the different objects in Latin or French; then let questions be asked in
-those languages, and the right answers at first put into the children’s
-mouths. When they have in this way acquired some knowledge of the
-language, they may apply it to the translating of an easy book. Basedow
-does not claim originality for the conversational method. He appeals
-to the success with which it had been already used in teaching French.
-“Are the French governesses,” he asks, “who, without vocabularies and
-grammars, first by conversation, then by reading, teach their language
-very successfully and very rapidly in schools of from thirty to forty
-children, better teachers than most masters in our Latin schools?”
-
-§ 11. On the subject of religion the instruction was to be quite as
-original as in matters of less importance. The teachers were to give an
-impartial account of all religions, and nothing but “natural religion”
-was to be inculcated.
-
-§ 12. The key-note of the whole system was to be—_everything according to
-nature_. The natural desires and inclinations of the children were to be
-educated and directed aright, but in no case to be suppressed.
-
-§ 13. These, then, were the principles and the methods which, as Basedow
-believed, were to revolutionise education through the success of the
-Philanthropinum. Basedow himself, as we might infer from Goethe’s
-description of him, was by no means a model director for the model
-Institution, but he was fortunate in his assistants. Of these he had
-three at the time of the public examination, of whom Wolke is said to
-have been the ablest.
-
-§ 14. A lively description of the examination was afterwards published
-by Herr Schummel of Magdeburg, under the title of “Fred’s Journey to
-Dessau.” It purports to be written by a boy of twelve years old, and to
-describe what took place without attempting criticism. A few extracts
-will give us a notion of the instruction carried on in the Philanthropin.
-
-“I have just come from a visit with my father to the Philanthropinum,
-where I saw Herr Basedow, Herr Wolke, Herr Simon, Herr Schweighäuser,
-and the little Philanthropinists. I am delighted with all that I have
-seen, and hardly know where to begin my description of it. There are
-two large white houses, and near them a field with trees. A pupil—not
-one of the regular scholars, but of those they call Famulants (a poorer
-class, who were servitors)—received us at the door, and asked if we
-wished to see Herr Basedow. We said ‘Yes,’ and he took us into the
-other house, where we found Herr Basedow in a dressing-gown, writing at
-a desk. We came at an inconvenient time, and Herr Basedow said he was
-very busy. He was very friendly, however, and promised to visit us in
-the evening. We then went into the other house, and enquired for Herr
-Wolke.” By him they were taken to the scholars. “They have,” says Fred,
-“their hair cut very short, and no wig-maker is employed. Their throats
-are quite open, and their shirt-collars fall back over their coats.”
-Further on he describes the examination. “The little ones have gone
-through the oddest performances. They play at ‘word of command.’ Eight or
-ten stand in a line like soldiers, and Herr Wolke is officer. He gives
-the word in Latin, and they must do whatever he says. For instance,
-when he says _Claudite oculos_, they all shut their eyes; when he says
-_Circumspicite_, they look about them; _Imitamini sartorem_, they all sew
-like tailors; _Imitamini sutorem_, they draw the waxed thread like the
-cobblers. Herr Wolke gives a thousand different commands in the drollest
-fashion. Another game, ‘the hiding game,’ I will also teach you. Some
-one writes a name, and hides it from the children—the name of some part
-of the body, or of a plant, or animal, or metal—and the children guess
-what it is. Whoever guesses right gets an apple or a piece of cake. One
-of the visitors wrote _Intestina_, and told the children it was a part of
-the body. Then the guessing began. One guessed _caput_, another _nasus_,
-another _os_, another _manus_, _pes_, _digiti_, _pectus_, and so forth,
-for a long time; but one of them hit it at last. Next Herr Wolke wrote
-the name of a beast, a quadruped. Then came the guesses: _leo_, _ursus_,
-_camelus_, _elephas_, and so on, till one guessed right—it was _mus_.
-Then a town was written, and they guessed Lisbon, Madrid, Paris, London,
-till a child won with St. Petersburg. They had another game, which was
-this: Herr Wolke gave the command in Latin, and they imitated the noises
-of different animals, and made us laugh till we were tired. They roared
-like lions, crowed like cocks, mewed like cats, just as they were bid.”
-
-§ 15. The subject that was next handled had also the effect of making the
-strangers laugh, till a severe reproof from Herr Wolke restored their
-gravity. A picture was brought, in which was represented a sad-looking
-woman, whose person indicated the approaching arrival of another subject
-for education. From one part of the picture it also appeared that the
-prospective mother, with a prodigality of forethought, had got ready
-clothing for both a boy and a girl. After a warning from Herr Wolke,
-that this was a most serious and important subject, the children were
-questioned on the topics the picture suggested. They were further taught
-the debt of gratitude they owed to their mothers, and the German fiction
-about the stork was dismissed with due contempt.
-
-§ 16. Next came the examination in arithmetic. Here there seems to have
-been nothing remarkable, except that all the rules were worked _vivâ
-voce_. From the arithmetic Herr Wolke went on to an “Attempt at various
-small drawings.” He asked the children what he should draw. Some one
-answered _leonem_. He then pretended he was drawing a lion, but put a
-beak to it; whereupon the children shouted _Non est Leo—leones non habent
-rostrum!_ He went on to other subjects, as the children directed him,
-sometimes going wrong that the children might put him right. In the next
-exercise dice were introduced, and the children threw to see who should
-give an account of an engraving. The engravings represented workmen at
-their different trades, and the child had to explain the process, the
-tools, &c. A lesson on ploughing and harrowing was given in French, and
-another, on Alexander’s expedition to India, in Latin. Four of the pupils
-translated passages from Curtius and from Castalio’s Bible, which were
-read to them. “These children,” said the teacher, “knew not a word of
-Latin a year ago.” “The listeners were well pleased with the Latin,”
-writes Fred, “except two or three, whom I heard grumbling that this was
-all child’s play, and that if Cicero, Livy, and Horace were introduced,
-it would soon be seen what was the value of Philanthropinist Latin.”
-After the examination, two comedies were acted by the children, one in
-French, the other in German.
-
-Most of the strangers seem to have left Dessau with a favourable
-impression of the Philanthropin. They were especially struck with the
-brightness and animation of the children.
-
-§ 17. How far did the Philanthropinum really deserve their good opinion?
-The conclusion to which we are driven by Fred’s narrative is, that
-Basedow carried to excess his principle—“Treat children as children, that
-they may remain the longer uncorrupted;” and that the Philanthropinum
-was, in fact, nothing but a good infant-school. Surely none of the
-thirteen children who were the subjects of Basedow’s experiments could
-have been more than ten years old. But if we consider Basedow’s system
-to have been intended for _children_, say between the ages of six and
-ten, we must allow that it possessed great merits. At the very beginning
-of a boy’s learning, it has always been too much the custom to make
-him hate the sight of a book, and escape at every opportunity from
-school-work, by giving him difficult tasks, and neglecting his acutest
-faculties. “Children love motion and noise,” says Basedow: “here is
-a hint from nature.” Yet the youngest children in most schools are
-expected to keep quiet and to sit at their books for as many hours as
-the youths of seventeen or eighteen. Their vivacity is repressed with
-the cane. Their delight in exercising their hands and eyes and ears
-is taken no notice of; and they are required to keep their attention
-fixed on subjects often beyond their comprehension, and almost always
-beyond the range of their interests. Everyone who has had experience
-in teaching boys knows how hard it is to get them to throw themselves
-heartily into any task whatever; and probably this difficulty arises in
-many cases, from the habits of inattention and of shirking school-work,
-which the boys have acquired almost necessarily from the dreariness of
-their earliest lessons.[150] Basedow determined to change all this; and
-in the Philanthropin no doubt he succeeded. We have already seen some of
-the expedients by which he sought to render school-work pleasurable. He
-appealed, wherever it was possible, to the children’s senses; and these,
-especially the sight, were trained with great care by exercises, such
-as drawing, shooting at a mark, &c. One of these exercises, intended
-to give quick perception, bears a curious likeness to what has since
-been practised in a very different educational system. A picture, with
-a somewhat varied subject, was exhibited for a short time and removed.
-The boys had then, either verbally or on paper, to give an account of
-it, naming the different objects in proper order. Houdin, if I rightly
-remember, tells us that the young thieves of Paris are required by their
-masters to make a mental inventory of the contents of a shop window,
-which they see only as they walk rapidly by. Other exercises of the
-Philanthropinum connected the pupils with more honourable callings.
-They became acquainted with both skilled and unskilled manual labour.
-Every boy was taught a handicraft, such as carpentering and turning,
-and was put to such tasks as threshing corn. Basedow’s division of the
-twenty-four hours was the following: Eight hours for sleep, eight for
-food and amusement, and, for the children of the rich, six hours of
-school-work, and two of manual labour. In the case of the children of
-the poor, he would have the division of the last eight hours inverted,
-and would give for school-work two, and for manual labour six. The
-development of the body was specially cared for in the Philanthropinum.
-Gymnastics were now first introduced into modern schools; and the boys
-were taken long expeditions on foot—the commencement, I believe, of a
-practice now common throughout Germany.
-
-§ 18. As I have already said, Basedow proved a very unfit person to be
-at the head of the model Institution. Many of his friends agreed with
-Herder, that he was not fit to have calves entrusted to him, much less
-children. He soon resigned his post; and was succeeded by Campe, who had
-been one of the visitors at the public examination. Campe did not remain
-long at the Philanthropinum; but left it to set up a school, on like
-principles, at Hamburg. His fame now rests on his writings for the young;
-one of which—“Robinson Crusoe the Younger”—is still a general favourite.
-
-Other distinguished men became connected with the Philanthropin—among
-them Salzmann, and Matthison the poet—and the number of pupils rose
-to over fifty; gathered we are told, from all parts of Europe between
-Riga and Lisbon. But this number is by no means a fair measure of the
-interest, nay, enthusiasm, which the experiment excited. We find Pastor
-Oberlin raising money on his wife’s earrings to send a donation. We find
-the philosopher Kant prophesying that quite another race of men would
-grow up, now that education according to Nature had been introduced.
-
-§ 19. These hopes were disappointed. Kant confesses as much in the
-following passage in his treatise “On Pædagogy”:—
-
-“One fancies, indeed, that experiments in education would not be
-necessary; and that we might judge by the understanding whether any plan
-would turn out well or ill. But this is a great mistake. Experience shows
-that often in our experiments we get quite opposite results from what we
-had anticipated. We see, too, that since experiments are necessary, it is
-not in the power of one generation to form a complete plan of education.
-The only experimental school which, to some extent, made a beginning in
-clearing the road, was the Institute at Dessau. This praise at least must
-be allowed it, notwithstanding the many faults which could be brought up
-against it—faults which are sure to show themselves when we come to the
-results of our experiments, and which merely prove that fresh experiments
-are necessary. It was the only School in which the teachers had liberty
-to work according to their own methods and schemes, and where they were
-in free communication both among themselves and with all learned men
-throughout Germany.”
-
-§ 20. We observe here, that Kant speaks of the Philanthropinum as a
-thing of the past. It was finally closed in 1793. But even from Kant
-we learn that the experiment had been by no means a useless one. The
-conservatives, of course, did not neglect to point out that young
-Philanthropinists, when they left school, were not in all respects
-the superiors of their fellow-creatures. But, although no one could
-pretend that the Philanthropinum had effected a tithe of what Basedow
-promised, and the “friends of humanity” throughout Europe expected, it
-had introduced many new ideas, which in time had their influence, even
-in the schools of the opposite party. Moreover, teachers who had been
-connected with the Philanthropinum founded schools on similar principles
-in different parts of Germany and Switzerland, as Bahrd’s at Heidesheim,
-and Salzmann’s celebrated school at Schnepfenthal, which is, I believe,
-still thriving. Their doctrines, too, made converts among other masters,
-the most celebrated of whom was Meierotto of Berlin.
-
-§ 21. Little remains to be said of Basedow. He lived chiefly at Dessau,
-earning his subsistence by private tuition, but giving offence by his
-irregularities. In 1790, when visiting Magdeburg, he died, after a short
-illness, in his sixty-seventh year. His last words were, “I wish my body
-to be dissected for the good of my fellow-creatures.”
-
- Basedow has a posthumous connexion with this country as the
- great-grandfather of Professor Max Müller. Basedow’s son became
- “Regierungs Präsident,” in Dessau. The President’s daughter,
- born in 1800, became the wife of the poet Wilhelm Müller, and
- the mother of Max Müller. Max Müller has contributed a life of
- his great-grandfather to the _Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie_.
-
- Those who read German and care about either Basedow or Comenius
- should get _Die Didaktik Basedows im Vergleiche zur Didaktik
- des Comenius von_ Dr. Petru Garbovicianu (Bucarest, C. Gobl),
- 1887. This is a very good piece of work; it is printed in roman
- type, and the price is only 1_s._ 6_d._
-
- Since the above was in type I have got an important book,
- _L’Education en Allemagne au Dix-huitième Siècle: Basedow et le
- Philanthropinisme_, by A. Pinloche (Paris, A. Colin, 1889.)
-
-
-
-
-XVI.
-
-PESTALOZZI.
-
-1746-1827.
-
-
-§ 1. _Qui facit per alium facit per se._ It is thus the law holds us
-accountable for the action of others which we direct. By the extension
-of this rule we immensely increase the personality of great writers and
-may credit them with vast spheres of action which never come within their
-consciousness. No man gains and suffers more from this consideration
-than Rousseau. On the one hand, we may attribute to him the crimes of
-Robespierre and Saint-Just; on the other Pestalozzi was instigated by him
-to turn to farming and—education.
-
-In treating of Rousseau as an educational reformer I passed over a life
-in which almost every incident tends to weaken the effect of his words.
-With Pestalozzi we must turn to his life for the true source of his
-writings and the best comment on them.
-
-§ 2. John Henry Pestalozzi was born at Zurich in 1746. His father dying
-when he was five years old, he was brought up with a brother and sister
-by a pious and self-denying mother and by a faithful servant “Babeli,”
-who had comforted the father in his last hours by promising to stay
-with his family. Thus Pestalozzi had an advantage denied to Rousseau
-and denied as it would seem to Locke; there was scope for his home
-affections, and the head was not developed before the heart. When he was
-sent to a day-school he became to some extent the laughing stock of his
-companions who dubbed him Harry Oddity of Foolborough; but he gained
-their good-will by his unselfishness. It was remembered that on the shock
-of an earthquake when teachers and taught fled from the school building
-Harry Oddity was induced to go back and bring away what his companions
-considered precious. His holidays he spent with his grandfather the
-pastor of a village some three miles from Zurich, where the lad learnt
-the condition of the rural poor and saw what a good man could do for
-them. He always looked back to these visits as an important element in
-his education. “The best way for a child to acquire the fear of God,” he
-wrote, “is for him to see and hear a true Christian.” The grandfather’s
-example so affected him that he wished to follow in his steps, and he
-became a student of theology.[151]
-
-§ 3. Even as a student Pestalozzi proved that he was no ordinary man.
-In his time there was great intellectual and moral enthusiasm among the
-students of the little Swiss University. Some distinguished professors,
-especially Bodmer, had awakened a craving for the old Swiss virtues
-of plain living and high thinking; and a band of students, among whom
-Lavater was leader and Pestalozzi played a prominent part, became eager
-reformers. The citizens of the great towns like Geneva and Zurich had
-become in effect privileged classes; and as their spokesmen the Geneva
-magistrates condemned the _Contrat Social_ and the _Emile_. This raised
-the indignation of the reforming students at Zurich; and though their
-organ, a periodical called the _Memorial_, kept clear of politics, one
-Muller wrote a paper which contained some strong language, and this
-was held to be proof of a conspiracy. Muller fled and was banished.
-Pestalozzi and some other of his friends were imprisoned. The _Memorial_
-was suppressed.
-
-§ 4. It is in this _Memorial_, a weekly paper edited by Lavater who
-was five years Pestalozzi’s senior that we have Pestalozzi’s earliest
-writing. We find him coming forward as “a man of aspirations.” No one
-he says can object to his expressing his wishes. And “wishes” with a
-man of 19 are usually hopes. Among other wishes he says: “I would that
-some one would draw up in a simple manner a few principles of education
-intelligible to everybody; that some generous people would then share the
-expense of printing, so that the pamphlet might be given to the public
-for nothing or next to nothing. I would then have clergymen distribute it
-to all fathers and mothers, so that they might bring up their children in
-a rational and Christian manner. But,” he adds, “perhaps this is asking
-too much at a time.”
-
-The _Memorial_ was suppressed because “the privileged classes” knew that
-it was in the hands of their opponents. Pestalozzi then and always felt
-keenly the oppression to which the peasants were exposed; and he spoke
-of “the privileged” as men on stilts who must descend among the people
-before they could secure a natural and firm position. He also satirises
-them in some of his fables, as, _e.g._, that of the “Fishes and the
-Pike.” “The fishes in a pond brought an accusation against the pike who
-were making great ravages among them. The judge, an old pike, said
-that their complaint was well founded, and that the defendants, to make
-amends, should allow two ordinary fish every year to become pike.”
-
-§ 5. By this time Pestalozzi had given up theology and had taken to the
-law. Now under the influence of Rousseau, or rather of the craving for
-a simple “natural” life which found its most eloquent expression in
-Rousseau’s writing, Pestalozzi made a bonfire of his MSS. and decided on
-becoming a farmer.
-
-§ 6. There was another person concerned in this decision. In his
-childhood he had one day ventured into the shop of one of the leading
-tradesmen, Herr Schulthess, bent on procuring for his farthings some
-object of delight; but he found there a little shop-keeper, Anna
-Schulthess, seven years his senior, who discouraged his extravagance and
-persuaded him to keep his money. Anna and he since those days had become
-engaged—not at all to the satisfaction of her parents. Their intimacy
-had been strengthened by their concern for a common friend, a young man
-named Bluntschli, who died of consumption. This friend, three years
-older than Pestalozzi, seems to have understood him thoroughly; and in
-the parting advice he gave him there was a warning which happily for the
-general good was in after years neglected. “I am going,” said Bluntschli,
-“and you will be left alone. Avoid any career in which you might become
-the victim of your own goodness and trust, and choose some quiet life in
-which you will run no risk. Above all, do not take part in any important
-undertaking without having at your side a man who by his cool judgment,
-knowledge of men and things, and unshakable fidelity may be able to
-protect you from the dangers to which you will be exposed.”
-
-§ 7. When the friendship with Anna Schulthess had ripened into a
-betrothal Pestalozzi spent a year in the neighbourhood of Bern learning
-farming under a man then famous for his innovations. His new ideas
-Pestalozzi absorbed very readily. “I had come to him,” he says, “a
-political visionary, though with many profound and correct attainments,
-views, and anticipations in matters political. I went away from him just
-as great an agricultural visionary, though with many enlarged and correct
-ideas and intentions with regard to agriculture.”
-
-§ 8. During his “learning year” he kept up a correspondence with his
-betrothed, and the letters of both, which have been preserved, differ
-very widely from love-letters in general. Of himself Pestalozzi gives an
-account which shows that in part at least he could see himself as others
-saw him. “Dearest,” he writes, “those of my faults which appear to me
-most important in relation to the situation in which I may be placed in
-after-life are improvidence, incautiousness, and a want of presence of
-mind to meet unexpected changes in my prospects.... Of my great, and
-indeed very reprehensible negligence in all matters of etiquette, and
-generally in all matters which are not in themselves of importance, I
-need not speak; anyone may see them at first sight of me. I also owe you
-the open confession, my dear, that I shall always consider my duties
-toward my beloved partner subordinate to my duties towards my country;
-and that, although I shall be the tenderest husband, nevertheless, I
-hold myself bound to be inexorable to the tears of my wife if she should
-ever attempt to restrain me by them from the direct performance of my
-duties as a citizen, whatever this must lead to. My wife shall be the
-confidante of my heart, the partner of all my most secret counsels. A
-great and honest simplicity shall reign in my house. And one thing more.
-My life will not pass without important and very critical undertakings.
-I shall not forget ... my first resolutions to devote myself wholly to
-my country. I shall never, from fear of man, refrain from speaking when
-I see that the good of my country calls upon me to speak. My whole heart
-is my country’s: I will risk all to alleviate the need and misery of
-my fellow-countrymen. What consequences may the undertakings to which
-I feel myself urged on draw after them! how unequal to them am I! and
-how imperative is my duty to show you the possibility of the great
-dangers which they may bring upon me! My dear, my beloved friend, I have
-now spoken candidly of my character and my aspirations. Reflect upon
-everything. If the traits which it was my duty to mention diminish your
-respect for me, you will still esteem my sincerity, and you will not
-think less highly of me, that I did not take advantage of your want of
-acquaintance with my character for the attainment of my inmost wishes.”
-
-§ 9. The young lady addressed was worthy of her lover. “Such nobleness,
-such elevation of character, reach my very soul,” said she. With
-equal nobleness she encouraged Pestalozzi in his schemes and took the
-consequences without a murmur during their long married life of 46 years.
-
-§ 10. Full of new ideas about farming Pestalozzi now thought he saw his
-way to making a fortune. He took some poor land near Birr not far from
-Zurich, and persuaded a banking firm to advance money with which he
-proposed to cultivate vegetables and madder. In September, 1769, he was
-married, and six months later the pair settled in a new house, “Neuhof,”
-which Pestalozzi had built on his land.
-
-§ 11. But in spite of his excellent ideas and great industry, his
-speculation failed. The bankers soon withdrew their money. Pestalozzi was
-not cautious enough for them. However, his wife’s friends prevented an
-immediate collapse.
-
-§ 12. But before he had any reason to doubt the success of his
-speculation Pestalozzi had begun to reproach himself with being engrossed
-by it. What had become of all his thoughts for the people? Was he not
-spending his strength entirely to gain the prosperity of himself and his
-household? These thoughts came to him with all the more force when a son
-was born to him; and at this time they naturally connected themselves
-with education. He had now seen a good deal of the degraded state of the
-peasantry. How were they to be raised out of it?
-
-§ 13. To Pestalozzi there seemed one answer and one only. This was
-_by education_. To many people in the present day it might seem that
-“education,” when quite successful, would qualify labourers to become
-clerks. This was not the notion of Pestalozzi. Rousseau had completely
-freed him from bondage to the Renascence, and education did not mean to
-him a training in the use of books. He looked at the children of the
-lowest class of the peasants and asked himself what they needed to raise
-them. Knowledge would not do it. “The thing was not that they should
-know what they did not know, but that they should behave as they did
-not behave” (_supra_, p. 169); and the road to right action lay through
-right feeling. If they could be made conscious that they were loved and
-cared for, their hearts would open and give back love and respect in
-return. More than this, they must be taught not only to respect their
-elders but also themselves. They must be taught to help themselves and
-contribute to their own maintenance. So Pestalozzi resolved to take into
-his own house some of the very poorest children, to bring them up in
-an atmosphere of love, and to instruct them in field-work and spinning
-which would soon partly (as Pestalozzi hoped, wholly) pay for their keep.
-Thus, just at the time when the experiment for himself failed he began
-for others an experiment that seemed likely to add indefinitely to his
-difficulties.
-
-§ 14. In the winter of 1774 the first children were taken into Neuhof.
-The consequences to his wife and to his little son only four years old
-might have vanquished the courage of a less ardent philanthropist. “Our
-position entailed much suffering on my wife;” he writes, “but nothing
-could shake us in our resolve to devote our time, strength and remaining
-fortune to the simplification of the instruction and domestic education
-of the people.”
-
-§ 15. These children, at first not more than 20 in number, Pestalozzi
-treated as his own. They worked with him in the summer in the garden and
-fields, in winter in the house. Very little time was given to separate
-lessons, the children often learning while they worked with their hands.
-Pestalozzi held that talking should come before reading and writing; and
-he practised them in conversation on subjects taken from their every day
-life. They also repeated passages from the Bible till they knew them by
-heart.
-
-§ 16. In a few months, as we are told, the appearance of these poor
-little creatures had entirely changed; though fed only on bread and
-vegetables they looked strong and hearty, and their faces gained an
-expression of cheerfulness, frankness and intelligence which till then
-had been totally wanting. They made good progress with their manual work
-as well as with the associated lessons, and took pleasure in both. In
-all they said and did, they seemed to show their consciousness of their
-benefactor’s kind care of them.
-
-§ 17. This experiment naturally drew much attention to it, and when it
-had gone on over a year Pestalozzi was induced by his friend Iselin
-of Basel to insert in the _Ephemerides_ (a paper of which Iselin was
-editor), an “appeal ... for an institution intended to provide education
-and work for poor country children.” In this appeal Pestalozzi narrates
-his experience. “I have proved,” says he, “that it is not regular work
-that stops the development of so many poor children, but the turmoil and
-irregularity of their lives, the privations they endure, the excesses
-they indulge in when opportunity offers, the wild rebellious passions
-so seldom restrained, and the hopelessness to which they are so often
-a prey. I have proved that children after having lost health, strength
-and courage in a life of idleness and mendicity have, when once set
-to regular work quickly recovered their health and spirits and grown
-rapidly. I have found that when taken out of their abject condition they
-soon become kindly, trustful and sympathetic; that even the most degraded
-of them are touched by kindness, and that the eyes of the child who has
-been steeped in misery, grow bright with pleasure and surprise, when,
-after years of hardship, he sees a gentle friendly hand stretched out to
-help him; and I am convinced that _when a child’s heart has been touched
-the consequences will be great for his development and entire moral
-character_.”
-
-Pestalozzi therefore would have the very poorest children brought up in
-private establishments where agriculture and industry were combined, and
-where they would learn to work steadily and carefully with their hands,
-the chief part of their time being devoted to this manual work, and their
-instruction and education being associated with it. And he asks for
-support in greatly increasing the establishment he has already begun.
-
-§ 18. Encouraged by the support he received and still more by his love
-for the children and his own too sanguine disposition Pestalozzi enlarged
-his undertaking. The consequence was bankruptcy. Several causes conspired
-to bring about this result. Whatever he might do for the children, he
-could not educate the parents, and these were many of them beggars with
-the ordinary vices of their class. With the usual discernment of such
-people they soon came to the conclusion that Pestalozzi was making a
-fortune out of their children’s labour; so they haunted Neuhof, treated
-Pestalozzi with the greatest insolence, and often induced their children
-to run away in their new clothes. This would account for much, but there
-was another cause of failure that accounted for a great deal more.
-This was Pestalozzi’s extreme incapacity as an administrator. Even his
-industrial experiment he carried on in such a way that it proved a source
-of expense rather than of profit. He says himself, that, contrary to his
-own principles, which should have led him to begin at the beginning and
-lay a good foundation in teaching, he put the children to work that was
-too difficult for them, wanted them to spin fine thread before their
-hands got steadiness and skill by exercise on the coarser kind, and to
-manufacture muslin before they could turn out well-made cotton goods.
-“Before I was aware of it,” he adds, “I was deeply involved in debt, and
-the greater part of my dear wife’s property and expectations had, as it
-were, in an instant gone up in smoke.”
-
-§ 19. The precise arrangement made with the creditors we do not know. The
-bare facts remain that the children were sent away, and that the land was
-let for the creditors’ benefit; but Pestalozzi remained in the house.
-This was settled in 1780.
-
-§ 20. We have now come to the most gloomy period in Pestalozzi’s history,
-a period of eighteen years, and those the best years in a man’s life,
-which Pestalozzi spent in great distress from poverty without and doubt
-and despondency within. When he got into difficulties, his friends, he
-tells us, loved him without hope: “in the whole surrounding district it
-was everywhere said that I was a lost man, that nothing more could be
-done for me.” “In his only too elegant country house,” we are told, “he
-often wanted money, bread, fuel, to protect himself against hunger and
-cold.” “Eighteen years!—what a time for a soul like his to wait! History
-passes lightly over such a period. Ten, twenty, thirty years—it makes but
-a cipher difference if nothing great happens in them. But with what agony
-must he have seen day after day, year after year gliding by, who in his
-fervent soul longed to labour for the good of mankind and yet looked in
-vain for the opportunity!” (Palmer.)
-
-§ 21. But he who was always ready to sacrifice himself for others now
-found someone, and that a stranger, ready to make a great sacrifice for
-him. A servant, named Elizabeth Naef, heard of the disaster and distress
-at Neuhof, and her master having just died she resolved to go to the
-rescue. At first Pestalozzi refused her help. He did not wish her to
-share the poverty of his household, and he felt himself out of sympathy
-with her “evangelical” form of piety. But Elizabeth declared she had come
-to stay, and when Pestalozzi found he could not shake her determination
-he consented, saying, “Well, you will find after all that God is in our
-house also.”
-
-§ 22. To this pious sensible but illiterate peasant woman Pestalozzi
-was fond of tracing many of his ideas. She was the original of his
-_Gertrude_, and it was of her he wrote: “God’s sun pursues its path
-from morning to evening; yet your eye detects no movement, your ear no
-sound. Even when it goes down, you know that it will rise again and
-continue to ripen the fruits of the earth. Extreme as it may seem, I am
-not ashamed to say that this is an image of Gertrude as of every woman
-who makes her house a temple of the living God and wins heaven for her
-husband and children.” (_Leonard and Gertrude_). She was invaluable at
-Neuhof and restored comfort to the household. In after years she managed
-the establishment at Yverdun and married one of the Krüsis who were
-Pestalozzi’s assistants.
-
-§ 23. Writing of the gloomy years at Neuhof Pestalozzi afterwards said;
-“My head was grey, yet I was still a child. With a heart in which all
-the foundations of life were shaken, I still pursued in those stormy
-times my favourite object, but my way was one of prejudice, of passion
-and of error.” But with Pestalozzi self-depreciation had “almost grown
-the habit of his soul,” and in his writings at Neuhof at this period
-we find no traces of this prejudice, passion and error from which he
-supposes himself to have suffered. He certainly did not abandon his love
-of humanity; and in his sacrifice for it he sought a religious basis.
-In these Neuhof days he wrote: “Christ teaches us by His example and
-doctrine to sacrifice not only our possessions but ourselves for the
-good of others, and shews us that nothing we have received is absolutely
-ours but is merely entrusted to us by God to be piously employed in the
-service of charity.” (Quoted by Guimps. R’s trans. 72.) Whatever were his
-doubts and difficulties, he never swerved from pursuing the great object
-of his life, and nothing could cloud his mind as to the true method of
-attaining that object. As he afterwards wrote to Gessner (_Wie Gertrud_
-u.s.w.), “Even while I was the sport of men who condemned me I never lost
-sight for a moment of the object I had in view, which was the removal of
-the causes of the misery that I saw on all sides of me. My strength too
-kept on increasing, and my own misfortunes taught me valuable truths.
-I knew the people as no one else did. What deceived no one else always
-deceived me, but what deceived everybody else deceived me no longer....
-My own sufferings have enabled me to understand the sufferings of the
-people and their causes as no man without suffering can understand them.
-I suffered what the people suffered and saw them as no one else saw them;
-and strange as it may seem, I was never more profoundly convinced of the
-fundamental truths on which I had based my undertaking than when I saw
-that I had failed.” (R’s. Guimps 74.)
-
-§ 24. Pestalozzi still had a few friends who did not despise the dreamer
-of dreams. Among them was the editor of the _Ephemerides_, Iselin.
-This friend encouraged him to write, and there soon appeared in the
-_Ephemerides_ a series of reflexions under the title of “The Evening Hour
-of a Hermit.” Not many editors would have printed these aphorisms, and
-they attracted little or no attention at the time, but they have proved
-worth attending to. “The fruit of Pestalozzi’s past years, they are,”
-says Raumer, “at the same time the seed-corn of the years that were to
-come, the plan and key to his action in pedagogy.... The drawing of the
-architect of genius contains his work, even though the architect himself
-has not skill enough to carry out his own design.” (Quoted by Otto
-Fischer).[152]
-
-§ 25. What was the connexion between Pestalozzi’s belief at this season
-and complete belief in dogmatic Christianity? The question is one that
-will always be asked and can never, I think, be fully answered. In the
-days preceding the French Revolution it was a proof of wisdom to “Cleave
-ever to the sunnier side of doubt, and cling to Faith,” even though the
-Faith were “beyond the forms of Faith” (see Tennyson’s _Ancient Sage_).
-But Pestalozzi did far more than this. He traced all virtue and strength
-in the people to belief in the Fatherhood of God; and he saw in unbelief
-the severance of all the bonds of society. The “Hermit” does not indeed
-use the phrases common among “evangelical” Christians, but that he was
-indeed a Christian is established not only by the general tone of his
-aphorisms but still more clearly by his last words: “The Man of God, who
-with his sufferings and death has restored to humanity the lost feeling
-of the child’s disposition towards God is the Redeemer of the world; he
-is the sacrificed Priest of the Lord; he is the Mediator between God
-and God-forgetting mankind. His teaching is pure justice, educating
-philosophy of the people; it is the revelation of God the Father to the
-lost race of his children.”
-
-§ 26. The “Evening Hour” remaining almost unnoticed, Pestalozzi’s friends
-urged him to write something in a more popular form. So he set to work on
-a tale which should depict the life of the peasantry and shew the causes
-of their degradation and the cure. With extraordinary rapidity he wrote
-between the lines of an old account book the first part of his “Leonard
-and Gertrude.” The book, which was complete in itself, and through the
-good offices of Iselin (of the _Ephemerides_), soon found a publisher,
-suddenly sprang into immense popularity, a popularity of which nothing
-but the “continuations” could ever have deprived it. In the works of a
-great artist we see natural objects represented with perfect fidelity
-and yet with a life breathed into them by genius, which is wanting or
-at least is not visible to common eyes in the originals. Just so do
-we find Swiss peasant life depicted by Pestalozzi. The delineation is
-evidently true to nature; and, at the same time, shows Nature as she
-reveals herself to genius. But for this work something more than genius
-was necessary, viz., sympathy and love. In the preface to the first
-edition, he says, “In that which I here relate, and which I have, for the
-most part, seen and heard myself in the course of an active life, I have
-taken care not once to add my own opinion to what I saw and heard the
-people themselves saying, feeling; believing, judging, and attempting.”
-In a later edition (1800) he says, “I desired nothing then, and I desire
-nothing else now, as the object of my life, but the welfare of the
-people, whom I love, and whom I feel to be miserable as few feel them to
-be miserable, because I have with them borne their sufferings as few have
-borne them.”
-
-§ 27. Wherever German was read this book excited vast interest, and
-though it seemed to most people only a good tale, it met with some more
-discerning readers. The Bern Agricultural Society sent the author their
-thanks and a gold medal, and Pestalozzi was at once recognised as a man
-who understood the peasantry and had good ideas for raising them. The
-book is and must remain a classic, but Pestalozzi in his zeal to spread
-the truth added again and again “continuations,” and these became less
-and less popular in the method of exposition.[153]
-
-§ 28. Here and there we get glimpses of the trials Pestalozzi had gone
-through in his industrial experiment. “The love and patience,” he writes,
-“with which Gertrude bore with the disorderly and untrained little ones
-was almost past belief. Their eyes were often anywhere but on their yarn,
-so that this would now be too thick, and now too thin. When they had
-spoiled it, they would watch for a moment when Gertrude was not looking,
-and throw it out of the window by the handful, until they found that she
-discovered the trick when she weighed their work at night.” (E. C’s.
-trans., p. 122.) And in this connexion Pestalozzi preached his doctrine
-of perfect attainment. “‘What you can’t do blindfold,’” said Harry, “‘you
-can’t do at all.’” (_ib._)
-
-§ 29. “Gertrude,” we are told, “seemed quite unable to explain her method
-in words;” and here no doubt Pestalozzi was speaking of himself; but like
-Gertrude he “would let fall some significant remark which went to the
-root of the whole matter of education.” As an instance we may take what
-Gertrude said to the schoolmaster: “You should do for the children what
-their parents fail to do for them. The reading, writing, and arithmetic
-are not after all what they most need. It is all well and good for them
-to learn something, but the really important thing for them is to _be_
-something.” When this truth is fully realized by teachers and school
-managers there will be some hope for national education.
-
-§ 30. “Although Gertrude exerted herself to develop very early the manual
-dexterity of her children, she was in no haste for them to learn to read
-and write; but she took pains to teach them early how to speak: for, as
-she said, ‘Of what use is it for a person to be able to read and write if
-he cannot speak, since reading and writing are only an artificial sort
-of speech.’ ... She did not adopt the tone of an instructor towards the
-children ... and her verbal instruction seemed to vanish in the spirit of
-her real activity, in which it always had its source. The result of her
-system was that each child was skilful, intelligent, and active to the
-full extent that its age and development allowed.” (_Ib._ p. 130.)
-
-§ 31. In this book we see that knowledge is treated as valueless unless
-it has a basis in action. “The pastor was soon convinced that all
-verbal instruction in so far as it aims at true human wisdom and at the
-highest goal of this wisdom, true religion, ought to be subordinated
-to a constant training in practical domestic labour.... So he strove
-to lead the children without many words to a quiet industrious life,
-and thus to lay the foundations of a silent worship of God and love of
-humanity. To this end he connected every word of his brief religious
-teachings with their actual every-day experience, so that when he spoke
-of God and eternity, it seemed to them as if he were speaking of father
-and mother, house and home; in short of the things with which they were
-most familiar” (p. 156). Thus he built on the foundation laid by the
-schoolmaster, who “cared for the children’s heads as he did for their
-hearts, and demanded that whatever entered them should be plain and clear
-as the silent moon in the sky. To insure this he taught them to see and
-hear with accuracy, and cultivated their powers of attention” (p. 157).
-
-§ 32. With all his love for the children, an element of severity was
-not wanting. Pestalozzi maintained that “love was only useful in the
-education of men when in conjunction with fear: for they must learn to
-root out thorns and thistles, which they never do of their own accord,
-but only under compulsion and in consequence of training” (p. 157).
-
-§ 33. Just at the end of the book “the Duke” appoints a commission to
-report on the success of the Bonal experiment, and Pestalozzi makes him
-give the following order: “To insure thoroughness there must be among
-the examiners men skilled in law and finance, merchants, clergymen,
-government officials, schoolmasters, and physicians, _besides women
-of different ranks and conditions of life_ who shall view the matter
-with their woman’s eyes and be sure there is nothing visionary in the
-background” (p. 180). In this respect Pestalozzi is in advance of us
-still. No woman has yet sat on an educational commission.
-
-§ 34. Thus we find Pestalozzi at the age of thirty-five turning author,
-and for the next six or seven years he worked indefatigably with his
-pen. Most men of genius have some leading purpose which unites their
-varied activities, and this was specially true of Pestalozzi. He never
-lost sight of his one object, which was the elevation of the people;
-and this he held to be attainable only by means of education properly so
-called. The success of the first part of _Leonard and Gertrude_ he now
-endeavoured to turn to account in spreading true ideas of education. With
-this intent he published _Christopher and Eliza: My Second Book for the
-People_ (1782), which was a kind of commentary on _Leonard and Gertrude_.
-But the public wished to be amused, not taught; and the book was a
-failure. He was thus driven into the attempt already mentioned to catch
-the public ear by continuing _Leonard and Gertrude_, thus endangering his
-first and, as it proved, his only great success in literature.
-
-§ 35. To gain circulation for his ideas he also started a weekly paper
-called the _Swiss Journal_, and issued it regularly throughout the year
-1782; but the subscribers were so few that he was then obliged to give it
-up. I have not the smallest doubt that it was, as Guimps says, full of
-wisdom, but not the kind of wisdom that readers of periodicals are likely
-to care for.[154]
-
-§ 36. In the _Swiss Journal_ we get a hint of the analogy between the
-development of the plant and of the man. This analogy, often as it had
-been observed before, was never before so fruitful as it became in the
-hands of Pestalozzi and Froebel. The passage quoted by Guimps is this:
-“Teach me, summer day, that man formed from the dust of the earth, grows
-and ripens like the plant rooted in the soil.”
-
-§ 37. Between the close of the year 1787 and 1797 Pestalozzi did not
-publish anything. Though he had become famous, had made the acquaintance
-of the greatest men in Germany, such as Goethe, Wieland, Herder, and
-Fichte, and had been declared a “Citizen of the French Republic,”
-together with Bentham, Tom Payne, Wilberforce, Clarkson, Washington,
-Madison, Klopstock, Kozciusko, &c., he was nearly starving, and,
-naturally enough in that state of affairs both private and public, he
-was in great despondency. As we have seen, his whole life and work
-were founded on religion and on the only religion possible for us, the
-Christian religion; but carried away by his political radicalism he seems
-at this time to have doubted whether Christianity was more than the
-highest human wisdom. In October, 1793, he wrote to a friend in Berlin:
-“I doubt, not because I look on doubt as the truth, but because the sum
-of the impressions of my life has driven faith with its blessings from my
-soul. Thus impelled by my fate I see nothing more in Christianity but
-the purest and noblest teaching of the victory of the spirit over the
-flesh, the one possible means of raising our nature to its true nobility,
-or in other words of establishing the empire of the reason over the
-senses by the development of the purest feelings of the heart.” If this
-was the lowest point to which Pestalozzi’s faith sank in the days of the
-Revolution, it remained for practical purposes higher than the faith of
-most professing Christians then and since.
-
-§ 38. At this time we find him complaining: “My agriculture swallows up
-all my time. I am longing for winter with its leisure. My time passes
-like a shadow.” He was then forty-six years of age and seemed to himself
-to have done nothing.
-
-§ 39. Another five years he had to wait before he found an opportunity
-for action. During this time, impelled by Fichte, he endeavoured to give
-his ideas philosophic completeness, and after labouring for three years
-with almost incredible toil he published in 1797 his “Inquiry into the
-Course of Nature in the Development of the Human Race.” This book is
-pronounced even by his biographer Guimps to be “prolix and obscure,” and,
-says Pestalozzi, “nobody understood me.” But even in this book there was
-much wisdom, had the world cared to learn; but the world had then no
-place for Pestalozzi, and as he says at the end of this book, “without
-even asking whether the fault was his or another’s, it crushed him with
-its iron hammer as the mason crushes a useless stone.” He was, however,
-not actually crushed, and a place was in time found for him.
-
-§ 40. The world might be pardoned for neglecting an _Inquiry_ which even
-a biographer finds “prolix and obscure.” But why could it see nothing
-in another book which Pestalozzi published in the same year, “Figures
-to my ABC Book,” or according to its later title, “Fables,” a series of
-apologues as witty and wise as those of Lessing.[155]
-
-§ 41. As I have said already (_supra_ p. 239) there seems a marked
-distinction between thinkers and doers, at least in education, and we
-seldom find a man great in both. But with all his weakness as a practical
-man Pestalozzi proved great both as a thinker and a doer. He not only
-thought out what should be done, but he also made splendid efforts to
-do it. His first attempt at Neuhof was, as we have seen, all his own;
-so was the next at Stanz; but afterwards he had to work with others,
-and the work would have come to a standstill if he had not gained the
-co-operation of the magistrates, the parents of the children, and his
-own assistants. So he never again had the free hand, or at least the
-free thought which bore such good fruit in his enforced cessation
-from practice in the years between 1780 and 1798. It is well then to
-ask, as his biographer Guimps has asked, what was the main outcome of
-Pestalozzi’s thought before he plunged into action a second time in 1798.
-
-§ 42. Pestalozzi set himself to find a means of rescuing the people from
-their poverty and degradation. This he held would last as long as their
-moral and intellectual poverty lasted; so there was no hope except in an
-education that should make them better and more intelligent. In studying
-the children even of the most degraded parents he found the seeds, as it
-were, of a wealth of faculties, sentiments, tastes, and capabilities,
-which, if developed, might make them reasonable and upright human
-beings. But what was called education did nothing of the kind. Instead
-of developing the noblest part of the child’s nature it neglected this
-entirely, and bringing to the child the knowledge, ideas, and feelings
-of others, it tried to make him “learn” them. So “education” did little
-beyond stifling the child’s individuality under a mass of borrowed
-ideas. The schoolmaster worked, as it were, from without to within. This
-Pestalozzi would change, and make education begin in the child and work
-from within outwards. Acting on this principle he sought for some means
-of developing the child’s inborn faculties, and he found as he says:
-“Nature develops all the powers of humanity by exercising them; they
-increase with use.” (_Evening Hour_, Aph. 22.) No means can be found of
-exercising the higher faculties which can be compared with the actual
-relations of daily life; so Pestalozzi declares: “The pure sentiment of
-truth and wisdom is formed in the narrow circle of the relationships
-which affect us, the circumstances which suggest our actions, and
-the common knowledge which we cannot do without.” And taking as his
-starting-point the needs, desires, and connexions of actual life he was
-naturally led to associate the work of the body with that of the mind,
-to develop industry and study side by side, to combine the workshop and
-the school. With regard to instruction he was never tired of insisting
-on the importance of thorough mastery in the first elements, and there
-was to be no advance till this mastery was attained. (See what “Harry”
-says, _supra_ p. 306.) “The schools,” he says (_E. H._, No. 28), “hastily
-substitute an artificial method of words for the truer method of Nature
-which knows no hurry but waits.”
-
-§ 43. In this account of Pestalozzi’s doctrine before 1798 I have as
-usual followed M. Guimps. According to him Pestalozzi had discovered
-“a principle which settles the law of man’s development, and is the
-fundamental principle of education.” This principle M. Guimps briefly
-states as follows: “All the real knowledge, useful powers, and noble
-sentiments that a man can acquire are but the extension of his
-individuality by the development of the powers and faculties that God
-has put in him, and by their assimilation of the elements supplied by
-the outer world. There exists for this development and the work of
-assimilation a natural and necessary order, an order which the school
-mostly sets at nought.”
-
-§ 44. Now we come to the period of Pestalozzi’s practical activity. In
-1798 Switzerland was overrun by the French. Everything was remodelled
-after the French pattern; and in conformity with the existing phase in
-the model country the government of Switzerland was declared to be in the
-hands of five “Directors.” Pestalozzi was a Radical, and he at once set
-to work to serve the new government with his pen. The Directors gladly
-welcomed such an ally as the author of _Leonard and Gertrude_, and they
-made him editor of a newspaper intended to diffuse the revolutionary
-principles among the people. Naturally enough they supposed that he,
-like other people, “wanted” something; but when asked what he wanted
-he replied simply that he wished to be a schoolmaster. The Directors,
-especially Le Grand, took a genuine interest in education, and were
-quite willing that Pestalozzi should be allowed a free hand in his “new
-departure.” They therefore agreed to find the funds with which Pestalozzi
-might open a new Institution in Aargau.
-
-§ 45. But the editorship and the plans for the new Institution came to an
-abrupt ending. The Catholic cantons did not acquiesce in giving up their
-local liberties and being subjected to a new government in the hands of
-men whom they regarded as heretics and even atheists. Consequently those
-missionaries of enlightenment, the French troops, at once fell upon them
-and slaughtered many without distinction of age or sex. The French, we
-are told, did not expect to meet with resistance; so their light became
-lightning and struck dead the stupid people who could not or would not
-see. “Our soldiers” (it is Michelet who speaks) “were ferocious at
-Stanz.” (_Nos Fils_, 217). This ferocity at Stanz in September, 1798, was
-in secret disapproved of by the Directors, who were nominally responsible
-for it. But all they could do was to provide in a measure for the “111
-infirm old people, the 169 orphans, and 237 other children,” who were
-left totally destitute. Le Grand proposed to Pestalozzi that he should,
-for the present, give up his other plans and go to Stanz (which is on
-the Lake of Lucerne) to take charge of the orphan and destitute children.
-Pestalozzi was not the man to refuse such a task as this. He at once set
-out. Some buildings connected with an Ursuline convent were, without the
-consent of the nuns, made over to him. Workmen were employed upon them,
-and as soon as a single room could be inhabited Pestalozzi received
-forty children into it. This was in January, 1799, in the middle of a
-remarkably cold winter.
-
-§ 46. Thus under circumstances perhaps less unfavourable than they seemed
-began the five months’ trial of pure Pestalozzianism. The physical
-difficulties were immense. At first Pestalozzi and all the children were
-shut up day and night in a single room. He had throughout no helper of
-any kind but one female servant, and he had to do everything for the
-children, even what was most menial and disgusting. As soon as possible
-the number was increased, and before long was nearly eighty, some of
-the children having to go out to sleep. But great as were the material
-difficulties, those arising from the opposition and hatred of the people
-he came to succour were still worse. To them he seemed no philanthropist,
-but only a servant of the devil, an agent of the wicked government which
-had sent its ferocious soldiers and slaughtered the parents of these
-poor children, a Protestant who came to complete the work by destroying
-their souls. Pestalozzi, who was making heroic efforts in their behalf,
-seems to have wondered at the animosity shown him by the people of Stanz;
-but on looking back we must admit that in the circumstances it was only
-natural.
-
-§ 47. And yet in spite of enormous difficulties of every kind Pestalozzi
-triumphed. Within the five months he spent with them he attached to
-him the hearts of the children, and produced in them a marvellous
-physical, intellectual, and moral change. “If ever there was a miracle,”
-says Michelet, “it was here. It was the reward of a strong faith, of a
-wonderful expansion of heart. He believed, he willed, he succeeded.”
-(_Nos Fils_ 223.)
-
-What was the great act of faith by which Pestalozzi triumphed? According
-to M. Michelet he stood before these vicious and degraded children
-and said, “Man is good.” Pestalozzi does not tell us this himself;
-and as a benighted believer in Christianity, I venture to differ from
-the enlightened Michelet. As far as I can judge from Pestalozzi’s own
-teaching the source of his strength was his belief in the goodness not of
-Man but of God.
-
-§ 48. But encouraged and rewarded as he was by the result, Pestalozzi
-could not long have maintained this fearful exertion. He was over fifty
-years of age, and he must soon have succumbed; indeed he was already
-spitting blood when in June, 1799, the French soldiers, whose action
-had brought him to Stanz, drove him away again. Falling back before
-the Austrians they had need of a hospital in Stanz, and demanded the
-buildings occupied by Pestalozzi and the children. So almost all the
-children had to be sent away, and then at last Pestalozzi took thought
-for his own health and retired to some baths in the mountains. But most
-of his peculiarities in teaching may be said to date from the experience
-at Stanz; and I will therefore give this experience in his own words.
-
-§ 49. The following is the account given in his letter to his friend
-Gessner. (I have in part availed myself of Mr. Russell’s translation of
-Guimps, pp. 149 _ff._)
-
- “My friend, once more I awake from a dream; once more I see my
- work destroyed, and my failing strength wasted.
-
- “But, however weak and unfortunate my attempt, a friend of
- humanity will not grudge a few moments to consider the reasons
- which convince me that some day a more fortunate posterity will
- certainly take up the thread of my hopes at the place where it
- is now broken....
-
- “I once more made known, as well as I could, my old wishes
- for the education of the people. In particular, I laid my
- whole scheme before Legrand (then one of the Directors),
- who not only took a warm interest in it, but agreed with me
- that the Republic stood in urgent need of a reform of public
- education. He also agreed with me that much might be done for
- the regeneration of the people by giving a certain number of
- the poorest children an education which should be complete, but
- which, far from lifting them out of their proper sphere, would
- but attach them the more strongly to it.
-
- “I limited my desires to this one point, Legrand helping me in
- every possible way. He even thought my views so important that
- he once said to me: ‘I shall not willingly give up my present
- post till you have begun your work.’ ...
-
- “It was my intention to try to find near Zurich or in Aargau a
- place where I should be able to join industry and agriculture
- to the other means of instruction, and so give my establishment
- all the development necessary to its complete success. But
- the Unterwalden disaster (September, 1798) left me no further
- choice in the matter. The Government felt the urgent need of
- sending help to this unfortunate district, and begged me for
- this once to make an attempt to put my plans into execution
- in a place where almost everything that could have made it a
- success was wanting.
-
- “I went there gladly. I felt that the innocence of the people
- would make up for what was wanting, and that their distress
- would, at any rate, make them grateful.
-
- “My eagerness to realise at last the great dream of my life
- would have led me to work on the very highest peaks of the
- Alps, and, so to speak, without fire or water.
-
- “For a house, the Government made over to me the new part of
- the Ursuline convent at Stanz, but when I arrived it was still
- uncompleted, and not in any way fitted to receive a large
- number of children. Before anything else could be done, then,
- the house itself had to be got ready. The Government gave the
- necessary orders, and Rengger pushed on the work with much zeal
- and useful activity. I was never indeed allowed to want for
- money.
-
- “In spite, however, of the admirable support I received, all
- this preparation took time, and time was precisely what we
- could least afford, since it was of the highest importance
- that a number of children, whom the war had left homeless and
- destitute, should be received at once.
-
- “I was still without everything but money when the children
- crowded in; neither kitchen, rooms, nor beds were ready to
- receive them. At first this was a source of inconceivable
- confusion. For the first few weeks I was shut up in a very
- small room; the weather was bad, and the alterations, which
- made a great dust and filled the corridors with rubbish,
- rendered the air very unhealthy.
-
- “The want of beds compelled me at first to send some of the
- poor children home at night; these children generally came
- back the next day covered with vermin. Most of them on their
- arrival were very degenerated specimens of humanity. Many of
- them had a sort of chronic skin-disease, which almost prevented
- their walking, or sores on their heads, or rags full of vermin;
- many were almost skeletons, with haggard, careworn faces, and
- shrinking looks; some brazen, accustomed to begging, hypocrisy,
- and all sorts of deceit; others broken by misfortune, patient,
- suspicious, timid, and entirely devoid of affection. There were
- also some spoilt children amongst them who had known the sweets
- of comfort, and were therefore full of pretensions. These kept
- to themselves, affected to despise the little beggars their
- comrades, and to suffer from this equality, and seemed to find
- it impossible to adapt themselves to the ways of the house,
- which differed too much from their old habits. But what was
- common to them all was a persistent idleness, resulting from
- their want of physical and mental activity. Out of every ten
- children there was hardly one who knew his A B C; as for any
- other knowledge, it was, of course, out of the question.
-
- “The entire absence of school learning was what troubled me
- least, for I trusted in the natural powers that God bestows on
- even the poorest and most neglected children. I had observed
- for a long time that behind their coarseness, shyness, and
- apparent incapacity, are hidden the finest faculties, the most
- precious powers; and now, even amongst these poor creatures by
- whom I was surrounded at Stanz, marked natural abilities soon
- began to show themselves. I knew how useful the common needs of
- life are in teaching men the relations of things, in bringing
- out their natural intelligence, in forming their judgment, and
- in arousing faculties which, buried, as it were, beneath the
- coarser elements of their nature, cannot become active and
- useful till they are set free. It was my object then to set
- free these faculties, and bring them to bear on the pure and
- simple circumstances of domestic life, for I was convinced this
- was all that was wanting, and these natural faculties would
- shew themselves capable of raising the hearts and minds of my
- pupils to all that I could desire.
-
- “I saw then how my wishes might be carried out; and I was
- persuaded that my affection would change the state of my
- children just as quickly as the spring sun would awake to new
- life the earth that winter had benumbed. I was not deceiving
- myself: before the spring sun melted the snow of our mountains
- my children were hardly to be recognised.
-
- “But I must not anticipate. Just as in the evening I often mark
- the quick growth of the gourd by the side of the house, so I
- want you to mark the growth of my plant; and, my friend, I
- will not hide from you the worm which sometimes fastens on the
- leaves, sometimes even on the heart.
-
- “I opened the establishment with no other helper but a
- woman-servant. I had not only to teach the children, but to
- look after their physical needs. I preferred being alone, and,
- unfortunately, it was the only way to reach my end. No one
- in the world would have cared to enter into my views for the
- education of children, and at that time I knew scarcely any one
- even capable of it.
-
- “In proportion as the men whom I might have called to my aid
- were highly educated just so far they failed to understand
- me, and were incapable of confining themselves even in theory
- to the simple starting-points which I sought to come back to.
- All their views about the organisation and requirements of the
- enterprise differed entirely from mine. What they specially
- objected to was the notion that the enterprise might be carried
- out without the aid of any artificial means, and simply by the
- influence of nature in the environment of the children, and by
- the activity aroused in them by the needs of their daily life.
-
- “And yet it was precisely upon this idea that I based all my
- hope of success; it was, as it were, a basis for innumerable
- other points of view.
-
- “Experienced teachers, then, could not help me; still less
- boorish, ignorant men. I had nothing to put into the hands of
- assistants to guide them, nor any results or apparatus by which
- I could make my ideas clearer to them. Thus, whether I would
- or no, I had first to make my experiment alone, and collect
- facts to illustrate the essential features of my system before
- I could venture to look for outside help. Indeed, in my then
- position, nobody could help me. I knew that I must help myself
- and shaped my plans accordingly.
-
- “I wanted to prove by my experiment that if public education
- is to have any real value for humanity, it must imitate the
- means which make the merit of domestic education; for it
- is my opinion that if school teaching does not take into
- consideration the circumstances of family life, and everything
- else that bears on a man’s general education, it can only lead
- to an artificial and methodical dwarfing of humanity.
-
- “In any good education, the mother must be able to judge
- daily, nay hourly, from the child’s eyes, lips, and face, of
- the slightest change in his soul. The power of the educator,
- too, must be that of a father, quickened by the general
- circumstances of domestic life.
-
- “Such was the foundation upon which I built. I determined that
- there should not be a minute in the day when my children should
- not be aware from my face and my lips that my heart was theirs,
- that their happiness was my happiness, and their pleasures my
- pleasures.
-
- “Man readily accepts what is good, and the child readily
- listens to it; but it is not for you that he wants it, master
- and educator, but for himself. The good to which you would lead
- him must not depend on your capricious humour or passion; it
- must be a good which is good in itself and by the nature of
- things, and which the child can recognize as good. He must feel
- the necessity of your will in things which concern his comfort
- before he can be expected to obey it.
-
- “Whatever he does gladly, whatever gains him credit, whatever
- tends to accomplish his great hopes, whatever awakens his
- powers and enables him truly to say _I can_, all this he
- _wills_.
-
- “But this will is not aroused by words; it is aroused only by a
- kind of complete culture which gives feelings and powers. Words
- do not give the thing itself, but only an expression, a clear
- picture, of the thing which we already have in our minds.
-
- “Before all things I was bound to gain the confidence and the
- love of the children. I was sure that if I succeeded in this
- all the rest would come of itself. Friend, only think how I
- was placed, and how great were the prejudices of the people
- and of the children themselves, and you will comprehend what
- difficulties I had to overcome.”
-
-After narrating what we already know he goes on:
-
- “Think, my friend, of this temper of the people, of my
- weakness, of my poor appearance, of the ill-will to which I
- was almost publicly exposed, and then judge how much I had to
- endure for the sake of carrying on my work.
-
- “And yet, however painful this want of help and support was to
- me, it was favourable to the success of my undertaking, for it
- compelled me to be always everything for my children. I was
- alone with them from morning till night. It was from me that
- they received all that could do them good, soul and body. All
- needful help, consolation, and instruction they received direct
- from me. Their hands were in mine, my eyes were fixed on theirs.
-
- “We wept and smiled together. They forgot the world and Stanz;
- they only knew that they were with me and I with them. We
- shared our food and drink. I had about me neither family,
- friends, nor servants; nothing but them. I was with them in
- sickness, and in health, and when they slept. I was the last
- to go to bed, and the first to get up. In the bedroom I prayed
- with them, and, at their own request, taught them till they
- fell asleep. Their clothes and bodies were intolerably filthy,
- but I looked after both myself, and was thus constantly exposed
- to the risk of contagion.
-
- “This is how it was that these children gradually became so
- attached to me, some indeed so deeply that they contradicted
- their parents and friends when they heard evil things said
- about me. They felt that I was being treated unfairly, and
- loved me, I think, the more for it. But of what avail is it for
- the young nestlings to love their mother when the bird of prey
- that is bent on destroying them is constantly hovering near?
-
- “However, the first results of these principles and of this
- line of action were not always satisfactory, nor, indeed, could
- they be so. The children did not always understand my love.
- Accustomed to idleness, unbounded liberty, and the fortuitous
- and lawless pleasures of an almost wild life, they had come
- to the convent in the expectation of being well fed, and of
- having nothing to do. Some of them soon discovered that they
- had been there long enough, and wanted to go away again; they
- talked of the school fever that attacks children when they are
- kept employed all day long. This dissatisfaction, which showed
- itself during the first months, resulted principally from the
- fact that many of them were ill, the consequence either of the
- sudden change of diet and habits, or of the severity of the
- weather and the dampness of the building in which we lived. We
- all coughed a great deal, and several children were seized with
- a peculiar sort of fever. This fever, which always began with
- sickness, was very general in the district. Cases of sickness,
- however, not followed by fever, were not at all rare, and were
- an almost natural consequence of the change of food. Many
- people attributed the fever to bad food, but the facts soon
- showed them to be wrong, for not a single child succumbed.
-
- “On the return of spring it was evident to everybody that the
- children were all doing well, growing rapidly, and gaining
- colour. Certain magistrates and ecclesiastics, who saw them
- some time afterwards, stated that they had improved almost
- beyond recognition....
-
- “Months passed before I had the satisfaction of having my hand
- grasped by a single grateful parent. But the children were won
- over much sooner. They even wept sometimes when their parents
- met me or left me without a word of salutation. Many of them
- were perfectly happy, and used to say to their mothers: ‘I am
- better here than at home.’ At home, indeed, as they readily
- told me when we talked alone, they had been ill-used and
- beaten, and had often had neither bread to eat nor bed to lie
- down upon. And yet these same children would sometimes go off
- with their mothers the very next morning.
-
- “A good many others, however, soon saw that by staying with me
- they might both learn something and become something, and these
- never failed in their zeal and attachment. Before very long
- their conduct was imitated by others who had not altogether the
- same feelings.
-
- “Those who ran away were the worst in character and the least
- capable. But they were not incited to go till they were free of
- their vermin and their rags. Several were sent to me with no
- other purpose than that of being taken away again as soon as
- they were clean and well clothed.
-
- “But after a time their better judgment overcame the defiant
- hostility with which they arrived. In 1799[156] I had nearly
- eighty children. Most of them were bright and intelligent, some
- even remarkably so.
-
- “For most of them study was something entirely new. As soon as
- they found that they could learn, their zeal was indefatigable,
- and in a few weeks children who had never before opened a
- book, and could hardly repeat a _Pater Noster_ or an _Ave_,
- would study the whole day long with the keenest interest. Even
- after supper, when I used to say to them, ‘Children, will you
- go to bed, or learn something?’ they would generally answer,
- especially in the first month or two, ‘Learn something.’ It is
- true that afterwards, when they had to get up very early, it
- was not quite the same.
-
- “But this first eagerness did much towards starting the
- establishment on the right lines, and making the studies the
- success they ultimately were, a success indeed, which far
- surpassed my expectations. And yet great beyond expression were
- my difficulties. I did not as yet find it possible to organise
- the studies properly.
-
- “Neither my trust nor my zeal had been able to overcome either
- the intractability of individuals or the want of coherence in
- the whole experiment. The general order of the establishment, I
- felt, must be based upon order of a higher character. As this
- higher order did not yet exist, I had to attempt to create
- it; for without this foundation I could not hope to organise
- properly either the teaching or the general management of the
- place, nor should I have wished to do so. I wanted everything
- to result not from a preconceived plan, but from my relations
- with the children. The high principles and educating forces I
- was seeking, I looked for from the harmonious common life of
- my children, from their common attention, activity, and needs.
- It was not, then, from any external organisation that I looked
- for the regeneration of which they stood so much in need. If I
- had employed constraint, regulations, and lectures, I should,
- instead of winning and ennobling my children’s hearts, have
- repelled them and made them bitter, and thus been farther than
- ever from my aim. First of all, I had to arouse in them pure,
- moral, and noble feelings, so that afterwards, in external
- things, I might be sure of their ready attention, activity, and
- obedience. I had, in short, to follow the high precept of Jesus
- Christ, ‘Cleanse first that which is within, that the outside
- may be clean also; and if ever the truth of this precept was
- made manifest, it was made manifest then.
-
- “My one aim was to make their new life in common, and their new
- powers, awaken a feeling of brotherhood amongst the children,
- and make them affectionate, just, and considerate.
-
- “I was successful in gaining my aims. Amongst these seventy
- wild beggar-children there soon existed such peace, friendship,
- and cordial relations as are rare even between actual brothers
- and sisters.
-
- “The principle to which I endeavoured to conform all my conduct
- was as follows: Endeavour, first, to broaden your children’s
- sympathies, and, by satisfying their daily needs, to bring love
- and kindness into such unceasing contact with their impressions
- and their activity, that these sentiments may be engrafted in
- their hearts; then try to give them such judgment and tact as
- will enable them to make a wise, sure, and abundant use of
- these virtues in the circle which surrounds them. In the last
- place, do not hesitate to touch on the difficult questions of
- good and evil, and the words connected with them. And you must
- do this especially in connection with the ordinary events of
- every day, upon which your whole teaching in these matters must
- be founded, so that the children may be reminded of their own
- feelings, and supplied, as it were, with solid facts upon which
- to base their conception of the beauty and justice of the moral
- life. Even though you should have to spend whole nights in
- trying to express in two words what others say in twenty, never
- regret the loss of sleep.
-
- “I gave my children very few explanations; I taught them
- neither morality nor religion. But sometimes, when they were
- perfectly quiet, I used to say to them, ‘Do you not think that
- you are better and more reasonable when you are like this than
- when you are making a noise?’ When they clung round my neck and
- called me their father, I used to say, ‘My children, would it
- be right to deceive your father? After kissing me like this,
- would you like to do anything behind my back to vex me?’ When
- our talk turned on the misery of the country, and they were
- feeling glad at the thought of their own happier lot, I would
- say, ‘How good God is to have given man a compassionate heart!’
- ... They perfectly understood that all they did was but a
- preparation for their future activity, and they looked forward
- to happiness as the certain result of their perseverance. That
- is why steady application soon became easy to them, its object
- being in perfect accordance with their wishes and their hopes.
- Virtue, my friend, is developed by this agreement, just as
- the young plant thrives when the soil suits its nature, and
- supplies the needs of its tender shoots.
-
- “I witnessed the growth of an inward strength in my children,
- which, in its general development, far surpassed my
- expectations, and in its particular manifestations not only
- often surprised me, but touched me deeply.
-
- “When the neighbouring town of Altdorf was burnt down, I
- gathered the children round me, and said, ‘Altdorf has been
- burnt down; perhaps, at this very moment, there are a hundred
- children there without home, food, or clothes; will you not ask
- our good Government to let twenty of them come and live with
- us?’ I still seem to see the emotion with which they answered,
- ‘Oh, yes, yes!’ ‘But, my children,’ I said, ‘think well of what
- you are asking! Even now we have scarcely money enough, and it
- is not at all certain that if these poor children came to us,
- the Government would give us any more than they do at present,
- so that you might have to work harder, and share your clothes
- with these children, and sometimes perhaps go without food. Do
- not say, then, that you would like them to come unless you are
- quite prepared for all these consequences.’ After having spoken
- to them in this way as seriously as I could, I made them repeat
- all I had said, to be quite sure that they had thoroughly
- understood what the consequences of their request would be. But
- they were not in the least shaken in their decision, and all
- repeated, ‘Yes, yes, we are quite ready to work harder, eat
- less, and share our clothes, for we want them to come.’
-
- “Some refugees from the Grisons having given me a few crowns
- for my poor children, I at once called them and said, ‘These
- men are obliged to leave their country; they hardly know
- where they will find a home to-morrow, yet, in spite of their
- trouble, they have given me this for you. Come and thank them.’
- And the emotion of the children brought tears to the eyes of
- the refugees.
-
- “It was in this way that I strove to awaken the feeling of each
- virtue before talking about it, for I thought it unwise to
- talk to children on subjects which would compel them to speak
- without thoroughly understanding what they were saying.
-
- “I followed up this awakening of the sentiments by exercises
- intended to teach the children self-control, so that all that
- was good in them might be applied to the practical questions of
- every-day life.
-
- “It will easily be understood that, in this respect, it was
- not possible to organise any system of discipline for the
- establishment; that could only come slowly, as the general work
- developed.
-
- “Silence, as an aid to application, is perhaps the great secret
- of such an institution. I found it very useful to insist
- on silence when I was teaching, and also to pay particular
- attention to the attitude of my children. I succeeded so well
- that the moment I asked for silence, I could teach in quite a
- low voice. The children repeated my words all together; and as
- there was no other sound, I was able to detect the slightest
- mistakes of pronunciation. It is true that this was not always
- so. Sometimes, whilst they repeated sentences after me, I would
- ask them as if in fun to keep their eyes fixed on their middle
- fingers. It is hardly credible how useful simple things of this
- sort sometimes are as means to the very highest ends.
-
- “One young girl, for instance, who had been little better than
- a savage, by keeping her head and body upright, and not looking
- about, made more progress in her moral education than any one
- would have believed possible.
-
- “These experiences have shown me that the mere habit of
- carrying oneself well does much more for the education of the
- moral sentiments than any amount of teaching and lectures in
- which this simple fact is ignored.
-
- “Thanks to the application of these principles, my children
- soon became more open, more contented and more susceptible to
- every good and noble influence than any one could possibly
- have foreseen when they first came to me, so utterly devoid
- were they of ideas, good feelings, and moral principles. As a
- matter of fact, this lack of previous instruction was not a
- serious obstacle to me; indeed, it hardly troubled me at all.
- I am inclined even to say that, in the simple method I was
- following, it was often an advantage, for I had incomparably
- less trouble to develop those children whose minds were still
- blank, than those who had already acquired inaccurate ideas.
- The former, too, were much more open than the latter to the
- influence of all pure and simple sentiments.
-
- “But when the children were obdurate and churlish, then I was
- severe, and made use of corporal punishment.
-
- “My dear friend, the pedagogical principle which says that
- we must win the hearts and minds of our children by words
- alone without having recourse to corporal punishment, is
- certainly good, and applicable under favourable conditions and
- circumstances; but with children of such widely different ages
- as mine, children for the most part beggars, and all full of
- deeply-rooted faults, a certain amount of corporal punishment
- was inevitable, especially as I was anxious to arrive surely,
- speedily, and by the simplest means, at gaining an influence
- over them all, for the sake of putting them all in the right
- road. I was compelled to punish them, but it would be a mistake
- to suppose that I thereby, in any way, lost the confidence of
- my pupils.
-
- “It is not the rare and isolated actions that form the opinions
- and feelings of children, but the impressions of every day and
- every hour. From such impressions they judge whether we are
- kindly disposed towards them or not, and this settles their
- general attitude towards us. Their judgment of isolated actions
- depends upon this general attitude.
-
- “This is how it is that punishments inflicted by parents
- rarely make a bad impression. But it is quite different with
- schoolmasters and teachers who are not with their children
- night and day, and have none of those relations with them which
- result from life in common.
-
- “My punishments never produced obstinacy; the children I
- had beaten were quite satisfied if a moment afterwards I
- gave them my hand and kissed them, and I could read in their
- eyes that the final effect of my blows was really joy. The
- following is a striking instance of the effect this sort of
- punishment sometimes had. One day one of the children I liked
- best, taking advantage of my affection, unjustly threatened
- one of his companions. I was very indignant, and my hand did
- not spare him. He seemed at first almost broken-hearted, and
- cried bitterly for at least a quarter of an hour. When I had
- gone out, however, he got up, and going to the boy he had
- ill-treated, begged his pardon, and thanked him for having
- spoken about his bad conduct. My friend, this was no comedy;
- the child had never seen anything like it before.
-
- “It was impossible that this sort of treatment should produce
- a bad impression on my children, because all day long I was
- giving them proofs of my affection and devotion. They could
- not misread my heart, and so they did not misjudge my actions.
- It was not the same with the parents, friends, strangers,
- and teachers who visited us; but that was natural. But I
- cared nothing for the opinion of the whole world, provided my
- children understood me.
-
- “I always did my best, therefore, to make them clearly
- understand the motives of my actions in all matters likely to
- excite their attention and interest. This, my friend, brings
- me to the consideration of the moral means to be employed in a
- truly domestic education.
-
- “Elementary moral education, considered as a whole, includes
- three distinct parts: the children’s moral sense must first
- be aroused by their feelings being made active and pure; then
- they must be exercised in self-control, so that they may give
- themselves to that which is right and good; finally they
- must be brought to form for themselves, by reflection and
- comparison, a just notion of the moral rights and duties which
- are theirs by reason of their position and surroundings.
-
- “So far, I have pointed out some of the means I employed to
- reach the first two of these ends. They were just as simple
- for the third; for I still made use of the impressions and
- experiences of their daily life to give my children a true and
- exact idea of right and duty. When, for instance, they made
- a noise, I appealed to their own judgment, and asked them if
- it was possible to learn under such conditions. I shall never
- forget how strong and true I generally found their sense of
- justice and reason, and how this sense increased and, as it
- were, established their good will.
-
- “I appealed to them in all matters that concerned the
- establishment. It was generally in the quiet evening hours that
- I appealed to their free judgment. When, for instance, it was
- reported in the village that they had not enough to eat, I said
- to them, ‘Tell me, my children, if you are not better fed than
- you were at home? Think, and tell me yourselves, whether it
- would be well to keep you here in such a way as would make it
- impossible for you afterwards, in spite of all your application
- and hard work, to procure what you had become accustomed to. Do
- you lack anything that is really necessary? Do you think that I
- could reasonably and justly do more for you? Would you have me
- spend all the money that is entrusted to me on thirty or forty
- children instead of on eighty as at present? Would that be
- just?’
-
- “In the same way, when I heard that it was reported that I
- punished them too severely, I said to them: ‘You know how I
- love you, my children; but tell me would you like me to stop
- punishing you? Do you think that in any other way I can free
- you from your deeply-rooted bad habits, or make you always mind
- what I say?’ You were there, my friend, and saw with your own
- eyes the sincere emotion with which they answered, ‘We don’t
- complain about your hitting us. We wish we never deserved it.
- But we want to be punished when we do wrong.’
-
- “Many things that make no difference in a small household could
- not be tolerated where the numbers were so great. I tried to
- make my children feel this, always leaving them to decide
- what could or could not be allowed. It is true that in my
- intercourse with them I never spoke of liberty or equality;
- but, at the same time, I encouraged them as far as possible to
- be free and unconstrained in my presence, with the result that
- every day I marked more and more that clear open look in their
- eyes which, in my experience, is the sign of a really liberal
- education. I could not bear the thought of betraying the trust
- in me which I saw shining in their eyes; I strove constantly to
- strengthen it and at the same time their free individuality,
- that nothing might happen to trouble those angel-eyes, the
- sight of which caused me the most intense delight. But I could
- not endure frowns and anxious looks; I myself smoothed away the
- frowns; then the children smiled, and even among themselves
- they took care not to shew frowning faces.
-
- “By reason of their great number, I had occasion nearly every
- day to point out the difference between good and evil, justice
- and injustice. Good and evil are equally contagious amongst so
- many children, so that, according as the good or bad sentiments
- spread, the establishment was likely to become either much
- better or much worse than if it had only contained a smaller
- number. About this, too, I talked to them frankly. I shall
- never forget the impression that my words produced when, in
- speaking of a certain disturbance that had taken place among
- them, I said, ‘My children, it is the same with us as with
- every other household; when the children are numerous, and each
- gives way to his bad habits, the disorder becomes such that the
- weakest mother is driven to take sensible measures in bringing
- up her children, and make them submit to what is just and
- right. And that is what I must do now. If you do not willingly
- assist in the maintenance of order, our establishment cannot
- go on, you will fall back into your former condition, and your
- misery—now that you have been accustomed to a good home, clean
- clothes, and regular food—will be greater than ever. In this
- world, my children, necessity and conviction alone can teach
- a man to behave; when both fail him, he is hateful. Think for
- a moment what you would become if you were safe from want and
- cared nothing for right, justice, or goodness. At home there
- was always some one who looked after you, and poverty itself
- forced you to many a right action; but with convictions and
- reason to guide you, you will rise far higher than by following
- necessity alone.’
-
- “I often spoke to them in this way without troubling in the
- least whether they each understood every word, feeling quite
- sure that they all caught the general sense of what I said....
-
- “Here are a few more thoughts which produced a great impression
- on my children: ‘Do you know anything greater or nobler than
- to give counsel to the poor, and comfort to the unfortunate?
- But if you remain ignorant and incapable, you will be obliged,
- in spite of your good heart, to let things take their course;
- whereas, if you acquire knowledge and power, you will be able
- to give good advice, and save many a man from misery.’
-
- “I have generally found that great, noble, and high thoughts
- are indispensable for developing wisdom and firmness of
- character.
-
- “Such an instruction must be complete in the sense that it must
- take account of all our aptitudes and all our circumstances; it
- must be conducted, too, in a truly psychological spirit, that
- is to say, simply, lovingly, energetically, and calmly. Then,
- by its very nature, it produces an enlightened and delicate
- feeling for everything true and good, and brings to light a
- number of accessory and dependent truths, which are forthwith
- accepted and assimilated by the human soul, even in the case of
- those who could not express these truths in words.
-
- “I believe that the first development of thought in the child
- is very much disturbed by a wordy system of teaching, which
- is not adapted either to his faculties or the circumstances
- of his life. According to my experience, success depends upon
- whether what is taught to children commends itself to them as
- true through being closely connected with their own personal
- observation and experience....
-
- “I knew no other order, method, or art, but that which resulted
- naturally from my children’s conviction of my love for them,
- nor did I care to know any other.
-
- “Thus I subordinated the instruction of my children to a higher
- aim, which was to arouse and strengthen their best sentiments
- by the relations of every-day life as they existed between
- themselves and me....
-
- “As a general rule I attached little importance to the study
- of words, even when explanations of the ideas they represented
- were given.
-
- “I tried to connect study with manual labour, the school with
- the workshop, and make one thing of them. But I was the less
- able to do this as staff, material, and tools were all wanting.
- A short time only before the close of the establishment, a few
- children had begun to spin; and I saw clearly that, before
- any fusion could be effected, the two parts must be firmly
- established separately—study, that is, on the one hand, and
- labour on the other.
-
- “But in the work of the children I was already inclined to care
- less for the immediate gain than for the physical training
- which, by developing their strength and skill, was bound to
- supply them later with a means of livelihood. In the same way
- I considered that what is generally called the instruction of
- children should be merely an exercise of the faculties, and
- I felt it important to exercise the attention, observation,
- and memory first, so as to strengthen these faculties before
- calling into play the art of judging and reasoning; this, in
- my opinion, was the best way to avoid turning out that sort of
- superficial and presumptuous talker, whose false judgments are
- often more fatal to the happiness and progress of humanity than
- the ignorance of simple people of good sense.
-
- “Guided by these principles, I sought less at first to teach my
- children to spell, read, and write than to make use of these
- exercises for the purpose of giving their minds as full and as
- varied a development as possible....
-
- “In natural history they were very quick in corroborating what
- I taught them by their own personal observations on plants and
- animals. I am quite sure that, by continuing in this way, I
- should soon have been able not only to give them such a general
- acquaintance with the subject as would have been useful in any
- vocation, but also to put them in a position to carry on their
- education themselves by means of their daily observations and
- experiences; and I should have been able to do all this without
- going outside the very restricted sphere to which they were
- confined by the actual circumstances of their lives. I hold
- it to be extremely important that men should be encouraged
- to learn by themselves and allowed to develop freely. It is
- in this way alone that the diversity of individual talent is
- produced and made evident.
-
- “I always made the children learn perfectly even the least
- important things, and I never allowed them to lose ground; a
- word once learnt, for instance, was never to be forgotten, and
- a letter once well written never to be written badly again.
- I was very patient with all who were weak or slow, but very
- severe with those who did anything less well than they had done
- it before.
-
- “The number and inequality of my children rendered my task
- easier. Just as in a family the eldest and cleverest child
- readily shows what he knows to his younger brothers and
- sisters, and feels proud and happy to be able to take his
- mother’s place for a moment, so my children were delighted when
- they knew something that they could teach others. A sentiment
- of honour awoke in them, and they learned twice as well by
- making the younger ones repeat their words. In this way I soon
- had helpers and collaborators amongst the children themselves.
- When I was teaching them to spell difficult words by heart, I
- used to allow any child who succeeded in saying one properly to
- teach it to the others. These child-helpers, whom I had formed
- from the very outset, and who had followed my method step by
- step, were certainly much more useful to me than any regular
- schoolmasters could have been.
-
- “I myself learned with the children. Our whole system was so
- simple and so natural that I should have had difficulty in
- finding a master who would not have thought it undignified to
- learn and teach as I was doing....
-
- “You will hardly believe that it was the Capuchin friars and
- the nuns of the convent that showed the greatest sympathy with
- my work. Few people, except Truttman, took any active interest
- in it. Those from whom I had hoped most were too deeply
- engrossed with their high political affairs to think of our
- little institution as having the least degree of importance.
-
- “Such were my dreams; but at the very moment that I seemed to
- be on the point of realizing them, I had to leave Stanz.”
-
-§ 50. Heroic efforts rise above the measurement of time. As Byron has
-said, “A thought is capable of years,” and it seldom happens that the
-nobleness of any human action depends on the time it lasts. Pestalozzi’s
-five months’ experiment at Stanz proved one of the most memorable events
-in the history of education. He was now completely satisfied that he
-saw his way to giving children a right education and “thus raising the
-beggar out of the dung-hill”; and seeing the right course he was urged
-by his love of the people into taking it. But how was he to set to work?
-His notions of school instruction differed entirely from those of the
-teaching profession; and even in the revolutionary age they had some
-reason for looking askance at this revolutionist. “He had everything
-against him,” we read, “thick, indistinct speech, bad writing, ignorance
-of drawing, scorn of grammatical learning. He had studied various
-branches of natural history, but without any particular attention either
-to classification or terminology. He was conversant with the ordinary
-operations in arithmetic, but he would have had difficulty in getting
-through a really long sum in multiplication or division; and he probably
-had never tried to work out a problem in geometry. For years this dreamer
-had read no books. But instead of the usual knowledge that any young man
-of ordinary talent can acquire in a year or two, he understood thoroughly
-what most masters were entirely ignorant of—the mind of man and the
-laws of its development, human affections and the art of arousing and
-ennobling them. He seemed to have almost an intuitive insight into the
-development of human nature, and was never tired of contemplating it.”
-(C. Monnard in R.’s Guimps, p. 174.)[157]
-
-§ 51. This man wished to be a schoolmaster, but who would venture to
-entrust him with a school? No one seemed willing to do this; and he would
-have been at a loss where to turn had he not had influential friends
-at Burgdorf, a town not far from Bern. These got for him permission
-to teach, not indeed the children of burgesses but the children of
-non-burgesses, seventy-three of whom used to assemble under a shoemaker
-in his house in the suburbs. With this arrangement, however, the
-shoemaker and the parents of the children were by no means satisfied. “If
-the burgesses like the new method,” they said very reasonably, “let them
-try it on their own children.” Their grumbling was heard, and permission
-to teach was withdrawn from Pestalozzi.
-
-§ 52. The check, however, was only temporary. His friends were wiser than
-the shoemaker, and they procured for him admission into the lowest class
-of the school for burghers’ children. In this class there were about 25
-children, boys and girls between the ages of 5 and 8. Here he proved
-that he was vastly different from a mere dreamer. After teaching these
-children in his own way for eight months he received the first official
-recognition of the merits of his system. The Burgdorf School Commission
-after the usual examination, wrote a public letter to Pestalozzi, in
-which they said: “The surprising progress of your little scholars of
-various capacities shews plainly that every one is good for something, if
-the teacher knows how to get at his abilities and develop them according
-to the laws of psychology. By your method of teaching you have proved how
-to lay the groundwork of instruction in such a way that it may afterwards
-support what is built on it.... Between the ages of 5 and 8, a period
-in which according to the system of torture enforced hitherto, children
-have learnt to know their letters, to spell and read, your scholars have
-not only accomplished all this with a success as yet unknown, but the
-best of them have already distinguished themselves by their good writing,
-drawing, and calculating. In them all you have been able so to arouse and
-excite a liking for history, natural history, mensuration, geography,
-&c., that thus future teachers must find their task a far easier one if
-they only know how to make good use of the preparatory stage the children
-have gone through with you” (Morf, Pt. I, p. 223).
-
-§ 53. In consequence of this report, Pestalozzi in June 1800 was made
-master of the second school of Burgdorf, a school numbering about
-70 boys and girls from 10 to 16 years old. With them Pestalozzi did
-not get on so well. Ramsauer, a poor boy of 10 who afterwards helped
-Pestalozzi at Yverdun and became one of his best teachers, has left us
-his remembrances. Two things seemed clear to the child’s mind: 1st,
-that their teacher was very kind but very unhappy; 2nd, that the pupils
-did not learn anything and behaved very badly. Many schoolmasters have
-smiled in derision at this account of Pestalozzi’s actual teaching; but
-in reading it several things should be borne in mind. First Ramsauer
-as a child would have a keen eye and good memory for the master’s
-eccentricities; but how far the teaching succeeded he could not judge,
-for he did not know what it aimed at. Then again he saw that Pestalozzi’s
-zeal was for the whole school, not for individual scholars. But the
-child who knew of nothing beyond Burgdorf could not tell that Pestalozzi
-was thinking not so much of the children of Burgdorf as of the children
-of Europe. For Burgdorf—whether it was pleased to honour or to dismiss
-Pestalozzi—could not contain him. His aims extended beyond the town,
-beyond canton Bern, beyond Switzerland even; and he was consumed with
-zeal to bring about a radical change in elementary education throughout
-Europe. The truth which was burning within him he has himself expressed
-as follows:
-
-“If we desire to aid the poor man, the very lowest among the people, this
-can be done in one way only, that is, _by changing his schools into
-true places of education, in which the moral, intellectual, and physical
-powers which God has put into our nature may be drawn out_, so that the
-man may be enabled to live a life such as a man should live, contented
-in himself and satisfying other people. Thus and only thus does the man,
-whom in God’s wide world nobody helps and nobody can help, learn to help
-himself.” “The public common school-coach throughout Europe must not
-simply be better horsed, but still more it must be _turned round and be
-brought on to an entirely new road_.” (Quoted by Morf, P. I, p. 211.)
-
-§ 54. Pestalozzi was now working heart and soul at the engineering of
-this “new road.” His grand successes hitherto had been gained more by
-the heart than by the head; but the school course must draw out the
-faculties of the head as well as of the heart. Pestalozzi made all
-instruction start from what children observed for themselves. “I laid
-special stress,” he says, “on just what usually affected their senses.
-And as I dwelt much on elementary knowledge, I wanted to know when the
-child receives its first lesson, and I soon came to the conviction that
-the first hour of learning dates from birth. From the very moment that
-the child’s senses open to the impressions of nature, nature teaches
-it. Its new life is but the faculty, now come to maturity, of receiving
-impressions; it is the awakening of the germs now perfect which will
-go on using all their forces and energies to secure the development of
-their proper organisation; it is the awakening of the animal now complete
-which will and shall become a man. So the sole instruction given to the
-human being consists merely in the art of giving a helping hand to this
-natural tendency towards its proper development; and this art consists
-essentially in the means of putting the child’s impressions in connexion
-and harmony with the precise degree of development the child has reached.
-There must be then in the impressions to be given him by instruction,
-a regular gradation; and the beginning and the progress of his various
-knowledges must exactly correspond with the beginning and increase in his
-powers as they are developed. From this I soon saw that this gradation
-must be ascertained for all the branches of human knowledge, especially
-for those fundamental notions from which our thinking power takes its
-rise. On such principles and no others is it possible to construct real
-school books and books about teaching” (_Wie Gertrud_, &c., Letter I.).
-
-§ 55. In endeavouring to put teaching, as he said, “on a psychological
-basis,” Pestalozzi compared it to a mechanism. On one occasion when
-expounding his views, he was interrupted by the exclamation, “Vous voulez
-mécaniser l’éducation!” Pestalozzi was weak in French, and he took these
-words to mean, “You wish to get at the mechanism of education.” He
-accordingly assented, and was in his turn misunderstood. Soon afterwards
-he endeavoured to express the new thing by a new word and said, “Ich will
-den menschlichen Unterricht psychologisieren; I wish to psychologise
-instruction,” and this he explains to mean that he sought to make
-instruction fall in with the eternal laws which govern the development
-of the human intellect (Morf, I, p. 227). But this was a task which no
-one man could accomplish, not even Pestalozzi. The eternal laws which
-govern the development of mind have not been completely ascertained even
-after investigations carried on during thousands of years; and Pestalozzi
-did not know what had been established by previous thinkers. He made a
-gigantic effort to find both the laws and their application, but if
-he had continued to stand alone he could have done but little. Happily
-he attracted to him some young and vigorous assistants, who caught his
-enthusiasm and worked in his spirit. They did much, but there was one
-thing the Master could not communicate—his genius.
-
-§ 56. Just at this time, before Pestalozzi found associates in his
-work, he drew up for a “Society of Friends of Education” an account of
-his method; and this begins with the words I have already quoted, “I
-want to psychologise education.” Basing all instruction on _Anschauung_
-(which is nearly equivalent to the child’s own observation), he explains
-how this may be used for a series of exercises, and he takes as the
-general elements of culture the following: language, drawing, writing,
-arithmetic, and the art of measuring. In the education of the poor he
-would lay special stress on the importance of two things, then and
-since much neglected, viz., singing and the sense of the beautiful.
-The mother’s cradle song should begin a series leading up to hymns of
-praise to God. Education should develop in all a sense of the beauties
-of Nature. “Nature is full of lovely sights, yet Europe has done nothing
-either to awaken in the poor a sense for these beauties, or to arrange
-them in such a way as to produce a series of impressions capable of
-developing this sense.... If ever popular education should cease to be
-the barbarous absurdity it now is, and put itself into harmony with the
-real needs of our nature, this want will be supplied.” (R.’s Guimps, 186.)
-
-§ 57. In the last year of the eighteenth century (1800) Pestalozzi was
-toiling away, constant to his purpose but not clearly seeing the road
-before him. In March, 1800, he wrote to Zschokke: “For thirty years my
-life has been a well-nigh hopeless struggle against the most frightful
-poverty.... For thirty years I have had to forego many of the barest
-necessaries of life, and have had to shun the society of my fellow-men
-from sheer lack of decent clothes. Many and many a time have I gone
-without a dinner and eaten in bitterness a dry crust of bread on the
-road at a time when even the poorest were seated round a table. All this
-I have suffered and am still suffering to-day, and with no other object
-than the realization of my plans for helping the poor” (R.’s Guimps,
-189). It was clear that he could not help others till he himself got
-help; and he now did get just the help he wanted, an assistant who though
-a schoolmaster was, strange to say, perfectly ready to learn, and to
-throw himself into carrying out another man’s ideas. This was Hermann
-Kruesi, a man twenty-five years old, who from the age of 18 had been
-master of the village school at Gais in Appenzell. In consequence of
-the war between the French and Austrians, Appenzell was now reduced to
-a state of famine, and bands of children were sent off to other cantons
-to escape starvation. Fischer, a friend of Pestalozzi’s, and himself an
-educationist taught by Salzmann (_supra_ 289), wrote from Burgdorf to the
-pastor of Gais, offering to get thirty children taken in by the people of
-Burgdorf, and asking that they might be sent with some one who would look
-after them in the day-time and teach them. In answer to this invitation
-Kruesi, after a week’s march, entered Burgdorf with a troop of little
-ones. The children were drawn up in an open place, and benevolent people
-chose which they would adopt. Kruesi was taken into the Castle which the
-Government had made over partly to Fischer, partly to Pestalozzi. In it
-Kruesi opened a day-school. Fischer soon afterwards died; and Pestalozzi
-proposed to Kruesi, who had become entirely converted to his views, that
-they should unite and together carry on the school in the Castle. By a
-decree of 23rd July, 1800, the Executive Council granted to Pestalozzi
-the gratuitous use of as much of the Castle and garden as he needed, and
-thus was established Pestalozzi’s celebrated Institute at Burgdorf.
-
-§ 58. Very soon Kruesi enlisted other helpers who had read _Leonard
-and Gertrude_, viz., Tobler and Buss, and this is his account of the
-party: “Our society thus consisted of four very different men ... the
-founder, whose chief reputation was that of a dreamy writer, incapable
-in practical life, and three young men, one [Tobler] a private tutor
-whose youth had been much neglected, who had begun to study late, and
-whose pedagogic efforts had never produced the results his character and
-talents seemed to promise; another [Buss], a bookbinder, who devoted his
-leisure to singing and drawing; and a third [Kruesi himself], a village
-schoolmaster who carried out the duties of his office as best he could
-without having been in any way prepared for them. Those who looked on
-this group of men, scarce one of them with a home of his own, naturally
-formed but a small opinion of their capabilities. And yet our work
-succeeded, and won the public confidence beyond the expectations of those
-who knew us, and even beyond our own” (R.’s Guimps, 304).
-
-§ 59. With assistance from the Government there was added to the united
-schools of Pestalozzi and Kruesi a training class for teachers; and
-elementary teachers were sent to spend a month at Burgdorf and learn of
-Pestalozzi, as years afterwards they were sent to the same town to learn
-of Froebel. This Institute opened in January, 1801, and had nearly three
-years of complete success. In it was carried out Pestalozzi’s notion
-that there should be “no gulf between the home and the school.” On one
-occasion a parent visiting the establishment exclaimed, “Why, this is
-not a school but a family!” and Pestalozzi declared that this was the
-highest praise he could give it. The bond which united them all, both
-teachers and scholars, was love of “Father Pestalozzi.” Want of space
-kept the number of children below a hundred, and these enjoyed great
-freedom and worked away without rewards and almost without punishments.
-Both public reports and private speak very highly of the results. In
-June, 1802, the President of the Council of Public Education in Bern
-declares: “Pestalozzi has discovered the real and universal laws of all
-elementary teaching.” A visitor, Charles Victor von Bonstetten, writes:
-“The children know little, but what they know, they know well.... They
-are very happy and evidently take great pleasure in their lessons, which
-says a great deal for the method.... As it will be long before there is
-another Pestalozzi, I fear that the rich harvest his discovery seems to
-promise will be reserved for future ages.”
-
-The success of the method was specially conspicuous in arithmetic.
-A Nürnberg merchant who came prejudiced against Pestalozzi was much
-impressed and has acknowledged: “I was amazed when I saw these children
-treating the most complicated calculations of fractions as the simplest
-thing in the world.”
-
-§ 60. Up to this point Pestalozzi may be said to have gained by the
-disposition to “reform” or revolutionise everything, which had prevailed
-in Switzerland since 1798. But from the reaction which now set in he
-suffered more than he had gained. Switzerland sent deputies to Paris to
-discuss under the direction of the First Consul Bonaparte what should
-be their future form of Government. Among these deputies Pestalozzi was
-elected, and he set off thinking more of the future of the schools than
-of the future of the Government. At Paris he asked for an interview
-with Bonaparte, but destruction being in his opinion a much higher art
-than instruction, the First Consul said he could not be bothered about
-questions of A, B, C. He, however, deputed Monge to hear what Pestalozzi
-had to say, but the mathematician seems to have agreed with some English
-authorities that “there was nothing in Pestalozzi.”[158] On his return
-to Switzerland Pestalozzi was asked by Buss, “Did you see Bonaparte?”
-“No,” replied Pestalozzi, “I did not see Bonaparte and Bonaparte did
-not see me.” His presumption in thus putting himself on an equality
-with the great conqueror seems to have taken away the breath of his
-contemporaries: but “the whirligig of time brings in his revenges,” and
-before the close of the century Europe already thinks more in amount, and
-immeasurably more in respect, of Pestalozzi than of Bonaparte.
-
-§ 61. As a result of the reaction the Government of United Switzerland
-ceased to exist, and the Cantons were restored. This destroyed
-Pestalozzi’s hopes of Government support, and even turned his Institute
-out of doors. The Castle of Burgdorf was at once demanded for the
-Prefect of the District; but Pestalozzi was offered an old convent at
-Münchenbuchsee near Bern, and thither he was forced to migrate.
-
-§ 62. Close to Münchenbuchsee was Hofwyl where was the agricultural
-institution of Emmanuel Fellenberg. Fellenberg and Pestalozzi were old
-friends and correspondents, and as they had much regard for each other
-and Fellenberg was as great in administration as Pestalozzi in ideas,
-there seemed a chance of their benefiting by co-operation; but this could
-not be. The teachers desired that the administration should be put into
-the hands of Fellenberg, and this was done accordingly, “not without my
-consent,” says Pestalozzi, “but to my profound mortification.” He could
-not work with this “man of iron,” as he calls Fellenberg; so he left
-Münchenbuchsee and accepting one of several invitations he settled in the
-Castle of Yverdun near the lake of Neuchatel. Within a twelvemonth he was
-followed by his old assistants, who had found government by Fellenberg
-less to their taste than no-government by Pestalozzi.
-
-§ 63. Thus arose the most celebrated Institute of which we read in the
-history of education. For some years its success seemed prodigious.
-Teachers came from all quarters, many of them sent by the Governments of
-the countries to which they belonged, that they might get initiated into
-the Pestalozzian system. Children too were sent from great distances,
-some of them being intrusted to Pestalozzi, some of them living with
-their own tutor in Yverdun and only attending the Institute during
-the day. The wave of enthusiasm for the new ideas seemed to carry
-everything before it; but there is nothing stable in a wave, and when
-the enthusiasm has subsided disappointment follows. This was the case at
-Yverdun, and Pestalozzi outlived his Institute. But the principles on
-which he worked and the spirit in which he worked could not pass away;
-and, at least in Germany, all elementary schoolmasters acknowledge how
-much they are indebted to his teaching.
-
-§ 64. Of the state of things in the early days of the Institute we have a
-very lively account written for his own children by Professor Vuillemin,
-who entered it in 1805 as a child of eight, and was in it for two years.
-From this I extract the following portrait of Pestalozzi: “Imagine, my
-children, a very ugly man with rough bristling hair, his face scarred
-with small-pox and covered with freckles, an untidy beard, no neck-tie,
-his breeches not properly buttoned and coming down to his stockings,
-which in their turn descended on to his great thick shoes; fancy him
-panting and jerking as he walked; then his eyes which at one time opened
-wide to send a flash of lightning, at another were half closed as if
-engaged on what was going on within; his features now expressing a
-profound sadness and now again the most peaceful happiness; his speech
-either slow or hurried, either soft and melodious or bursting forth like
-thunder; imagine the man and you have him whom we used to call our Father
-Pestalozzi. Such as I have sketched him for you we loved him; we all
-loved him, for he loved us all; we loved him so warmly that when some
-time passed without our seeing him, we were quite troubled about it, and
-when he again appeared we could not take our eyes off him” (Guimps, 315).
-
-§ 65. At this time he was no less loved by his assistants, who put up
-with any quarters that could be found for them, and received no salary.
-We read that the money paid by the scholars was kept in the room of
-“the head of the family”; every master could get the key, and when they
-required clothes they took from these funds just the sum requisite.
-This system, or want of system, went on for some time without abuse. As
-Vuillemin says, it was like a return to the early days of the Christian
-Church.
-
-§ 66. We have seen that the first Emperor Napoleon “could not be bothered
-about questions of A, B, C.” His was the pride that goes before a fall.
-On the other hand the Prussian Government which he brought to the dust in
-the battle of Jena (1806) had the wisdom to perceive that children will
-become men, and that the nature of the instruction they receive will in a
-great measure determine what kind of men they turn out. How was Prussia
-again to raise its head? Its rulers decided that it was by the education
-of the people. “We have lost in territory,” said the king; “our power and
-our credit abroad have fallen; but we must and will go to work to gain in
-power and in credit at home. It is for this reason that I desire above
-everything that the greatest attention be paid to the education of the
-people” (Guimps, 319). About the same time the Queen (Louisa) wrote in
-her private diary, “I am reading _Leonard and Gertrude_, and I delight
-in being transported into the Swiss village. If I could do as I liked I
-should take a carriage and start for Switzerland to see Pestalozzi; I
-should warmly shake him by the hand, and my eyes filled with tears would
-speak my gratitude.... With what goodness, with what zeal, he labours
-for the welfare of his fellow-creatures! Yes, in the name of humanity, I
-thank him with my whole heart.”
-
-So in the day of humiliation Prussia seriously went to work at the
-education of the people, and this she did on the lines pointed out by
-Pestalozzi. To him they were directed by their philosopher Fichte, who
-in his _Addresses to the German Nation_ (delivered at Berlin 1807-8)
-declared that education was the only means of raising a nation, and that
-all sound reform of public instruction must be based on the principles of
-Pestalozzi.
-
-To bring these principles to bear on popular education, the Prussian
-Government sent seventeen young men for a three years’ course to
-Pestalozzi’s Institute, “where,” as the Minister said in a letter to
-Pestalozzi, “they will be prepared not only in mind and judgment, but
-also in heart, for the noble vocation which they are to follow, and will
-be filled with a sense of the holiness of their task, and with new zeal
-for the work to which you have devoted your life.”
-
-§ 67. Among the eminent men who were drawn to Yverdun were some who
-afterwards did great things in education, as _e.g._, Karl Ritter, Karl
-von Raumer the historian of education, the philosopher Herbart, and a
-man who was destined to have more influence than anyone, except perhaps
-Pestalozzi himself—I mean Friedrich Froebel. Ritter’s testimony is
-especially striking. “I have seen,” says he, “more than the Paradise of
-Switzerland, for I have seen Pestalozzi, and recognised how great his
-heart is, and how great his genius; never have I been so filled with a
-sense of the sacredness of my vocation and the dignity of human nature
-as in the days I spent with this noble man.... Pestalozzi knew less
-geography than a child in one of our primary schools, yet it was from him
-that I gained my chief knowledge of this science; for it was in listening
-to him that I first conceived the idea of the natural method. It was he
-who opened the way to me, and I take pleasure in attributing whatever
-value my work may have entirely to him.”
-
-§ 68. At this time we read glowing accounts of the healthy and happy life
-of the children; and throughout Pestalozzi never lost a single pupil by
-illness. With a body of very able assistants, instruction was carried
-on for ten hours out of the twenty-four; but in these hours there was
-reckoned the time spent in drill, gymnastics, hand-work, and singing. The
-monotony of school-life was also broken by frequent “festivals.”
-
-§ 69. And yet the Institute had taken into it the seeds of its own ruin.
-There were several causes of failure, though these were not visible till
-the house was divided against itself.
-
-§ 70. First, Pestalozzi based the morality and discipline of the school
-on the relations of family life. He would be the “father” of all the
-children. At Burgdorf this relation seemed a reality, but it completely
-failed at Yverdun when the Institute became, from the number of the
-pupils and their differences in language, habits, and antecedents, a
-little world. The pupils still called him “Father Pestalozzi,” but he
-could no longer know them as a father should know his children. Thus
-the discipline of affection slowly disappeared, and there was no school
-discipline to take its place.
-
-§ 71. Next, we can see that even at Burgdorf, and still more at Yverdun,
-Pestalozzi was attempting to do impossibilities. According to his system,
-the faculties of the child were to be developed in a natural unbroken
-order, and the first exercises were to give the child the power of
-surmounting later difficulties by its own exertions. But this education
-could not be started at any age, and yet children of every age and every
-country were received into the Institution. It was not likely that the
-fresh comers could be made to understand that they “knew nothing,” and
-must start over again on a totally different road. The teachers might
-take such pupils to the water of “sense-impressions,” but they could not
-inspire the inclination to drink, nor induce the lad to learn what he
-supposed himself to know already. (_Cfr. supra_ p. 64, § 4.)
-
-§ 72. But there was a greater mischief at work than either of these. In
-his discourse to the members of the Institution on New Year’s Day, 1808,
-Pestalozzi surprised them all by his gloom. He had had a coffin brought
-in, and he stood beside it. “This work,” said he, “was founded by love,
-but love has disappeared from our midst.” This was only too true, and the
-discord was more deeply rooted than at first appeared. Among the brood
-of Pestalozzians there was a Catholic shepherd lad from Tyrol, Joseph
-Schmid by name, and he, in the end, proved a veritable cuckoo. As he
-shewed very marked ability in mathematics, he became one of the assistant
-masters; and a good deal of the fame of the Institution rested on the
-performances of his pupils. But his ideas differed totally from those of
-his colleagues, especially from those of Niederer, a clergyman with a
-turn for philosophy, who had become Pestalozzi’s chief exponent.
-
-§ 73. After Pestalozzi’s gloomy speech, the masters, with the exception
-of Schmid, urged Pestalozzi to apply for a Government inquiry into the
-state of the Institution. This Pestalozzi did, and Commissioners were
-appointed, among them an educationist, Père Girard of Freiburg, by whom
-the Report was drawn up. The Report was not favourable. Père Girard
-was by no means inclined to sit at the feet of Pestalozzi, as he had
-principles of his own. Pestalozzi, he thought, laid far too much stress
-on mathematics, and he drew from him a statement that everything taught
-to a child should seem as certain as that two and two made four. “Then,”
-said Girard, “if I had thirty children I would not intrust you with one
-of them. You could not teach him that I was his father.” Thus the Report,
-though very friendly in tone, was by no means friendly in spirit. The
-Commissioners simply compared the performances of the scholars with what
-pupils of the same age could do in good schools of the ordinary type, and
-Père Girard stated, though not in the Report, that the Institution was
-inferior to the Cantonal School of Aargau. But the comparison of these
-incommensurables only shews that Girard was not capable of understanding
-what was going on at Yverdun. Indeed, he asserts “not only that the
-mother-tongue was neglected,” but also that the children, “though they
-had reached a high pitch of excellence in abstract mathematics, were
-inconceivably weak in all ordinary practical calculations.” This is
-absurd. In Pestalozzian teaching the abstract never went before ordinary
-practical calculations. The good Father evidently blunders, and takes
-“head-reckoning” for abstract, and pen or pencil arithmetic for practical
-work. Reckoning with slate or paper is no doubt “ordinary,” but a
-distinction has often to be drawn between what is ordinary and what is
-practical.
-
-§ 74. Soon after this the disputes between Schmid and his colleagues
-waxed so fierce that Schmid was virtually driven away. In 1810 he left
-Yverdun, and declared the Institution “a disgrace to humanity.” Great
-was the disorder into which the Institution now fell from having over it
-only a genius with “an unrivalled incapacity to govern.” The days which
-“remind us of the early Church” were no more, and financial difficulties
-naturally followed them. For the next five years things went from bad
-to worse, and the masters were then driven to the desperate, and, as it
-proved, the fatal step of inviting the able and strong-willed Schmid
-back again. He came in 1815, he acquired entire control over Pestalozzi,
-and drove from him all his most faithful adherents, among them not only
-Niederer, who had invited the return of his rival, but even Kruesi and
-the faithful servant, Elizabeth Naef, now Mrs. Kruesi, the widow of
-Kruesi’s brother. Pestalozzi’s grandson married Schmid’s sister, and thus
-united with him by family ties, Schmid took entire possession of the old
-man and kept it till the end. His former colleagues seem to have been
-deceived in their estimate both of Schmid’s integrity and ability. He
-completed the ruin of the Institution, and he was finally expelled from
-Yverdun by the Magistrates.
-
-§ 75. But while Pestalozzi seemed falling lower and lower to the eyes of
-the inhabitants of Yverdun, and so had little honour in his own country,
-his fame was spreading all over Europe. Of this Yverdun was to reap the
-benefit. In 1813-14, Austrian troops marched across Switzerland to invade
-France. In January, 1814, the Castle and other buildings in Yverdun were
-“requisitioned” for a military hospital, many of the Austrian soldiers
-being down with typhus fever. In a great fright the Municipality sent
-off two deputies to headquarters, then at Basel, to petition that this
-order might be withdrawn. As the order threatened the destruction of
-his Institution, Pestalozzi went with them, and it was entirely to him
-they owed their success. On their return they reported that “no military
-hospital would be established at Yverdun, and that M. Pestalozzi had been
-received with most extraordinary favour.”
-
-§ 75. On this occasion Pestalozzi took the opportunity of preaching to
-the Emperor Alexander on the necessity of establishing good schools and
-of emancipating the serfs. The Emperor took the lecture in good part, and
-allowed the philanthropist to drive him into a corner and “button-hole”
-him.
-
-§ 76. In 1815 Pestalozzi received a visit from an Englishman, or more
-accurately Scotsman—Dr. Bell, who, however, like most of our compatriots,
-could find nothing in Pestalozzi. Whatever we may think of Bell as an
-educationist, he was certainly a poor prophet. On leaving Yverdun he
-said, “In another twelve years mutual instruction will be adopted by the
-whole world and Pestalozzi’s method will be forgotten.”[159]
-
-§ 77. In December, 1815, Pestalozzi was thrown more completely into the
-power of Schmid by losing the only companion from whom nothing but death
-could separate him—his wife. At the funeral Pestalozzi, standing by the
-coffin, and as if heard by her whose earthly remains were in it, ran
-over the disasters and trials they had passed through together, and the
-sacrifices she had made for him. “What in those days of affliction,” said
-he, “gave us strength to bear our troubles and recover hope?” and taking
-up a Bible he went on, “_This_ is the source whence you drew, whence we
-both drew courage, strength, and peace.”
-
-§ 78. The “death agony of the Institution,” as Guimps calls it, lasted
-for some years, but in this gloomy period there are only two incidents I
-will mention. The first is the publication of Pestalozzi’s writings, for
-which Schmid and Pestalozzi sought subscriptions; and the appeal was so
-cordially answered that Pestalozzi received £2,000. This sum he wished
-to devote to the carrying out of a plan he had always cherished of an
-orphanage at Neuhof; but the money seems to have melted we do not know
-how.
-
-§ 79. The other incident is that of Pestalozzi’s last success. In
-spite of Schmid he would open a school for twelve neglected children
-at Clindy, a hamlet near Yverdun. Here he produced results like those
-which had crowned his first efforts at Neuhof, Stanz, and Burgdorf. Old,
-absent-minded, and incapable as he seemed in ordinary affairs, he, as
-though by enchantment, gained the attention and the affection of the
-children, and bent them entirely to his will. In a few months the number
-of children had risen to thirty, and wonderful progress had been made.
-Clindy at once became celebrated. Pestalozzi was induced to admit some
-children whose friends paid for them, and Schmid then persuaded the old
-man to remove the school into the Castle.
-
-§ 80. In 1824 the Institution, which had lasted for twenty years, was
-finally closed, and Pestalozzi went to spend his remaining days (nearly
-three years as it proved) at Neuhof, which was then in the hands of his
-grandson. The year before his death he visited an orphanage conducted on
-his principles by Zeller at Beuggen near Rheinfelden. The children sang
-a poem of Goethe’s quoted in _Leonard and Gertrude_, and had a crown of
-oak ready to put on the old man’s head; but this he declined. “I am not
-worthy of it,” said he, “keep it for innocence.”
-
-§ 81. On 17th February, 1827, at the age of eighty-one, Pestalozzi fell
-asleep.
-
-§ 82. “The reform needed,” said Pestalozzi, “is not that the school-coach
-should be better horsed, but that it should be turned right round and
-started on a new track.” This may seem a violent metaphor, but perhaps
-it is not more violent than the change that was (and in this country
-still is) necessary. Let us try to ascertain what is the right road
-according to Pestalozzi, and then see on what road the school-coach is
-now travelling.
-
-§ 83. The grand change advocated by Pestalozzi was a change of _object_.
-The main object of the school should not be to _teach_ but to _develop_.
-
-§ 84. This change of object naturally brings many changes with it.
-Measured by their capacity for acquiring school knowledge and skill young
-children may be considered, as one of H.M. Inspectors considered them,
-“the fag-end of the school.” But if the school exists not to teach but to
-develop, young children, instead of being the “fag-end,” become the most
-important part of all. In the development of all organisms more depends
-on the earlier than on the later stages; and there is no reason to doubt
-that this law holds in the case of human beings. On this account, from
-the days of Pestalozzi educational science has been greatly, I may say
-mainly, concerned with young children. For the dominating thought has
-been that the young human being is an undeveloped organism, and that in
-education that organism is developed. So the essence of Pestalozzianism
-lies not so much in its method as in its aim, not more in what it does
-than in what it endeavours to do.
-
-§ 85. And thus it was that Pestalozzi (in Raumer’s words) “compelled
-the scholastic world to revise the whole of their task, to reflect on
-the nature and destiny of man, and also on the proper way of leading
-him from his youth towards that destiny.” And it was his love of his
-fellow-creatures that raised him to this standpoint. He was moved by “the
-enthusiasm of humanity.” Consumed with grief for the degradation of the
-Swiss peasantry, he never lost faith in their true dignity as men, and
-in the possibility of raising them to a condition worthy of it. He cast
-about for the best means of thus raising them, and decided that it could
-be effected, not by any improvement in their outward circumstances, but
-by an education which should make them what their Creator intended them
-to be, and should give them the use and the consciousness of all their
-inborn faculties. “From my youth up,” he says, “I felt what a high and
-indispensable human duty it is to labour for the poor and miserable;
-... that he may attain to a consciousness of his own dignity through
-his feeling of the universal powers and endowments which he possesses
-awakened within him; that he may not only learn to gabble over by rote
-the religious maxim that ‘man is created in the image of God, and is
-bound to live and die as a child of God,’ but may himself experience its
-truth by virtue of the Divine power within him, so that he may be raised,
-not only above the ploughing oxen, but also above the man in purple and
-silk who lives unworthily of his high destiny” (Quoted in Barnard, p. 13).
-
-Again he says (and I quote at length on the point, as it is indeed the
-key to Pestalozzianism), “Why have I insisted so strongly on attention to
-early physical and intellectual education? Because I consider these as
-merely leading to a higher aim, to qualify the human being for the free
-and full use of all the faculties implanted by the Creator, and to direct
-all these faculties towards the perfection of the whole being of man,
-that he may be enabled to act in his peculiar station as an instrument
-of that All-wise and Almighty Power that has called him into life” (To
-Greaves, p. 160).
-
-§ 86. Believing in this high aim of education, Pestalozzi required a
-proper early training for all alike. “Every human being,” said he, “has
-a claim to a judicious development of his faculties by those to whom the
-care of his infancy is confided” (_Ib._ p. 163).
-
-§ 87. Pestalozzi therefore most earnestly addressed himself to mothers,
-to convince them of the power placed in their hands, and to teach them
-how to use it. “The mother is qualified, and qualified by the Creator
-Himself, to become the principal agent in the development of her child;
-... and what is demanded of her is—a _thinking love_.... God has given to
-thy child all the faculties of our nature, but the grand point remains
-undecided—how shall this heart, this head, these hands, be employed? to
-whose service shall they be dedicated? A question the answer to which
-involves a futurity of happiness or misery to a life so dear to thee....
-It is recorded that God opened the heavens to the patriarch of old, and
-showed him a ladder leading thither. This ladder is let down to every
-descendant of Adam; it is offered to thy child. But he must be taught
-to climb it. And let him not attempt it by the cold calculations of the
-head, or the mere impulse of the heart; but let all these powers combine,
-and the noble enterprise will be crowned with success. These powers are
-already bestowed on him, but to thee it is given to assist in calling
-them forth” (To Greaves, p. 21). “Maternal love is the first agent in
-education.... Through it the child is led to love and trust his Creator
-and his Redeemer.”
-
-§ 88. From the theory of development which lay at the root of
-Pestalozzi’s views of education, it followed that the imparting of
-knowledge and the training for special pursuits held only a subordinate
-position in his scheme. “Education, instead of merely considering what
-is to be imparted to children, ought to consider first what they may be
-said already to possess, if not as a developed, at least as an involved
-faculty capable of development. Or if, instead of speaking thus in
-the abstract, we will but recollect that it is to the great Author of
-life that man owes the possession, and is responsible for the use, of
-his innate faculties, education should not simply decide what is to be
-made of a child, but rather inquire what it was intended that he should
-become. What is his destiny as a created and responsible being? What
-are his faculties as a rational and moral being? What are the means for
-their perfection, and the end held out as the highest object of their
-efforts by the Almighty Father of all, both in creation and in the page
-of revelation?”
-
-§ 89. Education, then, must consist “in _a continual benevolent
-superintendence_, with the object of calling forth all the faculties
-which Providence has implanted; and its province, thus enlarged, will
-yet be with less difficulty surveyed from one point of view, and will
-have more of a systematic and truly philosophical character, than an
-incoherent mass of ‘lessons’—arranged without unity of principle, and
-gone through without interest—which too often usurps its name.”
-
-The educator’s task then is to superintend and promote the child’s
-development, morally, intellectually, and physically.
-
-§ 90. “The essential principle of education is not teaching,” said
-Pestalozzi; “it is love” (R.’s G., 289). Again he says, “The child
-loves and believes before it thinks and acts” (_Ib._ 378). And in a
-very striking passage (_Ib._ 329), where he compares the development of
-the various powers of a human being to the development of a tree, he
-says, “These forces of the heart—faith and love—are in the formation of
-immortal man what the root is for the tree.” So, according to Pestalozzi,
-a child without faith and love can no more grow up to be what he should
-be than a tree can grow without a root. Apart from this vital truth there
-can be no such thing as Pestalozzianism.
-
- “Ah yet when all is thought and said
- The heart still overrules the head.”
-
-It is our hearts and affections that lead us right or wrong far more than
-our intellects. In advocating the training of the minds of the people,
-Lord Derby once remarked that as Chairman of Quarter Sessions he had
-found most of the culprits brought before him were stupid and ignorant.
-It certainly cannot be denied that the commonest kind of criminal is
-bad in every way. He has his body ruined by debauchery, his intellect
-almost in abeyance, and his heart and affections set on what is vile and
-degrading. If you could cultivate his intellect you would certainly raise
-him out of the lowest and by far the largest of the criminal classes.
-But he might become a criminal of a type less disgusting in externals,
-but in reality far more dangerous. The most atrocious miscreant of our
-time, if not of all time, was a man who contrived a machine to sink ships
-in mid-ocean, his only object being to gain a sum of money on a false
-insurance. This man was a type of the _élite_ of criminals, had received
-an intellectual training, and could not have been described by Lord Derby
-as ignorant or stupid.
-
-§ 91. Pestalozzi then, much as he valued the development of the
-intellect, put first the moral and religious influence of education; and
-with him moral and religious were one and the same. He protested against
-the ordinary routine of elementary education, because “everywhere in it
-the flesh predominated over the spirit, everywhere the divine element was
-cast into the shade, everywhere selfishness and the passions were taken
-as the motives of action, everywhere mechanical habits usurped the place
-of intelligent spontaneity” (R.’s G., 470). Education for the people
-must be different to this. “Man does not live by bread alone; every
-child needs a religious development; every child needs to know how to
-pray to God in all simplicity, but with faith and love” (R.’s G., 378).
-“If the religious element does not run through the whole of education,
-this element will have little influence on the life; it remains formal
-or isolated”[160] (_Ib._ 381). And Pestalozzi sums up the essentials of
-popular education in the words: “The child accustomed from his earliest
-years to pray, to think, and to work, is already more than half educated”
-(_Ib._ 381).
-
-§ 92. Here we see the main requisites. First the child must pray with
-faith and love. Next he must _think_.
-
-“The child must think!” exclaims the schoolmaster: “Must he not learn?”
-To which Pestalozzi would have replied, “Most certainly he must.”
-Learning was not in Pestalozzi’s estimation as in Locke’s, the “last and
-least” thing, but learning was with him something very different from
-the learning imparted by the ordinary schoolmaster. Pestalozzi was very
-imperfectly acquainted with the thoughts and efforts of his predecessors,
-but the one book on education which he had studied had freed him from the
-“idols” of the schoolroom. This book was the _Emile_ of Rousseau, and
-from it he came no less than Rousseau himself to despise the learning
-of the schoolmaster. But when he had to face the problem of organizing
-a course of education for the people, Pestalozzi did not agree with
-Rousseau that the first twelve years should be spent in “losing time.”
-No, the children must learn, but they must learn in such a way as to
-develop all the powers of the mind. And so Pestalozzi was led to what he
-considered his great discovery, viz., that all instruction must be based
-on “Anschauung.”
-
-§ 93. The Germans, who have devoted so much thought and care and effort
-to education, greatly honour Pestalozzi,[161] and as his disciples aim
-at making all elementary instruction “anschaulich.” We English have
-troubled ourselves so little about Pestalozzi, or, I might say, about
-the theory of education, that we have not cared to get equivalent words
-for _Anschauung_ and _anschaulich_. For _Anschauung_ “sense-impression”
-has lately been tried; but this is in two ways defective; for (1) there
-may be “Anschauungen” beyond the range of the senses, and (2) there is
-in an “Anschauung” an active as well as a passive element, and this the
-word “impression” does not convey. The active part is brought out better
-by “observation”—the word used by Joseph Payne and James MacAlister; but
-this seems hardly wide enough. Other writers of English borrow words
-straight from the French, and talk about “intuition” and “intuitive,”
-words which were taken (first I believe by Kant) from the Latin
-_intueri_, “to look at _with attention and reflection_.”
-
-§ 94. I think we shall be wise in following these writers. On good
-authority I have heard of a German professor who when asked if he had
-read some large work recently published in the distressing type of his
-nation, replied that he had not; he was waiting for a French translation.
-If the Germans find that the French express their thoughts more clearly
-than they can themselves, we may think ourselves fortunate when the
-French will act as interpreters. I therefore gladly turn to M. Buisson
-and translate what he says about “intuition.”
-
-“Intuition is just the most natural and most spontaneous action of human
-intelligence, the action by which the mind seizes a reality without
-effort, hesitation, or go-between. It is a ‘direct apperception,’ made as
-it were at a glance. If it has to do with some matter within the province
-of the senses, the senses perceive it at once. Here we have the simplest
-case of all, the most common, the most easily noted. If the thing
-concerned is an idea, a reality, that is, beyond the reach of the senses,
-we still say that we seize it by intuition when all that is necessary is
-that it present itself to the mind, and the mind at once grasps it and is
-satisfied with it without any need of proof or investigation. We advance
-by intuition whenever our mind, acting by the senses, or by the judgment,
-or by the conscience, knows things with the same amount of evidence and
-the same amount of speed that a distinct view of an object affords the
-eye. So intuition is no separate faculty; it is nothing strange or new
-in the mind of man. It is just the mind itself ‘intuitively’ recognising
-what exists in it or around it” (_Les Conférences Péd. faites aux
-Instituteurs_, Delagrave, 1879, p. 331). So the “intuitive method” (to
-keep the French name for it) is of very wide application. “It appeals to
-this force _sui generis_, to this glance of the mind, to this spontaneous
-spring of the intelligence towards truth.” It sets the pupil’s mind to
-work in following his own intellectual instincts. If in our teaching we
-can use it, we shall have gained, as M. Buisson says, the best helper in
-the world, viz., the pupil. If he can be got to take an active part in
-the instruction all difficulty vanishes at once. Instead of having to
-drag him along, you will see him delighted to keep you company.
-
-§ 95. According to M. Buisson there are three kinds of
-intuition—sensuous, intellectual, and moral. Similarly M. Jullien
-(_Esprit de Pestalozzi_, 1812, vol. j, p. 152) says that there are
-“intuitions” of the “internal senses” as well as of the external: the
-“internal senses” are four in number: first, the sense for the true;
-second, the sense for the beautiful; third, the sense for the good;
-fourth, the sense for the infinite.
-
-§ 96. Without settling whether this analysis is complete we shall have
-no difficulty in admitting that both body and mind have faculties by
-means of which we apprehend, lay hold of, what is true and right; and it
-is on the use of these faculties that Pestalozzi bases instruction. No
-Englishman may have found a good word to indicate _Anschauung_, but one
-Englishman at least had the idea of it long before Pestalozzi. More than
-a century earlier Locke had called knowledge “the internal perception of
-the mind.” “Knowing is seeing,” said he; “and if it be so, it is madness
-to persuade ourselves we do so by another man’s eyes, let him use never
-so many words to tell us that what he asserts is very visible” (_Supra_
-p. 222).
-
-§ 97. Thus in theory Pestalozzi was, however unconsciously, a follower
-of Locke. But in practice they went far asunder. Locke’s thoughts were
-constantly occupied with philosophical investigations, and he seems to
-have made small account of the intellectual power of children, and to
-have supposed that they cannot “see” anything at all. So he cared little
-what was taught them, and till they reached the age of reason the tutor
-might give such lessons as would be useful to “young gentlemen,” the
-avowed object being to “keep them from sauntering.” His follower Rousseau
-preferred that the child’s mind should not be filled with the traditional
-lore of the schoolroom, and that the instructor, when the youth reached
-the age of twelve, should find “an unfurnished apartment to let.” Then
-came Pestalozzi, and he saw that at whatever age the instructor began
-to teach the child, he would not find an unfurnished apartment, seeing
-that every child learns continuously from the hour of its birth. And
-how does the child learn? Not by repeating words which express the
-thoughts, feelings, and experiences of other people,[162] but by his own
-experiences and feelings, and by the thoughts which these suggest to him.
-
-§ 98. Elementary education then on its intellectual side is teaching the
-child to think. The proper subjects of thought for children Pestalozzi
-held to be the children’s surroundings, the realities of their own lives,
-the things that affect them and arouse their feelings and interests.
-Perhaps he did not emphasize _interest_ as much as Herbart has done
-since; but clearly an _Anschauung_ or “intuition” is only possible when
-the child is interested in the thing observed.
-
-§ 99. The art of teaching in Pestalozzi’s system consists in analyzing
-the knowledge that the children should acquire about their surroundings,
-arranging it in a regular sequence, and bringing it to the children’s
-consciousness gradually and in the way in which their minds will act upon
-it. In this way they learn slowly, but all they learn is their own. They
-are not like the crow drest up in peacock’s feathers, for they have
-not appropriated any _dead_ knowledge (“_angelernte todte Begriffe_,”
-as Diesterweg has it), and it cannot be said of them, “They know about
-much, but _know_ nothing (_Sie kennen viel und wissen nichts_).” Their
-knowledge is actual knowledge, for they are taught not _what_ to think
-but _to think_, and to exercise their powers of observation and draw
-conclusions from their own experience. The teacher simply furnishes
-materials and occasions for this exercise in observing, and as it goes on
-gives his benevolent superintendence.
-
-§ 100. They learn slowly for another reason. According to Pestalozzi the
-first conceptions must be dwelt upon till they are distinct and firmly
-fixed. Buss tells us that when he first joined Pestalozzi at Burgdorf the
-delay over the prime elements seemed to him a waste of time, but that
-afterwards he was convinced of its being the right plan, and felt that
-the failure of his own education was due to its incoherent and desultory
-character. “Not only,” says Pestalozzi, “have the first elements of
-knowledge in every subject the most important bearing on its complete
-outline, but the child’s confidence and interest are gained by perfect
-attainment even in the lowest stage of instruction.”[163]
-
-§ 101. We have seen that Pestalozzi would have children learn to pray,
-to think, and to _work_. In schools for the _soi-disant_ “upper classes”
-the parents or friends of a boy sometimes say, “There is no need for
-him to work he will be very well off.” From this kind of demoralization
-Pestalozzi’s pupils were free. They would have to work, and Pestalozzi
-wished them to learn to work as soon as possible. In this way he sought
-to increase their self-respect, and to unite their school-life with their
-life beyond it.[164]
-
-§ 102. Pestalozzi was tremendously in earnest, and he wished the children
-also to take instruction seriously. He was totally opposed to the notion
-which had found favour with many great authorities as _e.g._, Locke
-and Basedow, that instruction should always be given in the guise of
-amusement. “I am convinced,” says he, “that such a notion will for ever
-preclude solidity of knowledge, and, for want of sufficient exertions on
-the part of the pupils, will lead to that very result which I wish to
-avoid by my principle of a constant employment of the thinking powers.
-A child must very early in life be taught the lesson that exertion is
-indispensable for the attainment of knowledge”[165] (To G., xxiv, p.
-117). But he should be taught at the same time that exertion is not an
-evil, and he should be encouraged, not frightened, into it. Healthy
-exertion, whether of body or mind, is always attended with a feeling of
-satisfaction amounting to pleasure, and where this pleasure is absent
-the instructor has failed in producing proper exertion. As Pestalozzi
-says, “Whenever children are inattentive and apparently take no interest
-in a lesson, the teacher should always first look to himself for the
-reason”[166] (_Ib._).
-
-§ 103. But though he took so serious a view of instruction, he made
-instruction include and indeed give a prominent place to the arts of
-singing and drawing. In the Pestalozzian schools singing found immense
-favour with both the masters and the pupils, and the collection of songs
-by Nägeli, a master at Yverdun, became famous. Drawing too was practised
-by all. As Pestalozzi writes to Greaves (xxiv, 117), “A person who is
-in the habit of drawing, especially from nature, will easily perceive
-many circumstances which are commonly overlooked, and will form a much
-more correct impression even of such objects as he does not stop to
-examine minutely, than one who has never been taught to look upon what
-he sees with an intention of reproducing a likeness of it. The attention
-to the exact shape of the whole and the proportion of the parts, which
-is requisite for the taking of an adequate sketch, is converted into a
-habit, and becomes productive both of instruction and amusement.”
-
-§ 104. I have now endeavoured to point out the main features of
-Pestalozzianism. The following is the summing up of these features given
-by Morf in his Contribution to Pestalozzi’s Biography:—
-
- 1. Instruction must be based on the learner’s own experience.
- (Das Fundament des Unterrichts ist die Anschauung.)
-
- 2. What the learner experiences and observes must be connected
- with language.
-
- 3. The time for learning is not the time for judging, not the
- time for criticism.
-
- 4. In every department instruction must begin with the simplest
- elements, and starting from these must be carried on step by
- step according to the development of the child, that is, it
- must be brought into psychological sequence.
-
- 5. At each point the instructor shall not go forward till
- that part of the subject has become the proper intellectual
- possession of the learner.
-
- 6. Instruction must follow the path of development, not the
- path of lecturing, teaching, or telling.
-
- 7. To the educator the individuality of the child must be
- sacred.
-
- 8. Not the acquisition of knowledge or skill is the main
- object of elementary instruction, but the development and
- strengthening of the powers of the mind.
-
- 9. With knowledge (_Wissen_) must come power (_Können_), with
- information (_Kenntniss_) skill (_Fertigkeit_).
-
- 10. Intercourse between educator and pupil, and school
- discipline especially, must be based on and controlled by love.
-
- 11. Instruction shall be subordinated to the aim of _education_.
-
- 12. The ground of moral-religious bringing up lies in the
- relation of mother and child.[167]
-
-§ 105. Having now seen in which direction Pestalozzi would start the
-school-coach, let us examine (with reference to England only) the
-direction in which it is travelling at present.
-
-§ 106. For educational purposes we may, with Lord Beaconsfield, regard
-the English as composed of two nations, the rich and the poor. Let us
-consider these separately.
-
-In the case of the rich we find that the worst part of our educational
-course—the part most wrong in theory and pernicious in practice—is the
-schooling of young children, say between six and twelve years old.
-Before the age of six some few are fortunate enough to attend a good
-Kindergarten; but the opportunity of doing this is at present rare, and
-for most children of well-to-do parents there is, up to six years old,
-little or no organised instruction. Pestalozzi would have every mother
-made capable of giving such instruction. Froebel would have every child
-sent to a skilled “Kindergärtnerin.” It seems to me beyond question that
-children gain immensely from joining a properly-managed Kindergarten; but
-where this is impossible, perhaps the mother may leave the child to the
-series of impressions which come to its senses without any regular order.
-According to the first Lord Lytton, the mother’s interference might
-remind us of the man who thought his bees would make honey faster if,
-instead of going in search of flowers, they were shut up and had flowers
-brought to them. The way in which young children turn from object to
-object, like the bees from flower to flower, seems to show that at this
-stage their intellectual training goes on whether we help it or not.
-There is no doubt an education for children however young, and the mother
-is the teacher, but the lessons have more to do with the heart than the
-head.
-
-§ 107. But the time for regular teaching comes at last, and what is to be
-done then? Let us consider briefly what _is_ done.
-
-Hitherto, the only defence ever made of our school-course leading up to
-residence at a University, has been that it aims not at giving knowledge
-but at training the mind. Youths then are supposed to be engaged, not in
-gaining knowledge, but in training their faculties for adult life. But
-when we come to provide for the “education” of children, we never think
-of training their faculties for youth, but endeavour solely to inculcate
-what will then come in useful. We see clearly enough that it would
-be absurd to cram the mind of a youth with laws of science or art or
-commerce which he could not understand, on the ground that the getting-up
-of these things might save him trouble in after-life. But we do not
-hesitate to sacrifice childhood to the learning by heart of grammar
-rules, Latin declensions, historical dates, and the like, with no thought
-whatever of the child’s faculties, but simply with a view of giving
-him knowledge (so-called) that will come in useful five or six years
-afterwards. We do not treat youths thus, probably because we have more
-sympathy with them, or at least understand them better. The intellectual
-life to which the senses and the imagination are subordinated in the man
-has already begun in the youth. In an inferior degree he can do what the
-man can do, and understand what the man can understand. He has already
-some notion of reasoning, and abstraction, and generalisation. But with
-the child it is very different. His active faculties may be said almost
-to differ in kind from a man’s. He has a feeling for the sensuous world
-which he will lose as he grows up. His strong imagination, under no
-control of the reason, is constantly at work building castles in the air,
-and investing the doll or the puppet-show with all the properties of the
-things they represent. His feelings and affections, easily excited, find
-an object to love or dislike in every person and thing he meets with. On
-the other hand, he has only vague notions of the abstract, and has no
-interest except in actual known persons, animals, and things.
-
-§ 108. There is, then, between the child of eight or nine and the youth
-of fourteen or fifteen a greater difference than between the youth and
-the man of twenty; and this demands a corresponding difference in their
-studies. And yet, as matters are carried on now, the child is too often
-kept to the drudgery of learning by rote mere collections of hard words,
-perhaps, too, in a foreign language: and absorbed in the present, he
-is not much comforted by the teacher’s assurance that “some day” these
-things will come in useful.
-
-§ 109. How to educate the child is doubtless the most difficult problem
-of all, and it is generally allotted to those who are the least likely to
-find a satisfactory solution.
-
-The earliest educator of the children of many rich parents is the
-nursemaid—a person not usually distinguished by either intellectual or
-moral excellence.[168] At an early age this educator is superseded
-by the Preparatory School. Taken as a body, the ladies who open
-“establishments for young gentlemen” cannot be said to hold enlarged
-views, or, indeed, any views whatever, on the subject of education. Their
-intention is not so much to cultivate the children’s faculties as to make
-a livelihood, and to hear no complaints that pupils who have left them
-have been found deficient in the expected knowledge by the master of the
-next school. If anyone would investigate the sort of teaching which is
-considered adapted to the capacity of children at this stage, let him
-look into a standard work still in vogue (“Mangnall’s Questions”), from
-which the young of both sexes acquire a great quantity and variety of
-learning; the whole of ancient and modern history and biography, together
-with the heathen mythology, the planetary system, and the names of all
-the constellations, lying very compactly in about 300 pages.[169]
-
-Unfortunately, moreover, from the gentility of these ladies, their
-scholars’ bodies are often treated in preparatory schools no less
-injuriously than their minds. It may be natural in a child to use his
-lungs and delight in noise, but this can hardly be considered _genteel_,
-so the tendency is, as far as possible, suppressed. It is found, too,
-that if children are allowed to run about they get dirty and spoil their
-clothes, and do not look like “young gentlemen,” so they are made to take
-exercise in a much more genteel fashion, walking slowly two-and-two,
-_with gloves on_.[170]
-
-§ 110. At nine or ten years old, boys are commonly put to a school taught
-by masters. Here they lose sight of their gloves, and learn the use of
-their limbs; but their minds are not so fortunate as their bodies. The
-studies of the school have been arranged without any thought of their
-peculiar needs. The youngest class is generally the largest, often much
-the largest, and it is handed over to the least competent and worst paid
-master on the staff of teachers. The reason is, that little boys are
-found to learn the tasks imposed upon them very slowly. A youth or a man
-who came fresh to the Latin grammar would learn in a morning as much as
-the master, with great labour, can get into children in a week. It is
-thought, therefore, that the best teaching should be applied where it
-will have the most obvious results. If anyone were to say to the manager
-of a school, “The master who takes the lowest form teaches badly, and
-the children learn nothing”; he would perhaps say, “Very likely; but if
-I paid a much higher salary, and got a better man, they would learn but
-little.” The only thing the school-manager thinks of is, How much do
-the little boys learn of what is taught in the higher forms? How their
-faculties are being developed, or whether they have any faculties except
-for reading, writing, and arithmetic, and for getting grammar-rules, &c.
-by heart, he is not so “unpractical” as to enquire.
-
-§ 111. With reference to the education of the first of our “two
-nations,” it seems then pretty clear that Pestalozzi would require that
-the school-coach should be turned and started in a totally different
-direction.
-
-§ 112. What about the education of the other “nation,” a nation of which
-the verb “to rule” has for many centuries been used in the passive
-voice, but can be used in that voice no longer? A century ago, with
-the partial exception of Scotland and Massachusetts, there was no such
-thing as school education for the people to be found anywhere in Europe
-or America. But from 1789 onwards power has been passing more and more
-from the few to the many; and as a natural consequence folk-schools
-(for which we have not yet found a name) have become of vast importance
-everywhere. The Germans, as we have seen, have been the disciples of
-Pestalozzi, and their elementary education in everything bears traces
-of his ideas. The English have organised a great system of elementary
-education in total ignorance of Pestalozzi. As usual, we seem to have
-supposed that the right system would come to us “in sleep.” But has it
-come? The children of the poor are now compelled by the law to attend an
-elementary school. What sort of an education has the law there provided
-for them? The Education Department professes to measure everything by
-results. Let us do the same. Suppose that on his leaving school we
-wished to forecast a lad’s future. What should we try to find out about
-him? No doubt we should ask what he knew; but this would not be by any
-means the main thing. His skill would interest us, and still more would
-his state of health. But what we should ask first and foremost is this,
-Whom does he love? Whom does he admire and imitate? What does he care
-about? What interests him? It is only when the answers to these questions
-are satisfactory, that we can think hopefully of his future; and it
-is only in so far as the school-course has tended to make the answers
-satisfactory, that it deserves our approval. Schools such as Pestalozzi
-designed would have thus deserved our approval; but we cannot say this
-of the schools into which the children of the English poor are now
-driven. In these schools the heart and the affections are not thought of,
-the powers of neither mind nor body are developed by exercise, and the
-children do not acquire any interests that will raise or benefit them.
-
-§ 113. An advocate of our system would not deny this, but would probably
-say, “The question for us to consider is, not what is the best that in
-the most favourable circumstances might be attempted, but what is the
-best that in very restricted and by no means favourable circumstances,
-we are likely to get. The teachers in our schools are not self-devoting
-Pestalozzis, but only ordinary men and women, and still worse, ordinary
-boys and girls.[171] It would be of no use talking to our teachers
-(still less our pupil-teachers) about developing the affections and
-the mental or bodily powers of the children. All such talk could end
-in nothing but silly cant. As for character, we expect the school to
-cultivate in the children habits of order, neatness, industry. Beyond
-this we cannot go.”
-
-And yet, though this seems reasonable, we feel that it is not quite
-satisfactory. If so much depends in all of us on “admiration, hope, and
-love,” we can hardly consider a system of education that entirely ignores
-them to be well adapted to the needs of human nature. If Pestalozzi
-was right, we must be wrong. We have never supposed the object of the
-school to be the development of the faculties of heart, of head, and
-of hand, but we have thought of nothing but learning—learning first of
-all to read, write, and cipher, and then in “good” schools, one or more
-“extra subjects” may be taken up, and a grant obtained for them. The sole
-object, both of managers and teachers, is to prepare for the Inspector,
-who comes once a year, and from an examination of five hours or so,
-pronounces on what the children have learnt.
-
-§ 114. The engineer most concerned in the construction of this machine,
-the Right Hon. Robert Lowe, announced that there could be “no such thing
-as a science of education;” and as when we have no opinion of our own
-we always adopt the opinion of some positive person, we took his word
-for it. But what if the confident Mr. Lowe was mistaken? What if there
-_is_ such a science, and the aim of it is that children should grow up
-not so much to _know_ something as to _be_ something? In this case we
-shall be obliged sooner or later to give up Mr. Lowe and to come round to
-Pestalozzi.[172] Science is correct inferences drawn from the facts of
-the universe; and where such science exists, confident assertions that
-it does not and cannot exist are dangerous for the confident persons and
-for those who follow them. Even if “there is no such thing as a science
-of education,” such a thing as _education_ there is; and this is just
-what Mr. Lowe, and we may say the English, practically deny. They make
-arrangements for instruction and mete out “the grant” according to the
-results obtained, but they totally fail to conceive of the existence of
-_education_, education which has instruction among its various agents.
-
-§ 115. In one respect the analogy between the educator and child and
-the gardener and plant, an analogy in which Pestalozzi no less than
-Froebel delighted, entirely breaks down. The gardener has to study the
-conditions necessary for the health and development of the plant, but
-these conditions lie outside his own life and are independent of it. With
-the educator it is different. Like the gardener he can create nothing
-in the child, but unlike the gardener he can further the development
-only of that which exists in himself. He _draws out_ in the young
-the intelligence and the sense of what is just, the love of what is
-beautiful, the admiration of what is noble, but this he can do only
-by his own intelligence and his own enthusiasm for what is just and
-beautiful and noble. Even industry is in many cases _caught_ from the
-teacher. In a volume of essays (originally published in the _Forum_),
-in which some men, distinguished as scholars or in literature in the
-United States, have given an account of their early years, we find that
-almost in every case they date their intellectual industry and growth
-from the time when they came under the influence of some inspiring
-teacher. Thus even for instruction and still more for education, the
-great force is _the teacher_. This is a truth which all our “parties”
-overlook. They wage their controversies and have their triumphs and
-defeats about unessentials, and leave the essentials to “crotchety
-educationists.” In such questions as whether the Church Catechism shall
-or shall not be taught, whether natural science shall or shall not figure
-in the time-table (without scientific teachers it can figure nowhere
-else), whether the parents or the Government shall pay for each child
-twopence or threepence a week, whether the ratepayers shall or shall
-not be “represented” among the Managers in “voluntary” schools, in all
-questions of this kind _education_ is not concerned; and yet these are
-the only questions that we think about. In the end it will perhaps dawn
-upon us that in every school what is important for education is not
-the time-table but the teacher, and that so far as pupil-teachers are
-employed education is impossible. Elsewhere (_infra_ p. 476) I have told
-of a man in the prime of life (he seemed between 40 and 50 years old)
-whose time was entirely taken up in teaching a large class of children,
-boys and girls, of six or seven years. He most certainly could and did
-educate them both in heart and mind. He made their lessons a delightful
-occupation to them, and he exercised over them the influence of a good
-and wise father. Here was the right system seen at its best. I do not
-say that all or even most adult teachers would have exercised so good
-an influence as this gentleman; but so far as they come up to what they
-ought to be and might be they do exercise such an influence. And this of
-course can be said of no _pupil_-teacher.
-
-§ 116. As regards schools then, schools for the rich and schools for the
-poor, the great educating force is the personality of the teacher. Before
-we can have Pestalozzian schools we must have Pestalozzian teachers.
-Teachers must catch something of Pestalozzi’s spirit and enter into his
-conception of their task. Perhaps some of them will feel inclined to
-say: “Fine words, no doubt, and in a sense very true, that education
-should be the unfolding of the faculties according to the Divine idea;
-but between this high poetical theory and the dull prose of actual
-school-teaching, there is a great gulf fixed, and we cannot attend to
-both at the same time.” I know full well the difference there is between
-theories and plans of education as they seem to us when we are at leisure
-and can think of them without reference to particular pupils, and when
-all our energy is taxed to get through our day’s teaching, and our
-animal spirits jaded by having to keep order and exact attention among
-veritable schoolboys who do not answer in all respects to “the young”
-of the theorists. But whilst admitting most heartily the difference
-here, as elsewhere, between the actual and the ideal, I think that
-the dull prose of school-teaching would be less dull and less prosaic
-if our aim was higher, and if we did not contentedly assume that our
-present performances are as good as the nature of the case will admit
-of. Many teachers (perhaps I may say most) are discontented with the
-greater number of their pupils, but it is not so usual for teachers to be
-discontented with themselves. And yet even those who are most averse from
-theoretical views, which they call unpractical, would admit, as practical
-men, that their methods are probably susceptible of improvement, and that
-even if their methods are right, they themselves are by no means perfect
-teachers. Only let the _desire_ of improvement once exist, and the
-teacher will find a new interest in his work. In part, the treadmill-like
-monotony so wearing to the spirits will be done away, and he will at
-times have the encouragement of conscious progress. To a man thus
-minded, theorists may be of great assistance. His practical knowledge
-may, indeed, often show him the absurdity of some pompously enunciated
-principle, and even where the principles seem sound, he may smile at
-the applications. But the theorists will show him many aspects of his
-profession, and will lead him to make many observations in it, which
-would otherwise have escaped him. They will save him from a danger caused
-by the difficulty of getting anything done in the school-room, the danger
-of thinking more of means than ends. They will teach him to examine what
-his aim really is, and then whether he is using the most suitable methods
-to accomplish it.
-
-Such a theorist is Pestalozzi. He points to a high ideal, and bids us
-measure our modes of education by it. Let us not forget that if we are
-practical men we are Christians, and as such the ideal set before us is
-the highest of all. “Be ye perfect, even as your Father in heaven is
-perfect.”
-
- The Pestalozzian literature in German and even in French is now
- considerable, but it is still small in English. The book I have
- made most use of is _Histoire de Pestalozzi par R. de Guimps_
- (Lausanne, Bridel), with its translation by John Russell
- (London: Sonnenschein. Appleton’s: N. Yk.). In Henry Barnard’s
- _Pestalozzi and Pestalozzianism_ are collected some good
- papers, among them Tilleard’s trans. from Raumer. We also have
- H. Kruesi’s _Pestalozzi_ (Cincinatti: Wilson, Hinkle, & Co.). I
- have already mentioned Miss Channing’s _Leonard and Gertrude_.
- The _Letters to Greaves_ are now out of print. A complete
- account of Pestalozzi and everything connected with him,
- bibliography included, is given in M. J. Guillaume’s article
- _Pestalozzi_, in Buisson’s _Dictionnaire de Pédagogie_. (See
- also _Pestalozzi_ par J. Guillaume (Hachette) just published.)
-
-
-
-
-XVII.
-
-FRIEDRICH FROEBEL.
-
-(1783-1852.)
-
-
-§ 1. I now approach the most difficult part of my subject. I have
-endeavoured to give some account of the lessons taught us by the chief
-Educational Reformers. No doubt my selection of these has been made in a
-fashion somewhat arbitrary, and there are names which do not appear and
-yet might reasonably be looked for if all the chief Educational Reformers
-were supposed to be included. But the plan of my book has restricted
-me to a few, and I am by no means sure that some to whom I have given
-a chapter are as worthy of it as some to whom I have not. I have in a
-measure been guided by fancy and even by chance. One man, however, I dare
-not leave out. All the best tendencies of modern thought on education
-seem to me to culminate in what was said and done by Friedrich Froebel,
-and I have little doubt that he has shown the right road for further
-advance. Of what he said and did I therefore feel bound to give the
-best account I can, but I am well aware that I shall fail, even more
-conspicuously than in other cases, to do him justice. There are some
-great men who seem to have access to a world from which we ordinary
-mortals are shut out. Like Moses “they go up into the Mount,” and the
-directions they give us are based upon what they have seen in it. But we
-cannot go up with them; so we feel that we very imperfectly understand
-them; and when there can be not the smallest doubt of their sincerity
-we at times hesitate about the nature of their visions. For myself I
-must admit that I very imperfectly understand Froebel. I am convinced,
-as I said, that he has pointed out the right road for our advance in
-education; but he was perhaps right in saying: “Centuries may yet pass
-before my view of the human creature as manifested in the child, and of
-the educational treatment it requires, are universally received.” It
-has already taken centuries to recover from the mistakes made at the
-Renascence. For the full attainment of Froebel’s standpoint perhaps a few
-additional centuries may be necessary.
-
-§ 2. Friedrich Wilhelm August Froebel[173] was born at Oberweissbach, a
-village of the Thuringian Forest, on the 21st April, 1783. He completed
-his seventieth year, and died at Marienthal, near Bad-Liebenstein, on the
-21st June, 1852. Like Comenius, with whom he had much in common, he was
-neglected in his youth; and the remembrance of his own early sufferings
-made him in after life the more eager in promoting the happiness of
-children. His mother he lost in his infancy, and his father, the pastor
-of Oberweissbach and the surrounding district, attended to his parish
-but not to his family. Friedrich soon had a stepmother, and neglect was
-succeeded by stepmotherly attention; but a maternal uncle took pity on
-him, and for some years gave him a home a few miles off at Stadt-Ilm.
-Here he went to the village school, but like many thoughtful boys he
-passed for a dunce. Throughout life he was always seeking for hidden
-connexions and an underlying unity in all things. In his own words: “Man,
-particularly in boyhood, should become intimate with nature—not so much
-with reference to the details and the outer forms of her phenomena as
-with reference to the Spirit of God that lives in her and rules over
-her. Indeed, the boy feels this deeply and demands it” (_Ed. of M._,
-Hailmann’s trans., p. 162). But nothing of this unity was to be perceived
-in the piecemeal studies of the school; so Froebel’s mind, busy as it
-was for itself, would not work for the masters. His half-brother was
-therefore thought more worthy of a university education, and Friedrich
-was apprenticed for two years to a forester (1797-1799). Left to himself
-in the Thuringian Forest, Froebel now began to “become intimate with
-nature;” and without scientific instruction he obtained a profound
-insight into the uniformity and essential unity of nature’s laws.
-Years afterwards the celebrated Jahn (the “Father Jahn” of the German
-gymnasts) told a Berlin student of a queer fellow he had met, who made
-out all sorts of wonderful things from stones and cobwebs. This “queer
-fellow” was Froebel; and the habit of making out general truths from the
-observation of nature, especially of plants and trees, dated from his
-solitary rambles in the Forest. No training could have been better suited
-to strengthen his inborn tendency to mysticism; and when he left the
-Forest at the early age of seventeen, he seems to have been possessed by
-the main ideas which influenced him all his life. The conception which
-in him dominated all others was the _unity of nature_; and he longed to
-study natural sciences that he might find in them various applications
-of nature’s universal laws. With great difficulty he got leave to join
-his elder brother at the university of Jena; and there for a year he
-went from lecture-room to lecture-room hoping to grasp that connexion of
-the sciences which had for him far more attraction than any particular
-science in itself. But Froebel’s allowance of money was very small, and
-his skill in the management of money was never great; so his university
-career ended in an imprisonment of nine weeks for a debt of thirty
-shillings. He then returned home with very poor prospects, but much more
-intent on what he calls the course of “self-completion” (_Vervollkommnung
-meines selbst_) than on “getting on” in a worldly point of view. He
-was soon sent to learn farming, but was recalled in consequence of the
-failing health of his father. In 1802 the father died, and Froebel, now
-twenty years old, had to shift for himself. It was some time before he
-found his true vocation, and for the next three-and-a half years we
-find him at work now in one part of Germany now in another,—sometimes
-land-surveying, sometimes acting as accountant, sometimes as private
-secretary.
-
-§ 3. But in all this his “outer life was far removed from his inner
-life.” “I carried my own world within me,” he tells us, “and this it
-was for which I cared and which I cherished.” In spite of his outward
-circumstances he became more and more conscious that a great task lay
-before him for the good of humanity; and this consciousness proved fatal
-to his “settling down.” “To thee may Fate soon give a settled hearth and
-a loving wife” (thus he wrote in a friend’s album in 1805); “me let it
-keep wandering without rest, and allow only time to learn aright my true
-relation to the world and to my own inner being. Do thou give bread to
-men; be it my effort to give men to themselves” (K. Schmidt’s _Gesch. d.
-Päd._, 3rd ed. by Lange, vol. iv, p. 277).
-
-§ 4. As yet the nature of the task was not clear to him, and it
-seemed determined by accident. While studying architecture in
-Frankfort-on-the-Main, he became acquainted with the director of a model
-school who had caught some of the enthusiasm of Pestalozzi. This friend
-saw that Froebel’s true field was education, and he persuaded him to give
-up architecture and take a post in the model school. “The very first
-time,” he says, “that I found myself before thirty or forty boys, I felt
-thoroughly at home. In fact, I perceived that I had at last found my
-long-missed life-element; and I wrote to my brother that I was as well
-pleased as the fish in the water: I was inexpressibly happy.”
-
-§ 5. In this school Froebel worked for two years with remarkable success;
-but he felt more and more his need of preparation, so he then retired
-and undertook the education of three lads of one family. Even in this he
-could not satisfy himself, and he obtained the parents’ consent to his
-taking the boys to Yverdun, and there forming with them a part of the
-celebrated institution of Pestalozzi. Thus from 1807 till 1809 Froebel
-was drinking in Pestalozzianism at the fountain head, and qualifying
-himself to carry on the work which Pestalozzi had begun. For the science
-of education had to deduce from Pestalozzi’s experience principles
-which Pestalozzi himself could not deduce; and “Froebel, the pupil of
-Pestalozzi, and a genius like his master, completed the reformer’s
-system; taking the results at which Pestalozzi had arrived through the
-necessities of his position, Froebel developed the ideas involved in
-them, not by further experience but by deduction from the nature of man,
-and thus he attained to the conception of true human development and to
-the requirements of true education” (Schmidt’s _Gesch. d. Päd._).
-
-§ 6. Holding that man and nature, inasmuch as they proceed from the
-same Source, must be governed by the same laws, Froebel longed for more
-knowledge of natural science. Even Pestalozzi seemed to him not to
-“honour science in her divinity.” He therefore determined to continue
-the university course which had been so rudely interrupted eleven years
-before, and in 1811 he began studying at Göttingen, whence he proceeded
-to Berlin. In his Autobiography he tells us: “The lectures for which I
-had so longed really came up to the needs of my mind and soul, and made
-me feel more fervently than ever the certainty of the demonstrable inner
-connexion of the whole cosmical development of the universe. I saw also
-the possibility of man’s becoming conscious of this absolute unity of the
-universe, as well as of the diversity of things and appearances which is
-perpetually unfolding itself within that unity; and then when I had made
-clear to myself, and brought fully home to my consciousness the view that
-the infinitely varied phenomena in man’s life, work, thought, feeling,
-and position were all summed up in the unity of his personal existence I
-felt myself able to turn my thoughts once more to educational problems”
-(_Autob._ trans. by Michaelis and Moore, p. 89).
-
-But again his studies were interrupted, this time by the king of
-Prussia’s celebrated call “To my people.” Though not a Prussian, Froebel
-was heart and soul a German. He therefore responded to the call, enlisted
-in Lützow’s corps, and went through the campaign of 1813. His military
-ardour, however, did not take his mind off education. “Everywhere,” he
-writes, “as far as the fatigues I underwent allowed, I carried in my
-thoughts my future calling as educator; yes, even in the few engagements
-in which I had to take part. Even in these I could gather experience
-for the task I proposed to myself.” Froebel’s soldiering showed him the
-value of discipline and united action, how the individual belongs not
-to himself but to the whole body, and how the whole body supports the
-individual.
-
-Froebel was rewarded for his patriotism by the friendship of two
-men whose names will always be associated with his, Langethal and
-Middendorff. These young men, ten years younger than Froebel, became
-attached to him in the field, and were ever afterwards his devoted
-followers, sacrificing all their prospects in life for the sake of
-carrying out his ideas.
-
-§ 7. At the peace of Fontainebleau (signed in May, 1814) Froebel
-returned to Berlin, and became curator of the Museum of Mineralogy under
-Professor Weiss. In accepting this appointment from the Government he
-seemed to turn aside from his work as educator; but if not teaching he
-was learning. The unity of nature and human nature seemed more and more
-to reveal itself to him. Of the days past in the museum he afterwards
-wrote: “Here was I at the central point of my life and strife, where
-inner working and law, where life, nature, and mathematics were united
-in the fixed crystaline form, where a world of symbols lay open to the
-inner eye.” Again he says: “The stones in my hand and under my eye became
-speaking forms. The world of crystals declared to me the life and laws of
-life of man, and in still but real and sensible speech taught the true
-life of humanity.” “Geology and crystallography not only opened for me
-a higher circle of knowledge and insight, but also showed me a higher
-goal for my inquiry, my speculation, and my endeavour. Nature and man now
-seemed to me mutually to explain each other through all their numberless
-various stages of development. Man, as I saw, receives from a knowledge
-of natural objects, even because of their immense deep-seated diversity,
-a foundation for and a guidance towards a knowledge of himself and life,
-and a preparation for the manifestation of that knowledge” (_Autob._
-_ut supra_, p. 97). More and more the thought possessed him that the
-one thing needful for man was unity of development, perfect evolution
-in accordance with the laws of his being, such evolution as science
-discovers in the other organisms of nature.
-
-§ 8. He at first intended to become a teacher of natural science, but
-before long wider views dawned upon him. Langethal and Middendorff were
-in Berlin, engaged in tuition. Froebel gave them regular instruction in
-his theory, and at length, counting on their support, he resolved to
-set about realising his own idea of “the new education.” This was in
-1816. Three years before one of his brothers, a clergyman, had died of
-fever caught from the French prisoners. His widow was still living in
-the parsonage at Griesheim, a village on the Ilm. Froebel gave up his
-post in Berlin, and set out for Griesheim on foot, spending his very
-last groschen on the way for bread. Here he undertook the education of
-his orphan niece and nephews, and also of two more nephews sent him by
-another brother. With these he opened a school, and wrote to Middendorff
-and Langethal to come and help in the experiment. Middendorff came at
-once, Langethal a year or two later, when the school had been moved to
-Keilhau, another of the Thuringian villages, which became the Mecca of
-the new faith. In Keilhau, Froebel, Langethal, Middendorff, and Barop,
-a relation of Middendorff’s, all married and formed an educational
-community. Such zeal could not be fruitless, and the school gradually
-increased, though for many years its teachers, with Froebel at their
-head, were in the greatest straits for money, and at times even for
-food. Karl Froebel, who was brought up in the school, tells how, on one
-occasion, he and the other children were sent to ramble in the woods
-till some of the seed-corn provided for the coming year had been turned
-into bread for them. Besides these difficulties the community suffered
-from the panic and reaction after the murder of Kotzebue (1819), and
-were persecuted as a nest of demagogues. But “the New Education” was
-sufficiently successful to attract notice from all quarters; and when he
-had been ten years at Keilhau (1826) Froebel published his great work,
-_The Education of Man_.
-
-§ 9. Four years later he determined to start other institutions in
-connexion with the parent institution at Keilhau; and being offered by
-a private friend the use of a castle on the Wartensee, in the canton of
-Lucerne, he left Keilhau under the direction of Barop, and with Langethal
-made a settlement in Switzerland. The ground, however, was very ill
-chosen. The Catholic clergy resisted what they considered as a Protestant
-invasion, and the experiment on the Wartensee and at Willisau in the
-same canton, to which the institution was moved in 1833, never had a
-fair chance. It was in vain that Middendorff at Froebel’s call left his
-wife and family at Keilhau, and laboured for four years in Switzerland
-without once seeing them. The Swiss institution never flourished. But
-the Swiss Government wished to turn to account the presence of the great
-educator; so young teachers were sent to Froebel for instruction, and
-finally he removed to Burgdorf (a town already famous from Pestalozzi’s
-labours there thirty years earlier) to undertake the establishment of
-a public orphanage, and also to superintend a course of teaching for
-schoolmasters. The elementary teachers of the canton were to spend three
-months every alternate year at Burgdorf, and there compare experiences,
-and learn of distinguished men such as Froebel and Bitzius.
-
-§ 10. In his conferences with these teachers Froebel found that the
-schools suffered from the state of the raw material brought into them.
-Till the school age was reached the children were entirely neglected.
-Froebel’s conception of harmonious development naturally led him to
-attach much importance to the earliest years, and his great work on _The
-Education of Man_, published as early as 1826, deals chiefly with the
-education of children. At Burgdorf his thoughts were much occupied with
-the proper treatment of _young_ children, and in scheming for them a
-graduated course of exercises modelled on the games in which he observed
-them to be most interested. In his eagerness to carry out his new plans
-he grew impatient of official restraints; and partly from this reason,
-partly on account of his wife’s ill health, he left Burgdorf without even
-actually becoming “Waisenvater” (father of the orphans).[174] After a
-sojourn of some months in Berlin, where he was detained through family
-affairs, but used the opportunities thus afforded of examining the
-recently founded infant schools, Froebel returned to Keilhau, and soon
-afterwards opened the first _Kindergarten_, or “Garden of Children,”
-in the neighbouring village of Blankenburg (A.D. 1837). Not only the
-thing but the name seemed to Froebel a happy inspiration, and it has
-now become inseparably connected with his own. Perhaps we can hardly
-understand the pleasure he took in it unless we know its predecessor,
-_Kleinkinderbeschäftigungsanstalt_.
-
-§ 11. Firmly convinced of the importance of the Kindergarten for the
-whole human race, Froebel described his system in a weekly paper (his
-_Sonntagsblatt_) which appeared from the middle of 1837 till 1840. He
-also lectured in great towns; and he gave a regular course of instruction
-to young teachers at Blankenburg.
-
-§ 12. But although the principles of the Kindergarten were gradually
-making their way, the first Kindergarten was failing for want of funds.
-It had to be given up; and Froebel, now a widower (he had lost his wife
-in 1839), carried on his course for teachers first at Keilhau, and from
-1848, for the last four years of his life, at or near Liebenstein, in
-the Thuringian Forest, and in the duchy of Meiningen. It is in these
-last years that the man Froebel will be best known to posterity; for in
-1849 be attracted within the circle of his influence a woman of great
-intellectual power, the Baroness von Marenholtz-Bülow, who has given us
-in her _Recollections of Friedrich Froebel_ the only life-like portrait
-we possess. In these records of personal intercourse we see the truth
-of Deinhardt’s words: “The living perception of universal and ideal
-truth which his talk revealed to us, his unbounded enthusiasm for the
-education and happiness of the human race, his willingness to offer up
-everything he possessed for the sake of his idea, the stream of thoughts
-which flowed from his enthusiasm for the ideal as from an inexhaustible
-fountain, all these made Froebel a wonderful appearance in the world, by
-whom no unprejudiced spectator could fail to be attracted and elevated.”
-
-§ 13. These seemed likely to be Froebel’s most peaceful days. He married
-again; and having now devoted himself to the training of women as
-educators, he spent his time in instructing his class of young female
-teachers. But trouble came upon him from a quarter whence he least
-expected it. In the great year of revolutions, 1848, Froebel had hoped to
-turn to account the general eagerness for improvement, and Middendorff
-had presented an address on Kindergartens to the German Parliament.
-Besides this a nephew of Froebel’s published books which were supposed
-to teach socialism. True the uncle and nephew differed so widely that
-“the New Froebelians” were the enemies of the “Old.” But the distinction
-was overlooked, and Friedrich and Karl Froebel were regarded as the
-united advocates of “some new thing.” In the reaction which soon set
-in, Froebel found himself suspected of socialism and irreligion; and
-in 1851 the _Cultus-minister_ Raumer issued an edict forbidding the
-establishment of schools “after Friedrich and Karl Froebel’s principles”
-in Prussia. It was in vain that Froebel proved that his principles
-differed fundamentally from his nephew’s. It was in vain that a congress
-of schoolmasters, presided over by the celebrated Diesterweg, protested
-against the calumnious decree. The Minister turned a deaf ear, and the
-decree remained in force ten years after the death of Froebel (_i.e._,
-till 1862). But the edict was a heavy blow to the old man, who looked to
-the Government of the “_Cultus-staat_” Prussia for support, and was met
-with denunciation. Of the justice of the charge brought by the Minister
-against Froebel the reader may judge from the account of his principles
-given below.
-
-Whether from the worry of this new controversy, or from whatever cause,
-Froebel did not long survive the decree. His seventieth birthday was
-celebrated with great rejoicings in May, 1852, but he died in the
-following month, and lies buried at Schweina, a village near his last
-abode, Marienthal.
-
-§ 14. Throughout these essays my object has been to collect what seemed
-to me the most valuable lessons of various Reformers. In doing this I
-have had to judge and decide what was most valuable, and at times to
-criticise and differ from my authorities. This may perhaps give rise
-to the question, Do you then think yourself the superior or at least
-the equal of the great men you criticise? and I could only reply in all
-sincerity, I most certainly do not. If I am asked further, what then is
-my attitude towards them? I reply, it differs very much with different
-individuals. I cannot say I am prepared to sit at the feet of Mulcaster,
-or Dury, or Petty. In writing of these men I simply point out very early
-expression of ideas that following generations have developed partially
-and we are developing still. When we come to the great leaders we see
-among them men like Comenius who unite a thorough study of what has
-already been thought and done with a genius for original thinking, men
-like Locke with splendid intellectual gifts and a power of happy and
-clear expression, men like Rousseau with a talent for shaking themselves
-free from “custom”—custom which “lies upon us with a weight, Heavy as
-frost and deep almost as life,” and besides this (in his case at least)
-endowed with a voice to be heard throughout the world. Then again we
-have men like Pestalozzi who with a genius for investigating, devote
-their lives to the investigation, and men like Froebel who seem to
-penetrate to a region above us or at least beyond us, and to talk about
-it in language which at times only partially conveys a meaning. From all
-these men we have much to learn; and that we may do this we must come as
-learners to them. When we thus come we find that the great lessons they
-teach become clearer and clearer as each takes up wholly or in part what
-has been taught by his predecessors and adds to it. Some of these lessons
-we may now receive as established truths and seek to conform our practice
-to them. But in following our leaders we dare not close our eyes. Before
-we can know anything we must see it, as Locke says, with our mind’s eye.
-The great thing is to keep the eye of the mind wide open and always on
-the lookout for truth. Acting on this conviction I have not blindly
-accepted the dicta even of the greatest men but have selected those of
-their lessons which are taught if not by all at least by most of them,
-and which also seem to evoke “the spontaneous spring of the intelligence
-towards truth” (see p. 362, _supra_).
-
-§ 15. In reading Froebel however I am conscious that this “spring” is
-wanting. Before one can accept teaching one must at least understand it,
-and this preliminary is not always possible when we would learn from
-Froebel. At times he goes entirely out of sight, and whether the words
-we hear are the expression of deep truth or have absolutely no meaning
-at all, I for my part am at times totally unable to determine. But where
-I can understand him he seems to me singularly wise; and working in the
-same lines as Pestalozzi he in some respects advances far beyond his
-great predecessor.
-
-§ 16. Both these men were devotees of science; but instead of finding
-in science anything antagonistic to religion they looked upon science
-as the expression of the mind of God. Their belief was just that which
-Sir Thomas Browne had uttered more than 200 years before in the _Religio
-Medici_: “Though we christen effects by their most sensible and nearest
-causes yet is God the true and infallible cause of all, whose concourse
-[_i.e._, concurrence, co-operation] though it be general, yet doth it
-subdivide itself into the particular actions of everything, and is that
-spirit by which each singular essence not only subsists but performs its
-operation.”[175] With this belief Froebel sought to trace everything back
-to the central Unity, to God. The author of the _De Imitatione Christi_
-has said: “The man to whom all things are one, who refers all things to
-one and sees all things in one, he can stand firm and be at peace in
-God. Cui omnia unum sunt, et qui omnia ad unum trahit, et omnia in uno
-videt, potest stabilis esse et in Deo pacificus permanere” (_De Im. Xti._
-lib. i; cap. 3, § 2). So thought Froebel, and his great longing was to
-refer all things to one and see all things in one. However little we may
-share this longing we must admit that it is a natural outcome from the
-Christian religion. If there is One in Whom all “live and move and have
-their being,” everything should be referred to Him. As Froebel says, “In
-Allem wirkt und schafft _Ein_ Leben, Weil das Leben All’ ein einz’ger
-Gott gegeben. (In everything there works and stirs _one_ life, because
-to all One God has given life.)” So long then as we remain Christians we
-must agree with Froebel that all true education is founded on Religion.
-Perhaps in the end we may adopt his high ideal and say with him,
-“Education should lead and guide man to clearness concerning himself and
-in himself, to peace with nature, and to unity with God; hence, it should
-lift him to a knowledge of himself and of mankind, to a knowledge of God
-and of Nature, and to the pure and holy life to which such knowledge
-leads.” (_E. of M._, Hailmann’s t., 5.) “The object of education is the
-realization of a faithful, pure, inviolate, and hence holy life” (_Ib._
-4).
-
-§ 17. This is indeed a high ideal: and we naturally ask, If we would work
-towards it what road would Froebel point out to us? This brings us to his
-theory of development or, as it has been called since Darwin, evolution.
-The idea of organic growth was first definitely applied to the young by
-Pestalozzi, but it was more clearly and consistently applied by Froebel.
-It has gone forth conquering and to conquer; and though far indeed from
-being accepted by the teaching profession of this age, it is likely
-to have a vast influence on the practice of those who will come after
-them. I therefore give the following statement of it, which seems to me
-excellent:—
-
-“The first thing to note in the idea of development is that it indicates,
-not an increase in bulk or quantity (though it may include this), but
-an increase in complexity of structure, an improvement in power, skill,
-and variety in the performance of natural functions. We say that a thing
-is fully developed when its internal organisation is perfect in every
-detail, and when it can perform all its natural actions or functions
-perfectly. If we apply this distinction to mind, an increase in bulk
-will be represented by an increase in the amount of material retained
-in the mind, in the memory; development will be a perfecting of the
-structure of the mind itself, an increase of power and skill and variety
-in dealing with knowledge, and in putting knowledge to all its natural
-uses. The next thing to consider is how this development is produced.
-How can we aid in promoting this change from germ to complete organism,
-from partially developed thing to more highly developed thing? The
-answer comes from every part of creation with ever-increasing clearness
-and emphasis—development is produced by exercise of function, use of
-faculty. Neglect or disuse of any part of an organism leads to the
-dwindling, and sometimes even to the disappearance, of that part. And
-this applies not only to individuals, but stretches also from parent to
-child, from generation to generation, constituting then what we call
-heredity, or what Froebel calls the connectedness of humanity. Slowly
-through successive generations a faculty or organ may dwindle and decay,
-or may be brought to greater and greater perfection. As Froebel puts
-it, humanity past, present, and future is one continuous whole. The
-_amount_ of development, then, possible in any particular case plainly
-depends partly on the original outfit, and partly (and as a rule in a
-greater measure) on the opportunities there have been for exercise, and
-the use made of those opportunities. If we wish to develop the hand, we
-must exercise the hand. If we wish to develop the body, we must exercise
-the body. If we wish to develop the mind, we must exercise the mind.
-If we wish to develop the _whole_ human being, we must _exercise the
-whole_ human being. But will _any_ exercise suffice? Again the answer
-is clear. Only that exercise which is always in harmony with the nature
-of the thing, and which is always proportioned to the strength of the
-thing, produces true development. All other exercise is partially or
-wholly hurtful. And another condition, evident in every case, becomes
-still more evident when we apply these laws to the mind. To produce
-development most truly and effectively, the exercise must arise from
-and be sustained by the thing’s own activity—its own natural powers,
-and all of them (as far as these are in _any_ sense connected with the
-activity proposed) should be awakened and become naturally active. If,
-for instance, we desire to further the development of a plant, what we
-have to do is to induce the plant (and the whole of it) to become active
-in its own natural way, and to help it to sustain that activity. We may
-abridge the time; we may modify the result; but we must act through and
-by the plant’s own activity. This activity of a thing’s own self we call
-_self-activity_ (_E. of M._, § 9). We generally consider the mind in the
-light of its three activities of _knowing, feeling, and willing_. The
-exercise which aims at producing mental development must be in harmony
-with the nature of _knowing_, _feeling_, and _willing_, and continually
-in proportion to their strength. And, further, it is found that the more
-the activity is that of the _whole_ mind, the more it is the mind’s _own_
-activity—self-produced, and self-maintained, and self-directed—the better
-is the result. In other words, knowing, feeling, and willing must _all_
-take their rightful share in the exercise; and, in particular, feeling
-and willing—the mind’s powers of prompting and nourishing, of maintaining
-and directing its own activities—must never be neglected” (H. C. Bowen on
-_Ed. of M._).
-
-§ 18. “A divine message or eternal regulation of the Universe there
-verily is, in regard to every conceivable procedure and affair of man;
-faithfully following this, said procedure or affair will prosper ... not
-following this ... destruction and wreck are certain for every affair.”
-These words of Carlyle’s express Froebel’s thought about education.
-Before attempting to educate we must do all we can to ascertain the
-divine message and must then direct our proceedings by it. The divine
-message must be learnt according to Froebel by studying the nature of the
-organism we have to assist in developing. Each human being must “develop
-from within, self-active and free, in accordance with the eternal law.
-This is the problem and the aim of all education in instruction and
-training; there can be and should be no other” (_Ed. of M._, 13). For
-“all has come forth from the Divine, from God, and is through God alone
-conditioned. To this it is that all things owe their existence—to the
-Divine working in them. The Divine element that works in each thing is
-the true idea (_das Wesen_) of the thing.” Therefore “the destiny and
-calling of all things is to develop their true idea, and in so doing to
-reveal God in outward and through passing forms.”
-
-§19. What we must think of then is the “true idea” which each child
-should develop. How is this idea to be ascertained? In other words, how
-are we to learn the Divine Message about the bringing up of children?
-This Message is given us through the works of God. “In the creation,
-in nature and the order of the material world, and in the progress of
-mankind, God has given us the true type (_Urbild_) of education.”
-
-§ 20. So Froebel would have all educators lay to heart the great
-principle of the Baconian philosophy: We command Nature only by obeying
-her. They are to be very cautious how they interfere, and the education
-they give is to be “passive, following.” Even in teaching they must bear
-in mind, that “the purpose of teaching is to bring ever more _out of_
-man rather than to put more and more _into_ him.” (_Ed. of M._, 279.)
-Froebel in fact taught the Pestalozzian doctrine that the function of the
-educator was that of “benevolent superintendence.”[176]
-
-§21. But if Froebel would thus limit the action of the educator he would
-greatly extend the action of those educated; and here we see the great
-principle with which the name of Froebel is likely to be permanently
-associated. “The starting-point of all that appears, of all that exists,
-and therefore of all intellectual conception, is act, action. From
-the act, from action, must therefore start true human education, the
-developing education of the man; in action, in acting, it must be rooted
-and must spring up.... Living, acting, conceiving,—these must form a
-triple chord within every child of man, though the sound now of this
-string, now of that, may preponderate, and then again of two together.”
-
-§ 22. Many thinkers before Froebel had seen the transcendent importance
-of action; but Froebel not only based everything upon it, but he based
-it upon God. “God creates and works productively in uninterrupted
-continuity. Each thought of God is a work, a deed” (_Ed. of M._, § 23).
-As Jesus has said: “My Father worketh hitherto and I work” (St. John v,
-17). From this it follows that, since God created man in his own image,
-“man should create and bring forth like God” (_Ed. of M._, _ib._). “He
-who will early learn to recognise the Creator must early exercise his own
-power of action with the consciousness that he is bringing about what
-is good; for the doing good is the link between the creature and the
-Creator, and the conscious doing of it the conscious connexion, the true
-living union of the man with God, of the individual man as of the human
-race, and is therefore at once the starting point and the eternal aim of
-all education.” Elsewhere he says: “We become truly God-like in diligence
-and industry, in working and doing, which are accompanied by the clear
-perception or even by the vaguest feeling that thereby we represent the
-inner in the outer; that we give body to spirit, and form to thought;
-that we render visible the invisible; that we impart an outward, finite,
-transient being to life in the spirit. Through this God-likeness we rise
-more and more to a true knowledge of God, to insight into His Spirit;
-and thus, inwardly and outwardly, God comes ever nearer to us. Therefore
-Jesus says of the poor, ‘Theirs is the kingdom of heaven,’ if they
-could but see and know it and practice it in diligence and industry, in
-productive and creative work. Of children too is the kingdom of heaven;
-for unchecked by the presumption and conceit of adults they yield
-themselves in child-like trust and cheerfulness to their formative and
-creative instinct” (_Ed. of M._, § 23. P. 31).
-
-§ 23. This “formative and creative instinct” which as we must suppose
-has existed in all children in all nations and in all ages of the world,
-Froebel was the first to take duly into account for education. Pestalozzi
-saw the importance of getting children to _think_, and to think about
-their material surroundings. These the child can observe and search into;
-and in doing this he may discover what is not at first obvious to sight
-or touch and may even ascertain relations between the several parts of
-the same thing or connexions between different things compared together.
-All these discoveries may be made by the child’s self-activity, but
-only on one condition, viz.: that the child is interested. But in the
-search interest soon flags and then observation comes to an end. Besides,
-even while it lasts in full vigour the activity is mental only; it is
-concerned with perceiving, taking in; and for development something more
-is needed; the organism must not only take in, it must also _give out_.
-And so we find in children a restless eagerness to touch, pull about,
-and change the condition of things around them. When this activity of
-theirs, instead of being checked is properly directed, the children are
-delighted in recognising desirable results which they themselves have
-brought about; especially those which give expression to what is their
-own thought. In this way the child “renders the inner outer;” and in thus
-satisfying his creative instinct he is led to exercise some faculties
-both of mind and body.
-
-§ 24. The prominence which Froebel gave to action, his doctrine that
-man is primarily a doer and even a creator, and that he learns only
-through “self-activity,” may produce great changes in educational methods
-generally, and not simply in the treatment of children too young for
-schooling. But it was to the first stage of life that Froebel paid the
-greatest attention, and it is over this stage that his influence is
-gradually extending. Froebel held that each age has a completeness of
-its own (“First the blade, then the ear, then the full corn in the
-ear”), and that the perfection of the later stage can be attained only
-through the perfection of the earlier. If the infant is what he should
-be as an infant, and the child as a child, he will become what he should
-be as a boy, just as naturally as new shoots spring from the healthy
-plant. Every stage, then, must be cared for and tended in such a way
-that it may attain its own perfection. But as Bacon says with reference
-to education, the gardener bestows most care on the young plants, and it
-was “the young plants” for whom Froebel designed his Kindergarten. Like
-Pestalozzi he attached the very highest importance to giving instruction
-to mothers. But he would not like Pestalozzi leave young children
-entirely in the mother’s hands. There was something to be done for them
-which even the ideal mother in the ideal family could not do. Pestalozzi
-held that the child belonged to the family. Fichte on the other hand
-claimed it for society and the state. Froebel, whose mind, like that of
-our own theologian Frederick Maurice, delighted in harmonising apparent
-contradictions, and who taught that “all progress lay through opposites
-to their reconciliation,” maintained that the child belongs both to the
-family and to society; and he would therefore have children prepare
-for society by spending some hours of the day in a common life and in
-well-organised common employments.
-
-§ 25. His study of children showed him that one of their most striking
-characteristics was restlessness. This was, first, restlessness of body,
-delight in mere motion of the limbs; and, secondly, restlessness of
-mind, a constant curiosity about whatever came within the range of the
-senses, and especially a desire to examine with the hand every unknown
-object within reach.[177] Children’s fondness for using their hands
-was especially noted by Froebel; and he found that they delighted, not
-merely in examining by touch, but also in altering whatever they could
-alter, and further that they endeavoured to imitate known forms whether
-by drawing or whenever they could get any kind of plastic material by
-modelling. Besides remarking in them these various activities, he saw
-that children were sociable and needed the sympathy of companions. There
-was, too, in them a growing moral nature, passions, affections, and
-conscience, which needed to be controlled, responded to, cultivated.
-Both the restraints and the opportunities incident to a well-organised
-community would be beneficial to their moral nature, and prove a cure for
-selfishness.
-
-§ 26. As all education was to be sought in rightly directed but
-spontaneous action, Froebel considered how the children in this community
-should be employed. At that age their most natural employment is play,
-especially as Wordsworth has pointed out, games in which they imitate
-and “con the parts” they themselves will have to fill in after years.
-Froebel agreed with Montaigne that the games of children were “their most
-serious occupations,” and with Locke that “all the plays and diversions
-of children should be directed towards good and useful habits, or else
-they will introduce ill ones” (_Th. c. Ed._, § 130). So he invented a
-course of occupations, a great part of which consisted in social games.
-Many of the names are connected with the “Gifts,” as he called the series
-of simple playthings provided for the children, the first being the ball,
-“the type of unity.” The “gifts” are chiefly not mere playthings but
-materials which the children work up in their own way, thus gaining scope
-for their power of doing and inventing and creating. The artistic faculty
-was much thought of by Froebel, and, as in the education of the ancients,
-the sense of rhythm in sound and motion was cultivated by music and
-poetry introduced in the games. Much care was to be given to the training
-of the senses, especially those of sight, sound, and touch. Intuition
-(_Anschauung_) was to be recognised as the true basis of knowledge, and
-though stories were to be told, and there was to be much intercourse in
-the way of social chat, instruction of the imparting and “learning-up”
-kind was to be excluded. There was to be no “dead knowledge;” in fact
-Froebel like Pestalozzi endeavoured to do for the child what Bacon
-nearly 200 years before had done for the philosopher. Bacon showed the
-philosopher that the way to study Nature was not to learn what others had
-surmised but to go straight to Nature and use his own senses and his own
-powers of observation. Pestalozzi and Froebel wished children to learn in
-this way as well as philosophers.
-
-§ 27. Schools for very young children existed before Froebel’s
-Kindergarten, but they had been thought of more in the interest of the
-mothers than of the children. It was for the sake of the mothers that
-Oberlin established them in the Vosges more than a century ago, his
-first _Conductrices de l’Enfance_ being peasant women, Sara Banzet and
-Louise Scheppler. In the early part of this century the notion was taken
-up by James Buchanan and Samuel Wilderspin in this country (see James
-Leitch’s _Practical Educationists_) and by J. M. D. Cochin in France.
-But Froebel’s conception differed from that of the “Infant School.”
-His object was purely educational but he would have no “schooling.” He
-called these communities of children _Kindergarten_, Gardens of children,
-_i.e._, enclosures in which young human plants are nurtured.[178]
-The children’s employment is to be play. But any occupation in which
-children delight is _play_ to them; and Froebel’s series of employments,
-while they are in this sense play to the children, have nevertheless,
-as seen from the adult point of view, a distinctly educational object.
-This object, as Froebel himself describes it, is “to give the children
-employment in agreement with their whole nature, to strengthen their
-bodies, to exercise their senses, to engage their awakening mind, and
-through their senses to bring them acquainted with nature and their
-fellow-creatures; it is especially to guide aright the heart and the
-affections, and to lead them to the original ground of all life, to unity
-with themselves.”
-
-§ 28. No less than six-and-thirty years ago Henry Barnard (in his
-Report to Governor of Connecticut, 1854) declared the Kindergarten to
-be “by far the most original, attractive, and philosophical form of
-infant development the world has yet seen.” Since then it has spread
-in all civilised lands, and in many of them there are now _public_
-Kindergartens, the first I believe having been established in 1873 by Dr.
-William T. Harris in St. Louis, Mo. But Froebel’s ideas are not so easily
-got hold of as his “Gifts,” and the real extension of his system may be
-by no means so great as it seems. “The Kindergarten system in the hands
-of one who understands it,” says Dr. James Ward, “produces admirable
-results; but it is apt to be too mechanical and formal. There does not
-seem room for the individuality of a child, to which all free play
-possible should be given in the earliest years.” (In _Parents’ Review_
-Ap. 1890.) And Mr. Courthope Bowen has well said: “Kindergarten work
-without the Kindergarten idea, like a body without a soul, is subject to
-rapid degeneration and decay.” So perhaps it will in the end prove that
-Froebel in his _Education of Man_ which is “a book with seven seals” has
-left us a more precious legacy than in his “Gifts” and Occupations which
-are so popular and so easily adopted.
-
-§ 29. It has been well said that “the essence of stupidity is in the
-demand for final opinions.” How our thoughts have widened about education
-since a man like Dr. Johnson could assert, “Education is as well known,
-and has long been as well known, as ever it can be!”[179] (Hill’s
-_Boswell’s J._ ij, 407.) The astronomers of the Middle Ages might as well
-have asserted that nothing more could ever be known about astronomy.
-
-Was Froebel what he believed himself to be, the Kepler or the Newton
-of the educational system? Whoso is wise will not during the nineteenth
-century lay claim to a “final opinion” on this point. But the “New
-Education” seems gaining ground. F. W. Parker emphatically declares “the
-Kindergarten” (by which he probably means Froebel’s encouragement of
-self-activity) to be “the most important far-reaching educational reform
-of the nineteenth century.” We sometimes see it questioned whether the
-“New Education” has any proper claim to its title; but the education
-which Dr. Johnson considered final and which seems to us old aimed at
-learning; and the education which aims not at learning, but at developing
-through self-activity is so different from this that it may well be
-called New. If we consider the platform of the New Educationists as it
-stands, _e.g._, in the New York _School Journal_, we shall find that if
-it is not all new in theory it would be substantially new in practice.
-
-§ 30. Let us look at a brief statement of what the “New Education”
-requires:—
-
-1. Each study must be valued in proportion as it develops _power_; and
-power is developed by self-activity.
-
-2. The memory must be employed in strict subservience to the higher
-faculties of the mind.
-
-3. Whatever instruction is given, it must be adapted to the actual state
-of the pupil, and not ruled by the wants of the future boy or man.
-
-4. More time must be given to the study of nature and to modern language
-and literature; less to the ancient languages.
-
-5. The body must be educated as well as the mind.
-
-6. Rich and poor alike must be taught to use their eyes and hands. 7.
-The higher education of women must be cared for no less than that of men.
-
-8. Teachers, no less than doctors, must go through a course of
-professional training.
-
-To these there must in time be added another:
-
-9. All methods shall have a scientific foundation, _i.e._, they shall be
-based on the laws of the mind, or shall have been tested by those laws.
-
-§ 31. When this program is adopted, even as the object of our efforts,
-we shall, indeed, have a New Education. At present the encouragement
-of self-activity is thought of, if at all, only as a “counsel of
-perfection.” Our school work is chiefly mechanical and will long
-remain so. “From the primary school to the college productive creative
-doing is almost wholly excluded. Knowledge in its barrenest form is
-communicated, and tested in the barrenest, wordiest way possible. Never
-is the learner taught or permitted to apply his knowledge to even
-second-hand life-purpose.... So inveterate is the habit of the school
-that the Kindergarten itself, although invented by the deep-feeling and
-far-seeing Froebel for the very purpose of correcting this fault, has
-in most cases fallen a victim to its influence.” So says W. H. Hailmann
-(_Kindergarten_, May, 1888) and those who best know what usually goes on
-in the school-room are the least likely to differ from him.
-
-§ 32. During the last thirty years I have spent the greatest part of my
-working hours in a variety of school-rooms; and if my school experience
-has shown me that our advance is slow, my study of the Reformers
-convinces me that it is sure.
-
- “Ring out the old, ring in the new!”
-
-It has been well said that to study science is to study the thoughts
-of God; and thus it is that all true educational Reformers declare the
-thoughts of God to us. “A divine message, of eternal regulation of the
-Universe, there verily is in regard to every conceivable procedure and
-affair of man;” and it behoves us to ascertain what that message is in
-regard to the immensely important procedure and affair of bringing up
-children. After innumerable mistakes we seem by degrees to be getting
-some notion of it; and such insight as we have we owe to those who have
-contributed to the science of education. Among these there are probably
-no greater names than the names of Pestalozzi and Froebel.
-
- Froebel’s _Education of Man_, trans. by W. N. Hailmann, is
- a vol. of Appleton’s Series, ed. by Dr. W. T. Harris. The
- _Autobiography_ trans., by Michaelis and Moore, is published
- by Sonnenschein. The _Mutter-u-K.-lieder_ have been trans.
- by Miss Lord (London, Rice). _Reminiscences of Froebel_ by
- the Baroness Marenholtz-Bülow, is trans. by Mr. Horace Mann.
- _The Child and Child Nature_ is trans. from the Baroness by
- Miss A. M. Christie. The Froebel lit. is now immense. I will
- simply mention some of those who have expounded Froebel in
- _English_: Miss Shirreff, Miss E. A. Manning, Miss Lyschinska,
- Miss Heerwart, Mdme. De Portugall, Miss Peabody, H. G Bowen,
- F. W. Parker, W. N. Hailmann, Joseph Payne, W. T. Harris,
- are the names that first suggest themselves. Henry Barnard’s
- _Kindergarten and Child Culture_ is a valuable collection of
- papers.
-
-
-
-
-XVIII.
-
-JACOTOT, A METHODIZER.
-
-1770-1840.
-
-
-§ 1. We are now by degrees becoming convinced that teachers, like
-everyone else who undertakes skilled labour, should be trained before
-they seek an engagement. This has led to a great increase in the
-number of Normal Schools. In some of these schools it has already been
-discovered that while the study of principles requires much time and
-the application of much intellectual force, the study of methods is a
-far simpler matter and can be knocked off in a short time and with no
-intellectual force at all. Methods are special ways of doing things, and
-when it has been settled what is to be done and why, a knowledge of the
-methods available adds greatly to a teacher’s power; but the what and
-the why demand our attention before the how, and the study of methods
-disconnected from principles leads straight to the prison-house of all
-the teachers’ higher faculties—routine.
-
-§ 2. I have called Jacotot a methodizer because he invented a special
-method and wished everything to be taught by it. But in advocating this
-method he appeals to principles; and his principles are so important that
-at least one man great in educational science, Joseph Payne, always
-spoke of him as his master.
-
-§ 3. In the following summary of Jacotot’s system I am largely indebted
-to Joseph Payne’s Lectures, which he published in the _Educational Times_
-in 1867, and which I believe Dr. J. F. Payne has lately reprinted in a
-volume of his father’s collected papers.
-
-§ 4. Jacotot was born at Dijon, of humble parentage, in 1770. Even as
-a boy he showed his preference for “self-teaching.” We are told that
-he rejoiced greatly in the acquisition of all kinds of knowledge that
-could be gained by his own efforts, while he steadily resisted what was
-imposed on him by authority. He was, however, early distinguished by his
-acquirements, and at the age of twenty-five was appointed sub-director
-of the Polytechnic School. Some years afterwards he became Professor
-of “the Method of Sciences” at Dijon, and it was here that his method
-of instruction first attracted attention. “Instead of pouring forth a
-flood of information on the subject under attention from his own ample
-stores—explaining everything, and thus too frequently superseding in a
-great degree the pupil’s own investigation of it—Jacotot, after a simple
-statement of the subject, with its leading divisions, boldly started it
-as a quarry for the class to hunt down, and invited every member of it
-to take part in the chase.” All were free to ask questions, to raise
-objections, to suggest answers. The Professor himself did little more
-than by leading questions put them on the right scent. He was afterwards
-Professor of Ancient and Oriental Languages, of Mathematics, and of
-Roman Law; and he pursued the same method, we are told, with uniform
-success. Being compelled to leave France as an enemy of the Bourbons,
-he was appointed, in 1818, when he was forty-eight years old, to the
-Professorship of the French Language and Literature at the University
-of Louvain. The celebrated teacher was received with enthusiasm, but he
-soon met with an unexpected difficulty. Many members of his large class
-knew no language but the Flemish and Dutch, and of these he himself was
-totally ignorant. He was, therefore, forced to consider how to teach
-without talking to his pupils. The plan he adopted was as follows:—He
-gave the young Flemings copies of Fénelon’s “Télémaque,” with the French
-on one side, and a Dutch translation on the other. This they had to study
-for themselves, comparing the two languages, and learning the French by
-heart. They were to go over the same ground again and again, and as soon
-as possible they were to give in French, however bad, the substance of
-those parts which they had not yet committed to memory. This method was
-found to succeed marvellously. Jacotot attributed its success to the
-fact that the students had learnt _entirely by the efforts of their own
-minds_, and that, though working under his superintendence, they had
-been, in fact, their own teachers. Hence he proceeded to generalise, and
-by degrees arrived at a series of astounding paradoxes. These paradoxes
-at first did their work well, and made noise enough in the world; but
-Jacotot seems to me like a captain who in his eagerness to astonish his
-opponents takes on board guns much too heavy for his own safety.
-
-§ 5. “_All human beings are equally capable of learning_,” said Jacotot.
-
-The truth which Jacotot chose to throw into this more than doubtful form,
-may perhaps be expressed by saying that the student’s power of learning
-depends, in a great measure, on his _will_, and that where there is no
-will there is no capacity.
-
-§ 6. “_Everyone can teach; and, moreover, can teach that which he does
-not know himself._”
-
-Let us ask ourselves what is the meaning of this. First of all, we
-have to get rid of some ambiguity in the meaning of the word _teach_.
-To teach, according to Jacotot’s idea, is to cause to learn. Teaching
-and learning are therefore correlatives: where there is no learning
-there can be no teaching. But this meaning of the word only coincides
-partially with the ordinary meaning. We speak of the lecturer or preacher
-as teaching when he gives his hearers an opportunity of learning, and
-do not say that his teaching ceases the instant they cease to attend.
-On the other hand, we do not call a parent a teacher because he sends
-his boy to school, and so causes him to learn. The notion of teaching,
-then, in the minds of most of us, includes giving information, or showing
-how an art is to be performed, and we look upon Jacotot’s assertion as
-absurd, because we feel that no one can give information which he does
-not possess, or show how anything is to be done if he does not himself
-know. But let us take the Jacototian definition of teaching—causing to
-learn—and then see how far a person can cause another to learn that of
-which he himself is ignorant.
-
-§ 7. Subjects which are _taught_ may be divided into three great
-classes:—1, Facts; 2, reasonings, or generalisation from facts, _i.e._,
-science; 3, actions which have to be performed by the learner, _i.e._,
-arts.
-
-1. We learn some facts by “intuition,” _i.e._, by direct experience.
-It may be as well to make the number of them as large as possible. No
-doubt there are no facts which are _known_ so perfectly as these. For
-instance, a boy who has tried to smoke knows the fact that tobacco is
-apt to produce nausea much better than another who has picked up the
-information second-hand. An intelligent master may suggest experiments,
-even in matters about which he himself is ignorant, and thus, in
-Jacotot’s sense, he teaches things which he does not know. But some facts
-cannot be learnt in this way, and then a Newton is helpless either to
-find them out for himself, or to teach them to others without knowing
-them. If the teacher does not know in what county Tavistock is, he can
-only learn from those who do, and the pupils will be no cleverer than
-their master. Here, then, I consider that Jacotot’s pretensions utterly
-break down. “No,” the answer is; “the teacher may give his pupil an
-atlas, and direct the boy to find out for himself: thus the master will
-teach what he does not know.” But, in this case, he is a teacher only
-so far as he knows. For what he does not know, he hands over the pupil
-to the maker of the map, who communicates with him, not orally, but by
-ink and paper. The master’s ignorance is simply an obstacle to the boy’s
-learning; for the boy would learn sooner the position of Tavistock if it
-were shown him on the map. “That’s the very point,” says the disciple of
-Jacotot. “If the boy gets the knowledge without any trouble, he is likely
-to forget it again directly. ‘Lightly come, lightly go.’ Moreover, his
-faculty of observation will not have been exercised.” It is indeed well
-not to allow the knowledge even of facts to come too easily; though the
-difficulties which arise from the master’s ignorance will not be found
-the most advantageous. Still there is obviously a limit. If we gave boys
-their lessons in cipher, and offered a prize to the first decipherer,
-one would probably be found at last, and meantime all the boys’ powers
-of observation, &c., would have been cultivated by comparing like signs
-in different positions, and guessing at their meaning; but the boys’
-time might have been better employed. Jacotot’s plan of teaching a
-language which the master did not know, was to put a book with, say,
-“Arma virumque cano,” &c., on one side, and “I sing arms and the man,
-&c.” on the other, and to require the pupil to puzzle over it till he
-found out which word answered to which. In this case the teacher was the
-translator; and though from the roundabout way in which the knowledge
-was communicated the pupil derived some benefit, the benefit was hardly
-sufficient to make up for the expenditure of time involved.
-
-Jacotot, then, did not teach facts of which he was ignorant, except in
-the sense in which the parent who sends his boy to school may be said to
-teach him. All Jacotot did was to direct the pupil to learn, sometimes in
-a very awkward fashion, from somebody else.[180]
-
-§ 8. 2. When we come to science, we find all the best authorities agree
-that the pupil should be led to principles if possible, and not have the
-principles brought to him. Men like Tyndall, Huxley, H. Spencer, J. M.
-Wilson have spoken eloquently on this subject, and shown how valuable
-scientific teaching is, when thus conducted, in drawing out the faculties
-of the mind. But although a schoolboy may be led to great scientific
-discoveries by anyone who knows the road, he will have no more chance
-of making them with an ignorant teacher than he would have had in the
-days of the Ptolemies. Here again, then, I cannot understand how the
-teacher can teach what he does not know. He may, indeed, join his pupil
-in investigating principles, but he must either keep with the pupil or
-go in advance of him. In the first case he is only a fellow-pupil; in the
-second, he teaches only that which he knows.
-
-§ 9. Finally, we come to arts, and we are told that Jacotot taught
-drawing and music, without being either a draughtsman or a musician.
-In art everything depends on _rightly directed practice_. The most
-consummate artist cannot communicate his skill, and, except for
-inspiration may be inferior as a teacher to one whose attention is
-more concentrated on the mechanism of the art. Perhaps it is not even
-necessary that the teacher should be able to do the exercises himself,
-if only he knows how they should be done; but he seldom gets credit for
-this knowledge, unless he can show that he knows how the thing should
-be done, by doing it. Lessing tells us that Raphael would have been a
-great painter even if he had been born without hands. He would not,
-however, have succeeded in getting mankind to believe it. I grant, then,
-that the teacher of art need not be a first-rate artist, and, in some
-very exceptional cases, need not be an artist at all; but, if he cannot
-perform the exercises he gives his pupil, he must at least _know how they
-should be done_. But Jacotot claims perfect ignorance. We are told that
-he “taught” drawing by setting objects before his pupils, and making them
-imitate them on paper as best they could. Of course the art originated
-in this way, and a person with great perseverance, and (I must say, in
-spite of Jacotot) with more than average ability, would make considerable
-progress with no proper instruction; but he would lose much by the
-ignorance of the person calling himself his teacher. An awkward habit of
-holding the pencil will make skill doubly difficult to acquire, and thus
-half his time might be wasted. Then, again, he would hardly have a better
-eye than the early painters, so the drawing of his landscape would not
-be less faulty than theirs. To consider music I am told that a person
-who is ignorant of music can teach, say, the piano or the violin. This
-seems to go beyond the region of paradox into that of utter nonsense.
-Talent often surmounts all kinds of difficulties; but in the case of
-self-taught, and ill-taught musicians, it is often painful to see what
-time and talent have been wasted for want of proper instruction.
-
-I have thus carefully examined Jacotot’s pretensions to teach what he did
-not know, because I am anxious that what seems to me the rubbish should
-be cleared away from his principles, and should no longer conceal those
-parts of his system which are worthy of general attention.
-
-§ 10. At the root of Jacotot’s paradox lay a truth of very great
-importance. The highest and best teaching is not that which makes the
-pupils passive recipients of other peoples’ ideas (not to speak of the
-teaching which conveys mere words without any ideas at all), but that
-which guides and encourages the pupils in working for themselves and
-thinking for themselves. The master, as Joseph Payne well says, can no
-more think, or practise, or see for his pupil, than he can digest for
-him, or walk for him. The pupil must owe everything to his own exertions,
-which it is the function of the master to encourage and direct. Perhaps
-this may seem very obvious truth, but obvious or not it has been very
-generally neglected. The old system of lecturing which found favour with
-the Jesuits, has indeed now passed away, and boys are left to acquire
-facts from school-books instead of from the master. But this change
-is merely accidental. The essence of the teaching still remains. Even
-where the master does not confine himself to hearing what the scholars
-have learnt by heart, he seldom does more than offer explanations. He
-measures the teaching rather by the amount which has been put before
-the scholars—by what he has done for them and shown them—than by what
-they have learned. But this is not teaching of the highest type. When
-the votary of Dulness in the “Dunciad” is rendering an account of his
-services, he arrives at this climax,
-
- “For thee explain a thing till all men doubt it,
- And write about it, Goddess, and about it.”
-
-And in the same spirit Mr. J. M. Wilson stigmatises as synonymous “the
-most stupid and most _didactic_ teaching.”
-
-§ 11. All the eminent authorities on education have a very different
-theory of the teachers function. According to them the master’s attention
-is not to be fixed on his own mind and his own store of knowledge, but
-on his pupil’s mind and on its gradual expansion. He must, in fact, be
-not so much a _teacher_ as a _trainer_. Here we have the view which
-Jacotot intended to enforce by his paradox; for we may possibly train
-faculties which we do not ourselves possess, just as the sportsman trains
-his pointer and his hunter to perform feats which are altogether out
-of the range of his own capacities. Now, “training is the cultivation
-bestowed on any set of faculties with the object of developing them” (J.
-M. Wilson), and to train any faculty, you must set it to work. Hence it
-follows, that as boys’ minds are not simply their memories, the master
-must aim at something more than causing his pupils to remember facts.
-Jacotot has done good service to education by giving prominence to this
-truth, and by showing in his method how other faculties may be cultivated
-besides the memory.
-
-§ 12. “_Tout est dans tout_” (“All is in all”), is another of Jacotot’s
-paradoxes. I do not propose discussing it as the philosophical thesis
-which takes other forms, as “Every man is a microcosm,” &c., but merely
-to inquire into its meaning as applied to didactics.
-
-If you asked an ordinary French schoolmaster who Jacotot was, he
-would probably answer, Jacotot was a man who thought you could learn
-everything by getting up Fénelon’s “Télémaque” by heart. By carrying your
-investigation further, you would find that this account of him required
-modification, that the learning by heart was only part, and a very small
-part, of what Jacotot demanded from his pupils, but you would also find
-that entire mastery of “Télémaque” was the first requisite, and that
-he managed to connect everything he taught with that “model-book.” Of
-course, if “tout est dans tout,” everything is in “Télémaque;” and, said
-an objector, also in the first book of “Télémaque” and in _the first
-word_. Jacotot went through a variety of subtilties to show that all
-“Télémaque” is contained in the word _Calypso_, and perhaps he would
-have been equally successful, if he had been required to take only the
-first letter instead of the first word. His maxim indeed becomes by his
-treatment of it a mere paraphrase of “_Quidlibet ex quolibet_.” The
-reader is amused rather than convinced by these discussions, but he finds
-them not without fruit. They bring to his mind very forcibly a truth
-to which he has hitherto probably not paid sufficient attention. He
-sees that all knowledge is connected together, or (what will do equally
-well for our present purpose) that there are a thousand links by which
-we may bring into connexion the different subjects of knowledge. If by
-means of these links we can attach in our minds the knowledge we acquire
-to the knowledge we already possess, we shall learn faster and more
-intelligently, and at the same time we shall have a much better chance of
-retaining our new acquisitions. The memory, as we all know, is assisted
-even by artificial association of ideas, much more by natural. Hence the
-value of “tout est dans tout,” or, to adopt a modification suggested by
-Joseph Payne, of the connexion of knowledges. Suppose we know only one
-subject, but know that thoroughly, our knowledge, if I may express myself
-algebraically, cannot be represented by ignorance plus the knowledge of
-that subject. We have acquired a great deal more than that. When other
-subjects come before us, they may prove to be so connected with what we
-had before, that we may also seem to know them already. In other words
-when we know a little thoroughly, though our actual possession is small,
-we have potentially a great deal more.[181]
-
-§ 13. Jacotot’s practical application of his “tout est dans tout” was
-as follows:—“_Il faut apprendre quelque chose, et y rapporter tout
-le reste._” (“The pupil must learn something thoroughly, and refer
-everything to that.”) For language he must take a model book, and become
-thoroughly master of it. His knowledge must not be a verbal knowledge
-only, but he must enter into the sense and spirit of the writer. Here we
-find that Jacotot’s practical advice coincides with that of many other
-great authorities, who do not base it on the same principle. The Jesuits’
-maxim was, that their pupils should always learn something thoroughly,
-however little it might be. Pestalozzi insisted on the children going
-over the elements again and again till they were completely master of
-them. Ascham, Ratke, and Comenius all required a model-book to be read
-and re-read till words and thoughts were firmly fixed in the pupil’s
-memory. Jacotot probably never read Ascham’s “Schoolmaster.” If he had
-done so he might have appropriated some of Ascham’s words as exactly
-conveying his own thoughts. Ascham, as we saw, recommended that a short
-book should be thoroughly mastered, each lesson being worked over in
-different ways a dozen times at the least, and in this way “your scholar
-shall be brought not only to like eloquence, but also to all true
-understanding and right judgment, both for writing and speaking.” In this
-the Englishman and the Frenchman are in perfect accord.
-
-§ 14. But if Jacotot agrees so far with earlier authorities, there is
-one point in which he seems to differ from them. He makes great demands
-on the memory, and requires six books of “Télémaque” to be learned by
-heart. On the other hand, Montaigne, Locke, Rousseau, H. Spencer, and
-other great writers would be opposed to this. Ratke insisted that nothing
-should be learnt by heart. Protests against “loading the memory,” “saying
-without book,” &c., are everywhere to be met with, and nowhere more
-vigorously expressed than in Ascham. He says of the grammar-school boys
-of his time, that “their whole knowledge, by learning without the book,
-was tied only to their tongue and lips, and never ascended up to the
-brain and head, and therefore was soon spit out of the mouth again. They
-learnt without book everything, they understood within the book little or
-nothing.” But these protests were really directed at verbal knowledge,
-when it is made to take the place of knowledge of the thing signified.
-We are always too ready to suppose that words are connected with ideas,
-though both old and young are constantly exposing themselves to the
-sarcasm of Mephistopheles:—
-
- ... eben wo Begriffe fehlen,
- Da stellt ein Wort zur rechten Zeit sich ein.
-
- ... just where meaning fails, a word
- Comes patly in to serve your turn.
-
-Against this danger Jacotot took special precautions. The pupil was to
-undergo an examination in everything connected with the lesson learnt,
-and the master’s share in the work was to convince himself, from the
-answers he received, that the pupil thoroughly grasped the meaning, as
-well as remembered the words, of the author. Still the six books of
-“Télémaque,” which Jacotot gave to be learnt by heart, was a very large
-dose, and he would have been more faithful to his own principles, says
-Joseph Payne, if he had given the first book only.
-
-§ 15. There are three ways in which the model-book may be studied. 1st,
-it may be read through rapidly again and again, which was Ratke’s plan
-and Hamilton’s; or, 2nd, each lesson may be thoroughly mastered, read in
-various ways a dozen times at the least, which was Ascham’s plan; or,
-3rd, the pupil may begin always at the beginning, and advance a little
-further each time, which was Jacotot’s plan.[182] This last, could not,
-of course, be carried very far The repetitions, when the pupil had
-got on some way in the book, could not always be from the beginning;
-still every part was to be repeated so frequently that _nothing could
-be forgotten_. Jacotot did not wish his pupils to learn simply in
-order to forget, but to learn in order to remember for ever. “We are
-learned,” said he, “not so far as we have learned, but only so far as
-we remember.” He seems, indeed, almost to ignore the fact that the act
-of learning serves other purposes than that of making learned, and to
-assert that to forget is the same as never to have learned, which is
-a palpable error. We necessarily forget much that passes through our
-minds, and yet its effect remains. All grown people have arrived at some
-opinions, convictions, knowledge, but they cannot call to mind every spot
-they trod on in the road thither. When we have read a great history,
-say, or travelled through a fresh country, we have gained more than the
-number of facts we happen to remember. The mind seems to have formed
-an acquaintance with that history or that country, which is something
-different from the mere acquisition of facts. Moreover, our interests,
-as well as our ideas, may long survive the memory of the facts which
-originally started them. We are told that one of the old judges, when a
-barrister objected to some dictum of his, put him down by the assertion,
-“Sir, I have forgotten more law than ever you read.” If he wished to
-make the amount forgotten a measure of the amount remembered, this was
-certainly fallacious, as the ratio between the two is not a constant
-quantity. But he may have meant that this extensive reading had left its
-result, and that he could see things from more points of view than the
-less travelled legal vision of his opponent. That _power_ acquired by
-learning may also last longer than the knowledge of the thing learned
-is sufficiently obvious. So the advantages derived from having learnt a
-thing are not entirely lost when the thing itself is forgotten.[183]
-
-§ 16. But the reflection by no means justifies the disgraceful waste of
-memory which goes on in most school-rooms. Much is learnt which, for
-want of the necessary repetition, will soon be lost again, besides much
-that would be valueless if remembered. The thing to aim at is not giving
-“useful knowledge,” but making the memory a store house of such facts
-as are good material for the other powers of the mind to work with; and
-that the facts may serve this purpose they must be such as the mind can
-thoroughly grasp and handle, and such as can be connected together. To
-_instruct is instruere_, “to put together in order, to build;” it is not
-cramming the memory with facts without connexion, and, as Herbert Spencer
-calls them, _unorganisable_. And yet a great deal of our children’s
-memory is wasted in storing facts of this kind, which can never form
-part of any organism. We do not teach them geography (_earth knowledge_,
-as the Germans call it), but the names of places. Our “history” is a
-similar, though disconnected study. We leave our children ignorant of the
-land, but insist on their getting up the “landmarks.” And, perhaps, from
-a latent perception of the uselessness of such work, neither teachers
-nor scholars ever think of these things as learnt to be remembered. They
-are indeed got up, as Schuppius says of the Logic of his day, _in spem
-futuræ oblivionis_. Latin grammar is gone through again and again, and a
-boy feels that the sooner he gets it into his head, the better it will be
-for him; but who expects that the lists of geographical and historical
-names which are learnt one half-year, will be remembered the next? I have
-seen it asserted, that when a boy leaves school, he has already forgotten
-nine-tenths of what he has been taught, and I dare say that estimate is
-quite within the mark.
-
-§ 17. By adopting the principles of Jacotot, we avoid a great deal of
-this waste. We give some thorough knowledge, with which fresh knowledge
-may be connected. And it will then be found that perfect familiarity
-with a subject is something beyond the mere understanding it and being
-able, with difficulty, to reproduce what we have learned. By thus going
-over the same thing again and again, we acquire a thorough command over
-our knowledge; and the feeling perfectly at home, even within narrow
-borders, gives a consciousness of strength. An old adage tells us that
-the Jack-of-all-trades is master of none; but the master of one trade
-will have no difficulty in extending his insight and capacity beyond
-it. To use an illustration, which is of course an illustration merely,
-we should kindle knowledge in children, like fire in a grate. A stupid
-servant, with a small quantity of wood, spreads it over the whole grate.
-It blazes away, goes out, and is simply wasted. Another, who is wiser
-or more experienced, kindles the whole of the wood at one spot, and the
-fire, thus concentrated, extends in all directions. Similarly we should
-concentrate the beginnings of knowledge, and although we could not expect
-to make much show for a time, we might be sure that after a bit the fire
-would extend, almost of its own accord.[184]
-
-§ 18. From Joseph Payne I take Jacotot’s directions for carrying out the
-rule, “II faut apprendre quelque chose, et y rapporter tout le reste.”
-
-1. LEARN—_i.e._, learn so as to know thoroughly, perfectly, immovably
-(_imperturbablement_), as well six months or twelve months hence,
-as now—SOMETHING—something which fairly represents the subject to be
-acquired, which contains its essential characteristics. 2. REPEAT that
-“something” incessantly (_sans cesse_), _i.e._, every day, or very
-frequently, from the beginning, without any omission, so that no part
-may be forgotten. 3. REFLECT upon the matter thus acquired, so as, by
-degrees, to make it a possession of the mind as well as of the memory,
-so that, being appreciated as a whole, and appreciated in its minutest
-parts, what is as yet unknown, may be _referred to_ it and interpreted by
-it. 4. VERIFY, or test, general remarks, _e.g._, grammatical rules, &c.,
-made by others, by comparing them with the facts (_i.e._, the words and
-phraseology) which you have learnt yourself.
-
-§ 19. In conclusion, I will give some account of the way in which
-reading, writing, and the mother-tongue were taught on the Jacototian
-system.
-
-The teacher takes a book, say Edgeworth’s “Early Lessons,” points to the
-first word, and names it, “Frank.” The child looks at the word and also
-pronounces it. Then the teacher does the same with the first two words,
-“Frank and”; then with the three first, “Frank and Robert,” &c. When
-a line or so has been thus gone over, the teacher asks which word is
-Robert? What word is that (pointing to one)? “Find me the same word in
-this line” (pointing to another part of the book). When a sentence has
-been thus acquired, the words already known are analysed into syllables,
-and these syllables the child must pick out elsewhere. Finally, the
-same thing is done with letters. When the child can read a sentence,
-that sentence is put before him written in small-hand, and the child is
-required to copy it. When he has copied the first word, he is led, by the
-questions of the teacher, to see how it differs from the original, and
-then he tries again. The pupil must always correct himself, guided only
-by questions. This sentence must be worked at till the pupil can write
-it pretty well from memory. He then tries it in larger characters. By
-carrying out this plan, the children’s powers of observation and making
-comparisons are strengthened, and the arts of reading and writing are
-said to be very readily acquired.
-
-§ 20. For the mother-tongue, a model book is chosen and thoroughly
-learned. Suppose “Rasselas” is selected. “The pupil learns by heart
-a sentence, or a few sentences, and to-morrow adds a few more, still
-repeating from the beginning. The teacher, after two or three lessons of
-learning and repeating, takes portions—any portion—of the matter, and
-submits it to the crucible of the pupil’s mind:—Who was Rasselas? Who was
-his father? What is the father of waters? Where does it begin its course?
-Where is Abyssinia? Where is Egypt? Where was Rasselas placed? What sort
-of a person was Rasselas? What is ‘credulity’? What are the ‘whispers of
-fancy,’ the ‘promises of youth,’ &c., &c.?”
-
-A great variety of written exercises is soon joined with the learning by
-heart. Pieces must be written from memory, and the spelling, pointing,
-&c., corrected by the pupil himself from the book. The same piece must
-be written again and again, till there are no more mistakes to correct.
-“This,” said Joseph Payne, who had himself taught in this way, “is the
-best plan for spelling that has been devised.” Then the pupil may
-write an analysis, may define words, distinguish between synonyms,
-explain metaphors, imitate descriptions, write imaginary dialogues or
-correspondence between the characters, &c. Besides these, a great variety
-of grammatical exercises may be given, and the force of prefixes and
-affixes may be found out by the pupils themselves by collection and
-comparison. “The resources even of such a book as “Rasselas” will be
-found all but exhaustless, while the training which the mind undergoes in
-the process of thoroughly mastering it, the acts of analysis, comparison,
-induction, and deduction, performed so frequently as to become a sort
-of second nature, cannot but serve as an excellent preparation for the
-subsequent study of English literature” (Payne).
-
-§ 21. We see, from these instances, how Jacotot sought to imitate the
-method by which young children and self-taught men teach themselves. All
-such proceed from objects to definitions, from facts to reflections and
-theories, from examples to rules, from particular observations to general
-principles. They pursue, in fact, however unconsciously, the _method of
-investigation_, the advantages of which are thus set out in a passage
-from Burke’s treatise on the Sublime and Beautiful:—“I am convinced,”
-says he, “that the method of teaching which approaches most nearly to
-the method of investigation is incomparably the best; since, not content
-with serving up a few barren and lifeless truths, it leads to the stock
-on which they grew; it tends to set the reader [or learner] himself in
-the track of invention, and to direct him into those paths in which the
-author has made his own discoveries.” “For Jacotot, I think the claim
-may, without presumption, be maintained that he has, beyond all other
-teachers, succeeded in co-ordinating the method of elementary teaching
-with the method of investigation” (Payne).
-
-§ 22. The latter part of his life, which did not end till 1840, Jacotot
-spent in his native country—first at Valenciennes, and then at Paris. To
-the last he laboured indefatigably, and with a noble disinterestedness,
-for what he believed to be the “intellectual emancipation” of his
-fellow-creatures. For a time, his system made great way in France, but we
-now hear little of it. Jacotot has, however, lately found an advocate in
-M. Bernard Perez, who has written a book about him and also a very good
-article in Buisson’s _Dictionnaire_.
-
-
-
-
-XIX.
-
-HERBERT SPENCER.[185]
-
-
-§ 1. I once heard it said by a teacher of great ability that no one
-without practical acquaintance with the subject could write anything
-worth reading on Education. My own opinion differs very widely from this.
-I am not, indeed, prepared to agree with another authority, much given
-to paradox, that the actual work of education unfits a man for forming
-enlightened views about it, but I think that the outsider, coming fresh
-to the subject, and unencumbered by tradition and prejudice, may hit upon
-truths which the teacher, whose attention is too much engrossed with
-practical difficulties, would fail to perceive without assistance, and
-that, consequently, the theories of intelligent men, unconnected with the
-work of education, deserve our careful, and, if possible, our impartial
-consideration.
-
-§ 2. One of the most important works of this kind which has lately
-appeared, is the treatise of Mr. Herbert Spencer. So eminent a writer
-has every claim to be listened to with respect, and in this book he
-speaks with more than his individual authority. The views he has very
-vigorously propounded are shared by a number of distinguished scientific
-men; and not a few of the unscientific believe that in them is shadowed
-forth the education of the future.
-
-§ 3. It is perhaps to be regretted that Mr. Spencer has not kept the
-tone of one who investigates the truth in a subject of great difficulty,
-but lays about him right and left, after the manner of a spirited
-controversialist. This, no doubt, makes his book much more entertaining
-reading than such treatises usually are, but, on the other hand, it has
-the disadvantage of arousing the antagonism of those whom he would most
-wish to influence. When the man who has no practical acquaintance with
-education, lays down the law _ex cathedrâ_, garnished with sarcasms at
-all that is now going on, the schoolmaster, offended by the assumed tone
-of authority, sets himself to show where these theories would not work,
-instead of examining what basis of truth there is in them, and how far
-they should influence his own practice.
-
-I shall proceed to examine Mr. Spencer’s proposals with all the
-impartiality I am master of.
-
-§ 4. The great question, whether the teaching which gives the most
-valuable knowledge is the same as that which best disciplines the
-faculties of the mind, Mr. Spencer dismisses briefly. “It would be
-utterly contrary to the beautiful economy of nature,” he says, “if one
-kind of culture were needed for the gaining of information, and another
-kind were needed as a mental gymnastic.”[186] But it seems to me that
-different subjects must be used to train the faculties at different
-stages of development. The processes of science, which form the staple
-of education in Mr. Spencer’s system cannot be grasped by the intellect
-of a child. “The scientific discoverer does the work, and when it is
-done the schoolboy is called in to witness the result, to learn its
-chief features by heart, and to repeat them when called upon, just as
-he is called on to name the mothers of the patriarchs, or to give an
-account of the Eastern campaigns of Alexander the Great.”—(_Pall Mall
-G._). This, however, affords but scanty training for the mind. We want
-to draw out the child’s interests, and to direct them to worthy objects.
-We want not only to teach him, but to enable and encourage him to teach
-himself; and, if following Mr. Spencer’s advice, we make him get up the
-species of plants, “which amount to some 320,000,” and the varied forms
-of animal life, which are “estimated at some 2,000,000,” we may, as Mr.
-Spencer tells us, have strengthened his memory as effectually as by
-teaching him languages; but the pupil will, perhaps have no great reason
-to rejoice over his escape from the horrors of the “As in Præsenti,” and
-“Propria quæ Maribus.” The consequences will be the same in both cases.
-We shall disgust the great majority of our scholars with the acquisition
-of knowledge, and with the use of the powers of their mind. Whether,
-therefore, we adopt or reject Mr. Spencer’s conclusion, that there is
-one sort of knowledge which is universally the most valuable, I think we
-must deny that there is one sort of knowledge which is universally and at
-every stage in education, the best adapted to develop the intellectual
-faculties. Mr. Spencer himself acknowledges this elsewhere. “There
-is,” says he, “a certain sequence in which the faculties spontaneously
-develop, and a certain kind of knowledge, which each requires during its
-development.” It is for us to ascertain this sequence, and supply this
-knowledge.
-
-§ 5. Mr. Spencer discusses more fully “the relative value of knowledges,”
-and this is a subject which has hitherto not met with the attention it
-deserves. It is not sufficient for us to prove of any subject taught in
-our schools that the knowledge or the learning of it is valuable. We
-must also show that the knowledge or the learning of it is of at least
-as great value as that of anything else that might be taught in the same
-time. “Had we time to master all subjects we need not be particular. To
-quote the old song—
-
- Could a man be secure
- That his life would endure,
- As of old, for a thousand long years,
- What things he might know!
- What deeds he might do!
- And all without hurry or care!
-
-But we that have but span-long lives must ever bear in mind our limited
-time for acquisition.”
-
-§ 6. To test the value of the learning imparted in education we must
-look to the end of education. This Mr. Spencer defines as follows: “To
-prepare us for complete living is the function which education has to
-discharge, and the only rational mode of judging of an educational course
-is to judge in what degree it discharges such function.” For complete
-living we must know “in what way to treat the body; in what way to treat
-the mind; in what way to manage our affairs; in what way to bring up a
-family; in what way to behave as a citizen; in what way to utilise those
-sources of happiness which nature supplies—how to use all our faculties
-to the greatest advantage of ourselves and others.” There are a number
-of sciences, says Mr. Spencer, which throw light on these subjects. It
-should, therefore, be the business of education to impart these sciences.
-
-But if there were (which is far from being the case) a well-defined and
-well-established science in each of these departments, those sciences
-would not be understandable by children, nor would any individual have
-time to master the whole of them, or even “a due proportion of each.”
-The utmost that could be attempted would be to give young people some
-knowledge of the _results_ of such sciences and the rules derived from
-them. But to this Mr. Spencer would object that it would tend, like
-the learning of languages, “to increase the already undue respect for
-authority.”
-
-§ 7. To consider Mr. Spencer’s divisions in detail, we come first to
-knowledge that leads to self-preservation.
-
-“Happily, that all-important part of education which goes to secure
-direct self-preservation is, in part, already provided for. Too momentous
-to be left to our blundering, Nature takes it into her own hands.” But
-Mr. Spencer warns us against such thwartings of Nature as that by which
-“stupid schoolmistresses commonly prevent the girls in their charge
-from the spontaneous physical activities they would indulge in, and so
-render them comparatively incapable of taking care of themselves in
-circumstances of peril.”
-
-§ 8. Indirect self-preservation, Mr. Spencer believes, may be much
-assisted by a knowledge of physiology. “Diseases are often contracted,
-our members are often injured, by causes which superior knowledge would
-avoid.” I believe these are not the only grounds on which the advocates
-of physiology urge its claim to be admitted into the curriculum; but
-these, if they can be established, are no doubt very important. Is it
-true, however, that doctors preserve their own life and health or that
-of their children by their knowledge of physiology? I think the matter
-is open to dispute. Mr. Spencer does not. He says very truly that many
-a man would blush if convicted of ignorance about the pronunciation of
-Iphigenia, or about the labours of Hercules who, nevertheless, would not
-scruple to acknowledge that he had never heard of the Eustachian tubes,
-and could not tell the normal rate of pulsation. “So terribly,” adds Mr.
-Spencer, “in our education does the ornamental override the useful!”
-But this is begging the question. At present classics form part of the
-instruction given to every gentleman, and physiology does not. This is
-the simpler form of Mr. Spencer’s assertion about the labours of Hercules
-and the Eustachian tubes, and no one denies it. But we are not so well
-agreed on the comparative value of these subjects. In his Address at
-St. Andrews, J. S. Mill showed that he at least was not convinced of
-the uselessness of classics, and Mr. Spencer does not tell us how the
-knowledge of the normal state of pulsation is useful; how, to use his
-own test, it “influences action.” However, whether we admit the claims
-of physiology or not, we shall probably allow that there are certain
-physiological facts and rules of health, the knowledge of which would be
-of great practical value, and should therefore be imparted to everyone.
-Here the doctor should come to the schoolmaster’s assistance, and give
-him a manual from which to teach them.
-
-§ 9. Next in order of importance, according to Mr. Spencer, comes the
-knowledge which aids indirect self-preservation by facilitating the
-gaining of a livelihood. Here Mr. Spencer thinks it necessary to prove
-to us that such sciences as mathematics and physics and biology underlie
-all the practical arts and business of life. No one would think of
-joining issue with him on this point; but the question still remains,
-what influence should this have on education? “Teach science,” says Mr.
-Spencer. “A grounding in science is of great importance, both because
-it prepares for all this [business of life], and because rational
-knowledge has an immense superiority over empirical knowledge.” Should
-we teach all sciences to everybody? This is clearly impossible. Should
-we, then, decide for each child what is to be his particular means of
-money-getting, and instruct him in those sciences which will be most
-useful in that business or profession? In other words, should we have a
-separate school for each calling? The only attempt of this kind which has
-been made is, I believe, the institution of _Handelschulen_ (commercial
-schools) in Germany. In them, youths of fifteen or sixteen enter for
-a course of two or three years’ instruction which aims exclusively at
-fitting them for commerce. But, in this case, their general education
-is already finished. With us, the lad commonly goes to work at the
-business itself quite as soon as he has the faculties for learning the
-sciences connected with it. If the school sends him to it with a love of
-knowledge, and with a mind well disciplined to acquire knowledge, this
-will be of more value to him than any special information.
-
-§ 10. As Mr. Spencer is here considering science merely with reference to
-its importance in earning a livelihood, it is not beside the question to
-remark, that in a great number of instances, the knowledge of the science
-which underlies an operation confers no practical ability whatever. No
-one sees the better for understanding the structure of the eye and the
-undulatory theory of light. In swimming or rowing, a senior wrangler
-has no advantage over a man who is entirely ignorant about the laws of
-fluid pressure. As far as money-getting is concerned then, science will
-not be found to be universally serviceable. Mr. Spencer gives instances
-indeed, where science would prevent very expensive blundering; but the
-true inference is, not that the blunderers should learn science, but that
-they should mind their own business, and take the opinion of scientific
-men about theirs. “Here is a mine,” says he, “in the sinking of which
-many shareholders ruined themselves, from not knowing that a certain
-fossil belonged to the old red sandstone, below which no coal is found.”
-Perhaps they were misled by the little knowledge which Pope tells us is
-a dangerous thing. If they had been entirely ignorant, they would surely
-have called in a professional geologist, whose opinion would have been
-more valuable than their own, even though geology had taken the place of
-classics in their schooling. “Daily are men induced to aid in carrying
-out inventions which a mere tyro in science could show to be futile.” But
-these are men whose function it would always be to lose money, not make
-it, whatever you might teach them.[187] I have great doubt, therefore,
-whether the learning of sciences will ever be found a ready way of making
-a fortune. But directly we get beyond the region of pounds, shillings,
-and pence, I agree most cordially with Mr. Spencer that a rational
-knowledge has an immense superiority over empirical knowledge. And, as
-a part of their education, boys should be taught to distinguish the one
-from the other, and to desire rational knowledge. Much might be done in
-this way by teaching, not all the sciences and nothing else, but the main
-principles of some one science, which would enable the more intelligent
-boys to understand and appreciate the value of “a rational explanation
-of phenomena.” I believe this addition to what was before a literary
-education has already been made in some of our leading schools, as
-Harrow, Rugby, and the City of London.[188]
-
-§ 11. Next, Mr. Spencer would have instruction in the proper way of
-rearing offspring form a part of his curriculum. There can be no question
-of the importance of this knowledge, and all that Mr. Spencer says of the
-lamentable ignorance of parents is, unfortunately, no less undeniable.
-But could this knowledge be imparted early in life? Young people would
-naturally take but little interest in it. It is by parents, or at least
-by those who have some notion of the parental responsibility, that this
-knowledge should be sought. The best way in which we can teach the young
-will be so to bring them up that when they themselves have to rear
-children the remembrance of their own youth may be a guide and not a
-beacon to them. But more knowledge than this is necessary, and I differ
-from Mr. Spencer only as to the proper time for acquiring it.
-
-§ 12. Next comes the knowledge which fits a man for the discharge of his
-functions as a citizen, a subject to which Dr. Arnold attached great
-importance at the time of the first Reform Bill, and which deserves our
-attention all the more in consequence of the second and third. But
-what knowledge are we to give for this purpose? One of the subjects
-which seem especially suitable is history. But history, as it is now
-written, is, according to Mr. Spencer, useless. “It does not illustrate
-the right principles of political action.” “The great mass of historical
-facts are facts from which no conclusions can be drawn—unorganisable
-facts, and, therefore, facts of no service in establishing principles
-of conduct, which is the chief use of facts. Read them if you like for
-amusement, but do not flatter yourself they are instructive.” About the
-right principles of political action we seem so completely at sea that,
-perhaps, the main thing we can do for the young is to point out to them
-the responsibilities which will hereafter devolve upon them, and the
-danger, both to the state and the individual, of just echoing the popular
-cry without the least reflection, according to our present usage. But
-history, as it is now written by great historians, may be of some use
-in training the young both to be citizens and men. “Reading about the
-fifteen decisive battles, or all the battles in history, would not make a
-man a more judicious voter at the next election,” says Mr. Spencer. But
-is this true? The knowledge of what has been done in other times, even
-by those whose coronation renders them so distasteful to Mr. Spencer, is
-knowledge which influences a man’s whole character, and may, therefore,
-affect particular acts, even when we are unable to trace the connexion.
-As it has been often said, the effect of reading history is, in some
-respects, the same as that of travelling. Anyone in Mr. Spencer’s vein
-might ask, “If a man has seen the Alps, of what use will that be to
-him in weighing out groceries?” Directly, none at all; but indirectly,
-much. The travelled man will not be such a slave to the petty views
-and customs of his trade as the man who looks on his county town as the
-centre of the universe. The study of history, like travelling, widens the
-student’s mental vision, frees him to some extent from the bondage of the
-present, and prevents his mistaking conventionalities for laws of nature.
-It brings home to him, in all its force, the truth that “there are also
-people beyond the mountain” (_Hinter dem Berge sind auch Leute_), that
-there are higher interests in the world than his own business concerns,
-and nobler men than himself or the best of his acquaintance. It teaches
-him what men are capable of, and thus gives him juster views of his race.
-And to have all this truth worked into the mind contributes perhaps as
-largely to “complete living” as knowledge of the Eustachian tubes or of
-the normal rate of pulsation.[189] I think, therefore, that the works
-of great historians and biographers, which we already possess, may be
-usefully employed in education. It is difficult to estimate the value of
-history according to Mr. Spencer’s idea, as it has yet to be written; but
-I venture to predict that if boys, instead of reading about the history
-of nations in connection with their leading men, are required to study
-only “the progress of society,” the subject will at once lose all its
-interest for them; and, perhaps, many of the facts communicated will
-prove, after all, no less unorganisable than the fifteen decisive battles.
-
-§ 13. Lastly, we come to that “remaining division of human life which
-includes the relaxations and amusements filling leisure hours.” Mr.
-Spencer assures us that he will yield to none in the value he attaches
-to æsthetic culture and its pleasures; but if he does not value the fine
-arts less, he values science more; and painting, music, and poetry would
-receive as little encouragement under his dictatorship as in the days of
-the Commonwealth. “As the fine arts and belles-lettres occupy the leisure
-part of life, so should they occupy the leisure part of education.” This
-language is rather obscure; but the only meaning I can attach to it is,
-that music, drawing, poetry, &c., may be taught if time can be found when
-all other knowledges are provided for. This reminds me of the author
-whose works are so valuable that they will be studied when Shakspeare
-is forgotten—but not before. Any one of the sciences which Mr. Spencer
-considers so necessary might employ a lifetime. Where then shall we look
-for the leisure part of education when education includes them all?[190]
-
-§ 14. But, if adopting Mr. Spencer’s own measure, we estimate the
-value of knowledge by its influence on action, we shall probably rank
-“accomplishments” much higher than they have hitherto been placed
-in the schemes of educationists. Knowledge and skill connected with
-the business of life, are of necessity acquired in the discharge of
-business. But the knowledge and skill which make our leisure valuable
-to ourselves and a source of pleasure to others, can seldom be gained
-after the work of life has begun. And yet every day a man may benefit
-by possessing such an ability, or may suffer from the want of it. One
-whose eyesight has been trained by drawing and painting finds objects of
-interest all around him, to which other people are blind. A primrose by
-a river’s brim is, perhaps, more to him who has a feeling for its form
-and colour than even to the scientific student, who can tell all about
-its classification and component parts. A knowledge of music is often
-of the greatest practical service, as by virtue of it, its possessor
-is valuable to his associates, to say nothing of his having a constant
-source of pleasure and a means of recreation which is most precious as a
-relief from the cares of life. Of far greater importance is the knowledge
-of our best poetry. One of the first reforms in our school course would
-have been, I should have thought, to give this knowledge a much more
-prominent place; but Mr. Spencer consigns it, with music and drawing,
-to “the leisure part of education.” Whether a man who was engrossed by
-science, who had no knowledge of the fine arts except as they illustrated
-scientific laws, no acquaintance with the lives of great men, or with
-any history but sociology, and who studied the thoughts and emotions
-expressed by our great poets merely with a view to their psychological
-classification—whether such a man could be said to “live completely” is
-a question to which every one, not excepting Mr. Spencer himself, would
-probably return the same answer. And yet this is the kind of man which
-Mr. Spencer’s system would produce where it was most successful.
-
-§ 15. Let me now briefly sum up the conclusions arrived at, and consider
-how far I differ from Mr. Spencer. I believe that there is no one study
-which is suited to train the faculties of the mind at every stage of
-its development, and that when we have decided on the necessity of this
-or that knowledge, we must consider further what is the right time for
-acquiring it. I believe that intellectual education should aim, not so
-much at communicating facts, however valuable, as at showing the boy
-what true knowledge is, and giving him the power and the _disposition_
-to acquire it. I believe that the exclusively scientific teaching which
-Mr. Spencer approves would not effect this. It would lead at best to
-a very one-sided development of the mind. It might fail to engage the
-pupil’s interest sufficiently to draw out his faculties, and in this
-case the net outcome of his school-days would be no larger than at
-present. Of the knowledges which Mr. Spencer recommends for special
-objects, some, I think, would not conduce to the object, and some could
-not be communicated early in life, (1.) For indirect self-preservation
-we do not require to know physiology, but the results of physiology.
-(2.) The science which bears on special pursuits in life has not, in
-many cases, any pecuniary value, and although it is most desirable that
-every one should study the science which makes his work intelligible to
-him, this must usually be done when his schooling is over. The school
-will have done its part if it has accustomed him to the intellectual
-processes by which sciences are learned, and has given him an intelligent
-appreciation of their value.[191] (3.) The right way of rearing and
-training children should be studied, but not by the children themselves.
-(4.) The knowledge which fits a man to discharge his duties as a citizen
-is of great importance, and, as Dr. Arnold pointed out, is likely to be
-entirely neglected by those who have to struggle for a livelihood. The
-schoolmaster should, therefore, by no means neglect this subject with
-those of his pupils whose school-days will soon be over, but, probably,
-all that he can do is to cultivate in them a sense of the citizen’s
-duty, and a capacity for being their own teachers. (5.) The knowledge
-of poetry, belles-lettres, and the fine arts, which Mr. Spencer hands
-over to the leisure part of education, is the only knowledge in his
-program which I think should most certainly form a prominent part in the
-curriculum of every school.
-
-§ 16. I therefore differ, though with great respect, from the conclusions
-at which Mr. Spencer has arrived. But I heartily agree with him that we
-are bound to inquire into the relative value of knowledges, and if we
-take, as I should willingly do, Mr. Spencer’s test, and ask how does
-this or that knowledge influence action (including in our inquiry its
-influence on mind and character, through which it bears upon action),
-I think we should banish from our schools much that has hitherto been
-taught in them, besides those old tormentors of youth (laid, I fancy, at
-last—_requiescant in pace_)—the _Propria quæ Maribus_ and its kindred
-absurdities. What we _should_ teach is, of course, not so easily decided
-as what we _should not_.
-
-§ 17. I now come to consider Mr. Spencer’s second chapter, in which,
-under the heading of “Intellectual Education,” he gives an admirable
-summing up of the main principles in which the great writers on the
-subject have agreed, from Comenius downwards. These principles are,
-perhaps, not all of them unassailable, and even where they are true,
-many mistakes must be expected before we arrive at the best method of
-applying them; but the only reason that can be assigned for the small
-amount of influence they have hitherto exercised is, that most teachers
-are as ignorant of them as of the abstrusest doctrines of Kant and Hegel.
-
-§ 18. In stating these principles Mr. Spencer points out that they merely
-form a commencement for a science of education. “Before educational
-methods can be made to harmonise in character and arrangement with the
-faculties in the mode and order of unfolding, it is first needful that
-we ascertain with some completeness how the faculties _do_ unfold. At
-present we have acquired on this point only a few general notions. These
-general notions must be developed in detail—must be transformed into
-a multitude of specific propositions before we can be said to possess
-that _science_ on which the _art_ of education must be based. And
-then, when we have definitely made out in what succession and in what
-combinations the mental powers become active, it remains to choose out
-of the many possible ways of exercising each of them, that which best
-conforms to its natural mode of action. Evidently, therefore, it is not
-to be supposed that even our most advanced modes of teaching are the
-right ones, or nearly the right ones.” It is not to be wondered at that
-we have no science of education. Those who have been able to observe
-the phenomena have had no interest in generalising from them. Up to
-the present time the schoolmaster has been a person to whom boys were
-sent to learn Latin and Greek. He has had, therefore, no more need of
-a science than the dancing-master.[192] But the present century, which
-has brought in so many changes, will not leave the state of education
-as it found it. Latin and Greek, if they are not dethroned in our higher
-schools, will have their despotism changed for a very limited monarchy. A
-course of instruction certainly without Greek and perhaps without Latin
-will have to be provided for middle schools. Juster views are beginning
-to prevail of the schoolmaster’s function. It is at length perceived
-that he has to assist the development of the human mind, and perhaps,
-by-and-bye, he may think it as well to learn all he can of that which he
-is employed in developing. When matters have advanced as far as this, we
-may begin to hope for a science of education. In Locke’s day he could
-say of physical science that there was no such science in existence. For
-thousands of years the human race had lived in ignorance of the simplest
-laws of the world it inhabited. But the true method of inquiring once
-introduced, science has made such rapid conquests, and acquired so great
-importance, that some of our ablest men seem inclined to deny, if not the
-existence, at least the value, of any other kind of knowledge. So, too,
-when teachers seek by actual observation to discover the laws of mental
-development, a science may be arrived at, which, in its influence on
-mankind, would perhaps rank before any we now possess.
-
-§ 19. Those who have read the previous Essays will have seen in various
-forms most of the principles which Mr. Spencer enumerates, but I gladly
-avail myself of his assistance in summing them up.
-
-1. We should proceed from the simple to the complex, both in our choice
-of subjects and in the way in which each subject is taught. We should
-begin with but few subjects at once, and, successively adding to these,
-should finally carry on all subjects abreast.
-
-Each larger concept is made by a combination of smaller ones, and
-presupposes them. If this order is not attended to in communicating
-knowledge, the pupil can learn nothing but words, and will speedily sink
-into apathy and disgust.
-
-§ 20. That we must proceed from the known to the unknown is something
-more than a corollary to the above;[193] because not only are new
-concepts formed by the combination of old, but the mind has a liking
-for what it knows, and this liking extends itself to all that can be
-connected with its object. The principle of using the known in teaching
-the unknown is so simple, that all teachers who really endeavour to make
-anything understood, naturally adopt it. The traveller who is describing
-what he has seen and what we have not seen tells us that it is in one
-particular like this object, and in another like that object, with which
-we are already familiar. We combine these different concepts we possess,
-and so get some notion of things about which we were previously ignorant.
-What is required in our teaching is that the use of the known should
-be employed more systematically. Most teachers think of boys who have
-no school learning as entirely ignorant. The least reflection shows,
-however, that they know already much more than schools can ever teach
-them. A sarcastic examiner is said to have handed a small piece of paper
-to a student and told him to write _all he knew_ on it. Perhaps many
-boys would have no difficulty in stating the sum of their school-learning
-within very narrow limits, but with other knowledge a child of five years
-old, could he write, might soon fill a volume.[194] Our aim should be to
-connect the knowledge boys bring with them to the schoolroom with that
-which they are to acquire there.[195] I suppose all will allow, whether
-they think it a matter of regret or otherwise, that hardly anything
-of the kind has hitherto been attempted. Against this state of things
-I cannot refrain from borrowing Mr. Spencer’s eloquent protest. “Not
-recognising the truth that the function of books is supplementary—that
-they form an indirect means to knowledge when direct means fail, a
-means of seeing through other men what you cannot see for yourself,
-teachers are eager to give second-hand facts in place of first-hand
-facts. Not perceiving the enormous value of that spontaneous education
-which goes on in early years, not perceiving that a child’s restless
-observation, instead of being ignored or checked, should be diligently
-ministered to, and made as accurate and complete as possible, they insist
-on occupying its eyes and thoughts with things that are, for the time
-being, incomprehensible and repugnant. Possessed by a superstition which
-worships the symbols of knowledge instead of the knowledge itself,
-they do not see that only when his acquaintance with the objects and
-processes of the household, the street, and the fields, is becoming
-tolerably exhaustive, only then should a child be introduced to the new
-sources of information which books supply, and this not only because
-immediate cognition is of far greater value than mediate cognition, but
-also because the words contained in books can be rightly interpreted into
-ideas only in proportion to the antecedent experience of things.”[196]
-While agreeing heartily in the spirit of this protest, I doubt whether we
-should wait till the child’s acquaintance with the objects and processes
-of the household, the streets, and the fields, is becoming tolerably
-exhaustive before we give him instruction from books. The point of time
-which Mr. Spencer indicates is, at all events, rather hard to fix, and
-I should wish to connect book-learning as soon as possible with the
-learning that is being acquired in other ways. Thus might both the books,
-and the acts and objects of daily life, win an additional interest. If,
-_e.g._, the first reading-books were about the animals, and later on
-about the trees and flowers which the children constantly meet with,
-and their attention was kept up by large coloured pictures, to which
-the text might refer, the children would soon find both pleasure and
-advantage in reading, and they would look at the animals and trees with
-a keener interest from the additional knowledge of them they had derived
-from books. This is, of course, only one small application of a very
-influential principle.
-
-§ 21. One marvellous instance of the neglect of this principle is found
-in the practice of teaching Latin grammar before English grammar. As
-Professor Seeley has so well pointed out, children bring with them to
-school the knowledge of language in its concrete form. They may soon be
-taught to observe the language they already know, and to find, almost
-for themselves, some of the main divisions of words in it. But, instead
-of availing himself of the child’s previous knowledge, the schoolmaster
-takes a new and difficult language, differing as much as possible from
-English, a new and difficult science, that of grammar, conveyed, too,
-in a new and difficult terminology, and all this he tries to teach at
-the same time. The consequence is that the science is destroyed, the
-terminology is either misunderstood, or, more probably, associated with
-no ideas, and even the language for which every sacrifice is made, is
-found, in nine cases out of ten, never to be acquired at all.[197]
-
-§ 22. 2. “All development is an advance from the indefinite to the
-definite.” I do not feel very certain of the truth of this principle,
-or of its application, if true. Of course, a child’s intellectual
-conceptions are at first vague, and we should not forget this; but it is
-rather a fact than a principle.
-
-§ 23. 3. “Our lessons ought to start from the concrete, and end in the
-abstract.” What Mr. Spencer says under this head well deserves the
-attention of all teachers. “General formulas which men have devised to
-express groups of details, and which have severally simplified their
-conceptions by uniting many facts into one fact, they have supposed
-must simplify the conceptions of a child also. They have forgotten that
-a generalisation is simple only in comparison with the whole mass of
-particular truths it comprehends; that it is more complex than any one of
-these truths taken simply; that only, after many of these single truths
-have been acquired, does the generalisation ease the memory and help the
-reason; and that, to a mind not possessing these single truths, it is
-necessarily a mystery. Thus, confounding two kinds of simplification,
-teachers have constantly erred by setting out with “first principles,”
-a proceeding essentially, though not apparently, at variance with the
-primary rule [of proceeding from the simple to the complex], which
-implies that the mind should be introduced to principles through the
-medium of examples, and so should be led from the particular to the
-general, from the concrete to the abstract.” In conformity with this
-principle, Pestalozzi made the actual counting of things precede the
-teaching of abstract rules in arithmetic. Basedow introduced weights
-and measures into the school, and Mr. Spencer describes some exercise
-in cutting out geometrical figures in cardboard, as a preparation for
-geometry. The difficulty about such instruction is that it requires
-apparatus, and apparatus is apt to get lost or out of order. But if
-apparatus is good for anything at all, it is worth a little trouble.
-There is a tendency in the minds of many teachers to depreciate
-“mechanical appliances.” Even a decent black-board is not always to be
-found in our higher schools. But, though such appliances will not enable
-a bad master to teach well, nevertheless, other things being equal, the
-master will teach better with them than without them. There is little
-credit due to him for managing to dispense with apparatus. An author
-might as well pride himself on being saving in pens and paper.
-
-§ 24. 4. “The genesis of knowledge in the individual must follow the same
-course as the genesis of knowledge in the race.” This is the thesis on
-which I have no opinion to offer.
-
-§ 25. 5. From the above principle Mr. Spencer infers that every study
-should have a purely experimental introduction, thus proceeding through
-an empirical stage to a rational.
-
-§ 26. 6. A second conclusion which Mr. Spencer draws is that, in
-education, the process of self-development should be encouraged to the
-utmost. Children should be led to make their own investigations, and to
-draw their own inferences. They should be told as little as possible,
-and induced to discover as much as possible. I quite agree with Mr.
-Spencer that this principle cannot be too strenuously insisted on, though
-it obviously demands a high amount of intelligence in the teacher. But
-if education is to be a training of the faculties, if it is to prepare
-the pupil to teach himself, something more is needed than simply to
-pour in knowledge and make the pupil reproduce it. The receptive and
-reproductive faculties form but a small portion of a child’s powers,
-and yet the only portion which many schoolmasters seek to cultivate.
-It is indeed, not easy to get beyond this point; but the impediment
-is in us, not in the children. “Who can watch,” ask Mr. Spencer, “the
-ceaseless observation, and inquiry, and inference, going on in a child’s
-mind, or listen to its acute remarks in matters within the range of
-its faculties, without perceiving that these powers it manifests, if
-brought to bear systematically upon studies _within the same range_,
-would readily master them without help? This need for perpetual telling
-results from our stupidity, not from the child’s. We drag it away
-from the facts in which it is interested, and which it is actively
-assimilating of itself. We put before it facts far too complex for it to
-understand, and therefore distasteful to it. Finding that it will not
-voluntarily acquire these facts, we thrust them into its mind by force
-of threats and punishment. By thus denying the knowledge it craves, and
-cramming it with knowledge it cannot digest, we produce a morbid state
-of its faculties, and a consequent disgust for knowledge in general.
-And when, as a result, partly of the stolid indolence we have brought
-on, and partly of still-continued unfitness in its studies, the child
-can understand nothing without explanation, and becomes a mere passive
-recipient of our instruction, we infer that education must necessarily
-be carried on thus. Having by our method induced helplessness, we make
-the helplessness a reason for our method.” It is, of course, much easier
-to point out defects than to remedy them: but every one who has observed
-the usual indifference of schoolboys to their work, and the waste of time
-consequent on their inattention or only half-hearted attention to the
-matter before them, and then thinks of the eagerness with which the same
-boys throw themselves into the pursuits of their play-hours, will feel a
-desire to get at the cause of this difference; and, perhaps, it may seem
-to him partly accounted for by the fact that their school-work makes a
-monotonous demand on a single faculty—the memory.
-
-§ 27. 7. This brings me to the last of Mr. Spencer’s principles of
-intellectual education. Instruction must excite the interest of the
-pupils and therefore be pleasurable to them. “Nature has made the
-healthful exercise of our faculties both of mind and body pleasurable.
-It is true that some of the highest mental powers as yet but little
-developed in the race, and congenitally possessed in any considerable
-degree only by the most advanced, are indisposed to the amount of
-exertion required of them. But these, in virtue of their very complexity
-will in a normal course of culture come last into exercise, and will,
-therefore, have no demands made on them until the pupil has arrived at
-an age when ulterior motives can be brought into play, and an indirect
-pleasure made to counterbalance a direct displeasure. With all faculties
-lower than these, however, the immediate gratification consequent on
-activity is the normal stimulus, and under good management the only
-needful stimulus. When we have to fall back on some other, we must take
-the fact as evidence that we are on the wrong track. Experience is daily
-showing with greater clearness that there is always a method to be found
-productive of interest—even of delight—and it ever turns out that this is
-the method proved by all other tests to be the right one.”
-
-§ 28. As far as I have had the means of judging, I have found that the
-majority of teachers reject this principle. If you ask them why, most of
-them will tell you that it is impossible to make school-work interesting
-to children. A large number also hold that it is not desirable. Let us
-consider these two points separately.
-
-Of course, if it is not possible to get children to take interest in
-anything they could be taught in school, there is an end of the matter.
-But no one really goes as far as this. Every teacher finds that some of
-the things boys are taught they like better than others, and perhaps
-that one boy takes to one subject and another to another; and he also
-finds, both of classes and individuals, that they always get on best
-with what they like best. The utmost that can be maintained is, then,
-that some subjects which must be taught will not interest the majority
-of the learners. And if it be once admitted that it is desirable to make
-learning pleasant and interesting to our pupils, this principle will
-influence us to some extent in the subjects we select for teaching, and
-still more in the methods by which we endeavour to teach them. I say we
-shall be guided _to some extent_ in the selection of subjects. There
-are theorists who assert that nature gives to young minds a craving for
-their proper aliment, so that they should be taught only what they show
-an inclination for. But surely our natural inclinations in this matter,
-as in others, are neither on the one hand to be ignored, nor on the
-other to be uncontrolled by such motives as our reason dictates to us.
-We at length perceive this in the physical nurture of our children.
-Locke directs that children are to have very little sugar or salt.
-“Sweetmeats of all kinds are to be avoided,” says he, “which, whether
-they do more harm to the maker or eater is not easy to tell.” (Ed. §
-20.) Now, however, doctors have found out that young people’s taste for
-sweets should in moderation be gratified, that they require sugar as
-much as they require any other kind of nutriment. But no one would think
-of feeding his children entirely on sweetmeats, or even of letting them
-have an unlimited supply of plum puddings and hardbake. If we follow out
-this analogy in nourishing the mind, we shall, to some extent, gratify
-a child’s taste for “stories,” whilst we also provide a large amount
-of more solid fare. But although we should certainly not ignore our
-children’s likes and dislikes in learning, or in anything else, it is
-easy to attach too much importance to them. Dislike very often proceeds
-from mere want of insight into the subject. When a boy has “done” the
-First Book of Euclid without knowing how to judge of the size of an
-angle, or the Second Book without forming any conception of a rectangle,
-no one can be surprised at his not liking Euclid. And then the failure
-which is really due to bad teaching is attributed by the master to the
-stupidity of his pupil, and by the pupil to the dulness of the subject.
-If masters really desired to make learning a pleasure to their pupils, I
-think they would find that much might be done to effect this without any
-alteration in the subjects taught.
-
-But the present dulness of school-work is not without its defenders. They
-insist on the importance of breaking in the mind to hard work. This can
-only be done, they say, by tasks which are repulsive to it. The schoolboy
-does not like, and ought not to like, learning Latin grammar any more
-than the colt should find pleasure in running round in a circle: the very
-fact that these things are not pleasant makes them beneficial. Perhaps
-a certain amount of such training may train _down_ the mind and qualify
-it for some drudgery from which it might otherwise revolt; but if this
-result is attained, it is attained at the sacrifice of the intellectual
-activity which is necessary for any higher function. As Carlyle says,
-(_Latter-Day PP._, No. iij), when speaking of routine work generally, you
-want nothing but a sorry nag to draw your sand-cart; your high-spirited
-Arab will be dangerous in such a capacity. But who would advocate for all
-colts a training which should render them fit for nothing but such humble
-toil? I shall say more about this further on (_v._ pp. 472 _ff._); here I
-will merely express my strong conviction that boys’ minds are frequently
-dwarfed, and their interest in intellectual pursuits blighted, by the
-practice of employing the first years of their school-life in learning
-by heart things which it is quite impossible for them to understand or
-care for. Teachers set out by assuming that little boys cannot understand
-anything, and that all we can do with them is to keep them quiet and cram
-them with forms which will come in useful at a later age. When the boys
-have been taught on this system for two or three years, their teacher
-complains that they are stupid and inattentive, and that so long as they
-can say a thing by heart they never trouble themselves to understand it.
-In other words, the teacher grumbles at them for doing precisely what
-they have been taught to do, for repeating words without any thought of
-their meaning.
-
-§ 29. In this very important matter I am fully alive to the difference
-between theory and practice. It is so easy to recommend that boys should
-be got to understand and take an interest in their work—so difficult to
-carry out the recommendation! Grown people can hardly conceive that words
-which have in their minds been associated with familiar ideas from time
-immemorial, are mere sounds in the mouths of their pupils. The teacher
-thinks he is beginning at the beginning if he says that a transitive verb
-must govern an accusative, or that all the angles of a square are right
-angles. He gives his pupils credit for innate ideas up to this point, at
-all events, and advancing on this supposition he finds that he can get
-nothing out of them but memory-work; so he insists on this that his time
-and theirs may seem not to be wholly wasted. The great difficulty of
-teaching well, however, is after all but a poor excuse for contentedly
-teaching badly, and it would be a great step in advance if teachers in
-general were as dissatisfied with themselves as they usually are with
-their pupils.[198]
-
-§ 30. I do not purpose following Mr. Spencer through his chapters on
-moral and physical education. In practice I find I can draw no line
-between moral and religious education; so the discussion of one without
-the other has not for me much interest. Mr. Spencer has some very
-valuable remarks on physical education which I could do little more than
-extract, and I have already made too many quotations from a work which
-will be in the hands of most of my readers.
-
-§ 31. Mr. Spencer differs very widely from the great body of our
-schoolmasters. I have ventured in turn to differ on some points from Mr.
-Spencer; but I have failed to give any adequate notion of the work I
-have been discussing if the reader has not perceived that it is not only
-one of the most readable, but also one of the most important books on
-education in the English language.
-
-
-
-
-XX.
-
-THOUGHTS AND SUGGESTIONS.
-
-
-$ 1. One of the great wants of middle-class education at present, is
-an ideal to work towards. Our old public schools have such an ideal.
-The model public school-man is a gentleman who is an elegant Latin and
-Greek scholar. True, this may not be a very good ideal, and some of our
-ablest men, both literary and scientific, are profoundly dissatisfied
-with it. But, so long as it is maintained, all questions of reform are
-comparatively simple. In middle-class schools, on the other hand, there
-is no _terminus ad quem_. A number of boys are got together, and the
-question arises, not simply _how_ to teach, but _what_ to teach. Where
-the masters are not university men, they are, it may be, not men of
-broad views or high culture. Of course no one will suppose me ignorant
-of the fact that a great number of teachers who have never been at a
-university, are both enlightened and highly cultivated; and also that
-many teachers who have taken degrees, even in honours, are neither.
-But, speaking broadly of the two classes, I may fairly assume that the
-non-university men are inferior in these respects to the graduates.
-If not, our universities should be reformed on Carlyle’s “live-coal”
-principle without further loss of time. Many non-university masters
-have been engaged in teaching ever since they were boys themselves,
-and teaching is a very narrowing occupation. They are apt therefore to
-be careless of general principles, and to aim merely at storing their
-pupils’ memory with _facts_—facts about language, about history, about
-geography, without troubling themselves to consider what is and what is
-not worth knowing, or what faculties the boys have, and how they should
-be developed. The consequence is their boys get up, for the purpose of
-forgetting with all convenient speed, quantities of details about as
-instructive and entertaining as the _Propria quæ maribus_, such as the
-division of England under the Heptarchy, the battles in the wars of the
-Roses, and lists of geographical names. Where the masters are university
-men, they have rather a contempt for this kind of cramming, which makes
-them do it badly, if they attempt it at all; but they are driven to this
-teaching in many cases because they do not know what to substitute in
-its place. In their own school-education they were taught classics and
-mathematics and nothing else. Their pupils are too young to have much
-capacity for mathematics, and they will leave school too soon to get
-any sound knowledge of classics; so the strength of the teaching ought
-clearly not to be thrown into these subjects. But the master really
-knows no other. He soon finds that he is not much his pupils’ superior
-in acquaintance with the theory of the English language or with history
-and geography. There are not many men with sufficient strength of will to
-study whilst their energies are taxed by teaching; and standard books are
-not always within reach: so the master is forced to content himself with
-hearing lessons in a perfunctory way out of dreary school-books. Hence it
-comes to pass that he goes on teaching subjects of which he himself is
-ignorant, subjects, too, of which he does not recognise the importance,
-with an enlightened disbelief in his own method of tuition. He finds it
-uphill work, to be sure, and is conscious that his pupils do not get on,
-however hard he may try to drive them; but he never hoped for success in
-his teaching, so the want of it does not distress him. I may be suspected
-of caricature, but not, I think, by university men who have themselves
-had to teach anything besides classics and mathematics.
-
-§ 2. If there is any truth in what I have been saying, school-teaching,
-in subjects other than classics and mathematics (which I am not now
-considering), is very commonly a failure. And a failure it must remain
-until boys can be got to work with a will, in other words, to feel
-interest in the subject taught. I know there is a strong prejudice in
-some people’s minds against the notion of making learning pleasant. They
-remind us that school should be a preparation for after-life. After-life
-will bring with it an immense amount of drudgery. If, they say, things
-at school are made too easy and pleasant (words, by the way, very often
-and very erroneously confounded), school will cease to give the proper
-discipline: boys will be turned out not knowing what hard work is, which,
-after all, is the most important lesson that can be taught them. In these
-views I sincerely concur, so far as this at least, that we want boys to
-work hard, and vigorously to go through the necessary drudgery, _i.e._,
-labour in itself disagreeable. But this result is not attained by such a
-system as I have described. Boys do not learn to work _hard_, but in a
-dull stupid way, with most of their faculties lying dormant, and though
-they are put through a vast quantity of drudgery, they seem as incapable
-of throwing any energy into it as prisoners on the tread-mill. I think
-we shall find on consideration, that no one succeeds in any occupation
-unless that occupation is interesting, either in itself or from some
-object that is to be obtained by means of it. Only when such an interest
-is aroused is energy possible. No one will deny that, as a rule, the
-most successful men are those for whom their employment has the greatest
-attractions. We should be sorry to give ourselves up to the treatment of
-a doctor who thought the study of disease mere drudgery, or a dentist who
-felt a strong repugnance to operating on teeth. No doubt the successful
-man in every pursuit has to go through a great deal of drudgery, but he
-has a general interest in the subject, which extends, partially at least,
-to its most wearisome details; his energy, too, is excited by the desire
-of what the drudgery will gain for him.[199]
-
-§ 3. Observe, that although I would have boys take pleasure in their
-work, I regard the pleasure as a _means_, not an end. If it could be
-proved that the mind was best trained by the most repulsive exercises, I
-should most certainly enforce them. But I do not think that the mind _is_
-benefited by galley-slave labour; indeed, hardly any of its faculties are
-capable of such labour. We can compel a boy to learn a thing by heart,
-but we cannot compel him to wish to understand it; and the intellect
-does not act without the will (_v. supra_ p. 193). Hence, when anything
-is required which cannot be performed by the memory alone, the driving
-system utterly breaks down; and even the memory, as I hope to show
-presently, works much more effectually in matters about which the mind
-feels an interest. Indeed, the mind without sympathy and interest is like
-the sea-anemone when the tide is down, an unlovely thing, closed against
-external influences, enduring existence as best it can. But let it find
-itself in a more congenial element, and it opens out at once, shows
-altogether unexpected capacities, and eagerly assimilates all the proper
-food that comes within its reach. Our school teaching is often little
-better than an attempt to get sea-anemones to flourish on dry land.
-
-§ 4. We see then, that a boy, before he can throw energy into a study,
-must find that study _interesting in itself, or in its results_.
-
-Some subjects, properly taught, are interesting in themselves.
-
-Some subjects may be interesting to older and more thoughtful boys, from
-a perception of their usefulness.
-
-All subjects may be made interesting by emulation.
-
-§ 5. Hardly any effort is made in some schools to interest the younger
-children in their work, and yet no effort can be, as the Germans say,
-more “rewarding.” The teacher of children has this advantage, that his
-pupils are never dull and listless, as youths are apt to be. If they are
-not attending to him, they very soon give him notice of it; and if he has
-the sense to see that their inattention is his fault, not theirs, this
-will save him much annoyance and them much misery. He has, too, another
-advantage, which gives him the power of gaining their attention—their
-emulation is easily excited. In the Waisenhaus at Halle I once heard a
-class of very young children, none of them much above six years old,
-perform feats of mental arithmetic quite, as I should have said, beyond
-their age, and I well remember the pretty eagerness with which each
-child held out a little hand and shouted, “_Mich! Bitte!_” to gain the
-privilege of answering.
-
-§ 6. Then again, there are many subjects in which children take an
-interest. Indeed, all visible things, especially animals, are much more
-to them than to us. A child has made acquaintance with all the animals
-in the neighbourhood, and can tell you much more about the house and its
-surroundings than you know yourself. But all this knowledge and interest
-you would wish forgotten directly he comes into school. Reading, writing,
-and figures are taught in the driest manner. The two first are in
-themselves not uninteresting to the child, as he has something to do, and
-young people are much more ready to do anything than to learn anything.
-But when lessons are given the child to learn, they are not about things
-concerning which he has ideas and feels an interest, but you teach him
-mere sounds—_e.g._, that Alfred (to him only a name) came to the throne
-in 871, though he has no notion what the throne is, or what 871 means.
-The child learns the lesson with much trouble and small profit, bearing
-the infliction with what patience he can, till he escapes out of school
-and begins to learn much faster on a very different system.
-
-§ 7. We cannot often introduce into the school the thing, much less the
-animal, which children would care to see, but we can introduce what will
-please them as well, in some cases even better, viz., good pictures. A
-teacher who could draw boldly on the blackboard, would have no difficulty
-in arresting the children’s attention. But, at present, few can do this,
-and pictures must be provided. A good deal has been done of late years
-in the way of illustrating children’s books, and even childhood must be
-the happier for such pictures as those of Tenniel and Harrison Weir. But
-it seems well understood that these gentlemen are incapable of doing
-anything for children beyond affording them innocent amusement, and we
-should be as much surprised at seeing their works introduced into that
-region of asceticism, the English school-room, as if we ran across one of
-Raphael’s Madonnas in a Baptist chapel.[200]
-
-§ 8. I had the good fortune, many years ago, to be present at the lessons
-given by a very excellent teacher to the youngest class, consisting both
-of boys and girls, at the first _Bürger-schule_ of Leipzig. In Saxony the
-schooling which the state demands for each child, begins at six years
-old, and lasts till fourteen. These children were, therefore, between six
-and seven. In one year, a certain Dr. Vater taught them to read, write,
-and reckon. His method of teaching was as follows:—Each child had a book
-with pictures of objects, such as a hat, a slate, &c. Under the picture
-was the name of the object in printing and writing characters, and also
-a couplet about the object. The children having opened their books, and
-found the picture of a hat, the teacher showed them a hat, and told them
-a tale connected with one. He then asked the children questions about
-his story, and about the hat he had in his hand—What was the colour of
-it? &c. He then drew a hat on the blackboard, and made the children copy
-it on their slates. Next he wrote the word “hat” and told them that for
-people who could read this did as well as the picture. The children then
-copied the word on their slates. The teacher proceeded to analyse the
-word “hat, (_hut_).” “It is made up,” said he, “of three sounds, the
-most important of which is the _a_ (_u_), which comes in the middle.” In
-all cases the vowel sound was first ascertained in every syllable, and
-then was given an approximation to consonantal sounds before and after.
-The couplet was now read by the teacher, and the children repeated it
-after him. In this way the book had to be worked over and over till the
-children were perfectly familiar with everything in it. They had been
-already six months thus employed when I visited the school, and knew the
-book pretty thoroughly. To test their knowledge, Dr. Vater first wrote a
-number of capitals at random on the board, and called out a boy to tell
-him words having these capitals as initials. This boy had to call out a
-girl to do something of the kind, she a boy, and so forth. Everything was
-done very smartly, both by master and children. The best proof I saw of
-their accuracy and quickness was this: the master traced words from the
-book very rapidly with a stick on the blackboard, and the children always
-called out the right word, though I could not follow him. He also wrote
-with chalk words which the children had never seen, and made them name
-first the vowel sounds, then the consonantal, then combine them.
-
-I have been thus minute in my description of this lesson, because it
-seems to me an admirable example of the way in which children between
-six and eight years of age should be taught. The method (see Rüegg’s
-_Pädagogik_, p. 360; also _Die Normalwörtermethode_, published by Orell,
-Füssli, Zürich, 1876), was arranged and the book prepared by the late Dr.
-Vogel, who was then Director of the school. Its merits, as its author
-pointed out to me, are:—1. That it connects the instruction with objects
-of which the child has already an idea in his mind, and so associates
-new knowledge with old; 2. That it gives the children plenty to _do_ as
-well as to learn, a point on which the Doctor was very emphatic; 3. That
-it makes the children go over the same matter in various ways till they
-have _learnt a little thoroughly_, and then applies their knowledge to
-the acquirement of more. Here the Doctor seems to have followed Jacotot.
-But though the method was no doubt a good one, I must say its success
-at Leipzig was due at least as much to Dr. Vater as to Dr. Vogel. This
-gentleman had been taking the youngest class in this school for twenty
-years, and, whether by practice or natural talent, he had acquired
-precisely the right manner for keeping children’s attention. He was
-energetic without bustle and excitement, and quiet without a suspicion of
-dulness or apathy. By frequently changing the employment of the class,
-and requiring smartness in everything that was done, he kept them all on
-the alert. The lesson I have described was followed without pause by one
-in arithmetic, the two together occupying an hour and three quarters, and
-the interest of the children never flagged throughout.
-
-§ 9. Dr. Vater’s method for arithmetic I cannot now recall; but I do
-not doubt that, as a German teacher who had studied his profession, he
-understood what English teachers and pupil-teachers do not understand,
-viz., how children should get their first knowledge of numbers.
-Pestalozzi and Froebel insisted that children should learn about numbers
-from _things_ which they actually counted; and, according to Grubé’s
-method, which I found in Germany over 30 years ago, and which is now
-extending to the United States, the whole of the first year is given to
-the relations of numbers not exceeding ten (see _Grubé’s Method_ by L.
-Seeley, New York, Kellogg, and F. L. Soldan’s _Grubé’s M._, Chicago).
-In arithmetic everything depends on these relations becoming thoroughly
-familiar. The decimal scale is possibly not so good as the scale of eight
-or of twelve, but the human race has adopted it; and even the French
-Revolutionists, with all their belief in “reason,” and their hatred of
-the past, recoiled from any attempt to change it. But in accepting it,
-they endeavoured to remove anomalies, and so should we. Everything must
-be based on groups of ten; and with children we should do well, as Mr.
-W. Wooding suggests, to avoid the great anomaly in our nomenclature, and
-call the numbers between ten and twenty (_i.e._, twain-tens or two-tens),
-“ten-one, ten-two, &c.” Numeration should by a long way precede any
-kind of notation, and the main truths about numbers should be got
-at experimentally with counters or coins. In these truths should be
-included all that we usually separate under the “First Four Rules,” and
-with integers we may even from the first give a clear conception of the
-fractional parts of whole numbers, _e.g._, that one third of 6 is 2.[201]
-
-Actual measuring and weighing, besides actual counting, go towards actual
-arithmetic for children.
-
-All this teaching, if conducted as Dr. Vater would have conducted it,
-would not give children any distaste for learning or make them dread the
-sound of the school bell.
-
-§ 10. I will suppose a child to have passed through such a course as this
-by the time he is eight or nine years old. Besides having some clear
-notions of number and form, he can now read and copy easy words. What
-we next want for him is a series of good reading-books, about things in
-which he takes an interest. The language must of course be simple, but
-the matter so good that neither master nor pupils will be disgusted by
-its frequent repetition.
-
-The first volume may very well be about animals—dogs, horses, &c., of
-which large pictures should be provided, illustrating the text. The first
-cost of these pictures would be considerable, but as they would last for
-years, the expense to the friends of each child taught from them would be
-a mere trifle.
-
-§ 11. The books placed in the hands of the children should be well
-printed and strongly bound. In the present penny-wise system,
-school-books are given out in cloth, and the leaves are loose at the end
-of a fortnight, so that children get accustomed to their destruction and
-treat it as a matter of course. This ruins their respect for books, which
-is not so unimportant a matter as it may at first appear.
-
-§ 12. After each reading lesson, which should contain at least one
-interesting anecdote, there should be columns of all the words which
-occurred for the first time in that lesson. These should be arranged
-according to their grammatical classification, not that the child should
-be taught grammar, but this order is as good as any other, and by it
-the child would learn to observe certain differences in words almost
-unconsciously.[202]
-
-Here I cannot resist quoting an excellent remark from Helps’s _Brevia_
-(p. 125). “We should make the greatest progress in art, science,
-politics, and morals, if we could train up our minds to look straight
-and steadfastly and uninterruptedly at the thing in question that we
-are observing. This seems a very slight thing to do; but practically
-it is hardly ever done. Between you and the object rises a mist of
-technicalities, of prejudices, of previous knowledge, and, above all,
-of terrible familiarity.” Perhaps it is this “terrible familiarity”
-that has prevented our seeing till quite lately that reading is the art
-of getting meaning by signs that appeal to the eye, _not_ the art of
-reporting to others the meaning we have thus arrived at. “Accustoming
-boys to read aloud what they do not first understand,” says Benjamin
-Franklin, “is the cause of those even set tones so common among readers,
-which, when they have once got a habit of using [them], they find so
-difficult to correct; by which means, among fifty readers we scarcely
-find a good one.” (_Essays, Sk. of English Sch._) It seems to have
-escaped even Franklin’s sagacity that reading aloud is a different art
-to the art of reading, and a much harder one. The two should be studied
-separately, and most time and attention should be given to silent
-reading, which is by far the more important of the two. Colonel F. W.
-Parker, who has successfully cultivated the power of “looking straight
-at” things, gives us in his _Talks on Teaching_ the right rule for
-reading. “Changing,” says he, “the beautiful power of expression, full
-of melody, harmony, and correct emphasis and inflection, to the slow,
-painful, almost agonising pronunciation that we have heard so many times
-in the school-room, is a terrible sin that we should never be guilty of.
-There is, indeed, not the slightest need of changing a good habit to a
-miserable one if we would follow the rule that the child has naturally
-followed all his life. _Never allow a child to give a thought till he
-gets it_” (p. 37). Now that the existence of a thought in children is
-allowed for, we may expect all sorts of improvements. Reading, as a means
-of ascertaining thought, is second only to hearing, and this art should
-be cultivated by giving children books of questions (_e.g._, Horace
-Grant’s _Arithmetic for Young Children_), and requiring the learner
-silently to get at the question and then give the answer aloud.
-
-§ 13. Easy descriptive and narrative poetry should be learnt by heart at
-this stage. That the children may repeat it well, they should get their
-first notions of it from the master _vivâ voce_. According to the usual
-plan, they get it up with false emphasis and false stops, and the more
-thoroughly they have learnt the piece, the more difficulty the master has
-in making them say it properly.
-
-§ 14. Every lesson should be worked over in various ways. The columns
-of words at the end of the reading lessons may be printed with writing
-characters, and used for copies. To write an upright column either of
-words or figures is an excellent exercise in neatness. The columns will
-also be used as spelling lessons, and the children may be questioned
-about the meaning of the words. The poetry, when thoroughly learned,
-may sometimes be written from memory. Sentences from the book may be
-copied either directly or from the black-board, and afterwards used for
-dictation.
-
-§ 15. Boys should, as soon as possible, be accustomed to write out
-fables, or the substance of other reading lessons, in their own words.
-They may also write descriptions of things with which they are familiar,
-or any event which has recently happened, such as a country excursion.
-Every one feels the necessity, on grounds of practical utility at all
-events, of boys being taught to express their thoughts neatly on paper,
-in good English and with correct spelling. Yet this is a point rarely
-reached before the age of fifteen or sixteen, often never reached at
-all. The reason is, that written exercises must be carefully looked over
-by the master, or they are done in a slovenly manner. Anyone who has
-never taught in a school will say, “Then let the master carefully look
-them over.” But the expenditure of time and trouble this involves on the
-master is so great, that in the end he is pretty sure either to have few
-exercises written, or to neglect to look them over. The only remedy is
-for the master not to have many boys to teach, and not to be many hours
-in school. Even then, unless he set apart a special time every day for
-correcting exercises, he is likely to find them “increase upon him.”
-
-§ 16. The course of reading-books, accompanied by large illustrations,
-may go on to many other things which the children see around them, such
-as trees and plants, and so lead up to instruction in natural history and
-physiology. But in imparting all knowledge of this kind, we should aim,
-not at getting the children to remember a number of facts, but at opening
-their eyes, and extending the range of their interests.
-
-§ 17. I should suggest, then, for children, three books to be used
-concurrently, viz., a reading book about animals and things, a poetry
-book, and a prose narrative or Æsop’s Fables. With the first commences a
-series culminating in works of science; with the second, a series that
-should lead up to Milton and Shakespeare; the third should be succeeded
-by some of our best writers in prose.
-
-§ 18. But many schoolmasters will shudder at the thought of a child’s
-spending a year or two at school without ever hearing of the Heptarchy
-or Magna Charta, and without knowing the names of the great towns in
-any country of Europe. I confess I regard this ignorance with great
-equanimity. If the child, or the youth even, takes no interest in the
-Heptarchy and Magna Charta, and knows nothing of the towns but their
-names, I think him quite as well off without this knowledge as with
-it—perhaps better, as such knowledge turns the lad into a “wind-bag,” as
-Carlyle might say, and gives him the appearance of being well-informed
-without the reality. But I neither despise a knowledge of history and
-geography; nor do I think that these studies should be neglected for
-foreign languages or science: and it is because I should wish a pupil
-of mine to become, in the end, thoroughly conversant in history and
-geography, that I should, if possible, conceal from him the existence of
-the numerous school manuals on these subjects.
-
-We will suppose that a parent meets with a book which he thinks will
-be both instructive and entertaining to his children. But the book is
-a large one, and would take a long time to get through; so instead of
-reading any part of it to them or letting them read it for themselves, he
-makes them _learn by heart the table of contents_. The children do _not_
-find it entertaining; they get a horror of the book, which prevents their
-ever looking at it afterwards, and they forget what they have learnt
-as soon as they possibly can. Just such is the sagacious plan adopted
-in teaching history and geography in schools, and such are the natural
-consequences. Every student knows that the use of an epitome is to
-_systematise_ knowledge, not to communicate it, and yet, in teaching, we
-give the epitome first, and allow it to precede, or rather to supplant,
-the knowledge epitomised. The children are disgusted, and no wonder. The
-subjects, indeed, are interesting, but not so the epitomes. I suppose if
-we could see the skeletons of the Gunnings, we should not find them more
-fascinating than any other skeletons.[203]
-
-§ 19. The first thing to be aimed at, then, is to excite the children’s
-interest. Even if we thought of nothing but the acquiring of information,
-this is clearly the true method. What are the facts which we remember?
-Those in which we feel an interest. If we are told that So-and-so has met
-with an accident, or failed in business, we forget it directly, unless we
-know the person spoken of. Similarly, if I read anything about Addison
-or Goldsmith, it interests me, and I remember it because they are, so
-to speak, friends of mine; but the same information about Sir Richard
-Blackmore or Cumberland would not stay in my head for four-and-twenty
-hours. So, again, we naturally retain anything we learn about a foreign
-country in which a relation has settled, but it would require some little
-trouble to commit to memory the same facts about a place in which we
-had no concern. All this proceeds from two causes. First, that the mind
-retains that in which it takes an interest; and, secondly, that one of
-the principal helps to memory is the association of ideas. These were,
-no doubt, the ground reasons which influenced Dr. Arnold in framing his
-plan of a child’s first history book. This book, he says, should be
-a picture-book of the memorable deeds which would best appeal to the
-child’s imagination. They should be arranged in order of time, but with
-no other connection. The letter-press should simply, but fully, tell
-the _story_ of the action depicted. These would form starting-points
-of interest. The child would be curious to know more about the great
-men whose acquaintance he had made, and would associate with them the
-scenes of their exploits; and thus we might actually find our children
-anxious to learn history and geography! I am sorry that even the great
-authority of Dr. Arnold has not availed to bring this method into use.
-Such a book would, of course, be dear. Bad pictures are worse than none
-at all: and Goethe tells us that his appreciation of Homer was for years
-destroyed by his having been shown, when a child, absurd pictures of the
-Homeric heroes. The book would, therefore, cost six or eight shillings at
-least; and who would give this sum for an account of single actions of
-a few great men, when he might buy the lives of all great men, together
-with ancient and modern history, the names of the planets, and a great
-amount of miscellaneous information, all for a shilling in “Mangnall’s
-Questions”?
-
-However, if the saving of a few shillings is more to be thought of than
-the best method of instruction, the subject hardly deserves our serious
-consideration.
-
-§ 20. It is much to be regretted that books for the young are so seldom
-written by distinguished authors. I suppose that of the three things
-which the author seeks, money, reputation, influence, the first is not
-often despised, nor the last considered the least valuable. And yet both
-money and influence are more certainly gained by a good book for the
-young than by any other. The influence of “Tom Brown,” however different
-in kind, is probably not smaller in amount than that of “Sartor Resartus.”
-
-§ 21. What we want is a Macaulay for boys, who shall handle historical
-subjects with that wonderful art displayed in the “Essays,”—the art of
-elaborating all the more telling portions of the subject, outlining the
-rest, and suppressing everything that does not conduce to heighten the
-general effect. Some of these essays, such as the “Hastings” and “Clive,”
-will be read with avidity by the elder boys; but Macaulay did not write
-for children, and he abounds in words to them unintelligible. Had he been
-a married man, we might perhaps have had such a volume of historical
-sketches for boys as now we must wish for in vain. But there are good
-story-tellers left among us, and we might soon expect such books as we
-desiderate, if it were clearly understood what is the right sort of book,
-and if men of literary ability and experience would condescend to write
-them.
-
-§ 22. If, in these latter days, “the individual withers, and the world
-is more and more,” we must not expect our children to enter into this.
-Their sympathy and their imagination can be aroused, not for nations,
-but for individuals; and this is the reason why some biographies of
-great men should precede any history. These should be written after
-Macaulay’s method. There should be no attempt at completeness, but what
-is most important and interesting about the man should be narrated in
-detail, and the rest lightly sketched, or omitted altogether. Painters
-understand this principle, and, in taking a portrait, very often depict a
-man’s features minutely without telling all the truth about the buttons
-on his waistcoat. But, because in a literary picture each touch takes up
-additional space, writers seem to fear that the picture will be distorted
-unless every particular is expanded or condensed in the same ratio.
-
-§ 23. At the risk of wearisome repetition, I must again say that I
-care as little about driving “useful knowledge” into a boy as the most
-ultra Cambridge man could wish; but I want to get the boy to have wide
-sympathies, and to teach himself; and I should therefore select the great
-men from very different periods and countries, that his net of interest
-(so to speak) may be spread in all waters.
-
-§ 24. When we have thus got our boys to form the acquaintance of great
-men, they will have certain associations connected with many towns and
-countries. Constant reference should be made to the map, and the boys’
-knowledge and interest will thus make settlements in different parts of
-the globe. These may be extended by a good book of travels, especially
-of voyages of discovery. There are now many such books suitable for the
-purpose, but I am still partial to a book which has been a delight to
-me and to my own children from our earliest years:—Miss Hack’s “Winter
-Evenings; or, Tales of Travelers”; or, as Routledge now calls a part of
-it, “Travels in Hot and Cold Lands.” In studying such travels, the map
-should, of course, be always in sight; and outline maps may be filled
-up by the boys as they learn about the places in the traveller’s route.
-Anyone who has had the management of a school library knows how popular
-“voyage and venture” is with the boys who have passed the stage in which
-the picture-books of animals were the main attraction. Captain Cook,
-Mungo Park, and Admiral Byron are heroes without whom boyhood would
-be incomplete; but as boys are engrossed by the adventures, and never
-trouble themselves about the map, they often remember the incidents
-without knowing where they happened.
-
-Of course, school geographies never mention such people as celebrated
-travellers; if they did, it would be impossible to give all the principal
-geographical names in the world within the compass of 200 pages.
-
-§ 25. What might we fairly expect from such a course of teaching as I
-have here suggested?
-
-At the end of a year and a half, or two years, from the age, say, of
-nine, the boy would read to himself intelligently; he would write fairly;
-he would spell all common English words correctly; he would be thoroughly
-familiar with the relations of all common numbers, that is, of all
-numbers below 100; he would have had his interest aroused, or, to speak
-more accurately, not stifled but increased in common objects, such as
-animals, trees, and plants; he would have made the acquaintance of some
-great men, and traced the voyages of some great travellers; he would be
-able to say by heart and to write from memory some of the best simple
-English poetry, and his ear would be familiar with the sound of good
-English prose. So much, at least, on the positive side. On the negative
-there might also be results of considerable value. He would _not_ have
-learned to look upon books and school-time as the torment of his life,
-nor have fallen into the habit of giving them as little of his attention
-as he could reconcile with immunity from the cane. The benefit of the
-negative result might outweigh a very glib knowledge of “tables” and
-Latin Grammar.
-
-
-
-
-XXI.
-
-THE SCHOOLMASTER’S MORAL AND RELIGIOUS INFLUENCE.
-
-
-§ 1. All who are acquainted with the standard treatises on the theory of
-education, and also with the management of schools, will have observed
-that moral and religious training occupies a larger and more prominent
-space in theory than in practice. On consideration, we shall find perhaps
-that this might naturally be expected. Of course we are all agreed that
-morality is more important than learning, and masters who are many of
-them clergymen, will hardly be accused of under-estimating the value
-of religion. Why then, does not moral and religious training receive a
-larger share of the master’s attention? The reason I take to be this.
-Experience shows that it depends directly on the master whether a boy
-acquires knowledge, but only indirectly, and in a much less degree,
-whether he grows up a good and religious man. The aim which engrosses
-most of our time is likely to absorb an equal share of our interest; and
-thus it happens that masters, especially those who never associate on
-terms of intimacy with their pupils out of school, throw energy enough
-into making boys _learn_, but seldom think at all of the development
-of their character, or about their thoughts and feelings in matters of
-religion. This statement may indeed be exaggerated, but no one who
-has the means of judging will assert that it is altogether without
-foundation. And yet, although a master can be more certain of sending
-out his pupils well-taught than well-principled, his influence on their
-character is much greater than it might appear to a superficial observer.
-I am not speaking of formal religious instruction. I refer now to the
-teacher’s indirect influence. The results of his formal teaching vary
-as its amount, but he can apply no such gauge to his informal teaching.
-A few words of earnest advice or remonstrance, which a boy hears at the
-right time from a man whom he respects, may affect that boy’s character
-for life. Here everything depends, not on the words used, but on the
-feeling with which they are spoken, and on the way in which the speaker
-is regarded by the hearer. In such matters the master has a much more
-delicate and difficult task than in mere instruction. The words, indeed,
-are soon spoken, but that which gives them their influence is not soon
-or easily acquired. Here, as in so many other instances, we may in a
-few minutes throw down what it has cost us days—perhaps years—to build
-up. An unkind word will destroy the effects of long-continued kindness.
-Boys always form their opinion of a man from the worst they know of him.
-Experience has not yet taught them that good people have their failings,
-and bad people their virtues. If the scholars find the master at times
-harsh and testy, they cannot believe in his kindness of heart and care
-for their welfare. They do not see that he may have an ideal before him
-to which he is partly, though not wholly true. They judge him by his
-demeanour in his least guarded moments—at times when he is jaded and
-dissatisfied with the result of his labours. At such times he is no
-longer “in touch” with his pupils. He is conscious only of his own power
-and mental superiority. Feeling almost a contempt for the boys’ weakness,
-he does not care for their opinion of him or think for an instant what
-impression he is making by his words and conduct. He gives full play to
-his _arbitrium_, and says or does something which seems to the boys to
-reveal him in his true character, and which causes them ever after to
-distrust his kindness.
-
-§ 2. When we consider the way in which masters endeavour to gain
-influence, we shall find that they may be divided roughly into two
-parties, whom I will call the open and the reserved. A teacher of the
-_open_ party endeavours to appear to his pupils precisely as he is.
-He will hear of no restraint except that of decorum. He believes that
-if he is as much the superior of his pupils as he ought to be, his
-authority will take care of itself without his casting round it a wall
-of artificial reserve. “Be natural,” he says; “get rid of affectations
-and shams of all kinds; and then, if there is any good in you, it will
-tell on those around you. Whatever is bad, would be felt just as surely
-in disguise; and the disguise would only be an additional source of
-mischief.” The _reserved_, on the other hand, wish their pupils to think
-of them as they ought to be rather than as they are. Against the other
-party they urge that our words and actions cannot always be in harmony
-with our thoughts and feelings, however much we may desire to make them
-so. We must, therefore, they say, reconcile ourselves to this; and since
-our words and actions are more under our control than our thoughts and
-feelings, we must make them as nearly as possible what they should be,
-instead of debasing them to involuntary thoughts and feelings which are
-not worthy of us. Then again, a teacher who is an idealist may say,
-“The young require some one to look up to. In my better moments I am not
-altogether unworthy of their respect; but if they knew all my weaknesses,
-they would naturally, and perhaps justly, despise me. For their sakes,
-therefore, I must keep my weaknesses out of sight, and the effort to do
-this demands a certain reserve in all our intercourse.”
-
-§ 3. I suppose an excess in either direction might lead to mischievous
-results. The “open” man might be wanting in self-restraint, and might say
-and do things which, though not wrong in themselves, might have a bad
-effect on the young. Then, again, the lower and more worldly side of his
-character might show itself in too strong relief; and his pupils seeing
-this mainly, and supposing that they understood him entirely, might
-disbelieve in his higher motives and religious feeling. On the other
-hand, those who set up for being better than they really are, are, as it
-were, walking on stilts. They gain no real influence by their separation
-from their pupils, and they are always liable to an accident which may
-expose them to their ridicule.[204]
-
-§ 4. I am, therefore, though with some limitation, in favour of the
-_open_ school. I am well aware, however, what an immense demand this
-system makes on the master who desires to exercise a good influence on
-the moral and religious character of his pupils. If he would have his
-pupils know him as he is, if he would have them think as he thinks,
-feel as he feels, and believe as he believes, he must be, at least in
-heart and aim, worthy of their imitation. He must (with reverence be
-it spoken) enter, in his humble way, into the spirit of the perfect
-Teacher, who said, “For their sakes I sanctify myself, that they also
-may be sanctified in truth.” Are we prepared to look upon our calling in
-this light? I believe that the school-teachers of this country need not
-fear comparison with any other body of men, in point of morality, and
-religious earnestness; but I dare say many have found, as I have, that
-the occupation is a very _narrowing_ one, that the teacher soon gets to
-work in a groove, and from having his thoughts so much occupied with
-routine work, especially with small fault-findings and small corrections,
-he is apt to settle down insensibly into a kind of moral and intellectual
-stagnation—Philistinism, as Matthew Arnold has taught us to call it—in
-which he cares as little for high aims and general principles as his
-most commonplace pupil. Thus it happens sometimes that a man who set
-out with the notion of developing all the powers of his pupils’ minds,
-thinks in the end of nothing but getting them to work out equations and
-do Latin exercises without false concords; and the clergyman even, who
-began with a strong sense of his responsibility and a confident hope of
-influencing the boys’ belief and character, at length is quite content if
-they conform to discipline and give him no trouble out of school-hours.
-We may say of a really good teacher what Wordsworth says of the poet; in
-his work he must neither
-
- lack that first great gift, the vital soul,
- Nor general truths, which are themselves a sort
- Of elements and agents, under-powers,
- Subordinate helpers of the living mind.—_Prelude_, i. 9.
-
-But the “vital soul” is too often crushed by excessive routine labour,
-and then when general truths, both moral and intellectual, have ceased
-to interest us, our own education stops, and we become incapable of
-fulfilling the highest and most important part of our duty in educating
-others.
-
-§ 5. It is, then, the duty of the teacher to resist gravitating into this
-state, no less for his pupils’ sake than for his own. The ways and means
-of doing this I am by no means competent to point out; so I will merely
-insist on the importance of teachers not being overworked—a matter which
-has not, I think, hitherto received due attention.
-
-We cannot expect intellectual activity of men whose minds are compelled
-“with pack-horse constancy to keep the road” hour after hour, till they
-are too jaded for exertion of any kind. The man himself suffers, and
-his work, even his easiest work, suffers also. It may be laid down as a
-general rule, that no one can teach long and teach well. All satisfactory
-teaching and management of boys absolutely requires that the master
-should be _in good spirits_. When the “genial spirits fail,” as they must
-from an overdose of monotonous work, everything goes wrong directly. The
-master has no longer the power of keeping the boys’ attention, and has to
-resort to punishments even to preserve order. His gloom quenches their
-interest and mental activity, just as fire goes out before carbonic acid;
-and in the end teacher and taught acquire, not without cause, a feeling
-of mutual aversion.
-
-§ 6. And another reason why the master should not spend the greater
-part of his time in formal teaching is this—his doing so compels him to
-neglect the informal but very important teaching he may both give and
-receive by making his pupils his companions.
-
-§ 7. I fear I shall be met here by an objection which has only too much
-force in it. Most Englishmen are at a loss how to make any use of
-leisure. If a man has no turn for thinking, no fondness for reading, and
-is without a hobby, what good shall his leisure do him? he will only pass
-it in insipid gossip, from which any easy work would be a relief. That
-this is so in many cases, is a proof to my mind of the utter failure of
-our ordinary education: and perhaps an improved education may some day
-alter what now seems a national peculiarity. Meantime the mind, even of
-Englishmen, is more than a “succedaneum for salt;”[205] and its tendency
-to bury its sight, ostrich-fashion, under a heap of routine work must be
-strenuously resisted, if it is to escape its deadly enemies, stupidity
-and ignorance.
-
-§ 8. I have elsewhere expressed what I believe is the common conviction
-of those who have seen something both of large schools and of small,
-viz., that the moral atmosphere of the former is, as a rule, by far the
-more wholesome;[206] and also that each boy is more influenced by his
-companions than by his master. More than this, I believe that in many,
-perhaps in most, schools, one or two boys affect the tone of the whole
-body more than any master.[207] What are called Preparatory Schools
-labour under this immense disadvantage, that their ruling spirits are
-mere children without reflection or sense of responsibility.[208] But
-where the leading boys are virtually young men, these may be made a
-medium through which the mind of the master may act upon the whole
-school. They can enter into the thoughts, feelings, and aims of the
-master on the one hand, and they know what is said and done among the
-boys on the other. The master must, therefore, know the elder boys
-intimately, and they must know him. This consummation, however, will
-not be arrived at without great tact and self-denial on the part of the
-master. The youth who is “neither man nor boy” is apt to be shy and
-awkward, and is not by any means so easy to entertain as the lad who
-chatters freely of the school’s cricket or football, past, present, and
-to come. But the master who feels how all-important is the _tone_ of the
-school, will not grudge any pains to influence those on whom it chiefly
-depends.
-
-§ 9. But, allowing the value of all these indirect influences, can we
-afford to neglect direct formal religious instruction? We have most of us
-the greatest horror of what we call a secular education, meaning thereby
-an education without formal religious teaching. But this horror seems to
-affect our theory more than our practice. Few parents ever enquire what
-religious instruction their sons get at Eton, Harrow, or Westminster. At
-Harrow when I was in the Fourth Form there (nearly fifty years ago by the
-way) we had no religious instruction except a weekly lesson in Watts’s
-Scripture History; and when I was a master some twenty years ago my form
-had only a Sunday lesson in a portion of the Old Testament, and a lesson
-in French Testament at “First School” on Monday. Even in some “Voluntary
-Schools” we do not find “religious instruction” made so much of as the
-arithmetic.
-
-§ 10. In this matter we differ very widely from the Germans. All their
-classes have a “religion-lesson” (_Religionstunde_) nearly every day, the
-younger children in the German Bible, the elder in the Greek Testament
-or Church History; and in all cases the teacher is careful to instruct
-his pupils in the tenets of Luther or Calvin. The Germans may urge that
-if we believe a set of doctrines to be a fitting expression of Divine
-revelation, it is our first duty to make the young familiar with those
-doctrines. I cannot say, however, that I have been favourably impressed
-by the religion-lessons I have heard given in German schools. I do
-not deny that dogmatic teaching is necessary, but the first thing to
-cultivate in the young is reverence; and reverence is surely in danger
-if you take a class in “religion” just as you take a class in grammar.
-Emerson says somewhere, that to the poet, the saint, and the philosopher,
-all distinction of sacred and profane ceases to exist, all things become
-alike sacred. As the schoolboy, however, does not as yet come under any
-one of these denominations, if the distinction ceases to exist for him,
-all things will become alike profane.
-
-§ 11. I believe that religious instruction is conveyed in the most
-impressive way when it is connected with worship. Where the prayers
-are joined with the reading of Scripture and with occasional simple
-addresses, and where the congregation have responses to repeat, and
-psalms and hymns to sing, there is reason to hope that boys will
-increase, not only in knowledge, but in wisdom and reverence too. Without
-asserting that the Church of England service is the best possible for
-the young, I hold that any form for them should at least resemble it
-in its main features, should be as varied as possible, should require
-frequent change of posture, and should give the congregation much to say
-and sing. Much use might be made as in the Church of Rome, of litanies.
-The service, whatever its form, should be conducted with great solemnity,
-and the boys should not sit or kneel so close together that the badly
-disposed may disturb their neighbours who try to join in the act of
-worship. If good hymns are sung, these may be taken occasionally as the
-subject of an address, so that attention may be drawn to their meaning.
-Music should be carefully attended to, and the danger of irreverence
-at practices guarded against by never using sacred words more than is
-necessary, and by impressing on the singers the sacredness of everything
-connected with Divine worship. Questions combined with instruction may
-sometimes keep up boys’ attention better than a formal sermon. Though
-common prayer should be frequent, this should not be supposed to take the
-place of private prayer. In many schools boys have hardly an opportunity
-for private prayer. They kneel down, perhaps, with all the talk and play
-of their schoolfellows going on around them, and sometimes fear of public
-opinion prevents their kneeling down at all. A schoolmaster cannot teach
-private prayer, but he can at least see that there is opportunity for it.
-
-Education to goodness and piety, as far as it lies in human hands, must
-consist almost entirely in the influence of the good and pious superior
-over his inferiors, and as this influence is independent of rules, these
-remarks of mine cannot do more than touch the surface of this most
-important subject.[209]
-
-§ 12. In conclusion, I wish to say a word on the education of opinion.
-Sir Arthur Helps lays great stress on preparing the way to moderation
-and open-mindedness by teaching boys that all good men are not of the
-same way of thinking. It is indeed a miserable error to lead a young
-person to suppose that his small ideas are a measure of the universe,
-and that all who do not accept his formularies are less enlightened than
-himself. If a young man is so brought up, he either carries intellectual
-blinkers all his life, or, what is far more probable, he finds that
-something he has been taught is false, and forthwith begins to doubt
-everything. On the other hand, it is a necessity with the young to
-believe, and we could not, even if we would, bring a youth into such a
-state of mind as to regard everything about which there is any variety of
-opinion as an open question. But he may be taught reverence and humility;
-he may be taught to reflect how infinitely greater the facts of the
-universe must be than our poor thoughts about them, and how inadequate
-are words to express even our imperfect thoughts. Then he will not
-suppose that all truth has been taught him in his formularies, nor that
-he understands even all the truth of which those formularies are the
-imperfect expression.[210]
-
-
-
-
-XXII.
-
-CONCLUSION.
-
-
-§ 1. When I originally published these essays (more than 22 years ago)
-the critic of the _Nonconformist_ in one of the best, though by no
-means most complimentary, of the many notices with which the book was
-favoured, took me to task for being in such a hurry to publish. I had
-confessed incompleteness. What need was there for me to publish before I
-had completed my work? Since that time I have spent years on my subject
-and at least two years on these essays themselves; but they now seem to
-me even further from completeness than they seemed then. However, I have
-reason to believe that the old book, incomplete as it was, proved useful
-to teachers; and in its altered form it will, I hope, be found useful
-still.
-
-§ 2. It may be useful I think in two ways.
-
-First: it may lead some teachers to the study of the great thinkers on
-education. There are some vital truths which remain in the books which
-time cannot destroy. In the world as Goethe says are few voices, many
-echoes; and the echoes often prevent our hearing the voices distinctly.
-Perhaps most people had a better chance of hearing the voices when there
-were fewer books and no periodicals. Speakers properly so called cannot
-now be heard for the hubbub of the talkers; and as literature is becoming
-more and more periodical our writers seem mostly employed like children
-on card pagodas or like the recumbent artists of the London streets who
-produce on the stones of the pavement gaudy chalk drawings which the next
-shower washes out.
-
-But if I would have fewer books what business have I to add to the
-number? I may be told that—
-
- “He who in quest of quiet, ‘Silence!’ hoots,
- Is apt to make the hubbub he imputes.”
-
-My answer is that I do not write to expound my own thought, but to draw
-attention to the thoughts of the men who are best worth hearing. It is
-not given to us small people to think strongly and clearly like the great
-people; we, however, gain in strength and clearness by contact with them;
-and this contact I seek to promote. So long as this book is used, it will
-I hope be used only as an _introduction_ to the great thinkers whose
-names are found in it.
-
-§ 3. There is another way in which the book may be of use. By considering
-the great thinkers in chronological order we see that each adds to the
-treasure which he finds already accumulated, and thus by degrees we are
-arriving in education, as in most departments of human endeavour, at a
-_science_. In this science lies our hope for the future. Teachers must
-endeavour to obtain more and more knowledge of the laws to which their
-art has to conform itself.
-
-§ 4. It may be of advantage to some readers if I point out briefly what
-seems to me the course of the main stream of thought as it has flowed
-down to us from the Renascence.
-
-§ 5. As I endeavoured to show at the beginning of this book, the Scholars
-of the Renascence fell into a great mistake, a mistake which perhaps
-could not have been avoided at a time when literature was rediscovered
-and the printing press had just been invented. This mistake was the
-idolatry of books, and, still worse, of books in Latin and Greek. So the
-schoolmaster fell into a bad theory or conception of his task, for he
-supposed that his function was to teach Latin and Greek; and his practice
-or way of going to work was not much better, for his chief implements
-were grammar and the cane.
-
-§ 6. The first who made a great advance were the Jesuits. They were
-indeed far too much bent on being popular to be “Innovators.” They
-endeavoured to do well what most schoolmasters did badly. They taught
-Latin and Greek, and they made great use of grammar, but they gave up the
-cane. Boys were to be made happy. School-hours were to be reduced from 10
-hours a day to 5 hours, and in those 5 hours learning was to be made “not
-only endurable but even pleasurable.”
-
-But the pupils were to find this pleasure not in the exercise of their
-mental powers but in other ways. As Mr. Eve has said, young teachers
-are inclined to think mainly of stimulating their pupils’ minds and so
-neglect the repetition needed for accuracy. Old teachers on the other
-hand care so much for accuracy that they require the same thing over and
-over till the pupils lose zest and mental activity. The Jesuits frankly
-adopted the maxim “Repetition is the mother of studies,” and worked over
-the same ground again and again. The two forces on which they relied for
-making the work pleasant were one good—the personal influence of the
-master (“boys will soon love learning when they love the teacher,”) and
-one bad or at least doubtful—the spur of emulation.
-
-However, the attempt to lead, not drive, was a great step in the right
-direction. Moreover as they did not hold with the Sturms and Trotzendorfs
-that the classics in and for themselves were the object of education
-the Jesuits were able to think of other things as well. They were very
-careful of the health of the body. And they also enlarged the task of
-the schoolmaster in another and still more important way. To the best of
-their lights they attended to the moral and religious training of their
-pupils. It is much to the credit of the Fathers that though Plautus
-and Terence were considered very valuable for giving a knowledge of
-colloquial Latin and were studied and learnt by heart in the Protestant
-schools, the Jesuits rejected them on account of their impurity. The
-Jesuits wished the whole boy, not his memory only, to be affected by the
-master; so the master was to make a study of each of his pupils and to go
-on with the same pupils through the greater part of their school course.
-
-The Jesuit system stands out in the history of education as a remarkable
-instance of a school system elaborately thought out and worked as a
-whole. In it the individual schoolmaster withered, but the system grew,
-and was, I may say _is_, a mighty organism. The single Jesuit teacher
-might not be the superior of the average teacher in good Protestant
-schools, but by their unity of action the Jesuits triumphed over their
-rivals as easily as a regiment of soldiers scatters a mob.
-
-§ 7. The schoolmaster’s theory of the human mind made of it, to use
-Bartle Massey’s simile, a kind of bladder fit only to hold what was
-poured into it. This pouring-in theory of education was first called in
-question by that strange genius who seems to have stood outside all the
-traditions and opinions of his age,
-
- “holding no form of creed,
- But contemplating all.”
-
-I mean Rabelais.
-
-Like most reformers, Rabelais begins with denunciations of the system
-established by use and wont. After an account of the school-teaching and
-school-books of the day, he says—“It would be better for a boy to learn
-nothing at all than to be taught such-like books by such-like masters.”
-He then proposes a training in which, though the boy is to study books,
-he is not to do this mainly, but is to be led to look about him, and
-to use both his senses and his limbs. For instance, he is to examine
-the stars when he goes to bed, and then to be called up at four in the
-morning to find the change that has taken place. Here we see a training
-of the powers of observation. These powers are also to be exercised on
-the trees and plants which are met with out-of-doors, and on objects
-within the house, as well as on the food placed on the table. The study
-of books is to be joined with this study of things, for the old authors
-are to be consulted for their accounts of whatever has been met with.
-The study of trades, too, and the practice of some of them, such as
-wood-cutting, and carving in stone, makes a very interesting feature
-in this system. On the whole, I think we may say that Rabelais was the
-first to advocate training as distinguished from teaching; and he was the
-father of _Anschauungs-unterricht_, teaching by _intuition_, _i.e._, by
-the pupil’s own senses and the spring of his own intelligence. Rabelais
-would bestow much care on the body too. Not only was the pupil to ride
-and fence; we find him even shouting for the benefit of his lungs.
-
-§ 8. Rabelais had now started an entirely new theory of the educator’s
-task, and fifty years afterwards his thought was taken up and put forward
-with incomparable vigour by the great essayist, Montaigne. Montaigne
-starts with a quotation from Rabelais—“The greatest clerks are not the
-wisest men,” and then he makes one of the most effective onslaughts
-on the pouring-in theory that is to be found in all literature. His
-accusation against the schoolmasters of his time is twofold. First, he
-says, they aim only at giving knowledge, whereas they should first think
-of judgment and virtue. Secondly, in their method of teaching they do
-not exercise the pupils’ own minds. The sum and substance of the charge
-is contained in these words—“We labour to stuff the memory and in the
-meantime leave the conscience and understanding impoverished and void.”
-His notion of education embraced the whole man. “Our very exercises and
-recreations,” says he, “running, wrestling, music, dancing, hunting,
-riding, fencing, will prove to be a good part of our study. I would have
-the pupil’s outward fashion and mien and the disposition of his limbs
-formed at the same time with his mind. ’Tis not a soul, ’tis not a body,
-that we are training up, but a _man_, and we ought not to divide him.”
-
-§ 9. Before the end of the fifteen hundreds then we see in the best
-thought of the time a great improvement in the conception of the task of
-the schoolmaster. Learning is not the only thing to be thought of. Moral
-and religious training are recognised as of no less importance. And as
-“both soul and body have been created by the hand of God” (the words
-are Ignatius Loyola’s), both must be thought of in education. When we
-come to instruction we find Rabelais recommending that at least part of
-it should be “intuitive,” and Montaigne requiring that the instruction
-should involve an exercise of the intellectual powers of the learner. But
-the escape even in thought from the Renascence ideal was but partial.
-Some of Rabelais’ directions seem to come from a “Verbal Realist,” and
-Montaigne was far from saying as Joseph Payne has said, “every act of
-teaching is a mode of dealing with mind and will be successful only in
-proportion as this is recognised,” “teaching is only another name for
-mental training.” But if Rabelais and Montaigne did not reach the best
-thought of our time they were much in advance of a great deal of our
-_practice_.
-
-§ 10. The opening of the sixteen hundreds saw a great revolt from the
-literary spirit of the Renascence. The exclusive devotion to books was
-followed by a reaction. There might after all be something worth knowing
-that books would not teach. Why give so much time to the study of words
-and so little to the observation of things? “Youth,” says a writer of the
-time, “is deluged with grammar precepts infinitely tedious, perplexed,
-obscure, and for the most part unprofitable, and that for many years.”
-Why not escape from this barren region? “Come forth, my son,” says
-Comenius. “Let us go into the open air. There you shall view whatsoever
-God produced from the beginning and doth yet effect by nature.”
-And Milton thus expresses the conviction of his day: “Because our
-understanding cannot in this body found itself but on sensible things,
-nor arrive so clearly to the knowledge of God and things invisible as by
-orderly conning over the visible and inferior creature, the same method
-is necessarily to be followed in all discreet teaching.”
-
-This great revolution which was involved in the Baconian philosophy may
-be described as a turning from fancy to fact. All the creations of the
-human mind seemed to have lost their value. The only things that seemed
-worth studying were the material universe and the laws or sequences which
-were gradually ascertained by patient induction and experiment.
-
-§ 11. Till the present century this revolution did not extend to our
-schools and universities. It is only within the last fifty years that
-natural science has been studied even in the University of Bacon and
-Newton. The Public School Commission of 1862 found that the curriculum
-was just as it had been settled at the Renascence. But if the walls of
-these educational Jerichos were still standing this was not from any
-remissness on the part of “the children of light” in shouting and blowing
-with the trumpet. They raised the war-cry “Not words, but things!” and
-the cry has been continued by a succession of eminent men against the
-schools of the 17th and 18th centuries and has at length begun to tell
-on the schools of the 19th. Perhaps the change demanded is best shown in
-the words of John Dury about 1649: “The true end of all human learning
-is to supply in ourselves and others the defects which proceed from our
-ignorance of the nature and use of the creatures and the disorderliness
-of our natural faculties in using them and reflecting upon them.” So the
-Innovators required teachers to devote themselves to natural science and
-to the science of the human mind.
-
-§ 12. The first Innovators, like the people of the fifteen hundreds,
-thought mainly of the acquisition of knowledge, only the knowledge
-was to be not of the classics but of the material world. In this they
-seem inferior to Montaigne who had given the first place to virtue and
-judgment.
-
-§ 13. But towards the middle of the sixteen hundreds a very eminent
-Innovator took a comprehensive view of education, and reduced instruction
-to its proper place, that is, he treated it as a part of education
-merely. This man, Comenius, was at once a philosopher, a philanthropist,
-and a schoolmaster; and in his writings we find the first attempt at a
-science of education. The outline of his science is as follows:—
-
-“We live a threefold life—a vegetative, an animal, and an intellectual
-or spiritual. Of these, the first is perfect in the womb, the last in
-heaven. He is happy who comes with healthy body into the world, much more
-he who goes with healthy spirit out of it. According to the heavenly idea
-a man should—1st, Know all things; 2nd, He should be master of things and
-of himself; 3rd, He should refer everything to God. So that within us
-Nature has implanted the seeds of learning, of virtue, and of piety. To
-bring these seeds to maturity is the object of education. All men require
-education, and God has made children unfit for other employment that they
-may have time to learn.”
-
-Here we have quite a new theory of the educator’s task. He is to bring
-to maturity the seeds of learning, virtue, and piety, which are already
-sown by Nature in his pupils. This is quite different from the pouring-in
-theory, and seems to anticipate the notion of Froebel, that the educator
-should be called not _teacher_ but _gardener_. But Comenius evidently
-made too much of knowledge. Had he lived two centuries later he would
-have seen the area of possible knowledge extending to infinity in all
-directions, and he would no longer have made it his ideal that “man
-should know all things.”
-
-§ 14. The next great thinker about education—I mean Locke—seems to me
-chiefly important from his having taken up the principles of Montaigne
-and treated the giving of knowledge as of very small importance.
-Montaigne, as we have seen, was the first to bring out clearly that
-education was much more than instruction, as the whole was greater than
-its part, and that instruction was of far less importance than some other
-parts of education. And this lies at the root of Locke’s theory also.
-The great function of the educator, according to him, is not to _teach_,
-but to _dispose_ the pupil to virtue first, industry next, and then
-knowledge; but he thinks where the first two have been properly cared for
-knowledge will come of itself. The following are Locke’s own words:—“The
-great work of a governor is to fashion the carriage and to form the mind,
-to settle in his pupil good habits and the principles of virtue and
-wisdom, to give him little by little a view of mankind and work him into
-a love and imitation of what is excellent and praiseworthy; and in the
-prosecution of it to give him vigour, activity, and industry. The studies
-which he sets him upon are but, as it were, the exercise of his faculties
-and employment of his time; to keep him from sauntering and idleness; to
-teach him application and accustom him to take pains, and to give him
-some little taste of what his own industry must perfect.”[211] So we see
-that Locke agrees with Comenius in his enlarged view of the educator’s
-task, and that he thought much less than Comenius of the importance of
-the knowledge to be given.
-
-§ 15. We already see a gradual escape from the “idols” of the Renascence.
-Locke, instead of accepting the learned ideal, declares that learning
-is the last and least thing to be thought of. He cares little about the
-ordinary literary instruction given to children, though he thinks they
-must be taught something and does not know what to put in its place. He
-provides for the education of those who are to remain ignorant of Greek,
-but only when they are “gentlemen.” In this respect the van is led by
-Comenius, who thought of education for _all_, boys and girls, rich and
-poor, alike. Comenius also gave the first hint of the true nature of our
-task—to bring to perfection the seeds implanted by Nature. He also cared
-for the little ones whom the schoolmaster had despised. Locke does not
-escape from a certain intellectual disdain of “my young masters,” as he
-calls them; but in one respect he advanced as far as the best thinkers
-among his successors have advanced. Knowledge, he says, must come by the
-action of the learner’s own mind. The true teacher is within.
-
-§ 16. We now come to the least practical and at the same time the most
-influential of all the writers on education—I mean Rousseau. He, like
-Rabelais, Montaigne, and Locke, was (to use Matthew Arnold’s expression)
-a “child of the idea.” He attacked scholastic use and wont not in the
-name of expedience, but in the name of reason; and such an attack—so
-eloquent, so vehement, so uncompromising—had never been made before.
-
-Still there remained even in theory, and far more in practice, effects
-produced by the false ideal of the Renascence. This ideal Rousseau
-entirely rejected. He proposed making a clean sweep and returning to what
-he called the state of Nature.
-
-§ 17. Rousseau was by no means the first of the Reformers who advocated
-a return to Nature. There has been a constant conviction in men’s
-minds from the time of the Stoics onwards that most of the evils which
-afflict humanity have come from our not following “Nature.” The cry of
-“Everything according to Nature” was soon raised by educationists. Ratke
-announced it as one of his principles. Comenius would base all action
-on the analogy of Nature. Indeed, there has hardly ever been a system
-of education which did not lay claim to be the “natural” system. And by
-“natural” has been always understood something different from what is
-usual. What is the notion that produces this antithesis?
-
-§ 18. When we come to trace back things to their cause we are wont to
-attribute them to God, to Nature, or to Man. According to the general
-belief, God works in and through Nature, and therefore the tendency
-of things apart from human agency must be to good. This faith which
-underlies all our thoughts and modes of speech, has been beautifully
-expressed by Wordsworth—
-
- “A gracious spirit o’er this earth presides,
- And in the heart of man; invisibly
- It comes to works of unreproved delight
- And tendency benign; directing those
- Who care not, know not, think not, what they do.”
-
- _Prelude_, v, _ad f._
-
-But if the tendency of things is to good, why should the usual be in such
-strong contrast with “the natural”? Here again we may turn to Wordsworth.
-After pointing to the harmony of the visible world, and declaring his
-faith that “every flower enjoys the air it breathes,” he goes on—
-
- “If this belief from heaven be sent,
- If this be Nature’s holy plan,
- Have I not reason to lament,
- What Man has made of Man?”
-
-This passage might be taken as the motto of Rousseauism. According to
-that philosophy man is the great disturber and perverter of the natural
-order. Other animals simply follow nature, but man has no instinct,
-and is thus left to find his own way. What is the consequence? A very
-different authority from Rousseau, the poet Cowper, tells us in language
-which Rousseau might have adopted—
-
- “Reasoning at every step he treads,
- Man yet mistakes his way:
- While meaner things whom instinct leads,
- Are seldom known to stray.”
-
-Man has to investigate the sequences of Nature, and to arrange them for
-himself. In this way he brings about a great number of foreseen results,
-but in doing this he also brings about perhaps even a greater number of
-unforeseen results; and alas! it turns out that many, if not most, of
-these unforeseen results are the reverse of beneficial.
-
-§ 19. Another thing is observable. Other animals are guided by instinct;
-we, for the most part, are guided by tradition. Man, it has been said,
-is the only animal that capitalises his discoveries. If we capitalised
-nothing but our discoveries, this accumulation would be an immense
-advantage to us; but we capitalise also our conjectures, our ideals, our
-habits, and unhappily, in many cases, our blunders.[212] So a great deal
-of action which is purely mischievous in its effects, comes not from our
-own mistakes, but from those of our ancestors. The consequence is, that
-what with our own mistakes and the mistakes we inherit, we sometimes go
-far indeed out of the course which “Nature” has prescribed for us.
-
-§ 20. The generation which found a mouthpiece in Rousseau had become
-firmly convinced, not indeed of its own stupidity, but of the stupidity
-of all its predecessors; and the vast patrimony bequeathed to it seemed
-nothing but lumber or worse. So Rousseau found an eager and enthusiastic
-audience when he proposed a return to Nature, in other words, to give
-up all existing customs, and for the most part to do nothing and “give
-Nature a chance.” His boy of twelve years old was to have been taught
-_nothing_. Up to that age the great art of education, says Rousseau, is
-to do everything by doing nothing. The first part of education should be
-purely negative.
-
-§ 21. Rousseau then was the first who escaped completely from the notion
-of the Renascence, that man was mainly a _learning_ and _remembering_
-animal. But if he is not this, what is he? We must ascertain, said
-Rousseau, not _a priori_, but by observation. We need a new art, the art
-of observing children.
-
-§ 22. Now at length there was hope for the Science of Education. This
-science must be based on a study of the subject on whom we have to act.
-According to Locke there is such variation not only in the circumstances,
-but also in the personal peculiarities of individuals, that general laws
-either do not exist or can never be ascertained. But this variation is
-no less observable in the human body, and the art of the physician has
-to conform itself to a science which is still very far from perfect. The
-physician, however, does not despair. He carefully avails himself of such
-science as we now have, and he makes a study of the human body in order
-to increase that science. When a few more generations have passed away,
-the medical profession will very likely smile at mistakes made by the old
-Victorian doctors. But, meantime, we profit by the science of medicine
-in its present state, and we find that this science has considerably
-increased the average duration of human life. We therefore require every
-practitioner to have made a scientific study of his calling, and to
-have had a training in both the theory and practice of it. The science
-of education cannot be said to have done much for us at present, but
-it will do more in the future, and might do more now if no one were
-allowed to teach before he or she had been trained in the best theory and
-practice we have. Since the appearance of the Emile the best educators
-have studied the subject on whom they had to act, and they have been
-learning more and more of the laws or sequences which affect the human
-mind and the human body. The marvellous strides of science in every other
-department encourages us to hope that it will make great advances in the
-field of education where it is still so greatly needed. Perhaps the day
-may come when a Pestalozzi may be considered even by his contemporaries
-on an equality with a Napoleon, and the human race may be willing to
-give to the art of instruction the same amount of time, money, thought,
-and energy, which in our day have been devoted with such tremendous
-success to the art of destruction. It is already dawning on the general
-consciousness that in education as in physical science “we conquer Nature
-by obeying her,” and we are learning more and more how to obey her.
-
-§ 23. Rousseau’s great work was first, to expose the absurdities of the
-school-room, and second, to set the educator on studying the laws of
-nature in the human mind and body. He also drew attention to the child’s
-restless activity. He would also (like Locke before him), make the young
-learner his own teacher.
-
-§ 24. There is another way in which the appearance of the Emile was,
-as the Germans say, “epoch-making.” From the time of the earliest
-Innovators, we have seen that “Things not Words,” had been the war-cry of
-a strong party of Reformers. But _things_ had been considered merely as
-a superior means of instruction. Rousseau first pointed out the intimate
-relation that exists between children and the material world around them.
-Children had till then been thought of only as immature and inferior men.
-Since his day an English poet has taught us that in some ways the man is
-far inferior to the child, “the things which we have seen we now can see
-no more,” and that
-
- “nothing can bring back the hour
- “Of splendour in the grass, of glory in the flower.”
-
-Rousseau had not Wordsworth’s gifts, but he, too, observed that childhood
-is the age of strong impressions from without and that its material
-surroundings affect it much more acutely than they will in after life.
-Which of us knows as much about our own house and furniture as our
-children know? Still more remarkable is the sympathy children have with
-animals. If a cat comes into a room where there are grown people and also
-a child, which sees the cat first? which observes it most accurately?
-Now, this intimate relation of the child with its surroundings plays a
-most important part in its education. The educator may, if so minded,
-ignore this altogether, and stick to grammar, dates, and county towns,
-but if he does so the child’s real education will not be much affected
-by him. Rousseau saw this clearly, and wished to use “things” not for
-instruction but for education. Their special function was to train the
-senses.
-
-§ 25. Perhaps it is not too much to say of Rousseau that he was the first
-who gave up thinking of the child as a being whose chief faculty was the
-faculty of remembering, and thought of him rather as a being who feels
-and reflects, acts and invents.
-
-§ 26. But if the thought may be traced back to Rousseau, it was, as left
-by him, quite crude or rather embryonic. Since his time this conception
-of the young has been taken up and moulded into a fair commencement of a
-science of education. This commencement is now occupying the attention
-of thinkers such as Herbert Spencer, and much may be expected from it
-even in the immediate future. For the science so far as it exists we are
-indebted mainly to the two Reformers with whom I will conclude—Pestalozzi
-and Froebel.
-
-§ 27. Pestalozzi, like Comenius more than 100 years before him, conceived
-of education for all. “Every human being,” said he, “has a claim to a
-judicious development of his faculties.” Every child must go to school.
-
-But the word _school_ includes a great variety of institutions. The
-object these have in view differs immensely. With us the main object in
-some schools seems to be to prepare boys to compete at an early age for
-entrance scholarships awarded to the greatest proficients in Latin and
-Greek. In other schools the object is to turn the children out “good
-scholars” in another sense; that is, the school is held to be successful
-when the boys and girls acquire skill in the arts of reading, writing,
-and arithmetic, and can remember a number of facts—facts of history, of
-geography, and even of natural science. So the common notion is that what
-is wanted in the way of education depends entirely on the child’s social
-position. There still linger among us notions derived from the literary
-men of the Renascence. We still measure all children by their literary
-and mnemonic attainments. We still consider knowledge of Latin and Greek
-the highest kind of knowledge. Children are sent to school that they may
-not be ignorant.[213] Pestalozzi, who had studied Rousseau, entirely
-denied all this. He required that the school-coach should be turned and
-started in a new direction. The main object of the school was not to
-teach, but to develop, not to _put in_ but to _draw out_.
-
-§ 28. The study of nature shows us that every animal comes into the world
-with certain faculties or capabilities. There are a set of circumstances
-which will develop these capabilities and make the most of them. There
-are other circumstances which would impede this development, decrease it,
-or even prevent it altogether. All other animals have this development
-secured for them by their ordinary environment: but Man, with far higher
-capacities, and with immeasurably greater faculties both for good and
-evil, is left far more to his own resources than the other animals.
-Placed in an almost endless variety of circumstances we have to ascertain
-how the development of our offspring may best be brought about. We have
-to consider what are the inborn faculties of our children, and also what
-aids and what hinders their development. When we have arrived at this
-knowledge we must educate them by placing them in the best circumstances
-in our power, and then superintending, judiciously and lovingly, the
-development of their faculties and of their higher nature.
-
-§ 29. There is, said Pestalozzi, only one way in which faculty can be
-developed, and that is by exercise; so his system sought to encourage the
-activities of children, and in this respect he was surpassed, as we shall
-see, by Froebel. “Dead” knowledge, as it has been called—the knowledge
-commonly acquired for examinations, our school-knowledge, in fact—was
-despised by Pestalozzi as it had been by Locke and Rousseau before him.
-In its place he would put knowledge acquired by “intuition,” by the
-spring of the learner’s own intelligence.
-
-§ 30. The conception of every child as an organism and of education as
-the process by which the development of that organism is promoted is
-found first in Pestalozzi, but it was more consistently thought out by
-Froebel. There is, said Froebel, a divine idea for every human being,
-for we are all God’s offspring. The object of the education of a human
-being is to further the development of his divine idea. This development
-is attainable only through action; for the development of every organism
-depends on its self-activity. Self-activity then, activity “with a will,”
-is the main thing to be cared for in education. The educator has to
-direct the children’s activity in such a way that it may satisfy their
-instincts, especially the formative and creative instincts. The child
-from his earliest years is to be treated as a _doer_ and even a _creator_.
-
-§ 31. Now, at last, we have arrived at the complete antithesis between
-the old education and the New. The old education had one object, and that
-was learning. Man was a being who learnt and remembered. Education was
-a process by which he _learnt_, at first the languages and literatures
-of Rome and Greece only; but as time went on the curriculum was greatly
-extended. The New Education treats the human being not so much a learner
-as a doer and creator. The educator no longer fixes his eyes on the
-object—the knowledge, but on the subject—the being to be educated. The
-success of the education is not determined by what the educated _know_,
-but by what they _do_ and what they _are_. They are well educated when
-they love what is good, and have had all their faculties of mind and body
-properly developed to do it.
-
-§ 32. The New Education then is “passive, following,” and must be based
-on the study of human nature. When we have ascertained what are the
-faculties to be developed we must consider further how to foster the
-self-activity that will develop them.
-
-§ 33. We have travelled far from Dr. Johnson, who asserted that education
-was as well known as it ever could be. Some of us are more inclined to
-assert that in his day education was not invented. On the other hand,
-there are those who belittle the New Education and endeavour to show
-that in it there is nothing new at all. As it seems to me a revolution
-of the most salutary kind was made by the thinkers who proposed basing
-education on a study of the subject to be educated, and, more than this,
-making the process a “following” process with the object of drawing out
-self-activity.
-
-§ 34. This change of object must in the end be fruitful in changes
-of every kind. But as yet we are only groping our way; and, if I may
-give a caution which, in this country at least, is quite superfluous,
-we should be cautious, and till we see our way clearly we should try
-no great experiment that would destroy our connexion with the past.
-Most of our predecessors thought only of knowledge. By a reaction some
-of our New Educationists seem to despise knowledge. But knowledge is
-necessary, and without some knowledge development would be impossible.
-We probably cannot do too much to assist development and encourage
-“intuition,” but there is, perhaps, some danger of our losing sight of
-truths which schoolroom experience would bring home to us. Even the
-clearest “concepts” get hazy again and totally unfit for use, unless they
-are permanently fixed in the mind by repetition, which to be effective
-must to some extent take the form of _drill_. The practical man, even
-the crammer, has here mastered a truth of the teaching art which the
-educationist is prone to overlook. And there are, no doubt, other things
-which the practical man can teach. But the great thinkers would raise us
-to a higher standing-point from which we may see much that will make the
-right road clearer to us, and lead us to press forward in it with good
-heart and hope.
-
-
-FINIS.
-
-
-
-
-FOOTNOTES
-
-
-[1] When the greater part of this volume was already written, Mr. Parker
-published his sketch of the history of Classical Education (_Essays on
-a Liberal Education_, edited by Farrar). He seems to me to have been
-very successful in bringing out the most important features of his
-subject, but his essay necessarily shows marks of over-compression. Two
-volumes have also lately appeared on _Christian Schools and Scholars_
-(Longmans, 1867). Here we have a good deal of information which we want,
-and also, it seems to me, a good deal which we do not want. The work
-characteristically opens with a 10th century description of the personal
-appearance of St. Mark when he landed at Alexandria. The author treats
-only of the times which preceded the Council of Trent. A very interesting
-account of early English education has been given by Mr. Furnivall, in
-the 2nd and 3rd numbers of the _Quarterly Journal of Education_ (1867).
-[I did not then know of Dr. Barnard’s works.]
-
-[2] This article is omitted in the last edition.
-
-[3] The rest of this chapter was published in the September, 1880 number
-of _Education_. Boston, U.S.A.
-
-[4] On the nature of literature see Cardinal Newman’s “Lectures on the
-Nature of a University. University Subjects. II. Literature.”
-
-[5] I see Carlyle has used a similar metaphor in the same connexion:
-“Consider the old schoolmen and their pilgrimage towards Truth! the
-faithfullest endeavour, incessant unwearied motion; often great natural
-vigour, only no progress; nothing but antic feats of one limb poised
-against the other; there they balanced, somerseted, and made postures; at
-best gyrated swiftly with some pleasure like spinning dervishes and ended
-where they began.”—_Characteristics_, Misc., vol. iii, 5.
-
-[6] This illustration was suggested by a similar one in Prof. J. R.
-Seeley’s essay “On the teaching of English” in his _Lectures and Essays_,
-1870.
-
-[7] Miss J. D. Potter, in “Journal of Education.” London, June, 1879
-
-[8] See Erasmus’s _Ciceronianus_, or account of it, in Henry Barnard’s
-_German Teachers_.
-
-[9] “On Abuse of Human Learning,” by Samuel Butler.
-
-[10] Multum ilium profecisse arbitror, qui ante sextum decimum ætatis
-annum facultatem duarum linguarum mediocrem assecutus est. (Quoted by
-Parker.)
-
-[11] R. Mulcaster’s _Positions_, 1581, p. 30. I have reprinted this book
-(Longmans, 1888, price 10_s._).
-
-[12] Sturm’s school “had an European reputation: there were Poles and
-Portuguese, Spaniards, Danes, Italians, French and English. But besides
-this, it was the model and mother school of a numerous progeny. Sturm
-himself organized schools for several towns which applied to him. His
-disciples became organizers, rectors, and professors. In short, if
-Melanchthon was the instructor, Sturm was the schoolmaster of Germany.
-Together with his method, his school-books were spread broadcast over
-the land. Both were adopted by Ascham in England, and by Buchanan in
-Scotland. Sturm himself was a great man at the imperial court. No
-diplomatist passed through Strasburg without stopping to converse with
-him. He drew a pension from the King of Denmark, another from the King
-of France, a third from the Queen of England, collected political
-information for Cardinal Granvella, and was ennobled by Charles V. He
-helped to negotiate peace between France and England, and was appointed
-to confer with a commission of Cardinals on reunion of the Church. In
-short, Sturm knew what he was about as well as most men of his time. Yet
-few will be disposed to accept his theory of education, even for the
-sixteenth century, as the best. Wherein then lay the mistake?... Sturm
-asserted that the proper end of school education is eloquence, or in
-modern phrase, a masterly command of language, and that the knowledge of
-things mainly belongs to a later stage ... Sturm assumed that Latin is
-the language in which eloquence is to be acquired.”
-
-This is from Mr. Charles Stuart Parker’s excellent account of Sturm in
-_Essays on a Liberal Education_, edited by Farrar, Essay I., _On History
-of Classical Education_, p. 39.
-
-I find from Herbart (_Päd. Schriften_, O. Wilmann’s edition, vol. ij,
-229 ff; Beyer’s edition, ij, 321) that the historian, F. H. Ch. Schwarz,
-took a very favourable view of Sturm’s work; and both he and Karl Schmidt
-give Sturm credit for introducing the two ways of studying an author that
-may be carried on at the same time—1st, _statarisch_, _i.e._, reading a
-small quantity accurately, and 2nd, _cursorisch_, _i.e._, getting over
-the ground. These two kinds, of reading were made much of by J. M. Gesner
-(1691-1761). Ernst Laas has written _Die Pädagogik J. Sturms_ which no
-doubt does him justice, but I have not seen the book.
-
-[13] Why did Bacon, who spoke slightingly of Sturm (see Parker, in
-_Essays on Lib. Ed._), rate the Jesuits so highly? “Consule scholas
-Jesuitarum: nihil enim quod in usum venit his melius,” _De Aug._, lib.
-iv, cap. iv. See, too, a longer passage in first book of _De Aug._ (about
-end of first 1/4), “Quæ nobilissima pars priscæ disciplinæ revocata est
-aliquatenus, quasi postliminio, in Jesuitarum collegiis; quorum cum
-intueor industriam solertiamque tam in doctrina excolenda quam in moribus
-informandis, illud occurrit Agesilai de Pharnabazo, ‘Talis cum sis,
-utinam noster esses.’”
-
-[14] (1) Joseph Anton Schmid’s “Niedere Schulen der Jesuiten:”
-Regensburg, 1852. (2) Article by Wagenmann in K. A. Schmid’s
-“Encyclopädie des Erziehungs-und Unterrichtswesens.” (3) “Ratio atque
-Institutio Studiorum Soc. Jesu.” The first edition of this work,
-published at Rome in 1585, was suppressed as heretical, because it
-contemplated the possibility of differing from St. Thomas Aquinas. The
-book is now very scarce. There is a copy in the British Museum. On
-comparing it with the folio edition (“Constitutiones,” &c., published
-at Prag in 1632), I find many omissions in the latter, some of which
-are curious, _e.g._, under “De Matrimonio:”—“Matremne an uxorem
-occidere sit gravius, non est hujus loci.” (4) “Parænesis ad Magistros
-Scholarum Inferiorum Soc. Jesu, scripta a P. Francisco Sacchino, ex
-eâdem Societate.” (5) “Juvencius de Ratione Discendi et Docendi.”
-Crétineau-Joly’s “Histoire de la Compagnie de Jésus” (Paris, 1844), I
-have not made much use of. Sacchini and Jouvency were both historians of
-the Order. The former died in 1625, the latter in 1719. There is a good
-sketch of the Jesuit schools, by Andrewes, in Barnard’s _American Journal
-of Education_, vol. xiv, 1864, reprinted in the best book I know of in
-English on the History of Education, Barnard’s _German Teachers_.
-
-[15] “L’exécution des décrets de 1880 a eu pour résultat la fermeture de
-leurs collèges. Mais malgré leur dispersion apparente ils sont encore
-plus puissants qu’on ne le croit, et ce serait une erreur de penser que
-le dernier mot est dit avec eux.”—_Compayré, in Buisson_, ij, p. 1420.
-
-[16] According to the article in K. A. Schmid’s “Encyclopädie,” the usual
-course was this—the two years’ novitiate was over by the time the youth
-was between fifteen and seventeen. He then entered a Jesuit college as
-Scholasticus. Here he learnt literature and rhetoric for two years, and
-then philosophy (with mathematics) for three more. He then entered on
-his Regency, _i.e._, he went over the same ground as a _teacher_, for
-from four to six years. Then followed a period of theological study,
-ending with a year of trial, called the _Tertiorat_. The candidate was
-now admitted to Priest’s Orders, and took the vows either as _professus
-quatuor votorum_, professed father of four vows, or as a _coadjutor_. If
-he was then sent back to teach, he gave only the higher instruction. The
-_fourth_ vow placed him at the disposal of the Pope.
-
-[17] Karl Schmidt (Gesch. d. Päd., iij. 199, 200), says that however much
-teachers were wanted, a two years’ course of preparation was considered
-indispensable. When the Novitiate was over the candidate became a
-“Junior” (_Gallicè_ “Juveniste”). He then continued his studies _in
-literis humanioribus_, preparatory to teaching. When in the “Juvenat” or
-“Juniorate” he had rubbed up his classics and mathematics, he entered
-the “Seminary,” and two or three times a week he expounded to a class
-the matter of the previous lecture, and answered questions, &c. For this
-information I am indebted to the courtesy of Father Eyre (S. J.), of
-Stonyhurst.
-
-[18] So says Andrewes (_American Journal of Education_), but other
-authorities put the age of entrance as high as fourteen. The _studia
-superiora_ were begun before twenty-four.
-
-[19] “Non gratia nobilium officiat culturæ vulgarium: cum sint natales
-omnium pares in Adam et hæreditates quoque pares in Christo.”
-
-[20] Even junior masters were not to be much addicted to their own
-language. “Illud cavendum imprimis juniori magistro ne vernaculis nimium
-libris indulgeat, præsertim poetis, in quibus maximam temporis ac
-fortasse morum jacturam faceret.”—_Jouvency._
-
-[21] “Multum proderit si magister non tumultuario ac subito dicat, sed
-quæ domi cogitate scripserit.—It will be a great gain if the master does
-not speak in a hurry and without forethought, but is ready with what
-he has thought out and written out in his own room.”—_Ratio Studd._,
-quoted by Schmid. And Sacchini says: “Ante omnia, quæ quisque docturus
-est, egregie calleat. Tum enim bene docet, et facile docet, et libenter
-docet; bene, quia sine errore; facile, quia sine labore; libenter, quia
-ex pleno.... Memoriæ minimum fidat: instauret eam refricetque iterata
-lectione antequam quicquam doceat, etiamsi idem sæpe docuerit. Occurret
-non raro quod addat vel commodius proponat.—Before all things let
-everyone be thoroughly skilled in what he is going to teach; for then
-he teaches well, he teaches easily, he teaches readily: well, because
-he makes no mistakes; easily, because he has no need to exert himself;
-readily, because, like wealthy men he cares not how he gives.... Let him
-be very distrustful of his memory; let him renew his remembrance and rub
-it up by repeated reading before he teaches anything, though he may have
-often taught it before. Something will now and then occur to him which he
-may add, or put more neatly.”
-
-[22] In a school (not belonging to the Jesuits) where this plan was
-adopted, the boys, by an ingenious contrivance, managed to make it work
-very smoothly. The boy who was “hearing” the lessons held the book upside
-down in such a way that the others _read_ instead of repeating by heart.
-The masters finally interfered with this arrangement.
-
-[23] Since the above was written, an account of these concertations
-has appeared in the Rev. G. R. Kingdon’s evidence before the Schools
-Commission, 1867 (vol. v, Answers 12, 228 ff.) Mr. Kingdon, the Prefect
-of Studies at Stonyhurst, mentions that the side which wins in most
-concertations gets an extra half-holiday.
-
-[24] “The grinding over and over of a subject after pupils have attained
-a fair knowledge of it, is nothing less than stultifying—killing
-out curiosity and the desire of knowledge, and begetting mechanical
-habits.”—_Supt. J. Hancock_, Dayton, Ohio. Every teacher of experience
-knows how true this is.
-
-[25] “Stude potius ut pauciora clare distincteque percipiant, quam
-obscure atque confuse pluribus imbuantur.—Care rather for their seeing a
-few things vividly and definitely, than that they should get filled with
-hazy and confusing notions of many things.” (There are few more valuable
-precepts for the teacher than this.)
-
-[26] Sacchini writes in a very high tone on this subject. The following
-passage is striking: “Gravitatem sui muneris summasque opportunitates
-assidue animo verset (magister).... ‘Puerilis institutio mundi renovatio
-est;’ hæc gymnasia Dei castra sunt, hic bonorum omnium semina latent.
-Video solum fundamentumque republicæ quod multi non videant interpositu
-terræ.—Let the mind of the master dwell upon the responsibilities of
-his office and its immense opportunities.... The education of the young
-is the renovation of the world. These schools are the camp of God: in
-them lie the seeds of all that is good. There I see the foundation and
-ground-work of the commonwealth, which many fail to see from its being
-underground.” Perhaps he had read of Trotzendorf’s address to a school,
-“Hail reverend divines, learned doctors, worshipful magistrates, &c.”
-
-[27] “Circa illorum valetudinem peculiari cura animadvertat (Rector) ut
-et in laboribus mentis modum servent, et in iis quæ ad corpus pertinent,
-religiosa commoditate tractentur, ut diutius in studiis perseverare
-tam in litteris addiscendis quam in eisdem exercendis ad Dei gloriam
-possint.”—_Ratio Studd._, quoted by Schmid. See also _infra_ p. 62.
-
-[28] The following, from the _Ratio Studd._, sounds Jesuitical: “Nec
-publicé puniant flagitia quædam secretiora sed privatim; aut si publicé,
-_alias obtendant causas_, et satis est eos qui plectuntur conscios esse
-causarum.”
-
-[29] As the Public Schools Commission pointed out, the Head Master often
-thinks of nothing but the attainment of University honours, _even when
-the great majority of his pupils are not going to the University_.
-
-[30] The advantages of learning by heart are twofold, says Sacchini:
-“Primum memoriam ipsam perficiunt, quod est in totam ætatem ad universa
-negotia inæstimabile commodum. Deinde suppellectilem inde pulcherrimam
-congregant verborum ac rerum: quæ item, quamdiu vivant, usui futura sit:
-cum quæ ætate illa insederint indelebilia soleant permanere. Magnam
-itaque, ubi adoleverint, gratiam Praeceptori habebunt, cui memoriæ
-debebunt profectum, magnamque lætitiam capient invenientes quodammodo
-domi thesaurum quem, in ætate cæteroqui parum fructuosa, prope non
-sentientes parârint. Enim vero quam sæpe viros graves atque præstantes
-magnoque jam natu videre et audire est, dum in docta ac nobili corona
-jucundissime quædam promunt ex iis quæ pueri condiderunt?—First, they
-strengthen the memory itself and so gain an inestimable advantage in
-affairs of every kind throughout life. Then they get together by this
-means the fairest furniture for the mind, both of thoughts and words, a
-stock that will be of use to them as long as they live, since that which
-settles in the mind in youth mostly stays there. And when the lads have
-grown up they will feel gratitude to the master to whom they are indebted
-for their good memory; and they will take delight in finding within them
-a treasure which at a time of life otherwise unfruitful they have been
-preparing almost without knowing it. How often we see and hear eminent
-men far advanced in life, when in learned and noble company, take a
-special delight in quoting what they stored up as boys!” The master, he
-says, must point out to his pupils the advantages we derive from memory;
-that we only know and possess that which we retain, that this cannot
-be taken from us, but is with us always and is always ready for use,
-a living library, which may be studied even in the dark. Boys should
-therefore be encouraged to run over in their minds, or to say aloud,
-what they have learnt, as often as opportunity offers, as when they are
-walking or are by themselves: “Ita numquam in otio futuros otiosos; ita
-minus fore solos cum soli erunt, consuetudine fruentes sapientum....
-Denique curandum erit ut selecta quædam ediscant quæ deinde in quovis
-studiorum genere ac vita fere omni usui sint futura.—So they will never
-be without employment when unemployed, never less alone than when alone,
-for then they profit by intercourse with the wise.... To sum up, take
-care that they thoroughly commit to memory choice selections which will
-for ever after be of use to them in every kind of study, and nearly every
-pursuit in life.”—(Cap. viij.) This is interesting and well put, but we
-see one or two points in which we have now made an advance. Learning
-by heart will give none of the advantages mentioned unless the boys
-understand the pieces and delight in them. Learning by heart strengthens,
-no doubt, a faculty, but nothing large enough to be called “the memory.”
-And the Renascence must indeed have blinded the eyes of the man to whom
-childhood and youth seemed an “ætas parum fructuosa”! Similarly, Sturm
-speaks of the small fry “qui in extremis latent classibus.” (Quoted by
-Parker.) But when Pestalozzi and Froebel came these lay hid no longer.
-
-[31] Ranke, speaking of the success of the Jesuit schools, says: “It was
-found that young persons learned more under them in half a year than with
-others in two years. Even Protestants called back their children from
-distant schools, and put them under the care of the Jesuits.”—_Hist. of
-Popes_, book v, p. 138. Kelly’s Trans.
-
-In France, the University in vain procured an _arrêt_ forbidding the
-Parisians to send away their sons to the Jesuit colleges: “Jesuit schools
-enjoyed the confidence of the public in a degree which placed them beyond
-competition.” (Pattison’s _Casaubon_, p. 182.)
-
-Pattison remarks elsewhere that such was the common notion of the
-Jesuits’ course of instruction that their controversialists could treat
-anyone, even a Casaubon, who had not gone through it, as an uneducated
-person.
-
-[32] “Sapientum hoc omnium seu veterum seu recentum constans judicium
-est, institutionem puerilem tum fore optimam cum jucundissima
-fuerit, inde enim et ludum vocari. Meretur ætatis teneritas ut ne
-oneretur: meretur innocentia ut ei parcatur ... Quæ libentibus auribus
-instillantur, ad ea velut occurrit animus, avide suscipit, studiose
-recondit, fideliter servat.”
-
-[33] “Conciliabit facilè studiis quos primùm sibi conciliârit. Det itaque
-omnem operam illorum erga se observantionem ut sapienter colligat et
-continenter enutriat. Ostendat, sibi res eorum curæ esse non solum quæ
-ad animum sed etiam quæ ad alia pertinent. Gaudeat cum gaudentibus, nec
-dedignetur flere cum flentibus. Instar Apostoli inter parvulos parvulus
-fiat quo magnos in Christo et magnum in eis Christum efficiat ... Seriam
-comitatem et paternam gravitatem cum materna benignitate permisceat.”
-Unfortunately, the Jesuits’ kind manner loses its value from being due
-not so much to kind feeling as to some ulterior object, or to a rule
-of the Order. I think it is Jouvency who recommends that when a boy is
-absent from sickness or other sufficient reason, the master should send
-daily to inquire after him, _because the parents will be pleased by such
-attention_. When the motive of the inquiry is suspected, the parents will
-be pleased no longer.
-
-[34] “Errorem existimo statim initio spinosiores quasdam grammaticæ
-difficultates inculcare ... cum enim planioribus insueverint difficiliora
-paulatim usus explanabit. Quin et capacior subinde mens ac firmius cum
-ætate judicium, quod alio monstrante perægre unquam percepisset per sese
-non raro intelliget. Exempla quoque talium rerum dum praelegitur autor
-facilius in orationis contextu agnoscentur et penetrabunt in animos quam
-si solitaria et abscissa proponantur. Quamobrem faciendum erit ut quoties
-occurrunt diligenter enucleentur.”
-
-[35] See, _e.g._, marvellous instances of their self-devotion in that
-most interesting book, Francis Parkman’s _Jesuits in N. America_ (Boston,
-Little & Co., 10th edition, 1876).
-
-[36] I have referred to Francis Parkman, who has chronicled the
-marvellous self-devotion and heroism of the Jesuit missionaries in
-Canada. Such a witness may be trusted when he says: “The Jesuit was as
-often a fanatic for his Order as for his faith; and oftener yet, the two
-fanaticisms mingled in him inextricably. Ardently as he burned for the
-saving of souls, he would have none saved on the Upper Lakes except by
-his brethren and himself. He claimed a monopoly of conversion with its
-attendant monopoly of toil, hardships, and martyrdom. Often disinterested
-for himself, he was inordinately ambitious for the great corporate power
-in which he had merged his own personality; and here lies one of the
-causes among many, of the seeming contradictions which abound in the
-annals of the Order.”—_The Discovery of the Great West_, by F. Parkman,
-London, 1869, p. 28.
-
-[37] In a letter dated from Stonyhurst, 22nd April, 1880.
-
-[38] The best account I have seen of life in a Jesuit school is in
-_Erinnerungen eines chemaligen Jesuitenzöglings_ (Leipzig, Brockhaus,
-1862). The writer (Köhler?) says that he has become an evangelical
-clergyman, but there is no hostile feeling shown to his old instructors,
-and the narrative bears the strongest internal evidence of accuracy. Some
-of the Jesuit devices mentioned are very ingenious. All house masters who
-have adopted the cubicle arrangement of dormitories know how difficult it
-is to keep the boys in their own cubicles. The Jesuits have the cubicles
-barred across at the top, and the locks on the doors are so constructed
-that though they can be opened from the inside _they cannot be shut
-again_. The Fathers at Freiburg (in Breisgau) opened a “tuck-shop” for
-the boys, and gave “week’s-pay” in counters which passed at their own
-shop and nowhere else. The author speaks warmly of the kindness of the
-Fathers and of their care for health and recreation. But their ways
-were inscrutable and every boy felt himself in the hands of a _human_
-providence. As the boys go out for a walk, one of them is detained by the
-porter, who says “the Rector wants to speak to you.” On their way back
-the boys meet a diligence in which sits their late comrade waving adieus.
-_He has been expelled._
-
-Another book which throws much light on Jesuit pedagogy is by a
-Jesuit—_La Discipline_, par le R. P. Emmanuel Barbier (Paris, V. Palmé,
-2nd edition, 1888). I will give a specimen in a loose translation, as it
-may interest the reader to see how carefully the Jesuits have studied the
-master’s difficulties. “The master in charge of the boys, especially in
-play-time, in his first intercourse with them, has no greater snare in
-his way than taking his power for granted, and trusting to the strength
-of his will and his knowledge of the world, especially as he is at first
-lulled into security by the deferential manner of his pupils.
-
-“That master who goes off with such ease from the very first, to whom the
-carrying out of all the rules seems the simplest thing in the world, who
-in the very first hour he is with them has already made himself liked,
-almost popular, with his pupils, who shows no more anxiety about his work
-than he must show to keep his character for good sense, that master is
-indeed to be pitied; he is most likely a lost man. He will soon have to
-choose one of two things, either to shut his eyes and put up with all
-the irregularities he thought he had done away with, or to break with a
-past that he would wish forgotten, and engage in open conflict with the
-boys who are inclined to set him at defiance. These cases are we trust
-rare. But many believe with a kind of rash ignorance and in spite of
-the warnings of experience that the good feelings of their pupils will
-work together to maintain their authority. They have been told that this
-authority should be mild and endeared by acts of kindness. So they set
-about crowning the edifice without making sure of the foundations; and
-taking the title of authority for its possession they spend all their
-efforts in lightening a yoke of which no one really bears the weight.
-
-“In point of fact the first steps often determine the whole course. For
-this reason you will attach extreme importance to what I am now going to
-advise:
-
-“The chief characteristic in your conduct towards the boys during the
-first few weeks should be _an extreme reserve_. However far you go in
-this, you can hardly overdo it. So your first attitude is clearly defined.
-
-“You have everything to observe, the individual character of each boy and
-the general tendencies and feelings of the whole body. But be sure of one
-thing, viz., that _you_ are observed also, and a careful study is made
-both of your strong points and of your weak. Your way of speaking and
-of giving orders, the tone of your voice, your gestures, disclose your
-character, your tastes, your failings, to a hundred boys on the alert to
-pounce upon them. One is summed up long before one has the least notion
-of it. Try then to remain impenetrable. You should never give up your
-reserve till you are master of the situation.
-
-“For the rest, let there be no affectation about you. Don’t attempt
-to put on a severe manner; answer politely and simply your pupils’
-questions, but let it be in few words, and _avoid conversation_. All
-depends on that. Let there be no chatting with them in these early days.
-You cannot be too cautious in this respect. Boys have such a polite, such
-a taking way with them in drawing out information about your impressions,
-your tastes, your antecedents; don’t attempt the diplomate; don’t
-match your skill against theirs. You cannot chat without coming out of
-your shell, so to speak. Instead of this, you must puzzle them by your
-reserve, and drive them to this admission: ‘We don’t know what to make of
-our new master.’
-
-“Do I advise you then to be on the defensive throughout the whole year
-and like a stranger among your pupils? No! a thousand times, No! It is
-just to make their relations with you simple, confiding, I might say
-cordial, without the least danger to your authority, that I endeavour
-to raise this authority at first beyond the reach of assault.”—_La
-Discipline_, chap, v, pp. 31 ff.
-
-In this book we see the best side of the Jesuits. They believe in their
-“mission,” and this belief throws light on many things. Those who hate
-the Jesuits have often extolled the wisdom of Montaigne, when he says:
-“We have not to train up a soul, nor yet a body, but a man; and we cannot
-divide him.” Can they see no wisdom in _this_? “Let your mind be filled
-with the thought that both soul and body have been created by the Hand of
-God: we must account to Him for these two parts of our being; and we are
-not required to weaken one of them out of love for the Creator. We should
-love the body in the same degree that He could love it.” This is what
-Loyola wrote in 1548 to Francis Borgia (Compayré, _Doctrines, &c._, vol.
-j, 179). But if we wish to see the other side of the Jesuit character,
-we have only to look at the Jesuit as a controversialist. We sometimes
-see children hiding things and then having a pretence hunt for them. The
-Jesuits are no children, but in arguing they pretend to be searching
-for conclusions which are settled before arguments are thought of. See,
-_e.g._, the attack on the Port Royalists in _Les Jésuites Instituteurs_,
-par le P. Ch. Daniel, 1880, in which the Jesuit sets himself to maintain
-this thesis: “D’une source aussi profondément infectée du poison de
-l’hérésie, il ne pouvait sortir rien d’absolument bon” (p. 123). One good
-point he certainly makes, and in my judgment one only, in comparing the
-Port Royalist schools with the schools of Jesuits. Methods which answer
-with very small numbers may not do with large numbers: “You might as well
-try to extend your gardening operations to agriculture” (p. 102).
-
-[39] I am sorry to use a German word, but educational matters have been
-so little considered among us that we have no English vocabulary for
-them. The want of a word for _Realien_ was felt over 200 years ago.
-“Repositories for _visibles_ shall be prepared by which from beholding
-the things gentlewomen may learn the names, natures, values, and use
-of herbs, shrubs, trees, mineral-juices (_sic_), metals, and stones.”
-(_Essay to Revive the Antient Education of Gentlewomen._ London, 1672.)
-
-[40] See the very interesting _Essay on Montaigne_ by Dean R. W. Church.
-
-[41] Perhaps the saying of Montaigne’s which is most frequently quoted
-is the paradox _Savoir par cœur n’est pas savoir_: (“to know by heart is
-not to _know_.”) But these words are often misunderstood. The meaning, as
-I take it, is this: When a thought has entered into the mind it shakes
-off the words by which it was conveyed thither. Therefore so long as the
-words are indispensable the thought is not known. Knowing and knowing by
-heart are not necessarily opposed, but they are different things; and as
-the mind most easily runs along sequences of words a knowledge of the
-words often conceals ignorance or neglect of the thought. I once asked a
-boy if he thought of the meaning when he repeated Latin poetry and I got
-the instructive answer: “Sometimes, _when I am not sure of the words_.”
-But there are cases in which we naturally connect a particular form of
-words with thoughts that have become part of our minds. We then know, and
-know by heart also.
-
-[42] Lord Armstrong has perhaps never read Montaigne’s _Essay on
-Pedantry_; certainly, he has not borrowed from it; and yet much that
-he says in discussing “The Cry for Useless Knowledge” (_Nineteenth
-Century Magazine_, November, 1888), is just what Montaigne said more
-than three centuries ago. “The aphorism that knowledge is power is so
-constantly used by educational enthusiasts that it may almost be regarded
-as the motto of the party. But the first essential of a motto is that
-it be true, and it is certainly not true that knowledge is the same as
-power, seeing that it is only an aid to power. The power of a surgeon
-to amputate a limb no more lies in his knowledge than in his knife. In
-fact, the knife has the better claim to potency of the two, for a man
-may hack off a limb with his knife alone, but not with his knowledge
-alone. Knowledge is not even an aid to power in all cases, seeing that
-useless knowledge, which is no uncommon article in our popular schools,
-has no relation to power. The true source of power is the originative
-action of the mind which we see exhibited in the daily incidents of
-life, as well as in matters of great importance.... A man’s success in
-life depends incomparably more upon his capacities for useful action
-than upon his acquirements in knowledge, and the education of the young
-should therefore be directed to the development of faculties and valuable
-qualities rather than to the acquisition of knowledge.... Men of capacity
-and possessing qualities for useful action are at a premium all over the
-world, while men of mere education are at a deplorable discount.” (p.
-664).
-
-“There is a great tendency in the scholastic world to underrate the value
-and potency of self-education, which commences on leaving school and
-endures all through life.” (p. 667).
-
-“I deprecate plunging into doubtful and costly schemes of instruction,
-led on by the _ignis fatuus_ that ‘knowledge is a power.’ For where
-natural capacity is wasted in attaining knowledge, it would be truer to
-say that knowledge is weakness.” (p. 668).
-
-[43] In another matter, also, we find that the masters of these schools
-subsequently departed widely from the intention of the great men who
-fostered the revival of learning. Wolsey writes: “Imprimis hoc unum
-admonendum censuerimus, ut neque plagis severioribus neque vultuosis
-minis, aut ulla tyrannidis specie, tenera pubes afficiatur: hac enim
-injuria ingenii alacritas aut extingui aut magna ex parte obtundi solet.”
-Again he says: “In ipsis studiis sic voluptas est intermiscenda ut puer
-ludum potius discendi quam laborem existimet.” He adds: “Cavendum erit ne
-immodica contentione ingenia discentium obruantur aut lectione prolonga
-defatigentur; utraque enim juxta offenditur.”
-
-[44] Professor Arber is one of the very few editors who give accurate and
-sufficient bibliographical information about the books they edit. All
-students of our old literature are under deep obligations to him.
-
-[45] Mayor’s is beautifully printed and costs 1_s._ (London, Bell and
-Sons.)
-
-[46] “Utile imprimis ut multi præcipiunt, vel ex Græco in Latinum vel
-ex Latino vertere in Græcum; quo genere exercitationis proprietas
-splendorque verborum, copia figurarum, vis explicandi, præterea
-imitatione optimorum similia inveniendi facultas paratur: simul quæ
-legentem fefellissent transferentem fugere non possunt. Intelligentia ex
-hoc et judicium acquiritur.”—_Epp._ vii. 9, § 2. So the passage stands in
-Pliny. Ascham quotes “_et_ ex Græco in Latinum _et_ ex Latino vertere in
-Græcum.” with other variations.
-
-[47] _Teaching of Languages in Schools_, by W. H. Widgery, p. 6.
-
-[48] Much information about our early books, with quotations from some of
-them, will be found in Henry Barnard’s _English Pedagogy_, 1st and 2nd
-series. Some notice of rare books is given in _Schools, School-books, and
-Schoolmasters_, by W. Carew Hazlitt (London, Jarvis, 1888), but in this
-work there are strange omissions.
-
-[49] The paging is that of the reprint. It differs slightly from that of
-first edition.
-
-[50] Mulcaster goes on to talk about the brain, &c. Of course he does
-not anticipate the discoveries of science, but his language is very
-different from what we should expect from a writer in the pre-scientific
-age, _e.g._, “To serve the turn of these two, both _sense_ and _motion_,
-Nature hath planted in our body a _brain_, the prince of all our parts,
-which by spreading sinews of all sorts throughout all our parts doth work
-all those effects which either _sense_ is seen in or _motion_ perceived
-by.” (_El._, p. 32.) But much as he thinks of the body Mulcaster is no
-materialist. “Last of all our soul hath in it an imperial prerogative
-of understanding beyond sense, of judging by reason, of directing by
-both, for duty towards God, for society towards men, for conquest in
-affections, for purchase in knowledge, and such other things, whereby
-it furnisheth out all manner of uses in this our mortal life, and
-bewrayeth in itself a more excellent being than to continue still in this
-roaming pilgrimage.” (p. 33.) The grand thing, he says, is to bring all
-these abilities to perfection “which so heavenly a benefit is begun by
-education, confirmed by use, perfected with continuance which crowneth
-the whole work.” (p. 34.) “Nature makes the boy toward; nurture sees him
-forward.” (p. 35.) The neglect of the material world which has been for
-ages the source of mischief of all kinds in the schoolroom, and which has
-not yet entirely passed away, would have been impossible if Mulcaster’s
-elementary course had been adopted. “Is the body made by Nature nimble to
-run, to ride, to swim, to fence, to do anything else which beareth praise
-in that kind for either profit or pleasure? And doth not the Elementary
-help them all forward by precept and train? The hand, the ear, the eye
-be the greatest instruments whereby the receiving and delivery of our
-learning is chiefly executed, and doth not this Elementary instruct the
-hand to write, to draw, to play; the eye to read by letters, to discern
-by line, to judge by both; the ear to call for voice and sound with
-proportion for pleasure, with reason for wit? Generally whatsoever gift
-Nature hath bestowed upon the body, to be brought forth or bettered by
-the mean of train for any profitable use in our whole life, doth not this
-Elementary both find it and foresee it?” (_El._, p. 35). “_The hand,
-the ear, the eye, be the greatest instruments_,” said the Elizabethan
-schoolmaster. So says the Victorian reformer.
-
-[51] I wish some good author would write a book on _Unpopular Truths_,
-and show how, on some subjects, wise men go on saying the same thing
-in all ages and nobody listens to them. Plato said “In every work the
-beginning is the most important part, especially in dealing with anything
-young and tender.” (_Rep._, bk. ii, 377; Davies and Vaughan, p. 65.) And
-the complaints about “bad grounding” prove our common neglect of what
-Mulcaster urged three centuries ago: “For the _Elementarie_ because good
-scholars will not abase themselves to it, it is left to the meanest, and
-therefore to the worst. For that the first grounding would be handled
-by the best, and his reward would be greatest, because both his pains
-and his judgment should be with the greatest. And it would easily allure
-sufficient men to come down so low, if they might perceive that reward
-would rise up. No man of judgment will contrary this point, neither can
-any ignorant be blamed for the contrary: the one seeth the thing to be
-but low in order, the other knoweth the ground to be great in laying, not
-only for the matter which the child doth learn: which is very small in
-show though great for process: but also for the manner of handling his
-wit, to hearten him for afterward, which is of great moment. The first
-master can deal but with a few, the next with more, and so still upward
-as reason groweth on and receives without forcing. It is the foundation
-well and soundly laid, which makes all the upper building muster, with
-countenance and continuance. If I were to strike the stroke, as I am
-but to give counsel, the first pains truly taken should in good truth
-be most liberally recompensed; and less allowed still upward, as the
-pains diminish and the ease increaseth. Whereat no master hath cause to
-repine, so he may have his children well grounded in the _Elementarie_.
-Whose imperfection at this day doth marvellously trouble both masters and
-scholars, so that we can hardly do any good, nay, scantly tell how to
-place the too too raw boys in any certain form, with hope to go forward
-orderly, the ground-work of their entry being so rotten underneath.”
-(_PP._, pp. 233, 4.)
-
-[52] Quaint as we find Mulcaster in his mode of expression, the thing
-expressed is sometimes rather what we should expect from Herbert Spencer
-than from a schoolmaster of the Renascence. I have met with nothing
-more modern in thought than the following: “In time all learning may be
-brought into one tongue, and that natural to the inhabitant: so that
-schooling for tongues may prove needless, as once they were not needed;
-but it can never fall out that arts and sciences in their right nature
-shall be but most necessary for any commonwealth that is not given over
-unto too too much barbarousness.” (_PP._, 240.)
-
-[53] “Subject to a regulation like that of the ancient Spartans, the
-theft of knowledge in our sex is only connived at while carefully
-concealed, and if displayed [is] punished with disgrace.” So says Mrs.
-Barbauld, and I have met with similar passages in other female writers.
-
-[54] John Brinsley (the elder) who married a sister of Bishop Hall’s and
-kept school at Ashby-de-la-Zouch (was it the _Grammar School_?) was one
-of the best English writers on education. In his _Consolation for our
-Grammar Schooles_, published early in the sixteen hundreds, he says:
-“Amongst others myself having first had long experience of the manifold
-evils which grow from the ignorance of a right order of teaching, and
-afterwards some gracious taste of the sweetness that is to be found in
-the better courses truly known and practised, I have betaken me almost
-wholly, for many years unto this weighty work, and that not without much
-comfort, through the goodness of our blessed God.” (p. 1.) “And for the
-most part wherein any good is done, it is ordinarily effected by the
-endless vexation of the painful master, the extreme labour and terror
-of the poor children with enduring far overmuch and long severity. Now
-whence proceedeth all this but because so few of those who undertake
-this function are acquainted with any good method or right order of
-instruction fit for a grammar school?” (p. 2.) It is sad to think how
-many generations have since suffered from teachers “unacquainted with
-any good method or right order of instruction.” And it seems to justify
-Goethe’s dictum, “_Der Engländer ist eigentlich ohne Intelligenz_,” that
-for several generations to come this evil will be but partially abated.
-
-[55] At Cambridge (as also in London and Edinburgh) there is already a
-Training College for Women Teachers in Secondary Schools.
-
-[56] All we know of his life may soon be told. Richard Mulcaster was a
-Cumberland man of good family, an “esquier borne,” as he calls himself,
-who was at Eton, then King’s College, Cambridge, then at Christ Church,
-Oxford. His birth year was probably 1530 or 1531, and he became a student
-of Christ Church in 1555. In 1558 he settled as a schoolmaster in London,
-and was elected first headmaster of Merchant Taylors’ School, which dates
-from 1561. Here he remained twenty-five years, _i.e._ till 1586. Whether
-he then became, as H. B. Wilson says, surmaster of St. Paul’s, I cannot
-determine, but “he came in” highmaster in 1596, and held that office
-for twelve years. Though in 1598 Elizabeth made him rector of Stanford
-Rivers, there can be no doubt that he did not give up the highmastership
-till 1608, when he must have been about 77 years old. He died at
-Stanford Rivers three years later. While at Merchant Taylors’, viz., in
-1581 and 1582, he published the two books which have secured for him a
-permanent place in the history of education in England. The first was his
-_Positions_, the second “The first part” (and, as it proved, the only
-part) of his _Elementarie_. Of his other writings, his _Cato Christianus_
-seems to have been the most important, and a very interesting quotation
-from it has been preserved in Robotham’s Preface to the _Janua_ of
-Comenius; but the book itself is lost: at least I never heard of a copy,
-and I have sought in vain in the British Museum, and at the University
-Libraries of Oxford and Cambridge. His _Catechismus Paulinus_ is a
-rare book, but Rev. J. H. Lupton has found and described a copy in the
-Bodleian.
-
-[57] _Lectures and Essays_: _English in School_, by J. R. Seeley, p.
-222. Elsewhere in the same lecture (p. 229) Professor Seeley says: “The
-schoolmaster might set this right. Every boy that enters the school is
-a _talking_ creature. He is a performer, in his small degree, upon the
-same instrument as Milton and Shakespeare. Only do not sacrifice this
-advantage. Do not try by artificial and laborious processes to give him
-a new knowledge before you have developed that which he has already.
-Train and perfect the gift of speech, unfold all that is in it, and you
-train at the same time the power of thought and the power of intellectual
-sympathy, you enable your pupil to think the thoughts and to delight in
-the words of great philosophers and poets.” I wish this lecture were
-published separately.
-
-[58] _Rep._ bk. vii, 536, _ad f._; Davies and Vaughan, p. 264.
-
-[59] In Buisson (_Dictionnaire_) No. 7 is “The children must have
-frequent play, and a break after every lesson.” Raumer connects this with
-No. 6, and says: “breaks were rendered necessary by Ratke’s plan, which
-kept the learners far too silent.”
-
-[60] In the matter of grammar Ratke’s advice, so long disregarded, has
-recently been followed in the “Parallel Grammar Series,” published by
-Messrs. Sonnenschein.
-
-[61] The ordinary teaching of almost every subject offers illustrations
-of the neglect of this principle. Take, _e.g._, the way in which children
-are usually taught to read. First, they have to say the alphabet—a
-very easy task as it seems to us, but if we met with a strange word
-of _twenty-six syllables_, and that not a compound word, but one of
-which every syllable was new to us, we might have some difficulty in
-remembering it. And yet such a word would be to us what the alphabet is
-to a child. When he can perform this feat, he is next required to learn
-the visual symbols of the sounds and to connect these with the vocal
-symbols. Some of the vocal symbols bring the child in contact with the
-sound itself, but most are simply conventional. What notion does the
-child get of the aspirate from the name of the letter _h_? Having learnt
-twenty-six visual and twenty-six vocal symbols, and connected them
-together, the child _finally comes to the sounds_ (over 40 in number)
-_which the symbols are supposed to represent_.
-
-[62] See Mr. E. E. Bowen’s vigorous essay on “Teaching by means of
-Grammar,” in _Essays on a Liberal Education_, 1867.
-
-I have returned to the subject of language-learning in § 15 of _Jacotot_
-in the _note_. See page 426.
-
-[63] Preface to the _Prodromus_.
-
-[64] Preface to _Prodromus_, first edition, p. 40; second edition (1639),
-p. 78. The above is Hartlib’s translation, see _A Reformation of Schools,
-&c._, pp. 46, 47.
-
-[65] Preface to _Prodromus_, first edition, p. 40; second edition, p. 79.
-_A Reformation, &c._, p. 47.
-
-[66] Very interesting are the “immeasurable labours and intellectual
-efforts” of Master Samuel Hartlib, whom Milton addresses as “a person
-sent hither by some good providence from a far country, to be the
-occasion and incitement of great good to this island.” (_Of Education_,
-A.D. 1644.) See Masson’s _Life of Milton_, vol. iii; also biographical
-and bibliographical account of Hartlib by H. Dircks, 1865. Hartlib’s
-mother was English. His father, when driven out of Poland by triumph of
-the Jesuits, settled at Elbing, where there was an English “Company of
-Merchants” with John Dury for their chaplain. Hartlib came to England not
-later than 1628, and devoted himself to the furtherance of a variety of
-schemes for the public good. He was one of those rare beings who labour
-to promote the schemes of others as if they were their own. He could,
-as he says, “contribute but little” himself, but “being carried forth
-to watch for the opportunities of provoking others, who can do more, to
-improve their talents, I have found experimentally that my endeavours
-have not been without effect.” (Quoted by Dircks, p. 66.) The philosophy
-of Bacon seemed to have introduced an age of boundless improvement; and
-men like Comenius, Hartlib, Petty, and Dury, caught the first unchecked
-enthusiasm. “There is scarce one day,” so Hartlib wrote to Robert Boyle,
-“and one hour of the day or night, being brim full with all manner of
-objects of the most public and universal nature, but my soul is crying
-out ‘Phosphore redde diem! Quid gaudia nostra moraris? Phosphore redde
-diem!’”
-
-But in this world Hartlib looked in vain for the day. The income of £300
-a year allowed him by Parliament was £700 in arrears at the Restoration,
-and he had then nothing to hope. His last years were attended by much
-physical suffering and by extreme poverty. He died as Evelyn thought at
-Oxford in 1662, but this is uncertain.
-
-[67] _Dilucidatio_, Hartlib’s trans., p. 65.
-
-[68] The _Dilucidation_, as he calls it, is added. All the books above
-mentioned are in the Library of the British Museum under _Komensky_.
-
-[69] Masson’s _Milton_, vol. iii, p. 224, Prof. Masson is quoting _Opera
-Didactica_, tom. ii, Introd.
-
-[70] _Unum Necessarium_, quoted by Raumer.
-
-Compare George Eliot: “By desiring what is perfectly good, even when we
-don’t quite know what it is, and cannot do what we would, we are part of
-the Divine power against evil—widening the skirts of light and making the
-struggle with darkness narrower.”—_Middlemarch_, bk. iv, p. 308 of first
-edition.
-
-[71] Compare Mulcaster, _supra_, p. 94.
-
-[72] Comenius here follows Ratke, who, as I have mentioned above (p.
-116), required beginners to study the translation _before the original_.
-
-[73] Professor Masson (_Life of Milton_, vol. iii, p. 205, _note_) gives
-us the following from chap. ix (cols. 42-44), of the _Didactica Magna_:—
-
-“Nor, to say something particularly on this subject, can any sufficient
-reason be given why the weaker sex [_sequior sexus_, literally the
-_later_ or _following_ sex, is his phrase, borrowed from Apuleius, and,
-though the phrase is usually translated the inferior sex, it seems to
-have been chosen by Comenius to avoid that implication] should be wholly
-shut out from liberal studies whether in the native tongue or in Latin.
-For equally are they God’s image; equally are they partakers of grace,
-and of the Kingdom to come; equally are they furnished with minds agile
-and capable of wisdom, yea, often beyond our sex; equally to them is
-there a possibility of attaining high distinction, inasmuch as they
-have often been employed by God Himself for the government of peoples,
-the bestowing of wholesome counsels on Kings and Princes, the science
-of medicine and other things useful to the human race, nay even the
-prophetical office, and the rattling reprimand of Priests and Bishops
-[etiam ad propheticum munus, et increpandos Sacerdotes Episcoposque, are
-the words; and as the treatise was prepared for the press in 1638 one
-detects a reference, by the Moravian Brother in Poland to the recent
-fame of Jenny Geddes, of Scotland]. Why then should we admit them to
-the alphabet, but afterwards debar them from books? Do we fear their
-rashness? The more we occupy their thoughts, the less room will there be
-in them for rashness, which springs generally from vacuity of mind.”
-
-[74] Translated by Daniel Benham as _The School of Infancy_. London, 1858.
-
-[75] Here Comenius seems to be thinking of the intercourse of children
-when no older companion is present; Froebel made more of the very
-different intercourse when their thoughts and actions are led by some
-one who has studied how to lead them. Children constantly want help
-from their elders even in amusing themselves. On the other hand, it is
-only the very wisest of mortals who can give help enough and _no more_.
-Self-dependence may sometimes be cultivated by “a little wholesome
-neglect.”
-
-[76] Comical and at the same time melancholy results follow. In an
-elementary school, where the children “took up” geography for the
-Inspector, I once put some questions about St. Paul at Rome. I asked in
-what country Rome was, but nobody seemed to have heard of such a place.
-“It’s geography!” said I, and some twenty hands went up directly: their
-owners now answered quite readily, “In Italy.”
-
-[77] “A talent for History may be said to be born with us, as our chief
-inheritance. In a certain sense all men are historians. Is not every
-memory written quite full of annals...? Our very speech is curiously
-historical. Most men, you may observe, speak only to narrate.” (Carlyle
-on _History_. Miscellanies.)
-
-[78] South Kensington, which controls the drawing of millions of
-children, says precisely the opposite, and prescribes a kind of drawing,
-which, though it may give manual skill to adults, does not “afford
-delight” to the mind of children.
-
-[79] “Generalem nos intendimus institutionem omnium qui homines nati
-sunt, ad omnia humana.... Vernaculæ (scholæ) scopus metaque erit, ut
-omnis juventus utriusque sexus, intra annum sextum et duodecimum seu
-decimum tertium, ea addoceatur quorum usus per totam vitam se extendat.”
-I quote this Latin from the excellent article _Coménius_ (by several
-writers) in Buisson’s _Dictionnaire_. It is a great thing to get an
-author’s exact words. Unfortunately the writer in the _Dictionnaire_
-follows custom and does not give the means of verifying the quotation.
-Comenius in Latin I have never seen except in the British Museum.
-
-[80] In Sermon on Charity Schools, A.D. 1745. The Bishop points out that
-“training up children is a very different thing from merely teaching
-them some truths necessary to be known or believed.” He goes into the
-historical aspect of the subject. As since the days of Elizabeth there
-has been legal provision for the maintenance of the poor, there has
-been “need also of some particular legal provision in behalf of poor
-children for their _education_; this not being included in what we
-call maintenance.” “But,” says the Bishop, “it might be necessary that
-a burden so entirely new as that of a poor-tax was at the time I am
-speaking of, should be as light as possible. Thus the legal provision
-for the poor was first settled without any particular consideration of
-that additional want in the case of children; as it still remains with
-scarce any alteration in this respect.” And _remained_ for nearly a
-century longer. Great changes naturally followed and will follow from the
-extension of the franchise; and another century will probably see us with
-a Folkschool worthy of its importance. By that time we shall no longer be
-open to the sarcasm of “the foreign friend:” “It is highly instructive
-to visit English elementary schools, for there you find everything that
-should be avoided.” (M. Braun quoted by Mr. A. Sonnenschein. The _Old_
-Code was in force.)
-
-[81] “Adhuc sub judice lis est.” I find the editor of an American
-educational paper brandishing in the face of an opponent as a quotation
-from Professor N. A. Calkins’ “Ear and Voice Training”: “The senses are
-the only powers by which children can gain the elements of knowledge;
-and until these have been trained to act, no definite knowledge can be
-acquired.” But Calkins says, “act, under direction of the mind.”
-
-[82] “What do you learn from ‘Paradise Lost’? Nothing at all. What do
-you learn from a cookery book? Something new, something that you did
-not know before, in every paragraph. But would you therefore put the
-wretched cookery book on a higher level of estimation than the divine
-poem? What you owe to Milton is not any _knowledge_, of which a million
-separate items are but a million of advancing steps on the same earthly
-level; what you owe is _power_, that is, exercise and expansion to your
-own latent capacity of sympathy with the infinite, where every pulse and
-each separate influx is a step upward—a step ascending as upon a Jacob’s
-ladder from earth to mysterious altitudes above the earth. All the steps
-of knowledge from first to last carry you further on the same plane, but
-could never raise you one foot above your ancient level of earth; whereas
-the very _first_ step in power is a flight, is an ascending into another
-element where earth is forgotten.” I have met with this as a quotation
-from De Quincey.
-
-[83] When I visited (some years ago) the “École Modèle” at Brussels
-I was told that books were used for _nothing_ except for learning to
-read. Comenius was saved from this consequence of his realism by his
-fervent Christianity. He valued the study of the Bible as highly as the
-Renascence scholars valued the study of the classics, though for a very
-different reason. He cared for the Bible not as literature, but as the
-highest authority on the problems of existence. Those who, like Matthew
-Arnold, may attribute to it far less authority may still treasure it as
-literature, while those who despise literature and recognise no authority
-above things would limit us to the curriculum of the “École Modèle” and
-care for natural science only.
-
-In this country we are fortunately able to advocate some reforms which
-were suggested by the realism of Comenius without incurring any suspicion
-of rejecting his Christianity. It is singular to see how the highest
-authorities of to-day—men conversant with the subject on the side of
-practice as well as theory—hold precisely the language which practical
-men have been wont to laugh at as “theoretical nonsense” ever since
-the days of Comenius. A striking instance will be found in a lecture
-by the Principal of the Battersea Training College (Rev. Canon Daniel)
-as reported in _Educational Times_, July, 1889. Compare what Comenius
-said (_supra_ p. 151) with the following: “Children are not sufficiently
-required to use their senses. They are allowed to observe by deputy. They
-look at Nature through the spectacles of Books, and through the eyes of
-the teacher, but do not observe for themselves. It might be expected that
-in object lessons and science lessons, which are specially intended to
-cultivate the observing faculty, this fault would be avoided, but I do
-not find that such is the case. I often hear lessons on objects that are
-not object lessons at all. The object is not allowed to speak for itself,
-eloquent though it is, and capable though it is of adapting its teaching
-to the youngest child who interrogates it. The teacher buries it under a
-heap of words and second-hand statements, thereby converting the object
-lesson into a verbal lesson and throwing away golden opportunities of
-forming the scientific habit of mind. Now mental science teaches us that
-our knowledge of the sensible qualities of the material world can come to
-us only through our senses, and through the right senses. If we had no
-senses we should know nothing about the material world at all; if we had
-a sense less we should be cut off from a whole class of facts; if we had
-as many senses as are ascribed to the inhabitants of Sirius in Voltaire’s
-novel, our knowledge would be proportionately greater than it is now.
-Words cannot compensate for sensations. The eloquence of a Cicero would
-not explain to a deaf man what music is, or to a blind man what scarlet
-is. Yet I have frequently seen teachers wholly disregard these obvious
-truths. They have taught as though their pupils had eyes that saw not,
-and ears that heard not, and noses that smelled not, and palates that
-tasted not, and skins that felt not, and muscles that would not work.
-They have insisted on taking the words out of Nature’s mouth and speaking
-for her. They have thought it derogatory to play a subordinate part to
-the object itself.”
-
-This subject has been well treated by Mr. Thos. M. Balliet in a paper on
-shortening the curriculum (_New York School Journal_, 10th Nov., 1888).
-“Studies,” says he, “are of two kinds (1) studies which supply the mind
-with thoughts of images, and (2) those which give us ‘labels,’ _i.e._ the
-means of indicating and so communicating thought. Under the last head
-come the study of language, writing (including spelling), notation, &c.”
-Mr. Balliet proposes, as Comenius did, that the symbol subjects shall
-not be taken separately, but in connexion with the thought subjects.
-Especially in the mother-tongue, we should study language for thought,
-not thought for the sake of language.
-
-But after all though we may and _should_ bring the young in connexion
-with the objects of thought and not with words merely, we must not forget
-that the scholastic aspect of things will differ from the practical.
-When brought into the schoolroom the thing must be divested of details
-and surroundings, and used to give a conception of one of a class. The
-fir tree of the schoolboy cannot be the fir tree of the wood-cutter. The
-“boiler” becomes a cylinder subject to internal or external pressure. It
-is not the thing that the engine-driver knows will burn and corrode, get
-foul in its tubes and loose in its joints, and be liable to burst. (See
-Mr. C. H. Benton on “Practical and Theoretical Training” in _Spectator_,
-10th Nov., 1888). The school knowledge of things no less than of words
-may easily be over-valued. It should be given not for itself but to
-excite interest and draw out the powers of the mind.
-
-[84] Ruskin seems to be echoing Comenius (of whom perhaps he never heard)
-when he says “To be taught to see is to gain word and thought at once,
-and both true.” (_Address at Camb. Sch. of Art_, Oct. 1858.)
-
-[85] As far as my experience goes there are few men capable both of
-teaching and being taught, and of these rare beings Comenius was a noble
-example. The passage in which he acknowledges his obligation to the
-Jesuits’ _Janua_ is a striking proof of his candour and open-mindedness.
-
-As an experiment in language-teaching this _Janua_ is a very interesting
-book, and will be well worth a note. From Augustin and Alois de Backer’s
-_Bibliothèque des Ecrivains de la C. de Jésus_, I learn that the author
-William Bath or Bathe [Latin Bateus] was born in Dublin in 1564, and
-died in Madrid in 1614. “A brief introduction to the skill of song as
-set forth by William Bathe, gent.” is attributed to him; but we know
-nothing of his origin or occupation till he entered on the Jesuit
-noviciate at Tournai in 1596. Either before or after this “he ran” as
-he himself tells us “the pleasant race of study” at Beauvais. After
-studying at Padua he was sent as Spiritual Father to the Irish College at
-Salamanca. Here, according to C. Sommervogel he wrote two Latin books.
-He also designed the _Janua Linguarum_, and carried out the plan with
-the help of the other members of the college. The book was published at
-Salamanca “apud de Cea Tesa” 1611, 4to. Four years afterwards an edition
-with English version added was published in London edited by Wm. Welde.
-I have never seen the Spanish version, but a copy of Welde’s edition
-(wanting title page) was bequeathed to me by a friend honoured by all
-English-speaking students of education, Joseph Payne. The _Janua_ must
-have had great success in this country, and soon had other editors. In an
-old catalogue I have seen “_Janua Linguarum Quadrilinguis_, or a Messe
-of Tongues, Latine, English, French, Spanish, neatly served up together
-for a wholesome repast to the worthy curiositie of the studious, sm.
-4to, Matthew Lowndes, 1617.” This must have been the early edition of
-Isaac Habrecht. I have his “_Janua Linguarum Silinguis_. _Argentinæ_
-(Strassburg), 1630,” and in the Preface he says that the first English
-edition came out in 1615, and that he had added a French version and
-published the book at London in four languages in 1617. I have seen
-“sixth edition 1627,” also published by Lowndes, and edited “opera I. H.
-(John Harmar, called in Catalogue of British Museum ‘Rector of Ewhurst’)
-Scholæ Sancti Albani Magistri primarii.” Harmar, I think, suppressed all
-mention of the author of the book, but he kept the title. This seems to
-have been altered by the celebrated Scioppius who published the book as
-_Pascasii Grosippi Mercurius bilinguis_.
-
-This Jesuits’ _Janua_ is one of the most interesting experiments in
-language teaching I ever met with. Bathe and his co-adjutors collected
-as they believed all the common root words in the Latin language; and
-these they worked up into 1,200 short sentences in the form of proverbs.
-After the sentences follows a short Appendix _De ambiguis_ of which the
-following is a specimen: “Dum malum comedis juxta malum navis, de malo
-commisso sub malo vetita meditare. While thou eatest an apple near the
-mast of a ship, think of the evil committed under the forbidden apple
-tree.” An alphabetical index of all the Latin words is then given, with
-the number of the sentence in which the word occurs.
-
-Prefixed to this _Janua_ we find some introductory chapters in which
-the problem: What is the best way of learning a foreign language? is
-considered and some advance made towards a solution. “The body of
-every language consisteth of four principal members—words, congruity,
-phrases, and elegancy. The dictionary sets down the words, grammar the
-congruities, Authors the phrases, and Rhetoricians (with their figures)
-the elegancy. We call phrases the proper forms or peculiar manners of
-speaking which every Tongue hath.” (Chap. 1 _ad f._) Hitherto, says
-Bathe, there have been in use, only two ways of learning a language,
-“regular, such as is grammar, to observe the congruities; and irregular
-such as is the common use of learners, by reading and speaking in vulgar
-tongues.” The “regular” way is more certain, the “irregular” is easier.
-So Bathe has planned a middle way which is to combine the advantages of
-the other two. The “congruities” are learnt regularly by the grammar. Why
-are not the “words” learned regularly by the dictionary? 1st, Because
-the Dictionary contains many useless words; 2nd, because compound words
-may be known from the root words without special learning; 3rd, because
-words as they stand in the Dictionary bear no sense and so cannot be
-remembered. By the use of this _Janua_ all these objections will be
-avoided. Useful words and root words only are given, and they are worked
-up into sentences “easy to be remembered.” And with the exception of a
-few little words such as _et_, _in_, _qui_, _sum_, _fio_ no word occurs a
-second time; thus, says Bathe, the labour of learning the language will
-be lightened and “as it was much more easy to have known all the living
-creatures by often looking into Noe’s Ark, wherein was a selected couple
-of each kind, than by travelling over all the world until a man should
-find here and there a creature of each kind, even in the same manner
-will all the words be far more easily learned by use of these sentences
-than by hearing, speaking or reading until a man do accidentally meet
-with every particular word.” (Proeme _ad f._) “We hope no man will be
-so ingrateful as not to think this work very profitable,” says the
-author. For my own part I feel grateful for such an earnest attempt at
-“retrieving of the curse of Babylon,” but I cannot show my gratitude by
-declaring “this work very profitable.” The attempt to squeeze the greater
-part of a language into 1,200 short sentences could produce nothing
-better than a curiosity. The language could not be thus squeezed into the
-memory of the learner.
-
-[86] This book must have had a great sale in England. Anchoran’s
-version (the Latin title of which is _Porta_ not _Janua_) went through
-several editions. I have a copy of _Janua Linguarum Reserata_ “formerly
-translated by Tho. Horn: afterwards much corrected and amended by Joh.
-Robotham: now carefully reviewed and exactly compared with all former
-editions, foreign and others, and much enlarged both in the Latine and
-English: together with a Portall ... by G. P. 1647.” “W. D.” was a
-subsequent editor, and finally it was issued by Roger Daniel, to whom
-Comenius dedicates from Amsterdam in 1659 as “Domino Rogero Danieli,
-Bibliopolæ ac Typographo Londinensi celeberrimo.”
-
-[87] Eilhardus Lubinus or Eilert Lueben, born 1565; was Professor first
-of Poetry then of Theology at Rostock, where he died in 1621. This
-projector of the most famous school-book of modern times seems not to be
-mentioned in K. A. Schmid’s great _Encyklopädie_, at least in the first
-edition. (I have not seen the second.) I find from F. Sander’s _Lexikon
-d. Pädagogik_ that Ratke declared he learnt nothing from Lubinus, while
-Comenius recognised him gratefully as his predecessor. This is just what
-we should have expected from the character of Ratke and of Comenius.
-Lubinus advocated the use of interlinear translations and published (says
-Sander) such translations of the New Testament, of Plautus, &c. The very
-interesting Preface to the New Test., was translated into English by
-Hartlib and published as “The True and Readie Way to Learne the Latine
-Tongue by E. Lubinus,” &c., 1654. The date given for Lubinus’ preface is
-1614. L. finds fault with the grammar teaching which is thrashed into
-boys so that they hate their masters. He would appeal to the senses: “For
-from these things falling under the sense of the eyes, and as it were
-more known, we will make entrance and begin to learn the Latin speech.
-Four-footed living creatures, creeping things, fishes and birds which
-can neither be gotten nor live well in these parts ought to be painted.
-Others also, which because of their bulk and greatness cannot be shut up
-in houses may be made in a lesser form, or drawn with the pencil, yet of
-such bigness as they may be well seen by boys even afar off.” He says
-he has often counselled the Stationers to bring out a book “in which
-all things whatsoever which may be devised and written and seen by the
-eyes, might be described, so as there might be also added to all things
-and all parts and members of things, its own proper word, its own proper
-appellation or term expressed in the Latin and Dutch tongues” (pp. 22,
-23). “Visible things are first to be known by the eyes” (p. 23), and the
-joining of seeing the thing and hearing the name together “is by far the
-profitablest and the bravest course, and passing fit and applicable to
-the age of children.” Things themselves if possible, if not, pictures
-(p. 25). There are some capital hints on teaching children from things
-common in the house, in the street, &c. One Hadrianus Junius has made a
-“nomenclator” that may be useful. In the pictures of the projected book
-there are to be lines under each object, and under its printed name. (The
-excellent device of corresponding numbers seems due to Comenius.) For
-printing below the pictures L. also suggests sentences which are simpler
-and better for children than those in the Vestibulum, _e.g._ “Panis in
-Mensa positus est, Felis vorat Murem.”
-
-In the Brit. Museum there is a copy of _Medulla Linguæ Græcæ_ in which L.
-works up the root words of Greek into sentences. He was evidently a man
-with ideas. Comenius thought of them so highly that he tried to carry out
-another at Saros-Patak, the plan of a “Cœnobium” or Roman colony in which
-no language should be used but Latin.
-
-[88] For full titles of the books referred to see p. 195.
-
-[89] The solitaries of Port-Royal used to vary their mental toil with
-manual. A Jesuit having maliciously asked whether it was true that
-Monsieur Pascal made shoes, met with the awkward repartee, “Je ne sais
-pas s’il fait des souliers, mais je crois qu’il _vous a porté une fameuse
-botte_.”
-
-[90] A master in a great public school once stated in a school address
-what masters and boys felt to be true. “It would hardly be too much to
-say that the whole problem of education is how to surround the young
-with good influences. I believe we must go on to add that if the wisest
-man had set himself to work out this problem without the teaching of
-experience, he would have been little likely to hit upon the system of
-which we are so proud, and which we call “the Public School System.”
-If the real secret of education is to surround the young with good
-influences, is it not a strange paradox to take them at the very age
-when influences act most despotically and mass them together in large
-numbers, where much that is coarsest is sure to be tolerated, and much
-that is gentlest and most refining—the presence of mothers and sisters
-for example—is for a large part of the year a memory or an echo rather
-than a living voice? I confess I have never seen any answers to this
-objection which _apart from the test of experience_ I should have been
-prepared to pronounce satisfactory. It is a simple truth that the moral
-dangers of our Public School System are enormous. It is the simple truth
-that do what you will in the way of precaution, you do give to boys of
-low, animal natures, the very boys who ought to be exceptionally subject
-to almost despotic restraint, exceptional opportunities of exercising
-a debasing influence over natures far more refined and spiritual than
-their own. And it is further the simple but the sad truth, that these
-exceptional opportunities are too often turned to account, and that the
-young boy’s character for a time—sometimes for a long time—is spoiled
-or vulgarized by the influence of unworthy companions.” This is what
-public schoolmasters, if their eyes are not blinded by routine, are
-painfully conscious of. But they find that in the end good prevails; the
-average boy gains a manly character and contributes towards the keeping
-up a healthy public opinion which is of great effect in restraining the
-evil-doer.
-
-[91] “The number of boarders was never very great, because to a master
-were assigned no more than he could have beds for in his room.”
-(Fontaine’s _Mémoire_, Carré, p. 24.)
-
-[92] “Plerisque placet media quædam ratio, ut apud unum Præceptorem
-quinque sexve pueri instituantur: ita nec sodalitas deerit ætati, cui
-convenit alacritas; neque non sufficiet singulis cura Præceptoris; et
-facile vitabitur corruptio quam affert multitudo. Many take up with a
-middle course, and would have five or six boys placed with one preceptor;
-in this way they will not be without companionship at an age when from
-their liveliness they seem specially to need it, and the master may
-give sufficient care to each individual; moreover, there will be an
-easy avoidance of the moral corruption which numbers bring.” Erasmus on
-_Christian Marriage_ quoted by Coustel in Sainte-Beuve, P.Riij, bk. 4, p.
-404.
-
-[93] Lancelot’s “New way of easily learning Latin (_Nouvelle Méthode
-pour apprendre facilement la langue Latine_)” was published in 1644, his
-method for Greek in 1655. This was followed in 1657 by his “Garden of
-Greek Roots (_Jardin des racines grecques_)” (see Cadet, pp. 15 ff.)
-
-The Port-Royalists seem to me in some respects far behind Comenius, but
-they were right in rejecting him as a methodiser in language-learning.
-Lancelot in the preface to his “Garden of Greek Roots,” says that the
-_Janua_ of Comenius is totally wanting in method. “It would need,” says
-he, “an extraordinary memory; and from my experience I should say that
-few children could learn this book, for it is long and difficult; and
-as the words in it are not repeated, those at the beginning would be
-forgotten before the learner reached the end. So he would feel a constant
-discouragement, because he would always find himself in a new country
-where he would recognize nothing. And the book is full of all sorts of
-uncommon and difficult words, and the first chapters throw no light
-on those which follow.” To this well-grounded criticism he adds: “The
-_entrances to the Tongues_, to deserve its name, should be nothing but
-a short and simple way leading us as soon as possible to read the best
-books in the language, so that we might not only acquire the words we
-are in need of, but also all that is most characteristic in the idiom
-and pure in the phraseology, which make up the most difficult and most
-important part of every language.” (Quoted by Cadet, p. 17).
-
-[94] Lemaître, a nephew of La Mère Angélique, was one of the most
-celebrated orators in France. In renouncing the world for Port-Royal, he
-retired from a splendid position at the Bar. Such men had qualifications
-out of the reach of ordinary schoolmasters. Dufossé, in after years, told
-how, when he was a boy, Lemaître called him often to his room and gave
-him solid instruction in learning and piety. “He read to me and made me
-read pieces from poets and orators, and saw that I noticed the beauties
-in them both in thought and diction. Moreover he taught me the right
-emphasis and articulation both in verse and prose, in which he himself
-was admirable, having the charm of a fine voice and all else that goes
-to make a great orator. He gave me also many rules for good translation
-and for making my progress in that art easy to me.” (Dufossé’s _Mémoires,
-&c._, quoted by Cadet, p. 9.) It was Lemaître who instructed Racine (born
-1639, admitted at Les Granges, Port Royal des Champs, in 1655).
-
-[95] In 1670 the General of the Jesuits issued a letter to the Society
-against the Cartesian philosophy. The University in this agreed with its
-rivals, and petitioned the Parliament to prohibit the Cartesian teaching.
-This produced the burlesque _Arrêt_ by Boileau (1675). “Whereas it is
-stated that for some years past a stranger named Reason has endeavoured
-to make entry by force into the Schools of the University ... where
-Aristotle has always been acknowledged as judge without appeal and not
-accountable for his opinions.... Be it known by these presents that
-this Court has maintained and kept and does maintain and keep the said
-Aristotle in perfect and peaceable possession of the said schools ...
-and in order that for the future he may not be interfered with in them,
-it has banished Reason for ever from the Schools of the said University,
-and forbids his entry to disturb and disquiet the said Aristotle in the
-possession and enjoyment of the aforesaid schools, under pain and penalty
-of being declared a Jansenist and a lover of innovations.” (Quoted by
-Cadet, p. 34.)
-
-[96] Although so much time is given to the study of words, practice in
-the use of words is almost entirely neglected, and the English schoolboy
-remains inarticulate.
-
-[97] Rollin somewhat extends Quintilian’s statement: “The desire of
-learning rests in the will which you cannot force.” About attempts to
-coerce the will in the absence of interest, I may quote a passage from
-a lecture of mine at Birmingham in 1884, when I did not know that I had
-behind me such high authorities as Quintilian and Rollin: “I should
-divide the powers of the mind that may be cultivated in the school-room
-into two classes: in the first I should put all the higher powers—grasp
-of meaning, perception of analogy, observation, reflection, imagination,
-intellectual memory; in the other class is one power only, and that is
-a kind of memory that depends on the association of sounds. How is it
-then that in most school-rooms far more time is spent in cultivating
-this last and least-valuable power than all the rest put together? The
-explanation is easy. All the higher powers can be exercised only when the
-pupils are interested, or, as Mr. Thring puts it, ‘care for what they
-are about.’ The memory that depends on associating sounds is independent
-of interest and can be secured by simple repetition. Now it is very hard
-to awaken interest, and still harder to maintain it. That magician’s
-wand, the cane, with which the schoolmasters of olden time worked such
-wonders, is powerless here or powerful only in the negative direction;
-and so is every form of punishment. You may tell a boy—‘If you can’t say
-your lesson you shall stay in and write it out half-a-dozen times!’ and
-the threat may have effect; but no ‘_instans tyrannus_’ from Orbilius
-downwards has ever thought of saying, ‘If you don’t take an interest in
-your work, I’ll keep you in till you do!’ So teachers very naturally
-prefer the kind of teaching in which they can make sure of success.”
-
-[98] Here as usual Rollin uses Quintilian without directly quoting him.
-He gives in a note the passage he had in his mind. “Id imprimis cavere
-oportebit, ne studia qui amare nondum potest oderit; et amaritudinem
-semel præceptam etiam ultra rudes annos reformidet (Quint., lib. j, cap.
-1.)”
-
-[99] Rousseau, Pestalozzi and Froebel were also in this sense realists,
-but they held that the educational value of knowledge lay not in itself,
-but only in so far as it was an instrument for developing the faculties
-of the mind.
-
-[100] Henry Barnard (_English Pedagogy_, second series, p. 192), speaks
-of Hoole as “one of the pioneer educators of his century.” According to
-Barnard he was born at Wakefield, in 1610, and died in 1666, rector of
-“Stock Billerica” (perhaps Stock with Billericay), in Essex.
-
-[101] A very interesting suggestion of Cowley’s is that another house
-be built for poor men’s sons who show ability. These shall be brought
-up “with the same conveniences that are enjoyed even by rich men’s
-children (though they maintain the fewer for that cause), there being
-nothing of eminent and illustrious to be expected from a low, sordid, and
-hospital-like education.”
-
-[102] It would seem as if these Puritans were more active in body than in
-mind: even the seniors, like the children at Port-Royal, _tombent dans la
-nonchalance_. Dury has to lay it down that “the Governour and Ushers and
-Steward if they be in health should not go to bed till ten.” (p. 30.)
-
-[103] It is a sign of the failure of all attempts to establish
-educational science in England that though the meaning of “real” and
-“realities” which connected them with _res_ seemed established in the
-sixteen hundreds, our language soon lost it again. According to a
-writer in _Meyer’s Conversations Lexicon_ (first edition) “_reales_”
-in this sense occurs first in Taubmann, 1614. Whether this is correct
-or not it was certainly about this time that there arose a contest
-between _Humanismus_ and _Realismus_, a contest now at its height in the
-_Gymnasien_ and _Realschulen_ of Germany. For a discussion of it, _see_
-M. Arnold’s “Literature and Science,” referred to above (p. 154).
-
-[104] Many of Petty’s proposals are now realized in the South Kensington
-Museum.
-
-[105] Later in the century Locke recommended that “working schools should
-be set up in every parish,” (_see_ Fox-Bourne’s _Locke_, or Cambridge
-edition of the _Thoughts c. Ed._, App. A, p. 189). The Quakers seem
-to have early taken up “industrious education.” John Bellers, whose
-_Proposals for Raising a College of Industry_ (1696) was reprinted by
-Robt. Owen, has some very good notions. After advising that boys and
-girls be taught to knit, spin, &c., and the bigger boys turning, &c.,
-he says, “Thus the Hand employed brings Profit, _the Reason used in it
-makes wise_, and the Will subdued makes them good” (_Proposals_, p. 18).
-Years afterwards in a Letter to the Yearly Meeting (dated 1723), he
-says, “It may be observed that some of the Boys in Friends’ Workhouse in
-Clerkenwell by their present employment of spinning are capable to earn
-their own living.”
-
-[106] Petty does not lose sight of the body. The “educands” are to “use
-such exercises whether in work or for recreation as tend to the health,
-agility, and strength of their bodies.”
-
-I have quoted Petty from the very valuable collection of English writings
-on Education reprinted in Henry Barnard’s _English Pedagogy_, 2 vols.
-Petty is in Vol. I. In this vol. we have plenty of evidence of the
-working of the Baconian spirit; _e.g._, we find Sir Matthew Hale in a
-_Letter of Advice to his Grandchildren_, written in 1678, saying that
-there is little use or improvement in “notional speculations in logic
-or philosophy delivered by others; the rather because bare speculations
-and notions have little experience and external observation to confirm
-them, and they rarely fix the minds especially of young men. But that
-part of philosophy that is real may be improved and confirmed by daily
-observation, and is more stable and yet more certain and delightful, and
-goes along with a man all his life, whatever employment or profession he
-undertakes.”
-
-[107] “In this respect,” says Professor Masson, “the passion and the
-projects of Comenius were a world wider than Milton’s.” (_L. of M._ iij,
-p. 237.)
-
-[108] _Of Education. To Master Samuel Hartlib_ (“the Tractate” as it is
-usually called), was published by Milton first in 1644, and again in
-1673. _See_ Oscar Browning’s edition, Cambridge Univ. Press.
-
-[109] The University of Cambridge. The first examination was in June,
-1880.
-
-[110] “Believe it, my good friend, to love truth for truth’s sake is the
-principal part of human perfection in this world and the seed-plot of
-all other virtues.” L. to Bolde, quoted by Fowler, _Locke_, p. 120. This
-shows us that according to Locke “the principal part of human perfection”
-is to be found in the intellect.
-
-[111] Lady Masham seems to consider these two characteristics identical.
-She wrote to Leclerc of Locke after his death: “He was always, in the
-greatest and in the smallest affairs of human life, as well as in
-speculative opinions, disposed to follow reason, whosoever it were that
-suggested it; he being ever a faithful servant, I had almost said a
-slave, to truth; never abandoning her for anything else, and following
-her for her own sake purely” (quoted by Fox-Bourne). But it is one thing
-to desire truth, and another to think one’s own reasoning power the sole
-means of obtaining it.
-
-[112] “I am far from imagining myself infallible; but yet I should
-be loth to differ from any thinking man; being fully persuaded there
-are very few things of pure speculation wherein two thinking men who
-impartially seek truth can differ if they give themselves the leisure to
-examine their hypotheses and understand one another” (L. to W. M., 26
-Dec., 1692). Again he writes: “I am persuaded that upon debate you and
-I cannot be of two opinions, nor I think any two men used to think with
-freedom, who really prefer truth to opiniatrety and a little foolish
-vain-glory of not having made a mistake” (L. to W. M., 3 Sept., 1694).
-
-[113] Compare Carlyle:—“Except thine own eye have got to see it, except
-thine own soul have victoriously struggled to clear vision and belief
-of it, what is the thing seen or the thing believed by another or by
-never so many others? Alas, it is not thine, though thou look on it,
-brag about it, and bully and fight about it till thou die, striving to
-persuade thyself and all men how much it is thine! Not _it_ is thine,
-but only a windy echo and tradition of it bedded [an echo _bedded_?] in
-hypocrisy, ending sure enough in tragical futility is thine.” Froude’s
-_Thos. Carlyle_, ij, 10. Similarly Locke wrote to Bolde in 1699:—“To be
-learned in the lump by other men’s thoughts, and to be right by saying
-after others is much the easier and quieter way; but how a rational man
-that should enquire and know for himself can content himself with a faith
-or religion taken upon trust, or with such a servile submission of his
-understanding as to admit all and nothing else but what fashion makes
-passable among men, is to me astonishing.” Quoted by Fowler, _Locke_, p.
-118.
-
-[114] For Rabelais, _see_ p. 67 _supra_.
-
-In the notes to the Cambridge edition of the _Thoughts_ Locke’s advice on
-physical education is discussed and compared with the results of modern
-science by Dr. J. F. Payne.
-
-[115] “Examinations directed, as the paper examinations of the numerous
-examining boards now flourishing are directed, to finding out what the
-pupil knows, have the effect of concentrating the teacher’s effort upon
-the least important part of his function.” Mark Pattison in _N. Quart.
-M._, January, 1880.
-
-[116] Michelet (_Nos fils_, chap. ij. _ad f._ p. 170), says of
-Montaigne’s essay: “c’est déjà une belle esquisse, vive et forte, une
-tentative pour donner, _non l’objet_, le savoir, mais _le sujet_, c’est
-l’homme.”
-
-[117] Pope seems to contrast Montaigne and Locke:
-
- “But ask not to what doctors I apply!
- “Sworn to no master, of no sect am I:
- “As drives the storm, at any door I knock,
- “And house with Montaigne now, or now with Locke.”
-
- _Satires_ iij., 26.
-
-Perhaps as Dr. Abbott suggests he took Montaigne as representing active
-and Locke contemplative life.
-
-[118] _See_ “An introduction to the History of Educational Theories,” by
-Oscar Browning.
-
-[119] “History and the mathematics, I think, are the most proper and
-advantageous studies for persons of your quality; the other are fitter
-for schoolmen and people that must live by their learning, though a
-little insight and taste of them will be no burthen or inconvenience to
-you, especially Natural Philosophy.” _Advice to a young Lord written by
-his father_, 1691, p. 29.
-
-[120] “Il n’y a point avant la raison de véritable éducation pour
-l’homme.” (_N. H._, 5th P., Lett. 3. Conf. _supra_, p. 227.)
-
-[121] “La première éducation doit donc être purement négative. Elle
-consiste, non point à enseigner la vertu ni la vérité, mais à garantir
-le cœur du vice et l’esprit de l’erreur. Si vous pouviez ne rien faire
-et ne rien laisser faire; si vous pouviez amener votre élève sain et
-robuste à l’âge de douze ans, sans qu’il sût distinguer sa main droite
-de sa main gauche, dès vos premières leçons les yeux de son entendement
-s’ouvriraient à la raison; sans préjugés, sans habitudes, il n’aurait
-rien en lui qui pût contrarier l’effet de vos soins. Bientôt il
-deviendrait entre vos mains le plus sage des hommes; et, en commençant
-par ne rien faire, vous auriez fait un prodige d’éducation.” _Ém._ ij.,
-80.
-
-[122] “Exercez son corps, ses organes, ses sens, ses forces, mais tenez
-son âme oisive aussi longtemps qu’il se pourra. Redoutez tous les
-sentiments antérieurs au jugement qui les apprécie. Retenez, arrêtez
-les impressions étrangères: et, pour empêcher le mal de naître, ne vous
-pressez point de faire le bien; car il n’est jamais tel que quand la
-raison l’éclaire. Regardez tous les délais comme des avantages: c’est
-gagner beaucoup que d’avancer vers le terme sans rien perdre; laissez
-mûrir l’enfance dans les enfants. Enfin quelque leçon leur devient-elle
-nécessaire, gardez-vous de la donner aujourd’hui, si vous pouvez différer
-jusqu’à demain sans danger.” _Ém._ ij., 80.
-
-[123] “Effrayez-vous donc peu de cette oisiveté prétendue. Que
-diriez-vous d’un homme qui, pour mettre toute la vie à profit, ne
-voudrait jamais dormir? Vous diriez: Cet homme est insensé; il ne jouit
-pas du temps, il se l’ôte; pour fuir le sommeil il court à la mort.
-Songez donc que c’est ici la même chose, et que l’enfance est le sommeil
-de la raison.” _Ém._ ij., 99.
-
-[124] “Il n’y a pas de philosophie plus superficielle que celle qui,
-prenant l’homme comme un être égoïste et viager, prétend l’expliquer et
-lui tracer ses devoirs en dehors de la société dont il est une partie.
-Autant vaut considérer l’abeille abstraction faite de la ruche, et dire
-qu’à elle seule l’abeille construit son alvéole.” Renan, _La Réforme_,
-312.
-
-[125] “Tout est bien, sortant des mains de l’Auteur des choses; tout
-dégénère entre les mains de l’homme.”
-
-[126] “Nous naissons faibles, nous avons besoin de forces; nous naissons
-dépourvus de tout, nous avons besoin d’assistance; nous naissons
-stupides, nous avons besoin de jugement. Tout ce que nous n’avons pas à
-notre naissance, et dont nous avons besoin étant grands, nous est donné
-par l’éducation. Cette éducation nous vient ou de la nature, ou des
-hommes, ou des choses. Le développement interne de nos facultés et de nos
-organes est l’éducation de la nature; l’usage qu’on nous apprend à faire
-de ce développement est l’éducation des hommes; et l’acquis de notre
-propre expérience sur les objets qui nous affectent est l’éducation des
-choses.” _Ém._ j., 6.
-
-[127] “Puisque le concours des trois éducations est nécessaire à leur
-perfection, c’est sur celle à laquelle nous ne pouvons rien qu’il faut
-diriger les deux autres.” _Ém._ j., 7.
-
-[128] “Vivre ce n’est pas respirer, c’est agir; c’est faire usage de
-nos organes, de nos sens, de nos facultés, de toutes les parties de
-nous-mêmes qui nous donnent le sentiment de notre existence. L’homme qui
-a le plus vécu n’est pas celui qui a compté le plus d’années, mais celui
-qui a le plus senti la vie.” _Ém._ j., 13.
-
-[129] “On ne connaît point l’enfance: sur les fausses idées qu’on en
-a, plus on va, plus on s’égare. Les plus sages s’attachent à ce qu’il
-importe aux hommes de savoir, sans considérer ce que les enfants sont
-en état d’apprendre. Ils cherchent toujours l’homme dans l’enfant, sans
-penser à ce qu’il est avant que d’être homme. Voilà l’êtude à laquelle
-je me suis le plus appliqué, afin que, quand toute ma méthode serait
-chimérique et fausse, on pût toujours profiter de mes observations. Je
-puis avoir très-mal vu ce qu’il faut faire; mais je crois avoir bien vu
-le sujet sur lequel on doit opérer. Commencez donc par mieux étudier vos
-élèves; car très-assurément vous ne les connaissez point.”
-
-[130] “La nature veut que les enfants soient enfants avant que d’être
-hommes. Si nous voulons pervertir cet ordre, nous produirons des fruits
-précoces qui n’auront ni maturité ni saveur, et ne tarderont pas à se
-corrompre: nous aurons de jeunes docteurs et de vieux enfants. L’enfance
-a des manières de voir, de penser, de sentir, qui lui sont propres; rien
-n’est moins sensé que d’y vouloir substituer les nôtres.” _Ém._ ij., 75;
-also in _N. H._, 478.
-
-[131] “Nous ne savons jamais nous mettre à la place des enfants; nous
-n’entrons pas dans leurs idées, nous leur prêtons les nôtres; et, suivant
-toujours nos propres raisonnements, avec des chaînes de vérités nous
-n’entassons qu’extravagances et qu’erreurs dans leur tête.” _Ém._ iij.,
-185.
-
-[132] “Je voudrais qu’un homme judicieux nous donnât un traité de l’art
-d’observer les enfants. Cet art serait très-important à connaître: les
-pères et les maîtres n’en ont pas encore les éléments.” _Ém._ iij., 224.
-
-[133] Rousseau says: “Full of what is going on in your own head, you do
-not see the effect you produce in their head: Pleins de ce qui se passe
-dans votre tête vous ne voyez pas l’effet que vous produisez dans la
-leur.” (_Ém._ lib. ij., 83.)
-
-[134] “Or, toutes les études forcées de ces pauvres infortunés tendent
-à ces objets entièrement étrangers à leurs esprits. Qu’on juge de
-l’attention qu’ils y peuvent donner. Les pédagogues qui nous étalent
-en grand appareil les instructions qu’ils donnent à leurs disciples
-sont payés pour tenir un autre langage: cependant on voit, par leur
-propre conduite, qu’ils pensent exactement comme moi. Car que leur
-apprennent-ils enfin? Des mots, encore des mots, et toujours des mots.
-Parmi les diverses sciences qu’ils se vantent de leur enseigner, ils se
-gardent bien de choisir celles qui leur seraient véritablement utiles,
-parce que ce seraient des sciences de choses, et qu’ils n’y réussiraient
-pas; mais celles qu’on paraît savoir quand on en sait les termes, le
-blason, la géographie, la chronologie, les langues, etc.; toutes études
-si loin de l’homme, et surtout de l’enfant, que c’est une merveille si
-rien de tout cela lui peut être utile une seule fois en sa vie.” _Ém._
-ij., 100.
-
-[135] “En quelque étude que ce puisse être, sans l’idée des choses
-représentées, les signes représentants ne sont rien. On borne pourtant
-toujours l’enfant à ces signes, sans jamais pouvoir lui faire comprendre
-aucune des choses qu’ils représentent.” _Ém._ ij., 102.
-
-[136] “Non, si la nature donne au cerveau d’un enfant cette souplesse
-qui le rend propre à recevoir toutes sortes d’impressions, ce n’est pas
-pour qu’on y grave des noms de rois, des dates, des termes de blason,
-de sphère, de géographie, et tous ces mots sans aucun sens pour son âge
-et sans aucune utilité pour quelque âge que ce soit, dont on accable sa
-triste et stérile enfance; mais c’est pour que toutes les idées qu’il
-peut concevoir et qui lui sont utiles, toutes celles qui se rapportent à
-son bonheur et doivent l’éclairer un jour sur ses devoirs, s’y tracent
-de bonne heure en caractères ineffaçables, et lui servent à se conduire
-pendant sa vie d’une manière convenable à son être et à ses facultés.”
-_Ém._ ij., 105; also _N. H._, P. v., L. 3.
-
-Sans étudier dans les livres, l’espèce de mémoire que peut avoir un
-enfant ne reste pas pour cela oisive; tout ce qu’il voit, tout ce qu’il
-entend le frappe, et il s’en souvient; il tient registre en lui-même des
-actions, des discours des hommes; et tout ce qui l’environne est le livre
-dans lequel, sans y songer, il enrichit continuellement sa mémoire, en
-attendant que son jugement puisse en profiter. C’est dans le choix de
-ces objets, c’est dans le soin de lui présenter sans cesse ceux qu’il
-peut connaître, et de lui cacher ceux qu’il doit ignorer, que consiste le
-véritable art de cultiver en lui cette première faculté; et c’est par là
-qu’il faut tâcher de lui former un magasin de connaissances qui servent à
-son éducation durant sa jeunesse, et à sa conduite dans tous les temps.
-Cette méthode, il est vrai, ne forme point de petits prodiges et ne fait
-pas briller les gouvernantes et les précepteurs; mais elle forme des
-hommes judicieux, robustes, sains de corps et d’entendement, qui, sans
-s’être fait admirer étant jeunes, se font honorer étant grands.
-
-[137] “L’activité défaillante se concentre dans le cœur du vieillard;
-dans celui de l’enfant elle est surabondante et s’étend au dehors; il se
-sent, pour ainsi dire, assez de vie pour animer tout ce qui l’environne.
-Qu’il fasse ou qu’il défasse, il n’importe; il suffit qu’il change l’état
-des choses, et tout changement est une action. Que s’il semble avoir plus
-de penchant à détruire, ce n’est point par méchanceté, c’est que l’action
-qui forme est toujours lente, et que celle qui détruit, étant plus
-rapide, convient mieux à sa vivacité.” _Ém._ j., 47.
-
-[138] It would be difficult to find a man more English, in a good sense,
-than the present Lord Derby or, whether we say it in praise or dispraise,
-a man less like Rousseau. So it is interesting to find him in agreement
-with Rousseau in condemning the ordinary restraints of the school-room.
-“People are beginning to find out what, if they would use their own
-observation more, and not follow one another like sheep, they would have
-found out long ago, that it is doing positive harm to a young child,
-mental and bodily harm, to keep it learning or pretending to learn,
-the greater part of the day. Nature says to a child, ‘Run about,’ the
-schoolmaster says, ‘Sit still;’ and as the schoolmaster can punish on the
-spot, and Nature only long afterwards, he is obeyed, and health and brain
-suffer.”—_Speech in 1864._
-
-[139] All this is very crude, and so is the artifice by which Julie in
-the _Nouvelle Héloïse_ entraps her son into learning to read. No doubt
-Rousseau is right when he says that where there is a desire to read the
-power is sure to come. But “reading” is one thing in the lives of the
-labouring classes to whom it means reading aloud in school, and quite
-another in families of literary tastes and habits with whom the range of
-thought is in a great measure dependent on books. In such families the
-children learn to read as surely as they learn to talk. They mostly have
-access to books which they read to themselves for pleasure; and of course
-it is absurdly untrue to say that they learn nothing but words and do not
-think. In my opinion it may be questioned whether the world of fiction
-into which their reading gives them the _entrée_ does not withdraw them
-too much from the actual world in which they live. The elders find it
-very convenient when the child can always be depended on to amuse himself
-with a book; but noise and motion contribute more to health of body and
-perhaps of mind also. While children of well-to-do parents often read too
-much, the children of our schools “under government” hardly get a notion
-what reading is. In these schools “reading” always stands for vocal
-reading, and the power and the habit of using books for pleasure or for
-knowledge (other than verbal) are little cultivated.
-
-[140] “Il veut tout toucher, tout manier; ne vous opposez point à
-cette inquiétude; elle lui suggère un apprentissage très-nécessaire.
-C’est ainsi qu’il apprend à sentir la chaleur, le froid, la dureté, la
-mollesse, la pesanteur, la légèreté des corps; à juger de leur grandeur,
-de leur figure et de toutes leurs qualités sensibles, en regardant,
-palpant, écoutant, surtout en comparant la vue au toucher, en estimant à
-l’œil la sensation qu’ils feraient sous ses doigts.” _Ém._ j., 43.
-
-[141] “Voyez un chat entrer pour la première fois dans une chambre: il
-visite, il regarde, il flaire, il ne reste pas un moment en repos, il
-ne se fie à rien qu’après avoir tout examiné, tout connu. Ainsi fait un
-enfant commençant à marcher, et entrant pour ainsi dire dans l’espace
-du monde. Toute la différence est qu’à la vue, commune à l’enfant et au
-chat, le premier joint, pour observer, les mains que lui donna la nature,
-et l’autre l’odorat subtil dont elle l’a doué. Cette disposition, bien ou
-mal cultivée, est ce qui rend les enfants adroits ou lourds, pesants ou
-dispos, étourdis ou prudents. Les premiers mouvements naturels de l’homme
-étant donc de se mesurer avec tout ce qui l’environne, et d’éprouver
-dans chaque objet qu’il aperçoit toutes les qualités sensibles qui
-peuvent se rapporter à lui, sa première étude est une sorte de physique
-expérimentale relative à sa propre conservation, et dont on le détourne
-par des études spéculatives avant qu’il ait reconnu sa place ici-bas.
-Tandis que ses organes délicats et flexibles peuvent s’ajuster aux corps
-sur lesquels ils doivent agir, tandis que ses sens encore purs sont
-exempts d’illusion, c’est le temps d’exercer les uns et les autres aux
-fonctions qui leur sont propres; c’est le temps d’apprendre à connaître
-les rapports sensibles que les choses ont avec nous. Comme tout ce qui
-entre dans l’entendement humain y vient par les sens, la première raison
-de l’homme est une raison sensitive; c’elle qui sert de base à la raison
-intellectuelle: nos premiers maîtres de philosophie sont nos pieds, nos
-mains, nos yeux. Substituer des livres à tout cela, ce n’est pas nous
-apprendre à raisonner, c’est nous apprendre à nous servir de la raison
-d’autrui; c’est nous apprendre à beaucoup croire, et à ne jamais rien
-savoir. Pour exercer un art, il faut commencer par s’en procurer les
-instruments; et, pour pouvoir employer utilement ces instruments, il
-faut les faire assez solides pour résister à leur usage. Pour apprendre
-à penser, il faut donc exercer nos membres, nos sens, nos organes, qui
-sont les instruments de notre intelligence; et pour tirer tout le parti
-possible de ces instruments, il faut que le corps, qui les fournit, soit
-robuste et sain. Ainsi, loin que la véritable raison de l’homme se forme
-indépendamment du corps, c’est la bonne constitution du corps qui rend
-les opérations de l’esprit faciles et sûres.” _Ém._ ij., 123.
-
-[142] “Exercer les sens n’est pas seulement en faire usage, c’est
-apprendre à bien juger par eux, c’est apprendre, pour ainsi dire, à
-sentir; car nous ne savons ni toucher, ni voir, ni entendre, que comme
-nous avons appris. Il y a un exercice purement naturel et mécanique, qui
-sert à rendre le corps robuste sans donner aucune prise au jugement:
-nager, courir, sauter, fouetter un sabot, lancer des pierres; tout cela
-est fort bien: mais n’avons-nous que des bras et des jambes? n’avons-nous
-pas aussi des yeux, des oreilles? et ces organes sont-ils superflus à
-l’usage des premiers? N’exercez donc pas seulement les forces, exercez
-tous les sens qui les dirigent; tirez de chacun d’eux tout le parti
-possible, puis vérifiez l’impression de l’un par l’autre. Mesurez,
-comptez, pesez, comparez.” _Ém._ ij., 133.
-
-[143] _E.g._—What can be better than this about family life? “L’attrait
-de la vie domestique est le meilleur contrepoison des mauvaises mœurs. Le
-tracas des enfants qu’on croit importun devient agréable; il rend le père
-et la mère plus nécessaires, plus chers l’un à l’autre; il resserre entre
-eux le lien conjugal. Quand la famille est vivante et animée, les soins
-domestiques font la plus chère occupation de la femme et le plus doux
-amusement du mari. Ainsi de ce seul abus corrigé résulterait bientôt une
-réforme générale; bientôt la nature aurait repris tous ses droits. Qu’une
-fois les femmes redeviennent mères bientôt les hommes redeviendront pères
-et maris.” _Ém._ j., 17. Again he says in a letter quoted by Saint-Marc
-Girardin (ij., 121)—“L’habitude la plus douce qui puisse exister est
-celle de la vie domestique qui nous tient plus près de nous qu’aucune
-autre.” We may say of Rousseau what Émile says of the Corsair:—“Il savait
-à fond toute la morale; il n’y avait que la pratique qui lui manquât.”
-(_Ém. et S._ 636). And yet he himself testifies:—“Nurses and mothers
-become attached to children by the cares they devote to them; it is the
-exercise of the social virtues that carries the love of humanity to
-the bottom of our hearts; it is in doing good that one becomes good; I
-know no experience more certain than this: Les nourrices, les mères,
-s’attachent aux enfants par les soins qu’elles leur rendent; l’exercice
-des vertus sociales porte au fond des cœurs l’amour de l’humanité; c’est
-en faisant le bien qu’on devient bon; je ne connais point de pratique
-plus sure.” _Ém._ iv., 291.
-
-[144] Elsewhere he asserts in his fitful way that there is inborn in the
-heart of man a feeling of what is just and unjust. Again, after all his
-praise of negation he contradicts himself, and says: “I do not suppose
-that he who does not need anything can love anything; and I do not
-suppose that he who does not love anything can be happy: Je ne conçois
-pas que celui qui n’a besoin de rien puisse aimer quelque chose; je ne
-conçois pas que celui qui n’aime rien puisse être heureux.” _Ém._ iv.,
-252.
-
-[145] This part of Rousseau’s scheme is well discussed by Saint-Marc
-Girardin (_J. J. Rousseau_, vol. ij.). The following passage is striking:
-“How is it that Madame Necker-Saussure understood the child better
-than Rousseau did? She saw in the child two things, a creation and a
-ground-plan, something finished and something begun, a perfection which
-prepares the way for another perfection, a child and a man. God, Who has
-put together human life in several pieces, has willed, it is true, that
-all these pieces should be related to each other; but He has also willed
-that each of them should be complete in itself, so that every stage of
-life has what it needs as the object of that period, and also what it
-needs to bring in the period that comes next. Wonderful union of aims and
-means which shews itself at every step in creation! In everything there
-is aim and also means, everything exists for itself and also for that
-which lies beyond it! (Tout est but et tout est moyen; tout est absolu et
-tout est relatif.)” _J. J. R._, ij., 151.
-
-[146] “Je n’aime point les explications en discours; les jeunes gens y
-font peu d’attention et ne les retiennent guère. Les choses! les choses!
-Je ne répéterai jamais assez que nous donnons trop de pouvoir aux mots:
-avec notre éducation babillarde nous ne faisons que des babillards.”
-_Ém._ iij., 198.
-
-[147] “Forcé d’apprendre de lui-même, il use de sa raison et non de celle
-d’autrui; car, pour ne rien donner à l’opinion, il ne faut rien donner
-à l’autorité; et la plupart de nos erreurs nous viennent bien moins de
-nous que des autres. De cet exercice continuel il doit résulter une
-vigueur d’esprit semblable à celle qu’on donne au corps par le travail et
-par la fatigue. Un autre avantage est qu’on n’avance qu’à proportion de
-ses forces. L’esprit, non plus que le corps, ne porte que ce qu’il peut
-porter. Quand l’entendement s’approprie les choses avant de les déposer
-dans la mémoire, ce qu’il en tire ensuite est à lui: au lieu qu’en
-surchargeant la mémoire, à son insu, on s’expose à n’en jamais rien tirer
-qui lui soit propre.” _Ém._ iij., 235.
-
-[148] “Sans contredit on prend des notions bien plus claires et bien
-plus sûres des choses qu’on apprend ainsi de soi-même, que de celles
-qu’on tient des enseignements d’autrui; et, outre qu’on n’accoutume
-point sa raison à se soumettre servilement à l’autorité, l’on se rend
-plus ingénieux à trouver des rapports, à lier des idées, à inventer des
-instruments, que quand, adoptant tout cela tel qu’on nous le donne, nous
-laissons affaisser notre esprit dans la nonchalance, comme le corps d’un
-homme qui, toujours habillé, chaussé, servi par ses gens et traîné par
-ses chevaux, perd à la fin la force et l’usage de ses membres. Boileau
-se vantait d’avoir appris à Racine à rimer difficilement. Parmi tant
-d’admirables méthodes pour abréger l’étude des sciences, nous aurions
-grand besoin que quelqu’un nous en donnât une pour les apprendre avec
-effort.” _Ém._ iij., 193.
-
-[149] I avail myself of the old substantival use of the word _elementary_
-to express its German equivalent _Elementarbuch_.
-
-[150] “Who has not met with some experience such as _this_? A child with
-an active and inquiring mind accustomed to chatter about everything
-that interests him is sent to school. In a few weeks his vivacity
-is extinguished, his abundance of talk has dried up. If you ask him
-about his studies, if you desire him to give you a specimen of what he
-has learnt, he repeals to you in a sing-song voice some rule for the
-formation of tenses or some recipe for spelling words. Such are the
-results of the teaching which should be of all teaching the most fruitful
-and the most attractive!” Translated from _Quelques Mots_, &c., by M.
-Bréal.
-
-[151] In these visits he observed how the children suffered from working
-in factories. These observations influenced him in after years.
-
-[152] In these aphorisms Pestalozzi states the main principles at work in
-his own mind; but this bare statement is not well suited to communicate
-these principles to the minds of others. For most readers the aphorisms
-have as little attraction as the enunciations, say, of a book of Euclid
-would have for those who knew no geometry. But as his future life was
-guided by the principles he has formulated in this paper it seems
-necessary for us to bear some of these in mind.
-
-What he mainly insists upon is that all wise guidance must proceed from
-a knowledge of the nature of the creature to be guided; further that
-there is a simple wisdom which must direct the course of all men. “The
-path of Nature,” says he, “which brings out the powers of men must be
-open and plain; and human education to true peace-giving wisdom must
-be simple and available for all. Nature brings out all men’s powers
-by practice, and their increase springs from _use_.” The powers of
-children should be strengthened by exercise on what is close at hand;
-and this should be done without hardness or pressure. A forced and rigid
-sequence in instruction is not Nature’s method, says he: this would
-make men one-sided, and truth would not penetrate freely and softly
-into their whole being. The pure feeling for truth grows in a small
-area; and human wisdom must be grounded on a perception of our closest
-relationships, and must show itself in skilled management of our nearest
-concerns. Everything we do against our consciousness of right weakens
-our perception of truth and disturbs the purity of our fundamental
-conceptions and experiences. On this account all wisdom of man rests
-in the strength of a good heart that follows after truth, and all the
-blessing of man in the sense of simplicity and innocence. Peace of mind
-must be the outcome of right training. To get out of his surroundings
-all he needs for life and enjoyment, to be patient, painstaking, and in
-every difficulty trustful in the love of the Heavenly Father, this comes
-of a man’s true education to wisdom. Nothing concerns the human race
-so closely and intimately as—God. “God as Father of thy household, as
-source of thy blessing—God as thy Father; in this belief thou findest
-rest and strength and wisdom, which no violence nor the grave itself can
-overthrow.” Belief in God which is a part of our nature, like the sense
-of right and wrong and the feeling we can never quench of what is just
-and unjust, must be made the foundation in educating the human race. The
-subject of that belief is that God is the Father of men, men are the
-children of God. To this divine relationship Pestalozzi refers all human
-relationships as those of parent and child, of ruler and subject. The
-priest is appointed to declare the fatherhood of God and the brotherhood
-of men.
-
-The only text I have seen is that reprinted by Raumer (_Gesch. d. Päd._).
-From Otto Fischer (_Wichtigste Pädagogen_), I learn that this is the
-edition of 1807, which differs, at least by omission, from the original
-of 1780.
-
-[153] There are now four parts, first published respectively in 1781,
-1783, 1785, and 1787 (O. Fischer). The English translation in two small
-vols. (1825) ends with the First Part, but Miss Eva Channing has recently
-sought to weld the four parts into one (Boston, U.S.—D.C. Heath & Co.),
-and in this form the book seems to me not only very instructive but
-very entertaining also. Not many readers who look into it will fail to
-reach the end, and few are the books connected with education of which
-this could prudently be asserted. “All good teachers should read it with
-care,” says Stanley Hall in his Introduction, and if they thus read it
-and catch anything of the spirit of Pestalozzi both they and their pupils
-will have reason to rejoice.
-
-[154] In the pages of this Journal Pestalozzi taught that it was “the
-domestic virtues which determine the happiness of a nation.” Again he
-says: “On the throne and in the cottage man has equal need of religion,
-and becomes the most wretched being on the earth if he forget his God.”
-“The child at his mother’s breast is weaker and more dependent than any
-creature on earth, and yet he already feels the first moral impressions
-of love and gratitude.” “_Morality is nothing but a result of the
-development of the first sentiments of love and gratitude felt by the
-infant._ The first development of the child’s powers should come from his
-participation in the work of his home; for this work is what his parents
-understand best, what most absorbs their attention, and what they can
-best teach. But even if this were not so, work undertaken to supply real
-needs would be just as truly the surest foundation of a good education.
-_To engage the attention of the child, to exercise his judgment, to
-raise his heart to noble sentiments, these I think the chief ends of
-education_: and how can these ends be reached so surely as by training
-the child as early as possible in the various daily duties of domestic
-life?” It would seem then that at this time Pestalozzi was for basing
-education on domestic labour and would teach the child to be useful. But
-it is hard to see how this principle could always be applied.
-
-[155] One of these I have already given (_supra_ p. 292). I will give
-another, not as by any means one of the best, but as a fit companion to
-Rousseau’s “two dogs.”
-
-“26. THE TWO COLTS.
-
-“Two colts as like as two eggs, fell into different hands. One was bought
-by a peasant whose only thought was to harness it to his plough as soon
-as possible: this one turned out a bad horse. The other fell to the lot
-of a man who by looking after it well and training it carefully, made a
-noble steed of it, strong and mettlesome. Fathers and mothers, if your
-children’s faculties are not carefully trained and directed right, they
-will become not only useless, but hurtful; and the greater the faculties
-the greater the danger.”
-
-Compare Rousseau: “Just look at those two dogs; they are of the same
-litter, they have been brought up and treated precisely alike, they have
-never been separated; and yet one of them is sharp, lively, affectionate,
-and very intelligent: the other is dull, lumpish, surly, and nobody could
-ever teach him anything. Simply a difference of temperament has produced
-in them a difference of character, just as a simple difference of our
-interior organisation produces in us a difference of mind.” _N. Héloise._
-5me P. Lettre iii.
-
-[156] Pestalozzi was with the children at Stanz only during the first
-half of 1799.
-
-[157] As Pestalozzi wrote to Gessner (_How Gertrude, &c._): “You
-see street-gossip is not always entirely wrong; I really could not
-write properly, nor read, nor reckon. But people always jump to wrong
-conclusions from such ‘notorious facts.’ At Stanz you saw that I could
-teach writing without myself being able to write properly.” He here
-anticipates a paradox of Jacotot’s.
-
-[158] Years afterwards Napoleon, though he could not foresee Sedan, got
-a notion that after all there was _something_ in Pestalozzi; and that
-the aim of the system was to put the freedom and development of the
-individual in the place of the mechanical routine of the old schools,
-which tended to produce a mass of dull uniformity. With this aim, as
-Guimps says, Napoleon was quite out of sympathy, and whenever the subject
-was mentioned he would say, “The Pestalozzians are Jesuits”; thus very
-inaccurately expressing an accurate notion that there was more in them
-than could be understood at the first glance.
-
-[159] Pestalozzi had from this country some more discerning visitors,
-_e.g._, J. P. Greaves, to whom Pestalozzi addressed _Letters_, which
-were translated and published in this country; also Dr. Mayo, who was
-at Yverdun with his pupils for three years from 1818 and afterwards
-conducted a celebrated Pestalozzian school at Cheam. Dr. Mayo in 1826
-lectured on Pestalozzi’s system at the Royal Institution. Sir Jas.
-Kay-Shuttleworth and Mr. Tufnell also drew attention to it in the
-“Minutes of Council on Education.”
-
-[160] The disciple is not above his master, and if parents and teachers
-are without sympathy and religious feeling the children will also be
-without faith and love. This cannot be urged too strongly on those who
-have charge of the young. But there is no test by which we can ascertain
-that a master has these essential qualifications. As in the Christian
-ministry the unfit can be shut out only by their own consciences. But let
-no one think to understand education if he loses sight of what Joseph
-Payne has called “Pestalozzi’s simple but profound discovery—the teacher
-must have a heart.” “Soul is kindled only by soul,” says Carlyle; “to
-_teach_ religion the first thing needful and also the last and only thing
-is finding of a man who _has_ religion. All else follows.”
-
-[161] In 1872, a Congress in which more than 10,000 German elementary
-teachers were represented, petitioned the Prussian Government for “the
-organization of training schools in accordance with the pedagogic
-principles of Pestalozzi, which formerly enjoyed so much favour in
-Prussia and so visibly contributed to the regeneration of the country.”
-
-[162] Did Pestalozzi make due allowance for the system of thought
-which every child inherits? Croom Robertson in “How we came by our
-Knowledge” (_Nineteenth Century_, No. 1, March, 1877), without mentioning
-Pestalozzi, seems to differ from him. Croom Robertson says that “Children
-being born into the world are born into society, and are acted on by
-overpowering social influences before they have any chance of being
-their proper selves.... The words and sentences that fall upon a child’s
-ear and are soon upon his lips, express not so much his subjective
-experience as the common experience of his kind, which becomes as it were
-an objective rule or measure to which his shall conform.... He does, he
-must, accept what he is told; and in general he is only too glad to find
-his own experience in accordance with it.... We use our incidental, by
-which I mean our natural subjective experience, mainly to decipher and
-verify the ready-made scheme of knowledge that is given us _en bloc_ with
-the words of our mother-tongue” (pp. 117, 118).
-
-[163] One of the most interesting and most difficult problems in teaching
-is this:—How long should the beginner be kept to the rudiments? With
-young children, to whom ideas come fast, the main thing is no doubt to
-take care that these ideas become distinct and are made “the intellectual
-property” of the learners. But after a year or two children will be
-impatient to “get on,” and if they seem “marking time” will be bored
-and discouraged. Then again in some subjects the elementary parts seem
-clear only to those who have a conception of the whole. As Diderot says
-in a passage I have seen quoted from _Le Neveu de Rameau_, “Il faut
-être profond dans l’art ou dans la science pour en bien posséder les
-éléments.” “C’est le milieu et la fin qui éclaircissent les ténèbres du
-commencement.” The greatest “coach” in Cambridge used to “rush” his men
-through their subjects and then go back again for thorough learning. To
-be sure, the “scientific method” suitable for young men differs greatly
-from the “heuristic” or “method of investigation,” which is best for
-children. (See Joseph Payne’s Lecture on Pestalozzi.) But even with
-children we should bear in mind Niemeyer’s caution, “Thoroughness itself
-may become superficial by exaggeration; for it may keep too long to a
-part and in this way fail to complete and give any notion of the whole”
-(Quoted by O. Fischer, _Wichtigste Päd._ 213).
-
-[164] Nearly 20 years ago (1871) appeared a paper on “Elementary National
-Education” in which “John Parkin, M.D.,” advocated making all our
-elementary schools industrial, not only for practical purposes, but still
-more for the sake of physical education. The paper attracted no notice
-at the time, but now we are beginning to see that the body is concerned
-in education as well as the mind, and that the mind learns through it
-“without book.” The application of this truth will bring about many
-changes.
-
-[165] Herbart, when he visited Pestalozzi at Burgdorf, observed that
-though Pestalozzi’s kindness was apparent to all, he took no pains in
-his teaching to mix the _dulce_ with the _utile_. He never talked to
-the children, or joked, or gave them an anecdote. This, however, did
-not surprise Herbart, whose own experience had taught him that when the
-subject requires earnest attention the children do not like it the better
-for the teacher’s “fun.” “The feeling of clear apprehension,” says he, “I
-held to be the only genuine condiment of instruction” (Herbart’s _Päd.
-Schriften_, ed. by O. Willmann, j. 89).
-
-[166] _First_ look to himself, but there may be other causes of failure
-as well. The great thing is never to put up contentedly, or even
-discontentedly, with failure. In teaching classes of lads from ten to
-sixteen years old, when I have found the lessons in any subject were not
-going well, I have sometimes taken the class into my confidence, told
-them that they no doubt felt as I did that this lesson was a dull one,
-and asked them each to put on paper what he considered to be the reasons,
-and also to make any suggestions that occurred to him. In this way I have
-got some very good hints, and I have always been helped in my effort to
-understand how the work seemed to the pupils. Every teacher should make
-this effort. As Pestalozzi says, “Could we conceive the indescribable
-tedium which must oppress the young mind while the weary hours are slowly
-passing away one after another in occupations which it can neither relish
-nor understand ... we should no longer be surprised at the remissness of
-the schoolboy creeping like snail unwillingly to school” (To G., xxx,
-150).
-
-[167] With Morf’s summing-up it is interesting to compare Joseph Payne’s,
-given at the end of his lecture on _Pestalozzi_:
-
-I. The principles of education are not to be devised _ab extra_; they are
-to be sought for in human nature.
-
-II. This nature is an organic nature—a plexus of bodily, intellectual
-and moral capabilities, ready for development, and struggling to develop
-themselves.
-
-III. The education conducted by the formal educator has both a negative
-and a positive side. The negative function of the educator consists
-in removing impediments, so as to afford free scope for the learner’s
-self-development. His positive function is to stimulate the learner to
-the exercise of his powers, to furnish materials and occasion for the
-exercise, and to superintend and maintain the action of the machinery.
-
-IV. Self-development begins with the impressions received by the mind
-from external objects. These impressions (called sensations), when the
-mind becomes conscious of them, group themselves into perceptions. These
-are registered in the mind as conceptions or ideas, and constitute that
-elementary knowledge which is the basis of all knowledge.
-
-V. Spontaneity and self-activity are the necessary conditions under which
-the mind educates itself and gains power and independence.
-
-VI. Practical aptness or faculty, depends more on habits gained by the
-assiduous oft-repeated exercise of the learner’s active powers than on
-knowledge alone. Knowing and doing (_Wissen und Können_) must, however,
-proceed together. The chief aim of all education (including instruction)
-is the development of the learner’s powers.
-
-VII. All education (including instruction) must be grounded on the
-learner’s own observation (_Anschauung_) at first hand—on his own
-personal experience. This is the true basis of all his knowledge. First
-the reality, then the symbol; first the thing, then the word, not _vice
-versâ_.
-
-VIII. That which the learner has gained by his own observation
-(_Anschauung_) and which, as a part of his personal experience, is
-incorporated with his mind, he _knows_ and can describe or explain in his
-own words. His competency to do this is the measure of the accuracy of
-his observation, and consequently of his knowledge.
-
-IX. Personal experience necessitates the advancement of the learner’s
-mind from the near and actual, with which he is in contact, and which he
-can deal with himself, to the more remote; therefore from the concrete
-to the abstract, from particulars to generals, from the known to the
-unknown. This is the method of elementary education; the opposite
-proceeding—the usual proceeding of our traditional teaching—leads the
-mind from the abstract to the concrete, from generals to particulars,
-from the unknown to the known. This latter is the Scientific method—a
-method suited only to the advanced learner, who it assumes is already
-trained by the Elementary method.
-
-[168] Most parents do not seem to think with Jean Paul, “If we regard
-all life as an educational institution, a circumnavigator of the world
-is less influenced by all the nations he has seen than by his nurse.”
-(_Levana_, quoted in Morley’s _Rousseau_.)
-
-[169] I will quote the first paragraph of this work which is still
-considered mental pabulum suited to the digestions of young ladies and
-children:—
-
-“_Name some of the most Ancient Kingdoms._—Chaldēa, Babylonia, Assyria,
-China in Asia, and Egypt in Africa. Nimrod, the grandson of Ham, is
-supposed to have founded the first of these B.C. 2221, as well as the
-famous cities of Babylon and Nineveh; his kingdom being within the
-fertile plains of Chaldēa, Chalonītis, and Assyria, was of small extent
-compared with the vast empires that afterwards arose from it, but
-included several large cities. In the district called Babylonia were the
-cities of Babylon, Barsīta, Idicarra, and Vologsia,” &c., &c.
-
-[170] I shall always feel gratitude and affection for the two old ladies
-(sisters) to whom I was entrusted over half a century ago. More truly
-Christian women I never met with. But of the science and art of education
-they were totally ignorant; and moreover the premises they occupied were
-unfit for a school. As all the boys were under ten years old, it will
-seem strange, but is alas! too true, that there were vices among them
-which are supposed to be unknown to children and which if discovered
-would have made the old ladies close their school. The want of subjects
-in which the children can take a healthy interest will in a great measure
-account for the spread of evil in such schools. On this point some
-mistresses and most parents are dangerously ignorant.
-
-[171] Having watched the “teaching” of pupil-teachers, I find that some
-of them (I may say many) never address more than one child at a time,
-and never attempt to gain the attention of more than a single child. So,
-by a very simple calculation, we can get at the maximum time each child
-is “under instruction.” If the pupil-teacher has but three-quarters of
-the pupils for whom the Department supposes him “sufficient,” each child
-cannot be under instruction _more_ than two minutes in the hour. The rest
-of the time the children must sit quiet, or be cuffed if they do not.
-What is called “simultaneous” teaching in, say, reading, consists in the
-pupil-teacher reading from the book, and as he pronounces each word, the
-children shout it after him; but no one except the pupil-teacher knows
-the place in the book.
-
-But perhaps the dangers from employing boys and girls to teach and govern
-children are greater morally than intellectually. Whether he report on
-it or not, the Inspector has less influence on the moral training than
-the youngest pupil-teacher. Channing has well said: “A child compelled
-for six hours each day to see the countenance and hear the voice of an
-unfeeling, petulant, passionate, unjust teacher is placed in a school
-of vice.” Those who have never taught day after day, week after week,
-month after month, little know what demands school-work makes on the
-temper and the sense of justice. The harshest tyrants are usually those
-who are raised but a little way above those whom they have to control;
-and when I think of the pupil-teacher with his forty pupils to keep in
-order, I heartily pity both him and them. Is there not too much reason to
-fear lest in many cases the school should prove for both what Channing
-has well described as “a school of vice”? (R. H. Q. in _Spectator_, 1st
-March, 1890.)
-
-[172] Since the above was written, another “New Code” has appeared
-(March, 1890), in which the system of measuring by “passes,” a
-system maintained (in spite of the remonstrances of all interested
-in _education_) for nearly 30 years, is at length abandoned. We are
-certainly travelling, however slowly, away from Mr. Lowe. Far as we are
-still from Pestalozzi there seems reason to hope that the distance is
-diminishing.
-
-[173] This short sketch of Froebel’s life is mainly taken, with Messrs.
-Black’s permission, from the _Encyclopædia Britannica_, for which I wrote
-it.
-
-[174] This office was first filled by Langethal and afterwards by
-Ferdinand Froebel. I learned this at Burgdorf from Herr Pfarrer Heuer,
-whose father had himself been Waisenvater.
-
-[175] For this quotation, and for much besides (as will appear later
-on), I am indebted to Mr. H. Courthope Bowen. See his paper _Froebel’s
-Education of Man_.
-
-[176] The educator _as teacher_ has his activity limited, according to
-DeGarmo, to these two things; “(1) The _preparation_ of the child’s
-mind for a rapid and effective assimilation of new knowledge; (2) The
-_presentation_ of the matter of instruction in such order and manner
-as will best conduce to the most effective assimilation” (_Essentials
-of Method_ by Chas. DeGarmo, Boston, U.S., D. C. Heath, 1889). Besides
-this he must make his pupils _use_ their knowledge both new and old, and
-reproduce it in fresh connexions.
-
-[177] “Little children,” says Joseph Payne, “are scarcely ever contented
-with simply doing nothing; and their fidgetiness and unrest, which often
-give mothers and teachers so much anxiety, are merely the strugglings of
-the soul to get, through the body, some employment for its powers. Supply
-this want, give them an object to work upon, and you solve the problem.
-The divergence and distraction of the faculties cease as they converge
-upon the work, and the mind is at rest in its very occupation.” _V. to
-German Schools._
-
-[178] I entirely agree with Joseph Payne that where the language
-spoken is not German, it would be well to discard _Kindergarten_,
-_Kindergärtner_, and _Kindergärtnerin_. All who have to do with children
-should master some great principles taught by Froebel, but there is no
-need for them to learn German or to use German words. The French seem
-satisfied with _Jardin d’Enfants_, but we are not likely to be with
-_Children-Garden_. _Playschool_ _might_ do.
-
-[179] Contrast this with what has been said by an eminent thinker of
-our time: “No art of equal importance to mankind has been so little
-investigated scientifically as the art of teaching.” Sir H. S. Maine,
-quoted in J. H. Hoose’s _M. of Teaching_.
-
-[180] Here Jacotot’s notion of teaching reminds one of the sophism quoted
-by Montaigne—“A Westphalia ham makes a man drink. Drink quenches thirst.
-Therefore a Westphalia ham quenches thirst.”
-
-[181] _See_ H. Courthope Bowen on “Connectedness in Teaching”
-(_Educational Times_, June, 1890). Mr. Bowen quotes from H.
-Spencer—“Knowledge of the lowest kind is _un-unified_ knowledge: science
-is _partially unified_ knowledge: philosophy is _completely unified_
-knowledge.”
-
-[182] As I have said above (p. 89) these methodizers in language-learning
-may, with regard to the first stage, be divided into two parties which I
-have called _Complete Retainers_ and _Rapid Impressionists_. Two Complete
-Retainers, Robertson and Prendergast, have, as it seems to me, made,
-since Jacotot, a great advance on his method and that of his predecessor
-Ascham. As I have had a good deal of experience with beginners in German,
-I will give from an old lecture of mine the main conclusions at which
-I have arrived:—“My principle is to attack the most vital part of the
-language, and at first to keep the area small, or rather to enlarge
-it very slowly; but within that area I want to get as much variety
-as possible. The study of a book written in the language should be
-carried on _pari passu_ with drill in its common inflexions. Now arises
-the question, Should the book be made with the object of teaching the
-language, or should it be selected from those written for other purposes?
-I see much to be said on either side. The three great facts we have to
-turn to account in teaching a language, are these:—first, a few words
-recur so constantly that a knowledge of them and grasp of them gives
-us a power in the language quite out of proportion to their number;
-second, large classes of words admit of many variations of meaning by
-inflection, which variations we can understand from analogy; third,
-compound words are formed _ad infinitum_ on simple laws, so that the root
-word supplies the key to a whole family. Now, if the book is written by
-the language-teacher, he has the whole language before him, and he can
-make the most of all these advantages. He can use only the important
-words of the language; he can repeat them in various connections; he can
-bring the main facts of inflection and construction before the learner
-in a regular order, which is a great assistance to the memory; he can
-give the simple words before introducing words compounded of them; and
-he can provide that, when a word occurs for the first time, the learners
-shall connect it with its root meaning. A short book securing all these
-advantages would, no doubt, be a very useful implement, but I have never
-seen such a book. Almost all delectuses, &c., bury the learner with a
-pile of new words, under which he feels himself powerless. So far as I
-know, the book has yet to be written. And even if it were written, with
-the greatest success from a linguistic point of view, it would of course
-make no pretension to a meaning. Having myself gone through a course of
-Ahn and of Ollendorf, I remember, as a sort of nightmare, innumerable
-questions and answers, such as “Have you my thread stockings? No, I have
-your worsted stockings.” Still more repulsive are the long sentences of
-Mr. Prendergast:—“How much must I give to the cabdriver to take my father
-to the Bank in New Street before his second breakfast, and to bring him
-home again before half-past two o’clock?” I cannot forget Voltaire’s
-_mot_, which has a good deal of truth in it,—“Every way is good but
-the tiresome way.” And most of the books written for beginners are
-inexpressibly tiresome. No doubt it will be said, “Unless you adopt the
-rapid-impressionist plan, any book _must_ be tiresome. What is a meaning
-at first becomes no meaning by frequent repetition.” This, however, is
-not altogether true. I myself have taught Niebuhr’s _Heroengeschichten_
-for years, and I know some chapters by heart; but the old tales of Jason
-and Hercules as they are told in Niebuhr’s simple language do not bore me
-in the least.
-
- “Ein Begriff muss bei dem Worte sein,”
-
-says the Student in Faust; and a notion—a very pleasing notion,
-too—remains to me about every word in the _Heroengeschichten_.
-
-These, then, would be my books to be worked at the same time by a
-beginner, say in German:—A book for drill in the principal inflexions,
-followed by the main facts about gender, &c., and a book like the
-_Heroengeschichten_. This I would have prepared very much after the
-Robertsonian manner. It should be printed, as should also the Primer,
-in good-sized Roman type; though, in an appendix, some of it should be
-reprinted in German type. The book should be divided into short lessons.
-A translation of each lesson should be given in parallel columns. Then
-should come a vocabulary, in which all useful information should be
-given about the really important words, _the unimportant words being
-neglected_. Finally should come _variations_, and exercises in the
-lessons; and in these the important words of that and previous lessons
-should be used exclusively. The exercises should be such as the pupils
-could do in writing out of school, and _vivâ voce_ in school. They should
-be very easy—real exercises in what is already known, not a series of
-linguistic puzzles. The object of the exercises, and also of a vast
-number of _vivâ voce_ questions, should be to accustom the pupil to use
-his knowledge _readily_. (But some teachers, young teachers especially,
-are always _cross_-examining, and seem to themselves to fail when their
-questions are answered without difficulty.) The ear, the voice, the hand,
-should all be practised on each lesson. When the construing is known,
-transcription of the German is not by any means to be despised. A good
-variety of transcription is, for the teacher to write the German clause
-by clause on the black-board, and rub out each clause before the pupils
-begin to write it. Then a known piece may be prepared for dictation. In
-reading this as dictation, the master may introduce small variations, to
-teach his pupils to keep their ears open. He may, as another exercise,
-read the German aloud, and stop here and there for the boys to give the
-English of the last sentence read; or he may read to them either the
-exact German in the book or small variations on it, and make the pupils
-translate _vivâ voce_, clause by clause. He may then ask questions on the
-piece in German and require answers in English.
-
-For exercises, there are many devices by which the pupil may be trained
-to observation, and also be confirmed in his knowledge of back lessons.
-The great teacher, F. A. Wolf, used to make his own children ascertain
-how many times such and such a word occurred in such and such pages.
-As M. Bréal says, children are collectors by nature; and, acting on
-this hint, we might say, “Write in column all the dative cases on pages
-_a_ to _c_, and give the English and the corresponding nominatives.”
-Or, “Copy from those pages all the accusative prepositions with the
-accusatives after them.” Or, “Write out the past participles, with
-their infinitives.” Or, “Translate such and such sentences, and explain
-them with reference to the context.” Or, questions may be asked on the
-subject-matter of the book. There is no end to the possible varieties of
-such exercises.
-
-As soon as they get any feeling of the language, the pupils should learn
-by heart some easy poetry in it. I should recommend their learning the
-English of the piece first, and then getting the German _vivâ voce_ from
-the teacher. To quicken the German in their minds, I think it is well
-to give them in addition a German prose version, using almost the same
-words. Variations of the more important sentences should be learnt at the
-same time.
-
-In all these suggestions you will see what I am aiming at. I wish the
-learner to get a feeling of, and a power over, the main words of the
-language and the machinery in which they are employed.
-
-[183] I append in a note a passage from the old edition of this book
-referring to the Cambridge man of forty years ago. “The typical Cambridge
-man studies mathematics, not because he likes mathematics, or derives any
-pleasure from the perception of mathematical truth, still less with the
-notion of ever using his knowledge; but either because, if he is “a good
-man,” he hopes for a fellowship, or because, if he cannot aspire so high,
-he considers reading the thing to do, and finds a satisfaction in mental
-effort just as he does in a constitutional to the Gogmagogs. When such a
-student takes his degree, he is by no means a highly cultivated man; but
-he is not the sort of man we can despise for all that. He has in him, to
-use one of his own metaphors, a considerable amount of _force_, which
-may be applied in any direction. He has great power of concentration and
-sustained mental effort even on subjects which are distasteful to him. In
-other words, his mind is under the control of his will, and he can bring
-it to bear promptly and vigorously on anything put before him. He will
-sometimes be half through a piece of work, while an average Oxonian (as
-we Cambridge men conceive of him at least) is thinking about beginning.
-But his training has taught him to value mental force without teaching
-him to care about its application. Perhaps he has been working at the
-gymnasium, and has at length succeeded in “putting up” a hundredweight.
-In learning to do this, he has been acquiring strength for its own sake.
-He does not want to put up hundredweights, but simply to be able to put
-them up, and his reward is the consciousness of power. Now the tripos
-is a kind of competitive examination in putting up weights. The student
-who has been training for it, has acquired considerable mental vigour,
-and when he has put up his weight he falls back on the consciousness of
-strength which he seldom thinks of using. Having put up the heavier, he
-despises the lighter weights. He rather prides himself on his ignorance
-of such things as history, modern languages, and English literature. He
-“can get those up in a few evenings,” whenever he wants them. He reminds
-me, indeed, of a tradesman who has worked hard to have a large balance at
-his banker’s. This done, he is satisfied. He has neither taste nor desire
-for the things which make wealth valuable; but when he sees other people
-in the enjoyment of them, he hugs himself with the consciousness that he
-can write a cheque for such things whenever he pleases.”
-
-[184] On this interesting subject I will quote three men who said
-nothing _inepte_—De Morgan, Helps, and the first Sir James Stephen. De
-Morgan, speaking of Jacotot’s plan, wrote:—“There is much truth in the
-assertion that new knowledge hooks on easily to a little of the old
-thoroughly mastered. The day is coming when it will be found out that
-crammed erudition got up for examination, does not cast out any hooks
-for more.” (_Budget of Paradoxes_, p. 3.) Elsewhere he says:—“When the
-student has occupied his time in learning a moderate portion of many
-different things, what has he acquired—extensive knowledge or useful
-habits? Even if he can be said to have varied learning, it will not long
-be true of him, for nothing flies so quickly as half-digested knowledge;
-and when this is gone, there remains but a slender portion of useful
-power. A small quantity of learning quickly evaporates from a mind which
-never held any learning except in small quantities; and the intellectual
-philosopher can perhaps explain the following phenomenon—that men who
-have given deep attention to one or more liberal studies, can learn to
-the end of their lives, and are able to retain and apply very small
-quantities of other kinds of knowledge; while those who have never learnt
-much of any one thing seldom acquire new knowledge after they attain to
-years of maturity, and frequently lose the greater part of that which
-they once possessed.”
-
-Sir Arthur Helps in _Reading_ (_Friends in C._) says:—“All things are so
-connected together that a man who knows one subject well, cannot, if he
-would, have failed to have acquired much besides; and that man will not
-be likely to keep fewer pearls who has a string to put them on than he
-who picks them up and throws them together without method. This, however,
-is a very poor metaphor to represent the matter; for what I would aim at
-producing not merely holds together what is gained, but has vitality in
-itself—is always growing. And anybody will confirm this who in his own
-case has had any branch of study or human affairs to work upon; for he
-must have observed how all he meets seems to work in with, and assimilate
-itself to, his own peculiar subject. During his lonely walks, or in
-society, or in action, it seems as if this one pursuit were something
-almost independent of himself, always on the watch, and claiming its
-share in whatever is going on.”
-
-In his Lecture on _Desultory and Systematic Reading_, Sir James Stephen
-said:—“Learning is a world, not a chaos. The various accumulations of
-human knowledge are not so many detached masses. They are all connected
-parts of one great system of truth, and though that system be infinitely
-too comprehensive for any one of us to compass, yet each component member
-of it bears to every other component member relations which each of us
-may, in his own department of study, search out and discover for himself.
-A man is really and soundly learned in exact proportion to the number and
-to the importance of those relations which he has thus carefully examined
-and accurately understood.”
-
-[185] This essay, which was written nearly twenty-five years ago, I leave
-as it stands. I take some credit to myself for having early recognised
-the importance of a book now famous. (June, 1890.)
-
-[186] This proposition has been ably discussed by President W. H. Payne.
-_Contributions to the Science of Education._ “Education Values.”
-
-[187] “The brewer,” as Mr. Spencer himself tells us, “if his business is
-very extensive, finds it pay to keep a chemist on the premises”—pay a
-good deal better, I suspect, than learning chemistry at school.
-
-[188] Helps, who by taste and talent is eminently literary, put in this
-claim for science more than 20 [now nearer 50] years ago. “The higher
-branches of method cannot be taught at first; but you may begin by
-teaching orderliness of mind. Collecting, classifying, contrasting, and
-weighing facts are some of the processes by which method is taught....
-Scientific method may be acquired without many sciences being learnt; but
-one or two great branches of science must be accurately known.” (_Friends
-in Council, Education._) Helps, though by his delightful style he never
-gives the reader any notion of over compression, has told us more truth
-about education in a few pages than one sometimes meets with in a
-complete treatise.
-
-[189] J. S. Mill (who by the way, would leave history entirely to private
-reading, _Address at St. Andrews_, p. 21), has pointed out that “there
-is not a fact in history which is not susceptible of as many different
-explanations as there are possible theories of human affairs,” and
-that “history is not the foundation but the verification of the social
-science.” But he admits that “what we know of former ages, like what
-we know of foreign nations, is, with all its imperfectness, of much
-use, by correcting the narrowness incident to personal experience.”
-(Dissertations, Vol. I, p. 112.)
-
-[190] It is difficult to treat seriously the arguments by which Mr.
-Spencer endeavours to show that a knowledge of science is necessary for
-the practice or the enjoyment of the fine arts. Of course, the highest
-art of every kind is based on science, that is, on truths which science
-takes cognizance of and explains; but it does not therefore follow
-that “without science there can be neither perfect production nor full
-appreciation.” Mr. Spencer tells us of mistakes which John Lewis and
-Rossetti have made for want of science. Very likely; and had those
-gentlemen devoted much of their time to science we should never have
-heard of their blunders—or of their pictures either. If they were to
-paint a piece of woodwork, a carpenter might, perhaps, detect something
-amiss in the mitring. If they painted a wall, a bricklayer might point
-out that with their arrangement of stretchers and headers the wall would
-tumble down for want of a proper bond. But even Mr. Spencer would not
-wish them to spend their time in mastering the technicalities of every
-handicraft, in order to avoid these inaccuracies. It is the business
-of the painter to give us form and colour as they reveal themselves to
-the eye, not to prepare illustrations of scientific text-books. The
-physical sciences, however, are only part of the painter’s necessary
-equipment, according to Mr. Spencer. “He must also understand how the
-minds of spectators will be affected by the several peculiarities of his
-work—a question in psychology!” Still more surprising is Mr. Spencer’s
-dictum about poetry. “Its rhythm, its strong and numerous metaphors,
-its hyperboles, its violent inversions, are simply exaggerations of
-the traits of excited speech. To be good, therefore, poetry must pay
-attention to those laws of nervous action which excited speech obeys.” It
-is difficult to see how poetry can pay attention to anything. The poet,
-of course must not violate those laws, but, if he _has paid attention_
-to them in composing, he will do well to present his MS. to the local
-newspaper. [It seems the class is not extinct of whom Pope wrote:—
-
- “Some drily plain, without invention’s aid
- “Write dull receipts how poems may be made.”
-
- _Essay on Criticism._]
-
-[191] Speaking of law, medicine, engineering, and the industrial arts,
-J. S. Mill remarks: “Whether those whose speciality they are will learn
-them as a branch of intelligence or as a mere trade, and whether having
-learnt them, they will make a wise and conscientious use of them, or
-the reverse, depends less on the manner in which they are taught their
-profession, than upon _what sort of mind they bring to it—what kind
-of intelligence and of conscience the general system of education has
-developed in them_.”—Address at St. Andrews, p. 6.
-
-[192] “Comme vous n’avez pas su ou comme vous n’avez pas voulu atteindre
-la pensée de l’enfant, vous n’avez aucune action sur son développement
-moral et intellectuel. Vous êtes le maître de latin et de grec.” Bréal.
-_Quelques Mots, &c._, p. 243.
-
-[193] Mr. Spencer does not mention this principle in his enumeration,
-but, no doubt, considers he implies it.
-
-[194] “Si l’on partageait toute la science humaine en deux parties, l’une
-commune à tous les hommes, l’autre particulière aux savants, celle-ci
-serait très-petite en comparaison de l’autre. Mais nous ne songeons guère
-aux acquisitions générales, parce qu’elles se font sans qu’on y pense, et
-même avant l’âge de raison; que d’ailleurs le savoir ne se fait remarquer
-que par ses différences, et que, comme dans les équations d’algèbre, les
-quantités communes se comptent pour rien.”—_Émile_, livre i.
-
-[195] This is well said in Dr. John Brown’s admirable paper _Education
-through the Senses_. (Horæ Subsecivæ, pp. 313, 314.)
-
-[196] After remarking on the wrong order in which subjects are taught, he
-continues, “What with perceptions unnaturally dulled by early thwartings,
-and a coerced attention to books, what with the mental confusion produced
-by teaching subjects before they can be understood, and in each of
-them giving generalisations before the facts of which they are the
-generalisations, what with making the pupil a mere passive recipient of
-others’ ideas and not in the least leading him to be an active inquirer
-or self-instructor, and what with taxing the faculties to excess, there
-are very few minds that become as efficient as they might be.”
-
-[197] A class of boys whom I once took in Latin Delectus denied, with
-the utmost confidence, when I questioned them on the subject, that there
-were any such things in English as verbs and substantives. On another
-occasion, I saw a poor boy of nine or ten caned, because, when he had
-said that _proficiscor_ was a deponent verb, he could not say what a
-deponent verb was. Even if he had remembered the inaccurate grammar
-definition expected of him, “A deponent verb is a verb with a passive
-form and an active meaning,” his comprehension of _proficiscor_ would
-have been no greater. It is worth observing that, even when offending
-grievously in great matters against the principle of connecting fresh
-knowledge with the old, teachers are sometimes driven to it in small.
-They find that it is better for boys to see that _lignum_ is like
-_regnum_, and _laudare_ like _amare_, than simply to learn that _lignum_
-is of the Second Declension, and _laudare_ of the First Conjugation. If
-boys had to learn by a mere effort of memory the particular declension
-or conjugation of Latin words before they were taught anything about
-declensions and conjugations, this would be as sensible as the method
-adopted in some other instances, and the teachers might urge, as usual,
-that the information would come in useful afterwards.
-
-[198] Mr. Spencer and Professor Tyndall appeal to the results of
-experience as justifying a more rational method of teaching. Speaking of
-geometrical deductions, Mr. Spencer says: “It has repeatedly occurred
-that those who have been stupefied by the ordinary school-drill—by its
-abstract formulas, its wearisome tasks, its cramming—have suddenly had
-their intellects roused by thus ceasing to make them passive recipients,
-and inducing them to become active discoverers. The discouragement
-caused by bad teaching having been diminished by a little sympathy, and
-sufficient perseverance excited to achieve a first success, there arises
-a revolution of feeling affecting the whole nature. They no longer find
-themselves incompetent; they too can do something. And gradually, as
-success follows success, the incubus of despair disappears, and they
-attack the difficulties of their other studies with a courage insuring
-conquest.”
-
-[199] On this subject I can quote the authority of a great observer
-of the mind—no less a man, indeed, than Wordsworth. He speaks of the
-“grand elementary principal of pleasure, by which man knows, and feels,
-and lives, and moves. We have no sympathy,” he continues, “but what is
-propagated by pleasure—I would not be misunderstood—but wherever we
-sympathise with pain, it will be found that the sympathy is produced and
-carried on by subtile combinations with pleasure. We have no knowledge,
-that is, no general principles drawn from the contemplation of particular
-facts, but what has been built up by pleasure, and exists in us by
-pleasure alone. The man of science, the chemist, and mathematician,
-whatever difficulties and disgusts they may have to struggle with,
-know and feel this. However painful may be the objects with which the
-anatomist’s knowledge may be connected, he feels that his knowledge is
-pleasure, and _when he has no pleasure he has no knowledge_.”—Preface to
-second edition of _Lyrical Ballads_. So Wordsworth would have agreed with
-Tranio: (_T. of Shrew_, j. 1.)
-
- “No profit grows where is no pleasure ta’en;
- In brief, Sir, study what you most affect.”
-
-[200] This remark, I am glad to say, is much less true now (1890) than
-when first published. Indeed some purveyors of books for children are
-getting to rely too exclusively on the pictures, just as I have noticed
-that an organ-grinder with a monkey seldom or never has a good organ. Of
-large pictures for class teaching, some of the best I have seen (both for
-history and natural history) are published by the S.P.C.K.
-
-[201] Tillich’s boxes of bricks (sold by the B’ham Midland Educational
-Supply Company, and by Arnold, Briggate, Leeds), are very useful for
-“intuitive” arithmetic: for higher stages one might say the same of W.
-Wooding’s “Decimal Abacus” with vertical wires.
-
-[202] The grammar question is still a perplexing one. There are
-Inspectors who require children (as I once heard in a remote country
-school) to distinguish “7 kinds of adverbs.” Then we have children
-discriminating after the fashion of one of my own pupils, (I quote from
-a grammar paper,) “Parse _it_.” “_It_ is a prepreition. Almost all small
-words are prepreitions.” In such cases it is very hard indeed to find
-any common ground for the minds of the old and the young. The true way I
-believe is to lead the young to make their own observations. The way is
-very very slow, but it developes power. I have lately seen an interesting
-little book on these lines, called _Language Work_ by Dr. De Garmo
-(Bloomington, Ill., U.S.A.)
-
-[203] Books for a beginner should contain a little matter in much space,
-and, as they are usually written, they contain much matter in a little
-space. Nothing can be truer than the saying of Lakanal, “L’abrégé est le
-contraire de l’éléméntaire: That which is abridged is just the opposite
-of that which is elementary.” When shall we learn what seems obvious
-in itself and what is taught us by the great authorities? “Epitome,”
-says Ascham, “is good privately for himself that doth work it, but ill
-commonly for all others that use other men’s labour therein. A silly
-poor kind of study, not unlike to the doing of those poor folk which
-neither till, nor sow, nor reap themselves, but glean by stealth upon
-other’s grounds. Such have empty barns for dear years.” (_School Master_,
-Book ij.) Bacon says (_De Aug._, lib. vj., cap. iv.), “Ad pædagogicam
-quod attinet brevissimum foret dictu.... Illud imprimis consuluerim ut
-caveatur a compendiis: Not much about pedagogics.... My chief advice is,
-keep clear of compendiums.” And yet “the table of contents” method which
-I suggested in irony I afterwards found proposed in all seriousness in
-an announcement of Dr. J. F. Bright’s _English History_: “The marginal
-analysis has been collected at the beginning of the volume so as to
-form an abstract of the history _suitable for the use of those who are
-beginning the study_.”
-
-I would rather listen to Oliver Goldsmith: “In history, such stories
-alone should be laid before them as might catch the imagination:
-instead of this, they are too frequently obliged to toil through the
-four Empires, as they are called, where their memories are burthened
-by a number of disgusting names that destroy all their future relish
-for our best historians.” (Letter on _Education_ in _the Bee_: a letter
-containing so much new truth that Goldsmith in re-publishing it had to
-point out that it had appeared before Rousseau’s _Emile_.) A modern
-authority on education has come to the same conclusion as Goldsmith.
-“The first teaching in history will not give dates, but will show
-the learner men and actions likely to make an impression on him. Der
-erste Geschichtsunterricht wird nicht Jahreszahlen geben, sondern
-eindrucksvolle Personen und Thaten vorführen.” (L. Wiese’s _Deutsche
-Bildungsfragen_, 1871.)
-
-[204] Dr. Jas. Donaldson has well said of the educator:—“The most
-unguarded of his acts, those which come from the depth of his nature,
-uncalled for and unbidden, are the actions which have the most powerful
-influence.” _Chambers’ Information_ sub v. _Education_, p. 565.
-
-[205]
-
- “That you are wife
- To so much bloated flesh _as scarce hath soul_
- _Instead of salt to keep it sweet_, I think
- Will ask no witnesses to prove.”
-
- BEN JONSON: _The Devil is an Ass_, Act i. sc. 3.
-
-[206] I fortify myself with the following quotation from the _Book about
-Dominies_ by “Ascott Hope” (Hope Moncrieff). He says that a school of
-from twenty to a hundred boys is too large to be altogether under the
-influence of one man, and too small for the development of a healthy
-condition of public opinion among the boys themselves. “In a community
-of fifty boys, there will always be found so many bad ones who will be
-likely to carry things their own way. Vice is more unblushing in small
-societies than in large ones. _Fifty boys will be more easily leavened
-by the wickedness of five, than five hundred by that of fifty._ It would
-be too dangerous an ordeal to send a boy to a school where sin appears
-fashionable, and where, if he would remain virtuous, he must shun his
-companions. There may be middle-sized schools which derive a good and
-healthy tone from the moral strength of their masters or the good example
-of a certain set of boys, but I doubt if there are many. Boys are so
-easily led to do right or wrong, that we should be very careful at least
-to set the balance fairly” (p. 167); and again he says (p. 170), “The
-moral tone of a middle-sized school will be peculiarly liable to be at
-the mercy of a set of bold and bad boys.”
-
-[207] As I have been thought to express myself too strongly on this
-point, I will give a quotation from a master whose opinion will go far
-with all who know him. “The moral tone of the school is made what it
-is, not nearly so much by its rules and regulations, or its masters,
-as by the leading characters among the boys. They mainly determine the
-public opinion amongst their schoolfellows—their personal influence is
-incalculable.” Rev. D. Edwardes, of Denstone.
-
-[208] About Preparatory Schools I find I am at issue with my friend the
-Head Master of Harrow (See _Public Schools_, by Rev. J. E. C. Welldon, in
-_Contemporary R._, May, 1890). I do indeed incline to his opinion that
-very young boys should not be at a public school, but I cannot agree
-that they should be at a middle-sized boarding school. I hold that they
-should live in a _family_ (their own if possible) and go to a day school.
-Day Schools have now been provided for girls, but for young boys they do
-not seem in demand. English parents who can afford it send their sons to
-boarding schools from eight years old onwards. This seems to me a great
-mistake of theirs.
-
-[209] “What is education? It is that which is imbibed from the moral
-atmosphere which a child breathes. It is the involuntary and unconscious
-language of its parents and of all those by whom it is surrounded, and
-not their set speeches and set lectures. It is the words which the young
-hear fall from their seniors when the speakers are off their guard:
-and it is by these unconscious expressions that the child interprets
-the hearts of its parents. That is education.”—Drummond’s _Speeches in
-Parliament_.
-
-[210] In what I have said on this subject, the incompleteness which is
-noticeable enough in the preceding essays, has found an appropriate
-climax. I see, too, that if anyone would take the trouble, the little I
-have said might easily be misinterpreted. I am well aware, however, that
-if the young mind will not readily assimilate sharply defining religious
-formulæ, still less will it feel at home among the “immensities” and
-“veracities.” The great educating force of Christianity I believe to be
-due to this, that it is not a set of abstractions or vague generalities,
-but that in it God reveals Himself to us in a Divine Man, and raises us
-through our devotion to Him. I hold, therefore, that religious teaching
-for the young should neither be vague nor abstract. Mr. Froude, in
-commenting on the use made of hagiology in the Church of Rome, has shown
-that we lose much by not following the Bible method of instruction. (See
-_Short Studies: Lives of the Saints_, and _Representative Men_.)
-
-[211] This theory of the educator’s task which makes him a disposer or
-director of influence rather than a teacher, led Locke to decry our
-public schools, for in them the traditions and tone of the school seem
-the source of influence, and the masters are to all appearance mainly
-teachers. Locke’s own words are these:—“The difference is great between
-two or three pupils in the same house and three or four score boys lodged
-up and down; for let the master’s industry and skill be never so great,
-it is impossible he should have fifty or a hundred scholars under his eye
-any longer than they are in the school together, nor can it be expected
-that he should instruct them successfully in anything but their books;
-the forming of their minds and manners requiring a constant attention
-and particular application to every single boy which is impossible in a
-numerous flock, and would be wholly in vain (could he have time to study
-and correct everyone’s particular defects and wrong inclinations) when
-the lad was to be left to himself or the prevailing infection of his
-fellows the greatest part of the four-and-twenty hours.” But the educator
-who considers himself a director of influences must remember that he
-is not the only force. The boy’s companions are a force at least as
-great; and if he were brought up in private on Locke’s system, he would
-be entirely without a kind of influence much more valuable than Locke
-seems to think—the influence of boy companions, and of the traditions of
-a great school. On the other hand, it cannot be denied that our public
-schools used to be, and perhaps are still to some extent, under-mastered,
-and that the masters should not be the mere teachers which, from overwork
-and other causes, they often tend to become. The consequence has been
-that the real education of the boys has in a great measure passed out of
-their hands. What has been the result? A long succession of able teachers
-have aimed at giving literary instruction and making their pupils
-classical scholars. Both manners and bodily training have been left to
-take care of themselves. Yet such is the irony of Fate that the majority
-of youths who leave our great schools are not literary and are not much
-of classical scholars, but they are decidedly gentlemanly and still more
-decidedly athletic.
-
-[212] I append a note written from a different point of view—“_With how
-little wisdom!_” certainly seems to cover most departments of life.
-_Seems?_ Yes; but are we not apt to overlook the wisdom that lies in the
-great mass of people? In some small department we may have investigated
-further than our class-mates, and may see, or think we see, a good deal
-of stupidity in what goes on. But in most matters we do not investigate
-for ourselves, but just do the usual thing; and this seems to work
-all right. There must be a good deal of wisdom underlying the complex
-machinery of civilised life. Carlyle’s “Mostly fools!” will by no means
-account for it. At times one has a dim perception that people in general
-are not so stupid as they seem. Perhaps a long life would in the end lead
-us to say like Tithonus,
-
- “Why should a man desire in any way
- “To vary from the kindly race of men?”
-
-There is a higher wisdom than the disintegrating individualism of
-Carlyle. Far better to believe with Mazzini in “the collective existence
-of humanity,” and remembering that we work in a medium fashioned for us
-by the labours of all who have preceded us, regard our collective powers
-as “grafted upon those of all foregoing humanity.” (Mazzini’s _Essays_:
-_Carlyle_.) This is the point of view to which Wordsworth would raise us:—
-
- “Among the multitudes
- “Of that huge city, oftentimes was seen
- “.........................the unity of man,
- “One spirit over ignorance and vice
- “Predominant, in good and evil hearts;
- “One sense for moral judgements, as one eye
- “For the sun’s light. The soul when smitten thus
- “By a sublime _idea_, whence soe’er
- “Vouchsafed for union or communion, feeds
- “On the pure bliss and takes her rest with God.”
-
- _Prelude_ viij, _ad f._
-
-Though unable to share in “the pure bliss” of Wordsworth we may take
-refuge with Goethe in the thought that “humanity is the true man,” and
-enjoy much to which we have no claim as individuals. Tradition, blind
-tradition, must rule our actions through by far the greatest part of our
-lives; and seeing we owe it so much, we should be tolerant, even grateful.
-
-[213] Professor Jebb has lately given us the main ideas of the great
-Scholar Erasmus. “In all his work,” says the Professor, “he had an
-educational aim.... The evils of his age, in Church, in State, in the
-daily lives of men, seemed to him to have their roots in _ignorance_;
-ignorance of what Christianity meant, ignorance of what the Bible
-taught, ignorance of what the noblest and most gifted minds of the
-past, whether Christian or pagan, had contributed to the instruction of
-the human race.” (Rede Lecture, 1890.) Erasmus evidently fell into the
-error against which Pestalozzi and Froebel lift up their voices, often
-in vain—the error of forgetting that knowledge is of no avail without
-intelligence. What is the use of lighting additional candles for the
-blind?
-
-
-
-
-APPENDIX.
-
-
-=History of this Book.=—Some wise man has advised us never to find fault
-with ourselves, for, says he, you may always depend on your friends to
-do it for you. So, having looked through the proofs of this book, I
-abstain from fault-finding. I fancy I _could_ find fault more effectively
-than my friends or even my professional critics. As the _Spectator’s_
-“Correspondent in an easy chair” says very truly; the author has read
-his book many times; the critic has read it _at most_ once. In fact the
-critic gives to the book (in some cases to the subject of the book also)
-no greater number of hours than the author has given months, perhaps
-years. Partiality blinds the author, no doubt, but unless he is a fatuous
-person it does not blind him so much as his haste blinds the critic. An
-author of note said of a book of his, which had been much criticised:
-“The book has faults, but I am the only person who has discovered them,”
-to which a friend maliciously appended: “For _faults_ read _merits_.”
-Whatever was the truth here, I am inclined to think the author has the
-best chance of putting his finger on the weak places.
-
-But if I see weaknesses in the foregoing book, why do I not make it
-better? Just for two reasons: to improve the book I should have to spend
-more time on it and more money. The more I read and think about any one
-of my subjects, the more I want to go on reading and thinking. Perhaps I
-hear of an old book that has escaped my notice, or a new book comes out,
-sometimes an important book like Pinloche’s _Basedow_. So I can never
-finish an essay to my satisfaction, and the only way of getting it off my
-hands is to send the copy to the printer. By the time the proof comes in
-there is something that I should like to add or alter; but then the dread
-of a long bill for “corrections” restrains me. However, now the book is
-all in type, I see here and there something that suggests a note by way
-of explanation or addition, so I add this appendix. Taking a hint from
-one of my favourite authors, Sir Arthur Helps, I throw my notes into the
-form of a dialogue, but being entirely destitute of Helps’s dramatic
-skill I confine myself to =E.= (the Essayist) and =A.= (Amicus), who is
-only too clearly an _alter ego_.
-
-=A.= So the Americans have kept alive your old book for you, and at last
-you have rewritten it. You at least have no reason to complain that there
-is no international copyright. Your book would have been forgotten long
-ago if a lady in Cincinnati had not persuaded an American publisher there
-to reprint it. =E.= Yes, I very readily allow that I have been a gainer.
-The Americans have done more for me than my own countrymen. To be sure
-neither have “praised with the hands” (as Molière’s _professeur_ has it);
-and, in money at least, the book has never paid _me_ its expenses; but
-three American publishers have done for themselves what no Englishman
-would do for me, viz., publish at their own risk. In 1868 when my MS. was
-ready, I went to my old friend, Mr. Alexander Macmillan; but he would
-not even look at it. “Books on education,” said he, “don’t pay. Why
-there is Thring’s _Education and School_, a capital book” (I assented
-heartily, for I was very fond of it), “well, _that_ doesn’t sell.” I was
-forced to admit that in that case I had little chance. “But,” I said, “I
-suppose you would publish at my risk?” “No,” said Mr. Macmillan. “The
-author is never satisfied when his book doesn’t pay.” “What would you
-advise?” I asked. “I’ll give you a letter of introduction to Mr. William
-Longman,” said Mr. Macmillan; “I dare say he’ll publish for you.” With
-this letter I went to Mr. William Longman (who has since those days been
-gathered to his ancestors, formerly of Paternoster Row). Mr. Longman
-said he would put the MS. in the hands of his reader. If the reader’s
-report was favourable the firm would offer me terms; if not, they would
-publish for me on commission. I sent the MS. accordingly, and soon after
-I had a letter from the firm offering to publish “on commission.” When
-the book was in type, Mr. Longman advised me to have only 500 printed,
-and to publish at a high price. “I should charge 9_s._,” he said. “Very
-few people will buy, and they won’t consider the price.” This was not my
-opinion, but in such a matter I felt that the weight of authority was
-enormously against me. So I consented to the publishing price of 7_s._
-6_d._ And at first it seemed that Mr. Longman was right—at least about
-the small number of purchasers. £30 was spent in advertising, and the
-book was very generally and I may say very favourably reviewed; but when
-about 100 copies had been sold, it almost entirely ceased “to move.” I
-think 13 copies were sold in six months. So to get rid of the remainder
-of my 500 copies (some 300 of them) I put down the price to 3_s._ 6_d._
-Then it seemed that Mr. Longman had made a mistake about the price.
-Without another advertisement the 300 were sold in a month or two. Some
-time after, I heard that the book had been republished in Cincinnati,
-and on my writing to the publishers, Messrs. Robert Clarke & Co., they
-presented me with half-a-dozen copies. This proved to be a perfect
-reprint, which is more than I can say of those which years afterwards
-were issued by Mr. Bardeen and Messrs. Kellogg. I have therefore from
-time to time purchased from Messrs. Clarke and imported the copies (I
-suppose about 1500 in all) that have been wanted for the English market.
-I hope these details do not bore you. =A.= Not at all. The history of any
-book interests me, and your book has had some odd experiences. It has
-lived, I own, much longer than I expected, and for this you have to thank
-the Americans. =A.= In my case the absence of international copyright
-has done no harm certainly; but after all copyright has its advantages,
-international copyright included. Specialists suffer severely from the
-want of it. Perhaps the “special” public in this country is so small that
-an important book for it cannot be published. If to our special public
-were joined the special public of the U.S., the book might be fairly
-remunerative to its author. Take, _e.g._, Joseph Payne’s writings. These
-would have been lost to the world had not Dr. Payne published them as an
-act of filial piety. With an international copyright these works would be
-very good property. =E.= You think then that in the long run “honesty is
-the best policy” even internationally? =A.= I must say my opinion does
-incline in that direction.
-
-=Class Matches (p 42).=—=A.= I think you have had a good deal to do with
-class matches? =E.= Yes. One must be careful not to overdo them, but I
-have found an occasional match a capital way of enlivening school-work.
-Some time before the match takes place the master lets the two best boys
-pick up sides, the second boy having the first choice. The subject for
-the match is then arranged, and to prevent disputes the area must be
-carefully defined. Moreover, there must be no opportunity for the boys to
-ask questions about unimportant details that are likely to have escaped
-attention. When the match is to take place each boy should come provided
-with a set of written questions, and whenever a boy shows himself
-ignorant of the right answer to a question of his own he must be held to
-have failed even if his opponent is ignorant also. At Harrow, where I
-had a class-room (“school-room” as it is there called) to myself, I used
-to work these matches very successfully in German. Say Heine’s Lorelei
-had been learnt by heart. I set as a subject for a match the plurals
-of the substantives and the past participles of the verbs in the poem.
-Or the boys had to make up for themselves and number on paper a set of
-short sentences in which only words which occurred in the poem were used.
-In this last case the questioner handed in to the master his paper with
-both the English and the German on it, and the master gave the other side
-the English, of which they had to write the German. The details of such
-matches may of course be varied to any extent so long as the subject
-set is quite definite. The scoring will be found best at the lower end,
-so that a match stimulates those who need stimulus. =A.= What did you
-call “scratch pairs?” =E.= Oh, that was a device for getting up a little
-harmless excitement. Knowing the capacities of my boys, I arranged them
-in pairs, the best boy and the worst forming one pair, the next best and
-next worst the second pair, &c., &c. I then asked a series of questions
-to which all had to write short answers. I then looked over the answers
-and marked them. Finally the marks of each _pair_ were added together,
-and I announced the order in which the pairs “came in.” It was really
-“anybody’s race” for neither I nor anyone could predict the result. If
-the number of boys was an odd number the boy in the middle fought for his
-own hand and had his marks doubled. Perhaps on the whole he had the best
-chance.
-
-=Competition.=—=A.= There were then some forms of emulation which you
-did not set your face against? =E.= There were many, but I preferred
-emulation which stimulated the idle rather than the industrious. Most
-“prizes” act only on those who would be better without them. =A.= Do you
-see no danger in encouraging rivalry between different bodies? The strife
-between parties has often been more virulent than the strife between
-individuals. =E.= Yes, I know well that in exciting party-feeling one
-is playing with edged tools; and besides this, a boy who for any cause
-is thought a disgrace to his side, is very likely to be bullied by it.
-Let me tell you of one form of stimulus which seemed to work well and
-was free from most of the objections you are thinking of. When I had a
-small school of my own in which there were only young boys, I put up in
-the school-room a list of the boys’ names in alphabetical order with
-blank spaces after the names. I looked over the boys’ written work very
-carefully, and whenever I came across any written exercise evidently
-done with great painstaking and for that boy with more than ordinary
-success, I marked it with a G, and I put up the G in one of the spaces
-after that boy’s name in the list hung up in the school-room. When the
-school collectively had obtained a fixed number of G’s we had an extra
-half-holiday. The announcement of a G was therefore always hailed with
-delight. =A.= I see one thing in favour of that device. You might by a
-G give encouragement to a boy when he has just begun to _try_. This is
-often a turning-point in a boy’s life; and a master’s early recognition
-of effort may do much to strengthen into a habit what might, without
-the recognition, have proved nothing but a passing whim. At the very
-least, all such devices have one good effect; they break the monotony
-of school-work; and monotony is much more wearing to the young than it
-is to their elders. Can you tell me of others who have used such plans?
-=E.= A friend of mine who has a genius for inventing school plans of
-all kinds and marvellous energy in working them, has a boarding-house
-in connexion with a large school. The marks of every boy in the school
-are given out for each week. My friend gives a supper at the end of the
-quarter if the average marks of his house come up to a certain standard.
-He puts up each week a list of “Furtherers,” _i.e._, of the boys who
-have surpassed the average, and of “Hinderers,” _i.e._, of boys who have
-fallen below it =A.= No doubt this is an effective spur, but I should
-fear it would in practice deliver the hindermost to Satan. The boy whom
-nature has made a “hinderer” is likely to have by no means a good time
-in that house. Do you know if such devices as you have mentioned are
-common in schools? =E.= I really can’t say. I have seen in American
-school papers accounts of class matches. In the New England _Journal of
-Education_ (22nd November, 1888) Mr. A. E. Winship gave an account of
-some inter-class matches at Milwaukee. There is a match between three
-classes, say in penmanship. If there are seventy boys in the three
-classes together, each boy draws a number from one to seventy, and puts
-not his name but his number on his paper. The same lesson is set for all.
-The papers are collected, divided into three equal heaps, and looked
-over and marked by three masters. Finally the _average_ of each class is
-taken. In mental arithmetic each class chooses its own champions. This
-would be fun, but would do nothing for the lower end of the class. The
-principal of McDonough School No. 12, New Orleans, Mr. H. E. Chambers,
-gives an account in the New York _School Journal_ (8th December, 1888),
-how he organised sixteen boys into teams of four, putting the best and
-worst together as I did in making up scratch pairs. The match between
-these teams was to see which could get the best record for the month. As
-Mr. Chambers tells us the sharper boys managed with more success than the
-master to let light into the dull intellects of boys in the same team
-with them. This union of interests between the “strong” and the “weak” as
-the French call them, is a very good feature in combats of _sides_.
-
-=The Jesuits.=—=A.= What is it that interests you so much in the Jesuits?
-=E.= Two things. First, the Jesuit shows the effects of a definitely
-planned and rigidly carried out system of education; and next, in such
-a society you find a continuity of effort which is and must be wanting
-in the life of an individual. If ever “we feel that we are greater than
-we know” it is when we can think of ourselves as parts of a society,
-a society which existed long before us, and will last after us. For
-instance, it is a great thing to be connected with an historical school
-such as Harrow. We then realise, as the school’s poet, Mr. E. E. Bowen,
-has said, that we are no mere “sons of yesterday,” and thinking of the
-connection between the mighty dead and the old school we join heartily in
-the chorus of the school song:—
-
- “Their glory thus shall circle us
- “Till time be done.”
-
-=A.= I verily believe you expect your share in this “glory” for having
-invented the Harrow “Blue Book,” which is likely to outlive _Educational
-Reformers_; but if the boys ever thought of the inventor (which they
-don’t) they would naturally suppose that he was some contemporary of
-Cadmus or Deucalion. _Sic transit!_ But what has this to do with the
-Jesuits? =E.= Only this, that by corporate life you secure a continuity
-of effort. There is to me something very attractive in the idea of a
-teaching society. How such a society might capitalise its discoveries!
-The Roman Church has shown a genius for such societies, witness the
-Jesuits and the Christian Brothers. The experience of centuries must have
-taught them much that we could learn of them. =A.= The Jesuits seem to
-me to be without the spirit of investigators and discoverers. The rules
-of their Society do not permit of their learning anything or forgetting
-anything. Ignatius Loyola was a wonderful man, but he must have been
-superhuman if he could legislate for all time. By the way, I see you say
-the first edition of the _Ratio_ was published in 1585. What is your
-authority? =E.= I took the date from the copy in the British Museum.
-According to a volume published by Rivingtons in 1838 (_Constitutiones
-Societatis Jesu_) the _Constitutions_ were first printed in 1558, but
-were not divulged till “the celebrated suit of the MM. Lionci and Father
-La Valette” in 1761.
-
-=Alexander’s Doctrinale (p. 80).=—=A.= I thought you made it a rule
-to give only what was useful. What can be the use of the quotations
-which your old Appendix contained “from a celebrated grammar written
-by a Franciscan of Brittany about the middle of the 13th century”?
-=E.= Perhaps I had an attack of antiquarianism; but I rather think the
-quotations were given in order to shew our progress since those days.
-The Teachers’ art of making easy things difficult is well exemplified in
-Alexander’s rules for the first declension. But life is short, and folly
-is best forgotten.
-
-=Lily’s Grammar (p. 80).= =A.= Would not your last remark rule out what
-you told us about Lily’s Grammar? =E.= As regards Lily’s assertion,
-“Genders of nouns be 7,” it certainly would. Surely nobody but a writer
-of school-books would ever have thought of making a “gender” out of “hic,
-hæc, hoc, felix”! But the absurdity did not originate with Lily. He was
-all for simplification, and though there were some changes in the Eton
-Latin Grammar which succeeded the “Short introduction of Grammar” known
-as Lily’s Grammar, these changes were, some of them at least, by no means
-improvements. The old book put _a_ before _all_ ablatives and taught that
-“by a kingdom” was _a regno_. If this was not any better than teaching
-that _domino_ by itself was “by a Lord,” it was at least no worse. The
-optative of the old book (“_Utinam sim_ I pray God I be; _Utinam Essem_
-would God I were, &c.”) and the subjunctive (“_Cum Sim_ When I am,
-&c.,”) were better than the oracular statement which perplexed my youth,
-“The subjunctive mood is declined like the potential.” How often I said
-those words, and being of an inquiring mind wondered what on earth “the
-subjunctive mood” was!
-
-=Colet.= =E.= The passage I refer to on page 80 from Colet is in a little
-book in the B.M. It is “Joannis Coleti theologi, olim Decani Divi Pauli,
-editio, una cum quibusdam G. Lilii Grammatices Rudimentis, &c. Antuerpiæ
-1535.” After the accidence of the eight parts of speech, he says:—“Of
-these eight parts of speech in order well construed, be made reasons
-and sentences, and long orations. But how and in what manner, and with
-what constructions of words, and all the varieties, and diversities, and
-changes in Latin speech (which be innumerable), if any man will know, and
-by that knowledge attain to understand Latin books, and to speak and to
-write clean Latin, let him, above all, busily learn and read good Latin
-authors of chosen poets and orators, and note wisely how they wrote and
-spake; and study always to follow them, desiring none other rules but
-their examples. For in the beginning men spake not Latin because such
-rules were made, but, contrariwise, because men spake such Latin, upon
-that followed the rules, and were made. That is to say, Latin speech was
-before the rules, and not the rules before the Latin speech. Wherefore,
-well-beloved masters and teachers of grammar, after the parts of speech
-sufficiently known in our schools, read and expound plainly unto your
-scholars good authors, and show to them [in] every word, and in every
-sentence, what they shall note and observe, warning them busily to follow
-and do like both in writing and in speaking; and be to them your own self
-also speaking with them the pure Latin very present, and leave the rules;
-for reading of good books, diligent information of learned masters,
-studious advertence and taking heed of learners, hearing eloquent men
-speak, and finally, busy imitation with tongue and pen, more availeth
-shortly to get the true eloquent speech, than all the traditions, rules,
-and precepts of masters.” This passage is, I find, well known. It is
-given in Knights’ _Life of Colet_ and is referred to by Mr. Seebohm. Mr.
-J. H. Lupton, Colet’s latest biographer, has kindly corrected the date
-for me: it is indistinct in the Museum copy.
-
-=Mulcaster for English (p. 97).= =A.= Except in Clarke’s edition,
-your extracts from Mulcaster’s _Elementarie_ have been omitted by
-your American reprinters. =E.= So I see. I should have thought the
-Americans would have been much interested by this early praise of our
-common language. The passage is certainly a very remarkable one, and
-Professor Masson has thought it worth quoting in his _Life of Milton_.
-The _Elementarie_ is a scarce book; so I will not follow my reprinters
-in leaving out this passage:—“Is it not a marvellous bondage to become
-servants to one tongue, for learning’s sake, the most part of our time,
-with loss of most time, whereas we may have the very same treasure in
-our own tongue with the gain of most time? our own bearing the joyful
-title of our liberty and freedom, the Latin tongue remembering us of our
-thraldom and bondage? I love Rome, but London better; I favour Italy,
-but England more: I honour the Latin, but I worship the English....
-I honour foreign tongues, but wish my own to be partaker of their
-honour. Knowing them, I wish my own tongue to resemble their grace. I
-confess their furniture, and wish it were ours.... The diligent labour
-of learned countrymen did so enrich those tongues, and not the tongues
-themselves; though they proved very pliable, as our tongue will prove,
-I dare assure it, of knowledge, if our learned countrymen will put to
-their labour. And why not, I pray you, as well in English as either
-Latin or any tongue else? Will ye say it is needless? sure that will not
-hold. If loss of time, while ye be pilgrims to learning, by lingering
-about tongues be no argument of need; if lack of sound skill while the
-tongue distracteth sense more than half to itself and that most of all
-in a simple student or a silly wit, be no argument of need, then ye say
-somewhat which pretend no need. But because we needed not to lose any
-time unless we listed, if we had such a vantage, in the course of study,
-as we now lose while we travail in tongues; and because our understanding
-also were most full in our natural speech, though we know the foreign
-exceedingly well—methink _necessity_ itself doth call for _English_,
-whereby all that gaiety may be had at home which makes us gaze so much
-at the fine stranger.” Among various objections to the use of English
-which he answers, he comes to this one:—“But will ye thus break off the
-common conference with the learned foreign?” To this his answer is not
-very forcible:—“The conference will not cease while the people have cause
-to interchange dealings, and without the Latin it may well be continued:
-as in some countries the learneder sort and some near cousins to the
-Latin itself do already wean their pens and tongues from the use of the
-Latin, both in written discourse and spoken disputation, into their
-own natural, and yet no dry nurse being so well appointed by the milch
-nurse’s help.” Further on he says:—“The emperor Justinian said, when he
-made the Institutes of force, that the students were happy in having such
-a foredeal [_i.e._, advantage—German _Vortheil_] as to hear him at once,
-and not to wait four years first. And doth not our languaging hold us
-back four years and that full, think you?... [But this is not all.] Our
-best understanding is in our natural tongue, and all our foreign learning
-is applied to our use by means of our own; and without the application
-to particular use, wherefore serves learning?... [As for dishonouring
-antiquity], if we must cleave to the eldest and not the best, we should
-be eating acorns and wearing old Adam’s pelts. But why not all in
-English, a tongue of itself both deep in conceit and frank in delivery? I
-do not think that any language, be it whatsoever, is better able to utter
-all arguments either with more pith or greater plainness than our English
-tongue is.... It is our accident which restrains our tongue and not the
-tongue itself, which will strain with the strongest and stretch to the
-furthest, for either government if we were conquerors, or for cunning
-if we were treasurers; not any whit behind either the subtle Greek for
-crouching close, or the stately Latin for spreading fair.”
-
-=Marcel’s “Axiomatic Truths.”=—=A.= I have seen Marcel referred to as a
-great authority in education, but I look in vain for his name in Kiddle’s
-Cyclopædia and in Sonnenschein’s. =E.= You would be more successful in
-Buisson’s. There I see that Claude Marcel was born at Paris in 1793, and
-died in 1876. He was one of Napoleon’s soldiers. After 40 years’ absence
-from France dating from 1825 he went back to Paris. He had been French
-Consul at Cork, and brought up nine children whom he taught entirely
-himself. In 1853 he published with Chapman and Hall his _Language as a
-Means of Mental Culture_ (2 vols.). This book was not very well named,
-for it contains in fact an analysis of the subject—education. To the
-study of this subject Marcel must have given his life, and it seems odd
-that his contribution to English (not French) pedagogic literature is
-so little known. A French abridgment of his work appeared in 1855 with
-the title _Premiers Principes d’Education_; and in 1867 he published in
-French _L’Études des Languages_ (Paris, Borrani) of which a translation
-was published in the U.S.A. Marcel’s notion of education is threefold,
-viz., Physical, Intellectual, and Moral Education: the 1st aiming at
-_health_, _strength_, and _beauty_; the 2nd at _mental power_ and the
-_acquisition of knowledge_; the 3rd at _piety_, _justice_, _goodness_,
-and _wisdom_. According to him the Creator has made the exercise of our
-faculties _pleasurable_. This will suggest his main lines. He expects to
-find general assent, for he quotes from Garrick:—
-
- “When Doctrine meets with general approbation,
- “It is not heresy but reformation.”
-
-But he has met with less approbation than neglect. His “axiomatic truths”
-that I quoted in the old appendix were abused without mercy by a critic
-of those days who accused me of “bookmaking” for putting them in. On the
-other hand my last American reprinter singles them out for honour and
-puts them at the beginning of the book. After this I suppose somebody
-likes them, so here they are:
-
-“=Axiomatic Truths of Methodology.=—1. The method of nature is the
-archetype of all methods, and especially of the method of learning
-languages.
-
-2. The classification of the objects of study should mark out to teacher
-and learner their respective spheres of action.
-
-3. The ultimate objects of the study should always be kept in view, that
-the end be not forgotten in pursuit of the means.
-
-4. The means ought to be consistent with the end.
-
-5. Example and practice are more efficient than precept and theory.
-
-6. Only one thing should be taught at one time; and an accumulation of
-difficulties should be avoided, especially in the beginning of the study.
-
-7. Instruction should proceed from the known to the unknown, from the
-simple to the complex, from concrete to abstract notions, from analysis
-to synthesis.
-
-8. The mind should be impressed with the idea before it takes cognisance
-of the sign that represents it.
-
-9. The development of the intellectual powers is more important than the
-acquisition of knowledge; each should be made auxiliary to the other.
-
-10. All the faculties should be equally exercised, and exercised in a way
-consistent with the exigencies of active life.
-
-11. The protracted exercise of the faculties is injurious: a change of
-occupation renews the energy of their action.
-
-12. No exercise should be so difficult as to discourage exertion, nor so
-easy as to render it unnecessary: attention is secured by making study
-interesting.
-
-13. First impressions and early habits are the most important, because
-they are the most enduring.
-
-14. What the learner discovers by mental exertion is better known than
-what is told him.
-
-15. Learners should not do with their instructor what they can do by
-themselves, that they may have time to do with him what they cannot do by
-themselves.
-
-16. The monitorial principle multiplies the benefits of public
-instruction. By teaching we learn.
-
-17. The more concentrated is the professor’s teaching, the more
-comprehensive and efficient his instruction.
-
-18. In a class the time must be so employed that no learner shall be
-idle, and the business so contrived, that learners of different degrees
-of advancement shall derive equal advantage from the instructor.
-
-19. Repetition must mature into a habit what the learner wishes to
-remember.
-
-20. Young persons should be taught only what they are capable of clearly
-understanding, and what may be useful to them in after-life.”
-
-=A.= What do _you_ think of these? =E.= I confess they bring into my mind
-the advice given to a learner in billiards: “When in doubt cannon and
-pocket the red.” First catch your “Method of Nature,” as Mrs. Glass might
-have said. As to No. 10 again, who shall say what “all the faculties”
-are? And is smelling a faculty that must be equally exercised with
-seeing? When the young Marcels went to Paris I fancy they found there far
-more that was worth seeing than worth smelling. =A.= After what you have
-said about pupil-teachers I infer you do not advocate the “monitorial
-principle”? =E.= Not exactly. “By teaching we learn.” This is very true.
-But if we can’t teach we can’t learn by teaching. =A.= But may we not
-gain by trying to teach? And short of teaching a good deal may be done
-by monitors. =E.= If by the monitorial principle we mean “Encourage the
-young to make themselves useful” it is a capital principle.
-
-=Words and Things.=—=A.= In your Sturm Essay you say: “The schoolmaster’s
-art always has taken, and I suppose, in the main, always will take for
-its material the means of expression.” Surely the signs of the times do
-not indicate this. Have not the tongue and the pen had their day, and
-is not the schoolmaster turning his attention from them, not perhaps
-to the brain, but certainly to the eye and the hand? It has at length
-occurred to him to ask like Shylock “Hath not a boy eyes? Hath not a
-boy hands?” And as it seems certain that the boy has these organs, the
-schoolmaster wants to find employment for them. Till now no scholastic
-use has been found for the eye except reading, or for the hand except
-making strokes with the pen and receiving them from the cane. But it will
-be different in the future. Words have had their day. Things will have
-theirs. =E.= You may be right; but be careful in your use of terms. As
-is usually the case with “cries,” if we want a meaning we may take our
-choice. The contrast between “words” and “things” is sometimes between
-studies like grammar, logic, and rhetoric on the one hand, and, on
-the other, _Realien_, studies which in some way have Things for their
-subject. Then again we have _words_ as the vocal or visible symbols
-of ideas contrasted with the ideas themselves. Those who complain of
-the time spent on words are thinking, some of them, of the time spent
-on the art of expression, others of the time given to symbols which
-do not, to the learner, symbolize anything. But in our day Words and
-Things are supposed to represent the study of literature and the study
-of natural science. At present there is a rage for Things, but it is a
-little early to adjudicate on the comparative claims of, say Homer and
-James Watt, on the gratitude of mankind. The great book of our day on
-Education, Herbert Spencer’s, would make short work with “words”; and
-yet two School Commissions, the Public Schools Commission of 1862, and
-the Middle Schools Commission of 1867 have defended “words.” The first
-of these says: “Grammar is the logic of common speech, and there are
-few educated men who are not sensible of the advantages they gained, as
-boys, from the steady practice of composition and translation, and from
-their introduction to etymology. The study of literature is the study,
-not indeed of the physical, but of the intellectual and moral world
-we live in, and of the thoughts, lives, and characters of those men
-whose writings or whose memories succeeding generations have thought it
-worth while to preserve.” The Commissioners on Middle Schools express
-a similar opinion:—“The ‘human’ subjects of instruction, of which the
-study of language is the beginning, appear to have a distinctly greater
-educational power than the ‘material.’ As all civilisation really takes
-its rise in human intercourse, so the most efficient instrument of
-education appears to be the study which most bears on that intercourse,
-the study of human speech. Nothing appears to develop and discipline the
-whole man so much as the study which assists the learner to understand
-the thoughts, to enter into the feelings, to appreciate the moral
-judgments of others. There is nothing so opposed to true cultivation,
-nothing so unreasonable, as excessive narrowness of mind; and nothing
-contributes to remove this narrowness so much as that clear understanding
-of language which lays open the thoughts of others to ready appreciation.
-Nor is equal clearness of thought to be obtained in any other way.
-Clearness of thought is bound up with clearness of language, and the
-one is impossible without the other. When the study of language can be
-followed by that of literature, not only breadth and clearness, but
-refinement becomes attainable. The study of history in the full sense
-belongs to a still later age: for till the learner is old enough to have
-some appreciation of politics, he is not capable of grasping the meaning
-of what he studies. But both literature and history do but carry on that
-which the study of language has begun, the cultivation of all those
-faculties by which man has contact with man.” (Middle Schools Report,
-vol. i, c. iv, p. 22.) As Matthew Arnold says, in comparing two things
-it is “a kind of disadvantage” to be totally ignorant about one of them;
-and I labour under this disadvantage in comparing literature and science.
-But I own I do not expect the ultimate victory will be with those who may
-kill, or even cure or carry, the body, and after that have no more that
-they can do. Milton says of fine music, that it “brings all heaven before
-our eyes.” Similarly fine literature can at least bring all earth and
-its inhabitants, and the best thoughts and actions the world has known.
-I remember Matthew Arnold in conversation dwelling on the difference it
-makes to us _what we read_. Surely one of the great things education
-should do is to enable and to accustom the thoughts of the young to
-follow the guidance which is offered us in “the words of the wise.”
-
-=Seneca= _v._ =Comenius=.—=A.= I like your quotation on p. 169 from Dr.
-John Brown. After your see-saw fashion, you have, in a note on p. 365,
-expressed a fondness for “a notion of the whole.” E. I am there thinking
-of _minute_ instruction about parts. But in most things notions of the
-parts precede the notion of the whole; and in this matter I think Seneca
-was wiser than Comenius: “More easily are we led through the parts into
-a conception of the whole. Facilius per partes in cognitionem totius
-adducimur.” (Ep. 88, 1.) A. May I ask to whom you are indebted for this
-erudition? E. To Wuestemann. (_Promptuarium._ Gotha, 1856.)
-
-=Useful Knowledge.=—A. I am inclined to think that now and then you do
-not attach sufficient importance to the possession of knowledge and
-skill. E. Perhaps I do not. What I wish to cultivate is, not so much
-knowledge as the desire for knowledge, and further, the activity of mind
-that will turn knowledge to account. Knowledge driven in from without,
-so to speak, and skill obtained by enforced practice are, I will not say
-valueless, but very different in quality from the knowledge and skill
-that their possessor has sought for. Knowledge is a tool. He who has
-acquired it without caring for it, will have neither the skill nor the
-will to use it. A. Does not this apply to the knowledges recommended by
-Herbert Spencer, knowledge how to bring up children, &c., and to the
-knowledge of physiological facts and rules of health which you yourself
-say would be “of great practical value” (p. 444)? E. Certainly it does,
-and also to the “domestic economy” of our Board schools; still more to
-the lessons in morality which it seems are, at least in France if not
-elsewhere, to supersede religion. If you can get the learners to care for
-such lessons, the lessons are worth giving; if not, not. Care, not for
-the thing, but for the examination in the thing, is different, and can
-produce only a very inferior article. I expect there are instances in
-which care for the examination develops into care for the subject of the
-examination; but these cases are so rare that they may be neglected. A. I
-see you would not take a deep interest in the “Society for the Diffusion
-of Useful Knowledge.” And yet how terrible are the results of ignorance!
-Herbert Spencer is great on knowledge for earning a livelihood. It
-would add, perhaps, three or four shillings a week to the wages of the
-working man if his wife had learnt to cook. In matters of food the waste
-from ignorance among the English poor is appalling. E. In this case the
-school might do much, as girls would be anxious to learn. And though we
-cannot lay down as a general rule that it is “never too late to learn,”
-this rule might be applied to cooking. I see that in Govan, a suburb of
-Glasgow, the widow of the great ship-builder, John Elder, employs a
-trained teacher of cookery to instruct both by demonstrations, and also
-by visiting houses to which he (or she?) is invited. The results are said
-to be excellent. May this good lady find many imitators!
-
-=Memorizing Poetry.=—A. About learning poetry by heart, did you ever hear
-of the old Winchester plan of “Standing up”? In the regular “exams.”
-(“trials” as we called them at Harrow), each boy had to state in how much
-Homer and Virgil he was ready to “stand up.” The master examined into the
-boy’s power of saying this by heart, and of construing all he said. From
-the very first the boy always gave in the _same_ poetry, only adding to
-it each time. E. I have heard of it. Why, I wonder, was this plan given
-up? A. I have asked old Wykamists, but nobody seems to know. Perhaps the
-quantities learnt became absurdly large. But this method of accretion,
-if not overdone, would leave something behind it for life. Let me show
-you a passage from Æschines (Agnst Ktesip. § 135) which I have seen, not
-in Æschines, but in J. H. Krause’s “Education among the Greeks” (_Gesch.
-d. Erziehg bei d. Griechen_). It is so simple that even _you_ may
-construe it. Διὰ τοῦτο γὰρ οἶμαι ἠμᾶς παῖδας ὄντας τὰς τῶν ποιητῶν γνώμας
-ἔκμανθάνειν ἵν’ ἄνδρες ὄντὲς αὐταῖς χρώμεθα. E. There is very little
-left of my Littlego Greek, but I will try: “For it is, I suppose, with
-this object that, when we are boys, we thoroughly commit to memory the
-sayings of the poets—in order to turn them to account when we are men.” I
-wish the old Greek custom were continued. I believe in learning by heart
-what is worthy of it (see _supra_, p. 74, _n._). A. But the poetry that
-appeals to children they grow out of. E. This cannot be said of the best
-of it; but of this best there is, to be sure, a very small quantity. By
-“appeals to,” I suppose you mean “written on purpose for.” But in a sense
-much melodious poetry appeals to children even when they can get only
-a vague notion that it _has_ a meaning. I have known children delight
-in “The splendour falls on castle walls,” and Hohen Linden pleases them
-much better than anything of Jane Taylor’s. But here, at all events,
-there can be no doubt about the wisdom of Tranio’s rule: “Study what you
-most affect.” As I have said in an old paper of mine (_How to Train the
-Memory_; Kellogg’s _Teachers Manuals_, No. 9), the teacher may read aloud
-some selected pieces, and let the children separately “give marks” for
-each. He can then choose “what they most affect.”
-
-=Books for Teachers.=—A. Don’t you think you might give some useful
-advice to young teachers about the books they should read? E. I had
-intended giving some advice, but in reading tastes differ widely, and
-after all the best advice is Tranio’s, “Study what you most affect.”
-There are three Englishmen who have written so well that, as it seems,
-they will be read by English-speaking teachers of all time. These are
-Ascham, Locke, and Herbert Spencer. If a teacher does not know these he
-is not likely to know or care anything about the literature of education.
-These authors have attained to the position of classics by writing short
-books in excellent English. After these, I must know something of the
-student before I ventured on a recommendation. If he (or more probably
-_she_) be a student indeed, nothing will be found more valuable than
-Henry Barnard’s vols. especially those of the _English Pedagogy_. But
-the majority of mankind want books that are readable, _i.e._, can be
-read easily. I do not know any books on teaching that I have found
-easier reading than D’Arcy Thompson’s _Day-Dreams of a Schoolmaster_ and
-H. Clay Trumbull’s _Teaching and Teachers_ (Eng. edition is Hodder and
-Stoughton’s). But some very valuable books are by no means easy reading.
-Take _e.g._ Froebel’s _Education of Man_ (trans. by Hailmann, Appletons).
-This book is a fount of ideas, but Froebel seems to want interpreters,
-and happily he has found them. The Baroness Marenholtz-Bülow has done
-good work for him in German, and in English he has had good interpreters
-as _e.g._, Miss Shirreff, Mr. H. C. Bowen, and Supt. Hailmann. In the
-case of Froebel there is certainly a want of literary talent; but even
-where this talent is clearly shown, a book may be by no means “easy
-reading.” It may make great demands on our thinking power, and thought
-is never easy. This will probably prevent Thring’s _Theory and Practice
-of Teaching_ (Pitt Press, 4_s._ 6_d._) from ever being a popular book,
-though every teacher who has read it will feel that he is the better for
-it. Sometimes the size of a book stands in the way of its popularity.
-This seems to me the case with Joseph Payne’s _Science and Art of
-Teaching_ (Longmans, 10_s._); but this book is popular in the United
-States, and I take this as a proof that the American teachers are more
-in earnest than we are. All the essentials of popularity are combined in
-Fitch’s _Lectures on Teaching_ (Pitt Press, 5_s._), and this is now (and
-long may it continue!) one of our most read educational works. A. But
-what about less known books? Cannot you recommend anything as yet unknown
-to fame? E. Ah! you want me to tell you what books deserve fame, that is,
-to—
-
- “Look into the seeds of time
- “And say which grain will grow, and which will not.”
-
-But I have no intention of posing as the representative of the readers of
-our day, still less of the future. Indeed, far from being able to tell
-you what other people would like or should like, I can hardly say what
-I like myself. Perhaps I come across a book and read it with delight.
-Remembering the very favourable impression made by the first reading I go
-back to the book some years afterwards and I then in some cases cannot
-discover what it was that pleased me. A. That reminds me of Wordsworth’s
-similar experience—
-
- “I sometimes could be sad
- To think of, to read over, many a page,
- Poems withal of name, which at that time
- Did never fail to entrance me, and are now
- Dead in my eyes, dead as a theatre
- Fresh emptied of spectators.” (_Prelude_ v.)
-
-I suppose this has happened to all of us. We go back and the things
-are the same and yet look so different. It is like after the night of
-an illumination looking at the designs by daylight. E. Not many of our
-designs will bear “the light of common day.” And if we tried to settle
-which, we should probably be quite wrong. Of my three English Educational
-Classics one can hardly understand why the peoples who speak English have
-retained Ascham while Mulcaster, Brinsley, and Hoole are forgotten. Locke
-had his reputation as a philosopher to keep his _Thoughts_ from neglect,
-and yet at the beginning of 1880 1 found that there was no _English_
-edition in print. Perhaps some of the old writers will come into the
-field of view again. _E.g._, my friend Dr. Bülbring, of Heidelberg, the
-editor of De Foe’s _Compleat Gentleman_, talks of reviving the fame of
-Mary Astell, who at the end of the seventeenth century took up the rights
-of women and put very vigorously some of the pet ideas of the nineteenth
-century. A. I will not ask you to “look into the seeds of time,” and
-I will not take you for a representative person in any way. On these
-conditions perhaps you will give me the names of some of the books that
-have made such a favourable impression on first reading—at least in cases
-where that impression has not been effaced by further acquaintance. E.
-Agreed. I ought to begin with psychology, but I must with sorrow confess
-that I never read a _whole_ book on the science of mind; so this most
-important section of the subject must be omitted. French and German books
-I will also omit unless they exist in an English translation. About the
-historical and biographical part of the subject I have already named
-many books such as S. S. Laurie’s _Comenius_ and Russell’s Guimps’s
-_Pestalozzi_. F. V. N. Painter’s _History of Education_ is pleasantly
-written; but no really satisfactory history of education can be held
-in one small volume. This objection _in limine_ also applies to G.
-Compayré’s _History of Pedagogy_ (trans. by W. H. Payne) which is far too
-full of matter. In it we find _many things_, but only a very advanced
-student can find _much_. Little has been written about English-speaking
-educators, but there are good accounts of Bell, Lancaster, Wilderspin,
-and Stow in J. Leitch’s _Practical Educationists_ (Macmillans, 6_s._).
-Turning to books about principles and methods I have found nothing that
-with reference to the first stage of instruction seems to me better
-than Colonel F. W. Parker’s _Talks on Teaching_ (New York, Kelloggs).
-Fitch’s more complete book I have named already. A. Geikie’s _Teaching of
-Geography_ (Macmillans, 2_s._ 6_d._) is a book I read with great delight.
-For principles Joseph Payne seems to me one of our best educational
-writers, and we shall before long have, I hope, the much expected volume
-of his papers on the history of education. Some of the smaller books
-that I remember reading with especial gratification are Jacob Abbott’s
-_Teacher_, Calderwood _On Teaching_, A. Sidgwick’s lectures on _Stimulus_
-(Pitt Press) and on _Discipline_ (Rivingtons), and Mrs. Malleson’s _Notes
-on Early Training_ (Sonnenschein). There seemed to me a very fine tone in
-a book much read in the United States—D. P. Page’s _Theory and Practice
-of Teaching_. T. Tate’s _Philosophy of Education_ I liked very much, and
-the book has been revived by Colonel Parker (Kelloggs). There are some
-books that are worth getting “by opportunity,” as the Germans say, good
-books now out of print. Among them I should name Rollin’s _Method_ in
-three volumes, Rousseau’s _Emilius_ in four, De Morgan’s _Arithmetic,
-Essays on a Liberal Education_ edited by Farrar. I know or have known
-all the books here named, but my knowledge and time for reading do not
-extend as far as my bookshelves, and I see before me some books that I
-have not mentioned and yet feel sure I ought to mention. Among them are
-Compayré’s _Lectures on Pedagogy_, translated by W. H. Payne, which seems
-an admirable compilation (Boston, Heath; London, Sonnenschein); Shaw and
-Donnell’s _School Devices_ (Kelloggs) in which I have seen some good
-“wrinkles”; and T. J. Morgan’s _Educational Mosaics_ (Boston; Silver,
-Rogers & Co.). J. Landon’s _School Management_ (London, K. Paul) I have
-heard spoken of as an excellent book, and I like what I have seen of it.
-But I set out with a promise to mention not all our good books, but those
-which I thought good _after reading them_. There still remain some that
-fall under this category and have not been mentioned, _e.g._, _The Action
-of Examinations_, by H. Latham, Cotterill’s _Reforms in Public Schools_,
-W. H. Payne’s _Contributions_, and a pamphlet from which I formed a very
-high estimate of the writer’s ability to give us some first-rate books
-about teaching. I mean _A Pot of Green Feathers_, by T. G. Rooper.
-
-=Professional Knowledge.=—A. What a pity it is that in English we have
-no name for _Kernsprüche_! When an important truth has been aptly
-expressed, the very expression may be an important event in the history
-of thought. Take _e.g._ Milton’s words which I observe you have quoted
-more than once, about “the understanding founding itself on sensible
-things” (p. 510). Here we have a “kernel-saying” that might have sprung
-up and yielded a rich crop of improvements in teaching if it had only
-taken root in teachers’ minds. Why don’t you make a collection of such
-“kernel-sayings”? E. I have had thoughts of doing so, and I have a
-collection of collections of _Kernsprüche_ in German. A. Well, German
-is _not_ the language I should choose for the expression of thought.
-According to Heine, in everything the Germans do there is a thought
-embodied; and we may add that in everything they say a thought is
-embedded; but I rather shrink from the labour of digging it out. E.
-You would find a collection of “kernel-sayings” in any language rather
-stiff reading. And after all, the sayings which strike us are just
-those which give utterance to our own thought. This is probably the
-reason why in reading such a book so few sayings seem to us worthy of
-selection. I had intended prefacing these essays with some mottoes, as
-Dr. W. B. Hodgson used to do when he wrote, but finally I have left my
-readers to collect for themselves. A. I should like to know the sort
-of thing you intended for your “first course.” E. Here is one of them
-from Professor Stanley Hall, of Worcester, Mass.: “Modern life in all
-its departments is ruled by experts and by those who have attained the
-mastery that comes by concentration.” (New England _J. of Ed._, 27th
-February, 1890.) A. According to you, sayings strike us only when they
-express our own thought. In that case Professor Hall’s saying would not
-make much impression on the generality of your scholastic friends. Many
-of the best paid schoolmasters in England would burst out laughing if
-anyone spoke of them as “educational experts.” Educational experts? Why
-they have never even thought of the art of teaching, leave alone the
-science of education. They are “good scholars” who at one time thought
-enough of preparing for the Tripos or the Honour Schools; and having
-got a good degree they thought (and small blame to them!) how to employ
-their knowledge of classics so as to secure a comfortable income for
-life. Accordingly they took a mastership, and soon settled down into the
-groove of work. But as for the science of education they have thought
-of it about as much as they have thought of the sea-serpent, and would
-probably tell you with Mr. Lowe (now forgotten as Lord Sherbrooke) that
-“there is no such thing.” E. No doubt they feel the force of Dr. Harris’s
-words: “For the most part the teacher who is theoretically inclined
-is lame in the region of details of work.” It would be a pity indeed
-if their “resolution” to make a good income were “sicklied o’er with
-the pale cast of thought.” A. They had to think how to prepare for the
-Tripos; and before long they will have to think how to do their work
-of teaching and educating better than they have done it hitherto. The
-future will demand something more than “a good degree.” Professor Hall
-is right. The day of the experts is coming. But does not even Dr. Harris
-warn teachers against being “too theoretical”? E. It is rather jumping at
-conclusions to assume with some of our countrymen that if a man does not
-think, he does act. Goethe’s aphorism which Dr. Harris quotes is this:
-“Thought expands, but lames; action narrows, but intensifies.” Now a good
-many men who do not expend energy in thought are by no means strong in
-action. In education they have no desire either to think the best that is
-thought or to do the best that is done. They won’t inquire about either;
-and they show the most impartial ignorance of both. Like Dr. Ridding
-they are of opinion that professional knowledge is to be sought only by
-persons without the advantages of having been at a public school and of
-“a good degree.” As for reading books about teaching they leave that sort
-of thing to national schoolmasters. And yet if teaching is an art, they
-might get at least as much good from books as the golf-player gets or
-the whist-player. “How marvellous it is when one comes to consider the
-matter, that a man should decline to receive instruction on a technical
-subject from those who have eminently distinguished themselves in it and
-have systematised for the benefit of others the results of the experience
-of a lifetime!” Mr. James Payn who wrote this (_Some Private Views_, p.
-176) was thinking of books not on teaching but on whist; but his words
-would come home to teachers if they took as much interest in teaching as
-he takes in whist. A. I fancy you have spotted the real deficiency; it
-is want of interest. It is only when a man becomes thoroughly interested
-in whist that he desires to play better, and when he becomes thoroughly
-interested in teaching that he desires to teach better. And if only he
-_desires_ to improve he will seek all the professional knowledge within
-his reach. “Every one,” says Matthew Arnold, “every one is aware how
-those who want to cultivate any sense or endowment in themselves must be
-habitually conversant with the works of people who have been eminent for
-that sense, must study them, catch inspiration from them. Only in this
-way can progress be made.” (Quoted by Momerie). Let us hope that you have
-incited some young teachers to study and catch inspiration from the great
-thinkers and workers in the educational field. E. This is the object I
-have aimed at. If I wanted a motto I think I should choose this from
-Froebel interpreted by Miss Shirreff:
-
-“The duty of each generation is to gather up its inheritance from the
-past, and thus to serve the present, and prepare better things for the
-future.”
-
-
-
-
-SYLLABUS OF QUICK’S EDUCATIONAL REFORMERS.
-
-_From the International Reading Circle Course of Professional Study._
-
-
-Pages 1 to 62.
-
-
-I. THE RENASCENCE.
-
- 1. The essential element in literature.
-
- 2. Classical literature in education.
-
- 3. The educational classes produced by renascence tendencies.
-
- 4. How much of the error of the “renascence ideal” still
- survives?
-
- 5. Is this harm overbalanced by the good influences of that
- ideal?
-
-
-II. STURM.
-
-(_See Painter, pp. 160-162, for Sturm’s Course of Study._)
-
- 1. What two or more influences of Sturm’s school would you
- mention as most prominently retained in our larger schools of
- to-day?
-
- 2. How far are these influences good, and in what ways are they
- evil?
-
-
-III. THE JESUITS.
-
- 1. Their motive.
-
- 2. Their elements of excellence.
-
- 3. What value attaches to their provisions for securing
- thoroughness?
-
- 4. What to their instruction in morals?
-
- 5. What to their physical training?
-
-
-Pages 63 to 171.
-
-
-RABELAIS.
-
- 1. His products of education: wisdom, eloquence, and piety.
-
- 2. His emphasis upon the study of _things_.
-
- 3. His standard of physical training.
-
-
-MONTAIGNE.
-
- 1. His prime product of education: wisdom, in thought and
- action; not knowledge.
-
- 2. The practical errors in his theory of educational methods.
-
-
-ASCHAM.
-
- 1. His method of Latin instruction.
-
-
-MULCASTER.
-
- 1. His principles of education as identical with the best of
- to-day.
-
- 2. His recognition of the need for trained teachers.
-
-
-RATKE.
-
- 1. His practical failure due to the characteristics of the man,
- not to faults in his principles of education.
-
- 2. Nine cardinal principles of didactics as gathered from his
- writings upon method.
-
-
-COMENIUS.
-
- 1. The first to treat education in a scientific spirit.
-
- 2. Based educational method upon an understanding of the nature
- of the child.
-
- 3. Insisted upon the direct study of external Nature, and upon
- the learning of words only in connection with things.
-
- 4. Recognized education as the development of all the faculties
- of body and of mind.
-
- 5. Demanded the equal instruction of both sexes.
-
- 6. Taught that languages must be learned through practice, not
- by means of rules.
-
- 7. Made provision for education through the hand as well as
- through the eye and ear.
-
-
-Pages 172 to 218.
-
-
-THE PORT-ROYALISTS.
-
- 1. Purpose and method of Saint Cyran’s “Little Schools.”
-
- 2. Actual results of English public-school influences as
- opposed to St. Cyran’s theory.
-
- 3. Port-Royalists’ restoration of the mother tongue as the
- subject-matter of elementary instruction.
-
- 4. Literature study as distinguished from grammar study of
- Latin and Greek.
-
- 5. Logic, or the act of thinking.
-
- 6. The principles set forth in the pedagogic writings of the
- Port-Royalists.
-
-
-SOME ENGLISH WRITERS BEFORE LOCKE.
-
- 1. Francis Bacon: first great leader of the _realists_—of those
- who sought to know the facts of Nature rather than the thoughts
- of man.
-
- 2. Charles Hoole: “one of the pioneer educators of his century.”
-
- 3. Dury and Petty: extending the doctrines of _realism_.
-
- 4. Milton: elevating the moral nature to the first place in his
- theory of a complete education.
-
-
-Pages 219 to 238.
-
-
-JOHN LOCKE.
-
-(See Painter’s History, pp. 218-223.)
-
- 1. From the standpoints of reason he rejected the established
- methods.
-
- 2. His definition of knowledge.
-
- 3. Development of body and mind, and formation of right habits
- the true aim of education.
-
- 4. Locke’s comparison of the child to white paper or wax.
-
- 5. The _naturalistic_ school of educational thinkers.
-
- 6. Objections to classing Locke as a utilitarian.
-
-
-Pages 239 to 289.
-
-
-ROUSSEAU.
-
- 1. To be classed with the thinkers, not with the doers, in
- educational work.
-
- 2. The value of his destructive work.
-
- 3. His three kinds of education—from Nature, from men, from
- things.
-
- 4. The first essential in the work of education is to
- understand the mind of childhood.
-
- 5. Some characteristics of the mode of acting of the child’s
- mind.
-
- 6. Evil of over-directing in both discipline and instruction.
-
- 7. Right and wrong views of the value of self-teaching.
-
-
-BASEDOW.
-
- 1. His mode of thought and manner of life.
-
- 2. The theory outlined in his Elementary and in his Book of
- Method.
-
- 3. Interesting devices used at the Philanthropinum.
-
- 4. The training of the senses and acquirement of knowledge
- through the senses pre-eminent both in Rousseau’s and in
- Basedow’s theories.
-
-
-Pages 290 to 383.
-
-
-PESTALOZZI. I. HIS LIFE.
-
- 1. His personal characteristics as shown in his early life and
- in his farming venture.
-
- 2. His view of the nature and purpose of education.
-
- 3. The first experiment at Neuhof and its failure.
-
- 4. The orphanage at Stanz.
-
- 5. The experiences at Burgdorf.
-
- 6. The Institute at Yverdun.
-
- 7. The last success at Clindy.
-
- 8. Death of Pestalozzi at Neuhof.
-
-
-II. PESTALOZZI’S PRINCIPLES.
-
- 1. The main object of the school not to teach but to develop.
-
- 2. The child first to be trained to _love_; moral education.
-
- 3. The child next to be trained to _think_; intellectual
- education.
-
- 4. The child also to be trained to _work_; physical education.
-
- 5. The _self-activity_ of the pupil the real force in all true
- education.
-
-
-Pages 384 to 413.
-
-
-FRIEDRICH FROEBEL.
-
- 1. The best tendencies of educational thought embodied in
- Froebel’s teachings.
-
- 2. Froebel imperfectly understood even by the most earnest
- students.
-
- 3. Influence of his own neglected youth upon his after
- consideration for children.
-
- 4. His communion with Nature in the Thuringian Forest.
-
- 5. His transfer from the study of architecture to the practice
- and study of education.
-
- 6. His association with Pestalozzi at Yverdun.
-
- 7. The influence of his military experience in showing him the
- value of discipline and united action.
-
- 8. His experiences in teaching prior to his first kindergarten.
-
- 9. The edict forbidding the establishment of schools based upon
- Froebel’s principles.
-
- 10. His death at threescore years and ten.
-
-
-FROEBEL’S EDUCATIONAL PRINCIPLES.
-
- 11. To find in science the expression of the mind of God.
-
- 12. To view education as founded upon religion, and leading to
- unity with God.
-
- 13. To regard the educational process as a process of
- development.
-
- 14. To seek development, or evolution of power, in the exercise
- of those functions, in the use of those faculties, that it is
- desired to develop.
-
- 15. That the exercise productive of true development must be
- in harmony with the function or faculty to be developed, and
- proportioned to its present strength.
-
- 16. That to be most truly efficient the exercise must arise
- from and be sustained by the _self_-activity of the function or
- faculty to be developed.
-
- 17. That this self-activity must manifest itself not in
- receptive action or acquisition alone, but in expressive action
- or production.
-
- 18. Practically, that children should be busied with things
- that they can not only see but can handle and use in the making
- or representing of new things to express their growing ideas.
-
-
-Pages 414 to 469.
-
-
-JACOTOT.
-
- 1. Set pupils to learning by their own investigation and
- refrained from giving them direct instruction.
-
- 2. Asserted that all human beings are equally capable of
- learning.
-
- 3. Declared that every one can teach; and, moreover, can teach
- that which he does not know.
-
- 4. Has done great service by giving prominence to the principle
- that the mental faculties must be developed and trained by
- being put to actual work.
-
- 5. By his doctrine “All is in all,” he gave prominence to the
- correlation of knowledge.
-
- 6. Made the thorough mastery of a single book and the retention
- of it all in the memory his basis of all further accumulation.
-
- 7. His methodology summarized: Learn something, repeat it,
- reflect upon it, test all related facts by it.
-
-
-HERBERT SPENCER.
-
- 1. The value in the views of one who comes to educational
- problems free from tradition and prejudice.
-
- 2. The teaching that gives the most valuable knowledge also
- best disciplines in the mental faculties.
-
- 3. The end and aim of education is to prepare us for complete
- living.
-
- 4. The test of the relative value of knowledge lies in its
- power to influence action in right or wrong directions.
-
- 5. In method we must proceed from the simple to the complex;
- from the known to the unknown; from the concrete to the
- abstract.
-
- 6. Every study should have a purely experimental introduction,
- and children should be led to make their own investigations and
- draw their own inferences.
-
- 7. Instruction must excite the interest of pupils and therefore
- be pleasurable to them.
-
-
-Pages 470 to 503.
-
-
-I. THOUGHTS AND SUGGESTIONS.
-
- 1. The ideal of public-school work is to beget a healthy
- interest and pleasure in the doing of hard work.
-
- 2. The interest to arise from the nature of the subject itself,
- or from the recognized usefulness of the subject, or from
- emulation.
-
- 3. The value of pictures in the teaching of children as a means
- of awakening active interest.
-
- 4. The first teaching in reading and number to begin with the
- objective method and pass thence to the subjective.
-
- 5. In geography and history the lively description and the
- interesting story to precede the formal compend.
-
-
-II. MORAL AND RELIGIOUS INFLUENCE.
-
- 6. Sources and means of the teacher’s influence upon his pupils.
-
- 7. Causes of the loss of his good influence.
-
- 8. The influence of a few leading spirits among the pupils
- themselves.
-
- 9. A mode of religious training.
-
-
-Pages 504 to 547.
-
-
-REVIEW OF EDUCATIONAL PROGRESS.
-
- 1. The good and the ill influences of the Jesuits as the “first
- reformers” in educational practice.
-
- 2. Rabelais, the first to advocate training as distinguished
- from teaching.
-
- 3. Comenius, founder of the science of education, recognizing
- in his scheme the threefold nature of man.
-
- 4. Rousseau, the originator of the “new education” as based
- upon the inherent nature of the child.
-
- 5. Pestalozzi and Froebel, reformers of the processes of
- education, seeking to secure the development of each faculty by
- its own activity in appropriate exercise.
-
-
-
-
-INDEX.
-
-
- Abbott, E. A., on Montaigne and Locke, 231, _n._
-
- — Jacob; Teacher, 544
-
- Accomplishments, 451
-
- Action, the root of Ed., 403
-
- “Advice to a Young Lord” (1691), 234, _n._
-
- Æschines on memorizing, 541
-
- Æsop’s Fables, Locke’s, 238, _n._
-
- Alexander De Villa Dei, 80, 532
-
- All can learn, Jacotot, 416
-
- — Education for, 356
-
- — Education for. Comenius, 515, 522
-
- — is in all. Jacotot, 423
-
- — to be educated. Comenius, 146
-
- Altdorf burnt, 326
-
- Analogies for illustration not proof, 155
-
- Anchoran edits C.’s _Janua_, 163
-
- Andreæ, J. V., 122
-
- _Anschauung_, Pestalozzi on, 360
-
- — Froebel for, 408
-
- Apparatus, 462
-
- Aquaviva and Jesuit schools, 36
-
- Arber, Prof., 82, _n._, 83
-
- Arithmetic, Children’s. Comenius, 145
-
- — for children, 479, 482
-
- Armstrong, Ld., on cry for Useless Knowledge, 78, _n._
-
- Arnauld, his _Règlement_, 189
-
- — the Philosopher of Port-Royal, 187
-
- Arnaulds, The, and the Jesuits, 173
-
- Arnold, Dr., educator of English type, 219
-
- — History Primer, 487
-
- — on citizens’ duties, 447
-
- Arnold, M., about the Middle Age, 240
-
- — Barbarian’s inaptitude for ideas, 178
-
- — on importance of reading, 539
-
- — on studying great authorities, 547
-
- — on Words and Things, 154
-
- Arnstädt, F. A.: _Rabelais_, 69
-
- Art learnt by right practice, 420
-
- — of observing children, 252
-
- Ascham against epitomes, 486, _n._
-
- — and Jacotot, 425
-
- Ascham’s method for Latin, 84
-
- — “six points,” 85
-
- “Ascott Hope,” quoted, 498, _n._
-
- Athletic public schoolmen, 514, _n._
-
- Audition, Hint for, 429, _n._
-
- Augsburg, Ratke at, 106
-
-
- Bacon against epitomes, 446, _n._
-
- — for Jesuits, 33, _n._
-
- — for study of Nature, 408
-
- — on “young plants,” 406
-
- — studied by Comenius, 122, 149
-
- Baconian teaching, Effect of, 510
-
- Bahrd, 289
-
- Balliet, T. M., quoted, 156, _n._
-
- Banzet, Sara, 408
-
- Barbauld, Mrs., on women’s concealment of knowledge, 98, _n._
-
- Barbier, _La Discipline_, 60, _n._
-
- Bardeen’s _Orbis Pictus_, 168
-
- Barnard, H., _English Pedagogy_, 542
-
- — _Eng. Pedagogy_, 91, _n._, 212, _n._
-
- — on Kindergarten, 409
-
- — Opinion of _Positions_, 91, and _n._
-
- — _The Kindergarten_, 413
-
- Bartle Massey in _Adam Bede_, 507
-
- Basedow and Goethe, 277
-
- _Basedow_, Pinloche’s mentioned, 289, _n._, 527
-
- Bateus, 160, _n._
-
- Bath, W., 160, _n._
-
- Beaconsfield, Ld. His “two nations,” 371
-
- Beautiful, Pestalozzi on sense of the, 339
-
- Beginners shall have best teachers. Mulcaster, 95
-
- Bell, Dr., at Yverdun, 352
-
- Bellers, John, for hand-work, 211, _n._
-
- Benham, D. His _Comenius_, 119
-
- — His trans. of _Sch. of Infancy_, 142
-
- Besant, W. Readings in Rabelais, 67, _n._
-
- Biographies before history, 489
-
- Birmingham lecture quoted, 193, _n._
-
- Blackboard, Drawing on, 476
-
- Blunder of insisting on repulsive tasks, 467
-
- — of not getting clear ideas about definitions, 460
-
- — of giving only book knowledge, 458
-
- — of teaching epitomes, 485
-
- — of teaching words without ideas, 475
-
- — of “cramming” children, 374, 375
-
- — of not beginning at the beginning, 468
-
- — of assuming knowledge in pupil, 468
-
- — of neglecting interest, 464, 474
-
- — of teaching the incomprehensible, 195
-
- — about “first principles,” 461
-
- Bluntschli warns Pestalozzi, 293
-
- Bodily health, Jesuits cared for, 48, 507
-
- Bodmer, 291
-
- Body, its part in education, 566
-
- — must be educated, 411
-
- — Rabelais’s care of the, 508
-
- Boileau’s _Arrêt_, 187, _n._
-
- Bookishness of Renascence. Montaigne, 76
-
- Book-learning, connected with life, 459
-
- Books for teachers, 541
-
- “Books, Miserable,” 153
-
- — Reaction against, 510
-
- — Respect for, 481
-
- — Rousseau against, 259
-
- — useful in learning an art, 546
-
- Bowen, E. E., 118, _n._, 532
-
- Bowen, H. C., on connected teaching, 424, _n._
-
- — on development, 399
-
- — on Kindergartens without idea, 410
-
- Bréal, M., quoted, 286, _n._
-
- — on child-collectors, 429, _n._
-
- — on teachers, 455, _n._
-
- Brewer, Prof., 98
-
- Brinsley, J., 200
-
- — on training teachers, 99, _n._
-
- Brown, Dr. John, _Ed. through senses_, 458, _n._
-
- — _Horæ Sub._, quoted, 169
-
- Browning, Oscar, on Humanists, &c., 231
-
- Buchanan and Infant Schools, 409
-
- Buisson on Intuition, 361
-
- Bülbring, Dr., and Mary Astell, 543
-
- Burgdorf Institute, 341
-
- — Pestalozzi at, 335
-
- Burke, quoted, 437
-
- Buss, 341, 365
-
- Butler, Bp., on Ed., 147, 148, _n._
-
- Butler, Samuel, quoted, 30
-
-
- Cadet on Port-Royal, 195
-
- Calkins, Prof., on learning thro’ senses, 150, _n._
-
- Cambridge exam, of teachers, 219, _n._
-
- — man, 40 years ago, 431, _n._
-
- Campanella, 122
-
- Campe, 287
-
- Capitalizing discoveries, 517
-
- Carlyle about the Schoolmen, 10, _n._
-
- — on divine message, 401
-
- — on History, quoted, 145, _n._
-
- — on Knowledge, 223
-
- — on “nag for sand-cart,” 467
-
- — on teaching religion, 359, _n._
-
- Carlyle’s “mostly fools,” 517, _n._
-
- — “Succedaneum for salt,” 498
-
- Carré on Port-Royal, 195
-
- Cat, Rousseau on the, 258
-
- Cato’s _Distichs_, 81, 121
-
- Chambers, H. E., of N. Orleans, on “teams,” 531
-
- Channing, Eva, Trans, of _L. and G._, 306, _n._
-
- Children and poetry, 541
-
- — care for things and animals, 475, 521
-
- — not small men, 250
-
- Childhood the sleep of Reason, 245
-
- _Christopher and Eliza_, 309
-
- Church, Dean R. W., on Montaigne, 71, _n._
-
- Citizens’ duties, 447
-
- Classics, “Discovery” of the, 3
-
- — do not satisfy modern wants, 7
-
- — in Public Schools, 76
-
- — too hard for boys, 16
-
- Classification, Thoughts on, 232
-
- Classifiers, Caution against, 232
-
- Class matches, 42, 529
-
- Clindy, Pestalozzi at, 353
-
- Clough, quoted, 358
-
- Colet, Dean, 80, 533
-
- Columbus and geography, 2
-
- Comenius and Science of ed., 512
-
- — Books about, 170
-
- — at Amsterdam, 133
-
- — in London, 126
-
- — criticized by Lancelot, 186, _n._
-
- — stiftung, 119
-
- Compayré, _Hist. of Pedagogy_ and _Lectures_, 544
-
- — on Jesuits, 56
-
- — on Port-Royal, 196
-
- Compendia Dispendia, 169
-
- Complete living, H. Spencer on, 442
-
- “Complete Retainers,” 89, 426, _n._
-
- Composition, 483
-
- Compulsion, Nothing on, 112
-
- Concept, Larger, how formed, 457
-
- Concertations, 42
-
- Concrete, Start from, 461
-
- _Conduct of Understanding_ and Reason, 221
-
- _Conférences pédagogiques_, 362
-
- Connexion of knowledges, 424
-
- _Consolation_, &c., Brinsley, 200
-
- Cooking should be taught, 540
-
- Coote, Edward, _English Scholemaster_, 91
-
- Corporal punishment, Pestalozzi for, 327
-
- Cotterill, C. C., _Suggested Reforms_, 545
-
- Cowley’s Proposition, &c., 202
-
- Cowper on man and animals, 517
-
- Creative instinct. Froebel, 404
-
-
- Daniel, Canon, quoted, 155, _n._
-
- Daniel, Le P. Ch., quoted, 62, _n._
-
- _Day-dreams of a Schoolmaster_, 541
-
- Day-schools wanted, 499
-
- Dead knowledge, 524
-
- Decimal scale universal, 479
-
- De Garmo, Dr., on language work. 481, _n._
-
- — quoted, 403, _n._
-
- De Geer and Comenius, 130
-
- _De Imitatione_, quoted, 398
-
- De Morgan, quoted, 433, _n._
-
- De Quincey, quoted, 153, _n._
-
- Derby, Ld., on criminals, 358
-
- — quoted, 256, _n._
-
- Development, Froebel’s theory of, 400
-
- Didactic teaching, Rousseau against, 268
-
- Diderot, quoted, 365, _n._
-
- Diesterweg on dead knowledge, 365
-
- Diesterweg’s rule for repetition, 111
-
- _Dilucidatio_ of Comenius, 123
-
- _Discentem oportet credere_, 152
-
- Dislike often from ignorance, 466
-
- _Doctrinale_, 80, 532
-
- Double Translating, 86
-
- — translation judged, 89
-
- Drawing, Comenius for, 146
-
- — Pestalozzi on, 368
-
- — Rousseau for, 261
-
- Drill, Need of, 526
-
- Drudgery defined, 472
-
- Drummond, Henry, quoted, 502, _n._
-
- _Dunciad_, quoted, 31, 422
-
- Dupanloup, Bp., quoted, 113
-
- Dupanloup against Public Schools, 179
-
- Dury’s _Reformed Schoole_, 203
-
- — watch simile, 205
-
-
- Early education negative, 244, 402
-
- Ecclesiasticus, quoted, 77
-
- École modèle, books not used, 154, _n._
-
- “Economy of Nature,” 440
-
- _Education of Man_, published 1826, 392
-
- _Educational Reformers._ History of the book, 527
-
- — in America, 529
-
- Educations. Rousseau’s three, 248
-
- Edwardes, Rev. D., quoted, 499, _n._
-
- Elbing, Comenius at, 130
-
- _Elementarie._ Mulcaster’s, 92
-
- Elementary, Basedow’s, published, 275
-
- — course. Mulcaster, 97
-
- — studies. Comenius, 141
-
- Elizabeth, Queen, Ascham’s pupil, 88
-
- Elyot’s _Governour_, 91, 202
-
- Emerson, R. W., quoted, 501
-
- Empirical before Rational, 462
-
- Emulation cultivated by Jesuits, 42
-
- — Forms of, 530
-
- Encyclopædia Bri., 385, _n._
-
- Endter. Publisher of _Orbis Rictus_, 167
-
- English, Mulcaster’s eulogy of, 534
-
- — party questions, 381
-
- — tongue, Mulcaster on, 92
-
- — without Verbs and Substantives, 460, _n._
-
- Epitomes. Against, 485
-
- Erasmus against ignorance, 523, _n._
-
- — for small schools, 180, _n._
-
- — the Scholar, 23
-
- _Erinnerungen eines Jesuitenzöglings_, 60
-
- _Eruditio_ in Jesuit Schools, 40
-
- Eve, H. W., on old and young teachers, 506
-
- _Evening Hour of Hermit_, 302
-
- Evolution and Froebel, 399
-
- Examination of children for scholarships, 97
-
- — knowledge, 540
-
- Examinations cause pressure, 77
-
- Exercises, Correcting, 484
-
- — Hints for, 429, _n._
-
- Experience _v._ Theory, 107
-
- Experts needed in modern life, 545
-
- Eyes, Use of, 411
-
- Eyre, Father, on the _Ratio_, 57
-
-
- Fables for Composition, 483
-
- — Pestalozzi’s, 312
-
- Faculties, Equal attention to all, 537
-
- Fag-end, Children not the, 354
-
- _Faust_, quoted, 426, 428
-
- Fellenberg, 344
-
- Fichte and Pestalozzi, 347
-
- Final opinions, Demand for, 410
-
- Fire like knowledge, 433
-
- First-hand knowledge not enough, 224
-
- First impressions important, 194
-
- Fischer, O., 366, _n._
-
- Fitch’s _Lectures on Teaching_, 542
-
- Folk-schools, Importance of, 376
-
- Forcing, Comenius against, 144
-
- Formative instinct. Froebel, 404
-
- Franklin, B., on reading aloud, 482
-
- Froebel and Bacon, 408
-
- — on preparing better things for future, 547
-
- — showed the right road, 384
-
- Froude, J. A., on use of hagiology, 503, _n._
-
- “Furtherers” and “Hinderers,” 531
-
-
- Garbovicianu on Basedow, 289, _n._
-
- Gargantua’s Education, 63
-
- Garrick, David, “When doctrine, &c.,” 536
-
- Geikie, A.: _Teaching of Geography_, 544
-
- Generalization, 461
-
- General view should not come first, 169
-
- Geography absent from Trivium and Quadrivium, 2
-
- — Beginnings in, 489
-
- — how begun, Comenius, 145
-
- Gerard, Father (S. J.), quoted, 57
-
- German not a good medium of thought, 545
-
- “Gertrude,” Account of, 301
-
- Gesner, J. M., for _Statarisch_ and _Cursorisch_, 32
-
- “Gifts.” Froebel’s, 408
-
- Girard, Père, and Pestalozzi, 349
-
- Girardin, St. M., on Rousseau, 264, _n._
-
- Girls, Schoolmistresses’ blunders about, 443
-
- Giving “G.’s,” 530
-
- Goethe and bad pictures, 487
-
- — on Basedow, 276
-
- — on unity of man, 518, _n._
-
- — on Voices and Echoes, 504
-
- — on thought and action, 546
-
- Golden Age, in Past or Future? 22
-
- Goldsmith against epitomes, 486, _n._
-
- “Good scholars” as schoolmasters, 545
-
- — spirits needed for teaching, 497
-
- Grammar, 481, _n._
-
- — learnt from good authors, Ascham, 85
-
- — Mistakes about, 460
-
- Grant’s, H., _Arithmetic_, 482
-
- “Gratis receive, gratis give.” Jesuit rule, 39
-
- Greaves, J. P., at Yverdun, 352, _n._
-
- Grounding, Importance of, Mulcaster, 96, _n._
-
- Groundwork by best workman, Mulcaster, 95
-
- Grubé’s method, 479
-
- _Guesses at Truth_, quoted, 24
-
- Guillaume’s Pestalozzi mentioned, 383, _n._
-
- Guimps, 383, _n._
-
- Guimps’s Pestalozzi, 317, &c.
-
-
- Habrecht, Isaac, 161, _n._
-
- Hack, Miss, _Tales of Travelers_, 490
-
- Hailmann, W. H., on creative doing, 412
-
- Hale, Sir Matthew, for realism, 212, _n._
-
- Hall, Stanley, about _L. & G._, 306, _n._
-
- — Experts needed, 545
-
- Hallam on Comenius, 158
-
- Hallé, Children’s Lessons at, 475
-
- Hancock, Supt. J., quoted, 46, _n._
-
- Handelschulen, 445
-
- Hands, Children’s use of, 407
-
- — use of, 411
-
- — use of, 538
-
- Handwork at Neuhof, 297
-
- — Comenius for, 146
-
- — Petty on, 211
-
- — Rabelais for, 66
-
- — Rousseau for, 271
-
- Harmar, J. 161, _n._
-
- Harris, W. T., on “Nature,” 109
-
- — started public Kindergartens, 410
-
- — on thought and action, 546
-
- Harrow “Bluebook,” 532
-
- — Class-matches at, 529
-
- — Religious instruction at, 500
-
- Hartlib, S., 124, _n._, 130
-
- Hazlitt, W. C., 91, _n._
-
- Helplessness produced by bad teaching, 464
-
- Helps, Sir A., for science, 447, _n._
-
- — on looking straight at things, 481
-
- — on open-mindedness, 502
-
- — quoted, 434, _n._
-
- Herbart at Burgdorf, 367, _n._
-
- — on Rousseau, 269
-
- Herbert, Ld., of Cherbury, on physical ed., 227
-
- Hewitson on Stonyhurst, 59
-
- “Hinter dem Berge,” 449
-
- Hints from pupils, 367, _n._
-
- History, Beginnings in, 489
-
- — H. Spencer on, 448
-
- Home and School, 342
-
- Honesty the best policy, 529
-
- Hoole’s _A new discovery_, &c., 200
-
- — trans. of _Orbis Pictus_, 166
-
- Humility to be taught, 503
-
- Hymns to be used, 501
-
-
- Ickelsamer, 116
-
- Ideal, high, 496
-
- — value of, 382
-
- — want of an, 471
-
- Ideas before symbols, 253
-
- “Idols,” escape from, 514
-
- Ignorance, Erasmus agst., 523
-
- _Il faut apprendre_, &c., Jacotot, 424
-
- “Impressionists,” 89, 426, _n._
-
- Improvements suggested by Mulcaster, 92
-
- Inclinations should be studied, 465
-
- Industrial school at Neuhof, 297
-
- “Infelix divortium verum et verborum,” 139
-
- Innovators, 103
-
- “Inquiry into course of Nature,” 311
-
- _Instruct_ is _instruere_, 432
-
- Instruction an exercise of faculty, 332
-
- Intellect before critical faculty. Comenius, 138
-
- Interest, Degrees in, 113
-
- — in teaching needed, 546
-
- — needed for activity, 474
-
- — needed for mental exertion, 193, _n._
-
- — No success without, 473
-
- Interesting, Can learning be? 465
-
- Intuition = _Anschauung_, 361
-
- — Froebel for, 408
-
- Investigation, Method of, 437
-
- “Ipse dixit,” Comenius against, 152
-
- Iselin, editor of _Ephemerides_, 298, 302
-
-
- “Jacob’s Ladder,” Pestalozzi, 356
-
- Jahn on Froebel, 386
-
- Jansenius and St.-Cyran, 175
-
- _Janua_, English versions of C.’s, 165
-
- — Jesuits, 160, _n._
-
- — of Comenius published, 123, 163
-
- Jebb on Erasmus, 523, _n._
-
- Jesuit a trained teacher, 37
-
- — course included _Studia Superiora et inferiora_, 38
-
- — exams., 47
-
- — shows effect of planned system, 532
-
- — teaching. An example of, 44
-
- Jesuits. Books about, 34
-
- — the army of the Church, 55
-
- — the first reformers, 506
-
- Johnson, Richard, _Gram. Commentaries_, 82
-
- Johnson, Dr., on knowledge of education 410, 525
-
- — on _Scholemaster_, 82
-
- Jonson, Ben. “Soul for salt,” 498, _n._
-
- Jullien on Intuition, 362
-
- Jung, 106
-
-
- Kant and Intuition, 361
-
- — on the Philanthropinum, 288
-
- Kay-Shuttleworth and Pestalozzi, 352
-
- Kempe, W., _Ed. of Children_, 83
-
- “Kernsprüche,” 545
-
- Kindergarten and Comenius, 143
-
- — a German word, 409, _n._
-
- — Froebel on aim of, 409
-
- — Notion of, 406
-
- — The first, 394
-
- Kinglake’s _Eothen_, quoted, 15
-
- Kingsley on Jesuits, 54
-
- Knowing, after Being and Doing, 307
-
- — by heart, 74, _n._
-
- Knowledge and Locke, 513
-
- — a tool, 540
-
- — and Comenius, 512
-
- — Danger from, 78
-
- — Desire for, 540
-
- — despised by New Educationists, 526
-
- — Genesis of, 462
-
- — Locke’s definition of, 222
-
- — must not be dead knowledge, 524
-
- — not fastened to mind, Montaigne, 71
-
- — over-estimated by Comenius, 168
-
- — Perfect, impossible, 226
-
- — spreads like fire, 433
-
- — self-gained, Locke, 515
-
- — Teaching what it is, 453
-
- Knowledges, Relative value of, 442
-
- — Connexion of, Comenius, 157
-
- Known to Unknown, 457
-
- Koethen, Ratke fails at, 107
-
- Kruesi joins Pestalozzi, 340
-
-
- Lancelot on Comenius, 186
-
- — on learning Latin, 185
-
- Landon, J., School Management, 544
-
- Langethal and Froebel, 390
-
- Language-learning, Lancelot on, 186, _n._
-
- — Method for, 426, _n._
-
- Language lives in small vocabulary, 169
-
- — not Literature, 17
-
- — teaching, Ratke’s plan, 116
-
- Languages, Comenius on learning, 140
-
- Latham, H., _Action of Exam._, 544
-
- Latin, Comenius for, 159
-
- Laurie, S. S., his _Comenius_, 119
-
- — on books of Comenius, 135
-
- — on Milton, 214
-
- Lavater and Basedow, 276
-
- — and Pestalozzi, 291
-
- Learn, Every one can, Jacotot, 416
-
- Learning as employment, 75
-
- — begins with birth. Pestalozzi, 537
-
- — by heart wrong. Ratke, 113
-
- — by heart. _See_ Memorizing
-
- — for the few, Mulcaster, 93
-
- — may be borrowed, Montaigne, 73
-
- — must not be play, 367
-
- — not Knowledge, Montaigne, 71
-
- Leipzig, Dr. Vater at, 477
-
- Leisure hours, 450
-
- — often useless, 498
-
- Leitch, J., Practical Educationists, 409
-
- — Practical Educationists, 544
-
- Lemaître, 186, _n._
-
- _Leonard and Gertrude_, 305
-
- Lessing on Raphael, 420
-
- Leszna sacked, 132
-
- “Letters,” Comm. for, 538
-
- Lewis, Prince, and Ratke, 106
-
- Light from within, Nicole, 190
-
- Likes and Dislikes, Study, 466
-
- Lily’s _Carmen Mon._, 81
-
- — Grammar, 533
-
- Literature and Science, 154, 539
-
- — at Port-Royal, 184
-
- — in education, 539
-
- — or Letters, 9
-
- — What is? 6
-
- “Little Schools,” 176
-
- Locke against sugar and salt, 466
-
- — and Froebel, 407
-
- — behind Comenius, 230
-
- — Books on, 238
-
- — for Working Schools, 211, _n._
-
- — on Public Schools, 177, 513
-
- — and Rousseau, 227
-
- — against ordinary learning, 234
-
- — predecessor of Pestalozzi, 362
-
- — two characteristics, 220
-
- — teacher disposes influence, 513
-
- — Was he a utilitarian? 234
-
- _Locksley Hall_ quoted, 152
-
- Louis XIV and Port-Royalists, 176
-
- Love the essential principle, 358
-
- Loyola on body and soul, 62
-
- Lowe or Pestalozzi? 379
-
- Lubinus, E., 166, _n._
-
- _Ludus Literarius_, 200
-
- Lupton, J. H., and Colet, 534
-
- Lupton, J. H., on _Catechismus_ P., 102, _n._
-
- _Lux in tenebris_, 133
-
- Lytton, Ld., on mother’s interference, 371
-
-
- MacAlister, James, and _Anschauung_, 361
-
- Macaulay on French Revolution, 246
-
- — wanted, 488
-
- “Magis magnos clericos, &c.,” 70
-
- Maine, Sir H. S., on studying teaching scientifically, 410, _n._
-
- Malleson, Mrs., _Notes on Early Training_, 544
-
- Mangnall’s Questions, 374
-
- Manning, Miss E. A., a Froebelian, 413
-
- Manual labour at Stanz, 331
-
- Marcel, C., 535
-
- Marenholtz-Bülow and Froebel, 394
-
- Marion’s fraud, 173
-
- Martineau, Miss, and comet, 223
-
- Masham, Lady, on Locke, 220, _n._
-
- Masson, D., quotes Mulcaster, 534
-
- Masson, D., quotes _Didac. Mag._, 140, _n._
-
- Masson’s _Milton_, quoted, 127, _n._
-
- Masters and religion, 492
-
- Masters, The “open” and the “reserved,” 494
-
- Mastery, 365
-
- Maurice and Froebel, 406
-
- Maurice, F. D., on Jesuits, 54
-
- Max Müller, a descendant of Basedow’s, 289, _n._
-
- Mayo, Dr., 352, _n._
-
- Mayor, J. E. B., on _Scholemaster_, 82, 83
-
- Mazzini on humanity, 518, _n._
-
- Measuring for arithmetic, 480
-
- Mediæval art excelled Renascence, 5
-
- “_Melius est scire paucca_, &c.,” 168
-
- Memorizing, 113
-
- — poetry, 541
-
- — Sacchini on, 50, _n._
-
- Memory after senses, Comenius, 138
-
- — alone can be driven, 474
-
- — and interest, 487
-
- — depending on associating sounds, 193, _n._
-
- — helped by association, 424
-
- — Jacotot’s demands on, 425
-
- — stuffed, Montaigne, 73
-
- — subservient to other powers, 411
-
- — The carrying, 77
-
- — Waste of, 431
-
- — without books, 257
-
- Methodology, Truths of, 536
-
- Methods defined, 414
-
- “Methods teach the Teachers,” 82
-
- _Methodus Linguarum_, published, 131
-
- Michaelis and Moore, Trans. of Froebel, 413
-
- Michelet on Montaigne, 94
-
- — on Montaigne, 229, _n._
-
- — on Stanz, 317
-
- Middendorff and Froebel, 390
-
- Middle Age blind to beauty in human form and literature, 5
-
- Middle-class education without ideal, 470
-
- Middle Schools Comm., quoted, 538
-
- Mill, J. S., against specializing, 453, _n._
-
- — for teaching classics, 444
-
- — on history, 449, _n._
-
- Milton a great scholar, 212
-
- — a Verbal Realist, 215
-
- — and Realism, 23
-
- — on learning through the senses, 150, 213, 510
-
- Milwaukee, Inter-class matches at, 531
-
- Mind like sea-anemone, 474
-
- Model book, Ascham for, 87
-
- — Jacotot’s use of, 436
-
- — Ways of studying, 426
-
- Molyneux on geography, 225
-
- Moncrieff, H., quoted, 498, _n._
-
- Monitorial principle, 538
-
- Monitors at Stanz, 333
-
- Monotony wearing to the young, 531
-
- Montaigne and Froebel, 407
-
- Montaigne for educating mind and body, 509
-
- — his paradox of ham, 419, _n._
-
- Moral development first, 358
-
- Morality is development of infant’s gratitude, 309
-
- Morals, Rousseau on, 263
-
- Morf, Summary of Pestalozzi’s principles, 368
-
- Morgan, T. J., _Educational Mosaics_, 544
-
- Mother-tongue, 104
-
- — Everything through, 111
-
- — first at Port-Royal, 184
-
- — Jacotot’s plan for, 435
-
- — only, till ten, Comenius, 139
-
- — Ratke for, 108
-
- Mulcaster for English, 534
-
- Mulcaster’s elementary subject, 97
-
- — Life, 102
-
- — proposed reforms, 92
-
- — style fatal, 92
-
- Music, Benefit from, 452
-
- — Rousseau for, 261
-
-
- Naef, Eliz., at Neuhof, 300
-
- Nägeli, 368
-
- Napoleon I and Pestalozzi, 343
-
- Narrow-mindedness, How to avoid, 503
-
- Natural History at Stanz, 333
-
- Natural _v._ Usual, 516
-
- Nature, Comenius about, 136, 137
-
- — Laws of, 134
-
- — Ratke for, 109
-
- — Return to, 515
-
- Negative education, Rousseau, 519
-
- New Code of 1890, 379, _n._
-
- “New Education” started by Rousseau, 271, 522
-
- — education and old, 524
-
- — Froebel’s in 1816, 391, 411
-
- Newman, J. H., on Locke, 235
-
- — on connexion of knowledges, 158
-
- — on nature of literature, 7, _n._
-
- New master, Advice to, 60, _n._
-
- New road, Pestalozzi’s, 337
-
- — York _School Journal_ and New Education, 411
-
- Nicole on Ed., 190
-
- Niebuhr’s _Heroengeschichten_, 428, _n._
-
- Niemeyer on thoroughness, 366, _n._
-
- _Nihil est in intellectu_ &c., 138
-
- Noah’s Ark for words, 161
-
- _Nonconformist_, 504
-
- Normal Schools on increase, 414
-
- _Nouvelle Héloïse_, Family life, 242
-
- Number of boarders in Port-Royalist schools small, 179
-
- Numbers, First knowledge of, 479
-
- Numeration before notation, 479
-
-
- Oberlin, 408
-
- Observation, Poetry for cultivating, 209
-
- Observing children, 251
-
- “Omnia sponte fluant,” Comenius, 136
-
- One thing at a time, Ratke, 109
-
- Opinion, Education of, 502
-
- — Sensible men cannot differ in, Locke, 221, _n._
-
- _Orbis Pictus_ published, 132, 167
-
- “Over and over again,” Ratke, 110
-
- Over-directing, Rousseau against, 265
-
- Overworking teachers, 497
-
- Oxenstiern sees Comenius, 128
-
-
- Painter, F. V. N., _History of Education_, 543
-
- Parallel Grammar Series, 114, _n._
-
- Parænesis by Sacchini, 34, _n._
-
- Parker, F. W., and Kindergarten, 411
-
- — on reading, 482
-
- — _Talks on Teaching_, 544
-
- Parker, C. S., in _Essays on Lib. Ed._, 32
-
- Parkin, John, 366, _n._
-
- Parkman, Francis, on Jesuits, 55, 56
-
- Pascal and Loyola, 172
-
- Past, No escape from the, 2
-
- Pattison, Mark, on exams., 228, _n._
-
- — on dearth of books, 12
-
- — on what is education, 228
-
- — on Milton
-
- Pattison’s account of Renascence, 4
-
- Paul III recognizes Jesuits, 35
-
- Paulsen on Jesuits, 55
-
- — on Comenius, 153
-
- Payn, James, on learning from books, 546
-
- Payne, Joseph, on Pestalozzi, 359, _n._
-
- — on observation, 361
-
- — on child’s unrest, 407, _n._
-
- — _Science and Art of Teaching_, 542
-
- — Papers on History of Ed., 544
-
- — summing up Pestalozzi, 369, _n._
-
- — a disciple of Jacotot, 415
-
- — and International Copyright, 529
-
- — on women’s ed., 98
-
- Payne, Dr. J. F., notes to Locke, 228, _n._
-
- Payne, W. H., _Science of Ed._, 545
-
- Perez, B., on Jacotot, 438
-
- Perfect familiarity, 433
-
- Pestalozzian books, 383
-
- Pestalozzianism lies in aim, 354
-
- Pestalozzi’s school at Neuhof, 296
-
- — talks with children at Stanz, 325
-
- Pestalozzi, a strange schoolmaster, 334
-
- — A portrait of, 345
-
- — and Bacon, 408
-
- — His poverty, 340
-
- — His severity, 308
-
- Petty’s Battlefield simile, 207
-
- — Realism, 208
-
- Philanthropinum, Subjects taught at, 279
-
- Physical education for health, 104
-
- — Ed. neglected by Port-Royalists, 188
-
- — Ed., Rabelais for, 67
-
- Physician’s defective science, 519
-
- Picture-book for History, Dr. Arnold, 487
-
- Pictures for teaching, 476
-
- Piety at Port-Royal, 181
-
- Pinloche’s Basedow mentioned, 289, _n._, 527
-
- Plants and education, Rousseau, 255
-
- Plato against compulsion, 113
-
- — on literary instruction, 14
-
- Play and learning different, 367
-
- Pleasant, Learning must be, 138
-
- Pleasurable, Exercise is, 464
-
- Pleasure in learning, Jesuits, 506
-
- — in learning. Ratke, 112
-
- — in sch. work. Sacchini, 52
-
- — in sch. work. Mulcaster, 98
-
- — in study at Port-Royal, 183, 194
-
- Poetry, Memorizing, 483
-
- Pomey’s _Indiculus_, 40
-
- Pope. _Dunciad_ quoted, 31, 422
-
- — on Locke and Montaigne, 230, _n._
-
- — on “Nature,” 109
-
- — quoted, 451, _n._
-
- Pope’s “Little Knowledge,” 446
-
- Port-Royal des Champs and the Solitaries, 174
-
- Posture, Importance of, 327
-
- Potter, Miss J. D., quoted, 21
-
- Pouring-in theory, 507
-
- Practice does not make perfect, 182
-
- Preparatory Schools, 374
-
- Prendergast and language learning, 426, _n._
-
- Pressure, Causes of, 77
-
- — Mulcaster against, 97
-
- Principles of the Innovators, 104
-
- — H. Spencer’s summing up, 454
-
- Printing, Effect of, 10
-
- — spread literature at Renascence, 9
-
- Private prayer, 502
-
- Prize-giving in Jesuit schools, 58
-
- _Prodromus_ of Comenius, 125, 126
-
- Prussia adopts Pestalozzianism, 346
-
- Prussian edict against Froebel, 395
-
- Psychologizing instruction, 338
-
- Public education must imitate domestic, Pestalozzi, 321
-
- — schools, 513, _n._
-
- — schools Comm., quoted, 531
-
- — school freedom, 265
-
- — schools leave boys to themselves, 177
-
- — schools undermastered, 514, _n._
-
- Punishments for moral offences only. Comenius, 139
-
- — in Jesuit schools, 48
-
- — Pestalozzi on, 327
-
- Pupil teachers, 377, _n._
-
-
- Quadrivium preferred by Rabelais, 65
-
- Queen Louisa on Pestalozzi, 346
-
- Questioning, art of, 428, _n._
-
- — Rousseau, on art of, 266
-
- Questions by pupils at Port-Royal, 190
-
- _Quidlibet ex quolibet_, 423
-
- Quintilian on rudiments, 195, _n._
-
-
- Rabelais for intuition, 508
-
- — His detachment, 63
-
- — on Curriculum, 67, _n._
-
- Racine and Port-Royal, 187
-
- Ramsauer and Pestalozzi, 336
-
- “Rapid impressionists,” 89, 426, _n._
-
- “Ratich,” 105
-
- Ratio Studd, Soc. Jesu, 34, _note_
-
- Ratke and Ascham, 117
-
- Ratke’s promises, 105
-
- Raumer on Comenius, 146
-
- Reaction in 17th century against books, 510
-
- Reading after study of things. Petty, 209
-
- — badly taught, 115, _n._
-
- — begun with Mother-tongue at Port-Royal, 183
-
- — in elementary schools, 257, _n._
-
- — Jacotot’s plan for, 435
-
- — Rousseau against, 256
-
- — silent and vocal, 482
-
- Realism, Birth of, 198
-
- — Comenius for, 149
-
- — Rabelais, 66
-
- Rearing offspring, to be taught, 447
-
- Reason, Locke’s dependence on, 221
-
- — No education before, 242
-
- _Reformation of Schools_, 125
-
- Reformers, Attitude towards, 396
-
- Reimarus and Basedow, 273
-
- _Rejected Addresses_, quoted, 505
-
- Relative value of Knowledges, 442
-
- Religion and Science, 147
-
- “Religion” lessons in Germany, 501
-
- Religious and moral Training, 359
-
- Religious instruction, 500
-
- Renan, quoted, 247, _n._
-
- Renascence defects. _See_ Table of Contents
-
- — gave a new bend to ideas, 2
-
- — re-awakening to beauty in lit., 5
-
- — settled Curriculum, 4
-
- Repetitio, 45
-
- Restlessness, The Child’s, 406
-
- “Retainers,” 89
-
- — 426, _n._
-
- Reverence to be taught, 503
-
- Richelieu and Saint-Cyran, 174
-
- Richter, J. P., on nurse’s influence, 373, _n._
-
- Ritter, Karl, on Pestalozzi, 347
-
- Robertson, a methodiser, 426, _n._
-
- — Croome, on inherited Knowledge, 364, _n._
-
- Rollin’s _Traité des Etudes_, 192
-
- Rooper, T. G., _A Pot of Green Feathers_, 545
-
- Rousseau against schoolroom lore, 363
-
- — first shook off Renascence, 246
-
- — His proposals, 267
-
- — His two dogs, 312
-
- —His great influence, 240, 290
-
- — on Common Knowledge, 458, _n._
-
- — studied by all, 248
-
- Rousseauism, 516
-
- Rousseau’s work, 520
-
- Routine work a refuge, 498
-
- Rudiments not to be made repulsive, 194
-
- Rules, Hoole about, 202
-
- Ruskin on things and words, 159, _n._
-
- Russell, John, translator of Guimps, 317
-
-
- Sacchini quoted, 39, 41, 46, 47
-
- Saint-Cyran and Port-Royal, 174
-
- Sainte-Beuve on Port-Royal, 195
-
- Salzmann, 287, 289
-
- Saros-Patak. Comenius at, 132
-
- _Savoir par cœur_, &c., 74, _n._
-
- Scheppler, Louise, 408
-
- Schmid, Josef, goes to Yverdun, 349
-
- Schmid, J. A., on Jesuits, 34
-
- Schuepfenthal, School at, 289
-
- _Schola materni gremii_, 142
-
- _Scholemaster_, When published, 81
-
- School-hours of Jesuits short, 43
-
- Schoolmaster and words, 538
-
- — his test of knowledge, 222
-
- — in Education, 177
-
- — art led to Verbalism, 30
-
- School means different things, 522
-
- Schoolroom rubbish, 252
-
- Schuppius, _in spem_, &c., 432
-
- Science of Education dates from Comenius, 512
-
- — of Education denied by Lowe, 379
-
- — of Education growing, 505
-
- — of education, Importance of, 456
-
- — of education like medicine, 519
-
- — of Education, Mulcaster for, 94
-
- — of education, only beginning. H. Spencer, 455
-
- — the thought of God, 413
-
- Scientific foundation for Method, 412
-
- — knowledge now valued, 77
-
- Scioppius edits _Janua_, 161, _n._
-
- “Scratch pairs,” 530
-
- Seeley, J. R., on language teaching, 460
-
- — on use of tongue, 112, _n._
-
- Self-activity, 401
-
- — the main thing, 524
-
- Self-development, H. Spencer for, 462
-
- Self-education, Locke for, 236
-
- Self-preservation, Education for, 443
-
- Self-teaching: Jacotot, 415
-
- Seneca for knowing few things, 168
-
- — on learning through parts, 540
-
- Sense, Art learnt by. Dury, 206
-
- Senses, Everything through, Rousseau, 259
-
- — Error of neglecting, 151
-
- — first, Comenius, 138
-
- — Hoole about, 20
-
- — How to cultivate. Rousseau, 260
-
- — Insufficiency of, 152
-
- — Learning from. Comenius, 149
-
- — Rousseau on training, 257, 258
-
- — Teach by the. Nicole, 191
-
- — Training of the. Mulcaster, 95, _n._
-
- Sequences of nature arranged by man, 314
-
- Severity, Wolsey against, 81, _n._
-
- Shakespeare and Mulcaster, 91
-
- — “No profit grows, &c.,” 473
-
- — quoted, 17
-
- Shaw and Donnell: _School Devices_, 544
-
- Shirreff, Miss, a Froebelian, 413, _n._
-
- Sides, Good of, 532
-
- Sidgwick, A.; Lectures on _Stimulus_ and _Discipline_, 544
-
- Simple to complex, 456
-
- Singing, 368
-
- Skyte sees Comenius, 128
-
- Small schools worse than large, 179
-
- _Societas Professa_ of Jesuits, 36
-
- Sociology, 449
-
- Sonnenschein’s parallel Grammars, 114, _n._
-
- “Soul instead of salt,” Ben Jonson, 498, _n._
-
- Spartan Ed. preferred by Montaigne, 72
-
- S.P.C.K. pictures, 476, _n._
-
- “_Spectator’s_ C. in easy chair,” quoted, 527
-
- Spelling, 483
-
- — Jacotot’s plan for, 436
-
- Spencer, H., Conclusions about, 452
-
- — his “Economy of nature,” 235
-
- Stanford Rivers, Mulcaster at, 102, _n._
-
- Stanz, Pestalozzi at, 316, 318, _ff._
-
- — The French at, 315
-
- Starting-points of the Sciences, Comenius, 144
-
- Stephen, Sir J., quoted, 434
-
- _Stonyhurst College_, by Hewitson, 59
-
- Street for Mediæval art, 5
-
- Study depends on will, 193
-
- Sturmius. _See_ Table of Contents
-
- Stylists, 26
-
- Sugar needed, 466
-
- Sunrise can’t be hastened, 191
-
- Superintendence, the educator’s function, 357
-
- Sweetmeats, Locke against, 466
-
- _Swiss Journal_, Pestalozzi, 309
-
-
- Talleyrand on methods, 82
-
- Teach, Everyone can, Jacotot, 417
-
- — Meaning of word, 417
-
- Teacher a gardener, 512
-
- — Can he write on Education? 439
-
- — does not begin at beginning, 468
-
- Teachers, Books for, 541
-
- Teachers, College for. Mulcaster, 100
-
- — Harm of overworking, 497
-
- — ignorant of principles, 455
-
- — must be trained, 412
-
- — Old, overdo repetition, 506
-
- — Young, neglect repetition, 506
-
- Teacher’s business, 272
-
- — personality, Force of, _Forum_, quoted, 380
-
- Teaching, causing to learn, 417
-
- — gained from pupils, 497
-
- — Good, escapes common tests, 192
-
- — needs good spirits, 497
-
- Télémaque, 423
-
- “Telling,” H. Spencer against, 463
-
- Theorists, Use of, 383
-
- Things before words, 104
-
- — Children’s delight in. Petty, 210
-
- “Things” in education, 521
-
- Things, Rabelais for, 65
-
- Threefold life, Comenius, 135
-
- Thring. _Theory and Practice of Teaching_, 542
-
- Tillich’s bricks, 480, _n._
-
- Tithonus, Quotation from Tennyson’s, 518, _n._
-
- Tobler, 341
-
- Tone of school and big boys, 500
-
- _Tout est en tout_, 423
-
- Tradition, loss and gain from, 518
-
- — needed, 182
-
- Trainer better than teacher, 422
-
- Training of teachers, Mulcaster, 99
-
- — of teachers needed, 520
-
- Transcription, Hint for, 429, _n._
-
- Translating both ways, 86
-
- Translations at Port-Royal, 185
-
- — discouraged at Renascence, 8
-
- — would be literature, 15
-
- _Travelers, Tales of_, 490
-
- Trench, Archbishop, on 13th century art, 5
-
- Trumbull, H. K. _Teaching and Teachers_, 542
-
- Trivium and Quadrivium, 2
-
- — like squirrel’s revolving cage, 10
-
- Tyndall on teaching, 468, _n._
-
-
- Uniformity, Ratke for, 114
-
- Unity, Froebel’s desire for, 398
-
- — of Universe, Froebel, 389
-
- Universities excluded Baconian teaching, 511
-
- University men in middle class education, 472
-
- _Unum necessarium_, quoted, 133
-
- Upton, Editor of _Scholemaster_, 82
-
- Useful knowledge, 540
-
- Usual contrasted with natural, 516
-
- Utilitarianism defined, 235
-
-
- Variations, Prendergastian, 428, _n._
-
- Vater, Dr., at Leipzig, 477
-
- Ventilabrum Sapientiæ, 135
-
- Verbal Realism, 25
-
- — Rabelais, 65
-
- Verbalism, Milton against, 213, 214
-
- “Visibles” used for Realien, 70, _n._
-
- _Vive la destruction_, 1
-
- Vogel, Dr., at Leipzig, 478
-
- Vogel, A., on Comenius, 156
-
-
- Ward, James, on Kindergarten, 410
-
- Weighing for arithmetic, 480
-
- Welldon, J. E. C., on schools for young boys, 499, _n._
-
- Well-educated, When, 525
-
- Widgery, W. H., quoted, 90
-
- Wilderspin and Infant Schools, 409
-
- Will, learning depends on. Jacotot, 416
-
- — needed for study, 193
-
- Wilson, H. B., on Mulcaster, 102
-
- Wilson, J. M., against “telling,” 422
-
- — on training, 422
-
- Winchester, “Standing up,” 541
-
- Winship, A. E., on inter-class matches, 531
-
- “Wisdom cried of old,” &c., 77
-
- Wisdom in “the general,” 517, _n._
-
- — must be our own, Montaigne, 73
-
- Wolf, F. A., for self-teaching, 268
-
- — on child-collectors, 429, _n._
-
- Wolf, Hiero., quoted, 31
-
- Wolsey, 80
-
- Women Commissioners, 308
-
- Women’s education, 98, 412
-
- — education, Comenius, 141
-
- — interest in education, 106
-
- Wooding, W., on numbering, 479, 480, _n._
-
- Words and Things, 538
-
- Words, Learning from, 364, _n._
-
- — studying, 154
-
- — taught without meaning, 467
-
- “Words,” Various meanings of, 538
-
- Wordsworth on action of man, 516
-
- — on children’s games, 407
-
- — on general truths, 496
-
- — on need of pleasure, 473, _n._
-
- — quoted, 20
-
- — Taste in books changes, 543
-
- — on tendency, 516
-
- — on unity of man, 518, _n._
-
- — “We live by admiration &c.,” 154
-
- Working-schools, Locke’s, 211, _n._
-
- Worship connected with instruction, 501
-
- Writing, Jacotot’s plan for, 435
-
-
- Yverdun, Pestalozzi goes to, 344
-
-
-
-
-
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-Project Gutenberg's Essays on Educational Reformers, by Robert Hebert Quick
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-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
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-this ebook.
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-Title: Essays on Educational Reformers
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-Author: Robert Hebert Quick
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-Release Date: December 2, 2019 [EBook #60832]
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-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ESSAYS ON EDUCATIONAL REFORMERS ***
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-
-
-<p class="gothic center larger">International Education Series</p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smaller">EDITED BY</span><br />
-WILLIAM T. HARRIS, A. M., LL. D.</p>
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-<p class="center"><i>Volume XVII.</i></p>
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-<hr />
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-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_i" id="Page_i">[i]</a></span></p>
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-training for teachers generally. It is edited by <span class="smcap">W. T. Harris</span>, LL. D., United
-States Commissioner of Education, who has contributed for the different volumes
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-<p>Vol. XVII.—ESSAYS ON EDUCATIONAL REFORMERS. By <span class="smcap">Robert Herbert
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-</div>
-
-<p class="center">New York: D. APPLETON &amp; CO., Publishers, 72 Fifth Avenue.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p class="titlepage"><i>INTERNATIONAL EDUCATION SERIES</i></p>
-
-<h1>ESSAYS ON<br />
-EDUCATIONAL REFORMERS</h1>
-
-<p class="titlepage smaller">BY<br />
-<span class="larger">ROBERT HEBERT QUICK</span><br />
-M. A. TRIN. COLL., CAMBRIDGE<br />
-FORMERLY ASSISTANT MASTER AT HARROW, AND LECTURER ON<br />
-THE HISTORY OF EDUCATION AT CAMBRIDGE<br />
-LATE VICAR OF SEDBERGH</p>
-
-<p class="titlepage"><i>ONLY AUTHORIZED EDITION OF THE WORK<br />
-AS REWRITTEN IN 1890</i></p>
-
-<p class="titlepage">NEW YORK<br />
-D. APPLETON AND COMPANY<br />
-1896</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_iv" id="Page_iv">[iv]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="titlepage smaller"><span class="smcap">Copyright, 1890,<br />
-By D. APPLETON AND COMPANY.</span></p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_v" id="Page_v">[v]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="dedication">To<br />
-<br />
-DR. HENRY BARNARD,<br />
-<br />
-<i>The first United States Commissioner of Education</i>,<br />
-<br />
-<span class="smaller">WHO IN A LONG LIFE OF<br />
-SELF-SACRIFICING LABOUR HAS GIVEN TO THE ENGLISH<br />
-LANGUAGE AN EDUCATIONAL LITERATURE,<br />
-THIS VOLUME IS DEDICATED,<br />
-<br />
-WITH THE ESTEEM AND ADMIRATION OF</span><br />
-<br />
-THE AUTHOR.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_vi" id="Page_vi">[vi]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>Οὺ γὰρ ἔστι περὶ ὅτου θειοτέρου ἄνθρωπος ἄν βουλεύσαιτο, ὴ περὶ
-παιδείας καὶ τῶν αὑτοῦ και τῶν οἰκείων. <i>Plato in initio Theagis</i>
-(p. 122 B).</p>
-
-<p>Socrates saith plainlie, that “no man goeth about a more godlie
-purpose, than he that is mindfull of the good bringing up both of hys
-owne and other men’s children.”—<i>Ascham’s Scholemaster. Preface.</i></p>
-
-<p><i>Fundamentum totius reipublicæ est recta juventutis educatio.</i></p>
-
-<p>The very foundation of the whole commonwealth is the proper
-bringing up of the young.—<i>Cic.</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_vii" id="Page_vii">[vii]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>EDITOR’S PREFACE.</h2>
-
-<p>Many years ago I proposed to my friend Mr. Quick
-to rewrite his Educational Reformers, making some additions
-(Sturm and Froebel, for example), and allow me to
-place it in this series of educational works. I had read
-his essays when they first appeared, and noted their great
-value as a contribution to the right kind of educational
-literature. They showed admirable tact in the selection
-of the materials; the “epoch-making” writers were chosen
-and the things that had been said and done of permanent
-value were brought forward. Better than all was the running
-commentary on these materials by Mr. Quick himself.
-His style was popular, taking the reader, as it were,
-into confidential relations with him from the start, and
-offering now and then a word of criticism in the most
-judicial spirit, leaning neither to the extreme of destructive
-radicalism, which seeks revolution rather than reform,
-nor, on the other hand, to the extreme of blind conservatism,
-which wishes to preserve the vesture of the past
-rather than its wisdom.</p>
-
-<p>I have called this book of Mr. Quick the most valuable
-history of education in our mother-tongue, fit only
-to be compared with Karl von Raumer’s Geschichte der
-Pädagogik for its presentation of essentials and for the
-sanity of its verdicts.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_viii" id="Page_viii">[viii]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>I made my proposal that he “rewrite” his book because
-I knew that he considered his first edition hastily
-written and, in many respects, not adequate to the ideal
-he had conceived of the book. I knew, moreover, that
-years of continued thinking on a theme necessarily modifies
-one’s views. He would wish to make some changes
-in matter presented, some in judgments rendered, and
-many more in style of presentation.</p>
-
-<p>Hence it has come about that after this lapse of time
-Mr. Quick has produced a substantially new book, which,
-retaining all or nearly all of the admirable features of the
-first edition, has brought up to their standard of excellence
-many others.</p>
-
-<p>The history of education is a vast field, and we are
-accustomed to demand bulky treatises as the only adequate
-ones. But the obvious disadvantage of such works
-has led to the clearly defined ideal of a book like Mr.
-Quick’s, which separates the gold from the dross, and
-offers it small in bulk but precious in value.</p>
-
-<p>The educational reformers are the men above all others
-who stimulate us to think about education. Every one
-of these was an extremist, and erred in his judgment as
-to the value of the methods which prevailed in his time,
-and also overestimated the effects of the new education
-that he proposed in the place of the old. But thought
-begins with negations, and originality shows itself first
-not in creating something new, but in removing the fettering
-limitations of its existing environment. The old is
-attacked—its good and its bad are condemned alike. It
-has been imposed on us by authority, and we have not
-been allowed to summon it before the bar of our reason
-and ask of it its credentials. It informs us that it presented
-these credentials ages ago to our ancestors—men<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_ix" id="Page_ix">[ix]</a></span>
-older and wiser than we are. Such imposition of authority
-leaves us no choice but to revolt. We, too, have a
-right to think as well as our ancestors; we, too, must clear
-up the ground of our belief and substitute insight for blind
-faith in tradition.</p>
-
-<p>These educational reformers are prophets of the clearing-up
-period (<i>Aufklärung</i>) of revolution against mere
-authority.</p>
-
-<p>While we are inspired to think for ourselves, however,
-we must not neglect that more important matter of thinking
-the truth. Free-thinking, if it does not reach the
-truth, is not of great value. It sets itself as puny individual
-against the might of the race, which preserves its
-experience in the forms of institutions—the family, the
-social organism, the state, the Church.</p>
-
-<p>Hence our wiser and more scientific method studies
-everything that is, or exists, in its history, and endeavors
-to discover how it came to be what it is. It inquires into
-its evolution. The essential truth is not the present fact,
-but the entire process by which the present fact grew to
-be what it is. For the living force that made the present
-fact made also the past facts antecedent to the present,
-and it will go on making subsequent facts. The revelation
-of the living forces which make the facts of existence
-is the object of science. It takes all these facts to
-reveal the living force that is acting and producing them.</p>
-
-<p>Hence the scientific attitude is superior to the attitude
-of these educational reformers, and we shall in our own
-minds weigh these men in our scales, asking first of all:
-What is their view of the world? How much do they
-value human institutions? How much do they know of
-the substantial good that is wrought by those institutions?
-If they know nothing of these things, if they see only incumbrance<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_x" id="Page_x">[x]</a></span>
-in these institutions, if to them the individual
-is the measure of all things, we can not do reverence to
-their proposed remedies, but must account their value to
-us chiefly this, that they have stimulated us to thinking,
-and helped us to discover what they have not discovered—namely,
-the positive value of institutions.</p>
-
-<p>All education deals with the boundary between ignorance
-and knowledge and between bad habits and good
-ones. The pupil as pupil brings with him the ignorance
-and the bad habits, and is engaged in acquiring good
-habits and correct knowledge.</p>
-
-<p>This situation gives us a general recipe for a frequently
-recurring type of educational reformer. Any would-be
-reformer may take his stand on the boundary mentioned,
-and, casting an angry look at the realm of ignorance and
-bad habit not yet conquered, condemn in wholesale terms
-the system of education that has not been efficient in removing
-this mental and moral darkness.</p>
-
-<p>Such a reformer selects an examination paper written
-by a pupil whose ignorance is not yet vanquished, and
-parades the same as a product of the work of the school,
-taking great pains to avoid an accurate and just admeasurement
-of the actual work done by the school. The
-reformer critic assumes that there is one factor here,
-whereas there are three factors—namely, (<i>a</i>) the pupil’s
-native and acquired powers of learning, (<i>b</i>) his actual
-knowledge acquired, and (<i>c</i>) the instruction given by the
-school. The school is not responsible for the first and
-second of these factors, but it is responsible only for what
-increment has grown under its tutelage. How much and
-what has the pupil increased his knowledge, and how
-much his power of acquiring knowledge and of doing?</p>
-
-<p>The educational reformer is always telling us to leave<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xi" id="Page_xi">[xi]</a></span>
-words and take up things. He dissuades from the study
-of language, and also undervalues the knowledge of manners
-and customs and laws and usages. He dislikes the
-study of institutions even. He “loves Nature,” as he informs
-us. Herbert Spencer wants us to study the body,
-and to be more interested in biology than in formal logic;
-more interested in natural history than in literature. But
-I think he would be indignant if one were to ask him
-whether he thought the study of the habits and social instincts
-of bees and ants is less important than the study
-of insect anatomy and physiology. Anatomy and physiology
-are, of course, important, but the social organism is
-more important than the physiological organism, even in
-bees and ants.</p>
-
-<p>So in man the social organism is transcendent as compared
-with human physiology, and social hygiene compared
-with physiological hygiene is supreme.</p>
-
-<p>To suppose that the habits of plants and insects are
-facts, and that the structure of human languages, the logical
-structure of the mind itself as revealed in the figures
-and modes of the syllogism and the manners and customs
-of social life, the deep ethical principles which govern
-peoples as revealed in works of literature—to suppose
-that these and the like of these are not real facts and
-worthy of study is one of the strangest delusions that has
-ever prevailed.</p>
-
-<p>But it is a worse delusion to suppose that the study of
-Nature is more practical than the study of man, though
-this is often enough claimed by the educational reformers.</p>
-
-<p>The knowledge of most worth is first and foremost the
-knowledge of how to behave—a knowledge of social customs
-and usages. Any person totally ignorant in this
-regard would not escape imprisonment—perhaps I should<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xii" id="Page_xii">[xii]</a></span>
-say decapitation—for one day in any city of the world—say
-in London, in Pekin, in Timbuctoo, or in a <i>pueblo</i> of
-Arizona. A knowledge of human customs and usages,
-next a knowledge of human views of Nature and man—these
-are of primordial necessity to an individual, and are
-means of direct self-preservation.</p>
-
-<p>The old trivium or threefold course of study at the
-university taught grammar, logic, and rhetoric—namely,
-(1) the structure of language, (2) the structure of mind
-and the art of reasoning, (3) the principles and art of persuasion.
-These may be seen at once to be lofty subjects
-and worthy objects of science. They will always remain
-such, but they are not easy for the child. In the course
-of mastering them he must learn to master himself and
-gain great intellectual stature. Pedagogy has wisely
-graded the road to these heights, and placed much easier
-studies at the beginning and also made the studies more
-various. Improvements in methods and in grading—devices
-for interesting the pupil—so essential to his self-activity,
-for these we have to thank the Educational Reformers.</p>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">W. T. Harris.</span></p>
-
-<p class="smaller"><span class="smcap">Washington, D. C.</span>, 1890.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xiii" id="Page_xiii">[xiii]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>PREFACE TO EDITION OF 1868.</h2>
-
-<p>“<i>It is clear that in whatever it is our duty to act, those
-matters also it is our duty to study.</i>” These words of Dr.
-Arnold’s seem to me incontrovertible. So a sense of duty,
-as well as fondness for the subject, has led me to devote a
-period of leisure to the study of <i>Education</i>, in the practice
-of which I have been for some years engaged.</p>
-
-<p>There are countries where it would be considered a truism
-that a teacher in order to exercise his profession intelligently
-should know something about the chief authorities in it.
-Here, however, I suppose such an assertion will seem paradoxical;
-but there is a good deal to be said in defence of
-it. De Quincey has pointed out that a man who takes up
-any pursuit without knowing what advances others have
-made in it works at a great disadvantage. He does not
-apply his strength in the right direction, he troubles himself
-about small matters and neglects great, he falls into
-errors that have long since been exploded. An educator
-is, I think, liable to these dangers if he brings to his task
-no knowledge but that which he learnt for the tripos, and
-no skill but that which he acquired in the cricket ground or
-on the river. If his pupils are placed entirely in his hands,
-his work is one of great difficulty, with heavy penalties attached
-to all blundering in it; though here, as in the case<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xiv" id="Page_xiv">[xiv]</a></span>
-of the ignorant doctor and the careless architect, the
-penalties, unfortunately, are paid by his victims. If (as
-more commonly happens) he has simply to give a class prescribed
-instruction, his smaller scope of action limits
-proportionally the mischief that may ensue; but even then
-it is obviously desirable that his teaching should be as good
-as possible, and he is not likely to employ the best methods
-if he invents as he goes along, or simply falls back on his
-remembrance of how he was taught himself, perhaps in very
-different circumstances. I venture to think, therefore, that
-practical men in education, as in most other things, may
-derive benefit from the knowledge of what has already been
-said and done by the leading men engaged in it, both past
-and present.</p>
-
-<p>All study of this kind, however, is very much impeded by
-want of books. “Good books are in German,” says Professor
-Seeley. I have found that on the history of Education, not
-only <i>good</i> books but <i>all</i> books are in German or some other
-foreign language.<a name="FNanchor_1" id="FNanchor_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a> I have, therefore, thought it worth while
-to publish a few such imperfect sketches as these, with which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xv" id="Page_xv">[xv]</a></span>
-the reader can hardly be less satisfied than the author.
-They may, however, prove useful till they give place to a
-better book.</p>
-
-<p>Several of the following essays are nothing more than
-compilations. Indeed, a hostile critic might assert that I had
-used the scissors with the energy of Mr. Timbs and without
-his discretion. The reader, however, will probably agree
-with me that I have done wisely in putting before him the
-opinions of great writers in their own language. Where I
-am simply acting as reporter, the author’s own way of expressing
-himself is obviously the best; and if, following the
-example of the gipsies and Sir Fretful Plagiary, I had disfigured
-other people’s offspring to make them pass for my
-own, success would have been fatal to the purpose I have
-steadily kept in view. The sources of original ideas in any
-subject, as the student is well aware, are few, but for irrigation
-we require troughs as well as water-springs, and these
-essays are intended to serve in the humbler capacity.</p>
-
-<p>A word about the incomplete handling of my subjects. I
-have not attempted to treat any subject completely, or even
-with anything like completeness. In giving a sketch of the
-opinions of an author one of two methods must be adopted;
-we may give an epitome of all that he has said, or by confining
-ourselves to his more valuable and characteristic
-opinions, may gain space to give these fully. As I detest
-epitomes, I have adopted the latter method exclusively, but
-I may sometimes have failed in selecting an author’s most
-characteristic principles; and probably no two readers of a
-book would entirely agree as to what was most valuable in
-it: so my account must remain, after all, but a poor substitute
-for the author himself.</p>
-
-<p>For the part of a critic I have at least one qualification—practical
-acquaintance with the subject. As boy or master,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xvi" id="Page_xvi">[xvi]</a></span>
-I have been connected with no less than eleven schools,
-and my perception of the blunders of other teachers is
-derived mainly from the remembrance of my own. Some
-of my mistakes have been brought home to me by reading
-works on education, even those with which I do not in the
-main agree. Perhaps there are teachers who on looking
-through the following pages may meet with a similar experience.</p>
-
-<p>Had the essays been written in the order in which they
-stand, a good deal of repetition might have been avoided,
-but this repetition has at least the advantage of bringing out
-points which seem to me important; and as no one will
-read the book as carefully as I have done, I hope no one
-will be so much alive to this and other blemishes in it.</p>
-
-<p>I much regret that in a work which is nothing if it is not
-practically useful, I have so often neglected to mark the
-exact place from which quotations are taken. I have myself
-paid the penalty of this carelessness in the trouble it has
-cost me to verify passages which seemed inaccurate.</p>
-
-<p>The authority I have had recourse to most frequently is
-Raumer (<i>Geschichte der Pädagogik</i>). In his first two volumes
-he gives an account of the chief men connected with education,
-from Dante to Pestalozzi. The third volume contains
-essays on various parts of education, and the fourth is
-devoted to German Universities. There is an English
-translation, published in America, of the fourth volume
-only. I confess to a great partiality for Raumer—a partiality
-which is not shared by a Saturday Reviewer and
-by other competent authorities in this country. But surely
-a German author who is not profound, and is almost perspicuous,
-has some claim on the gratitude of English readers,
-if he gives information which we cannot get in our own
-language. To Raumer I am indebted for all that I have<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xvii" id="Page_xvii">[xvii]</a></span>
-written about Ratke, and almost all about Basedow. Elsewhere
-his history has been used, though not to the same
-extent.</p>
-
-<p>C. A. Schmid’s <i>Encyclopädie des Erziehungs-und-Unterrichtswesens</i>
-is a vast mine of information on everything
-connected with education. The work is still in progress.
-The part containing <i>Rousseau</i> has only just reached me. I
-should have been glad of it when I was giving an account
-of the Emile, as Raumer was of little use to me.</p>
-
-<p>Those for whom Schmid is too diffuse and expensive will
-find Carl Gottlob Hergang’s <i>Pädagogische Realencyclopädie</i>
-useful. This is in two thick volumes, and costs, to the best
-of my memory, about eighteen shillings. It was finished in
-1847.</p>
-
-<p>The best sketch I have met with of the general history of
-education is in the article on <i>Pädagogik</i> in <i>Meyers Conversations-Lexicon</i>.<a name="FNanchor_2" id="FNanchor_2"></a><a href="#Footnote_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a>
-I wish someone would translate this article;
-and I should be glad to draw the attention of the editor of
-an educational periodical, say the <i>Museum</i> or the <i>Quarterly
-Journal of Education</i>, to it.</p>
-
-<p>I have come upon references to many other works on the
-history of Education, but of these the only ones I have seen
-are Theodore Fritz’s <i>Esquisse d’un Système complet d’instruction
-et d’éducation et de leur histoire</i> (3 vols., Strasburg, 1843),
-and Carl Schmidt’s <i>Geschichte der Pädagogik</i> (4 vols.). The
-first of these gives only the outline of the subject. The
-second is, I believe, considered a standard work. It does
-not seem to me so readable as Raumer’s history, but it is
-much more complete, and comes down to quite recent
-times.</p>
-
-<p>For my account of the Jesuit schools and of Pestalozzi,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xviii" id="Page_xviii">[xviii]</a></span>
-the authorities will be found elsewhere (pp. 34 and 383).
-In writing about Comenius I have had much assistance from
-a life of him prefixed to an English translation of his <i>School
-of Infancy</i>, by Daniel Benham (London, 1858). For almost
-all the information given about Jacotot, I am indebted to
-Mr. Payne’s papers, which I should not have ventured to
-extract from so freely if they had been before the public in
-a more permanent form.</p>
-
-<p>I am sorry I cannot refer to any English works on the
-history of Education, except the essays of Mr. Parker and
-Mr. Furnivall, and <i>Christian Schools and Scholars</i>, which are
-mentioned above, but we have a very good treatise on the
-principles of education in Marcel’s <i>Language as a Means of
-Mental Culture</i> (2 vols., London, 1853). Edgeworth’s
-<i>Practical Education</i> seems falling into undeserved neglect,
-and Mr. Spencer’s recent work is not universally known
-even by schoolmasters.</p>
-
-<p>If the following pages attract but few readers, it will be
-some consolation, though rather a melancholy one, that I
-share the fate of my betters.</p>
-
-<p class="right">R. H. Q.</p>
-
-<p class="smaller"><span class="smcap">Ingatestone, Essex</span>, <i>May, 1868</i>.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<h2>PREFACE TO EDITION OF 1890.</h2>
-
-<p>When I was a young man (<i>i.e.</i>, nearly forty years ago), I
-once did what those who know the ground would declare
-a very risky, indeed, a fool-hardy thing. I was at the
-highest point of the Gemmi Pass in Switzerland, above the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xix" id="Page_xix">[xix]</a></span>
-Rhone Valley; and being in a hurry to get down and
-overtake my party I ran from the top to the bottom. The
-path in those days was not so good as it is now, and it is so
-near the precipice that a few years afterwards a lady in
-descending lost her head and fell over. No doubt I was
-in great danger of a drop of a thousand feet or so. But of
-this I was totally unconscious. I was in a thick mist, and
-saw the path for a few yards in front of me <i>and nothing more</i>.
-When I think of the way in which this book was written three
-and twenty years ago I can compare it to nothing but my
-first descent of the Gemmi. I did a very risky thing without
-knowing it. My path came into view little by little as I went
-on. All else was hid from me by a thick mist of ignorance.
-When I began the book I knew next to nothing of the Reformers,
-but I studied hard and wrote hard, and I turned out
-the essays within the year. This feat I now regard with amazement,
-almost with horror. Since that time I have given
-more years of work to the subject than I had then given
-months, and the consequence is I find I can write fast no
-longer. The mist has in a measure cleared off, and I cannot
-jog along in comfort as I did when I saw less. At the same
-time I have no reason to repent of the adventure. Being
-fortunate in my plan and thoroughly interested by my
-subject, I succeeded beyond my wildest expectations in
-getting others to take an interest in it also. The small
-English edition of 500 copies was, as soon as I reduced the
-price, sold off immediately, and the book has been, in
-England, for twenty years “out of print.” But no less than
-three publishing firms in the United States have reprinted
-it (one quite recently) without my consent, and, except in
-the edition of Messrs. R. Clarke &amp; Co., Cincinnati, with
-omissions and additions made without my knowledge. It
-seems then that the book will live for some years yet,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xx" id="Page_xx">[xx]</a></span>
-whether I like it or not; and while it lives I wish it to be
-in a form somewhat less defective than at its first appearance.
-I have therefore in a great measure re-written it, beside
-filling in a gap here and there with an additional essay.
-Perhaps some critics will call it a new book with an old
-title. If they do, they will I trust allow that the new book
-has at least two merits which went far to secure the success
-of the old, 1st, a good title, and 2nd, a good plan. My
-plan in both editions has been to select a few people who
-seemed specially worth knowing about, and to tell concerning
-them in some detail just that which seemed to me
-specially worth knowing. So I have given what I thought
-very valuable or very interesting, and everything I thought
-not particularly valuable or interesting I have ruthlessly
-omitted. I have not attempted a <i>complete</i> account of anybody
-or anything; and as for what the examiner may “set,”
-I have not once given his questions a thought.</p>
-
-<p>As the book is likely to have more readers in the country
-of its adoption than in the country of its birth, I have persuaded
-my friend Dr. William T. Harris, the United
-States Commissioner of Education, to put it into “The
-International Education Series” which he edits. So
-the only authorized editions of the book are the English
-edition, and the American edition published by
-Messrs. D. Appleton &amp; Co.</p>
-
-<p class="right">R. H. Q.</p>
-
-<p class="smaller"><span class="smcap">Earlswood Cottage,
-Redhill, Surrey, England</span>,
-<i>28th July, 1890</i>.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xxi" id="Page_xxi">[xxi]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="CONTENTS">TABLE OF CONTENTS.</h2>
-
-<table summary="Contents">
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td class="tdpg smaller">PAGE</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="chap"><b>Chapter I.—Effects of the Renascence</b></td>
- <td class="chap-tdpg"><a href="#I">1-21</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>No escape from the Past</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_2">2</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>“Discovery” of the Classics</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_3">3</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Mark Pattison’s account of Renascence</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_4">4</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Revival of taste for beauty in Literature</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_5">5</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>What is Literature?</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_6">6</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Renascence loved beauty of expression</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_7">7</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>No translations. The “educated”</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_8">8</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Spread of literature by printing</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_9">9</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>School course settled before Bacon</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_10">10</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>First defect: Learner above Doer</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_11">11</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Second: Over-estimate of literature</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_12">12</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Literary taste not common</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_13">13</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Third: Literature banished from school</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_14">14</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Translations would be literature</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_15">15</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>The classics not written for children</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_16">16</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Language <i>versus</i> Literature</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_17">17</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Fourth: “Miss as good as a mile”</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_18">18</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Fifth: Neglect of children</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_19">19</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Child’s study of his surroundings</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_20">20</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Aut Cæsar aut nihil</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_21">21</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="chap"><b>Chapter II.—Renascence Tendencies</b></td>
- <td class="chap-tdpg"><a href="#II">22-26</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Reviving the Past. The Scholars</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_23">23</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>The <i>Scholars</i>: things for words</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_24">24</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><i>Verbal Realists</i>: things through words</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_25">25</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><i>Stylists</i>: words for themselves</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_26">26</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="chap"><b>Chapter III.—Sturmius. (1507-1589)</b></td>
- <td class="chap-tdpg"><a href="#III">27-32</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>His early life. Settles in Strassburg</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_28">28</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xxii" id="Page_xxii">[xxii]</a></span>His course of Latin. Dismissed</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_29">29</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>The Schoolmaster taught Latin mainly</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_30">30</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Resulting verbalism</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_31">31</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Some books about Sturm</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_32">32</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="chap"><b>Chapter IV.—Schools of the Jesuits</b></td>
- <td class="chap-tdpg"><a href="#IV">33-62</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Importance of the Jesuit Schools</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_34">34</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>The Society in part educational</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_35">35</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>“Ratio atque Institutio.” Societas Professa</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_36">36</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>The Jesuit teacher: his preparation, &amp;c.</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_37">37</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Supervision. Maintenance. Lower Schools</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_38">38</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Free instruction. Equality. Boarders</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_39">39</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Classes. Curriculum. Latin only used</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_40">40</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Teacher Lectured. Exercises. Saying by heart</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_41">41</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Emulation. “Æmuli.” Concertations</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_42">42</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>“Academies.” Expedients. School-hours</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_43">43</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Method of teaching. An example</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_44">44</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Attention. Extra work. “Repetitio”</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_45">45</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Repetition. Thoroughness</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_46">46</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Yearly examinations. Moral training</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_47">47</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Care of health. Punishments</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_48">48</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>English want of system</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_49">49</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Jesuit limitations</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_50">50</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Gains from memorizing</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_51">51</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Popularity. Kindness</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_52">52</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Sympathy with each pupil</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_53">53</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Work moderate in amount and difficulty</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_54">54</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>The Society the Army of the Church</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_55">55</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Their pedagogy not disinterested</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_56">56</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Practical</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_57">57</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>The forces: 1. Master’s influence. 2. Emulation</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_57">57-58</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>A pupil’s summing-up</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_59">59</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Some books</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_60">60</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Barbier’s advice to new master</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_61">61</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Loyola and Montaigne. Port-Royal</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_62">62</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="chap"><b>Chapter V.—Rabelais. (1483-1553.)</b></td>
- <td class="chap-tdpg"><a href="#V">63-69</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Rabelais’ ideal. A new start</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_64">64</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Religion. Study of Things</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_65">65</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xxiii" id="Page_xxiii">[xxiii]</a></span>“Anschauung.” Hand-work. Books and Life</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_66">66</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Training the body</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_67">67</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Rabelais’ Curriculum</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_68">68</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Study of Scripture. Piety</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_69">69</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="chap"><b>Chapter VI.—Montaigne. (1533-1592.)</b></td>
- <td class="chap-tdpg"><a href="#VI">70-79</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Writers and doers. Montaigne <i>versus</i> Renascence</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_71">71</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Character before knowledge. True knowledge</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_72">72</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Athens and Sparta. Wisdom before knowledge</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_73">73</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Knowing, and knowing by heart</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_74">74</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Learning necessary as employment</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_75">75</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Montaigne and our Public Schools</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_76">76</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Pressure from Science and Examinations</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_77">77</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Danger from knowledge</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_78">78</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Montaigne and Lord Armstrong</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_79">79</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="chap"><b>Chapter VII.—Ascham. (1515-1568.)</b></td>
- <td class="chap-tdpg"><a href="#VII">80-89</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Wolsey on teaching</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_81">81</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>History of Methods useful</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_82">82</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Our three celebrities</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_83">83</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Ascham’s method for Latin: first stage</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_84">84</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Second stage. The six points</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_85">85</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Value of double translating and writing</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_86">86</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Study of a model book. Queen Elizabeth</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_87">87, 88</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>“A dozen times at the least”</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_88">88</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>“Impressionists” and “Retainers”</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_89">89</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="chap"><b>Chapter VIII.—Mulcaster. (1531(?)-1611.)</b></td>
- <td class="chap-tdpg"><a href="#VIII">90-102</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Old books in English on education</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_91">91</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Mulcaster’s wisdom hidden by his style</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_92">92</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Education and “learning”</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_93">93</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1. Development 2. Child-study</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_94">94</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>3. Groundwork by best workman</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_95">95</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>4. No forcing of young plants</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_96">96</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>5. The elementary course. English</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_97">97</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>6. Girls as well as Boys</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_98">98</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>7. Training of Teachers</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_99">99</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Training college at the Universities</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_100">100</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Mulcaster’s reasons for training teachers</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_101">101</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xxiv" id="Page_xxiv">[xxiv]</a></span>Mulcaster’s Life and Writings</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_102">102</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="chap"><b>Chapter IX.—Ratichius. (1571-1635.)</b></td>
- <td class="chap-tdpg"><a href="#IX">103-118</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Principles of the Innovators</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_104">104</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Ratke’s Address to the Diet</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_105">105</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>At Augsburg. At Koethen</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_106">106</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Failure at Koethen</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_107">107</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>German in the school. Ratichius’s services</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_108">108</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1. Follow Nature. 2. One thing at a time</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_109">109</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>3. Over and over again</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_110">110</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>4. Everything through the mother-tongue</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_111">111</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>5. Nothing on compulsion</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_112">112</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>6. Nothing to be learnt by heart</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_113">113</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>7. Uniformity. 8. Ne modus rei ante rem</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_114">114</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>9. Per inductionem omnia</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_115">115</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Ratke’s method for language</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_116">116</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Ratke’s method and Ascham’s</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_117">117</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Slow progress in methods</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_118">118</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="chap"><b>Chapter X.—Comenius. (1592-1671.)</b></td>
- <td class="chap-tdpg"><a href="#X">119-171</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Early years. His first book</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_120">120</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Troubles. Exile</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_121">121</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Pedagogic studies at Leszna</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_122">122</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Didactic written. <i>Janua</i> published. Pansophy</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_123">123</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Samuel Hartlib</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_124">124</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>The <i>Prodromus</i> and <i>Dilucidatio</i></td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_125">125</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Comenius in London. Parliamentary schemes</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_126">126</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Comenius driven away by Civil War</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_127">127</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>In Sweden. Interviews with Oxenstiern</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_128">128</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Oxenstiern criticises</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_129">129</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Comenius at Elbing</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_130">130</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>At Leszna again</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_131">131</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Saros-Patak. Flight from Leszna</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_132">132</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Last years at Amsterdam</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_133">133</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Comenius sought true foundation</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_134">134</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Threefold life. Seeds of learning, virtue, piety</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_135">135</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Omnia sponte fluant. Analogies</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_136">136</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Analogies of growth</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_137">137</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Senses. Foster desire of knowledge</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_138">138</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>No punishments. Words and Things together</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_139">139</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xxv" id="Page_xxv">[xxv]</a></span>Languages. System of schools</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_140">140</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Mother-tongue School. Girls</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_141">141</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>School teaching. Mother’s teaching</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_142">142</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Comenius and the Kindergarten</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_143">143</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Starting-points of the sciences</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_144">144</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Beginnings in Geography, History, &amp;c.</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_145">145</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Drawing. Education for all</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_146">146</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Scientific and Religious Agreement</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_147">147</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Bishop Butler on Educating the Poor</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_148">148</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Comenius and Bacon</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_149">149</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>“Everything Through the Senses”</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_150">150</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Error of Neglecting the Senses</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_151">151</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Insufficiency of the Senses</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_152">152</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Comenius undervalued the Past</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_153">153</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Literature and Science</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_154">154</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Comenius’s use of Analogies</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_155">155</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Thought-studies and Label-studies</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_156">156</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Unity of Knowledges</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_157">157</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Theory and the Practical Man</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_158">158</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Mother-tongue. Words and Things together</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_159">159</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Janua Linguarum</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_160">160</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>The Jesuits’ Janua</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_161">161</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Comenius adapts Jesuits’ Janua</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_162">162</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Anchoran’s edition of Comenius’s Janua</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_163">163</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Change to be made by Janua</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_164">164</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Popularity of Janua shortlived</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_165">165</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Lubinus projector of Orbis Pictus</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_166">166</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Orbis Pictus described</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_167">167</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Why Comenius’s schoolbooks failed</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_168">168</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>“Compendia Dispendia”</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_169">169</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Comenius and Science of Education</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_170">170</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Books on Comenius</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_171">171</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="chap"><b>Chapter XI.—The Gentlemen of Port-Royal</b></td>
- <td class="chap-tdpg"><a href="#XI">172-196</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>The Jesuits and the Arnaulds</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_173">173</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Saint-Cyran and Port-Royal</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_174">174</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Saint-Cyran an “Evangelical”</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_175">175</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Short career of the Little Schools</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_176">176</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Saint-Cyran and Locke on Public Schools</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_177">177</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xxvi" id="Page_xxvi">[xxvi]</a></span>Shadow-side of Public Schools</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_178">178</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>The Little Schools for the few only</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_179">179</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Advantages of great schools</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_180">180</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Choice of masters and servants. Watch and pray</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_181">181</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>No rivalry or pressure. Freedom from routine</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_182">182</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Study a delight. Reading French first</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_183">183</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Literature. Mother-tongue first</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_184">184</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Beginners’ difficulties lightened</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_185">185</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Begin with Latin into Mother-tongue</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_186">186</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Sense before sound. Reason must rule</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_187">187</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Not Baconian. The body despised</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_188">188</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Pedagogic writings of Port-Royalists</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_189">189</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Arnauld. Nicole</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_190">190</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Light from within. Teach by the Senses</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_191">191</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Best teaching escapes common tests</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_192">192</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Studying impossible without a will</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_193">193</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Against making beginnings bitter</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_194">194</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Port-Royal advance. Books on Port-Royal</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_195">195</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Rollin, Compayré, &amp;c.</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_196">196</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="chap"><b>Chapter XII.—Some English Writers before Locke</b></td>
- <td class="chap-tdpg"><a href="#XII">197-218</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Birth of Realism</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_198">198</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Realist Leaders not schoolmasters</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_199">199</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>John Brinsley. Charles Hoole</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_200">200</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Hoole’s Realism</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_201">201</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Art of teaching. Abraham Cowley</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_202">202</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Authors and schoolmasters. J. Dury</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_203">203</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Disorderly use of our natural faculties</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_204">204</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Dury’s watch simile</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_205">205</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Senses, 1st; imagination, 2nd; memory, 3rd</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_206">206</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Petty’s battlefield simile</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_207">207</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Petty’s realism</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_208">208</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Cultivate observation</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_209">209</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Petty on children’s activities</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_210">210</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Hand-work. Education for all. Bellers</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_211">211</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Milton and School-Reform</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_212">212</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Milton as spokesman of Christian Realists</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_213">213</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Language an instrument. Object of education</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_214">214</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Milton for barrack life and Verbal Realism</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_215">215</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xxvii" id="Page_xxvii">[xxvii]</a></span>Milton succeeded as man not master</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_216">216</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>He did not advance Science of Education</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_217">217</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Milton an educator of mankind</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_218">218</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="chap"><b>Chapter XIII.—Locke. (1632-1704.)</b></td>
- <td class="chap-tdpg"><a href="#XIII">219-238</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Locke’s two main characteristics</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_220">220</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1st, Truth for itself. 2nd, Reason for Truth</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_221">221</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Locke’s definition of knowledge</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_222">222</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Knowing without seeing</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_223">223</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>“Discentem credere oportet”</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_224">224</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Locke’s “Knowledge” and the schoolmaster’s</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_225">225</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>“Knowledge” in Geography</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_226">226</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>For children, health and habits</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_227">227</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Everything educative forms habits</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_228">228</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Confusion about special cases. Wax</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_229">229</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Locke behind Comenius</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_230">230</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Humanists, Realists, and Trainers</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_231">231</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Caution against classifiers</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_232">232</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Locke and development</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_233">233</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Was Locke a utilitarian?</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_234">234</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Utilitarianism defined</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_235">235</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Locke not utilitarian in education</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_236">236</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Locke’s Pisgah Vision</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_237">237</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Science and education. Names of books</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_238">238</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="chap"><b>Chapter XIV.—Jean-Jacques Rousseau. (1712-1778.)</b></td>
- <td class="chap-tdpg"><a href="#XIV">239-272</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Middle Age system fell in 18th century</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_240">240</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Do the opposite to the usual</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_241">241</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Family life. No education before reason</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_242">242</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Rousseau “neglects” essentials. Lose time</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_243">243</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Early education negative</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_244">244</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Childhood the sleep of reason</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_245">245</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Start from study of the child</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_246">246</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Rousseau’s paradoxes un-English</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_247">247</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Man the corrupter. The three educations</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_248">248</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>The aim, living thoroughly</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_249">249</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Children not small men</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_250">250</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Schoolmasters’ contempt for childhood</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_251">251</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xxviii" id="Page_xxviii">[xxviii]</a></span>Schoolroom rubbish</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_252">252</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Ideas before symbols</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_253">253</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Right ideas for children</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_254">254</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Child-gardening. Child’s activity</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_255">255</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>No sitting still or reading</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_256">256</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Memory without books</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_257">257</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Use of the senses in childhood</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_258">258</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Intellect based on the senses</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_259">259</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Cultivation of the senses</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_260">260</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Music and drawing</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_261">261</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Drawing from objects. Morals</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_262">262</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Contradictory statements on morals</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_263">263</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>The material world and the moral</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_264">264</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Shun over-directing</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_265">265</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Lessons out of school. Questioning. At 12</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_266">266</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>No book-learning. Study of nature</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_267">267</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Against didactic teaching</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_268">268</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Rousseau exaggerates about self-teaching</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_269">269</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Learn with effort</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_270">270</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Hand-work. The “New Education”</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_271">271</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>The Teacher’s business</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_272">272</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="chap"><b>Chapter XV.—Basedow and the Philanthropinum</b></td>
- <td class="chap-tdpg"><a href="#XV">273-289</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Basedow tries to mend religion and teaching</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_274">274</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Reform needed. Subscription for “Elementary”</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_275">275</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>A journey with Goethe</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_276">276</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Goethe on Basedow</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_277">277</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>The Philanthropinum opened</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_278">278</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Basedow’s “Elementary” and “Book of Method”</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_279">279</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Subjects to be taught</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_280">280</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>French and Latin. Religion</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_281">281</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>“Fred’s Journey to Dessau”</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_282">282</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>At the Philanthropinum</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_283">283</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Methods in the Philanthropinum</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_284">284</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>The Philanthropinum criticised</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_285">285</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Basedow’s improvements in teaching children</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_286">286</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Basedow’s successors</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_287">287</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Kant on the Philanthropinum</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_288">288</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xxix" id="Page_xxix">[xxix]</a></span>Influence of Philanthropinists</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_289">289</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="chap"><b>Chapter XVI.—Pestalozzi. (1746-1827.)</b></td>
- <td class="chap-tdpg"><a href="#XVI">290-383</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>His childhood and student-life</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_291">291</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>A Radical Student</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_292">292</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Turns farmer. Bluntschli’s warning</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_293">293</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>New ideas in farming. A love letter</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_294">294</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Resolutions. Buys land and marries</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_295">295</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Pestalozzi turns to education</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_296">296</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Neuhof filled with children</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_297">297</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Appeal for the new Institution</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_298">298</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Bankruptcy. The children sent away</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_299">299</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Eighteen years of poverty and distress</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_300">300</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>“Gertrude” to the rescue. Pestalozzi’s religion</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_301">301</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>He turns author. “E. H. of Hermit”</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_302">302</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Pestalozzi’s belief</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_303">303</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>The “Hermit” a Christian</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_304">304</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Success of “Leonard and Gertrude”</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_305">305</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Gertrude’s patience tried</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_306">306</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Being and doing before knowing</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_307">307</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Pestalozzi’s severity. Women Commissioners</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_308">308</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Pestalozzi’s seven years of authorship</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_309">309</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>“Citizen of French Republic.” Doubts</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_310">310</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Waiting. Pestalozzi’s “Inquiry”</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_311">311</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Pestalozzi’s “Fables”</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_312">312</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Pestalozzi’s own principles</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_313">313</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Pestalozzi’s return to action</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_314">314</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>The French at Stanz</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_315">315</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Pestalozzi at Stanz</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_316">316</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Success and expulsion</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_317">317</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>At Stanz: Pestalozzi’s own account</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_318">318-332</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Value of the five months’ experience</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_333">333</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Pestalozzi a strange Schoolmaster</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_334">334</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>At Burgdorf. First official approval</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_335">335</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>A child’s notion of Pestalozzi’s teaching</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_336">336</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Pestalozzi engineering a new road</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_337">337</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Psychologizing instruction</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_338">338</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>School course. Singing; and the beautiful</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_339">339</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Pestalozzi’s poverty. Kruesi joins him</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_340">340</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Pestalozzi’s assistants. The Burgdorf Institute</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_341">341</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xxx" id="Page_xxx">[xxx]</a></span>Success of the Burgdorf Institute</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_342">342</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Reaction. Pestalozzi and Napoleon I</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_343">343</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Fellenberg, Pestalozzi goes to Yverdun</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_344">344</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>A portrait of Pestalozzi</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_345">345</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Prussia adopts Pestalozzianism</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_346">346</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Ritter and others at Yverdun</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_347">347</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Causes of failure at Yverdun</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_348">348</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Report made by Father Girard</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_349">349</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Girard’s mistake. Schmid in flight</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_350">350</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Schmid’s return. Pestalozzi’s fame found useful</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_351">351</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Dr. Bell’s visit. Death of Mrs. Pestalozzi</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_352">352</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Works republished. Clindy. Yverdun left. Death</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_353">353, 354</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>New aim: develop organism</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_354">354</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>True dignity of man</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_355">355</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Education for all. Mothers’ part. Jacob’s Ladder</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_356">356</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Educator only superintends</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_357">357</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>First, moral development</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_358">358</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Moral and religious the same</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_359">359</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Second, intellectual development</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_360">360</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Learning by “intuition”</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_361">361</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Buisson and Jullien on intuition</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_362">362</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Pestalozzi and Locke</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_363">363</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Subjects for, and art of, teaching</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_364">364</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>“Mastery”</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_365">365</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>The body’s part in education</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_366">366</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Learning must not be play</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_367">367</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Singing and drawing</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_368">368</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Morf’s summing-up</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_369">369</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Joseph Payne’s summing-up</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_370">370</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>The “two nations.” Mother’s lessons</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_371">371</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Mistakes in teaching children</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_372">372</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Children and their teachers</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_373">373</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>“Preparatory” Schools</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_374">374</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Young boys ill taught at school</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_375">375</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>English folk-schools not Pestalozzian</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_376">376</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Schools judged by results</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_377">377</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Pupil-teachers. Teaching not educating</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_378">378</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Lowe or Pestalozzi?</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_379">379</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Chief force, personality of the teacher</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_380">380</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xxxi" id="Page_xxxi">[xxxi]</a></span>English care for unessentials</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_381">381</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Aim at the ideal</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_382">382</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Use of theorists. Books</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_383">383</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="chap"><b>Chapter XVII.—Friedrich Froebel. (1783-1852.)</b></td>
- <td class="chap-tdpg"><a href="#XVII">384-413</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Difficulty in understanding Froebel</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_385">385</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>A lad’s quest of unity</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_386">386</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Froebel wandering without rest</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_387">387</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Finds his vocation. With Pestalozzi</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_388">388</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Froebel at the Universities</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_389">389</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Through the Freiheits-krieg. Mineralogy</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_390">390</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>The “New Education” started</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_391">391</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>At Keilhau. “Education of Man” published</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_392">392</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Froebel fails in Switzerland</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_393">393</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>The first Kindergarten</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_394">394</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Froebel’s last years. Prussian edict against him. His end</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_395">395</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Author’s attitude towards Reformers</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_396">396</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Difficulties with Froebel</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_397">397</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>“Cui omnia unum sunt”</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_398">398</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Froebel’s ideal</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_399">399</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Theory of development</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_400">400</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Development through self-activity</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_401">401</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>True idea found in Nature</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_402">402</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>God acts and man acts</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_403">403</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>The formative and creative instinct</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_404">404</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Rendering the inner outer</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_405">405</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Care for “young plants.” Kindergarten</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_406">406</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Child’s restlessness: how to use it</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_407">407</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Employments in Kindergarten</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_408">408</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>No schoolwork in Kindergarten</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_409">409</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Without the idea the “gifts” fail</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_410">410</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>The New Education and the old</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_411">411</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>The old still vigorous</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_412">412</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Science the thought of God. Some Froebelians</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_413">413</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="chap"><b>Chapter XVIII.—Jacotot, a Methodizer. (1770-1840.)</b></td>
- <td class="chap-tdpg"><a href="#XVIII">414-438</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Self-teaching</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_415">415</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xxxii" id="Page_xxxii">[xxxii]</a></span>1. All can learn</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_416">416</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>2. Everyone can teach</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_417">417</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Can he teach facts he does not know?</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_418">418</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Languages? Sciences?</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_419">419</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Arts such as drawing and music?</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_420">420</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>True teacher within the learner</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_421">421</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Training rather than teaching</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_422">422</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>3. “Tout est dans tout.” Quidlibet ex quolibet</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_423">423</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Connexion of knowledges</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_424">424</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Connect with model book. Memorizing</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_425">425</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Ways of studying the model book</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_426">426</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Should the book be made or chosen?</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_427">427</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Robertsonian plan</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_428">428</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Hints for exercises</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_429">429</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>The good of having learnt</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_430">430</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>The old Cambridge “mathematical man”</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_431">431</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Waste of memory at school</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_432">432</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>How to stop this waste</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_433">433</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Multum, non multa. De Morgan. Helps. Stephen</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_434">434</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Jacotot’s plan for reading and writing</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_435">435</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>For the mother-tongue</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_436">436</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Method of investigation</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_437">437</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Jacotot’s last days</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_438">438</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="chap"><b>Chapter XIX.—Herbert Spencer</b></td>
- <td class="chap-tdpg"><a href="#XIX">439-469</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Same knowledge for discipline and use?</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_440">440</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Different stages, different knowledges</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_441">441</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Relative value of knowledges</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_442">442</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Knowledge for self-preservation</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_443">443</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Useful knowledge <i>versus</i> the classics</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_444">444</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Special instruction <i>versus</i> education</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_445">445</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Scientific knowledge and money-making</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_446">446</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Knowledge about rearing offspring</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_447">447</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Knowledge of history: its nature and use</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_448">448</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Use of history</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_449">449</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Employment of leisure hours</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_450">450</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Poetry and the Arts</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_451">451</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>More than science needed for complete living</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_452">452</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xxxiii" id="Page_xxxiii">[xxxiii]</a></span>Objections to Spencer’s curriculum</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_453">453</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Citizen’s duties. Things not to teach</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_454">454</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Need of a science of education</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_455">455</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Hope of a science</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_456">456</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>From simple to complex: known to unknown</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_457">457</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Connecting schoolwork with life outside</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_458">458</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Books and life</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_459">459</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Mistakes in grammar teaching</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_460">460</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>From indefinite to definite: concrete to abstract</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_461">461</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>The Individual and the Race. Empirical beginning</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_462">462</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Against “telling.” Effect of bad teaching</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_463">463</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Learning should be pleasurable</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_464">464</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Can learning be made interesting?</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_465">465</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Apathy from bad teaching</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_466">466</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Should learning be made interesting?</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_467">467</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Difference between theory and practice</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_468">468</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Importance of Herbert Spencer’s work</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_469">469</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="chap"><b>Chapter XX.—Thoughts and Suggestions</b></td>
- <td class="chap-tdpg"><a href="#XX">470-491</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Want of an ideal</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_471">471</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Get pupils to work hard</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_472">472</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>For this arouse interest. Wordsworth</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_473">473</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Interest needed for activity</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_474">474</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Teaching young children</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_475">475</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Value of pictures</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_476">476</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Dr. Vater at Leipzig</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_477">477</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Dr. Vogel and Dr. Vater</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_478">478</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>First knowledge of numbers. Grubé</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_479">479</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Measuring and weighing. Reading-books</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_480">480</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Respect for books. Grammar. Reading</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_481">481</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Silent and Vocal Reading</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_482">482</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Memorising poetry. Composition</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_483">483</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Correcting exercises. Three kinds of books</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_484">484</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>No epitomes</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_485">485</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Ascham, Bacon, Goldsmith, against them</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_486">486</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Arouse interest. Dr. Arnold’s historical primer</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_487">487</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>A Macaulay, not Mangnall, wanted</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_488">488</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Beginnings in history and geography</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_489">489</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Tales of Travelers</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_490">490</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xxxiv" id="Page_xxxiv">[xxxiv]</a></span>Results positive and negative</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_491">491</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="chap"><b>Chapter XXI.—The Schoolmaster’s Moral and Religious Influence</b></td>
- <td class="chap-tdpg"><a href="#XXI">492-503</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Master’s power, how gained and lost</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_493">493</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Masters, the open and the reserved</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_494">494</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Danger of excess either way</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_495">495</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>High ideal. Danger of low practice</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_496">496</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Harm from overworking teachers</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_497">497</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Refuge in routine work. Small schools</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_498">498</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Influence through the Sixth. Day schools wanted</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_499">499</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Teaching religion in England and Germany</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_500">500</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Religious teaching connected with worship</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_501">501</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Education to goodness and piety</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_502">502</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>How to avoid narrowmindedness</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_503">503</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="chap"><b>Chapter XXII.—Conclusion</b></td>
- <td class="chap-tdpg"><a href="#XXII">504-526</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>A growing science of education</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_505">505</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Jesuits the first Reformers</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_506">506</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>The Jesuits cared for more than classics</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_507">507</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Rabelais for “intuition”</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_508">508</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Montaigne for educating mind and body</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_509">509</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>17th century reaction against books</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_510">510</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Reaction not felt in schools and the Universities</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_511">511</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Comenius begins science of education</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_512">512</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Locke’s teacher a disposer of influence</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_513">513</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Locke and public schools. Escape from “idols”</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_514">514</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Rousseau’s clean sweep</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_515">515</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Benevolence of Nature. Man disturbs</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_516">516</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>We arrange sequences, capitalise ideas</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_517">517</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Loss and gain from tradition</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_518">518</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Rousseau for observing and following</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_519">519</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Rousseau exposed “school-learning”</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_520">520</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Function of “things” in education</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_521">521</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>“New Education” started by Rousseau</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_522">522</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Drawing out. Man and the other animals</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_523">523</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Intuition. Man an organism, a doer and creator</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_524">524</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Antithesis of Old and New Education</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_525">525</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Drill needed. What the Thinkers do for us</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Page_526">526</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="chap"><b>Appendix.</b> Class Matches. Words and Things. Books for Teachers, &amp;c.</td>
- <td class="chap-tdpg"><a href="#APPENDIX">527-547</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[1]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="I">I<br />
-<span class="smaller">EFFECTS OF THE RENASCENCE.</span></h2>
-
-<p>§ 1. The history of education, much as it has been
-hitherto neglected, especially in England, must have a great
-future before it. If we ignore the Past we cannot understand
-the Present, or forecast the Future. In this book I am
-going to speak of Reformers or Innovators who aimed at
-changing what was handed down to them; but the Radical
-can no more escape from the Past, than the Conservative
-can stereotype it. It acts not by attraction only, but no less
-by repulsion. There have been thinkers in latter times who
-have announced themselves as the executioners of the Past
-and laboured to destroy all it has bequeathed to us. They
-have raised the ferocious cry, “<i>Vive la destruction! Vive
-la mort! Place à l’avenir!</i> Hurrah for destruction!
-Hurrah for death! Make room for the world that is to be!”
-But their very hatred of the Past has brought them under
-the influence of it. “Do just the opposite of what has been
-done and you will do right,” said Rousseau; and this rule
-of negation would make the Past regulate the Present and
-the Future no less than its opposite, “Do always what is
-usual.”</p>
-
-<p>If we cannot get free from the Past in the domain of
-thought, still less can we in action. Custom is to all our<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[2]</a></span>
-activities what the mainspring is to the watch. We may
-bring forces into play to make the watch go faster or slower,
-but if we took out the mainspring it would not go at all.
-For <i>our</i> mainspring we are indebted to the Past.</p>
-
-<p>§ 2. In studying the Past we must give our special attention
-to those periods in which the course of ideas takes,
-as the French say, a new bend.<a name="FNanchor_3" id="FNanchor_3"></a><a href="#Footnote_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a> Such a period was the
-Renascence. Then it was that the latest bend was given to
-the educational ideal of the civilized world; and though we
-seem now again to have arrived at a period of change, we
-are still, perhaps far more than we are aware, affected by the
-ideas of the great scholars who guided the intellect of Europe
-in the Revival of Learning.</p>
-
-<p>§ 3. From the beginning to the end of the fifteenth
-century the balance was trembling between two kinds of
-culture, and the fate of the schoolboy depended on the
-result. In this century men first got a correct conception
-of the globe they were inhabiting. Hitherto they had not
-even professed to have any knowledge of geography; there
-is no mention of it in the Trivium and Quadrivium which
-were then supposed to form the cycle of things known, if not
-of things knowable. But Columbus and Vasco da Gama
-were grand teachers of geography, and their lessons were
-learnt as far as civilization extended.</p>
-
-<p>The impetus thus given to the study of the earth might,
-at the beginning of the sixteenth century, have engrossed
-the mind of Europe with the material world, had not the
-leaning to physical science been encountered and overcome
-by an impulse derived from another discovery. About the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[3]</a></span>
-time of the discovery of America there also came to light
-the literatures of Greece and Rome.</p>
-
-<p>§ 4. When I speak of the discovery of the ancient literatures
-as rivalling that of America, this use of the word
-“discovery” may be disputed. It may be urged that though
-the Greek language and literature were unknown in the West
-of Europe till they were brought there by the fugitives after
-the fall of Constantinople in 1453, yet the works of the great
-Latin writers had always been known in Italy, and Dante
-declares himself the disciple of Virgil. And yet I cannot
-give up the word “discovery.” In the life of an individual
-it sometimes happens that he suddenly acquires as it were
-a new sense. The world around him remains the same as
-before, but it is not the same to him. A film passes from
-his eyes, and what has been ordinary and unmeaning
-suddenly becomes a source of wonder and delight to him.
-Something similar happens at times in the history of the
-general mind; indeed our own century has seen a remarkable
-instance of it. In reading the thoughts of great writers
-of earlier times, we cannot but be struck, not only with their
-ignorance of the material world, but also with their ignorance
-of their ignorance. Little as they know, they often speak as if
-they knew everything. Newton could see that he was like a
-child discovering a few shells while the unexplored ocean lay
-before him; but in those days it required the intellect of a
-Newton to understand this. To the other children the ocean
-seemed to conceal nothing, and they innocently thought that
-all the shells, or nearly all, had been picked up. It was reserved
-for the people of our own century to become aware of
-the marvels which lie around us in the material world, and to
-be fascinated by the discovery. If the human race could live
-through several civilizations without opening its eyes to the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[4]</a></span>
-wonders of the earth it inhabits, and then could suddenly
-become aware of them, we may well understand its retaining
-unheeded the literatures of Greece and Rome for centuries,
-and at length as it were discovering them, and turning to
-them with unbounded enthusiasm and delight.</p>
-
-<p>As students of education we can hardly attach too much
-importance to this great revolution. For nearly three
-centuries the curriculum in the public schools of Europe
-remained what the Renascence had made it. We have
-again entered on an age of change, but we are still much
-influenced by the ideas of the Renascence, and the best
-way to understand the forces now at work is to trace them
-where possible to their origin. Let us then consider what
-the Renascence was, and how it affected the educational
-system.</p>
-
-<p>§ 5. In endeavouring to understand the Renascence, we
-cannot do better than listen to what Mark Pattison says of
-it in his “Life of Casaubon”:—“In the fifteenth century
-was revealed to a world which had hitherto been trained to
-logical analysis, the beauty of literary form. The conception
-of style or finished expression had died out with the pagan
-schools of rhetoric. It was not the despotic act of Justinian
-in closing the schools of Athens which had suppressed it.
-The sense of art in language decayed from the same general
-causes which had been fatal to all artistic perception. Banished
-from the Roman Empire in the sixth century or
-earlier, the classical conception of beauty of form re-entered
-the circle of ideas after near a thousand years of oblivion
-and abeyance. Cicero and Virgil, Livius and Ovid, had
-been there all along, but the idea of composite harmony on
-which their works were constructed was wanting. The
-restored conception, as if to recoup itself for its long suppression,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[5]</a></span>
-took entire possession of the mind of Europe.
-The first period of the Renascence passed in adoration of
-the awakened beauty, and in efforts to copy and multiply it.”</p>
-
-<p>§ 6. Here Mark Pattison speaks as if the conception of
-beauty of form belonged exclusively to the ancients and
-those who learnt of them. This seems to require some
-abatement. There are points in which mediæval art far
-excelled the art of the Renascence. The thirteenth century,
-as Archbishop Trench has said, was “rich in glorious creations
-of almost every kind;” and in that century our great English
-architect, Street, found the root of all that is best in modern
-art. (See “Dublin Afternoon Lectures,” 1868.)</p>
-
-<p>But there are expressions of beauty to which the Greeks,
-and those who caught their spirit, were keenly alive, and
-to which the people of the Middle Age seem to have been
-blind. The first is beauty in the human form; the second
-is beauty in literature.</p>
-
-<p>The old delight in beauty in the human form has never
-come back to us. Mr. Ruskin tells us we are an ugly race,
-with ill-shapen limbs, and well pleased with our ugliness
-and deformity, and in reply we only mutter something
-about the necessity of clothing both for warmth and
-decency. But as to the other expression of beauty,
-beauty in literature, the mind of Europe again became
-conscious of it in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries.
-The re-awakening of this sense of beauty we call the
-Renascence.</p>
-
-<p>§ 7. Before we consider the effect of this intellectual
-revolution on education, let us be sure that we are not
-“paying ourselves with words,” and that we know exactly
-what we mean by “literature.”</p>
-
-<p>When the conceptions of an individual mind are expressed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[6]</a></span>
-in a permanent form of words, we get literature.
-The sum total of all the permanent forms of expression in
-one language make up the literature of that language;
-and if no one has given his conceptions a form which
-has been preserved, the language is without a literature.
-There are then two things essential to a literary work:
-first, the conceptions of an individual mind; second, a
-permanent form of expression. Hence it follows that the
-domain of literature is distinct from the domain of natural
-or mathematical science. Science does not give us the
-conceptions of an individual mind, but it tells us what every
-rational person who studies the subject must think. And
-science is entirely independent of any form of words: a
-proposition of Euclid is science; a sonnet of Wordsworth’s
-is literature. We learn from Euclid certain truths which
-we should have learnt from some one else if Euclid had
-never existed, and the propositions may be conveyed equally
-well in different forms of words and in any language. But
-a sonnet of Wordsworth’s conveys thought and feeling
-peculiar to the poet; and even if the same thought and
-feeling were conveyed to us in other words, we should lose
-at least half of what he has given us. Poetry is indeed
-only one kind of literature, but it is the highest kind; and
-what is true of literary works in verse, is true also in a
-measure of literary works in prose. So great is the difference
-between science and literature, that in literature, as
-the first Lord Lytton said, the best books are generally the
-oldest; in science they are the newest.</p>
-
-<p>§ 8. At present we are concerned with literature only.
-There are two ways in which a work of literature may
-excite our admiration and affect our minds. These are,
-first, by the beauty of the conceptions it conveys to us; and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[7]</a></span>
-second, by the beauty of the language in which it conveys
-them. In the greatest works the two excellences will be
-combined.<a name="FNanchor_4" id="FNanchor_4"></a><a href="#Footnote_4" class="fnanchor">[4]</a></p>
-
-<p>Now the literary taste proper fastens especially on the
-second of the two, <i>i.e.</i>, on beauty of expression; and the
-Renascence was the revival of literary taste. “It was,” as
-Mark Pattison says, “the conception of style or finished
-expression which had died out with the pagan schools of
-rhetoric, and which re-entered the circle of ideas after a
-thousand years of oblivion and abeyance.” If we lose
-sight of this, we shall be perplexed by the unbounded
-enthusiasm which we find in the sixteenth century for the
-old classics. What great evangel, we may ask, had Cicero
-and Virgil and Ovid, or even Plato and the Greek dramatists,
-for men who lived when Europe had experienced a
-thousand years of Christianity? The answer is simple.
-They had none whatever. Their thoughts and conceptions
-were not adapted to the wants of the new world. The
-civilization of the Christian nations of the sixteenth century
-was a very different thing from the civilization of
-Greece and Rome. It had its own thoughts, its own
-problems, its own wants. The old-world thoughts could
-not be thought over again by it. This indeed was felt
-though not admitted by the Renascence scholars themselves.
-Had it been the thoughts of the ancients which
-seemed to them so valuable they would have made some
-effort to diffuse those thoughts in the languages of the
-modern world. Much as a great literary work loses by
-translation, there may still be enough left of it to be a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[8]</a></span>
-source of instruction and delight. The thoughts of
-Aristotle, conveyed in a Latin translation of an Arabic
-translation, profoundly affected the mind of Europe in the
-Middle Ages. The Bible, or Book <i>par excellence</i>, is known
-to few indeed in its original form. Some great writers—Cervantes,
-and Shakespeare, and the author of the “Arabian
-Nights”—please and instruct nations who know not the
-sound of the languages wherein their works are composed.
-If then the great writers of Greece and Rome had been
-valued for their matter, their works would have been translated
-by the Renascence scholars as the Bible was translated
-by the Reformers, and the history of modern education would
-have taken a very different turn from that which awaited
-it. But it was not so. The Renascence scholars did all
-they could to discourage translations. For the grand
-discovery which we call the Revival of Learning was, not
-that the ancients had something to say, but that whatever
-they had to say they knew how to say it.</p>
-
-<p>§ 9. And thus it happens that in the period of change,
-when Europe was re-arranging its institutions, developing new
-ideas and settling into new grooves of habit, we find the men
-most influential in education entirely fascinated by beauty
-of expression, and this in two ancient languages, so that the
-one thing needful for the young seemed to them an introduction
-to the study of ancient writings. The inevitable
-consequence was this: education became a mere synonym
-for instruction in Latin and Greek. The only ideal set up
-for the “educated” was the classical scholar.</p>
-
-<p>§ 10. Perhaps the absurdity of taking this ideal, an
-ideal which is obviously fitted for a small class of men only,
-and proposing it for general adoption, was partly concealed
-from the Renascence scholars by the peculiar circumstances<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[9]</a></span>
-of their age. No doubt they thought literature would in
-the future be a force capable of much wider application
-than it had ever been before. True, literature had till
-then affected a small class only. Literature meant books,
-books meant MSS., and MSS. were rare and costly. Literature,
-the embodiment of grand thoughts in grand words,
-had existed before letters, or at least without letters. The
-Homeric poems, for example, had been known to thousands
-who could not read or write. But beauty of expression
-naturally got associated and indeed confounded with the
-art by which it was preserved; so the creations of the mind,
-when embodied in particular combinations of words, acquired
-the name of literature or letters, and became almost
-exclusively the affair of those who had opportunities of study,
-opportunities afforded only to the few. During the Middle
-Ages every one who could read was allowed his “privilege
-of clergy;” that is, he was assumed to be a clergyman.
-Literature then was not thought of as a means of instruction.
-But at the very time that the beauty of the ancient writings
-dawned on the mind of Europe, a mechanical invention
-seemed to remove all hindrances to the spread of literature.
-The scholars seized on the printing press and thought by
-means of it to give all “the educated” a knowledge of
-classics.</p>
-
-<p>§ 11. We cannot help speculating what would have been
-the effect of the discovery of printing if it had been made at
-another time. As there may be literature without books, so
-there may be books without literature. If at the time of
-the invention of printing there had been no literature, no
-creations of individual minds embodied in permanent forms
-of speech, books might have been used as apparatus in a
-mental gymnasium, or they might have been made the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[10]</a></span>
-means of conveying information. But just then the intellect
-of Europe was tired of mental gymnastics. It had taken
-exercise in the Trivium like a squirrel in its revolving cage,
-and was vexed to find it made no progress.<a name="FNanchor_5" id="FNanchor_5"></a><a href="#Footnote_5" class="fnanchor">[5]</a> As for information
-there was little to be had. The age of observation
-and of physical science was not yet. So the printing press
-was entirely at the service of the new passion for literature
-and the scholars dreamed of the general diffusion of literary
-culture by means of printed books.</p>
-
-<p>§ 12. For some two centuries the literary spirit had
-supreme control over the intellect of Europe, and the
-literary spirit could then find satisfaction nowhere but in
-the study of the ancient classics. The natural consequence
-was that throughout this period the “educated man” was
-supposed to be identified with the classical scholar. The
-great rival of the literary spirit, the scientific spirit which
-cares for nothing but sequences independent of the human
-mind, began to show itself early in the seventeenth century:
-its first great champion was Francis Bacon. But by this
-time the school course of study had been settled, and two
-centuries had to elapse before the scientific spirit could
-unsettle it again. Even now when we speak of a man as
-“well-educated” we are commonly understood to mean
-that in his youth he was taught the two classical languages.</p>
-
-<p>§ 13. The taking of the classical scholar as the only<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[11]</a></span>
-ideal of the educated man has been a fruitful source of evil
-in the history of education.</p>
-
-<p>I. This ideal exalted the learner above the doer. As far
-back as Xenophon, we find a contest between the passive
-ideal and the active, between the excellence which depends
-on a knowledge of what others have thought and done and
-the excellence which comes of thinking and doing. But
-the excellence derived from learning had never been highly
-esteemed. To be able to repeat Homer’s poetry was
-regarded in Greece as we now regard a pleasing accomplishment;
-but the dignity of the learned man as such was not
-within the range of Greek ideas. Many of the Romans
-after they began to study Greek literature certainly piqued
-themselves on being good Greek scholars, and Cicero
-occasionally quotes with all the airs of a pedant; but so
-thoroughly was the contrary ideal, the ideal of the <i>doer</i>,
-established at Rome, that nobody ever dreamt of placing its
-rival above it. In the decline of the Empire, especially at
-Alexandria, we find for the first time honours paid to the
-learned man; but he was soon lost sight of again. At the
-Renascence he burst into sudden blaze, and it was then
-discovered that he was what every man would wish to be.
-Thus the Renascence scholars, notwithstanding their admiration
-of the great nations of antiquity, set up an ideal
-which those nations would heartily have despised. The
-schoolmaster very readily adopted this ideal; and schools
-have been places of learning, not training, ever since.</p>
-
-<p>§ 14. II. The next defect I observe in the Renascence
-ideal is this: it attributes to literature more direct power
-over common life than literature has ever had, or is ever
-likely to have.</p>
-
-<p>I say <i>direct</i> power, for indirectly literature is one of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[12]</a></span>
-grand forces which act on all of us; but it acts on us through
-others, its most important function being to affect great
-intellects, the minds of those who think out and act out
-important changes. Its direct action on the mass of mankind
-is after all but insignificant. We have seen that literature
-consists in permanent forms of words, expressing the
-conceptions of individual minds; and these forms will be
-studied only by those who are interested in the conceptions
-or find pleasure in the mode in which they are expressed.
-Now the vast majority of ordinary people are without these
-inducements to literary study. They take a keen interest
-in everything connected with their relations and intimate
-friends, and a weaker interest in the thinkings and sayings
-and doings of every one else who is personally known to
-them; but as to the mental conceptions of those who lived
-in other times, or if now alive are not known even by sight,
-the ordinary person is profoundly indifferent to them;
-and of course delight in expression, as such, is out of the
-question. The natural consequence is that the habit of
-reading books is by no means common. Mark Pattison
-observes that there are few books to be found in most
-English middle-class homes, and he says: “The dearth of
-books is only the outward and visible sign of the mental
-torpor which reigns in those destitute regions” (see “Fortnightly
-Review,” November, 1877). I much doubt if he
-would have found more books in the middle-class homes of
-the Continent. There is only one kind of reading that is
-nearly universal—the reading of newspapers; and the
-newspaper lacks the element of permanence, and belongs
-to the domain of talk rather than of literature.</p>
-
-<p>Even when we get among the so-called “educated,” we
-find that those who care for literature form a very small<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[13]</a></span>
-minority. The rest <i>have</i> of course read Shakespeare and
-Milton and Walter Scott and Tennyson, but <i>they do not
-read them</i>. The lion’s share of our time and thoughts and
-interests must be given to our business or profession,
-whatever that may be; and in few instances is this connected
-with literature. For the rest, whatever time or
-thought a man can spare from his calling is mostly given to
-his family, or to society, or to some hobby which is not
-literature.</p>
-
-<p>And love of literature is not shown in such reading as is
-common. The literary spirit shows itself, as I said, in
-appreciating beauty of expression, and how far beauty of
-expression is cared for we may estimate from the fact that
-few people think of reading anything a second time. The
-ordinary reader is profoundly indifferent about style, and
-will not take the trouble to understand ideas. He keeps to
-periodicals or light fiction, which enables the mind to loll in
-its easy chair (so to speak) and see pass before it a series of
-pleasing images. An idea, as Mark Pattison says, “is an
-excitant, comes from mind and calls forth mind; an image
-is a sedative;” and most people when they take up a book
-are seeking a sedative.</p>
-
-<p>So literature is after all a very small force in the lives
-of most men, and perhaps even less in the lives of most
-women. Why then are the employments of the school-room
-arranged on the supposition that it is the grand force
-of all? The reason is, that we have inherited from the
-Renascence a false notion of the function of literature.</p>
-
-<p>§ 15. III. I must now point out a fault in the Renascence
-ideal which is perhaps the most remarkable of all.
-Those by whom this ideal was set up were entirely possessed
-by an enthusiasm for literature, and they made the mistake<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[14]</a></span>
-of attributing to literature a share in general culture which
-literature seems incapable of taking. After this we could
-little have expected that the new ideal would exclude
-literature from the schoolroom, and yet so it has actually
-turned out.</p>
-
-<p>As a literary creation contains the conceptions of an
-individual mind expressed in a permanent form of words, it
-exists only for those who can understand the words or at
-least the conceptions.</p>
-
-<p>From this it follows that literature for the young must
-have its expression in the vernacular. The instances are
-rare indeed in which any one below the age of fifteen or
-sixteen (perhaps I might put the limit a year or two higher)
-understands any but the mother tongue. In the mother
-tongue indeed some forms of literature exercise a great
-influence over young minds. Ballad literature seems
-especially to belong to youth, the youth of nations and
-of individuals. Aristotle educated Alexander with Homer;
-and we can easily imagine the effect which the <i>Iliad</i> must
-have had on the young Greeks. Although in the days of
-Plato instruction was not confined to literature, he gives
-this account of part of the training in the Athenian schools:
-“Placing the pupils on benches, the instructors make them
-read and learn by heart the poems of good poets in which
-are many moral lessons, many tales and eulogies and lays
-of the brave men of old; that the boys may imitate them
-with emulation and strive to become such themselves.”
-Here we see a very important function attributed to
-literature in the bringing up of the young; but the literature
-so used must obviously be in the language of the learners.</p>
-
-<p>The influence of a literary work may, however, extend itself
-far beyond the limits of its own language. When our minds<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[15]</a></span>
-can receive and take pleasure in the conceptions of a great
-writer, he may speak to us by an interpreter. At the
-Renascence there were books in the world which might have
-affected the minds of the young—Plutarch, Herodotus, and
-above all Homer. But, as I have already said, it was not the
-conceptions, but the literary form of the ancients, which
-seemed to the Renascence scholars of such inestimable value,
-so they refused to give the conceptions in any but the
-original words. “Studying the ancients in translations,” says
-Melancthon, “is merely looking at the shadow.” He could
-not have made a greater mistake. As far as the young are
-concerned the truth is exactly the reverse. The translation
-would give the substance: the original can give nothing but
-the shadow. Let us take the experience of Mr. Kinglake,
-the author of “Eothen.” This distinguished Eton man,
-fired by his remembrances of Homer, visited the Troad.
-He had, as he tells us, “clasped the <i>Iliad</i> line by line to his
-brain with reverence as well as love.” Well done, Eton! we
-are tempted to exclaim when we read this passage: here at
-least is proof that some <i>literature</i> was taught in those days
-of the dominion of the classics. But stop! It seems that
-this clasping did not take place at Eton, but in happy days
-before Eton, when Kinglake knew no Greek and read translations.
-“Heroic days are these,” he writes, “but the Dark
-Ages of schoolboy life come closing over them. I suppose
-it’s all right in the end: yet, by Jove! at first sight it does
-seem a sad intellectual fall.... The dismal change is
-ordained and thin meagre Latin (the same for everybody)
-with small shreds and patches of Greek, is thrown like a
-pauper’s pall over all your early lore; instead of sweet
-knowledge, vile monkish doggrel, grammars and graduses,
-dictionaries and lexicons, horrible odds and ends of dead<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[16]</a></span>
-languages are given you for your portion, and down you fall
-from Roman story to a three-inch scrap of ‘Scriptores
-Romani’—from Greek poetry down, down, to the cold
-rations of ‘Poetæ Græci,’ cut up by commentators and
-served out by schoolmasters!” (“Eothen,” the Troad.)</p>
-
-<p>We see from this how the Renascence ideal had the
-extraordinary effect of banishing literature from the school-room.
-Literature has indeed not ceased to influence the
-young; it still counts for much more in their lives than in
-the lives of their seniors; but we all know who are the
-writers who affected our own minds in childhood and youth,
-and who affect the minds of our pupils now—not Eutropius
-or Xenophon, or Cæsar or Cicero, but Defoe and Swift and
-Marryatt and Walter Scott. The ancient writings which
-were literature to Melancthon and Erasmus, as they are
-still to many in our universities and elsewhere, can never be
-literature to the young. Most of the classical authors read
-in the schoolroom could not be made literature to young
-people even by means of translations, for they were men who
-wrote for men and women only. We see that it would be
-absurd to make an ordinary boy of twelve or fourteen study
-Burke or Pope. And if we do not make him read Burke,
-whose language he understands, why do we make him read
-Cicero whose language he does not understand? If he cannot
-appreciate Pope, why do we teach him Horace? The
-Renascence gives us the explanation of this singular anomaly.
-The scholars of that age were so delighted with the “composite
-harmony” of the ancient classics that the study of these
-classics seemed to them the one thing worth living for. The
-main, if not the only object they kept in view in bringing up
-the young was to gain for them admission to the treasure
-house; and though young people could not understand the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[17]</a></span>
-ancient writings as literature, they might at least study
-them as language and thus be ready to enjoy them as literature
-in after-life. Thus the subject of instruction in the
-schoolroom came to be, not the classics but, the classical
-languages. The classics were used as school books, but the
-only meaning thought of was the meaning of the detached
-word or at best of the detached sentence. You ask a child
-learning to read if he understands what he is reading about,
-and he says, “I can’t think of the meaning because I am
-thinking of the words.” The same thing happened in the
-schoolboy’s study of the classics, and so it has come to pass
-that to this day the great writers of antiquity discharge a
-humble function which they certainly never contemplated.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">“Great Cæsar’s body dead and turned to clay</div>
-<div class="verse">May stop a hole to keep the wind away.”</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">And great Cæsar’s mind has been turned to uses almost as
-paltry. He has in fact written for the schoolroom not a
-commentary on the Wars of Gaul—nothing of the kind—but
-simply a book of exercises in Latin construing; and an
-excellent book it would be if he had only graduated the
-difficulties better.</p>
-
-<p>§ 16. IV. There is yet another weakness about the
-Renascence ideal—a weakness from which most ideals are
-free.</p>
-
-<p>Most ideals have this merit at least, that he who makes
-even a feeble and abortive attempt to reach them is benefited
-in proportion to his advance, however small that advance
-may be. If he fails to seize the coat of gold, he carries
-away, as the proverb tells us, at least one of the sleeves; or,
-to use George Herbert’s metaphor—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">“ ... Who aimeth at the sky,</div>
-<div class="verse">Shoots higher far than he who means a tree.”</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[18]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="noindent">But the learned ideal has not even this advantage. The
-first stage, the study of the ancient languages, is so totally
-different from the study of the ancient literatures to which
-it is the preliminary, that the student who never goes beyond
-this first stage either gets no benefit at all, or a benefit which
-is not of the kind intended. Suppose I am within a walk,
-though a long one, of the British Museum, and hearing of
-some valuable books in the library, which I can see nowhere
-else, I set off to consult them. In this case it makes no
-difference to me how valuable the books are if I do not
-get as far as the Museum.<a name="FNanchor_6" id="FNanchor_6"></a><a href="#Footnote_6" class="fnanchor">[6]</a> My friends may comfort me
-with the assurance that the walk must have done me
-good. Perhaps so; but I left home to get a knowledge of
-certain books, not to exercise my legs. Had exercise
-been my object I should probably have chosen another
-direction.</p>
-
-<p>Now schoolmasters, since the Renascence, have been in
-the habit of leading all their pupils through the back slums
-of the Seven Dials and Soho in the direction of the British
-Museum, with the avowed purpose of taking them to the
-library, although they knew full well that not one pupil in
-ten, not one in fifty, would ever reach the door. To produce
-a few scholars able to appreciate the classics of Greece and
-Rome they have sacrificed everybody else; and according
-to their own showing they have condemned a large portion
-of the upper classes, nearly all the middle classes, and quite
-all the poorer classes to remain “uneducated.” And, according
-to the theory of the schoolroom, one-half of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[19]</a></span>
-human race—the women—have not been supposed to need
-education. For them “accomplishments” have been held
-sufficient.</p>
-
-<p>§ 17. V. In conclusion I must point out one effect of
-the Renascence ideal which seems to me no less mischievous
-than those I have already mentioned. This ideal led the
-schoolmasters to attach little importance to the education of
-<i>children</i>. Directly their pupils were old enough for Latin
-Grammar the schoolmasters were quite at home; but till
-then the children’s time seemed to them of small value, and
-they neither knew nor cared to know how to employ it. If
-the little ones could learn by heart forms of words which
-would afterwards “come in useful,” the schoolmasters were
-ready to assist such learning by unsparing application of the
-rod, but no other learning seemed worthy even of a caning.
-Absorbed in the world of books they overlooked the world
-of nature. Galileo complains that he could not induce them
-to look through his telescope, for they held that truth could
-be arrived at only by comparison of MSS. No wonder then
-that they had so little sympathy with children, and did not
-know how to teach them. It is by slow degrees that we are
-breaking away from the bad tradition then established, are
-getting to understand children, and with such leaders as
-Rousseau, Pestalozzi, and Froebel, are investigating the best
-education for them. We no longer think of them as immature
-men and women, but see that each stage has its own
-completeness, and that there is a perfection in childhood
-which must precede the perfection of manhood just as truly
-as the flower goes before the fruit. “Childhood,” says
-Rousseau, “has its own ways of seeing, feeling, thinking;”
-and it is by studying these that we find out how children
-should be educated. Our connexion with the world of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[20]</a></span>
-nature seems much closer in our early years than ever
-afterwards. The child’s mind seems drawn out to its
-surroundings. He is intensely interested in the new world
-in which he finds himself, and whilst so many of us grown
-people need a flapper, like the sages of Laputa, to call our
-attention from our own thoughts to anything that meets the
-eye or ear, the child sees and hears everything, and everything
-seen or heard becomes associated in his mind not so
-much with thought as with feeling. Hence it is that we
-most of us look back wistfully to our early days, and confess
-sorrowfully that though years may have brought “the philosophic
-mind,”</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">“ ... Nothing can bring back the hour</div>
-<div class="verse">Of splendour in the grass, of glory in the flower.”</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The material world then seems to supply just those objects,
-whether birds, beasts, or flowers, by which the child is
-attracted, and on which his faculties will therefore be most
-naturally and healthily employed. But the Renascence
-schoolmasters had little notion of this. If you think that
-the greatest scholar is the greatest man, you will, as a
-matter of course, place at the other end of the scale those
-who are not scholars at all. An English inspector, who
-seems to have thought children had been created with due
-regard to the Revised Code of the Privy Council, spoke of
-the infants who could not be classed by their performances
-in “the three R’s” as “the fag end of the school;” and no
-doubt the Renascence schoolmasters considered the children
-the fag end of humanity. The great scholars were indeed
-far above the race of pedants; but the schoolmasters who
-adopted their ideal were not. And what is a pedant? “A
-man who has got rid of his brains to make room for his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[21]</a></span>
-learning.”<a name="FNanchor_7" id="FNanchor_7"></a><a href="#Footnote_7" class="fnanchor">[7]</a> The pedantic schoolmasters of the Renascence
-wished the mind of the pupil to be cleared of everything
-else, that it might have room for the languages of Greece
-and Rome. But what if the mind failed to take in its
-destined freight? In that case the schoolmasters had
-nothing else for it, and were content that it should go
-empty.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[22]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="II">II.<br />
-<span class="smaller">RENASCENCE TENDENCIES.</span></h2>
-
-<p>§ 1. In considering and comparing the two great epochs
-of intellectual activity and change in modern times, viz., the
-sixteenth century and the nineteenth, we cannot but be
-struck with one fundamental difference between them.</p>
-
-<p>§ 2. It will affect all our thoughts, as Sir Henry Maine has
-said, whether we place the Golden Age in the Past or in the
-Future. In the nineteenth century the “good time” is
-supposed to be “coming,” but in the sixteenth century all
-thinkers looked backwards. The great Italian scholars gazed
-with admiration and envy on the works of ancient Greece
-and Rome, and longed to restore the old languages, and as
-much as possible the old world, so that such works might be
-produced again. Many were suspected, not altogether perhaps
-without reason, of wishing to uproot Christianity itself,<a name="FNanchor_8" id="FNanchor_8"></a><a href="#Footnote_8" class="fnanchor">[8]</a>
-that they might bring back the Golden Age of Pericles.</p>
-
-<p>§ 3. At the same time another movement was going on,
-principally in Germany. Here too, men were endeavouring
-to throw off the immediate past in order to revive the remote<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[23]</a></span>
-past. The religious reformers, like the scholars, wished to
-restore a golden age, only a different age, not the age of the
-Antigone, but the age of the Apostles’ Creed. Thus it
-happened that the scholars and the reformers joined
-in attaching the very highest importance to the ancient
-languages. Through these languages, and, as they thought,
-through them alone, was it possible to get a glimpse into the
-bygone world in which their soul delighted.</p>
-
-<p>§ 4. But though all joined in extolling the ancient writings,
-we find at the Renascence great differences in the way
-of regarding these writings and in the objects for which they
-were employed. A consideration of these differences will
-help us to understand the course of education when the
-Renascence was a force no longer.</p>
-
-<p>§ 5. Very powerful in education were the great scholars,
-of whom Erasmus was perhaps the greatest, certainly the
-most celebrated. In devoting their lives to the study of the
-ancients their object was not merely to appreciate literary
-style, though this was a source of boundless delight to them,
-but also to <i>understand</i> the classical writings and the ancient
-world through them. These men, whom we may call <i>par
-excellence</i> the Scholars, cared indeed before all things for
-literature; but with all their delight in the form they never
-lost sight of the substance. They knew the truth that
-Milton afterwards expressed in these memorable words:
-“Though a linguist should pride himself to have all the
-tongues that Babel cleft the world into, yet if he have not
-studied the solid things in them as well as the words and
-lexicons, he were nothing so much to be esteemed a learned
-man as any yeoman or tradesman competently wise in his
-mother dialect only.” (Tractate to Hartlib, § 4).</p>
-
-<p>So Erasmus and the scholars would have all the educated<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[24]</a></span>
-<i>understand</i> the classical authors. But to understand words
-you must know the things to which the words refer. Thus
-the Scholars were led to advocate a partial study of things a
-kind of realism. But we must carefully observe a peculiarity
-of this scholastic realism which distinguished it from the
-realism of a later date—the realism of Bacon. The study
-of things was undertaken not for its own sake, but simply in
-order to understand books. Perhaps some of us are conscious
-that this kind of literary realism has not wholly passed
-away. We may have observed wild flowers, or the changes
-in tree or cloud, because we find that the best way to understand
-some favourite author, as Wordsworth or Tennyson.
-This will help us to understand the realism of the sixteenth
-century. The writings of great authors have been compared
-to the plaster globes (“celestial globes” as we call them),
-which assist us in understanding the configuration of the
-stars (<i>Guesses at Truth</i>, j. 47). Adopting this simile we may
-say that the Scholars loved to study the globe for its own
-sake, and when they looked at stars they did so with the
-object of understanding the globe. Thus we read of doctors
-who recommended their pupils to look at actual cases of
-disease as the best commentary on the works of Hippocrates
-and Galen. This kind of realism was good as far as it went,
-but it did not go far. Of course the end in view limited
-the study, and the Scholars took no interest in things except
-those which were mentioned in the classics. They had no
-desire to investigate the material universe and make discoveries
-for themselves. This is why Galileo could not
-induce them to look through his telescope; for the ancients
-had no telescopes, and the Scholars wished to see nothing
-that had not been seen by their favourite authors. First
-then we have the Scholars, headed by Erasmus.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[25]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>§ 6. Next we find a party less numerous and for a time
-less influential, who did care about things for the sake of the
-things themselves; but carried away by the literary current
-of their age, they sought to learn about them not directly,
-but only by reading. Here again we have a kind of realism
-which is not yet extinct. Some years ago I was assured by
-a Graduate of the University of London who had passed in
-chemistry, that, as far as he knew, he had never seen a
-chemical in his life: he had got all his knowledge from
-books. While such a thing is possible among us, we need
-not wonder if those who in the sixteenth century prized the
-knowledge of things, allowed books to come between the
-learner and the object of his study, if they regarded Nature
-as a far-off country of which we could know nothing but
-what great authors reported to us.</p>
-
-<p>As this party, unlike the Scholars, did not delight in literature
-as such, but simply as a means of acquiring knowledge,
-literary form was not valued by them, and they preferred
-Euclid to Sophocles, Columella to Virgil. Seeking to learn
-about things, not immediately, but through words, they have
-received from Raumer a name they are likely to keep—Verbal
-Realists. In the sixteenth century the greatest of the
-Verbal Realists also gave a hint of Realism proper; for he
-was no less a man than Rabelais.</p>
-
-<p>§ 7. Lastly we come to those who, as it turned out, were
-to have more influence in the schoolroom than the Scholars
-and the Verbal Realists combined. I do not know that
-these have had any name given them, but for distinction
-sake we may call them <i>Stylists</i>. In studying literature the
-Scholars cared both for form and substance, the Verbal
-Realists for substance only, and the Stylists for form only.
-The Stylists gave up their lives, not, like the scholars, to gain<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[26]</a></span>
-a thorough understanding of the ancient writings and of the
-old world, but to an attempted reproduction of the ancient
-languages and of the classical literary form.</p>
-
-<p>§ 8. In marking these tendencies at the Renascence, we
-must remember that though distinguished by their tendencies,
-these Scholars, Verbal Realists, and Stylists, were not
-divided into clearly defined parties. Categories like these
-no doubt assist us in gaining precision of thought, but we
-must not gain precision at the expense of accuracy. The
-tendencies we have been considering did not act in precisely
-opposite directions, and all were to some extent affected by
-them. But one tendency was predominant in one man
-and another in another; and this justifies us in calling
-Sturm a Stylist, Erasmus a Scholar, and Rabelais a Verbal
-Realist.</p>
-
-<p>§ 9. In one respect they were all agreed. The world was
-to be regenerated by means of books. Nothing pleased
-them more than to think of their age as the Revival of
-Learning.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[27]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="III">III.<br />
-<span class="smaller">STURMIUS.<br />
-1507-1589.</span></h2>
-
-<p>§ 1. The curriculum bequeathed by the Renascence and
-stereotyped in the School Codes of Germany, in the <i>Ratio</i>
-of the Jesuits, and in the English public school system, was
-greatly influenced by the most famous schoolmaster of the
-fifteen hundreds, John Sturm, who was for over forty years
-Rector of the Strassburg Gymnasium.</p>
-
-<p>§ 2. Sturm was a fine specimen of the successful man:
-he knew what his contemporaries wanted, and that was just
-what he wanted. “He was a blessed fellow,” as Prince Hal
-says of Poins, “to think as every man thought,” and he not
-only “kept the roadway” himself, but he also “personally
-conducted” great bands of pupils over it, at one time “200
-noblemen, 24 counts and barons, and 3 princes.” What
-could schoolmaster desire more?</p>
-
-<p>§ 3. But I frankly own that Sturm is no favourite of mine,
-and that I think that he did much harm to education.
-However, his influence in the schoolroom was so great that
-I must not leave him unnoticed; and I give some information,
-taken mainly from Raumer’s account of him, which is
-translated in Henry Barnard’s “German Teachers and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[28]</a></span>
-Educators.” I have also looked at the exhaustive article by
-Dr. Bossier in K. A. Schmid’s <i>Encyklopädie</i> (<i>sub v.</i>)</p>
-
-<p>§ 4. John Sturm, born at Schleiden in the Eifel, not far
-from Cologne, in 1507, was one of 15 children, and would
-not have had much teaching had not his father been steward
-to a nobleman, with whose sons he was brought up. He
-always spoke with reverence and affection of his early teachers,
-and from them no doubt he acquired his thirst for learning.
-With the nobleman’s sons and under the guidance of a tutor
-he was sent to Liège, and there he attended a school of the
-“Brethren of the Life in Common,” <i>alias</i> Hieronymites.
-Many of the arrangements of this school he afterwards
-reproduced in the Strassburg Gymnasium, and in this way
-the good Brethren gained an influence over classical education
-throughout the world.</p>
-
-<p>§ 5. Between the age of 15 and 20 Sturm was at Lyons,
-and before the end of this period he was forced into teaching
-for a maintenance. He then, like many other learned men
-of the time, turned printer. We next find him at the
-University of Paris, where he thought of becoming a doctor
-of medicine, but was finally carried away from natural science
-by the Renascence devotion to literature, and he became a
-popular lecturer on the classics. From Paris he was called
-to Strassburg (then, as now, in Germany) in 1537. In 1538
-he published his plan of a Gymnasium or Grammar School,
-with the title, “The right way of opening schools of literature
-(<i>De Literarum Ludis recte aperiendis</i>),” and some years
-afterwards (1565) he published his Letters (<i>Classicæ Epistolæ</i>)
-to the different form-masters in his school.</p>
-
-<p>§ 6. The object of teaching is three-fold, says Sturm,
-“piety, knowledge, and the art of expression.” The student
-should be distinguished by reasonable and neat speech<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[29]</a></span>
-(<i>ratione et oratione</i>). To attain this the boys in his school
-had to give seven years to the acquirement of a pure Latin
-style; then two years more were devoted to elegance; then
-five years of collegiate life were to be given to the art of
-Latin speech. This course is for ten years carefully mapped
-out by Sturm in his Letters to the masters. The foundation
-is to be laid in the tenth class, which the child enters at seven
-years old, and in which he learns to read, and is turned on
-to the declensions and conjugations. We have for all classes
-the exact “pensum,” and also specimens of the questions put
-in examination by the <i>top boy of the next class above</i>, a hint
-which was not thrown away upon the Jesuits.</p>
-
-<p>§ 7. Sturm cries over the superior advantages of the
-Roman children. “Cicero was but twenty when he delivered
-his speeches in behalf of Quintius and Roscius; but in these
-days where is there the man even of eighty, who could make
-such speeches? Yet there are books enough and intellect
-enough. What need we further? We need the Latin
-language and a correct method of teaching. Both these we
-must have before we can arrive at the summit of eloquence.”</p>
-
-<p>§ 8. Sturm did not, like Rabelais, put Greek on a level
-with Latin or above it. The reading of Greek words is begun
-in the sixth class. Hebrew, Sturm did not himself learn till
-he was nearly sixty.</p>
-
-<p>§ 9. With a thousand boys in his school, and carrying on
-correspondence with the leading sovereigns of his age, Sturm
-was a model of the successful man. But in the end “the
-religious difficulty” was too much even for him, and he was
-dismissed from his post by his opponents “for old age and
-other causes.” Surely the “other causes” need not have
-been mentioned. Sturm was then eighty years old.</p>
-
-<p>§ 10. The successful man in every age is the man who<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[30]</a></span>
-chooses a popular and attainable object, and shows tremendous
-energy in pursuit of it. Most people don’t know
-precisely what they want; and among the few who do,
-nine-tenths or more fail through lack of energy. But Sturm
-was quite clear in his aim, and having settled the means, he
-showed immense energy and strength of will in going through
-with them. He wanted to restore the language of Cicero
-and Ovid and to give his pupils great power of elegant
-expression in that language. Like all schoolmasters he
-professed that piety and knowledge (which in more modern
-phrase would be wisdom and knowledge) should come first,
-but like most schoolmasters he troubled himself mainly, if
-not exclusively, about the art of expression. As an abstract
-proposition the schoolmaster admits that to have in your
-head something worth saying is more important than to have
-the power of expression ready in case anything worth saying
-should “come along.” But the schoolmaster’s art always
-has taken, and I suppose, in the main, always will take for
-its material the means of expression; and by preference it
-chooses a tongue not vulgar or “understanded of the people.”
-Thus the schoolmasters with Sturm at their head set themselves
-to teach <i>words</i>—foreign words, and allowed their
-pupils to study nothing else, not even the mother tongue.
-The satirist who wrote Hudibras has stated for us the result—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">“No sooner are the organs of the brain</div>
-<div class="verse">Quick to receive and stedfast to retain</div>
-<div class="verse">Best knowledges, but all’s laid out upon</div>
-<div class="verse">Retrieving of the curse of Babylon.</div>
-<div class="verse">...</div>
-<div class="verse">And he that is but able to express</div>
-<div class="verse">No sense in several languages</div>
-<div class="verse">Will pass for learneder than he that’s known</div>
-<div class="verse">To speak the strongest reason in his own.”<a name="FNanchor_9" id="FNanchor_9"></a><a href="#Footnote_9" class="fnanchor">[9]</a></div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[31]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>§ 11. One of the scholars of the Renascence, Hieronymus
-Wolf, was wise enough to see that there might be no small
-merit in a boy’s silence: “Nec minima pueri virtus est
-tacere cum recte loqui nesciat” (Quoted by Parker). But
-this virtue of silence was not encouraged by Sturm, and he
-determined that by the age of sixteen his pupils should
-have a fair command of expression in Latin and some knowledge
-of Greek.<a name="FNanchor_10" id="FNanchor_10"></a><a href="#Footnote_10" class="fnanchor">[10]</a> Latin indeed was to supplant the mother
-tongue, and boys were to be severely punished for using
-their own language. By this we may judge of the pernicious
-effects of following Sturm. And it is a mistake to suppose
-that the unwisdom of tilting at the vernacular was not so
-much Sturm’s, as of the age in which he lived. The typical
-English schoolmaster of the century, Mulcaster, was in this
-and many other ways greatly in advance of Sturm. To him
-it was plain that we should “care for that most which we
-ever use most, because we need it most.”<a name="FNanchor_11" id="FNanchor_11"></a><a href="#Footnote_11" class="fnanchor">[11]</a> The only need
-recognized by Sturm was need of the classical languages.
-Thus he and his admirers led the unlucky schoolboy
-straight into that “slough of Despond”—verbalism, in which
-he has struggled ever since;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">“Plunged for some sense, but found no bottom there,</div>
-<div class="verse">So learned and floundered on in mere despair.”<a name="FNanchor_12" id="FNanchor_12"></a><a href="#Footnote_12" class="fnanchor">[12]</a></div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[32]</a></span></p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[33]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="IV">IV.<br />
-<span class="smaller">SCHOOLS OF THE JESUITS.</span></h2>
-
-<p>§ 1. Since the Revival of Learning, no body of men has
-played so prominent a part in education as the Jesuits.
-With characteristic sagacity and energy they soon seized on
-education as a stepping-stone to power and influence; and
-with their talent for organization, they framed a system of
-schools which drove all important competitors from the field,
-and made Jesuits the instructors of Catholic, and even, to
-some extent, of Protestant Europe. Their skill in this
-capacity is attested by the highest authorities, by Bacon<a name="FNanchor_13" id="FNanchor_13"></a><a href="#Footnote_13" class="fnanchor">[13]</a>
-and by Descartes, the latter of whom had himself been their
-pupil; and it naturally met with its reward: for more than<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[34]</a></span>
-one hundred years nearly all the foremost men throughout
-Christendom, both among the clergy and laity, had received
-the Jesuit training, and in most cases retained for life an
-attachment to their old masters.</p>
-
-<p>§ 2. About these Jesuit schools—once so celebrated and
-so powerful, and still existing in great numbers, though
-little remains of their original importance—there does not
-seem to be much information accessible to the English
-reader. I have, therefore, collected the following particulars
-about them; and refer any one who is dissatisfied with so
-meagre an account, to the works which I have consulted.<a name="FNanchor_14" id="FNanchor_14"></a><a href="#Footnote_14" class="fnanchor">[14]</a>
-The Jesuit schools, as I said, still exist, but they did their<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[35]</a></span>
-great work in other centuries; and I therefore prefer to
-speak of them as things of the past.<a name="FNanchor_15" id="FNanchor_15"></a><a href="#Footnote_15" class="fnanchor">[15]</a></p>
-
-<p>§ 3. When the Jesuits were first formally recognized by
-a Bull of Paul III in 1540, the Bull stated that the Order
-was formed, among other things, “especially for the purpose
-of instructing boys and ignorant persons in the Christian
-religion.” But the Society well understood that secular was
-more in demand than religious learning; and they offered
-the more valued instruction, that they might have the
-opportunity of inculcating lessons which, to the Society at
-least, were the more valuable. From various Popes they
-obtained powers for founding schools and colleges, for giving
-degrees, and for lecturing publicly at universities. Their
-foundations rapidly extended in the Romance countries,
-except in France, where they were long in overcoming the
-opposition of the Regular clergy and of the University of
-Paris. Over the Teutonic and Slavonic countries they
-spread their influence first by means of national colleges at
-Rome, where boys of the different nations were trained as
-missionaries. But, in time, the Jesuits pushed their camps
-forward, even into the heart of the enemy’s country.</p>
-
-<p>§ 4. The system of education to be adopted in all the
-Jesuit institutions was settled during the Generalship of
-Aquaviva. In 1584 that General appointed a School
-Commission, consisting of six distinguished Jesuits from the
-various countries of Europe. These spent nearly a year in
-Rome, in study and consultation; and the fruit of their<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[36]</a></span>
-labours was the ground-work of the <i>Ratio atque Institutio
-Studiorum Societatis Jesu</i>. This, however, did not take its
-final form till twelve other commissioners had been at
-work upon it. It was then (1599) revised and approved
-by Aquaviva and the Fifth and Sixth General Assemblies.
-By this code the Jesuit schools were governed till 1832,
-when the curriculum was enlarged so as to include physical
-science and modern languages.</p>
-
-<p>§ 5. The Jesuits who formed the <i>Societas Professa</i>, <i>i.e.</i>,
-those who had taken all the vows, had spent from fifteen
-to eighteen years in preparation, viz., two years as novices
-and one as approved scholars, during which they were
-engaged chiefly in religious exercises, three years in the
-study of philosophy and mathematics, four years of theology,
-and, in the case of the more distinguished students, two
-years more in repetition and private theological study. At
-some point in this course, mostly after the philosophy, the
-students were sent, for a while, to teach the “lower studies”
-to boys.<a name="FNanchor_16" id="FNanchor_16"></a><a href="#Footnote_16" class="fnanchor">[16]</a> The method of teaching was to be learnt in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[37]</a></span>
-training schools, called Juvenats,<a name="FNanchor_17" id="FNanchor_17"></a><a href="#Footnote_17" class="fnanchor">[17]</a> one of which was founded
-in each province.</p>
-
-<p>Few, even of the most distinguished students, received
-dispensation from giving elementary instruction. Salmeron
-and Bobadilla performed this duty in Naples, Lainez in
-Florence, Borgia (who had been Viceroy of Catalonia) in
-Cordova, Canisius in Cologne.</p>
-
-<p>§ 6. During the time the Jesuit held his post as teacher
-he was to give himself up entirely to the work. His
-private studies were abandoned; his religious exercises
-shortened. He began generally with the boys in the lowest
-form, and that he might be able to study the character of
-his pupils he went up the school with them, advancing a
-step every year, as in the system now common in Scotland.
-But some forms were always taught, as the highest is in
-Scotland, by the same master, who remained a teacher for
-life.</p>
-
-<p>§ 7. Great care was to be taken that the frequent changes
-in the staff of masters did not lead to alteration in the
-conduct of the school. Each teacher was bound to carry
-on the established instruction by the established methods.
-All his personal peculiarities and opinions were to be as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[38]</a></span>
-much as possible suppressed. To secure this a rigid system
-of supervision was adopted, and reports were furnished by
-each officer to his immediate superior. Over all stood the
-General of the Order. Next came the Provincial, appointed
-by the General. Over each college was the Rector, who
-was appointed (for three years) by the General, though he
-was responsible to the Provincial, and made his reports to
-him. Next came the Prefect of Studies, appointed, not by
-the Rector, but by the Provincial. The teachers were
-carefully watched both by the Rector and the Prefect of
-Studies, and it was the duty of the latter to visit each
-teacher in his class at least once a fortnight, to hear him
-teach. The other authorities, besides the masters of classes,
-were usually a House Prefect, and Monitors selected from
-the boys, one in each form.</p>
-
-<p>§ 8. The school or college was to be built and maintained
-by gifts and bequests which the Society might receive for
-this purpose only. Their instruction was always given
-gratuitously. When sufficient funds were raised to support
-the officers, teachers, and at least twelve scholars, no effort
-was to be made to increase them; but if they fell short of
-this, donations were to be sought by begging from house to
-house. Want of money, however, was not a difficulty which
-the Jesuits often experienced.</p>
-
-<p>§ 9. The Jesuit education included two courses of study,
-<i>studia superiora et inferiora</i>. In the smaller colleges only the
-<i>studia inferiora</i> were carried on; and it is to these <i>lower schools</i>
-that the following account mainly refers. The boys usually
-began this course at ten years old and ended it at sixteen.<a name="FNanchor_18" id="FNanchor_18"></a><a href="#Footnote_18" class="fnanchor">[18]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[39]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>§ 10. The pupils in the Jesuit colleges were of two kinds:
-1st, those who were training for the Order, and had passed
-the Novitiate; 2nd, the externs, who were pupils merely.
-When the building was not filled by the first of these (the
-Scholastici, or <i>Nostri</i>, as they are called in the Jesuit
-writings), other pupils were taken in to board, who had to
-pay simply the cost of their living, and not even this unless
-they could well afford it. Instruction, as I said, was
-gratuitous to all. “Gratis receive, gratis give,” was the
-Society’s rule; so they would neither make any charge for
-instruction, nor accept any gift that was burdened with
-conditions.</p>
-
-<p>§ 11. Faithful to the tradition of the Catholic Church,
-the Society did not estimate a man’s worth simply according
-to his birth and outward circumstances. The Constitutions
-expressly laid down that poverty and mean extraction were
-never to be any hindrance to a pupil’s admission; and
-Sacchini says: “Do not let any favouring of the higher
-classes interfere with the care of meaner pupils, since the
-birth of all is equal in Adam, and the inheritance in
-Christ.”<a name="FNanchor_19" id="FNanchor_19"></a><a href="#Footnote_19" class="fnanchor">[19]</a></p>
-
-<p>§ 12. The externs who could not be received into the
-building were boarded in licensed houses, which were always
-liable to an unexpected visit from the Prefect of Studies.</p>
-
-<p>§ 13. The “lower school” was arranged in five classes
-(since increased to eight), of which the lowest usually had
-two divisions. Parallel classes were formed wherever the
-number of pupils was too great for five masters. The
-names given to the several divisions were as follows:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[40]</a></span></p>
-
-<table summary="The names given to the several divisions">
- <tr>
- <td>1.</td>
- <td>Infima</td>
- <td>}</td>
- <td rowspan="3">Classis Grammaticæ.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>2.</td>
- <td>Media</td>
- <td>}</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>3.</td>
- <td>Suprema</td>
- <td>}</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>4.</td>
- <td>Humanitas.</td>
- <td></td>
- <td></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>5.</td>
- <td>Rhetorica.</td>
- <td></td>
- <td></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p>Each was “absolved” in a year, except Rhetorica, which
-required two years (Stöckl, p. 237).</p>
-
-<p>Jesuits and Protestants alike in the sixteenth and seventeenth
-centuries thought of little but literary instruction, and
-that too connected only with Latin and Greek. The
-subject-matter of the teaching in the Jesuit schools was to
-be “præter Grammaticam, quod ad Rhetoricam, Poësim et
-Historiam pertinet,” in addition to Grammar, whatever
-related to Rhetoric, Poetry, and History. Reading and
-writing the mother-tongue might not be taught without
-special leave from the Provincial. Latin was as much
-as possible to supersede all other languages, even in
-speaking; and nothing else might be used by the pupils
-in the higher forms on any day but a holiday.<a name="FNanchor_20" id="FNanchor_20"></a><a href="#Footnote_20" class="fnanchor">[20]</a> To gain
-a supply of Latin words for ordinary use, the pupils committed
-to memory Latin conversations on general topics,
-such as Francis Pomey’s “Indiculus Universalis” and “Colloquia
-Scholastica.”</p>
-
-<p>§ 14. Although many good school-books were written by
-the Jesuits, a great part of their teaching was given orally.
-The master was, in fact, a lecturer, who expounded sometimes
-a piece of a Latin or Greek author, sometimes the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[41]</a></span>
-rules of grammar. The pupils were required to get up the
-substance of these lectures, and to learn the grammar-rules
-and parts of the classical authors by heart. The master
-for his part had to bestow great pains on the preparation of
-his lectures.<a name="FNanchor_21" id="FNanchor_21"></a><a href="#Footnote_21" class="fnanchor">[21]</a></p>
-
-<p>§ 15. Written exercises, translations, &amp;c., were given in
-on every day, except Saturday; and the master had, if
-possible, to go over each one with its writer and his
-appointed rival or <i>æmulus</i>.</p>
-
-<p>§ 16. The method of hearing the rules, &amp;c., committed
-to memory was this:—Certain boys in each class, who were
-called Decurions, repeated their tasks to the master, and
-then in his presence heard the other boys repeat theirs.
-The master meanwhile corrected the written exercises.<a name="FNanchor_22" id="FNanchor_22"></a><a href="#Footnote_22" class="fnanchor">[22]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[42]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>§ 17. One of the leading peculiarities in the Jesuits’
-system was the pains they took to foster emulation—“cotem
-ingenii puerilis, calcar industriæ—the whetstone of talent,
-the spur of industry.” For this purpose all the boys in the
-lower part of the school were arranged in pairs, each pair
-being rivals (<i>æmuli</i>) to one another. Every boy was to be
-constantly on the watch to catch his rival tripping, and was
-immediately to correct him. Besides this individual rivalry,
-every class was divided into two hostile camps, called
-Rome and Carthage, which had frequent pitched battles of
-questions on set subjects. These were the “Concertations,”
-in which the boys sometimes had to put questions to the
-opposite camp, sometimes to expose erroneous answers when
-the questions were asked by the master<a name="FNanchor_23" id="FNanchor_23"></a><a href="#Footnote_23" class="fnanchor">[23]</a> (see Appendix:
-Class Matches, p. 529). Emulation, indeed, was encouraged
-to a point where, as it seems to me, it must have
-endangered the good feeling of the boys among themselves.
-Jouvency mentions a practice of appointing mock defenders
-of any particularly bad exercise, who should make the
-author of it ridiculous by their excuses; and any boy whose
-work was very discreditable, was placed on a form by himself,
-with a daily punishment, until he could show that some
-one deserved to change places with him.</p>
-
-<p>§ 18. In the higher classes a better kind of rivalry was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[43]</a></span>
-cultivated by means of “Academies,” <i>i.e.</i>, voluntary associations
-for study, which met together, under the superintendence
-of a master, to read themes, translations, &amp;c., and to discuss
-passages from the classics. The new members were elected
-by the old, and to be thus elected was a much-coveted
-distinction. In these Academies the cleverer students got
-practice for the disputations, which formed an important
-part of the school work of the higher classes.</p>
-
-<p>§ 19. There was a vast number of other expedients by
-which the Jesuits sought to work on their pupils’ <i>amour
-propre</i>, such as, on the one hand, the weekly publication of
-offences <i>per præconem</i>, and, on the other, besides prizes
-(which could be won only by the externs), titles and badges
-of honour, and the like. “There are,” says Jouvency,
-“hundreds of expedients of this sort, all tending to sharpen
-the boys’ wits, to lighten the labour of the master, and to
-free him from the invidious and troublesome necessity of
-punishing.”</p>
-
-<p>§ 20. The school-hours were remarkably short: two
-hours and a half in the morning, and the same in the afternoon;
-with a whole holiday a week in summer, and a half
-holiday in winter. The time was spent in the first form
-after the following manner:—During the first half-hour the
-master corrected the exercises of the previous day, while the
-Decurions heard the lesson which had been learnt by heart.
-Then the master heard the piece of Latin which he had
-explained on the previous day. With this construing, was
-connected a great deal of parsing, conjugating, declining, &amp;c.
-The teacher then explained the piece for the following day,
-which, in this form, was never to exceed four lines. The
-last half-hour of the morning was spent in explaining
-grammar. This was done very slowly and carefully: in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[44]</a></span>
-words of the <i>Ratio Studd.</i>: “Pluribus diebus fere singula
-præcepta inculcanda sunt”—“Generally take a single rule and
-drive it in, several days.” For the first hour of the afternoon
-the master corrected exercises, and the boys learnt
-grammar. If there was time, the master put questions
-about the grammar he had explained in the morning. The
-second hour was taken up with more explanations of
-grammar, and the school closed with half an hour’s concertation,
-or the master corrected the notes which the pupils
-had taken during the day. In the other forms, the work
-was very similar to this, except that Greek was added, and
-also in the higher classes a little mathematics.</p>
-
-<p>§ 21. It will be observed from the above account, that
-almost all the strength of the Jesuit teaching was thrown
-into the study of the Latin language, which was to be used,
-not only for reading, but also in writing and speaking. But
-under the name of “erudition” some amount of instruction
-in other subjects, especially in history and geography, was
-given in explaining, or rather lecturing on, the classical
-authors. Jouvency says that this lecture must consist of the
-following parts:—1st, the general meaning of the whole
-passage; 2nd, the explanation of each clause, both as to the
-meaning and construction; 3rd, any information, such as
-accounts of historical events, or of ancient manners and
-customs, which could be connected with the text; 4th, in
-the higher forms, applications of the rules of rhetoric and
-poetry; 5th, an examination of the Latinity; 6th, the inculcation
-of some moral lesson. This treatment of a subject
-he illustrates by examples. Among these is an account of
-a lesson for the first (<i>i.e.</i>, lowest) class in the Fable of the
-Fox and the Mask:—1st, comes the argument and the
-explanation of words; 2nd, the grammar and parsing, as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[45]</a></span>
-<i>vulpes</i>, a substantive of the third declension, &amp;c., like
-<i>proles</i>, <i>clades</i>, &amp;c. (here the master is always to give among
-his examples some which the boys already know); 3rd,
-comes the <i>eruditio</i>—something about foxes, about tragedy,
-about the brain, and hence about other parts of the
-head; 4th, Latinity, the order of the words, choice of the
-words, synonyms, &amp;c. Then the sentences may be parodied;
-other suitable substantives may be found for the adjectives
-and <i>vice versâ</i>; and every method is to be adopted of
-showing the boys how to <i>use</i> the words they have learnt.
-Lastly, comes the moral.</p>
-
-<p>§ 22. The practical teacher will be tempted to ask, How
-is the attention of the class to be kept up whilst all this
-information is given? This the Jesuits did partly by punishing
-the inattentive. Every boy was subsequently required
-to reproduce what the teacher had said, and to show his
-written notes of it. But no doubt this matter of attention
-was found a difficulty. Jouvency tells the teachers to
-break off from time to time in their lectures, and to ask
-questions; and he adds: “Variæ sunt artes excitandæ
-attentionis quas docebit usus et sua cuique industria suggeret.—Very
-various are the devices for arousing attention.
-These will occur with practice and pains.”</p>
-
-<p>For private study, besides written exercises and learning
-by heart, the pupils were recommended subjects to get up
-in their own time; and in this, and also as to the length of
-some of the regular lessons, they were permitted to decide
-for themselves. Here, as everywhere, the Jesuits trusted to
-the sense of honour and emulation—those who did extra
-work were praised and rewarded.</p>
-
-<p>§ 23. One of the maxims of this system was: “Repetitio
-mater studiorum.” Every lesson was connected with two<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[46]</a></span>
-repetitions—one before it began, of preceding work, and the
-other at the close, of the work just done. Besides this, one
-day a week was devoted entirely to repetition. In the three
-lowest classes the desire of laying a solid foundation even
-led to the second six months in the year being given to
-again going over the work of the first six months.<a name="FNanchor_24" id="FNanchor_24"></a><a href="#Footnote_24" class="fnanchor">[24]</a> By this
-means boys of extraordinary ability could pass through these
-forms in eighteen months, instead of three years.</p>
-
-<p>§ 23. <i>Thoroughness</i> in work was the one thing insisted
-on. Sacchini says that much time should be spent in going
-over the more important things, which are “veluti multorum
-fontes et capita (as it were the sources and starting points of
-many others)”; and that the master should prefer to teach a
-few things perfectly, to giving indistinct impressions of many
-things.<a name="FNanchor_25" id="FNanchor_25"></a><a href="#Footnote_25" class="fnanchor">[25]</a> We should remember, however, that the pupils of
-the Jesuits were not <i>children</i>. Subjects such as grammar
-cannot, by any expenditure of time and trouble, be perfectly
-taught to children, because children cannot perfectly understand
-them; so that the Jesuit thoroughness is not always
-attainable.</p>
-
-<p>§ 24. The usual duration of the course in the lower
-schools was six years—<i>i.e.</i>, one year in each of the four<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[47]</a></span>
-lower classes, and two years in the highest class. Every
-year closed with a very formal examination. Before this
-examination took place, the pupils had lessons in the manner
-of it, so that they might come prepared, not only with a
-knowledge of the subjects, but also of the laws of writing for
-examination (“scribendi ad examen leges”). The examination
-was conducted by a commission appointed for the
-purpose, of which commission the Prefect of Studies was an
-<i>ex officio</i> member. The masters of the classes, though they
-were present, and could make remarks, were not of the
-examining body. For the <i>vivâ voce</i> the boys were ushered
-in, three at a time, before the solemn conclave. The results
-of the examination, both written and verbal, were joined
-with the records of the work done in the past year; and the
-names of those pupils who had distinguished themselves
-were then published in order of merit, but the poll was
-arranged alphabetically, or according to birthplace.</p>
-
-<p>§ 25. As might be expected, the Jesuits were to be very
-careful of the moral and religious training of their pupils.
-“Quam maxime in vitæ probitate ac bonis artibus doctrinaque
-proficiant ad Dei gloriam.” (<i>Ratio Studd.</i>, quoted by Schmid.)
-And Sacchini tells the master to remember how honourable
-his office is; as it has to do, not with grammar only, but
-also with the science and practice of a Christian and religious
-life: “atque eo quidem ordine ut ipsa ingenii eruditio sit
-expolitio morum, et humana literatura divinæ ancilletur
-sapientiæ.”<a name="FNanchor_26" id="FNanchor_26"></a><a href="#Footnote_26" class="fnanchor">[26]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[48]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Each lesson was to begin with prayer or the sign of the
-Cross. The pupils were to hear Mass every morning, and
-were to be urged to frequent confession and receiving of the
-Holy Communion. The Father Confessor was always a
-Jesuit, but he was not a master in the school.</p>
-
-<p>§ 26. The bodily health also was to be carefully attended
-to. The pupils were not to study too much or too long
-at a time. Nothing was to be done for a space of from one
-or two hours after dinner. On holidays excursions were
-made to farms in the country.<a name="FNanchor_27" id="FNanchor_27"></a><a href="#Footnote_27" class="fnanchor">[27]</a></p>
-
-<p>§ 27. Punishments were to be as light as possible, and
-the master was to shut his eyes to offences whenever he
-thought he might do so with safety. Grave offences were to
-be visited with corporal punishment, performed by a
-“corrector,” who was not a member of the Order. Where this
-chastisement did not have a good effect, the pupil was to be
-expelled.<a name="FNanchor_28" id="FNanchor_28"></a><a href="#Footnote_28" class="fnanchor">[28]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[49]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>§ 28. The dry details into which I have been drawn by
-faithfully copying the manner of the <i>Ratio Studiorum</i> may
-seem to the reader to afford no answer to the question
-which naturally suggests itself—To what did the school-system
-of the Jesuits owe its enormous popularity? But in
-part, at least, these details do afford an answer. They
-show us that the Jesuits were intensely practical. The
-<i>Ratio Studiorum</i> hardly contains a single principle; but
-what it does is this—it points out a perfectly attainable goal,
-and carefully defines the road by which that goal is to be
-approached. For each class was prescribed not only the work
-to be done, but also the end to be kept in view. Thus
-method reigned throughout—perhaps not the best method,
-as the object to be attained was assuredly not the highest
-object—but the method, such as it was, was applied with
-undeviating exactness. In this particular the Jesuit schools
-contrasted strongly with their rivals of old, as indeed with
-the ordinary school of the present day. The Head Master,
-who is to the modern English school what the General,
-Provincial, Rector, Prefect of Studies, and <i>Ratio Studiorum</i>
-combined were to a school of the Jesuits, has perhaps no
-standard in view up to which the boy should have been
-brought when his school course is completed.<a name="FNanchor_29" id="FNanchor_29"></a><a href="#Footnote_29" class="fnanchor">[29]</a> The
-masters of forms teach just those portion of their subject in
-which they themselves are interested, in any way that occurs
-to them, with by no means uniform success; so that when
-two forms are examined with the same examination paper, it
-is no very uncommon occurrence for the lower to be found<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[50]</a></span>
-superior to the higher. It is, perhaps, to be expected that a
-course in which uniform method tends to a definite goal would
-on the whole be more successful than one in which a boy has
-to accustom himself by turns to half-a-dozen different
-methods, invented at haphazard by individual masters with
-different aims in view, if indeed they have any aim at all.</p>
-
-<p>§ 29. I have said that the object which the Jesuits proposed
-in their teaching was not the highest object. They
-did not aim at developing <i>all</i> the faculties of their pupils,
-but mainly the receptive and reproductive faculties. When
-the young man had acquired a thorough mastery of the
-Latin language for all purposes, when he was well versed in
-the theological and philosophical opinions of his preceptors,
-when he was skilful in dispute, and could make a brilliant
-display from the resources of a well-stored memory, he had
-reached the highest point to which the Jesuits sought to lead
-him.<a name="FNanchor_30" id="FNanchor_30"></a><a href="#Footnote_30" class="fnanchor">[30]</a> Originality and independence of mind, love of truth<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[51]</a></span>
-for its own sake, the power of reflecting, and of forming
-correct judgments were not merely neglected—they were
-suppressed in the Jesuits’ system. But in what they attempted
-they were eminently successful, and their success went a
-long way towards securing their popularity.<a name="FNanchor_31" id="FNanchor_31"></a><a href="#Footnote_31" class="fnanchor">[31]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[52]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>§ 30. Their popularity was due, moreover, to the means
-employed, as well as to the result attained. The Jesuit
-teachers were to <i>lead</i>, not drive their pupils, to make their
-learning, not merely endurable, but even acceptable, “disciplinam
-non modo tolerabilem, sed etiam amabilem.”
-Sacchini expresses himself very forcibly on this subject.
-“It is,” says he, “the unvarying decision of wise men,
-whether in ancient or modern times, that the instruction
-of youth will be always best when it is pleasantest: whence
-this application of the word <i>ludus</i>. The tenderness of
-youth requires of us that we should not overstrain it, its
-innocence that we should abstain from harshness....
-That which enters into willing ears the mind as it were
-runs to welcome, seizes with avidity, carefully stows away,
-and faithfully preserves.”<a name="FNanchor_32" id="FNanchor_32"></a><a href="#Footnote_32" class="fnanchor">[32]</a> The pupils were therefore to be
-encouraged in every way to take kindly to their learning.
-With this end in view (and no doubt other objects also),<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[53]</a></span>
-the masters were carefully to seek the boys’ affections.
-“When pupils love the master,” says Sacchini, “they will
-soon love his teaching. Let him, therefore, show an interest
-in everything that concerns them and not merely in their
-studies. Let him rejoice with those that rejoice, and
-not disdain to weep with those that weep. After the
-example of the Apostle let him become a little one amongst
-little ones, that he may make them adult in Christ, and
-Christ adult in them ... Let him unite the grave kindness
-and authority of a father with a mother’s tenderness.”<a name="FNanchor_33" id="FNanchor_33"></a><a href="#Footnote_33" class="fnanchor">[33]</a></p>
-
-<p>§ 31. In order that learning might be pleasant to the
-pupils, it was necessary that they should not be overtasked.
-To avoid this, the master had to study the character and
-capacity of each boy in his class, and to keep a book with
-all particulars about him, and marks from one to six indicating
-proficiency. Thus the master formed an estimate
-of what should be required, and the amount varied considerably
-with the pupil, though the quality of the work
-was always to be good.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[54]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>§ 32. Not only was the work not to be excessive, it was
-never to be of great difficulty. Even the grammar was to
-be made as easy and attractive as possible. “I think it a
-mistake” says Sacchini, “to introduce at an early stage the
-more thorny difficulties of grammar: ... for when the
-pupils have become familiar with the earlier parts, use will,
-by degrees, make the more difficult clear to them. His
-mind expanding and his judgment ripening as he grows
-older the pupil will often see for himself that which he
-could hardly be made to see by others. Moreover, in
-reading an author, examples of grammatical difficulties will
-be more easily observed in connection with the context,
-and will make more impression on the mind, than if they
-are taught in an abstract form by themselves. Let them
-then, be carefully explained whenever they occur.”<a name="FNanchor_34" id="FNanchor_34"></a><a href="#Footnote_34" class="fnanchor">[34]</a></p>
-
-<p>§ 33. Perhaps no body of men in Europe (the Thugs
-may, in this respect, rival them in Asia) have been so hated
-as the Jesuits. I once heard Frederick Denison Maurice
-say he thought Kingsley could find good in every one
-except the Jesuits, and, he added, he thought <i>he</i> could find
-good even in them. But why should a devoted Christian
-find a difficulty in seeing good in the Jesuits, a body of men
-whose devotion to their idea of Christian duty has never<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[55]</a></span>
-been surpassed?<a name="FNanchor_35" id="FNanchor_35"></a><a href="#Footnote_35" class="fnanchor">[35]</a> The difficulty arose from differences in
-ideal. Both held that the ideal Christian would do everything
-“to the greater glory of God,” or as the Jesuits put it
-in their business-like fashion, “A.M.D.G.,” (<i>i.e.</i>, <i>ad majorem
-Dei gloriam</i>). But Maurice and Kingsley thought of a
-divine idea for every man. The Jesuits’ idea lost sight of the
-individual. Like their enemy, Carlyle, the Jesuits in effect
-worshipped strength, but Carlyle thought of the strength of
-the individual, the Jesuits of the strength of “the Catholic
-Church.” “The Catholic Church” was to them the
-manifested kingdom of God. Everything therefore that
-gave power to the Church tended “A.M.D.G.” The Company
-of Jesus was the regular army of the Church, so,
-arguing logically from their premises, they made the glory
-of God and the success of the Society convertible terms.</p>
-
-<p>§ 34. Thus their conception was a purely military conception.
-A commander-in-chief, if he were an ardent patriot
-and a great general, would do all he could to make the army
-powerful. He would care much for the health, morals, and
-training of the soldiers, but always with direct reference to
-the army. He would attend to everything that made a
-man a better soldier; beyond this he would not concern
-himself. In his eyes the army would be everything, and a
-soldier nothing but a part of it, just as a link is only a
-part of a chain. Paulsen, speaking of the Jesuits, says truly
-that no great organization can exist without a root idea.
-The root idea of the army is the sacrifice and annihilation
-of the individual, that the body may be fused together and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[56]</a></span>
-so gain a strength greater than that of any number of individuals.
-Formed on this idea the army acts all together and
-in obedience to a single will, and no mob can stand its
-charge. Ignatius Loyola and succeeding Generals took up
-this idea and formed an army for the Church, an army that
-became the wonder and the terror of all men. Never, as
-Compayré says, had a body been so sagaciously organized,
-or had wielded so great resources for good and for evil.<a name="FNanchor_36" id="FNanchor_36"></a><a href="#Footnote_36" class="fnanchor">[36]</a>
-(<i>See</i> Buisson, ij, 1419.)</p>
-
-<p>§ 35. To the English schoolmaster the Jesuits must
-always be interesting, if for no other reason at least for this—that
-they were so intensely practical. “<i>Les Jésuites ne sont
-pas des pédagogues assez desintéressés pour nous plaire.</i>—The
-Jesuits as schoolmasters,” says M. Compayré, “are not
-disinterested enough for us.” (Buisson, sub v. <i>Jésuites</i>, ad f.).
-But disinterested pedagogy is not much to the mind of the
-Englishman. It does not seem to know quite what it would
-be after, and deals in generalities, such as “Education is not
-a means but an end;” and the end being somewhat indefinite,
-the means are still more wanting in precision. This vagueness<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[57]</a></span>
-is what the English master hates. He prefers not to
-trouble himself about the end. The wisdom of his ancestors
-has settled that, and he can direct his attention to what
-really interests him—the practical details. In this he resembles
-the Jesuits. The end has been settled for them by
-their founder. They revel in practical details, in which they
-are truly great, and here we may learn much from them.
-“<i>Ratio</i> applied to studies” says Father Eyre,<a name="FNanchor_37" id="FNanchor_37"></a><a href="#Footnote_37" class="fnanchor">[37]</a> “more
-naturally means <i>Method</i> than <i>Principle</i>; and our <i>Ratio
-Studiorum</i> is essentially a Method or System of teaching
-and learning.” Here is a method that has been worked
-uniformly and with singular success for three centuries, and
-can still give a good account of its old rivals. But will it
-hold its own against the late Reformers? As regards intellectual
-training the new school seeks to draw out the faculties
-of the young mind by employing them on subjects in which
-it is <i>interested</i>. The Jesuits fixed a course of study which,
-as they frankly recognized, could not be made interesting.
-So they endeavoured to secure accuracy by constant repetition,
-and relied for industry on two motive powers: 1st, the
-personal influence of the master; and, 2nd, “the spur of
-industry”—emulation.</p>
-
-<p>§ 36. To acquire “influence” has ever been the main
-object of the Society, and his devotion to this object makes
-a great distinction between the Jesuit and most other
-instructors. His notion of the task was thus expressed by
-Father Gerard, S. J., at the Educational Conference of 1884:
-“Teaching is an art amongst arts. To be worthy of the
-name it must be the work of an individual upon individuals.
-The true teacher must understand, appreciate, and sympathize<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[58]</a></span>
-with those who are committed to him. He must be
-daily discovering what there is (and undoubtedly there is
-something in each of them) capable of fruitful development,
-and contriving how better to get at them and to evoke whatever
-possibilities there are in them for good.” The Jesuit
-master, then, tried to gain influence over the boys and to
-use that influence for many purposes; to make them work
-well being one of these, but not perhaps the most important.</p>
-
-<p>§ 37. As for emulation, no instructors have used it so
-elaborately as the Jesuits. In most English schools the
-prizes have no effect whatever except on the first three or
-four boys, and the marking is so arranged that those who
-take the lead in the first few lessons can keep their position
-without much effort. This clumsy system would not suit
-the Jesuits. They often for prize-giving divide a class into
-a number of small groups, the boys in each group being
-approximately equal, and a prize is offered for each group.
-The class matches, too, stimulate the weaker pupils even
-more than the strong.</p>
-
-<p>§ 38. In conclusion, I will give the chief points of the
-system in the words of one of its advocates and admirers,
-who was himself educated at Stonyhurst:</p>
-
-<p>“Let us now try to put together the various pieces of
-this school machinery and study the effect. We have seen
-that the boys have masters entirely at their disposition, not
-only at class time, but at recreation time after supper in the
-night Reading Rooms. Each day they record victory or
-defeat in the recurring exercises or themes upon various
-matters. By the quarterly papers or examinations in composition,
-for which nine hours are assigned, the order of
-merit is fixed, and this order entails many little privileges
-and precedencies, in chapel, refectory, class room, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[59]</a></span>
-elsewhere. Each master, if he prove a success and his
-health permit, continues to be the instructor of the boys
-in his class during the space of six years. ‘It is obvious’
-says Sheil, in his account of Stonyhurst, ‘that much of a
-boy’s acquirements, and a good deal of the character of
-his taste, must have depended upon the individual to whose
-instructions he was thus almost exclusively confined.’ And
-in many cases the effects must be a greater interest felt in
-the students by their teachers, a mutual attachment founded
-on long acquaintance, and a more thorough knowledge, on
-the part of the master, of the weak and strong points of his
-pupils. Add to the above, the ‘rival’ and ‘side’ system,
-the effect of challenges and class combats; of the wearing
-of decorations and medals by the Imperators on Sundays,
-Festival Days, Concertation Days, and Examination Days;
-of the extraordinary work—done much more as <i>private</i> than
-as <i>class</i> work—helping to give individuality to the boy’s
-exertions, which might otherwise be merged in the routine
-work of the class; and the ‘free time’ given for improvement
-on wet evenings and after night prayers; add the
-Honours Matter; the Reports read before the Rector and
-all subordinate Superiors, the Professors, and whole body
-of Students; add the competition in each class and between
-the various classes, and even between the various colleges in
-England of the Society; and only one conclusion can be
-arrived at. It is a system which everyone is free to admire
-or think inferior to some other preferred by him; but it <i>is</i>
-a system.” (<i>Stonyhurst College, Present and Past</i>, by A.
-Hewitson, 2nd edition, 1878, pp. 214, ff.)</p>
-
-<p>§ 39. Yes, it <i>is</i> a system, a system built up by the united
-efforts of many astute intellects and showing marvellous<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[60]</a></span>
-skill in selecting means to attain a clearly conceived end.
-There is then in the history of education little that should
-be more interesting or might be more instructive to the
-master of an English public school than the chapter about
-the Jesuits.<a name="FNanchor_38" id="FNanchor_38"></a><a href="#Footnote_38" class="fnanchor">[38]</a><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[61]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[62]</a></span></p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[63]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="V">V.<br />
-<span class="smaller">RABELAIS.<br />
-(1483-1553.)</span></h2>
-
-<p>§ 1. To great geniuses it is given to think themselves
-in a measure free from the ordinary notions of their time
-and often to anticipate the discoveries of a future age. In
-all literature there is perhaps hardly a more striking instance
-of this “detached” thinking than we find in Rabelais’
-account of the education of Gargantua.</p>
-
-<p>§ 2. We see in Rabelais an enthusiasm for learning and
-a tendency to verbal realism; that is, he turned to the old
-writers for instruction about <i>things</i>. So far he was a child
-of the Renascence. But in other respects he advanced far
-beyond it.</p>
-
-<p>§ 3. After a scornful account of the ordinary school
-books and methods by which Gargantua “though he
-studied hard, did nevertheless profit nothing, but only grew
-thereby foolish, simple, dolted, and blockish,” Rabelais
-decides that “it were better for him to learn nothing at all
-than to be taught suchlike books under suchlike schoolmasters.”
-All this old lumber must be swept away, and in
-two years a youth may acquire a better judgment, a better<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[64]</a></span>
-manner, and more command of language than could ever
-have been obtained by the old method.</p>
-
-<p>We are then introduced to the model pupil. The end
-of education has been declared to be <i>sapiens et eloquens
-pietas</i>; and we find that though Rabelais might have substituted
-knowledge for piety, he did care for piety, and
-valued very highly both wisdom and eloquence. The
-eloquent Roman was the ideal of the Renascence, and
-Rabelais’ model pupil expresses himself “with gestures so
-proper, pronunciation so distinct, a voice so eloquent,
-language so well turned <i>and in such good Latin</i> that he
-seemed rather a Gracchus, a Cicero, an Æmilius of the time
-past than a youth of the present age.”</p>
-
-<p>§ 4. So a Renascence tutor is appointed for Gargantua
-and administers to him a potion that makes him forget all
-he has ever learned. He then puts him through a very
-different course. Like all wise instructors he first endeavours
-to secure the will of the pupil. He allows Gargantua to go
-the accustomed road till he can convince him it is the
-wrong one. This seems to me a remarkable proof of
-wisdom. How often does the “new master” break abruptly
-with the past, and raise the opposition of the pupil by dispraise
-of all he has already done! By degrees Ponocrates,
-the model tutor, inspired in his pupil a great desire for
-improvement. This he did by bringing him into the
-society of learned men, who filled him with ambition to be
-like them. Thereupon Gargantua “put himself into such a
-train of study that he lost not any hour in the day, but
-employed all his time in learning and honest knowledge.”
-The day was to begin at 4 a.m., with reading of “some
-chapter of the Holy Scripture, and oftentimes he gave
-himself to revere, adore, pray, and send up his supplications<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[65]</a></span>
-to that good God, whose word did show His majesty and
-marvellous judgments.” This is the only hint we get in
-this part of the book on the subject of religious or moral
-education: the training is directed to the intellect and the
-body.</p>
-
-<p>§ 5. The remarkable feature in Rabelais’ curriculum is
-this, that it is concerned mainly with <i>things</i>. Of the Seven
-Liberal Arts of the Middle Ages, the first three were purely
-formal: grammar, logic, rhetoric; while the following course:
-arithmetic, geometry, astronomy, and music, were not. The
-effect of the Renascence was to cause increasing neglect of
-the Quadrivium, but Rabelais cares for the Quadrivium
-only; Gargantua studies arithmetic, geometry, astronomy,
-and music, and the Trivium is not mentioned. Great use
-is made of books and Gargantua learned them by heart;
-but all that he learned he at once “applied to practical
-cases concerning the estate of man.” It was the substance
-of the reading, not the form, that was thought of. At dinner
-“if they thought good they continued reading or began to
-discourse merrily together; speaking first of the virtue,
-propriety, efficacy, and nature of all that was served in at
-that table; of bread, of wine, of water, of salt, of flesh, fish,
-fruits, herbs, roots, and of their dressing. By means whereof
-he learned in a little time all the passages that on these
-subjects are to be found in Pliny, Athenæus, &amp;c. Whilst
-they talked of these things, many times to be more certain they
-caused the very books to be brought to the table; and so
-well and perfectly did he in his memory retain the things
-above said, that in that time there was not a physician that
-knew half so much as he did.” Again, out of doors he was to
-observe trees and plants, and “compare them with what is
-written of them in the books of the ancients, such as Theophrastus,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[66]</a></span>
-Dioscorides, &amp;c.” Here again, actual realism was
-to be joined with verbal realism, for Gargantua was to carry
-home with him great handfuls for herborising. Rabelais
-even recommends studying the face of the heavens at night,
-and then observing the change that has taken place at
-4 in the morning. So he seems to have been the first
-writer on education (and the first by a long interval), who
-would teach about things by observing the things themselves.
-It was this <i>Anschauungs-prinzip</i>—use of sense-impressions—that
-Pestalozzi extended and claimed as his invention two
-centuries and a half later. Rabelais also gives a hint of the
-use of hand-work as well as head-work. Gargantua and
-his fellows “did recreate themselves in bottling hay, in
-cleaving and sawing wood, and in threshing sheaves of
-corn in the barn. They also studied the art of painting or
-carving.” The course was further connected with life by
-visits to the various handicraftsmen, in whose workshops
-“they did learn and consider the industry and invention of
-the trader.”</p>
-
-<p>Thus, even in the time of the Renascence, Rabelais saw
-that the life of the intellect might be nourished by many
-things besides books. But books were still kept in the
-highest place. Even on a holiday, which occurred on some
-fine and clear day once a month, “though spent without
-books or lecture, yet was the day not without profit; for in
-the meadows they repeated certain pleasant verses of Virgil’s
-<i>Agriculture</i>, of Hesiod, of Politian’s <i>Husbandry</i>.” They
-also turned Latin epigrams into French <i>rondeaux</i>.</p>
-
-<p>This course of study, “although at first it seemed difficult,
-yet soon became so sweet, so easy, and so delightful, that it
-seemed rather the recreation of a king than the study of a
-scholar.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[67]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>In preferring the Quadrivial studies to the Trivial, and
-still more in his use of actual things, Rabelais separates
-himself from all the teachers of his time.</p>
-
-<p>§ 6. Very remarkable too is the attention he pays to
-physical education. A day does not pass on which Gargantua
-does not gallantly exercise his body as he has already
-exercised his mind. The exercises prescribed are very various,
-and include running, jumping, swimming, with practice on the
-horizontal bar and with dumb-bells, &amp;c. But in one respect
-Rabelais seems behind our own writer, Richard Mulcaster.
-Mulcaster trained the body simply with a view to health.
-Rabelais is thinking of the gentleman, and all his physical
-exercises are to prepare him for the gentleman’s occupation,
-war. The constant preparation for war had a strong and in
-some respects a very beneficial influence on the education of
-gentlemen in the fifteen and sixteen hundreds, as it has had
-on that of the Germans in the eighteen hundreds. But to be
-ready to slaughter one’s fellow creatures is not an ideal aim
-in education; and besides this, one half of the human race
-can never (as far as we can judge at present) be affected by
-it. We therefore prefer the physical training recommended
-by the Englishman.</p>
-
-<div class="smaller">
-
-<p>Mr. Walter Besant by his <i>Readings in Rabelais</i> (Blackwood, 1883),
-has put Rabelais’ wit and wisdom where we can get at most of it without
-searching in the dung-hill. But he has unfortunately omitted
-Gargantua’s letter to Pantagruel at Paris (book ij, chap. 8), where we
-get the curriculum as proposed by Rabelais, a chapter in which no
-scavenger is needed.</p>
-
-<p>I will give some extracts from it:—</p>
-
-<p>“Although my deceased father of happy memory, Grangousier, had
-bent his best endeavours to make me profit in all perfection and
-political knowledge, and that my labour and study was fully correspondent
-to, yea, went beyond his desire; nevertheless, the time then was not<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[68]</a></span>
-so proper and fit for learning as it is at present, neither had I
-plenty of such good masters as thou hast had; for that time was darksome,
-obscured with clouds of ignorance and savouring a little of the
-infelicity and calamity of the Goths, who had, wherever they set footing,
-destroyed all good literature, which in my age hath by the Divine Goodness
-been restored unto its former light and dignity, and that with such
-amendment and increase of knowledge that now hardly should I be
-admitted unto the first form of the little grammar school boys (<i>des
-petits grimaulx</i>): I say, I, who in my youthful days was (and that justly)
-reputed the most learned of that age. Now it is that the old knowledges
-(<i>disciplines</i>) are restored, the languages revived. Greek (without which
-it is a shame for any one to call himself learned), Hebrew, Chaldee, Latin.
-Printing (<i>Des impressions</i>) too, so elegant and exact, is in use, which
-in my day was invented by divine inspiration, as cannon were by suggestion
-of the devil. All the world is full of men of knowledge, of very
-learned teachers, of large libraries; so that it seems to me that neither
-in the age of Plato, nor of Cicero, nor of Papinian was there such convenience
-for studying as there is now. I see the robbers, hangmen,
-adventurers, ostlers of to-day more learned then the doctors and the
-preachers of my youth. Why, women and girls have aspired to the
-heavenly manna of good learning ... I mean you to learn the
-languages perfectly first of all, the Greek as Quintilian wishes, then the
-Latin, then Hebrew for the Scriptures, and Chaldee and Arabic at the
-same time; and that thou form thy style in Greek on Plato, in Latin
-on Cicero. Let there be no history which thou hast not ready in thy
-memory, in which cosmography will aid thee. Of the Liberal Arts,
-geometry, arithmetic, music, I have given thee a taste when thou wast
-still a child, at the age of five or six [Pantagruel was a giant, we must
-remember]; carry them on; and know’st thou all the rules of astronomy?
-Don’t touch astrology for divination and the art of Lullius, which are
-mere vanity. In the civil law thou must know the five texts by heart.</p>
-
-<p>“ ... As for knowledge of the works of Nature, I would have thee
-devote thyself to them so that there may be no sea, river, or spring of
-which thou knowest not the fishes; all the birds of the air, all the trees,
-forest or orchard, all the herbs of the field, all the metals hid in the
-bowels of the earth, all the precious stones of the East and the South,
-let nothing be unknown to thee.</p>
-
-<p>“Then turn again with diligence to the books of the Greek physicians,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[69]</a></span>
-and the Arabs, and the Latin, without despising the Talmudists and
-the Cabalists; and by frequent dissections acquire a perfect knowledge
-of the other world, which is Man. And some hours a-day begin to read
-the Sacred Writings, first in Greek the New Testament and Epistles of
-the Apostles; then in Hebrew the Old Testament. In brief, let me
-see thee an abyss and bottomless pit of knowledge, for from henceforth
-as thou growest great and becomest a man thou must part from this
-tranquillity and rest of study ... And because, as Solomon saith,
-wisdom entereth not into a malicious mind, and science without conscience
-is but the ruin of the soul, thou shouldst serve, love, and fear
-God, and in Him centre all thy thoughts, all thy hope; and by faith
-rooted in charity be joined to Him, so as never to be separated from
-Him by sin.”</p>
-
-<p>The influence of Rabelais on Montaigne, Locke, and Rousseau has
-been well traced by Dr. F. A. Arnstädt. (<i>François Rabelais</i>, Leipzig,
-Barth, 1872.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[70]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="VI">VI.<br />
-<span class="smaller">MONTAIGNE.<br />
-(1533-1592.)</span></h2>
-
-<p>§ 1. The learned ideal established by the Renascence was
-accepted by Rabelais, though he made some suggestions
-about <i>Realien</i><a name="FNanchor_39" id="FNanchor_39"></a><a href="#Footnote_39" class="fnanchor">[39]</a> that seem to us much in advance of it.
-When he quotes the saying “Magis magnos clericos non
-sunt magis magnos sapientes” (“the greatest clerks are not the
-greatest sages”), this singular piece of Latinity is appropriately
-put into the mouth of a monk, who represents
-everything the Renascence scholars despised. In Montaigne
-we strike into a new vein of thought, and we find that what
-the monk alleges in defence of his ignorance the cultured
-gentleman adopts as the expression of an important truth.</p>
-
-<p>§ 2. We ordinary people see truths indeed, but we see
-them indistinctly, and are not completely guided by them.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[71]</a></span>
-It is reserved for men of genius to see truths, some truths
-that is, often a very few, with intense clearness. Some of
-these men have no great talent for speech or writing, and they
-try to express the truths they see, not so much by books as by
-action. Such men in education were Comenius, Pestalozzi,
-and Froebel. But sometimes the man of genius has a great
-power over language, and then he finds for the truths he
-has seen, fitting expression, which becomes almost as
-lasting as the truths themselves. Such men were Montaigne
-and Rousseau. If the historian of education is asked
-“What did Montaigne do?” he will answer “Nothing.”
-“What did Froebel say?” “He said a great deal, but very
-few people can read him and still fewer understand him.”
-Both, however, are and must remain forces in education.
-Montaigne has given to some truths imperishable form in his
-<i>Essays</i>, and Froebel’s ideas come home to all the world in
-the Kindergarten.</p>
-
-<p>§ 3. The ideal set up by the Renascence attached the
-highest importance to learning. Montaigne maintained that
-the resulting training <i>even at its best</i> was not suited to a
-gentleman or man of action. Virtue, wisdom, and intellectual
-activity should be thought of before learning.
-Education should be first and foremost the development and
-exercise of faculties. And even if the acquirement of
-knowledge is thought of, Montaigne maintains that the
-pedants do not understand the first conditions of knowledge
-and give a semblance not the true thing.—“<i>Il ne faut pas
-attacher le savoir à l’âme, il faut l’incorporer.</i>—Knowledge
-cannot be fastened on to the mind; it must become part
-and parcel of the mind itself.”<a name="FNanchor_40" id="FNanchor_40"></a><a href="#Footnote_40" class="fnanchor">[40]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[72]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Here then we have two separate counts against the
-Renascence education:</p>
-
-<p>1st.—Knowledge is not the main thing.</p>
-
-<p>2nd.—True knowledge is something very different from
-knowing by heart.</p>
-
-<p>§ 4. It is a pity Montaigne’s utterances about education
-are to be found in English only in the complete translation
-of his essays. Seeing that a good many millions of people
-read English, and are most of them concerned in education,
-one may hope that some day the sayings of the shrewd old
-Frenchman may be offered them in a convenient form.</p>
-
-<p>§ 5. Here are some of them: “The evil comes of the
-foolish way in which our [instructors] set to work; and on the
-plan on which we are taught no wonder if neither scholars
-nor masters become more able, whatever they may do in
-becoming more learned. In truth the trouble and expense
-of our fathers are directed only to furnish our heads with
-knowledge: not a word of judgment or virtue. Cry out to
-our people about a passer-by, ‘There’s a learned man!’ and
-about another ‘There’s a good man!’ they will be all agog
-after the learned man, and will not look at the good man.
-One might fairly raise a third cry: ‘There’s a set of numskulls!’
-We are ready enough to ask ‘Does he know
-Greek or know Latin? Does he write verse or write
-prose?’ But whether he has become wiser or better
-should be the first question, and that is always the last.
-We ought to find out, not who knows <i>most</i> but who knows
-<i>best</i>.” (I, chap. 24, <i>Du Pédantisme</i>, page or two beyond
-<i>Odi homines</i>.)</p>
-
-<p>§ 6. The true educators, according to Montaigne, were
-the Spartans, who despised literature, and cared only for
-character and action. At Athens they thought about words,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[73]</a></span>
-at Sparta about things. At Athens boys learnt to speak
-well, at Sparta to do well: at Athens to escape from sophistical
-arguments, and to face all attempts to deceive them;
-at Sparta to escape from the allurements of pleasure, and
-to face the slings and arrows of outrageous fortune, even
-death itself. In the one system there was constant exercise
-of the tongue, in the other of the soul. “So it is not strange
-that when Antipater demanded of the Spartans fifty children
-as hostages they replied they would sooner give twice as many
-grown men, such store did they set by their country’s
-training.” (<i>Du Pédantisme</i>, ad f.)</p>
-
-<p>§ 7. It is odd to find a man of the fifteen hundreds who
-quotes from the old authors at every turn, and yet maintains
-that “we lean so much on the arm of other people that we
-lose our own strength.” The thing a boy should learn is
-not what the old authors say, but “what he himself ought
-to do when he becomes a man.” Wisdom, not knowledge!
-“We may become learned from the learning of others; wise
-we can never be except by our own wisdom.” (Bk. j,
-chap. 24).</p>
-
-<p>§ 8. So entirely was Montaigne detached from the
-thought of the Renascence that he scoffs at his own
-learning, and declares that true learning has for its subject,
-not the past or the future, but the present. “We are truly
-learned from knowing the present, not from knowing the
-past any more than the future.” And yet “we toil only to
-stuff the memory and leave the conscience and the understanding
-void. And like birds who fly abroad to forage for
-grain bring it home in their beak, without tasting it themselves,
-to feed their young, so our pedants go picking knowledge
-here and there out of several authors, and hold it at their
-tongue’s end, only to spit it out and distribute it amongst<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[74]</a></span>
-their pupils.” (<i>Du Pédantisme.</i>) “We are all richer than
-we think, but they drill us in borrowing and begging, and
-lead us to make more use of other people’s goods than of
-our own.”<a name="FNanchor_41" id="FNanchor_41"></a><a href="#Footnote_41" class="fnanchor">[41]</a> (Bk. iij, chap. 12, <i>De la Physionomie</i>, beg. of
-3rd paragraph).</p>
-
-<p>§ 9. So far Montaigne. What do we schoolmasters say
-to all this? If we would be quite candid I think we must
-allow that, after reading Montaigne’s essay, we put it down
-with the conviction that in the main he was right, and that
-he had proved the error and absurdity of a vast deal that
-goes on in the schoolroom. But from this first view we
-have had on reflection to make several drawbacks.</p>
-
-<p>§ 10. Montaigne, like Locke and Rousseau, who followed
-in his steps, arranges for every boy to have a tutor
-entirely devoted to him. We may question whether this
-method of bringing up children is desirable, and we may
-assert, without question, that in most cases it is impossible.
-It seems ordained that at every stage of life we should
-require the companionship of those of our own age. If we<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[75]</a></span>
-take two beings as little alike as a man and a child and
-force them to be each other’s companions, so great is the
-difference in their thoughts and interests that they will fall
-into inevitable boredom and restraint. So we see that this
-plan, even in the few cases in which it would be possible,
-would not be desirable; and for the great majority of boys
-it would be out of the question. We must then arrange
-for the young to be taught, not as individuals, but in classes,
-and this greatly changes the conditions of the problem.
-One of the first conditions is this, that we have to employ
-each class regularly and uniformly for some hours every
-day. Schoolmasters know what their non-scholastic mentors
-forget: we can make a class learn, but, broadly speaking,
-we cannot make a class think, still less can we make it
-judge. As a great deal of occupation has to be provided,
-we are therefore forced to make our pupils learn. Whatever
-may be the value of the learning in itself it is absolutely
-necessary <i>as employment</i>.</p>
-
-<p>§ 11. No doubt it will make a vast difference whether
-we consider the learning mainly as employment, as a
-means of taking up time and preventing “sauntering,” as
-Locke boldly calls it, or whether we are chiefly anxious to
-secure some special results. The knowledge of the Latin
-and Greek languages and the Latin and Greek authors was
-a result so highly prized by the Renascence scholars that
-they insisted on a prodigious quantity of learning, not as
-employment, but simply as the means of acquiring this
-knowledge. As the knowledge got to be less esteemed the
-pressure was by degrees relaxed. In our public schools fifty
-or sixty years ago the learning was to some extent retained as
-employment, but there certainly was no pressure, and the
-majority of the boys never learnt the ancient languages.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[76]</a></span>
-So the masters of that time had given up the Renascence
-enthusiasm for the classics, and on the negative side of
-his teaching had come to an agreement with Montaigne.
-Any one inclined to sarcasm might say that on the positive
-side they were still totally opposed to him, for <i>he</i> thought
-virtue and judgment were the main things to be cared for,
-and <i>they</i> did not care for these things at all. But this is
-not a fair statement. The one thing gained, or supposed to
-be gained, in the public schools was the art of living, and
-this art, though it does not demand heroic virtue, requires at
-least prudence and self-control. Montaigne’s system was a
-revolt against the <i>bookishness</i> of the Renascence. “In our
-studies,” says he, “whatever presents itself before us is book
-enough; a roguish trick of a page, a blunder of a
-servant, a jest at table, are so many new subjects.” So the
-education <i>out of school</i> was in his eyes of more value than
-the education in school. And this was acknowledged also
-in our public schools: “It is not the Latin and Greek they
-learn or don’t learn that we consider so important,” the
-masters used to say, “but it is the tone of the school and
-the discipline of the games.” But of late years this
-virtual agreement with Montaigne has been broken up.
-School work is no longer mere employment, but it is done
-under pressure, and with penalties if the tale of brick
-turned out does not pass the inspector.</p>
-
-<p>§ 12. What has produced this great change? It is due
-mainly to two causes:</p>
-
-<p>1. The pressure put on the young to attain classical
-knowledge was relaxed when it was thought that they could
-get through life very well without this knowledge. But
-in these days new knowledge has awakened a new enthusiasm.
-The knowledge of science promises such great advantages<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[77]</a></span>
-that the latest reformers, headed by Mr. Herbert Spencer,
-seem to make the well-being of the grown person depend
-mainly on the amount of scientific knowledge he stored up
-in his youth. This is the first cause of educational pressure.</p>
-
-<p>§ 13. 2. The second and more urgent cause is the
-rapid development of our system of examinations. Everybody’s
-educational status is now settled by the examiner, a
-potentate whose influence has brought back in a very
-malignant form all the evils of which Montaigne complains.
-Do what we will, the faculty chiefly exercised in preparing
-for ordinary examinations is the “carrying memory.” So
-the acquisition of knowledge—mere memory or examination
-knowledge—has again come to be regarded as the one thing
-needful in education, and there is great danger of everything
-else being neglected for it. Of the fourfold results of
-education—virtue, wisdom, good manners, learning—the
-last alone can be fairly tested in examinations; and as the
-schoolmaster’s very bread depends nowadays first on his
-getting through examinations himself and then on getting
-his pupils through, he would be more than human, if with
-Locke he thought of learning “last and least.” A great
-change has come over our public schools. The amount of
-work required from the boys is far greater than it used to be
-and masters again measure their success by the amount of
-knowledge the average boy takes away with him. It seems
-to me high time that another Montaigne arose to protest
-that a man’s intellectual life does not consist in the number
-of things he remembers, and that his true life is not his
-intellectual life only, but embraces his power of will and
-action and his love of what is noble and right. “Wisdom
-cried of old, I am the mother of fair Love and Fear and
-Knowledge and holy Hope” (<i>Ecclesiasticus</i>). In these<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[78]</a></span>
-days of science and examinations does there not seem some
-danger lest knowledge should prove the sole survivor? May
-not Knowledge, like another Cain, raise its hand against its
-brethren “fair Love and Fear and holy Hope?” This is
-perhaps the great danger of our time, a danger especially
-felt in education. Every school parades its scholarships at
-the public schools or at the universities, or its passes in the
-Oxford and Cambridge Locals, or its percentage at the last
-Inspection, and asks to be judged by these. And yet these
-are not the one thing or indeed the chief thing needful:
-and it will be the ruin of true education if, as Mark Pattison
-said, the master’s attention is concentrated on the least
-important part of his duty.<a name="FNanchor_42" id="FNanchor_42"></a><a href="#Footnote_42" class="fnanchor">[42]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[79]</a></span></p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[80]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="VII">VII.<br />
-<span class="smaller">ASCHAM.<br />
-(1515-1568.)</span></h2>
-
-<p>§ 1. Masters and scholars who sigh over what seem to
-them the intricacies and obscurities of modern grammars
-may find some consolation in thinking that, after all, matters
-might have been worse, and that our fate is enviable indeed
-compared with that of the students of Latin 400 years ago.
-Did the reader ever open the <i>Doctrinale</i> of Alexander
-de Villa Dei, which was the grammar in general use from
-the middle of the thirteenth to the end of the fifteenth
-century? (<a href="#Page_532"><i>v.</i> Appendix, p. 532</a>). If so, he is aware how
-great a step towards simplicity was made by our grammatical
-reformers, Lily, Colet, and Erasmus. Indeed, those whom
-we now regard as the forgers of our chains were, in their
-own opinion and that of their contemporaries, the champions
-of freedom (Appendix, p. 533).</p>
-
-<p>§ 2. I have given elsewhere (Appendix, p. 533) a remarkable
-passage from Colet, in which he recommends the
-leaving of rules, and the study of examples in good Latin
-authors. Wolsey also, in his directions to the masters of
-Ipswich School (dated 1528), proposes that the boys should
-be exercised in the eight parts of speech in the first form,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[81]</a></span>
-and should begin to speak Latin and translate from English
-into Latin in the second. If the masters think fit, they may
-also let the pupils read Lily’s <i>Carmen Monitorium</i>, or Cato’s
-<i>Distichs</i>. From the third upwards a regular course of
-classical authors was to be read, and Lily’s rules were to be
-introduced by degrees. “Although I confess such things
-are necessary,” writes Wolsey, “yet, as far as possible, we
-could wish them so appointed as not to occupy the more
-valuable part of the day.” Only in the sixth form, the
-highest but two, Lily’s syntax was to be begun. In these
-schools the boys’ time was wholly taken up with Latin, and
-the speaking of Latin was enforced even in play hours, so
-we see that anomalies in the accidence as taught in the <i>As
-in præsenti</i> were not given till the boys had been some time
-using the language; and the syntax was kept till they had
-a good practical knowledge of the usages to which the rules
-referred.<a name="FNanchor_43" id="FNanchor_43"></a><a href="#Footnote_43" class="fnanchor">[43]</a></p>
-
-<p>§ 3. But although there was a great stir in education
-throughout this century, and several English books were
-published about it, we come to 1570 before we find anything
-that has lived till now. We then have Roger Ascham’s
-<i>Scholemaster</i>, a posthumous work brought out by Ascham’s
-widow, and republished in 1571 and 1589. The book was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[82]</a></span>
-then lost sight of, but reappeared, with James Upton as
-editor, in 1711,<a name="FNanchor_44" id="FNanchor_44"></a><a href="#Footnote_44" class="fnanchor">[44]</a> and has been regarded as an educational
-classic ever since. Dr. Johnson says “it contains perhaps
-the best advice that was ever given for the study of
-languages,” and Professor J. E. B. Mayor, who on this
-point is a higher authority than Dr. Johnson, declares that
-“this book sets forth the only sound method of acquiring a
-dead language.”</p>
-
-<p>§ 4. With all their contempt for theory, English schoolmasters
-might have been expected to take an interest in one
-part of the history of education, viz., the history of methods.
-There is a true saying attributed by Marcel to Talleyrand,
-“<i>Les Méthodes sont les maîtres des maîtres</i>—Method is the
-master’s master.” The history of education shows us that
-every subject of instruction has been taught in various
-ways, and further, that the contest of methods has not
-uniformly ended in the survival of the fittest. Methods then
-might often teach the teachers, if the teachers cared to be
-taught; but till within the last half century or so an unintelligent
-traditional routine has sufficed for them. There
-has no doubt been a great change since men now old were
-at school, but in those days the main strength of the
-teaching was given to Latin, and the masters knew of no
-better method of starting boys in this language than
-making them learn by heart Lily’s, or as it was then called,
-the Eton Latin Grammar. If reason had had anything to
-do with teaching, this book would have been demolished
-by Richard Johnson’s <i>Grammatical Commentaries</i> published<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[83]</a></span>
-in 1706; but worthless as Johnson proved it to be, the
-Grammar was for another 150 years treated by English
-schoolmasters as the only introduction to the Latin tongue.
-The books that have recently been published show a
-tendency to revert to methods set forth in Elizabeth’s reign
-in Ascham’s <i>Scholemaster</i> (1570) and William Kempe’s
-<i>Education of Children</i> (1588), but the innovators have not
-as a rule been drawn to these methods by historical
-inquiry.</p>
-
-<p>§ 5. There seem to be only three English writers on
-education who have caught the ear of other nations, and
-these are Ascham, Locke, and Herbert Spencer. Of a
-contemporary we do well to speak with the same reserve as
-of “present company,” but of the other two we may say
-that the choice has been somewhat capricious. Locke’s
-<i>Thoughts</i> perhaps deserves the reputation and influence it
-has always had, but in it he hardly does himself justice as a
-philosopher of the mind; and much of the advice which has
-been considered his exclusively, is to be found in his
-English predecessors whose very names are unknown except
-to the educational antiquarian. Ascham wrote a few pages
-on method which entitle him to mention in an account of
-methods of language-learning. He also wrote a great many
-pages about things in general which would have shared the
-fate of many more valuable but long forgotten books had
-he not had one peculiarity in which the other writers were
-wanting, that indescribable something which Matthew Arnold
-calls “charm.”</p>
-
-<p>§ 6. Ascham has been very fortunate in his editors, Professor
-Arber and Professor Mayor, and the last editions<a name="FNanchor_45" id="FNanchor_45"></a><a href="#Footnote_45" class="fnanchor">[45]</a><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[84]</a></span>
-give everyone an opportunity of reading the <i>Scholemaster</i>.
-I shall therefore speak of nothing but the method.</p>
-
-<p>§ 7. Latin is to be taught as follows:—First, let the
-child learn the eight parts of speech, and then the right
-joining together of substantives with adjectives, the noun
-with the verb, the relative with the antecedent. After the
-concords are learned, let the master take Sturm’s selection
-of Cicero’s Epistles, and read them after this manner:
-“first, let him teach the child, cheerfully and plainly, the
-cause and matter of the letter; then, let him construe it
-into English so oft as the child may easily carry away the
-understanding of it; lastly, parse it over perfectly. This
-done, then let the child by and by both construe and parse
-it over again; so that it may appear that the child doubteth
-in nothing that his master has taught him before. After
-this, the child must take a paper book, and, sitting in some
-place where no man shall prompt him, by himself let him
-translate into English his former lesson. Then showing it
-to his master, let the master take from him his Latin book,
-and pausing an hour at the least, then let the child translate
-his own English into Latin again in another paper book.
-When the child bringeth it turned into Latin, the master must
-compare it with Tully’s book, and lay them both together,
-and where the child doth well, praise him,” where amiss point
-out why Tully’s use is better. Thus the child will easily
-acquire a knowledge of grammar, “and also the ground of
-almost all the rules that are so busily taught by the master, and
-so hardly learned by the scholar in all common schools....
-We do not contemn rules, but we gladly teach rules; and
-teach them more plainly, sensibly, and orderly, than they be
-commonly taught in common schools. For when the master
-shall compare Tully’s book with the scholar’s translation,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[85]</a></span>
-let the master at the first lead and teach the scholar to join
-the rules of his grammar book with the examples of his
-present lesson, until the scholar by himself be able to fetch
-out of his grammar every rule for every example; and let
-the grammar book be ever in the scholars hand, and also
-used by him as a dictionary for every present use. This is
-a lively and perfect way of teaching of rules; where the
-common way used in common schools to read the grammar
-alone by itself is tedious for the master, hard for the scholar,
-cold and uncomfortable for them both.” And elsewhere
-Ascham says: “Yea, I do wish that all rules for young
-scholars were shorter than they be. For, without doubt,
-<i>grammatica</i> itself is sooner and surer learned by examples
-of good authors than by the naked rules of grammarians.”</p>
-
-<p>§ 8. “As you perceive your scholar to go better on away,
-first, with understanding his lesson more quickly, with
-parsing more readily, with translating more speedily and
-perfectly than he was wont; after, give him longer lessons
-to translate, and, withal, begin to teach him, both in nouns
-and verbs, what is <i>proprium</i> and what is <i>translatum</i>, what
-<i>synonymum</i>, what <i>diversum</i>, which be <i>contraria</i>, and which
-be most notable <i>phrases</i>, in all his lectures, as—</p>
-
-<table summary="Example of how to analyse text by Ascham's method">
- <tr>
- <td>Proprium</td>
- <td>Rex sepultus est magnifice.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Translatum</td>
- <td>Cum illo principe, sepulta est et gloria et salus reipublicæ.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Synonyma</td>
- <td>Ensis, gladius: laudare, prædicare.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Diversa</td>
- <td>Diligere, amare: calere, exardescere: inimicus, hostis.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Contraria</td>
- <td>Acerbum et luctuosum bellum, dulcis et læta pax.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Phrases</td>
- <td>Dare verba, adjicere obedientiam.”</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p>Every lesson is to be thus carefully analysed, and entered
-under these headings in a third MS. book.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[86]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>§ 9. Here Ascham leaves his method, and returns to it
-only at the beginning of Book II. He there supposes the
-first stage to be finished and “your scholar to have come indeed,
-first to a ready perfectness in translating, then to a
-ripe and skilful choice in marking out his six points.” He now
-recommends a course of Cicero, Terence, Cæsar, and Livy
-which is to be read “a good deal at every lecture.” And
-the master is to give passages “put into plain natural
-English.” These the scholar shall “not know where to
-find” till he shall have tried his hand at putting them into
-Latin; then the master shall “bring forth the place in Tully.”</p>
-
-<p>§ 10. In the Second Book of the <i>Scholemaster</i>,
-Ascham discusses the various branches of the study then
-common, viz.: 1. Translatio linguarum; 2. Paraphrasis;
-3. Metaphrasis; 4. Epitome; 5. Imitatio; 6. Declamatio.
-He does not lay much stress on any of these, except
-<i>translatio</i> and <i>imitatio</i>. Of the last he says: “All languages,
-both learned and mother-tongue, be gotten, and gotten only,
-by imitation. For, as ye use to hear, so ye use to speak; if
-ye hear no other, ye speak not yourself; and whom ye only
-hear, of them ye only learn.” But translation was his great
-instrument for all kinds of learning. “The translation,” he
-says, “is the most common and most commendable of all
-other exercises for youth; most common, for all your constructions
-in grammar schools be nothing else but translations,
-but because they be not <i>double</i> translations (as I do require)
-they bring forth but simple and single commodity: and
-because also they lack the daily use of writing, which is the
-only thing that breedeth deep root, both in the wit for good
-understanding and in the memory for sure keeping of all
-that is learned; most commendable also, and that by the
-judgment of all authors which entreat of these exercises.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[87]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>§ 11. After quoting Pliny,<a name="FNanchor_46" id="FNanchor_46"></a><a href="#Footnote_46" class="fnanchor">[46]</a> he says: “You perceive
-how Pliny teacheth that by this exercise of double translating
-is learned easily, sensibly, by little and little, not
-only all the hard congruities of grammar, the choice of
-ablest words, the right pronouncing of words and sentences,
-comeliness of figures, and forms fit for every matter and
-proper for every tongue: but, that which is greater also, in
-marking daily and following diligently thus the footsteps of
-the best authors, like invention of arguments, like order in
-disposition, like utterance in elocution, is easily gathered
-up; and hereby your scholar shall be brought not only to
-like eloquence, but also to all true understanding and rightful
-judgment, both for writing and speaking.”</p>
-
-<p>Again he says: “For speedy attaining, I durst venture a
-good wager if a scholar in whom is aptness, love, diligence,
-and constancy, would but translate after this sort some little
-book in Tully (as <i>De Senectute</i>, with two Epistles, the first
-‘Ad Quintum Fratrem,’ the other ‘Ad Lentulum’), that
-scholar, I say, should come to a better knowledge in the
-Latin tongue than the most part do that spend from five to
-six years in tossing all the rules of grammar in common
-schools.” After quoting the instance of Dion Prussæus,
-who came to great learning and utterance by reading and
-following only two books, the <i>Phædo</i>, and <i>Demosthenes de<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[88]</a></span>
-Falsa Legatione</i>, he goes on: “And a better and nearer
-example herein may be our most noble Queen Elizabeth,
-who never took yet Greek nor Latin grammar in her hand
-after the first declining of a noun and a verb; but only by
-this double translating of Demosthenes and Isocrates daily,
-without missing, every forenoon, and likewise some part of
-Tully every afternoon, for the space of a year or two, hath
-attained to such a perfect understanding in both the tongues,
-and to such a ready utterance of the Latin, and that with
-such a judgment, as there be few now in both Universities
-or elsewhere in England that be in both tongues comparable
-with Her Majesty.” Ascham’s authority is indeed not conclusive
-on this point, as he, in praising the Queen’s attainments,
-was vaunting his own success as a teacher, and,
-moreover, if he flattered her he could plead prevailing
-custom. But we have, I believe, abundant evidence that
-Elizabeth was an accomplished scholar.</p>
-
-<p>§ 12. Before I leave Ascham I must make one more
-quotation, to which I shall more than once have occasion
-to refer. Speaking of the plan of double translation, he
-says: “Ere the scholar have construed, parsed, twice translated
-over by good advisement, marked out his six points
-by skilful judgment, he shall have necessary occasion to
-read over every lecture a <i>dozen times at the least</i>; which
-because he shall do always in order, he shall do it always
-with pleasure. And pleasure allureth love: love hath lust
-to labour; labour always obtaineth his purpose.”</p>
-
-<p>§ 13. A good deal has been said, and perhaps something
-learnt, about the teaching of Latin since the days of Ascham.
-As far as I know the method which Ascham denounced, and
-which most English schoolmasters stuck to for more than
-two centuries longer, has now been abandoned. No one<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[89]</a></span>
-thinks of making the beginner learn by heart all the Latin
-Grammar before he is introduced to the Latin language.
-To understand the machinery of which an account is given
-in the grammar, the learner must see it at work, and must
-even endeavour in a small way to work it himself. So it
-seems pretty well agreed that the information given in the
-grammar must be joined with some construing and some
-exercises from the very first. But here the agreement ends.
-Our teachers, consciously or in ignorance, follow one or
-more of a number of methodizers who have examined the
-problem of language-learning, such men as Ascham, Ratke,
-Comenius, Jacotot, Hamilton, Robertson, and Prendergast.
-These naturally divide themselves into two parties, which I
-have ventured to call “Rapid Impressionists,” and “Complete
-Retainers.” The first of these plunge the beginner
-into the language, and trust to the great mass of vague
-impressions clearing and defining themselves as he goes
-along. The second insist on his learning at the first a very
-small portion of the language, and mastering and retaining
-everything he learns. It will be seen that in the first stage
-of the course Ascham is a “Complete Retainer.” He does
-not talk, like Prendergast, of “mastery,” nor, like Jacotot,
-does he require the learner to begin every lesson at the
-beginning of the book: but he makes the pupil go over
-each lesson “a dozen times at the least,” before he may
-advance beyond it. As for his practice of double translation,
-for the advanced pupil it is excellent, but if it is
-required from the beginner, it leads to unintelligent memorizing.
-I think I shall be able to show later on that other
-methodizers have advanced beyond Ascham. (<a href="#Page_246"><i>Infra</i>, 246 <i>n.</i></a>)</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[90]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="VIII">VIII.<br />
-<span class="smaller">MULCASTER.<br />
-(1531(?)-1611.)</span></h2>
-
-<p>§ 1. The history of English thought on education has
-yet to be written. In the literature of education the
-Germans have been the pioneers, and have consequently
-settled the routes; and when a track has once been established
-few travellers will face the risk and trouble of
-leaving it. So up to the present time, writers on the history
-of European education after the Renascence have occupied
-themselves chiefly with men who lived in Germany, or
-wrote in German. But the French are at length exploring
-the country for themselves; and in time, no doubt, the
-English-speaking races will show an interest in the thoughts
-and doings of their common ancestors.</p>
-
-<p>We know what toils and dangers men will encounter in
-getting to the source of great rivers; and although, as Mr.
-Widgery truly says, “the study of origins is not everybody’s
-business,”<a name="FNanchor_47" id="FNanchor_47"></a><a href="#Footnote_47" class="fnanchor">[47]</a> we yet may hope that students will be found
-ready to give time and trouble to an investigation of great
-interest and perhaps some utility—the origin of the school<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[91]</a></span>
-course which now affects the millions who have English for
-their mother-tongue.</p>
-
-<p>§ 2. In the fifteen hundreds there were published
-several works on education, three of which, Elyot’s
-<i>Governour</i>, Ascham’s <i>Scholemaster</i>, and Mulcaster’s
-<i>Positions</i>, have been recently reprinted.<a name="FNanchor_48" id="FNanchor_48"></a><a href="#Footnote_48" class="fnanchor">[48]</a> Others, such as
-Edward Coote’s <i>English Schoolmaster</i>, and Mulcaster’s
-<i>Elementarie</i>, are pretty sure to follow, without serious loss,
-let us hope, to their editors, though neither Coote nor
-Mulcaster are likely to become as well-known writers as
-Roger Ascham.</p>
-
-<p>§ 3. Henry Barnard, whose knowledge of our educational
-literature no less than his labours in it, makes him
-the greatest living authority, says that Mulcaster’s <i>Positions</i>
-is “one of the earliest, and still one of the best treatises
-in the English language.” (<i>English Pedagogy</i>, 2nd series,
-p. 177.) Mulcaster was one of the most famous of English
-schoolmasters, and by his writings he proved that he was
-far in advance of the schoolmasters of his own time, and of
-the times which succeeded. But he paid the penalty of
-thinking of himself more highly than he should have
-thought; and whether or no the conjecture is right that
-Shakespeare had him in his mind when writing <i>Love’s
-Labour’s Lost</i>, there is an affectation in Mulcaster’s style
-which is very irritating, for it has caused even the master of
-Edmund Spenser to be forgotten. In a curious and interesting
-allegory on the progress of language (in the <i>Elementarie</i>,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[92]</a></span>
-pp. 66, ff.), Mulcaster says that Art selects the best age of
-a language to draw rules from, such as the age of Demosthenes
-in Greece and of Tully in Rome; and he goes on:
-“Such a period in the English tongue I take to be in our
-days for both the pen and the speech.” And he suggests
-that the English language, having reached its zenith, is seen
-to advantage, not in the writings of Shakespeare or Spenser,
-but in those of Richard Mulcaster. After enumerating
-the excellencies of the language, he adds: “I need no
-example in any of these, whereof my own penning is a
-general pattern.” Here we feel tempted to exclaim with
-Armado in <i>Love’s Labour’s Lost</i> (Act 5, sc. 2): “I protest
-the schoolmaster is exceeding fantastical: too too vain, too
-too vain.” He speaks elsewhere of his “so careful, I will
-not say so curious writing” (<i>Elementarie</i>, p. 253), and says
-very truly: “Even some of reasonable study can hardly
-understand the couching of my sentence, and the depth of
-my conceit” (<i>ib.</i>, 235). And this was the death-warrant
-of his literary renown.</p>
-
-<p>§ 4. But there is good reason why Mulcaster should
-not be forgotten. When we read his books we find that
-wisdom which we are importing in the nineteenth century
-was in a great measure offered us by an English schoolmaster
-in the sixteenth. The latest advances in pedagogy have
-established (1) that the end and aim of education is to
-develop the faculties of the mind and body; (2) that all
-teaching processes should be carefully adapted to the
-mental constitution of the learner; (3) that the first stage in
-learning is of immense importance and requires a very high
-degree of skill in the teacher; (4) that the brain of children,
-especially of clever children, should not be subjected to
-“pressure”; (5) that childhood should not be spent in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[93]</a></span>
-learning foreign languages, but that its language should be
-the mother-tongue, and its exercises should include handwork,
-especially drawing; (6) that girls’ education should be
-cared for no less than boys’; (7) that the only hope of improving
-our schools lies in providing training for our
-teachers. These are all regarded as planks in the platform
-of “the new education,” and these were all advocated by
-Mulcaster.</p>
-
-<p>§ 5. Before I point this out in detail I may remark how
-greatly education has suffered from being confounded with
-learning. There are interesting passages both in Ascham
-and Mulcaster which prove that the class-ideal of the
-“scholar and gentleman” was of later growth. In the fifteen
-hundreds learning was thought suitable, not for the rich, but
-for the clever. Still, learning, and therefore education, was
-not for the many, but the few. Mulcaster considers at some
-length how the number of the educated is to be kept down
-(<i>Positions</i>, chapp. 36, 37, 39), though even here he is in the
-van, and would have everyone taught to read and write
-(<i>Positions</i>, chapp. 5, 36). But the true problem of education
-was not faced till it was discovered that every human being
-was to be considered in it. This was, I think, first seen by
-Comenius.</p>
-
-<p>With this abatement we find Mulcaster’s sixteenth-century
-notions not much behind our nineteenth.</p>
-
-<p>§ 6. (1 &amp; 2) “Why is it not good,” he asks, “to have every
-part of the body and every power of the soul to be fined to
-his best?” (<i>PP.</i>, p. 34<a name="FNanchor_49" id="FNanchor_49"></a><a href="#Footnote_49" class="fnanchor">[49]</a>). Elsewhere he says: “The end of
-education and train is to help Nature to her perfection,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[94]</a></span>
-which is, when all her abilities be perfected in their habit,
-whereunto right elements be right great helps. Consideration
-and judgment must wisely mark whereunto Nature is either
-evidently given or secretly affectionate and must frame an
-education consonant thereto.” (<i>El.</i>, p. 28).</p>
-
-<p>Michelet has with justice claimed for Montaigne that he
-drew the teacher’s attention from the thing to be learnt to the
-<i>learner</i>: “<i>Non l’objet, le savoir, mais le sujet, c’est l’homme.</i>”
-(<i>Nos Fils</i>, p. 170.) Mulcaster has a claim to share this
-honour with his great contemporary. He really laid the
-foundation of a science of education. Discussing our
-natural abilities, he says: “We have a perceiving by outward
-sense to feel, to hear, to see, to smell, to taste all
-sensible things; which qualities of the outward, being
-received in by the <i>common sense</i> and examined by <i>fantsie</i>,
-are delivered to <i>remembrance</i>, and afterward prove our great
-and only grounds unto further knowledge.”<a name="FNanchor_50" id="FNanchor_50"></a><a href="#Footnote_50" class="fnanchor">[50]</a> (<i>El.</i>, p. 32.)
-Here we see Mulcaster endeavouring to base education, or
-as he so well calls it, “train,” on what we receive from
-Nature. Elsewhere he speaks of the three things which we
-“find peering out of the little young souls,” viz: “wit to take,
-memory to keep, and discretion to discern.” (<i>PP.</i>, p. 27.)</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[95]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>§ 7. (3) I have pointed out that the false ideal of the
-Renascence led schoolmasters to neglect children.
-Mulcaster remarks that the ancients considered the training
-of children should date from the birth; but he himself
-begins with the school age. Here he has the boldness to
-propose that those who teach the beginners should have the
-smallest number of pupils, and should receive the highest
-pay. “The first groundwork would be laid by the best
-workman,” says Mulcaster (<i>PP.</i>, 130), here expressing a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[96]</a></span>
-truth which, like many truths that are not quite convenient,
-is seldom denied but almost systematically ignored.<a name="FNanchor_51" id="FNanchor_51"></a><a href="#Footnote_51" class="fnanchor">[51]</a></p>
-
-<p>§ 8. (4) In the <i>Nineteenth Century</i> Magazine for November,
-1888, appeared a vigorous protest with nearly 400 signatures,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[97]</a></span>
-many of which carried great weight with them, against our
-<i>sacrifice of education to examination</i>. Our present system,
-whether good or bad, is the result of accident. Winchester
-and Eton had large endowments, and naturally endeavoured
-by means of these endowments to get hold of clever boys.
-At first no doubt they succeeded fairly well; but other
-schools felt bound to compete for juvenile brains, and as the
-number of prizes increased, many of our preparatory schools
-became mere racing stables for children destined at 12 or
-14 to run for “scholarship stakes.” Thus, in the scramble
-for the money all thought of education has been lost sight
-of; injury has been done in many cases to those who have
-succeeded, still greater injury to those who have failed or
-who have from the first been considered “out of the running.”
-These very serious evils would have been avoided had we
-taken counsel with Mulcaster: “Pity it were for so petty a
-gain to forego a greater; to win an hour in the morning and
-lose the whole day after; as those people most commonly
-do which start out of their beds too early before they be well
-awaked or know what it is o’clock; and be drowsy when
-they are up for want of their sleep.” (<i>PP.</i>, p. 19; see also
-<i>El.</i>, xi., pp. 52 ff.)</p>
-
-<p>§ 9. (5) It would have been a vast gain to all Europe if
-Mulcaster had been followed instead of Sturm. He was one
-of the earliest advocates of the use of English instead of
-Latin (see Appendix, p. 534), and good reading and writing
-in English were to be secured before Latin was begun. His
-elementary course included these five things: English reading,
-English writing, drawing, singing, playing a musical instrument.
-If the first course were made to occupy the school-time
-up to the age of 12, Mulcaster held that more would
-be done between 12 and 16 than between 7 and 17 in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[98]</a></span>
-the ordinary way. There would be the further gain
-that the children would not be set against learning. “Because
-of the too timely onset too little is done in too long a time,
-and the school is made a torture, which as it brings forth
-delight in the end when learning is held fast, so should it
-pass on very pleasantly by the way, while it is in learning.”<a name="FNanchor_52" id="FNanchor_52"></a><a href="#Footnote_52" class="fnanchor">[52]</a>
-(<i>PP.</i>, 33.)</p>
-
-<p>§ 10. (6) Among the many changes brought about in the
-nineteenth century we find little that can compare in importance
-with the advance in the education of women. In the
-last century, whenever a woman exercised her mental powers
-she had to do it by stealth,<a name="FNanchor_53" id="FNanchor_53"></a><a href="#Footnote_53" class="fnanchor">[53]</a> and her position was degraded
-indeed when compared not only with her descendants of
-the nineteenth century, but also with her ancestors of the
-sixteenth. This I know has been disputed by some authorities,
-<i>e.g.</i>, by the late Professor Brewer: but to others, <i>e.g.</i>, to
-a man who, as regards honesty and wisdom, has had few equals
-and no superiors in investigating the course of education, I
-mean the late Joseph Payne, this educational superiority of
-the women of Elizabeth’s time has seemed to be entirely<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[99]</a></span>
-beyond question. On this point Mulcaster’s evidence is
-very valuable, and, to me at least, conclusive. He not only
-“admits young maidens to learn,” but says that “custom
-stands for him,” and that “the custom of my country
-... hath made the maidens’ train her own approved
-travail.” (<i>PP.</i>, p. 167.)</p>
-
-<p>§ 11. (7) Of all the educational reforms of the nineteenth
-century by far the most fruitful and most expansive is, in my
-opinion, the training of teachers. In this, as in most educational
-matters, the English, though advancing, are in the
-rear. Far more is made of “training” on the Continent and
-in the United States than in England. And yet we made a
-good start. Our early writers on education saw that the
-teacher has immense influence, and that to turn this influence
-to good account he must have made a study of his profession
-and have learnt “the best that has been thought and done”
-in it. Every occupation in life has a traditional capital of
-knowledge and experience, and those who intend to follow
-the business, whatever it may be, are required to go through
-some kind of training or apprenticeship before they earn
-wages. To this rule there is but one exception. In English
-elementary schools children are paid to “teach” children,
-and in the higher schools the beginner is allowed to blunder
-at the expense of his first pupils into whatever skill he may
-in the end manage to pick up. But our English practice
-received no encouragement from the early English writers,
-Mulcaster, Brinsley,<a name="FNanchor_54" id="FNanchor_54"></a><a href="#Footnote_54" class="fnanchor">[54]</a> and Hoole.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[100]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>As far as I am aware the first suggestion of a training
-college for teachers came from Mulcaster. He schemed
-seven special colleges at the University; and of these one
-is for teachers. Some of his suggestions, <i>e.g.</i>, about
-“University Readers” have lately been adopted, though
-without acknowledgment; and as the University of
-Cambridge has since 1879 acknowledged the existence of
-teachers, and appointed a “Teachers’ Training Syndicate,”
-we may perhaps in a few centuries more carry out his scheme,
-and have training colleges at Oxford and Cambridge.<a name="FNanchor_55" id="FNanchor_55"></a><a href="#Footnote_55" class="fnanchor">[55]</a>
-Some of the reasons he gives us have not gone out of date
-with his English. They are as follows:—</p>
-
-<p>“And why should not these men (the teachers) have both
-this sufficiency in learning, and such room to rest in, thence
-to be chosen and set forth for the common service? Be
-either children or schools so small a portion of our<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[101]</a></span>
-multitude? or is the framing of young minds, and the training
-of their bodies so mean a point of cunning? Be schoolmasters
-in this Realm such a paucity, as they are not even
-in good sadness to be soundly thought on? If the chancel
-have a minister, the belfry hath a master: and where youth
-is, as it is eachwhere, there must be trainers, or there will be
-worse. He that will not allow of this careful provision for
-such a seminary of masters, is most unworthy either to have
-had a good master himself, or hereafter to have a good one
-for his. Why should not teachers be well provided for, to
-continue their whole life in the school, as <i>Divines</i>, <i>Lawyers</i>,
-<i>Physicians</i> do in their several professions? Thereby
-judgment, cunning, and discretion will grow in them: and
-masters would prove old men, and such as <i>Xenophon</i> setteth
-over children in the schooling of <i>Cyrus</i>. Whereas now, the
-school being used but for a shift, afterward to pass thence to
-the other professions, though it send out very sufficient men
-to them, itself remaineth too too naked, considering the
-necessity of the thing. I conclude, therefore, that this
-trade requireth a particular college, for these four causes.
-1. First, for the subject being the mean to make or mar the
-whole fry of our State. 2. Secondly, for the number,
-whether of them that are to learn, or of them that are to
-teach. 3. Thirdly, for the necessity of the profession, which
-may not be spared. 4. Fourthly, for the matter of their study,
-which is comparable to the greatest professions, for language,
-for judgment, for skill how to train, for variety in all points
-of learning, wherein the framing of the mind, and the
-exercising of the body craveth exquisite consideration,
-beside the staidness of the person.” (<i>PP.</i>, 9 pp. 248, 9.)</p>
-
-<p>§ 12. Though once a celebrated man, and moreover
-the master of Edmund Spenser, Mulcaster has been long<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[102]</a></span>
-forgotten; but when the history of education in England
-comes to be written, the historian will show that few schoolmasters
-in the fifteen hundreds or since were so enlightened
-as the first headmaster of Merchant Taylors’.<a name="FNanchor_56" id="FNanchor_56"></a><a href="#Footnote_56" class="fnanchor">[56]</a></p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[103]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="IX">IX.<br />
-<span class="smaller">RATICHIUS.<br />
-(1571-1635.)</span></h2>
-
-<p>§ 1. The history of Education in the fifteen hundreds
-tells chiefly of two very different classes of men. First we
-have the practical men, who set themselves to supply the
-general demand for instruction in the classical languages.
-This class includes most of the successful schoolmasters, such
-as Sturm, Trotzendorf, Neander, and the Jesuits. The other
-class were thinkers, who never attempted to teach, but
-merely gave form to truths which would in the end affect
-teaching. These were especially Rabelais and Montaigne.</p>
-
-<p>§ 2. With the sixteen hundreds we come to men who
-have earned for themselves a name unpleasant in our ears,
-although it might fittingly be applied to all the greatest
-benefactors of the human race. I mean the name of
-<i>Innovators</i>. These men were not successful; at least they
-seemed unsuccessful to their contemporaries, who contrasted
-the promised results with the actual. But their efforts were
-by no means thrown away: and posterity at least, has
-acknowledged its obligations to them. One sees now that
-they could hardly have expected justice in their own time.
-It is safe to adopt the customary plan; it is safe to speculate
-how that plan may and should be altered; but it is dangerous<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[104]</a></span>
-to attempt to translate new thought into new action, and
-boldly to advance without a track, trusting to principles
-which may, like the compass, show you the right direction,
-but, like the compass, will give you no hint of the obstacles
-that lie before you.</p>
-
-<p>The chief demands made by the Innovators have been:
-1st, that the study of <i>things</i> should precede, or be united
-with, the study of <i>words</i> (<a href="#Page_538"><i>v.</i> Appendix, p. 538</a>); 2nd, that
-knowledge should be communicated, where possible, by
-appeals to the senses; 3rd, that all linguistic study should
-begin with that of the mother-tongue; 4th, that Latin and
-Greek should be taught to such boys only as would be likely
-to complete a learned education; 5th, that physical education
-should be attended to in all classes of society for the
-sake of health, not simply with a view to gentlemanly
-accomplishments; 6th, that a new method of teaching
-should be adopted, framed “according to Nature.”</p>
-
-<p>Their notions of method have, of course, been very
-various; but their systems mostly agree in these
-particulars:—</p>
-
-<p>1. They proceed from the concrete to the abstract, giving
-some knowledge of the thing itself before the rules which
-refer to it. 2. They employ the student in analysing matter
-put before him, rather than in working synthetically
-according to precept. 3. They require the student to <i>teach
-himself</i> and investigate for himself under the superintendence
-and guidance of the master, rather than be taught by the
-master and receive anything on the master’s authority.
-4. They rely on the interest excited in the pupil by the
-acquisition of knowledge, and renounce coercion. 5. Only
-that which is understood may be committed to memory
-(<a href="#Page_74"><i>v. supra, p. 74, n.</i></a>)</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[105]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>§ 3. The first of the Innovators was Wolfgang Ratichius,
-who, oddly enough, is known to posterity by a name he and
-his contemporaries never heard of. His father’s name was
-Radtké or Ratké, and the son having received a University
-education, translated this into Ratichius. With our usual
-impatience of redundant syllables, we have attempted to
-reduce the word to its original dimensions, and in the
-process have hit upon <i>Ratich</i>, which is a new name
-altogether.</p>
-
-<p>Ratke (to adopt the true form of the original) was connected,
-as Basedow was a hundred and fifty years later,
-with Holstein and Hamburg. He was born at Wilster in
-Holstein in 1571, and studied at Hamburg and at the
-University of Rostock. He afterwards travelled to
-Amsterdam and to England, and it was perhaps owing to
-his residence in this country that he was acquainted with the
-new philosophy of Bacon. We next hear of him at the
-Electoral Diet, held as usual in Frankfurt-on-Main, in 1612.
-He was then over forty years old, and he had elaborated a
-new scheme for teaching. Like all inventors, he was fully
-impressed with the importance of his discovery, and he sent
-to the assembled Princes an address, in which he undertook
-some startling performances. He was able, he said: (1) to
-teach young or old Hebrew, Greek, and Latin, or other
-languages, in a very short time and without any difficulty;
-(2) to establish schools in which all arts should be taught
-and extended; (3) to introduce and peaceably establish
-throughout the German Empire a uniform speech, a uniform
-government, and (still more wonderful) a uniform religion.</p>
-
-<p>§ 4. Naturally enough the address arrested the
-attention of the Princes. The Landgraf Lewis of Darmstadt
-thought the matter worthy of examination, and he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[106]</a></span>
-deputed two learned men, Jung and Helwig, to confer with
-Ratke. Their report was entirely favourable, and they did
-all they could to get for Ratke the means of carrying his
-scheme into execution. “We are,” writes Helwig, “in bondage
-to Latin. The Greeks and Saracens would never have
-done so much for posterity if they had spent their youth in
-acquiring a foreign tongue. We must study our own
-language, and then sciences. Ratichius has discovered the
-art of teaching according to Nature. By his method,
-languages will be quickly learned, so that we shall have time
-for science; and science will be learned even better still, as
-the natural system suits best with science, which is the study
-of Nature.” Moved by this report the Town Council of
-Augsburg agreed to give Ratke the necessary power over
-their schools, and accompanied by Helwig, he accordingly
-went to Augsburg and set to work. But the good folks of
-Augsburg were like children, who expect a plant as soon as
-they have sown the seed. They were speedily dissatisfied,
-and Ratke and Helwig left Augsburg, the latter much discouraged
-but still faithful to his friend. Ratke went to
-Frankfurt again, and a Commission was appointed to consider
-his proposals, but by its advice Ratke was “allowed to
-try elsewhere.”</p>
-
-<p>§ 5. He would never have had a fair chance had he not
-had a firm friend in the Duchess Dorothy of Weimar. Then,
-as now, we find women taking the lead in everything which
-promises to improve education, and this good Duchess sent
-for Ratke and tested his method by herself taking lessons of
-him in Hebrew. With this adult pupil his plans seem to
-have answered well, and she always continued his admirer
-and advocate. By her advice her brother, Prince Lewis of
-Anhalt-Koethen, decided that the great discovery should not
-be lost for want of a fair trial; so he called Ratke to Koethen<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[107]</a></span>
-and complied with all his demands. A band of teachers
-sworn to secrecy were first of all instructed in the art by
-Ratke himself. Next, schools with very costly appliances
-were provided, and lastly some 500 little Koetheners—boys
-and girls—were collected and handed over to Ratke to work
-his wonders with.</p>
-
-<p>§ 6. It never seems to have occurred either to Ratke or
-his friends or the Prince that all the principles and methods
-that ever were or ever will be established could not enable a
-man without experience to organize a school of 500 children.
-A man who had never been in the water might just as well
-plunge into the sea at once and trust to his knowledge of
-the laws of fluid pressure to save him from drowning. There
-are endless details to be settled which would bewilder any
-one without experience. Some years ago school-buildings
-were provided for one of our county schools, and the council
-consulted a master of great experience who strongly urged
-them not to start as they had intended with 300 boys. “<i>I</i>
-would not undertake such a thing,” said he. When pressed
-for his reason, he said quietly, “I would not be responsible
-for the <i>boots</i>.” I have no doubt Ratke had to come down
-from his principles and his new method to deal with
-numberless little questions of caps, bonnets, late children,
-broken windows, and the like; and he was without the tact
-and the experience which enable many ordinary men and
-women, who know nothing of principles, to settle such
-matters satisfactorily.</p>
-
-<p>§ 7. Years afterwards there was another thinker much
-more profound and influential than Ratke, who was quite
-as incompetent to organize. I mean Pestalozzi. But
-Pestalozzi had one great advantage over Ratke. He
-attached all his assistants to him by inspiring them with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[108]</a></span>
-love and reverence of himself. This made up for many
-deficiencies. But Ratke was not like the fatherly, self-sacrificing
-Pestalozzi. He leads us to suspect him of being
-an impostor by making a mystery of his invention, and he
-never could keep the peace with his assistants.</p>
-
-<p>§ 8. So, as might have been expected, the grand experiment
-failed. The Prince, exasperated at being placed
-in a somewhat ridiculous position, and possibly at the
-serious loss of money into the bargain, revenged himself on
-Ratke by throwing him into prison, nor would he release
-him till he had made him sign a paper in which he admitted
-that he had undertaken more than he was able to fulfil.</p>
-
-<p>§ 9. This was no doubt the case; and yet Ratke had
-done more for the Prince than the Prince for Ratke. In
-Koethen had been opened the first German school in which
-the children were taught to make a study of the German
-language.</p>
-
-<p>Ratke never recovered from his failure at Koethen, and
-nothing memorable is recorded of him afterwards. He
-died in 1635.</p>
-
-<p>§ 10. Much was written by Ratke; much has been
-written about him; and those who wish to know more than
-the few particulars I have given may find all they want in
-Raumer or Barnard. The Innovator failed in gaining the
-applause of his contemporaries, and he does not seem to
-stand high in the respect of posterity; but he was a pioneer
-in the art of didactics, and the rules which Raumer has
-gathered from the <i>Methodus Institutionis nova ...
-Ratichii et Ratichianorum</i>, published by Rhenius at
-Leipzig in 1626, raise some of the most interesting points
-to which a teachers attention can be directed. I will
-therefore state them, and say briefly what I think of them.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[109]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>§ 11. I. <i>In everything we should follow the order of
-Nature. There is a certain natural sequence along which the
-human intelligence moves in acquiring knowledge. This
-sequence must be studied, and instruction must be based on
-the knowledge of it.</i></p>
-
-<p>Here, as in all teaching of the Reformers, we find
-“Nature” used as if the word stood for some definite idea.
-From the time of the Stoics we have been exhorted to
-“follow Nature.” In more modern times the demand was
-well formulated by Picus of Mirandola: “Take no heed
-what thing many men do, but what thing the <i>very law of
-Nature</i>, what thing <i>very reason</i>, what thing <i>our Lord Himself</i>
-showeth thee to be done.” (Trans. by Sir Thomas More,
-quoted in Seebohm, <i>Oxford Reformers</i>.)</p>
-
-<p>Pope, always happy in expression but not always clear in
-thought, talks of—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">“Unerring Nature, still divinely bright,</div>
-<div class="verse">One clear, unchanged, and universal light.”</div>
-<div class="verse right">(<i>Essay on C.</i>, i, 70.)</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>But as Dr. W. T. Harris has well pointed out (<i>St. Louis,
-Mo., School Report, ’78, ’79</i>, p. 217), with this word “Nature”
-writers on education do a great deal of juggling. Some
-times they use it for the external world, including in it man’s
-<i>unconscious</i> growth, sometimes they make it stand for the
-ideal. What sense does Ratke attach to it? One might
-have some difficulty in determining. Perhaps the best
-meaning we can nowadays find for his rule is: <i>study
-Psychology</i>.</p>
-
-<p>§ 12. II. <i>One thing at a time.</i> Master one subject
-before you take up another. For each language master a
-single book. Go over it again and again till you have
-completely made it your own.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[110]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>In its crude form this rule could not be carried out. If
-the attempt were made the results would be no better than
-from the six months’ course of Terence under Ratke. It is
-“against all Nature” to go on hammering away at one
-thing day after day without any change; and there is a
-point beyond which any attempt at thoroughness must end
-in simple stagnation. The rule then would have two fatal
-drawbacks: 1st, it would lead to monotony; 2nd, it would
-require a completeness of learning which to the young
-would be impossible. But in these days no one follows
-Ratke. On the other hand, concentration in study is often
-neglected, and our time-tables afford specimens of the most
-ingenious mosaic work, in which everything has a place, but
-in so small a quantity that the learners never find out what
-each thing really is. School subjects are like the clubs of
-the eastern tale, which did not give out their medicinal
-properties till the patient got warm in the use of them.</p>
-
-<p>When a good hold on a subject has once been secured,
-short study, with considerable intervals between, may suffice
-to keep up and even increase the knowledge already
-obtained; but in matters of any difficulty, <i>e.g.</i>, in a new
-language, no start is ever made without allotting to it much
-more than two or three hours a week. It is perhaps a
-mistake to suppose that if a good deal of the language may
-be learnt by giving it ten hours a week, twice that amount
-might be acquired in twenty hours. It is a much greater
-mistake if we think that one-fifth of the amount might be
-acquired in two hours.</p>
-
-<p>§ 13. III. <i>The same thing should be repeated over and
-over again.</i></p>
-
-<p>This is like the Jesuits’ <i>Repetitio Mater Studiorum</i>; and the
-same notion was well developed 200 years later by Jacotot.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[111]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>By Ratke’s application of this rule some odd results were
-produced. The little Koetheners were drilled for German
-in a book of the Bible (Genesis was selected), and then for
-Latin in a play of Terence.</p>
-
-<p>Unlike many “theoretical notions” this precept of Ratke’s
-comes more and more into favour as the schoolmaster
-increases in age and experience. But we must be careful to
-take our pupils with us; and this repeating the same thing
-over and over may seem to them what marking time would
-seem to soldiers who wanted to march. Even more than
-the last rule this is open to the objections that monotony is
-deadening, and perfect attainment of anything but words
-impossible. In keeping to a subject then we must not rely
-on simple repetition. The rule now accepted is thus stated
-by Diesterweg:—“Every subject of instruction should be
-viewed from as many sides as possible, and as varied
-exercises as possible should be set on one and the same
-thing.” The art of the master is shown in disguising
-repetition and bringing known things into new connection,
-so that they may partially at least retain their freshness.</p>
-
-<p>§ 14. IV. <i>First let the mother-tongue be studied, and
-teach everything through the mother-tongue, so that the
-learners attention may not be diverted to the language.</i></p>
-
-<p>We saw that Sturm, the leading schoolmaster of Renascence,
-tried to suppress the mother-tongue and substitute
-Latin for it. Against this a vigorous protest was made in
-this country by Mulcaster. And our language was never
-conquered by a foreign language, as German was conquered
-first by Latin and then by French. But “the tongues”
-have always had the lion’s share of attention in the schoolroom,
-and though many have seen and Milton has said
-that “our understanding cannot in this body found itself<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[112]</a></span>
-but on sensible things,” this truth is only now making its
-way into the schoolroom. Hitherto the foundation has
-hardly been laid before “the schoolmaster has stept in
-and staid the building by confounding the language.”<a name="FNanchor_57" id="FNanchor_57"></a><a href="#Footnote_57" class="fnanchor">[57]</a>
-Ratke’s protest against this will always be put to his credit
-in the history of education.</p>
-
-<p>§ 15. V. <i>Everything without constraint.</i> “The young
-should not be beaten to make them learn or for not having
-learnt. It is compulsion and stripes that set young people
-against studying. Boys are often beaten for not having
-learnt, but they would have learnt had they been well
-taught. The human understanding is so formed that it
-has pleasure in receiving what it should retain: and this
-pleasure you destroy by your harshness. Where the master
-is skilful and judicious, the boys will take to him and to
-their lessons. Folly lurks indeed in the heart of the child
-and must be driven out with the rod; but not by the
-<i>teacher</i>.”</p>
-
-<p>Here at least there is nothing original in Ratke’s precept.
-A goodly array of authorities have condemned learning
-“upon compulsion.” This array extends at least as far as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[113]</a></span>
-from Plato to Bishop Dupanloup. “In the case of the
-mind, no study pursued under compulsion remains rooted
-in the memory,” says Plato.<a name="FNanchor_58" id="FNanchor_58"></a><a href="#Footnote_58" class="fnanchor">[58]</a> “Everything depends,” says
-Dupanloup, “on what the teacher induces his pupils to do
-<i>freely</i>: for authority is not constraint—it ought to be
-inseparable from respect and devotion. I will respect
-human liberty in the smallest child.” As far as I have
-observed there is only one class of persons whom the
-authorities from Plato to Dupanloup have failed to
-convince, and that is the schoolmasters. This is the class
-to which I have belonged, and I should not be prepared to
-take Plato’s counsel: “Bring up your boys in their studies
-without constraint and in a playful manner.” (<i>Ib.</i>) At the
-same time I see the importance of self-activity, and there is
-no such thing as self-activity upon compulsion. You can
-no more hurry thought with the cane than you can hurry a
-snail with a pin. So without interest there can be no
-proper learning. Interest must be aroused—even in Latin
-Grammar. But if they could choose their own occupation,
-the boys, however interested in their work, would probably
-find something else more interesting still. We cannot get
-on, and never shall, without the <i>must</i>.</p>
-
-<p>§ 16. VI. <i>Nothing may be learnt by heart.</i></p>
-
-<p>It has always been a common mistake in the schoolroom
-to confound the power of running along a sequence of
-sounds with a mastery of the thought with which those
-sounds should be connected. But, as I have remarked
-elsewhere (<a href="#Page_74"><i>supra</i>, p. 74, note</a>), the two things, though different,
-are not opposed. Too much is likely to be made of learning
-by heart, for of the two things the pupils find it the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[114]</a></span>
-easier, and the teacher the more easily tested. We may,
-however, guard against the abuse without giving up the use.</p>
-
-<p>§ 17. VII.<a name="FNanchor_59" id="FNanchor_59"></a><a href="#Footnote_59" class="fnanchor">[59]</a> <i>Uniformity in all things.</i></p>
-
-<p>Both in the way of learning, and in the books, and the
-rules, a uniform method should be observed, says Ratke.</p>
-
-<p>The right plan is for the learner to acquire familiar
-knowledge of one subject or part of a subject, and then use
-this for comparison when he learns beyond it. If the same
-method of learning is adopted throughout, this will render
-comparison more easy and more striking.<a name="FNanchor_60" id="FNanchor_60"></a><a href="#Footnote_60" class="fnanchor">[60]</a></p>
-
-<p>§ 18. VIII. <i>The thing itself should come first, then
-whatever explains it.</i></p>
-
-<p>To those who do not with closed eyes cling to the
-method of their predecessors, this rule may seem founded
-on common-sense. Would any one but a “teacher,” or a
-writer of school books, ever think of making children who
-do not know a word of French, learn about the French
-accents? And yet what Ratke said 250 years ago has not
-been disproved since: “Accidens rei priusquam rem ipsam
-quaerere prorsus absonum et absurdum esse videtur,”
-which I take to mean: “Before the learner has a notion
-of the thing itself, it is folly to worry him about its accidents
-or even its properties, essential or unessential.” <i>Ne modus
-rei ante rem.</i><a name="FNanchor_61" id="FNanchor_61"></a><a href="#Footnote_61" class="fnanchor">[61]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[115]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>This rule of Ratke’s warns teachers against a very
-common mistake. The subject is <i>to them</i> in full view,
-and they make the most minute observations on it. But
-these things cannot be seen by their pupils; and even if the
-beginner could see these minutiæ, he would find in them
-neither interest nor advantage. But when we apply Ratke’s
-principle more widely, we find ourselves involved in the
-great question whether our method should be based on
-synthesis or analysis, a question which Ratke’s method did
-not settle for us.</p>
-
-<p>§ 19. IX. <i>Everything by experience and examination
-of the parts.</i> Or as he states the rule in Latin: <i>Per
-inductionem et experimentum omnia.</i></p>
-
-<p>Nothing was to be received on authority, and this
-disciple of Bacon went beyond his master and took for his
-motto: <i>Vetustas cessit, ratio vicit</i> (“Age has yielded, reason
-prevailed”); as if reason must be brand-new, and truth
-might wax old and be ready to vanish away.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[116]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>§ 20. From these rules of his we see that Ratke did
-much to formulate the main principles of Didactics. He
-also deserves to be remembered among the methodizers
-who have tackled the problem—how to teach a language.</p>
-
-<p>At Köthen the instructor of the lowest class had to talk
-with the children, and to take pains with their pronunciation.
-When they knew their letters (Ickelsamer’s plan for reading
-Ratke seems to have neglected) the teacher read the Book
-of Genesis through to them, each chapter twice over, requiring
-the children to follow with eye and finger. Then the
-teacher began the chapter again, and read about four lines
-only, which the children read after him. When the book had
-been worked over in this way, the children were required to
-read it through without assistance. Reading once secured,
-the master proceeded to grammar. He explained, say, what
-a substantive was, and then showed instances in Genesis,
-and next required the children to point out others. In
-this way the grammar was verified throughout from Genesis,
-and the pupils were exercised in declining and conjugating
-words taken from the Book.</p>
-
-<p>When they advanced to the study of Latin, they were
-given a <i>translation</i> of a play of Terence, and worked
-over it several times before they were shown the Latin.</p>
-
-<p>The master then translated the play to them, each half-hour’s
-work twice over. At the next reading, the master
-translated the first half-hour, and the boys translated the
-same piece the second. Having thus got through the play,
-they began again, and only the boys translated. After this
-there was a course of grammar, which was applied to the
-Terence, as the grammar of the mother-tongue had been
-to Genesis. Finally, the pupils were put through a course
-of exercises, in which they had to turn into Latin sentences<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[117]</a></span>
-imitated from the Terence, and differing from the original
-only in the number or person used.</p>
-
-<p>Raumer gives other particulars, and quotes largely from
-the almost unreadable account of Kromayer, one of Ratke’s
-followers, in order that we may have, as he says, a notion of
-the tediousness of the method. No doubt anyone who has
-followed me hitherto, will consider that this point has been
-brought out already with sufficient distinctness.</p>
-
-<p>§ 21. When we compare Ratke’s method with Ascham’s,
-we find several points of agreement. Ratke would begin
-the study of a language by taking a model book, and working
-through it with the pupil a great many times. Ascham
-did the same. Each lecture according to his plan would
-be gone over “a dozen times at the least.” Both construed
-to the pupil instead of requiring him to make out the sense
-for himself. Both Ratke and Ascham taught grammar not
-by itself, but in connection with the model book.</p>
-
-<p>But the points of difference are still more striking. In
-one respect Ratke’s plan was weak. It gave the pupils
-little to do, and made no use of the pen. Ascham’s was
-better in this and also as a training in accuracy. Ascham
-was, as I have pointed out, a “complete retainer.” Ratke
-was a “rapid impressionist.” His system was a good deal
-like that which had great vogue in the early part of this
-century as the “Hamiltonian System.” From the first the
-language was to be laid on “very thick,” in the belief that
-“some of it was sure to stick.” The impressions would be
-slight, and there would at first be much confusion between
-words which had a superficial resemblance, but accuracy
-it was thought would come in time.</p>
-
-<p>§ 22. The contest between the two schools of thought
-of which Ascham and Ratke may be taken as representatives<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[118]</a></span>
-has continued till now, and within the last few years both
-parties have made great advances in method. But in
-nothing does progress seem slower than in education; and
-the plan of grammar-teaching in vogue fifty years ago was
-inferior to the methods advocated by the old writers.<a name="FNanchor_62" id="FNanchor_62"></a><a href="#Footnote_62" class="fnanchor">[62]</a></p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[119]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="X">X.<br />
-<span class="smaller">COMENIUS.<br />
-(1592-1671).</span></h2>
-
-<p>§ 1. One of the most hopeful signs of the improvement
-of education is the rapid advance in the last thirty years of
-the fame of Comenius, and the growth of a large literature
-about the man and his ideas. Twenty-three years ago, when
-I first became interested in him, his name was hardly known
-beyond Germany. In English there was indeed an excellent
-life of him prefixed to a translation of his <i>School of
-Infancy</i>; but this work, by Daniel Benham (London, 1858),
-had not then, and has not now, anything like the circulation it
-deserves. A much more successful book has been Professor
-S. S. Laurie’s <i>John Amos Comenius</i> (Cambridge University
-Press), and this is known to most, and should be to all,
-English students of education. By the Germans and
-French Comenius is now recognised as the man who first
-treated education in a scientific spirit, and who bequeathed
-the rudiments of a science to later ages. On this account
-the great library of pedagogy at Leipzig has been named in
-his honour the “Comenius Stiftung.”</p>
-
-<p>§ 2. John Amos Komensky or Comenius, the son of a
-miller, who belonged to the Moravian Brethren, was born,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[120]</a></span>
-at the Moravian village of Niwnic, in 1592. Of his early
-life we know nothing but what he himself tells us in the
-following passage:—“Losing both my parents while I was
-yet a child, I began, through the neglect of my guardians,
-but at sixteen years of age to taste of the Latin tongue.
-Yet by the goodness of God, that taste bred such a thirst
-in me, that I ceased not from that time, by all means and
-endeavours, to labour for the repairing of my lost years;
-and now not only for myself, but for the good of others
-also. For I could not but pity others also in this respect,
-especially in my own nation, which is too slothful and
-careless in matter of learning. Thereupon I was continually
-full of thoughts for the finding out of some means whereby
-more might be inflamed with the love of learning, and
-whereby learning itself might be made more compendious,
-both in matter of the charge and cost, and of the labour
-belonging thereto, that so the youth might be brought by
-a more easy method, unto some notable proficiency in
-learning.”<a name="FNanchor_63" id="FNanchor_63"></a><a href="#Footnote_63" class="fnanchor">[63]</a> With these thoughts in his head, he pursued
-his studies in several German towns, especially at Herborn
-in Nassau. Here he saw the Report on Ratke’s method
-published in 1612 for the Universities of Jena and Giessen;
-and we find him shortly afterwards writing his first book,
-<i>Grammaticæ facilioris Præcepta</i>, which was published at
-Prag in 1616. On his return to Moravia, he was appointed
-to the Brethren’s school at Prerau, but (to use his own
-words) “being shortly after at the age of twenty-four called
-to the service of the Church, because <i>that divine function</i>
-challenged all my endeavours (divinumque HOC AGE præ<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[121]</a></span>
-oculis erat) these scholastic cares were laid aside.”<a name="FNanchor_64" id="FNanchor_64"></a><a href="#Footnote_64" class="fnanchor">[64]</a> His
-pastoral charge was at Fulneck, the headquarters of the
-Brethren. As such it soon felt the effects of the Battle of
-Prag, being in the following year (1621) taken and
-plundered by the Spaniards. On this occasion Comenius
-lost his MSS. and almost everything he possessed. The
-year after his wife died, and then his only child. In 1624
-all Protestant ministers were banished, and in 1627 a new
-decree extended the banishment to Protestants of every
-description. Comenius bore up against wave after wave
-of calamity with Christian courage and resignation, and
-his writings at this period were of great value to his fellow-sufferers.</p>
-
-<p>§ 3. For a time he found a hiding-place in the family
-of a Bohemian nobleman, Baron Sadowsky, at Slaupna, in
-the Bohemian mountains, and in this retirement, his attention
-was again directed to the science of teaching. The
-Baron had engaged Stadius, one of the proscribed, to
-educate his three sons, and, at Stadius’ request, Comenius
-wrote “some canons of a better method,” for his use. We
-find him, too, endeavouring to enrich the literature of his
-mother-tongue, making a metrical translation of the Psalms
-of David, and even writing imitations of Virgil, Ovid, and
-Cato’s <i>Distichs</i>.</p>
-
-<p>In 1627, however, the persecution waxed so hot, that
-Comenius, with most of the Brethren, had to flee their
-country, never to return. On crossing the border, Comenius
-and the exiles who accompanied him knelt down, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[122]</a></span>
-prayed that God would not suffer His truth to fail out of
-their native land.</p>
-
-<p>§ 4. Comenius had now, as Michelet says, lost his country
-and found his country, which was the world. Many of the
-banished, and Comenius among them, settled at the Polish
-town of Leszna, or, as the Germans call it, Lissa, near the
-Silesian frontier. Here there was an old-established school
-of the Brethren, in which Comenius found employment.
-Once more engaged in education, he earnestly set about
-improving the traditional methods. As he himself says,<a name="FNanchor_65" id="FNanchor_65"></a><a href="#Footnote_65" class="fnanchor">[65]</a>
-“Being by God’s permission banished my country with
-divers others, and forced for my sustenance to apply myself
-to the instruction of youth, I gave my mind to the perusal of
-divers authors, and lighted upon many which in this age have
-made a beginning in reforming the method of studies, as
-Ratichius, Helvicus, Rhenius, Ritterus, Glaumius, Cæcilius,
-and who indeed should have had the first place, Joannes
-Valentinus Andreæ, a man of a nimble and clear brain;
-as also Campanella and the Lord Verulam, those famous
-restorers of philosophy;—by reading of whom I was raised
-in good hope, that at last those so many various sparks
-would conspire into a flame; yet observing here and there
-some defects and gaps as it were, I could not contain
-myself from attempting something that might rest upon an
-immovable foundation, and which, if it could be once found
-out, should not be subject to any ruin. Therefore, after
-many workings and tossings of my thoughts, by reducing
-everything to the immovable laws of Nature, I lighted upon<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[123]</a></span>
-my <i>Didactica Magna</i>, which shows the art of readily and
-solidly teaching all men all things.”</p>
-
-<p>§ 5. This work did not immediately see the light, but
-in 1631 Comenius published a book which made him and
-the little Polish town where he lived known throughout
-Europe and beyond it. This was the <i>Janua Linguarum
-Reserata</i>, or “Gate of Tongues unlocked.” Writing about
-it many years afterwards he says that he never could have
-imagined that that little work, fitted only for children (<i>puerile
-istud opusculum</i>), would have been received with applause
-by all the learned world. Letters of congratulation came
-to him from every quarter; and the work was translated
-not only into Greek, Bohemian, Polish, Swedish, Belgian,
-English, French, Spanish, Italian, Hungarian, but also into
-Turkish, Arabic, Persian, and even “Mongolian, which is
-familiar to all the East Indies.” (Dedication of <i>Schola
-Ludus</i> in vol. i. of collected works.)</p>
-
-<p>§ 6. Incited by the applause of the learned, Comenius
-now planned a scheme of universal knowledge, to impart
-which a series of works would have to be written, far
-exceeding what the resources and industry of one man,
-however great a scholar, could produce. He therefore
-looked about for a patron to supply money for the support
-of himself and his assistants, whilst these works were in
-progress. “The vastness of the labours I contemplate,”
-he writes to a Polish nobleman, “demands that I should
-have a wealthy patron, whether we look at their extent, or
-at the necessity of securing assistants, or at the expenses
-generally.”</p>
-
-<p>§ 7. At Leszna there seemed no prospect of his obtaining
-the aid he required; but his fame now procured him
-invitations from distant countries. First he received a call<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[124]</a></span>
-to improve the schools of Sweden. After declining this
-he was induced by his English friends to undertake a
-journey to London, where Parliament had shown its interest
-in the matter of education, and had employed Hartlib,<a name="FNanchor_66" id="FNanchor_66"></a><a href="#Footnote_66" class="fnanchor">[66]</a> an
-enthusiastic admirer of Comenius, to attempt a reform.
-Probably through his family connections, Hartlib was on
-intimate terms with Comenius, and he had much influence<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[125]</a></span>
-on his career. It would seem that Comenius, though
-never tired of forming magnificent schemes, hung back from
-putting anything into a definite shape. After the appearance
-of the <i>Janua Linguarum Reserata</i>, he planned a <i>Janua
-Rerum</i>, and even allowed that title to appear in “the list
-of new books to come forth at the next Mart at Frankford.”<a name="FNanchor_67" id="FNanchor_67"></a><a href="#Footnote_67" class="fnanchor">[67]</a>
-But again he hesitated, and withdrew the announcement.
-Here Hartlib came in, and forced him into print without
-his intending or even knowing it (“præter meam spem et
-me inconsulto”; preface to <i>Conatuum Pansophicorum
-Dilucidatio</i>, 1638). Hartlib begged of Comenius a sketch
-of his great scheme, and with apologies to the author for
-not awaiting his consent, he published it at Oxford in 1637,
-under the title of <i>Conatuum Comenianorum Præludia</i>.
-Comenius accepted the <i>fait accompli</i> with the best grace he
-could—pleased at the stir the book made in the learned
-world, but galled by criticisms, especially by doubts of his
-orthodoxy. To refute the cavillers, he wrote a tract called
-<i>Conatuum Pansophicorum Dilucidatio</i> which was published
-in 1638. In 1639 Hartlib issued in London a new duodecimo
-edition of the <i>Præludia</i> (or as he then called it,
-<i>Prodromus</i>) and the <i>Dilucidatio</i>, adding a dissertation by
-Comenius on the study of Latin. Now, when everything
-seemed ripe for a change in education, and Comenius
-himself was on his way to England, Hartlib translated the
-<i>Prodromus</i>, and when Comenius had come he published it
-with the title, <i>A Reformation of Schools</i>, 1642.<a name="FNanchor_68" id="FNanchor_68"></a><a href="#Footnote_68" class="fnanchor">[68]</a></p>
-
-<p>§ 8. It was no doubt by Hartlib’s influence that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[126]</a></span>
-Parliament had been led to summon Comenius, and at any
-other time the visit might have been “the occasion of great
-good to this island,” but <i>inter arma silent magistri</i>, and
-Comenius went away again. This is the account he himself
-has left us:—</p>
-
-<p>“When seriously proposing to abandon the thorny studies
-of Didactics, and pass on to the pleasing studies of philosophical
-truth, I find myself again among the same thorns....
-After the <i>Pansophiæ Prodromus</i> had been published
-and dispersed through various kingdoms of Europe, many
-of the learned approved of the object and plan of the work,
-but despaired of its ever being accomplished by one man
-alone, and therefore advised that a college of learned men
-should be instituted to carry it into effect. Mr. S. Hartlib,
-who had forwarded the publication of the <i>Pansophiæ Prodromus</i>
-in England, laboured earnestly in this matter, and
-endeavoured, by every possible means, to bring together for
-this purpose a number of men of intellectual activity. And
-at length, having found one or two, he invited me also, with
-many very strong entreaties. My people having consented
-to the journey, I came to London on the very day of the
-autumnal equinox (September 22, 1641), and there at
-last learnt that I had been invited by the order of the
-Parliament. But as the Parliament, the King having then
-gone to Scotland [August 10], was dismissed for a three
-months’ recess [not quite three months, but from September
-9 to October 20], I was detained there through the
-winter, my friends mustering what pansophic apparatus they
-could, though it was but slender.... The Parliament
-meanwhile, having re assembled, and our presence being
-known, I had orders to wait until they should have sufficient
-leisure from other business to appoint a Commission of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[127]</a></span>
-learned and wise men from their body for hearing us and
-considering the grounds of our design. They communicated
-also beforehand their thoughts of assigning to us some
-college with its revenues, whereby a certain number of
-learned and industrious men called from all nations might
-be honourably maintained, either for a term of years or in
-perpetuity. There was even named for the purpose <i>The
-Savoy</i> in London; <i>Winchester College</i> out of London was
-named; and again nearer the city, <i>Chelsea College</i>, inventories
-of which and of its revenues were communicated to
-us, so that nothing seemed more certain than that the
-design of the great Verulam, concerning the opening somewhere
-of a Universal College, devoted to the advancement
-of the Sciences could be carried out. But the rumour of
-the Insurrection in Ireland, and of the massacre in one
-night of more than 200,000 English [October, November],
-and the sudden departure of the King from London
-[January 10, 1641-2], and the plentiful signs of the bloody
-war about to break out disturbed these plans, and obliged
-me to hasten my return to my own people.”<a name="FNanchor_69" id="FNanchor_69"></a><a href="#Footnote_69" class="fnanchor">[69]</a></p>
-
-<p>§ 9. While Comenius was in England, where he stayed
-till August, 1642, he received an invitation to France.
-This invitation, which he did not accept, came perhaps
-through his correspondent Mersenne, a man of great learning,
-who is said to have been highly esteemed and often consulted
-by Descartes. It is characteristic of the state of
-opinion in such matters in those days, that Mersenne tells
-Comenius of a certain Le Maire, by whose method a boy
-of six years old, might, with nine months’ instruction,
-acquire a perfect knowledge of three languages. Mersenne<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[128]</a></span>
-also had dreams of a universal alphabet, and even of a
-universal language.</p>
-
-<p>§ 10. Comenius’ hopes of assistance in England being
-at an end, he thought of returning to Leszna; but a letter
-now reached him from a rich Dutch merchant, Lewis de
-Geer, who offered him a home and means for carrying out
-his plans. This Lewis de Geer, “the Grand Almoner of
-Europe,” as Comenius calls him, displayed a princely
-munificence in the assistance he gave the exiled Protestants.
-At this time he was living at Nordcoping in Sweden.
-Comenius having now found such a patron as he was
-seeking, set out from England and joined him there.</p>
-
-<p>§ 11. Soon after the arrival of Comenius in Sweden,
-the great Oxenstiern sent for him to Stockholm, and with
-John Skyte, the Chancellor of Upsal University, examined
-him and his system. “These two,” as Comenius says,
-“exercised me in colloquy for four days, and chiefly
-the most illustrious Oxenstiern, that eagle of the North
-(<i>Aquila Aquilonius</i>). He inquired into the foundations of
-both my schemes, the Didactic and the Pansophic, so
-searchingly, that it was unlike anything that had been done
-before by any of my learned critics. In the first two days
-he examined the Didactics, and finally said: ‘From an
-early age I perceived that our Method of Studies generally
-in use is a harsh and crude one (<i>violentum quiddam</i>), but
-where the thing stuck I could not find out. At length,
-having been sent by my King of glorious memory [<i>i.e.</i>, by
-Gustavus Adolphus], as ambassador into Germany, I conversed
-on the subject with various learned men. And
-when I had heard that Wolfgang Ratichius was toiling at
-an amended Method I had no rest of mind till I had him
-before me, but instead of talking on the subject, he put<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[129]</a></span>
-into my hands a big quarto volume. I swallowed this
-trouble, and having turned over the whole book, I saw that
-he had detected well enough the maladies of our schools
-but the remedies he proposed did not seem to me sufficient.
-Yours, Mr. Comenius, rest on firmer foundations. Go on
-with the work.’ I answered that I had done all I could in
-those matters, and must now go on to others. ‘I know,’
-said he, ‘that you are toiling at greater affairs, for I have
-read your <i>Prodromus Pansophiæ</i>. That we will discuss
-to-morrow, I must now to public business.’ Next day he
-began on my Pansophic attempts, and examined them with
-still greater severity. ‘Are you a man,’ he asked, ‘who
-can bear contradiction?’ ‘I can,’ said I, ‘and for that
-reason my <i>Prodromus</i> or preliminary sketch was sent out
-first (not indeed that I sent it out myself, this was done by
-friends), that it might meet with criticism. And if we seek
-the criticism of all and sundry, how much more from men
-of mature wisdom and heroic reason?’ He began accordingly
-to discourse against the hope of a better state of
-things arising from a rightly instituted study of Pansophia;
-first, objecting political reasons, then what was said in
-Scripture about ‘the last times.’ All which objections I
-so answered that he ended with these words: ‘Into no
-one’s mind do I think such things have come before.
-Stand upon these grounds of yours; so shall we some time
-come to agreement, or there will be no way left. My advice,
-however,’ added he, ‘is that you first do something for the
-schools, and bring the study of the Latin tongue to a greater
-facility; thus you will prepare the way for those greater
-matters.’” As Skyte and afterwards De Geer gave the same
-advice, Comenius felt himself constrained to follow it; so he
-agreed to settle at Elbing, in Prussia, and there write a work<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[130]</a></span>
-on teaching, in which the principles of the <i>Didactica Magna</i>
-should be worked out with especial reference to teaching
-languages. Notwithstanding the remonstrances of his
-English friends, to which Comenius would gladly have
-listened, he was kept by Oxenstiern and De Geer strictly to
-his agreement, and thus, much against his will, he was held
-fast for eight years in what he calls the “miry entanglements
-of logomachy.”</p>
-
-<p>§ 12. Elbing, where, after a journey to Leszna to fetch
-his family (for he had married again), Comenius now
-settled, is in West Prussia, thirty-six miles south-east of
-Dantzic. From 1577 to 1660 an English trading company
-was settled here, with which the family of Hartlib was
-connected. This perhaps was one reason why Comenius
-chose this town for his residence. But although he had
-a grant of £300 a year from Parliament, Hartlib, instead
-of assisting with money, seems at this time to have himself
-needed assistance, for in October, 1642, Comenius writes
-to De Geer that he fears Fundanius and Hartlib are suffering
-from want, and that he intends for them £200 promised
-by the London booksellers; he suggests that De Geer shall
-give them £30 each meanwhile. (Benham, p. 63.)</p>
-
-<p>§ 13. The relation between Comenius and his patron
-naturally proved a difficult one. The Dutchman thought
-that as he supported Comenius, and contributed something
-more for the assistants, he might expect of Comenius that
-he would devote all his time to the scholastic treatise he
-had undertaken. Comenius, however, was a man of
-immense energy and of widely extended sympathies and
-connections. He was a “Bishop” of the religious body to
-which he belonged, and in this capacity he engaged in controversy,
-and attended some religious conferences. Then<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[131]</a></span>
-again, pupils were pressed upon him, and as money to pay
-five writers whom he kept at work was always running short,
-he did not decline them. De Geer complained of this, and
-supplies were not furnished with wonted regularity. In
-1647 Comenius writes to Hartlib that he is almost overwhelmed
-with cares, and sick to death of writing begging-letters.
-Yet in this year he found means to publish a book
-<i>On the Causes of this</i> (<i>i.e.</i>, the Thirty Years) <i>War</i>, in
-which the Roman Catholics are attacked with great bitterness—a
-bitterness for which the position of the writer affords
-too good an excuse.</p>
-
-<p>§ 14. The year 1648 brought with it the downfall of all
-Comenius’ hopes of returning to his native land. The
-Peace of Westphalia was concluded without any provision
-being made for the restoration of the exiles. But though
-thus doomed to pass the remaining years of his life in
-banishment, Comenius, in this year, seemed to have found
-an escape from all his pecuniary difficulties. The Senior
-Bishop, the head of the Moravian Brethren, died, and
-Comenius was chosen to succeed him. In consequence
-of this, Comenius returned to Leszna, where due provision
-was made for him by the Brethren. Before he left Elbing,
-however, the fruit of his residence there, the <i>Methodus
-Linguarum Novissima</i>, had been submitted to a commission
-of learned Swedes, and approved of by them. The MS.
-went with him to Leszna, where it was published.</p>
-
-<p>§ 15. As head of the Moravian Church, there now devolved
-upon Comenius the care of all the exiles, and his
-widespread reputation enabled him to get situations for
-many of them in all Protestant countries. But he was
-now so much connected with the science of education, that
-even his post at Leszna did not prevent his receiving and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[132]</a></span>
-accepting a call to reform the schools in Transylvania. A
-model school was formed at Saros-Patak, where there was
-a settlement of the banished Brethren, and in this school
-Comenius laboured from 1650 till 1654. At this time he
-wrote his most celebrated book, which is indeed only an
-abridgment of his <i>Janua</i> with the important addition of
-pictures, and sent it to Nürnberg, where it appeared three
-years later (1657). This was the famous <i>Orbis Pictus</i>.</p>
-
-<p>§ 16. Full of trouble as Comenius’ life had hitherto
-been, its greatest calamity was still before him. After he
-was again settled at Leszna, Poland was invaded by the
-Swedes, on which occasion the sympathies of the Brethren
-were with their fellow-Protestants, and Comenius was
-imprudent enough to write a congratulatory address to
-the Swedish King. A peace followed, by the terms of
-which, several towns, and Leszna among them, were made
-over to Sweden; but when the King withdrew, the Poles
-took up arms again, and Leszna, the headquarters of the
-Protestants, the town in which the chief of the Moravian
-Brethren had written his address welcoming the enemy,
-was taken and plundered.</p>
-
-<p>Comenius and his family escaped, but his house was
-marked for special violence, and nothing was preserved.
-His sole remaining possessions were the clothes in which
-he and his family travelled. All his books and manuscripts
-were burnt, among them his valued work on Pansophia,
-and a Latin-Bohemian and Bohemian-Latin Dictionary,
-giving words, phrases, idioms, adages, and aphorisms—a
-book on which he had been labouring for forty years.
-“This loss,” he writes, “I shall cease to lament only when
-I cease to breathe.”</p>
-
-<p>§ 17. After wandering for some time about Germany,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[133]</a></span>
-and being prostrated by fever at Hamburg, he at length
-came to Amsterdam, where Lawrence De Geer, the son
-of his deceased patron, gave him an asylum. Here were
-spent the remaining years of his life in ease and dignity.
-Compassion for his misfortunes was united with veneration
-for his learning and piety. He earned a sufficient income
-by giving instruction in the families of the wealthy; and by
-the liberality of De Geer he was enabled to publish a
-fine folio edition of all his writings on Education (1657).
-His political works, however, were to the last a source of
-trouble to him. His hostility to the Pope and the House
-of Hapsburg made him the dupe of certain “prophets”
-whose soothsayings he published as <i>Lux in Tenebris</i>.
-One of these prophets, who had announced that the Turk
-was to take Vienna, was executed at Pressburg, and the
-<i>Lux in Tenebris</i> at the same time burnt by the hangman.
-Before the news of this disgrace reached Amsterdam,
-Comenius was no more. He died in the year 1671, at the
-advanced age of eighty, and with him terminated the office
-of Chief Bishop among the Moravian Brethren.</p>
-
-<p>§ 18. His long life had been full of trouble, and he saw
-little of the improvements he so earnestly desired and
-laboured after, but he continued the struggle hopefully to
-the end. In his seventy-seventh year he wrote these
-memorable words: “I thank God that I have all my life
-been a man of aspirations.... For the longing after good,
-however it spring up in the heart, is always a rill flowing
-from the Fountain of all good—from God.”<a name="FNanchor_70" id="FNanchor_70"></a><a href="#Footnote_70" class="fnanchor">[70]</a> Labouring in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[134]</a></span>
-this spirit he did not toil in vain, and the historians of
-education have agreed in ranking him among the most
-influential as well as the most noble-minded of the Reformers.</p>
-
-<p>§ 19. Before Comenius, no one had brought the mind
-of a philosopher to bear practically on the subject of
-education. Montaigne and Bacon had advanced principles,
-leaving others to see to their application. A few able schoolmasters,
-Ascham, <i>e.g.</i>, had investigated new methods, but
-had made success in teaching the test to which they
-appealed, rather than any abstract principle. Comenius
-was at once a philosopher who had learnt of Bacon, and
-a schoolmaster who had earned his livelihood by teaching
-the rudiments. Dissatisfied with the state of education as
-he found it, he sought for a better system by an examination
-of the laws of Nature. Whatever is thus established is
-indeed on an immovable foundation, and, as Comenius
-himself says, “not liable to any ruin.” It will hardly be
-disputed, when broadly stated, that there are laws of
-Nature which must be obeyed in dealing with the mind,
-as with the body. No doubt these laws are not so easily
-established in the first case as in the second, nor can we
-find them without much “groping” and some mistakes;
-but whoever in any way assists or even tries to assist in
-the discovery, deserves our gratitude; and greatly are<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[135]</a></span>
-we indebted to him who first boldly set about the task, and
-devoted to it years of patient labour.</p>
-
-<p>§ 20. Comenius has left voluminous Latin writings.
-Professor Laurie gives us the titles of the books connected with
-education, and they are in number forty-two: so there must
-be much repetition and indeed retractation; for Comenius
-was always learning, and one of his last books was <i>Ventilabrum
-Sapientiæ, sive sapienter sua retractandi Ars</i>—<i>i.e.</i>, “Wisdom’s
-Winnowing-machine, or the Art of wisely withdrawing one’s
-own assertions.” We owe much to Professor Laurie, who
-has served as a <i>ventilabrum</i> and left us a succinct and clear
-account of the Reformer’s teaching. I have read little of
-the writings of Comenius except the German translation of
-the “Great Didactic,” from which the following is taken.</p>
-
-<p>§ 21. We live, says Comenius, a threefold life—a
-vegetative, an animal, and an intellectual or spiritual. Of
-these, the first is perfect in the womb, the last in heaven.
-He is happy who comes with healthy body into the world,
-much more he who goes with healthy spirit out of it.
-According to the heavenly idea, man should (1) know all
-things; (2) should be master of all things, and of himself;
-(3) should refer everything to God. So that within us
-Nature has implanted the seeds of (1) learning, (2) virtue,
-and (3) piety. To bring these seeds to maturity is the
-object of education. All men require education, and God
-has made children unfit for other employments that they
-may have leisure to learn.</p>
-
-<p>§ 22. But schools have failed, and instead of keeping
-to the true object of education, and teaching the foundations,
-relations, and intentions of all the most important things,
-they have neglected even the mother tongue, and confined
-the teaching to Latin; and yet that has been so badly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[136]</a></span>
-taught, and so much time has been wasted over grammar
-rules and dictionaries, that from ten to twenty years are
-spent in acquiring as much knowledge of Latin as is
-speedily acquired of any modern tongue.</p>
-
-<p>§ 23. The cause of this want of success is that the
-system does not follow Nature. Everything natural goes
-smoothly and easily. There must therefore be no pressure.
-Learning should come to children as swimming to fish,
-flying to birds, running to animals. As Aristotle says, the
-desire of knowledge is implanted in man: and the mind
-grows as the body does—by taking proper nourishment,
-not by being stretched on the rack.</p>
-
-<p>§ 24. If we would ascertain how teaching and learning
-are to have good results, we must look to the known
-processes of Nature and Art. A man sows seed, and it
-comes up he knows not how, but in sowing it he must
-attend to the requirements of Nature. Let us then look to
-Nature to find out how knowledge takes root in young
-minds. We find that Nature waits for the fit time. Then,
-too, she has prepared the material before she gives it form.
-In our teaching we constantly run counter to these principles
-of hers. We give instruction before the young minds
-are ready to receive it. We give the form before the
-material. Words are taught before the things to which
-they refer. When a foreign tongue is to be taught, we
-commonly give the form, <i>i.e.</i>, the grammatical rules, before
-we give the material, <i>i.e.</i>, the language, to which the rules
-apply. We should begin with an author, or properly
-prepared translation-book, and abstract rules should never
-come before the examples.</p>
-
-<p>§ 25. Again, Nature begins each of her works with its
-inmost part. Moreover, the crude form comes first, then<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[137]</a></span>
-the elaboration of the parts. The architect, acting on this
-principle, first makes a rough plan or model, and then by
-degrees designs the details; last of all he attends to the
-ornamentation. In teaching, then, let the inmost part,
-<i>i.e.</i>, the understanding of the subject, come first; then let
-the thing understood be used to exercise the memory, the
-speech, and the hands; and let every language, science,
-and art be taught first in its rudimentary outline; then
-more completely with examples and rules; finally, with
-exceptions and anomalies. Instead of this, some teachers
-are foolish enough to require beginners to get up all the
-anomalies in Latin Grammar, and the dialects in Greek.</p>
-
-<p>§ 26. Again, as Nature does nothing <i>per saltum</i>, nor
-halts when she has begun, the whole course of studies
-should be arranged in strict order, so that the earlier
-studies prepare the way for the later. Every year, every
-month, every day and hour even, should have its task
-marked out beforehand, and the plan should be rigidly
-carried out. Much loss is occasioned by absence of boys
-from school, and by changes in the instruction. Iron that
-might be wrought with one heating should not be allowed
-to get cold, and be heated over and over again.</p>
-
-<p>§ 27. Nature protects her work from injurious influences,
-so boys should be kept from injurious companionships and
-books.</p>
-
-<p>§ 28. In a chapter devoted to the principles of easy
-teaching, Comenius lays down, among rules similar to the
-foregoing, that children will learn if they are taught only
-what they have a desire to learn, with due regard to their
-age and the method of instruction, and especially when
-everything is first taught by means of the senses. On this
-point Comenius laid great stress, and he was the first who<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[138]</a></span>
-did so. Education should proceed, he said, in the following
-order: first, educate the senses, then the memory, then
-the intellect; last of all the critical faculty. This is the
-order of Nature. The child first perceives through the
-senses. “<i>Nihil est in intellectu quod non prius fuerit in
-sensu.</i> Everything in the intellect must have come through
-the senses.” These perceptions are stored in the memory,
-and called up by the imagination.<a name="FNanchor_71" id="FNanchor_71"></a><a href="#Footnote_71" class="fnanchor">[71]</a> By comparing one
-with another, the understanding forms general ideas, and
-at length the judgment decides between the false and the
-true. By keeping to this order, Comenius believed it
-would be possible to make learning entirely pleasant to the
-pupils, however young. Here Comenius went even further
-than the Jesuits. They wished to make learning pleasant,
-but despaired of doing this except by external influences,
-emulation and the like. Comenius did not neglect external
-means to make the road to learning agreeable. Like the
-Jesuits, he would have short school-hours, and would make
-great use of praise and blame, but he did not depend, as
-they did almost exclusively, on emulation. He would have
-the desire of learning fostered in every possible way—by
-parents, by teachers, by school buildings and apparatus, by
-the subjects themselves, by the method of teaching them,
-and lastly, by the public authorities. (1) The parents
-must praise learning and learned men, must show children
-beautiful books, &amp;c., must treat the teachers with great
-respect. (2) The teacher must be kind and fatherly, he
-must distribute praise and reward, and must always, where
-it is possible, give the children something to look at. (3)
-The school buildings must be light, airy, and cheerful, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[139]</a></span>
-well furnished with apparatus, as pictures, maps, models,
-collections of specimens. (4) The subjects taught must
-not be too hard for the learner’s comprehension, and the
-more entertaining parts of them must be especially dwelt
-upon. (5) The method must be natural, and everything
-that is not essential to the subject or is beyond the pupil
-must be omitted. Fables and allegories should be introduced,
-and enigmas given for the pupils to guess. (6)
-The authorities must appoint public examinations and
-reward merit.</p>
-
-<p>§ 29. Nature helps herself in various ways, so the
-pupils should have every assistance given them. It should
-especially be made clear what the pupils are to learn, and
-how they should learn it.</p>
-
-<p>§ 30. The pupils should be punished for offences
-against morals only. If they do not learn, the fault is with
-the teacher.</p>
-
-<p>§ 31. One of Comenius’s most distinctive principles
-was that there should no longer be “<i>infelix divortium
-rerum et verborum</i>, the wretched divorce of words from
-things” (the phrase, I think, is Campanella’s), but that
-knowledge of <i>things</i> and words should go together. This,
-together with his desire of submitting everything to the
-pupil’s senses, would have introduced a great change into
-the course of instruction, which was then, as it has for the
-most part continued, purely literary. We should learn, says
-Comenius, as much as possible, not from books, but from
-the great book of Nature, from heaven and earth, from oaks
-and beeches.</p>
-
-<p>§ 32. When languages are to be learnt, he would have
-them taught separately. Till the pupil is from eight to ten
-years old, he should be instructed only in the mother-tongue,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[140]</a></span>
-and about things. Then other languages can be
-acquired in about a year each; Latin (which is to be
-studied more thoroughly) in about two years. Every
-language must be learnt by use rather than by rules, <i>i.e.</i>, it
-must be learnt by hearing, reading and re-reading, transcribing,
-attempting imitations in writing and orally, and
-by using the language in conversation. Rules assist and
-confirm practice, but they must come after, not before it.
-The first exercises in a language should take for their
-subject something of which the sense is already known, so
-that the mind may be fixed on the words and their connections.<a name="FNanchor_72" id="FNanchor_72"></a><a href="#Footnote_72" class="fnanchor">[72]</a>
-The Catechism and Bible History may be used for
-this purpose.</p>
-
-<p>§ 33. Considering the classical authors not suited to
-boys’ understanding, and not fit for the education of
-Christians, Comenius proposed writing a set of Latin
-manuals for the different stages between childhood and
-manhood: these were to be called “Vestibulum,” “Janua,”
-“Palatium” or “Atrium,” “Thesaurus.” The “Vestibulum,”
-“Janua,” and “Atrium” were really carried out.</p>
-
-<p>§ 34. In Comenius’s scheme there were to be four
-kinds of schools for a perfect educational course:—1st,
-the mother’s breast for infancy; 2nd, the public vernacular
-school for children, to which all should be sent from six
-years old till twelve; 3rd, the Latin school or Gymnasium;
-4th, residence at a University and travelling, to complete
-the course. The public schools were to be for all classes
-alike, and for girls<a name="FNanchor_73" id="FNanchor_73"></a><a href="#Footnote_73" class="fnanchor">[73]</a> as well as boys.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[141]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>§ 35. Most boys and girls in every community would
-stop at the vernacular school; and as this school is a very
-distinctive feature in Comenius’s plan, it may be worth while
-to give his programme of studies. In this school the children
-should learn—1st, to read and write the mother-tongue
-<i>well</i>, both with writing and printing letters; 2nd, to compose
-grammatically; 3rd, to cipher; 4th, to measure and
-weigh; 5th, to sing, at first popular airs, then from music;
-6th, to say by heart, sacred psalms and hymns; 7th, Catechism,
-Bible History, and texts; 8th, moral rules, with
-examples; 9th, economics and politics, as far as they could
-be understood; 10th, general history of the world; 11th,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[142]</a></span>
-figure of the earth and motion of stars, &amp;c., physics and
-geography, especially of native land; 12th, general knowledge
-of arts and handicrafts.</p>
-
-<p>§ 36. Each school was to be divided into six classes,
-corresponding to the six years the pupil should spend in it.
-The hours of work were to be, in school, two hours in the
-morning and two in the afternoon, with nearly the same
-amount of private study. In the morning the mind and
-memory were to be exercised, in the afternoon the hands
-and voice. Each class was to have its proper lesson-book
-written expressly for it, so as to contain everything that
-class had to learn. When a lesson was to be got by heart
-from the book, the teacher was first to read it to the class,
-explain it, and re-read it; the boys then to read it aloud by
-turns till one of them offered to repeat it without book;
-the others were to do the same as soon as they were able,
-till all had repeated it. This lesson was then to be worked
-over again as a writing lesson, &amp;c. In the higher forms of
-the vernacular school a modern language was to be taught
-and duly practised.</p>
-
-<p>§ 37. Here we see a regular school course projected
-which differed essentially from the only complete school
-course still earlier, that of the Jesuits. In education
-Comenius was immeasurably in advance of Loyola and
-Aquaviva. Like the great thinkers, Pestalozzi and Froebel,
-who most resemble him, he thought of the development of
-the child from its birth; and in a singularly wise little book,
-called <i>Schola materni gremii</i>, or “School of the Mother’s
-Breast,” he has given advice for bringing up children to the
-age of six.<a name="FNanchor_74" id="FNanchor_74"></a><a href="#Footnote_74" class="fnanchor">[74]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[143]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>§ 38. Very interesting are the hints here given, in
-which we get the first approaches to Kindergarten training.
-Comenius saw that, much as their elders might do to
-develop children’s powers of thought and expression, “yet
-children of the same age and the same manners and habits
-are of greater service still. When they talk or play
-together, they sharpen each other more effectually; for the
-one does not surpass the other in depth of invention, and
-there is among them no assumption of superiority of the
-one over the other, only love, candour, free questionings
-and answers” (<i>School of Infancy</i>, vi, 12, p. 38).<a name="FNanchor_75" id="FNanchor_75"></a><a href="#Footnote_75" class="fnanchor">[75]</a> The
-constant activity of children must be provided for. “It is
-better to play than to be idle, for during play the mind is
-intent on some object which often sharpens the abilities.
-In this way children may be early exercised to an active
-life without any difficulty, since Nature herself stirs them
-up to be doing something” (<i>Ib.</i> ix, 15, p. 55). “In the
-second, third, fourth years, &amp;c., let their spirits be stirred up
-by means of agreeable play with them or their playing
-among themselves.... Nay, if some little occupation
-can be conveniently provided for the child’s eyes, ears, or
-other senses, these will contribute to its vigour of mind and
-body” (<i>Ib.</i> vi, 21, p. 31).</p>
-
-<p>§ 39. We have the usual cautions against forcing.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[144]</a></span>
-“Early fruit is useful for the day, but will not keep; whereas
-late fruit may be kept all the year. As some natural
-capacities would fly, as it were, before the sixth, the fifth, or
-even the fourth year, yet it will be beneficial rather to
-restrain than permit this; but very much worse to enforce
-it.” “It is safer that the brain be rightly consolidated before
-it begin to sustain labours: in a little child the whole
-<i>bregma</i> is scarcely closed and the brain consolidated
-within the fifth or sixth year. It is sufficient, therefore, for
-this age to comprehend spontaneously, imperceptibly and
-as it were in play, so much as is employed in the domestic
-circle” (<i>Ib.</i> chap. xi).</p>
-
-<p>§ 40. One disastrous tendency has always shown itself
-in the schoolroom—the tendency to sever all connection
-between studies in the schoolroom and life outside. The
-young pack away their knowledge as it were in water-tight
-compartments, where it may lie conveniently till the
-scholastic voyage is over and it can be again unshipped.<a name="FNanchor_76" id="FNanchor_76"></a><a href="#Footnote_76" class="fnanchor">[76]</a>
-Against this tendency many great teachers have striven,
-and none more vigorously than Comenius. Like Pestalozzi
-he sought to resolve everything into its simplest elements,
-and he finds the commencements before the school age.
-In the <i>School of Infancy</i> he says (speaking of rhetoric),
-“My aim is to shew, although this is not generally attended
-to, that the roots of all sciences and arts in every instance<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[145]</a></span>
-arise as early as in the tender age, and that on these
-foundations it is neither impossible nor difficult for the
-whole superstructure to be laid; provided always that we
-act reasonably with a reasonable creature” (viij, 6, p. 46).
-This principle he applies in his chapter, “How children
-ought to be accustomed to an active life and perpetual
-employment” (chap. vij). In the fourth and fifth year their
-powers are to be drawn out in mechanical or architectural
-efforts, in drawing and writing, in music, in arithmetic,
-geometry, and dialectics. For arithmetic in the fourth,
-fifth, or sixth year, it will be sufficient if they count up to
-twenty; and they may be taught to play at “odd and even.”
-In geometry they may learn in the fourth year what are
-lines, what are squares, what are circles; also the usual
-measures—foot, pint, quart, &amp;c., and soon they should try
-to measure and weigh for themselves. Similar beginnings
-are found for other sciences such as physics, astronomy,
-geography, history, economics, and politics. “The elements
-of <i>geography</i> will be during the course of the first year and
-thenceforward, when children begin to distinguish between
-their cradles and their mother’s bosom” (vj, 6, p. 34).
-As this geographical knowledge extends, they discover “what
-a field is, what a mountain, forest, meadow, river” (iv, 9,
-p. 17). “The beginning of <i>history</i> will be, to be able to
-remember what was done yesterday, what recently, what a
-year ago.”<a name="FNanchor_77" id="FNanchor_77"></a><a href="#Footnote_77" class="fnanchor">[77]</a> (<i>Ib.</i>)</p>
-
-<p>§ 41. In this book Comenius is careful to provide<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[146]</a></span>
-children with occupation for “<i>mind and hand</i>” (iv, 10, p. 18).
-Drawing is to be practised by all. “It matters not,” says
-Comenius, “whether the objects be correctly drawn or
-otherwise <i>provided that they afford delight to the mind</i>.”<a name="FNanchor_78" id="FNanchor_78"></a><a href="#Footnote_78" class="fnanchor">[78]</a></p>
-
-<p>§ 42. We see then that this restless thinker considered
-the entire course of a child’s bringing-up from the cradle to
-maturity; and we cannot doubt that Raumer is right in
-saying, “The influence of Comenius on subsequent thinkers
-and workers in education, especially on the Methodizers, is
-incalculable.” (<i>Gesch. d. P.</i>, ij, “Comenius,” § 10.)</p>
-
-<p>Before we think of his methods and school books, let us
-inquire what he did for education that has proved to be on
-a solid foundation and “not liable to any ruin.”</p>
-
-<p>§ 43. He was the first to reach a standpoint which was
-and perhaps always will be above the heads of “the practical
-men,” and demand <i>education for all</i>. “We design for all
-who have been born human beings, general instruction to
-fit them for everything human. They must, therefore, as
-far as possible be taught together, so that they may mutually
-draw each other out, enliven and stimulate. Of the
-‘mother-tongue school’ the end and aim will be, that all
-the youth of both sexes between the sixth and the twelfth
-or thirteenth years be taught those things which will be
-useful to them all their life long.”<a name="FNanchor_79" id="FNanchor_79"></a><a href="#Footnote_79" class="fnanchor">[79]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[147]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>In these days we often hear controversies between the
-men of science and the ministers of religion. It is as far
-beyond my intention as it is beyond my abilities to discuss
-how far the antithesis between religion and science is a true
-one; but our subject sometimes forces us to observe that
-religion and science often bring thinkers by different paths
-to the same result; <i>e.g.</i>, they both refuse to recognise class
-distinctions and make us see an essential unity underlying
-superficial variations. In Comenius we have an earnest
-Christian minister who was also an enthusiast for science.
-Moreover he was without social and virtually without
-national restrictions, and he was thus in a good position for
-expressing freely and without bias what both his science
-and his religion taught him. “Not only are the children of
-the rich and noble to be drawn to the school, but all alike,
-gentle and simple, rich and poor, boys and girls, in great
-towns and small, down to the country villages. And for this
-reason. Every one who is born a human being is born with
-this intent—that he should be a human being, that is, a
-reasonable creature ruling over the other creatures and bearing
-the likeness of his Maker.” (<i>Didactica M.</i> ix, § 1.)
-This sounds to me nobler than the utterances of Rousseau
-and the French Revolutionists, not to mention Locke who
-fell back on considering merely “the gentleman’s calling.”
-Even Bishop Butler a century after Comenius hardly takes
-so firm a ground, though he lays it down that “children<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[148]</a></span>
-have as much right to some proper education as to have
-their lives preserved.”<a name="FNanchor_80" id="FNanchor_80"></a><a href="#Footnote_80" class="fnanchor">[80]</a></p>
-
-<p>§ 44. The first man who demanded training for every
-human being <i>because he or she was a human being</i> must
-always be thought of with respect and gratitude by all who
-care either for science or religion. It has taken us 250
-years to reach the standpoint of Comenius; but we have
-reached it, or almost reached it at last, and when we have
-once got hold of the idea we are not likely to lose it again.
-The only question is whether we shall not go on and in the
-end agree with Comenius that the primary school shall be
-for rich and poor alike. At present the practical men, in
-England especially, have things all their own way; but their
-horizon is and must be very limited. They have already had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[149]</a></span>
-to adjust themselves to many things which their predecessors
-declared to be “quite impracticable—indeed impossible.”
-May not their successors in like manner get accustomed to
-other “impossible” things, this scheme of Comenius among
-them?</p>
-
-<p>§ 45. The champions of realism have always recognised
-Comenius as one of their earliest leaders. Bacon had just
-given voice to the scientific spirit which had at length rebelled
-against the literary spirit dominant at the Renascence,
-and had begun to turn from all that had been thought and
-said about Nature, straight to Nature herself. Comenius
-was the professed disciple of “the noble Verulam, who,”
-said he, “has given us the true key of Nature.” Furnished
-with this key, Comenius would unlock the door of the
-treasure-house for himself. “It grieved me,” he says, “that
-I saw most noble Verulam present us indeed with a true
-key of Nature, but not to open the secrets of Nature, only
-shewing us by a few examples how they were to be opened,
-and leave [<i>i.e.</i>, leaving] the rest to depend on observations
-and inductions continued for several ages.” Comenius
-thought that by the light of the senses, of reason, and of the
-Bible, he might advance faster. “For what? Are not we
-as well as the old philosophers placed in Nature’s garden?
-Why then do we not cast about our eyes, nostrils, and ears
-as well as they? Why should we learn the works of Nature
-of any other master rather than of these our senses? Why
-do we not, I say, turn over the living book of the world instead
-of dead papers? In it we may contemplate more
-things and with greater delight and profit than any one
-can tell us. If we have anywhere need of an interpreter,
-the Maker of Nature is the best interpreter Himself.” (Preface
-to <i>Naturall Philosophie reformed</i>. English trans., 1651.)</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[150]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>§ 46. Several things are involved in this so-called
-“realism.” First, Comenius would fix the mind of learners
-on material objects. Secondly, he would have them acquire
-their notions of these for themselves through the senses.
-From these two principles he drew the corollary that the
-vast accumulation of traditional learning and literature must
-be thrown overboard.</p>
-
-<p>§ 47. The demand for the study of things has been
-best formulated by one of the greatest masters of words, by
-Milton. “Because our understanding cannot in the body
-found itself but on sensible things, nor arrive so clearly to
-the knowledge of God and things invisible, as by orderly
-conning over the visible and inferior creature, the same
-method is necessarily to be followed in all discreet teaching.”
-(<i>To Hartlib.</i>) Its material surroundings then are to be the
-subjects on which the mind of the child must be fixed.
-This being settled, Comenius demands that the child’s
-knowledge shall not be <i>verbal</i> but <i>real</i> realism, knowledge
-derived at first hand through the senses.<a name="FNanchor_81" id="FNanchor_81"></a><a href="#Footnote_81" class="fnanchor">[81]</a></p>
-
-<p>§ 48. On this subject Comenius may speak for himself:
-“The ground of this business is, that sensual objects [we
-now say <i>sensible</i>: why not <i>sensuous</i>?] be rightly presented
-to the senses, for fear they may not be received. I say, and
-say it again aloud, that this last is the foundation of all the
-rest: because we can neither act nor speak wisely, unless<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[151]</a></span>
-we first rightly understand all the things which are to be
-done and whereof we have to speak. Now there is nothing
-in the understanding which was not before in the sense.
-And therefore to exercise the senses well about the right
-perceiving the differences of things will be to lay the grounds
-for all wisdom and all wise discourse and all discreet actions
-in one’s course of life. Which, because it is commonly
-neglected in Schools, and the things that are to be learned
-are offered to scholars without their being understood or
-being rightly presented to the senses, it cometh to pass that
-the work of teaching and learning goeth heavily onward and
-affordeth little benefit.” (Preface to <i>Orbis Pictus</i>, Hoole’s
-trans. A.D. 1658.)</p>
-
-<p>§ 49. Without going into any metaphysical discussion,
-we must all agree that a vast amount of impressions come
-to children through the senses, and that it is by the exercise
-of the senses that they learn most readily. As Comenius
-says: “The senses (being the main guides of childhood,
-because therein the mind doth not as yet raise up it self to an
-abstracted contemplation of things) evermore seek their
-own objects; and if these be away, they grow dull, and
-wry themselves hither and thither out of a weariness of
-themselves: but when their objects are present, they grow
-merry, wax lively, and willingly suffer themselves to be
-fastened upon them till the thing be sufficiently discerned.”
-(P. to <i>Orbis.</i>) This truth lay at the root of most of the
-methods of Pestalozzi; and though it has had little effect
-on teaching in England (where for the word <i>anschaulich</i>
-there is no equivalent), everything that goes on in a German
-Folkschool has reference to it.</p>
-
-<p>§ 50. For children then Comenius gave good counsel
-when he would have their senses exercised on the world<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[152]</a></span>
-about them. But after all, whatever may be thought of the
-proposition that all knowledge comes through the senses,
-we must not ignore what is bequeathed to us, both in science
-and in literature. Comenius says: “And now I beseech
-you let this be our business that the schools may cease to
-<i>persuade</i> and begin to <i>demonstrate</i>; cease to <i>dispute</i> and
-begin to <i>look</i>; cease lastly to <i>believe</i> and begin to <i>know</i>.
-For that Aristotellical maxim ‘<i>Discentem oportet credere</i>, A
-learner must believe,’ is as tyrannical as it is dangerous; so
-also is that same Pythagorean ‘<i>Ipse dixit</i>, The Master has
-said it.’ Let no man be compelled to swear to his Masters
-words, but let the things themselves constrain the intellect.”
-(P. to <i>Nat. Phil. R.</i>) But the things themselves will not
-take us far. Even in Natural Science we need teachers, for
-Science is not reached through the senses but through the
-intellectual grasp of knowledge which has been accumulating
-for centuries. If the education of times past has neglected
-the senses, we must not demand that the education of the
-future should care for the senses only. There is as yet
-little danger of our thinking too much of physical education;
-but we sometimes hear reformers talking as if the true ideal
-were sketched in “Locksley Hall:”</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">“Iron-jointed, supple-sinew’d, they shall dive, and they shall run,</div>
-<div class="verse">Catch the wild goat by the hair, and hurl their lances in the sun,</div>
-<div class="verse">Whistle back the parrot’s call, and leap the rainbows of the brooks;</div>
-<div class="verse">Not with blinded eyesight poring over miserable books.”</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>There seems, however, still some reason for counting “the
-gray barbarian lower than the Christian child.” And the
-reason is that we are “the heirs of all the ages.” Our
-education must enable every child to enter in some measure
-on his inheritance; and not a few of our most precious heirlooms<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[153]</a></span>
-will be found not only in scientific discoveries but
-also in those great works of literature which the votaries of
-science are apt to despise as “miserable books.” This
-truth was not duly appreciated by Comenius. As Professor
-Laurie well says, “he accepted only in a half-hearted way
-the products of the genius of past ages.” (Laurie’s <i>C.</i>, p.
-22.) In his day there was a violent reaction from the
-Renascence passion for literature, and Comenius would
-entirely banish from education the only literatures which
-were then important, the “heathen” literatures of Greece
-and Rome. “Our most learned men,” says he, “even
-among the theologians take from Christ only the mask: the
-blood and life they draw from Aristotle and a crowd of
-other heathens.” (See Paulsen’s <i>Gesch.</i>, pp. 312, ff.) So
-for Cicero and Virgil he would substitute, and his contemporaries
-at first seemed willing to accept, the <i>Janua
-Linguarum</i>. But though there may be much more “real”
-knowledge in the <i>Janua</i>, the classics have survived it.<a name="FNanchor_82" id="FNanchor_82"></a><a href="#Footnote_82" class="fnanchor">[82]</a><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[154]</a></span>
-In these days there is a passion for the study of things
-which in its intensity resembles the Renascence passion for
-literature. There is a craving for knowledge, and we know
-only the truths we can verify; so this craving must be
-satisfied, not by words, but things. And yet that domain
-which the physicists contemptuously describe as the study
-of words must not be lost sight of, indeed cannot be, either
-by young or old. As Matthew Arnold has said, “those
-who are for giving to natural knowledge the chief place in
-the education of the majority of mankind leave one important
-thing out of their account—the constitution of
-human nature.”</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">“We live by Admiration, Hope, and Love,</div>
-<div class="verse">And e’en as these are well and wisely fixed,</div>
-<div class="verse">In dignity of being we ascend.”</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>So says Wordsworth, and if this assertion cannot be
-verified, no more can it be disproved; that the words have
-become almost proverbial shows that it commends itself to
-the general consciousness. Whatever knowledge we may
-acquire, it will have little effect on our lives unless we can
-“relate it” (again to use Matthew Arnold’s words), “to our
-sense of conduct and our sense of beauty.” (<i>Discourses in
-America.</i> “Literature and Science.”) So long as we retain
-our sense for these, “the humanities” are safe. Like Milton
-we may have no inclination to study “modern Januas,” but we
-shall not cease to value many of the works which the Janua
-of Comenius was supposed to have supplanted.<a name="FNanchor_83" id="FNanchor_83"></a><a href="#Footnote_83" class="fnanchor">[83]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[155]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>§ 51. “Analogies are good for illustration, not for
-proof.” If Comenius had accepted this caution, he would
-have escaped much useless labour, and might have had a
-better foundation for his rules than fanciful applications of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[156]</a></span>
-what he observed in the external world. “Comenius” as
-August Vogel has said, “is unquestionably right in wishing
-to draw his principles of education from Nature; but instead
-of examining the proper constitution and nature of man, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[157]</a></span>
-taking that as the basis of his theory, he watches the life of
-birds, the growth of trees, or the quiet influence of the sun,
-and thus substitutes for the nature of man nature <i>without</i>
-man (<i>die objective Natur</i>). And yet by Nature he understands
-that first and primordial state to which as to our
-original [idea] we should be restored, and by the voice of
-Nature he understands the universal Providence of God or
-the ceaseless influence of the Divine Goodness working all
-in all, that is, leading every creature to the state ordained
-for it. The vegetative and animal life in Nature is according
-to Comenius himself not life at all in its highest sense, but
-the only true life is the intellectual or spiritual life of Man.
-No doubt in the two lower kinds of life certain analogies
-may be found for the higher; but nothing can be less
-worthy of reliance and less scientific than a method which
-draws its principles for the higher life from what has been
-observed in the lower.” (A. Vogel’s <i>Gesch. d. Pädagogik
-als Wissenschaft</i>, p. 94.)</p>
-
-<p>§ 52. This seems to me judicious criticism; but whatever
-mistakes he may have made, Comenius, like Froebel
-long after him, strove after a higher unity which should
-embrace knowledge of every kind. The connexion of
-knowledges (so constantly overlooked in the schoolroom)
-was always in his thoughts. “We see that the branches of a
-tree cannot live unless they all alike suck their juices from
-a common trunk with common roots. And can we hope
-that the branches of Wisdom can be torn asunder with safety
-to their life, that is to truth? Can one be a Natural Philosopher<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[158]</a></span>
-who is not also a Metaphysician? or an Ethical Thinker who
-does not know something of Physical Science? or a Logician
-who has no knowledge of real matters? or a Theologian, a
-jurisconsult, or a Physician, who is not first a Philosopher?
-or an Orator or Poet, who is not all these at once? He
-deprives himself of light, of hand, and of regulation, who
-pushes away from him any shred of the knowable.” (Quoted
-in Masson’s <i>L. of Milton</i> vol. iij., p. 213 from the Delineatio,
-[i.e., <i>Pansophiæ Prodromus</i>]. Conf. J. H. Newman, <i>Idea of
-a University</i>, Disc. iij.)</p>
-
-<p>§ 53. We see then that on the side of theory, Comenius
-was truly great. But the practical man who has always been
-the tyrant of the schoolroom cared nothing for theory and
-held, with a modern English minister responsible for education,
-who proved his ignorance of theory by his “New Code,”
-that there was, and could be no such thing. So the reputation
-of Comenius became pretty much what our great
-authority Hallam has recorded, that he was a person of some
-ingenuity and little judgment who invented a new way of
-learning Latin. This estimate of him enables us to follow
-some windings in the stream of thought about education.
-Comenius faced the whole problem in its double bearing,
-theory and practice: he asked, What is the educator’s task?
-How can he best accomplish it? But his contemporaries
-had not yet recovered from the idolatry of Latin which had
-been bequeathed to them by their fathers from the Renascence,
-and they too saw in Comenius chiefly an inventor of
-a new way of learning Latin. He sought to train up children
-for this world and the next; they supposed, as
-Oxenstiern himself said, that the main thing to be remedied
-was the clumsy way of teaching Latin. So Comenius was
-little understood. His books were seized upon as affording<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[159]</a></span>
-at once an introduction to the knowledge of <i>things</i> and a
-short way of learning Latin. But in the long run they were
-found more tiresome than the old classics: so they went out
-of fashion, and their author was forgotten with them. Now
-that schoolmasters are forming a more worthy conception of
-their office, they are beginning to do justice to Comenius.</p>
-
-<p>§ 54. As the Jesuits kept to Latin as the common language
-of the Church, so Comenius thought to use it as a
-means of inter-communication for the instructed of every
-nationality. But he was singularly free from over-estimating
-the value of Latin, and he demanded that all nations should
-be taught in their own language wherein they were born.
-On this subject he expresses himself with great emphasis.
-“We desire and protest that studies of wisdom be no longer
-committed to Latin alone, and kept shut up in the schools,
-as has hitherto been done, to the greatest contempt and injury
-of the people at large, and the popular tongues. Let all
-things be delivered to each nation in its own speech.”
-(<i>Delineatio</i> [<i>Prodromus</i>] in Masson <i>ut supra</i>.)</p>
-
-<p>§ 55. Comenius was then neither a verbalist nor a
-classicist, and yet his contemporaries were not entirely
-wrong in thinking of him as “a man who had invented a new
-way of learning Latin.” His great principle was that instruction
-in words and things should go together.<a name="FNanchor_84" id="FNanchor_84"></a><a href="#Footnote_84" class="fnanchor">[84]</a> The young
-were to learn about things, and <i>at the same time</i> were to
-acquire both in the vernacular and also in Latin, the international
-tongue, the words which were connected with the
-things. Having settled on this plan of concurrent instruction<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[160]</a></span>
-in words and things, Comenius determined to write a book
-for carrying it out. Just then there fell into his hands a book
-which a less open-minded man might have thrown aside on
-account of its origin, for it was written by the bitter foes and
-persecutors of the Bohemian Protestants, by the Jesuits. But
-Comenius says truly, “I care not whether I teach or whether
-I learn,” and he gave a marvellous proof of this by adopting
-the linguistic method of the Jesuits’ <i>Janua Linguarum</i>.<a name="FNanchor_85" id="FNanchor_85"></a><a href="#Footnote_85" class="fnanchor">[85]</a><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[161]</a></span>
-This “Noah’s Ark for words,” treated in a series of proverbs
-of all kinds of subjects, in such a way as to introduce in a
-natural connection every common word in the Latin language.
-“The idea,” says Comenius, “was better than the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[162]</a></span>
-execution. Nevertheless, inasmuch as they (the Jesuits)
-were the prime inventors, we thankfully acknowledge it, nor
-will we upbraid them with those errors they have committed.”
-(Preface to Anchoran’s trans. of <i>Janua</i>.)</p>
-
-<p>§ 56. The plan commended itself to Comenius on various
-grounds. First, he had a notion of giving an outline of all
-knowledge before anything was taught in detail. Next, he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[163]</a></span>
-could by such a book connect the teaching about simple
-things with instruction in the Latin words which applied to
-them. And thirdly, he hoped by this means to give such a
-complete Latin vocabulary as to render the use of Latin easy
-for all requirements of modern society. He accordingly
-wrote a short account of things in general, which he put in
-the form of a dialogue, and this he published in Latin and
-German at Leszna in 1531. The success of this work, as
-we have already seen, was prodigious. No doubt the spirit
-which animated Bacon was largely diffused among educated
-men in all countries, and they hailed the appearance of a
-book which called the youth from the study of old philosophical
-ideas to observe the facts around them.</p>
-
-<p>§ 57. The countrymen of Bacon were not backward
-in adopting the new work, as the following, from the title-page
-of a volume in the British Museum, will show: “The
-Gate of Tongues Unlocked and Opened; or else, a Seminary
-or Seed-plot of all Tongues and Sciences. That is, a short
-way of teaching and thoroughly learning, within a yeare and
-a half at the furthest, the Latine, English, French and any
-other tongue, with the ground and foundation of arts and
-sciences, comprised under a hundred titles and 1058 periods.
-In Latin first, and now, as a token of thankfulness, brought
-to light in Latine, English and French, in the behalfe of the
-most illustrious Prince Charles, and of British, French, and
-Irish youth. The 4th edition, much enlarged, by the labour
-and industry of John Anchoran, Licentiate in Divinity,
-London. Printed by Edward Griffin for Michael Sparke,
-dwelling at the Blew Bible in Green Arbor, 1639.” The
-first edition must have been some years earlier, and the work<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[164]</a></span>
-contains a letter to Anchoran from Comenius dated “Lessivæ
-polonorum (Leszna) 11th Oct, 1632.” So we see that,
-however the connexion arose, it was Anchoran not
-Hartlib who first made Comenius known in England.</p>
-
-<p>§ 58. In the preface to the volume (signed by Anchoran
-and Comenius) we read of the complaints of “Ascam, Vives,
-Erasmus, Sturmius, Frisclinus, Dornavius and others.” The
-Scaligers and Lipsius did climb but left no track. “Hence
-it is that the greater number of schools (howsoever some
-boast the happinesse of the age and the splendour of learning)
-have not as yet shaked off their ataxies. The youth
-was held off, nay distracted, and is yet in many places
-delayed with grammar precepts infinitely tedious, perplexed,
-obscure, and (for the most part) unprofitable, and that for
-many years.” The names of things were taught to those
-who were in total ignorance of the things themselves.</p>
-
-<p>§ 59. From this barren region the pupil was to escape
-to become acquainted with things. “Come on,” says the
-teacher in the opening dialogue, “let us go forth into the
-open air. There you shall view whatsoever God produced
-from the beginning, and doth yet effect by nature. Afterwards
-we will go into towns, shops, schools, where you shall
-see how men do both apply those Divine works to their uses,
-and also instruct themselves in arts, manners, tongues. Then
-we will enter into houses, courts, and palaces of princes, to
-see in what manner communities of men are governed. At
-last we will visit temples, where you shall observe how
-diversely mortals seek to worship their Creator and to be
-spiritually united unto Him, and how He by His Almightiness
-disposeth all things.” (This is from the 1656 edition,
-by “W.D.”)</p>
-
-<p>The book is still amusing, but only from the quaint<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[165]</a></span>
-manner in which the mode of life two hundred years ago is
-described in it.<a name="FNanchor_86" id="FNanchor_86"></a><a href="#Footnote_86" class="fnanchor">[86]</a></p>
-
-<p>§ 60. But though parts of the book may on first reading
-have gratified the youth of the seventeenth century, a great
-deal of it gave scanty information about difficult subjects,
-such as physiology, geometry, logic, rhetoric, and that too
-in the driest and dullest way. Moreover, in his first version
-(much modified at Saros-Patak) Comenius following the
-Jesuit boasts that no important word occurs twice; so that
-the book, to attain the end of giving a perfect stock of Latin
-words, would have to be read and re-read till it was almost
-known by heart; and however amusing boys might find an
-account of their toys written in Latin the first time of reading,
-the interest would somewhat wear away by the fifth or sixth
-time. We cannot then feel much surprised on reading this
-“general verdict,” written some years later, touching those
-earlier works of Comenius: “They are of singular use, and
-very advantageous to those of more discretion (especially to
-such as have already got a smattering in Latin), to help
-their memories to retain what they have scatteringly gotten
-here and there, and to furnish them with many words which
-perhaps they had not formerly read or so well observed;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[166]</a></span>
-but to young children (whom we have chiefly to instruct,
-as those that are ignorant altogether of most things and
-words), they prove rather a mere toil and burden than a
-delight and furtherance.” (Chas. Hoole’s preface to his trans.
-of <i>Orbis Pictus</i>, dated “From my school in <i>Lothbury</i>, London,
-Jan. 25, 1658.”)</p>
-
-<p>§ 61. The “<i>Janua</i>” would, therefore, have had but a
-short-lived popularity with teachers, and a still shorter with
-learners, if Comenius had not carried out his principle of
-appealing to the senses, and adopted a plan which had been
-suggested, nearly 50 years earlier, by a Protestant divine,
-Lubinus,<a name="FNanchor_87" id="FNanchor_87"></a><a href="#Footnote_87" class="fnanchor">[87]</a> of Rostock. The artist was called in, and with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[167]</a></span>
-Endter at Nürnberg in 1657 was published the first edition
-of a book which long outlived the <i>Janua</i>. This was the
-famous <i>Orbis Sensualium Pictus</i>, which was used for a century
-at least in many a schoolroom, and lives in imitations
-to the present day. Comenius wrote this book on the same
-lines as the <i>Janua</i>, but he goes into less detail, and every
-subject is illustrated by a small engraving. The text is
-mostly on the opposite page to the picture, and is connected
-with it by a series of corresponding numbers. Everything
-named in the text is numbered as in the picture. The artist
-employed must have been a bold man, as he sticks at nothing;
-but in skill he was not the equal of many of his contemporaries;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[168]</a></span>
-witness the pictures in the Schaffhausen <i>Janua</i>
-(Editio secunda, SchaffhusI, 1658), in Daniel’s edition of
-the <i>Janua</i>, 1562, and the very small but beautiful illustrations
-in the <i>Vestibulum</i> of “Jacob Redinger and J. S.” (Amsterdam,
-1673). However, the <i>Orbis Pictus</i> gives such a quaint
-delineation of life 200 years ago that copies with the original
-engravings keep rising in value, and an American publisher
-(Bardeen of Syracuse, New York), has lately reproduced the
-old book with the help of photography.</p>
-
-<p>§ 62. And yet as instruments of teaching, these books,
-<i>i.e.</i> the <i>Vestibulum</i> and the <i>Janua</i> and even the <i>Orbis Pictus</i>
-which in a great measure superseded both, proved a failure.
-How shall we account for this?</p>
-
-<p>Comenius immensely over-estimated the importance of
-knowledge and the power of the human mind to acquire
-knowledge. He took it for the heavenly idea that <i>man
-should know all things</i>. This notion started him on the
-wrong road for forming a scheme of instruction, and it needed
-many years and much experience to show him his error. When
-he wrote the <i>Orbis Pictus</i> he said of it: “It is <i>a little book</i>,
-as you see, of no great bulk, yet a brief of the whole world
-and a whole language;” (Hoole’s trans. Preface); and he
-afterwards speaks of “this our <i>little encyclopædia</i> of things
-subject to the senses.” But in his old age he saw that his
-text-books were too condensed and attempted too much
-(Laurie, p. 59); and he admitted that after all Seneca was
-right: “Melius est scire pauca et iis recté uti quam scire
-multa, quorum ignores usum. It is better to know a few
-things and have the right use of them than to know many
-things which you cannot use at all.”</p>
-
-<p>§ 63. The attempt to give “information” has been the
-ruin of a vast number of professing educators since Comenius.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[169]</a></span>
-Masters “of the old school” whom some of us can still
-remember made boys learn Latin and Greek Grammar and
-<i>nothing else</i>. Their successors seem to think that boys
-should not learn Latin and Greek Grammar but <i>everything
-else</i>: and the last error I take to be much worse than the
-first. As Ruskin has neatly said, education is not teaching
-people to know what they do not know, but to behave as
-they do not behave. It is to be judged not by the knowledge
-acquired, but the habits, powers, interests: knowledge must
-be thought of “last and least.”</p>
-
-<p>§ 64. So the attempt to teach about everything was
-unwise. The means adopted were unwise also. It is a
-great mistake to suppose that a “general view” should come
-first; this is not the right way to give knowledge in any
-subject. “A child begins by seeing bits of everything—here
-a little and there a little; it makes up its wholes out of its
-own littles, and is long in reaching the fulness of a whole;
-and in this we are children all our lives in much.” (Dr. John
-Brown in <i>Horæ Subsecivæ</i>, p. 5.) So nothing could have
-been much more unfortunate than an attempt to give the
-young “a brief of the whole world.” <i>Compendia, dispendia.</i></p>
-
-<p>§ 65. Corresponding to “a brief of the whole world,”
-Comenius offers “a brief of a whole language.” The two
-mistakes were well matched. In “the whole world” there
-are a vast number of things of which we must, and a good
-number of which we very advantageously <i>may</i> be ignorant.
-In a language there are many words which we cannot know
-and many more which we do not want to know. The
-language lives for us in a small vocabulary of essential words,
-and our hold upon the language depends upon the power
-we have in receiving and expressing thought by means of
-those words. But the Jesuit Bath, and after him Comenius,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[170]</a></span>
-made the tremendous mistake of treating all Latin words as
-of equal value, and took credit for using each word once
-and once only! Moreover, Comenius wrote not simply to
-teach the Latin language, but also to stretch the Latin
-language till it covered the whole area of modern life. He
-aimed at two things and missed them both.</p>
-
-<p>§ 66. We see then that Comenius was not what Hallam
-calls him, “a man who invented a new way of learning
-Latin.” He did not do this, but he did much more than
-this. He saw that every human creature should be trained
-up to become a reasonable being, and that the training
-should be such as to draw out God-given faculties. Thus
-he struck the key-note of the science of education.</p>
-
-<div class="smaller">
-
-<p>The quantity and the diffuseness of the writings of Comenius are truly
-bewildering. In these days eminent men, Carlyle, <i>e.g.</i>, sometimes find
-it difficult to get into print; but printing-presses all over Europe seemed
-to be at the service of Comenius. An account of the various editions of
-the <i>Janua</i> would be an interesting piece of bibliography, but the task
-of making it would not be a light one. The earliest copy of which I
-can find a trace is entered in the catalogue of the Bodleian: “Comenius
-J. A. <i>Janua Linguarum</i>, 8vo, Lips (Leipzig) 1632.” I also find there
-another copy entered “per Anchoranum, cum clave per W. Saltonstall,
-London, 1633.”</p>
-
-<p>The fame of Comenius is increasing and many interesting works have
-now been written about him. I have already mentioned the English
-books of Benham and Laurie. In German I have the following books,
-but not the time to read them all:—</p>
-
-<p>Daniel, H. A. <i>Zerstreute Blätter.</i> Halle, 1866.</p>
-
-<p>Free, H. <i>Pädagogik d. Comenius.</i> Bernburg, 1884.</p>
-
-<p>Hiller, R. <i>Latein Methode d. J. A. Comenius.</i> Zschopau, 1883.
-(v. g. and terse; only 46 pp.)</p>
-
-<p>Müller, Walter. <i>Comenius ein Systematiker in d. Päd.</i> Dresden,
-1887.</p>
-
-<p>Pappenheim, E. <i>Amos Comenius.</i> Berlin, 1871.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[171]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Seyffarth, L. W. <i>J. A. Comenius.</i> Leipzig, 2nd edition, 1871. (A
-careful and, as far as I can judge in haste, an excellent piece of work.)</p>
-
-<p>Zoubek, Fr. J. <i>J. A. Comenius.</i> <i>Eine quellenmässige Lebensskizze</i>,
-(Prefixed to trans. of <i>Didac. M.</i> in Richter’s <i>Päd. Bibliothek</i>.)</p>
-
-<p>For a Port-Royalist’s criticism of the <i>Janua</i>, <a href="#Page_185">see infra. (p. 185 <i>note</i>.)</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[172]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="XI">XI.<br />
-<span class="smaller">THE GENTLEMEN OF PORT-ROYAL.<a name="FNanchor_88" id="FNanchor_88"></a><a href="#Footnote_88" class="fnanchor">[88]</a></span></h2>
-
-<p>§ 1. In the sixteen-hundreds by far the most successful
-schoolmasters were the Jesuits. In spite of their exclusion
-from the University, they had in the Province of Paris some
-14,000 pupils, and in Paris itself at the Collège de Clermont,
-1,800. Might they not have neglected “the Little Schools,”
-which were organized by the friends and disciples of the
-Abbé de Saint-Cyran, schools in which the numbers were
-always small, about twenty or twenty-five, and only once
-increasing to fifty? And yet the Jesuits left no stone
-unturned, no weapon unemployed, in their attack on “the
-Little Schools.” The conflict seems to us like an engagement
-between a man-of-war and a fishing-boat. That the
-poor fishing-boat would soon be beneath the waves, was
-clear enough from the beginning, and she did indeed
-speedily disappear; but the victors have never recovered
-from their victory and never will. Whenever we think of
-Jesuitism we are not more forcibly reminded of Loyola than
-of Pascal. All educated Frenchmen, most educated people
-everywhere, get their best remembered impressions of the
-Society of Loyola from the Provincial Letters.<a name="FNanchor_89" id="FNanchor_89"></a><a href="#Footnote_89" class="fnanchor">[89]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[173]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>§ 2. The Society had a long standing rivalry with the
-University of Paris, and the University not only refused to
-admit the Jesuits, but several times petitioned the Parliament
-to chase them out of France. On one of these occasions
-the advocate who was retained by the University was
-Antoine Arnauld, a man of renowned eloquence; and he
-threw himself into the attack with all his heart. From that
-time the Jesuits had a standing feud with the house of
-Arnauld.</p>
-
-<p>§ 3. But it was no mere personal dislike that separated
-the Port-Royalists and the Jesuits. Port-Royal with which
-the Arnauld family was so closely united, became the
-stronghold of a theology which was unlike that of the
-Jesuits, and was denounced by them as heresy. The
-daughter of Antoine Arnauld was made, at the age of eleven
-years, Abbess of Port-Royal, a Cistercian convent not far from
-Versailles. This position was obtained for her by a fraud
-of Marion, Henry IV’s advocate-general, who thought only
-of providing comfortably for one of the twenty children to
-whom his daughter, Made. Arnauld, had made him grandfather.
-Never was a nomination more scandalously obtained
-or used to better purpose. The Mère Angélique is one of
-the saints of the universal church, and she soon became the
-restorer of the religious life first in her own and then by her
-influence and example in other convents of her Order.</p>
-
-<p>§ 4. In these reforms she had nothing to fear from her
-hereditary foes the Jesuits; but she soon came under the
-influence of a man whose theory of life was as much opposed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[174]</a></span>
-to the Jesuits’ theory as to that of the world which found in
-the Jesuits the most accommodating father confessors.</p>
-
-<p>Duvergier de Hauranne (1581-1643) better known by
-the name of his “abbaye,” Saint-Cyran, was one of those
-commanding spirits who seem born to direct others and
-form a distinct society. In vain Richelieu offered him the
-posts most likely to tempt him. The prize that Saint-Cyran
-had set his heart upon was not of this world, and Richelieu
-could assist him in one way only—by persecution.
-This assistance the Cardinal readily granted, and by his
-orders Saint-Cyran was imprisoned at Vincennes, and not
-set at liberty till Richelieu was himself summoned before a
-higher tribunal.</p>
-
-<p>§ 5. Driven by prevailing sickness from Port-Royal des
-Champs, the Mère Angélique transported her community (in
-1626) to a house purchased for them in Paris by her mother
-who in her widowhood became one of the Sisters. In Paris
-Angélique sought for herself and her convent the spiritual
-direction of Saint-Cyran (not yet a prisoner), and from that
-time Saint-Cyran added the Abbess and Sisters of Port-Royal
-to the number of those who looked up to him as their
-pattern and guide in all things.</p>
-
-<p>Port-Royal des Champs was in course of time occupied
-by a band of solitaries who at the bidding of Saint-Cyran
-renounced the world and devoted themselves to prayer and
-study. To them we owe the works of “the Gentlemen of
-Port-Royal.”</p>
-
-<p>§ 6. It is then to Saint-Cyran we must look for the
-ideas which became the distinctive mark of the Port-Royalists.</p>
-
-<p>Saint-Cyran was before all things a theologian. In his
-early days at Bayonne his studies had been shared by a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[175]</a></span>
-friend who afterwards was professor of theology at Louvain,
-and then Bishop of Ypres. This friend was Jansenius.
-Their searches after truth had brought them to opinions
-which in the England of the nineteenth century are known
-as “Evangelical.” According to “Catholic” teaching all
-those who receive the creed and the sacraments of the
-Church and do not commit “mortal” sin are in a “state of
-salvation,” that is to say the great majority of Christians are
-saved. This teaching is rejected by those of another school
-of thought who hold that only a few “elect” are saved and
-that the great body even of Christians are doomed to
-perdition.</p>
-
-<p>§ 7. Such a belief as this would seem to be associated
-of necessity with harshness and gloom; but from whatever
-cause, there has been found in many, even in most, cases
-no such connexion. Those who have held that the great
-mass of their fellow-creatures had no hope in a future world,
-have thrown themselves lovingly into all attempts to improve
-their condition in this world. Still, their main effort has
-always been to increase the number of the converted and to
-preserve them from the wiles of the enemy. This Saint-Cyran
-sought to do by selecting a few children and bringing
-them up in their tender years like hot-house plants, in the
-hope that they would be prepared when older and stronger,
-to resist the evil influences of the world.</p>
-
-<p>§ 8. His first plan was to choose out of all Paris six
-children and to confide them to the care of a priest appointed
-to direct their consciences, and a tutor of not more than
-twenty-five years old, to teach them Latin. “I should
-think,” says he, “it was doing a good deal if I did not
-advance them far in Latin before the age of twelve, and
-made them pass their first years confined to one house or a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[176]</a></span>
-monastery in the country where they might be allowed all the
-pastimes suited to their age and where they might see only
-the example of a good life set by those about them.”
-(Letter quoted by Carré, p. 20.)</p>
-
-<p>§ 9. His imprisonment put a stop to this plan, “but,”
-says Saint-Cyran, “I do not lightly break off what I undertake
-for God;” so when intrusted with the disposal of 2,000
-francs by M. Bignon, he started the first “Little School,” in
-which two small sons of M. Bignon’s were taken as pupils.
-The name of “Little Schools,” was given partly perhaps
-because according to their design the numbers in any school
-could never be large, partly no doubt to deprecate any
-suspicion of rivalry with the schools of the University. The
-children were to be taken at an early age, nine or ten, before
-they could have any guilty knowledge of evil, and Saint-Cyran
-made in all cases a stipulation that at any time a
-child might be returned to his friends; but in cases where
-the master’s care seemed successful, the pupils were to be
-kept under it till they were grown up.</p>
-
-<p>§ 10. The Little Schools had a short and troubled
-career of hardly more than fifteen years. They were not
-fully organized till 1646; they were proscribed a few years
-later and in 1661 were finally broken up by Louis XIV, who
-was under the influence of their enemies the Jesuits. But
-in that time the Gentlemen of Port-Royal had introduced
-new ideas which have been a force in French education and
-indeed in all literary education ever since.</p>
-
-<p>To Saint-Cyran then we trace the attempt at a particular
-kind of school, and to his followers some new departures in
-the training of the intellect.</p>
-
-<p>§ 11. Basing his system on the Fall of Man, Saint-Cyran
-came to a conclusion which was also reached by Locke<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[177]</a></span>
-though by a different road. To both of them it seemed
-that children require much more individual care and watching
-than they can possibly get in a public school. Saint-Cyran
-would have said what Locke said: “The difference
-is great between two or three pupils in the same house and
-three or four score boys lodged up and down: for let the
-master’s industry and skill be never so great, it is impossible
-he should have fifty or one hundred scholars under his eye
-any longer than they are in school together: Nor can it be
-expected that he should instruct them successfully in anything
-but their books; the forming of their minds and
-manners [preserving them from the danger of the enemy,
-Saint-Cyran would have said] requiring a constant attention
-and particular application to every single boy, which is
-impossible in a numerous flock, and would be wholly in
-vain (could he have time to study and correct everyone’s
-peculiar defects and wrong inclinations) when the lad was
-to be left to himself or the prevailing infection of
-his fellows the greater part of the four-and-twenty hours.”
-(<i>Thoughts c. Ed.</i> § 70.)</p>
-
-<p>§ 12. An English public schoolmaster told the Commission
-on Public Schools, that he stood <i>in loco parentis</i> to
-fifty boys. “Rather a large family,” observed one of the
-Commissioners drily. The truth is that in the bringing up
-of the young there is the place of the schoolmaster and of
-the school-fellows, as well as that of the parents; and of
-these several forces one cannot fulfil the functions of the
-others.</p>
-
-<p>§ 13. According to the theory or at least the practice of
-English public schools, boys are left in their leisure hours to
-organize their life for themselves, and they form a community
-from which the masters are, partly by their own over-work,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[178]</a></span>
-partly by the traditions of the school, utterly excluded. From
-this the intellectual education of the boys no doubt suffers.
-“Engage them in conversation with men of parts and
-breeding,” says Locke; and this was the old notion of
-training when boys of good family grew up as pages in the
-household of some nobleman. But, except in the holidays,
-the young aristocrats of the present day talk only with other
-boys, and servants, and tradesmen. Hence the amount of
-thought and conversation given to school topics, especially
-the games, is out of all proportion to the importance of such
-things; and this does much to increase what Matthew
-Arnold calls “the barbarians’” inaptitude for ideas.</p>
-
-<p>§ 14. What are we to say about the effects of the system
-on the morals of the boys? If we were to start like Saint-Cyran
-from the doctrine of human depravity, we should
-entirely condemn the system and predict from it the most
-disastrous results;<a name="FNanchor_90" id="FNanchor_90"></a><a href="#Footnote_90" class="fnanchor">[90]</a> but from experience we come to a very<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[179]</a></span>
-different conclusion. Bishop Dupanloup, indeed, spoke of
-the public schools of France as “<i>ces gouffres</i>.” This is not
-what is said or thought of the English schools, and they are
-filled with boys whose fathers and grandfathers were brought
-up in them, and desire above all things to maintain the old
-traditions.</p>
-
-<p>§ 15. The Little Schools of Port-Royal aimed at training
-a few boys very differently; each master had the charge
-of five or six only, and these were never to be out of his
-presence day or night.<a name="FNanchor_91" id="FNanchor_91"></a><a href="#Footnote_91" class="fnanchor">[91]</a></p>
-
-<p>§ 16. It may reasonably be objected that such schools
-would be possible only for a few children of well-to-do parents,
-and that men who would thus devote themselves could be
-found only at seasons of great enthusiasm. Under ordinary
-circumstances small schools have most of the drawbacks
-and few of the advantages which are to be found in large<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[180]</a></span>
-schools. As I have already said, parents, schoolmasters,
-and school-fellows have separate functions in education;
-and even in the smallest school the master can never take
-the place of the parent, or the school become the home.
-Children at home enter into the world of their father and
-mother; the family friends are <i>their</i> friends, the family
-events affect them as a matter of course. But in the school,
-however small, the children’s interests are unconnected with
-the master and the master’s family. The boys may be on
-the most intimate, even affectionate terms with the grown
-people who have charge of them; but the mental horizon of
-the two parties is very different, and their common area of
-vision but small. In such cases the young do not rise into
-the world of the adults, and it is almost impossible for the
-adults to descend into theirs. They are “no company” the
-one for the other, and to be constantly in each other’s
-presence would subject both to very irksome restraint.
-When left to themselves, boys in small numbers are far
-more likely to get into harm than boys in large numbers.
-In large communities even of boys, “the common sense of
-most” is a check on the badly disposed. So as it seems to
-me if from any cause the young cannot live at home and
-attend a day-school, they will be far better off in a large
-boarding school than in one that would better fulfil the
-requirements of Erasmus,<a name="FNanchor_92" id="FNanchor_92"></a><a href="#Footnote_92" class="fnanchor">[92]</a> Saint-Cyran, and Locke.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[181]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>§ 17. As Saint-Cyran attributed immense importance to
-the part of the master in education, he was not easily
-satisfied with his qualifications. “There is no occupation
-in the Church that is more worthy of a Christian; next to
-giving up one’s life there is no greater charity.... The
-charge of the soul of one of these little ones is a higher
-employment than the government of all the world.” (Cadet,
-2.) So thought Saint-Cyran, and he was ready to go to the
-ends of the earth to find the sort of teacher he wanted.</p>
-
-<p>§ 18. He was so anxious that the children should see
-only that which was good that the servants were chosen with
-peculiar care.</p>
-
-<p>§ 19. For the masters his favourite rule was: “Speak
-little; put up with much; pray still more.” Piety was not
-to be instilled so much by precepts as by the atmosphere in
-which the children grew up. “Do not spend so much time
-in speaking to them about God as to God about them:” so
-formal instruction was never to be made wearisome. But
-there was to be an incessant watch against evil influences
-and for good. “In guarding the citadel,” says Lancelot,
-“we fail if we leave open a single gateway by which the
-enemy might enter.”</p>
-
-<p>§ 20. Though anxious, like the Jesuits, to make their
-boys’ studies “not only endurable, but even delightful,” the
-Gentlemen of Port-Royal banished every form of rivalry.
-Each pupil was to think of one whom he should try to catch
-up, but this was not a school-fellow, but his own higher self, his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[182]</a></span>
-ideal. Here Pascal admits that the exclusion of competition
-had its drawbacks and that the boys sometimes became
-indifferent—“tombent dans la nonchalance,” as he says.</p>
-
-<p>§ 21. As for the instruction it was founded on this
-principle: the object of schools being piety rather than
-knowledge there was to be no pressure in studying, but the
-children were to be taught what was sound and enduring.</p>
-
-<p>§ 22. In all occupations there is of necessity a tradition.
-In the higher callings the tradition may be of several kinds.
-First there may be a tradition of noble thoughts and high
-ideals, which will be conveyed in the words of the greatest
-men who have been engaged in that calling, or have thought
-out the theory of it. Next there will be the tradition of the
-very best workers in it. And lastly there is the tradition of
-the common man who learns and passes on just the ordinary
-views of his class and the ordinary expedients for getting
-through ordinary work. Of these different kinds of tradition,
-the school-room has always shown a tendency to keep to this
-last, and the common man is supreme. Young teachers are
-mostly required to fulfil their daily tasks without the
-smallest preparation for them; so they have to get through
-as best they can, and have no time to think of any high
-ideal, or of any way of doing their work except that which
-gives them least trouble. “Practice makes perfect,” says
-the proverb, but it would be truer to say that practice in
-doing work badly soon makes perfect in contentment with
-bad workmanship. Thus it is that the tradition of the
-school-room settles down for the most part into a deadly
-routine, and teachers who have long been engaged in carrying
-it on seem to lose their powers of vision like horses who
-turn mills in the dark.</p>
-
-<p>The Gentlemen of Port-Royal worked free from school-room<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[183]</a></span>
-tradition. “If the want of emulation was a drawback,”
-says Sainte-Beuve, “it was a clear gain to escape from all
-routine, from all pedantry. <i>La crasse et la morgue des
-régents n’en approchaient pas.</i>” (<i>P.R.</i> vol. iij, p. 414) Piety
-as we have seen was their main object. Next to it they
-wished to “carry the intellects of their pupils to the highest
-point they could attain to.”</p>
-
-<p>§ 23. In doing this they profited by their freedom from
-routine to try experiments. They used their own judgments
-and sought to train the judgment of their pupils. Themselves
-knowing the delights of literature, they resolved that
-their pupils should know them also. They would banish all
-useless difficulties and do what they could to “help the
-young and make study even more pleasant to them than play
-and pastime.” (Preface to Cic.’s <i>Billets</i>, quoted by Sainte-Beuve,
-vol. iij, p. 423.)</p>
-
-<p>§ 24. One of their innovations, though startling to their
-contemporaries, does not seem to us very surprising. It
-was the custom to begin reading with a three or four years’
-course of reading Latin, because in that language all the
-letters were pronounced. The connexion between sound
-and sense is in our days not always thought of, but even
-among teachers no advocates would now be found for the
-old method which kept young people for the first three or
-four years uttering sounds they could by no possibility
-understand. The French language might have some disadvantage
-from its silent letters, but this was small compared
-with the disadvantage felt in Latin from its silent sense.
-So the Port-Royalists began reading with French.</p>
-
-<p>§ 25. Further than this, they objected to reading through
-spelling, and pointed out that as consonants cannot be
-pronounced by themselves they should be taken only in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[184]</a></span>
-connexion with the adjacent vowel. Pascal applied himself
-to the subject and invented the method described in the
-6th chap. of the General Grammar (Carré, p. xxiij) and
-introduced by his sister Jacqueline at Port-Royal des
-Champs.</p>
-
-<p>§ 26. When the child could read French, the Gentlemen
-of Port-Royal sought for him books within the range of his
-intelligence. There was nothing suitable in French, so they
-set to work to produce translations in good French of the
-most readable Latin books, “altering them just a little—<i>en
-y changeant fort peu de chose</i>,” as said the chief translator
-De Saci, for the sake of purity. In this way they gallicised
-the Fables of Phædrus, three Comedies of Terence, and
-the Familiar Letters (<i>Billets</i>) of Cicero.</p>
-
-<p>§ 27. In this we see an important innovation. As I
-have tried to explain (<a href="#Page_14"><i>supra</i> pp. 14 ff.</a>) the effect of the
-Renascence was to banish both the mother-tongue and
-literature proper from the school-room; for no language was
-tolerated but Latin, and no literature was thought possible
-except in Latin or Greek. Before any literature could be
-known, or indeed, instruction in any subject could be given,
-the pupils had to learn Latin. This neglect of the mother-tongue
-was one of the traditional mistakes pointed out and
-abandoned by the Port-Royalists. “People of quality
-complain,” says De Saci, “and complain with reason, that
-in giving their children Latin we take away French, and to
-turn them into citizens of ancient Rome we make them
-strangers in their native land. After learning Latin and
-Greek for 10 or 12 years, we are often obliged at the age of
-30 to learn French.” (Cadet, 10.) So Port-Royal proposed
-breaking through this bondage to Latin, and laid down the
-principle, new in France, though not in the country of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[185]</a></span>
-Mulcaster or of Ratke, that everything should be taught
-through the mother-tongue.</p>
-
-<p>Next, the Port-Royalists sought to give their pupils an
-early and a pleasing introduction to literature. The best
-literature in those days was the classical; and suitable works
-from that literature might be made intelligible <i>by means of
-translations</i>. In this way the Port-Royalists led their pupils
-to look upon some of the classical authors not as inventors
-of examples in syntax, but as writers of books that <i>meant</i>
-something. And thus both the mother-tongue and literature
-were brought into the school-room.</p>
-
-<p>§ 28. When the boys had by this means got some
-feeling for literature and some acquaintance with the world
-of the ancients, they began the study of Latin. Here again
-all needless difficulties were taken out of their way. No
-attempt indeed was made to teach language without grammar,
-the rationale of language, but the science of grammar was
-reduced to first principles (set forth in the <i>Grammaire
-Générale et Raisonnée</i> of Arnauld and Lancelot), and the
-special grammar of the Latin language was no longer taught
-by means of the work established in the University, the
-<i>Latin</i> Latin Grammar of Despautère, but by a “New Method”
-written in French which gave essentials only and had for its
-motto: “Mihi inter virtutes grammatici habebitur aliqua
-nescire—To me it will be among the grammarian’s good
-points not to know everything.” (Quintil.)<a name="FNanchor_93" id="FNanchor_93"></a><a href="#Footnote_93" class="fnanchor">[93]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[186]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>§ 29. With this minimum of the essentials of the
-grammar and with a previous acquaintance with the sense of
-the book the pupils were introduced to the Latin language
-and were taught to translate a Latin author into French.
-This was a departure from the ordinary route, which after a
-course of learning grammar-rules in Latin went to the
-“theme,” <i>i.e.</i>, to composition in Latin.</p>
-
-<p>The art of translating into the mother-tongue was made
-much of. School “construes,” which consist in substituting
-a word for a word, were entirely forbidden, and the pupils
-had to produce the old writer’s thoughts <i>in French</i>.<a name="FNanchor_94" id="FNanchor_94"></a><a href="#Footnote_94" class="fnanchor">[94]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[187]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>§30. From this we see that the training was literary.
-But in the study of form the Port-Royalists did not neglect
-the inward for the outward. Their great work, which still
-stands the attacks of time, is the Port-Royal <i>Logic, or the
-Art of Thinking</i> (see Trans, by T. Spencer Baynes, 1850).
-This was substantially the work of Arnauld; and it was
-Arnauld who led the Port-Royalists in their rupture with the
-philosophy of the Middle Age, and who openly followed
-Descartes. In the <i>Logic</i> we find the claims of reason
-asserted as if in defiance of the Jesuits. “It is a heavy
-bondage to think oneself forced to agree in everything with
-Aristotle and to take him as the standard of truth in
-philosophy.... The world cannot long continue in
-this restraint, and is recovering by degrees its natural and
-reasonable liberty, which consists in accepting that which
-we judge to be true and rejecting that which we judge to be
-false.” (Quoted by Cadet, p. 31.)<a name="FNanchor_95" id="FNanchor_95"></a><a href="#Footnote_95" class="fnanchor">[95]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[188]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>§ 31. To mark the change, the Port-Royalists called
-their book not “the Art of Reasoning,” but “the Art of
-Thinking,” and it was in this art of thinking that they
-endeavoured to train their scholars. They paid great
-attention to geometry, and Arnauld wrote a book (“New
-Elements of Geometry”) which so well satisfied Pascal that
-after reading the MS. he burnt a similar work of his own.</p>
-
-<p>§ 32. The Port-Royalists then sought to introduce into
-the school-room a “sweet reasonableness.” They were not
-touched, as Comenius was, by the spirit of Bacon, and knew
-nothing of a key for opening the secrets of Nature. They
-loved literature and resolved that their pupils should love it
-also; and with this end they would give the first notions of
-it in the mother-tongue; but the love of literature still
-bound them to the past, and they aimed simply at making
-the best of the Old Education without any thought of a
-New.</p>
-
-<p>§ 33. In one respect they seem less wise than Rabelais
-and Mulcaster, less wise perhaps than their foes the Jesuits.
-They gave little heed to training the body, and thought of
-the soul and the mind only; or if they thought of the body
-they were concerned merely that it should do no harm.
-“Not only must we form the minds of our pupils to virtue,”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[189]</a></span>
-says Nicole, “we must also bend their bodies to it, that is,
-we must endeavour that the body do not prove a hindrance
-to their leading a well-regulated life or draw them by
-its weight to any disorder. For we should know that as
-men are made up of mind and body, a wrong turn given to
-the body in youth is often in after life a great hindrance to
-piety.” (<i>Vues p. bien élever un prince</i>, quoted by Cadet,
-p. 206.)</p>
-
-<p>§ 34. But let us not underrate the good effect produced
-by this united effort of Christian toil and Christian thought.
-“Nothing should be more highly esteemed than good sense,”
-(Preface to the <i>Logique</i>), and Port-Royal did a great work
-in bringing good sense and reason to bear on the practice
-of the school-room. When the Little Schools were dispersed
-the Gentlemen still continued to teach, but the lessons they
-gave were now in the “art of thinking” and in the art of
-teaching; and all the world might learn of them, for they
-taught in the only way left open to them; they published
-books.</p>
-
-<p>§ 35. Of these writers on pedagogy the most distinguished
-was “the great Arnauld,” <i>i.e.</i>, Antoine Arnauld,
-(1612-1694) brother of the Mère Angélique. His “<i>Règlement
-des Études</i>” shows us how literary instruction was given at
-Port-Royal. In these directions we have not so much the
-rules observed in the Little Schools as the experience of the
-Little Schools rendered available for the schools of the
-University. On this account Sainte-Beuve speaks of the
-<i>Règlement</i> of Arnauld as forming a preface to the <i>Treatise
-on Studies</i> (<i>Traité des Études</i>) of Rollin. In the <i>Règlement</i>
-we see Arnauld yielding to what seems a practical necessity
-and admitting competition and prizes. Some excellent
-advice is given, especially on practice in the use of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[190]</a></span>
-mother-tongue. The young people are to question and
-answer each other about the substance of what they have
-read, about the more remarkable thoughts in their author or
-the more beautiful expressions. Each day two of the boys
-are to narrate a story which they themselves have selected
-from a classical author.<a name="FNanchor_96" id="FNanchor_96"></a><a href="#Footnote_96" class="fnanchor">[96]</a></p>
-
-<p>§ 36. With the notable exception of Pascal, Arnauld
-was the most distinguished writer among the Gentlemen of
-Port-Royal. A writer less devoted to controversy than
-Arnauld, less attached to the thought of Saint-Cyran and of
-Descartes, but of wider popularity, was Nicole, who had
-Made. de Sévigné for an admirer, and Locke for one of his
-translators.</p>
-
-<p>Nicole has given us a valuable contribution to pedagogy
-in his essay on the right bringing-up of a prince. (<i>Vues
-générales pour bien élever un prince.</i>) In this essay he shows
-us with what thought and care he had applied himself to
-the art of instruction, and he gives us hints that all teachers
-may profit by. Take the following:—</p>
-
-<p>§ 37. “Properly speaking it is not the masters, it is no
-instruction from without, that makes things understood; at
-the best the masters do nothing but expose the things to the
-interior light of the mind, by which alone they can be
-understood. It follows that where this light is wanting
-instruction is as useless as trying to shew pictures in the
-dark. The very greatest minds are nothing but lights in
-confinement, and they have always sombre and shady spots;
-but in children the mind is nearly full of shade and emits<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[191]</a></span>
-but little rays of light. So everything depends on making
-the most of these rays, on increasing them and exposing to
-them what one wishes to have understood. For this reason
-it is hard to give general rules for instructing anyone,
-because the instruction must be adapted to the mixture of
-light and darkness, which differs widely in different minds,
-especially with children. We must look where the day is
-breaking and bring to it what we wish them to understand;
-and to do this we must try a variety of ways for getting at
-their minds and must persevere with such as we find have
-most success.</p>
-
-<p>“But generally speaking we may say that, as in children
-the light depends greatly on their senses, we should as far
-as possible attach to the senses the instruction we give
-them, and make it enter not only by the ear but also by the
-sight, as there is no sense which makes so lively an impression
-on the mind and forms such sharp and clear ideas.”</p>
-
-<p>This is excellent. There is a wise proverb that warns us
-that “however soon we get up in the morning the sunrise
-comes never the earlier.” A vast amount of instruction is
-thrown away because the instructors will not wait for the
-day-break.</p>
-
-<p>§ 38. For the moral training of the young there is one
-qualification in the teacher which is absolutely indispensable—goodness.
-Similarly for the intellectual training, there is
-an indispensable qualification—intelligence. This is the
-qualification required by the system of Port-Royal, but not
-required in working the ordinary machinery of the school-room
-either in those days or in ours. When Nicole has
-described how instruction should be given so as to train the
-judgment and cultivate the taste, he continues:</p>
-
-<p>“As this kind of instruction comes without observation,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[192]</a></span>
-so is the profit derived from it likely to escape observation
-also; that is, it will not announce itself by anything on the
-surface and palpable to the common man. And on this
-account persons of small intelligence are mistaken about it
-and think that a boy thus instructed is no better than
-another, because he cannot make a better translation from
-Latin into French, or beat him in saying his Virgil. Thus
-judging of the instruction by these trifles only, they often
-make less account of a really able teacher than of one of
-little science and of a mind without light.” (Nicole in
-Cadet, p. 204; Carré, p. 187.)</p>
-
-<p>In these days of marks and percentages we seem agreed
-that it must be all right if the children can stand the tests
-of the examiner or the inspector. Something may no doubt
-be got at by these tests; but we cannot hope for any genuine
-care for education while everything is estimated “<i>par des
-signes grossiers et extérieurs</i>.”</p>
-
-<p>§ 39. Whatever was required to adapt the thought of Port-Royal
-to the needs of classical schools, especially the schools
-of the University of Paris was supplied by Rollin (1661-1741)
-whose <i>Traité des Études</i> or “Way of teaching and
-studying Literature,” united the lessons of Port-Royal with
-much material drawn from his own experience and from his
-acquaintance with the writings of other authors, especially
-Quintilian and Seneca. Having been twice Rector of the
-University (in 1694 and 1695) Rollin had managed to bring
-into the schools much that was due to Port-Royal; and in
-his <i>Traité</i> he has the tact to give the improved methods as
-the ordinary practice of his colleagues.</p>
-
-<p>§ 40. Much that Rollin has said applies only to classical
-or at most to literary instruction; but some of his advice
-will be good for all teachers as long as the human mind<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[193]</a></span>
-needs instruction. I have met with nothing that seems to
-me to go more truly to the very foundation of the art of
-teaching than the following:</p>
-
-<p>“We should never lose sight of this grand principle that
-<span class="smcap">study depends on the will</span>, and the will does not endure
-constraint: ‘<i>Studium discendi voluntate quæ cogi non potest
-constat.</i>’ (Quint. j, 1, cap. 3.)<a name="FNanchor_97" id="FNanchor_97"></a><a href="#Footnote_97" class="fnanchor">[97]</a> We can, to be sure, put
-constraint on the body and make a pupil, however unwilling,
-stick to his desk, can double his toil by punishment, compel<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[194]</a></span>
-him to finish a task imposed upon him, and with this object
-we can deprive him of play and recreation. But is this
-work of the galley-slave studying? And what remains to
-the pupil from this kind of study but a hatred of books, of
-learning, and of masters, often till the end of his days? It
-is then the will that we must draw on our side, and this we
-must do by gentleness, by friendliness, by persuasion, and
-above all by the allurement of pleasure.” (<i>Traité</i>, 8th Bk.
-<i>Du Gouvernement des Classes</i>, 1re Partie, Art. x.)</p>
-
-<p>§ 41. The passage I have quoted is from the <i>Article</i>
-“on giving a taste for study (<i>rendre l’étude aimable</i>);” and
-if some masters do not agree that this is “one of the most
-important points concerning education,” they will not deny
-that “it is at the same time one of the most difficult.” As
-Rollin truly says, “among a very great number of masters
-who in other respects are highly meritorious there will be
-found very few who manage to get their pupils to like their
-work.”</p>
-
-<p>§ 42. One of the great causes of the disinclination for
-school work is to be found according to Rollin and Quintilian,
-in the repulsive form in which children first become
-acquainted with the elements of learning. “In this matter
-success depends very much on first impressions; and the
-main effort of the masters who teach the first rudiments
-should be so to do this, that the child who cannot as yet
-love study should at least not get an aversion for it from
-that time forward, for fear lest the bitter taste once acquired
-should still be in his mouth when he grows older.”<a name="FNanchor_98" id="FNanchor_98"></a><a href="#Footnote_98" class="fnanchor">[98]</a> (Begin.
-of Art. x, as above.)</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[195]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>§ 43. In this matter Rollin was more truly the disciple of
-the Port-Royalists than of Quintilian. They it was who
-protested against the dismal “grind” of learning to read
-first in an unknown tongue, and of studying the rules of
-Latin in Latin with no knowledge of Latin, a course which
-professed to lead, as Sainte-Beuve puts it, “to the unknown
-through the unintelligible.” They directed their highly-trained
-intellects to the teaching of the elements, and
-succeeded in proving that the ordinary difficulties were due
-not to the dulness of the learners, but to the stupidity of the
-masters. They showed how much might be done to remove
-these difficulties by following not routine but the dictates of
-thought, and study and love of the little ones.</p>
-
-<div class="smaller">
-
-<p>There is an excellent though condensed account of the Port-Royalists
-under “Jansenists” in Sonnenschein’s <i>Cyclopædia of Education</i>. In
-vol. ij, of Charles Beard’s Port-Royal, (2 vols., 1861) there is a chapter
-on the Little Schools. The most pleasing account I have seen in
-English of the Port-Royalists (without reference to education) is in Sir
-Jas. Stephen’s <i>Essays on Ecclesiastical Biography</i>. In French the great
-work on the subject is Sainte-Beuve’s <i>Port-Royal</i>, 5 vols. (71 ed., 6 vols.)
-The account of the Schools is in 4th bk., in vol. iij, of 1st ed. Very
-useful for studying the pedagogy of Port-Royal are <i>L’Education à Port-Royal</i>
-by Félix Cadet (Hachette, 1887) and <i>Les Pédagogues de Port-Royal</i>,
-by I. Carré (Delagrave, 1887). These last give extracts from
-the main writings on education by Arnauld, Nicole, Lancelot, Coustel,
-&amp;c. The article, <i>Port-Royal</i>, in Buisson’s <i>D.</i>, is the “Introduction” to
-Carré’s book. A 3-vol. ed. of Rollin’s <i>Traité</i> was published (Paris,
-Didot) in 1872. The more interesting parts of this book are contained<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[196]</a></span>
-in F. Cadet’s <i>Rollin: Traité des Études</i> (Delagrave, 1882). Rollin’s
-work was at one time well-known in the English trans., and copies of it
-are often to be found “second-hand.” The best part comes last; which
-may account for the neglect into which the book has fallen. The
-accounts of Port-Royal and of Rollin in G. Compayré’s <i>Histoire
-Critique</i> are very good parts of a very good book. Vérin’s <i>Étude sur
-Lancelot</i> I have not seen, and it is only too probable that I have not
-given to Lancelot the attention due to him.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[197]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="XII">XII.<br />
-<span class="smaller">SOME ENGLISH WRITERS BEFORE LOCKE.</span></h2>
-
-<p>§ 1. The beginning of the 17th century brought with it
-a change in the main direction of thought and interest. As
-we have seen, the 16th century adored literature and was
-thrown back on the remote past. Some of the great scholars
-like Sturm had indeed visions of literary works to be written,
-that would rival the old models on which they were
-fashioned; but whether they hoped or not to bring back
-the Golden Age all the scholars of the Renascence thought
-of it as <i>having been</i>. With the change of century, however, a
-new conception came into men’s minds. Might not this
-worship of the old writers after all be somewhat of a
-superstition? The languages in which they wrote were
-beautiful languages, no doubt, but they were ill adapted to
-express the ideas and wants of the modern world. As for
-the substance of these old writings, this did not satisfy the
-cravings of men’s minds. It left unsolved all the main
-problems of existence, and offered for knowledge mere
-speculations or poetic fancies or polished rhetoric. Man
-needed to understand his position with regard to God and
-to Nature; but on both of these topics the classics were
-either silent or misleading. Revelation had supplied what<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[198]</a></span>
-the classics could not give concerning man’s relation to God;
-but nothing had as yet thrown light on his relation to Nature.
-And yet with his material body and animal life he could
-not but see how close that relation was, and could not but
-wish that something about it might be <i>known</i>, not simply
-guessed or feigned. Hence the demand for <i>real</i> knowledge,
-that is, a knowledge of the facts of the universe as distinct
-from the knowledge of what men have thought and said.
-We have heard of the mathematician who put down Paradise
-Lost with the remark that it seemed to him a poor book, for
-it did not prove anything; and it was just in this spirit that
-the new school of thinkers, the Realists, looked upon the
-classics. They wanted to know Nature’s laws: and words
-which did not convey such knowledge seemed to them of
-little value.</p>
-
-<p>§ 2. Here was a tremendous revolution from the mode
-of thought prevalent in the Renascence. No longer was
-the Golden Age in the past. In science the Golden Age
-must always be in the future. Scientific men start with what
-has been discovered and add to it. Every discovery passes
-into the common stock of knowledge, and becomes the
-property of everyone who knows it just as much as of the
-discoverer. Harvey had no more property in the circulation
-of the blood, Newton and Leibnitz no more property in the
-Differential Calculus than Columbus in the Continent of
-America; indeed not so much, for Columbus gained some
-exclusive rights in America, but Harvey gained none over
-the blood.</p>
-
-<p>So we see that whereas the literary spirit made the
-dominant minds reverence the past, the scientific spirit led
-them to despise the past; and whereas the literary spirit
-raised the value of words and led to the study of celebrated<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[199]</a></span>
-writings, the scientific spirit was totally careless about words
-and prized only physical truths which were entirely independent
-of words. Again, the literary spirit naturally
-favoured the principle of authority, for its oracles had already
-spoken: the scientific spirit set aside all authority and
-accepted nothing that did not of itself satisfy the reason.
-(Compare Comenius, <a href="#Page_152"><i>supra</i> p. 152</a>.)</p>
-
-<p>§ 3. The first great leader in this revolution was an
-Englishman, Francis Bacon. But the school-room felt his
-influence only through those who learnt from him; and among
-educational reformers, the chief advocates of realism have
-been found on the Continent, <i>e.g.</i>, Ratke and Comenius.<a name="FNanchor_99" id="FNanchor_99"></a><a href="#Footnote_99" class="fnanchor">[99]</a>
-But the desire to learn by “things, not words” affected the
-minds of many English writers on education, and we find
-this spirit showing itself even in Milton and Locke, and far
-more clearly in some writers less known to fame.</p>
-
-<p>§ 4. There is a wide distinction in educational writers
-between those who were schoolmasters and those who were
-not. Schoolmasters have to come to terms with what exists
-and to make a livelihood by it. So they are conservatives
-by position, and rarely get beyond an attempt at showing
-how that which is now done badly might be done well.
-Suggestions of radical change usually come from those who
-never belonged to the class of teachers, or who, not without
-disgust, have left it.</p>
-
-<p>Among English schoolmasters of the olden times the chief
-writers I have met with besides Mulcaster are John Brinsley
-the elder, and Charles Hoole.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[200]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>§ 5. John Brinsley the elder, a Puritan schoolmaster at
-Ashby-de-la-Zouch, a brother-in-law of Bishop Hall’s, and
-father of John Brinsley the younger who became a leading
-Puritan minister and author, was a veritable reformer, but
-only with reference to methods. His most interesting
-books are <i>Ludus Literarius or the Grammar Schoole</i>, 1612
-(written after 20 years’ experience in teaching, as we learn
-from the <i>Consolation</i>, p. 45), and <i>A Consolation for our
-Grammar Schooles: or a faithfull and most comfortable incouragement
-for laying of a sure foundation of all good learning
-in our schooles and for prosperous building thereupon</i>,
-1622. The first of these, when reprinted, as it is sure to
-be, will always secure for its author the notice and the
-gratitude of students of the history of our education; for in
-this book he tells us not only what should be done in the
-school-room, but also what was done. In a dialogue with
-the ordinary schoolmaster the reformer draws to light the
-usual practice, criticizes it, and suggests improvements.</p>
-
-<p>§ 6. In Brinsley we get no hint of realism; but by
-the middle of the sixteen hundreds we find the realistic
-spirit is felt even by a schoolmaster, Charles Hoole,<a name="FNanchor_100" id="FNanchor_100"></a><a href="#Footnote_100" class="fnanchor">[100]</a> who
-was a kinsman of Bishop Sanderson, the Casuist, and was
-master first of the Grammar School at Rotherham, then of a
-private Grammar School in London, published besides a
-number of school books, a translation of the <i>Orbis Pictus</i> (date
-of preface, January, 1658), and also “A New Discovery of the
-old art of teaching schoole ... published for the general<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[201]</a></span>
-profit, especially of young Schoolemasters” (date of preface,
-December, 1659). In these books we find that Hoole
-succeeded even in the school-room in keeping his mind open.
-He complains of the neglect of English, and evidently in
-theory at least went a long way with the realistic reformers.
-“Comenius,” he says, “hath proceeded (as Nature itself doth)
-in an orderly way, first to exercise the senses well by presenting
-their objects to them, and then to fasten upon the
-intellect by impressing the first notions of things upon it and
-linking them one to another by a rational discourse;
-whereas indeed we generally, missing this way, do teach
-children as we do parrots to speak they know not what, nay,
-which is worse, we taking the way of teaching little ones by
-grammar only, at the first do puzzle their imaginations with
-abstractive terms and secondary intentions, which, till they
-be somewhat acquainted with things, and the words belonging
-to them in the language which they learn, they cannot
-apprehend what they mean. And this I guess to be the
-reason why many greater persons do resolve sometimes not
-to put a child to school till he be at least eleven or twelve
-years of age.... You then, that have the care of
-little children, do not too much trouble their thoughts and
-clog their memories with bare grammar rudiments, which to
-them are harsh in getting, and fluid in retaining; because
-indeed to them they signifie nothing but a meer swimming
-notion of a general term, which they know not what it
-meaneth till they comprehend all particulars: but by this
-[<i>i.e.</i>, the <i>Orbis P.</i>] or the like subsidiarie inform them first
-with some knowledge of things and words wherewith to
-express them; and then their rules of speaking will be
-better understood and more firmly kept in mind. Else how
-should a child conceive what a rule meaneth when he neither<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[202]</a></span>
-knoweth what the Latine word importeth, nor what manner
-of thing it is which is signified to him in his own native
-language which is given him thereby to understand the rule?
-for rules consisting of generalities are delivered (as I may
-say) at a third hand, presuming first the things and then the
-words to be already apprehended touching which they are
-made.” This subject Hoole wisely commends to the consideration
-of teachers, “it being <i>the very basis of our profession
-to search into the way of children’s taking hold by little and
-little of what we teach them</i>, that so we may apply ourselves
-to their reach.” (Preface to trans. of <i>Orbis Pictus</i>.)</p>
-
-<p>§ 7. “Good Lord! how many good and clear wits of
-children be now-a-days perished by ignorant schoolmasters!”
-So said Sir Thomas Elyot in his <i>Governor</i> in 1531, and the
-complaint would not have been out of date in the 17th
-century, possibly not in the 19th. In the sixteen hundreds
-we certainly find little advance in practice, though in theory
-many bold projects were advanced, some of which pointed
-to the study of things, to the training of the hand, and even
-to observation of the “educands.”</p>
-
-<p>§ 8. The poet Cowley’s “proposition for the advancement
-of experimental philosophy” is a scheme of a college
-near London to which is to be attached a school of 200
-boys. “And because it is deplorable to consider the loss
-which children make of their time at most schools, employing
-or rather casting away six or seven years in the learning
-of words only, and that too very imperfectly; that a method
-be here established for the infusing knowledge and language
-at the same time, [Is this an echo of Comenius?] and that
-this may be their apprenticeship in Natural Philosophy.”<a name="FNanchor_101" id="FNanchor_101"></a><a href="#Footnote_101" class="fnanchor">[101]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[203]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>§ 9. Rarely indeed have those who either theoretically or
-practically have made a study of education ever acquired
-sufficient literary skill to catch the ear of the public or (what
-is at least as difficult) the ear of the teaching body. And
-among the eminent writers who have spoken on education,
-as Rabelais, Montaigne, Milton, Locke, Rousseau, Herbert
-Spencer, we cannot find one who has given to it more than
-passing, if not accidental, attention. Schoolmasters are, as I
-said, conservative, at least in the school-room; and moreover,
-they seldom find the necessary time, money, or inclination
-for publishing on the work of their calling. The current
-thought at any period must then be gathered from books
-only to be found in our great libraries, books in which
-writers now long forgotten give hints of what was wanted
-out of the school-room and grumble at what went on in it.</p>
-
-<p>§ 10. One of the most original of these writers that have
-come in my way is John Dury, a Puritan, who was at one
-time Chaplain to the English Company of Merchants at
-Elbing, and laboured with Comenius and Hartlib to promote
-unity among the various Christian bodies of the reformed
-faith (see Masson’s <i>Life of Milton</i>, vol. iii). About 1649
-Dury published <i>The Reformed Schoole</i> which gives the scheme
-of an association for the purpose of educating a number of
-boys and girls “in a Christian way.”</p>
-
-<p>§ 11. That Dury was not himself a schoolmaster is plain
-from the first of his “rules of education.” “The chief rule of
-the whole work is that nothing be made tedious and grievous
-to the children, but all the toilsomeness of their business<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[204]</a></span>
-the Governor and Ushers are to take upon themselves; that
-by diligence and industry all things may be so prepared,
-methodized and ordered for their apprehension, that this
-work may unto them be as a delightful recreation by the
-variety and easiness thereof.”</p>
-
-<p>§ 12. “The things to be looked unto in the care of
-their education,” he enumerates in the order of importance:
-“1. Their advancement in piety; 2. The preservation of their
-health; 3. The forming of their manners; 4. Their proficiency
-in learning” (p. 24). “Godliness and bodily
-health are absolutely necessary,” says Dury; “the one for
-spiritual and the other for their temporal felicitie” (p. 31): so
-great care is to be taken in “exercising their bodies in
-husbandry or manufactures or military employments.”<a name="FNanchor_102" id="FNanchor_102"></a><a href="#Footnote_102" class="fnanchor">[102]</a></p>
-
-<p>§ 13. About instruction we find the usual complaints
-which like “mother’s truth keep constant youth.” “Children,”
-says Dury, “are taught to read authors and learn words
-and sentences before they can have any notion of the things
-signified by those words and sentences or of the author’s
-strain and wit in setting them together; and they are made
-to learn by heart the generall rules, sentences and precepts
-of Arts before they are furnished with any matter whereunto
-to apply those rules and precepts” (p. 38). Dury would
-entirely sweep away the old routine, and in all instruction
-he would keep in view the following end: “the true end of
-all human learning is to supply in ourselves and others the
-defects which proceed from our ignorance of the nature and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[205]</a></span>
-use of the creatures, and the disorderliness of our natural
-faculties in using them and reflecting upon them” (p. 41).</p>
-
-<p>§ 14. “Our natural faculties”—here Dury struck a new
-note, which has now become the keynote in the science of
-education. He enforces his point with the following
-ingenious illustration:—“As in a watch one wheel rightly
-set doth with its teeth take hold of another and sets that
-a-work towards a third; and so all move one by another
-when they are in their right places for the end for which the
-watch is made; so is it with the faculties of the human
-nature being rightly ordered to the ends for which God
-hath created them. But contrariwise, if the wheels be not
-rightly set, or the watch not duly wound up, it is useless to
-him that hath it. And so it is with the faculties of Man;
-if his wheels be not rightly ordered and wound up by the
-ends of sciences in their subordination leading him to
-employ the same according to his capacity to make use of
-the creatures for that whereunto God hath made them, he
-becomes not only useless, but even a burthen and hurtful
-unto himself and others by the misusing of them” (p. 43).</p>
-
-<p>§ 15. “As in Nature sense is the servant of imagination;
-imagination of memory; memory of reason; so in teaching
-arts and sciences we must set these faculties a-work in this
-order towards their proper objects in everything which is to
-be taught. Whence this will follow, that as the faculties of
-Man’s soul naturally perfect each other by their mutual
-subordination; so the Arts which perfect those faculties
-should be gradually suggested: and the objects wherewith
-the faculties are to be conversant according to the rules of
-Art should be offered in that order which is answerable to
-their proper ends and uses and not otherwise.”</p>
-
-<p>§ 16. In this and much else that Dury says we see a firm<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[206]</a></span>
-grasp of the principle that the instruction given should be
-regulated by the gradual development of the learner’s
-faculties. The three sources of our knowledge, says he, are—1.
-Sense; 2. Tradition; 3. Reason; and Sense comes
-first. “Art or sciences which may be learnt by mere sense
-should not be learnt any other way.” “As children’s
-faculties break forth in them by degrees to be vigorous with
-their years and the growth of their bodies, so they are to be
-filled with objects whereof they are capable, and plied with
-arts; whence followeth that while children are not capable of
-the acts of reasoning, the method of filling their senses and
-imaginations with outward objects should be plied. Nor is
-their memory at this time to be charged further with any
-objects than their imagination rightly ordered and fixed doth
-of itself impress the same upon them.” After speaking of
-the common abuse of general rules, he says: “So far as
-those faculties (viz., sense, imagination, and memory) are
-started with matters of observation, so far rules may be
-given to direct the mind in the use of the same, and no
-further.” “The arts and sciences which lead us to reflect
-upon the use of our own faculties are not to be taught till
-we are fully acquainted with their proper objects, and the
-direct acts of the faculties about them.” So “it is a very
-absurd and preposterous course to teach Logick and
-Metaphysicks before or with other Humane Sciences which
-depend more upon Sense and Imagination than reasoning”
-(p. 46).</p>
-
-<p>§ 17. In all this it seems to me that the worthy Puritan,
-of whom nobody but Dr. Barnard and Professor Masson
-has ever heard, has truly done more to lay a foundation for
-the art of teaching than his famous contemporaries Milton
-and Locke.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[207]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>§ 18. Another writer of that day better known than
-Dury and with far more power of expression was Sir
-William Petty. He is the “W.P.,” who in an Epistle “to
-his honoured friend Master Samuel Hartlib,” set down his
-“thoughts concerning the advancement of real learning”
-(1647). This letter is to be shown only “to those few that
-are Reall Friends to the Designe of Realities.”<a name="FNanchor_103" id="FNanchor_103"></a><a href="#Footnote_103" class="fnanchor">[103]</a></p>
-
-<p>§ 19. Petty sees the need of intercommunication of
-those who wish to advance any art or science. He
-complains that “the wits and endeavours of the world are
-as so many scattered coals or fire-brands, which for want of
-union are soon quenched, whereas being but laid together
-they would yield a comfortable light and heat.” This is a
-thought which may well be applied to the bringing up of
-the young; and the following passage might have been
-written to secure a training for teachers: “Methinks the
-present condition of men is like a field where a battle hath
-been lately fought, where we may see many legs and arms
-and eyes lying here and there, which for want of a union
-and a soul to quicken and enliven them are good for
-nothing but to feed ravens and infect the air. So we see
-many wits and ingenuities lying scattered up and down the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[208]</a></span>
-world, whereof some are now labouring to do what is
-already done, and puzzling themselves to re-invent what is
-already invented. Others we see quite stuck fast in difficulties
-for want of a few directions which some other man
-(might he be met withal) both could and would most easily
-give him.” I wonder how many young teachers are now
-wasting their own and their pupils’ time in this awkward
-predicament.</p>
-
-<p>§ 20. “As for ... education,” says Petty, “we
-cannot but hope that those who make it their trade will
-supply it and render the idea thereof much more perfect.”
-His own contributions to the more perfect idea consist
-mainly in making the study of “realities” precede literature,
-and thus announcing the principle which in later times has
-led to the introduction of “object lessons.” The Baconians
-thought that the good time was at hand, and that they had
-found the right road at last. By experiments they would
-learn to interpret Nature. After scheming a “Gymnasium,
-Mechanicum, or College of Tradesmen,” Petty says, “What
-experiments and stuff would all those shops and operations
-afford to active and philosophical heads, out of which to
-extract that interpretation of nature whereof there is so
-little, and that so bad, as yet extant in the world!”<a name="FNanchor_104" id="FNanchor_104"></a><a href="#Footnote_104" class="fnanchor">[104]</a> And
-this study of things was to affect the work of the school-room,
-and redeem it from the dismal state into which it was
-fallen. “As for the studies to which children are now-a-days
-put,” says Petty, “they are altogether unfit for want
-of judgment which is but weak in them, and also for want
-of will, which is sufficiently seen ... by the difficulty<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[209]</a></span>
-of keeping them at schools and the punishment they will
-endure rather than be altogether debarred from the
-pleasure which they take in things.”</p>
-
-<p>§ 21. The grand reform required is thus set forth;
-“Since few children have need of reading before they know
-or can be acquainted with the things they read of; or of
-writing before their thoughts are worth the recording or they
-are able to put them into any form (which we call
-inditing); much less of learning languages when there be
-books enough for their present use in their own mother-tongue;
-our opinion is that those things being withal
-somewhat above their capacity (as being to be attained by
-judgment which is weakest in children) be deferred awhile,
-and others more needful for them, such as are in the order of
-Nature before those afore-mentioned, and are attainable by
-the help of memory which is either most strong or unpreoccupied
-in children, be studied before them. We wish,
-therefore, that the educands be taught to observe and
-remember all sensible objects and actions, whether they be
-natural or artificial, which the educators must upon all
-occasions expound unto them.”</p>
-
-<p>§ 22. In proposing this great change Petty was influenced
-not merely by his own delight in the study of
-things but by something far more important for education,
-by observation of the children themselves. This study
-of things instead of “a rabble of words” would be “more
-easy and pleasant to the young as the more suitable to the
-natural propensions we observe in them. For we see
-children do delight in drums, pipes, fiddles, guns made of
-elder sticks, and bellows’ noses, piped keys, &amp;c., painting
-flags and ensigns with elderberries and cornpoppy, making
-ships with paper, and setting even nut-shells a-swimming,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[210]</a></span>
-handling the tools of workmen as soon as they turn their
-backs and trying to work themselves; fishing, fowling, hunting,
-setting springes and traps for birds and other animals, making
-pictures in their writing-books, making tops, gigs and
-whirligigs, gilting balls, practising divers juggling tricks upon
-the cards, &amp;c., with a million more besides. And for the
-females they will be making pies with clay, making their
-babies’ clothes and dressing them therewith; they will spit
-leaves on sticks as if they were roasting meat; they will
-imitate all the talk and actions which they observe in their
-mother and her gossips, and punctually act the comedy or
-the tragedy (I know not whether to call it) of a woman’s
-lying-in. By all which it is most evident that children do
-most naturally delight in things and are most capable of
-learning them, having quick senses to receive them and
-unpreoccupied memories to retain them” (<i>ad f.</i>).</p>
-
-<p>§ 23. In these writers, Dury and Petty, we find a
-wonderful advance in the theory of instruction. Children
-are to be taught about <i>things</i> and this because their inward
-constitution determines them towards things. Moreover
-the subjects of instruction are to be graduated to accord
-with the development of the learner’s faculties. The giving
-of rules and incomprehensible statements that will come in
-useful at a future stage is entirely forbidden. All this is
-excellent, and greatly have children suffered, greatly do they
-suffer still, from their teachers’ neglect of it. There seems
-to me to have been no important advance on the thought of
-these men till Pestalozzi and Froebel fixed their attention on
-the mind of the child, and valued things not in themselves but
-simply as the means best fitted for drawing out the child’s
-self-activity.</p>
-
-<p>§ 24. In several other matters we find Sir William<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[211]</a></span>
-Petty’s recommendations in advance of the practice of his
-own time and ours. He advises “that the business of
-education be not (as now) committed to the worst and
-unworthiest of men [here at least we have improved] but
-that it be seriously studied and practised by the best and
-abler persons.” To this standard we have not yet attained.</p>
-
-<p>§ 25. Handwork is to be practised, but its educational
-value is not clearly perceived. “All children, though of the
-highest rank, are to be taught some gentle manufacture in
-their minority.” <i>Ergastula Literaria</i>, literary workhouses,
-are to be instituted where children may be taught as well to
-do something towards their living as to read and write.<a name="FNanchor_105" id="FNanchor_105"></a><a href="#Footnote_105" class="fnanchor">[105]</a></p>
-
-<p>§ 26. Education was to be universal, but chiefly with
-the object of bringing to the front the clever sons of poor
-parents. The rule he would lay down is “that all children of
-above seven years old may be presented to this kind of
-education, none being to be excluded by reason of the
-poverty and unability of their parents, for hereby it hath come
-to pass that many are now holding the plough which might
-have been made fit to steer the state.”<a name="FNanchor_106" id="FNanchor_106"></a><a href="#Footnote_106" class="fnanchor">[106]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[212]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>§ 27. From these enthusiasts for realities we find a
-change when we turn to their contemporary, a schoolmaster
-and author of a Latin Accidence, who was perhaps the
-most notable Englishman who ever kept a school or published
-a school-book.</p>
-
-<p>§ 28. Milton was not only a great poet: he was also a great
-scholar. Everything he said or wrote bore traces of his
-learning. The world of books then rather than the world
-of the senses is his world. He has benefited as he says
-“among old renowned authors” and “his inclination leads
-him not” to read modern <i>Januas</i> and <i>Didactics</i>, or
-apparently the writings of any of his contemporaries including
-those of his great countryman, Bacon. But, as
-Professor Laurie reminds us, no man, not even a Milton,
-however he may ignore the originators of ideas can keep
-himself outside the influence of the ideas themselves when
-they are in the air; and so we find Milton using his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[213]</a></span>
-incomparable power of expression in the service of the
-Realists.</p>
-
-<p>§ 29. But brief he endeavours to be, and paying the
-Horatian penalty he becomes obscure. In the “few
-observations which flowered off and were the burnishing
-of many studious and contemplative years,” Milton touches
-only on the bringing up of gentlemen’s sons between the
-ages of 12 and 21, and his suggestions do not, like those of
-Comenius, deal with the education of the people, or of both
-sexes.<a name="FNanchor_107" id="FNanchor_107"></a><a href="#Footnote_107" class="fnanchor">[107]</a> This limit of age, sex, and station deprives Milton’s
-plan of much of its interest, as the absence of detail deprives
-it of much of its value.</p>
-
-<p>§ 30. Still, we find in the <i>Tractate</i> a very great advance
-on the ideas current at the Renascence. Learning is no
-longer the aim of education but is regarded simply as a
-means. No finer expression has been given in our literature
-to the main thesis of the Christian and of the Realist
-and to the Realist’s contempt of verbalism, than this: “The
-end of learning is to repair the ruins of our first parents by
-regaining to know God aright, and out of that knowledge to
-love Him, to imitate Him, to be like Him, as we may the
-nearest by possessing our souls of true virtue, which being
-united to the heavenly grace of faith makes up the highest
-perfection. But because our understanding cannot in this
-body found itself but on sensible things, nor arrive so clearly
-to the knowledge of God and things invisible, as by orderly
-conning over the visible and inferior creature, the same
-method is necessarily to be followed in all discreet teaching.
-And seeing every Nation affords not experience and tradition<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[214]</a></span>
-enough for all kind of learning, therefore we are chiefly taught
-the languages of those people who have at any time been
-most industrious after wisdom; so that language is but the
-instrument conveying to us things useful to be known.
-And though a linguist should pride himself to have all the
-tongues that Babel cleft the world into, yet, if he have not
-studied the solid things in them as well as the words and
-lexicons, he were nothing so much to be esteemed a learned
-man as any yeoman or tradesman competently wise in his
-mother-dialect only.”</p>
-
-<p>§ 31. The several propositions here implied have thus
-been “disentangled” by Professor Laurie (<i>John Milton</i> in
-<i>Addresses</i>, &amp;c., p. 167).</p>
-
-<p>1. The aim of education is the <i>knowledge</i> of God and
-<i>likeness</i> to God.</p>
-
-<p>2. <i>Likeness</i> to God we attain by possessing our souls of
-true virtue and by the Heavenly Grace of Faith.</p>
-
-<p>3. <i>Knowledge</i> of God we attain by the study of the
-visible things of God.</p>
-
-<p>4. Teaching then has for its aim <i>this</i> knowledge.</p>
-
-<p>5. Language is merely an instrument or vehicle for the
-knowledge of things.</p>
-
-<p>6. The linguist may be less <i>learned</i> (<i>i.e.</i>, educated) in the
-true sense than a man who can make good use of his
-mother-tongue though he knows no other.</p>
-
-<p>§ 32. Elsewhere, Milton gives his idea of “a complete
-and generous education;” it “fits a man to perform justly,
-skilfully, and magnanimously all the offices both private and
-public of Peace and War.” (Browning’s edition, p. 8.)
-Here and indeed in all that Milton says we feel that “the
-noble moral glow that pervades the <i>Tractate on Education</i>,
-the mood of magnanimity in which it is conceived and written,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[215]</a></span>
-and the faith it inculcates in the powers of the young human
-spirit, if rightly nurtured and directed, are merits everlasting.”
-(Masson iij, p. 252.)</p>
-
-<p>§ 33. But in this moral glow and in an intense hatred of
-verbalism lie as it seems to me the chief merits of the
-Tractate. The practical suggestions are either incomprehensible
-or of doubtful wisdom. The reforming of education
-was, as Milton says, one of the greatest and noblest
-designs that could be thought on, but he does not take the
-right road when he proposes for every city in England a
-joint school and university for about 120 boarders. The
-advice to keep boys between 12 and 21 in this barrack life
-I consider, with Professor Laurie, to be “fundamentally
-unsound;” and the project of uniting the military training
-of Sparta with the humanistic training of Athens seems to
-me a pure chimæra.</p>
-
-<p>§ 34. When we come to instruction we find that Milton
-after announcing the distinctive principle of the Realists
-proves to be himself the last survivor of the Verbal Realists.
-(<a href="#Page_25">See <i>supra</i>, p. 25.</a>) No doubt</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">“His daily teachers had been woods and rills,”</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">but his thoughts had been even more in his books; and for
-the young he sketches out a purely bookish curriculum.
-The young are to learn about things, but they are to learn
-through books; and the only books to which Milton
-attaches importance are written in Latin, Greek, or Hebrew.
-He held, probably with good reason, that far too much
-time “is now bestowed in pure trifling at grammar and
-sophistry.” “We do amiss,” he says, “to spend 7 or 8
-years merely in scraping together so much miserable Latin
-and Greek as might be learned otherwise easily and delightfully<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[216]</a></span>
-in one year.” Without an explanation of the
-“otherwise” this statement is a truism, and what Milton
-says further hardly amounts to an explanation. His plan,
-if plan it can be called, is as follows: “If after some preparatory
-grounds of speech by their certain forms got into
-memory, the boys were led to the praxis thereof in some
-chosen short book lessoned thoroughly to them, they might
-then proceed to learn the substance of good things and arts
-in due order, which would bring the whole language quickly
-into their power. This,” adds Milton, “I take to be the
-most rational and most profitable way of learning languages.”
-It is, however, not the most intelligible.</p>
-
-<p>§ 35. “I doubt not but ye shall have more ado to drive
-our dullest and laziest youth, our stocks and stubbs, from
-the infinite desire of such a happy nurture than we have
-now to hale and drag our choicest and hopefullest wits to
-that asinine feast of sow thistles and brambles which is
-commonly set before them as all the food and entertainment
-of their tenderest and most docible age.” We cannot but
-wonder whether this belief survived the experience of “the
-pretty garden-house in Aldersgate.” From the little we are
-told by his nephew and old pupil Edward Phillips we
-should infer that Milton was not unsuccessful as a schoolmaster.
-In this we have a striking proof how much more
-important is the teacher than the teaching. A character
-such as Milton’s in which we find the noblest aims
-united with untiring energy in pursuit of them could not
-but dominate the impressionable minds of young people
-brought under its influence. But whatever success he
-met with could not have been due to the things he taught
-nor to his method in teaching them. In spite of the “moral
-glow” about his recommendations they are “not a bow for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[217]</a></span>
-every [or any] man to shoot in that counts himself a
-teacher.”</p>
-
-<p>§ 36. Nor did he do much for the science of education.
-His scheme is vitiated, as Mark Pattison says, by “the
-information fallacy.” In the literary instruction there is no
-thought of training the faculties of all or the special
-faculties of the individual. “It requires much observation
-of young minds to discover that the rapid inculcation of
-unassimilable information stupefies the faculties instead of
-training them,” says Pattison; and Milton absorbed by
-his own thoughts and the thoughts of the ancients did not
-observe the minds of the young, and knew little of the
-powers of any mind but his own.</p>
-
-<p>For information the youths are not required to observe
-for themselves but are to be taught “a general compact of
-physicks.” “Also in course might be read to them out of
-some not tedious writer the Institution of Physick; that
-they may know the tempers, the humours, the seasons, and
-how to manage a crudity.”</p>
-
-<p>§ 37. Even the study of the classics is advocated by
-Milton on false grounds. If, like the Port-Royalists, he had
-recommended the study of the classical authors for the
-sake of pure Latin and Greek or as models of literary
-style, the means would have been suited to the end;
-but it was very different when he directed boys to study
-Virgil and Columella in order to learn about bees and
-farming. In after-life they would find these authorities a
-little out of date; and if they ever attempted to improve
-tillage, “to recover the bad soil and to remedy the waste
-that is made of good, which was one of Hercules’s praises,”
-they would have found a knowledge of the methods of
-Hercules about as useful as of the methods of the Romans.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[218]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>§ 38. Milton was then a reformer “for his own hand;”
-and notwithstanding his moral and intellectual elevation
-and his superb power of rhetoric, he seems to me a less
-useful writer on education than the humble Puritans whom
-he probably would not deign to read. In his haughty self-reliance,
-he, like Carlyle with whom Seeley has well
-compared him (<i>Lectures and Addresses: Milton</i>), addressed
-his contemporaries <i>de haut en bas</i>, and though ready to
-teach could learn only among the old renowned authors
-with whom he associated himself and we associate him.</p>
-
-<p>§ 39. Judged from our present standpoint the Tractate is
-found with many weaknesses to be strong in this, that it co-ordinates
-physical, moral, mental and æsthetic training.</p>
-
-<p>§ 40. But nothing of Milton’s can be judged by our
-ordinary canons. He soars far above them and raises us
-with him “to mysterious altitudes above the earth” (<a href="#Page_153"><i>supra</i>,
-p. 153, <i>note</i></a>). Whatever we little people may say about the
-suggestions of the Tractate, Milton will remain one of the
-great educators of mankind.<a name="FNanchor_108" id="FNanchor_108"></a><a href="#Footnote_108" class="fnanchor">[108]</a></p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[219]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="XIII">XIII.<br />
-<span class="smaller">LOCKE.<br />
-(1632-1704).</span></h2>
-
-<p>§ 1. When an English University established an examination
-for future teachers,<a name="FNanchor_109" id="FNanchor_109"></a><a href="#Footnote_109" class="fnanchor">[109]</a> the “special subjects” first set
-were “Locke and Dr. Arnold.” The selection seems to me
-a very happy one. Arnold greatly affected the spirit and
-even the organization of our public schools at a time when
-the old schools were about to have new life infused into
-them, and when new schools were to be started on the
-model of the old. He is perhaps the greatest educator of
-the English type, <i>i.e.</i>, the greatest educator who had
-accepted the system handed down to him and tried to
-make the best of it. Locke on the other hand, whose
-reputation is more European than English, belongs rather
-to the continental type. Like his disciple Rousseau and
-like Rousseau’s disciples the French Revolutionists, Locke
-refused the traditional system and appealed from tradition
-and authority to reason. We English revere Arnold, but
-so long as the history of education continues to be written,
-as it has been written hitherto, on the Continent, the only
-Englishman celebrated in it will be as now not the great
-schoolmaster but the great philosopher.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[220]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>§ 2. In order to understand Locke we must always
-bear in mind what I may call his two main characteristics;
-1st, his craving to know and to speak the truth and the
-whole truth in everything, truth not for a purpose but for
-itself<a name="FNanchor_110" id="FNanchor_110"></a><a href="#Footnote_110" class="fnanchor">[110]</a>; 2nd, his perfect trust in the reason as the guide,
-the only guide, to truth.<a name="FNanchor_111" id="FNanchor_111"></a><a href="#Footnote_111" class="fnanchor">[111]</a></p>
-
-<p>§ 3. 1st. Those who have not reflected much on the subject
-will naturally suppose that the desire to know the truth
-is common to all men, and the desire to speak the truth
-common to most. But this is very far from being the case.
-If we had any earnest desire for truth we should examine
-things carefully before we admitted them as truths; in
-other words our opinions would be the growth of long and
-energetic thought. But instead of this they are formed for
-the most part quite carelessly and at haphazard, and we
-value them not on account of their supposed agreement
-with fact but because though “poor things” they are “our
-own” or those of our sect or party. Locke on the other<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[221]</a></span>
-hand was always endeavouring to get at the truth for its
-own sake. This separated him from men in general. And
-he brought great powers of mind to bear on the investigation.
-This raised him above them.</p>
-
-<p>§ 4. 2nd. Locke’s second characteristic was his entire
-reliance on the guidance of reason. “The faculty of
-reasoning,” says he, “seldom or never deceives those who
-trust to it.” Elsewhere, borrowing a metaphor from
-Solomon (Prov. xx, 27), he speaks of this faculty as “the
-candle of the Lord set up by Himself in men’s minds.”
-(F. B. ij., 129). In a fine passage in the <i>Conduct of the
-Understanding</i> he calls it “the touchstone of truth” (§ iij,
-Fowler’s edition, p. 10). He even goes so far in his
-correspondence with Molyneux as to maintain that intelligent
-honest men cannot possibly differ.<a name="FNanchor_112" id="FNanchor_112"></a><a href="#Footnote_112" class="fnanchor">[112]</a></p>
-
-<p>But if we consider it from one point of view the treatise
-on the <i>Conduct of the Understanding</i> is itself a witness that
-human reason is a compass liable to incalculable variations
-and likely enough to shipwreck those who steer by it alone.
-In this book Locke shows us that to come to a true result
-the understanding (1) must be perfectly trained, (2) must
-not be affected by any feeling in favour of or against any<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[222]</a></span>
-particular result, and (3) must have before it all the data
-necessary for forming a judgment. In practice these
-conditions are seldom (if ever) fulfilled; and Locke himself,
-when he wants an instance of a mind that can acquiesce in
-the certainty of its conclusions, takes it from “angels
-and separate spirits who may be endowed with more comprehensive
-faculties” than we are (C. of U. § iij, 3).</p>
-
-<p>§ 5. It seems to me then that Locke much exaggerates
-the power of the individual reason for getting at the truth.
-And to exaggerate the importance of one function of the
-mind is to unduly diminish the importance of the rest.
-Thus we find that in Locke’s scheme of education little
-thought is taken for the play of the affections and feelings;
-and as for the imagination it is treated merely as a source
-of mischief.</p>
-
-<p>§ 6. Locke, as it has often been pointed out, differs from
-the schoolmaster in making small account of the knowledge
-to be acquired by those under education. But it has
-not been so often remarked that the fundamental difference
-is much deeper than this and lies in the conception of
-knowledge itself. With the ordinary schoolmaster the test
-of knowledge is the power of reproduction. Whatever
-pupils can reproduce with difficulty they know imperfectly;
-whatever they can reproduce with ease they know thoroughly.
-But Locke’s definition of knowledge confines it to a much
-smaller area. According to him knowledge is “the internal
-perception of the mind” (Locke to Stillingfleet <i>v.</i> F. B. ij,
-432). “Knowing is seeing; and if it be so, it is madness
-to persuade ourselves we do so by another man’s eyes, let
-him use never so many words to tell us that what he asserts
-is very visible. Till we ourselves see it with our own eyes,
-and perceive it by our own understandings, we are as much<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[223]</a></span>
-in the dark and as void of knowledge as before, let us believe
-any learned authors as much as we will” (C. of U. § 24).<a name="FNanchor_113" id="FNanchor_113"></a><a href="#Footnote_113" class="fnanchor">[113]</a></p>
-
-<p>§ 7. Here Locke makes no distinction between different
-classes of truths. But surely very important differences
-exist.</p>
-
-<p>About some physical facts our knowledge is at once
-most certain and most definite when we derive it through
-the evidence of our own senses. “Seeing is believing,” says
-the proverb. It may be believing, but it is not knowing.
-That certainty which we call knowledge we often arrive at
-better by the testimony of others than by that of our
-own senses.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Martineau in her Autobiography tells us that as a
-child of ten she entirely and unaccountably failed to see a
-comet which was visible to all other people; but, although
-her own senses were at fault, the evidence for the comet
-was so conclusive that she may be said to have <i>known</i>
-there was a comet in the sky.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[224]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>On sufficient evidence we can know anything, just as we
-know there is a great water-fall at Niagara though we may
-never have crossed the Atlantic. But we cannot be so certain
-simply on the evidence of our senses. If we trusted
-entirely to them we might take the earth for a plane and
-“know” that the sun moved round it.</p>
-
-<p>§ 8. But Locke probably considers as the subject of knowledge
-not so much physical facts as the great body of truths
-which are ascertained by the intellect. It is the eye of the
-mind by which alone knowledge is to be gained. Of these
-truths the purest specimens are the truths of geometry. It
-may be said that only those who have followed the proofs
-<i>know</i> that the area of the square on the side opposite the
-right angle in a right-angled triangle is equal to the sum of
-the squares on the other sides. But even in pure reasoning
-like this, the tiro often seems to see what he does not really
-see; and where his own reason brings him to a conclusion
-different from the one established he <i>knows</i> only that he is
-mistaken.</p>
-
-<p>§ 9. It must be admitted then that first-hand knowledge,
-knowledge derived from the vision of the eye or of the
-mind, is not the only knowledge the young require.
-Every learner must take things on trust, as even Lord
-Bacon admits. <i>Discentem credere oportet.</i> To use Locke’s
-own words:—“I do not say, to be a good geographer that
-a man should visit every mountain, river, promontory, and
-creek upon the face of the earth, view the buildings and
-survey the land everywhere as if he were going to make a
-purchase” (C. of U., iij, <i>ad f.</i>). So that even according to
-Locke’s own shewing we must use the eyes of others as
-well as our own, and this is true not in geography only, but
-in all other branches of knowledge.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[225]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>§ 10. But are we driven to the alternative of agreeing
-either with Locke or with the schoolmaster? I do not see
-that we are. The thought which underlies Locke’s system
-of education is this: true knowledge can be acquired only
-by the exercise of the reason: in childhood the reasoning
-power is not strong enough for the pursuit of knowledge:
-knowledge, therefore, is out of the question at that age,
-and the only thing to be thought of is the formation of
-habits. Opposed to this we have the schoolmaster’s ideal
-which is governed by examinations. According to this ideal
-the object of the school course is to give certain “knowledge,”
-linguistic and other, and to fix it in the memory in
-such a manner that it can be displayed on the day of
-examination. “Knowledge” of this kind often makes no
-demand whatever on the reasoning faculty, or indeed on any
-faculty but that of remembering and reproducing what the
-learner has been told; in extreme cases the memory of mere
-sounds or symbols suffices.</p>
-
-<p>But after all we are not compelled to choose between these
-two theories. Take, <i>e.g.</i>, the subject which Locke has mentioned,
-geography. The schoolmasters of the olden time
-began with the use of the globes, a plan which, by the way,
-Locke himself seems to have winked at. His disciple
-Molyneux tells him of the performances of the small
-Molyneux. When he was but just turned five he could
-read perfectly well, and on the globe could have traced out
-and pointed at all the noted ports, countries, and cities of
-the world, both land and sea; by five and a half could
-perform many of the plainest problems on the globe, as the
-longitude and latitude, the Antipodes, the time with them
-and other countries, &amp;c. (Molyneux to L., 24th August,
-1695.) Here we find a child brought up, without any<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[226]</a></span>
-protest from Locke, on mere examination knowledge, which
-according to Locke himself is not knowledge at all. It
-is strange that Locke did not at once point out to Molyneux
-that the child was not really learning what the father
-supposed him to be learning. When the child turned over
-the plaster ball and found the word “Paris,” the father
-no doubt attributed to the child much that was in his
-own mind only. To the child “the Globe” (as Rousseau
-afterwards said), was nothing but a plaster ball; “Paris”
-was nothing but some letters marked on that ball. Comenius
-had already got a notion how children may be given
-some knowledge of geography. “Children begin geography,”
-said he, “when they get to understand what a hill,
-a valley, a field, a river, a village, a town is.” (<a href="#Page_145"><i>Supra</i>,
-p. 145.</a>) When this beginning has been made, geographical
-knowledge is at once possible to the child, and not
-before.</p>
-
-<p>Perfect knowledge in geography, as in most other things,
-is out of every one’s reach. Nobody knows, <i>e.g.</i>, all that
-could be known about Paris. The knowledge its inhabitants
-have of it is very various, but in all cases this knowledge
-is far greater than that of a visitor. The visitor’s
-knowledge again is far greater than that of strangers who
-have never seen Paris. Nobody, then, can know everything
-even about Paris; but a child who knows what a large town
-is, and can fancy to himself a big town called Paris, which
-is the biggest and most important town in France has some
-knowledge about it. This must be maintained against
-Locke. Against the schoolmaster it may be pointed out
-that making an Eskimo say the words:—“Paris is the
-capital of France,” would not be giving him any knowledge
-at all; and the same may be said of many “lessons” in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[227]</a></span>
-the school-room. If a common sailor were to teach an
-Eskimo English, he would very likely suppose that when he
-had taught the sounds “Paris is the capital of France,” he
-had conveyed to his pupil all the ideas which those sounds
-suggested to his own mind. A common schoolmaster may
-fall into a similar error.</p>
-
-<p>§ 11. In the most celebrated work which has been
-affected by the <i>Thoughts</i> of Locke, Rousseau’s <i>Emile</i>, we
-find childhood treated in a manner altogether different from
-youth: the child’s education is mainly physical, and
-instruction is not given till the age of twelve. Locke’s
-system on first sight seems very different to this, but there
-is a deeper connection between the two than is usually
-observed. We have seen that Locke allowed nothing to be
-knowledge that was not acquired by the perception of the
-intellect. But in children the intellectual power is not yet
-developed; so according to Locke knowledge properly so-called
-is not within their reach. What then can the
-educator do for them? He can prepare them for the age
-of reason in two ways, by caring first for their physical health,
-second for the formation of good habits.</p>
-
-<p>§ 12. 1st. On the Continent Locke has always been considered
-one of the first advocates of physical education, and
-he does, it is true, give physical education the first place, a
-feature in his system, which we naturally connect with his
-study of medicine, and also with the trouble he had all his life
-with his own health. But care of the body, and especially
-bodily exercises, were always much thought of in this
-country, and the main writers on education before Locke,
-<i>e.g.</i>, Sir Thos. Elyot, Mulcaster, Milton, were very emphatic
-about physical training.</p>
-
-<p>In the autobiography of Lord Herbert of Cherbury, we<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[228]</a></span>
-may see what attention was paid in Locke’s own century to
-this part of education.<a name="FNanchor_114" id="FNanchor_114"></a><a href="#Footnote_114" class="fnanchor">[114]</a></p>
-
-<p>§ 13. 2nd. “That, and that only, is educative which
-moulds forms or modifies the soul or mind.” (Mark
-Pattison in <i>New Quarterly Magazine</i>, January, 1880.)</p>
-
-<p>Here we have a proposition which is perhaps seldom
-denied, but very commonly ignored by those who bring
-up the young. But Locke seems to have been entirely
-possessed with this notion, and the greater part of the <i>Thoughts</i>
-is nothing but a long application of it. The principle which
-lies at the root of most of his advice, he has himself expressed
-as follows: “That which I cannot too often inculcate is,
-that whatever the matter be about which it is conversant
-whether great or small, the main, I had almost said only
-thing, to be considered in every action of a child is what
-influence it will have upon his mind; what habit it tends to,
-and is likely to settle in him: how it will become him when
-he is bigger, and if it be encouraged, whither it will lead him
-when he is grown up.” (<i>Thoughts</i>, § 107, p. 86.)</p>
-
-<p>Here we see that Locke differed widely from the schoolmasters
-of his time, perhaps of all time. A man must be a
-philosopher indeed if he can spend his life in teaching boys,
-and yet always think more about what they will <i>be</i> and what
-they will <i>do</i> when their schooling is over than what they will
-<i>know</i>. And in these days if we stopped to think at all we
-should be trodden on by the examiner.<a name="FNanchor_115" id="FNanchor_115"></a><a href="#Footnote_115" class="fnanchor">[115]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[229]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>In this respect Locke has not been surpassed. Like his
-predecessor Montaigne he took for his centre not the object,
-knowledge, but the subject, man.<a name="FNanchor_116" id="FNanchor_116"></a><a href="#Footnote_116" class="fnanchor">[116]</a></p>
-
-<p>§ 14. In some other respects he does not seem so happy.
-He makes little attempt to reach a scientific standpoint and
-to establish general truths about our common human nature.
-He thinks not so much of the man as the gentleman, not so
-much of the common laws of the mind as of the peculiarities
-of the individual child. He even hints that differences of
-disposition in children render treatises on education defective
-if not useless. “There are a thousand other things that
-may need consideration” he writes “especially if one should
-take in the various tempers, different inclinations, and
-particular defaults that are to be found in children and
-prescribe proper remedies. The variety is so great that it
-would require a volume, nor would that reach it. Each
-man’s mind has some peculiarity as well as his face, that
-distinguishes him from all others; and there are possibly
-scarce two children who can be conducted by exactly the
-same method: besides that I think a prince, a nobleman,
-or an ordinary gentleman’s son should have different ways
-of breeding. But having had here only some general views
-in reference to the main end and aims in education, and those
-designed for a gentleman’s son, whom being then very little
-I considered only as white paper or wax to be moulded and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">[230]</a></span>
-fashioned as one pleases, I have touched little more than
-those heads which I judged necessary for the breeding of a
-young gentleman of his condition in general.” (<i>Thoughts</i>,
-§ 217, p. 187.)</p>
-
-<p>No language could bring out more clearly the inferiority
-of Locke’s standpoint to that of later thinkers. He makes
-little account of our common nature and wishes education to
-be based upon an estimate of the peculiarities of the
-individual pupil and of his social needs. And no one with an
-adequate notion of education could ever compare the young
-child to “white paper or wax.” Perhaps the development of
-an organism was a conception that could not have been
-formed without a great advance in physical science. Froebel
-who makes most of it learnt it from the scientific study of
-trees and from mineralogy. We need not then be surprised
-that Locke does not say, as Pestalozzi said a hundred years
-later, “Education instead of merely considering what is to be
-imparted to children ought to consider first what they already
-possess.” But if he had read Comenius he would have been
-saved from comparing the child to wax or white paper in the
-hands of the educator. Comenius had said: “Nature has
-implanted within us the seeds of learning, of virtue, and of
-piety. The object of education is to bring these seeds to
-perfection.” (<a href="#Page_135"><i>Supra</i>, p. 135.</a>) This seems to me a higher
-conception than any that I meet with in Locke.</p>
-
-<p>§ 15. But if our philosopher did not learn from Comenius
-he certainly learnt from Montaigne.<a name="FNanchor_117" id="FNanchor_117"></a><a href="#Footnote_117" class="fnanchor">[117]</a> Indeed Dr. Arnstädt<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">[231]</a></span>
-(<a href="#Page_69"><i>v. supra</i>, p. 69</a>) has put him into a series of thinkers who
-have much in common. This succession is as follows:
-Rabelais, Montaigne, Locke, Rousseau; and, according to
-Mr. Browning’s division, they form a school by themselves.
-“Thinkers on education,” says Mr. Browning,<a name="FNanchor_118" id="FNanchor_118"></a><a href="#Footnote_118" class="fnanchor">[118]</a> “are 1st
-those who wish to educate through the study of the classics,
-or 2nd those who wish to educate through the study of the
-works of Nature, or 3rd those who aim at an education
-independent of study and knowledge, and think rather of the
-training of character and the attaining to the Greek ideal,
-the man beautiful and good.” To the three schools Mr.
-Browning gives the names Humanist, Realist, and Naturalist,
-(“nos autres naturalistes,” Montaigne says). Locke he considers
-one of the principal writers of the “naturalistic”
-school, and says, Locke “has given a powerful bias to naturalistic
-education both in England and on the Continent for
-the last 200 years.” (<i>Ed. Theories</i>, p. 85.)</p>
-
-<p>This use of the word “naturalistic” seems to me somewhat
-misleading, or at best vague, and it is a word overworked
-already: so I should prefer to speak of the “developing” or
-“training” school. The classification itself certainly has its
-uses but it must be employed with caution. If caught up by
-those who have only an elementary acquaintance with the
-subject a class of persons apt to delight in such arrangements
-as an aid to memory, these divisions may easily prove a
-hindrance to light.</p>
-
-<p>§ 16. This subject of classification is so important to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">[232]</a></span>
-students that it may be worth while to make a few remarks
-upon it. The only thoroughly consistent people are the
-people of fiction. We can know all about <i>them</i>. Directly
-we understand their central thought or peculiarity we may be
-sure that everything they say and do will be strictly in
-accordance with it, will indeed be explainable by it. To
-take a bald and simple instance, directly we know that Mrs.
-Jellaby in <i>Bleak House</i> is absorbed by her interest in an
-African Mission, we know all that is to be known about her;
-and everything she does or omits to do has some reference
-to Borrioboola Ghar. But in real life not only are people
-much less easily understood, but when we actually have seized
-their main idea or peculiarity or interest we must not expect
-to find them always consistent: and they will say and do much
-which if not inconsistent with the main idea or peculiarity or
-interest has at least no connection with it. Suppose, <i>e.g.</i>,
-you can make out with some certainty that Locke belonged
-to the developing school, you must not expect him to pay
-little heed to instruction as such. Again, suppose you find that
-his philosophy was utilitarian; you must not suppose that
-in everything he says he will be thinking of utility.</p>
-
-<p>Now the historian is tempted to treat real men and women
-as the writer of fiction treats his puppets. Having fastened,
-quite correctly let us suppose, on their main peculiarity he
-considers it necessary to square everything with his theory of
-them, and whatever will not fall in with it he, if he is
-unscrupulous, misrepresents, or if he is scrupulous, suppresses.</p>
-
-<p>Again, we are too apt to read into words meanings
-derived from controversies unknown at the time when the
-words were uttered. This is a well-known fact in the
-history of religious thought. We must always consider not
-merely the words used but the time when they were used.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[233]</a></span>
-What a man might say quite naturally and orthodoxly at one
-period would be sufficient to convict him of sympathizing
-with some terrible heresy if uttered half a century later.
-We find something like this in the history of education.
-If anyone nowadays speaks of the pleasure with which as
-a young man he read Tacitus, he is understood to mean
-that he is opposed to the introduction of “modern studies”
-into the school-room. If on the other hand he extols
-botany, or regrets that he never learned chemistry, this is
-taken for an assault on classical instruction. But, of course,
-no such inference could be drawn if we went back to a time
-when the antithesis between classics and natural science
-had not been accentuated. In many other instances we
-have to be on our guard against forcing into language
-meaning which belongs rather to a later date.</p>
-
-<p>§ 17. With these cautions in mind let us see how far
-Locke may be said (1) to be a trainer, and (2) how far a
-utilitarian.</p>
-
-<p>§ 18. I. Mr. Browning attributes to Rabelais, Montaigne,
-and Locke the desire to bring up a well-developed man
-rather than a good scholar. But Rabelais certainly craved
-for the knowledge of <i>things</i>; and if he is to be classed at
-all I should put him rather with the Realists, albeit he lived
-before the realistic spirit became powerful. Montaigne
-went more on the lines of developing rather than teaching,
-and, shrewd man of the world as he was, he thought a
-great deal about the art of living. But his ideal was not
-so much the man as the gentleman. This was true also
-of Locke; and here we see some explanation why both
-Montaigne and Locke do not value classical learning.<a name="FNanchor_119" id="FNanchor_119"></a><a href="#Footnote_119" class="fnanchor">[119]</a><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[234]</a></span>
-On the Continent classical learning has never been associated
-with the character of an accomplished gentleman;
-and, as far as I know, the conception that the highest type
-of excellence is found in the union of “the scholar and the
-gentleman” is peculiar to this country. In the society
-of Locke’s day this union does not seem to have been
-recognized, and Locke observes: “A great part of the
-learning now in fashion in the schools of Europe, and that
-goes ordinarily into the round of education, a gentleman
-may in a good measure be unfurnished with, without any
-great disparagement to himself or prejudice to his affairs.”
-(<i>Thoughts</i>, § 94, p. 74.) So Locke sought as the true
-essential for the young gentleman “prudence and good
-breeding.” He puts his requisites in the following order of
-importance:—1, virtue; 2, wisdom; 3, manners; 4, learning;
-and so “places learning last and least.” Here he shews
-himself far ahead of those who still held to the learned
-ideal; but his notions of development were cramped by
-his thinking only of the gentleman and what was requisite
-for him.</p>
-
-<p>§ 19. II. Was Locke a utilitarian in education? It is
-the fashion (and in history as in other things fashion is a
-powerful force), it is the fashion to treat of Locke as a great
-champion of utilitarianism. We might expect this in the
-ordinary historians, for “when they do agree their unanimity
-is” not perhaps very wonderful. But there is one great
-English authority quite uninfluenced by them who has said<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[235]</a></span>
-the same thing, viz.—Cardinal Newman. The Cardinal, as
-the champion of authority, is perhaps prejudiced against
-Locke, who holds that “the faculty of reasoning seldom
-or never deceived those who trusted to it.” Be this as it
-may, Newman asserts that “the tone of Locke’s remarks is
-condemnatory of any teaching which tends to the general
-cultivation of the mind.” (<i>Idea of a University.</i> Discourse
-vij., § 4; see also § 6.) A very interesting point for us to
-consider is then, Is this reputation of Locke’s for utilitarianism
-well deserved?</p>
-
-<p>§ 20. First let us be quite certain of our definition.</p>
-
-<p>In learning anything there are two points to be considered;
-1st, the advantage we shall find from knowing that subject
-or having that skill, and 2nd, the effect which the study of
-that subject or practising for that skill will have on the
-mind or the body.</p>
-
-<p>These two points are in themselves distinct, though it is
-open to anyone to maintain that they need not be considered
-separately. Nature has provided that the bodies of
-most animals should get the exercise best for them in procuring
-food. So Mr. Herbert Spencer has come to the
-conclusion that it would be contrary to “the economy of
-nature” if one set of occupations were needed as gymnastics
-and another for utility. In other words he considers that
-it is in learning the most useful things we get the best
-training.</p>
-
-<p>The utilitarian view of instruction is that we should teach
-things useful in themselves and either neglect the result on
-the mind and body of the learner or assume Mr. Spencer’s
-law of “the economy of nature.”</p>
-
-<p>Again, when the subjects are settled the utilitarian thinks
-how the knowledge or skill may be most speedily acquired,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[236]</a></span>
-and not how this method or that method of acquisition will
-affect the faculties.</p>
-
-<p>§ 21. This being utilitarianism in education the question
-is how far was Locke the utilitarian he is generally
-considered?</p>
-
-<p>If we take by itself what he says under the head of
-“Learning” in the <i>Thoughts concerning Education</i> no doubt
-we should pronounce him a utilitarian. He considers each
-subject of instruction and pronounces for or against it
-according as it seems likely or unlikely to be useful to a
-gentleman. And in the methods he suggests he simply
-points out the quickest route, as if the knowledge were the
-only thing to be thought of. Hence his utilitarian reputation.</p>
-
-<p>But two very important considerations have been lost
-sight of.</p>
-
-<p>1st. Learning is with him “the last and least part” in
-education.</p>
-
-<p>2nd. Intellectual education was not for childhood but
-for the age when we can teach ourselves. “When a man
-has got an entrance into any of the sciences,” says he, “it
-will be time then to depend on himself and rely upon his
-own understanding and exercise his own faculties, which is
-the only way to improvement and mastery.” (L. to Peterborough,
-quoted in Camb. edition of <i>Thoughts</i>, p. 229.)
-“So,” he says, “the business of education is not, as I think,
-to make the young perfect in any one of the sciences but so
-to open and dispose their minds as may best make them
-capable of any when they shall apply themselves to it.”
-The studies he proposes in the <i>Conduct of the Understanding</i>
-(which is his treatise on intellectual education) have for
-their object “an increase of the powers and activity of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[237]</a></span>
-mind, not an enlargement of its possessions” (<i>C. of U.</i>
-§ 19, <i>ad f.</i>).</p>
-
-<p>Thus strange to say the supposed leader of the Utilitarians
-has actually propounded in so many words the doctrine of
-their opponents.</p>
-
-<p>§ 22. When Locke is more studied it will be found
-that the <i>Thoughts</i> are misleading if we neglect his other
-works, more particularly the <i>Conduct of the Understanding</i>.</p>
-
-<p>§ 23. Towards the end of his days, Locke was conscious
-of gleams of the “untravelled world” which lay before the
-generations to come. With great pathos he writes to a
-friend: “When I consider how much of my life has been
-trifled away in beaten tracks where I vamped on with others
-only to follow those who went before me, I cannot but
-think I have just as much reason to be proud as if I had
-travelled all England and, if you will, all France too, only
-to acquaint myself with the roads, and be able to tell how
-the highways lie wherein those of equipage, and even the
-common herd too, travel. Now, methinks—and these are
-often old men’s dreams—I see openings to truth and direct
-paths leading to it, wherein a little application and industry
-would settle one’s mind with satisfaction and leave no darkness
-or doubt. But this is the end of my day when my sun
-is setting: and though the prospect it has given me be
-what I would not for anything be without—there is so
-much truth, beauty, and consistency in it—yet it is for one
-of your age, I think I ought to say for yourself, to set
-about” (L. to Bolde, quoted by Fowler, <i>Locke</i>, p. 120). But
-another 200 years have not sufficed to put us in possession
-of the Promised Land of which Locke had these Pisgah
-visions. We still “vamp on,” following those who went
-before us and getting small help from expounders of “Education<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[238]</a></span>
-as a Science.” But as it would seem the days of
-vamping on blindly in the beaten track are drawing to a
-close. We cannot doubt that if Locke had known the
-wonderful advance which various sciences have made since
-his day he would have seen in them “openings to truth and
-direct paths leading to it” for many purposes, certainly for
-education. It is for our age and ages to come to set about
-applying our scientific knowledge to the bringing up of
-children; and thinkers such as Froebel will shew us how.</p>
-
-<div class="smaller">
-
-<p>Locke’s <i>Thoughts concerning Education</i> and his <i>Conduct of the
-Understanding</i> should be in the hands of all students of education who
-know the English language. I have therefore not attempted to epitomise
-what he has said, but have endeavoured to get at the main thoughts
-which are, so to speak, the taproot of his system. Of the <i>Thoughts</i>
-there is an edition published by the National Society and another by
-the Pitt Press, Cambridge. The Cambridge edition gives from Fox-Bourne’s
-Life Locke’s scheme of “Working Schools” and from Lord
-King’s the essay “Of Study.” Of the <i>Conduct</i> there is an edition published
-by the Clarendon Press. “F.B.” in the references above stands
-for Fox-Bourne’s <i>Life of Locke</i>.</p>
-
-<p>In the above essay I have not treated of Locke as a methodizer; but
-he advocated teaching foreign languages <i>without grammar</i>, and he
-published “Æsop’s Fables in English and Latin, interlineary. For
-the benefit of those, who not having a master would learn either of
-these Tongues.” When I edited the <i>Thoughts</i> for Pitt Press I did not
-know of this book or I should have mentioned it.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[239]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="XIV">XIV.<br />
-<span class="smaller">JEAN-JACQUES ROUSSEAU.<br />
-(1712-1778).</span></h2>
-
-<p>§ 1. The great men whom we meet with in the history
-of education may be divided into two classes, thinkers and
-doers. There would seem no good reason why the thinker
-should not be great as a doer or the doer as a thinker; and
-yet we hardly find any records of men who have been
-successful both in investigating theory and directing practice.
-History tells us of first-rate practical schoolmasters like
-Sturm and the Jesuits; but they did not think out their own
-theory of their task: they accepted the current theory of
-their time. On the other hand, men who like Montaigne
-and Locke rejected the current theory and sought to establish
-a better by an appeal to reason were not practical
-schoolmasters. Whenever the thinker tries to turn his
-thought into action he has cause to be disappointed with
-the result. We saw this in the disastrous failure of Ratke;
-and even the books in which Comenius tried to work out
-his principles, the <i>Vestibulum, Janua</i> and the rest, with the
-exception of the <i>Orbis Pictus</i>, were speedily forgotten. In
-the world of education as elsewhere it takes time to find
-for great thoughts the practice which gives effect to them.
-The course of great thoughts is in some ways like the course
-of great rivers. Most romantic and beautiful near their
-source, they are not most useful. They must leave the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[240]</a></span>
-mountains in which they first appeared, and must flow not
-in cataracts but smoothly along the plain among the dwellings
-of common men before they can be turned to account
-in the every-day business of life.</p>
-
-<p>§ 2. The eighteenth century was soon distinguished by
-boundless activity of thought; and this thought was
-directed mainly to a great work of destruction. Europe
-had outgrown the ideas of the Middle Age, and the framework
-of Society, which the Middle Age had bequeathed, had
-waxed old and was ready to vanish as soon as any strong
-force could be found to push it out of the way. As Matthew
-Arnold has described it—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">“It’s frame yet stood without a breach</div>
-<div class="verse">“When blood and warmth were fled;</div>
-<div class="verse">“And still it spake it’s wonted speech—</div>
-<div class="verse">“But every word was dead.”</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">Here then there was need of some destructive power
-that should remove and burn up much that had become
-mere obstacle and incumbrance. This power was found in
-the writings which appeared in France about the middle of
-the century; and among the authors of them none spoke
-with more effect than one who differed from all the rest, a
-vagabond without family ties or social position of any kind,
-with no literary training, with little knowledge and in conduct
-at least, with no morals. The writings of Rousseau
-and the results produced by them are among the strangest
-things in history; and especially in matters of education it
-is more than doubtful if the wise man of the world Montaigne,
-the Christian philanthropist Comenius, or that “slave of
-truth and reason” the philosopher Locke, had half as much
-influence as this depraved serving man.</p>
-
-<p>§ 3. The work by which Rousseau became famous was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[241]</a></span>
-a prize essay in which he maintained that civilization, the
-arts and all human institutions were from first to last pernicious
-in their effects, and that no happiness was possible
-for the human race without giving them all up and returning
-to what he called the state of Nature. He glorified the
-“noble savage.” If man had brought himself to a state of
-misery bordering on despair by following his own many
-inventions, take away all these inventions and you will have
-man in his proper condition. The argument seems something
-of this kind: Man was once happy: Man is now
-miserable: undo everything that has been done and Man
-will be happy again.</p>
-
-<p>§ 4. This principle of a so-called “natural” state existing
-before man’s many inventions, Rousseau applied boldly
-to education, and he deduced this general rule: “Do precisely
-the opposite to what is usually done, and you will
-have hit on the right plan.” Not reform but revolution was
-his advice. He took the ordinary school teaching and held
-it up to ridicule, and certainly he did prove its absurdity.
-And a most valuable service he thus rendered to teachers.
-Every employment while it makes us see some things
-clearly, also provides us with blinkers, so to speak, which
-prevent our seeing other things at all. The school teacher’s
-blinkers often prevent his seeing much that is plain enough
-to other people; and when a writer like Rousseau takes off
-our blinkers for us and makes us look about us, he does
-us a great deal of good. But we need more than this: if
-we have children entrusted to us we must do something
-with them, and Rousseau’s rule of doing the opposite to
-what is usual will not be found universally applicable. So
-we consult Rousseau again, and what is his advice?</p>
-
-<p>§ 5. Rousseau would bring everything back to the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[242]</a></span>
-“natural” state, and unfortunately he never pauses to settle
-whether he means by this a state of ideal perfection, or of
-simply savagery. The savage, he says, gets his education
-without any one’s troubling about it, and so he infers that
-all the trouble taken by the civilized is worse than thrown
-away. (Girardin’s <i>Rousseau</i>, ij., 85.) But he does not fall
-back on <i>laisser faire</i>. He urges on parents the duty of
-<i>themselves</i> attending to the bringing up of their children.
-“Point de mère, point d’enfant—no mother, no child,”
-says he; and he would have the father see to the training
-of the child whom the mother has suckled.</p>
-
-<p>§ 6. Rousseau’s picture of family life is given us where
-few Englishmen are likely to find it, enveloped in the <i>Nouvelle
-Héloïse</i>. Here we read how Julie always has her
-children with her, and while seeming to let them do as they
-like, conceals with the air of apparent carelessness the
-most vigilant observation. Possessed by the notion that
-there can be no intellectual education before the age of
-reason, she proclaims: “La fonction dont je suis chargée
-n’est pas d’élever mes fils, mais de les préparer pour être
-élevés: My business is not to educate my sons, but to
-prepare them for being educated.” (<i>N. Héloïse</i>, 5th P.,
-Lett. 3.)<a name="FNanchor_120" id="FNanchor_120"></a><a href="#Footnote_120" class="fnanchor">[120]</a></p>
-
-<p>§ 7. There is much that is very pleasing in this picture
-of ideal family life; but when Rousseau comes formally to
-propound his ideas on education, he gives up family life to
-attain greater simplicity. “Je m’en tiens à ce qui est plus
-simple,” says he: “What I stick to is the more <i>simple</i>.”
-He tries to state everything in its lowest terms, so to speak;
-and this method is excellent so long as he puts on one side<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[243]</a></span>
-only what is accidental, and retains all the essentials of the
-problem. But his rage for simplicity sometimes carried
-him beyond this. There is an old Cambridge story of a
-problem introducing an elephant “whose weight may be
-neglected.” This is after the manner of Rousseau. In the
-bringing up of the model child, he “neglects” parents,
-brothers and sisters, young companions; and though he
-says that the needful qualities of a master may be expected
-only in “un homme de génie,” he hands over Émile to a
-governor to live an isolated life in the country.</p>
-
-<p>§ 8. This governor is to devote himself, for some years,
-entirely to imparting to his pupil these difficult arts—the
-art of being ignorant and of losing time. Till he is twelve
-years old, Émile is to have no direct instruction whatever.
-“At that age he shall not know what a book is,” says Rousseau;
-though elsewhere we are told that he will learn to
-read of his own accord by the time he is ten, if no
-attempt is made to teach him. He is to be under no restraint,
-and is to do nothing but what he sees to be useful.</p>
-
-<p>§ 9. Freedom from restraint is, however, to be apparent,
-not real. As in ordinary education the child employs all
-its faculties in duping the master, so in education “according
-to Nature” the master is to devote himself to duping
-the child. “Let him always be his own master in appearance,
-and do you take care to be so in reality. There is no
-subjection so complete as that which preserves the appearance
-of liberty; it is by this means even the will is led
-captive.”</p>
-
-<p>§ 10. “The most critical interval of human nature is
-that between the hour of our birth and twelve years of age.
-This is the time wherein vice and error take root without
-our being possessed of any instrument to destroy them.”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[244]</a></span>
-(<i>Ém.</i> ij., 79.) Throughout this season, the governor is to be
-at work training the pupil in the art of being ignorant and
-losing time. “The first education should be purely negative.
-It consists by no means in teaching virtue or truth,
-but in securing the heart from vice and the intellect from
-error. If you could do nothing and let nothing be done,
-if you could bring on your pupil healthy and strong to the
-age of 12 without his being able to tell his right hand
-from his left, from your very first lessons the eyes of his
-understanding would open to reason. Being without prejudices
-and without habits he would have nothing in him
-to thwart the effect of your care; and by beginning with
-doing nothing you would have made an educational prodigy.”<a name="FNanchor_121" id="FNanchor_121"></a><a href="#Footnote_121" class="fnanchor">[121]</a></p>
-
-<p>“Exercise his body, his organs, his senses, his powers;
-but keep his mind passive as long as possible. Mistrust
-all his sentiments formed before the judgment which determines
-their value. Restrain, avoid all foreign impressions,
-and to prevent the birth of evil be in no hurry to cause
-good; for good is good only in the light of reason. Look
-on all delays as so many advantages: it is a great gain to
-advance towards the goal without loss: let childhood ripen
-in children. In short, whatever lesson they may need, be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[245]</a></span>
-sure not to give it them to-day if you can safely put it off
-till to-morrow.”<a name="FNanchor_122" id="FNanchor_122"></a><a href="#Footnote_122" class="fnanchor">[122]</a></p>
-
-<p>“Do not, then, alarm yourself much about this apparent
-idleness. What would you say of the man, who, in order
-to make the most of life, should determine never to go to
-sleep? You would say, The man is mad: he is not enjoying
-the time; he is depriving himself of it: to avoid sleep he is
-hurrying towards death. Consider, then, that it is the
-same here, and that childhood is the sleep of reason.”<a name="FNanchor_123" id="FNanchor_123"></a><a href="#Footnote_123" class="fnanchor">[123]</a></p>
-
-<p>§ 11. We have now reached the climax (or shall
-we say the nadir?) in negation. Rousseau has given the
-<i>coup de grâce</i> to the ideal of the Renascence. Comenius was
-the first to take a comprehensive view of the educator’s task
-and to connect it with man’s nature and destiny; but he
-could not get clear from an over-estimate of the importance
-of knowledge. According to his ideal, man should know all
-things; so in practice he thought too much of imparting
-knowledge. Then came Locke and treated the imparting<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[246]</a></span>
-of knowledge as of trifling importance when compared with
-the formation of character; but he too in practice hardly
-went so far as this principle might have led him. He was
-much under the influence of social distinctions, and could
-not help thinking of what it was necessary for a gentleman
-to know. So that Rousseau was the very first to shake
-himself entirely free from the notion which the Renascence
-had handed down that man was mainly a <i>learning</i> animal.
-Rousseau has the courage to deny this in the most
-emphatic manner possible, and to say: “For the first 12
-years the educator must teach the child <i>nothing</i>.”</p>
-
-<p>§ 12. In this reaction against the Renascence Rousseau
-puts the truth in the form of such a violent paradox that we
-start back in terror. But it was perhaps necessary thus to
-sweep away the ordinary schoolroom rubbish before the true
-nature of the educator’s task could be fairly considered.
-The rubbish having been cleared away what was to take
-its place? No longer having his mind engrossed by the
-knowledge he wished to communicate, the educator had now
-an eye for something else not less worthy of his attention,
-viz., the child itself. Rousseau was the first to base education
-entirely on a study of the child to be educated; and by
-doing this he became, as I believe, one of the greatest of
-educational Reformers.</p>
-
-<p>§ 13. It was, however, purely as a thinker, or rather as a
-<i>voice</i> giving expression to the general discontent that
-Rousseau became such a tremendous force in Europe. He
-has indeed often been called the father of the first French
-Revolution which he did not live to see. But, as Macaulay
-has well said, a good deal besides eloquent writing is needed
-to cause such a convulsion; and we can no more attribute
-the French Revolution to the writings of Rousseau than we<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[247]</a></span>
-can attribute the shock of an explosion of gunpowder to the
-lucifer match without which it might never have happened
-(<i>v.</i> Macaulay’s <i>Barrère</i>). Rousseau did in the world of
-ideas what the French Revolutionists afterwards did in the
-world of politics; he made a clean sweep and endeavoured
-to start afresh.</p>
-
-<p>§ 14. I have already said that as regards education I
-think his labours in destruction were of very great value.
-But what shall we say of his efforts at construction? There
-would not be the least difficulty in showing that most of
-his proposals are impracticable. It is no more “natural”
-to treat as a typical case a child brought up in solitude than
-it would be to write a treatise on the rearing of a bee cut
-off from the hive.<a name="FNanchor_124" id="FNanchor_124"></a><a href="#Footnote_124" class="fnanchor">[124]</a> Rousseau requires impossibilities, <i>e.g.</i>,
-he postulates that the child is never to be brought into
-contact with anyone who might set a bad example.
-Modern science has shown us that the young are liable to take
-diseases from impurities in the air they breathe: but as
-yet no one has proposed that all children should be kept
-at an elevation of 5,000 feet above the level of the sea.
-Yet the advice would be about as practicable as the advice
-of Rousseau. A method which always starts with paradox
-and not infrequently ends with platitude might seem to
-have little in its favour; and Rousseau has had far less
-influence since (in the words of Herman Merivale) “he
-was dethroned with the fall of his extravagant child, the
-[First] Republic.” No doubt the great exponent of English<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248">[248]</a></span>
-opinion was right in calling Rousseau “the most un-English
-stranger who ever landed on our shores” (<i>Times</i>, 29 Aug.,
-1873); and the torch of his eloquence will never cause a
-conflagration, still less an explosion, here. His disregard
-for “appearances”—or rather his evident purpose of
-making an impression by defying “appearances” and
-saying just the opposite of what is expected, is simply
-distressing to us. But there is no denying Rousseau’s
-genius. His was one of the original voices that go on
-sounding and awakening echoes in all lands. Willingly or
-unwillingly, at first hand or from imperfect echoes, everyone
-who studies education must study Rousseau.</p>
-
-<p>§ 15. As specimens of Rousseau’s teaching I will give
-a few characteristic passages from the Émile.</p>
-
-<p>“Everything is good as it leaves the hands of the Creator:
-everything degenerates in the hands of man.”<a name="FNanchor_125" id="FNanchor_125"></a><a href="#Footnote_125" class="fnanchor">[125]</a> These are
-the first words of the “Émile,” and the key-note of Rousseau’s
-philosophy.</p>
-
-<p>§ 16. “We are born weak, we have need of strength;
-we are born destitute of everything, we have need of assistance;
-we are born stupid, we have need of understanding.
-All that we have not at our birth, and which we require
-when grown up, is bestowed on us by education. This
-education we receive from nature, from men, or from
-things. The internal development of our organs and
-faculties is the education of nature: the use we are taught
-to make of that development is the education given us by
-men; and in the acquisitions made by our own experience
-on the objects that surround us, consists our education<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">[249]</a></span>
-from things.”<a name="FNanchor_126" id="FNanchor_126"></a><a href="#Footnote_126" class="fnanchor">[126]</a> “Since the concurrence of these three
-kinds of education is necessary to their perfection, it is by
-that one which is entirely independent of us, we must
-regulate the two others.”<a name="FNanchor_127" id="FNanchor_127"></a><a href="#Footnote_127" class="fnanchor">[127]</a></p>
-
-<p>§ 17. Now “to live is not merely to breathe; it is to
-act, it is to make use of our organs, our senses, our faculties,
-and of all those parts of ourselves which give us the feeling
-of our existence. The man who has lived most, is not he
-who has counted the greatest number of years, but he who
-has most thoroughly felt life.”<a name="FNanchor_128" id="FNanchor_128"></a><a href="#Footnote_128" class="fnanchor">[128]</a></p>
-
-<p>§ 18. The aim of education, then, must be complete
-living.</p>
-
-<p>But ordinary education, instead of seeking to develop
-the life of the child, sacrifices childhood to the acquirement
-of knowledge, or rather the semblance of knowledge, which
-it is thought will prove useful to the youth or the man.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250">[250]</a></span>
-Rousseau’s great merit lies in his having exposed this
-fundamental error. He says, very truly, “We do not understand
-childhood, and pursuing false ideas of it our every
-step takes us further astray. The wisest among us fix upon
-what it concerns men to know without ever considering
-what children are capable of learning. They always expect
-to find the man in the child without thinking of what the
-child is before it is a man. And this is the study to which
-I have especially devoted myself, in order that should my
-entire method be false and visionary, my observations might
-always turn to account. I may not have seen aright what
-ought to be done: but I believe I have seen aright the
-subject on which we have to act. Begin then by studying
-your pupils better, for most certainly you do not understand
-them.”<a name="FNanchor_129" id="FNanchor_129"></a><a href="#Footnote_129" class="fnanchor">[129]</a> “Nature wills that children should be
-<i>children</i> before they are <i>men</i>. If we seek to pervert this
-order we shall produce forward fruits without ripeness or
-flavour, and tho’ not ripe, soon rotten: we shall have young
-<i>savans</i> and old children. Childhood has ways of seeing,
-thinking, feeling peculiar to itself; nothing is more absurd
-than to wish to substitute ours in their place.”<a name="FNanchor_130" id="FNanchor_130"></a><a href="#Footnote_130" class="fnanchor">[130]</a> “We<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">[251]</a></span>
-never know how to put ourselves in the place of children;
-we do not enter into their ideas, we attribute to them our
-own; and following always our own train of thought, even
-with syllogisms we manage to fill their heads with nothing
-but extravagance and error.”<a name="FNanchor_131" id="FNanchor_131"></a><a href="#Footnote_131" class="fnanchor">[131]</a> “I wish some discreet
-person would give us a treatise on the art of observing
-children—an art which would be of immense value to us,
-but of which fathers and schoolmasters have not as yet
-learnt the very first rudiments.”<a name="FNanchor_132" id="FNanchor_132"></a><a href="#Footnote_132" class="fnanchor">[132]</a></p>
-
-<p>§ 19. In these passages, Rousseau strikes the key-note
-of true education. The first thing necessary for us is to see
-aright the subject on which we have to act. Unfortunately,
-however, this subject has often been the subject most
-neglected in the schoolroom. Children have been treated
-as if they were made for their school books, not their school
-books for them. As education has been thought of as
-learning, childhood has been treated as unimportant, a
-necessary stage in existence no doubt, but far more troublesome
-and hardly more interesting than the state of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[252]</a></span>
-chrysalis. If some forms of words, tables, declensions,
-county towns, and the like can be drummed into children,
-this is, say educators of the old school, a clear gain. For
-the rest nothing can be done with them except teaching
-them to read, write, and say the multiplication table.</p>
-
-<p>But since the publication of the Émile, there has been in
-the world a very different view of education. According to
-this view, the importance of childhood is not to be measured
-by the amount of <i>our</i> knowledge, or even the number of <i>our</i>
-words, we can force it to remember. According to this
-view, in dealing with children we must not think of our
-knowledge or of our notions at all. We must think not of
-our own minds, but of the minds of the little ones.<a name="FNanchor_133" id="FNanchor_133"></a><a href="#Footnote_133" class="fnanchor">[133]</a></p>
-
-<p>§ 20. The absurd results in which the opposite course
-has ended, Rousseau exposes with great severity. “All the
-studies demanded from the poor unfortunates lead to such
-things as are entirely beyond the range of their ideas, so you
-may judge what amount of attention they can give to them.
-Schoolmasters who make a great display of the instruction
-they give their pupils are paid to differ from me; but we
-see from what they do that they are entirely of my opinion.
-For what do they really teach? Words, words, for ever
-words. Among the various knowledges which they boast
-of giving, they are careful not to include such as would be
-of use; because these would involve a knowledge of things,
-and there they would be sure to fail; but they choose
-subjects that seem to be known when the terms are known<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[253]</a></span>
-such as heraldry, geography, chronology, languages and the
-like; all of them studies so foreign to a man, and still more
-to a child, that it is a great chance if anything of the whole
-lot ever proves useful to him on a single occasion in his
-whole life.”<a name="FNanchor_134" id="FNanchor_134"></a><a href="#Footnote_134" class="fnanchor">[134]</a> “Whatever the study may be, without the
-idea of the things represented the signs representing them
-go for nothing. And yet the child is always kept to these
-signs without our being able to make him comprehend any
-of the things they represent.”<a name="FNanchor_135" id="FNanchor_135"></a><a href="#Footnote_135" class="fnanchor">[135]</a> What does a child understand
-by “the globe”? An old geography book says
-candidly, that it is a round thing made of plaster; and this
-is the only notion children have of it. What a fearful waste,
-and worse than waste, it is to make them learn the signs
-without the things, when if they ever learn the things, they
-must at the same time acquire the signs! (Conf. Ruskin
-<a href="#Page_159"><i>supra</i> p. 159, <i>note</i></a>.) “No! if Nature gives to the child’s<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_254" id="Page_254">[254]</a></span>
-brain this pliability which makes it capable of receiving
-impressions of every kind, this is not that we may engrave
-on it the names of kings, dates, the technical words of
-heraldry, of astronomy, of geography, and all those words
-meaningless at his age and useless at any age, with which
-we oppress his sad and sterile childhood; but that all the
-ideas which he can conceive and which are useful to him,
-all those which relate to his happiness and will one day
-make his duty plain to him, may trace themselves there in
-characters never to be effaced, and may assist him in
-conducting himself through life in a manner appropriate to
-his nature and his faculties.”<a name="FNanchor_136" id="FNanchor_136"></a><a href="#Footnote_136" class="fnanchor">[136]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_255" id="Page_255">[255]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>§ 21. With Rousseau, as afterwards with Froebel,
-education was a kind of “child-gardening.” “Plants are
-developed by cultivation,” says he, “men by education:
-On façonne les plantes par la culture, et les hommes par
-l’éducation” (<i>Ém.</i> j., 6). The governor, who is the child-gardener,
-is to aim at three things: first, he is to shield the
-child from all corrupting influences; second, he is to devote
-himself to developing in the child a healthy and strong
-body in which the senses are to be rendered acute by
-exercise; third, he is, by practice not precept, to cultivate
-the child’s sense of duty.</p>
-
-<p>§ 22. In his study of children Rousseau fixed on their
-never-resting activity. “The failing energy concentrates itself
-in the heart of the old man; in the heart of the child energy is
-overflowing and spreads outwards; he feels in him life enough
-to animate all his surroundings. Whether he makes or
-mars it is all one to him: it is enough that he has changed
-the state of things, and every change is an action. If he
-seems by preference to destroy, this is not from mischief;
-but the act of construction is always slow, and the act of
-destruction being quicker is more suited to his vivacity.”<a name="FNanchor_137" id="FNanchor_137"></a><a href="#Footnote_137" class="fnanchor">[137]</a></p>
-
-<p>One of the first requisites in the care of the young is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_256" id="Page_256">[256]</a></span>
-then to provide for the expansion of their activity. All
-restraints such as swaddling clothes for infants and “school”
-and “lessons” for children are to be entirely done away
-with.<a name="FNanchor_138" id="FNanchor_138"></a><a href="#Footnote_138" class="fnanchor">[138]</a> Literary instruction must not be thought of.
-“There must be no other book than the world,” says
-Rousseau, “no other instruction than facts. The child who
-reads does not think, he does nothing but read, he gets no
-instruction; he learns words: Point d’autre livre que le
-monde, point d’autre instruction que les faits. L’enfant
-qui lit ne pense pas, il ne fait que lire; il ne s’instruit pas,
-il apprend les mots.” (<i>Ém.</i> iij., 181.)<a name="FNanchor_139" id="FNanchor_139"></a><a href="#Footnote_139" class="fnanchor">[139]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_257" id="Page_257">[257]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>§ 23. If it be objected that, according to Rousseau’s
-plan, there would be a neglect of memory, he replies:
-“Without the study of books the kind of memory that a
-child should have will not remain inactive; all he sees, all
-he hears, strikes him, and he remembers it; he keeps a
-record in himself of people’s actions and people’s talk; and
-all around him makes the book by which without thinking
-of it he is constantly enriching his memory against the time
-that his judgment may benefit by it: Sans étudier dans les
-livres, l’espèce de mémoire que peut avoir un enfant ne
-reste pas pour cela oisive; tout ce qu’il voit, tout ce qu’il
-entend le frappe, et il s’en souvient; il tient registre en lui-même
-des actions, des discours des hommes; et tout ce
-qui l’environne est le livre, dans lequel, sans y songer, il
-enrichit continuellement sa mémoire, en attendant que son
-jugement puisse en profiter.” (<i>Ém.</i> ij., 106.) We should be
-most careful not to commit to our memory anything we do
-not understand, for if we do, we can never tell what part of
-our stores really belong to us. (<i>Ém.</i> iij., 236.)</p>
-
-<p>§ 24. On the positive side the most striking part of
-Rousseau’s advice relates to the training of the senses.
-“The first faculties which become strong in us,” says he,
-“are our senses. These then are the first that should be
-cultivated; they are in fact the only faculties we forget or<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_258" id="Page_258">[258]</a></span>
-at least those which we neglect most completely.” We find
-that the young child “wants to touch and handle everything.
-By no means check this restlessness; it points to a
-very necessary apprenticeship. Thus it is that the child
-gets to be conscious of the hotness or coldness, the hardness
-or softness, the heaviness or lightness of bodies, to judge of
-their size and shape and all their sensible properties by
-looking, feeling, listening, especially by comparing sight
-and touch, and combining the sensations of the eye with
-those of the fingers.”<a name="FNanchor_140" id="FNanchor_140"></a><a href="#Footnote_140" class="fnanchor">[140]</a> “See a cat enter a room for the
-first time; she examines round and stares and sniffs about
-without a moment’s rest, she is satisfied with nothing before
-she has tried it and made it out. This is just what a child
-does when he begins to walk, and enters, so to say, the
-chamber of the world. The only difference is that to the
-sight which is common to the child and the cat the first
-joins in his observations the hands which nature has given
-him, and the other animal that subtle sense of smell which
-has been bestowed upon her. It is this tendency, according
-as it is well cultivated or the reverse, that makes children
-either sharp or dull, active or slow, giddy or thoughtful.</p>
-
-<p>“The first natural movements of the child being then to
-measure himself with his surroundings and to test in
-everything he sees all its sensible properties which may
-concern him, his first study is a kind of experimental<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_259" id="Page_259">[259]</a></span>
-physics relating to his own preservation; and from this we
-divert him to speculative studies before he feels himself at
-home here below. So long as his delicate and flexible
-organs can adjust themselves to the bodies on which they
-ought to act, so long as his senses as yet uncorrupted are
-free from illusion, this is the time to exercise them all in
-their proper functions; this is the time to learn to understand
-the sensuous relations which things have with us.
-As everything that enters the mind finds its way through
-the senses, the first reason of a human being is a reason of
-sensations; this it is which forms the basis of the intellectual
-reason; our first masters in philosophy are our feet, our
-hands, our eyes. Substituting books for all this is not
-teaching us to reason, but simply to use the reason of other
-people; it teaches us to take a great deal on trust and
-never to know anything.</p>
-
-<p>“In order to practise an art we must begin by getting
-the proper implements; and that we may have good use of
-these implements they must be made strong enough to
-stand wear and tear. That we may learn to think we must
-then exercise our members, our senses, our organs, as these
-are the implements of our intelligence; and that we may
-make the most of these implements the body which supplies
-them must be strong and healthy. We see then that far
-from man’s true reason forming itself independently of his
-body, it is the sound constitution of the body that makes
-the operations of the mind easy and certain.”<a name="FNanchor_141" id="FNanchor_141"></a><a href="#Footnote_141" class="fnanchor">[141]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_260" id="Page_260">[260]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>§ 25. Rousseau does not confine himself to advising
-that the senses should be cultivated; he also gives some
-hints of the <i>way</i> in which they should be cultivated, and
-many modern experiments, such as “object lessons” and
-the use of actual weights and measures, may be directly
-traced to him. “As soon as a child begins to distinguish
-objects, a proper choice should be made in those which are
-presented to him.” Elsewhere he says, “To exercise the
-senses is not simply to make use of them; it is to learn to
-judge aright by means of them; it is to learn, so to say, to
-perceive; for we can only touch and see and hear according
-as we have learnt how. There is a kind of exercise
-perfectly natural and mechanical which serves to make the
-body strong without giving anything for the judgment to lay
-hold of: swimming, running, jumping, whip-top, stone
-throwing; all this is capital; but have we nothing but arms
-and legs? have we not also eyes and ears? and are these
-organs not needed in our use of the others? Do not then
-merely exercise the strength but exercise all the senses<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_261" id="Page_261">[261]</a></span>
-which direct it; get all you can out of each of them, and
-then check the impressions of one by the impressions of
-another. Measure, reckon, weigh, compare.”<a name="FNanchor_142" id="FNanchor_142"></a><a href="#Footnote_142" class="fnanchor">[142]</a></p>
-
-<p>§ 26. Two subjects there were in which Émile was to
-receive instruction, viz.: music and drawing. Rousseau’s
-advice about drawing is well worth considering. He says:
-“Children who are great imitators all try to draw. I should
-wish my child to cultivate this art, not exactly for the art
-itself, but to make his eye correct and his hand supple:<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_262" id="Page_262">[262]</a></span>
-Les enfants, grands imitateurs, essayent tous de dessiner:
-je voudrais que le mien cultivât cet art, non précisément
-pour l’art même, mais pour se rendre l’œil juste et la
-main flexible.” (<i>Ém.</i> ij., 149). But Émile is to be kept
-clear of the ordinary drawing-master who would put him
-to imitate imitations; and there is a striking contrast between
-Rousseau’s suggestions and those of the authorities
-at South Kensington. Technical skill he cares for less
-than the training of the eye; so Émile is always to draw
-<i>from the object</i>, and, says Rousseau, “my intention is not
-so much that he should get to <i>imitate</i> the objects, as get to
-<i>know</i> them: mon intention n’est pas tant qu’il sache imiter
-les objets que les connaître.” (<i>Ém.</i> ij., 150).</p>
-
-<p>§ 27. Before we pass the age of twelve years, at which
-point, as someone says, Rousseau substitutes another Émile
-for the one he has hitherto spoken of, let us look at his
-proposals for moral training. Rousseau is right, beyond
-question, in desiring that children should be treated as
-children. But what are children? What can they understand?
-What is the world in which they live? Is it the
-material world only, or is the moral world also open to
-them? (Girardin’s <i>R.</i>, vol. ij., 136). On the subject of
-morals Rousseau seems to have admirable instincts,<a name="FNanchor_143" id="FNanchor_143"></a><a href="#Footnote_143" class="fnanchor">[143]</a> but<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_263" id="Page_263">[263]</a></span>
-no principles, and moral as he is “on instinct,” there is
-always some confusion in what he Says. At one time he
-asserts that “there is only one knowledge to give children,
-and that is a knowledge of duty: Il n’y a qu’une science à
-enseigner aux enfants: c’est celle des devoirs de l’homme.”
-(<i>Ém.</i> j., 26). Elsewhere he says: “To know right from
-wrong, to be conscious of the reason of duty is not the
-business of a child: Connaître le bien et le mal, sentir la
-raison des devoirs de l’homme, n’est pas l’affaire d’un
-enfant.” (<i>Ém.</i> ij., 75).<a name="FNanchor_144" id="FNanchor_144"></a><a href="#Footnote_144" class="fnanchor">[144]</a> In another place he mounts his
-hobby that “the most sublime virtues are negative” (<i>Ém.</i>
-ij., 95), and that about the best man who ever lived (till he
-found Friday?) was Robinson Crusoe. The outcome of all
-Rousseau’s teaching on this subject seems that we should in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_264" id="Page_264">[264]</a></span>
-every way develop the child’s animal or physical life, retard
-his intellectual life, and ignore his life as a spiritual and
-moral being.</p>
-
-<p>§ 28. A variety of influences had combined, as they
-combine still, to draw attention away from the importance
-of physical training; and by placing the child’s bodily
-organs and senses as the first things to be thought of in
-education, Rousseau did much to save us from the bad
-tradition of the Renascence. But there were more things
-in heaven and earth than were dreamt of in his philosophy,
-and whatever Rousseau might say, Émile could never be
-restrained from inquiring after them. Every boy will <i>think</i>;
-<i>i.e.</i>, he will think <i>for himself</i>, however unable he may seem
-to think in the direction in which his instructors try to
-urge him. The wise elders who have charge of him
-must take this into account, and must endeavour to guide
-him into thinking modestly and thinking right. Then
-again, as soon as the child can speak, or before, the world
-of sensation becomes for him a world, not of sensations
-only, but also of sentiments, of sympathies, of affections,
-of consciousness of right and wrong, good and evil. All
-these feelings, it is true, may be affected by traditional
-prejudices. The air the child breathes may also contain
-much that is noxious; but we have no more power to
-exclude the atmosphere of the moral world than of the
-physical. All we can do is to take thought for fresh air
-in both cases. As for Rousseau’s notion that we can
-withdraw the child from the moral atmosphere, we see in
-it nothing but a proof how little he understood the problems
-he professed to solve.<a name="FNanchor_145" id="FNanchor_145"></a><a href="#Footnote_145" class="fnanchor">[145]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_265" id="Page_265">[265]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>§ 29. Although the governor is to devote himself to
-a single child, Rousseau is careful to protest against over-direction.
-“You would stupify the child,” says he, “if you
-were constantly directing him, if you were always saying to
-him, ‘Come here! Go there! Stop! Do this! Don’t
-do that!’ If your head always directs his arms, his own
-head becomes useless to him.” (<i>Ém.</i>, ij., 114). Here we
-have a warning which should not be neglected by those
-who maintain the <i>Lycées</i> in France, and the ordinary private
-boarding-schools in England. In these schools a boy is
-hardly called upon to exercise his will all day long. He
-rises in the morning when he must; at meals he eats till
-he is obliged to stop; he is taken out for exercise like a
-horse; he has all his indoor work prescribed for him both
-as to time and quantity. In this kind of life he never has
-occasion to think or act for himself. He is therefore without
-self-reliance. So much care is taken to prevent his doing
-wrong, that he gets to think only of checks from without.
-He is therefore incapable of self-restraint. In the English
-public schools boys have much less supervision from their
-elders, and organise a great portion of their lives for themselves.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_266" id="Page_266">[266]</a></span>
-This proves a better preparation for life after the
-school age; and most public schoolmasters would agree with
-Rousseau that “the lessons the boys get from each other
-in the playground are a hundred times more useful to them
-than the lessons given them in school: les leçons que les
-écoliers prennent entre eux dans la cour du collège leur sont
-cent fois plus utiles que tout ce qu’on leur dira jamais dans
-la classe.” (<i>Ém.</i> ij., 123.)</p>
-
-<p>§ 30. On questions put by children, Rousseau says:
-“The art of questioning is not so easy as it may be
-thought; it is rather the art of the master than of the pupil.
-We must have learnt a good deal of a thing to be able to
-ask what we do not know. The learned know and inquire,
-says an Indian proverb, but the ignorant know not what to
-inquire about.” And from this he infers that children learn
-less from asking than from being asked questions. (<i>N. H.</i>,
-5th p. 490.)</p>
-
-<p>§ 31. At twelve years old Émile is said to be fit for
-instruction. “Now is the time for labour, for instruction,
-for study; and observe that it is not I who arbitrarily make
-this choice; it is pointed out to us by Nature herself.”</p>
-
-<p>§ 32. What novelties await us here? As we have seen
-Rousseau was determined to recommend nothing that
-would harmonise with ordinary educational practice; but
-even a genius, though he may abandon previous practice,
-cannot keep clear of previous thought, and Rousseau’s plan
-for instruction is obviously connected with the thoughts of
-Montaigne and of Locke. But while on the same lines
-with these great writers Rousseau goes beyond them and is
-both clearer and bolder than they are.</p>
-
-<p>§ 33. Rousseau’s proposals for instruction have the following
-main features.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_267" id="Page_267">[267]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>1st. Instruction is to be no longer literary or linguistic.
-The teaching about words is to disappear, and the young
-are not to learn by books or about books.</p>
-
-<p>2nd. The subjects to be studied are to be mathematics
-and physical science.</p>
-
-<p>3rd. The method to be adopted is not the didactic but
-the method of <i>self-teaching</i>.</p>
-
-<p>4th. The hands are to be called into play as a means of
-learning.</p>
-
-<p>§ 34. 1st. Till quite recently the only learning ever given
-in schools was book-learning, a fact to which the language of
-the people still bears witness: when a child does not profit
-by school instruction he is always said to be “no good at his
-book.” Now-a-days the tendency is to change the character
-of the schools so that they may become less and less mere
-“Ludi Literarii.” In this Rousseau seems to have been a
-century and more in advance of us; and yet we cannot
-credit him with any remarkable wisdom or insight about
-literature. He himself used books as a means of “collecting
-a store of ideas, true or false, but at any rate clear” (J.
-Morley’s <i>Rousseau</i>, j. chap. 3, p. 85), and he has recorded
-for us his opinion that “the sensible and interesting conversations
-of a young woman of merit are more proper to
-form a young man than all the pedantical philosophy of
-books” (<i>Confessions</i>, quoted by Morley j., 87). After this,
-whatever we may think of the merit of his suggestions we
-can sit at the Sage’s feet no longer.</p>
-
-<p>§ 35. 2nd. Rousseau had himself little knowledge of
-mathematics and natural science, but he was strongly in
-favour of the “study of Nature”; and in his last years his
-devotion to botany became a passion. His curriculum for
-Émile is in the air, but the chief thing is to get him to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_268" id="Page_268">[268]</a></span>
-attend to the phenomena of nature, and “to foster his
-curiosity by being in no hurry to satisfy it.”</p>
-
-<p>§ 36. 3rd. About teaching and learning, there is one
-point on which we find a consensus of great authorities extending
-from the least learned of writers who was probably
-Rousseau to the most learned who was probably Friedrich
-August Wolf. In one form or other these assert that there
-is no true teaching but <i>self</i>-teaching.</p>
-
-<p>Past a doubt the besetting weakness of teachers is “telling.”
-They can hardly resist the tendency to be didactic.
-They have the knowledge which they desire to find in their
-pupils, and they cannot help expressing it and endeavouring
-to pass it on to those who need it, “like wealthy men who
-care not how they give.” But true “teaching,” as Jacotot and
-his disciple Joseph Payne were never tired of testifying, is
-“causing to learn,” and it is seldom that “didactic” teaching
-has this effect. Rousseau saw this clearly, and clearly pointed
-out the danger of didacticism. As usual he by exaggeration
-laid himself open to an answer that seems to refute him, but
-in spite of this we feel that there is valuable truth underlying
-what he says. “I like not explanations given in long discourses,”
-says he; “young people pay little attention to them
-and retain little from them. The things themselves! The
-things themselves! I shall never repeat often enough that we
-attach too much importance to words: with our chattering
-education we make nothing but chatterers.”<a name="FNanchor_146" id="FNanchor_146"></a><a href="#Footnote_146" class="fnanchor">[146]</a> Accordingly
-Rousseau lays down the rule that Émile is not to learn<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_269" id="Page_269">[269]</a></span>
-science but to invent it (qu’il n’apprenne pas la science; qu’il
-l’invente); and he even expects him to invent geometry.
-As Émile is not supposed to be a young Pascal but only an
-ordinary boy with extraordinary <i>physical</i> development such
-a requirement is obviously absurd, and Herbart has reckoned
-it among Rousseau’s <i>Hauptfehler</i> (<i>Päd. Schriften</i>, ij., 242).
-The training prescribed is in fact the training of the intellectual
-athlete; and the trainer may put the body through its
-exercises much more easily than the mind. Of this the
-practical teacher is only too conscious, and he will accept
-Rousseau’s advice, if at all, only as “counsels of perfection.”
-Rousseau says: “Émile, obliged to learn of himself, makes
-use of his own reason and not that of others; for to give
-no weight to opinion, none must be given to authority; and
-the more part of our mistakes come less from ourselves than
-from other people. From this constant exercise there should
-result a vigour of mind like that which the body gets from
-labour and fatigue. Another advantage is that we advance
-only in proportion to our strength. The mind like the body
-carries that only which it can carry. When the understanding
-makes things its own before they are committed
-to memory, whatever it afterwards draws forth belongs to it;
-but if the memory is burdened with what the understanding
-knows nothing about we are in danger of bringing from it
-things which the understanding declines to acknowledge.”<a name="FNanchor_147" id="FNanchor_147"></a><a href="#Footnote_147" class="fnanchor">[147]</a><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_270" id="Page_270">[270]</a></span>
-Again he writes: “Beyond contradiction we get much more
-clear and certain notions of the things we learn thus of ourselves
-than of those we derive from other people’s instruction,
-and besides not accustoming our reason to bow as a slave
-before authority, we become more ingenious in finding connexions,
-in uniting ideas, and in inventing our implements,
-than when we take all that is given us and let our minds sink
-into indifference, like the body of a man who always has his
-clothes put on for him, is waited on by his servants and
-drawn about by his horses till at length he loses the strength
-and use of his limbs. Boileau boasted of having taught
-Racine to find difficulty in rhyming. Among all the admirable
-methods of shortening the study of the sciences we might
-have need that some one should give us a way of learning
-them <i>with effort</i>.”<a name="FNanchor_148" id="FNanchor_148"></a><a href="#Footnote_148" class="fnanchor">[148]</a></p>
-
-<p>§ 37. 4th. However highly we may value our gains
-from the use of books we must admit that in some ways the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_271" id="Page_271">[271]</a></span>
-use of books tends to the neglect of powers that should not
-be neglected. As Rousseau wished to see the young
-brought up without books he naturally looked to other means
-of learning, especially to learning by the eye and by the
-hand. Much is now said about using the hand for education,
-and many will agree with Rousseau: “If instead of
-making a child stick to his books I employ him in a workshop,
-his hands work to the advantage of his intellect: he
-becomes a philosopher while he thinks he is becoming
-simply an artisan: Au lieu de coller un enfant sur des livres,
-si je l’occupe dans un atelier, ses mains travaillent au profit
-de son esprit: il devient philosophe, et croît n’être qu’un
-ouvrier.” (<i>Ém.</i> iij., 193).</p>
-
-<p>§ 38. In these essays I have done what I could to shew
-the best that each reformer has left us. In Rousseau’s case
-I have been obliged to confine myself to his words. “We
-attach far too much importance to words,” said Rousseau,
-and yet it is by words and words only that Rousseau still
-lives; and for the sake of his words we forget his deeds. Of
-the <i>Émile</i> Mr. Morley says: “It is one of the seminal
-books in the history of literature. It cleared away the
-accumulation of clogging prejudices and obscure inveterate
-usage which made education one of the dark formalistic arts;
-and it admitted floods of light and air into tightly-closed
-nurseries and schoolrooms” (<i>Rousseau</i>, ij., 248). In the
-region of thought it set us free from the Renascence; and
-it did more than this, it announced the true nature of the
-teacher’s calling, “<i>Study the subject you have to act upon.</i>” In
-these words we have the starting point of the “New
-Education.” From them the educator gets a fresh conception
-of his task. We grown people have received innumerable
-impressions which, forgotten as they are, have left their mark<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_272" id="Page_272">[272]</a></span>
-behind in our way of looking at things; and as we advance
-in life these experiences and associations cluster around
-everything to which we direct our attention, till in the end
-the past seems to dominate the present and to us “nothing is
-but what is not.” But to the child the present with its
-revelations and the future which will be “something more,
-a bringer of new things,” are all engrossing. It is our
-business as teachers to try to realize how the world looks
-from the child’s point of view. We may know a great many
-things and be ready to teach them, but we shall have little
-success unless we get another knowledge which we cannot
-teach and can learn only by patient observation, a knowledge
-of “the subject to be acted on,” of the mind of our
-pupils and what goes on there. When we set out on this
-path, which was first clearly pointed out by Rousseau,
-teaching becomes a new occupation with boundless
-possibilities and unceasing interest in it. Every teacher
-becomes a learner, for we have to study the minds of the
-young, their way of looking at things, their habits, their
-difficulties, their likes and dislikes, how they are stimulated
-to exertion, how they are discouraged, how one mood
-succeeds another. What we need we may well devote a
-lifetime to acquiring; it is a knowledge of the human mind
-with the object of influencing it.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_273" id="Page_273">[273]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="XV">XV.<br />
-<span class="smaller">BASEDOW AND THE PHILANTHROPINUM.</span></h2>
-
-<p>§ 1. One of the most famous movements ever made in
-educational reform was started in the last century by John
-Bernard Basedow. Basedow was born at Hamburg in 1723,
-the son of a wigmaker. His early years were not spent in the
-ordinary happiness of childhood. His mother he describes
-as melancholy, almost to madness, and his father was severe
-almost to brutality. It was the father’s intention to bring
-up his son to his own business, but the lad ran away, and
-engaged himself as servant to a gentleman in Holstein. The
-master soon perceived what had never occurred to the
-father, viz., that the youth had very extraordinary abilities.
-Sent home with a letter from his master pointing out this
-notable discovery, Basedow was allowed to renounce the
-paternal calling, and to go to the Hamburg Grammar School
-(<i>Gymnasium</i>), where he was under Reimarus, the author of
-the “Wolfenbüttel Fragment.” In due course his friends
-managed to send him to the University of Leipzig to prepare
-himself for the least expensive of the learned professions—the
-clerical. Basedow, however, was not a man to follow
-the beaten tracks. After an irregular life he left the university
-too unorthodox to think of being ordained, and in 1749
-became private tutor to the children of Herr von Quaalen<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_274" id="Page_274">[274]</a></span>
-in Holstein. In this situation his talent for inventing new
-methods of teaching first showed itself. He knew how to
-adapt himself to the capacity of the children, and he taught
-them much by conversation, and in the way of play, connecting
-his instruction with surrounding objects in the house,
-garden, and fields. Through Quaalen’s influence, he next
-obtained a professorship at Soroe, in Denmark, where he
-lectured for eight years, but his unorthodox writings raised a
-storm of opposition, and the Government finally removed
-him to the Gymnasium at Altona. Here he still continued
-his efforts to change the prevailing opinions in religious
-matters; and so great a stir was made by the publication of
-his “Philalethia,” and his “Methodical Instruction in both
-Natural and Biblical Religion,” that he and his family were
-refused the Communion at Altona, and his books were
-excluded, under a heavy penalty, from Lübeck.</p>
-
-<p>§ 2. About this time Basedow, incited by Rousseau’s
-“Emile,” turned his attention to a fresh field of activity, in
-which he was to make as many friends as in theology he
-had found enemies. A very general dissatisfaction was then
-felt with the condition of the schools. Physical education
-was not attempted in them. The mother-tongue was
-neglected. Instruction in Latin and Greek, which was the
-only instruction given, was carried on in a mechanical way,
-without any thought of improvement. The education of the
-poor and of the middle classes received but little attention.
-“Youth,” says Raumer, “was in those days, for most
-children, a sadly harassed period. Instruction was hard and
-heartlessly severe. Grammar was caned into the memory,
-so were portions of Scripture and poetry. A common school
-punishment was to learn by heart Psalm cxix. School-rooms
-were dismally dark. No one conceived it possible<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_275" id="Page_275">[275]</a></span>
-that the young could find pleasure in any kind of work, or
-that they had eyes for aught besides reading and writing.
-The pernicious age of Louis XIV. had inflicted on the poor
-children of the upper class, hair curled by the barber and
-messed with powder and pomade, braided coats, knee
-breeches, silk stockings, and a dagger by the side—for active,
-lively children a perfect torture” (<i>Gesch. d. Pädagogik</i>, ii.
-297). Kant gave expression to a very wide-spread feeling
-when he said that what was wanted in education was no
-longer a reform but a revolution. Here, then, was a good
-scope offered for innovators, and Basedow was a prince of
-innovators.</p>
-
-<p>§ 3. Having succeeded in interesting the Danish
-minister, Bernstorff, in his plans, he was permitted to devote
-himself entirely to a work on the subject of education
-whilst retaining his income from the Altona Gymnasium.
-The result was his “Address to Philanthropists and Men of
-Property on Schools and Studies and their Influence on the
-Public Weal” (1766), in which he announces the plan of his
-“Elementary.”<a name="FNanchor_149" id="FNanchor_149"></a><a href="#Footnote_149" class="fnanchor">[149]</a> In this address he calls upon princes,
-governments, town-councils, dignitaries of the Church,
-freemasons’ lodges, &amp;c., &amp;c., if they loved their fellow-creatures,
-to come to his assistance in bringing out his
-book. Nor did he call in vain. When the “Elementary”
-at length appeared (in 1774), he had to acknowledge
-contributions from the Emperor Joseph II., from Catherine
-II. of Russia, from Christian VII. of Denmark, from the
-Grand Prince Paul, and many other celebrities, the total
-sum received being over 2,000<i>l.</i></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_276" id="Page_276">[276]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>§ 4. While Basedow was travelling about (in 1774) to get
-subscriptions, he spent some time in Frankfurt, and thence
-made an excursion to Ems with two distinguished companions,
-one of them Lavater, and the other a young man of five-and-twenty,
-already celebrated as the author of “Götz von
-Berlichingen,” and the “Sorrows of Werther.” Of Basedow’s
-personal peculiarities at this time Goethe has left us an
-amusing description in the “Wahrheit und Dichtung;” but
-we must accept the portrait with caution: the sketch was
-thrown in as an artistic contrast with that of Lavater, and no
-doubt exaggerates those features in which the antithesis
-could be brought out with best effect.</p>
-
-<p>“One could not see,” writes Goethe, “a more marked
-contrast than between Lavater and Basedow. As the lines
-of Lavater’s countenance were free and open to the beholder,
-so were Basedow’s contracted, and as it were drawn inwards,
-Lavater’s eye, clear and benign, under a very wide eye-lid;
-Basedow’s, on the other hand, deep in his head, small, black,
-sharp, gleaming out from under shaggy eyebrows, whilst
-Lavater’s frontal bone seemed bounded by two arches of the
-softest brown hair. Basedow’s impetuous rough voice, his
-rapid and sharp utterances, a certain derisive laugh, an
-abrupt changing of the topic of conversation, and whatever
-else distinguished him, all were opposed to the peculiarities
-and the behaviour by which Lavater had been making us
-over-fastidious.”</p>
-
-<p>§ 5. Goethe approved of Basedow’s desire to make all
-instruction lively and natural, and thought that his system
-would promote mental activity and give the young a fresher
-view of the world: but he finds fault with the “Elementary,”
-and prefers the “Orbis Pictus” of Comenius, in which
-subjects are presented in their natural connection. Basedow<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_277" id="Page_277">[277]</a></span>
-himself, says Goethe, was not a man either to edify or
-to lead other people. Although the object of his journey
-was to interest the public in his philanthropic enterprise,
-and to open not only hearts but purses, and he was able to
-speak eloquently and convincingly on the subject of
-education, he spoilt everything by his tirades against
-prevalent religious belief, especially on the subject of the
-Trinity.</p>
-
-<p>§ 6. Goethe found in Basedow’s society an opportunity
-of “exercising, if not enlightening,” his mind, so he bore
-with his personal peculiarities, though apparently with great
-difficulty. Basedow seems to have delighted in worrying
-his associates. “He would never see anyone quiet but he
-provoked him with mocking irony, in a hoarse voice, or put
-him to confusion by an unexpected question, and laughed
-bitterly when he had gained his end; yet he was pleased
-when the object of his jests was quick enough to collect
-himself, and answer in the same strain.” So far Goethe was
-his match; but he was nearly routed by Basedow’s use of
-bad tobacco, and of some tinder still worse with which he
-was constantly lighting his pipe and poisoning the air
-insufferably. He soon discovered Goethe’s dislike to this
-preparation of his, so he took a malicious pleasure in using
-it and dilating upon its merits.</p>
-
-<p>§ 7. Here is an odd account of their intercourse.
-During their stay at Ems Goethe went a great deal into
-fashionable society. “To make up for these dissipations,”
-he writes, “I always passed a part of the night with
-Basedow. He never went to bed, but dictated without
-cessation. Occasionally he cast himself on the couch and
-slumbered, while his amanuensis sat quietly, pen in hand,
-ready to continue his work when the half-awakened author<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_278" id="Page_278">[278]</a></span>
-should once more give free course to his thoughts. All this
-took place in a close confined chamber, filled with the
-fumes of tobacco and the odious tinder. As often as I was
-disengaged from a dance I hastened up to Basedow, who
-was ready at once to speak and dispute on any question;
-and when after a time I hurried again to the ball-room,
-before I had closed the door behind me he would resume
-the thread of his essay as composedly as if he had been
-engaged with nothing else.”</p>
-
-<p>§ 8. It was through a friend of Goethe’s, Behrisch,
-whose acquaintance we make in the “Wahrheit und
-Dichtung,” that Basedow became connected with Prince
-Leopold of Dessau. Behrisch was tutor to the Prince’s
-son, and by him the Prince was so interested in Basedow’s
-plans that he determined to found an Institute in which
-they should be realised. Basedow was therefore called to
-Dessau, and under his direction was opened the famous
-Philanthropinum. Then for the first, and probably for the
-last time, a school was started in which use and wont
-were entirely set aside, and everything done on “improved
-principles.” Such a bold enterprise attracted the attention
-of all interested in education, far and near: but it would
-seem that few parents considered their own children <i>vilia
-corpora</i> on whom experiments might be made for the public
-good. When, in May 1776, a number of schoolmasters
-and others collected from different parts of Germany, and
-even from beyond Germany, to be present by Basedow’s
-invitation at an examination of the children, they found
-only thirteen pupils in the Philanthropinum, including
-Basedow’s own son and daughter.</p>
-
-<p>§ 9. Before we investigate how Basedow’s principles were
-embodied in the Philanthropinum, let us see the form in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_279" id="Page_279">[279]</a></span>
-which he had already announced them. The great work
-from which all children were to be taught was the
-“Elementary.” As a companion to this was published
-the “Book of Method” (<i>Methodenbuch</i>) for parents and
-teachers. The “Elementary” is a work in which a great
-deal of information about things in general is given in the
-form of dialogue, interspersed with tales and easy poetry.
-Except in bulk, it does not seem to me to differ very
-materially from many of the reading-books, which, in late
-years, have been published in this country. It had the
-advantage, however, of being accompanied by a set of
-engravings to which the text referred, though they were too
-large to be bound up with it. The root-ideas of Basedow
-put forth in his “Book of Method,” and other writings, are
-those of Rousseau. For example, “You should attend to
-nature in your children far more than to art. The elegant
-manners and usages of the world are for the most part
-unnatural (<i>Unnatur</i>). These come of themselves in later
-years. Treat children like children, that they may remain
-the longer uncorrupted. A boy whose acutest faculties are
-his senses, and who has no perception of anything abstract,
-must first of all be made acquainted with the world as it
-presents itself to the senses. Let this be shown him in
-nature herself, or where this is impossible, in faithful
-drawings or models. Thereby can he, even in play, learn
-how the various objects are to be named. Comenius alone
-has pointed out the right road in this matter. By all
-means reduce the wretched exercises of the memory.”
-Elsewhere he gives instances of the sort of things to which
-this method should be applied. 1st. Man. Here he
-would use pictures of foreigners and wild men, also a
-skeleton, a hand in spirits, and other objects still more<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_280" id="Page_280">[280]</a></span>
-appropriate to a surgical museum. 2nd. Animals. Only
-such animals are to be depicted as it is useful to know
-about, because there is much that ought to be known, and a
-good method of instruction must shorten rather than
-increase the hours of study. Articles of commerce made
-from the animals may also be exhibited. 3rd. Trees and
-plants. Only the most important are to be selected. Of
-these the seeds also must be shown, and cubes formed of
-the different woods. Gardeners’ and farmers’ implements
-are to be explained. 4th. Minerals and chemical substances.
-5th. Mathematical instruments for weighing and
-measuring; also the air-pump, siphon, and the like. The
-form and motion of the earth are to be explained with
-globes and maps. 6th. Trades. The use of various tools
-is to be taught. 7th. History. This is to be illustrated by
-engravings of historical events. 8th. Commerce. Samples
-of commodities may be produced. 9th. The younger
-children should be shown pictures of familiar objects about
-the house and its surroundings.</p>
-
-<p>§ 10. We see from this list that Basedow contemplated
-giving his educational course the charm of variety.
-Indeed, with that candour in acknowledging mistakes which
-partly makes amends for the effrontery too common in the
-trumpetings of his own performances, past, present, and to
-come, he confesses that when he began the “Elementary”
-he had exaggerated notions of the amount boys were
-capable of learning, and that he had subsequently very
-much contracted his proposed curriculum. And even “the
-Revolution,” which was to introduce so much new learning
-into the schools, could not afford entirely to neglect the
-old. However pleased parents might be with the novel
-acquirements of their children, they were not likely to be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_281" id="Page_281">[281]</a></span>
-satisfied without the usual knowledge of Latin, and still
-less would they tolerate the neglect of French, which in
-German polite society of the eighteenth century was the
-recognised substitute for the vulgar tongue. These, then,
-must be taught. But the old methods might be abandoned,
-if not the old subjects. Basedow proposed to teach both
-French and Latin by <i>conversation</i>. Let a cabinet of models,
-or something of the kind, be shown the children; let them
-learn the names of the different objects in Latin or French;
-then let questions be asked in those languages, and the
-right answers at first put into the children’s mouths. When
-they have in this way acquired some knowledge of the
-language, they may apply it to the translating of an easy
-book. Basedow does not claim originality for the conversational
-method. He appeals to the success with which it
-had been already used in teaching French. “Are the
-French governesses,” he asks, “who, without vocabularies
-and grammars, first by conversation, then by reading, teach
-their language very successfully and very rapidly in schools
-of from thirty to forty children, better teachers than most
-masters in our Latin schools?”</p>
-
-<p>§ 11. On the subject of religion the instruction was to
-be quite as original as in matters of less importance. The
-teachers were to give an impartial account of all religions,
-and nothing but “natural religion” was to be inculcated.</p>
-
-<p>§ 12. The key-note of the whole system was to be—<i>everything
-according to nature</i>. The natural desires and
-inclinations of the children were to be educated and
-directed aright, but in no case to be suppressed.</p>
-
-<p>§ 13. These, then, were the principles and the methods
-which, as Basedow believed, were to revolutionise education
-through the success of the Philanthropinum. Basedow<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_282" id="Page_282">[282]</a></span>
-himself, as we might infer from Goethe’s description of him,
-was by no means a model director for the model Institution,
-but he was fortunate in his assistants. Of these he had
-three at the time of the public examination, of whom Wolke
-is said to have been the ablest.</p>
-
-<p>§ 14. A lively description of the examination was afterwards
-published by Herr Schummel of Magdeburg, under
-the title of “Fred’s Journey to Dessau.” It purports to be
-written by a boy of twelve years old, and to describe
-what took place without attempting criticism. A few
-extracts will give us a notion of the instruction carried on in
-the Philanthropin.</p>
-
-<p>“I have just come from a visit with my father to the
-Philanthropinum, where I saw Herr Basedow, Herr Wolke,
-Herr Simon, Herr Schweighäuser, and the little Philanthropinists.
-I am delighted with all that I have seen, and
-hardly know where to begin my description of it. There
-are two large white houses, and near them a field with trees.
-A pupil—not one of the regular scholars, but of those they
-call Famulants (a poorer class, who were servitors)—received
-us at the door, and asked if we wished to see
-Herr Basedow. We said ‘Yes,’ and he took us into the
-other house, where we found Herr Basedow in a dressing-gown,
-writing at a desk. We came at an inconvenient time,
-and Herr Basedow said he was very busy. He was very
-friendly, however, and promised to visit us in the evening.
-We then went into the other house, and enquired for Herr
-Wolke.” By him they were taken to the scholars. “They
-have,” says Fred, “their hair cut very short, and no wig-maker
-is employed. Their throats are quite open, and
-their shirt-collars fall back over their coats.” Further
-on he describes the examination. “The little ones have<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_283" id="Page_283">[283]</a></span>
-gone through the oddest performances. They play at
-‘word of command.’ Eight or ten stand in a line like
-soldiers, and Herr Wolke is officer. He gives the word in
-Latin, and they must do whatever he says. For instance,
-when he says <i>Claudite oculos</i>, they all shut their eyes; when
-he says <i>Circumspicite</i>, they look about them; <i>Imitamini
-sartorem</i>, they all sew like tailors; <i>Imitamini sutorem</i>, they
-draw the waxed thread like the cobblers. Herr Wolke gives
-a thousand different commands in the drollest fashion.
-Another game, ‘the hiding game,’ I will also teach you.
-Some one writes a name, and hides it from the children—the
-name of some part of the body, or of a plant, or animal,
-or metal—and the children guess what it is. Whoever
-guesses right gets an apple or a piece of cake. One of the
-visitors wrote <i>Intestina</i>, and told the children it was a part
-of the body. Then the guessing began. One guessed
-<i>caput</i>, another <i>nasus</i>, another <i>os</i>, another <i>manus</i>, <i>pes</i>, <i>digiti</i>,
-<i>pectus</i>, and so forth, for a long time; but one of them hit it
-at last. Next Herr Wolke wrote the name of a beast, a
-quadruped. Then came the guesses: <i>leo</i>, <i>ursus</i>, <i>camelus</i>,
-<i>elephas</i>, and so on, till one guessed right—it was <i>mus</i>. Then
-a town was written, and they guessed Lisbon, Madrid,
-Paris, London, till a child won with St. Petersburg. They
-had another game, which was this: Herr Wolke gave the
-command in Latin, and they imitated the noises of different
-animals, and made us laugh till we were tired. They roared
-like lions, crowed like cocks, mewed like cats, just as they
-were bid.”</p>
-
-<p>§ 15. The subject that was next handled had also the
-effect of making the strangers laugh, till a severe reproof
-from Herr Wolke restored their gravity. A picture was
-brought, in which was represented a sad-looking woman,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_284" id="Page_284">[284]</a></span>
-whose person indicated the approaching arrival of another
-subject for education. From one part of the picture it also
-appeared that the prospective mother, with a prodigality of
-forethought, had got ready clothing for both a boy and a
-girl. After a warning from Herr Wolke, that this was a
-most serious and important subject, the children were
-questioned on the topics the picture suggested. They were
-further taught the debt of gratitude they owed to their
-mothers, and the German fiction about the stork was dismissed
-with due contempt.</p>
-
-<p>§ 16. Next came the examination in arithmetic. Here
-there seems to have been nothing remarkable, except that
-all the rules were worked <i>vivâ voce</i>. From the arithmetic
-Herr Wolke went on to an “Attempt at various small
-drawings.” He asked the children what he should draw.
-Some one answered <i>leonem</i>. He then pretended he was
-drawing a lion, but put a beak to it; whereupon the children
-shouted <i>Non est Leo—leones non habent rostrum!</i> He went
-on to other subjects, as the children directed him, sometimes
-going wrong that the children might put him right. In the
-next exercise dice were introduced, and the children threw
-to see who should give an account of an engraving. The
-engravings represented workmen at their different trades,
-and the child had to explain the process, the tools, &amp;c. A
-lesson on ploughing and harrowing was given in French,
-and another, on Alexander’s expedition to India, in Latin.
-Four of the pupils translated passages from Curtius and from
-Castalio’s Bible, which were read to them. “These children,”
-said the teacher, “knew not a word of Latin a year
-ago.” “The listeners were well pleased with the Latin,”
-writes Fred, “except two or three, whom I heard grumbling
-that this was all child’s play, and that if Cicero, Livy, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_285" id="Page_285">[285]</a></span>
-Horace were introduced, it would soon be seen what was
-the value of Philanthropinist Latin.” After the examination,
-two comedies were acted by the children, one in French,
-the other in German.</p>
-
-<p>Most of the strangers seem to have left Dessau with a
-favourable impression of the Philanthropin. They were
-especially struck with the brightness and animation of the
-children.</p>
-
-<p>§ 17. How far did the Philanthropinum really deserve
-their good opinion? The conclusion to which we are
-driven by Fred’s narrative is, that Basedow carried to excess
-his principle—“Treat children as children, that they may
-remain the longer uncorrupted;” and that the Philanthropinum
-was, in fact, nothing but a good infant-school.
-Surely none of the thirteen children who were the subjects
-of Basedow’s experiments could have been more than ten
-years old. But if we consider Basedow’s system to have
-been intended for <i>children</i>, say between the ages of six and
-ten, we must allow that it possessed great merits. At the
-very beginning of a boy’s learning, it has always been too
-much the custom to make him hate the sight of a book, and
-escape at every opportunity from school-work, by giving
-him difficult tasks, and neglecting his acutest faculties.
-“Children love motion and noise,” says Basedow: “here
-is a hint from nature.” Yet the youngest children in most
-schools are expected to keep quiet and to sit at their books
-for as many hours as the youths of seventeen or eighteen.
-Their vivacity is repressed with the cane. Their delight in
-exercising their hands and eyes and ears is taken no notice
-of; and they are required to keep their attention fixed on
-subjects often beyond their comprehension, and almost
-always beyond the range of their interests. Everyone who<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_286" id="Page_286">[286]</a></span>
-has had experience in teaching boys knows how hard it is to
-get them to throw themselves heartily into any task whatever;
-and probably this difficulty arises in many cases,
-from the habits of inattention and of shirking school-work,
-which the boys have acquired almost necessarily from the
-dreariness of their earliest lessons.<a name="FNanchor_150" id="FNanchor_150"></a><a href="#Footnote_150" class="fnanchor">[150]</a> Basedow determined
-to change all this; and in the Philanthropin no doubt he
-succeeded. We have already seen some of the expedients
-by which he sought to render school-work pleasurable. He
-appealed, wherever it was possible, to the children’s senses;
-and these, especially the sight, were trained with great care
-by exercises, such as drawing, shooting at a mark, &amp;c. One
-of these exercises, intended to give quick perception, bears
-a curious likeness to what has since been practised in a very
-different educational system. A picture, with a somewhat
-varied subject, was exhibited for a short time and removed.
-The boys had then, either verbally or on paper, to give an
-account of it, naming the different objects in proper order.
-Houdin, if I rightly remember, tells us that the young
-thieves of Paris are required by their masters to make a
-mental inventory of the contents of a shop window, which
-they see only as they walk rapidly by. Other exercises of
-the Philanthropinum connected the pupils with more
-honourable callings. They became acquainted with both<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_287" id="Page_287">[287]</a></span>
-skilled and unskilled manual labour. Every boy was taught
-a handicraft, such as carpentering and turning, and was put
-to such tasks as threshing corn. Basedow’s division of the
-twenty-four hours was the following: Eight hours for sleep,
-eight for food and amusement, and, for the children of
-the rich, six hours of school-work, and two of manual labour.
-In the case of the children of the poor, he would have the
-division of the last eight hours inverted, and would give for
-school-work two, and for manual labour six. The development
-of the body was specially cared for in the Philanthropinum.
-Gymnastics were now first introduced into modern schools;
-and the boys were taken long expeditions on foot—the
-commencement, I believe, of a practice now common
-throughout Germany.</p>
-
-<p>§ 18. As I have already said, Basedow proved a very
-unfit person to be at the head of the model Institution.
-Many of his friends agreed with Herder, that he was not fit
-to have calves entrusted to him, much less children. He
-soon resigned his post; and was succeeded by Campe, who
-had been one of the visitors at the public examination.
-Campe did not remain long at the Philanthropinum; but
-left it to set up a school, on like principles, at Hamburg.
-His fame now rests on his writings for the young; one of
-which—“Robinson Crusoe the Younger”—is still a general
-favourite.</p>
-
-<p>Other distinguished men became connected with the
-Philanthropin—among them Salzmann, and Matthison the
-poet—and the number of pupils rose to over fifty; gathered
-we are told, from all parts of Europe between Riga and
-Lisbon. But this number is by no means a fair measure of
-the interest, nay, enthusiasm, which the experiment excited.
-We find Pastor Oberlin raising money on his wife’s earrings<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_288" id="Page_288">[288]</a></span>
-to send a donation. We find the philosopher Kant prophesying
-that quite another race of men would grow up, now
-that education according to Nature had been introduced.</p>
-
-<p>§ 19. These hopes were disappointed. Kant confesses
-as much in the following passage in his treatise “On
-Pædagogy”:—</p>
-
-<p>“One fancies, indeed, that experiments in education
-would not be necessary; and that we might judge by the
-understanding whether any plan would turn out well or ill.
-But this is a great mistake. Experience shows that often in
-our experiments we get quite opposite results from what we
-had anticipated. We see, too, that since experiments are
-necessary, it is not in the power of one generation to form a
-complete plan of education. The only experimental school
-which, to some extent, made a beginning in clearing the
-road, was the Institute at Dessau. This praise at least must
-be allowed it, notwithstanding the many faults which could
-be brought up against it—faults which are sure to show
-themselves when we come to the results of our experiments,
-and which merely prove that fresh experiments are necessary.
-It was the only School in which the teachers had liberty to
-work according to their own methods and schemes, and
-where they were in free communication both among themselves
-and with all learned men throughout Germany.”</p>
-
-<p>§ 20. We observe here, that Kant speaks of the Philanthropinum
-as a thing of the past. It was finally closed in
-1793. But even from Kant we learn that the experiment
-had been by no means a useless one. The conservatives,
-of course, did not neglect to point out that young Philanthropinists,
-when they left school, were not in all respects
-the superiors of their fellow-creatures. But, although no
-one could pretend that the Philanthropinum had effected a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_289" id="Page_289">[289]</a></span>
-tithe of what Basedow promised, and the “friends of
-humanity” throughout Europe expected, it had introduced
-many new ideas, which in time had their influence, even in
-the schools of the opposite party. Moreover, teachers who
-had been connected with the Philanthropinum founded
-schools on similar principles in different parts of Germany
-and Switzerland, as Bahrd’s at Heidesheim, and Salzmann’s
-celebrated school at Schnepfenthal, which is, I believe,
-still thriving. Their doctrines, too, made converts among
-other masters, the most celebrated of whom was Meierotto
-of Berlin.</p>
-
-<p>§ 21. Little remains to be said of Basedow. He lived
-chiefly at Dessau, earning his subsistence by private tuition,
-but giving offence by his irregularities. In 1790, when
-visiting Magdeburg, he died, after a short illness, in his
-sixty-seventh year. His last words were, “I wish my body to
-be dissected for the good of my fellow-creatures.”</p>
-
-<div class="smaller">
-
-<p>Basedow has a posthumous connexion with this country as the great-grandfather
-of Professor Max Müller. Basedow’s son became “Regierungs
-Präsident,” in Dessau. The President’s daughter, born in
-1800, became the wife of the poet Wilhelm Müller, and the mother of
-Max Müller. Max Müller has contributed a life of his great-grandfather
-to the <i>Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Those who read German and care about either Basedow or Comenius
-should get <i>Die Didaktik Basedows im Vergleiche zur Didaktik des
-Comenius von</i> Dr. Petru Garbovicianu (Bucarest, C. Gobl), 1887. This
-is a very good piece of work; it is printed in roman type, and the price
-is only 1<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
-
-<p>Since the above was in type I have got an important book, <i>L’Education
-en Allemagne au Dix-huitième Siècle: Basedow et le Philanthropinisme</i>,
-by A. Pinloche (Paris, A. Colin, 1889.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_290" id="Page_290">[290]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="XVI">XVI.<br />
-<span class="smaller">PESTALOZZI.<br />
-1746-1827.</span></h2>
-
-<p>§ 1. <i>Qui facit per alium facit per se.</i> It is thus the law
-holds us accountable for the action of others which we
-direct. By the extension of this rule we immensely increase
-the personality of great writers and may credit them
-with vast spheres of action which never come within their
-consciousness. No man gains and suffers more from this
-consideration than Rousseau. On the one hand, we may
-attribute to him the crimes of Robespierre and Saint-Just;
-on the other Pestalozzi was instigated by him to turn to
-farming and—education.</p>
-
-<p>In treating of Rousseau as an educational reformer I
-passed over a life in which almost every incident tends to
-weaken the effect of his words. With Pestalozzi we must
-turn to his life for the true source of his writings and the
-best comment on them.</p>
-
-<p>§ 2. John Henry Pestalozzi was born at Zurich in 1746.
-His father dying when he was five years old, he was brought
-up with a brother and sister by a pious and self-denying
-mother and by a faithful servant “Babeli,” who had comforted
-the father in his last hours by promising to stay with
-his family. Thus Pestalozzi had an advantage denied to
-Rousseau and denied as it would seem to Locke; there<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_291" id="Page_291">[291]</a></span>
-was scope for his home affections, and the head was not
-developed before the heart. When he was sent to a day-school
-he became to some extent the laughing stock of his
-companions who dubbed him Harry Oddity of Foolborough;
-but he gained their good-will by his unselfishness. It was
-remembered that on the shock of an earthquake when
-teachers and taught fled from the school building Harry
-Oddity was induced to go back and bring away what his
-companions considered precious. His holidays he spent
-with his grandfather the pastor of a village some three miles
-from Zurich, where the lad learnt the condition of the
-rural poor and saw what a good man could do for them.
-He always looked back to these visits as an important
-element in his education. “The best way for a child to
-acquire the fear of God,” he wrote, “is for him to see and
-hear a true Christian.” The grandfather’s example so
-affected him that he wished to follow in his steps, and he
-became a student of theology.<a name="FNanchor_151" id="FNanchor_151"></a><a href="#Footnote_151" class="fnanchor">[151]</a></p>
-
-<p>§ 3. Even as a student Pestalozzi proved that he was no
-ordinary man. In his time there was great intellectual and
-moral enthusiasm among the students of the little Swiss
-University. Some distinguished professors, especially Bodmer,
-had awakened a craving for the old Swiss virtues of
-plain living and high thinking; and a band of students,
-among whom Lavater was leader and Pestalozzi played a
-prominent part, became eager reformers. The citizens of
-the great towns like Geneva and Zurich had become in
-effect privileged classes; and as their spokesmen the Geneva
-magistrates condemned the <i>Contrat Social</i> and the <i>Emile</i>.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_292" id="Page_292">[292]</a></span>
-This raised the indignation of the reforming students at
-Zurich; and though their organ, a periodical called the
-<i>Memorial</i>, kept clear of politics, one Muller wrote a paper
-which contained some strong language, and this was held
-to be proof of a conspiracy. Muller fled and was banished.
-Pestalozzi and some other of his friends were imprisoned.
-The <i>Memorial</i> was suppressed.</p>
-
-<p>§ 4. It is in this <i>Memorial</i>, a weekly paper edited by
-Lavater who was five years Pestalozzi’s senior that we have
-Pestalozzi’s earliest writing. We find him coming forward
-as “a man of aspirations.” No one he says can object
-to his expressing his wishes. And “wishes” with a man of
-19 are usually hopes. Among other wishes he says: “I
-would that some one would draw up in a simple manner a
-few principles of education intelligible to everybody; that
-some generous people would then share the expense of
-printing, so that the pamphlet might be given to the public
-for nothing or next to nothing. I would then have clergymen
-distribute it to all fathers and mothers, so that they
-might bring up their children in a rational and Christian
-manner. But,” he adds, “perhaps this is asking too much
-at a time.”</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Memorial</i> was suppressed because “the privileged
-classes” knew that it was in the hands of their opponents.
-Pestalozzi then and always felt keenly the oppression to
-which the peasants were exposed; and he spoke of “the
-privileged” as men on stilts who must descend among the
-people before they could secure a natural and firm position.
-He also satirises them in some of his fables, as, <i>e.g.</i>, that of
-the “Fishes and the Pike.” “The fishes in a pond
-brought an accusation against the pike who were making
-great ravages among them. The judge, an old pike, said<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_293" id="Page_293">[293]</a></span>
-that their complaint was well founded, and that the
-defendants, to make amends, should allow two ordinary
-fish every year to become pike.”</p>
-
-<p>§ 5. By this time Pestalozzi had given up theology and
-had taken to the law. Now under the influence of
-Rousseau, or rather of the craving for a simple “natural”
-life which found its most eloquent expression in Rousseau’s
-writing, Pestalozzi made a bonfire of his MSS. and decided
-on becoming a farmer.</p>
-
-<p>§ 6. There was another person concerned in this decision.
-In his childhood he had one day ventured into the shop of
-one of the leading tradesmen, Herr Schulthess, bent on procuring
-for his farthings some object of delight; but he found
-there a little shop-keeper, Anna Schulthess, seven years his
-senior, who discouraged his extravagance and persuaded
-him to keep his money. Anna and he since those days
-had become engaged—not at all to the satisfaction of
-her parents. Their intimacy had been strengthened by
-their concern for a common friend, a young man named
-Bluntschli, who died of consumption. This friend, three
-years older than Pestalozzi, seems to have understood him
-thoroughly; and in the parting advice he gave him there
-was a warning which happily for the general good was in
-after years neglected. “I am going,” said Bluntschli, “and
-you will be left alone. Avoid any career in which you
-might become the victim of your own goodness and trust,
-and choose some quiet life in which you will run no risk.
-Above all, do not take part in any important undertaking
-without having at your side a man who by his cool judgment,
-knowledge of men and things, and unshakable
-fidelity may be able to protect you from the dangers to
-which you will be exposed.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_294" id="Page_294">[294]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>§ 7. When the friendship with Anna Schulthess had
-ripened into a betrothal Pestalozzi spent a year in the
-neighbourhood of Bern learning farming under a man then
-famous for his innovations. His new ideas Pestalozzi
-absorbed very readily. “I had come to him,” he says, “a
-political visionary, though with many profound and correct
-attainments, views, and anticipations in matters political.
-I went away from him just as great an agricultural visionary,
-though with many enlarged and correct ideas and intentions
-with regard to agriculture.”</p>
-
-<p>§ 8. During his “learning year” he kept up a correspondence
-with his betrothed, and the letters of both, which
-have been preserved, differ very widely from love-letters in
-general. Of himself Pestalozzi gives an account which
-shows that in part at least he could see himself as others
-saw him. “Dearest,” he writes, “those of my faults which
-appear to me most important in relation to the situation in
-which I may be placed in after-life are improvidence,
-incautiousness, and a want of presence of mind to meet
-unexpected changes in my prospects.... Of my
-great, and indeed very reprehensible negligence in all
-matters of etiquette, and generally in all matters which are
-not in themselves of importance, I need not speak; anyone
-may see them at first sight of me. I also owe you the
-open confession, my dear, that I shall always consider my
-duties toward my beloved partner subordinate to my duties
-towards my country; and that, although I shall be the
-tenderest husband, nevertheless, I hold myself bound to be
-inexorable to the tears of my wife if she should ever
-attempt to restrain me by them from the direct performance
-of my duties as a citizen, whatever this must lead to. My
-wife shall be the confidante of my heart, the partner of all<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_295" id="Page_295">[295]</a></span>
-my most secret counsels. A great and honest simplicity
-shall reign in my house. And one thing more. My life
-will not pass without important and very critical undertakings.
-I shall not forget ... my first resolutions to
-devote myself wholly to my country. I shall never, from
-fear of man, refrain from speaking when I see that the good
-of my country calls upon me to speak. My whole heart is
-my country’s: I will risk all to alleviate the need and
-misery of my fellow-countrymen. What consequences may
-the undertakings to which I feel myself urged on draw
-after them! how unequal to them am I! and how imperative
-is my duty to show you the possibility of the great
-dangers which they may bring upon me! My dear, my
-beloved friend, I have now spoken candidly of my character
-and my aspirations. Reflect upon everything. If the
-traits which it was my duty to mention diminish your
-respect for me, you will still esteem my sincerity, and you
-will not think less highly of me, that I did not take advantage
-of your want of acquaintance with my character for
-the attainment of my inmost wishes.”</p>
-
-<p>§ 9. The young lady addressed was worthy of her lover.
-“Such nobleness, such elevation of character, reach my
-very soul,” said she. With equal nobleness she encouraged
-Pestalozzi in his schemes and took the consequences without
-a murmur during their long married life of 46
-years.</p>
-
-<p>§ 10. Full of new ideas about farming Pestalozzi now
-thought he saw his way to making a fortune. He took
-some poor land near Birr not far from Zurich, and persuaded
-a banking firm to advance money with which he
-proposed to cultivate vegetables and madder. In September,
-1769, he was married, and six months later the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_296" id="Page_296">[296]</a></span>
-pair settled in a new house, “Neuhof,” which Pestalozzi
-had built on his land.</p>
-
-<p>§ 11. But in spite of his excellent ideas and great industry,
-his speculation failed. The bankers soon withdrew
-their money. Pestalozzi was not cautious enough for them.
-However, his wife’s friends prevented an immediate collapse.</p>
-
-<p>§ 12. But before he had any reason to doubt the success
-of his speculation Pestalozzi had begun to reproach himself
-with being engrossed by it. What had become of all his
-thoughts for the people? Was he not spending his strength
-entirely to gain the prosperity of himself and his household?
-These thoughts came to him with all the more force
-when a son was born to him; and at this time they naturally
-connected themselves with education. He had now
-seen a good deal of the degraded state of the peasantry.
-How were they to be raised out of it?</p>
-
-<p>§ 13. To Pestalozzi there seemed one answer and one
-only. This was <i>by education</i>. To many people in the present
-day it might seem that “education,” when quite successful,
-would qualify labourers to become clerks. This was not the
-notion of Pestalozzi. Rousseau had completely freed him
-from bondage to the Renascence, and education did not
-mean to him a training in the use of books. He looked
-at the children of the lowest class of the peasants and asked
-himself what they needed to raise them. Knowledge would
-not do it. “The thing was not that they should know what
-they did not know, but that they should behave as they did
-not behave” (<a href="#Page_169"><i>supra</i>, p. 169</a>); and the road to right action
-lay through right feeling. If they could be made conscious
-that they were loved and cared for, their hearts would open
-and give back love and respect in return. More than this,
-they must be taught not only to respect their elders but also<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_297" id="Page_297">[297]</a></span>
-themselves. They must be taught to help themselves and
-contribute to their own maintenance. So Pestalozzi resolved
-to take into his own house some of the very poorest children,
-to bring them up in an atmosphere of love, and to instruct
-them in field-work and spinning which would soon partly
-(as Pestalozzi hoped, wholly) pay for their keep. Thus, just
-at the time when the experiment for himself failed he began
-for others an experiment that seemed likely to add indefinitely
-to his difficulties.</p>
-
-<p>§ 14. In the winter of 1774 the first children were taken
-into Neuhof. The consequences to his wife and to his little
-son only four years old might have vanquished the courage
-of a less ardent philanthropist. “Our position entailed much
-suffering on my wife;” he writes, “but nothing could shake
-us in our resolve to devote our time, strength and remaining
-fortune to the simplification of the instruction and domestic
-education of the people.”</p>
-
-<p>§ 15. These children, at first not more than 20 in number,
-Pestalozzi treated as his own. They worked with him in
-the summer in the garden and fields, in winter in the house.
-Very little time was given to separate lessons, the children
-often learning while they worked with their hands. Pestalozzi
-held that talking should come before reading and writing;
-and he practised them in conversation on subjects taken
-from their every day life. They also repeated passages from
-the Bible till they knew them by heart.</p>
-
-<p>§ 16. In a few months, as we are told, the appearance of
-these poor little creatures had entirely changed; though fed
-only on bread and vegetables they looked strong and hearty,
-and their faces gained an expression of cheerfulness, frankness
-and intelligence which till then had been totally
-wanting. They made good progress with their manual work<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_298" id="Page_298">[298]</a></span>
-as well as with the associated lessons, and took pleasure in
-both. In all they said and did, they seemed to show their
-consciousness of their benefactor’s kind care of them.</p>
-
-<p>§ 17. This experiment naturally drew much attention to it,
-and when it had gone on over a year Pestalozzi was induced
-by his friend Iselin of Basel to insert in the <i>Ephemerides</i> (a
-paper of which Iselin was editor), an “appeal ... for
-an institution intended to provide education and work for
-poor country children.” In this appeal Pestalozzi narrates
-his experience. “I have proved,” says he, “that it is not
-regular work that stops the development of so many poor
-children, but the turmoil and irregularity of their lives, the
-privations they endure, the excesses they indulge in when
-opportunity offers, the wild rebellious passions so seldom
-restrained, and the hopelessness to which they are so often
-a prey. I have proved that children after having lost health,
-strength and courage in a life of idleness and mendicity have,
-when once set to regular work quickly recovered their health
-and spirits and grown rapidly. I have found that when
-taken out of their abject condition they soon become kindly,
-trustful and sympathetic; that even the most degraded of them
-are touched by kindness, and that the eyes of the child who
-has been steeped in misery, grow bright with pleasure and
-surprise, when, after years of hardship, he sees a gentle
-friendly hand stretched out to help him; and I am convinced
-that <i>when a child’s heart has been touched the consequences
-will be great for his development and entire moral character</i>.”</p>
-
-<p>Pestalozzi therefore would have the very poorest children
-brought up in private establishments where agriculture and
-industry were combined, and where they would learn to work
-steadily and carefully with their hands, the chief part of
-their time being devoted to this manual work, and their instruction<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_299" id="Page_299">[299]</a></span>
-and education being associated with it. And he
-asks for support in greatly increasing the establishment he
-has already begun.</p>
-
-<p>§ 18. Encouraged by the support he received and still more
-by his love for the children and his own too sanguine disposition
-Pestalozzi enlarged his undertaking. The consequence
-was bankruptcy. Several causes conspired to bring about
-this result. Whatever he might do for the children, he could
-not educate the parents, and these were many of them beggars
-with the ordinary vices of their class. With the usual discernment
-of such people they soon came to the conclusion that
-Pestalozzi was making a fortune out of their children’s labour;
-so they haunted Neuhof, treated Pestalozzi with the greatest
-insolence, and often induced their children to run away in their
-new clothes. This would account for much, but there was
-another cause of failure that accounted for a great deal more.
-This was Pestalozzi’s extreme incapacity as an administrator.
-Even his industrial experiment he carried on in such a way that
-it proved a source of expense rather than of profit. He says
-himself, that, contrary to his own principles, which should
-have led him to begin at the beginning and lay a good
-foundation in teaching, he put the children to work that was
-too difficult for them, wanted them to spin fine thread before
-their hands got steadiness and skill by exercise on the
-coarser kind, and to manufacture muslin before they could
-turn out well-made cotton goods. “Before I was aware of
-it,” he adds, “I was deeply involved in debt, and the greater
-part of my dear wife’s property and expectations had, as it
-were, in an instant gone up in smoke.”</p>
-
-<p>§ 19. The precise arrangement made with the creditors
-we do not know. The bare facts remain that the children
-were sent away, and that the land was let for the creditors’<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_300" id="Page_300">[300]</a></span>
-benefit; but Pestalozzi remained in the house. This was
-settled in 1780.</p>
-
-<p>§ 20. We have now come to the most gloomy period in
-Pestalozzi’s history, a period of eighteen years, and those
-the best years in a man’s life, which Pestalozzi spent in great
-distress from poverty without and doubt and despondency
-within. When he got into difficulties, his friends, he tells
-us, loved him without hope: “in the whole surrounding
-district it was everywhere said that I was a lost man, that
-nothing more could be done for me.” “In his only too
-elegant country house,” we are told, “he often wanted
-money, bread, fuel, to protect himself against hunger and
-cold.” “Eighteen years!—what a time for a soul like his
-to wait! History passes lightly over such a period. Ten,
-twenty, thirty years—it makes but a cipher difference if
-nothing great happens in them. But with what agony must
-he have seen day after day, year after year gliding by, who
-in his fervent soul longed to labour for the good of mankind
-and yet looked in vain for the opportunity!” (Palmer.)</p>
-
-<p>§ 21. But he who was always ready to sacrifice himself for
-others now found someone, and that a stranger, ready to
-make a great sacrifice for him. A servant, named Elizabeth
-Naef, heard of the disaster and distress at Neuhof, and her
-master having just died she resolved to go to the rescue. At
-first Pestalozzi refused her help. He did not wish her to
-share the poverty of his household, and he felt himself out of
-sympathy with her “evangelical” form of piety. But
-Elizabeth declared she had come to stay, and when
-Pestalozzi found he could not shake her determination he
-consented, saying, “Well, you will find after all that God
-is in our house also.”</p>
-
-<p>§ 22. To this pious sensible but illiterate peasant woman<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_301" id="Page_301">[301]</a></span>
-Pestalozzi was fond of tracing many of his ideas. She was
-the original of his <i>Gertrude</i>, and it was of her he wrote:
-“God’s sun pursues its path from morning to evening; yet
-your eye detects no movement, your ear no sound. Even
-when it goes down, you know that it will rise again and
-continue to ripen the fruits of the earth. Extreme as it may
-seem, I am not ashamed to say that this is an image of
-Gertrude as of every woman who makes her house a temple
-of the living God and wins heaven for her husband and
-children.” (<i>Leonard and Gertrude</i>). She was invaluable at
-Neuhof and restored comfort to the household. In after years
-she managed the establishment at Yverdun and married
-one of the Krüsis who were Pestalozzi’s assistants.</p>
-
-<p>§ 23. Writing of the gloomy years at Neuhof Pestalozzi
-afterwards said; “My head was grey, yet I was still a child.
-With a heart in which all the foundations of life were shaken,
-I still pursued in those stormy times my favourite object,
-but my way was one of prejudice, of passion and of
-error.” But with Pestalozzi self-depreciation had “almost
-grown the habit of his soul,” and in his writings at Neuhof
-at this period we find no traces of this prejudice, passion and
-error from which he supposes himself to have suffered. He
-certainly did not abandon his love of humanity; and in
-his sacrifice for it he sought a religious basis. In these
-Neuhof days he wrote: “Christ teaches us by His example
-and doctrine to sacrifice not only our possessions but ourselves
-for the good of others, and shews us that nothing we
-have received is absolutely ours but is merely entrusted to
-us by God to be piously employed in the service of charity.”
-(Quoted by Guimps. R’s trans. 72.) Whatever were his
-doubts and difficulties, he never swerved from pursuing the
-great object of his life, and nothing could cloud his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_302" id="Page_302">[302]</a></span>
-mind as to the true method of attaining that object. As he
-afterwards wrote to Gessner (<i>Wie Gertrud</i> u.s.w.), “Even
-while I was the sport of men who condemned me I never
-lost sight for a moment of the object I had in view, which
-was the removal of the causes of the misery that I saw on
-all sides of me. My strength too kept on increasing, and my
-own misfortunes taught me valuable truths. I knew the
-people as no one else did. What deceived no one else
-always deceived me, but what deceived everybody else
-deceived me no longer.... My own sufferings have
-enabled me to understand the sufferings of the people and
-their causes as no man without suffering can understand
-them. I suffered what the people suffered and saw them as
-no one else saw them; and strange as it may seem, I was
-never more profoundly convinced of the fundamental truths
-on which I had based my undertaking than when I saw
-that I had failed.” (R’s. Guimps 74.)</p>
-
-<p>§ 24. Pestalozzi still had a few friends who did not
-despise the dreamer of dreams. Among them was the
-editor of the <i>Ephemerides</i>, Iselin. This friend encouraged
-him to write, and there soon appeared in the <i>Ephemerides</i>
-a series of reflexions under the title of “The Evening Hour
-of a Hermit.” Not many editors would have printed these
-aphorisms, and they attracted little or no attention at the
-time, but they have proved worth attending to. “The
-fruit of Pestalozzi’s past years, they are,” says Raumer,
-“at the same time the seed-corn of the years that were to
-come, the plan and key to his action in pedagogy....
-The drawing of the architect of genius contains his work,
-even though the architect himself has not skill enough to
-carry out his own design.” (Quoted by Otto Fischer).<a name="FNanchor_152" id="FNanchor_152"></a><a href="#Footnote_152" class="fnanchor">[152]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_303" id="Page_303">[303]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>§ 25. What was the connexion between Pestalozzi’s
-belief at this season and complete belief in dogmatic
-Christianity? The question is one that will always be asked
-and can never, I think, be fully answered. In the days<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_304" id="Page_304">[304]</a></span>
-preceding the French Revolution it was a proof of wisdom
-to “Cleave ever to the sunnier side of doubt, and cling to
-Faith,” even though the Faith were “beyond the forms of
-Faith” (see Tennyson’s <i>Ancient Sage</i>). But Pestalozzi did
-far more than this. He traced all virtue and strength in
-the people to belief in the Fatherhood of God; and he
-saw in unbelief the severance of all the bonds of society.
-The “Hermit” does not indeed use the phrases common
-among “evangelical” Christians, but that he was indeed a
-Christian is established not only by the general tone of his
-aphorisms but still more clearly by his last words: “The
-Man of God, who with his sufferings and death has restored
-to humanity the lost feeling of the child’s disposition towards
-God is the Redeemer of the world; he is the sacrificed
-Priest of the Lord; he is the Mediator between God and
-God-forgetting mankind. His teaching is pure justice,
-educating philosophy of the people; it is the revelation of
-God the Father to the lost race of his children.”</p>
-
-<p>§ 26. The “Evening Hour” remaining almost unnoticed,
-Pestalozzi’s friends urged him to write something in a more
-popular form. So he set to work on a tale which should
-depict the life of the peasantry and shew the causes of their<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_305" id="Page_305">[305]</a></span>
-degradation and the cure. With extraordinary rapidity he
-wrote between the lines of an old account book the first
-part of his “Leonard and Gertrude.” The book, which was
-complete in itself, and through the good offices of Iselin (of
-the <i>Ephemerides</i>), soon found a publisher, suddenly sprang
-into immense popularity, a popularity of which nothing but
-the “continuations” could ever have deprived it. In the
-works of a great artist we see natural objects represented
-with perfect fidelity and yet with a life breathed into them
-by genius, which is wanting or at least is not visible to
-common eyes in the originals. Just so do we find Swiss
-peasant life depicted by Pestalozzi. The delineation is
-evidently true to nature; and, at the same time, shows
-Nature as she reveals herself to genius. But for this work
-something more than genius was necessary, viz., sympathy
-and love. In the preface to the first edition, he says, “In
-that which I here relate, and which I have, for the most
-part, seen and heard myself in the course of an active life,
-I have taken care not once to add my own opinion to what
-I saw and heard the people themselves saying, feeling;
-believing, judging, and attempting.” In a later edition
-(1800) he says, “I desired nothing then, and I desire
-nothing else now, as the object of my life, but the welfare
-of the people, whom I love, and whom I feel to be miserable
-as few feel them to be miserable, because I have with them
-borne their sufferings as few have borne them.”</p>
-
-<p>§ 27. Wherever German was read this book excited vast
-interest, and though it seemed to most people only a good
-tale, it met with some more discerning readers. The Bern
-Agricultural Society sent the author their thanks and a gold
-medal, and Pestalozzi was at once recognised as a man who
-understood the peasantry and had good ideas for raising<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_306" id="Page_306">[306]</a></span>
-them. The book is and must remain a classic, but
-Pestalozzi in his zeal to spread the truth added again and
-again “continuations,” and these became less and less
-popular in the method of exposition.<a name="FNanchor_153" id="FNanchor_153"></a><a href="#Footnote_153" class="fnanchor">[153]</a></p>
-
-<p>§ 28. Here and there we get glimpses of the trials
-Pestalozzi had gone through in his industrial experiment.
-“The love and patience,” he writes, “with which Gertrude
-bore with the disorderly and untrained little ones was almost
-past belief. Their eyes were often anywhere but on their
-yarn, so that this would now be too thick, and now too thin.
-When they had spoiled it, they would watch for a moment
-when Gertrude was not looking, and throw it out of the
-window by the handful, until they found that she discovered
-the trick when she weighed their work at night.”
-(E. C’s. trans., p. 122.) And in this connexion Pestalozzi
-preached his doctrine of perfect attainment. “‘What you
-can’t do blindfold,’” said Harry, “‘you can’t do at all.’” (<i>ib.</i>)</p>
-
-<p>§ 29. “Gertrude,” we are told, “seemed quite unable to
-explain her method in words;” and here no doubt Pestalozzi
-was speaking of himself; but like Gertrude he “would let
-fall some significant remark which went to the root of the
-whole matter of education.” As an instance we may take<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_307" id="Page_307">[307]</a></span>
-what Gertrude said to the schoolmaster: “You should do
-for the children what their parents fail to do for them. The
-reading, writing, and arithmetic are not after all what they
-most need. It is all well and good for them to learn something,
-but the really important thing for them is to <i>be</i> something.”
-When this truth is fully realized by teachers and
-school managers there will be some hope for national
-education.</p>
-
-<p>§ 30. “Although Gertrude exerted herself to develop very
-early the manual dexterity of her children, she was in no
-haste for them to learn to read and write; but she took
-pains to teach them early how to speak: for, as she said,
-‘Of what use is it for a person to be able to read and
-write if he cannot speak, since reading and writing are only
-an artificial sort of speech.’ ... She did not adopt the
-tone of an instructor towards the children ... and her
-verbal instruction seemed to vanish in the spirit of her real
-activity, in which it always had its source. The result of
-her system was that each child was skilful, intelligent, and
-active to the full extent that its age and development
-allowed.” (<i>Ib.</i> p. 130.)</p>
-
-<p>§ 31. In this book we see that knowledge is treated as
-valueless unless it has a basis in action. “The pastor was
-soon convinced that all verbal instruction in so far as it aims
-at true human wisdom and at the highest goal of this
-wisdom, true religion, ought to be subordinated to a constant
-training in practical domestic labour.... So he
-strove to lead the children without many words to a quiet
-industrious life, and thus to lay the foundations of a silent
-worship of God and love of humanity. To this end he
-connected every word of his brief religious teachings with
-their actual every-day experience, so that when he spoke of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_308" id="Page_308">[308]</a></span>
-God and eternity, it seemed to them as if he were speaking
-of father and mother, house and home; in short of the
-things with which they were most familiar” (p. 156). Thus
-he built on the foundation laid by the schoolmaster, who
-“cared for the children’s heads as he did for their hearts,
-and demanded that whatever entered them should be plain
-and clear as the silent moon in the sky. To insure this he
-taught them to see and hear with accuracy, and cultivated
-their powers of attention” (p. 157).</p>
-
-<p>§ 32. With all his love for the children, an element of
-severity was not wanting. Pestalozzi maintained that “love
-was only useful in the education of men when in conjunction
-with fear: for they must learn to root out thorns
-and thistles, which they never do of their own accord, but
-only under compulsion and in consequence of training”
-(p. 157).</p>
-
-<p>§ 33. Just at the end of the book “the Duke” appoints
-a commission to report on the success of the Bonal experiment,
-and Pestalozzi makes him give the following order:
-“To insure thoroughness there must be among the examiners
-men skilled in law and finance, merchants, clergymen,
-government officials, schoolmasters, and physicians,
-<i>besides women of different ranks and conditions of life</i> who
-shall view the matter with their woman’s eyes and be sure
-there is nothing visionary in the background” (p. 180). In
-this respect Pestalozzi is in advance of us still. No woman
-has yet sat on an educational commission.</p>
-
-<p>§ 34. Thus we find Pestalozzi at the age of thirty-five
-turning author, and for the next six or seven years he worked
-indefatigably with his pen. Most men of genius have some
-leading purpose which unites their varied activities, and
-this was specially true of Pestalozzi. He never lost sight<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_309" id="Page_309">[309]</a></span>
-of his one object, which was the elevation of the people;
-and this he held to be attainable only by means of education
-properly so called. The success of the first part of <i>Leonard
-and Gertrude</i> he now endeavoured to turn to account in
-spreading true ideas of education. With this intent he
-published <i>Christopher and Eliza: My Second Book for the
-People</i> (1782), which was a kind of commentary on <i>Leonard
-and Gertrude</i>. But the public wished to be amused, not
-taught; and the book was a failure. He was thus driven
-into the attempt already mentioned to catch the public ear
-by continuing <i>Leonard and Gertrude</i>, thus endangering his
-first and, as it proved, his only great success in literature.</p>
-
-<p>§ 35. To gain circulation for his ideas he also started a
-weekly paper called the <i>Swiss Journal</i>, and issued it regularly
-throughout the year 1782; but the subscribers were
-so few that he was then obliged to give it up. I have not
-the smallest doubt that it was, as Guimps says, full of wisdom,
-but not the kind of wisdom that readers of periodicals are
-likely to care for.<a name="FNanchor_154" id="FNanchor_154"></a><a href="#Footnote_154" class="fnanchor">[154]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_310" id="Page_310">[310]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>§ 36. In the <i>Swiss Journal</i> we get a hint of the analogy
-between the development of the plant and of the man.
-This analogy, often as it had been observed before, was
-never before so fruitful as it became in the hands of
-Pestalozzi and Froebel. The passage quoted by Guimps is
-this: “Teach me, summer day, that man formed from the
-dust of the earth, grows and ripens like the plant rooted in
-the soil.”</p>
-
-<p>§ 37. Between the close of the year 1787 and 1797
-Pestalozzi did not publish anything. Though he had
-become famous, had made the acquaintance of the greatest
-men in Germany, such as Goethe, Wieland, Herder, and
-Fichte, and had been declared a “Citizen of the French
-Republic,” together with Bentham, Tom Payne, Wilberforce,
-Clarkson, Washington, Madison, Klopstock, Kozciusko, &amp;c.,
-he was nearly starving, and, naturally enough in that state
-of affairs both private and public, he was in great despondency.
-As we have seen, his whole life and work were
-founded on religion and on the only religion possible for us,
-the Christian religion; but carried away by his political
-radicalism he seems at this time to have doubted whether
-Christianity was more than the highest human wisdom. In
-October, 1793, he wrote to a friend in Berlin: “I doubt,
-not because I look on doubt as the truth, but because the
-sum of the impressions of my life has driven faith with its
-blessings from my soul. Thus impelled by my fate I see<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_311" id="Page_311">[311]</a></span>
-nothing more in Christianity but the purest and noblest
-teaching of the victory of the spirit over the flesh, the one
-possible means of raising our nature to its true nobility, or
-in other words of establishing the empire of the reason over
-the senses by the development of the purest feelings of
-the heart.” If this was the lowest point to which Pestalozzi’s
-faith sank in the days of the Revolution, it remained for
-practical purposes higher than the faith of most professing
-Christians then and since.</p>
-
-<p>§ 38. At this time we find him complaining: “My
-agriculture swallows up all my time. I am longing for
-winter with its leisure. My time passes like a shadow.”
-He was then forty-six years of age and seemed to himself
-to have done nothing.</p>
-
-<p>§ 39. Another five years he had to wait before he found
-an opportunity for action. During this time, impelled by
-Fichte, he endeavoured to give his ideas philosophic completeness,
-and after labouring for three years with almost
-incredible toil he published in 1797 his “Inquiry into the
-Course of Nature in the Development of the Human
-Race.” This book is pronounced even by his biographer
-Guimps to be “prolix and obscure,” and, says Pestalozzi,
-“nobody understood me.” But even in this book there was
-much wisdom, had the world cared to learn; but the world
-had then no place for Pestalozzi, and as he says at the end
-of this book, “without even asking whether the fault was
-his or another’s, it crushed him with its iron hammer as the
-mason crushes a useless stone.” He was, however, not
-actually crushed, and a place was in time found for him.</p>
-
-<p>§ 40. The world might be pardoned for neglecting
-an <i>Inquiry</i> which even a biographer finds “prolix and
-obscure.” But why could it see nothing in another book<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_312" id="Page_312">[312]</a></span>
-which Pestalozzi published in the same year, “Figures to
-my ABC Book,” or according to its later title, “Fables,” a
-series of apologues as witty and wise as those of Lessing.<a name="FNanchor_155" id="FNanchor_155"></a><a href="#Footnote_155" class="fnanchor">[155]</a></p>
-
-<p>§ 41. As I have said already (<a href="#Page_239"><i>supra</i> p. 239</a>) there seems
-a marked distinction between thinkers and doers, at least
-in education, and we seldom find a man great in both. But
-with all his weakness as a practical man Pestalozzi proved
-great both as a thinker and a doer. He not only thought
-out what should be done, but he also made splendid efforts
-to do it. His first attempt at Neuhof was, as we have seen,
-all his own; so was the next at Stanz; but afterwards he
-had to work with others, and the work would have come to
-a standstill if he had not gained the co-operation of the
-magistrates, the parents of the children, and his own<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_313" id="Page_313">[313]</a></span>
-assistants. So he never again had the free hand, or at least
-the free thought which bore such good fruit in his enforced
-cessation from practice in the years between 1780 and 1798.
-It is well then to ask, as his biographer Guimps has asked,
-what was the main outcome of Pestalozzi’s thought before
-he plunged into action a second time in 1798.</p>
-
-<p>§ 42. Pestalozzi set himself to find a means of rescuing
-the people from their poverty and degradation. This he
-held would last as long as their moral and intellectual
-poverty lasted; so there was no hope except in an education
-that should make them better and more intelligent. In
-studying the children even of the most degraded parents he
-found the seeds, as it were, of a wealth of faculties, sentiments,
-tastes, and capabilities, which, if developed, might
-make them reasonable and upright human beings. But
-what was called education did nothing of the kind. Instead
-of developing the noblest part of the child’s nature it
-neglected this entirely, and bringing to the child the knowledge,
-ideas, and feelings of others, it tried to make him
-“learn” them. So “education” did little beyond stifling
-the child’s individuality under a mass of borrowed ideas.
-The schoolmaster worked, as it were, from without to within.
-This Pestalozzi would change, and make education begin in
-the child and work from within outwards. Acting on this
-principle he sought for some means of developing the
-child’s inborn faculties, and he found as he says: “Nature
-develops all the powers of humanity by exercising them;
-they increase with use.” (<i>Evening Hour</i>, Aph. 22.) No
-means can be found of exercising the higher faculties which
-can be compared with the actual relations of daily life; so
-Pestalozzi declares: “The pure sentiment of truth and
-wisdom is formed in the narrow circle of the relationships<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_314" id="Page_314">[314]</a></span>
-which affect us, the circumstances which suggest our actions,
-and the common knowledge which we cannot do without.”
-And taking as his starting-point the needs, desires, and connexions
-of actual life he was naturally led to associate the
-work of the body with that of the mind, to develop industry
-and study side by side, to combine the workshop and the
-school. With regard to instruction he was never tired of
-insisting on the importance of thorough mastery in the
-first elements, and there was to be no advance till this
-mastery was attained. (See what “Harry” says, <a href="#Page_306"><i>supra</i>
-p. 306</a>.) “The schools,” he says (<i>E. H.</i>, No. 28), “hastily
-substitute an artificial method of words for the truer method
-of Nature which knows no hurry but waits.”</p>
-
-<p>§ 43. In this account of Pestalozzi’s doctrine before 1798
-I have as usual followed M. Guimps. According to him
-Pestalozzi had discovered “a principle which settles the law
-of man’s development, and is the fundamental principle of
-education.” This principle M. Guimps briefly states as
-follows: “All the real knowledge, useful powers, and noble
-sentiments that a man can acquire are but the extension of
-his individuality by the development of the powers and
-faculties that God has put in him, and by their assimilation
-of the elements supplied by the outer world. There exists
-for this development and the work of assimilation a natural
-and necessary order, an order which the school mostly sets
-at nought.”</p>
-
-<p>§ 44. Now we come to the period of Pestalozzi’s practical
-activity. In 1798 Switzerland was overrun by the French.
-Everything was remodelled after the French pattern; and
-in conformity with the existing phase in the model country
-the government of Switzerland was declared to be in the
-hands of five “Directors.” Pestalozzi was a Radical, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_315" id="Page_315">[315]</a></span>
-he at once set to work to serve the new government with
-his pen. The Directors gladly welcomed such an ally as the
-author of <i>Leonard and Gertrude</i>, and they made him
-editor of a newspaper intended to diffuse the revolutionary
-principles among the people. Naturally enough they supposed
-that he, like other people, “wanted” something; but
-when asked what he wanted he replied simply that he
-wished to be a schoolmaster. The Directors, especially Le
-Grand, took a genuine interest in education, and were quite
-willing that Pestalozzi should be allowed a free hand in his
-“new departure.” They therefore agreed to find the funds
-with which Pestalozzi might open a new Institution in
-Aargau.</p>
-
-<p>§ 45. But the editorship and the plans for the new Institution
-came to an abrupt ending. The Catholic cantons
-did not acquiesce in giving up their local liberties and being
-subjected to a new government in the hands of men whom
-they regarded as heretics and even atheists. Consequently
-those missionaries of enlightenment, the French troops, at
-once fell upon them and slaughtered many without distinction
-of age or sex. The French, we are told, did not
-expect to meet with resistance; so their light became
-lightning and struck dead the stupid people who could
-not or would not see. “Our soldiers” (it is Michelet who
-speaks) “were ferocious at Stanz.” (<i>Nos Fils</i>, 217). This
-ferocity at Stanz in September, 1798, was in secret disapproved
-of by the Directors, who were nominally responsible
-for it. But all they could do was to provide in a
-measure for the “111 infirm old people, the 169 orphans,
-and 237 other children,” who were left totally destitute.
-Le Grand proposed to Pestalozzi that he should, for the
-present, give up his other plans and go to Stanz (which is on<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_316" id="Page_316">[316]</a></span>
-the Lake of Lucerne) to take charge of the orphan and
-destitute children. Pestalozzi was not the man to refuse
-such a task as this. He at once set out. Some buildings
-connected with an Ursuline convent were, without the consent
-of the nuns, made over to him. Workmen were
-employed upon them, and as soon as a single room could
-be inhabited Pestalozzi received forty children into it.
-This was in January, 1799, in the middle of a remarkably
-cold winter.</p>
-
-<p>§ 46. Thus under circumstances perhaps less unfavourable
-than they seemed began the five months’ trial of
-pure Pestalozzianism. The physical difficulties were immense.
-At first Pestalozzi and all the children were shut
-up day and night in a single room. He had throughout
-no helper of any kind but one female servant, and he had
-to do everything for the children, even what was most
-menial and disgusting. As soon as possible the number
-was increased, and before long was nearly eighty, some of
-the children having to go out to sleep. But great as were
-the material difficulties, those arising from the opposition and
-hatred of the people he came to succour were still worse.
-To them he seemed no philanthropist, but only a servant
-of the devil, an agent of the wicked government which had
-sent its ferocious soldiers and slaughtered the parents of
-these poor children, a Protestant who came to complete the
-work by destroying their souls. Pestalozzi, who was making
-heroic efforts in their behalf, seems to have wondered at the
-animosity shown him by the people of Stanz; but on
-looking back we must admit that in the circumstances it
-was only natural.</p>
-
-<p>§ 47. And yet in spite of enormous difficulties of every
-kind Pestalozzi triumphed. Within the five months he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_317" id="Page_317">[317]</a></span>
-spent with them he attached to him the hearts of the
-children, and produced in them a marvellous physical,
-intellectual, and moral change. “If ever there was a
-miracle,” says Michelet, “it was here. It was the reward
-of a strong faith, of a wonderful expansion of heart. He
-believed, he willed, he succeeded.” (<i>Nos Fils</i> 223.)</p>
-
-<p>What was the great act of faith by which Pestalozzi
-triumphed? According to M. Michelet he stood before
-these vicious and degraded children and said, “Man is
-good.” Pestalozzi does not tell us this himself; and as a
-benighted believer in Christianity, I venture to differ from
-the enlightened Michelet. As far as I can judge from
-Pestalozzi’s own teaching the source of his strength was his
-belief in the goodness not of Man but of God.</p>
-
-<p>§ 48. But encouraged and rewarded as he was by the
-result, Pestalozzi could not long have maintained this fearful
-exertion. He was over fifty years of age, and he must soon
-have succumbed; indeed he was already spitting blood when
-in June, 1799, the French soldiers, whose action had
-brought him to Stanz, drove him away again. Falling back
-before the Austrians they had need of a hospital in Stanz,
-and demanded the buildings occupied by Pestalozzi and the
-children. So almost all the children had to be sent away,
-and then at last Pestalozzi took thought for his own health
-and retired to some baths in the mountains. But most of
-his peculiarities in teaching may be said to date from the
-experience at Stanz; and I will therefore give this experience
-in his own words.</p>
-
-<p>§ 49. The following is the account given in his letter to
-his friend Gessner. (I have in part availed myself of Mr.
-Russell’s translation of Guimps, pp. 149 <i>ff.</i>)</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_318" id="Page_318">[318]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“My friend, once more I awake from a dream; once more I see my
-work destroyed, and my failing strength wasted.</p>
-
-<p>“But, however weak and unfortunate my attempt, a friend of
-humanity will not grudge a few moments to consider the reasons which
-convince me that some day a more fortunate posterity will certainly
-take up the thread of my hopes at the place where it is now broken....</p>
-
-<p>“I once more made known, as well as I could, my old wishes for the
-education of the people. In particular, I laid my whole scheme before
-Legrand (then one of the Directors), who not only took a warm interest
-in it, but agreed with me that the Republic stood in urgent need of a
-reform of public education. He also agreed with me that much might
-be done for the regeneration of the people by giving a certain number
-of the poorest children an education which should be complete, but
-which, far from lifting them out of their proper sphere, would but attach
-them the more strongly to it.</p>
-
-<p>“I limited my desires to this one point, Legrand helping me in
-every possible way. He even thought my views so important that he
-once said to me: ‘I shall not willingly give up my present post till
-you have begun your work.’ ...</p>
-
-<p>“It was my intention to try to find near Zurich or in Aargau a place
-where I should be able to join industry and agriculture to the other
-means of instruction, and so give my establishment all the development
-necessary to its complete success. But the Unterwalden disaster
-(September, 1798) left me no further choice in the matter. The
-Government felt the urgent need of sending help to this unfortunate
-district, and begged me for this once to make an attempt to put my
-plans into execution in a place where almost everything that could have
-made it a success was wanting.</p>
-
-<p>“I went there gladly. I felt that the innocence of the people would
-make up for what was wanting, and that their distress would, at any
-rate, make them grateful.</p>
-
-<p>“My eagerness to realise at last the great dream of my life would have
-led me to work on the very highest peaks of the Alps, and, so to speak,
-without fire or water.</p>
-
-<p>“For a house, the Government made over to me the new part of the
-Ursuline convent at Stanz, but when I arrived it was still uncompleted,
-and not in any way fitted to receive a large number of children. Before
-anything else could be done, then, the house itself had to be got ready.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_319" id="Page_319">[319]</a></span>
-The Government gave the necessary orders, and Rengger pushed on the
-work with much zeal and useful activity. I was never indeed allowed
-to want for money.</p>
-
-<p>“In spite, however, of the admirable support I received, all this
-preparation took time, and time was precisely what we could least
-afford, since it was of the highest importance that a number of
-children, whom the war had left homeless and destitute, should be
-received at once.</p>
-
-<p>“I was still without everything but money when the children crowded
-in; neither kitchen, rooms, nor beds were ready to receive them. At
-first this was a source of inconceivable confusion. For the first few
-weeks I was shut up in a very small room; the weather was bad, and
-the alterations, which made a great dust and filled the corridors with
-rubbish, rendered the air very unhealthy.</p>
-
-<p>“The want of beds compelled me at first to send some of the poor
-children home at night; these children generally came back the next
-day covered with vermin. Most of them on their arrival were very
-degenerated specimens of humanity. Many of them had a sort
-of chronic skin-disease, which almost prevented their walking, or sores
-on their heads, or rags full of vermin; many were almost skeletons,
-with haggard, careworn faces, and shrinking looks; some brazen,
-accustomed to begging, hypocrisy, and all sorts of deceit; others broken
-by misfortune, patient, suspicious, timid, and entirely devoid of
-affection. There were also some spoilt children amongst them who had
-known the sweets of comfort, and were therefore full of pretensions.
-These kept to themselves, affected to despise the little beggars their
-comrades, and to suffer from this equality, and seemed to find it impossible
-to adapt themselves to the ways of the house, which differed
-too much from their old habits. But what was common to them all
-was a persistent idleness, resulting from their want of physical and
-mental activity. Out of every ten children there was hardly one who
-knew his A B C; as for any other knowledge, it was, of course, out of
-the question.</p>
-
-<p>“The entire absence of school learning was what troubled me least,
-for I trusted in the natural powers that God bestows on even the poorest
-and most neglected children. I had observed for a long time that
-behind their coarseness, shyness, and apparent incapacity, are hidden
-the finest faculties, the most precious powers; and now, even amongst<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_320" id="Page_320">[320]</a></span>
-these poor creatures by whom I was surrounded at Stanz, marked
-natural abilities soon began to show themselves. I knew how useful
-the common needs of life are in teaching men the relations of things, in
-bringing out their natural intelligence, in forming their judgment, and
-in arousing faculties which, buried, as it were, beneath the coarser
-elements of their nature, cannot become active and useful till they are
-set free. It was my object then to set free these faculties, and bring
-them to bear on the pure and simple circumstances of domestic life, for
-I was convinced this was all that was wanting, and these natural
-faculties would shew themselves capable of raising the hearts and minds
-of my pupils to all that I could desire.</p>
-
-<p>“I saw then how my wishes might be carried out; and I was persuaded
-that my affection would change the state of my children just as quickly
-as the spring sun would awake to new life the earth that winter had
-benumbed. I was not deceiving myself: before the spring sun melted
-the snow of our mountains my children were hardly to be recognised.</p>
-
-<p>“But I must not anticipate. Just as in the evening I often mark the
-quick growth of the gourd by the side of the house, so I want you to
-mark the growth of my plant; and, my friend, I will not hide from
-you the worm which sometimes fastens on the leaves, sometimes even
-on the heart.</p>
-
-<p>“I opened the establishment with no other helper but a woman-servant.
-I had not only to teach the children, but to look after their
-physical needs. I preferred being alone, and, unfortunately, it was the
-only way to reach my end. No one in the world would have cared to
-enter into my views for the education of children, and at that time I
-knew scarcely any one even capable of it.</p>
-
-<p>“In proportion as the men whom I might have called to my aid were
-highly educated just so far they failed to understand me, and were
-incapable of confining themselves even in theory to the simple starting-points
-which I sought to come back to. All their views about the
-organisation and requirements of the enterprise differed entirely from
-mine. What they specially objected to was the notion that the enterprise
-might be carried out without the aid of any artificial means, and
-simply by the influence of nature in the environment of the children,
-and by the activity aroused in them by the needs of their daily life.</p>
-
-<p>“And yet it was precisely upon this idea that I based all my hope of
-success; it was, as it were, a basis for innumerable other points of view.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_321" id="Page_321">[321]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Experienced teachers, then, could not help me; still less boorish,
-ignorant men. I had nothing to put into the hands of assistants to
-guide them, nor any results or apparatus by which I could make my
-ideas clearer to them. Thus, whether I would or no, I had first to
-make my experiment alone, and collect facts to illustrate the essential
-features of my system before I could venture to look for outside help.
-Indeed, in my then position, nobody could help me. I knew that I must
-help myself and shaped my plans accordingly.</p>
-
-<p>“I wanted to prove by my experiment that if public education is to
-have any real value for humanity, it must imitate the means which make
-the merit of domestic education; for it is my opinion that if school
-teaching does not take into consideration the circumstances of family life,
-and everything else that bears on a man’s general education, it can only
-lead to an artificial and methodical dwarfing of humanity.</p>
-
-<p>“In any good education, the mother must be able to judge daily, nay
-hourly, from the child’s eyes, lips, and face, of the slightest change in
-his soul. The power of the educator, too, must be that of a father,
-quickened by the general circumstances of domestic life.</p>
-
-<p>“Such was the foundation upon which I built. I determined
-that there should not be a minute in the day when my children should
-not be aware from my face and my lips that my heart was theirs, that
-their happiness was my happiness, and their pleasures my pleasures.</p>
-
-<p>“Man readily accepts what is good, and the child readily listens to
-it; but it is not for you that he wants it, master and educator, but for
-himself. The good to which you would lead him must not depend on
-your capricious humour or passion; it must be a good which is good in
-itself and by the nature of things, and which the child can recognize as
-good. He must feel the necessity of your will in things which concern
-his comfort before he can be expected to obey it.</p>
-
-<p>“Whatever he does gladly, whatever gains him credit, whatever
-tends to accomplish his great hopes, whatever awakens his powers and
-enables him truly to say <i>I can</i>, all this he <i>wills</i>.</p>
-
-<p>“But this will is not aroused by words; it is aroused only by a kind
-of complete culture which gives feelings and powers. Words do not
-give the thing itself, but only an expression, a clear picture, of the thing
-which we already have in our minds.</p>
-
-<p>“Before all things I was bound to gain the confidence and the
-love of the children. I was sure that if I succeeded in this all the rest<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_322" id="Page_322">[322]</a></span>
-would come of itself. Friend, only think how I was placed, and how
-great were the prejudices of the people and of the children themselves,
-and you will comprehend what difficulties I had to overcome.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>After narrating what we already know he goes on:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“Think, my friend, of this temper of the people, of my weakness,
-of my poor appearance, of the ill-will to which I was almost publicly
-exposed, and then judge how much I had to endure for the sake of
-carrying on my work.</p>
-
-<p>“And yet, however painful this want of help and support was to me,
-it was favourable to the success of my undertaking, for it compelled me
-to be always everything for my children. I was alone with them from
-morning till night. It was from me that they received all that could
-do them good, soul and body. All needful help, consolation, and
-instruction they received direct from me. Their hands were in mine,
-my eyes were fixed on theirs.</p>
-
-<p>“We wept and smiled together. They forgot the world and Stanz;
-they only knew that they were with me and I with them. We shared
-our food and drink. I had about me neither family, friends, nor
-servants; nothing but them. I was with them in sickness, and in
-health, and when they slept. I was the last to go to bed, and the first
-to get up. In the bedroom I prayed with them, and, at their own
-request, taught them till they fell asleep. Their clothes and bodies
-were intolerably filthy, but I looked after both myself, and was thus
-constantly exposed to the risk of contagion.</p>
-
-<p>“This is how it was that these children gradually became so attached
-to me, some indeed so deeply that they contradicted their parents and
-friends when they heard evil things said about me. They felt that I
-was being treated unfairly, and loved me, I think, the more for it.
-But of what avail is it for the young nestlings to love their mother when
-the bird of prey that is bent on destroying them is constantly hovering near?</p>
-
-<p>“However, the first results of these principles and of this line of
-action were not always satisfactory, nor, indeed, could they be so.
-The children did not always understand my love. Accustomed to
-idleness, unbounded liberty, and the fortuitous and lawless pleasures of
-an almost wild life, they had come to the convent in the expectation of
-being well fed, and of having nothing to do. Some of them soon
-discovered that they had been there long enough, and wanted to go
-away again; they talked of the school fever that attacks children when<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_323" id="Page_323">[323]</a></span>
-they are kept employed all day long. This dissatisfaction, which
-showed itself during the first months, resulted principally from the fact
-that many of them were ill, the consequence either of the sudden
-change of diet and habits, or of the severity of the weather and the
-dampness of the building in which we lived. We all coughed a great
-deal, and several children were seized with a peculiar sort of fever.
-This fever, which always began with sickness, was very general in the
-district. Cases of sickness, however, not followed by fever, were not
-at all rare, and were an almost natural consequence of the change of
-food. Many people attributed the fever to bad food, but the facts soon
-showed them to be wrong, for not a single child succumbed.</p>
-
-<p>“On the return of spring it was evident to everybody that the
-children were all doing well, growing rapidly, and gaining colour.
-Certain magistrates and ecclesiastics, who saw them some time afterwards,
-stated that they had improved almost beyond recognition....</p>
-
-<p>“Months passed before I had the satisfaction of having my hand
-grasped by a single grateful parent. But the children were won over
-much sooner. They even wept sometimes when their parents met me
-or left me without a word of salutation. Many of them were perfectly
-happy, and used to say to their mothers: ‘I am better here than at
-home.’ At home, indeed, as they readily told me when we talked
-alone, they had been ill-used and beaten, and had often had neither
-bread to eat nor bed to lie down upon. And yet these same children
-would sometimes go off with their mothers the very next morning.</p>
-
-<p>“A good many others, however, soon saw that by staying with me
-they might both learn something and become something, and these never
-failed in their zeal and attachment. Before very long their conduct
-was imitated by others who had not altogether the same feelings.</p>
-
-<p>“Those who ran away were the worst in character and the least
-capable. But they were not incited to go till they were free of their
-vermin and their rags. Several were sent to me with no other purpose
-than that of being taken away again as soon as they were clean and
-well clothed.</p>
-
-<p>“But after a time their better judgment overcame the defiant hostility
-with which they arrived. In 1799<a name="FNanchor_156" id="FNanchor_156"></a><a href="#Footnote_156" class="fnanchor">[156]</a> I had nearly eighty children.
-Most of them were bright and intelligent, some even remarkably so.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_324" id="Page_324">[324]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“For most of them study was something entirely new. As soon as
-they found that they could learn, their zeal was indefatigable, and in a
-few weeks children who had never before opened a book, and could
-hardly repeat a <i>Pater Noster</i> or an <i>Ave</i>, would study the whole day
-long with the keenest interest. Even after supper, when I used to say
-to them, ‘Children, will you go to bed, or learn something?’ they
-would generally answer, especially in the first month or two, ‘Learn
-something.’ It is true that afterwards, when they had to get up very
-early, it was not quite the same.</p>
-
-<p>“But this first eagerness did much towards starting the establishment
-on the right lines, and making the studies the success they ultimately
-were, a success indeed, which far surpassed my expectations. And
-yet great beyond expression were my difficulties. I did not as yet find
-it possible to organise the studies properly.</p>
-
-<p>“Neither my trust nor my zeal had been able to overcome either the
-intractability of individuals or the want of coherence in the whole
-experiment. The general order of the establishment, I felt, must be
-based upon order of a higher character. As this higher order did not
-yet exist, I had to attempt to create it; for without this foundation I
-could not hope to organise properly either the teaching or the general
-management of the place, nor should I have wished to do so. I wanted
-everything to result not from a preconceived plan, but from my
-relations with the children. The high principles and educating forces
-I was seeking, I looked for from the harmonious common life of my
-children, from their common attention, activity, and needs. It was not,
-then, from any external organisation that I looked for the regeneration
-of which they stood so much in need. If I had employed constraint,
-regulations, and lectures, I should, instead of winning and ennobling
-my children’s hearts, have repelled them and made them bitter, and
-thus been farther than ever from my aim. First of all, I had to arouse
-in them pure, moral, and noble feelings, so that afterwards, in external
-things, I might be sure of their ready attention, activity, and obedience.
-I had, in short, to follow the high precept of Jesus Christ, ‘Cleanse first
-that which is within, that the outside may be clean also; and if ever
-the truth of this precept was made manifest, it was made manifest then.</p>
-
-<p>“My one aim was to make their new life in common, and their new
-powers, awaken a feeling of brotherhood amongst the children, and
-make them affectionate, just, and considerate.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_325" id="Page_325">[325]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“I was successful in gaining my aims. Amongst these seventy wild
-beggar-children there soon existed such peace, friendship, and cordial
-relations as are rare even between actual brothers and sisters.</p>
-
-<p>“The principle to which I endeavoured to conform all my conduct
-was as follows: Endeavour, first, to broaden your children’s
-sympathies, and, by satisfying their daily needs, to bring love and
-kindness into such unceasing contact with their impressions and their
-activity, that these sentiments may be engrafted in their hearts; then
-try to give them such judgment and tact as will enable them to make a
-wise, sure, and abundant use of these virtues in the circle which
-surrounds them. In the last place, do not hesitate to touch on the
-difficult questions of good and evil, and the words connected with
-them. And you must do this especially in connection with the ordinary
-events of every day, upon which your whole teaching in these matters
-must be founded, so that the children may be reminded of their own
-feelings, and supplied, as it were, with solid facts upon which to base
-their conception of the beauty and justice of the moral life. Even though
-you should have to spend whole nights in trying to express in two
-words what others say in twenty, never regret the loss of sleep.</p>
-
-<p>“I gave my children very few explanations; I taught them neither
-morality nor religion. But sometimes, when they were perfectly quiet,
-I used to say to them, ‘Do you not think that you are better and more
-reasonable when you are like this than when you are making a noise?’
-When they clung round my neck and called me their father, I used to
-say, ‘My children, would it be right to deceive your father? After
-kissing me like this, would you like to do anything behind my back to
-vex me?’ When our talk turned on the misery of the country, and
-they were feeling glad at the thought of their own happier lot, I would
-say, ‘How good God is to have given man a compassionate heart!’ ...
-They perfectly understood that all they did was but a preparation
-for their future activity, and they looked forward to happiness as
-the certain result of their perseverance. That is why steady application
-soon became easy to them, its object being in perfect accordance with
-their wishes and their hopes. Virtue, my friend, is developed by this
-agreement, just as the young plant thrives when the soil suits its nature,
-and supplies the needs of its tender shoots.</p>
-
-<p>“I witnessed the growth of an inward strength in my children,
-which, in its general development, far surpassed my expectations, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_326" id="Page_326">[326]</a></span>
-in its particular manifestations not only often surprised me, but touched
-me deeply.</p>
-
-<p>“When the neighbouring town of Altdorf was burnt down, I
-gathered the children round me, and said, ‘Altdorf has been burnt
-down; perhaps, at this very moment, there are a hundred children
-there without home, food, or clothes; will you not ask our good
-Government to let twenty of them come and live with us?’ I still
-seem to see the emotion with which they answered, ‘Oh, yes, yes!’
-‘But, my children,’ I said, ‘think well of what you are asking! Even
-now we have scarcely money enough, and it is not at all certain that if
-these poor children came to us, the Government would give us any
-more than they do at present, so that you might have to work harder,
-and share your clothes with these children, and sometimes perhaps go
-without food. Do not say, then, that you would like them to come
-unless you are quite prepared for all these consequences.’ After having
-spoken to them in this way as seriously as I could, I made them repeat
-all I had said, to be quite sure that they had thoroughly understood
-what the consequences of their request would be. But they were not
-in the least shaken in their decision, and all repeated, ‘Yes, yes, we
-are quite ready to work harder, eat less, and share our clothes, for we
-want them to come.’</p>
-
-<p>“Some refugees from the Grisons having given me a few crowns for
-my poor children, I at once called them and said, ‘These men are
-obliged to leave their country; they hardly know where they will find
-a home to-morrow, yet, in spite of their trouble, they have given me
-this for you. Come and thank them.’ And the emotion of the
-children brought tears to the eyes of the refugees.</p>
-
-<p>“It was in this way that I strove to awaken the feeling of each
-virtue before talking about it, for I thought it unwise to talk to children
-on subjects which would compel them to speak without thoroughly
-understanding what they were saying.</p>
-
-<p>“I followed up this awakening of the sentiments by exercises intended
-to teach the children self-control, so that all that was good in them
-might be applied to the practical questions of every-day life.</p>
-
-<p>“It will easily be understood that, in this respect, it was not possible
-to organise any system of discipline for the establishment; that could
-only come slowly, as the general work developed.</p>
-
-<p>“Silence, as an aid to application, is perhaps the great secret of such<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_327" id="Page_327">[327]</a></span>
-an institution. I found it very useful to insist on silence when I was
-teaching, and also to pay particular attention to the attitude of my
-children. I succeeded so well that the moment I asked for silence, I
-could teach in quite a low voice. The children repeated my words all
-together; and as there was no other sound, I was able to detect the
-slightest mistakes of pronunciation. It is true that this was not always
-so. Sometimes, whilst they repeated sentences after me, I would ask
-them as if in fun to keep their eyes fixed on their middle fingers. It is
-hardly credible how useful simple things of this sort sometimes are
-as means to the very highest ends.</p>
-
-<p>“One young girl, for instance, who had been little better than a
-savage, by keeping her head and body upright, and not looking about,
-made more progress in her moral education than any one would have
-believed possible.</p>
-
-<p>“These experiences have shown me that the mere habit of carrying
-oneself well does much more for the education of the moral sentiments
-than any amount of teaching and lectures in which this simple fact is
-ignored.</p>
-
-<p>“Thanks to the application of these principles, my children soon
-became more open, more contented and more susceptible to every good
-and noble influence than any one could possibly have foreseen when
-they first came to me, so utterly devoid were they of ideas, good
-feelings, and moral principles. As a matter of fact, this lack of
-previous instruction was not a serious obstacle to me; indeed, it hardly
-troubled me at all. I am inclined even to say that, in the simple
-method I was following, it was often an advantage, for I had incomparably
-less trouble to develop those children whose minds were still
-blank, than those who had already acquired inaccurate ideas. The
-former, too, were much more open than the latter to the influence of all
-pure and simple sentiments.</p>
-
-<p>“But when the children were obdurate and churlish, then I was
-severe, and made use of corporal punishment.</p>
-
-<p>“My dear friend, the pedagogical principle which says that we must
-win the hearts and minds of our children by words alone without
-having recourse to corporal punishment, is certainly good, and applicable
-under favourable conditions and circumstances; but with children of
-such widely different ages as mine, children for the most part beggars,
-and all full of deeply-rooted faults, a certain amount of corporal punishment<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_328" id="Page_328">[328]</a></span>
-was inevitable, especially as I was anxious to arrive surely,
-speedily, and by the simplest means, at gaining an influence over them
-all, for the sake of putting them all in the right road. I was compelled
-to punish them, but it would be a mistake to suppose that I thereby, in
-any way, lost the confidence of my pupils.</p>
-
-<p>“It is not the rare and isolated actions that form the opinions and
-feelings of children, but the impressions of every day and every hour.
-From such impressions they judge whether we are kindly disposed
-towards them or not, and this settles their general attitude towards us.
-Their judgment of isolated actions depends upon this general attitude.</p>
-
-<p>“This is how it is that punishments inflicted by parents rarely make
-a bad impression. But it is quite different with schoolmasters and
-teachers who are not with their children night and day, and have none
-of those relations with them which result from life in common.</p>
-
-<p>“My punishments never produced obstinacy; the children I had
-beaten were quite satisfied if a moment afterwards I gave them my
-hand and kissed them, and I could read in their eyes that the final
-effect of my blows was really joy. The following is a striking instance
-of the effect this sort of punishment sometimes had. One day one of
-the children I liked best, taking advantage of my affection, unjustly
-threatened one of his companions. I was very indignant, and my
-hand did not spare him. He seemed at first almost broken-hearted, and
-cried bitterly for at least a quarter of an hour. When I had gone out,
-however, he got up, and going to the boy he had ill-treated, begged his
-pardon, and thanked him for having spoken about his bad conduct.
-My friend, this was no comedy; the child had never seen anything
-like it before.</p>
-
-<p>“It was impossible that this sort of treatment should produce a bad
-impression on my children, because all day long I was giving them
-proofs of my affection and devotion. They could not misread my
-heart, and so they did not misjudge my actions. It was not the same
-with the parents, friends, strangers, and teachers who visited us; but
-that was natural. But I cared nothing for the opinion of the whole
-world, provided my children understood me.</p>
-
-<p>“I always did my best, therefore, to make them clearly understand
-the motives of my actions in all matters likely to excite their attention
-and interest. This, my friend, brings me to the consideration of the
-moral means to be employed in a truly domestic education.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_329" id="Page_329">[329]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Elementary moral education, considered as a whole, includes three
-distinct parts: the children’s moral sense must first be aroused by their
-feelings being made active and pure; then they must be exercised in
-self-control, so that they may give themselves to that which is right and
-good; finally they must be brought to form for themselves, by reflection
-and comparison, a just notion of the moral rights and duties which are
-theirs by reason of their position and surroundings.</p>
-
-<p>“So far, I have pointed out some of the means I employed to reach
-the first two of these ends. They were just as simple for the third; for
-I still made use of the impressions and experiences of their daily life to
-give my children a true and exact idea of right and duty. When, for
-instance, they made a noise, I appealed to their own judgment, and
-asked them if it was possible to learn under such conditions. I shall
-never forget how strong and true I generally found their sense of
-justice and reason, and how this sense increased and, as it were, established
-their good will.</p>
-
-<p>“I appealed to them in all matters that concerned the establishment.
-It was generally in the quiet evening hours that I appealed to their free
-judgment. When, for instance, it was reported in the village that they
-had not enough to eat, I said to them, ‘Tell me, my children, if you
-are not better fed than you were at home? Think, and tell me yourselves,
-whether it would be well to keep you here in such a way as
-would make it impossible for you afterwards, in spite of all your application
-and hard work, to procure what you had become accustomed to.
-Do you lack anything that is really necessary? Do you think that I
-could reasonably and justly do more for you? Would you have me
-spend all the money that is entrusted to me on thirty or forty children
-instead of on eighty as at present? Would that be just?’</p>
-
-<p>“In the same way, when I heard that it was reported that I punished
-them too severely, I said to them: ‘You know how I love you, my
-children; but tell me would you like me to stop punishing you? Do
-you think that in any other way I can free you from your deeply-rooted
-bad habits, or make you always mind what I say?’ You were there,
-my friend, and saw with your own eyes the sincere emotion with which
-they answered, ‘We don’t complain about your hitting us. We wish
-we never deserved it. But we want to be punished when we do wrong.’</p>
-
-<p>“Many things that make no difference in a small household could
-not be tolerated where the numbers were so great. I tried to make<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_330" id="Page_330">[330]</a></span>
-my children feel this, always leaving them to decide what could or
-could not be allowed. It is true that in my intercourse with them I
-never spoke of liberty or equality; but, at the same time, I encouraged
-them as far as possible to be free and unconstrained in my presence, with
-the result that every day I marked more and more that clear open look
-in their eyes which, in my experience, is the sign of a really liberal
-education. I could not bear the thought of betraying the trust in me
-which I saw shining in their eyes; I strove constantly to strengthen it
-and at the same time their free individuality, that nothing might happen
-to trouble those angel-eyes, the sight of which caused me the most
-intense delight. But I could not endure frowns and anxious looks; I
-myself smoothed away the frowns; then the children smiled, and even
-among themselves they took care not to shew frowning faces.</p>
-
-<p>“By reason of their great number, I had occasion nearly every day
-to point out the difference between good and evil, justice and injustice.
-Good and evil are equally contagious amongst so many children, so that,
-according as the good or bad sentiments spread, the establishment was
-likely to become either much better or much worse than if it had only contained
-a smaller number. About this, too, I talked to them frankly. I shall
-never forget the impression that my words produced when, in speaking
-of a certain disturbance that had taken place among them, I said,
-‘My children, it is the same with us as with every other household;
-when the children are numerous, and each gives way to his bad habits,
-the disorder becomes such that the weakest mother is driven to take
-sensible measures in bringing up her children, and make them submit to
-what is just and right. And that is what I must do now. If you do
-not willingly assist in the maintenance of order, our establishment
-cannot go on, you will fall back into your former condition, and your
-misery—now that you have been accustomed to a good home, clean
-clothes, and regular food—will be greater than ever. In this world, my
-children, necessity and conviction alone can teach a man to behave;
-when both fail him, he is hateful. Think for a moment what you
-would become if you were safe from want and cared nothing for right,
-justice, or goodness. At home there was always some one who looked
-after you, and poverty itself forced you to many a right action; but with
-convictions and reason to guide you, you will rise far higher than by
-following necessity alone.’</p>
-
-<p>“I often spoke to them in this way without troubling in the least<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_331" id="Page_331">[331]</a></span>
-whether they each understood every word, feeling quite sure that
-they all caught the general sense of what I said....</p>
-
-<p>“Here are a few more thoughts which produced a great impression on
-my children: ‘Do you know anything greater or nobler than to give
-counsel to the poor, and comfort to the unfortunate? But if you remain
-ignorant and incapable, you will be obliged, in spite of your good heart,
-to let things take their course; whereas, if you acquire knowledge and
-power, you will be able to give good advice, and save many a man from
-misery.’</p>
-
-<p>“I have generally found that great, noble, and high thoughts are
-indispensable for developing wisdom and firmness of character.</p>
-
-<p>“Such an instruction must be complete in the sense that it must take
-account of all our aptitudes and all our circumstances; it must be conducted,
-too, in a truly psychological spirit, that is to say, simply,
-lovingly, energetically, and calmly. Then, by its very nature, it produces
-an enlightened and delicate feeling for everything true and good,
-and brings to light a number of accessory and dependent truths, which
-are forthwith accepted and assimilated by the human soul, even in the
-case of those who could not express these truths in words.</p>
-
-<p>“I believe that the first development of thought in the child is very
-much disturbed by a wordy system of teaching, which is not adapted
-either to his faculties or the circumstances of his life. According to my
-experience, success depends upon whether what is taught to children
-commends itself to them as true through being closely connected with
-their own personal observation and experience....</p>
-
-<p>“I knew no other order, method, or art, but that which resulted
-naturally from my children’s conviction of my love for them, nor did I
-care to know any other.</p>
-
-<p>“Thus I subordinated the instruction of my children to a higher aim,
-which was to arouse and strengthen their best sentiments by the relations
-of every-day life as they existed between themselves and me....</p>
-
-<p>“As a general rule I attached little importance to the study of
-words, even when explanations of the ideas they represented were
-given.</p>
-
-<p>“I tried to connect study with manual labour, the school with the
-workshop, and make one thing of them. But I was the less able to do
-this as staff, material, and tools were all wanting. A short time only
-before the close of the establishment, a few children had begun to spin;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_332" id="Page_332">[332]</a></span>
-and I saw clearly that, before any fusion could be effected, the two parts
-must be firmly established separately—study, that is, on the one hand,
-and labour on the other.</p>
-
-<p>“But in the work of the children I was already inclined to care less
-for the immediate gain than for the physical training which, by developing
-their strength and skill, was bound to supply them later with a
-means of livelihood. In the same way I considered that what is
-generally called the instruction of children should be merely an exercise
-of the faculties, and I felt it important to exercise the attention,
-observation, and memory first, so as to strengthen these faculties before
-calling into play the art of judging and reasoning; this, in my opinion,
-was the best way to avoid turning out that sort of superficial and presumptuous
-talker, whose false judgments are often more fatal to the
-happiness and progress of humanity than the ignorance of simple people
-of good sense.</p>
-
-<p>“Guided by these principles, I sought less at first to teach my
-children to spell, read, and write than to make use of these exercises
-for the purpose of giving their minds as full and as varied a development
-as possible....</p>
-
-<p>“In natural history they were very quick in corroborating what I
-taught them by their own personal observations on plants and animals.
-I am quite sure that, by continuing in this way, I should soon have
-been able not only to give them such a general acquaintance with the
-subject as would have been useful in any vocation, but also to put
-them in a position to carry on their education themselves by means of
-their daily observations and experiences; and I should have been able
-to do all this without going outside the very restricted sphere to which
-they were confined by the actual circumstances of their lives. I hold it
-to be extremely important that men should be encouraged to learn by
-themselves and allowed to develop freely. It is in this way alone that
-the diversity of individual talent is produced and made evident.</p>
-
-<p>“I always made the children learn perfectly even the least important
-things, and I never allowed them to lose ground; a word once learnt, for
-instance, was never to be forgotten, and a letter once well written never
-to be written badly again. I was very patient with all who were weak
-or slow, but very severe with those who did anything less well than they
-had done it before.</p>
-
-<p>“The number and inequality of my children rendered my task easier.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_333" id="Page_333">[333]</a></span>
-Just as in a family the eldest and cleverest child readily shows what he
-knows to his younger brothers and sisters, and feels proud and happy to
-be able to take his mother’s place for a moment, so my children were
-delighted when they knew something that they could teach others. A
-sentiment of honour awoke in them, and they learned twice as well by
-making the younger ones repeat their words. In this way I soon had
-helpers and collaborators amongst the children themselves. When I
-was teaching them to spell difficult words by heart, I used to allow any
-child who succeeded in saying one properly to teach it to the others.
-These child-helpers, whom I had formed from the very outset, and who
-had followed my method step by step, were certainly much more useful
-to me than any regular schoolmasters could have been.</p>
-
-<p>“I myself learned with the children. Our whole system was so
-simple and so natural that I should have had difficulty in finding a
-master who would not have thought it undignified to learn and teach as
-I was doing....</p>
-
-<p>“You will hardly believe that it was the Capuchin friars and the nuns
-of the convent that showed the greatest sympathy with my work. Few
-people, except Truttman, took any active interest in it. Those from
-whom I had hoped most were too deeply engrossed with their high
-political affairs to think of our little institution as having the least degree
-of importance.</p>
-
-<p>“Such were my dreams; but at the very moment that I seemed to be
-on the point of realizing them, I had to leave Stanz.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>§ 50. Heroic efforts rise above the measurement of time.
-As Byron has said, “A thought is capable of years,” and it
-seldom happens that the nobleness of any human action
-depends on the time it lasts. Pestalozzi’s five months’
-experiment at Stanz proved one of the most memorable
-events in the history of education. He was now completely
-satisfied that he saw his way to giving children a right
-education and “thus raising the beggar out of the dung-hill”;
-and seeing the right course he was urged by his love of the
-people into taking it. But how was he to set to work?
-His notions of school instruction differed entirely from<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_334" id="Page_334">[334]</a></span>
-those of the teaching profession; and even in the revolutionary
-age they had some reason for looking askance at
-this revolutionist. “He had everything against him,” we
-read, “thick, indistinct speech, bad writing, ignorance of
-drawing, scorn of grammatical learning. He had studied
-various branches of natural history, but without any particular
-attention either to classification or terminology. He was
-conversant with the ordinary operations in arithmetic, but
-he would have had difficulty in getting through a really long
-sum in multiplication or division; and he probably had
-never tried to work out a problem in geometry. For years
-this dreamer had read no books. But instead of the usual
-knowledge that any young man of ordinary talent can acquire
-in a year or two, he understood thoroughly what most
-masters were entirely ignorant of—the mind of man and the
-laws of its development, human affections and the art of
-arousing and ennobling them. He seemed to have almost
-an intuitive insight into the development of human nature,
-and was never tired of contemplating it.” (C. Monnard in
-R.’s Guimps, p. 174.)<a name="FNanchor_157" id="FNanchor_157"></a><a href="#Footnote_157" class="fnanchor">[157]</a></p>
-
-<p>§ 51. This man wished to be a schoolmaster, but who
-would venture to entrust him with a school? No one
-seemed willing to do this; and he would have been at a
-loss where to turn had he not had influential friends at
-Burgdorf, a town not far from Bern. These got for him
-permission to teach, not indeed the children of burgesses but<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_335" id="Page_335">[335]</a></span>
-the children of non-burgesses, seventy-three of whom used to
-assemble under a shoemaker in his house in the suburbs.
-With this arrangement, however, the shoemaker and the
-parents of the children were by no means satisfied. “If
-the burgesses like the new method,” they said very
-reasonably, “let them try it on their own children.” Their
-grumbling was heard, and permission to teach was withdrawn
-from Pestalozzi.</p>
-
-<p>§ 52. The check, however, was only temporary. His friends
-were wiser than the shoemaker, and they procured for him
-admission into the lowest class of the school for burghers’
-children. In this class there were about 25 children, boys
-and girls between the ages of 5 and 8. Here he proved
-that he was vastly different from a mere dreamer. After
-teaching these children in his own way for eight months he
-received the first official recognition of the merits of his
-system. The Burgdorf School Commission after the usual
-examination, wrote a public letter to Pestalozzi, in which they
-said: “The surprising progress of your little scholars of
-various capacities shews plainly that every one is good for
-something, if the teacher knows how to get at his abilities
-and develop them according to the laws of psychology. By
-your method of teaching you have proved how to lay the
-groundwork of instruction in such a way that it may afterwards
-support what is built on it.... Between the ages of 5
-and 8, a period in which according to the system of torture
-enforced hitherto, children have learnt to know their letters,
-to spell and read, your scholars have not only accomplished
-all this with a success as yet unknown, but the best of them
-have already distinguished themselves by their good writing,
-drawing, and calculating. In them all you have been able
-so to arouse and excite a liking for history, natural history,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_336" id="Page_336">[336]</a></span>
-mensuration, geography, &amp;c., that thus future teachers must
-find their task a far easier one if they only know how to
-make good use of the preparatory stage the children have
-gone through with you” (Morf, Pt. I, p. 223).</p>
-
-<p>§ 53. In consequence of this report, Pestalozzi in June
-1800 was made master of the second school of Burgdorf, a
-school numbering about 70 boys and girls from 10 to 16
-years old. With them Pestalozzi did not get on so well.
-Ramsauer, a poor boy of 10 who afterwards helped Pestalozzi
-at Yverdun and became one of his best teachers, has left us
-his remembrances. Two things seemed clear to the child’s
-mind: 1st, that their teacher was very kind but very unhappy;
-2nd, that the pupils did not learn anything and behaved very
-badly. Many schoolmasters have smiled in derision at this
-account of Pestalozzi’s actual teaching; but in reading it
-several things should be borne in mind. First Ramsauer as
-a child would have a keen eye and good memory for the
-master’s eccentricities; but how far the teaching succeeded
-he could not judge, for he did not know what it aimed at.
-Then again he saw that Pestalozzi’s zeal was for the whole
-school, not for individual scholars. But the child who knew
-of nothing beyond Burgdorf could not tell that Pestalozzi
-was thinking not so much of the children of Burgdorf as of
-the children of Europe. For Burgdorf—whether it was
-pleased to honour or to dismiss Pestalozzi—could not contain
-him. His aims extended beyond the town, beyond canton
-Bern, beyond Switzerland even; and he was consumed with
-zeal to bring about a radical change in elementary education
-throughout Europe. The truth which was burning within
-him he has himself expressed as follows:</p>
-
-<p>“If we desire to aid the poor man, the very lowest among
-the people, this can be done in one way only, that is, <i>by<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_337" id="Page_337">[337]</a></span>
-changing his schools into true places of education, in which
-the moral, intellectual, and physical powers which God has put
-into our nature may be drawn out</i>, so that the man may be
-enabled to live a life such as a man should live, contented
-in himself and satisfying other people. Thus and only thus
-does the man, whom in God’s wide world nobody helps and
-nobody can help, learn to help himself.” “The public
-common school-coach throughout Europe must not simply be
-better horsed, but still more it must be <i>turned round and be
-brought on to an entirely new road</i>.” (Quoted by Morf, P.
-I, p. 211.)</p>
-
-<p>§ 54. Pestalozzi was now working heart and soul at the
-engineering of this “new road.” His grand successes
-hitherto had been gained more by the heart than by the
-head; but the school course must draw out the faculties of
-the head as well as of the heart. Pestalozzi made all
-instruction start from what children observed for themselves.
-“I laid special stress,” he says, “on just what usually affected
-their senses. And as I dwelt much on elementary knowledge,
-I wanted to know when the child receives its first lesson,
-and I soon came to the conviction that the first hour of
-learning dates from birth. From the very moment that the
-child’s senses open to the impressions of nature, nature
-teaches it. Its new life is but the faculty, now come to
-maturity, of receiving impressions; it is the awakening of
-the germs now perfect which will go on using all their forces
-and energies to secure the development of their proper
-organisation; it is the awakening of the animal now complete
-which will and shall become a man. So the sole instruction
-given to the human being consists merely in the art of giving
-a helping hand to this natural tendency towards its proper
-development; and this art consists essentially in the means<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_338" id="Page_338">[338]</a></span>
-of putting the child’s impressions in connexion and harmony
-with the precise degree of development the child has
-reached. There must be then in the impressions to be
-given him by instruction, a regular gradation; and the
-beginning and the progress of his various knowledges must
-exactly correspond with the beginning and increase in his
-powers as they are developed. From this I soon saw that
-this gradation must be ascertained for all the branches of
-human knowledge, especially for those fundamental notions
-from which our thinking power takes its rise. On such
-principles and no others is it possible to construct real school
-books and books about teaching” (<i>Wie Gertrud</i>, &amp;c., Letter I.).</p>
-
-<p>§ 55. In endeavouring to put teaching, as he said, “on a
-psychological basis,” Pestalozzi compared it to a mechanism.
-On one occasion when expounding his views, he was
-interrupted by the exclamation, “Vous voulez mécaniser
-l’éducation!” Pestalozzi was weak in French, and he took
-these words to mean, “You wish to get at the mechanism
-of education.” He accordingly assented, and was in his
-turn misunderstood. Soon afterwards he endeavoured to
-express the new thing by a new word and said, “Ich will
-den menschlichen Unterricht psychologisieren; I wish to
-psychologise instruction,” and this he explains to mean
-that he sought to make instruction fall in with the eternal
-laws which govern the development of the human intellect
-(Morf, I, p. 227). But this was a task which no one man
-could accomplish, not even Pestalozzi. The eternal laws
-which govern the development of mind have not been
-completely ascertained even after investigations carried on
-during thousands of years; and Pestalozzi did not know
-what had been established by previous thinkers. He made
-a gigantic effort to find both the laws and their application,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_339" id="Page_339">[339]</a></span>
-but if he had continued to stand alone he could have done
-but little. Happily he attracted to him some young and
-vigorous assistants, who caught his enthusiasm and worked
-in his spirit. They did much, but there was one thing the
-Master could not communicate—his genius.</p>
-
-<p>§ 56. Just at this time, before Pestalozzi found associates
-in his work, he drew up for a “Society of Friends of
-Education” an account of his method; and this begins
-with the words I have already quoted, “I want to psychologise
-education.” Basing all instruction on <i>Anschauung</i>
-(which is nearly equivalent to the child’s own observation),
-he explains how this may be used for a series of exercises,
-and he takes as the general elements of culture the following:
-language, drawing, writing, arithmetic, and the art
-of measuring. In the education of the poor he would lay
-special stress on the importance of two things, then and
-since much neglected, viz., singing and the sense of the
-beautiful. The mother’s cradle song should begin a series
-leading up to hymns of praise to God. Education should
-develop in all a sense of the beauties of Nature. “Nature
-is full of lovely sights, yet Europe has done nothing either
-to awaken in the poor a sense for these beauties, or to
-arrange them in such a way as to produce a series of
-impressions capable of developing this sense.... If
-ever popular education should cease to be the barbarous
-absurdity it now is, and put itself into harmony with the
-real needs of our nature, this want will be supplied.”
-(R.’s Guimps, 186.)</p>
-
-<p>§ 57. In the last year of the eighteenth century (1800)
-Pestalozzi was toiling away, constant to his purpose but not
-clearly seeing the road before him. In March, 1800, he
-wrote to Zschokke: “For thirty years my life has been a well-nigh<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_340" id="Page_340">[340]</a></span>
-hopeless struggle against the most frightful poverty....
-For thirty years I have had to forego many of the barest
-necessaries of life, and have had to shun the society of my
-fellow-men from sheer lack of decent clothes. Many and
-many a time have I gone without a dinner and eaten in bitterness
-a dry crust of bread on the road at a time when even the
-poorest were seated round a table. All this I have suffered
-and am still suffering to-day, and with no other object than
-the realization of my plans for helping the poor” (R.’s
-Guimps, 189). It was clear that he could not help others
-till he himself got help; and he now did get just the help
-he wanted, an assistant who though a schoolmaster was,
-strange to say, perfectly ready to learn, and to throw himself
-into carrying out another man’s ideas. This was Hermann
-Kruesi, a man twenty-five years old, who from the age of
-18 had been master of the village school at Gais in
-Appenzell. In consequence of the war between the French
-and Austrians, Appenzell was now reduced to a state of
-famine, and bands of children were sent off to other
-cantons to escape starvation. Fischer, a friend of Pestalozzi’s,
-and himself an educationist taught by Salzmann
-(<a href="#Page_289"><i>supra</i> 289</a>), wrote from Burgdorf to the pastor of Gais,
-offering to get thirty children taken in by the people of
-Burgdorf, and asking that they might be sent with some one
-who would look after them in the day-time and teach them.
-In answer to this invitation Kruesi, after a week’s march,
-entered Burgdorf with a troop of little ones. The children
-were drawn up in an open place, and benevolent people
-chose which they would adopt. Kruesi was taken into the
-Castle which the Government had made over partly to
-Fischer, partly to Pestalozzi. In it Kruesi opened a day-school.
-Fischer soon afterwards died; and Pestalozzi<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_341" id="Page_341">[341]</a></span>
-proposed to Kruesi, who had become entirely converted to
-his views, that they should unite and together carry on the
-school in the Castle. By a decree of 23rd July, 1800, the
-Executive Council granted to Pestalozzi the gratuitous use
-of as much of the Castle and garden as he needed, and
-thus was established Pestalozzi’s celebrated Institute at
-Burgdorf.</p>
-
-<p>§ 58. Very soon Kruesi enlisted other helpers who had
-read <i>Leonard and Gertrude</i>, viz., Tobler and Buss, and
-this is his account of the party: “Our society thus consisted
-of four very different men ... the founder, whose
-chief reputation was that of a dreamy writer, incapable in
-practical life, and three young men, one [Tobler] a private
-tutor whose youth had been much neglected, who had
-begun to study late, and whose pedagogic efforts had never
-produced the results his character and talents seemed to
-promise; another [Buss], a bookbinder, who devoted
-his leisure to singing and drawing; and a third [Kruesi
-himself], a village schoolmaster who carried out the duties
-of his office as best he could without having been in any
-way prepared for them. Those who looked on this group of
-men, scarce one of them with a home of his own, naturally
-formed but a small opinion of their capabilities. And yet
-our work succeeded, and won the public confidence beyond
-the expectations of those who knew us, and even beyond
-our own” (R.’s Guimps, 304).</p>
-
-<p>§ 59. With assistance from the Government there was
-added to the united schools of Pestalozzi and Kruesi a
-training class for teachers; and elementary teachers were
-sent to spend a month at Burgdorf and learn of Pestalozzi,
-as years afterwards they were sent to the same town to
-learn of Froebel. This Institute opened in January, 1801,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_342" id="Page_342">[342]</a></span>
-and had nearly three years of complete success. In it was
-carried out Pestalozzi’s notion that there should be “no
-gulf between the home and the school.” On one occasion
-a parent visiting the establishment exclaimed, “Why, this
-is not a school but a family!” and Pestalozzi declared
-that this was the highest praise he could give it. The bond
-which united them all, both teachers and scholars, was love
-of “Father Pestalozzi.” Want of space kept the number of
-children below a hundred, and these enjoyed great freedom
-and worked away without rewards and almost without
-punishments. Both public reports and private speak very
-highly of the results. In June, 1802, the President of the
-Council of Public Education in Bern declares: “Pestalozzi
-has discovered the real and universal laws of all elementary
-teaching.” A visitor, Charles Victor von Bonstetten, writes:
-“The children know little, but what they know, they know
-well.... They are very happy and evidently take great
-pleasure in their lessons, which says a great deal for the
-method.... As it will be long before there is another
-Pestalozzi, I fear that the rich harvest his discovery seems
-to promise will be reserved for future ages.”</p>
-
-<p>The success of the method was specially conspicuous in
-arithmetic. A Nürnberg merchant who came prejudiced
-against Pestalozzi was much impressed and has acknowledged:
-“I was amazed when I saw these children treating
-the most complicated calculations of fractions as the simplest
-thing in the world.”</p>
-
-<p>§ 60. Up to this point Pestalozzi may be said to have
-gained by the disposition to “reform” or revolutionise
-everything, which had prevailed in Switzerland since 1798.
-But from the reaction which now set in he suffered more
-than he had gained. Switzerland sent deputies to Paris to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_343" id="Page_343">[343]</a></span>
-discuss under the direction of the First Consul Bonaparte
-what should be their future form of Government. Among
-these deputies Pestalozzi was elected, and he set off thinking
-more of the future of the schools than of the future of the
-Government. At Paris he asked for an interview with
-Bonaparte, but destruction being in his opinion a much
-higher art than instruction, the First Consul said he could
-not be bothered about questions of A, B, C. He, however,
-deputed Monge to hear what Pestalozzi had to say, but the
-mathematician seems to have agreed with some English
-authorities that “there was nothing in Pestalozzi.”<a name="FNanchor_158" id="FNanchor_158"></a><a href="#Footnote_158" class="fnanchor">[158]</a> On his
-return to Switzerland Pestalozzi was asked by Buss, “Did
-you see Bonaparte?” “No,” replied Pestalozzi, “I did not
-see Bonaparte and Bonaparte did not see me.” His presumption
-in thus putting himself on an equality with the
-great conqueror seems to have taken away the breath of his
-contemporaries: but “the whirligig of time brings in his
-revenges,” and before the close of the century Europe
-already thinks more in amount, and immeasurably more in
-respect, of Pestalozzi than of Bonaparte.</p>
-
-<p>§ 61. As a result of the reaction the Government of
-United Switzerland ceased to exist, and the Cantons were
-restored. This destroyed Pestalozzi’s hopes of Government
-support, and even turned his Institute out of doors. The<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_344" id="Page_344">[344]</a></span>
-Castle of Burgdorf was at once demanded for the Prefect of
-the District; but Pestalozzi was offered an old convent at
-Münchenbuchsee near Bern, and thither he was forced to
-migrate.</p>
-
-<p>§ 62. Close to Münchenbuchsee was Hofwyl where was
-the agricultural institution of Emmanuel Fellenberg.
-Fellenberg and Pestalozzi were old friends and correspondents,
-and as they had much regard for each other and
-Fellenberg was as great in administration as Pestalozzi in
-ideas, there seemed a chance of their benefiting by co-operation;
-but this could not be. The teachers desired
-that the administration should be put into the hands of
-Fellenberg, and this was done accordingly, “not without
-my consent,” says Pestalozzi, “but to my profound mortification.”
-He could not work with this “man of iron,” as he
-calls Fellenberg; so he left Münchenbuchsee and accepting
-one of several invitations he settled in the Castle of Yverdun
-near the lake of Neuchatel. Within a twelvemonth he was
-followed by his old assistants, who had found government
-by Fellenberg less to their taste than no-government by
-Pestalozzi.</p>
-
-<p>§ 63. Thus arose the most celebrated Institute of which
-we read in the history of education. For some years its
-success seemed prodigious. Teachers came from all quarters,
-many of them sent by the Governments of the countries to
-which they belonged, that they might get initiated into the
-Pestalozzian system. Children too were sent from great
-distances, some of them being intrusted to Pestalozzi, some
-of them living with their own tutor in Yverdun and only
-attending the Institute during the day. The wave of
-enthusiasm for the new ideas seemed to carry everything
-before it; but there is nothing stable in a wave, and when<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_345" id="Page_345">[345]</a></span>
-the enthusiasm has subsided disappointment follows. This
-was the case at Yverdun, and Pestalozzi outlived his Institute.
-But the principles on which he worked and the spirit in
-which he worked could not pass away; and, at least in
-Germany, all elementary schoolmasters acknowledge how
-much they are indebted to his teaching.</p>
-
-<p>§ 64. Of the state of things in the early days of the
-Institute we have a very lively account written for his own
-children by Professor Vuillemin, who entered it in 1805 as a
-child of eight, and was in it for two years. From this I extract
-the following portrait of Pestalozzi: “Imagine, my children,
-a very ugly man with rough bristling hair, his face scarred
-with small-pox and covered with freckles, an untidy beard,
-no neck-tie, his breeches not properly buttoned and coming
-down to his stockings, which in their turn descended on to
-his great thick shoes; fancy him panting and jerking as he
-walked; then his eyes which at one time opened wide to
-send a flash of lightning, at another were half closed as if
-engaged on what was going on within; his features now
-expressing a profound sadness and now again the most
-peaceful happiness; his speech either slow or hurried, either
-soft and melodious or bursting forth like thunder; imagine
-the man and you have him whom we used to call our Father
-Pestalozzi. Such as I have sketched him for you we loved
-him; we all loved him, for he loved us all; we loved him
-so warmly that when some time passed without our seeing
-him, we were quite troubled about it, and when he again
-appeared we could not take our eyes off him” (Guimps,
-315).</p>
-
-<p>§ 65. At this time he was no less loved by his assistants,
-who put up with any quarters that could be found for them,
-and received no salary. We read that the money paid by<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_346" id="Page_346">[346]</a></span>
-the scholars was kept in the room of “the head of the family”;
-every master could get the key, and when they required
-clothes they took from these funds just the sum requisite.
-This system, or want of system, went on for some time without
-abuse. As Vuillemin says, it was like a return to the
-early days of the Christian Church.</p>
-
-<p>§ 66. We have seen that the first Emperor Napoleon
-“could not be bothered about questions of A, B, C.” His
-was the pride that goes before a fall. On the other hand
-the Prussian Government which he brought to the dust in
-the battle of Jena (1806) had the wisdom to perceive that
-children will become men, and that the nature of the
-instruction they receive will in a great measure determine
-what kind of men they turn out. How was Prussia again
-to raise its head? Its rulers decided that it was by the
-education of the people. “We have lost in territory,” said
-the king; “our power and our credit abroad have fallen;
-but we must and will go to work to gain in power and in
-credit at home. It is for this reason that I desire above
-everything that the greatest attention be paid to the education
-of the people” (Guimps, 319). About the same time
-the Queen (Louisa) wrote in her private diary, “I am reading
-<i>Leonard and Gertrude</i>, and I delight in being transported
-into the Swiss village. If I could do as I liked I should
-take a carriage and start for Switzerland to see Pestalozzi;
-I should warmly shake him by the hand, and my eyes filled
-with tears would speak my gratitude.... With what goodness,
-with what zeal, he labours for the welfare of his fellow-creatures!
-Yes, in the name of humanity, I thank him with
-my whole heart.”</p>
-
-<p>So in the day of humiliation Prussia seriously went to
-work at the education of the people, and this she did on<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_347" id="Page_347">[347]</a></span>
-the lines pointed out by Pestalozzi. To him they were
-directed by their philosopher Fichte, who in his <i>Addresses
-to the German Nation</i> (delivered at Berlin 1807-8) declared
-that education was the only means of raising a nation, and
-that all sound reform of public instruction must be based
-on the principles of Pestalozzi.</p>
-
-<p>To bring these principles to bear on popular education,
-the Prussian Government sent seventeen young men for a
-three years’ course to Pestalozzi’s Institute, “where,” as the
-Minister said in a letter to Pestalozzi, “they will be prepared
-not only in mind and judgment, but also in heart,
-for the noble vocation which they are to follow, and will
-be filled with a sense of the holiness of their task, and with
-new zeal for the work to which you have devoted your
-life.”</p>
-
-<p>§ 67. Among the eminent men who were drawn to
-Yverdun were some who afterwards did great things in
-education, as <i>e.g.</i>, Karl Ritter, Karl von Raumer the historian
-of education, the philosopher Herbart, and a man
-who was destined to have more influence than anyone,
-except perhaps Pestalozzi himself—I mean Friedrich Froebel.
-Ritter’s testimony is especially striking. “I have seen,”
-says he, “more than the Paradise of Switzerland, for I have
-seen Pestalozzi, and recognised how great his heart is, and
-how great his genius; never have I been so filled with a
-sense of the sacredness of my vocation and the dignity of
-human nature as in the days I spent with this noble man....
-Pestalozzi knew less geography than a child in
-one of our primary schools, yet it was from him that I
-gained my chief knowledge of this science; for it was in
-listening to him that I first conceived the idea of the natural
-method. It was he who opened the way to me, and I take<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_348" id="Page_348">[348]</a></span>
-pleasure in attributing whatever value my work may have
-entirely to him.”</p>
-
-<p>§ 68. At this time we read glowing accounts of the
-healthy and happy life of the children; and throughout
-Pestalozzi never lost a single pupil by illness. With a body
-of very able assistants, instruction was carried on for ten
-hours out of the twenty-four; but in these hours there was
-reckoned the time spent in drill, gymnastics, hand-work,
-and singing. The monotony of school-life was also broken
-by frequent “festivals.”</p>
-
-<p>§ 69. And yet the Institute had taken into it the seeds
-of its own ruin. There were several causes of failure,
-though these were not visible till the house was divided
-against itself.</p>
-
-<p>§ 70. First, Pestalozzi based the morality and discipline
-of the school on the relations of family life. He would be
-the “father” of all the children. At Burgdorf this relation
-seemed a reality, but it completely failed at Yverdun when
-the Institute became, from the number of the pupils and
-their differences in language, habits, and antecedents, a
-little world. The pupils still called him “Father Pestalozzi,”
-but he could no longer know them as a father should
-know his children. Thus the discipline of affection slowly
-disappeared, and there was no school discipline to take its
-place.</p>
-
-<p>§ 71. Next, we can see that even at Burgdorf, and still
-more at Yverdun, Pestalozzi was attempting to do impossibilities.
-According to his system, the faculties of the child
-were to be developed in a natural unbroken order, and the
-first exercises were to give the child the power of surmounting
-later difficulties by its own exertions. But this
-education could not be started at any age, and yet children
-of every age and every country were received into the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_349" id="Page_349">[349]</a></span>
-Institution. It was not likely that the fresh comers could
-be made to understand that they “knew nothing,” and must
-start over again on a totally different road. The teachers
-might take such pupils to the water of “sense-impressions,”
-but they could not inspire the inclination to drink, nor
-induce the lad to learn what he supposed himself to know
-already. (<a href="#Page_64"><i>Cfr. supra</i> p. 64, § 4.</a>)</p>
-
-<p>§ 72. But there was a greater mischief at work than
-either of these. In his discourse to the members of the
-Institution on New Year’s Day, 1808, Pestalozzi surprised
-them all by his gloom. He had had a coffin brought in,
-and he stood beside it. “This work,” said he, “was
-founded by love, but love has disappeared from our midst.”
-This was only too true, and the discord was more deeply
-rooted than at first appeared. Among the brood of Pestalozzians
-there was a Catholic shepherd lad from Tyrol,
-Joseph Schmid by name, and he, in the end, proved a
-veritable cuckoo. As he shewed very marked ability in
-mathematics, he became one of the assistant masters; and
-a good deal of the fame of the Institution rested on the
-performances of his pupils. But his ideas differed totally
-from those of his colleagues, especially from those of
-Niederer, a clergyman with a turn for philosophy, who had
-become Pestalozzi’s chief exponent.</p>
-
-<p>§ 73. After Pestalozzi’s gloomy speech, the masters, with
-the exception of Schmid, urged Pestalozzi to apply for a
-Government inquiry into the state of the Institution. This
-Pestalozzi did, and Commissioners were appointed, among
-them an educationist, Père Girard of Freiburg, by whom
-the Report was drawn up. The Report was not favourable.
-Père Girard was by no means inclined to sit at the feet of
-Pestalozzi, as he had principles of his own. Pestalozzi, he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_350" id="Page_350">[350]</a></span>
-thought, laid far too much stress on mathematics, and he
-drew from him a statement that everything taught to a child
-should seem as certain as that two and two made four.
-“Then,” said Girard, “if I had thirty children I would not
-intrust you with one of them. You could not teach him
-that I was his father.” Thus the Report, though very
-friendly in tone, was by no means friendly in spirit. The
-Commissioners simply compared the performances of the
-scholars with what pupils of the same age could do in good
-schools of the ordinary type, and Père Girard stated, though
-not in the Report, that the Institution was inferior to the
-Cantonal School of Aargau. But the comparison of these
-incommensurables only shews that Girard was not capable
-of understanding what was going on at Yverdun. Indeed,
-he asserts “not only that the mother-tongue was neglected,”
-but also that the children, “though they had reached a high
-pitch of excellence in abstract mathematics, were inconceivably
-weak in all ordinary practical calculations.” This
-is absurd. In Pestalozzian teaching the abstract never
-went before ordinary practical calculations. The good
-Father evidently blunders, and takes “head-reckoning” for
-abstract, and pen or pencil arithmetic for practical work.
-Reckoning with slate or paper is no doubt “ordinary,” but
-a distinction has often to be drawn between what is ordinary
-and what is practical.</p>
-
-<p>§ 74. Soon after this the disputes between Schmid and
-his colleagues waxed so fierce that Schmid was virtually
-driven away. In 1810 he left Yverdun, and declared the
-Institution “a disgrace to humanity.” Great was the disorder
-into which the Institution now fell from having over
-it only a genius with “an unrivalled incapacity to govern.”
-The days which “remind us of the early Church” were no<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_351" id="Page_351">[351]</a></span>
-more, and financial difficulties naturally followed them.
-For the next five years things went from bad to worse, and
-the masters were then driven to the desperate, and, as it
-proved, the fatal step of inviting the able and strong-willed
-Schmid back again. He came in 1815, he acquired entire
-control over Pestalozzi, and drove from him all his most
-faithful adherents, among them not only Niederer, who had
-invited the return of his rival, but even Kruesi and the
-faithful servant, Elizabeth Naef, now Mrs. Kruesi, the
-widow of Kruesi’s brother. Pestalozzi’s grandson married
-Schmid’s sister, and thus united with him by family ties,
-Schmid took entire possession of the old man and kept it
-till the end. His former colleagues seem to have been
-deceived in their estimate both of Schmid’s integrity and
-ability. He completed the ruin of the Institution, and he
-was finally expelled from Yverdun by the Magistrates.</p>
-
-<p>§ 75. But while Pestalozzi seemed falling lower and lower
-to the eyes of the inhabitants of Yverdun, and so had little
-honour in his own country, his fame was spreading all over
-Europe. Of this Yverdun was to reap the benefit. In
-1813-14, Austrian troops marched across Switzerland to
-invade France. In January, 1814, the Castle and other
-buildings in Yverdun were “requisitioned” for a military
-hospital, many of the Austrian soldiers being down with
-typhus fever. In a great fright the Municipality sent off
-two deputies to headquarters, then at Basel, to petition that
-this order might be withdrawn. As the order threatened
-the destruction of his Institution, Pestalozzi went with them,
-and it was entirely to him they owed their success. On
-their return they reported that “no military hospital would
-be established at Yverdun, and that M. Pestalozzi had been
-received with most extraordinary favour.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_352" id="Page_352">[352]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>§ 75. On this occasion Pestalozzi took the opportunity of
-preaching to the Emperor Alexander on the necessity of
-establishing good schools and of emancipating the serfs.
-The Emperor took the lecture in good part, and allowed the
-philanthropist to drive him into a corner and “button-hole”
-him.</p>
-
-<p>§ 76. In 1815 Pestalozzi received a visit from an
-Englishman, or more accurately Scotsman—Dr. Bell, who,
-however, like most of our compatriots, could find nothing
-in Pestalozzi. Whatever we may think of Bell as an
-educationist, he was certainly a poor prophet. On leaving
-Yverdun he said, “In another twelve years mutual instruction
-will be adopted by the whole world and Pestalozzi’s method
-will be forgotten.”<a name="FNanchor_159" id="FNanchor_159"></a><a href="#Footnote_159" class="fnanchor">[159]</a></p>
-
-<p>§ 77. In December, 1815, Pestalozzi was thrown more
-completely into the power of Schmid by losing the only
-companion from whom nothing but death could separate
-him—his wife. At the funeral Pestalozzi, standing by the
-coffin, and as if heard by her whose earthly remains were in
-it, ran over the disasters and trials they had passed through
-together, and the sacrifices she had made for him. “What
-in those days of affliction,” said he, “gave us strength to
-bear our troubles and recover hope?” and taking up a Bible
-he went on, “<i>This</i> is the source whence you drew, whence
-we both drew courage, strength, and peace.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_353" id="Page_353">[353]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>§ 78. The “death agony of the Institution,” as Guimps
-calls it, lasted for some years, but in this gloomy period
-there are only two incidents I will mention. The first is
-the publication of Pestalozzi’s writings, for which Schmid
-and Pestalozzi sought subscriptions; and the appeal was
-so cordially answered that Pestalozzi received £2,000.
-This sum he wished to devote to the carrying out of a plan
-he had always cherished of an orphanage at Neuhof; but
-the money seems to have melted we do not know how.</p>
-
-<p>§ 79. The other incident is that of Pestalozzi’s last
-success. In spite of Schmid he would open a school for
-twelve neglected children at Clindy, a hamlet near Yverdun.
-Here he produced results like those which had crowned his
-first efforts at Neuhof, Stanz, and Burgdorf. Old, absent-minded,
-and incapable as he seemed in ordinary affairs, he,
-as though by enchantment, gained the attention and the
-affection of the children, and bent them entirely to his will.
-In a few months the number of children had risen to thirty,
-and wonderful progress had been made. Clindy at once
-became celebrated. Pestalozzi was induced to admit some
-children whose friends paid for them, and Schmid then
-persuaded the old man to remove the school into the Castle.</p>
-
-<p>§ 80. In 1824 the Institution, which had lasted for twenty
-years, was finally closed, and Pestalozzi went to spend his
-remaining days (nearly three years as it proved) at Neuhof,
-which was then in the hands of his grandson. The year
-before his death he visited an orphanage conducted on his
-principles by Zeller at Beuggen near Rheinfelden. The
-children sang a poem of Goethe’s quoted in <i>Leonard and
-Gertrude</i>, and had a crown of oak ready to put on the old
-man’s head; but this he declined. “I am not worthy of it,”
-said he, “keep it for innocence.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_354" id="Page_354">[354]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>§ 81. On 17th February, 1827, at the age of eighty-one,
-Pestalozzi fell asleep.</p>
-
-<p>§ 82. “The reform needed,” said Pestalozzi, “is not
-that the school-coach should be better horsed, but that it
-should be turned right round and started on a new track.”
-This may seem a violent metaphor, but perhaps it is not
-more violent than the change that was (and in this country
-still is) necessary. Let us try to ascertain what is the right
-road according to Pestalozzi, and then see on what road the
-school-coach is now travelling.</p>
-
-<p>§ 83. The grand change advocated by Pestalozzi was a
-change of <i>object</i>. The main object of the school should
-not be to <i>teach</i> but to <i>develop</i>.</p>
-
-<p>§ 84. This change of object naturally brings many
-changes with it. Measured by their capacity for acquiring
-school knowledge and skill young children may be considered,
-as one of H.M. Inspectors considered them, “the
-fag-end of the school.” But if the school exists not to
-teach but to develop, young children, instead of being the
-“fag-end,” become the most important part of all. In the
-development of all organisms more depends on the earlier
-than on the later stages; and there is no reason to doubt
-that this law holds in the case of human beings. On this
-account, from the days of Pestalozzi educational science
-has been greatly, I may say mainly, concerned with young
-children. For the dominating thought has been that the
-young human being is an undeveloped organism, and that
-in education that organism is developed. So the essence of
-Pestalozzianism lies not so much in its method as in its aim,
-not more in what it does than in what it endeavours to do.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_355" id="Page_355">[355]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>§ 85. And thus it was that Pestalozzi (in Raumer’s
-words) “compelled the scholastic world to revise the whole
-of their task, to reflect on the nature and destiny of man,
-and also on the proper way of leading him from his youth
-towards that destiny.” And it was his love of his fellow-creatures
-that raised him to this standpoint. He was moved
-by “the enthusiasm of humanity.” Consumed with grief
-for the degradation of the Swiss peasantry, he never lost
-faith in their true dignity as men, and in the possibility of
-raising them to a condition worthy of it. He cast about for
-the best means of thus raising them, and decided that it
-could be effected, not by any improvement in their outward
-circumstances, but by an education which should make them
-what their Creator intended them to be, and should give
-them the use and the consciousness of all their inborn
-faculties. “From my youth up,” he says, “I felt what a
-high and indispensable human duty it is to labour for the
-poor and miserable; ... that he may attain to a
-consciousness of his own dignity through his feeling of the
-universal powers and endowments which he possesses
-awakened within him; that he may not only learn to gabble
-over by rote the religious maxim that ‘man is created in
-the image of God, and is bound to live and die as a child
-of God,’ but may himself experience its truth by virtue of
-the Divine power within him, so that he may be raised, not
-only above the ploughing oxen, but also above the man in
-purple and silk who lives unworthily of his high destiny”
-(Quoted in Barnard, p. 13).</p>
-
-<p>Again he says (and I quote at length on the point, as it
-is indeed the key to Pestalozzianism), “Why have I insisted
-so strongly on attention to early physical and intellectual
-education? Because I consider these as merely leading to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_356" id="Page_356">[356]</a></span>
-a higher aim, to qualify the human being for the free and
-full use of all the faculties implanted by the Creator, and
-to direct all these faculties towards the perfection of the
-whole being of man, that he may be enabled to act in
-his peculiar station as an instrument of that All-wise and
-Almighty Power that has called him into life” (To
-Greaves, p. 160).</p>
-
-<p>§ 86. Believing in this high aim of education, Pestalozzi
-required a proper early training for all alike. “Every
-human being,” said he, “has a claim to a judicious development
-of his faculties by those to whom the care of his
-infancy is confided” (<i>Ib.</i> p. 163).</p>
-
-<p>§ 87. Pestalozzi therefore most earnestly addressed himself
-to mothers, to convince them of the power placed in
-their hands, and to teach them how to use it. “The
-mother is qualified, and qualified by the Creator Himself,
-to become the principal agent in the development of her
-child; ... and what is demanded of her is—a <i>thinking
-love</i>.... God has given to thy child all the faculties
-of our nature, but the grand point remains undecided—how
-shall this heart, this head, these hands, be employed? to
-whose service shall they be dedicated? A question the
-answer to which involves a futurity of happiness or misery to
-a life so dear to thee.... It is recorded that God
-opened the heavens to the patriarch of old, and showed him
-a ladder leading thither. This ladder is let down to every
-descendant of Adam; it is offered to thy child. But he
-must be taught to climb it. And let him not attempt it by
-the cold calculations of the head, or the mere impulse of
-the heart; but let all these powers combine, and the noble
-enterprise will be crowned with success. These powers are
-already bestowed on him, but to thee it is given to assist in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_357" id="Page_357">[357]</a></span>
-calling them forth” (To Greaves, p. 21). “Maternal love
-is the first agent in education.... Through it the
-child is led to love and trust his Creator and his Redeemer.”</p>
-
-<p>§ 88. From the theory of development which lay at the
-root of Pestalozzi’s views of education, it followed that the
-imparting of knowledge and the training for special pursuits
-held only a subordinate position in his scheme. “Education,
-instead of merely considering what is to be imparted
-to children, ought to consider first what they may be said
-already to possess, if not as a developed, at least as an
-involved faculty capable of development. Or if, instead of
-speaking thus in the abstract, we will but recollect that it is
-to the great Author of life that man owes the possession,
-and is responsible for the use, of his innate faculties,
-education should not simply decide what is to be made of a
-child, but rather inquire what it was intended that he
-should become. What is his destiny as a created and
-responsible being? What are his faculties as a rational and
-moral being? What are the means for their perfection, and
-the end held out as the highest object of their efforts by the
-Almighty Father of all, both in creation and in the page of
-revelation?”</p>
-
-<p>§ 89. Education, then, must consist “in <i>a continual
-benevolent superintendence</i>, with the object of calling forth all
-the faculties which Providence has implanted; and its
-province, thus enlarged, will yet be with less difficulty
-surveyed from one point of view, and will have more of a
-systematic and truly philosophical character, than an incoherent
-mass of ‘lessons’—arranged without unity of
-principle, and gone through without interest—which too
-often usurps its name.”</p>
-
-<p>The educator’s task then is to superintend and promote<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_358" id="Page_358">[358]</a></span>
-the child’s development, morally, intellectually, and physically.</p>
-
-<p>§ 90. “The essential principle of education is not
-teaching,” said Pestalozzi; “it is love” (R.’s G., 289).
-Again he says, “The child loves and believes before it
-thinks and acts” (<i>Ib.</i> 378). And in a very striking passage
-(<i>Ib.</i> 329), where he compares the development of the
-various powers of a human being to the development of a
-tree, he says, “These forces of the heart—faith and love—are
-in the formation of immortal man what the root is for
-the tree.” So, according to Pestalozzi, a child without faith
-and love can no more grow up to be what he should be
-than a tree can grow without a root. Apart from this vital
-truth there can be no such thing as Pestalozzianism.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">“Ah yet when all is thought and said</div>
-<div class="verse">The heart still overrules the head.”</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">It is our hearts and affections that lead us right or wrong
-far more than our intellects. In advocating the training of
-the minds of the people, Lord Derby once remarked that as
-Chairman of Quarter Sessions he had found most of the
-culprits brought before him were stupid and ignorant. It
-certainly cannot be denied that the commonest kind of
-criminal is bad in every way. He has his body ruined
-by debauchery, his intellect almost in abeyance, and his
-heart and affections set on what is vile and degrading. If
-you could cultivate his intellect you would certainly raise
-him out of the lowest and by far the largest of the criminal
-classes. But he might become a criminal of a type less
-disgusting in externals, but in reality far more dangerous.
-The most atrocious miscreant of our time, if not of all time,
-was a man who contrived a machine to sink ships in mid-ocean,
-his only object being to gain a sum of money on a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_359" id="Page_359">[359]</a></span>
-false insurance. This man was a type of the <i>élite</i> of
-criminals, had received an intellectual training, and could
-not have been described by Lord Derby as ignorant or
-stupid.</p>
-
-<p>§ 91. Pestalozzi then, much as he valued the development
-of the intellect, put first the moral and religious
-influence of education; and with him moral and religious
-were one and the same. He protested against the ordinary
-routine of elementary education, because “everywhere in it
-the flesh predominated over the spirit, everywhere the divine
-element was cast into the shade, everywhere selfishness and
-the passions were taken as the motives of action, everywhere
-mechanical habits usurped the place of intelligent spontaneity”
-(R.’s G., 470). Education for the people must be
-different to this. “Man does not live by bread alone;
-every child needs a religious development; every child
-needs to know how to pray to God in all simplicity,
-but with faith and love” (R.’s G., 378). “If the religious
-element does not run through the whole of education, this
-element will have little influence on the life; it remains
-formal or isolated”<a name="FNanchor_160" id="FNanchor_160"></a><a href="#Footnote_160" class="fnanchor">[160]</a> (<i>Ib.</i> 381). And Pestalozzi sums up the
-essentials of popular education in the words: “The child<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_360" id="Page_360">[360]</a></span>
-accustomed from his earliest years to pray, to think, and to
-work, is already more than half educated” (<i>Ib.</i> 381).</p>
-
-<p>§ 92. Here we see the main requisites. First the child
-must pray with faith and love. Next he must <i>think</i>.</p>
-
-<p>“The child must think!” exclaims the schoolmaster:
-“Must he not learn?” To which Pestalozzi would have
-replied, “Most certainly he must.” Learning was not in
-Pestalozzi’s estimation as in Locke’s, the “last and least”
-thing, but learning was with him something very different
-from the learning imparted by the ordinary schoolmaster.
-Pestalozzi was very imperfectly acquainted with the thoughts
-and efforts of his predecessors, but the one book on education
-which he had studied had freed him from the “idols”
-of the schoolroom. This book was the <i>Emile</i> of Rousseau,
-and from it he came no less than Rousseau himself to despise
-the learning of the schoolmaster. But when he had to face
-the problem of organizing a course of education for the
-people, Pestalozzi did not agree with Rousseau that the
-first twelve years should be spent in “losing time.” No,
-the children must learn, but they must learn in such a way
-as to develop all the powers of the mind. And so Pestalozzi
-was led to what he considered his great discovery, viz., that
-all instruction must be based on “Anschauung.”</p>
-
-<p>§ 93. The Germans, who have devoted so much thought
-and care and effort to education, greatly honour Pestalozzi,<a name="FNanchor_161" id="FNanchor_161"></a><a href="#Footnote_161" class="fnanchor">[161]</a>
-and as his disciples aim at making all elementary instruction<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_361" id="Page_361">[361]</a></span>
-“anschaulich.” We English have troubled ourselves so
-little about Pestalozzi, or, I might say, about the theory of
-education, that we have not cared to get equivalent words
-for <i>Anschauung</i> and <i>anschaulich</i>. For <i>Anschauung</i> “sense-impression”
-has lately been tried; but this is in two ways
-defective; for (1) there may be “Anschauungen” beyond
-the range of the senses, and (2) there is in an “Anschauung”
-an active as well as a passive element, and this the word
-“impression” does not convey. The active part is brought
-out better by “observation”—the word used by Joseph
-Payne and James MacAlister; but this seems hardly wide
-enough. Other writers of English borrow words straight from
-the French, and talk about “intuition” and “intuitive,”
-words which were taken (first I believe by Kant) from the
-Latin <i>intueri</i>, “to look at <i>with attention and reflection</i>.”</p>
-
-<p>§ 94. I think we shall be wise in following these writers.
-On good authority I have heard of a German professor who
-when asked if he had read some large work recently published
-in the distressing type of his nation, replied that he
-had not; he was waiting for a French translation. If the
-Germans find that the French express their thoughts more
-clearly than they can themselves, we may think ourselves
-fortunate when the French will act as interpreters. I therefore
-gladly turn to M. Buisson and translate what he says
-about “intuition.”</p>
-
-<p>“Intuition is just the most natural and most spontaneous
-action of human intelligence, the action by which
-the mind seizes a reality without effort, hesitation, or
-go-between. It is a ‘direct apperception,’ made as it were
-at a glance. If it has to do with some matter within the
-province of the senses, the senses perceive it at once. Here
-we have the simplest case of all, the most common, the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_362" id="Page_362">[362]</a></span>
-most easily noted. If the thing concerned is an idea, a
-reality, that is, beyond the reach of the senses, we still say
-that we seize it by intuition when all that is necessary is that
-it present itself to the mind, and the mind at once grasps
-it and is satisfied with it without any need of proof or
-investigation. We advance by intuition whenever our mind,
-acting by the senses, or by the judgment, or by the conscience,
-knows things with the same amount of evidence and
-the same amount of speed that a distinct view of an object
-affords the eye. So intuition is no separate faculty; it is
-nothing strange or new in the mind of man. It is just the
-mind itself ‘intuitively’ recognising what exists in it or
-around it” (<i>Les Conférences Péd. faites aux Instituteurs</i>,
-Delagrave, 1879, p. 331). So the “intuitive method” (to
-keep the French name for it) is of very wide application.
-“It appeals to this force <i>sui generis</i>, to this glance of the
-mind, to this spontaneous spring of the intelligence towards
-truth.” It sets the pupil’s mind to work in following his
-own intellectual instincts. If in our teaching we can use it,
-we shall have gained, as M. Buisson says, the best helper in the
-world, viz., the pupil. If he can be got to take an active
-part in the instruction all difficulty vanishes at once. Instead
-of having to drag him along, you will see him delighted to
-keep you company.</p>
-
-<p>§ 95. According to M. Buisson there are three kinds of
-intuition—sensuous, intellectual, and moral. Similarly M.
-Jullien (<i>Esprit de Pestalozzi</i>, 1812, vol. j, p. 152) says that
-there are “intuitions” of the “internal senses” as well as
-of the external: the “internal senses” are four in number:
-first, the sense for the true; second, the sense for the beautiful;
-third, the sense for the good; fourth, the sense for the
-infinite.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_363" id="Page_363">[363]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>§ 96. Without settling whether this analysis is complete
-we shall have no difficulty in admitting that both body and
-mind have faculties by means of which we apprehend, lay
-hold of, what is true and right; and it is on the use of these
-faculties that Pestalozzi bases instruction. No Englishman
-may have found a good word to indicate <i>Anschauung</i>, but one
-Englishman at least had the idea of it long before Pestalozzi.
-More than a century earlier Locke had called knowledge
-“the internal perception of the mind.” “Knowing is seeing,”
-said he; “and if it be so, it is madness to persuade
-ourselves we do so by another man’s eyes, let him use never
-so many words to tell us that what he asserts is very
-visible” (<a href="#Page_222"><i>Supra</i> p. 222</a>).</p>
-
-<p>§ 97. Thus in theory Pestalozzi was, however unconsciously,
-a follower of Locke. But in practice they went far
-asunder. Locke’s thoughts were constantly occupied with
-philosophical investigations, and he seems to have made
-small account of the intellectual power of children, and to
-have supposed that they cannot “see” anything at all. So
-he cared little what was taught them, and till they reached
-the age of reason the tutor might give such lessons as
-would be useful to “young gentlemen,” the avowed object
-being to “keep them from sauntering.” His follower
-Rousseau preferred that the child’s mind should not be
-filled with the traditional lore of the schoolroom, and that
-the instructor, when the youth reached the age of twelve,
-should find “an unfurnished apartment to let.” Then came
-Pestalozzi, and he saw that at whatever age the instructor
-began to teach the child, he would not find an unfurnished
-apartment, seeing that every child learns continuously from
-the hour of its birth. And how does the child learn? Not
-by repeating words which express the thoughts, feelings, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_364" id="Page_364">[364]</a></span>
-experiences of other people,<a name="FNanchor_162" id="FNanchor_162"></a><a href="#Footnote_162" class="fnanchor">[162]</a> but by his own experiences
-and feelings, and by the thoughts which these suggest to
-him.</p>
-
-<p>§ 98. Elementary education then on its intellectual side
-is teaching the child to think. The proper subjects of
-thought for children Pestalozzi held to be the children’s
-surroundings, the realities of their own lives, the things that
-affect them and arouse their feelings and interests. Perhaps
-he did not emphasize <i>interest</i> as much as Herbart has done
-since; but clearly an <i>Anschauung</i> or “intuition” is only
-possible when the child is interested in the thing observed.</p>
-
-<p>§ 99. The art of teaching in Pestalozzi’s system consists
-in analyzing the knowledge that the children should acquire
-about their surroundings, arranging it in a regular sequence,
-and bringing it to the children’s consciousness gradually and
-in the way in which their minds will act upon it. In this
-way they learn slowly, but all they learn is their own.
-They are not like the crow drest up in peacock’s feathers, for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_365" id="Page_365">[365]</a></span>
-they have not appropriated any <i>dead</i> knowledge (“<i>angelernte
-todte Begriffe</i>,” as Diesterweg has it), and it cannot be said
-of them, “They know about much, but <i>know</i> nothing (<i>Sie
-kennen viel und wissen nichts</i>).” Their knowledge is actual
-knowledge, for they are taught not <i>what</i> to think but <i>to
-think</i>, and to exercise their powers of observation and draw
-conclusions from their own experience. The teacher
-simply furnishes materials and occasions for this exercise
-in observing, and as it goes on gives his benevolent superintendence.</p>
-
-<p>§ 100. They learn slowly for another reason. According
-to Pestalozzi the first conceptions must be dwelt upon
-till they are distinct and firmly fixed. Buss tells us that
-when he first joined Pestalozzi at Burgdorf the delay over
-the prime elements seemed to him a waste of time, but
-that afterwards he was convinced of its being the right plan,
-and felt that the failure of his own education was due to its
-incoherent and desultory character. “Not only,” says
-Pestalozzi, “have the first elements of knowledge in every
-subject the most important bearing on its complete outline,
-but the child’s confidence and interest are gained by perfect
-attainment even in the lowest stage of instruction.”<a name="FNanchor_163" id="FNanchor_163"></a><a href="#Footnote_163" class="fnanchor">[163]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_366" id="Page_366">[366]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>§ 101. We have seen that Pestalozzi would have
-children learn to pray, to think, and to <i>work</i>. In schools
-for the <i>soi-disant</i> “upper classes” the parents or friends of
-a boy sometimes say, “There is no need for him to work
-he will be very well off.” From this kind of demoralization
-Pestalozzi’s pupils were free. They would have to work,
-and Pestalozzi wished them to learn to work as soon as possible.
-In this way he sought to increase their self-respect,
-and to unite their school-life with their life beyond it.<a name="FNanchor_164" id="FNanchor_164"></a><a href="#Footnote_164" class="fnanchor">[164]</a></p>
-
-<p>§ 102. Pestalozzi was tremendously in earnest, and he
-wished the children also to take instruction seriously. He
-was totally opposed to the notion which had found favour
-with many great authorities as <i>e.g.</i>, Locke and Basedow,
-that instruction should always be given in the guise of
-amusement. “I am convinced,” says he, “that such a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_367" id="Page_367">[367]</a></span>
-notion will for ever preclude solidity of knowledge, and, for
-want of sufficient exertions on the part of the pupils, will
-lead to that very result which I wish to avoid by my
-principle of a constant employment of the thinking powers.
-A child must very early in life be taught the lesson that
-exertion is indispensable for the attainment of knowledge”<a name="FNanchor_165" id="FNanchor_165"></a><a href="#Footnote_165" class="fnanchor">[165]</a>
-(To G., xxiv, p. 117). But he should be taught at the same
-time that exertion is not an evil, and he should be encouraged,
-not frightened, into it. Healthy exertion, whether of body
-or mind, is always attended with a feeling of satisfaction
-amounting to pleasure, and where this pleasure is absent the
-instructor has failed in producing proper exertion. As
-Pestalozzi says, “Whenever children are inattentive and
-apparently take no interest in a lesson, the teacher should
-always first look to himself for the reason”<a name="FNanchor_166" id="FNanchor_166"></a><a href="#Footnote_166" class="fnanchor">[166]</a> (<i>Ib.</i>).</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_368" id="Page_368">[368]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>§ 103. But though he took so serious a view of instruction,
-he made instruction include and indeed give a prominent
-place to the arts of singing and drawing. In the
-Pestalozzian schools singing found immense favour with both
-the masters and the pupils, and the collection of songs by
-Nägeli, a master at Yverdun, became famous. Drawing too
-was practised by all. As Pestalozzi writes to Greaves (xxiv,
-117), “A person who is in the habit of drawing, especially
-from nature, will easily perceive many circumstances which
-are commonly overlooked, and will form a much more correct
-impression even of such objects as he does not stop to
-examine minutely, than one who has never been taught to
-look upon what he sees with an intention of reproducing a
-likeness of it. The attention to the exact shape of the
-whole and the proportion of the parts, which is requisite for
-the taking of an adequate sketch, is converted into a habit,
-and becomes productive both of instruction and amusement.”</p>
-
-<p>§ 104. I have now endeavoured to point out the main
-features of Pestalozzianism. The following is the summing
-up of these features given by Morf in his Contribution to
-Pestalozzi’s Biography:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>1. Instruction must be based on the learner’s own
-experience. (Das Fundament des Unterrichts ist
-die Anschauung.)</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_369" id="Page_369">[369]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>2. What the learner experiences and observes must be
-connected with language.</p>
-
-<p>3. The time for learning is not the time for judging, not
-the time for criticism.</p>
-
-<p>4. In every department instruction must begin with the
-simplest elements, and starting from these must
-be carried on step by step according to the development
-of the child, that is, it must be brought into
-psychological sequence.</p>
-
-<p>5. At each point the instructor shall not go forward till
-that part of the subject has become the proper
-intellectual possession of the learner.</p>
-
-<p>6. Instruction must follow the path of development, not
-the path of lecturing, teaching, or telling.</p>
-
-<p>7. To the educator the individuality of the child must be
-sacred.</p>
-
-<p>8. Not the acquisition of knowledge or skill is the main
-object of elementary instruction, but the development
-and strengthening of the powers of the mind.</p>
-
-<p>9. With knowledge (<i>Wissen</i>) must come power (<i>Können</i>),
-with information (<i>Kenntniss</i>) skill (<i>Fertigkeit</i>).</p>
-
-<p>10. Intercourse between educator and pupil, and school
-discipline especially, must be based on and controlled
-by love.</p>
-
-<p>11. Instruction shall be subordinated to the aim of <i>education</i>.</p>
-
-<p>12. The ground of moral-religious bringing up lies in the
-relation of mother and child.<a name="FNanchor_167" id="FNanchor_167"></a><a href="#Footnote_167" class="fnanchor">[167]</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_370" id="Page_370">[370]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>§ 105. Having now seen in which direction Pestalozzi
-would start the school-coach, let us examine (with reference<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_371" id="Page_371">[371]</a></span>
-to England only) the direction in which it is travelling at
-present.</p>
-
-<p>§ 106. For educational purposes we may, with Lord
-Beaconsfield, regard the English as composed of two nations,
-the rich and the poor. Let us consider these separately.</p>
-
-<p>In the case of the rich we find that the worst part of our
-educational course—the part most wrong in theory and
-pernicious in practice—is the schooling of young children,
-say between six and twelve years old. Before the age of
-six some few are fortunate enough to attend a good Kindergarten;
-but the opportunity of doing this is at present rare,
-and for most children of well-to-do parents there is, up to
-six years old, little or no organised instruction. Pestalozzi
-would have every mother made capable of giving such
-instruction. Froebel would have every child sent to a
-skilled “Kindergärtnerin.” It seems to me beyond question
-that children gain immensely from joining a properly-managed
-Kindergarten; but where this is impossible, perhaps the
-mother may leave the child to the series of impressions
-which come to its senses without any regular order. According
-to the first Lord Lytton, the mother’s interference
-might remind us of the man who thought his bees would
-make honey faster if, instead of going in search of flowers,
-they were shut up and had flowers brought to them. The way<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_372" id="Page_372">[372]</a></span>
-in which young children turn from object to object, like the
-bees from flower to flower, seems to show that at this stage
-their intellectual training goes on whether we help it or not.
-There is no doubt an education for children however young,
-and the mother is the teacher, but the lessons have more to
-do with the heart than the head.</p>
-
-<p>§ 107. But the time for regular teaching comes at last,
-and what is to be done then? Let us consider briefly what
-<i>is</i> done.</p>
-
-<p>Hitherto, the only defence ever made of our school-course
-leading up to residence at a University, has been that it
-aims not at giving knowledge but at training the mind.
-Youths then are supposed to be engaged, not in gaining
-knowledge, but in training their faculties for adult life. But
-when we come to provide for the “education” of children,
-we never think of training their faculties for youth, but
-endeavour solely to inculcate what will then come in useful.
-We see clearly enough that it would be absurd to cram the
-mind of a youth with laws of science or art or commerce
-which he could not understand, on the ground that the
-getting-up of these things might save him trouble in after-life.
-But we do not hesitate to sacrifice childhood to the
-learning by heart of grammar rules, Latin declensions,
-historical dates, and the like, with no thought whatever of
-the child’s faculties, but simply with a view of giving him
-knowledge (so-called) that will come in useful five or six
-years afterwards. We do not treat youths thus, probably
-because we have more sympathy with them, or at least
-understand them better. The intellectual life to which the
-senses and the imagination are subordinated in the man
-has already begun in the youth. In an inferior degree he
-can do what the man can do, and understand what the man<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_373" id="Page_373">[373]</a></span>
-can understand. He has already some notion of reasoning,
-and abstraction, and generalisation. But with the child it
-is very different. His active faculties may be said almost
-to differ in kind from a man’s. He has a feeling for the
-sensuous world which he will lose as he grows up. His
-strong imagination, under no control of the reason, is constantly
-at work building castles in the air, and investing the
-doll or the puppet-show with all the properties of the things
-they represent. His feelings and affections, easily excited,
-find an object to love or dislike in every person and thing
-he meets with. On the other hand, he has only vague
-notions of the abstract, and has no interest except in actual
-known persons, animals, and things.</p>
-
-<p>§ 108. There is, then, between the child of eight or nine
-and the youth of fourteen or fifteen a greater difference than
-between the youth and the man of twenty; and this demands
-a corresponding difference in their studies. And
-yet, as matters are carried on now, the child is too often
-kept to the drudgery of learning by rote mere collections
-of hard words, perhaps, too, in a foreign language: and
-absorbed in the present, he is not much comforted by the
-teacher’s assurance that “some day” these things will come
-in useful.</p>
-
-<p>§ 109. How to educate the child is doubtless the most
-difficult problem of all, and it is generally allotted to those
-who are the least likely to find a satisfactory solution.</p>
-
-<p>The earliest educator of the children of many rich parents
-is the nursemaid—a person not usually distinguished by
-either intellectual or moral excellence.<a name="FNanchor_168" id="FNanchor_168"></a><a href="#Footnote_168" class="fnanchor">[168]</a> At an early age<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_374" id="Page_374">[374]</a></span>
-this educator is superseded by the Preparatory School.
-Taken as a body, the ladies who open “establishments for
-young gentlemen” cannot be said to hold enlarged views,
-or, indeed, any views whatever, on the subject of education.
-Their intention is not so much to cultivate the children’s
-faculties as to make a livelihood, and to hear no complaints
-that pupils who have left them have been found deficient
-in the expected knowledge by the master of the next school.
-If anyone would investigate the sort of teaching which is
-considered adapted to the capacity of children at this stage,
-let him look into a standard work still in vogue (“Mangnall’s
-Questions”), from which the young of both sexes
-acquire a great quantity and variety of learning; the whole
-of ancient and modern history and biography, together with
-the heathen mythology, the planetary system, and the names
-of all the constellations, lying very compactly in about 300
-pages.<a name="FNanchor_169" id="FNanchor_169"></a><a href="#Footnote_169" class="fnanchor">[169]</a></p>
-
-<p>Unfortunately, moreover, from the gentility of these
-ladies, their scholars’ bodies are often treated in preparatory
-schools no less injuriously than their minds. It may be
-natural in a child to use his lungs and delight in noise, but<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_375" id="Page_375">[375]</a></span>
-this can hardly be considered <i>genteel</i>, so the tendency is,
-as far as possible, suppressed. It is found, too, that if
-children are allowed to run about they get dirty and spoil
-their clothes, and do not look like “young gentlemen,” so
-they are made to take exercise in a much more genteel
-fashion, walking slowly two-and-two, <i>with gloves on</i>.<a name="FNanchor_170" id="FNanchor_170"></a><a href="#Footnote_170" class="fnanchor">[170]</a></p>
-
-<p>§ 110. At nine or ten years old, boys are commonly put
-to a school taught by masters. Here they lose sight of
-their gloves, and learn the use of their limbs; but their
-minds are not so fortunate as their bodies. The studies
-of the school have been arranged without any thought of
-their peculiar needs. The youngest class is generally the
-largest, often much the largest, and it is handed over to
-the least competent and worst paid master on the staff of
-teachers. The reason is, that little boys are found to learn
-the tasks imposed upon them very slowly. A youth or a
-man who came fresh to the Latin grammar would learn in
-a morning as much as the master, with great labour, can
-get into children in a week. It is thought, therefore, that
-the best teaching should be applied where it will have the
-most obvious results. If anyone were to say to the manager<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_376" id="Page_376">[376]</a></span>
-of a school, “The master who takes the lowest form teaches
-badly, and the children learn nothing”; he would perhaps
-say, “Very likely; but if I paid a much higher salary, and
-got a better man, they would learn but little.” The only
-thing the school-manager thinks of is, How much do the
-little boys learn of what is taught in the higher forms?
-How their faculties are being developed, or whether they
-have any faculties except for reading, writing, and arithmetic,
-and for getting grammar-rules, &amp;c. by heart, he is not so
-“unpractical” as to enquire.</p>
-
-<p>§ 111. With reference to the education of the first of our
-“two nations,” it seems then pretty clear that Pestalozzi
-would require that the school-coach should be turned and
-started in a totally different direction.</p>
-
-<p>§ 112. What about the education of the other “nation,”
-a nation of which the verb “to rule” has for many centuries
-been used in the passive voice, but can be used in that
-voice no longer? A century ago, with the partial exception
-of Scotland and Massachusetts, there was no such thing as
-school education for the people to be found anywhere in
-Europe or America. But from 1789 onwards power has
-been passing more and more from the few to the many;
-and as a natural consequence folk-schools (for which we
-have not yet found a name) have become of vast importance
-everywhere. The Germans, as we have seen, have been
-the disciples of Pestalozzi, and their elementary education
-in everything bears traces of his ideas. The English have
-organised a great system of elementary education in total
-ignorance of Pestalozzi. As usual, we seem to have supposed
-that the right system would come to us “in sleep.”
-But has it come? The children of the poor are now compelled
-by the law to attend an elementary school. What<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_377" id="Page_377">[377]</a></span>
-sort of an education has the law there provided for them?
-The Education Department professes to measure everything
-by results. Let us do the same. Suppose that on his
-leaving school we wished to forecast a lad’s future. What
-should we try to find out about him? No doubt we should
-ask what he knew; but this would not be by any means
-the main thing. His skill would interest us, and still more
-would his state of health. But what we should ask first
-and foremost is this, Whom does he love? Whom does
-he admire and imitate? What does he care about? What
-interests him? It is only when the answers to these questions
-are satisfactory, that we can think hopefully of his
-future; and it is only in so far as the school-course has
-tended to make the answers satisfactory, that it deserves
-our approval. Schools such as Pestalozzi designed would
-have thus deserved our approval; but we cannot say this
-of the schools into which the children of the English poor
-are now driven. In these schools the heart and the affections
-are not thought of, the powers of neither mind nor
-body are developed by exercise, and the children do not
-acquire any interests that will raise or benefit them.</p>
-
-<p>§ 113. An advocate of our system would not deny this,
-but would probably say, “The question for us to consider
-is, not what is the best that in the most favourable circumstances
-might be attempted, but what is the best that in
-very restricted and by no means favourable circumstances,
-we are likely to get. The teachers in our schools are not
-self-devoting Pestalozzis, but only ordinary men and women,
-and still worse, ordinary boys and girls.<a name="FNanchor_171" id="FNanchor_171"></a><a href="#Footnote_171" class="fnanchor">[171]</a> It would be of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_378" id="Page_378">[378]</a></span>
-no use talking to our teachers (still less our pupil-teachers)
-about developing the affections and the mental or bodily
-powers of the children. All such talk could end in nothing
-but silly cant. As for character, we expect the school to
-cultivate in the children habits of order, neatness, industry.
-Beyond this we cannot go.”</p>
-
-<p>And yet, though this seems reasonable, we feel that it is
-not quite satisfactory. If so much depends in all of us on
-“admiration, hope, and love,” we can hardly consider a
-system of education that entirely ignores them to be well<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_379" id="Page_379">[379]</a></span>
-adapted to the needs of human nature. If Pestalozzi was
-right, we must be wrong. We have never supposed the
-object of the school to be the development of the faculties
-of heart, of head, and of hand, but we have thought of
-nothing but learning—learning first of all to read, write,
-and cipher, and then in “good” schools, one or more
-“extra subjects” may be taken up, and a grant obtained
-for them. The sole object, both of managers and teachers,
-is to prepare for the Inspector, who comes once a year, and
-from an examination of five hours or so, pronounces on
-what the children have learnt.</p>
-
-<p>§ 114. The engineer most concerned in the construction
-of this machine, the Right Hon. Robert Lowe, announced
-that there could be “no such thing as a science of education;”
-and as when we have no opinion of our own we always
-adopt the opinion of some positive person, we took his word
-for it. But what if the confident Mr. Lowe was mistaken?
-What if there <i>is</i> such a science, and the aim of it is that
-children should grow up not so much to <i>know</i> something as
-to <i>be</i> something? In this case we shall be obliged sooner
-or later to give up Mr. Lowe and to come round to
-Pestalozzi.<a name="FNanchor_172" id="FNanchor_172"></a><a href="#Footnote_172" class="fnanchor">[172]</a> Science is correct inferences drawn from the
-facts of the universe; and where such science exists, confident
-assertions that it does not and cannot exist are dangerous
-for the confident persons and for those who follow them. Even<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_380" id="Page_380">[380]</a></span>
-if “there is no such thing as a science of education,” such
-a thing as <i>education</i> there is; and this is just what Mr. Lowe,
-and we may say the English, practically deny. They make
-arrangements for instruction and mete out “the grant”
-according to the results obtained, but they totally fail to
-conceive of the existence of <i>education</i>, education which has
-instruction among its various agents.</p>
-
-<p>§ 115. In one respect the analogy between the educator
-and child and the gardener and plant, an analogy in which
-Pestalozzi no less than Froebel delighted, entirely breaks
-down. The gardener has to study the conditions necessary
-for the health and development of the plant, but these
-conditions lie outside his own life and are independent of it.
-With the educator it is different. Like the gardener he can
-create nothing in the child, but unlike the gardener he can
-further the development only of that which exists in himself.
-He <i>draws out</i> in the young the intelligence and the sense of
-what is just, the love of what is beautiful, the admiration of what
-is noble, but this he can do only by his own intelligence and
-his own enthusiasm for what is just and beautiful and noble.
-Even industry is in many cases <i>caught</i> from the teacher. In a
-volume of essays (originally published in the <i>Forum</i>), in which
-some men, distinguished as scholars or in literature in the
-United States, have given an account of their early years, we
-find that almost in every case they date their intellectual industry
-and growth from the time when they came under the influence
-of some inspiring teacher. Thus even for instruction
-and still more for education, the great force is <i>the teacher</i>.
-This is a truth which all our “parties” overlook. They
-wage their controversies and have their triumphs and defeats
-about unessentials, and leave the essentials to “crotchety
-educationists.” In such questions as whether the Church<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_381" id="Page_381">[381]</a></span>
-Catechism shall or shall not be taught, whether natural
-science shall or shall not figure in the time-table (without
-scientific teachers it can figure nowhere else), whether the
-parents or the Government shall pay for each child twopence
-or threepence a week, whether the ratepayers shall or shall
-not be “represented” among the Managers in “voluntary”
-schools, in all questions of this kind <i>education</i> is not concerned;
-and yet these are the only questions that we think
-about. In the end it will perhaps dawn upon us that in
-every school what is important for education is not the time-table
-but the teacher, and that so far as pupil-teachers are
-employed education is impossible. Elsewhere (<a href="#Page_476"><i>infra</i> p. 476</a>)
-I have told of a man in the prime of life (he seemed between
-40 and 50 years old) whose time was entirely taken up in
-teaching a large class of children, boys and girls, of six or
-seven years. He most certainly could and did educate them
-both in heart and mind. He made their lessons a delightful
-occupation to them, and he exercised over them the influence
-of a good and wise father. Here was the right system seen
-at its best. I do not say that all or even most adult teachers
-would have exercised so good an influence as this gentleman;
-but so far as they come up to what they ought to be and
-might be they do exercise such an influence. And this of
-course can be said of no <i>pupil</i>-teacher.</p>
-
-<p>§ 116. As regards schools then, schools for the rich and
-schools for the poor, the great educating force is the personality
-of the teacher. Before we can have Pestalozzian
-schools we must have Pestalozzian teachers. Teachers
-must catch something of Pestalozzi’s spirit and enter into
-his conception of their task. Perhaps some of them will
-feel inclined to say: “Fine words, no doubt, and in a sense
-very true, that education should be the unfolding of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_382" id="Page_382">[382]</a></span>
-faculties according to the Divine idea; but between this
-high poetical theory and the dull prose of actual school-teaching,
-there is a great gulf fixed, and we cannot attend
-to both at the same time.” I know full well the difference
-there is between theories and plans of education as they
-seem to us when we are at leisure and can think of them
-without reference to particular pupils, and when all our
-energy is taxed to get through our day’s teaching, and our
-animal spirits jaded by having to keep order and exact
-attention among veritable schoolboys who do not answer
-in all respects to “the young” of the theorists. But whilst
-admitting most heartily the difference here, as elsewhere,
-between the actual and the ideal, I think that the dull
-prose of school-teaching would be less dull and less prosaic
-if our aim was higher, and if we did not contentedly assume
-that our present performances are as good as the nature of
-the case will admit of. Many teachers (perhaps I may say
-most) are discontented with the greater number of their pupils,
-but it is not so usual for teachers to be discontented with
-themselves. And yet even those who are most averse from
-theoretical views, which they call unpractical, would admit,
-as practical men, that their methods are probably susceptible
-of improvement, and that even if their methods are
-right, they themselves are by no means perfect teachers.
-Only let the <i>desire</i> of improvement once exist, and the
-teacher will find a new interest in his work. In part, the
-treadmill-like monotony so wearing to the spirits will be
-done away, and he will at times have the encouragement of
-conscious progress. To a man thus minded, theorists may
-be of great assistance. His practical knowledge may, indeed,
-often show him the absurdity of some pompously
-enunciated principle, and even where the principles seem<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_383" id="Page_383">[383]</a></span>
-sound, he may smile at the applications. But the theorists
-will show him many aspects of his profession, and will lead
-him to make many observations in it, which would otherwise
-have escaped him. They will save him from a danger
-caused by the difficulty of getting anything done in the
-school-room, the danger of thinking more of means than
-ends. They will teach him to examine what his aim really
-is, and then whether he is using the most suitable methods
-to accomplish it.</p>
-
-<p>Such a theorist is Pestalozzi. He points to a high ideal,
-and bids us measure our modes of education by it. Let us
-not forget that if we are practical men we are Christians,
-and as such the ideal set before us is the highest of all.
-“Be ye perfect, even as your Father in heaven is perfect.”</p>
-
-<div class="smaller">
-
-<p>The Pestalozzian literature in German and even in French is now
-considerable, but it is still small in English. The book I have made
-most use of is <i>Histoire de Pestalozzi par R. de Guimps</i> (Lausanne,
-Bridel), with its translation by John Russell (London: Sonnenschein.
-Appleton’s: N. Yk.). In Henry Barnard’s <i>Pestalozzi and
-Pestalozzianism</i> are collected some good papers, among them Tilleard’s
-trans. from Raumer. We also have H. Kruesi’s <i>Pestalozzi</i> (Cincinatti:
-Wilson, Hinkle, &amp; Co.). I have already mentioned Miss
-Channing’s <i>Leonard and Gertrude</i>. The <i>Letters to Greaves</i> are now
-out of print. A complete account of Pestalozzi and everything
-connected with him, bibliography included, is given in M. J.
-Guillaume’s article <i>Pestalozzi</i>, in Buisson’s <i>Dictionnaire de Pédagogie</i>.
-(See also <i>Pestalozzi</i> par J. Guillaume (Hachette) just published.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_384" id="Page_384">[384]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="XVII">XVII.<br />
-<span class="smaller">FRIEDRICH FROEBEL.<br />
-(1783-1852.)</span></h2>
-
-<p>§ 1. I now approach the most difficult part of my subject.
-I have endeavoured to give some account of the lessons
-taught us by the chief Educational Reformers. No doubt
-my selection of these has been made in a fashion somewhat
-arbitrary, and there are names which do not appear and
-yet might reasonably be looked for if all the chief Educational
-Reformers were supposed to be included. But the
-plan of my book has restricted me to a few, and I am by
-no means sure that some to whom I have given a chapter are
-as worthy of it as some to whom I have not. I have
-in a measure been guided by fancy and even by chance.
-One man, however, I dare not leave out. All the best
-tendencies of modern thought on education seem to me to
-culminate in what was said and done by Friedrich Froebel,
-and I have little doubt that he has shown the right road
-for further advance. Of what he said and did I therefore
-feel bound to give the best account I can, but I am well
-aware that I shall fail, even more conspicuously than in
-other cases, to do him justice. There are some great men
-who seem to have access to a world from which we ordinary
-mortals are shut out. Like Moses “they go up into the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_385" id="Page_385">[385]</a></span>
-Mount,” and the directions they give us are based upon
-what they have seen in it. But we cannot go up with
-them; so we feel that we very imperfectly understand them;
-and when there can be not the smallest doubt of their
-sincerity we at times hesitate about the nature of their
-visions. For myself I must admit that I very imperfectly
-understand Froebel. I am convinced, as I said, that he has
-pointed out the right road for our advance in education;
-but he was perhaps right in saying: “Centuries may yet
-pass before my view of the human creature as manifested in
-the child, and of the educational treatment it requires, are
-universally received.” It has already taken centuries to
-recover from the mistakes made at the Renascence. For
-the full attainment of Froebel’s standpoint perhaps a few
-additional centuries may be necessary.</p>
-
-<p>§ 2. Friedrich Wilhelm August Froebel<a name="FNanchor_173" id="FNanchor_173"></a><a href="#Footnote_173" class="fnanchor">[173]</a> was born at
-Oberweissbach, a village of the Thuringian Forest, on the
-21st April, 1783. He completed his seventieth year, and
-died at Marienthal, near Bad-Liebenstein, on the 21st June,
-1852. Like Comenius, with whom he had much in
-common, he was neglected in his youth; and the remembrance
-of his own early sufferings made him in after life
-the more eager in promoting the happiness of children.
-His mother he lost in his infancy, and his father, the pastor
-of Oberweissbach and the surrounding district, attended to
-his parish but not to his family. Friedrich soon had a
-stepmother, and neglect was succeeded by stepmotherly
-attention; but a maternal uncle took pity on him, and for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_386" id="Page_386">[386]</a></span>
-some years gave him a home a few miles off at Stadt-Ilm.
-Here he went to the village school, but like many thoughtful
-boys he passed for a dunce. Throughout life he was
-always seeking for hidden connexions and an underlying
-unity in all things. In his own words: “Man, particularly
-in boyhood, should become intimate with nature—not so
-much with reference to the details and the outer forms of
-her phenomena as with reference to the Spirit of God that
-lives in her and rules over her. Indeed, the boy feels this
-deeply and demands it” (<i>Ed. of M.</i>, Hailmann’s trans., p.
-162). But nothing of this unity was to be perceived in the
-piecemeal studies of the school; so Froebel’s mind, busy as
-it was for itself, would not work for the masters. His half-brother
-was therefore thought more worthy of a university
-education, and Friedrich was apprenticed for two years to a
-forester (1797-1799). Left to himself in the Thuringian
-Forest, Froebel now began to “become intimate with
-nature;” and without scientific instruction he obtained a
-profound insight into the uniformity and essential unity of
-nature’s laws. Years afterwards the celebrated Jahn (the
-“Father Jahn” of the German gymnasts) told a Berlin
-student of a queer fellow he had met, who made out all
-sorts of wonderful things from stones and cobwebs. This
-“queer fellow” was Froebel; and the habit of making out
-general truths from the observation of nature, especially of
-plants and trees, dated from his solitary rambles in the
-Forest. No training could have been better suited to
-strengthen his inborn tendency to mysticism; and when he
-left the Forest at the early age of seventeen, he seems to
-have been possessed by the main ideas which influenced
-him all his life. The conception which in him dominated
-all others was the <i>unity of nature</i>; and he longed to study<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_387" id="Page_387">[387]</a></span>
-natural sciences that he might find in them various applications
-of nature’s universal laws. With great difficulty he
-got leave to join his elder brother at the university of Jena;
-and there for a year he went from lecture-room to lecture-room
-hoping to grasp that connexion of the sciences which
-had for him far more attraction than any particular science
-in itself. But Froebel’s allowance of money was very small,
-and his skill in the management of money was never great;
-so his university career ended in an imprisonment of nine
-weeks for a debt of thirty shillings. He then returned
-home with very poor prospects, but much more intent on
-what he calls the course of “self-completion” (<i>Vervollkommnung
-meines selbst</i>) than on “getting on” in a worldly
-point of view. He was soon sent to learn farming, but was
-recalled in consequence of the failing health of his father.
-In 1802 the father died, and Froebel, now twenty years old,
-had to shift for himself. It was some time before he found
-his true vocation, and for the next three-and-a half years we
-find him at work now in one part of Germany now in
-another,—sometimes land-surveying, sometimes acting as
-accountant, sometimes as private secretary.</p>
-
-<p>§ 3. But in all this his “outer life was far removed from
-his inner life.” “I carried my own world within me,” he
-tells us, “and this it was for which I cared and which I
-cherished.” In spite of his outward circumstances he
-became more and more conscious that a great task lay
-before him for the good of humanity; and this consciousness
-proved fatal to his “settling down.” “To thee may
-Fate soon give a settled hearth and a loving wife” (thus he
-wrote in a friend’s album in 1805); “me let it keep
-wandering without rest, and allow only time to learn aright
-my true relation to the world and to my own inner being.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_388" id="Page_388">[388]</a></span>
-Do thou give bread to men; be it my effort to give men to
-themselves” (K. Schmidt’s <i>Gesch. d. Päd.</i>, 3rd ed. by
-Lange, vol. iv, p. 277).</p>
-
-<p>§ 4. As yet the nature of the task was not clear to him,
-and it seemed determined by accident. While studying
-architecture in Frankfort-on-the-Main, he became acquainted
-with the director of a model school who had caught some
-of the enthusiasm of Pestalozzi. This friend saw that
-Froebel’s true field was education, and he persuaded him to
-give up architecture and take a post in the model school.
-“The very first time,” he says, “that I found myself before
-thirty or forty boys, I felt thoroughly at home. In fact, I
-perceived that I had at last found my long-missed life-element;
-and I wrote to my brother that I was as well
-pleased as the fish in the water: I was inexpressibly
-happy.”</p>
-
-<p>§ 5. In this school Froebel worked for two years with
-remarkable success; but he felt more and more his need of
-preparation, so he then retired and undertook the education
-of three lads of one family. Even in this he could not
-satisfy himself, and he obtained the parents’ consent to his
-taking the boys to Yverdun, and there forming with them a
-part of the celebrated institution of Pestalozzi. Thus from
-1807 till 1809 Froebel was drinking in Pestalozzianism at
-the fountain head, and qualifying himself to carry on the
-work which Pestalozzi had begun. For the science of
-education had to deduce from Pestalozzi’s experience
-principles which Pestalozzi himself could not deduce;
-and “Froebel, the pupil of Pestalozzi, and a genius like
-his master, completed the reformer’s system; taking the
-results at which Pestalozzi had arrived through the necessities
-of his position, Froebel developed the ideas involved<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_389" id="Page_389">[389]</a></span>
-in them, not by further experience but by deduction from
-the nature of man, and thus he attained to the conception
-of true human development and to the requirements of true
-education” (Schmidt’s <i>Gesch. d. Päd.</i>).</p>
-
-<p>§ 6. Holding that man and nature, inasmuch as they
-proceed from the same Source, must be governed by the
-same laws, Froebel longed for more knowledge of natural
-science. Even Pestalozzi seemed to him not to “honour
-science in her divinity.” He therefore determined to
-continue the university course which had been so rudely
-interrupted eleven years before, and in 1811 he began
-studying at Göttingen, whence he proceeded to Berlin. In
-his Autobiography he tells us: “The lectures for which I
-had so longed really came up to the needs of my mind and
-soul, and made me feel more fervently than ever the
-certainty of the demonstrable inner connexion of the whole
-cosmical development of the universe. I saw also the
-possibility of man’s becoming conscious of this absolute
-unity of the universe, as well as of the diversity of things
-and appearances which is perpetually unfolding itself within
-that unity; and then when I had made clear to myself, and
-brought fully home to my consciousness the view that the
-infinitely varied phenomena in man’s life, work, thought,
-feeling, and position were all summed up in the unity of
-his personal existence I felt myself able to turn my thoughts
-once more to educational problems” (<i>Autob.</i> trans. by
-Michaelis and Moore, p. 89).</p>
-
-<p>But again his studies were interrupted, this time by the
-king of Prussia’s celebrated call “To my people.” Though
-not a Prussian, Froebel was heart and soul a German. He
-therefore responded to the call, enlisted in Lützow’s corps,
-and went through the campaign of 1813. His military<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_390" id="Page_390">[390]</a></span>
-ardour, however, did not take his mind off education.
-“Everywhere,” he writes, “as far as the fatigues I underwent
-allowed, I carried in my thoughts my future calling as
-educator; yes, even in the few engagements in which I had
-to take part. Even in these I could gather experience for
-the task I proposed to myself.” Froebel’s soldiering showed
-him the value of discipline and united action, how the
-individual belongs not to himself but to the whole body,
-and how the whole body supports the individual.</p>
-
-<p>Froebel was rewarded for his patriotism by the friendship
-of two men whose names will always be associated with his,
-Langethal and Middendorff. These young men, ten years
-younger than Froebel, became attached to him in the field,
-and were ever afterwards his devoted followers, sacrificing
-all their prospects in life for the sake of carrying out his
-ideas.</p>
-
-<p>§ 7. At the peace of Fontainebleau (signed in May,
-1814) Froebel returned to Berlin, and became curator of
-the Museum of Mineralogy under Professor Weiss. In
-accepting this appointment from the Government he seemed
-to turn aside from his work as educator; but if not teaching
-he was learning. The unity of nature and human nature
-seemed more and more to reveal itself to him. Of the
-days past in the museum he afterwards wrote: “Here was
-I at the central point of my life and strife, where inner
-working and law, where life, nature, and mathematics were
-united in the fixed crystaline form, where a world of
-symbols lay open to the inner eye.” Again he says: “The
-stones in my hand and under my eye became speaking
-forms. The world of crystals declared to me the life and
-laws of life of man, and in still but real and sensible speech
-taught the true life of humanity.” “Geology and crystallography<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_391" id="Page_391">[391]</a></span>
-not only opened for me a higher circle of knowledge
-and insight, but also showed me a higher goal for my
-inquiry, my speculation, and my endeavour. Nature and
-man now seemed to me mutually to explain each other
-through all their numberless various stages of development.
-Man, as I saw, receives from a knowledge of natural
-objects, even because of their immense deep-seated
-diversity, a foundation for and a guidance towards a knowledge
-of himself and life, and a preparation for the
-manifestation of that knowledge” (<i>Autob.</i> <a href="#Page_97"><i>ut supra</i>, p. 97</a>).
-More and more the thought possessed him that the one
-thing needful for man was unity of development, perfect
-evolution in accordance with the laws of his being, such
-evolution as science discovers in the other organisms of
-nature.</p>
-
-<p>§ 8. He at first intended to become a teacher of natural
-science, but before long wider views dawned upon him.
-Langethal and Middendorff were in Berlin, engaged in
-tuition. Froebel gave them regular instruction in his
-theory, and at length, counting on their support, he
-resolved to set about realising his own idea of “the new
-education.” This was in 1816. Three years before one
-of his brothers, a clergyman, had died of fever caught from
-the French prisoners. His widow was still living in the
-parsonage at Griesheim, a village on the Ilm. Froebel
-gave up his post in Berlin, and set out for Griesheim on
-foot, spending his very last groschen on the way for bread.
-Here he undertook the education of his orphan niece and
-nephews, and also of two more nephews sent him by
-another brother. With these he opened a school, and
-wrote to Middendorff and Langethal to come and help in
-the experiment. Middendorff came at once, Langethal a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_392" id="Page_392">[392]</a></span>
-year or two later, when the school had been moved to
-Keilhau, another of the Thuringian villages, which became
-the Mecca of the new faith. In Keilhau, Froebel,
-Langethal, Middendorff, and Barop, a relation of Middendorff’s,
-all married and formed an educational community.
-Such zeal could not be fruitless, and the school gradually
-increased, though for many years its teachers, with Froebel
-at their head, were in the greatest straits for money, and at
-times even for food. Karl Froebel, who was brought up in
-the school, tells how, on one occasion, he and the other
-children were sent to ramble in the woods till some of the
-seed-corn provided for the coming year had been turned
-into bread for them. Besides these difficulties the community
-suffered from the panic and reaction after the
-murder of Kotzebue (1819), and were persecuted as a nest
-of demagogues. But “the New Education” was sufficiently
-successful to attract notice from all quarters; and when he
-had been ten years at Keilhau (1826) Froebel published his
-great work, <i>The Education of Man</i>.</p>
-
-<p>§ 9. Four years later he determined to start other institutions
-in connexion with the parent institution at Keilhau;
-and being offered by a private friend the use of a castle on
-the Wartensee, in the canton of Lucerne, he left Keilhau
-under the direction of Barop, and with Langethal made a
-settlement in Switzerland. The ground, however, was very
-ill chosen. The Catholic clergy resisted what they considered
-as a Protestant invasion, and the experiment on the
-Wartensee and at Willisau in the same canton, to which the
-institution was moved in 1833, never had a fair chance. It
-was in vain that Middendorff at Froebel’s call left his wife
-and family at Keilhau, and laboured for four years in
-Switzerland without once seeing them. The Swiss institution<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_393" id="Page_393">[393]</a></span>
-never flourished. But the Swiss Government wished to
-turn to account the presence of the great educator; so
-young teachers were sent to Froebel for instruction, and
-finally he removed to Burgdorf (a town already famous from
-Pestalozzi’s labours there thirty years earlier) to undertake
-the establishment of a public orphanage, and also to
-superintend a course of teaching for schoolmasters. The
-elementary teachers of the canton were to spend three
-months every alternate year at Burgdorf, and there compare
-experiences, and learn of distinguished men such as Froebel
-and Bitzius.</p>
-
-<p>§ 10. In his conferences with these teachers Froebel
-found that the schools suffered from the state of the raw
-material brought into them. Till the school age was
-reached the children were entirely neglected. Froebel’s
-conception of harmonious development naturally led him
-to attach much importance to the earliest years, and his
-great work on <i>The Education of Man</i>, published as early as
-1826, deals chiefly with the education of children. At
-Burgdorf his thoughts were much occupied with the proper
-treatment of <i>young</i> children, and in scheming for them a
-graduated course of exercises modelled on the games in
-which he observed them to be most interested. In his
-eagerness to carry out his new plans he grew impatient of
-official restraints; and partly from this reason, partly on
-account of his wife’s ill health, he left Burgdorf without
-even actually becoming “Waisenvater” (father of the
-orphans).<a name="FNanchor_174" id="FNanchor_174"></a><a href="#Footnote_174" class="fnanchor">[174]</a> After a sojourn of some months in Berlin,
-where he was detained through family affairs, but used the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_394" id="Page_394">[394]</a></span>
-opportunities thus afforded of examining the recently
-founded infant schools, Froebel returned to Keilhau, and
-soon afterwards opened the first <i>Kindergarten</i>, or “Garden
-of Children,” in the neighbouring village of Blankenburg
-(<span class="smcapuc">A.D.</span> 1837). Not only the thing but the name seemed to
-Froebel a happy inspiration, and it has now become
-inseparably connected with his own. Perhaps we can
-hardly understand the pleasure he took in it unless we
-know its predecessor, <i>Kleinkinderbeschäftigungsanstalt</i>.</p>
-
-<p>§ 11. Firmly convinced of the importance of the Kindergarten
-for the whole human race, Froebel described his
-system in a weekly paper (his <i>Sonntagsblatt</i>) which appeared
-from the middle of 1837 till 1840. He also lectured in
-great towns; and he gave a regular course of instruction to
-young teachers at Blankenburg.</p>
-
-<p>§ 12. But although the principles of the Kindergarten
-were gradually making their way, the first Kindergarten was
-failing for want of funds. It had to be given up; and
-Froebel, now a widower (he had lost his wife in 1839),
-carried on his course for teachers first at Keilhau, and from
-1848, for the last four years of his life, at or near Liebenstein,
-in the Thuringian Forest, and in the duchy of Meiningen.
-It is in these last years that the man Froebel will be best
-known to posterity; for in 1849 be attracted within the
-circle of his influence a woman of great intellectual power,
-the Baroness von Marenholtz-Bülow, who has given us in
-her <i>Recollections of Friedrich Froebel</i> the only life-like portrait
-we possess. In these records of personal intercourse we
-see the truth of Deinhardt’s words: “The living perception
-of universal and ideal truth which his talk revealed to us,
-his unbounded enthusiasm for the education and happiness
-of the human race, his willingness to offer up everything he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_395" id="Page_395">[395]</a></span>
-possessed for the sake of his idea, the stream of thoughts
-which flowed from his enthusiasm for the ideal as from an
-inexhaustible fountain, all these made Froebel a wonderful
-appearance in the world, by whom no unprejudiced spectator
-could fail to be attracted and elevated.”</p>
-
-<p>§ 13. These seemed likely to be Froebel’s most peaceful
-days. He married again; and having now devoted himself
-to the training of women as educators, he spent his time in
-instructing his class of young female teachers. But trouble
-came upon him from a quarter whence he least expected it.
-In the great year of revolutions, 1848, Froebel had hoped to
-turn to account the general eagerness for improvement, and
-Middendorff had presented an address on Kindergartens to
-the German Parliament. Besides this a nephew of Froebel’s
-published books which were supposed to teach socialism.
-True the uncle and nephew differed so widely that “the
-New Froebelians” were the enemies of the “Old.” But
-the distinction was overlooked, and Friedrich and Karl
-Froebel were regarded as the united advocates of “some
-new thing.” In the reaction which soon set in, Froebel
-found himself suspected of socialism and irreligion; and in
-1851 the <i>Cultus-minister</i> Raumer issued an edict forbidding
-the establishment of schools “after Friedrich and Karl
-Froebel’s principles” in Prussia. It was in vain that
-Froebel proved that his principles differed fundamentally
-from his nephew’s. It was in vain that a congress of
-schoolmasters, presided over by the celebrated Diesterweg,
-protested against the calumnious decree. The Minister
-turned a deaf ear, and the decree remained in force ten
-years after the death of Froebel (<i>i.e.</i>, till 1862). But the
-edict was a heavy blow to the old man, who looked to the
-Government of the “<i>Cultus-staat</i>” Prussia for support, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_396" id="Page_396">[396]</a></span>
-was met with denunciation. Of the justice of the charge
-brought by the Minister against Froebel the reader may
-judge from the account of his principles given below.</p>
-
-<p>Whether from the worry of this new controversy, or from
-whatever cause, Froebel did not long survive the decree.
-His seventieth birthday was celebrated with great rejoicings
-in May, 1852, but he died in the following month, and
-lies buried at Schweina, a village near his last abode,
-Marienthal.</p>
-
-<p>§ 14. Throughout these essays my object has been to
-collect what seemed to me the most valuable lessons of
-various Reformers. In doing this I have had to judge and
-decide what was most valuable, and at times to criticise and
-differ from my authorities. This may perhaps give rise to
-the question, Do you then think yourself the superior or
-at least the equal of the great men you criticise? and I
-could only reply in all sincerity, I most certainly do not.
-If I am asked further, what then is my attitude towards
-them? I reply, it differs very much with different individuals.
-I cannot say I am prepared to sit at the feet of
-Mulcaster, or Dury, or Petty. In writing of these men I
-simply point out very early expression of ideas that following
-generations have developed partially and we are developing
-still. When we come to the great leaders we see among
-them men like Comenius who unite a thorough study of
-what has already been thought and done with a genius for
-original thinking, men like Locke with splendid intellectual
-gifts and a power of happy and clear expression, men like
-Rousseau with a talent for shaking themselves free from
-“custom”—custom which “lies upon us with a weight,
-Heavy as frost and deep almost as life,” and besides this
-(in his case at least) endowed with a voice to be heard<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_397" id="Page_397">[397]</a></span>
-throughout the world. Then again we have men like
-Pestalozzi who with a genius for investigating, devote their
-lives to the investigation, and men like Froebel who seem
-to penetrate to a region above us or at least beyond us, and
-to talk about it in language which at times only partially
-conveys a meaning. From all these men we have much to
-learn; and that we may do this we must come as learners
-to them. When we thus come we find that the great lessons
-they teach become clearer and clearer as each takes up
-wholly or in part what has been taught by his predecessors
-and adds to it. Some of these lessons we may now receive
-as established truths and seek to conform our practice to
-them. But in following our leaders we dare not close our
-eyes. Before we can know anything we must see it, as
-Locke says, with our mind’s eye. The great thing is to
-keep the eye of the mind wide open and always on the lookout
-for truth. Acting on this conviction I have not blindly
-accepted the dicta even of the greatest men but have selected
-those of their lessons which are taught if not by all at least
-by most of them, and which also seem to evoke “the spontaneous
-spring of the intelligence towards truth” (<a href="#Page_362">see p. 362,
-<i>supra</i></a>).</p>
-
-<p>§ 15. In reading Froebel however I am conscious that
-this “spring” is wanting. Before one can accept teaching
-one must at least understand it, and this preliminary is not
-always possible when we would learn from Froebel. At
-times he goes entirely out of sight, and whether the words
-we hear are the expression of deep truth or have absolutely
-no meaning at all, I for my part am at times totally unable
-to determine. But where I can understand him he seems
-to me singularly wise; and working in the same lines as
-Pestalozzi he in some respects advances far beyond his great
-predecessor.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_398" id="Page_398">[398]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>§ 16. Both these men were devotees of science; but
-instead of finding in science anything antagonistic to
-religion they looked upon science as the expression of the
-mind of God. Their belief was just that which Sir Thomas
-Browne had uttered more than 200 years before in the <i>Religio
-Medici</i>: “Though we christen effects by their most sensible
-and nearest causes yet is God the true and infallible cause
-of all, whose concourse [<i>i.e.</i>, concurrence, co-operation]
-though it be general, yet doth it subdivide itself into the
-particular actions of everything, and is that spirit by which
-each singular essence not only subsists but performs its
-operation.”<a name="FNanchor_175" id="FNanchor_175"></a><a href="#Footnote_175" class="fnanchor">[175]</a> With this belief Froebel sought to trace
-everything back to the central Unity, to God. The author
-of the <i>De Imitatione Christi</i> has said: “The man to whom
-all things are one, who refers all things to one and sees all
-things in one, he can stand firm and be at peace in God.
-Cui omnia unum sunt, et qui omnia ad unum trahit, et
-omnia in uno videt, potest stabilis esse et in Deo pacificus
-permanere” (<i>De Im. Xti.</i> lib. i; cap. 3, § 2). So thought
-Froebel, and his great longing was to refer all things to one
-and see all things in one. However little we may share this
-longing we must admit that it is a natural outcome from the
-Christian religion. If there is One in Whom all “live and
-move and have their being,” everything should be referred
-to Him. As Froebel says, “In Allem wirkt und schafft <i>Ein</i>
-Leben, Weil das Leben All’ ein einz’ger Gott gegeben. (In
-everything there works and stirs <i>one</i> life, because to all One
-God has given life.)” So long then as we remain Christians
-we must agree with Froebel that all true education is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_399" id="Page_399">[399]</a></span>
-founded on Religion. Perhaps in the end we may adopt
-his high ideal and say with him, “Education should lead
-and guide man to clearness concerning himself and in
-himself, to peace with nature, and to unity with God;
-hence, it should lift him to a knowledge of himself and
-of mankind, to a knowledge of God and of Nature, and to
-the pure and holy life to which such knowledge leads.”
-(<i>E. of M.</i>, Hailmann’s t., 5.) “The object of education is
-the realization of a faithful, pure, inviolate, and hence holy
-life” (<i>Ib.</i> 4).</p>
-
-<p>§ 17. This is indeed a high ideal: and we naturally ask,
-If we would work towards it what road would Froebel point
-out to us? This brings us to his theory of development or,
-as it has been called since Darwin, evolution. The idea of
-organic growth was first definitely applied to the young by
-Pestalozzi, but it was more clearly and consistently applied
-by Froebel. It has gone forth conquering and to conquer;
-and though far indeed from being accepted by the teaching
-profession of this age, it is likely to have a vast influence on
-the practice of those who will come after them. I therefore
-give the following statement of it, which seems to me excellent:—</p>
-
-<p>“The first thing to note in the idea of development is
-that it indicates, not an increase in bulk or quantity (though
-it may include this), but an increase in complexity of structure,
-an improvement in power, skill, and variety in the
-performance of natural functions. We say that a thing is
-fully developed when its internal organisation is perfect in
-every detail, and when it can perform all its natural actions
-or functions perfectly. If we apply this distinction to mind,
-an increase in bulk will be represented by an increase in
-the amount of material retained in the mind, in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_400" id="Page_400">[400]</a></span>
-memory; development will be a perfecting of the structure
-of the mind itself, an increase of power and skill and variety
-in dealing with knowledge, and in putting knowledge to all
-its natural uses. The next thing to consider is how this
-development is produced. How can we aid in promoting
-this change from germ to complete organism, from partially
-developed thing to more highly developed thing? The
-answer comes from every part of creation with ever-increasing
-clearness and emphasis—development is produced by
-exercise of function, use of faculty. Neglect or disuse of
-any part of an organism leads to the dwindling, and sometimes
-even to the disappearance, of that part. And this
-applies not only to individuals, but stretches also from
-parent to child, from generation to generation, constituting
-then what we call heredity, or what Froebel calls the connectedness
-of humanity. Slowly through successive generations
-a faculty or organ may dwindle and decay, or may be
-brought to greater and greater perfection. As Froebel
-puts it, humanity past, present, and future is one continuous
-whole. The <i>amount</i> of development, then, possible
-in any particular case plainly depends partly on the original
-outfit, and partly (and as a rule in a greater measure) on
-the opportunities there have been for exercise, and the
-use made of those opportunities. If we wish to develop
-the hand, we must exercise the hand. If we wish to
-develop the body, we must exercise the body. If we wish
-to develop the mind, we must exercise the mind. If we
-wish to develop the <i>whole</i> human being, we must <i>exercise
-the whole</i> human being. But will <i>any</i> exercise suffice?
-Again the answer is clear. Only that exercise which is
-always in harmony with the nature of the thing, and which
-is always proportioned to the strength of the thing, produces<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_401" id="Page_401">[401]</a></span>
-true development. All other exercise is partially or wholly
-hurtful. And another condition, evident in every case,
-becomes still more evident when we apply these laws to the
-mind. To produce development most truly and effectively,
-the exercise must arise from and be sustained by the thing’s
-own activity—its own natural powers, and all of them (as
-far as these are in <i>any</i> sense connected with the activity
-proposed) should be awakened and become naturally active.
-If, for instance, we desire to further the development of a
-plant, what we have to do is to induce the plant (and the
-whole of it) to become active in its own natural way, and
-to help it to sustain that activity. We may abridge the
-time; we may modify the result; but we must act through
-and by the plant’s own activity. This activity of a thing’s
-own self we call <i>self-activity</i> (<i>E. of M.</i>, § 9). We
-generally consider the mind in the light of its three activities
-of <i>knowing, feeling, and willing</i>. The exercise which aims at
-producing mental development must be in harmony with
-the nature of <i>knowing</i>, <i>feeling</i>, and <i>willing</i>, and continually
-in proportion to their strength. And, further, it is found
-that the more the activity is that of the <i>whole</i> mind, the
-more it is the mind’s <i>own</i> activity—self-produced, and
-self-maintained, and self-directed—the better is the result.
-In other words, knowing, feeling, and willing must <i>all</i> take
-their rightful share in the exercise; and, in particular, feeling
-and willing—the mind’s powers of prompting and
-nourishing, of maintaining and directing its own activities—must
-never be neglected” (H. C. Bowen on <i>Ed. of M.</i>).</p>
-
-<p>§ 18. “A divine message or eternal regulation of the
-Universe there verily is, in regard to every conceivable
-procedure and affair of man; faithfully following this, said
-procedure or affair will prosper ... not following<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_402" id="Page_402">[402]</a></span>
-this ... destruction and wreck are certain for every
-affair.” These words of Carlyle’s express Froebel’s thought
-about education. Before attempting to educate we must
-do all we can to ascertain the divine message and must
-then direct our proceedings by it. The divine message
-must be learnt according to Froebel by studying the nature
-of the organism we have to assist in developing. Each
-human being must “develop from within, self-active and
-free, in accordance with the eternal law. This is the
-problem and the aim of all education in instruction and
-training; there can be and should be no other” (<i>Ed. of
-M.</i>, 13). For “all has come forth from the Divine, from
-God, and is through God alone conditioned. To this it
-is that all things owe their existence—to the Divine working
-in them. The Divine element that works in each thing is
-the true idea (<i>das Wesen</i>) of the thing.” Therefore “the
-destiny and calling of all things is to develop their true idea,
-and in so doing to reveal God in outward and through
-passing forms.”</p>
-
-<p>§19. What we must think of then is the “true idea”
-which each child should develop. How is this idea to be
-ascertained? In other words, how are we to learn the
-Divine Message about the bringing up of children? This
-Message is given us through the works of God. “In the
-creation, in nature and the order of the material world, and
-in the progress of mankind, God has given us the true type
-(<i>Urbild</i>) of education.”</p>
-
-<p>§ 20. So Froebel would have all educators lay to heart
-the great principle of the Baconian philosophy: We command
-Nature only by obeying her. They are to be very
-cautious how they interfere, and the education they give is
-to be “passive, following.” Even in teaching they must<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_403" id="Page_403">[403]</a></span>
-bear in mind, that “the purpose of teaching is to bring ever
-more <i>out of</i> man rather than to put more and more <i>into</i>
-him.” (<i>Ed. of M.</i>, 279.) Froebel in fact taught the
-Pestalozzian doctrine that the function of the educator
-was that of “benevolent superintendence.”<a name="FNanchor_176" id="FNanchor_176"></a><a href="#Footnote_176" class="fnanchor">[176]</a></p>
-
-<p>§21. But if Froebel would thus limit the action of the
-educator he would greatly extend the action of those
-educated; and here we see the great principle with which
-the name of Froebel is likely to be permanently associated.
-“The starting-point of all that appears, of all that exists,
-and therefore of all intellectual conception, is act, action.
-From the act, from action, must therefore start true human
-education, the developing education of the man; in action,
-in acting, it must be rooted and must spring up....
-Living, acting, conceiving,—these must form a triple chord
-within every child of man, though the sound now of this
-string, now of that, may preponderate, and then again of
-two together.”</p>
-
-<p>§ 22. Many thinkers before Froebel had seen the transcendent
-importance of action; but Froebel not only based
-everything upon it, but he based it upon God. “God
-creates and works productively in uninterrupted continuity.
-Each thought of God is a work, a deed” (<i>Ed. of M.</i>, § 23).
-As Jesus has said: “My Father worketh hitherto and I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_404" id="Page_404">[404]</a></span>
-work” (St. John v, 17). From this it follows that, since
-God created man in his own image, “man should create
-and bring forth like God” (<i>Ed. of M.</i>, <i>ib.</i>). “He who will
-early learn to recognise the Creator must early exercise his
-own power of action with the consciousness that he is bringing
-about what is good; for the doing good is the link
-between the creature and the Creator, and the conscious
-doing of it the conscious connexion, the true living union
-of the man with God, of the individual man as of the human
-race, and is therefore at once the starting point and the
-eternal aim of all education.” Elsewhere he says: “We
-become truly God-like in diligence and industry, in working
-and doing, which are accompanied by the clear perception
-or even by the vaguest feeling that thereby we represent the
-inner in the outer; that we give body to spirit, and form to
-thought; that we render visible the invisible; that we
-impart an outward, finite, transient being to life in the
-spirit. Through this God-likeness we rise more and more
-to a true knowledge of God, to insight into His Spirit;
-and thus, inwardly and outwardly, God comes ever
-nearer to us. Therefore Jesus says of the poor, ‘Theirs
-is the kingdom of heaven,’ if they could but see and know
-it and practice it in diligence and industry, in productive
-and creative work. Of children too is the kingdom of
-heaven; for unchecked by the presumption and conceit of
-adults they yield themselves in child-like trust and cheerfulness
-to their formative and creative instinct” (<i>Ed. of M.</i>,
-§ 23. P. 31).</p>
-
-<p>§ 23. This “formative and creative instinct” which as
-we must suppose has existed in all children in all nations
-and in all ages of the world, Froebel was the first to take
-duly into account for education. Pestalozzi saw the importance<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_405" id="Page_405">[405]</a></span>
-of getting children to <i>think</i>, and to think about
-their material surroundings. These the child can observe
-and search into; and in doing this he may discover what is
-not at first obvious to sight or touch and may even ascertain
-relations between the several parts of the same thing or
-connexions between different things compared together.
-All these discoveries may be made by the child’s self-activity,
-but only on one condition, viz.: that the child is
-interested. But in the search interest soon flags and then
-observation comes to an end. Besides, even while it lasts
-in full vigour the activity is mental only; it is concerned
-with perceiving, taking in; and for development something
-more is needed; the organism must not only take in, it
-must also <i>give out</i>. And so we find in children a restless
-eagerness to touch, pull about, and change the condition
-of things around them. When this activity of theirs, instead
-of being checked is properly directed, the children are
-delighted in recognising desirable results which they themselves
-have brought about; especially those which give
-expression to what is their own thought. In this way the
-child “renders the inner outer;” and in thus satisfying his
-creative instinct he is led to exercise some faculties both of
-mind and body.</p>
-
-<p>§ 24. The prominence which Froebel gave to action, his
-doctrine that man is primarily a doer and even a creator,
-and that he learns only through “self-activity,” may produce
-great changes in educational methods generally, and
-not simply in the treatment of children too young for
-schooling. But it was to the first stage of life that Froebel
-paid the greatest attention, and it is over this stage that
-his influence is gradually extending. Froebel held that each
-age has a completeness of its own (“First the blade, then<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_406" id="Page_406">[406]</a></span>
-the ear, then the full corn in the ear”), and that the perfection
-of the later stage can be attained only through the
-perfection of the earlier. If the infant is what he should be
-as an infant, and the child as a child, he will become what
-he should be as a boy, just as naturally as new shoots
-spring from the healthy plant. Every stage, then, must be
-cared for and tended in such a way that it may attain its
-own perfection. But as Bacon says with reference to
-education, the gardener bestows most care on the young
-plants, and it was “the young plants” for whom Froebel
-designed his Kindergarten. Like Pestalozzi he attached
-the very highest importance to giving instruction to mothers.
-But he would not like Pestalozzi leave young children
-entirely in the mother’s hands. There was something to
-be done for them which even the ideal mother in the ideal
-family could not do. Pestalozzi held that the child belonged
-to the family. Fichte on the other hand claimed
-it for society and the state. Froebel, whose mind, like
-that of our own theologian Frederick Maurice, delighted
-in harmonising apparent contradictions, and who taught
-that “all progress lay through opposites to their reconciliation,”
-maintained that the child belongs both to the family
-and to society; and he would therefore have children
-prepare for society by spending some hours of the day in a
-common life and in well-organised common employments.</p>
-
-<p>§ 25. His study of children showed him that one of their
-most striking characteristics was restlessness. This was,
-first, restlessness of body, delight in mere motion of the
-limbs; and, secondly, restlessness of mind, a constant
-curiosity about whatever came within the range of the
-senses, and especially a desire to examine with the hand<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_407" id="Page_407">[407]</a></span>
-every unknown object within reach.<a name="FNanchor_177" id="FNanchor_177"></a><a href="#Footnote_177" class="fnanchor">[177]</a> Children’s fondness
-for using their hands was especially noted by Froebel; and
-he found that they delighted, not merely in examining by
-touch, but also in altering whatever they could alter, and
-further that they endeavoured to imitate known forms
-whether by drawing or whenever they could get any kind of
-plastic material by modelling. Besides remarking in them
-these various activities, he saw that children were sociable
-and needed the sympathy of companions. There was, too,
-in them a growing moral nature, passions, affections, and
-conscience, which needed to be controlled, responded to,
-cultivated. Both the restraints and the opportunities
-incident to a well-organised community would be beneficial
-to their moral nature, and prove a cure for selfishness.</p>
-
-<p>§ 26. As all education was to be sought in rightly directed
-but spontaneous action, Froebel considered how the children
-in this community should be employed. At that age their
-most natural employment is play, especially as Wordsworth
-has pointed out, games in which they imitate and “con the
-parts” they themselves will have to fill in after years.
-Froebel agreed with Montaigne that the games of children
-were “their most serious occupations,” and with Locke that
-“all the plays and diversions of children should be directed
-towards good and useful habits, or else they will introduce<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_408" id="Page_408">[408]</a></span>
-ill ones” (<i>Th. c. Ed.</i>, § 130). So he invented a course of
-occupations, a great part of which consisted in social games.
-Many of the names are connected with the “Gifts,” as he
-called the series of simple playthings provided for the
-children, the first being the ball, “the type of unity.” The
-“gifts” are chiefly not mere playthings but materials which
-the children work up in their own way, thus gaining scope
-for their power of doing and inventing and creating. The
-artistic faculty was much thought of by Froebel, and, as in
-the education of the ancients, the sense of rhythm in sound
-and motion was cultivated by music and poetry introduced
-in the games. Much care was to be given to the training
-of the senses, especially those of sight, sound, and touch.
-Intuition (<i>Anschauung</i>) was to be recognised as the true
-basis of knowledge, and though stories were to be told, and
-there was to be much intercourse in the way of social chat,
-instruction of the imparting and “learning-up” kind was to
-be excluded. There was to be no “dead knowledge;” in
-fact Froebel like Pestalozzi endeavoured to do for the child
-what Bacon nearly 200 years before had done for the
-philosopher. Bacon showed the philosopher that the way
-to study Nature was not to learn what others had surmised
-but to go straight to Nature and use his own senses and his
-own powers of observation. Pestalozzi and Froebel wished
-children to learn in this way as well as philosophers.</p>
-
-<p>§ 27. Schools for very young children existed before
-Froebel’s Kindergarten, but they had been thought of more
-in the interest of the mothers than of the children. It was
-for the sake of the mothers that Oberlin established them
-in the Vosges more than a century ago, his first <i>Conductrices
-de l’Enfance</i> being peasant women, Sara Banzet and Louise
-Scheppler. In the early part of this century the notion was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_409" id="Page_409">[409]</a></span>
-taken up by James Buchanan and Samuel Wilderspin in
-this country (see James Leitch’s <i>Practical Educationists</i>)
-and by J. M. D. Cochin in France. But Froebel’s conception
-differed from that of the “Infant School.” His
-object was purely educational but he would have no
-“schooling.” He called these communities of children
-<i>Kindergarten</i>, Gardens of children, <i>i.e.</i>, enclosures in which
-young human plants are nurtured.<a name="FNanchor_178" id="FNanchor_178"></a><a href="#Footnote_178" class="fnanchor">[178]</a> The children’s employment
-is to be play. But any occupation in which
-children delight is <i>play</i> to them; and Froebel’s series of
-employments, while they are in this sense play to the
-children, have nevertheless, as seen from the adult point of
-view, a distinctly educational object. This object, as Froebel
-himself describes it, is “to give the children employment in
-agreement with their whole nature, to strengthen their
-bodies, to exercise their senses, to engage their awakening
-mind, and through their senses to bring them acquainted
-with nature and their fellow-creatures; it is especially to
-guide aright the heart and the affections, and to lead them
-to the original ground of all life, to unity with themselves.”</p>
-
-<p>§ 28. No less than six-and-thirty years ago Henry
-Barnard (in his Report to Governor of Connecticut, 1854)
-declared the Kindergarten to be “by far the most original,
-attractive, and philosophical form of infant development the
-world has yet seen.” Since then it has spread in all<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_410" id="Page_410">[410]</a></span>
-civilised lands, and in many of them there are now <i>public</i>
-Kindergartens, the first I believe having been established
-in 1873 by Dr. William T. Harris in St. Louis, Mo. But
-Froebel’s ideas are not so easily got hold of as his “Gifts,”
-and the real extension of his system may be by no means
-so great as it seems. “The Kindergarten system in the
-hands of one who understands it,” says Dr. James Ward,
-“produces admirable results; but it is apt to be too
-mechanical and formal. There does not seem room for the
-individuality of a child, to which all free play possible
-should be given in the earliest years.” (In <i>Parents’ Review</i>
-Ap. 1890.) And Mr. Courthope Bowen has well said:
-“Kindergarten work without the Kindergarten idea, like a
-body without a soul, is subject to rapid degeneration and
-decay.” So perhaps it will in the end prove that Froebel in
-his <i>Education of Man</i> which is “a book with seven seals”
-has left us a more precious legacy than in his “Gifts” and
-Occupations which are so popular and so easily adopted.</p>
-
-<p>§ 29. It has been well said that “the essence of stupidity
-is in the demand for final opinions.” How our thoughts
-have widened about education since a man like Dr. Johnson
-could assert, “Education is as well known, and has long
-been as well known, as ever it can be!”<a name="FNanchor_179" id="FNanchor_179"></a><a href="#Footnote_179" class="fnanchor">[179]</a> (Hill’s <i>Boswell’s
-J.</i> ij, 407.) The astronomers of the Middle Ages might
-as well have asserted that nothing more could ever be
-known about astronomy.</p>
-
-<p>Was Froebel what he believed himself to be, the Kepler<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_411" id="Page_411">[411]</a></span>
-or the Newton of the educational system? Whoso is wise
-will not during the nineteenth century lay claim to a “final
-opinion” on this point. But the “New Education” seems
-gaining ground. F. W. Parker emphatically declares “the
-Kindergarten” (by which he probably means Froebel’s
-encouragement of self-activity) to be “the most important far-reaching
-educational reform of the nineteenth century.”
-We sometimes see it questioned whether the “New Education”
-has any proper claim to its title; but the education
-which Dr. Johnson considered final and which seems to us
-old aimed at learning; and the education which aims not
-at learning, but at developing through self-activity is so
-different from this that it may well be called New. If we
-consider the platform of the New Educationists as it stands,
-<i>e.g.</i>, in the New York <i>School Journal</i>, we shall find that if it
-is not all new in theory it would be substantially new in
-practice.</p>
-
-<p>§ 30. Let us look at a brief statement of what the “New
-Education” requires:—</p>
-
-<p>1. Each study must be valued in proportion as it develops
-<i>power</i>; and power is developed by self-activity.</p>
-
-<p>2. The memory must be employed in strict subservience
-to the higher faculties of the mind.</p>
-
-<p>3. Whatever instruction is given, it must be adapted to
-the actual state of the pupil, and not ruled by the wants of
-the future boy or man.</p>
-
-<p>4. More time must be given to the study of nature and to
-modern language and literature; less to the ancient
-languages.</p>
-
-<p>5. The body must be educated as well as the mind.</p>
-
-<p>6. Rich and poor alike must be taught to use their eyes
-and hands.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_412" id="Page_412">[412]</a></span>
-7. The higher education of women must be cared for no
-less than that of men.</p>
-
-<p>8. Teachers, no less than doctors, must go through a
-course of professional training.</p>
-
-<p>To these there must in time be added another:</p>
-
-<p>9. All methods shall have a scientific foundation, <i>i.e.</i>,
-they shall be based on the laws of the mind, or shall have
-been tested by those laws.</p>
-
-<p>§ 31. When this program is adopted, even as the
-object of our efforts, we shall, indeed, have a New Education.
-At present the encouragement of self-activity is
-thought of, if at all, only as a “counsel of perfection.” Our
-school work is chiefly mechanical and will long remain so.
-“From the primary school to the college productive creative
-doing is almost wholly excluded. Knowledge in its
-barrenest form is communicated, and tested in the barrenest,
-wordiest way possible. Never is the learner taught or
-permitted to apply his knowledge to even second-hand
-life-purpose.... So inveterate is the habit of the
-school that the Kindergarten itself, although invented by
-the deep-feeling and far-seeing Froebel for the very purpose
-of correcting this fault, has in most cases fallen a victim to
-its influence.” So says W. H. Hailmann (<i>Kindergarten</i>,
-May, 1888) and those who best know what usually goes on
-in the school-room are the least likely to differ from him.</p>
-
-<p>§ 32. During the last thirty years I have spent the
-greatest part of my working hours in a variety of school-rooms;
-and if my school experience has shown me that our
-advance is slow, my study of the Reformers convinces me
-that it is sure.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">“Ring out the old, ring in the new!”</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_413" id="Page_413">[413]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>It has been well said that to study science is to study the
-thoughts of God; and thus it is that all true educational
-Reformers declare the thoughts of God to us. “A divine
-message, of eternal regulation of the Universe, there verily
-is in regard to every conceivable procedure and affair of
-man;” and it behoves us to ascertain what that message is
-in regard to the immensely important procedure and affair
-of bringing up children. After innumerable mistakes we
-seem by degrees to be getting some notion of it; and such
-insight as we have we owe to those who have contributed
-to the science of education. Among these there are
-probably no greater names than the names of Pestalozzi and
-Froebel.</p>
-
-<div class="smaller">
-
-<p>Froebel’s <i>Education of Man</i>, trans. by W. N. Hailmann, is a vol. of
-Appleton’s Series, ed. by Dr. W. T. Harris. The <i>Autobiography</i> trans.,
-by Michaelis and Moore, is published by Sonnenschein. The <i>Mutter-u-K.-lieder</i>
-have been trans. by Miss Lord (London, Rice). <i>Reminiscences
-of Froebel</i> by the Baroness Marenholtz-Bülow, is trans. by Mr. Horace
-Mann. <i>The Child and Child Nature</i> is trans. from the Baroness by
-Miss A. M. Christie. The Froebel lit. is now immense. I will simply
-mention some of those who have expounded Froebel in <i>English</i>: Miss
-Shirreff, Miss E. A. Manning, Miss Lyschinska, Miss Heerwart, Mdme.
-De Portugall, Miss Peabody, H. G Bowen, F. W. Parker, W. N.
-Hailmann, Joseph Payne, W. T. Harris, are the names that first suggest
-themselves. Henry Barnard’s <i>Kindergarten and Child Culture</i> is a
-valuable collection of papers.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_414" id="Page_414">[414]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="XVIII">XVIII.<br />
-<span class="smaller">JACOTOT, A METHODIZER.<br />
-1770-1840.</span></h2>
-
-<p>§ 1. We are now by degrees becoming convinced that
-teachers, like everyone else who undertakes skilled labour,
-should be trained before they seek an engagement. This
-has led to a great increase in the number of Normal Schools.
-In some of these schools it has already been discovered that
-while the study of principles requires much time and the
-application of much intellectual force, the study of methods
-is a far simpler matter and can be knocked off in a short
-time and with no intellectual force at all. Methods are
-special ways of doing things, and when it has been settled
-what is to be done and why, a knowledge of the methods
-available adds greatly to a teacher’s power; but the what
-and the why demand our attention before the how, and the
-study of methods disconnected from principles leads straight
-to the prison-house of all the teachers’ higher faculties—routine.</p>
-
-<p>§ 2. I have called Jacotot a methodizer because he
-invented a special method and wished everything to be
-taught by it. But in advocating this method he appeals to
-principles; and his principles are so important that at least<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_415" id="Page_415">[415]</a></span>
-one man great in educational science, Joseph Payne, always
-spoke of him as his master.</p>
-
-<p>§ 3. In the following summary of Jacotot’s system I
-am largely indebted to Joseph Payne’s Lectures, which he
-published in the <i>Educational Times</i> in 1867, and which I
-believe Dr. J. F. Payne has lately reprinted in a volume of
-his father’s collected papers.</p>
-
-<p>§ 4. Jacotot was born at Dijon, of humble parentage, in
-1770. Even as a boy he showed his preference for “self-teaching.”
-We are told that he rejoiced greatly in the acquisition
-of all kinds of knowledge that could be gained by
-his own efforts, while he steadily resisted what was imposed on
-him by authority. He was, however, early distinguished by
-his acquirements, and at the age of twenty-five was appointed
-sub-director of the Polytechnic School. Some years afterwards
-he became Professor of “the Method of Sciences” at
-Dijon, and it was here that his method of instruction first
-attracted attention. “Instead of pouring forth a flood of
-information on the subject under attention from his own
-ample stores—explaining everything, and thus too frequently
-superseding in a great degree the pupil’s own investigation
-of it—Jacotot, after a simple statement of the subject, with
-its leading divisions, boldly started it as a quarry for the
-class to hunt down, and invited every member of it to take
-part in the chase.” All were free to ask questions, to raise
-objections, to suggest answers. The Professor himself did little
-more than by leading questions put them on the right scent.
-He was afterwards Professor of Ancient and Oriental Languages,
-of Mathematics, and of Roman Law; and he pursued
-the same method, we are told, with uniform success. Being
-compelled to leave France as an enemy of the Bourbons, he
-was appointed, in 1818, when he was forty-eight years old,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_416" id="Page_416">[416]</a></span>
-to the Professorship of the French Language and Literature
-at the University of Louvain. The celebrated teacher was
-received with enthusiasm, but he soon met with an unexpected
-difficulty. Many members of his large class knew
-no language but the Flemish and Dutch, and of these he
-himself was totally ignorant. He was, therefore, forced to
-consider how to teach without talking to his pupils. The
-plan he adopted was as follows:—He gave the young
-Flemings copies of Fénelon’s “Télémaque,” with the French
-on one side, and a Dutch translation on the other. This
-they had to study for themselves, comparing the two
-languages, and learning the French by heart. They were
-to go over the same ground again and again, and as soon
-as possible they were to give in French, however bad, the
-substance of those parts which they had not yet committed
-to memory. This method was found to succeed marvellously.
-Jacotot attributed its success to the fact that the
-students had learnt <i>entirely by the efforts of their own minds</i>,
-and that, though working under his superintendence, they
-had been, in fact, their own teachers. Hence he proceeded
-to generalise, and by degrees arrived at a series of astounding
-paradoxes. These paradoxes at first did their work well,
-and made noise enough in the world; but Jacotot seems
-to me like a captain who in his eagerness to astonish his
-opponents takes on board guns much too heavy for his own
-safety.</p>
-
-<p>§ 5. “<i>All human beings are equally capable of learning</i>,”
-said Jacotot.</p>
-
-<p>The truth which Jacotot chose to throw into this more than
-doubtful form, may perhaps be expressed by saying that the
-student’s power of learning depends, in a great measure, on
-his <i>will</i>, and that where there is no will there is no capacity.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_417" id="Page_417">[417]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>§ 6. “<i>Everyone can teach; and, moreover, can teach that
-which he does not know himself.</i>”</p>
-
-<p>Let us ask ourselves what is the meaning of this. First
-of all, we have to get rid of some ambiguity in the meaning
-of the word <i>teach</i>. To teach, according to Jacotot’s idea, is
-to cause to learn. Teaching and learning are therefore
-correlatives: where there is no learning there can be no
-teaching. But this meaning of the word only coincides
-partially with the ordinary meaning. We speak of the
-lecturer or preacher as teaching when he gives his hearers
-an opportunity of learning, and do not say that his teaching
-ceases the instant they cease to attend. On the other hand,
-we do not call a parent a teacher because he sends his boy
-to school, and so causes him to learn. The notion of teaching,
-then, in the minds of most of us, includes giving
-information, or showing how an art is to be performed, and
-we look upon Jacotot’s assertion as absurd, because we feel
-that no one can give information which he does not possess,
-or show how anything is to be done if he does not himself
-know. But let us take the Jacototian definition of teaching—causing
-to learn—and then see how far a person can
-cause another to learn that of which he himself is ignorant.</p>
-
-<p>§ 7. Subjects which are <i>taught</i> may be divided into
-three great classes:—1, Facts; 2, reasonings, or generalisation
-from facts, <i>i.e.</i>, science; 3, actions which have to be
-performed by the learner, <i>i.e.</i>, arts.</p>
-
-<p>1. We learn some facts by “intuition,” <i>i.e.</i>, by direct
-experience. It may be as well to make the number of them
-as large as possible. No doubt there are no facts which are
-<i>known</i> so perfectly as these. For instance, a boy who has
-tried to smoke knows the fact that tobacco is apt to produce
-nausea much better than another who has picked up<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_418" id="Page_418">[418]</a></span>
-the information second-hand. An intelligent master may
-suggest experiments, even in matters about which he himself
-is ignorant, and thus, in Jacotot’s sense, he teaches things
-which he does not know. But some facts cannot be learnt
-in this way, and then a Newton is helpless either to find
-them out for himself, or to teach them to others without
-knowing them. If the teacher does not know in what
-county Tavistock is, he can only learn from those who do,
-and the pupils will be no cleverer than their master. Here,
-then, I consider that Jacotot’s pretensions utterly break
-down. “No,” the answer is; “the teacher may give his
-pupil an atlas, and direct the boy to find out for himself:
-thus the master will teach what he does not know.” But,
-in this case, he is a teacher only so far as he knows. For
-what he does not know, he hands over the pupil to the
-maker of the map, who communicates with him, not orally,
-but by ink and paper. The master’s ignorance is simply an
-obstacle to the boy’s learning; for the boy would learn
-sooner the position of Tavistock if it were shown him on
-the map. “That’s the very point,” says the disciple of
-Jacotot. “If the boy gets the knowledge without any
-trouble, he is likely to forget it again directly. ‘Lightly
-come, lightly go.’ Moreover, his faculty of observation will
-not have been exercised.” It is indeed well not to allow
-the knowledge even of facts to come too easily; though the
-difficulties which arise from the master’s ignorance will
-not be found the most advantageous. Still there is obviously
-a limit. If we gave boys their lessons in cipher, and
-offered a prize to the first decipherer, one would probably
-be found at last, and meantime all the boys’ powers of
-observation, &amp;c., would have been cultivated by comparing
-like signs in different positions, and guessing at their meaning;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_419" id="Page_419">[419]</a></span>
-but the boys’ time might have been better employed.
-Jacotot’s plan of teaching a language which the master did
-not know, was to put a book with, say, “Arma virumque
-cano,” &amp;c., on one side, and “I sing arms and the man, &amp;c.”
-on the other, and to require the pupil to puzzle over it till
-he found out which word answered to which. In this case
-the teacher was the translator; and though from the roundabout
-way in which the knowledge was communicated the
-pupil derived some benefit, the benefit was hardly sufficient
-to make up for the expenditure of time involved.</p>
-
-<p>Jacotot, then, did not teach facts of which he was ignorant,
-except in the sense in which the parent who sends his
-boy to school may be said to teach him. All Jacotot did
-was to direct the pupil to learn, sometimes in a very
-awkward fashion, from somebody else.<a name="FNanchor_180" id="FNanchor_180"></a><a href="#Footnote_180" class="fnanchor">[180]</a></p>
-
-<p>§ 8. 2. When we come to science, we find all the best
-authorities agree that the pupil should be led to principles
-if possible, and not have the principles brought to him.
-Men like Tyndall, Huxley, H. Spencer, J. M. Wilson have
-spoken eloquently on this subject, and shown how valuable
-scientific teaching is, when thus conducted, in drawing out
-the faculties of the mind. But although a schoolboy may
-be led to great scientific discoveries by anyone who knows
-the road, he will have no more chance of making them with
-an ignorant teacher than he would have had in the days of
-the Ptolemies. Here again, then, I cannot understand how
-the teacher can teach what he does not know. He may,
-indeed, join his pupil in investigating principles, but he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_420" id="Page_420">[420]</a></span>
-must either keep with the pupil or go in advance of him.
-In the first case he is only a fellow-pupil; in the second, he
-teaches only that which he knows.</p>
-
-<p>§ 9. Finally, we come to arts, and we are told that
-Jacotot taught drawing and music, without being either a
-draughtsman or a musician. In art everything depends on
-<i>rightly directed practice</i>. The most consummate artist
-cannot communicate his skill, and, except for inspiration
-may be inferior as a teacher to one whose attention is more
-concentrated on the mechanism of the art. Perhaps it is
-not even necessary that the teacher should be able to do the
-exercises himself, if only he knows how they should be done;
-but he seldom gets credit for this knowledge, unless he can
-show that he knows how the thing should be done, by
-doing it. Lessing tells us that Raphael would have been a
-great painter even if he had been born without hands. He
-would not, however, have succeeded in getting mankind to
-believe it. I grant, then, that the teacher of art need not be
-a first-rate artist, and, in some very exceptional cases, need
-not be an artist at all; but, if he cannot perform the exercises
-he gives his pupil, he must at least <i>know how they
-should be done</i>. But Jacotot claims perfect ignorance. We
-are told that he “taught” drawing by setting objects before
-his pupils, and making them imitate them on paper as best
-they could. Of course the art originated in this way, and a
-person with great perseverance, and (I must say, in spite of
-Jacotot) with more than average ability, would make considerable
-progress with no proper instruction; but he would
-lose much by the ignorance of the person calling himself his
-teacher. An awkward habit of holding the pencil will make
-skill doubly difficult to acquire, and thus half his time might
-be wasted. Then, again, he would hardly have a better eye<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_421" id="Page_421">[421]</a></span>
-than the early painters, so the drawing of his landscape
-would not be less faulty than theirs. To consider music
-I am told that a person who is ignorant of music can teach,
-say, the piano or the violin. This seems to go beyond the
-region of paradox into that of utter nonsense. Talent often
-surmounts all kinds of difficulties; but in the case of self-taught,
-and ill-taught musicians, it is often painful to see
-what time and talent have been wasted for want of proper
-instruction.</p>
-
-<p>I have thus carefully examined Jacotot’s pretensions to
-teach what he did not know, because I am anxious that
-what seems to me the rubbish should be cleared away from
-his principles, and should no longer conceal those parts of
-his system which are worthy of general attention.</p>
-
-<p>§ 10. At the root of Jacotot’s paradox lay a truth of very
-great importance. The highest and best teaching is not that
-which makes the pupils passive recipients of other peoples’
-ideas (not to speak of the teaching which conveys mere
-words without any ideas at all), but that which guides and
-encourages the pupils in working for themselves and thinking
-for themselves. The master, as Joseph Payne well says,
-can no more think, or practise, or see for his pupil, than he
-can digest for him, or walk for him. The pupil must owe
-everything to his own exertions, which it is the function of
-the master to encourage and direct. Perhaps this may seem
-very obvious truth, but obvious or not it has been very
-generally neglected. The old system of lecturing which
-found favour with the Jesuits, has indeed now passed away,
-and boys are left to acquire facts from school-books instead
-of from the master. But this change is merely accidental.
-The essence of the teaching still remains. Even where the
-master does not confine himself to hearing what the scholars<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_422" id="Page_422">[422]</a></span>
-have learnt by heart, he seldom does more than offer
-explanations. He measures the teaching rather by the
-amount which has been put before the scholars—by what he
-has done for them and shown them—than by what they
-have learned. But this is not teaching of the highest type.
-When the votary of Dulness in the “Dunciad” is rendering
-an account of his services, he arrives at this climax,</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">“For thee explain a thing till all men doubt it,</div>
-<div class="verse">And write about it, Goddess, and about it.”</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">And in the same spirit Mr. J. M. Wilson stigmatises
-as synonymous “the most stupid and most <i>didactic</i>
-teaching.”</p>
-
-<p>§ 11. All the eminent authorities on education have a
-very different theory of the teachers function. According
-to them the master’s attention is not to be fixed on his own
-mind and his own store of knowledge, but on his pupil’s
-mind and on its gradual expansion. He must, in fact, be
-not so much a <i>teacher</i> as a <i>trainer</i>. Here we have the view
-which Jacotot intended to enforce by his paradox; for we
-may possibly train faculties which we do not ourselves
-possess, just as the sportsman trains his pointer and his
-hunter to perform feats which are altogether out of the range
-of his own capacities. Now, “training is the cultivation
-bestowed on any set of faculties with the object of developing
-them” (J. M. Wilson), and to train any faculty, you
-must set it to work. Hence it follows, that as boys’ minds
-are not simply their memories, the master must aim at
-something more than causing his pupils to remember facts.
-Jacotot has done good service to education by giving prominence
-to this truth, and by showing in his method how
-other faculties may be cultivated besides the memory.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_423" id="Page_423">[423]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>§ 12. “<i>Tout est dans tout</i>” (“All is in all”), is another of
-Jacotot’s paradoxes. I do not propose discussing it as the
-philosophical thesis which takes other forms, as “Every
-man is a microcosm,” &amp;c., but merely to inquire into its
-meaning as applied to didactics.</p>
-
-<p>If you asked an ordinary French schoolmaster who
-Jacotot was, he would probably answer, Jacotot was a man
-who thought you could learn everything by getting up
-Fénelon’s “Télémaque” by heart. By carrying your investigation
-further, you would find that this account of him
-required modification, that the learning by heart was only
-part, and a very small part, of what Jacotot demanded from
-his pupils, but you would also find that entire mastery of
-“Télémaque” was the first requisite, and that he managed to
-connect everything he taught with that “model-book.” Of
-course, if “tout est dans tout,” everything is in “Télémaque;”
-and, said an objector, also in the first book of “Télémaque”
-and in <i>the first word</i>. Jacotot went through a variety of
-subtilties to show that all “Télémaque” is contained in the
-word <i>Calypso</i>, and perhaps he would have been equally
-successful, if he had been required to take only the first
-letter instead of the first word. His maxim indeed becomes
-by his treatment of it a mere paraphrase of “<i>Quidlibet ex
-quolibet</i>.” The reader is amused rather than convinced by
-these discussions, but he finds them not without fruit.
-They bring to his mind very forcibly a truth to which he
-has hitherto probably not paid sufficient attention. He sees
-that all knowledge is connected together, or (what will do
-equally well for our present purpose) that there are a
-thousand links by which we may bring into connexion the
-different subjects of knowledge. If by means of these links
-we can attach in our minds the knowledge we acquire to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_424" id="Page_424">[424]</a></span>
-the knowledge we already possess, we shall learn faster
-and more intelligently, and at the same time we shall have
-a much better chance of retaining our new acquisitions.
-The memory, as we all know, is assisted even by artificial
-association of ideas, much more by natural. Hence the
-value of “tout est dans tout,” or, to adopt a modification
-suggested by Joseph Payne, of the connexion of knowledges.
-Suppose we know only one subject, but know that
-thoroughly, our knowledge, if I may express myself
-algebraically, cannot be represented by ignorance plus the
-knowledge of that subject. We have acquired a great deal
-more than that. When other subjects come before us, they
-may prove to be so connected with what we had before, that
-we may also seem to know them already. In other words
-when we know a little thoroughly, though our actual
-possession is small, we have potentially a great deal more.<a name="FNanchor_181" id="FNanchor_181"></a><a href="#Footnote_181" class="fnanchor">[181]</a></p>
-
-<p>§ 13. Jacotot’s practical application of his “tout est dans
-tout” was as follows:—“<i>Il faut apprendre quelque chose, et y
-rapporter tout le reste.</i>” (“The pupil must learn something
-thoroughly, and refer everything to that.”) For language
-he must take a model book, and become thoroughly master
-of it. His knowledge must not be a verbal knowledge only,
-but he must enter into the sense and spirit of the writer.
-Here we find that Jacotot’s practical advice coincides with
-that of many other great authorities, who do not base it on
-the same principle. The Jesuits’ maxim was, that their
-pupils should always learn something thoroughly, however<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_425" id="Page_425">[425]</a></span>
-little it might be. Pestalozzi insisted on the children going
-over the elements again and again till they were completely
-master of them. Ascham, Ratke, and Comenius all required
-a model-book to be read and re-read till words and thoughts
-were firmly fixed in the pupil’s memory. Jacotot probably
-never read Ascham’s “Schoolmaster.” If he had done so
-he might have appropriated some of Ascham’s words as
-exactly conveying his own thoughts. Ascham, as we saw,
-recommended that a short book should be thoroughly
-mastered, each lesson being worked over in different ways a
-dozen times at the least, and in this way “your scholar shall
-be brought not only to like eloquence, but also to all true
-understanding and right judgment, both for writing and
-speaking.” In this the Englishman and the Frenchman are
-in perfect accord.</p>
-
-<p>§ 14. But if Jacotot agrees so far with earlier authorities,
-there is one point in which he seems to differ from them.
-He makes great demands on the memory, and requires six
-books of “Télémaque” to be learned by heart. On the
-other hand, Montaigne, Locke, Rousseau, H. Spencer, and
-other great writers would be opposed to this. Ratke
-insisted that nothing should be learnt by heart. Protests
-against “loading the memory,” “saying without book,” &amp;c.,
-are everywhere to be met with, and nowhere more vigorously
-expressed than in Ascham. He says of the grammar-school
-boys of his time, that “their whole knowledge, by learning
-without the book, was tied only to their tongue and lips,
-and never ascended up to the brain and head, and therefore
-was soon spit out of the mouth again. They learnt without
-book everything, they understood within the book
-little or nothing.” But these protests were really directed
-at verbal knowledge, when it is made to take the place of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_426" id="Page_426">[426]</a></span>
-knowledge of the thing signified. We are always too ready
-to suppose that words are connected with ideas, though both
-old and young are constantly exposing themselves to the
-sarcasm of Mephistopheles:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">... eben wo Begriffe fehlen,</div>
-<div class="verse">Da stellt ein Wort zur rechten Zeit sich ein.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">... just where meaning fails, a word</div>
-<div class="verse">Comes patly in to serve your turn.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Against this danger Jacotot took special precautions.
-The pupil was to undergo an examination in everything
-connected with the lesson learnt, and the master’s share in
-the work was to convince himself, from the answers he
-received, that the pupil thoroughly grasped the meaning, as
-well as remembered the words, of the author. Still the six
-books of “Télémaque,” which Jacotot gave to be learnt by
-heart, was a very large dose, and he would have been more
-faithful to his own principles, says Joseph Payne, if he had
-given the first book only.</p>
-
-<p>§ 15. There are three ways in which the model-book
-may be studied. 1st, it may be read through rapidly
-again and again, which was Ratke’s plan and Hamilton’s;
-or, 2nd, each lesson may be thoroughly mastered, read in
-various ways a dozen times at the least, which was Ascham’s
-plan; or, 3rd, the pupil may begin always at the beginning,
-and advance a little further each time, which was Jacotot’s
-plan.<a name="FNanchor_182" id="FNanchor_182"></a><a href="#Footnote_182" class="fnanchor">[182]</a> This last, could not, of course, be carried very far<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_427" id="Page_427">[427]</a></span>
-The repetitions, when the pupil had got on some way in
-the book, could not always be from the beginning; still<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_428" id="Page_428">[428]</a></span>
-every part was to be repeated so frequently that <i>nothing
-could be forgotten</i>. Jacotot did not wish his pupils to learn<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_429" id="Page_429">[429]</a></span>
-simply in order to forget, but to learn in order to remember
-for ever. “We are learned,” said he, “not so far as we<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_430" id="Page_430">[430]</a></span>
-have learned, but only so far as we remember.” He seems,
-indeed, almost to ignore the fact that the act of learning
-serves other purposes than that of making learned, and to
-assert that to forget is the same as never to have learned,
-which is a palpable error. We necessarily forget much
-that passes through our minds, and yet its effect remains.
-All grown people have arrived at some opinions, convictions,
-knowledge, but they cannot call to mind every spot they
-trod on in the road thither. When we have read a great
-history, say, or travelled through a fresh country, we have
-gained more than the number of facts we happen to remember.
-The mind seems to have formed an acquaintance
-with that history or that country, which is something different
-from the mere acquisition of facts. Moreover, our interests,
-as well as our ideas, may long survive the memory of the
-facts which originally started them. We are told that one
-of the old judges, when a barrister objected to some dictum
-of his, put him down by the assertion, “Sir, I have forgotten
-more law than ever you read.” If he wished to
-make the amount forgotten a measure of the amount remembered,
-this was certainly fallacious, as the ratio between
-the two is not a constant quantity. But he may have meant
-that this extensive reading had left its result, and that he
-could see things from more points of view than the less
-travelled legal vision of his opponent. That <i>power</i> acquired
-by learning may also last longer than the knowledge of
-the thing learned is sufficiently obvious. So the advantages
-derived from having learnt a thing are not entirely lost
-when the thing itself is forgotten.<a name="FNanchor_183" id="FNanchor_183"></a><a href="#Footnote_183" class="fnanchor">[183]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_431" id="Page_431">[431]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>§ 16. But the reflection by no means justifies the disgraceful
-waste of memory which goes on in most school-rooms.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_432" id="Page_432">[432]</a></span>
-Much is learnt which, for want of the necessary
-repetition, will soon be lost again, besides much that would
-be valueless if remembered. The thing to aim at is not
-giving “useful knowledge,” but making the memory a store
-house of such facts as are good material for the other powers
-of the mind to work with; and that the facts may serve this
-purpose they must be such as the mind can thoroughly
-grasp and handle, and such as can be connected together.
-To <i>instruct is instruere</i>, “to put together in order, to build;”
-it is not cramming the memory with facts without connexion,
-and, as Herbert Spencer calls them, <i>unorganisable</i>.
-And yet a great deal of our children’s memory is wasted in
-storing facts of this kind, which can never form part of any
-organism. We do not teach them geography (<i>earth knowledge</i>,
-as the Germans call it), but the names of places. Our
-“history” is a similar, though disconnected study. We
-leave our children ignorant of the land, but insist on their
-getting up the “landmarks.” And, perhaps, from a latent
-perception of the uselessness of such work, neither teachers
-nor scholars ever think of these things as learnt to be remembered.
-They are indeed got up, as Schuppius says of
-the Logic of his day, <i>in spem futuræ oblivionis</i>. Latin
-grammar is gone through again and again, and a boy feels
-that the sooner he gets it into his head, the better it will
-be for him; but who expects that the lists of geographical
-and historical names which are learnt one half-year, will be
-remembered the next? I have seen it asserted, that when
-a boy leaves school, he has already forgotten nine-tenths of
-what he has been taught, and I dare say that estimate is
-quite within the mark.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_433" id="Page_433">[433]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>§ 17. By adopting the principles of Jacotot, we avoid
-a great deal of this waste. We give some thorough knowledge,
-with which fresh knowledge may be connected. And
-it will then be found that perfect familiarity with a subject
-is something beyond the mere understanding it and being
-able, with difficulty, to reproduce what we have learned.
-By thus going over the same thing again and again, we
-acquire a thorough command over our knowledge; and the
-feeling perfectly at home, even within narrow borders, gives
-a consciousness of strength. An old adage tells us that
-the Jack-of-all-trades is master of none; but the master of
-one trade will have no difficulty in extending his insight
-and capacity beyond it. To use an illustration, which is
-of course an illustration merely, we should kindle knowledge
-in children, like fire in a grate. A stupid servant, with a
-small quantity of wood, spreads it over the whole grate. It
-blazes away, goes out, and is simply wasted. Another, who
-is wiser or more experienced, kindles the whole of the wood
-at one spot, and the fire, thus concentrated, extends in all
-directions. Similarly we should concentrate the beginnings
-of knowledge, and although we could not expect to make
-much show for a time, we might be sure that after a bit the
-fire would extend, almost of its own accord.<a name="FNanchor_184" id="FNanchor_184"></a><a href="#Footnote_184" class="fnanchor">[184]</a></p>
-
-<p>§ 18. From Joseph Payne I take Jacotot’s directions for
-carrying out the rule, “II faut apprendre quelque chose, et
-y rapporter tout le reste.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_434" id="Page_434">[434]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>1. <span class="smcap">Learn</span>—<i>i.e.</i>, learn so as to know thoroughly, perfectly,
-immovably (<i>imperturbablement</i>), as well six months or twelve<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_435" id="Page_435">[435]</a></span>
-months hence, as now—<span class="smcap">something</span>—something which fairly
-represents the subject to be acquired, which contains its
-essential characteristics. 2. <span class="smcap">Repeat</span> that “something” incessantly
-(<i>sans cesse</i>), <i>i.e.</i>, every day, or very frequently, from
-the beginning, without any omission, so that no part may
-be forgotten. 3. <span class="smcap">Reflect</span> upon the matter thus acquired,
-so as, by degrees, to make it a possession of the mind as
-well as of the memory, so that, being appreciated as a
-whole, and appreciated in its minutest parts, what is as yet
-unknown, may be <i>referred to</i> it and interpreted by it. 4.
-<span class="smcap">Verify</span>, or test, general remarks, <i>e.g.</i>, grammatical rules,
-&amp;c., made by others, by comparing them with the facts (<i>i.e.</i>,
-the words and phraseology) which you have learnt yourself.</p>
-
-<p>§ 19. In conclusion, I will give some account of the
-way in which reading, writing, and the mother-tongue were
-taught on the Jacototian system.</p>
-
-<p>The teacher takes a book, say Edgeworth’s “Early Lessons,”
-points to the first word, and names it, “Frank.”
-The child looks at the word and also pronounces it. Then
-the teacher does the same with the first two words, “Frank
-and”; then with the three first, “Frank and Robert,” &amp;c.
-When a line or so has been thus gone over, the teacher
-asks which word is Robert? What word is that (pointing
-to one)? “Find me the same word in this line” (pointing
-to another part of the book). When a sentence has been
-thus acquired, the words already known are analysed into
-syllables, and these syllables the child must pick out elsewhere.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_436" id="Page_436">[436]</a></span>
-Finally, the same thing is done with letters. When
-the child can read a sentence, that sentence is put before
-him written in small-hand, and the child is required to copy
-it. When he has copied the first word, he is led, by the
-questions of the teacher, to see how it differs from the
-original, and then he tries again. The pupil must always
-correct himself, guided only by questions. This sentence
-must be worked at till the pupil can write it pretty well from
-memory. He then tries it in larger characters. By carrying
-out this plan, the children’s powers of observation and
-making comparisons are strengthened, and the arts of reading
-and writing are said to be very readily acquired.</p>
-
-<p>§ 20. For the mother-tongue, a model book is chosen
-and thoroughly learned. Suppose “Rasselas” is selected.
-“The pupil learns by heart a sentence, or a few sentences,
-and to-morrow adds a few more, still repeating from the
-beginning. The teacher, after two or three lessons of learning
-and repeating, takes portions—any portion—of the
-matter, and submits it to the crucible of the pupil’s mind:—Who
-was Rasselas? Who was his father? What is the
-father of waters? Where does it begin its course? Where
-is Abyssinia? Where is Egypt? Where was Rasselas
-placed? What sort of a person was Rasselas? What is
-‘credulity’? What are the ‘whispers of fancy,’ the ‘promises
-of youth,’ &amp;c., &amp;c.?”</p>
-
-<p>A great variety of written exercises is soon joined with
-the learning by heart. Pieces must be written from memory,
-and the spelling, pointing, &amp;c., corrected by the pupil himself
-from the book. The same piece must be written again
-and again, till there are no more mistakes to correct.
-“This,” said Joseph Payne, who had himself taught in this
-way, “is the best plan for spelling that has been devised.”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_437" id="Page_437">[437]</a></span>
-Then the pupil may write an analysis, may define words,
-distinguish between synonyms, explain metaphors, imitate
-descriptions, write imaginary dialogues or correspondence
-between the characters, &amp;c. Besides these, a great variety
-of grammatical exercises may be given, and the force of
-prefixes and affixes may be found out by the pupils themselves
-by collection and comparison. “The resources even
-of such a book as “Rasselas” will be found all but exhaustless,
-while the training which the mind undergoes in the
-process of thoroughly mastering it, the acts of analysis, comparison,
-induction, and deduction, performed so frequently
-as to become a sort of second nature, cannot but serve as
-an excellent preparation for the subsequent study of English
-literature” (Payne).</p>
-
-<p>§ 21. We see, from these instances, how Jacotot sought
-to imitate the method by which young children and self-taught
-men teach themselves. All such proceed from
-objects to definitions, from facts to reflections and theories,
-from examples to rules, from particular observations to
-general principles. They pursue, in fact, however unconsciously,
-the <i>method of investigation</i>, the advantages of which
-are thus set out in a passage from Burke’s treatise on the
-Sublime and Beautiful:—“I am convinced,” says he, “that
-the method of teaching which approaches most nearly to
-the method of investigation is incomparably the best; since,
-not content with serving up a few barren and lifeless truths,
-it leads to the stock on which they grew; it tends to set
-the reader [or learner] himself in the track of invention, and
-to direct him into those paths in which the author has made
-his own discoveries.” “For Jacotot, I think the claim may,
-without presumption, be maintained that he has, beyond
-all other teachers, succeeded in co-ordinating the method<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_438" id="Page_438">[438]</a></span>
-of elementary teaching with the method of investigation”
-(Payne).</p>
-
-<p>§ 22. The latter part of his life, which did not end till
-1840, Jacotot spent in his native country—first at Valenciennes,
-and then at Paris. To the last he laboured indefatigably,
-and with a noble disinterestedness, for what he
-believed to be the “intellectual emancipation” of his fellow-creatures.
-For a time, his system made great way in
-France, but we now hear little of it. Jacotot has, however,
-lately found an advocate in M. Bernard Perez, who has written
-a book about him and also a very good article in Buisson’s
-<i>Dictionnaire</i>.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_439" id="Page_439">[439]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="XIX">XIX.<br />
-<span class="smaller">HERBERT SPENCER.<a name="FNanchor_185" id="FNanchor_185"></a><a href="#Footnote_185" class="fnanchor">[185]</a></span></h2>
-
-<p>§ 1. I once heard it said by a teacher of great ability
-that no one without practical acquaintance with the subject
-could write anything worth reading on Education. My own
-opinion differs very widely from this. I am not, indeed,
-prepared to agree with another authority, much given to
-paradox, that the actual work of education unfits a man for
-forming enlightened views about it, but I think that the
-outsider, coming fresh to the subject, and unencumbered by
-tradition and prejudice, may hit upon truths which the
-teacher, whose attention is too much engrossed with
-practical difficulties, would fail to perceive without assistance,
-and that, consequently, the theories of intelligent men,
-unconnected with the work of education, deserve our
-careful, and, if possible, our impartial consideration.</p>
-
-<p>§ 2. One of the most important works of this kind
-which has lately appeared, is the treatise of Mr. Herbert
-Spencer. So eminent a writer has every claim to be listened
-to with respect, and in this book he speaks with more than
-his individual authority. The views he has very vigorously<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_440" id="Page_440">[440]</a></span>
-propounded are shared by a number of distinguished
-scientific men; and not a few of the unscientific believe
-that in them is shadowed forth the education of the future.</p>
-
-<p>§ 3. It is perhaps to be regretted that Mr. Spencer has
-not kept the tone of one who investigates the truth in a
-subject of great difficulty, but lays about him right and
-left, after the manner of a spirited controversialist. This,
-no doubt, makes his book much more entertaining reading
-than such treatises usually are, but, on the other hand, it
-has the disadvantage of arousing the antagonism of those
-whom he would most wish to influence. When the man
-who has no practical acquaintance with education, lays
-down the law <i>ex cathedrâ</i>, garnished with sarcasms at all
-that is now going on, the schoolmaster, offended by the
-assumed tone of authority, sets himself to show where these
-theories would not work, instead of examining what basis of
-truth there is in them, and how far they should influence his
-own practice.</p>
-
-<p>I shall proceed to examine Mr. Spencer’s proposals with
-all the impartiality I am master of.</p>
-
-<p>§ 4. The great question, whether the teaching which gives
-the most valuable knowledge is the same as that which best
-disciplines the faculties of the mind, Mr. Spencer dismisses
-briefly. “It would be utterly contrary to the beautiful
-economy of nature,” he says, “if one kind of culture were
-needed for the gaining of information, and another kind
-were needed as a mental gymnastic.”<a name="FNanchor_186" id="FNanchor_186"></a><a href="#Footnote_186" class="fnanchor">[186]</a> But it seems to me
-that different subjects must be used to train the faculties at
-different stages of development. The processes of science,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_441" id="Page_441">[441]</a></span>
-which form the staple of education in Mr. Spencer’s system
-cannot be grasped by the intellect of a child. “The
-scientific discoverer does the work, and when it is done the
-schoolboy is called in to witness the result, to learn its
-chief features by heart, and to repeat them when called
-upon, just as he is called on to name the mothers of the
-patriarchs, or to give an account of the Eastern campaigns
-of Alexander the Great.”—(<i>Pall Mall G.</i>). This, however,
-affords but scanty training for the mind. We want to draw
-out the child’s interests, and to direct them to worthy objects.
-We want not only to teach him, but to enable and encourage
-him to teach himself; and, if following Mr. Spencer’s advice,
-we make him get up the species of plants, “which amount to
-some 320,000,” and the varied forms of animal life, which
-are “estimated at some 2,000,000,” we may, as Mr. Spencer
-tells us, have strengthened his memory as effectually as by
-teaching him languages; but the pupil will, perhaps have no
-great reason to rejoice over his escape from the horrors of
-the “As in Præsenti,” and “Propria quæ Maribus.” The
-consequences will be the same in both cases. We shall
-disgust the great majority of our scholars with the acquisition
-of knowledge, and with the use of the powers of their mind.
-Whether, therefore, we adopt or reject Mr. Spencer’s conclusion,
-that there is one sort of knowledge which is
-universally the most valuable, I think we must deny that
-there is one sort of knowledge which is universally and at
-every stage in education, the best adapted to develop the
-intellectual faculties. Mr. Spencer himself acknowledges this
-elsewhere. “There is,” says he, “a certain sequence in which
-the faculties spontaneously develop, and a certain kind of
-knowledge, which each requires during its development.” It is
-for us to ascertain this sequence, and supply this knowledge.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_442" id="Page_442">[442]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>§ 5. Mr. Spencer discusses more fully “the relative value
-of knowledges,” and this is a subject which has hitherto not
-met with the attention it deserves. It is not sufficient for
-us to prove of any subject taught in our schools that the
-knowledge or the learning of it is valuable. We must also
-show that the knowledge or the learning of it is of at least
-as great value as that of anything else that might be taught
-in the same time. “Had we time to master all subjects we
-need not be particular. To quote the old song—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">Could a man be secure</div>
-<div class="verse">That his life would endure,</div>
-<div class="verse">As of old, for a thousand long years,</div>
-<div class="verse">What things he might know!</div>
-<div class="verse">What deeds he might do!</div>
-<div class="verse">And all without hurry or care!</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">But we that have but span-long lives must ever bear in mind
-our limited time for acquisition.”</p>
-
-<p>§ 6. To test the value of the learning imparted in education
-we must look to the end of education. This Mr.
-Spencer defines as follows: “To prepare us for complete
-living is the function which education has to discharge, and
-the only rational mode of judging of an educational course
-is to judge in what degree it discharges such function.”
-For complete living we must know “in what way to treat the
-body; in what way to treat the mind; in what way to
-manage our affairs; in what way to bring up a family; in
-what way to behave as a citizen; in what way to utilise
-those sources of happiness which nature supplies—how to
-use all our faculties to the greatest advantage of ourselves
-and others.” There are a number of sciences, says Mr.
-Spencer, which throw light on these subjects. It should,
-therefore, be the business of education to impart these sciences.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_443" id="Page_443">[443]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>But if there were (which is far from being the case) a
-well-defined and well-established science in each of these
-departments, those sciences would not be understandable by
-children, nor would any individual have time to master the
-whole of them, or even “a due proportion of each.” The
-utmost that could be attempted would be to give young
-people some knowledge of the <i>results</i> of such sciences and
-the rules derived from them. But to this Mr. Spencer
-would object that it would tend, like the learning of
-languages, “to increase the already undue respect for
-authority.”</p>
-
-<p>§ 7. To consider Mr. Spencer’s divisions in detail, we
-come first to knowledge that leads to self-preservation.</p>
-
-<p>“Happily, that all-important part of education which goes
-to secure direct self-preservation is, in part, already provided
-for. Too momentous to be left to our blundering, Nature
-takes it into her own hands.” But Mr. Spencer warns us
-against such thwartings of Nature as that by which “stupid
-schoolmistresses commonly prevent the girls in their charge
-from the spontaneous physical activities they would indulge
-in, and so render them comparatively incapable of taking
-care of themselves in circumstances of peril.”</p>
-
-<p>§ 8. Indirect self-preservation, Mr. Spencer believes,
-may be much assisted by a knowledge of physiology.
-“Diseases are often contracted, our members are often
-injured, by causes which superior knowledge would avoid.”
-I believe these are not the only grounds on which the
-advocates of physiology urge its claim to be admitted into
-the curriculum; but these, if they can be established, are
-no doubt very important. Is it true, however, that doctors
-preserve their own life and health or that of their children
-by their knowledge of physiology? I think the matter is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_444" id="Page_444">[444]</a></span>
-open to dispute. Mr. Spencer does not. He says very
-truly that many a man would blush if convicted of ignorance
-about the pronunciation of Iphigenia, or about the labours
-of Hercules who, nevertheless, would not scruple to acknowledge
-that he had never heard of the Eustachian tubes, and
-could not tell the normal rate of pulsation. “So terribly,”
-adds Mr. Spencer, “in our education does the ornamental
-override the useful!” But this is begging the question. At
-present classics form part of the instruction given to every
-gentleman, and physiology does not. This is the simpler
-form of Mr. Spencer’s assertion about the labours of Hercules
-and the Eustachian tubes, and no one denies it. But we
-are not so well agreed on the comparative value of these
-subjects. In his Address at St. Andrews, J. S. Mill showed
-that he at least was not convinced of the uselessness of
-classics, and Mr. Spencer does not tell us how the knowledge
-of the normal state of pulsation is useful; how, to use
-his own test, it “influences action.” However, whether we
-admit the claims of physiology or not, we shall probably
-allow that there are certain physiological facts and rules of
-health, the knowledge of which would be of great practical
-value, and should therefore be imparted to everyone.
-Here the doctor should come to the schoolmaster’s assistance,
-and give him a manual from which to teach them.</p>
-
-<p>§ 9. Next in order of importance, according to Mr. Spencer,
-comes the knowledge which aids indirect self-preservation
-by facilitating the gaining of a livelihood. Here Mr. Spencer
-thinks it necessary to prove to us that such sciences as
-mathematics and physics and biology underlie all the
-practical arts and business of life. No one would think of
-joining issue with him on this point; but the question still
-remains, what influence should this have on education?<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_445" id="Page_445">[445]</a></span>
-“Teach science,” says Mr. Spencer. “A grounding in
-science is of great importance, both because it prepares for
-all this [business of life], and because rational knowledge
-has an immense superiority over empirical knowledge.”
-Should we teach all sciences to everybody? This is clearly
-impossible. Should we, then, decide for each child what
-is to be his particular means of money-getting, and instruct
-him in those sciences which will be most useful in that
-business or profession? In other words, should we have
-a separate school for each calling? The only attempt of
-this kind which has been made is, I believe, the institution
-of <i>Handelschulen</i> (commercial schools) in Germany. In
-them, youths of fifteen or sixteen enter for a course of two
-or three years’ instruction which aims exclusively at fitting
-them for commerce. But, in this case, their general education
-is already finished. With us, the lad commonly goes
-to work at the business itself quite as soon as he has the
-faculties for learning the sciences connected with it. If the
-school sends him to it with a love of knowledge, and with
-a mind well disciplined to acquire knowledge, this will be
-of more value to him than any special information.</p>
-
-<p>§ 10. As Mr. Spencer is here considering science merely
-with reference to its importance in earning a livelihood, it
-is not beside the question to remark, that in a great number
-of instances, the knowledge of the science which underlies
-an operation confers no practical ability whatever. No one
-sees the better for understanding the structure of the eye
-and the undulatory theory of light. In swimming or
-rowing, a senior wrangler has no advantage over a man
-who is entirely ignorant about the laws of fluid pressure.
-As far as money-getting is concerned then, science will not
-be found to be universally serviceable. Mr. Spencer gives<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_446" id="Page_446">[446]</a></span>
-instances indeed, where science would prevent very
-expensive blundering; but the true inference is, not that
-the blunderers should learn science, but that they should
-mind their own business, and take the opinion of scientific
-men about theirs. “Here is a mine,” says he, “in
-the sinking of which many shareholders ruined themselves,
-from not knowing that a certain fossil belonged to
-the old red sandstone, below which no coal is found.”
-Perhaps they were misled by the little knowledge which
-Pope tells us is a dangerous thing. If they had been
-entirely ignorant, they would surely have called in a professional
-geologist, whose opinion would have been more
-valuable than their own, even though geology had taken the
-place of classics in their schooling. “Daily are men induced
-to aid in carrying out inventions which a mere tyro in
-science could show to be futile.” But these are men whose
-function it would always be to lose money, not make it,
-whatever you might teach them.<a name="FNanchor_187" id="FNanchor_187"></a><a href="#Footnote_187" class="fnanchor">[187]</a> I have great doubt,
-therefore, whether the learning of sciences will ever be found
-a ready way of making a fortune. But directly we get
-beyond the region of pounds, shillings, and pence, I agree
-most cordially with Mr. Spencer that a rational knowledge
-has an immense superiority over empirical knowledge.
-And, as a part of their education, boys should be taught to
-distinguish the one from the other, and to desire rational
-knowledge. Much might be done in this way by teaching,
-not all the sciences and nothing else, but the main principles
-of some one science, which would enable the more intelligent
-boys to understand and appreciate the value of “a
-rational explanation of phenomena.” I believe this addition<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_447" id="Page_447">[447]</a></span>
-to what was before a literary education has already been
-made in some of our leading schools, as Harrow, Rugby,
-and the City of London.<a name="FNanchor_188" id="FNanchor_188"></a><a href="#Footnote_188" class="fnanchor">[188]</a></p>
-
-<p>§ 11. Next, Mr. Spencer would have instruction in the
-proper way of rearing offspring form a part of his curriculum.
-There can be no question of the importance of this knowledge,
-and all that Mr. Spencer says of the lamentable
-ignorance of parents is, unfortunately, no less undeniable.
-But could this knowledge be imparted early in life? Young
-people would naturally take but little interest in it. It is
-by parents, or at least by those who have some notion of
-the parental responsibility, that this knowledge should be
-sought. The best way in which we can teach the young
-will be so to bring them up that when they themselves have
-to rear children the remembrance of their own youth may
-be a guide and not a beacon to them. But more knowledge
-than this is necessary, and I differ from Mr. Spencer only as
-to the proper time for acquiring it.</p>
-
-<p>§ 12. Next comes the knowledge which fits a man for
-the discharge of his functions as a citizen, a subject to which
-Dr. Arnold attached great importance at the time of the
-first Reform Bill, and which deserves our attention all the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_448" id="Page_448">[448]</a></span>
-more in consequence of the second and third. But what
-knowledge are we to give for this purpose? One of the
-subjects which seem especially suitable is history. But
-history, as it is now written, is, according to Mr. Spencer,
-useless. “It does not illustrate the right principles of
-political action.” “The great mass of historical facts are
-facts from which no conclusions can be drawn—unorganisable
-facts, and, therefore, facts of no service in establishing
-principles of conduct, which is the chief use of facts. Read
-them if you like for amusement, but do not flatter yourself
-they are instructive.” About the right principles of political
-action we seem so completely at sea that, perhaps, the main
-thing we can do for the young is to point out to them the
-responsibilities which will hereafter devolve upon them, and
-the danger, both to the state and the individual, of just
-echoing the popular cry without the least reflection,
-according to our present usage. But history, as it is now
-written by great historians, may be of some use in training
-the young both to be citizens and men. “Reading about
-the fifteen decisive battles, or all the battles in history,
-would not make a man a more judicious voter at the next
-election,” says Mr. Spencer. But is this true? The knowledge
-of what has been done in other times, even by those
-whose coronation renders them so distasteful to Mr. Spencer,
-is knowledge which influences a man’s whole character, and
-may, therefore, affect particular acts, even when we are
-unable to trace the connexion. As it has been often said,
-the effect of reading history is, in some respects, the same
-as that of travelling. Anyone in Mr. Spencer’s vein might
-ask, “If a man has seen the Alps, of what use will that be
-to him in weighing out groceries?” Directly, none at all;
-but indirectly, much. The travelled man will not be such<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_449" id="Page_449">[449]</a></span>
-a slave to the petty views and customs of his trade as the
-man who looks on his county town as the centre of the
-universe. The study of history, like travelling, widens the
-student’s mental vision, frees him to some extent from the
-bondage of the present, and prevents his mistaking conventionalities
-for laws of nature. It brings home to him, in
-all its force, the truth that “there are also people beyond
-the mountain” (<i>Hinter dem Berge sind auch Leute</i>), that
-there are higher interests in the world than his own business
-concerns, and nobler men than himself or the best of his
-acquaintance. It teaches him what men are capable of,
-and thus gives him juster views of his race. And to have
-all this truth worked into the mind contributes perhaps as
-largely to “complete living” as knowledge of the Eustachian
-tubes or of the normal rate of pulsation.<a name="FNanchor_189" id="FNanchor_189"></a><a href="#Footnote_189" class="fnanchor">[189]</a> I think, therefore,
-that the works of great historians and biographers, which we
-already possess, may be usefully employed in education.
-It is difficult to estimate the value of history according to
-Mr. Spencer’s idea, as it has yet to be written; but I
-venture to predict that if boys, instead of reading about
-the history of nations in connection with their leading men,
-are required to study only “the progress of society,” the
-subject will at once lose all its interest for them; and,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_450" id="Page_450">[450]</a></span>
-perhaps, many of the facts communicated will prove, after
-all, no less unorganisable than the fifteen decisive battles.</p>
-
-<p>§ 13. Lastly, we come to that “remaining division of
-human life which includes the relaxations and amusements
-filling leisure hours.” Mr. Spencer assures us that he will
-yield to none in the value he attaches to æsthetic culture
-and its pleasures; but if he does not value the fine arts
-less, he values science more; and painting, music, and
-poetry would receive as little encouragement under his
-dictatorship as in the days of the Commonwealth. “As
-the fine arts and belles-lettres occupy the leisure part of
-life, so should they occupy the leisure part of education.”
-This language is rather obscure; but the only meaning I
-can attach to it is, that music, drawing, poetry, &amp;c., may
-be taught if time can be found when all other knowledges
-are provided for. This reminds me of the author whose
-works are so valuable that they will be studied when Shakspeare
-is forgotten—but not before. Any one of the sciences
-which Mr. Spencer considers so necessary might employ a
-lifetime. Where then shall we look for the leisure part of
-education when education includes them all?<a name="FNanchor_190" id="FNanchor_190"></a><a href="#Footnote_190" class="fnanchor">[190]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_451" id="Page_451">[451]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>§ 14. But, if adopting Mr. Spencer’s own measure, we
-estimate the value of knowledge by its influence on action,
-we shall probably rank “accomplishments” much higher
-than they have hitherto been placed in the schemes of
-educationists. Knowledge and skill connected with the
-business of life, are of necessity acquired in the discharge
-of business. But the knowledge and skill which make our
-leisure valuable to ourselves and a source of pleasure to
-others, can seldom be gained after the work of life has
-begun. And yet every day a man may benefit by possessing
-such an ability, or may suffer from the want of it.
-One whose eyesight has been trained by drawing and
-painting finds objects of interest all around him, to which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_452" id="Page_452">[452]</a></span>
-other people are blind. A primrose by a river’s brim is,
-perhaps, more to him who has a feeling for its form and
-colour than even to the scientific student, who can tell all
-about its classification and component parts. A knowledge
-of music is often of the greatest practical service, as by
-virtue of it, its possessor is valuable to his associates, to
-say nothing of his having a constant source of pleasure
-and a means of recreation which is most precious as a relief
-from the cares of life. Of far greater importance is the
-knowledge of our best poetry. One of the first reforms
-in our school course would have been, I should have
-thought, to give this knowledge a much more prominent
-place; but Mr. Spencer consigns it, with music and drawing,
-to “the leisure part of education.” Whether a man who
-was engrossed by science, who had no knowledge of the
-fine arts except as they illustrated scientific laws, no
-acquaintance with the lives of great men, or with any history
-but sociology, and who studied the thoughts and
-emotions expressed by our great poets merely with a view
-to their psychological classification—whether such a man
-could be said to “live completely” is a question to which
-every one, not excepting Mr. Spencer himself, would probably
-return the same answer. And yet this is the kind of
-man which Mr. Spencer’s system would produce where it
-was most successful.</p>
-
-<p>§ 15. Let me now briefly sum up the conclusions arrived
-at, and consider how far I differ from Mr. Spencer. I
-believe that there is no one study which is suited to train
-the faculties of the mind at every stage of its development,
-and that when we have decided on the necessity of this or
-that knowledge, we must consider further what is the right
-time for acquiring it. I believe that intellectual education<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_453" id="Page_453">[453]</a></span>
-should aim, not so much at communicating facts, however
-valuable, as at showing the boy what true knowledge is,
-and giving him the power and the <i>disposition</i> to acquire it.
-I believe that the exclusively scientific teaching which Mr.
-Spencer approves would not effect this. It would lead at
-best to a very one-sided development of the mind. It
-might fail to engage the pupil’s interest sufficiently to draw
-out his faculties, and in this case the net outcome of his
-school-days would be no larger than at present. Of the
-knowledges which Mr. Spencer recommends for special
-objects, some, I think, would not conduce to the object, and
-some could not be communicated early in life, (1.) For
-indirect self-preservation we do not require to know physiology,
-but the results of physiology. (2.) The science
-which bears on special pursuits in life has not, in many
-cases, any pecuniary value, and although it is most desirable
-that every one should study the science which makes his
-work intelligible to him, this must usually be done when
-his schooling is over. The school will have done its part
-if it has accustomed him to the intellectual processes by
-which sciences are learned, and has given him an intelligent
-appreciation of their value.<a name="FNanchor_191" id="FNanchor_191"></a><a href="#Footnote_191" class="fnanchor">[191]</a> (3.) The right way of rearing
-and training children should be studied, but not by the
-children themselves. (4.) The knowledge which fits a man<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_454" id="Page_454">[454]</a></span>
-to discharge his duties as a citizen is of great importance,
-and, as Dr. Arnold pointed out, is likely to be entirely
-neglected by those who have to struggle for a livelihood.
-The schoolmaster should, therefore, by no means neglect
-this subject with those of his pupils whose school-days will
-soon be over, but, probably, all that he can do is to cultivate
-in them a sense of the citizen’s duty, and a capacity for
-being their own teachers. (5.) The knowledge of poetry,
-belles-lettres, and the fine arts, which Mr. Spencer hands
-over to the leisure part of education, is the only knowledge
-in his program which I think should most certainly form
-a prominent part in the curriculum of every school.</p>
-
-<p>§ 16. I therefore differ, though with great respect, from
-the conclusions at which Mr. Spencer has arrived. But I
-heartily agree with him that we are bound to inquire into
-the relative value of knowledges, and if we take, as I should
-willingly do, Mr. Spencer’s test, and ask how does this or
-that knowledge influence action (including in our inquiry
-its influence on mind and character, through which it bears
-upon action), I think we should banish from our schools
-much that has hitherto been taught in them, besides those
-old tormentors of youth (laid, I fancy, at last—<i>requiescant
-in pace</i>)—the <i>Propria quæ Maribus</i> and its kindred absurdities.
-What we <i>should</i> teach is, of course, not so easily
-decided as what we <i>should not</i>.</p>
-
-<p>§ 17. I now come to consider Mr. Spencer’s second
-chapter, in which, under the heading of “Intellectual Education,”
-he gives an admirable summing up of the main
-principles in which the great writers on the subject have
-agreed, from Comenius downwards. These principles are,
-perhaps, not all of them unassailable, and even where they
-are true, many mistakes must be expected before we arrive<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_455" id="Page_455">[455]</a></span>
-at the best method of applying them; but the only reason
-that can be assigned for the small amount of influence they
-have hitherto exercised is, that most teachers are as ignorant
-of them as of the abstrusest doctrines of Kant and Hegel.</p>
-
-<p>§ 18. In stating these principles Mr. Spencer points out
-that they merely form a commencement for a science of
-education. “Before educational methods can be made to
-harmonise in character and arrangement with the faculties
-in the mode and order of unfolding, it is first needful that
-we ascertain with some completeness how the faculties <i>do</i>
-unfold. At present we have acquired on this point only a
-few general notions. These general notions must be developed
-in detail—must be transformed into a multitude of
-specific propositions before we can be said to possess that
-<i>science</i> on which the <i>art</i> of education must be based. And
-then, when we have definitely made out in what succession
-and in what combinations the mental powers become active,
-it remains to choose out of the many possible ways of
-exercising each of them, that which best conforms to its
-natural mode of action. Evidently, therefore, it is not to
-be supposed that even our most advanced modes of teaching
-are the right ones, or nearly the right ones.” It is not
-to be wondered at that we have no science of education.
-Those who have been able to observe the phenomena have
-had no interest in generalising from them. Up to the
-present time the schoolmaster has been a person to whom
-boys were sent to learn Latin and Greek. He has had,
-therefore, no more need of a science than the dancing-master.<a name="FNanchor_192" id="FNanchor_192"></a><a href="#Footnote_192" class="fnanchor">[192]</a>
-But the present century, which has brought in so<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_456" id="Page_456">[456]</a></span>
-many changes, will not leave the state of education as it
-found it. Latin and Greek, if they are not dethroned in
-our higher schools, will have their despotism changed for
-a very limited monarchy. A course of instruction certainly
-without Greek and perhaps without Latin will have to be
-provided for middle schools. Juster views are beginning
-to prevail of the schoolmaster’s function. It is at length
-perceived that he has to assist the development of the
-human mind, and perhaps, by-and-bye, he may think it as
-well to learn all he can of that which he is employed in
-developing. When matters have advanced as far as this,
-we may begin to hope for a science of education. In
-Locke’s day he could say of physical science that there was
-no such science in existence. For thousands of years the
-human race had lived in ignorance of the simplest laws of
-the world it inhabited. But the true method of inquiring
-once introduced, science has made such rapid conquests,
-and acquired so great importance, that some of our ablest
-men seem inclined to deny, if not the existence, at least
-the value, of any other kind of knowledge. So, too, when
-teachers seek by actual observation to discover the laws of
-mental development, a science may be arrived at, which, in
-its influence on mankind, would perhaps rank before any
-we now possess.</p>
-
-<p>§ 19. Those who have read the previous Essays will
-have seen in various forms most of the principles which Mr.
-Spencer enumerates, but I gladly avail myself of his assistance
-in summing them up.</p>
-
-<p>1. We should proceed from the simple to the complex,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_457" id="Page_457">[457]</a></span>
-both in our choice of subjects and in the way in which each
-subject is taught. We should begin with but few subjects
-at once, and, successively adding to these, should finally
-carry on all subjects abreast.</p>
-
-<p>Each larger concept is made by a combination of smaller
-ones, and presupposes them. If this order is not attended
-to in communicating knowledge, the pupil can learn nothing
-but words, and will speedily sink into apathy and disgust.</p>
-
-<p>§ 20. That we must proceed from the known to the unknown
-is something more than a corollary to the above;<a name="FNanchor_193" id="FNanchor_193"></a><a href="#Footnote_193" class="fnanchor">[193]</a>
-because not only are new concepts formed by the combination
-of old, but the mind has a liking for what it knows, and
-this liking extends itself to all that can be connected with
-its object. The principle of using the known in teaching
-the unknown is so simple, that all teachers who really
-endeavour to make anything understood, naturally adopt
-it. The traveller who is describing what he has seen and
-what we have not seen tells us that it is in one particular
-like this object, and in another like that object, with which
-we are already familiar. We combine these different
-concepts we possess, and so get some notion of things about
-which we were previously ignorant. What is required in our
-teaching is that the use of the known should be employed
-more systematically. Most teachers think of boys who
-have no school learning as entirely ignorant. The least
-reflection shows, however, that they know already much
-more than schools can ever teach them. A sarcastic
-examiner is said to have handed a small piece of paper to a
-student and told him to write <i>all he knew</i> on it. Perhaps<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_458" id="Page_458">[458]</a></span>
-many boys would have no difficulty in stating the sum of
-their school-learning within very narrow limits, but with
-other knowledge a child of five years old, could he write,
-might soon fill a volume.<a name="FNanchor_194" id="FNanchor_194"></a><a href="#Footnote_194" class="fnanchor">[194]</a> Our aim should be to connect
-the knowledge boys bring with them to the schoolroom with
-that which they are to acquire there.<a name="FNanchor_195" id="FNanchor_195"></a><a href="#Footnote_195" class="fnanchor">[195]</a> I suppose all will
-allow, whether they think it a matter of regret or otherwise,
-that hardly anything of the kind has hitherto been attempted.
-Against this state of things I cannot refrain from borrowing
-Mr. Spencer’s eloquent protest. “Not recognising the
-truth that the function of books is supplementary—that they
-form an indirect means to knowledge when direct means
-fail, a means of seeing through other men what you cannot
-see for yourself, teachers are eager to give second-hand facts
-in place of first-hand facts. Not perceiving the enormous
-value of that spontaneous education which goes on in early
-years, not perceiving that a child’s restless observation,
-instead of being ignored or checked, should be diligently
-ministered to, and made as accurate and complete as possible,
-they insist on occupying its eyes and thoughts with
-things that are, for the time being, incomprehensible and
-repugnant. Possessed by a superstition which worships the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_459" id="Page_459">[459]</a></span>
-symbols of knowledge instead of the knowledge itself, they
-do not see that only when his acquaintance with the objects
-and processes of the household, the street, and the fields,
-is becoming tolerably exhaustive, only then should a child
-be introduced to the new sources of information which
-books supply, and this not only because immediate cognition
-is of far greater value than mediate cognition, but also
-because the words contained in books can be rightly interpreted
-into ideas only in proportion to the antecedent
-experience of things.”<a name="FNanchor_196" id="FNanchor_196"></a><a href="#Footnote_196" class="fnanchor">[196]</a> While agreeing heartily in the spirit
-of this protest, I doubt whether we should wait till the
-child’s acquaintance with the objects and processes of the
-household, the streets, and the fields, is becoming tolerably
-exhaustive before we give him instruction from books. The
-point of time which Mr. Spencer indicates is, at all events,
-rather hard to fix, and I should wish to connect book-learning
-as soon as possible with the learning that is being
-acquired in other ways. Thus might both the books, and
-the acts and objects of daily life, win an additional interest.
-If, <i>e.g.</i>, the first reading-books were about the animals, and
-later on about the trees and flowers which the children constantly
-meet with, and their attention was kept up by large
-coloured pictures, to which the text might refer, the children<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_460" id="Page_460">[460]</a></span>
-would soon find both pleasure and advantage in reading,
-and they would look at the animals and trees with a keener
-interest from the additional knowledge of them they had
-derived from books. This is, of course, only one small
-application of a very influential principle.</p>
-
-<p>§ 21. One marvellous instance of the neglect of this principle
-is found in the practice of teaching Latin grammar
-before English grammar. As Professor Seeley has so well
-pointed out, children bring with them to school the knowledge
-of language in its concrete form. They may soon be
-taught to observe the language they already know, and to
-find, almost for themselves, some of the main divisions of
-words in it. But, instead of availing himself of the child’s
-previous knowledge, the schoolmaster takes a new and
-difficult language, differing as much as possible from English,
-a new and difficult science, that of grammar, conveyed, too,
-in a new and difficult terminology, and all this he tries to
-teach at the same time. The consequence is that the
-science is destroyed, the terminology is either misunderstood,
-or, more probably, associated with no ideas, and even the
-language for which every sacrifice is made, is found, in nine
-cases out of ten, never to be acquired at all.<a name="FNanchor_197" id="FNanchor_197"></a><a href="#Footnote_197" class="fnanchor">[197]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_461" id="Page_461">[461]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>§ 22. 2. “All development is an advance from the
-indefinite to the definite.” I do not feel very certain of the
-truth of this principle, or of its application, if true. Of
-course, a child’s intellectual conceptions are at first vague,
-and we should not forget this; but it is rather a fact than a
-principle.</p>
-
-<p>§ 23. 3. “Our lessons ought to start from the concrete,
-and end in the abstract.” What Mr. Spencer says under
-this head well deserves the attention of all teachers.
-“General formulas which men have devised to express
-groups of details, and which have severally simplified their
-conceptions by uniting many facts into one fact, they have
-supposed must simplify the conceptions of a child also.
-They have forgotten that a generalisation is simple only in
-comparison with the whole mass of particular truths it comprehends;
-that it is more complex than any one of these
-truths taken simply; that only, after many of these single
-truths have been acquired, does the generalisation ease the
-memory and help the reason; and that, to a mind not
-possessing these single truths, it is necessarily a mystery.
-Thus, confounding two kinds of simplification, teachers have
-constantly erred by setting out with “first principles,” a proceeding
-essentially, though not apparently, at variance with
-the primary rule [of proceeding from the simple to the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_462" id="Page_462">[462]</a></span>
-complex], which implies that the mind should be introduced
-to principles through the medium of examples, and so should
-be led from the particular to the general, from the concrete
-to the abstract.” In conformity with this principle, Pestalozzi
-made the actual counting of things precede the teaching
-of abstract rules in arithmetic. Basedow introduced
-weights and measures into the school, and Mr. Spencer
-describes some exercise in cutting out geometrical figures in
-cardboard, as a preparation for geometry. The difficulty
-about such instruction is that it requires apparatus, and
-apparatus is apt to get lost or out of order. But if apparatus
-is good for anything at all, it is worth a little trouble.
-There is a tendency in the minds of many teachers to
-depreciate “mechanical appliances.” Even a decent
-black-board is not always to be found in our higher schools.
-But, though such appliances will not enable a bad master
-to teach well, nevertheless, other things being equal, the
-master will teach better with them than without them.
-There is little credit due to him for managing to dispense
-with apparatus. An author might as well pride himself on
-being saving in pens and paper.</p>
-
-<p>§ 24. 4. “The genesis of knowledge in the individual
-must follow the same course as the genesis of knowledge
-in the race.” This is the thesis on which I have no opinion
-to offer.</p>
-
-<p>§ 25. 5. From the above principle Mr. Spencer infers
-that every study should have a purely experimental introduction,
-thus proceeding through an empirical stage to a
-rational.</p>
-
-<p>§ 26. 6. A second conclusion which Mr. Spencer draws
-is that, in education, the process of self-development should
-be encouraged to the utmost. Children should be led to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_463" id="Page_463">[463]</a></span>
-make their own investigations, and to draw their own
-inferences. They should be told as little as possible,
-and induced to discover as much as possible. I quite
-agree with Mr. Spencer that this principle cannot be too
-strenuously insisted on, though it obviously demands a high
-amount of intelligence in the teacher. But if education is
-to be a training of the faculties, if it is to prepare the pupil
-to teach himself, something more is needed than simply to
-pour in knowledge and make the pupil reproduce it. The
-receptive and reproductive faculties form but a small portion
-of a child’s powers, and yet the only portion which many
-schoolmasters seek to cultivate. It is indeed, not easy to
-get beyond this point; but the impediment is in us, not in
-the children. “Who can watch,” ask Mr. Spencer, “the
-ceaseless observation, and inquiry, and inference, going on
-in a child’s mind, or listen to its acute remarks in matters
-within the range of its faculties, without perceiving that
-these powers it manifests, if brought to bear systematically
-upon studies <i>within the same range</i>, would readily master
-them without help? This need for perpetual telling results
-from our stupidity, not from the child’s. We drag it away
-from the facts in which it is interested, and which it is
-actively assimilating of itself. We put before it facts far
-too complex for it to understand, and therefore distasteful
-to it. Finding that it will not voluntarily acquire these
-facts, we thrust them into its mind by force of threats and
-punishment. By thus denying the knowledge it craves,
-and cramming it with knowledge it cannot digest, we
-produce a morbid state of its faculties, and a consequent
-disgust for knowledge in general. And when, as a result,
-partly of the stolid indolence we have brought on, and
-partly of still-continued unfitness in its studies, the child<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_464" id="Page_464">[464]</a></span>
-can understand nothing without explanation, and becomes
-a mere passive recipient of our instruction, we infer that
-education must necessarily be carried on thus. Having
-by our method induced helplessness, we make the helplessness
-a reason for our method.” It is, of course, much
-easier to point out defects than to remedy them: but every
-one who has observed the usual indifference of schoolboys
-to their work, and the waste of time consequent on their
-inattention or only half-hearted attention to the matter
-before them, and then thinks of the eagerness with which
-the same boys throw themselves into the pursuits of their
-play-hours, will feel a desire to get at the cause of this
-difference; and, perhaps, it may seem to him partly
-accounted for by the fact that their school-work makes a
-monotonous demand on a single faculty—the memory.</p>
-
-<p>§ 27. 7. This brings me to the last of Mr. Spencer’s
-principles of intellectual education. Instruction must
-excite the interest of the pupils and therefore be pleasurable
-to them. “Nature has made the healthful exercise of our
-faculties both of mind and body pleasurable. It is true
-that some of the highest mental powers as yet but little
-developed in the race, and congenitally possessed in any
-considerable degree only by the most advanced, are indisposed
-to the amount of exertion required of them. But
-these, in virtue of their very complexity will in a normal
-course of culture come last into exercise, and will, therefore,
-have no demands made on them until the pupil has arrived
-at an age when ulterior motives can be brought into play,
-and an indirect pleasure made to counterbalance a direct
-displeasure. With all faculties lower than these, however,
-the immediate gratification consequent on activity is the
-normal stimulus, and under good management the only<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_465" id="Page_465">[465]</a></span>
-needful stimulus. When we have to fall back on some
-other, we must take the fact as evidence that we are on the
-wrong track. Experience is daily showing with greater
-clearness that there is always a method to be found productive
-of interest—even of delight—and it ever turns out that
-this is the method proved by all other tests to be the right one.”</p>
-
-<p>§ 28. As far as I have had the means of judging, I have
-found that the majority of teachers reject this principle.
-If you ask them why, most of them will tell you that it is
-impossible to make school-work interesting to children. A
-large number also hold that it is not desirable. Let us
-consider these two points separately.</p>
-
-<p>Of course, if it is not possible to get children to take
-interest in anything they could be taught in school, there
-is an end of the matter. But no one really goes as far as
-this. Every teacher finds that some of the things boys are
-taught they like better than others, and perhaps that one
-boy takes to one subject and another to another; and he
-also finds, both of classes and individuals, that they always
-get on best with what they like best. The utmost that can
-be maintained is, then, that some subjects which must be
-taught will not interest the majority of the learners. And
-if it be once admitted that it is desirable to make learning
-pleasant and interesting to our pupils, this principle will
-influence us to some extent in the subjects we select for
-teaching, and still more in the methods by which we
-endeavour to teach them. I say we shall be guided <i>to
-some extent</i> in the selection of subjects. There are theorists
-who assert that nature gives to young minds a craving for
-their proper aliment, so that they should be taught only
-what they show an inclination for. But surely our natural
-inclinations in this matter, as in others, are neither on the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_466" id="Page_466">[466]</a></span>
-one hand to be ignored, nor on the other to be uncontrolled
-by such motives as our reason dictates to us. We at length
-perceive this in the physical nurture of our children. Locke
-directs that children are to have very little sugar or salt.
-“Sweetmeats of all kinds are to be avoided,” says he,
-“which, whether they do more harm to the maker or eater
-is not easy to tell.” (Ed. § 20.) Now, however, doctors
-have found out that young people’s taste for sweets should
-in moderation be gratified, that they require sugar as much
-as they require any other kind of nutriment. But no one
-would think of feeding his children entirely on sweetmeats,
-or even of letting them have an unlimited supply of plum
-puddings and hardbake. If we follow out this analogy in
-nourishing the mind, we shall, to some extent, gratify a
-child’s taste for “stories,” whilst we also provide a large
-amount of more solid fare. But although we should
-certainly not ignore our children’s likes and dislikes in
-learning, or in anything else, it is easy to attach too much
-importance to them. Dislike very often proceeds from
-mere want of insight into the subject. When a boy has
-“done” the First Book of Euclid without knowing how to
-judge of the size of an angle, or the Second Book without
-forming any conception of a rectangle, no one can be surprised
-at his not liking Euclid. And then the failure which
-is really due to bad teaching is attributed by the master
-to the stupidity of his pupil, and by the pupil to the
-dulness of the subject. If masters really desired to make
-learning a pleasure to their pupils, I think they would find
-that much might be done to effect this without any alteration
-in the subjects taught.</p>
-
-<p>But the present dulness of school-work is not without
-its defenders. They insist on the importance of breaking<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_467" id="Page_467">[467]</a></span>
-in the mind to hard work. This can only be done, they
-say, by tasks which are repulsive to it. The schoolboy does
-not like, and ought not to like, learning Latin grammar any
-more than the colt should find pleasure in running round in
-a circle: the very fact that these things are not pleasant
-makes them beneficial. Perhaps a certain amount of such
-training may train <i>down</i> the mind and qualify it for some
-drudgery from which it might otherwise revolt; but if this
-result is attained, it is attained at the sacrifice of the intellectual
-activity which is necessary for any higher function.
-As Carlyle says, (<i>Latter-Day PP.</i>, No. iij), when speaking
-of routine work generally, you want nothing but a sorry nag
-to draw your sand-cart; your high-spirited Arab will be
-dangerous in such a capacity. But who would advocate
-for all colts a training which should render them fit for
-nothing but such humble toil? I shall say more about this
-further on (<a href="#Page_472"><i>v.</i> pp. 472 <i>ff.</i></a>); here I will merely express my strong
-conviction that boys’ minds are frequently dwarfed, and
-their interest in intellectual pursuits blighted, by the practice
-of employing the first years of their school-life in learning
-by heart things which it is quite impossible for them to
-understand or care for. Teachers set out by assuming that
-little boys cannot understand anything, and that all we can
-do with them is to keep them quiet and cram them with
-forms which will come in useful at a later age. When the
-boys have been taught on this system for two or three years,
-their teacher complains that they are stupid and inattentive,
-and that so long as they can say a thing by heart they never
-trouble themselves to understand it. In other words, the
-teacher grumbles at them for doing precisely what they have
-been taught to do, for repeating words without any thought
-of their meaning.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_468" id="Page_468">[468]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>§ 29. In this very important matter I am fully alive to the
-difference between theory and practice. It is so easy to
-recommend that boys should be got to understand and take
-an interest in their work—so difficult to carry out the
-recommendation! Grown people can hardly conceive that
-words which have in their minds been associated with
-familiar ideas from time immemorial, are mere sounds in
-the mouths of their pupils. The teacher thinks he is
-beginning at the beginning if he says that a transitive verb
-must govern an accusative, or that all the angles of a square
-are right angles. He gives his pupils credit for innate ideas
-up to this point, at all events, and advancing on this
-supposition he finds that he can get nothing out of them but
-memory-work; so he insists on this that his time and theirs
-may seem not to be wholly wasted. The great difficulty of
-teaching well, however, is after all but a poor excuse for
-contentedly teaching badly, and it would be a great step in
-advance if teachers in general were as dissatisfied with
-themselves as they usually are with their pupils.<a name="FNanchor_198" id="FNanchor_198"></a><a href="#Footnote_198" class="fnanchor">[198]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_469" id="Page_469">[469]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>§ 30. I do not purpose following Mr. Spencer through
-his chapters on moral and physical education. In practice
-I find I can draw no line between moral and religious
-education; so the discussion of one without the other has
-not for me much interest. Mr. Spencer has some very
-valuable remarks on physical education which I could do
-little more than extract, and I have already made too many
-quotations from a work which will be in the hands of most
-of my readers.</p>
-
-<p>§ 31. Mr. Spencer differs very widely from the great body
-of our schoolmasters. I have ventured in turn to differ on
-some points from Mr. Spencer; but I have failed to give
-any adequate notion of the work I have been discussing if
-the reader has not perceived that it is not only one of the
-most readable, but also one of the most important books on
-education in the English language.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_470" id="Page_470">[470]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="XX">XX.<br />
-<span class="smaller">THOUGHTS AND SUGGESTIONS.</span></h2>
-
-<p>$ 1. One of the great wants of middle-class education at
-present, is an ideal to work towards. Our old public
-schools have such an ideal. The model public school-man
-is a gentleman who is an elegant Latin and Greek scholar.
-True, this may not be a very good ideal, and some of our
-ablest men, both literary and scientific, are profoundly
-dissatisfied with it. But, so long as it is maintained, all
-questions of reform are comparatively simple. In middle-class
-schools, on the other hand, there is no <i>terminus ad
-quem</i>. A number of boys are got together, and the question
-arises, not simply <i>how</i> to teach, but <i>what</i> to teach. Where
-the masters are not university men, they are, it may be, not
-men of broad views or high culture. Of course no one will
-suppose me ignorant of the fact that a great number of
-teachers who have never been at a university, are both
-enlightened and highly cultivated; and also that many
-teachers who have taken degrees, even in honours, are
-neither. But, speaking broadly of the two classes, I may
-fairly assume that the non-university men are inferior in
-these respects to the graduates. If not, our universities
-should be reformed on Carlyle’s “live-coal” principle without
-further loss of time. Many non-university masters<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_471" id="Page_471">[471]</a></span>
-have been engaged in teaching ever since they were boys
-themselves, and teaching is a very narrowing occupation.
-They are apt therefore to be careless of general principles,
-and to aim merely at storing their pupils’ memory with
-<i>facts</i>—facts about language, about history, about geography,
-without troubling themselves to consider what is and what
-is not worth knowing, or what faculties the boys have, and
-how they should be developed. The consequence is their
-boys get up, for the purpose of forgetting with all convenient
-speed, quantities of details about as instructive and entertaining
-as the <i>Propria quæ maribus</i>, such as the division of
-England under the Heptarchy, the battles in the wars of the
-Roses, and lists of geographical names. Where the masters
-are university men, they have rather a contempt for this kind
-of cramming, which makes them do it badly, if they attempt
-it at all; but they are driven to this teaching in many cases
-because they do not know what to substitute in its place.
-In their own school-education they were taught classics
-and mathematics and nothing else. Their pupils are too
-young to have much capacity for mathematics, and they
-will leave school too soon to get any sound knowledge of
-classics; so the strength of the teaching ought clearly not
-to be thrown into these subjects. But the master really
-knows no other. He soon finds that he is not much his
-pupils’ superior in acquaintance with the theory of the
-English language or with history and geography. There
-are not many men with sufficient strength of will to study
-whilst their energies are taxed by teaching; and standard
-books are not always within reach: so the master is forced
-to content himself with hearing lessons in a perfunctory
-way out of dreary school-books. Hence it comes to pass
-that he goes on teaching subjects of which he himself is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_472" id="Page_472">[472]</a></span>
-ignorant, subjects, too, of which he does not recognise the
-importance, with an enlightened disbelief in his own method
-of tuition. He finds it uphill work, to be sure, and is
-conscious that his pupils do not get on, however hard he
-may try to drive them; but he never hoped for success in
-his teaching, so the want of it does not distress him. I
-may be suspected of caricature, but not, I think, by
-university men who have themselves had to teach anything
-besides classics and mathematics.</p>
-
-<p>§ 2. If there is any truth in what I have been saying,
-school-teaching, in subjects other than classics and mathematics
-(which I am not now considering), is very commonly
-a failure. And a failure it must remain until boys can be
-got to work with a will, in other words, to feel interest in
-the subject taught. I know there is a strong prejudice in
-some people’s minds against the notion of making learning
-pleasant. They remind us that school should be a preparation
-for after-life. After-life will bring with it an
-immense amount of drudgery. If, they say, things at
-school are made too easy and pleasant (words, by the way,
-very often and very erroneously confounded), school will
-cease to give the proper discipline: boys will be turned out
-not knowing what hard work is, which, after all, is the most
-important lesson that can be taught them. In these views
-I sincerely concur, so far as this at least, that we want
-boys to work hard, and vigorously to go through the
-necessary drudgery, <i>i.e.</i>, labour in itself disagreeable. But
-this result is not attained by such a system as I have
-described. Boys do not learn to work <i>hard</i>, but in a dull
-stupid way, with most of their faculties lying dormant, and
-though they are put through a vast quantity of drudgery,
-they seem as incapable of throwing any energy into it as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_473" id="Page_473">[473]</a></span>
-prisoners on the tread-mill. I think we shall find on
-consideration, that no one succeeds in any occupation
-unless that occupation is interesting, either in itself or from
-some object that is to be obtained by means of it. Only
-when such an interest is aroused is energy possible. No
-one will deny that, as a rule, the most successful men are
-those for whom their employment has the greatest attractions.
-We should be sorry to give ourselves up to the treatment
-of a doctor who thought the study of disease mere drudgery,
-or a dentist who felt a strong repugnance to operating on
-teeth. No doubt the successful man in every pursuit has
-to go through a great deal of drudgery, but he has a
-general interest in the subject, which extends, partially at
-least, to its most wearisome details; his energy, too, is
-excited by the desire of what the drudgery will gain for
-him.<a name="FNanchor_199" id="FNanchor_199"></a><a href="#Footnote_199" class="fnanchor">[199]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_474" id="Page_474">[474]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>§ 3. Observe, that although I would have boys take
-pleasure in their work, I regard the pleasure as a <i>means</i>,
-not an end. If it could be proved that the mind was best
-trained by the most repulsive exercises, I should most
-certainly enforce them. But I do not think that the mind
-<i>is</i> benefited by galley-slave labour; indeed, hardly any of
-its faculties are capable of such labour. We can compel a
-boy to learn a thing by heart, but we cannot compel him to
-wish to understand it; and the intellect does not act
-without the will (<a href="#Page_193"><i>v. supra</i> p. 193</a>). Hence, when anything
-is required which cannot be performed by the memory
-alone, the driving system utterly breaks down; and even
-the memory, as I hope to show presently, works much
-more effectually in matters about which the mind feels an
-interest. Indeed, the mind without sympathy and interest
-is like the sea-anemone when the tide is down, an unlovely
-thing, closed against external influences, enduring existence
-as best it can. But let it find itself in a more congenial
-element, and it opens out at once, shows altogether unexpected
-capacities, and eagerly assimilates all the proper
-food that comes within its reach. Our school teaching is
-often little better than an attempt to get sea-anemones to
-flourish on dry land.</p>
-
-<p>§ 4. We see then, that a boy, before he can throw
-energy into a study, must find that study <i>interesting in
-itself, or in its results</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Some subjects, properly taught, are interesting in themselves.</p>
-
-<p>Some subjects may be interesting to older and more
-thoughtful boys, from a perception of their usefulness.</p>
-
-<p>All subjects may be made interesting by emulation.</p>
-
-<p>§ 5. Hardly any effort is made in some schools to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_475" id="Page_475">[475]</a></span>
-interest the younger children in their work, and yet no
-effort can be, as the Germans say, more “rewarding.”
-The teacher of children has this advantage, that his pupils
-are never dull and listless, as youths are apt to be. If they
-are not attending to him, they very soon give him notice of
-it; and if he has the sense to see that their inattention is
-his fault, not theirs, this will save him much annoyance and
-them much misery. He has, too, another advantage, which
-gives him the power of gaining their attention—their
-emulation is easily excited. In the Waisenhaus at Halle I
-once heard a class of very young children, none of them
-much above six years old, perform feats of mental arithmetic
-quite, as I should have said, beyond their age, and I well
-remember the pretty eagerness with which each child held
-out a little hand and shouted, “<i>Mich! Bitte!</i>” to gain the
-privilege of answering.</p>
-
-<p>§ 6. Then again, there are many subjects in which
-children take an interest. Indeed, all visible things,
-especially animals, are much more to them than to us.
-A child has made acquaintance with all the animals in the
-neighbourhood, and can tell you much more about the
-house and its surroundings than you know yourself. But
-all this knowledge and interest you would wish forgotten
-directly he comes into school. Reading, writing, and
-figures are taught in the driest manner. The two first are
-in themselves not uninteresting to the child, as he has
-something to do, and young people are much more ready
-to do anything than to learn anything. But when lessons
-are given the child to learn, they are not about things
-concerning which he has ideas and feels an interest, but
-you teach him mere sounds—<i>e.g.</i>, that Alfred (to him only
-a name) came to the throne in 871, though he has no<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_476" id="Page_476">[476]</a></span>
-notion what the throne is, or what 871 means. The child
-learns the lesson with much trouble and small profit,
-bearing the infliction with what patience he can, till he
-escapes out of school and begins to learn much faster on a
-very different system.</p>
-
-<p>§ 7. We cannot often introduce into the school the thing,
-much less the animal, which children would care to see,
-but we can introduce what will please them as well, in
-some cases even better, viz., good pictures. A teacher
-who could draw boldly on the blackboard, would have no
-difficulty in arresting the children’s attention. But, at
-present, few can do this, and pictures must be provided.
-A good deal has been done of late years in the way of
-illustrating children’s books, and even childhood must be
-the happier for such pictures as those of Tenniel and
-Harrison Weir. But it seems well understood that these
-gentlemen are incapable of doing anything for children
-beyond affording them innocent amusement, and we should
-be as much surprised at seeing their works introduced into
-that region of asceticism, the English school-room, as if we
-ran across one of Raphael’s Madonnas in a Baptist chapel.<a name="FNanchor_200" id="FNanchor_200"></a><a href="#Footnote_200" class="fnanchor">[200]</a></p>
-
-<p>§ 8. I had the good fortune, many years ago, to be
-present at the lessons given by a very excellent teacher to
-the youngest class, consisting both of boys and girls, at the
-first <i>Bürger-schule</i> of Leipzig. In Saxony the schooling
-which the state demands for each child, begins at six years<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_477" id="Page_477">[477]</a></span>
-old, and lasts till fourteen. These children were, therefore,
-between six and seven. In one year, a certain Dr. Vater
-taught them to read, write, and reckon. His method of
-teaching was as follows:—Each child had a book with
-pictures of objects, such as a hat, a slate, &amp;c. Under the
-picture was the name of the object in printing and writing
-characters, and also a couplet about the object. The
-children having opened their books, and found the picture
-of a hat, the teacher showed them a hat, and told them a
-tale connected with one. He then asked the children
-questions about his story, and about the hat he had in his
-hand—What was the colour of it? &amp;c. He then drew a
-hat on the blackboard, and made the children copy it on
-their slates. Next he wrote the word “hat” and told them
-that for people who could read this did as well as the
-picture. The children then copied the word on their
-slates. The teacher proceeded to analyse the word “hat,
-(<i>hut</i>).” “It is made up,” said he, “of three sounds, the
-most important of which is the <i>a</i> (<i>u</i>), which comes in the
-middle.” In all cases the vowel sound was first ascertained
-in every syllable, and then was given an approximation to
-consonantal sounds before and after. The couplet was now
-read by the teacher, and the children repeated it after him.
-In this way the book had to be worked over and over till
-the children were perfectly familiar with everything in it.
-They had been already six months thus employed when I
-visited the school, and knew the book pretty thoroughly.
-To test their knowledge, Dr. Vater first wrote a number of
-capitals at random on the board, and called out a boy to
-tell him words having these capitals as initials. This boy
-had to call out a girl to do something of the kind, she a
-boy, and so forth. Everything was done very smartly, both<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_478" id="Page_478">[478]</a></span>
-by master and children. The best proof I saw of their
-accuracy and quickness was this: the master traced words
-from the book very rapidly with a stick on the blackboard,
-and the children always called out the right word, though I
-could not follow him. He also wrote with chalk words
-which the children had never seen, and made them name
-first the vowel sounds, then the consonantal, then combine
-them.</p>
-
-<p>I have been thus minute in my description of this lesson,
-because it seems to me an admirable example of the way
-in which children between six and eight years of age should
-be taught. The method (see Rüegg’s <i>Pädagogik</i>, p. 360;
-also <i>Die Normalwörtermethode</i>, published by Orell, Füssli,
-Zürich, 1876), was arranged and the book prepared by the
-late Dr. Vogel, who was then Director of the school. Its
-merits, as its author pointed out to me, are:—1. That it
-connects the instruction with objects of which the child
-has already an idea in his mind, and so associates new
-knowledge with old; 2. That it gives the children plenty
-to <i>do</i> as well as to learn, a point on which the Doctor was
-very emphatic; 3. That it makes the children go over the
-same matter in various ways till they have <i>learnt a little
-thoroughly</i>, and then applies their knowledge to the acquirement
-of more. Here the Doctor seems to have followed
-Jacotot. But though the method was no doubt a good
-one, I must say its success at Leipzig was due at least as
-much to Dr. Vater as to Dr. Vogel. This gentleman had
-been taking the youngest class in this school for twenty
-years, and, whether by practice or natural talent, he had
-acquired precisely the right manner for keeping children’s
-attention. He was energetic without bustle and excitement,
-and quiet without a suspicion of dulness or apathy. By<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_479" id="Page_479">[479]</a></span>
-frequently changing the employment of the class, and requiring
-smartness in everything that was done, he kept
-them all on the alert. The lesson I have described was
-followed without pause by one in arithmetic, the two
-together occupying an hour and three quarters, and the
-interest of the children never flagged throughout.</p>
-
-<p>§ 9. Dr. Vater’s method for arithmetic I cannot now
-recall; but I do not doubt that, as a German teacher who
-had studied his profession, he understood what English
-teachers and pupil-teachers do not understand, viz., how
-children should get their first knowledge of numbers.
-Pestalozzi and Froebel insisted that children should learn
-about numbers from <i>things</i> which they actually counted;
-and, according to Grubé’s method, which I found in Germany
-over 30 years ago, and which is now extending to
-the United States, the whole of the first year is given to
-the relations of numbers not exceeding ten (see <i>Grubé’s
-Method</i> by L. Seeley, New York, Kellogg, and F. L.
-Soldan’s <i>Grubé’s M.</i>, Chicago). In arithmetic everything
-depends on these relations becoming thoroughly familiar.
-The decimal scale is possibly not so good as the scale of
-eight or of twelve, but the human race has adopted it; and
-even the French Revolutionists, with all their belief in
-“reason,” and their hatred of the past, recoiled from any
-attempt to change it. But in accepting it, they endeavoured
-to remove anomalies, and so should we. Everything must
-be based on groups of ten; and with children we should do
-well, as Mr. W. Wooding suggests, to avoid the great
-anomaly in our nomenclature, and call the numbers between
-ten and twenty (<i>i.e.</i>, twain-tens or two-tens), “ten-one, ten-two,
-&amp;c.” Numeration should by a long way precede any
-kind of notation, and the main truths about numbers should<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_480" id="Page_480">[480]</a></span>
-be got at experimentally with counters or coins. In these
-truths should be included all that we usually separate under
-the “First Four Rules,” and with integers we may even from
-the first give a clear conception of the fractional parts of
-whole numbers, <i>e.g.</i>, that one third of 6 is 2.<a name="FNanchor_201" id="FNanchor_201"></a><a href="#Footnote_201" class="fnanchor">[201]</a></p>
-
-<p>Actual measuring and weighing, besides actual counting,
-go towards actual arithmetic for children.</p>
-
-<p>All this teaching, if conducted as Dr. Vater would have
-conducted it, would not give children any distaste for
-learning or make them dread the sound of the school bell.</p>
-
-<p>§ 10. I will suppose a child to have passed through
-such a course as this by the time he is eight or nine years
-old. Besides having some clear notions of number and
-form, he can now read and copy easy words. What we
-next want for him is a series of good reading-books, about
-things in which he takes an interest. The language
-must of course be simple, but the matter so good that
-neither master nor pupils will be disgusted by its frequent
-repetition.</p>
-
-<p>The first volume may very well be about animals—dogs,
-horses, &amp;c., of which large pictures should be provided,
-illustrating the text. The first cost of these pictures would
-be considerable, but as they would last for years, the expense
-to the friends of each child taught from them would
-be a mere trifle.</p>
-
-<p>§ 11. The books placed in the hands of the children
-should be well printed and strongly bound. In the present
-penny-wise system, school-books are given out in cloth, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_481" id="Page_481">[481]</a></span>
-the leaves are loose at the end of a fortnight, so that
-children get accustomed to their destruction and treat it as
-a matter of course. This ruins their respect for books,
-which is not so unimportant a matter as it may at first
-appear.</p>
-
-<p>§ 12. After each reading lesson, which should contain
-at least one interesting anecdote, there should be columns
-of all the words which occurred for the first time in that
-lesson. These should be arranged according to their
-grammatical classification, not that the child should be taught
-grammar, but this order is as good as any other, and by it
-the child would learn to observe certain differences in words
-almost unconsciously.<a name="FNanchor_202" id="FNanchor_202"></a><a href="#Footnote_202" class="fnanchor">[202]</a></p>
-
-<p>Here I cannot resist quoting an excellent remark from
-Helps’s <i>Brevia</i> (p. 125). “We should make the greatest
-progress in art, science, politics, and morals, if we could
-train up our minds to look straight and steadfastly and
-uninterruptedly at the thing in question that we are observing.
-This seems a very slight thing to do; but practically
-it is hardly ever done. Between you and the object
-rises a mist of technicalities, of prejudices, of previous
-knowledge, and, above all, of terrible familiarity.” Perhaps<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_482" id="Page_482">[482]</a></span>
-it is this “terrible familiarity” that has prevented our seeing
-till quite lately that reading is the art of getting meaning
-by signs that appeal to the eye, <i>not</i> the art of reporting to
-others the meaning we have thus arrived at. “Accustoming
-boys to read aloud what they do not first understand,” says
-Benjamin Franklin, “is the cause of those even set tones
-so common among readers, which, when they have once
-got a habit of using [them], they find so difficult to correct;
-by which means, among fifty readers we scarcely find a
-good one.” (<i>Essays, Sk. of English Sch.</i>) It seems to
-have escaped even Franklin’s sagacity that reading aloud is
-a different art to the art of reading, and a much harder one.
-The two should be studied separately, and most time and
-attention should be given to silent reading, which is by far
-the more important of the two. Colonel F. W. Parker,
-who has successfully cultivated the power of “looking
-straight at” things, gives us in his <i>Talks on Teaching</i>
-the right rule for reading. “Changing,” says he, “the
-beautiful power of expression, full of melody, harmony, and
-correct emphasis and inflection, to the slow, painful, almost
-agonising pronunciation that we have heard so many times
-in the school-room, is a terrible sin that we should never
-be guilty of. There is, indeed, not the slightest need of
-changing a good habit to a miserable one if we would
-follow the rule that the child has naturally followed all his
-life. <i>Never allow a child to give a thought till he gets it</i>”
-(p. 37). Now that the existence of a thought in children
-is allowed for, we may expect all sorts of improvements.
-Reading, as a means of ascertaining thought, is second only
-to hearing, and this art should be cultivated by giving
-children books of questions (<i>e.g.</i>, Horace Grant’s <i>Arithmetic<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_483" id="Page_483">[483]</a></span>
-for Young Children</i>), and requiring the learner silently to
-get at the question and then give the answer aloud.</p>
-
-<p>§ 13. Easy descriptive and narrative poetry should be
-learnt by heart at this stage. That the children may repeat
-it well, they should get their first notions of it from the
-master <i>vivâ voce</i>. According to the usual plan, they get
-it up with false emphasis and false stops, and the more
-thoroughly they have learnt the piece, the more difficulty
-the master has in making them say it properly.</p>
-
-<p>§ 14. Every lesson should be worked over in various
-ways. The columns of words at the end of the reading
-lessons may be printed with writing characters, and used
-for copies. To write an upright column either of words or
-figures is an excellent exercise in neatness. The columns
-will also be used as spelling lessons, and the children may
-be questioned about the meaning of the words. The
-poetry, when thoroughly learned, may sometimes be written
-from memory. Sentences from the book may be copied
-either directly or from the black-board, and afterwards used
-for dictation.</p>
-
-<p>§ 15. Boys should, as soon as possible, be accustomed to
-write out fables, or the substance of other reading lessons,
-in their own words. They may also write descriptions of
-things with which they are familiar, or any event which has
-recently happened, such as a country excursion. Every
-one feels the necessity, on grounds of practical utility at all
-events, of boys being taught to express their thoughts neatly
-on paper, in good English and with correct spelling. Yet
-this is a point rarely reached before the age of fifteen or
-sixteen, often never reached at all. The reason is, that
-written exercises must be carefully looked over by the
-master, or they are done in a slovenly manner. Anyone<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_484" id="Page_484">[484]</a></span>
-who has never taught in a school will say, “Then let the
-master carefully look them over.” But the expenditure of
-time and trouble this involves on the master is so great,
-that in the end he is pretty sure either to have few exercises
-written, or to neglect to look them over. The only remedy
-is for the master not to have many boys to teach, and not
-to be many hours in school. Even then, unless he set
-apart a special time every day for correcting exercises, he is
-likely to find them “increase upon him.”</p>
-
-<p>§ 16. The course of reading-books, accompanied by
-large illustrations, may go on to many other things which
-the children see around them, such as trees and plants, and
-so lead up to instruction in natural history and physiology.
-But in imparting all knowledge of this kind, we should aim,
-not at getting the children to remember a number of facts,
-but at opening their eyes, and extending the range of their
-interests.</p>
-
-<p>§ 17. I should suggest, then, for children, three books to
-be used concurrently, viz., a reading book about animals
-and things, a poetry book, and a prose narrative or Æsop’s
-Fables. With the first commences a series culminating in
-works of science; with the second, a series that should
-lead up to Milton and Shakespeare; the third should be
-succeeded by some of our best writers in prose.</p>
-
-<p>§ 18. But many schoolmasters will shudder at the
-thought of a child’s spending a year or two at school without
-ever hearing of the Heptarchy or Magna Charta, and without
-knowing the names of the great towns in any country of
-Europe. I confess I regard this ignorance with great
-equanimity. If the child, or the youth even, takes no
-interest in the Heptarchy and Magna Charta, and knows
-nothing of the towns but their names, I think him quite as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_485" id="Page_485">[485]</a></span>
-well off without this knowledge as with it—perhaps better,
-as such knowledge turns the lad into a “wind-bag,” as
-Carlyle might say, and gives him the appearance of being
-well-informed without the reality. But I neither despise
-a knowledge of history and geography; nor do I think
-that these studies should be neglected for foreign languages
-or science: and it is because I should wish a pupil of mine
-to become, in the end, thoroughly conversant in history
-and geography, that I should, if possible, conceal from him
-the existence of the numerous school manuals on these
-subjects.</p>
-
-<p>We will suppose that a parent meets with a book which
-he thinks will be both instructive and entertaining to his
-children. But the book is a large one, and would take a
-long time to get through; so instead of reading any part
-of it to them or letting them read it for themselves, he
-makes them <i>learn by heart the table of contents</i>. The children
-do <i>not</i> find it entertaining; they get a horror of the book,
-which prevents their ever looking at it afterwards, and they
-forget what they have learnt as soon as they possibly can.
-Just such is the sagacious plan adopted in teaching history
-and geography in schools, and such are the natural consequences.
-Every student knows that the use of an epitome
-is to <i>systematise</i> knowledge, not to communicate it, and yet,
-in teaching, we give the epitome first, and allow it to precede,
-or rather to supplant, the knowledge epitomised.
-The children are disgusted, and no wonder. The subjects,
-indeed, are interesting, but not so the epitomes. I suppose
-if we could see the skeletons of the Gunnings, we should
-not find them more fascinating than any other skeletons.<a name="FNanchor_203" id="FNanchor_203"></a><a href="#Footnote_203" class="fnanchor">[203]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_486" id="Page_486">[486]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>§ 19. The first thing to be aimed at, then, is to excite
-the children’s interest. Even if we thought of nothing but
-the acquiring of information, this is clearly the true method.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_487" id="Page_487">[487]</a></span>
-What are the facts which we remember? Those in which
-we feel an interest. If we are told that So-and-so has met
-with an accident, or failed in business, we forget it directly,
-unless we know the person spoken of. Similarly, if I read
-anything about Addison or Goldsmith, it interests me, and
-I remember it because they are, so to speak, friends of
-mine; but the same information about Sir Richard Blackmore
-or Cumberland would not stay in my head for four-and-twenty
-hours. So, again, we naturally retain anything
-we learn about a foreign country in which a relation has
-settled, but it would require some little trouble to commit
-to memory the same facts about a place in which we had
-no concern. All this proceeds from two causes. First,
-that the mind retains that in which it takes an interest;
-and, secondly, that one of the principal helps to memory is
-the association of ideas. These were, no doubt, the ground
-reasons which influenced Dr. Arnold in framing his plan of
-a child’s first history book. This book, he says, should be
-a picture-book of the memorable deeds which would best
-appeal to the child’s imagination. They should be arranged
-in order of time, but with no other connection. The letter-press
-should simply, but fully, tell the <i>story</i> of the action
-depicted. These would form starting-points of interest.
-The child would be curious to know more about the great
-men whose acquaintance he had made, and would associate
-with them the scenes of their exploits; and thus we might
-actually find our children anxious to learn history and
-geography! I am sorry that even the great authority of
-Dr. Arnold has not availed to bring this method into use.
-Such a book would, of course, be dear. Bad pictures are
-worse than none at all: and Goethe tells us that his appreciation
-of Homer was for years destroyed by his having<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_488" id="Page_488">[488]</a></span>
-been shown, when a child, absurd pictures of the Homeric
-heroes. The book would, therefore, cost six or eight
-shillings at least; and who would give this sum for an
-account of single actions of a few great men, when he might
-buy the lives of all great men, together with ancient and
-modern history, the names of the planets, and a great
-amount of miscellaneous information, all for a shilling in
-“Mangnall’s Questions”?</p>
-
-<p>However, if the saving of a few shillings is more to be
-thought of than the best method of instruction, the subject
-hardly deserves our serious consideration.</p>
-
-<p>§ 20. It is much to be regretted that books for the
-young are so seldom written by distinguished authors. I
-suppose that of the three things which the author seeks,
-money, reputation, influence, the first is not often despised,
-nor the last considered the least valuable. And yet both
-money and influence are more certainly gained by a good
-book for the young than by any other. The influence
-of “Tom Brown,” however different in kind, is probably
-not smaller in amount than that of “Sartor Resartus.”</p>
-
-<p>§ 21. What we want is a Macaulay for boys, who shall
-handle historical subjects with that wonderful art displayed
-in the “Essays,”—the art of elaborating all the more telling
-portions of the subject, outlining the rest, and suppressing
-everything that does not conduce to heighten the general
-effect. Some of these essays, such as the “Hastings” and
-“Clive,” will be read with avidity by the elder boys; but
-Macaulay did not write for children, and he abounds in
-words to them unintelligible. Had he been a married man,
-we might perhaps have had such a volume of historical
-sketches for boys as now we must wish for in vain. But
-there are good story-tellers left among us, and we might<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_489" id="Page_489">[489]</a></span>
-soon expect such books as we desiderate, if it were clearly
-understood what is the right sort of book, and if men of
-literary ability and experience would condescend to write
-them.</p>
-
-<p>§ 22. If, in these latter days, “the individual withers,
-and the world is more and more,” we must not expect our
-children to enter into this. Their sympathy and their imagination
-can be aroused, not for nations, but for individuals;
-and this is the reason why some biographies of great men
-should precede any history. These should be written after
-Macaulay’s method. There should be no attempt at completeness,
-but what is most important and interesting about
-the man should be narrated in detail, and the rest lightly
-sketched, or omitted altogether. Painters understand this
-principle, and, in taking a portrait, very often depict a man’s
-features minutely without telling all the truth about the
-buttons on his waistcoat. But, because in a literary picture
-each touch takes up additional space, writers seem to fear
-that the picture will be distorted unless every particular is
-expanded or condensed in the same ratio.</p>
-
-<p>§ 23. At the risk of wearisome repetition, I must again
-say that I care as little about driving “useful knowledge”
-into a boy as the most ultra Cambridge man could wish;
-but I want to get the boy to have wide sympathies, and to
-teach himself; and I should therefore select the great men
-from very different periods and countries, that his net of
-interest (so to speak) may be spread in all waters.</p>
-
-<p>§ 24. When we have thus got our boys to form the
-acquaintance of great men, they will have certain associations
-connected with many towns and countries. Constant
-reference should be made to the map, and the boys’ knowledge
-and interest will thus make settlements in different<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_490" id="Page_490">[490]</a></span>
-parts of the globe. These may be extended by a good
-book of travels, especially of voyages of discovery. There
-are now many such books suitable for the purpose, but I
-am still partial to a book which has been a delight to me
-and to my own children from our earliest years:—Miss
-Hack’s “Winter Evenings; or, Tales of Travelers”; or,
-as Routledge now calls a part of it, “Travels in Hot and
-Cold Lands.” In studying such travels, the map should,
-of course, be always in sight; and outline maps may be
-filled up by the boys as they learn about the places in the
-traveller’s route. Anyone who has had the management of
-a school library knows how popular “voyage and venture”
-is with the boys who have passed the stage in which the
-picture-books of animals were the main attraction. Captain
-Cook, Mungo Park, and Admiral Byron are heroes without
-whom boyhood would be incomplete; but as boys are
-engrossed by the adventures, and never trouble themselves
-about the map, they often remember the incidents without
-knowing where they happened.</p>
-
-<p>Of course, school geographies never mention such people
-as celebrated travellers; if they did, it would be impossible
-to give all the principal geographical names in the world
-within the compass of 200 pages.</p>
-
-<p>§ 25. What might we fairly expect from such a course
-of teaching as I have here suggested?</p>
-
-<p>At the end of a year and a half, or two years, from the
-age, say, of nine, the boy would read to himself intelligently;
-he would write fairly; he would spell all common English
-words correctly; he would be thoroughly familiar with the
-relations of all common numbers, that is, of all numbers
-below 100; he would have had his interest aroused, or, to
-speak more accurately, not stifled but increased in common<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_491" id="Page_491">[491]</a></span>
-objects, such as animals, trees, and plants; he would have
-made the acquaintance of some great men, and traced the
-voyages of some great travellers; he would be able to say
-by heart and to write from memory some of the best simple
-English poetry, and his ear would be familiar with the
-sound of good English prose. So much, at least, on the
-positive side. On the negative there might also be results
-of considerable value. He would <i>not</i> have learned to look
-upon books and school-time as the torment of his life, nor
-have fallen into the habit of giving them as little of his
-attention as he could reconcile with immunity from the
-cane. The benefit of the negative result might outweigh a
-very glib knowledge of “tables” and Latin Grammar.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_492" id="Page_492">[492]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="XXI">XXI.<br />
-<span class="smaller">THE SCHOOLMASTER’S MORAL AND
-RELIGIOUS INFLUENCE.</span></h2>
-
-<p>§ 1. All who are acquainted with the standard treatises
-on the theory of education, and also with the management
-of schools, will have observed that moral and religious training
-occupies a larger and more prominent space in theory
-than in practice. On consideration, we shall find perhaps
-that this might naturally be expected. Of course we are all
-agreed that morality is more important than learning, and
-masters who are many of them clergymen, will hardly be
-accused of under-estimating the value of religion. Why
-then, does not moral and religious training receive a larger
-share of the master’s attention? The reason I take to
-be this. Experience shows that it depends directly on
-the master whether a boy acquires knowledge, but only
-indirectly, and in a much less degree, whether he grows up
-a good and religious man. The aim which engrosses most
-of our time is likely to absorb an equal share of our interest;
-and thus it happens that masters, especially those who never
-associate on terms of intimacy with their pupils out of
-school, throw energy enough into making boys <i>learn</i>, but
-seldom think at all of the development of their character,
-or about their thoughts and feelings in matters of religion.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_493" id="Page_493">[493]</a></span>
-This statement may indeed be exaggerated, but no one who
-has the means of judging will assert that it is altogether
-without foundation. And yet, although a master can be
-more certain of sending out his pupils well-taught than well-principled,
-his influence on their character is much greater
-than it might appear to a superficial observer. I am not
-speaking of formal religious instruction. I refer now to the
-teacher’s indirect influence. The results of his formal teaching
-vary as its amount, but he can apply no such gauge to
-his informal teaching. A few words of earnest advice or remonstrance,
-which a boy hears at the right time from a man
-whom he respects, may affect that boy’s character for life.
-Here everything depends, not on the words used, but on
-the feeling with which they are spoken, and on the way in
-which the speaker is regarded by the hearer. In such
-matters the master has a much more delicate and difficult
-task than in mere instruction. The words, indeed, are soon
-spoken, but that which gives them their influence is not
-soon or easily acquired. Here, as in so many other instances,
-we may in a few minutes throw down what it has
-cost us days—perhaps years—to build up. An unkind
-word will destroy the effects of long-continued kindness.
-Boys always form their opinion of a man from the worst
-they know of him. Experience has not yet taught them
-that good people have their failings, and bad people their
-virtues. If the scholars find the master at times harsh and
-testy, they cannot believe in his kindness of heart and care
-for their welfare. They do not see that he may have an
-ideal before him to which he is partly, though not wholly
-true. They judge him by his demeanour in his least guarded
-moments—at times when he is jaded and dissatisfied with
-the result of his labours. At such times he is no longer<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_494" id="Page_494">[494]</a></span>
-“in touch” with his pupils. He is conscious only of his
-own power and mental superiority. Feeling almost a contempt
-for the boys’ weakness, he does not care for their
-opinion of him or think for an instant what impression he is
-making by his words and conduct. He gives full play to
-his <i>arbitrium</i>, and says or does something which seems to
-the boys to reveal him in his true character, and which
-causes them ever after to distrust his kindness.</p>
-
-<p>§ 2. When we consider the way in which masters endeavour
-to gain influence, we shall find that they may be divided
-roughly into two parties, whom I will call the open and the
-reserved. A teacher of the <i>open</i> party endeavours to appear
-to his pupils precisely as he is. He will hear of no restraint
-except that of decorum. He believes that if he is as much
-the superior of his pupils as he ought to be, his authority
-will take care of itself without his casting round it a wall of
-artificial reserve. “Be natural,” he says; “get rid of affectations
-and shams of all kinds; and then, if there is any
-good in you, it will tell on those around you. Whatever is
-bad, would be felt just as surely in disguise; and the disguise
-would only be an additional source of mischief.” The
-<i>reserved</i>, on the other hand, wish their pupils to think of
-them as they ought to be rather than as they are. Against
-the other party they urge that our words and actions cannot
-always be in harmony with our thoughts and feelings, however
-much we may desire to make them so. We must,
-therefore, they say, reconcile ourselves to this; and since
-our words and actions are more under our control than our
-thoughts and feelings, we must make them as nearly as
-possible what they should be, instead of debasing them to
-involuntary thoughts and feelings which are not worthy of
-us. Then again, a teacher who is an idealist may say,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_495" id="Page_495">[495]</a></span>
-“The young require some one to look up to. In my
-better moments I am not altogether unworthy of their
-respect; but if they knew all my weaknesses, they would
-naturally, and perhaps justly, despise me. For their sakes,
-therefore, I must keep my weaknesses out of sight, and the
-effort to do this demands a certain reserve in all our intercourse.”</p>
-
-<p>§ 3. I suppose an excess in either direction might lead
-to mischievous results. The “open” man might be wanting
-in self-restraint, and might say and do things which,
-though not wrong in themselves, might have a bad effect on
-the young. Then, again, the lower and more worldly side
-of his character might show itself in too strong relief; and
-his pupils seeing this mainly, and supposing that they
-understood him entirely, might disbelieve in his higher
-motives and religious feeling. On the other hand, those
-who set up for being better than they really are, are, as it
-were, walking on stilts. They gain no real influence by their
-separation from their pupils, and they are always liable to
-an accident which may expose them to their ridicule.<a name="FNanchor_204" id="FNanchor_204"></a><a href="#Footnote_204" class="fnanchor">[204]</a></p>
-
-<p>§ 4. I am, therefore, though with some limitation, in
-favour of the <i>open</i> school. I am well aware, however, what
-an immense demand this system makes on the master who
-desires to exercise a good influence on the moral and religious
-character of his pupils. If he would have his pupils
-know him as he is, if he would have them think as he thinks,
-feel as he feels, and believe as he believes, he must be, at
-least in heart and aim, worthy of their imitation. He must<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_496" id="Page_496">[496]</a></span>
-(with reverence be it spoken) enter, in his humble way,
-into the spirit of the perfect Teacher, who said, “For their
-sakes I sanctify myself, that they also may be sanctified in
-truth.” Are we prepared to look upon our calling in this
-light? I believe that the school-teachers of this country
-need not fear comparison with any other body of men, in
-point of morality, and religious earnestness; but I dare say
-many have found, as I have, that the occupation is a very
-<i>narrowing</i> one, that the teacher soon gets to work in a groove,
-and from having his thoughts so much occupied with
-routine work, especially with small fault-findings and small
-corrections, he is apt to settle down insensibly into a kind
-of moral and intellectual stagnation—Philistinism, as
-Matthew Arnold has taught us to call it—in which he cares
-as little for high aims and general principles as his most
-commonplace pupil. Thus it happens sometimes that a
-man who set out with the notion of developing all the
-powers of his pupils’ minds, thinks in the end of nothing
-but getting them to work out equations and do Latin
-exercises without false concords; and the clergyman even,
-who began with a strong sense of his responsibility and a
-confident hope of influencing the boys’ belief and character,
-at length is quite content if they conform to discipline and
-give him no trouble out of school-hours. We may say of a
-really good teacher what Wordsworth says of the poet; in
-his work he must neither</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse indent2">lack that first great gift, the vital soul,</div>
-<div class="verse">Nor general truths, which are themselves a sort</div>
-<div class="verse">Of elements and agents, under-powers,</div>
-<div class="verse">Subordinate helpers of the living mind.—<i>Prelude</i>, i. 9.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">But the “vital soul” is too often crushed by excessive
-routine labour, and then when general truths, both moral<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_497" id="Page_497">[497]</a></span>
-and intellectual, have ceased to interest us, our own education
-stops, and we become incapable of fulfilling the highest
-and most important part of our duty in educating others.</p>
-
-<p>§ 5. It is, then, the duty of the teacher to resist gravitating
-into this state, no less for his pupils’ sake than for his
-own. The ways and means of doing this I am by no means
-competent to point out; so I will merely insist on the
-importance of teachers not being overworked—a matter
-which has not, I think, hitherto received due attention.</p>
-
-<p>We cannot expect intellectual activity of men whose
-minds are compelled “with pack-horse constancy to keep
-the road” hour after hour, till they are too jaded for
-exertion of any kind. The man himself suffers, and his
-work, even his easiest work, suffers also. It may be laid
-down as a general rule, that no one can teach long and
-teach well. All satisfactory teaching and management of
-boys absolutely requires that the master should be <i>in good
-spirits</i>. When the “genial spirits fail,” as they must from
-an overdose of monotonous work, everything goes wrong
-directly. The master has no longer the power of keeping
-the boys’ attention, and has to resort to punishments even
-to preserve order. His gloom quenches their interest and
-mental activity, just as fire goes out before carbonic acid;
-and in the end teacher and taught acquire, not without
-cause, a feeling of mutual aversion.</p>
-
-<p>§ 6. And another reason why the master should not
-spend the greater part of his time in formal teaching is this—his
-doing so compels him to neglect the informal but
-very important teaching he may both give and receive by
-making his pupils his companions.</p>
-
-<p>§ 7. I fear I shall be met here by an objection which has
-only too much force in it. Most Englishmen are at a loss<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_498" id="Page_498">[498]</a></span>
-how to make any use of leisure. If a man has no turn for
-thinking, no fondness for reading, and is without a hobby,
-what good shall his leisure do him? he will only pass it in
-insipid gossip, from which any easy work would be a relief.
-That this is so in many cases, is a proof to my mind of the
-utter failure of our ordinary education: and perhaps an
-improved education may some day alter what now seems a
-national peculiarity. Meantime the mind, even of Englishmen,
-is more than a “succedaneum for salt;”<a name="FNanchor_205" id="FNanchor_205"></a><a href="#Footnote_205" class="fnanchor">[205]</a> and its
-tendency to bury its sight, ostrich-fashion, under a heap of
-routine work must be strenuously resisted, if it is to escape
-its deadly enemies, stupidity and ignorance.</p>
-
-<p>§ 8. I have elsewhere expressed what I believe is the
-common conviction of those who have seen something both
-of large schools and of small, viz., that the moral atmosphere
-of the former is, as a rule, by far the more wholesome;<a name="FNanchor_206" id="FNanchor_206"></a><a href="#Footnote_206" class="fnanchor">[206]</a><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_499" id="Page_499">[499]</a></span>
-and also that each boy is more influenced by his companions
-than by his master. More than this, I believe that in many,
-perhaps in most, schools, one or two boys affect the tone of
-the whole body more than any master.<a name="FNanchor_207" id="FNanchor_207"></a><a href="#Footnote_207" class="fnanchor">[207]</a> What are called
-Preparatory Schools labour under this immense disadvantage,
-that their ruling spirits are mere children without reflection
-or sense of responsibility.<a name="FNanchor_208" id="FNanchor_208"></a><a href="#Footnote_208" class="fnanchor">[208]</a> But where the leading boys are
-virtually young men, these may be made a medium through
-which the mind of the master may act upon the whole
-school. They can enter into the thoughts, feelings, and aims
-of the master on the one hand, and they know what is said
-and done among the boys on the other. The master must,
-therefore, know the elder boys intimately, and they must<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_500" id="Page_500">[500]</a></span>
-know him. This consummation, however, will not be
-arrived at without great tact and self-denial on the part of
-the master. The youth who is “neither man nor boy” is
-apt to be shy and awkward, and is not by any means so easy
-to entertain as the lad who chatters freely of the school’s
-cricket or football, past, present, and to come. But the
-master who feels how all-important is the <i>tone</i> of the school,
-will not grudge any pains to influence those on whom it
-chiefly depends.</p>
-
-<p>§ 9. But, allowing the value of all these indirect influences,
-can we afford to neglect direct formal religious instruction?
-We have most of us the greatest horror of what we call a
-secular education, meaning thereby an education without
-formal religious teaching. But this horror seems to affect
-our theory more than our practice. Few parents ever
-enquire what religious instruction their sons get at Eton,
-Harrow, or Westminster. At Harrow when I was in the
-Fourth Form there (nearly fifty years ago by the way) we
-had no religious instruction except a weekly lesson in Watts’s
-Scripture History; and when I was a master some twenty
-years ago my form had only a Sunday lesson in a portion
-of the Old Testament, and a lesson in French Testament at
-“First School” on Monday. Even in some “Voluntary
-Schools” we do not find “religious instruction” made so
-much of as the arithmetic.</p>
-
-<p>§ 10. In this matter we differ very widely from the
-Germans. All their classes have a “religion-lesson” (<i>Religionstunde</i>)
-nearly every day, the younger children in the German
-Bible, the elder in the Greek Testament or Church History;
-and in all cases the teacher is careful to instruct his pupils
-in the tenets of Luther or Calvin. The Germans may
-urge that if we believe a set of doctrines to be a fitting<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_501" id="Page_501">[501]</a></span>
-expression of Divine revelation, it is our first duty to make
-the young familiar with those doctrines. I cannot say,
-however, that I have been favourably impressed by the
-religion-lessons I have heard given in German schools. I
-do not deny that dogmatic teaching is necessary, but the
-first thing to cultivate in the young is reverence; and
-reverence is surely in danger if you take a class in “religion”
-just as you take a class in grammar. Emerson says somewhere,
-that to the poet, the saint, and the philosopher, all
-distinction of sacred and profane ceases to exist, all things
-become alike sacred. As the schoolboy, however, does not
-as yet come under any one of these denominations, if the
-distinction ceases to exist for him, all things will become
-alike profane.</p>
-
-<p>§ 11. I believe that religious instruction is conveyed in
-the most impressive way when it is connected with worship.
-Where the prayers are joined with the reading of Scripture
-and with occasional simple addresses, and where the congregation
-have responses to repeat, and psalms and hymns to
-sing, there is reason to hope that boys will increase, not only
-in knowledge, but in wisdom and reverence too. Without
-asserting that the Church of England service is the best
-possible for the young, I hold that any form for them should
-at least resemble it in its main features, should be as varied
-as possible, should require frequent change of posture, and
-should give the congregation much to say and sing. Much
-use might be made as in the Church of Rome, of litanies.
-The service, whatever its form, should be conducted with
-great solemnity, and the boys should not sit or kneel so
-close together that the badly disposed may disturb their
-neighbours who try to join in the act of worship. If good
-hymns are sung, these may be taken occasionally as the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_502" id="Page_502">[502]</a></span>
-subject of an address, so that attention may be drawn to
-their meaning. Music should be carefully attended to,
-and the danger of irreverence at practices guarded against
-by never using sacred words more than is necessary, and by
-impressing on the singers the sacredness of everything
-connected with Divine worship. Questions combined
-with instruction may sometimes keep up boys’ attention
-better than a formal sermon. Though common prayer
-should be frequent, this should not be supposed to take the
-place of private prayer. In many schools boys have hardly
-an opportunity for private prayer. They kneel down, perhaps,
-with all the talk and play of their schoolfellows going
-on around them, and sometimes fear of public opinion
-prevents their kneeling down at all. A schoolmaster cannot
-teach private prayer, but he can at least see that there
-is opportunity for it.</p>
-
-<p>Education to goodness and piety, as far as it lies in
-human hands, must consist almost entirely in the influence
-of the good and pious superior over his inferiors, and as
-this influence is independent of rules, these remarks of
-mine cannot do more than touch the surface of this most
-important subject.<a name="FNanchor_209" id="FNanchor_209"></a><a href="#Footnote_209" class="fnanchor">[209]</a></p>
-
-<p>§ 12. In conclusion, I wish to say a word on the education
-of opinion. Sir Arthur Helps lays great stress on<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_503" id="Page_503">[503]</a></span>
-preparing the way to moderation and open-mindedness by
-teaching boys that all good men are not of the same way of
-thinking. It is indeed a miserable error to lead a young
-person to suppose that his small ideas are a measure of the
-universe, and that all who do not accept his formularies are
-less enlightened than himself. If a young man is so brought
-up, he either carries intellectual blinkers all his life, or,
-what is far more probable, he finds that something he has
-been taught is false, and forthwith begins to doubt everything.
-On the other hand, it is a necessity with the young
-to believe, and we could not, even if we would, bring a youth
-into such a state of mind as to regard everything about which
-there is any variety of opinion as an open question. But he
-may be taught reverence and humility; he may be taught
-to reflect how infinitely greater the facts of the universe
-must be than our poor thoughts about them, and how inadequate
-are words to express even our imperfect thoughts.
-Then he will not suppose that all truth has been taught him
-in his formularies, nor that he understands even all the
-truth of which those formularies are the imperfect expression.<a name="FNanchor_210" id="FNanchor_210"></a><a href="#Footnote_210" class="fnanchor">[210]</a></p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_504" id="Page_504">[504]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="XXII">XXII.<br />
-<span class="smaller">CONCLUSION.</span></h2>
-
-<p>§ 1. When I originally published these essays (more than
-22 years ago) the critic of the <i>Nonconformist</i> in one of the
-best, though by no means most complimentary, of the many
-notices with which the book was favoured, took me to task
-for being in such a hurry to publish. I had confessed
-incompleteness. What need was there for me to publish
-before I had completed my work? Since that time I have
-spent years on my subject and at least two years on these
-essays themselves; but they now seem to me even further
-from completeness than they seemed then. However, I
-have reason to believe that the old book, incomplete as it
-was, proved useful to teachers; and in its altered form it
-will, I hope, be found useful still.</p>
-
-<p>§ 2. It may be useful I think in two ways.</p>
-
-<p>First: it may lead some teachers to the study of the
-great thinkers on education. There are some vital truths
-which remain in the books which time cannot destroy. In
-the world as Goethe says are few voices, many echoes; and
-the echoes often prevent our hearing the voices distinctly.
-Perhaps most people had a better chance of hearing the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_505" id="Page_505">[505]</a></span>
-voices when there were fewer books and no periodicals.
-Speakers properly so called cannot now be heard for the
-hubbub of the talkers; and as literature is becoming more
-and more periodical our writers seem mostly employed like
-children on card pagodas or like the recumbent artists of
-the London streets who produce on the stones of the pavement
-gaudy chalk drawings which the next shower washes
-out.</p>
-
-<p>But if I would have fewer books what business have I to
-add to the number? I may be told that—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">“He who in quest of quiet, ‘Silence!’ hoots,</div>
-<div class="verse">Is apt to make the hubbub he imputes.”</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">My answer is that I do not write to expound my own
-thought, but to draw attention to the thoughts of the men
-who are best worth hearing. It is not given to us small
-people to think strongly and clearly like the great people;
-we, however, gain in strength and clearness by contact with
-them; and this contact I seek to promote. So long as this
-book is used, it will I hope be used only as an <i>introduction</i>
-to the great thinkers whose names are found in it.</p>
-
-<p>§ 3. There is another way in which the book may be of
-use. By considering the great thinkers in chronological
-order we see that each adds to the treasure which he finds
-already accumulated, and thus by degrees we are arriving
-in education, as in most departments of human endeavour,
-at a <i>science</i>. In this science lies our hope for the future.
-Teachers must endeavour to obtain more and more knowledge
-of the laws to which their art has to conform itself.</p>
-
-<p>§ 4. It may be of advantage to some readers if I point
-out briefly what seems to me the course of the main stream
-of thought as it has flowed down to us from the Renascence.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_506" id="Page_506">[506]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>§ 5. As I endeavoured to show at the beginning of this
-book, the Scholars of the Renascence fell into a great
-mistake, a mistake which perhaps could not have been
-avoided at a time when literature was rediscovered and the
-printing press had just been invented. This mistake was
-the idolatry of books, and, still worse, of books in Latin
-and Greek. So the schoolmaster fell into a bad theory or
-conception of his task, for he supposed that his function
-was to teach Latin and Greek; and his practice or way of
-going to work was not much better, for his chief implements
-were grammar and the cane.</p>
-
-<p>§ 6. The first who made a great advance were the
-Jesuits. They were indeed far too much bent on being
-popular to be “Innovators.” They endeavoured to do
-well what most schoolmasters did badly. They taught
-Latin and Greek, and they made great use of grammar, but
-they gave up the cane. Boys were to be made happy.
-School-hours were to be reduced from 10 hours a day to
-5 hours, and in those 5 hours learning was to be made
-“not only endurable but even pleasurable.”</p>
-
-<p>But the pupils were to find this pleasure not in the
-exercise of their mental powers but in other ways. As Mr.
-Eve has said, young teachers are inclined to think mainly
-of stimulating their pupils’ minds and so neglect the repetition
-needed for accuracy. Old teachers on the other hand
-care so much for accuracy that they require the same thing
-over and over till the pupils lose zest and mental activity.
-The Jesuits frankly adopted the maxim “Repetition is the
-mother of studies,” and worked over the same ground again
-and again. The two forces on which they relied for
-making the work pleasant were one good—the personal
-influence of the master (“boys will soon love learning when<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_507" id="Page_507">[507]</a></span>
-they love the teacher,”) and one bad or at least doubtful—the
-spur of emulation.</p>
-
-<p>However, the attempt to lead, not drive, was a great step
-in the right direction. Moreover as they did not hold with
-the Sturms and Trotzendorfs that the classics in and for
-themselves were the object of education the Jesuits were able
-to think of other things as well. They were very careful of
-the health of the body. And they also enlarged the task of
-the schoolmaster in another and still more important way.
-To the best of their lights they attended to the moral and
-religious training of their pupils. It is much to the credit
-of the Fathers that though Plautus and Terence were
-considered very valuable for giving a knowledge of colloquial
-Latin and were studied and learnt by heart in the Protestant
-schools, the Jesuits rejected them on account of their
-impurity. The Jesuits wished the whole boy, not his
-memory only, to be affected by the master; so the master
-was to make a study of each of his pupils and to go on
-with the same pupils through the greater part of their
-school course.</p>
-
-<p>The Jesuit system stands out in the history of education
-as a remarkable instance of a school system elaborately
-thought out and worked as a whole. In it the individual
-schoolmaster withered, but the system grew, and was, I may
-say <i>is</i>, a mighty organism. The single Jesuit teacher might
-not be the superior of the average teacher in good Protestant
-schools, but by their unity of action the Jesuits triumphed over
-their rivals as easily as a regiment of soldiers scatters a mob.</p>
-
-<p>§ 7. The schoolmaster’s theory of the human mind made
-of it, to use Bartle Massey’s simile, a kind of bladder fit
-only to hold what was poured into it. This pouring-in
-theory of education was first called in question by that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_508" id="Page_508">[508]</a></span>
-strange genius who seems to have stood outside all the
-traditions and opinions of his age,</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse indent4">“holding no form of creed,</div>
-<div class="verse">But contemplating all.”</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">I mean Rabelais.</p>
-
-<p>Like most reformers, Rabelais begins with denunciations
-of the system established by use and wont. After an
-account of the school-teaching and school-books of the
-day, he says—“It would be better for a boy to learn
-nothing at all than to be taught such-like books by such-like
-masters.” He then proposes a training in which, though
-the boy is to study books, he is not to do this mainly, but
-is to be led to look about him, and to use both his senses
-and his limbs. For instance, he is to examine the stars
-when he goes to bed, and then to be called up at four in
-the morning to find the change that has taken place. Here
-we see a training of the powers of observation. These
-powers are also to be exercised on the trees and plants
-which are met with out-of-doors, and on objects within the
-house, as well as on the food placed on the table. The study
-of books is to be joined with this study of things, for the
-old authors are to be consulted for their accounts of whatever
-has been met with. The study of trades, too, and the
-practice of some of them, such as wood-cutting, and carving
-in stone, makes a very interesting feature in this system.
-On the whole, I think we may say that Rabelais was the
-first to advocate training as distinguished from teaching;
-and he was the father of <i>Anschauungs-unterricht</i>, teaching
-by <i>intuition</i>, <i>i.e.</i>, by the pupil’s own senses and the spring
-of his own intelligence. Rabelais would bestow much care
-on the body too. Not only was the pupil to ride and
-fence; we find him even shouting for the benefit of his lungs.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_509" id="Page_509">[509]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>§ 8. Rabelais had now started an entirely new theory of
-the educator’s task, and fifty years afterwards his thought was
-taken up and put forward with incomparable vigour by the
-great essayist, Montaigne. Montaigne starts with a quotation
-from Rabelais—“The greatest clerks are not the wisest
-men,” and then he makes one of the most effective
-onslaughts on the pouring-in theory that is to be found in
-all literature. His accusation against the schoolmasters of
-his time is twofold. First, he says, they aim only at giving
-knowledge, whereas they should first think of judgment and
-virtue. Secondly, in their method of teaching they do not
-exercise the pupils’ own minds. The sum and substance
-of the charge is contained in these words—“We labour to
-stuff the memory and in the meantime leave the conscience
-and understanding impoverished and void.” His notion of
-education embraced the whole man. “Our very exercises
-and recreations,” says he, “running, wrestling, music,
-dancing, hunting, riding, fencing, will prove to be a good
-part of our study. I would have the pupil’s outward
-fashion and mien and the disposition of his limbs formed
-at the same time with his mind. ’Tis not a soul, ’tis not
-a body, that we are training up, but a <i>man</i>, and we ought
-not to divide him.”</p>
-
-<p>§ 9. Before the end of the fifteen hundreds then we see
-in the best thought of the time a great improvement in the
-conception of the task of the schoolmaster. Learning is
-not the only thing to be thought of. Moral and religious
-training are recognised as of no less importance. And as
-“both soul and body have been created by the hand of
-God” (the words are Ignatius Loyola’s), both must be
-thought of in education. When we come to instruction
-we find Rabelais recommending that at least part of it<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_510" id="Page_510">[510]</a></span>
-should be “intuitive,” and Montaigne requiring that the
-instruction should involve an exercise of the intellectual
-powers of the learner. But the escape even in thought
-from the Renascence ideal was but partial. Some of
-Rabelais’ directions seem to come from a “Verbal Realist,”
-and Montaigne was far from saying as Joseph Payne has
-said, “every act of teaching is a mode of dealing with
-mind and will be successful only in proportion as this
-is recognised,” “teaching is only another name for mental
-training.” But if Rabelais and Montaigne did not reach
-the best thought of our time they were much in advance of
-a great deal of our <i>practice</i>.</p>
-
-<p>§ 10. The opening of the sixteen hundreds saw a great
-revolt from the literary spirit of the Renascence. The
-exclusive devotion to books was followed by a reaction.
-There might after all be something worth knowing that
-books would not teach. Why give so much time to the
-study of words and so little to the observation of things?
-“Youth,” says a writer of the time, “is deluged with
-grammar precepts infinitely tedious, perplexed, obscure, and
-for the most part unprofitable, and that for many years.”
-Why not escape from this barren region? “Come forth,
-my son,” says Comenius. “Let us go into the open air.
-There you shall view whatsoever God produced from the
-beginning and doth yet effect by nature.” And Milton
-thus expresses the conviction of his day: “Because our
-understanding cannot in this body found itself but on
-sensible things, nor arrive so clearly to the knowledge of
-God and things invisible as by orderly conning over the
-visible and inferior creature, the same method is necessarily
-to be followed in all discreet teaching.”</p>
-
-<p>This great revolution which was involved in the Baconian<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_511" id="Page_511">[511]</a></span>
-philosophy may be described as a turning from fancy to
-fact. All the creations of the human mind seemed to
-have lost their value. The only things that seemed worth
-studying were the material universe and the laws or
-sequences which were gradually ascertained by patient
-induction and experiment.</p>
-
-<p>§ 11. Till the present century this revolution did not
-extend to our schools and universities. It is only within
-the last fifty years that natural science has been studied
-even in the University of Bacon and Newton. The Public
-School Commission of 1862 found that the curriculum was
-just as it had been settled at the Renascence. But if the
-walls of these educational Jerichos were still standing this
-was not from any remissness on the part of “the children of
-light” in shouting and blowing with the trumpet. They
-raised the war-cry “Not words, but things!” and the cry
-has been continued by a succession of eminent men against
-the schools of the 17th and 18th centuries and has at
-length begun to tell on the schools of the 19th. Perhaps
-the change demanded is best shown in the words of John
-Dury about 1649: “The true end of all human learning is
-to supply in ourselves and others the defects which proceed
-from our ignorance of the nature and use of the creatures
-and the disorderliness of our natural faculties in using them
-and reflecting upon them.” So the Innovators required
-teachers to devote themselves to natural science and to the
-science of the human mind.</p>
-
-<p>§ 12. The first Innovators, like the people of the fifteen
-hundreds, thought mainly of the acquisition of knowledge,
-only the knowledge was to be not of the classics but of the
-material world. In this they seem inferior to Montaigne
-who had given the first place to virtue and judgment.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_512" id="Page_512">[512]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>§ 13. But towards the middle of the sixteen hundreds
-a very eminent Innovator took a comprehensive view of
-education, and reduced instruction to its proper place, that
-is, he treated it as a part of education merely. This man,
-Comenius, was at once a philosopher, a philanthropist, and
-a schoolmaster; and in his writings we find the first attempt
-at a science of education. The outline of his science is as
-follows:—</p>
-
-<p>“We live a threefold life—a vegetative, an animal, and
-an intellectual or spiritual. Of these, the first is perfect in
-the womb, the last in heaven. He is happy who comes
-with healthy body into the world, much more he who goes
-with healthy spirit out of it. According to the heavenly
-idea a man should—1st, Know all things; 2nd, He should
-be master of things and of himself; 3rd, He should refer
-everything to God. So that within us Nature has implanted
-the seeds of learning, of virtue, and of piety. To bring
-these seeds to maturity is the object of education. All
-men require education, and God has made children unfit
-for other employment that they may have time to learn.”</p>
-
-<p>Here we have quite a new theory of the educator’s task.
-He is to bring to maturity the seeds of learning, virtue,
-and piety, which are already sown by Nature in his pupils.
-This is quite different from the pouring-in theory, and seems
-to anticipate the notion of Froebel, that the educator should
-be called not <i>teacher</i> but <i>gardener</i>. But Comenius evidently
-made too much of knowledge. Had he lived two
-centuries later he would have seen the area of possible
-knowledge extending to infinity in all directions, and he
-would no longer have made it his ideal that “man should
-know all things.”</p>
-
-<p>§ 14. The next great thinker about education—I mean<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_513" id="Page_513">[513]</a></span>
-Locke—seems to me chiefly important from his having
-taken up the principles of Montaigne and treated the giving
-of knowledge as of very small importance. Montaigne, as
-we have seen, was the first to bring out clearly that education
-was much more than instruction, as the whole was
-greater than its part, and that instruction was of far less
-importance than some other parts of education. And this
-lies at the root of Locke’s theory also. The great function
-of the educator, according to him, is not to <i>teach</i>, but to
-<i>dispose</i> the pupil to virtue first, industry next, and then
-knowledge; but he thinks where the first two have been
-properly cared for knowledge will come of itself. The
-following are Locke’s own words:—“The great work of a
-governor is to fashion the carriage and to form the mind,
-to settle in his pupil good habits and the principles of virtue
-and wisdom, to give him little by little a view of mankind
-and work him into a love and imitation of what is excellent
-and praiseworthy; and in the prosecution of it to give him
-vigour, activity, and industry. The studies which he sets
-him upon are but, as it were, the exercise of his faculties
-and employment of his time; to keep him from sauntering
-and idleness; to teach him application and accustom him
-to take pains, and to give him some little taste of what
-his own industry must perfect.”<a name="FNanchor_211" id="FNanchor_211"></a><a href="#Footnote_211" class="fnanchor">[211]</a> So we see that Locke<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_514" id="Page_514">[514]</a></span>
-agrees with Comenius in his enlarged view of the educator’s
-task, and that he thought much less than Comenius of the
-importance of the knowledge to be given.</p>
-
-<p>§ 15. We already see a gradual escape from the “idols”
-of the Renascence. Locke, instead of accepting the learned
-ideal, declares that learning is the last and least thing to
-be thought of. He cares little about the ordinary literary
-instruction given to children, though he thinks they must
-be taught something and does not know what to put in
-its place. He provides for the education of those who are<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_515" id="Page_515">[515]</a></span>
-to remain ignorant of Greek, but only when they are “gentlemen.”
-In this respect the van is led by Comenius, who
-thought of education for <i>all</i>, boys and girls, rich and poor,
-alike. Comenius also gave the first hint of the true nature
-of our task—to bring to perfection the seeds implanted by
-Nature. He also cared for the little ones whom the schoolmaster
-had despised. Locke does not escape from a
-certain intellectual disdain of “my young masters,” as he
-calls them; but in one respect he advanced as far as the
-best thinkers among his successors have advanced. Knowledge,
-he says, must come by the action of the learner’s
-own mind. The true teacher is within.</p>
-
-<p>§ 16. We now come to the least practical and at the
-same time the most influential of all the writers on education—I
-mean Rousseau. He, like Rabelais, Montaigne, and
-Locke, was (to use Matthew Arnold’s expression) a “child
-of the idea.” He attacked scholastic use and wont not in
-the name of expedience, but in the name of reason; and
-such an attack—so eloquent, so vehement, so uncompromising—had
-never been made before.</p>
-
-<p>Still there remained even in theory, and far more in
-practice, effects produced by the false ideal of the Renascence.
-This ideal Rousseau entirely rejected. He proposed
-making a clean sweep and returning to what he called the
-state of Nature.</p>
-
-<p>§ 17. Rousseau was by no means the first of the Reformers
-who advocated a return to Nature. There has
-been a constant conviction in men’s minds from the time
-of the Stoics onwards that most of the evils which afflict
-humanity have come from our not following “Nature.”
-The cry of “Everything according to Nature” was soon
-raised by educationists. Ratke announced it as one of his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_516" id="Page_516">[516]</a></span>
-principles. Comenius would base all action on the analogy
-of Nature. Indeed, there has hardly ever been a system
-of education which did not lay claim to be the “natural”
-system. And by “natural” has been always understood
-something different from what is usual. What is the notion
-that produces this antithesis?</p>
-
-<p>§ 18. When we come to trace back things to their cause
-we are wont to attribute them to God, to Nature, or to
-Man. According to the general belief, God works in and
-through Nature, and therefore the tendency of things apart
-from human agency must be to good. This faith which
-underlies all our thoughts and modes of speech, has been
-beautifully expressed by Wordsworth—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">“A gracious spirit o’er this earth presides,</div>
-<div class="verse">And in the heart of man; invisibly</div>
-<div class="verse">It comes to works of unreproved delight</div>
-<div class="verse">And tendency benign; directing those</div>
-<div class="verse">Who care not, know not, think not, what they do.”</div>
-<div class="verse right"><i>Prelude</i>, v, <i>ad f.</i></div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">But if the tendency of things is to good, why should the
-usual be in such strong contrast with “the natural”? Here
-again we may turn to Wordsworth. After pointing to the
-harmony of the visible world, and declaring his faith that
-“every flower enjoys the air it breathes,” he goes on—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">“If this belief from heaven be sent,</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">If this be Nature’s holy plan,</div>
-<div class="verse">Have I not reason to lament,</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">What Man has made of Man?”</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">This passage might be taken as the motto of Rousseauism.
-According to that philosophy man is the great disturber and
-perverter of the natural order. Other animals simply follow<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_517" id="Page_517">[517]</a></span>
-nature, but man has no instinct, and is thus left to find his
-own way. What is the consequence? A very different
-authority from Rousseau, the poet Cowper, tells us in language
-which Rousseau might have adopted—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">“Reasoning at every step he treads,</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">Man yet mistakes his way:</div>
-<div class="verse">While meaner things whom instinct leads,</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">Are seldom known to stray.”</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">Man has to investigate the sequences of Nature, and to
-arrange them for himself. In this way he brings about a
-great number of foreseen results, but in doing this he also
-brings about perhaps even a greater number of unforeseen
-results; and alas! it turns out that many, if not most, of
-these unforeseen results are the reverse of beneficial.</p>
-
-<p>§ 19. Another thing is observable. Other animals are
-guided by instinct; we, for the most part, are guided by
-tradition. Man, it has been said, is the only animal that
-capitalises his discoveries. If we capitalised nothing but
-our discoveries, this accumulation would be an immense
-advantage to us; but we capitalise also our conjectures, our
-ideals, our habits, and unhappily, in many cases, our blunders.<a name="FNanchor_212" id="FNanchor_212"></a><a href="#Footnote_212" class="fnanchor">[212]</a>
-So a great deal of action which is purely mischievous<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_518" id="Page_518">[518]</a></span>
-in its effects, comes not from our own mistakes, but from
-those of our ancestors. The consequence is, that what with
-our own mistakes and the mistakes we inherit, we sometimes
-go far indeed out of the course which “Nature” has prescribed
-for us.</p>
-
-<p>§ 20. The generation which found a mouthpiece in
-Rousseau had become firmly convinced, not indeed of its<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_519" id="Page_519">[519]</a></span>
-own stupidity, but of the stupidity of all its predecessors;
-and the vast patrimony bequeathed to it seemed nothing
-but lumber or worse. So Rousseau found an eager and
-enthusiastic audience when he proposed a return to Nature,
-in other words, to give up all existing customs, and for the
-most part to do nothing and “give Nature a chance.” His
-boy of twelve years old was to have been taught <i>nothing</i>.
-Up to that age the great art of education, says Rousseau,
-is to do everything by doing nothing. The first part of
-education should be purely negative.</p>
-
-<p>§ 21. Rousseau then was the first who escaped completely
-from the notion of the Renascence, that man was mainly a
-<i>learning</i> and <i>remembering</i> animal. But if he is not this,
-what is he? We must ascertain, said Rousseau, not <i>a priori</i>,
-but by observation. We need a new art, the art of observing
-children.</p>
-
-<p>§ 22. Now at length there was hope for the Science of
-Education. This science must be based on a study of the
-subject on whom we have to act. According to Locke
-there is such variation not only in the circumstances, but
-also in the personal peculiarities of individuals, that general
-laws either do not exist or can never be ascertained. But
-this variation is no less observable in the human body, and
-the art of the physician has to conform itself to a science
-which is still very far from perfect. The physician, however,
-does not despair. He carefully avails himself of such science
-as we now have, and he makes a study of the human body
-in order to increase that science. When a few more generations
-have passed away, the medical profession will very
-likely smile at mistakes made by the old Victorian doctors.
-But, meantime, we profit by the science of medicine in its
-present state, and we find that this science has considerably<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_520" id="Page_520">[520]</a></span>
-increased the average duration of human life. We therefore
-require every practitioner to have made a scientific
-study of his calling, and to have had a training in both the
-theory and practice of it. The science of education cannot
-be said to have done much for us at present, but it will do
-more in the future, and might do more now if no one were
-allowed to teach before he or she had been trained in the
-best theory and practice we have. Since the appearance
-of the Emile the best educators have studied the subject
-on whom they had to act, and they have been learning
-more and more of the laws or sequences which affect the
-human mind and the human body. The marvellous strides
-of science in every other department encourages us to hope
-that it will make great advances in the field of education
-where it is still so greatly needed. Perhaps the day may
-come when a Pestalozzi may be considered even by his contemporaries
-on an equality with a Napoleon, and the human
-race may be willing to give to the art of instruction the
-same amount of time, money, thought, and energy, which
-in our day have been devoted with such tremendous success
-to the art of destruction. It is already dawning on the
-general consciousness that in education as in physical
-science “we conquer Nature by obeying her,” and we are
-learning more and more how to obey her.</p>
-
-<p>§ 23. Rousseau’s great work was first, to expose the absurdities
-of the school-room, and second, to set the educator
-on studying the laws of nature in the human mind and
-body. He also drew attention to the child’s restless
-activity. He would also (like Locke before him), make the
-young learner his own teacher.</p>
-
-<p>§ 24. There is another way in which the appearance of
-the Emile was, as the Germans say, “epoch-making.”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_521" id="Page_521">[521]</a></span>
-From the time of the earliest Innovators, we have seen that
-“Things not Words,” had been the war-cry of a strong
-party of Reformers. But <i>things</i> had been considered
-merely as a superior means of instruction. Rousseau first
-pointed out the intimate relation that exists between children
-and the material world around them. Children had till then
-been thought of only as immature and inferior men. Since
-his day an English poet has taught us that in some ways
-the man is far inferior to the child, “the things which we
-have seen we now can see no more,” and that</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse indent6">“nothing can bring back the hour</div>
-<div class="verse">“Of splendour in the grass, of glory in the flower.”</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">Rousseau had not Wordsworth’s gifts, but he, too, observed
-that childhood is the age of strong impressions from without
-and that its material surroundings affect it much more
-acutely than they will in after life. Which of us knows as
-much about our own house and furniture as our children
-know? Still more remarkable is the sympathy children have
-with animals. If a cat comes into a room where there are
-grown people and also a child, which sees the cat first? which
-observes it most accurately? Now, this intimate relation of
-the child with its surroundings plays a most important part
-in its education. The educator may, if so minded, ignore
-this altogether, and stick to grammar, dates, and county
-towns, but if he does so the child’s real education will not
-be much affected by him. Rousseau saw this clearly, and
-wished to use “things” not for instruction but for education.
-Their special function was to train the senses.</p>
-
-<p>§ 25. Perhaps it is not too much to say of Rousseau that
-he was the first who gave up thinking of the child as a
-being whose chief faculty was the faculty of remembering,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_522" id="Page_522">[522]</a></span>
-and thought of him rather as a being who feels and reflects,
-acts and invents.</p>
-
-<p>§ 26. But if the thought may be traced back to Rousseau,
-it was, as left by him, quite crude or rather embryonic.
-Since his time this conception of the young has been taken
-up and moulded into a fair commencement of a science of
-education. This commencement is now occupying the
-attention of thinkers such as Herbert Spencer, and much
-may be expected from it even in the immediate future.
-For the science so far as it exists we are indebted mainly
-to the two Reformers with whom I will conclude—Pestalozzi
-and Froebel.</p>
-
-<p>§ 27. Pestalozzi, like Comenius more than 100 years
-before him, conceived of education for all. “Every human
-being,” said he, “has a claim to a judicious development of
-his faculties.” Every child must go to school.</p>
-
-<p>But the word <i>school</i> includes a great variety of institutions.
-The object these have in view differs immensely. With
-us the main object in some schools seems to be to prepare
-boys to compete at an early age for entrance scholarships
-awarded to the greatest proficients in Latin and Greek. In
-other schools the object is to turn the children out “good
-scholars” in another sense; that is, the school is held to be
-successful when the boys and girls acquire skill in the arts
-of reading, writing, and arithmetic, and can remember a
-number of facts—facts of history, of geography, and even of
-natural science. So the common notion is that what is
-wanted in the way of education depends entirely on the
-child’s social position. There still linger among us notions
-derived from the literary men of the Renascence. We still
-measure all children by their literary and mnemonic attainments.
-We still consider knowledge of Latin and Greek<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_523" id="Page_523">[523]</a></span>
-the highest kind of knowledge. Children are sent to school
-that they may not be ignorant.<a name="FNanchor_213" id="FNanchor_213"></a><a href="#Footnote_213" class="fnanchor">[213]</a> Pestalozzi, who had
-studied Rousseau, entirely denied all this. He required
-that the school-coach should be turned and started in a
-new direction. The main object of the school was not to
-teach, but to develop, not to <i>put in</i> but to <i>draw out</i>.</p>
-
-<p>§ 28. The study of nature shows us that every animal
-comes into the world with certain faculties or capabilities.
-There are a set of circumstances which will develop these
-capabilities and make the most of them. There are other
-circumstances which would impede this development,
-decrease it, or even prevent it altogether. All other
-animals have this development secured for them by their
-ordinary environment: but Man, with far higher capacities,
-and with immeasurably greater faculties both for good and
-evil, is left far more to his own resources than the other
-animals. Placed in an almost endless variety of circumstances
-we have to ascertain how the development of our
-offspring may best be brought about. We have to consider
-what are the inborn faculties of our children, and also what
-aids and what hinders their development. When we have
-arrived at this knowledge we must educate them by placing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_524" id="Page_524">[524]</a></span>
-them in the best circumstances in our power, and then
-superintending, judiciously and lovingly, the development of
-their faculties and of their higher nature.</p>
-
-<p>§ 29. There is, said Pestalozzi, only one way in which
-faculty can be developed, and that is by exercise; so his
-system sought to encourage the activities of children, and in
-this respect he was surpassed, as we shall see, by Froebel.
-“Dead” knowledge, as it has been called—the knowledge
-commonly acquired for examinations, our school-knowledge,
-in fact—was despised by Pestalozzi as it had been by Locke
-and Rousseau before him. In its place he would put
-knowledge acquired by “intuition,” by the spring of the
-learner’s own intelligence.</p>
-
-<p>§ 30. The conception of every child as an organism and
-of education as the process by which the development of
-that organism is promoted is found first in Pestalozzi, but it
-was more consistently thought out by Froebel. There is,
-said Froebel, a divine idea for every human being, for we
-are all God’s offspring. The object of the education of a
-human being is to further the development of his divine
-idea. This development is attainable only through action;
-for the development of every organism depends on its self-activity.
-Self-activity then, activity “with a will,” is the
-main thing to be cared for in education. The educator
-has to direct the children’s activity in such a way that it
-may satisfy their instincts, especially the formative and
-creative instincts. The child from his earliest years is to be
-treated as a <i>doer</i> and even a <i>creator</i>.</p>
-
-<p>§ 31. Now, at last, we have arrived at the complete
-antithesis between the old education and the New. The
-old education had one object, and that was learning. Man
-was a being who learnt and remembered. Education was a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_525" id="Page_525">[525]</a></span>
-process by which he <i>learnt</i>, at first the languages and
-literatures of Rome and Greece only; but as time went on
-the curriculum was greatly extended. The New Education
-treats the human being not so much a learner as a doer and
-creator. The educator no longer fixes his eyes on the
-object—the knowledge, but on the subject—the being to be
-educated. The success of the education is not determined
-by what the educated <i>know</i>, but by what they <i>do</i> and what
-they <i>are</i>. They are well educated when they love what is
-good, and have had all their faculties of mind and body
-properly developed to do it.</p>
-
-<p>§ 32. The New Education then is “passive, following,”
-and must be based on the study of human nature. When
-we have ascertained what are the faculties to be developed
-we must consider further how to foster the self-activity that
-will develop them.</p>
-
-<p>§ 33. We have travelled far from Dr. Johnson, who
-asserted that education was as well known as it ever could
-be. Some of us are more inclined to assert that in his day
-education was not invented. On the other hand, there are
-those who belittle the New Education and endeavour to
-show that in it there is nothing new at all. As it seems to
-me a revolution of the most salutary kind was made by the
-thinkers who proposed basing education on a study of the
-subject to be educated, and, more than this, making the
-process a “following” process with the object of drawing
-out self-activity.</p>
-
-<p>§ 34. This change of object must in the end be fruitful in
-changes of every kind. But as yet we are only groping our
-way; and, if I may give a caution which, in this country at
-least, is quite superfluous, we should be cautious, and till we
-see our way clearly we should try no great experiment that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_526" id="Page_526">[526]</a></span>
-would destroy our connexion with the past. Most of our
-predecessors thought only of knowledge. By a reaction
-some of our New Educationists seem to despise knowledge.
-But knowledge is necessary, and without some knowledge
-development would be impossible. We probably cannot
-do too much to assist development and encourage “intuition,”
-but there is, perhaps, some danger of our losing sight
-of truths which schoolroom experience would bring home to
-us. Even the clearest “concepts” get hazy again and
-totally unfit for use, unless they are permanently fixed in
-the mind by repetition, which to be effective must to some
-extent take the form of <i>drill</i>. The practical man, even the
-crammer, has here mastered a truth of the teaching art
-which the educationist is prone to overlook. And there are,
-no doubt, other things which the practical man can teach.
-But the great thinkers would raise us to a higher standing-point
-from which we may see much that will make the right
-road clearer to us, and lead us to press forward in it with
-good heart and hope.</p>
-
-<p class="titlepage">FINIS.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div class="footnotes">
-
-<h2>FOOTNOTES</h2>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_1" id="Footnote_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> When the greater part of this volume was already written, Mr.
-Parker published his sketch of the history of Classical Education (<i>Essays
-on a Liberal Education</i>, edited by Farrar). He seems to me to have
-been very successful in bringing out the most important features of his
-subject, but his essay necessarily shows marks of over-compression.
-Two volumes have also lately appeared on <i>Christian Schools and
-Scholars</i> (Longmans, 1867). Here we have a good deal of information
-which we want, and also, it seems to me, a good deal which we do not
-want. The work characteristically opens with a 10th century description
-of the personal appearance of St. Mark when he landed at Alexandria.
-The author treats only of the times which preceded the Council of Trent.
-A very interesting account of early English education has been given by
-Mr. Furnivall, in the 2nd and 3rd numbers of the <i>Quarterly Journal of
-Education</i> (1867). [I did not then know of Dr. Barnard’s works.]</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_2" id="Footnote_2"></a><a href="#FNanchor_2"><span class="label">[2]</span></a> This article is omitted in the last edition.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_3" id="Footnote_3"></a><a href="#FNanchor_3"><span class="label">[3]</span></a> The rest of this chapter was published in the September, 1880
-number of <i>Education</i>. Boston, U.S.A.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_4" id="Footnote_4"></a><a href="#FNanchor_4"><span class="label">[4]</span></a> On the nature of literature see Cardinal Newman’s “Lectures on
-the Nature of a University. University Subjects. II. Literature.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_5" id="Footnote_5"></a><a href="#FNanchor_5"><span class="label">[5]</span></a> I see Carlyle has used a similar metaphor in the same connexion:
-“Consider the old schoolmen and their pilgrimage towards Truth! the
-faithfullest endeavour, incessant unwearied motion; often great natural
-vigour, only no progress; nothing but antic feats of one limb poised
-against the other; there they balanced, somerseted, and made postures;
-at best gyrated swiftly with some pleasure like spinning dervishes and
-ended where they began.”—<i>Characteristics</i>, Misc., vol. iii, 5.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_6" id="Footnote_6"></a><a href="#FNanchor_6"><span class="label">[6]</span></a> This illustration was suggested by a similar one in Prof. J. R.
-Seeley’s essay “On the teaching of English” in his <i>Lectures and Essays</i>,
-1870.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_7" id="Footnote_7"></a><a href="#FNanchor_7"><span class="label">[7]</span></a> Miss J. D. Potter, in “Journal of Education.” London, June, 1879</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_8" id="Footnote_8"></a><a href="#FNanchor_8"><span class="label">[8]</span></a> See Erasmus’s <i>Ciceronianus</i>, or account of it, in Henry Barnard’s
-<i>German Teachers</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_9" id="Footnote_9"></a><a href="#FNanchor_9"><span class="label">[9]</span></a> “On Abuse of Human Learning,” by Samuel Butler.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_10" id="Footnote_10"></a><a href="#FNanchor_10"><span class="label">[10]</span></a> Multum ilium profecisse arbitror, qui ante sextum decimum ætatis
-annum facultatem duarum linguarum mediocrem assecutus est. (Quoted
-by Parker.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_11" id="Footnote_11"></a><a href="#FNanchor_11"><span class="label">[11]</span></a> R. Mulcaster’s <i>Positions</i>, 1581, p. 30. I have reprinted this book
-(Longmans, 1888, price 10<i>s.</i>).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_12" id="Footnote_12"></a><a href="#FNanchor_12"><span class="label">[12]</span></a> Sturm’s school “had an European reputation: there were Poles
-and Portuguese, Spaniards, Danes, Italians, French and English. But
-besides this, it was the model and mother school of a numerous progeny.
-Sturm himself organized schools for several towns which applied to him.
-His disciples became organizers, rectors, and professors. In short, if
-Melanchthon was the instructor, Sturm was the schoolmaster of
-Germany. Together with his method, his school-books were spread
-broadcast over the land. Both were adopted by Ascham in England,
-and by Buchanan in Scotland. Sturm himself was a great man at the
-imperial court. No diplomatist passed through Strasburg without
-stopping to converse with him. He drew a pension from the King of
-Denmark, another from the King of France, a third from the Queen
-of England, collected political information for Cardinal Granvella, and
-was ennobled by Charles V. He helped to negotiate peace between
-France and England, and was appointed to confer with a commission of
-Cardinals on reunion of the Church. In short, Sturm knew what he
-was about as well as most men of his time. Yet few will be disposed
-to accept his theory of education, even for the sixteenth century, as the
-best. Wherein then lay the mistake?... Sturm asserted that the
-proper end of school education is eloquence, or in modern phrase, a
-masterly command of language, and that the knowledge of things
-mainly belongs to a later stage ... Sturm assumed that Latin is
-the language in which eloquence is to be acquired.”</p>
-
-<p>This is from Mr. Charles Stuart Parker’s excellent account of Sturm in
-<i>Essays on a Liberal Education</i>, edited by Farrar, Essay I., <i>On History
-of Classical Education</i>, p. 39.</p>
-
-<p>I find from Herbart (<i>Päd. Schriften</i>, O. Wilmann’s edition, vol. ij,
-229 ff; Beyer’s edition, ij, 321) that the historian, F. H. Ch. Schwarz,
-took a very favourable view of Sturm’s work; and both he and Karl
-Schmidt give Sturm credit for introducing the two ways of studying an
-author that may be carried on at the same time—1st, <i>statarisch</i>, <i>i.e.</i>,
-reading a small quantity accurately, and 2nd, <i>cursorisch</i>, <i>i.e.</i>, getting
-over the ground. These two kinds, of reading were made much of by
-J. M. Gesner (1691-1761). Ernst Laas has written <i>Die Pädagogik J.
-Sturms</i> which no doubt does him justice, but I have not seen the book.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_13" id="Footnote_13"></a><a href="#FNanchor_13"><span class="label">[13]</span></a> Why did Bacon, who spoke slightingly of Sturm (see Parker, in
-<i>Essays on Lib. Ed.</i>), rate the Jesuits so highly? “Consule scholas
-Jesuitarum: nihil enim quod in usum venit his melius,” <i>De Aug.</i>, lib.
-iv, cap. iv. See, too, a longer passage in first book of <i>De Aug.</i> (about
-end of first 1/4), “Quæ nobilissima pars priscæ disciplinæ revocata est
-aliquatenus, quasi postliminio, in Jesuitarum collegiis; quorum cum
-intueor industriam solertiamque tam in doctrina excolenda quam in
-moribus informandis, illud occurrit Agesilai de Pharnabazo, ‘Talis
-cum sis, utinam noster esses.’”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_14" id="Footnote_14"></a><a href="#FNanchor_14"><span class="label">[14]</span></a> (1) Joseph Anton Schmid’s “Niedere Schulen der Jesuiten:” Regensburg,
-1852. (2) Article by Wagenmann in K. A. Schmid’s “Encyclopädie
-des Erziehungs-und Unterrichtswesens.” (3) “Ratio atque
-Institutio Studiorum Soc. Jesu.” The first edition of this work,
-published at Rome in 1585, was suppressed as heretical, because it
-contemplated the possibility of differing from St. Thomas Aquinas. The
-book is now very scarce. There is a copy in the British Museum.
-On comparing it with the folio edition (“Constitutiones,” &amp;c., published
-at Prag in 1632), I find many omissions in the latter, some of
-which are curious, <i>e.g.</i>, under “De Matrimonio:”—“Matremne an
-uxorem occidere sit gravius, non est hujus loci.” (4) “Parænesis ad
-Magistros Scholarum Inferiorum Soc. Jesu, scripta a P. Francisco
-Sacchino, ex eâdem Societate.” (5) “Juvencius de Ratione Discendi
-et Docendi.” Crétineau-Joly’s “Histoire de la Compagnie de Jésus”
-(Paris, 1844), I have not made much use of. Sacchini and Jouvency
-were both historians of the Order. The former died in 1625, the latter
-in 1719. There is a good sketch of the Jesuit schools, by Andrewes, in
-Barnard’s <i>American Journal of Education</i>, vol. xiv, 1864, reprinted
-in the best book I know of in English on the History of Education,
-Barnard’s <i>German Teachers</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_15" id="Footnote_15"></a><a href="#FNanchor_15"><span class="label">[15]</span></a> “L’exécution des décrets de 1880 a eu pour résultat la fermeture de
-leurs collèges. Mais malgré leur dispersion apparente ils sont encore
-plus puissants qu’on ne le croit, et ce serait une erreur de penser que le
-dernier mot est dit avec eux.”—<i>Compayré, in Buisson</i>, ij, p. 1420.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_16" id="Footnote_16"></a><a href="#FNanchor_16"><span class="label">[16]</span></a> According to the article in K. A. Schmid’s “Encyclopädie,” the
-usual course was this—the two years’ novitiate was over by the time the
-youth was between fifteen and seventeen. He then entered a Jesuit
-college as Scholasticus. Here he learnt literature and rhetoric for two
-years, and then philosophy (with mathematics) for three more. He then
-entered on his Regency, <i>i.e.</i>, he went over the same ground as a <i>teacher</i>,
-for from four to six years. Then followed a period of theological study,
-ending with a year of trial, called the <i>Tertiorat</i>. The candidate was
-now admitted to Priest’s Orders, and took the vows either as <i>professus
-quatuor votorum</i>, professed father of four vows, or as a <i>coadjutor</i>. If he
-was then sent back to teach, he gave only the higher instruction. The
-<i>fourth</i> vow placed him at the disposal of the Pope.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_17" id="Footnote_17"></a><a href="#FNanchor_17"><span class="label">[17]</span></a> Karl Schmidt (Gesch. d. Päd., iij. 199, 200), says that however much
-teachers were wanted, a two years’ course of preparation was considered
-indispensable. When the Novitiate was over the candidate became a
-“Junior” (<i>Gallicè</i> “Juveniste”). He then continued his studies <i>in
-literis humanioribus</i>, preparatory to teaching. When in the “Juvenat”
-or “Juniorate” he had rubbed up his classics and mathematics, he
-entered the “Seminary,” and two or three times a week he expounded
-to a class the matter of the previous lecture, and answered questions,
-&amp;c. For this information I am indebted to the courtesy of Father Eyre
-(S. J.), of Stonyhurst.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_18" id="Footnote_18"></a><a href="#FNanchor_18"><span class="label">[18]</span></a> So says Andrewes (<i>American Journal of Education</i>), but other
-authorities put the age of entrance as high as fourteen. The <i>studia
-superiora</i> were begun before twenty-four.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_19" id="Footnote_19"></a><a href="#FNanchor_19"><span class="label">[19]</span></a> “Non gratia nobilium officiat culturæ vulgarium: cum sint natales
-omnium pares in Adam et hæreditates quoque pares in Christo.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_20" id="Footnote_20"></a><a href="#FNanchor_20"><span class="label">[20]</span></a> Even junior masters were not to be much addicted to their own
-language. “Illud cavendum imprimis juniori magistro ne vernaculis
-nimium libris indulgeat, præsertim poetis, in quibus maximam temporis
-ac fortasse morum jacturam faceret.”—<i>Jouvency.</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_21" id="Footnote_21"></a><a href="#FNanchor_21"><span class="label">[21]</span></a> “Multum proderit si magister non tumultuario ac subito dicat, sed
-quæ domi cogitate scripserit.—It will be a great gain if the master does
-not speak in a hurry and without forethought, but is ready with what
-he has thought out and written out in his own room.”—<i>Ratio Studd.</i>,
-quoted by Schmid. And Sacchini says: “Ante omnia, quæ quisque
-docturus est, egregie calleat. Tum enim bene docet, et facile docet, et
-libenter docet; bene, quia sine errore; facile, quia sine labore;
-libenter, quia ex pleno.... Memoriæ minimum fidat: instauret
-eam refricetque iterata lectione antequam quicquam doceat, etiamsi idem
-sæpe docuerit. Occurret non raro quod addat vel commodius proponat.—Before
-all things let everyone be thoroughly skilled in what he is
-going to teach; for then he teaches well, he teaches easily, he teaches
-readily: well, because he makes no mistakes; easily, because he has
-no need to exert himself; readily, because, like wealthy men he
-cares not how he gives.... Let him be very distrustful of his
-memory; let him renew his remembrance and rub it up by repeated
-reading before he teaches anything, though he may have often taught it
-before. Something will now and then occur to him which he may add,
-or put more neatly.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_22" id="Footnote_22"></a><a href="#FNanchor_22"><span class="label">[22]</span></a> In a school (not belonging to the Jesuits) where this plan was
-adopted, the boys, by an ingenious contrivance, managed to make it
-work very smoothly. The boy who was “hearing” the lessons held
-the book upside down in such a way that the others <i>read</i> instead of
-repeating by heart. The masters finally interfered with this arrangement.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_23" id="Footnote_23"></a><a href="#FNanchor_23"><span class="label">[23]</span></a> Since the above was written, an account of these concertations has
-appeared in the Rev. G. R. Kingdon’s evidence before the Schools
-Commission, 1867 (vol. v, Answers 12, 228 ff.) Mr. Kingdon, the
-Prefect of Studies at Stonyhurst, mentions that the side which wins
-in most concertations gets an extra half-holiday.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_24" id="Footnote_24"></a><a href="#FNanchor_24"><span class="label">[24]</span></a> “The grinding over and over of a subject after pupils have attained a
-fair knowledge of it, is nothing less than stultifying—killing out
-curiosity and the desire of knowledge, and begetting mechanical habits.”—<i>Supt.
-J. Hancock</i>, Dayton, Ohio. Every teacher of experience knows
-how true this is.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_25" id="Footnote_25"></a><a href="#FNanchor_25"><span class="label">[25]</span></a> “Stude potius ut pauciora clare distincteque percipiant, quam
-obscure atque confuse pluribus imbuantur.—Care rather for their seeing
-a few things vividly and definitely, than that they should get filled
-with hazy and confusing notions of many things.” (There are few
-more valuable precepts for the teacher than this.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_26" id="Footnote_26"></a><a href="#FNanchor_26"><span class="label">[26]</span></a> Sacchini writes in a very high tone on this subject. The following
-passage is striking: “Gravitatem sui muneris summasque opportunitates
-assidue animo verset (magister).... ‘Puerilis institutio
-mundi renovatio est;’ hæc gymnasia Dei castra sunt, hic bonorum omnium
-semina latent. Video solum fundamentumque republicæ quod
-multi non videant interpositu terræ.—Let the mind of the master dwell
-upon the responsibilities of his office and its immense opportunities....
-The education of the young is the renovation of the world.
-These schools are the camp of God: in them lie the seeds of all that is
-good. There I see the foundation and ground-work of the commonwealth,
-which many fail to see from its being underground.” Perhaps
-he had read of Trotzendorf’s address to a school, “Hail reverend
-divines, learned doctors, worshipful magistrates, &amp;c.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_27" id="Footnote_27"></a><a href="#FNanchor_27"><span class="label">[27]</span></a> “Circa illorum valetudinem peculiari cura animadvertat (Rector) ut
-et in laboribus mentis modum servent, et in iis quæ ad corpus pertinent,
-religiosa commoditate tractentur, ut diutius in studiis perseverare
-tam in litteris addiscendis quam in eisdem exercendis ad Dei gloriam
-possint.”—<i>Ratio Studd.</i>, quoted by Schmid. <a href="#Page_62">See also <i>infra</i> p. 62.</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_28" id="Footnote_28"></a><a href="#FNanchor_28"><span class="label">[28]</span></a> The following, from the <i>Ratio Studd.</i>, sounds Jesuitical: “Nec
-publicé puniant flagitia quædam secretiora sed privatim; aut si publicé,
-<i>alias obtendant causas</i>, et satis est eos qui plectuntur conscios esse
-causarum.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_29" id="Footnote_29"></a><a href="#FNanchor_29"><span class="label">[29]</span></a> As the Public Schools Commission pointed out, the Head Master
-often thinks of nothing but the attainment of University honours, <i>even
-when the great majority of his pupils are not going to the University</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_30" id="Footnote_30"></a><a href="#FNanchor_30"><span class="label">[30]</span></a> The advantages of learning by heart are twofold, says Sacchini:
-“Primum memoriam ipsam perficiunt, quod est in totam ætatem ad universa
-negotia inæstimabile commodum. Deinde suppellectilem inde
-pulcherrimam congregant verborum ac rerum: quæ item, quamdiu vivant,
-usui futura sit: cum quæ ætate illa insederint indelebilia soleant
-permanere. Magnam itaque, ubi adoleverint, gratiam Praeceptori habebunt,
-cui memoriæ debebunt profectum, magnamque lætitiam capient
-invenientes quodammodo domi thesaurum quem, in ætate cæteroqui
-parum fructuosa, prope non sentientes parârint. Enim vero quam sæpe
-viros graves atque præstantes magnoque jam natu videre et audire est,
-dum in docta ac nobili corona jucundissime quædam promunt ex iis
-quæ pueri condiderunt?—First, they strengthen the memory itself and
-so gain an inestimable advantage in affairs of every kind throughout life.
-Then they get together by this means the fairest furniture for the mind,
-both of thoughts and words, a stock that will be of use to them as long
-as they live, since that which settles in the mind in youth mostly stays
-there. And when the lads have grown up they will feel gratitude to
-the master to whom they are indebted for their good memory; and they
-will take delight in finding within them a treasure which at a time of
-life otherwise unfruitful they have been preparing almost without knowing
-it. How often we see and hear eminent men far advanced in life,
-when in learned and noble company, take a special delight in quoting what
-they stored up as boys!” The master, he says, must point out to his
-pupils the advantages we derive from memory; that we only know and
-possess that which we retain, that this cannot be taken from us, but is
-with us always and is always ready for use, a living library, which may
-be studied even in the dark. Boys should therefore be encouraged to
-run over in their minds, or to say aloud, what they have learnt, as often
-as opportunity offers, as when they are walking or are by themselves:
-“Ita numquam in otio futuros otiosos; ita minus fore solos cum soli
-erunt, consuetudine fruentes sapientum.... Denique curandum
-erit ut selecta quædam ediscant quæ deinde in quovis studiorum genere
-ac vita fere omni usui sint futura.—So they will never be without employment
-when unemployed, never less alone than when alone, for then
-they profit by intercourse with the wise.... To sum up, take care
-that they thoroughly commit to memory choice selections which will for
-ever after be of use to them in every kind of study, and nearly every
-pursuit in life.”—(Cap. viij.) This is interesting and well put, but we see
-one or two points in which we have now made an advance. Learning
-by heart will give none of the advantages mentioned unless the boys
-understand the pieces and delight in them. Learning by heart
-strengthens, no doubt, a faculty, but nothing large enough to be called
-“the memory.” And the Renascence must indeed have blinded the eyes
-of the man to whom childhood and youth seemed an “ætas parum
-fructuosa”! Similarly, Sturm speaks of the small fry “qui in extremis
-latent classibus.” (Quoted by Parker.) But when Pestalozzi and
-Froebel came these lay hid no longer.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_31" id="Footnote_31"></a><a href="#FNanchor_31"><span class="label">[31]</span></a> Ranke, speaking of the success of the Jesuit schools, says: “It
-was found that young persons learned more under them in half a year
-than with others in two years. Even Protestants called back their
-children from distant schools, and put them under the care of the
-Jesuits.”—<i>Hist. of Popes</i>, book v, p. 138. Kelly’s Trans.</p>
-
-<p>In France, the University in vain procured an <i>arrêt</i> forbidding the
-Parisians to send away their sons to the Jesuit colleges: “Jesuit schools
-enjoyed the confidence of the public in a degree which placed them
-beyond competition.” (Pattison’s <i>Casaubon</i>, p. 182.)</p>
-
-<p>Pattison remarks elsewhere that such was the common notion of the
-Jesuits’ course of instruction that their controversialists could treat anyone,
-even a Casaubon, who had not gone through it, as an uneducated person.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_32" id="Footnote_32"></a><a href="#FNanchor_32"><span class="label">[32]</span></a> “Sapientum hoc omnium seu veterum seu recentum constans judicium
-est, institutionem puerilem tum fore optimam cum jucundissima
-fuerit, inde enim et ludum vocari. Meretur ætatis teneritas ut ne
-oneretur: meretur innocentia ut ei parcatur ... Quæ libentibus
-auribus instillantur, ad ea velut occurrit animus, avide suscipit, studiose
-recondit, fideliter servat.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_33" id="Footnote_33"></a><a href="#FNanchor_33"><span class="label">[33]</span></a> “Conciliabit facilè studiis quos primùm sibi conciliârit. Det itaque
-omnem operam illorum erga se observantionem ut sapienter colligat et
-continenter enutriat. Ostendat, sibi res eorum curæ esse non solum
-quæ ad animum sed etiam quæ ad alia pertinent. Gaudeat cum gaudentibus,
-nec dedignetur flere cum flentibus. Instar Apostoli inter parvulos
-parvulus fiat quo magnos in Christo et magnum in eis Christum
-efficiat ... Seriam comitatem et paternam gravitatem cum
-materna benignitate permisceat.” Unfortunately, the Jesuits’ kind
-manner loses its value from being due not so much to kind feeling as to
-some ulterior object, or to a rule of the Order. I think it is Jouvency
-who recommends that when a boy is absent from sickness or other
-sufficient reason, the master should send daily to inquire after him,
-<i>because the parents will be pleased by such attention</i>. When the motive
-of the inquiry is suspected, the parents will be pleased no longer.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_34" id="Footnote_34"></a><a href="#FNanchor_34"><span class="label">[34]</span></a> “Errorem existimo statim initio spinosiores quasdam grammaticæ
-difficultates inculcare ... cum enim planioribus insueverint
-difficiliora paulatim usus explanabit. Quin et capacior subinde mens ac
-firmius cum ætate judicium, quod alio monstrante perægre unquam
-percepisset per sese non raro intelliget. Exempla quoque talium rerum
-dum praelegitur autor facilius in orationis contextu agnoscentur et
-penetrabunt in animos quam si solitaria et abscissa proponantur.
-Quamobrem faciendum erit ut quoties occurrunt diligenter enucleentur.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_35" id="Footnote_35"></a><a href="#FNanchor_35"><span class="label">[35]</span></a> See, <i>e.g.</i>, marvellous instances of their self-devotion in that most
-interesting book, Francis Parkman’s <i>Jesuits in N. America</i> (Boston,
-Little &amp; Co., 10th edition, 1876).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_36" id="Footnote_36"></a><a href="#FNanchor_36"><span class="label">[36]</span></a> I have referred to Francis Parkman, who has chronicled the
-marvellous self-devotion and heroism of the Jesuit missionaries in
-Canada. Such a witness may be trusted when he says: “The Jesuit
-was as often a fanatic for his Order as for his faith; and oftener yet,
-the two fanaticisms mingled in him inextricably. Ardently as he burned
-for the saving of souls, he would have none saved on the Upper Lakes
-except by his brethren and himself. He claimed a monopoly of conversion
-with its attendant monopoly of toil, hardships, and martyrdom.
-Often disinterested for himself, he was inordinately ambitious for the
-great corporate power in which he had merged his own personality;
-and here lies one of the causes among many, of the seeming contradictions
-which abound in the annals of the Order.”—<i>The Discovery of the
-Great West</i>, by F. Parkman, London, 1869, p. 28.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_37" id="Footnote_37"></a><a href="#FNanchor_37"><span class="label">[37]</span></a> In a letter dated from Stonyhurst, 22nd April, 1880.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_38" id="Footnote_38"></a><a href="#FNanchor_38"><span class="label">[38]</span></a> The best account I have seen of life in a Jesuit school is in
-<i>Erinnerungen eines chemaligen Jesuitenzöglings</i> (Leipzig, Brockhaus,
-1862). The writer (Köhler?) says that he has become an evangelical
-clergyman, but there is no hostile feeling shown to his old instructors,
-and the narrative bears the strongest internal evidence of accuracy.
-Some of the Jesuit devices mentioned are very ingenious. All house
-masters who have adopted the cubicle arrangement of dormitories know
-how difficult it is to keep the boys in their own cubicles. The Jesuits
-have the cubicles barred across at the top, and the locks on the doors
-are so constructed that though they can be opened from the inside <i>they
-cannot be shut again</i>. The Fathers at Freiburg (in Breisgau) opened a
-“tuck-shop” for the boys, and gave “week’s-pay” in counters which
-passed at their own shop and nowhere else. The author speaks
-warmly of the kindness of the Fathers and of their care for health and
-recreation. But their ways were inscrutable and every boy felt himself
-in the hands of a <i>human</i> providence. As the boys go out for a walk,
-one of them is detained by the porter, who says “the Rector wants to
-speak to you.” On their way back the boys meet a diligence in which
-sits their late comrade waving adieus. <i>He has been expelled.</i></p>
-
-<p>Another book which throws much light on Jesuit pedagogy is by a Jesuit—<i>La
-Discipline</i>, par le R. P. Emmanuel Barbier (Paris, V. Palmé, 2nd
-edition, 1888). I will give a specimen in a loose translation, as it may
-interest the reader to see how carefully the Jesuits have studied the
-master’s difficulties. “The master in charge of the boys, especially
-in play-time, in his first intercourse with them, has no greater snare in
-his way than taking his power for granted, and trusting to the strength
-of his will and his knowledge of the world, especially as he is at first
-lulled into security by the deferential manner of his pupils.</p>
-
-<p>“That master who goes off with such ease from the very first, to whom
-the carrying out of all the rules seems the simplest thing in the world,
-who in the very first hour he is with them has already made himself
-liked, almost popular, with his pupils, who shows no more anxiety
-about his work than he must show to keep his character for good sense,
-that master is indeed to be pitied; he is most likely a lost man. He
-will soon have to choose one of two things, either to shut his eyes and
-put up with all the irregularities he thought he had done away with, or
-to break with a past that he would wish forgotten, and engage in open
-conflict with the boys who are inclined to set him at defiance. These
-cases are we trust rare. But many believe with a kind of rash
-ignorance and in spite of the warnings of experience that the good
-feelings of their pupils will work together to maintain their authority.
-They have been told that this authority should be mild and endeared
-by acts of kindness. So they set about crowning the edifice without
-making sure of the foundations; and taking the title of authority for its
-possession they spend all their efforts in lightening a yoke of which no
-one really bears the weight.</p>
-
-<p>“In point of fact the first steps often determine the whole course. For
-this reason you will attach extreme importance to what I am now going
-to advise:</p>
-
-<p>“The chief characteristic in your conduct towards the boys during the
-first few weeks should be <i>an extreme reserve</i>. However far you go in
-this, you can hardly overdo it. So your first attitude is clearly
-defined.</p>
-
-<p>“You have everything to observe, the individual character of each boy
-and the general tendencies and feelings of the whole body. But be sure
-of one thing, viz., that <i>you</i> are observed also, and a careful study is made
-both of your strong points and of your weak. Your way of speaking and
-of giving orders, the tone of your voice, your gestures, disclose your
-character, your tastes, your failings, to a hundred boys on the alert to
-pounce upon them. One is summed up long before one has the least
-notion of it. Try then to remain impenetrable. You should never
-give up your reserve till you are master of the situation.</p>
-
-<p>“For the rest, let there be no affectation about you. Don’t attempt to
-put on a severe manner; answer politely and simply your pupils’
-questions, but let it be in few words, and <i>avoid conversation</i>. All
-depends on that. Let there be no chatting with them in these early
-days. You cannot be too cautious in this respect. Boys have such a
-polite, such a taking way with them in drawing out information about
-your impressions, your tastes, your antecedents; don’t attempt the
-diplomate; don’t match your skill against theirs. You cannot chat without
-coming out of your shell, so to speak. Instead of this, you must
-puzzle them by your reserve, and drive them to this admission: ‘We
-don’t know what to make of our new master.’</p>
-
-<p>“Do I advise you then to be on the defensive throughout the whole
-year and like a stranger among your pupils? No! a thousand times,
-No! It is just to make their relations with you simple, confiding, I
-might say cordial, without the least danger to your authority, that I
-endeavour to raise this authority at first beyond the reach of assault.”—<i>La
-Discipline</i>, chap, v, pp. 31 ff.</p>
-
-<p>In this book we see the best side of the Jesuits. They believe in
-their “mission,” and this belief throws light on many things. Those
-who hate the Jesuits have often extolled the wisdom of Montaigne, when
-he says: “We have not to train up a soul, nor yet a body, but a man;
-and we cannot divide him.” Can they see no wisdom in <i>this</i>? “Let
-your mind be filled with the thought that both soul and body have been
-created by the Hand of God: we must account to Him for these two
-parts of our being; and we are not required to weaken one of them out
-of love for the Creator. We should love the body in the same degree
-that He could love it.” This is what Loyola wrote in 1548 to Francis
-Borgia (Compayré, <i>Doctrines, &amp;c.</i>, vol. j, 179). But if we wish to see the
-other side of the Jesuit character, we have only to look at the Jesuit as a
-controversialist. We sometimes see children hiding things and then
-having a pretence hunt for them. The Jesuits are no children, but in
-arguing they pretend to be searching for conclusions which are settled
-before arguments are thought of. See, <i>e.g.</i>, the attack on the Port
-Royalists in <i>Les Jésuites Instituteurs</i>, par le P. Ch. Daniel, 1880, in
-which the Jesuit sets himself to maintain this thesis: “D’une source
-aussi profondément infectée du poison de l’hérésie, il ne pouvait sortir
-rien d’absolument bon” (p. 123). One good point he certainly makes,
-and in my judgment one only, in comparing the Port Royalist schools
-with the schools of Jesuits. Methods which answer with very small
-numbers may not do with large numbers: “You might as well try to
-extend your gardening operations to agriculture” (p. 102).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_39" id="Footnote_39"></a><a href="#FNanchor_39"><span class="label">[39]</span></a> I am sorry to use a German word, but educational matters have
-been so little considered among us that we have no English vocabulary
-for them. The want of a word for <i>Realien</i> was felt over 200 years ago.
-“Repositories for <i>visibles</i> shall be prepared by which from beholding
-the things gentlewomen may learn the names, natures, values, and use
-of herbs, shrubs, trees, mineral-juices (<i>sic</i>), metals, and stones.” (<i>Essay
-to Revive the Antient Education of Gentlewomen.</i> London, 1672.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_40" id="Footnote_40"></a><a href="#FNanchor_40"><span class="label">[40]</span></a> See the very interesting <i>Essay on Montaigne</i> by Dean R. W.
-Church.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_41" id="Footnote_41"></a><a href="#FNanchor_41"><span class="label">[41]</span></a> Perhaps the saying of Montaigne’s which is most frequently quoted
-is the paradox <i>Savoir par cœur n’est pas savoir</i>: (“to know by heart is
-not to <i>know</i>.”) But these words are often misunderstood. The meaning,
-as I take it, is this: When a thought has entered into the mind it
-shakes off the words by which it was conveyed thither. Therefore so
-long as the words are indispensable the thought is not known. Knowing
-and knowing by heart are not necessarily opposed, but they are different
-things; and as the mind most easily runs along sequences of words a
-knowledge of the words often conceals ignorance or neglect of the
-thought. I once asked a boy if he thought of the meaning when he
-repeated Latin poetry and I got the instructive answer: “Sometimes,
-<i>when I am not sure of the words</i>.” But there are cases in which we
-naturally connect a particular form of words with thoughts that have
-become part of our minds. We then know, and know by heart also.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_42" id="Footnote_42"></a><a href="#FNanchor_42"><span class="label">[42]</span></a> Lord Armstrong has perhaps never read Montaigne’s <i>Essay on
-Pedantry</i>; certainly, he has not borrowed from it; and yet much that
-he says in discussing “The Cry for Useless Knowledge” (<i>Nineteenth
-Century Magazine</i>, November, 1888), is just what Montaigne said more
-than three centuries ago. “The aphorism that knowledge is power is
-so constantly used by educational enthusiasts that it may almost be regarded
-as the motto of the party. But the first essential of a motto
-is that it be true, and it is certainly not true that knowledge is the
-same as power, seeing that it is only an aid to power. The power of a
-surgeon to amputate a limb no more lies in his knowledge than in his
-knife. In fact, the knife has the better claim to potency of the two,
-for a man may hack off a limb with his knife alone, but not with his
-knowledge alone. Knowledge is not even an aid to power in all cases,
-seeing that useless knowledge, which is no uncommon article in our
-popular schools, has no relation to power. The true source of power
-is the originative action of the mind which we see exhibited in the daily
-incidents of life, as well as in matters of great importance....
-A man’s success in life depends incomparably more upon his capacities
-for useful action than upon his acquirements in knowledge, and the
-education of the young should therefore be directed to the development
-of faculties and valuable qualities rather than to the acquisition of knowledge....
-Men of capacity and possessing qualities for useful
-action are at a premium all over the world, while men of mere education
-are at a deplorable discount.” (p. 664).</p>
-
-<p>“There is a great tendency in the scholastic world to underrate the
-value and potency of self-education, which commences on leaving school
-and endures all through life.” (p. 667).</p>
-
-<p>“I deprecate plunging into doubtful and costly schemes of instruction,
-led on by the <i>ignis fatuus</i> that ‘knowledge is a power.’ For where
-natural capacity is wasted in attaining knowledge, it would be truer to
-say that knowledge is weakness.” (p. 668).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_43" id="Footnote_43"></a><a href="#FNanchor_43"><span class="label">[43]</span></a> In another matter, also, we find that the masters of these schools
-subsequently departed widely from the intention of the great men who
-fostered the revival of learning. Wolsey writes: “Imprimis hoc unum
-admonendum censuerimus, ut neque plagis severioribus neque vultuosis
-minis, aut ulla tyrannidis specie, tenera pubes afficiatur: hac enim
-injuria ingenii alacritas aut extingui aut magna ex parte obtundi solet.”
-Again he says: “In ipsis studiis sic voluptas est intermiscenda ut puer
-ludum potius discendi quam laborem existimet.” He adds: “Cavendum
-erit ne immodica contentione ingenia discentium obruantur aut lectione
-prolonga defatigentur; utraque enim juxta offenditur.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_44" id="Footnote_44"></a><a href="#FNanchor_44"><span class="label">[44]</span></a> Professor Arber is one of the very few editors who give accurate
-and sufficient bibliographical information about the books they edit.
-All students of our old literature are under deep obligations to him.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_45" id="Footnote_45"></a><a href="#FNanchor_45"><span class="label">[45]</span></a> Mayor’s is beautifully printed and costs 1<i>s.</i> (London, Bell and
-Sons.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_46" id="Footnote_46"></a><a href="#FNanchor_46"><span class="label">[46]</span></a> “Utile imprimis ut multi præcipiunt, vel ex Græco in Latinum vel
-ex Latino vertere in Græcum; quo genere exercitationis proprietas
-splendorque verborum, copia figurarum, vis explicandi, præterea imitatione
-optimorum similia inveniendi facultas paratur: simul quæ
-legentem fefellissent transferentem fugere non possunt. Intelligentia
-ex hoc et judicium acquiritur.”—<i>Epp.</i> vii. 9, § 2. So the passage stands
-in Pliny. Ascham quotes “<i>et</i> ex Græco in Latinum <i>et</i> ex Latino vertere
-in Græcum.” with other variations.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_47" id="Footnote_47"></a><a href="#FNanchor_47"><span class="label">[47]</span></a> <i>Teaching of Languages in Schools</i>, by W. H. Widgery, p. 6.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_48" id="Footnote_48"></a><a href="#FNanchor_48"><span class="label">[48]</span></a> Much information about our early books, with quotations from some
-of them, will be found in Henry Barnard’s <i>English Pedagogy</i>, 1st and 2nd
-series. Some notice of rare books is given in <i>Schools, School-books, and
-Schoolmasters</i>, by W. Carew Hazlitt (London, Jarvis, 1888), but in this
-work there are strange omissions.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_49" id="Footnote_49"></a><a href="#FNanchor_49"><span class="label">[49]</span></a> The paging is that of the reprint. It differs slightly from that of
-first edition.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_50" id="Footnote_50"></a><a href="#FNanchor_50"><span class="label">[50]</span></a> Mulcaster goes on to talk about the brain, &amp;c. Of course he does
-not anticipate the discoveries of science, but his language is very different
-from what we should expect from a writer in the pre-scientific age,
-<i>e.g.</i>, “To serve the turn of these two, both <i>sense</i> and <i>motion</i>, Nature hath
-planted in our body a <i>brain</i>, the prince of all our parts, which by
-spreading sinews of all sorts throughout all our parts doth work all
-those effects which either <i>sense</i> is seen in or <i>motion</i> perceived by.”
-(<i>El.</i>, p. 32.) But much as he thinks of the body Mulcaster is no
-materialist. “Last of all our soul hath in it an imperial prerogative of
-understanding beyond sense, of judging by reason, of directing by both,
-for duty towards God, for society towards men, for conquest in
-affections, for purchase in knowledge, and such other things, whereby
-it furnisheth out all manner of uses in this our mortal life, and
-bewrayeth in itself a more excellent being than to continue still in this
-roaming pilgrimage.” (p. 33.) The grand thing, he says, is to bring
-all these abilities to perfection “which so heavenly a benefit is begun
-by education, confirmed by use, perfected with continuance which
-crowneth the whole work.” (p. 34.) “Nature makes the boy toward;
-nurture sees him forward.” (p. 35.) The neglect of the material world
-which has been for ages the source of mischief of all kinds in the
-schoolroom, and which has not yet entirely passed away, would have
-been impossible if Mulcaster’s elementary course had been adopted.
-“Is the body made by Nature nimble to run, to ride, to swim, to fence,
-to do anything else which beareth praise in that kind for either profit or
-pleasure? And doth not the Elementary help them all forward by precept
-and train? The hand, the ear, the eye be the greatest instruments
-whereby the receiving and delivery of our learning is chiefly executed,
-and doth not this Elementary instruct the hand to write, to draw, to play;
-the eye to read by letters, to discern by line, to judge by both; the ear
-to call for voice and sound with proportion for pleasure, with reason for
-wit? Generally whatsoever gift Nature hath bestowed upon the body,
-to be brought forth or bettered by the mean of train for any profitable
-use in our whole life, doth not this Elementary both find it and foresee
-it?” (<i>El.</i>, p. 35). “<i>The hand, the ear, the eye, be the greatest instruments</i>,”
-said the Elizabethan schoolmaster. So says the Victorian
-reformer.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_51" id="Footnote_51"></a><a href="#FNanchor_51"><span class="label">[51]</span></a> I wish some good author would write a book on <i>Unpopular Truths</i>,
-and show how, on some subjects, wise men go on saying the same thing
-in all ages and nobody listens to them. Plato said “In every work
-the beginning is the most important part, especially in dealing with
-anything young and tender.” (<i>Rep.</i>, bk. ii, 377; Davies and Vaughan,
-p. 65.) And the complaints about “bad grounding” prove our common
-neglect of what Mulcaster urged three centuries ago: “For the
-<i>Elementarie</i> because good scholars will not abase themselves to it, it is
-left to the meanest, and therefore to the worst. For that the first
-grounding would be handled by the best, and his reward would be
-greatest, because both his pains and his judgment should be with the
-greatest. And it would easily allure sufficient men to come down so
-low, if they might perceive that reward would rise up. No man of
-judgment will contrary this point, neither can any ignorant be blamed
-for the contrary: the one seeth the thing to be but low in order, the
-other knoweth the ground to be great in laying, not only for the matter
-which the child doth learn: which is very small in show though great
-for process: but also for the manner of handling his wit, to hearten
-him for afterward, which is of great moment. The first master can deal
-but with a few, the next with more, and so still upward as reason
-groweth on and receives without forcing. It is the foundation well
-and soundly laid, which makes all the upper building muster, with
-countenance and continuance. If I were to strike the stroke, as I am
-but to give counsel, the first pains truly taken should in good truth be
-most liberally recompensed; and less allowed still upward, as the pains
-diminish and the ease increaseth. Whereat no master hath cause to
-repine, so he may have his children well grounded in the <i>Elementarie</i>.
-Whose imperfection at this day doth marvellously trouble both masters
-and scholars, so that we can hardly do any good, nay, scantly tell how
-to place the too too raw boys in any certain form, with hope to go forward
-orderly, the ground-work of their entry being so rotten underneath.”
-(<i>PP.</i>, pp. 233, 4.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_52" id="Footnote_52"></a><a href="#FNanchor_52"><span class="label">[52]</span></a> Quaint as we find Mulcaster in his mode of expression, the thing
-expressed is sometimes rather what we should expect from Herbert
-Spencer than from a schoolmaster of the Renascence. I have met with
-nothing more modern in thought than the following: “In time all
-learning may be brought into one tongue, and that natural to the inhabitant:
-so that schooling for tongues may prove needless, as once
-they were not needed; but it can never fall out that arts and sciences in
-their right nature shall be but most necessary for any commonwealth
-that is not given over unto too too much barbarousness.” (<i>PP.</i>, 240.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_53" id="Footnote_53"></a><a href="#FNanchor_53"><span class="label">[53]</span></a> “Subject to a regulation like that of the ancient Spartans, the
-theft of knowledge in our sex is only connived at while carefully concealed,
-and if displayed [is] punished with disgrace.” So says Mrs.
-Barbauld, and I have met with similar passages in other female writers.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_54" id="Footnote_54"></a><a href="#FNanchor_54"><span class="label">[54]</span></a> John Brinsley (the elder) who married a sister of Bishop Hall’s and
-kept school at Ashby-de-la-Zouch (was it the <i>Grammar School</i>?) was
-one of the best English writers on education. In his <i>Consolation for our
-Grammar Schooles</i>, published early in the sixteen hundreds, he says:
-“Amongst others myself having first had long experience of the manifold
-evils which grow from the ignorance of a right order of teaching,
-and afterwards some gracious taste of the sweetness that is to be found
-in the better courses truly known and practised, I have betaken me
-almost wholly, for many years unto this weighty work, and that not
-without much comfort, through the goodness of our blessed God.” (p. 1.)
-“And for the most part wherein any good is done, it is ordinarily effected
-by the endless vexation of the painful master, the extreme labour and
-terror of the poor children with enduring far overmuch and long severity.
-Now whence proceedeth all this but because so few of those who undertake
-this function are acquainted with any good method or right order
-of instruction fit for a grammar school?” (p. 2.) It is sad to think
-how many generations have since suffered from teachers “unacquainted
-with any good method or right order of instruction.” And it seems to
-justify Goethe’s dictum, “<i>Der Engländer ist eigentlich ohne Intelligenz</i>,”
-that for several generations to come this evil will be but partially abated.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_55" id="Footnote_55"></a><a href="#FNanchor_55"><span class="label">[55]</span></a> At Cambridge (as also in London and Edinburgh) there is already
-a Training College for Women Teachers in Secondary Schools.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_56" id="Footnote_56"></a><a href="#FNanchor_56"><span class="label">[56]</span></a> All we know of his life may soon be told. Richard Mulcaster was
-a Cumberland man of good family, an “esquier borne,” as he calls himself,
-who was at Eton, then King’s College, Cambridge, then at Christ
-Church, Oxford. His birth year was probably 1530 or 1531, and he
-became a student of Christ Church in 1555. In 1558 he settled as a
-schoolmaster in London, and was elected first headmaster of Merchant
-Taylors’ School, which dates from 1561. Here he remained twenty-five
-years, <i>i.e.</i> till 1586. Whether he then became, as H. B. Wilson
-says, surmaster of St. Paul’s, I cannot determine, but “he came in”
-highmaster in 1596, and held that office for twelve years. Though in
-1598 Elizabeth made him rector of Stanford Rivers, there can be no
-doubt that he did not give up the highmastership till 1608, when he must
-have been about 77 years old. He died at Stanford Rivers three years
-later. While at Merchant Taylors’, viz., in 1581 and 1582, he published
-the two books which have secured for him a permanent place in the
-history of education in England. The first was his <i>Positions</i>, the
-second “The first part” (and, as it proved, the only part) of his
-<i>Elementarie</i>. Of his other writings, his <i>Cato Christianus</i> seems to have
-been the most important, and a very interesting quotation from it has
-been preserved in Robotham’s Preface to the <i>Janua</i> of Comenius; but
-the book itself is lost: at least I never heard of a copy, and I have
-sought in vain in the British Museum, and at the University Libraries
-of Oxford and Cambridge. His <i>Catechismus Paulinus</i> is a rare book,
-but Rev. J. H. Lupton has found and described a copy in the Bodleian.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_57" id="Footnote_57"></a><a href="#FNanchor_57"><span class="label">[57]</span></a> <i>Lectures and Essays</i>: <i>English in School</i>, by J. R. Seeley, p. 222.
-Elsewhere in the same lecture (p. 229) Professor Seeley says: “The
-schoolmaster might set this right. Every boy that enters the school is
-a <i>talking</i> creature. He is a performer, in his small degree, upon the
-same instrument as Milton and Shakespeare. Only do not sacrifice
-this advantage. Do not try by artificial and laborious processes to give
-him a new knowledge before you have developed that which he has
-already. Train and perfect the gift of speech, unfold all that is in it,
-and you train at the same time the power of thought and the power of
-intellectual sympathy, you enable your pupil to think the thoughts and
-to delight in the words of great philosophers and poets.” I wish this
-lecture were published separately.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_58" id="Footnote_58"></a><a href="#FNanchor_58"><span class="label">[58]</span></a> <i>Rep.</i> bk. vii, 536, <i>ad f.</i>; Davies and Vaughan, p. 264.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_59" id="Footnote_59"></a><a href="#FNanchor_59"><span class="label">[59]</span></a> In Buisson (<i>Dictionnaire</i>) No. 7 is “The children must have
-frequent play, and a break after every lesson.” Raumer connects this
-with No. 6, and says: “breaks were rendered necessary by Ratke’s
-plan, which kept the learners far too silent.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_60" id="Footnote_60"></a><a href="#FNanchor_60"><span class="label">[60]</span></a> In the matter of grammar Ratke’s advice, so long disregarded, has
-recently been followed in the “Parallel Grammar Series,” published
-by Messrs. Sonnenschein.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_61" id="Footnote_61"></a><a href="#FNanchor_61"><span class="label">[61]</span></a> The ordinary teaching of almost every subject offers illustrations of
-the neglect of this principle. Take, <i>e.g.</i>, the way in which children are
-usually taught to read. First, they have to say the alphabet—a very
-easy task as it seems to us, but if we met with a strange word of
-<i>twenty-six syllables</i>, and that not a compound word, but one of which
-every syllable was new to us, we might have some difficulty in
-remembering it. And yet such a word would be to us what the
-alphabet is to a child. When he can perform this feat, he is next
-required to learn the visual symbols of the sounds and to connect these
-with the vocal symbols. Some of the vocal symbols bring the child in
-contact with the sound itself, but most are simply conventional. What
-notion does the child get of the aspirate from the name of the letter <i>h</i>?
-Having learnt twenty-six visual and twenty-six vocal symbols, and
-connected them together, the child <i>finally comes to the sounds</i> (over 40
-in number) <i>which the symbols are supposed to represent</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_62" id="Footnote_62"></a><a href="#FNanchor_62"><span class="label">[62]</span></a> See Mr. E. E. Bowen’s vigorous essay on “Teaching by means of
-Grammar,” in <i>Essays on a Liberal Education</i>, 1867.</p>
-
-<p>I have returned to the subject of language-learning in § 15 of <i>Jacotot</i>
-in the <i>note</i>. <a href="#Page_426">See page 426.</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_63" id="Footnote_63"></a><a href="#FNanchor_63"><span class="label">[63]</span></a> Preface to the <i>Prodromus</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_64" id="Footnote_64"></a><a href="#FNanchor_64"><span class="label">[64]</span></a> Preface to <i>Prodromus</i>, first edition, p. 40; second edition (1639),
-p. 78. The above is Hartlib’s translation, see <i>A Reformation of
-Schools, &amp;c.</i>, pp. 46, 47.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_65" id="Footnote_65"></a><a href="#FNanchor_65"><span class="label">[65]</span></a> Preface to <i>Prodromus</i>, first edition, p. 40; second edition, p. 79.
-<i>A Reformation, &amp;c.</i>, p. 47.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_66" id="Footnote_66"></a><a href="#FNanchor_66"><span class="label">[66]</span></a> Very interesting are the “immeasurable labours and intellectual
-efforts” of Master Samuel Hartlib, whom Milton addresses as “a person
-sent hither by some good providence from a far country, to be the
-occasion and incitement of great good to this island.” (<i>Of Education</i>,
-<span class="smcapuc">A.D.</span> 1644.) See Masson’s <i>Life of Milton</i>, vol. iii; also biographical and
-bibliographical account of Hartlib by H. Dircks, 1865. Hartlib’s
-mother was English. His father, when driven out of Poland by triumph
-of the Jesuits, settled at Elbing, where there was an English “Company of
-Merchants” with John Dury for their chaplain. Hartlib came to
-England not later than 1628, and devoted himself to the furtherance of a
-variety of schemes for the public good. He was one of those rare
-beings who labour to promote the schemes of others as if they were their
-own. He could, as he says, “contribute but little” himself, but “being
-carried forth to watch for the opportunities of provoking others, who
-can do more, to improve their talents, I have found experimentally that
-my endeavours have not been without effect.” (Quoted by Dircks, p.
-66.) The philosophy of Bacon seemed to have introduced an age of
-boundless improvement; and men like Comenius, Hartlib, Petty, and
-Dury, caught the first unchecked enthusiasm. “There is scarce one
-day,” so Hartlib wrote to Robert Boyle, “and one hour of the day or
-night, being brim full with all manner of objects of the most public and
-universal nature, but my soul is crying out ‘Phosphore redde diem!
-Quid gaudia nostra moraris? Phosphore redde diem!’”</p>
-
-<p>But in this world Hartlib looked in vain for the day. The income of
-£300 a year allowed him by Parliament was £700 in arrears at the
-Restoration, and he had then nothing to hope. His last years were
-attended by much physical suffering and by extreme poverty. He died
-as Evelyn thought at Oxford in 1662, but this is uncertain.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_67" id="Footnote_67"></a><a href="#FNanchor_67"><span class="label">[67]</span></a> <i>Dilucidatio</i>, Hartlib’s trans., p. 65.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_68" id="Footnote_68"></a><a href="#FNanchor_68"><span class="label">[68]</span></a> The <i>Dilucidation</i>, as he calls it, is added. All the books above
-mentioned are in the Library of the British Museum under <i>Komensky</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_69" id="Footnote_69"></a><a href="#FNanchor_69"><span class="label">[69]</span></a> Masson’s <i>Milton</i>, vol. iii, p. 224, Prof. Masson is quoting <i>Opera
-Didactica</i>, tom. ii, Introd.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_70" id="Footnote_70"></a><a href="#FNanchor_70"><span class="label">[70]</span></a> <i>Unum Necessarium</i>, quoted by Raumer.</p>
-
-<p>Compare George Eliot: “By desiring what is perfectly good, even
-when we don’t quite know what it is, and cannot do what we would, we
-are part of the Divine power against evil—widening the skirts of light and
-making the struggle with darkness narrower.”—<i>Middlemarch</i>, bk. iv,
-p. 308 of first edition.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_71" id="Footnote_71"></a><a href="#FNanchor_71"><span class="label">[71]</span></a> Compare Mulcaster, <a href="#Page_94"><i>supra</i>, p. 94</a>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_72" id="Footnote_72"></a><a href="#FNanchor_72"><span class="label">[72]</span></a> Comenius here follows Ratke, who, as I have mentioned above
-(p. 116), required beginners to study the translation <i>before the original</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_73" id="Footnote_73"></a><a href="#FNanchor_73"><span class="label">[73]</span></a> Professor Masson (<i>Life of Milton</i>, vol. iii, p. 205, <i>note</i>) gives us the
-following from chap. ix (cols. 42-44), of the <i>Didactica Magna</i>:—</p>
-
-<p>“Nor, to say something particularly on this subject, can any
-sufficient reason be given why the weaker sex [<i>sequior sexus</i>, literally
-the <i>later</i> or <i>following</i> sex, is his phrase, borrowed from Apuleius, and,
-though the phrase is usually translated the inferior sex, it seems to have
-been chosen by Comenius to avoid that implication] should be wholly
-shut out from liberal studies whether in the native tongue or in Latin.
-For equally are they God’s image; equally are they partakers of grace,
-and of the Kingdom to come; equally are they furnished with minds
-agile and capable of wisdom, yea, often beyond our sex; equally to
-them is there a possibility of attaining high distinction, inasmuch as they
-have often been employed by God Himself for the government of peoples,
-the bestowing of wholesome counsels on Kings and Princes, the science
-of medicine and other things useful to the human race, nay even the
-prophetical office, and the rattling reprimand of Priests and Bishops
-[etiam ad propheticum munus, et increpandos Sacerdotes Episcoposque,
-are the words; and as the treatise was prepared for the press in 1638
-one detects a reference, by the Moravian Brother in Poland to the
-recent fame of Jenny Geddes, of Scotland]. Why then should we
-admit them to the alphabet, but afterwards debar them from books?
-Do we fear their rashness? The more we occupy their thoughts, the
-less room will there be in them for rashness, which springs generally
-from vacuity of mind.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_74" id="Footnote_74"></a><a href="#FNanchor_74"><span class="label">[74]</span></a> Translated by Daniel Benham as <i>The School of Infancy</i>. London,
-1858.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_75" id="Footnote_75"></a><a href="#FNanchor_75"><span class="label">[75]</span></a> Here Comenius seems to be thinking of the intercourse of children
-when no older companion is present; Froebel made more of the very
-different intercourse when their thoughts and actions are led by some
-one who has studied how to lead them. Children constantly want help
-from their elders even in amusing themselves. On the other hand, it is
-only the very wisest of mortals who can give help enough and <i>no more</i>.
-Self-dependence may sometimes be cultivated by “a little wholesome
-neglect.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_76" id="Footnote_76"></a><a href="#FNanchor_76"><span class="label">[76]</span></a> Comical and at the same time melancholy results follow. In an
-elementary school, where the children “took up” geography for the
-Inspector, I once put some questions about St. Paul at Rome. I asked
-in what country Rome was, but nobody seemed to have heard of such a
-place. “It’s geography!” said I, and some twenty hands went up
-directly: their owners now answered quite readily, “In Italy.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_77" id="Footnote_77"></a><a href="#FNanchor_77"><span class="label">[77]</span></a> “A talent for History may be said to be born with us, as our chief
-inheritance. In a certain sense all men are historians. Is not every
-memory written quite full of annals...? Our very speech is
-curiously historical. Most men, you may observe, speak only to
-narrate.” (Carlyle on <i>History</i>. Miscellanies.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_78" id="Footnote_78"></a><a href="#FNanchor_78"><span class="label">[78]</span></a> South Kensington, which controls the drawing of millions of children,
-says precisely the opposite, and prescribes a kind of drawing,
-which, though it may give manual skill to adults, does not “afford
-delight” to the mind of children.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_79" id="Footnote_79"></a><a href="#FNanchor_79"><span class="label">[79]</span></a> “Generalem nos intendimus institutionem omnium qui homines nati
-sunt, ad omnia humana.... Vernaculæ (scholæ) scopus metaque erit,
-ut omnis juventus utriusque sexus, intra annum sextum et duodecimum
-seu decimum tertium, ea addoceatur quorum usus per totam vitam se
-extendat.” I quote this Latin from the excellent article <i>Coménius</i> (by
-several writers) in Buisson’s <i>Dictionnaire</i>. It is a great thing to get
-an author’s exact words. Unfortunately the writer in the <i>Dictionnaire</i>
-follows custom and does not give the means of verifying the quotation.
-Comenius in Latin I have never seen except in the British Museum.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_80" id="Footnote_80"></a><a href="#FNanchor_80"><span class="label">[80]</span></a> In Sermon on Charity Schools, A.D. 1745. The Bishop points
-out that “training up children is a very different thing from merely
-teaching them some truths necessary to be known or believed.” He
-goes into the historical aspect of the subject. As since the days of
-Elizabeth there has been legal provision for the maintenance of the
-poor, there has been “need also of some particular legal provision in
-behalf of poor children for their <i>education</i>; this not being included in
-what we call maintenance.” “But,” says the Bishop, “it might be
-necessary that a burden so entirely new as that of a poor-tax was at the
-time I am speaking of, should be as light as possible. Thus the legal
-provision for the poor was first settled without any particular consideration
-of that additional want in the case of children; as it still remains
-with scarce any alteration in this respect.” And <i>remained</i> for nearly a
-century longer. Great changes naturally followed and will follow from
-the extension of the franchise; and another century will probably see
-us with a Folkschool worthy of its importance. By that time we shall
-no longer be open to the sarcasm of “the foreign friend:” “It is
-highly instructive to visit English elementary schools, for there you
-find everything that should be avoided.” (M. Braun quoted by Mr. A.
-Sonnenschein. The <i>Old</i> Code was in force.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_81" id="Footnote_81"></a><a href="#FNanchor_81"><span class="label">[81]</span></a> “Adhuc sub judice lis est.” I find the editor of an American
-educational paper brandishing in the face of an opponent as a quotation
-from Professor N. A. Calkins’ “Ear and Voice Training”: “The
-senses are the only powers by which children can gain the elements of
-knowledge; and until these have been trained to act, no definite knowledge
-can be acquired.” But Calkins says, “act, under direction of
-the mind.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_82" id="Footnote_82"></a><a href="#FNanchor_82"><span class="label">[82]</span></a> “What do you learn from ‘Paradise Lost’? Nothing at all.
-What do you learn from a cookery book? Something new, something
-that you did not know before, in every paragraph. But would you
-therefore put the wretched cookery book on a higher level of estimation
-than the divine poem? What you owe to Milton is not any
-<i>knowledge</i>, of which a million separate items are but a million of
-advancing steps on the same earthly level; what you owe is <i>power</i>,
-that is, exercise and expansion to your own latent capacity of sympathy
-with the infinite, where every pulse and each separate influx is a step
-upward—a step ascending as upon a Jacob’s ladder from earth to
-mysterious altitudes above the earth. All the steps of knowledge from
-first to last carry you further on the same plane, but could never raise
-you one foot above your ancient level of earth; whereas the very <i>first</i>
-step in power is a flight, is an ascending into another element where
-earth is forgotten.” I have met with this as a quotation from De
-Quincey.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_83" id="Footnote_83"></a><a href="#FNanchor_83"><span class="label">[83]</span></a> When I visited (some years ago) the “École Modèle” at Brussels
-I was told that books were used for <i>nothing</i> except for learning to read.
-Comenius was saved from this consequence of his realism by his fervent
-Christianity. He valued the study of the Bible as highly as the Renascence
-scholars valued the study of the classics, though for a very
-different reason. He cared for the Bible not as literature, but as the
-highest authority on the problems of existence. Those who, like
-Matthew Arnold, may attribute to it far less authority may still treasure
-it as literature, while those who despise literature and recognise no
-authority above things would limit us to the curriculum of the “École
-Modèle” and care for natural science only.</p>
-
-<p>In this country we are fortunately able to advocate some reforms
-which were suggested by the realism of Comenius without incurring any
-suspicion of rejecting his Christianity. It is singular to see how the
-highest authorities of to-day—men conversant with the subject on the
-side of practice as well as theory—hold precisely the language which
-practical men have been wont to laugh at as “theoretical nonsense”
-ever since the days of Comenius. A striking instance will be found in
-a lecture by the Principal of the Battersea Training College (Rev. Canon
-Daniel) as reported in <i>Educational Times</i>, July, 1889. Compare what
-Comenius said (<a href="#Page_151"><i>supra</i> p. 151</a>) with the following: “Children are not
-sufficiently required to use their senses. They are allowed to observe
-by deputy. They look at Nature through the spectacles of Books, and
-through the eyes of the teacher, but do not observe for themselves. It
-might be expected that in object lessons and science lessons, which are
-specially intended to cultivate the observing faculty, this fault would be
-avoided, but I do not find that such is the case. I often hear lessons on
-objects that are not object lessons at all. The object is not allowed to
-speak for itself, eloquent though it is, and capable though it is of adapting
-its teaching to the youngest child who interrogates it. The teacher
-buries it under a heap of words and second-hand statements, thereby
-converting the object lesson into a verbal lesson and throwing away
-golden opportunities of forming the scientific habit of mind. Now
-mental science teaches us that our knowledge of the sensible qualities of
-the material world can come to us only through our senses, and through
-the right senses. If we had no senses we should know nothing about
-the material world at all; if we had a sense less we should be cut off
-from a whole class of facts; if we had as many senses as are ascribed to
-the inhabitants of Sirius in Voltaire’s novel, our knowledge would be
-proportionately greater than it is now. Words cannot compensate for
-sensations. The eloquence of a Cicero would not explain to a deaf man
-what music is, or to a blind man what scarlet is. Yet I have frequently
-seen teachers wholly disregard these obvious truths. They have taught
-as though their pupils had eyes that saw not, and ears that heard not,
-and noses that smelled not, and palates that tasted not, and skins that felt
-not, and muscles that would not work. They have insisted on taking
-the words out of Nature’s mouth and speaking for her. They have
-thought it derogatory to play a subordinate part to the object itself.”</p>
-
-<p>This subject has been well treated by Mr. Thos. M. Balliet in a paper
-on shortening the curriculum (<i>New York School Journal</i>, 10th Nov.,
-1888). “Studies,” says he, “are of two kinds (1) studies which supply the
-mind with thoughts of images, and (2) those which give us ‘labels,’ <i>i.e.</i>
-the means of indicating and so communicating thought. Under the last
-head come the study of language, writing (including spelling), notation,
-&amp;c.” Mr. Balliet proposes, as Comenius did, that the symbol subjects shall
-not be taken separately, but in connexion with the thought subjects.
-Especially in the mother-tongue, we should study language for thought,
-not thought for the sake of language.</p>
-
-<p>But after all though we may and <i>should</i> bring the young in connexion
-with the objects of thought and not with words merely, we must not
-forget that the scholastic aspect of things will differ from the practical.
-When brought into the schoolroom the thing must be divested of details
-and surroundings, and used to give a conception of one of a class. The
-fir tree of the schoolboy cannot be the fir tree of the wood-cutter. The
-“boiler” becomes a cylinder subject to internal or external pressure.
-It is not the thing that the engine-driver knows will burn and corrode,
-get foul in its tubes and loose in its joints, and be liable to burst. (See
-Mr. C. H. Benton on “Practical and Theoretical Training” in <i>Spectator</i>,
-10th Nov., 1888). The school knowledge of things no less than of
-words may easily be over-valued. It should be given not for itself but
-to excite interest and draw out the powers of the mind.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_84" id="Footnote_84"></a><a href="#FNanchor_84"><span class="label">[84]</span></a> Ruskin seems to be echoing Comenius (of whom perhaps he never
-heard) when he says “To be taught to see is to gain word and thought
-at once, and both true.” (<i>Address at Camb. Sch. of Art</i>, Oct. 1858.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_85" id="Footnote_85"></a><a href="#FNanchor_85"><span class="label">[85]</span></a> As far as my experience goes there are few men capable both of
-teaching and being taught, and of these rare beings Comenius was a
-noble example. The passage in which he acknowledges his obligation
-to the Jesuits’ <i>Janua</i> is a striking proof of his candour and open-mindedness.</p>
-
-<p>As an experiment in language-teaching this <i>Janua</i> is a very interesting
-book, and will be well worth a note. From Augustin and Alois de
-Backer’s <i>Bibliothèque des Ecrivains de la C. de Jésus</i>, I learn that the
-author William Bath or Bathe [Latin Bateus] was born in Dublin in
-1564, and died in Madrid in 1614. “A brief introduction to the skill
-of song as set forth by William Bathe, gent.” is attributed to him; but
-we know nothing of his origin or occupation till he entered on the Jesuit
-noviciate at Tournai in 1596. Either before or after this “he ran” as
-he himself tells us “the pleasant race of study” at Beauvais. After
-studying at Padua he was sent as Spiritual Father to the Irish College
-at Salamanca. Here, according to C. Sommervogel he wrote two
-Latin books. He also designed the <i>Janua Linguarum</i>, and carried out
-the plan with the help of the other members of the college. The book
-was published at Salamanca “apud de Cea Tesa” 1611, 4to. Four
-years afterwards an edition with English version added was published in
-London edited by Wm. Welde. I have never seen the Spanish version,
-but a copy of Welde’s edition (wanting title page) was bequeathed to me
-by a friend honoured by all English-speaking students of education,
-Joseph Payne. The <i>Janua</i> must have had great success in this country,
-and soon had other editors. In an old catalogue I have seen “<i>Janua
-Linguarum Quadrilinguis</i>, or a Messe of Tongues, Latine, English,
-French, Spanish, neatly served up together for a wholesome repast to
-the worthy curiositie of the studious, sm. 4to, Matthew Lowndes, 1617.”
-This must have been the early edition of Isaac Habrecht. I have his
-“<i>Janua Linguarum Silinguis</i>. <i>Argentinæ</i> (Strassburg), 1630,” and in
-the Preface he says that the first English edition came out in 1615, and
-that he had added a French version and published the book at London
-in four languages in 1617. I have seen “sixth edition 1627,” also published
-by Lowndes, and edited “opera I. H. (John Harmar, called in
-Catalogue of British Museum ‘Rector of Ewhurst’) Scholæ Sancti Albani
-Magistri primarii.” Harmar, I think, suppressed all mention of the
-author of the book, but he kept the title. This seems to have been
-altered by the celebrated Scioppius who published the book as <i>Pascasii
-Grosippi Mercurius bilinguis</i>.</p>
-
-<p>This Jesuits’ <i>Janua</i> is one of the most interesting experiments in
-language teaching I ever met with. Bathe and his co-adjutors collected
-as they believed all the common root words in the Latin language; and
-these they worked up into 1,200 short sentences in the form of proverbs.
-After the sentences follows a short Appendix <i>De ambiguis</i> of which
-the following is a specimen: “Dum malum comedis juxta malum navis,
-de malo commisso sub malo vetita meditare. While thou eatest an
-apple near the mast of a ship, think of the evil committed under the
-forbidden apple tree.” An alphabetical index of all the Latin words is
-then given, with the number of the sentence in which the word occurs.</p>
-
-<p>Prefixed to this <i>Janua</i> we find some introductory chapters in which the
-problem: What is the best way of learning a foreign language? is considered
-and some advance made towards a solution. “The body of every
-language consisteth of four principal members—words, congruity,
-phrases, and elegancy. The dictionary sets down the words, grammar
-the congruities, Authors the phrases, and Rhetoricians (with their
-figures) the elegancy. We call phrases the proper forms or peculiar
-manners of speaking which every Tongue hath.” (Chap. 1 <i>ad f.</i>)
-Hitherto, says Bathe, there have been in use, only two ways of learning
-a language, “regular, such as is grammar, to observe the congruities;
-and irregular such as is the common use of learners, by reading and
-speaking in vulgar tongues.” The “regular” way is more certain, the
-“irregular” is easier. So Bathe has planned a middle way which is to
-combine the advantages of the other two. The “congruities” are learnt
-regularly by the grammar. Why are not the “words” learned regularly
-by the dictionary? 1st, Because the Dictionary contains many useless
-words; 2nd, because compound words may be known from the root
-words without special learning; 3rd, because words as they stand in the
-Dictionary bear no sense and so cannot be remembered. By the use of
-this <i>Janua</i> all these objections will be avoided. Useful words and root
-words only are given, and they are worked up into sentences “easy to
-be remembered.” And with the exception of a few little words such as
-<i>et</i>, <i>in</i>, <i>qui</i>, <i>sum</i>, <i>fio</i> no word occurs a second time; thus, says Bathe,
-the labour of learning the language will be lightened and “as it was
-much more easy to have known all the living creatures by often looking
-into Noe’s Ark, wherein was a selected couple of each kind, than by
-travelling over all the world until a man should find here and there a
-creature of each kind, even in the same manner will all the words be
-far more easily learned by use of these sentences than by hearing, speaking
-or reading until a man do accidentally meet with every particular
-word.” (Proeme <i>ad f.</i>) “We hope no man will be so ingrateful as
-not to think this work very profitable,” says the author. For my own
-part I feel grateful for such an earnest attempt at “retrieving of the
-curse of Babylon,” but I cannot show my gratitude by declaring “this
-work very profitable.” The attempt to squeeze the greater part of a
-language into 1,200 short sentences could produce nothing better than
-a curiosity. The language could not be thus squeezed into the memory
-of the learner.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_86" id="Footnote_86"></a><a href="#FNanchor_86"><span class="label">[86]</span></a> This book must have had a great sale in England. Anchoran’s
-version (the Latin title of which is <i>Porta</i> not <i>Janua</i>) went through
-several editions. I have a copy of <i>Janua Linguarum Reserata</i>
-“formerly translated by Tho. Horn: afterwards much corrected and
-amended by Joh. Robotham: now carefully reviewed and exactly compared
-with all former editions, foreign and others, and much enlarged
-both in the Latine and English: together with a Portall ... by G. P.
-1647.” “W. D.” was a subsequent editor, and finally it was issued by
-Roger Daniel, to whom Comenius dedicates from Amsterdam in 1659 as
-“Domino Rogero Danieli, Bibliopolæ ac Typographo Londinensi
-celeberrimo.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_87" id="Footnote_87"></a><a href="#FNanchor_87"><span class="label">[87]</span></a> Eilhardus Lubinus or Eilert Lueben, born 1565; was Professor first
-of Poetry then of Theology at Rostock, where he died in 1621. This
-projector of the most famous school-book of modern times seems not to
-be mentioned in K. A. Schmid’s great <i>Encyklopädie</i>, at least in the first
-edition. (I have not seen the second.) I find from F. Sander’s <i>Lexikon
-d. Pädagogik</i> that Ratke declared he learnt nothing from Lubinus,
-while Comenius recognised him gratefully as his predecessor. This is
-just what we should have expected from the character of Ratke and of
-Comenius. Lubinus advocated the use of interlinear translations and
-published (says Sander) such translations of the New Testament, of
-Plautus, &amp;c. The very interesting Preface to the New Test., was
-translated into English by Hartlib and published as “The True and
-Readie Way to Learne the Latine Tongue by E. Lubinus,” &amp;c., 1654.
-The date given for Lubinus’ preface is 1614. L. finds fault with the
-grammar teaching which is thrashed into boys so that they hate their
-masters. He would appeal to the senses: “For from these things
-falling under the sense of the eyes, and as it were more known, we will
-make entrance and begin to learn the Latin speech. Four-footed living
-creatures, creeping things, fishes and birds which can neither be gotten
-nor live well in these parts ought to be painted. Others also, which
-because of their bulk and greatness cannot be shut up in houses may be
-made in a lesser form, or drawn with the pencil, yet of such bigness as
-they may be well seen by boys even afar off.” He says he has often
-counselled the Stationers to bring out a book “in which all things
-whatsoever which may be devised and written and seen by the eyes,
-might be described, so as there might be also added to all things and
-all parts and members of things, its own proper word, its own proper
-appellation or term expressed in the Latin and Dutch tongues” (pp.
-22, 23). “Visible things are first to be known by the eyes” (p. 23),
-and the joining of seeing the thing and hearing the name together “is
-by far the profitablest and the bravest course, and passing fit and applicable
-to the age of children.” Things themselves if possible, if not,
-pictures (p. 25). There are some capital hints on teaching children
-from things common in the house, in the street, &amp;c. One Hadrianus
-Junius has made a “nomenclator” that may be useful. In the pictures
-of the projected book there are to be lines under each object, and under
-its printed name. (The excellent device of corresponding numbers
-seems due to Comenius.) For printing below the pictures L. also suggests
-sentences which are simpler and better for children than those in the
-Vestibulum, <i>e.g.</i> “Panis in Mensa positus est, Felis vorat Murem.”</p>
-
-<p>In the Brit. Museum there is a copy of <i>Medulla Linguæ Græcæ</i> in
-which L. works up the root words of Greek into sentences. He was
-evidently a man with ideas. Comenius thought of them so highly that
-he tried to carry out another at Saros-Patak, the plan of a “Cœnobium”
-or Roman colony in which no language should be used but Latin.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_88" id="Footnote_88"></a><a href="#FNanchor_88"><span class="label">[88]</span></a> For full titles of the books referred to <a href="#Page_195">see p. 195</a>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_89" id="Footnote_89"></a><a href="#FNanchor_89"><span class="label">[89]</span></a> The solitaries of Port-Royal used to vary their mental toil with
-manual. A Jesuit having maliciously asked whether it was true that
-Monsieur Pascal made shoes, met with the awkward repartee, “Je ne
-sais pas s’il fait des souliers, mais je crois qu’il <i>vous a porté une fameuse
-botte</i>.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_90" id="Footnote_90"></a><a href="#FNanchor_90"><span class="label">[90]</span></a> A master in a great public school once stated in a school address
-what masters and boys felt to be true. “It would hardly be too much
-to say that the whole problem of education is how to surround the
-young with good influences. I believe we must go on to add that if the
-wisest man had set himself to work out this problem without the teaching
-of experience, he would have been little likely to hit upon the system
-of which we are so proud, and which we call “the Public School
-System.” If the real secret of education is to surround the young with
-good influences, is it not a strange paradox to take them at the very age
-when influences act most despotically and mass them together in large
-numbers, where much that is coarsest is sure to be tolerated, and much
-that is gentlest and most refining—the presence of mothers and sisters
-for example—is for a large part of the year a memory or an echo rather
-than a living voice? I confess I have never seen any answers to this
-objection which <i>apart from the test of experience</i> I should have been
-prepared to pronounce satisfactory. It is a simple truth that the moral
-dangers of our Public School System are enormous. It is the simple
-truth that do what you will in the way of precaution, you do give to
-boys of low, animal natures, the very boys who ought to be exceptionally
-subject to almost despotic restraint, exceptional opportunities of exercising
-a debasing influence over natures far more refined and spiritual
-than their own. And it is further the simple but the sad truth, that
-these exceptional opportunities are too often turned to account, and
-that the young boy’s character for a time—sometimes for a long time—is
-spoiled or vulgarized by the influence of unworthy companions.”
-This is what public schoolmasters, if their eyes are not blinded by
-routine, are painfully conscious of. But they find that in the end good
-prevails; the average boy gains a manly character and contributes
-towards the keeping up a healthy public opinion which is of great effect
-in restraining the evil-doer.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_91" id="Footnote_91"></a><a href="#FNanchor_91"><span class="label">[91]</span></a> “The number of boarders was never very great, because to a master
-were assigned no more than he could have beds for in his room.”
-(Fontaine’s <i>Mémoire</i>, Carré, p. 24.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_92" id="Footnote_92"></a><a href="#FNanchor_92"><span class="label">[92]</span></a> “Plerisque placet media quædam ratio, ut apud unum Præceptorem
-quinque sexve pueri instituantur: ita nec sodalitas deerit ætati, cui
-convenit alacritas; neque non sufficiet singulis cura Præceptoris; et
-facile vitabitur corruptio quam affert multitudo. Many take up with a
-middle course, and would have five or six boys placed with one preceptor;
-in this way they will not be without companionship at an age
-when from their liveliness they seem specially to need it, and the master
-may give sufficient care to each individual; moreover, there will be an
-easy avoidance of the moral corruption which numbers bring.” Erasmus
-on <i>Christian Marriage</i> quoted by Coustel in Sainte-Beuve, P.Riij, bk.
-4, p. 404.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_93" id="Footnote_93"></a><a href="#FNanchor_93"><span class="label">[93]</span></a> Lancelot’s “New way of easily learning Latin (<i>Nouvelle Méthode
-pour apprendre facilement la langue Latine</i>)” was published in 1644, his
-method for Greek in 1655. This was followed in 1657 by his “Garden
-of Greek Roots (<i>Jardin des racines grecques</i>)” (see Cadet, pp. 15 ff.)</p>
-
-<p>The Port-Royalists seem to me in some respects far behind Comenius,
-but they were right in rejecting him as a methodiser in language-learning.
-Lancelot in the preface to his “Garden of Greek Roots,”
-says that the <i>Janua</i> of Comenius is totally wanting in method. “It
-would need,” says he, “an extraordinary memory; and from my experience
-I should say that few children could learn this book, for it is
-long and difficult; and as the words in it are not repeated, those at the
-beginning would be forgotten before the learner reached the end. So
-he would feel a constant discouragement, because he would always find
-himself in a new country where he would recognize nothing. And the
-book is full of all sorts of uncommon and difficult words, and the first
-chapters throw no light on those which follow.” To this well-grounded
-criticism he adds: “The <i>entrances to the Tongues</i>, to deserve its name,
-should be nothing but a short and simple way leading us as soon as
-possible to read the best books in the language, so that we might not
-only acquire the words we are in need of, but also all that is most
-characteristic in the idiom and pure in the phraseology, which make up
-the most difficult and most important part of every language.” (Quoted
-by Cadet, p. 17).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_94" id="Footnote_94"></a><a href="#FNanchor_94"><span class="label">[94]</span></a> Lemaître, a nephew of La Mère Angélique, was one of the most
-celebrated orators in France. In renouncing the world for Port-Royal,
-he retired from a splendid position at the Bar. Such men had qualifications
-out of the reach of ordinary schoolmasters. Dufossé, in after
-years, told how, when he was a boy, Lemaître called him often to his
-room and gave him solid instruction in learning and piety. “He read
-to me and made me read pieces from poets and orators, and saw that
-I noticed the beauties in them both in thought and diction. Moreover
-he taught me the right emphasis and articulation both in verse and
-prose, in which he himself was admirable, having the charm of a fine
-voice and all else that goes to make a great orator. He gave me also
-many rules for good translation and for making my progress in that art
-easy to me.” (Dufossé’s <i>Mémoires, &amp;c.</i>, quoted by Cadet, p. 9.) It was
-Lemaître who instructed Racine (born 1639, admitted at Les Granges,
-Port Royal des Champs, in 1655).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_95" id="Footnote_95"></a><a href="#FNanchor_95"><span class="label">[95]</span></a> In 1670 the General of the Jesuits issued a letter to the Society against
-the Cartesian philosophy. The University in this agreed with its rivals,
-and petitioned the Parliament to prohibit the Cartesian teaching. This
-produced the burlesque <i>Arrêt</i> by Boileau (1675). “Whereas it is stated
-that for some years past a stranger named Reason has endeavoured to
-make entry by force into the Schools of the University ... where
-Aristotle has always been acknowledged as judge without appeal and
-not accountable for his opinions.... Be it known by these presents
-that this Court has maintained and kept and does maintain and keep
-the said Aristotle in perfect and peaceable possession of the said schools
-... and in order that for the future he may not be interfered with in
-them, it has banished Reason for ever from the Schools of the said
-University, and forbids his entry to disturb and disquiet the said
-Aristotle in the possession and enjoyment of the aforesaid schools, under
-pain and penalty of being declared a Jansenist and a lover of innovations.”
-(Quoted by Cadet, p. 34.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_96" id="Footnote_96"></a><a href="#FNanchor_96"><span class="label">[96]</span></a> Although so much time is given to the study of words, practice in
-the use of words is almost entirely neglected, and the English schoolboy
-remains inarticulate.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_97" id="Footnote_97"></a><a href="#FNanchor_97"><span class="label">[97]</span></a> Rollin somewhat extends Quintilian’s statement: “The desire
-of learning rests in the will which you cannot force.” About attempts
-to coerce the will in the absence of interest, I may quote a passage
-from a lecture of mine at Birmingham in 1884, when I did not know
-that I had behind me such high authorities as Quintilian and Rollin:
-“I should divide the powers of the mind that may be cultivated in the
-school-room into two classes: in the first I should put all the higher
-powers—grasp of meaning, perception of analogy, observation, reflection,
-imagination, intellectual memory; in the other class is one power only,
-and that is a kind of memory that depends on the association of sounds.
-How is it then that in most school-rooms far more time is spent in
-cultivating this last and least-valuable power than all the rest put
-together? The explanation is easy. All the higher powers can be
-exercised only when the pupils are interested, or, as Mr. Thring puts it,
-‘care for what they are about.’ The memory that depends on associating
-sounds is independent of interest and can be secured by simple
-repetition. Now it is very hard to awaken interest, and still harder to
-maintain it. That magician’s wand, the cane, with which the schoolmasters
-of olden time worked such wonders, is powerless here or
-powerful only in the negative direction; and so is every form of punishment.
-You may tell a boy—‘If you can’t say your lesson you shall
-stay in and write it out half-a-dozen times!’ and the threat may have
-effect; but no ‘<i>instans tyrannus</i>’ from Orbilius downwards has ever
-thought of saying, ‘If you don’t take an interest in your work, I’ll keep
-you in till you do!’ So teachers very naturally prefer the kind of
-teaching in which they can make sure of success.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_98" id="Footnote_98"></a><a href="#FNanchor_98"><span class="label">[98]</span></a> Here as usual Rollin uses Quintilian without directly quoting him.
-He gives in a note the passage he had in his mind. “Id imprimis
-cavere oportebit, ne studia qui amare nondum potest oderit; et amaritudinem
-semel præceptam etiam ultra rudes annos reformidet (Quint.,
-lib. j, cap. 1.)”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_99" id="Footnote_99"></a><a href="#FNanchor_99"><span class="label">[99]</span></a> Rousseau, Pestalozzi and Froebel were also in this sense realists,
-but they held that the educational value of knowledge lay not in itself,
-but only in so far as it was an instrument for developing the faculties of
-the mind.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_100" id="Footnote_100"></a><a href="#FNanchor_100"><span class="label">[100]</span></a> Henry Barnard (<i>English Pedagogy</i>, second series, p. 192), speaks of
-Hoole as “one of the pioneer educators of his century.” According to
-Barnard he was born at Wakefield, in 1610, and died in 1666, rector of
-“Stock Billerica” (perhaps Stock with Billericay), in Essex.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_101" id="Footnote_101"></a><a href="#FNanchor_101"><span class="label">[101]</span></a> A very interesting suggestion of Cowley’s is that another house
-be built for poor men’s sons who show ability. These shall be brought
-up “with the same conveniences that are enjoyed even by rich men’s
-children (though they maintain the fewer for that cause), there being
-nothing of eminent and illustrious to be expected from a low, sordid,
-and hospital-like education.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_102" id="Footnote_102"></a><a href="#FNanchor_102"><span class="label">[102]</span></a> It would seem as if these Puritans were more active in body than
-in mind: even the seniors, like the children at Port-Royal, <i>tombent dans
-la nonchalance</i>. Dury has to lay it down that “the Governour and
-Ushers and Steward if they be in health should not go to bed till ten.”
-(p. 30.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_103" id="Footnote_103"></a><a href="#FNanchor_103"><span class="label">[103]</span></a> It is a sign of the failure of all attempts to establish educational
-science in England that though the meaning of “real” and “realities”
-which connected them with <i>res</i> seemed established in the sixteen hundreds,
-our language soon lost it again. According to a writer in <i>Meyer’s
-Conversations Lexicon</i> (first edition) “<i>reales</i>” in this sense occurs first
-in Taubmann, 1614. Whether this is correct or not it was certainly
-about this time that there arose a contest between <i>Humanismus</i> and
-<i>Realismus</i>, a contest now at its height in the <i>Gymnasien</i> and <i>Realschulen</i>
-of Germany. For a discussion of it, <i>see</i> M. Arnold’s “Literature and
-Science,” referred to above (p. 154).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_104" id="Footnote_104"></a><a href="#FNanchor_104"><span class="label">[104]</span></a> Many of Petty’s proposals are now realized in the South Kensington
-Museum.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_105" id="Footnote_105"></a><a href="#FNanchor_105"><span class="label">[105]</span></a> Later in the century Locke recommended that “working schools
-should be set up in every parish,” (<i>see</i> Fox-Bourne’s <i>Locke</i>, or Cambridge
-edition of the <i>Thoughts c. Ed.</i>, App. A, p. 189). The Quakers seem to
-have early taken up “industrious education.” John Bellers, whose
-<i>Proposals for Raising a College of Industry</i> (1696) was reprinted by Robt.
-Owen, has some very good notions. After advising that boys and girls
-be taught to knit, spin, &amp;c., and the bigger boys turning, &amp;c., he says,
-“Thus the Hand employed brings Profit, <i>the Reason used in it makes
-wise</i>, and the Will subdued makes them good” (<i>Proposals</i>, p. 18). Years
-afterwards in a Letter to the Yearly Meeting (dated 1723), he says, “It
-may be observed that some of the Boys in Friends’ Workhouse in
-Clerkenwell by their present employment of spinning are capable to
-earn their own living.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_106" id="Footnote_106"></a><a href="#FNanchor_106"><span class="label">[106]</span></a> Petty does not lose sight of the body. The “educands” are to
-“use such exercises whether in work or for recreation as tend to the
-health, agility, and strength of their bodies.”</p>
-
-<p>I have quoted Petty from the very valuable collection of English
-writings on Education reprinted in Henry Barnard’s <i>English Pedagogy</i>,
-2 vols. Petty is in Vol. I. In this vol. we have plenty of evidence of
-the working of the Baconian spirit; <i>e.g.</i>, we find Sir Matthew Hale in
-a <i>Letter of Advice to his Grandchildren</i>, written in 1678, saying that there
-is little use or improvement in “notional speculations in logic or
-philosophy delivered by others; the rather because bare speculations
-and notions have little experience and external observation to confirm
-them, and they rarely fix the minds especially of young men. But that
-part of philosophy that is real may be improved and confirmed by daily
-observation, and is more stable and yet more certain and delightful, and
-goes along with a man all his life, whatever employment or profession
-he undertakes.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_107" id="Footnote_107"></a><a href="#FNanchor_107"><span class="label">[107]</span></a> “In this respect,” says Professor Masson, “the passion and the
-projects of Comenius were a world wider than Milton’s.” (<i>L. of M.</i>
-iij, p. 237.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_108" id="Footnote_108"></a><a href="#FNanchor_108"><span class="label">[108]</span></a> <i>Of Education. To Master Samuel Hartlib</i> (“the Tractate” as it
-is usually called), was published by Milton first in 1644, and again in
-1673. <i>See</i> Oscar Browning’s edition, Cambridge Univ. Press.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_109" id="Footnote_109"></a><a href="#FNanchor_109"><span class="label">[109]</span></a> The University of Cambridge. The first examination was in
-June, 1880.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_110" id="Footnote_110"></a><a href="#FNanchor_110"><span class="label">[110]</span></a> “Believe it, my good friend, to love truth for truth’s sake is the
-principal part of human perfection in this world and the seed-plot of all
-other virtues.” L. to Bolde, quoted by Fowler, <i>Locke</i>, p. 120. This
-shows us that according to Locke “the principal part of human
-perfection” is to be found in the intellect.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_111" id="Footnote_111"></a><a href="#FNanchor_111"><span class="label">[111]</span></a> Lady Masham seems to consider these two characteristics identical.
-She wrote to Leclerc of Locke after his death: “He was always, in the
-greatest and in the smallest affairs of human life, as well as in speculative
-opinions, disposed to follow reason, whosoever it were that
-suggested it; he being ever a faithful servant, I had almost said a slave,
-to truth; never abandoning her for anything else, and following her
-for her own sake purely” (quoted by Fox-Bourne). But it is one
-thing to desire truth, and another to think one’s own reasoning power
-the sole means of obtaining it.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_112" id="Footnote_112"></a><a href="#FNanchor_112"><span class="label">[112]</span></a> “I am far from imagining myself infallible; but yet I should be
-loth to differ from any thinking man; being fully persuaded there are
-very few things of pure speculation wherein two thinking men who
-impartially seek truth can differ if they give themselves the leisure to
-examine their hypotheses and understand one another” (L. to W. M.,
-26 Dec., 1692). Again he writes: “I am persuaded that upon debate
-you and I cannot be of two opinions, nor I think any two men used to
-think with freedom, who really prefer truth to opiniatrety and a little
-foolish vain-glory of not having made a mistake” (L. to W. M.,
-3 Sept., 1694).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_113" id="Footnote_113"></a><a href="#FNanchor_113"><span class="label">[113]</span></a> Compare Carlyle:—“Except thine own eye have got to see it,
-except thine own soul have victoriously struggled to clear vision and
-belief of it, what is the thing seen or the thing believed by another or
-by never so many others? Alas, it is not thine, though thou look on
-it, brag about it, and bully and fight about it till thou die, striving to
-persuade thyself and all men how much it is thine! Not <i>it</i> is thine, but
-only a windy echo and tradition of it bedded [an echo <i>bedded</i>?] in
-hypocrisy, ending sure enough in tragical futility is thine.” Froude’s
-<i>Thos. Carlyle</i>, ij, 10. Similarly Locke wrote to Bolde in 1699:—“To
-be learned in the lump by other men’s thoughts, and to be right by
-saying after others is much the easier and quieter way; but how a
-rational man that should enquire and know for himself can content
-himself with a faith or religion taken upon trust, or with such a servile
-submission of his understanding as to admit all and nothing else but
-what fashion makes passable among men, is to me astonishing.”
-Quoted by Fowler, <i>Locke</i>, p. 118.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_114" id="Footnote_114"></a><a href="#FNanchor_114"><span class="label">[114]</span></a> For Rabelais, <a href="#Page_67"><i>see</i> p. 67 <i>supra</i></a>.</p>
-
-<p>In the notes to the Cambridge edition of the <i>Thoughts</i> Locke’s advice
-on physical education is discussed and compared with the results of
-modern science by Dr. J. F. Payne.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_115" id="Footnote_115"></a><a href="#FNanchor_115"><span class="label">[115]</span></a> “Examinations directed, as the paper examinations of the numerous
-examining boards now flourishing are directed, to finding out what the
-pupil knows, have the effect of concentrating the teacher’s effort upon the
-least important part of his function.” Mark Pattison in <i>N. Quart. M.</i>,
-January, 1880.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_116" id="Footnote_116"></a><a href="#FNanchor_116"><span class="label">[116]</span></a> Michelet (<i>Nos fils</i>, chap. ij. <i>ad f.</i> p. 170), says of Montaigne’s essay:
-“c’est déjà une belle esquisse, vive et forte, une tentative pour donner,
-<i>non l’objet</i>, le savoir, mais <i>le sujet</i>, c’est l’homme.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_117" id="Footnote_117"></a><a href="#FNanchor_117"><span class="label">[117]</span></a> Pope seems to contrast Montaigne and Locke:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">“But ask not to what doctors I apply!</div>
-<div class="verse">“Sworn to no master, of no sect am I:</div>
-<div class="verse">“As drives the storm, at any door I knock,</div>
-<div class="verse">“And house with Montaigne now, or now with Locke.”</div>
-<div class="verse right"><i>Satires</i> iij., 26.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Perhaps as Dr. Abbott suggests he took Montaigne as representing
-active and Locke contemplative life.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_118" id="Footnote_118"></a><a href="#FNanchor_118"><span class="label">[118]</span></a> <i>See</i> “An introduction to the History of Educational Theories,” by
-Oscar Browning.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_119" id="Footnote_119"></a><a href="#FNanchor_119"><span class="label">[119]</span></a> “History and the mathematics, I think, are the most proper and
-advantageous studies for persons of your quality; the other are fitter
-for schoolmen and people that must live by their learning, though a
-little insight and taste of them will be no burthen or inconvenience to
-you, especially Natural Philosophy.” <i>Advice to a young Lord written
-by his father</i>, 1691, p. 29.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_120" id="Footnote_120"></a><a href="#FNanchor_120"><span class="label">[120]</span></a> “Il n’y a point avant la raison de véritable éducation pour
-l’homme.” (<i>N. H.</i>, 5th P., Lett. 3. Conf. <a href="#Page_227"><i>supra</i>, p. 227</a>.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_121" id="Footnote_121"></a><a href="#FNanchor_121"><span class="label">[121]</span></a> “La première éducation doit donc être purement négative. Elle
-consiste, non point à enseigner la vertu ni la vérité, mais à garantir le cœur
-du vice et l’esprit de l’erreur. Si vous pouviez ne rien faire et ne rien
-laisser faire; si vous pouviez amener votre élève sain et robuste à l’âge
-de douze ans, sans qu’il sût distinguer sa main droite de sa main gauche,
-dès vos premières leçons les yeux de son entendement s’ouvriraient à la
-raison; sans préjugés, sans habitudes, il n’aurait rien en lui qui pût
-contrarier l’effet de vos soins. Bientôt il deviendrait entre vos mains le
-plus sage des hommes; et, en commençant par ne rien faire, vous
-auriez fait un prodige d’éducation.” <i>Ém.</i> ij., 80.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_122" id="Footnote_122"></a><a href="#FNanchor_122"><span class="label">[122]</span></a> “Exercez son corps, ses organes, ses sens, ses forces, mais tenez
-son âme oisive aussi longtemps qu’il se pourra. Redoutez tous les sentiments
-antérieurs au jugement qui les apprécie. Retenez, arrêtez les
-impressions étrangères: et, pour empêcher le mal de naître, ne vous
-pressez point de faire le bien; car il n’est jamais tel que quand la raison
-l’éclaire. Regardez tous les délais comme des avantages: c’est gagner
-beaucoup que d’avancer vers le terme sans rien perdre; laissez mûrir
-l’enfance dans les enfants. Enfin quelque leçon leur devient-elle nécessaire,
-gardez-vous de la donner aujourd’hui, si vous pouvez différer
-jusqu’à demain sans danger.” <i>Ém.</i> ij., 80.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_123" id="Footnote_123"></a><a href="#FNanchor_123"><span class="label">[123]</span></a> “Effrayez-vous donc peu de cette oisiveté prétendue. Que diriez-vous
-d’un homme qui, pour mettre toute la vie à profit, ne voudrait
-jamais dormir? Vous diriez: Cet homme est insensé; il ne jouit pas
-du temps, il se l’ôte; pour fuir le sommeil il court à la mort. Songez
-donc que c’est ici la même chose, et que l’enfance est le sommeil de la
-raison.” <i>Ém.</i> ij., 99.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_124" id="Footnote_124"></a><a href="#FNanchor_124"><span class="label">[124]</span></a> “Il n’y a pas de philosophie plus superficielle que celle qui, prenant
-l’homme comme un être égoïste et viager, prétend l’expliquer et lui
-tracer ses devoirs en dehors de la société dont il est une partie. Autant
-vaut considérer l’abeille abstraction faite de la ruche, et dire qu’à elle
-seule l’abeille construit son alvéole.” Renan, <i>La Réforme</i>, 312.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_125" id="Footnote_125"></a><a href="#FNanchor_125"><span class="label">[125]</span></a> “Tout est bien, sortant des mains de l’Auteur des choses; tout
-dégénère entre les mains de l’homme.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_126" id="Footnote_126"></a><a href="#FNanchor_126"><span class="label">[126]</span></a> “Nous naissons faibles, nous avons besoin de forces; nous naissons
-dépourvus de tout, nous avons besoin d’assistance; nous naissons stupides,
-nous avons besoin de jugement. Tout ce que nous n’avons pas à
-notre naissance, et dont nous avons besoin étant grands, nous est donné
-par l’éducation. Cette éducation nous vient ou de la nature, ou des
-hommes, ou des choses. Le développement interne de nos facultés et de
-nos organes est l’éducation de la nature; l’usage qu’on nous apprend à
-faire de ce développement est l’éducation des hommes; et l’acquis de
-notre propre expérience sur les objets qui nous affectent est l’éducation
-des choses.” <i>Ém.</i> j., 6.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_127" id="Footnote_127"></a><a href="#FNanchor_127"><span class="label">[127]</span></a> “Puisque le concours des trois éducations est nécessaire à leur perfection,
-c’est sur celle à laquelle nous ne pouvons rien qu’il faut diriger
-les deux autres.” <i>Ém.</i> j., 7.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_128" id="Footnote_128"></a><a href="#FNanchor_128"><span class="label">[128]</span></a> “Vivre ce n’est pas respirer, c’est agir; c’est faire usage de nos organes,
-de nos sens, de nos facultés, de toutes les parties de nous-mêmes
-qui nous donnent le sentiment de notre existence. L’homme qui a le
-plus vécu n’est pas celui qui a compté le plus d’années, mais celui qui a
-le plus senti la vie.” <i>Ém.</i> j., 13.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_129" id="Footnote_129"></a><a href="#FNanchor_129"><span class="label">[129]</span></a> “On ne connaît point l’enfance: sur les fausses idées qu’on en a, plus
-on va, plus on s’égare. Les plus sages s’attachent à ce qu’il importe aux
-hommes de savoir, sans considérer ce que les enfants sont en état d’apprendre.
-Ils cherchent toujours l’homme dans l’enfant, sans penser à ce
-qu’il est avant que d’être homme. Voilà l’êtude à laquelle je me suis le
-plus appliqué, afin que, quand toute ma méthode serait chimérique et
-fausse, on pût toujours profiter de mes observations. Je puis avoir
-très-mal vu ce qu’il faut faire; mais je crois avoir bien vu le sujet sur
-lequel on doit opérer. Commencez donc par mieux étudier vos élèves;
-car très-assurément vous ne les connaissez point.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_130" id="Footnote_130"></a><a href="#FNanchor_130"><span class="label">[130]</span></a> “La nature veut que les enfants soient enfants avant que d’être
-hommes. Si nous voulons pervertir cet ordre, nous produirons des fruits
-précoces qui n’auront ni maturité ni saveur, et ne tarderont pas à se corrompre:
-nous aurons de jeunes docteurs et de vieux enfants. L’enfance
-a des manières de voir, de penser, de sentir, qui lui sont propres; rien
-n’est moins sensé que d’y vouloir substituer les nôtres.” <i>Ém.</i> ij., 75;
-also in <i>N. H.</i>, 478.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_131" id="Footnote_131"></a><a href="#FNanchor_131"><span class="label">[131]</span></a> “Nous ne savons jamais nous mettre à la place des enfants; nous
-n’entrons pas dans leurs idées, nous leur prêtons les nôtres; et, suivant
-toujours nos propres raisonnements, avec des chaînes de vérités nous
-n’entassons qu’extravagances et qu’erreurs dans leur tête.” <i>Ém.</i> iij.,
-185.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_132" id="Footnote_132"></a><a href="#FNanchor_132"><span class="label">[132]</span></a> “Je voudrais qu’un homme judicieux nous donnât un traité de
-l’art d’observer les enfants. Cet art serait très-important à connaître:
-les pères et les maîtres n’en ont pas encore les éléments.” <i>Ém.</i> iij.,
-224.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_133" id="Footnote_133"></a><a href="#FNanchor_133"><span class="label">[133]</span></a> Rousseau says: “Full of what is going on in your own head, you
-do not see the effect you produce in their head: Pleins de ce qui se
-passe dans votre tête vous ne voyez pas l’effet que vous produisez dans
-la leur.” (<i>Ém.</i> lib. ij., 83.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_134" id="Footnote_134"></a><a href="#FNanchor_134"><span class="label">[134]</span></a> “Or, toutes les études forcées de ces pauvres infortunés tendent à
-ces objets entièrement étrangers à leurs esprits. Qu’on juge de l’attention
-qu’ils y peuvent donner. Les pédagogues qui nous étalent en
-grand appareil les instructions qu’ils donnent à leurs disciples sont
-payés pour tenir un autre langage: cependant on voit, par leur propre
-conduite, qu’ils pensent exactement comme moi. Car que leur
-apprennent-ils enfin? Des mots, encore des mots, et toujours des mots.
-Parmi les diverses sciences qu’ils se vantent de leur enseigner, ils se
-gardent bien de choisir celles qui leur seraient véritablement utiles,
-parce que ce seraient des sciences de choses, et qu’ils n’y réussiraient
-pas; mais celles qu’on paraît savoir quand on en sait les termes, le
-blason, la géographie, la chronologie, les langues, etc.; toutes études si
-loin de l’homme, et surtout de l’enfant, que c’est une merveille si rien
-de tout cela lui peut être utile une seule fois en sa vie.” <i>Ém.</i> ij., 100.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_135" id="Footnote_135"></a><a href="#FNanchor_135"><span class="label">[135]</span></a> “En quelque étude que ce puisse être, sans l’idée des choses représentées,
-les signes représentants ne sont rien. On borne pourtant toujours
-l’enfant à ces signes, sans jamais pouvoir lui faire comprendre
-aucune des choses qu’ils représentent.” <i>Ém.</i> ij., 102.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_136" id="Footnote_136"></a><a href="#FNanchor_136"><span class="label">[136]</span></a> “Non, si la nature donne au cerveau d’un enfant cette souplesse qui
-le rend propre à recevoir toutes sortes d’impressions, ce n’est pas pour
-qu’on y grave des noms de rois, des dates, des termes de blason, de
-sphère, de géographie, et tous ces mots sans aucun sens pour son âge et
-sans aucune utilité pour quelque âge que ce soit, dont on accable sa
-triste et stérile enfance; mais c’est pour que toutes les idées qu’il peut
-concevoir et qui lui sont utiles, toutes celles qui se rapportent à son
-bonheur et doivent l’éclairer un jour sur ses devoirs, s’y tracent de bonne
-heure en caractères ineffaçables, et lui servent à se conduire pendant sa
-vie d’une manière convenable à son être et à ses facultés.” <i>Ém.</i> ij., 105;
-also <i>N. H.</i>, P. v., L. 3.</p>
-
-<p>Sans étudier dans les livres, l’espèce de mémoire que peut avoir un
-enfant ne reste pas pour cela oisive; tout ce qu’il voit, tout ce qu’il entend
-le frappe, et il s’en souvient; il tient registre en lui-même des
-actions, des discours des hommes; et tout ce qui l’environne est le livre
-dans lequel, sans y songer, il enrichit continuellement sa mémoire, en
-attendant que son jugement puisse en profiter. C’est dans le choix de
-ces objets, c’est dans le soin de lui présenter sans cesse ceux qu’il peut
-connaître, et de lui cacher ceux qu’il doit ignorer, que consiste le véritable
-art de cultiver en lui cette première faculté; et c’est par là qu’il faut
-tâcher de lui former un magasin de connaissances qui servent à son
-éducation durant sa jeunesse, et à sa conduite dans tous les temps.
-Cette méthode, il est vrai, ne forme point de petits prodiges et ne fait
-pas briller les gouvernantes et les précepteurs; mais elle forme des
-hommes judicieux, robustes, sains de corps et d’entendement, qui, sans
-s’être fait admirer étant jeunes, se font honorer étant grands.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_137" id="Footnote_137"></a><a href="#FNanchor_137"><span class="label">[137]</span></a> “L’activité défaillante se concentre dans le cœur du vieillard; dans
-celui de l’enfant elle est surabondante et s’étend au dehors; il se sent,
-pour ainsi dire, assez de vie pour animer tout ce qui l’environne. Qu’il
-fasse ou qu’il défasse, il n’importe; il suffit qu’il change l’état des choses,
-et tout changement est une action. Que s’il semble avoir plus de penchant
-à détruire, ce n’est point par méchanceté, c’est que l’action qui
-forme est toujours lente, et que celle qui détruit, étant plus rapide, convient
-mieux à sa vivacité.” <i>Ém.</i> j., 47.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_138" id="Footnote_138"></a><a href="#FNanchor_138"><span class="label">[138]</span></a> It would be difficult to find a man more English, in a good sense,
-than the present Lord Derby or, whether we say it in praise or dispraise,
-a man less like Rousseau. So it is interesting to find him in agreement
-with Rousseau in condemning the ordinary restraints of the school-room.
-“People are beginning to find out what, if they would use their
-own observation more, and not follow one another like sheep, they
-would have found out long ago, that it is doing positive harm to a
-young child, mental and bodily harm, to keep it learning or pretending
-to learn, the greater part of the day. Nature says to a child, ‘Run
-about,’ the schoolmaster says, ‘Sit still;’ and as the schoolmaster
-can punish on the spot, and Nature only long afterwards, he is obeyed,
-and health and brain suffer.”—<i>Speech in 1864.</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_139" id="Footnote_139"></a><a href="#FNanchor_139"><span class="label">[139]</span></a> All this is very crude, and so is the artifice by which Julie in the
-<i>Nouvelle Héloïse</i> entraps her son into learning to read. No doubt
-Rousseau is right when he says that where there is a desire to read the
-power is sure to come. But “reading” is one thing in the lives of the
-labouring classes to whom it means reading aloud in school, and quite
-another in families of literary tastes and habits with whom the range of
-thought is in a great measure dependent on books. In such families
-the children learn to read as surely as they learn to talk. They
-mostly have access to books which they read to themselves for
-pleasure; and of course it is absurdly untrue to say that they learn
-nothing but words and do not think. In my opinion it may be questioned
-whether the world of fiction into which their reading gives them
-the <i>entrée</i> does not withdraw them too much from the actual world in
-which they live. The elders find it very convenient when the child can
-always be depended on to amuse himself with a book; but noise and
-motion contribute more to health of body and perhaps of mind also.
-While children of well-to-do parents often read too much, the children
-of our schools “under government” hardly get a notion what reading
-is. In these schools “reading” always stands for vocal reading, and
-the power and the habit of using books for pleasure or for knowledge
-(other than verbal) are little cultivated.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_140" id="Footnote_140"></a><a href="#FNanchor_140"><span class="label">[140]</span></a> “Il veut tout toucher, tout manier; ne vous opposez point à cette
-inquiétude; elle lui suggère un apprentissage très-nécessaire. C’est
-ainsi qu’il apprend à sentir la chaleur, le froid, la dureté, la mollesse,
-la pesanteur, la légèreté des corps; à juger de leur grandeur, de leur
-figure et de toutes leurs qualités sensibles, en regardant, palpant,
-écoutant, surtout en comparant la vue au toucher, en estimant à l’œil
-la sensation qu’ils feraient sous ses doigts.” <i>Ém.</i> j., 43.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_141" id="Footnote_141"></a><a href="#FNanchor_141"><span class="label">[141]</span></a> “Voyez un chat entrer pour la première fois dans une chambre: il
-visite, il regarde, il flaire, il ne reste pas un moment en repos, il ne se
-fie à rien qu’après avoir tout examiné, tout connu. Ainsi fait un enfant
-commençant à marcher, et entrant pour ainsi dire dans l’espace du
-monde. Toute la différence est qu’à la vue, commune à l’enfant et au
-chat, le premier joint, pour observer, les mains que lui donna la nature,
-et l’autre l’odorat subtil dont elle l’a doué. Cette disposition, bien ou
-mal cultivée, est ce qui rend les enfants adroits ou lourds, pesants ou
-dispos, étourdis ou prudents. Les premiers mouvements naturels de
-l’homme étant donc de se mesurer avec tout ce qui l’environne, et
-d’éprouver dans chaque objet qu’il aperçoit toutes les qualités sensibles
-qui peuvent se rapporter à lui, sa première étude est une sorte de
-physique expérimentale relative à sa propre conservation, et dont on le
-détourne par des études spéculatives avant qu’il ait reconnu sa place
-ici-bas. Tandis que ses organes délicats et flexibles peuvent s’ajuster
-aux corps sur lesquels ils doivent agir, tandis que ses sens encore purs
-sont exempts d’illusion, c’est le temps d’exercer les uns et les autres
-aux fonctions qui leur sont propres; c’est le temps d’apprendre à
-connaître les rapports sensibles que les choses ont avec nous. Comme
-tout ce qui entre dans l’entendement humain y vient par les sens, la
-première raison de l’homme est une raison sensitive; c’elle qui sert de
-base à la raison intellectuelle: nos premiers maîtres de philosophie sont
-nos pieds, nos mains, nos yeux. Substituer des livres à tout cela, ce
-n’est pas nous apprendre à raisonner, c’est nous apprendre à nous
-servir de la raison d’autrui; c’est nous apprendre à beaucoup croire, et
-à ne jamais rien savoir. Pour exercer un art, il faut commencer par
-s’en procurer les instruments; et, pour pouvoir employer utilement ces
-instruments, il faut les faire assez solides pour résister à leur usage.
-Pour apprendre à penser, il faut donc exercer nos membres, nos sens,
-nos organes, qui sont les instruments de notre intelligence; et pour
-tirer tout le parti possible de ces instruments, il faut que le corps, qui
-les fournit, soit robuste et sain. Ainsi, loin que la véritable raison de
-l’homme se forme indépendamment du corps, c’est la bonne constitution
-du corps qui rend les opérations de l’esprit faciles et sûres.” <i>Ém.</i> ij.,
-123.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_142" id="Footnote_142"></a><a href="#FNanchor_142"><span class="label">[142]</span></a> “Exercer les sens n’est pas seulement en faire usage, c’est apprendre
-à bien juger par eux, c’est apprendre, pour ainsi dire, à sentir; car
-nous ne savons ni toucher, ni voir, ni entendre, que comme nous avons
-appris. Il y a un exercice purement naturel et mécanique, qui sert à
-rendre le corps robuste sans donner aucune prise au jugement: nager,
-courir, sauter, fouetter un sabot, lancer des pierres; tout cela est fort
-bien: mais n’avons-nous que des bras et des jambes? n’avons-nous pas
-aussi des yeux, des oreilles? et ces organes sont-ils superflus à l’usage
-des premiers? N’exercez donc pas seulement les forces, exercez tous les
-sens qui les dirigent; tirez de chacun d’eux tout le parti possible, puis
-vérifiez l’impression de l’un par l’autre. Mesurez, comptez, pesez,
-comparez.” <i>Ém.</i> ij., 133.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_143" id="Footnote_143"></a><a href="#FNanchor_143"><span class="label">[143]</span></a> <i>E.g.</i>—What can be better than this about family life? “L’attrait
-de la vie domestique est le meilleur contrepoison des mauvaises mœurs.
-Le tracas des enfants qu’on croit importun devient agréable; il rend
-le père et la mère plus nécessaires, plus chers l’un à l’autre; il resserre
-entre eux le lien conjugal. Quand la famille est vivante et animée, les
-soins domestiques font la plus chère occupation de la femme et le plus
-doux amusement du mari. Ainsi de ce seul abus corrigé résulterait
-bientôt une réforme générale; bientôt la nature aurait repris tous ses
-droits. Qu’une fois les femmes redeviennent mères bientôt les hommes
-redeviendront pères et maris.” <i>Ém.</i> j., 17. Again he says in a letter
-quoted by Saint-Marc Girardin (ij., 121)—“L’habitude la plus douce
-qui puisse exister est celle de la vie domestique qui nous tient plus près
-de nous qu’aucune autre.” We may say of Rousseau what Émile says
-of the Corsair:—“Il savait à fond toute la morale; il n’y avait que la
-pratique qui lui manquât.” (<i>Ém. et S.</i> 636). And yet he himself testifies:—“Nurses
-and mothers become attached to children by the cares
-they devote to them; it is the exercise of the social virtues that carries
-the love of humanity to the bottom of our hearts; it is in doing good
-that one becomes good; I know no experience more certain than this:
-Les nourrices, les mères, s’attachent aux enfants par les soins qu’elles
-leur rendent; l’exercice des vertus sociales porte au fond des cœurs
-l’amour de l’humanité; c’est en faisant le bien qu’on devient bon; je
-ne connais point de pratique plus sure.” <i>Ém.</i> iv., 291.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_144" id="Footnote_144"></a><a href="#FNanchor_144"><span class="label">[144]</span></a> Elsewhere he asserts in his fitful way that there is inborn in the
-heart of man a feeling of what is just and unjust. Again, after all his
-praise of negation he contradicts himself, and says: “I do not suppose
-that he who does not need anything can love anything; and I do not
-suppose that he who does not love anything can be happy: Je ne conçois
-pas que celui qui n’a besoin de rien puisse aimer quelque chose;
-je ne conçois pas que celui qui n’aime rien puisse être heureux.” <i>Ém.</i>
-iv., 252.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_145" id="Footnote_145"></a><a href="#FNanchor_145"><span class="label">[145]</span></a> This part of Rousseau’s scheme is well discussed by Saint-Marc
-Girardin (<i>J. J. Rousseau</i>, vol. ij.). The following passage is striking:
-“How is it that Madame Necker-Saussure understood the child better
-than Rousseau did? She saw in the child two things, a creation and
-a ground-plan, something finished and something begun, a perfection
-which prepares the way for another perfection, a child and a man.
-God, Who has put together human life in several pieces, has willed,
-it is true, that all these pieces should be related to each other; but He
-has also willed that each of them should be complete in itself, so that
-every stage of life has what it needs as the object of that period, and
-also what it needs to bring in the period that comes next. Wonderful
-union of aims and means which shews itself at every step in creation!
-In everything there is aim and also means, everything exists for itself
-and also for that which lies beyond it! (Tout est but et tout est moyen;
-tout est absolu et tout est relatif.)” <i>J. J. R.</i>, ij., 151.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_146" id="Footnote_146"></a><a href="#FNanchor_146"><span class="label">[146]</span></a> “Je n’aime point les explications en discours; les jeunes gens y font
-peu d’attention et ne les retiennent guère. Les choses! les choses! Je
-ne répéterai jamais assez que nous donnons trop de pouvoir aux mots:
-avec notre éducation babillarde nous ne faisons que des babillards.”
-<i>Ém.</i> iij., 198.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_147" id="Footnote_147"></a><a href="#FNanchor_147"><span class="label">[147]</span></a> “Forcé d’apprendre de lui-même, il use de sa raison et non de celle
-d’autrui; car, pour ne rien donner à l’opinion, il ne faut rien donner à
-l’autorité; et la plupart de nos erreurs nous viennent bien moins de
-nous que des autres. De cet exercice continuel il doit résulter une
-vigueur d’esprit semblable à celle qu’on donne au corps par le travail et
-par la fatigue. Un autre avantage est qu’on n’avance qu’à proportion
-de ses forces. L’esprit, non plus que le corps, ne porte que ce qu’il peut
-porter. Quand l’entendement s’approprie les choses avant de les déposer
-dans la mémoire, ce qu’il en tire ensuite est à lui: au lieu qu’en surchargeant
-la mémoire, à son insu, on s’expose à n’en jamais rien tirer qui
-lui soit propre.” <i>Ém.</i> iij., 235.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_148" id="Footnote_148"></a><a href="#FNanchor_148"><span class="label">[148]</span></a> “Sans contredit on prend des notions bien plus claires et bien plus
-sûres des choses qu’on apprend ainsi de soi-même, que de celles qu’on
-tient des enseignements d’autrui; et, outre qu’on n’accoutume point sa
-raison à se soumettre servilement à l’autorité, l’on se rend plus ingénieux
-à trouver des rapports, à lier des idées, à inventer des instruments, que
-quand, adoptant tout cela tel qu’on nous le donne, nous laissons affaisser
-notre esprit dans la nonchalance, comme le corps d’un homme qui,
-toujours habillé, chaussé, servi par ses gens et traîné par ses chevaux,
-perd à la fin la force et l’usage de ses membres. Boileau se vantait
-d’avoir appris à Racine à rimer difficilement. Parmi tant d’admirables
-méthodes pour abréger l’étude des sciences, nous aurions grand besoin
-que quelqu’un nous en donnât une pour les apprendre avec effort.”
-<i>Ém.</i> iij., 193.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_149" id="Footnote_149"></a><a href="#FNanchor_149"><span class="label">[149]</span></a> I avail myself of the old substantival use of the word <i>elementary</i> to
-express its German equivalent <i>Elementarbuch</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_150" id="Footnote_150"></a><a href="#FNanchor_150"><span class="label">[150]</span></a> “Who has not met with some experience such as <i>this</i>? A child
-with an active and inquiring mind accustomed to chatter about everything
-that interests him is sent to school. In a few weeks his vivacity
-is extinguished, his abundance of talk has dried up. If you ask him
-about his studies, if you desire him to give you a specimen of what he
-has learnt, he repeals to you in a sing-song voice some rule for the formation
-of tenses or some recipe for spelling words. Such are the results
-of the teaching which should be of all teaching the most fruitful and the
-most attractive!” Translated from <i>Quelques Mots</i>, &amp;c., by M. Bréal.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_151" id="Footnote_151"></a><a href="#FNanchor_151"><span class="label">[151]</span></a> In these visits he observed how the children suffered from working
-in factories. These observations influenced him in after years.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_152" id="Footnote_152"></a><a href="#FNanchor_152"><span class="label">[152]</span></a> In these aphorisms Pestalozzi states the main principles at work in
-his own mind; but this bare statement is not well suited to communicate
-these principles to the minds of others. For most readers the
-aphorisms have as little attraction as the enunciations, say, of a book
-of Euclid would have for those who knew no geometry. But as his
-future life was guided by the principles he has formulated in this paper
-it seems necessary for us to bear some of these in mind.</p>
-
-<p>What he mainly insists upon is that all wise guidance must proceed
-from a knowledge of the nature of the creature to be guided; further
-that there is a simple wisdom which must direct the course of all men.
-“The path of Nature,” says he, “which brings out the powers of men
-must be open and plain; and human education to true peace-giving
-wisdom must be simple and available for all. Nature brings out all
-men’s powers by practice, and their increase springs from <i>use</i>.” The
-powers of children should be strengthened by exercise on what is close
-at hand; and this should be done without hardness or pressure. A
-forced and rigid sequence in instruction is not Nature’s method, says he:
-this would make men one-sided, and truth would not penetrate freely
-and softly into their whole being. The pure feeling for truth grows in
-a small area; and human wisdom must be grounded on a perception of
-our closest relationships, and must show itself in skilled management of
-our nearest concerns. Everything we do against our consciousness of
-right weakens our perception of truth and disturbs the purity of our
-fundamental conceptions and experiences. On this account all wisdom
-of man rests in the strength of a good heart that follows after truth, and all
-the blessing of man in the sense of simplicity and innocence. Peace of
-mind must be the outcome of right training. To get out of his surroundings
-all he needs for life and enjoyment, to be patient, painstaking, and in
-every difficulty trustful in the love of the Heavenly Father, this comes
-of a man’s true education to wisdom. Nothing concerns the human
-race so closely and intimately as—God. “God as Father of thy household,
-as source of thy blessing—God as thy Father; in this belief thou
-findest rest and strength and wisdom, which no violence nor the grave
-itself can overthrow.” Belief in God which is a part of our nature, like
-the sense of right and wrong and the feeling we can never quench of
-what is just and unjust, must be made the foundation in educating the
-human race. The subject of that belief is that God is the Father of
-men, men are the children of God. To this divine relationship Pestalozzi
-refers all human relationships as those of parent and child, of
-ruler and subject. The priest is appointed to declare the fatherhood of
-God and the brotherhood of men.</p>
-
-<p>The only text I have seen is that reprinted by Raumer (<i>Gesch. d.
-Päd.</i>). From Otto Fischer (<i>Wichtigste Pädagogen</i>), I learn that this is
-the edition of 1807, which differs, at least by omission, from the original
-of 1780.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_153" id="Footnote_153"></a><a href="#FNanchor_153"><span class="label">[153]</span></a> There are now four parts, first published respectively in 1781, 1783,
-1785, and 1787 (O. Fischer). The English translation in two small
-vols. (1825) ends with the First Part, but Miss Eva Channing has
-recently sought to weld the four parts into one (Boston, U.S.—D.C.
-Heath &amp; Co.), and in this form the book seems to me not only very
-instructive but very entertaining also. Not many readers who look
-into it will fail to reach the end, and few are the books connected with
-education of which this could prudently be asserted. “All good
-teachers should read it with care,” says Stanley Hall in his Introduction,
-and if they thus read it and catch anything of the spirit of Pestalozzi
-both they and their pupils will have reason to rejoice.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_154" id="Footnote_154"></a><a href="#FNanchor_154"><span class="label">[154]</span></a> In the pages of this Journal Pestalozzi taught that it was “the
-domestic virtues which determine the happiness of a nation.” Again
-he says: “On the throne and in the cottage man has equal need of
-religion, and becomes the most wretched being on the earth if he forget
-his God.” “The child at his mother’s breast is weaker and more
-dependent than any creature on earth, and yet he already feels the first
-moral impressions of love and gratitude.” “<i>Morality is nothing
-but a result of the development of the first sentiments of love and gratitude
-felt by the infant.</i> The first development of the child’s powers
-should come from his participation in the work of his home; for this
-work is what his parents understand best, what most absorbs their
-attention, and what they can best teach. But even if this were not so,
-work undertaken to supply real needs would be just as truly the surest
-foundation of a good education. <i>To engage the attention of the child,
-to exercise his judgment, to raise his heart to noble sentiments, these I
-think the chief ends of education</i>: and how can these ends be reached so
-surely as by training the child as early as possible in the various daily duties
-of domestic life?” It would seem then that at this time Pestalozzi was
-for basing education on domestic labour and would teach the child to
-be useful. But it is hard to see how this principle could always be
-applied.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_155" id="Footnote_155"></a><a href="#FNanchor_155"><span class="label">[155]</span></a> One of these I have already given (<a href="#Page_292"><i>supra</i> p. 292</a>). I will give
-another, not as by any means one of the best, but as a fit companion to
-Rousseau’s “two dogs.”</p>
-
-<p>“26. <span class="smcap">The two colts.</span></p>
-
-<p>“Two colts as like as two eggs, fell into different hands. One was
-bought by a peasant whose only thought was to harness it to his plough
-as soon as possible: this one turned out a bad horse. The other fell to
-the lot of a man who by looking after it well and training it carefully,
-made a noble steed of it, strong and mettlesome. Fathers and mothers,
-if your children’s faculties are not carefully trained and directed right,
-they will become not only useless, but hurtful; and the greater the
-faculties the greater the danger.”</p>
-
-<p>Compare Rousseau: “Just look at those two dogs; they are of
-the same litter, they have been brought up and treated precisely alike,
-they have never been separated; and yet one of them is sharp, lively,
-affectionate, and very intelligent: the other is dull, lumpish, surly, and
-nobody could ever teach him anything. Simply a difference of temperament
-has produced in them a difference of character, just as a simple
-difference of our interior organisation produces in us a difference of
-mind.” <i>N. Héloise.</i> 5me P. Lettre iii.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_156" id="Footnote_156"></a><a href="#FNanchor_156"><span class="label">[156]</span></a> Pestalozzi was with the children at Stanz only during the first half
-of 1799.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_157" id="Footnote_157"></a><a href="#FNanchor_157"><span class="label">[157]</span></a> As Pestalozzi wrote to Gessner (<i>How Gertrude, &amp;c.</i>): “You see
-street-gossip is not always entirely wrong; I really could not write
-properly, nor read, nor reckon. But people always jump to wrong
-conclusions from such ‘notorious facts.’ At Stanz you saw that I
-could teach writing without myself being able to write properly.”
-He here anticipates a paradox of Jacotot’s.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_158" id="Footnote_158"></a><a href="#FNanchor_158"><span class="label">[158]</span></a> Years afterwards Napoleon, though he could not foresee Sedan, got
-a notion that after all there was <i>something</i> in Pestalozzi; and that the
-aim of the system was to put the freedom and development of the
-individual in the place of the mechanical routine of the old schools,
-which tended to produce a mass of dull uniformity. With this aim, as
-Guimps says, Napoleon was quite out of sympathy, and whenever the
-subject was mentioned he would say, “The Pestalozzians are Jesuits”;
-thus very inaccurately expressing an accurate notion that there was
-more in them than could be understood at the first glance.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_159" id="Footnote_159"></a><a href="#FNanchor_159"><span class="label">[159]</span></a> Pestalozzi had from this country some more discerning visitors, <i>e.g.</i>,
-J. P. Greaves, to whom Pestalozzi addressed <i>Letters</i>, which were
-translated and published in this country; also Dr. Mayo, who was at
-Yverdun with his pupils for three years from 1818 and afterwards conducted
-a celebrated Pestalozzian school at Cheam. Dr. Mayo in 1826
-lectured on Pestalozzi’s system at the Royal Institution. Sir Jas. Kay-Shuttleworth
-and Mr. Tufnell also drew attention to it in the “Minutes
-of Council on Education.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_160" id="Footnote_160"></a><a href="#FNanchor_160"><span class="label">[160]</span></a> The disciple is not above his master, and if parents and teachers are
-without sympathy and religious feeling the children will also be without
-faith and love. This cannot be urged too strongly on those who have
-charge of the young. But there is no test by which we can ascertain
-that a master has these essential qualifications. As in the Christian
-ministry the unfit can be shut out only by their own consciences. But
-let no one think to understand education if he loses sight of what Joseph
-Payne has called “Pestalozzi’s simple but profound discovery—the
-teacher must have a heart.” “Soul is kindled only by soul,” says
-Carlyle; “to <i>teach</i> religion the first thing needful and also the last and
-only thing is finding of a man who <i>has</i> religion. All else follows.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_161" id="Footnote_161"></a><a href="#FNanchor_161"><span class="label">[161]</span></a> In 1872, a Congress in which more than 10,000 German elementary
-teachers were represented, petitioned the Prussian Government for “the
-organization of training schools in accordance with the pedagogic
-principles of Pestalozzi, which formerly enjoyed so much favour in
-Prussia and so visibly contributed to the regeneration of the country.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_162" id="Footnote_162"></a><a href="#FNanchor_162"><span class="label">[162]</span></a> Did Pestalozzi make due allowance for the system of thought which
-every child inherits? Croom Robertson in “How we came by our
-Knowledge” (<i>Nineteenth Century</i>, No. 1, March, 1877), without mentioning
-Pestalozzi, seems to differ from him. Croom Robertson says
-that “Children being born into the world are born into society, and are
-acted on by overpowering social influences before they have any chance
-of being their proper selves.... The words and sentences that
-fall upon a child’s ear and are soon upon his lips, express not so much
-his subjective experience as the common experience of his kind, which
-becomes as it were an objective rule or measure to which his shall
-conform.... He does, he must, accept what he is told; and in
-general he is only too glad to find his own experience in accordance
-with it.... We use our incidental, by which I mean our natural
-subjective experience, mainly to decipher and verify the ready-made
-scheme of knowledge that is given us <i>en bloc</i> with the words of our
-mother-tongue” (pp. 117, 118).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_163" id="Footnote_163"></a><a href="#FNanchor_163"><span class="label">[163]</span></a> One of the most interesting and most difficult problems in teaching
-is this:—How long should the beginner be kept to the rudiments?
-With young children, to whom ideas come fast, the main thing is no
-doubt to take care that these ideas become distinct and are made “the
-intellectual property” of the learners. But after a year or two
-children will be impatient to “get on,” and if they seem “marking
-time” will be bored and discouraged. Then again in some subjects
-the elementary parts seem clear only to those who have a conception of
-the whole. As Diderot says in a passage I have seen quoted from <i>Le
-Neveu de Rameau</i>, “Il faut être profond dans l’art ou dans la science
-pour en bien posséder les éléments.” “C’est le milieu et la fin qui
-éclaircissent les ténèbres du commencement.” The greatest “coach”
-in Cambridge used to “rush” his men through their subjects and
-then go back again for thorough learning. To be sure, the “scientific
-method” suitable for young men differs greatly from the “heuristic” or
-“method of investigation,” which is best for children. (See Joseph
-Payne’s Lecture on Pestalozzi.) But even with children we should bear
-in mind Niemeyer’s caution, “Thoroughness itself may become superficial
-by exaggeration; for it may keep too long to a part and in this
-way fail to complete and give any notion of the whole” (Quoted
-by O. Fischer, <i>Wichtigste Päd.</i> 213).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_164" id="Footnote_164"></a><a href="#FNanchor_164"><span class="label">[164]</span></a> Nearly 20 years ago (1871) appeared a paper on “Elementary
-National Education” in which “John Parkin, M.D.,” advocated making
-all our elementary schools industrial, not only for practical purposes,
-but still more for the sake of physical education. The paper attracted
-no notice at the time, but now we are beginning to see that the body is
-concerned in education as well as the mind, and that the mind learns
-through it “without book.” The application of this truth will bring
-about many changes.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_165" id="Footnote_165"></a><a href="#FNanchor_165"><span class="label">[165]</span></a> Herbart, when he visited Pestalozzi at Burgdorf, observed that
-though Pestalozzi’s kindness was apparent to all, he took no pains in his
-teaching to mix the <i>dulce</i> with the <i>utile</i>. He never talked to the children,
-or joked, or gave them an anecdote. This, however, did not surprise
-Herbart, whose own experience had taught him that when the subject
-requires earnest attention the children do not like it the better for the
-teacher’s “fun.” “The feeling of clear apprehension,” says he, “I
-held to be the only genuine condiment of instruction” (Herbart’s <i>Päd.
-Schriften</i>, ed. by O. Willmann, j. 89).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_166" id="Footnote_166"></a><a href="#FNanchor_166"><span class="label">[166]</span></a> <i>First</i> look to himself, but there may be other causes of failure as
-well. The great thing is never to put up contentedly, or even discontentedly,
-with failure. In teaching classes of lads from ten to sixteen
-years old, when I have found the lessons in any subject were not going
-well, I have sometimes taken the class into my confidence, told them
-that they no doubt felt as I did that this lesson was a dull one, and
-asked them each to put on paper what he considered to be the reasons,
-and also to make any suggestions that occurred to him. In this way I
-have got some very good hints, and I have always been helped in my
-effort to understand how the work seemed to the pupils. Every teacher
-should make this effort. As Pestalozzi says, “Could we conceive the
-indescribable tedium which must oppress the young mind while the
-weary hours are slowly passing away one after another in occupations
-which it can neither relish nor understand ... we should no
-longer be surprised at the remissness of the schoolboy creeping like
-snail unwillingly to school” (To G., xxx, 150).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_167" id="Footnote_167"></a><a href="#FNanchor_167"><span class="label">[167]</span></a> With Morf’s summing-up it is interesting to compare Joseph Payne’s,
-given at the end of his lecture on <i>Pestalozzi</i>:</p>
-
-<p>I. The principles of education are not to be devised <i>ab extra</i>; they
-are to be sought for in human nature.</p>
-
-<p>II. This nature is an organic nature—a plexus of bodily, intellectual
-and moral capabilities, ready for development, and struggling to develop
-themselves.</p>
-
-<p>III. The education conducted by the formal educator has both a
-negative and a positive side. The negative function of the educator
-consists in removing impediments, so as to afford free scope for the
-learner’s self-development. His positive function is to stimulate the
-learner to the exercise of his powers, to furnish materials and occasion
-for the exercise, and to superintend and maintain the action of the
-machinery.</p>
-
-<p>IV. Self-development begins with the impressions received by the
-mind from external objects. These impressions (called sensations),
-when the mind becomes conscious of them, group themselves into perceptions.
-These are registered in the mind as conceptions or ideas, and
-constitute that elementary knowledge which is the basis of all knowledge.</p>
-
-<p>V. Spontaneity and self-activity are the necessary conditions under
-which the mind educates itself and gains power and independence.</p>
-
-<p>VI. Practical aptness or faculty, depends more on habits gained by
-the assiduous oft-repeated exercise of the learner’s active powers than on
-knowledge alone. Knowing and doing (<i>Wissen und Können</i>) must,
-however, proceed together. The chief aim of all education (including
-instruction) is the development of the learner’s powers.</p>
-
-<p>VII. All education (including instruction) must be grounded on the
-learner’s own observation (<i>Anschauung</i>) at first hand—on his own
-personal experience. This is the true basis of all his knowledge. First
-the reality, then the symbol; first the thing, then the word, not <i>vice
-versâ</i>.</p>
-
-<p>VIII. That which the learner has gained by his own observation
-(<i>Anschauung</i>) and which, as a part of his personal experience, is incorporated
-with his mind, he <i>knows</i> and can describe or explain in his own
-words. His competency to do this is the measure of the accuracy of
-his observation, and consequently of his knowledge.</p>
-
-<p>IX. Personal experience necessitates the advancement of the learner’s
-mind from the near and actual, with which he is in contact, and which
-he can deal with himself, to the more remote; therefore from the
-concrete to the abstract, from particulars to generals, from the known
-to the unknown. This is the method of elementary education; the
-opposite proceeding—the usual proceeding of our traditional teaching—leads
-the mind from the abstract to the concrete, from generals to
-particulars, from the unknown to the known. This latter is the
-Scientific method—a method suited only to the advanced learner, who
-it assumes is already trained by the Elementary method.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_168" id="Footnote_168"></a><a href="#FNanchor_168"><span class="label">[168]</span></a> Most parents do not seem to think with Jean Paul, “If we
-regard all life as an educational institution, a circumnavigator of the
-world is less influenced by all the nations he has seen than by his
-nurse.” (<i>Levana</i>, quoted in Morley’s <i>Rousseau</i>.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_169" id="Footnote_169"></a><a href="#FNanchor_169"><span class="label">[169]</span></a> I will quote the first paragraph of this work which is still
-considered mental pabulum suited to the digestions of young ladies and
-children:—</p>
-
-<p>“<i>Name some of the most Ancient Kingdoms.</i>—Chaldēa, Babylonia,
-Assyria, China in Asia, and Egypt in Africa. Nimrod, the grandson
-of Ham, is supposed to have founded the first of these <span class="smcapuc">B.C.</span> 2221, as
-well as the famous cities of Babylon and Nineveh; his kingdom being
-within the fertile plains of Chaldēa, Chalonītis, and Assyria, was of
-small extent compared with the vast empires that afterwards arose
-from it, but included several large cities. In the district called
-Babylonia were the cities of Babylon, Barsīta, Idicarra, and Vologsia,”
-&amp;c., &amp;c.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_170" id="Footnote_170"></a><a href="#FNanchor_170"><span class="label">[170]</span></a> I shall always feel gratitude and affection for the two old ladies
-(sisters) to whom I was entrusted over half a century ago. More
-truly Christian women I never met with. But of the science and art
-of education they were totally ignorant; and moreover the premises
-they occupied were unfit for a school. As all the boys were under ten
-years old, it will seem strange, but is alas! too true, that there were
-vices among them which are supposed to be unknown to children and
-which if discovered would have made the old ladies close their school.
-The want of subjects in which the children can take a healthy
-interest will in a great measure account for the spread of evil in such
-schools. On this point some mistresses and most parents are
-dangerously ignorant.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_171" id="Footnote_171"></a><a href="#FNanchor_171"><span class="label">[171]</span></a> Having watched the “teaching” of pupil-teachers, I find that
-some of them (I may say many) never address more than one child at
-a time, and never attempt to gain the attention of more than a single
-child. So, by a very simple calculation, we can get at the maximum
-time each child is “under instruction.” If the pupil-teacher has but
-three-quarters of the pupils for whom the Department supposes him
-“sufficient,” each child cannot be under instruction <i>more</i> than two
-minutes in the hour. The rest of the time the children must sit
-quiet, or be cuffed if they do not. What is called “simultaneous”
-teaching in, say, reading, consists in the pupil-teacher reading from the
-book, and as he pronounces each word, the children shout it after him;
-but no one except the pupil-teacher knows the place in the book.</p>
-
-<p>But perhaps the dangers from employing boys and girls to teach and
-govern children are greater morally than intellectually. Whether he
-report on it or not, the Inspector has less influence on the moral
-training than the youngest pupil-teacher. Channing has well said:
-“A child compelled for six hours each day to see the countenance and
-hear the voice of an unfeeling, petulant, passionate, unjust teacher is
-placed in a school of vice.” Those who have never taught day after
-day, week after week, month after month, little know what demands
-school-work makes on the temper and the sense of justice. The
-harshest tyrants are usually those who are raised but a little way
-above those whom they have to control; and when I think of the
-pupil-teacher with his forty pupils to keep in order, I heartily pity both
-him and them. Is there not too much reason to fear lest in many
-cases the school should prove for both what Channing has well
-described as “a school of vice”? (R. H. Q. in <i>Spectator</i>, 1st March,
-1890.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_172" id="Footnote_172"></a><a href="#FNanchor_172"><span class="label">[172]</span></a> Since the above was written, another “New Code” has appeared
-(March, 1890), in which the system of measuring by “passes,” a
-system maintained (in spite of the remonstrances of all interested in
-<i>education</i>) for nearly 30 years, is at length abandoned. We are
-certainly travelling, however slowly, away from Mr. Lowe. Far as we
-are still from Pestalozzi there seems reason to hope that the distance is
-diminishing.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_173" id="Footnote_173"></a><a href="#FNanchor_173"><span class="label">[173]</span></a> This short sketch of Froebel’s life is mainly taken, with Messrs.
-Black’s permission, from the <i>Encyclopædia Britannica</i>, for which I
-wrote it.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_174" id="Footnote_174"></a><a href="#FNanchor_174"><span class="label">[174]</span></a> This office was first filled by Langethal and afterwards by Ferdinand
-Froebel. I learned this at Burgdorf from Herr Pfarrer Heuer,
-whose father had himself been Waisenvater.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_175" id="Footnote_175"></a><a href="#FNanchor_175"><span class="label">[175]</span></a> For this quotation, and for much besides (as will appear later on),
-I am indebted to Mr. H. Courthope Bowen. See his paper <i>Froebel’s
-Education of Man</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_176" id="Footnote_176"></a><a href="#FNanchor_176"><span class="label">[176]</span></a> The educator <i>as teacher</i> has his activity limited, according to
-DeGarmo, to these two things; “(1) The <i>preparation</i> of the child’s
-mind for a rapid and effective assimilation of new knowledge; (2) The
-<i>presentation</i> of the matter of instruction in such order and manner as
-will best conduce to the most effective assimilation” (<i>Essentials of
-Method</i> by Chas. DeGarmo, Boston, U.S., D. C. Heath, 1889).
-Besides this he must make his pupils <i>use</i> their knowledge both new and
-old, and reproduce it in fresh connexions.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_177" id="Footnote_177"></a><a href="#FNanchor_177"><span class="label">[177]</span></a> “Little children,” says Joseph Payne, “are scarcely ever contented
-with simply doing nothing; and their fidgetiness and unrest, which
-often give mothers and teachers so much anxiety, are merely the
-strugglings of the soul to get, through the body, some employment for
-its powers. Supply this want, give them an object to work upon, and
-you solve the problem. The divergence and distraction of the faculties
-cease as they converge upon the work, and the mind is at rest in its
-very occupation.” <i>V. to German Schools.</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_178" id="Footnote_178"></a><a href="#FNanchor_178"><span class="label">[178]</span></a> I entirely agree with Joseph Payne that where the language spoken
-is not German, it would be well to discard <i>Kindergarten</i>, <i>Kindergärtner</i>,
-and <i>Kindergärtnerin</i>. All who have to do with children should master
-some great principles taught by Froebel, but there is no need for them
-to learn German or to use German words. The French seem satisfied
-with <i>Jardin d’Enfants</i>, but we are not likely to be with <i>Children-Garden</i>.
-<i>Playschool</i> <i>might</i> do.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_179" id="Footnote_179"></a><a href="#FNanchor_179"><span class="label">[179]</span></a> Contrast this with what has been said by an eminent thinker of our
-time: “No art of equal importance to mankind has been so little investigated
-scientifically as the art of teaching.” Sir H. S. Maine,
-quoted in J. H. Hoose’s <i>M. of Teaching</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_180" id="Footnote_180"></a><a href="#FNanchor_180"><span class="label">[180]</span></a> Here Jacotot’s notion of teaching reminds one of the sophism
-quoted by Montaigne—“A Westphalia ham makes a man drink. Drink
-quenches thirst. Therefore a Westphalia ham quenches thirst.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_181" id="Footnote_181"></a><a href="#FNanchor_181"><span class="label">[181]</span></a> <i>See</i> H. Courthope Bowen on “Connectedness in Teaching”
-(<i>Educational Times</i>, June, 1890). Mr. Bowen quotes from H. Spencer—“Knowledge
-of the lowest kind is <i>un-unified</i> knowledge: science is
-<i>partially unified</i> knowledge: philosophy is <i>completely unified</i> knowledge.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_182" id="Footnote_182"></a><a href="#FNanchor_182"><span class="label">[182]</span></a> As I have said above (<a href="#Page_89">p. 89</a>) these methodizers in language-learning
-may, with regard to the first stage, be divided into two parties which
-I have called <i>Complete Retainers</i> and <i>Rapid Impressionists</i>. Two Complete
-Retainers, Robertson and Prendergast, have, as it seems to me,
-made, since Jacotot, a great advance on his method and that of his
-predecessor Ascham. As I have had a good deal of experience with
-beginners in German, I will give from an old lecture of mine the main
-conclusions at which I have arrived:—“My principle is to attack the most
-vital part of the language, and at first to keep the area small, or rather to
-enlarge it very slowly; but within that area I want to get as much variety
-as possible. The study of a book written in the language should be
-carried on <i>pari passu</i> with drill in its common inflexions. Now arises
-the question, Should the book be made with the object of teaching the
-language, or should it be selected from those written for other purposes?
-I see much to be said on either side. The three great facts we have to
-turn to account in teaching a language, are these:—first, a few words
-recur so constantly that a knowledge of them and grasp of them gives
-us a power in the language quite out of proportion to their number;
-second, large classes of words admit of many variations of meaning by
-inflection, which variations we can understand from analogy; third,
-compound words are formed <i>ad infinitum</i> on simple laws, so that the
-root word supplies the key to a whole family. Now, if the book is
-written by the language-teacher, he has the whole language before him,
-and he can make the most of all these advantages. He can use only
-the important words of the language; he can repeat them in various
-connections; he can bring the main facts of inflection and construction
-before the learner in a regular order, which is a great assistance to the
-memory; he can give the simple words before introducing words compounded
-of them; and he can provide that, when a word occurs for the
-first time, the learners shall connect it with its root meaning. A short
-book securing all these advantages would, no doubt, be a very useful
-implement, but I have never seen such a book. Almost all delectuses,
-&amp;c., bury the learner with a pile of new words, under which he feels
-himself powerless. So far as I know, the book has yet to be written.
-And even if it were written, with the greatest success from a linguistic
-point of view, it would of course make no pretension to a meaning.
-Having myself gone through a course of Ahn and of Ollendorf, I remember,
-as a sort of nightmare, innumerable questions and answers,
-such as “Have you my thread stockings? No, I have your worsted
-stockings.” Still more repulsive are the long sentences of Mr. Prendergast:—“How
-much must I give to the cabdriver to take my father to
-the Bank in New Street before his second breakfast, and to bring him
-home again before half-past two o’clock?” I cannot forget Voltaire’s
-<i>mot</i>, which has a good deal of truth in it,—“Every way is good but the
-tiresome way.” And most of the books written for beginners are inexpressibly
-tiresome. No doubt it will be said, “Unless you adopt the
-rapid-impressionist plan, any book <i>must</i> be tiresome. What is a meaning
-at first becomes no meaning by frequent repetition.” This, however,
-is not altogether true. I myself have taught Niebuhr’s <i>Heroengeschichten</i>
-for years, and I know some chapters by heart; but the old tales of
-Jason and Hercules as they are told in Niebuhr’s simple language do
-not bore me in the least.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">“Ein Begriff muss bei dem Worte sein,”</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">says the Student in Faust; and a notion—a very pleasing notion, too—remains
-to me about every word in the <i>Heroengeschichten</i>.</p>
-
-<p>These, then, would be my books to be worked at the same time by a
-beginner, say in German:—A book for drill in the principal inflexions,
-followed by the main facts about gender, &amp;c., and a book like the
-<i>Heroengeschichten</i>. This I would have prepared very much after the
-Robertsonian manner. It should be printed, as should also the Primer,
-in good-sized Roman type; though, in an appendix, some of it should
-be reprinted in German type. The book should be divided into short
-lessons. A translation of each lesson should be given in parallel columns.
-Then should come a vocabulary, in which all useful information should
-be given about the really important words, <i>the unimportant words being
-neglected</i>. Finally should come <i>variations</i>, and exercises in the lessons;
-and in these the important words of that and previous lessons should be
-used exclusively. The exercises should be such as the pupils could do
-in writing out of school, and <i>vivâ voce</i> in school. They should be very
-easy—real exercises in what is already known, not a series of linguistic
-puzzles. The object of the exercises, and also of a vast number of <i>vivâ
-voce</i> questions, should be to accustom the pupil to use his knowledge
-<i>readily</i>. (But some teachers, young teachers especially, are always
-<i>cross</i>-examining, and seem to themselves to fail when their questions are
-answered without difficulty.) The ear, the voice, the hand, should all
-be practised on each lesson. When the construing is known, transcription
-of the German is not by any means to be despised. A good
-variety of transcription is, for the teacher to write the German clause by
-clause on the black-board, and rub out each clause before the pupils
-begin to write it. Then a known piece may be prepared for dictation.
-In reading this as dictation, the master may introduce small variations,
-to teach his pupils to keep their ears open. He may, as another exercise,
-read the German aloud, and stop here and there for the boys to
-give the English of the last sentence read; or he may read to them
-either the exact German in the book or small variations on it, and make
-the pupils translate <i>vivâ voce</i>, clause by clause. He may then ask
-questions on the piece in German and require answers in English.</p>
-
-<p>For exercises, there are many devices by which the pupil may be
-trained to observation, and also be confirmed in his knowledge of back
-lessons. The great teacher, F. A. Wolf, used to make his own children
-ascertain how many times such and such a word occurred in such and
-such pages. As M. Bréal says, children are collectors by nature; and,
-acting on this hint, we might say, “Write in column all the dative cases
-on pages <i>a</i> to <i>c</i>, and give the English and the corresponding nominatives.”
-Or, “Copy from those pages all the accusative prepositions
-with the accusatives after them.” Or, “Write out the past participles,
-with their infinitives.” Or, “Translate such and such sentences, and
-explain them with reference to the context.” Or, questions may be
-asked on the subject-matter of the book. There is no end to the
-possible varieties of such exercises.</p>
-
-<p>As soon as they get any feeling of the language, the pupils should
-learn by heart some easy poetry in it. I should recommend their learning
-the English of the piece first, and then getting the German <i>vivâ voce</i>
-from the teacher. To quicken the German in their minds, I think it is
-well to give them in addition a German prose version, using almost the
-same words. Variations of the more important sentences should be
-learnt at the same time.</p>
-
-<p>In all these suggestions you will see what I am aiming at. I wish
-the learner to get a feeling of, and a power over, the main words of the
-language and the machinery in which they are employed.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_183" id="Footnote_183"></a><a href="#FNanchor_183"><span class="label">[183]</span></a> I append in a note a passage from the old edition of this book referring
-to the Cambridge man of forty years ago. “The typical
-Cambridge man studies mathematics, not because he likes mathematics,
-or derives any pleasure from the perception of mathematical truth, still
-less with the notion of ever using his knowledge; but either because, if
-he is “a good man,” he hopes for a fellowship, or because, if he cannot
-aspire so high, he considers reading the thing to do, and finds a satisfaction
-in mental effort just as he does in a constitutional to the
-Gogmagogs. When such a student takes his degree, he is by no means
-a highly cultivated man; but he is not the sort of man we can despise
-for all that. He has in him, to use one of his own metaphors, a considerable
-amount of <i>force</i>, which may be applied in any direction. He
-has great power of concentration and sustained mental effort even on
-subjects which are distasteful to him. In other words, his mind is
-under the control of his will, and he can bring it to bear promptly and
-vigorously on anything put before him. He will sometimes be half
-through a piece of work, while an average Oxonian (as we Cambridge
-men conceive of him at least) is thinking about beginning. But his
-training has taught him to value mental force without teaching him to
-care about its application. Perhaps he has been working at the gymnasium,
-and has at length succeeded in “putting up” a hundredweight.
-In learning to do this, he has been acquiring strength for its own sake.
-He does not want to put up hundredweights, but simply to be able to
-put them up, and his reward is the consciousness of power. Now the
-tripos is a kind of competitive examination in putting up weights. The
-student who has been training for it, has acquired considerable mental
-vigour, and when he has put up his weight he falls back on the consciousness
-of strength which he seldom thinks of using. Having put up
-the heavier, he despises the lighter weights. He rather prides himself
-on his ignorance of such things as history, modern languages, and
-English literature. He “can get those up in a few evenings,” whenever
-he wants them. He reminds me, indeed, of a tradesman who has
-worked hard to have a large balance at his banker’s. This done, he is
-satisfied. He has neither taste nor desire for the things which make
-wealth valuable; but when he sees other people in the enjoyment of
-them, he hugs himself with the consciousness that he can write a cheque
-for such things whenever he pleases.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_184" id="Footnote_184"></a><a href="#FNanchor_184"><span class="label">[184]</span></a> On this interesting subject I will quote three men who said nothing
-<i>inepte</i>—De Morgan, Helps, and the first Sir James Stephen. De
-Morgan, speaking of Jacotot’s plan, wrote:—“There is much truth in the
-assertion that new knowledge hooks on easily to a little of the old
-thoroughly mastered. The day is coming when it will be found out
-that crammed erudition got up for examination, does not cast out any
-hooks for more.” (<i>Budget of Paradoxes</i>, p. 3.) Elsewhere he says:—“When
-the student has occupied his time in learning a moderate portion
-of many different things, what has he acquired—extensive knowledge or
-useful habits? Even if he can be said to have varied learning, it will
-not long be true of him, for nothing flies so quickly as half-digested
-knowledge; and when this is gone, there remains but a slender portion
-of useful power. A small quantity of learning quickly evaporates from
-a mind which never held any learning except in small quantities; and
-the intellectual philosopher can perhaps explain the following phenomenon—that
-men who have given deep attention to one or more liberal
-studies, can learn to the end of their lives, and are able to retain and
-apply very small quantities of other kinds of knowledge; while those
-who have never learnt much of any one thing seldom acquire new
-knowledge after they attain to years of maturity, and frequently lose the
-greater part of that which they once possessed.”</p>
-
-<p>Sir Arthur Helps in <i>Reading</i> (<i>Friends in C.</i>) says:—“All things are
-so connected together that a man who knows one subject well, cannot,
-if he would, have failed to have acquired much besides; and that man
-will not be likely to keep fewer pearls who has a string to put them on
-than he who picks them up and throws them together without method.
-This, however, is a very poor metaphor to represent the matter; for
-what I would aim at producing not merely holds together what is
-gained, but has vitality in itself—is always growing. And anybody
-will confirm this who in his own case has had any branch of study or
-human affairs to work upon; for he must have observed how all he
-meets seems to work in with, and assimilate itself to, his own peculiar
-subject. During his lonely walks, or in society, or in action, it seems
-as if this one pursuit were something almost independent of himself,
-always on the watch, and claiming its share in whatever is going on.”</p>
-
-<p>In his Lecture on <i>Desultory and Systematic Reading</i>, Sir James
-Stephen said:—“Learning is a world, not a chaos. The various accumulations
-of human knowledge are not so many detached masses.
-They are all connected parts of one great system of truth, and though
-that system be infinitely too comprehensive for any one of us to compass,
-yet each component member of it bears to every other component member
-relations which each of us may, in his own department of study, search
-out and discover for himself. A man is really and soundly learned in
-exact proportion to the number and to the importance of those relations
-which he has thus carefully examined and accurately understood.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_185" id="Footnote_185"></a><a href="#FNanchor_185"><span class="label">[185]</span></a> This essay, which was written nearly twenty-five years ago, I
-leave as it stands. I take some credit to myself for having early recognised
-the importance of a book now famous. (June, 1890.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_186" id="Footnote_186"></a><a href="#FNanchor_186"><span class="label">[186]</span></a> This proposition has been ably discussed by President W. H.
-Payne. <i>Contributions to the Science of Education.</i> “Education
-Values.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_187" id="Footnote_187"></a><a href="#FNanchor_187"><span class="label">[187]</span></a> “The brewer,” as Mr. Spencer himself tells us, “if his business is
-very extensive, finds it pay to keep a chemist on the premises”—pay a
-good deal better, I suspect, than learning chemistry at school.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_188" id="Footnote_188"></a><a href="#FNanchor_188"><span class="label">[188]</span></a> Helps, who by taste and talent is eminently literary, put in this
-claim for science more than 20 [now nearer 50] years ago. “The
-higher branches of method cannot be taught at first; but you may begin
-by teaching orderliness of mind. Collecting, classifying, contrasting,
-and weighing facts are some of the processes by which method is taught....
-Scientific method may be acquired without many sciences being
-learnt; but one or two great branches of science must be accurately
-known.” (<i>Friends in Council, Education.</i>) Helps, though by his
-delightful style he never gives the reader any notion of over compression,
-has told us more truth about education in a few pages than one sometimes
-meets with in a complete treatise.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_189" id="Footnote_189"></a><a href="#FNanchor_189"><span class="label">[189]</span></a> J. S. Mill (who by the way, would leave history entirely to private
-reading, <i>Address at St. Andrews</i>, p. 21), has pointed out that “there is
-not a fact in history which is not susceptible of as many different explanations
-as there are possible theories of human affairs,” and that
-“history is not the foundation but the verification of the social science.”
-But he admits that “what we know of former ages, like what we know
-of foreign nations, is, with all its imperfectness, of much use, by correcting
-the narrowness incident to personal experience.” (Dissertations,
-Vol. I, p. 112.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_190" id="Footnote_190"></a><a href="#FNanchor_190"><span class="label">[190]</span></a> It is difficult to treat seriously the arguments by which Mr. Spencer
-endeavours to show that a knowledge of science is necessary for the
-practice or the enjoyment of the fine arts. Of course, the highest art of
-every kind is based on science, that is, on truths which science takes
-cognizance of and explains; but it does not therefore follow that “without
-science there can be neither perfect production nor full appreciation.”
-Mr. Spencer tells us of mistakes which John Lewis and Rossetti have
-made for want of science. Very likely; and had those gentlemen devoted
-much of their time to science we should never have heard of their
-blunders—or of their pictures either. If they were to paint a piece of
-woodwork, a carpenter might, perhaps, detect something amiss in the
-mitring. If they painted a wall, a bricklayer might point out that with
-their arrangement of stretchers and headers the wall would tumble down
-for want of a proper bond. But even Mr. Spencer would not wish
-them to spend their time in mastering the technicalities of every handicraft,
-in order to avoid these inaccuracies. It is the business of the
-painter to give us form and colour as they reveal themselves to the eye,
-not to prepare illustrations of scientific text-books. The physical
-sciences, however, are only part of the painter’s necessary equipment,
-according to Mr. Spencer. “He must also understand how the minds
-of spectators will be affected by the several peculiarities of his work—a
-question in psychology!” Still more surprising is Mr. Spencer’s dictum
-about poetry. “Its rhythm, its strong and numerous metaphors, its
-hyperboles, its violent inversions, are simply exaggerations of the traits
-of excited speech. To be good, therefore, poetry must pay attention to
-those laws of nervous action which excited speech obeys.” It is difficult
-to see how poetry can pay attention to anything. The poet, of course
-must not violate those laws, but, if he <i>has paid attention</i> to them in
-composing, he will do well to present his MS. to the local newspaper.
-[It seems the class is not extinct of whom Pope wrote:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">“Some drily plain, without invention’s aid</div>
-<div class="verse">“Write dull receipts how poems may be made.”</div>
-<div class="verse right"><i>Essay on Criticism.</i>]</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_191" id="Footnote_191"></a><a href="#FNanchor_191"><span class="label">[191]</span></a> Speaking of law, medicine, engineering, and the industrial arts, J.
-S. Mill remarks: “Whether those whose speciality they are will learn
-them as a branch of intelligence or as a mere trade, and whether having
-learnt them, they will make a wise and conscientious use of them, or
-the reverse, depends less on the manner in which they are taught their
-profession, than upon <i>what sort of mind they bring to it—what kind of
-intelligence and of conscience the general system of education has developed
-in them</i>.”—Address at St. Andrews, p. 6.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_192" id="Footnote_192"></a><a href="#FNanchor_192"><span class="label">[192]</span></a> “Comme vous n’avez pas su ou comme vous n’avez pas voulu
-atteindre la pensée de l’enfant, vous n’avez aucune action sur son développement
-moral et intellectuel. Vous êtes le maître de latin et de
-grec.” Bréal. <i>Quelques Mots, &amp;c.</i>, p. 243.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_193" id="Footnote_193"></a><a href="#FNanchor_193"><span class="label">[193]</span></a> Mr. Spencer does not mention this principle in his enumeration,
-but, no doubt, considers he implies it.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_194" id="Footnote_194"></a><a href="#FNanchor_194"><span class="label">[194]</span></a> “Si l’on partageait toute la science humaine en deux parties, l’une
-commune à tous les hommes, l’autre particulière aux savants, celle-ci
-serait très-petite en comparaison de l’autre. Mais nous ne songeons
-guère aux acquisitions générales, parce qu’elles se font sans qu’on y
-pense, et même avant l’âge de raison; que d’ailleurs le savoir ne se fait
-remarquer que par ses différences, et que, comme dans les équations
-d’algèbre, les quantités communes se comptent pour rien.”—<i>Émile</i>,
-livre i.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_195" id="Footnote_195"></a><a href="#FNanchor_195"><span class="label">[195]</span></a> This is well said in Dr. John Brown’s admirable paper <i>Education
-through the Senses</i>. (Horæ Subsecivæ, pp. 313, 314.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_196" id="Footnote_196"></a><a href="#FNanchor_196"><span class="label">[196]</span></a> After remarking on the wrong order in which subjects are taught,
-he continues, “What with perceptions unnaturally dulled by early
-thwartings, and a coerced attention to books, what with the mental confusion
-produced by teaching subjects before they can be understood, and
-in each of them giving generalisations before the facts of which they are
-the generalisations, what with making the pupil a mere passive recipient
-of others’ ideas and not in the least leading him to be an active inquirer
-or self-instructor, and what with taxing the faculties to excess, there are
-very few minds that become as efficient as they might be.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_197" id="Footnote_197"></a><a href="#FNanchor_197"><span class="label">[197]</span></a> A class of boys whom I once took in Latin Delectus denied, with
-the utmost confidence, when I questioned them on the subject, that there
-were any such things in English as verbs and substantives. On another
-occasion, I saw a poor boy of nine or ten caned, because, when he had
-said that <i>proficiscor</i> was a deponent verb, he could not say what a deponent
-verb was. Even if he had remembered the inaccurate grammar
-definition expected of him, “A deponent verb is a verb with a passive
-form and an active meaning,” his comprehension of <i>proficiscor</i> would
-have been no greater. It is worth observing that, even when offending
-grievously in great matters against the principle of connecting fresh
-knowledge with the old, teachers are sometimes driven to it in small.
-They find that it is better for boys to see that <i>lignum</i> is like <i>regnum</i>,
-and <i>laudare</i> like <i>amare</i>, than simply to learn that <i>lignum</i> is of the
-Second Declension, and <i>laudare</i> of the First Conjugation. If boys had
-to learn by a mere effort of memory the particular declension or conjugation
-of Latin words before they were taught anything about declensions
-and conjugations, this would be as sensible as the method adopted
-in some other instances, and the teachers might urge, as usual, that the
-information would come in useful afterwards.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_198" id="Footnote_198"></a><a href="#FNanchor_198"><span class="label">[198]</span></a> Mr. Spencer and Professor Tyndall appeal to the results of experience
-as justifying a more rational method of teaching. Speaking of
-geometrical deductions, Mr. Spencer says: “It has repeatedly occurred
-that those who have been stupefied by the ordinary school-drill—by its
-abstract formulas, its wearisome tasks, its cramming—have suddenly had
-their intellects roused by thus ceasing to make them passive recipients,
-and inducing them to become active discoverers. The discouragement
-caused by bad teaching having been diminished by a little sympathy,
-and sufficient perseverance excited to achieve a first success, there arises
-a revolution of feeling affecting the whole nature. They no longer find
-themselves incompetent; they too can do something. And gradually,
-as success follows success, the incubus of despair disappears, and they
-attack the difficulties of their other studies with a courage insuring
-conquest.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_199" id="Footnote_199"></a><a href="#FNanchor_199"><span class="label">[199]</span></a> On this subject I can quote the authority of a great observer of the
-mind—no less a man, indeed, than Wordsworth. He speaks of the
-“grand elementary principal of pleasure, by which man knows, and
-feels, and lives, and moves. We have no sympathy,” he continues,
-“but what is propagated by pleasure—I would not be misunderstood—but
-wherever we sympathise with pain, it will be found that the
-sympathy is produced and carried on by subtile combinations with
-pleasure. We have no knowledge, that is, no general principles drawn
-from the contemplation of particular facts, but what has been built up
-by pleasure, and exists in us by pleasure alone. The man of science,
-the chemist, and mathematician, whatever difficulties and disgusts they
-may have to struggle with, know and feel this. However painful may
-be the objects with which the anatomist’s knowledge may be connected, he
-feels that his knowledge is pleasure, and <i>when he has no pleasure he has
-no knowledge</i>.”—Preface to second edition of <i>Lyrical Ballads</i>. So
-Wordsworth would have agreed with Tranio: (<i>T. of Shrew</i>, j. 1.)</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">“No profit grows where is no pleasure ta’en;</div>
-<div class="verse">In brief, Sir, study what you most affect.”</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_200" id="Footnote_200"></a><a href="#FNanchor_200"><span class="label">[200]</span></a> This remark, I am glad to say, is much less true now (1890) than when
-first published. Indeed some purveyors of books for children are getting
-to rely too exclusively on the pictures, just as I have noticed that an
-organ-grinder with a monkey seldom or never has a good organ. Of
-large pictures for class teaching, some of the best I have seen (both for
-history and natural history) are published by the S.P.C.K.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_201" id="Footnote_201"></a><a href="#FNanchor_201"><span class="label">[201]</span></a> Tillich’s boxes of bricks (sold by the B’ham Midland Educational
-Supply Company, and by Arnold, Briggate, Leeds), are very useful for
-“intuitive” arithmetic: for higher stages one might say the same of
-W. Wooding’s “Decimal Abacus” with vertical wires.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_202" id="Footnote_202"></a><a href="#FNanchor_202"><span class="label">[202]</span></a> The grammar question is still a perplexing one. There are Inspectors
-who require children (as I once heard in a remote country
-school) to distinguish “7 kinds of adverbs.” Then we have children
-discriminating after the fashion of one of my own pupils, (I quote from
-a grammar paper,) “Parse <i>it</i>.” “<i>It</i> is a prepreition. Almost all
-small words are prepreitions.” In such cases it is very hard indeed to
-find any common ground for the minds of the old and the young. The
-true way I believe is to lead the young to make their own observations.
-The way is very very slow, but it developes power. I have lately seen
-an interesting little book on these lines, called <i>Language Work</i> by Dr.
-De Garmo (Bloomington, Ill., U.S.A.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_203" id="Footnote_203"></a><a href="#FNanchor_203"><span class="label">[203]</span></a> Books for a beginner should contain a little matter in much space,
-and, as they are usually written, they contain much matter in a little
-space. Nothing can be truer than the saying of Lakanal, “L’abrégé est
-le contraire de l’éléméntaire: That which is abridged is just the
-opposite of that which is elementary.” When shall we learn what
-seems obvious in itself and what is taught us by the great authorities?
-“Epitome,” says Ascham, “is good privately for himself that doth
-work it, but ill commonly for all others that use other men’s labour
-therein. A silly poor kind of study, not unlike to the doing of those
-poor folk which neither till, nor sow, nor reap themselves, but glean by
-stealth upon other’s grounds. Such have empty barns for dear years.”
-(<i>School Master</i>, Book ij.) Bacon says (<i>De Aug.</i>, lib. vj., cap. iv.),
-“Ad pædagogicam quod attinet brevissimum foret dictu.... Illud
-imprimis consuluerim ut caveatur a compendiis: Not much about
-pedagogics.... My chief advice is, keep clear of compendiums.”
-And yet “the table of contents” method which I suggested in irony I afterwards
-found proposed in all seriousness in an announcement of Dr. J.
-F. Bright’s <i>English History</i>: “The marginal analysis has been collected
-at the beginning of the volume so as to form an abstract of the history
-<i>suitable for the use of those who are beginning the study</i>.”</p>
-
-<p>I would rather listen to Oliver Goldsmith: “In history, such stories
-alone should be laid before them as might catch the imagination: instead
-of this, they are too frequently obliged to toil through the four
-Empires, as they are called, where their memories are burthened by a
-number of disgusting names that destroy all their future relish for our
-best historians.” (Letter on <i>Education</i> in <i>the Bee</i>: a letter containing
-so much new truth that Goldsmith in re-publishing it had to point out
-that it had appeared before Rousseau’s <i>Emile</i>.) A modern authority on
-education has come to the same conclusion as Goldsmith. “The first
-teaching in history will not give dates, but will show the learner men
-and actions likely to make an impression on him. Der erste Geschichtsunterricht
-wird nicht Jahreszahlen geben, sondern eindrucksvolle
-Personen und Thaten vorführen.” (L. Wiese’s <i>Deutsche Bildungsfragen</i>,
-1871.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_204" id="Footnote_204"></a><a href="#FNanchor_204"><span class="label">[204]</span></a> Dr. Jas. Donaldson has well said of the educator:—“The most
-unguarded of his acts, those which come from the depth of his nature,
-uncalled for and unbidden, are the actions which have the most powerful
-influence.” <i>Chambers’ Information</i> sub v. <i>Education</i>, p. 565.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_205" id="Footnote_205"></a><a href="#FNanchor_205"><span class="label">[205]</span></a></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse indent9">“That you are wife</div>
-<div class="verse">To so much bloated flesh <i>as scarce hath soul</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>Instead of salt to keep it sweet</i>, I think</div>
-<div class="verse">Will ask no witnesses to prove.”</div>
-<div class="verse right"><span class="smcap">Ben Jonson</span>: <i>The Devil is an Ass</i>, Act i. sc. 3.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_206" id="Footnote_206"></a><a href="#FNanchor_206"><span class="label">[206]</span></a> I fortify myself with the following quotation from the <i>Book about
-Dominies</i> by “Ascott Hope” (Hope Moncrieff). He says that a school
-of from twenty to a hundred boys is too large to be altogether under the
-influence of one man, and too small for the development of a healthy
-condition of public opinion among the boys themselves. “In a community
-of fifty boys, there will always be found so many bad ones who
-will be likely to carry things their own way. Vice is more unblushing
-in small societies than in large ones. <i>Fifty boys will be more easily
-leavened by the wickedness of five, than five hundred by that of fifty.</i> It
-would be too dangerous an ordeal to send a boy to a school where sin
-appears fashionable, and where, if he would remain virtuous, he must
-shun his companions. There may be middle-sized schools which derive
-a good and healthy tone from the moral strength of their masters or the
-good example of a certain set of boys, but I doubt if there are many.
-Boys are so easily led to do right or wrong, that we should be very
-careful at least to set the balance fairly” (p. 167); and again he says
-(p. 170), “The moral tone of a middle-sized school will be peculiarly
-liable to be at the mercy of a set of bold and bad boys.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_207" id="Footnote_207"></a><a href="#FNanchor_207"><span class="label">[207]</span></a> As I have been thought to express myself too strongly on this point,
-I will give a quotation from a master whose opinion will go far with all
-who know him. “The moral tone of the school is made what it is,
-not nearly so much by its rules and regulations, or its masters, as by the
-leading characters among the boys. They mainly determine the public
-opinion amongst their schoolfellows—their personal influence is incalculable.”
-Rev. D. Edwardes, of Denstone.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_208" id="Footnote_208"></a><a href="#FNanchor_208"><span class="label">[208]</span></a> About Preparatory Schools I find I am at issue with my friend the
-Head Master of Harrow (See <i>Public Schools</i>, by Rev. J. E. C. Welldon,
-in <i>Contemporary R.</i>, May, 1890). I do indeed incline to his opinion that
-very young boys should not be at a public school, but I cannot agree
-that they should be at a middle-sized boarding school. I hold that they
-should live in a <i>family</i> (their own if possible) and go to a day school.
-Day Schools have now been provided for girls, but for young boys they
-do not seem in demand. English parents who can afford it send their
-sons to boarding schools from eight years old onwards. This seems to
-me a great mistake of theirs.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_209" id="Footnote_209"></a><a href="#FNanchor_209"><span class="label">[209]</span></a> “What is education? It is that which is imbibed from the moral
-atmosphere which a child breathes. It is the involuntary and unconscious
-language of its parents and of all those by whom it is surrounded,
-and not their set speeches and set lectures. It is the words which the
-young hear fall from their seniors when the speakers are off their
-guard: and it is by these unconscious expressions that the child interprets
-the hearts of its parents. That is education.”—Drummond’s
-<i>Speeches in Parliament</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_210" id="Footnote_210"></a><a href="#FNanchor_210"><span class="label">[210]</span></a> In what I have said on this subject, the incompleteness which is
-noticeable enough in the preceding essays, has found an appropriate
-climax. I see, too, that if anyone would take the trouble, the little I
-have said might easily be misinterpreted. I am well aware, however,
-that if the young mind will not readily assimilate sharply defining religious
-formulæ, still less will it feel at home among the “immensities”
-and “veracities.” The great educating force of Christianity I believe
-to be due to this, that it is not a set of abstractions or vague generalities,
-but that in it God reveals Himself to us in a Divine Man, and raises us
-through our devotion to Him. I hold, therefore, that religious teaching
-for the young should neither be vague nor abstract. Mr. Froude, in
-commenting on the use made of hagiology in the Church of Rome, has
-shown that we lose much by not following the Bible method of instruction.
-(See <i>Short Studies: Lives of the Saints</i>, and <i>Representative Men</i>.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_211" id="Footnote_211"></a><a href="#FNanchor_211"><span class="label">[211]</span></a> This theory of the educator’s task which makes him a disposer or
-director of influence rather than a teacher, led Locke to decry our
-public schools, for in them the traditions and tone of the school seem
-the source of influence, and the masters are to all appearance mainly
-teachers. Locke’s own words are these:—“The difference is great
-between two or three pupils in the same house and three or four
-score boys lodged up and down; for let the master’s industry and
-skill be never so great, it is impossible he should have fifty or a hundred
-scholars under his eye any longer than they are in the school together,
-nor can it be expected that he should instruct them successfully in anything
-but their books; the forming of their minds and manners requiring
-a constant attention and particular application to every single boy
-which is impossible in a numerous flock, and would be wholly in vain
-(could he have time to study and correct everyone’s particular defects
-and wrong inclinations) when the lad was to be left to himself or the
-prevailing infection of his fellows the greatest part of the four-and-twenty
-hours.” But the educator who considers himself a director of influences
-must remember that he is not the only force. The boy’s companions
-are a force at least as great; and if he were brought up in private on
-Locke’s system, he would be entirely without a kind of influence much
-more valuable than Locke seems to think—the influence of boy companions,
-and of the traditions of a great school. On the other hand, it
-cannot be denied that our public schools used to be, and perhaps are
-still to some extent, under-mastered, and that the masters should not
-be the mere teachers which, from overwork and other causes, they often
-tend to become. The consequence has been that the real education of
-the boys has in a great measure passed out of their hands. What has
-been the result? A long succession of able teachers have aimed at giving
-literary instruction and making their pupils classical scholars. Both
-manners and bodily training have been left to take care of themselves.
-Yet such is the irony of Fate that the majority of youths who leave our
-great schools are not literary and are not much of classical scholars, but
-they are decidedly gentlemanly and still more decidedly athletic.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_212" id="Footnote_212"></a><a href="#FNanchor_212"><span class="label">[212]</span></a> I append a note written from a different point of view—“<i>With
-how little wisdom!</i>” certainly seems to cover most departments of life.
-<i>Seems?</i> Yes; but are we not apt to overlook the wisdom that lies in the
-great mass of people? In some small department we may have investigated
-further than our class-mates, and may see, or think we see, a
-good deal of stupidity in what goes on. But in most matters we do not
-investigate for ourselves, but just do the usual thing; and this seems to
-work all right. There must be a good deal of wisdom underlying the
-complex machinery of civilised life. Carlyle’s “Mostly fools!” will by
-no means account for it. At times one has a dim perception that people
-in general are not so stupid as they seem. Perhaps a long life would
-in the end lead us to say like Tithonus,</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">“Why should a man desire in any way</div>
-<div class="verse">“To vary from the kindly race of men?”</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>There is a higher wisdom than the disintegrating individualism of
-Carlyle. Far better to believe with Mazzini in “the collective existence
-of humanity,” and remembering that we work in a medium fashioned
-for us by the labours of all who have preceded us, regard our collective
-powers as “grafted upon those of all foregoing humanity.” (Mazzini’s
-<i>Essays</i>: <i>Carlyle</i>.) This is the point of view to which Wordsworth
-would raise us:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">“Among the multitudes</div>
-<div class="verse">“Of that huge city, oftentimes was seen</div>
-<div class="verse">“.........................the unity of man,</div>
-<div class="verse">“One spirit over ignorance and vice</div>
-<div class="verse">“Predominant, in good and evil hearts;</div>
-<div class="verse">“One sense for moral judgements, as one eye</div>
-<div class="verse">“For the sun’s light. The soul when smitten thus</div>
-<div class="verse">“By a sublime <i>idea</i>, whence soe’er</div>
-<div class="verse">“Vouchsafed for union or communion, feeds</div>
-<div class="verse">“On the pure bliss and takes her rest with God.”</div>
-<div class="verse right"><i>Prelude</i> viij, <i>ad f.</i></div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Though unable to share in “the pure bliss” of Wordsworth we may
-take refuge with Goethe in the thought that “humanity is the true man,”
-and enjoy much to which we have no claim as individuals. Tradition,
-blind tradition, must rule our actions through by far the greatest part of
-our lives; and seeing we owe it so much, we should be tolerant, even
-grateful.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_213" id="Footnote_213"></a><a href="#FNanchor_213"><span class="label">[213]</span></a> Professor Jebb has lately given us the main ideas of the great
-Scholar Erasmus. “In all his work,” says the Professor, “he had an
-educational aim.... The evils of his age, in Church, in State, in
-the daily lives of men, seemed to him to have their roots in <i>ignorance</i>;
-ignorance of what Christianity meant, ignorance of what the Bible taught,
-ignorance of what the noblest and most gifted minds of the past,
-whether Christian or pagan, had contributed to the instruction of the
-human race.” (Rede Lecture, 1890.) Erasmus evidently fell into the
-error against which Pestalozzi and Froebel lift up their voices, often in
-vain—the error of forgetting that knowledge is of no avail without intelligence.
-What is the use of lighting additional candles for the blind?</p>
-
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_527" id="Page_527">[527]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="APPENDIX">APPENDIX.</h2>
-
-<p><b>History of this Book.</b>—Some wise man has advised us never to
-find fault with ourselves, for, says he, you may always depend on your
-friends to do it for you. So, having looked through the proofs of this
-book, I abstain from fault-finding. I fancy I <i>could</i> find fault more
-effectively than my friends or even my professional critics. As the
-<i>Spectator’s</i> “Correspondent in an easy chair” says very truly; the
-author has read his book many times; the critic has read it <i>at most</i> once.
-In fact the critic gives to the book (in some cases to the subject of the
-book also) no greater number of hours than the author has given months,
-perhaps years. Partiality blinds the author, no doubt, but unless he is
-a fatuous person it does not blind him so much as his haste blinds the
-critic. An author of note said of a book of his, which had been much
-criticised: “The book has faults, but I am the only person who has
-discovered them,” to which a friend maliciously appended: “For <i>faults</i>
-read <i>merits</i>.” Whatever was the truth here, I am inclined to think
-the author has the best chance of putting his finger on the weak
-places.</p>
-
-<p>But if I see weaknesses in the foregoing book, why do I not make it
-better? Just for two reasons: to improve the book I should have to
-spend more time on it and more money. The more I read and think
-about any one of my subjects, the more I want to go on reading and
-thinking. Perhaps I hear of an old book that has escaped my notice,
-or a new book comes out, sometimes an important book like Pinloche’s
-<i>Basedow</i>. So I can never finish an essay to my satisfaction, and the
-only way of getting it off my hands is to send the copy to the printer.
-By the time the proof comes in there is something that I should like to
-add or alter; but then the dread of a long bill for “corrections” restrains
-me. However, now the book is all in type, I see here and there something
-that suggests a note by way of explanation or addition, so I add
-this appendix. Taking a hint from one of my favourite authors, Sir
-Arthur Helps, I throw my notes into the form of a dialogue, but<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_528" id="Page_528">[528]</a></span>
-being entirely destitute of Helps’s dramatic skill I confine myself to
-<b>E.</b> (the Essayist) and <b>A.</b> (Amicus), who is only too clearly an <i>alter ego</i>.</p>
-
-<p><b>A.</b> So the Americans have kept alive your old book for you, and at
-last you have rewritten it. You at least have no reason to complain
-that there is no international copyright. Your book would have been
-forgotten long ago if a lady in Cincinnati had not persuaded an American
-publisher there to reprint it. <b>E.</b> Yes, I very readily allow that I have
-been a gainer. The Americans have done more for me than my own
-countrymen. To be sure neither have “praised with the hands” (as
-Molière’s <i>professeur</i> has it); and, in money at least, the book has never
-paid <i>me</i> its expenses; but three American publishers have done for
-themselves what no Englishman would do for me, viz., publish at their
-own risk. In 1868 when my MS. was ready, I went to my old friend,
-Mr. Alexander Macmillan; but he would not even look at it. “Books
-on education,” said he, “don’t pay. Why there is Thring’s <i>Education
-and School</i>, a capital book” (I assented heartily, for I was very fond of
-it), “well, <i>that</i> doesn’t sell.” I was forced to admit that in that case I
-had little chance. “But,” I said, “I suppose you would publish at
-my risk?” “No,” said Mr. Macmillan. “The author is never satisfied
-when his book doesn’t pay.” “What would you advise?” I asked.
-“I’ll give you a letter of introduction to Mr. William Longman,” said
-Mr. Macmillan; “I dare say he’ll publish for you.” With this letter I
-went to Mr. William Longman (who has since those days been gathered
-to his ancestors, formerly of Paternoster Row). Mr. Longman said he
-would put the MS. in the hands of his reader. If the reader’s report
-was favourable the firm would offer me terms; if not, they would publish
-for me on commission. I sent the MS. accordingly, and soon after
-I had a letter from the firm offering to publish “on commission.”
-When the book was in type, Mr. Longman advised me to have only
-500 printed, and to publish at a high price. “I should charge 9<i>s.</i>,” he
-said. “Very few people will buy, and they won’t consider the price.”
-This was not my opinion, but in such a matter I felt that the weight of
-authority was enormously against me. So I consented to the publishing
-price of 7<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> And at first it seemed that Mr. Longman was
-right—at least about the small number of purchasers. £30 was spent
-in advertising, and the book was very generally and I may say very
-favourably reviewed; but when about 100 copies had been sold, it
-almost entirely ceased “to move.” I think 13 copies were sold in six
-months. So to get rid of the remainder of my 500 copies (some 300
-of them) I put down the price to 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> Then it seemed that Mr.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_529" id="Page_529">[529]</a></span>
-Longman had made a mistake about the price. Without another
-advertisement the 300 were sold in a month or two. Some time after,
-I heard that the book had been republished in Cincinnati, and on my
-writing to the publishers, Messrs. Robert Clarke &amp; Co., they presented
-me with half-a-dozen copies. This proved to be a perfect reprint,
-which is more than I can say of those which years afterwards were
-issued by Mr. Bardeen and Messrs. Kellogg. I have therefore from
-time to time purchased from Messrs. Clarke and imported the copies
-(I suppose about 1500 in all) that have been wanted for the English
-market. I hope these details do not bore you. <b>A.</b> Not at all. The
-history of any book interests me, and your book has had some odd
-experiences. It has lived, I own, much longer than I expected, and
-for this you have to thank the Americans. <b>A.</b> In my case the absence
-of international copyright has done no harm certainly; but after all
-copyright has its advantages, international copyright included. Specialists
-suffer severely from the want of it. Perhaps the “special” public in
-this country is so small that an important book for it cannot be published.
-If to our special public were joined the special public of the U.S., the
-book might be fairly remunerative to its author. Take, <i>e.g.</i>, Joseph
-Payne’s writings. These would have been lost to the world had not
-Dr. Payne published them as an act of filial piety. With an international
-copyright these works would be very good property. <b>E.</b> You
-think then that in the long run “honesty is the best policy” even
-internationally? <b>A.</b> I must say my opinion does incline in that
-direction.</p>
-
-<p><b>Class Matches (p 42).</b>—<b>A.</b> I think you have had a good deal to
-do with class matches? <b>E.</b> Yes. One must be careful not to overdo
-them, but I have found an occasional match a capital way of enlivening
-school-work. Some time before the match takes place the
-master lets the two best boys pick up sides, the second boy having the
-first choice. The subject for the match is then arranged, and to prevent
-disputes the area must be carefully defined. Moreover, there must be
-no opportunity for the boys to ask questions about unimportant details
-that are likely to have escaped attention. When the match is to take
-place each boy should come provided with a set of written questions,
-and whenever a boy shows himself ignorant of the right answer to a
-question of his own he must be held to have failed even if his opponent
-is ignorant also. At Harrow, where I had a class-room (“school-room”
-as it is there called) to myself, I used to work these matches
-very successfully in German. Say Heine’s Lorelei had been learnt by<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_530" id="Page_530">[530]</a></span>
-heart. I set as a subject for a match the plurals of the substantives and
-the past participles of the verbs in the poem. Or the boys had to make
-up for themselves and number on paper a set of short sentences in
-which only words which occurred in the poem were used. In this last
-case the questioner handed in to the master his paper with both the
-English and the German on it, and the master gave the other side the
-English, of which they had to write the German. The details of such
-matches may of course be varied to any extent so long as the subject
-set is quite definite. The scoring will be found best at the lower end,
-so that a match stimulates those who need stimulus. <b>A.</b> What did you
-call “scratch pairs?” <b>E.</b> Oh, that was a device for getting up a little
-harmless excitement. Knowing the capacities of my boys, I arranged
-them in pairs, the best boy and the worst forming one pair, the next
-best and next worst the second pair, &amp;c., &amp;c. I then asked a series of
-questions to which all had to write short answers. I then looked over
-the answers and marked them. Finally the marks of each <i>pair</i> were
-added together, and I announced the order in which the pairs “came
-in.” It was really “anybody’s race” for neither I nor anyone could
-predict the result. If the number of boys was an odd number the boy
-in the middle fought for his own hand and had his marks doubled.
-Perhaps on the whole he had the best chance.</p>
-
-<p><b>Competition.</b>—<b>A.</b> There were then some forms of emulation
-which you did not set your face against? <b>E.</b> There were many, but I
-preferred emulation which stimulated the idle rather than the
-industrious. Most “prizes” act only on those who would be better
-without them. <b>A.</b> Do you see no danger in encouraging rivalry
-between different bodies? The strife between parties has often been
-more virulent than the strife between individuals. <b>E.</b> Yes, I know
-well that in exciting party-feeling one is playing with edged tools;
-and besides this, a boy who for any cause is thought a disgrace to his
-side, is very likely to be bullied by it. Let me tell you of one form of
-stimulus which seemed to work well and was free from most of the
-objections you are thinking of. When I had a small school of my own in
-which there were only young boys, I put up in the school-room a list
-of the boys’ names in alphabetical order with blank spaces after the
-names. I looked over the boys’ written work very carefully, and
-whenever I came across any written exercise evidently done with great
-painstaking and for that boy with more than ordinary success, I marked
-it with a G, and I put up the G in one of the spaces after that boy’s
-name in the list hung up in the school-room. When the school<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_531" id="Page_531">[531]</a></span>
-collectively had obtained a fixed number of G’s we had an extra half-holiday.
-The announcement of a G was therefore always hailed with
-delight. <b>A.</b> I see one thing in favour of that device. You might by
-a G give encouragement to a boy when he has just begun to <i>try</i>. This
-is often a turning-point in a boy’s life; and a master’s early recognition
-of effort may do much to strengthen into a habit what might, without
-the recognition, have proved nothing but a passing whim. At the very
-least, all such devices have one good effect; they break the monotony
-of school-work; and monotony is much more wearing to the young
-than it is to their elders. Can you tell me of others who have used
-such plans? <b>E.</b> A friend of mine who has a genius for inventing
-school plans of all kinds and marvellous energy in working them, has a
-boarding-house in connexion with a large school. The marks of every
-boy in the school are given out for each week. My friend gives a
-supper at the end of the quarter if the average marks of his house
-come up to a certain standard. He puts up each week a list of
-“Furtherers,” <i>i.e.</i>, of the boys who have surpassed the average, and of
-“Hinderers,” <i>i.e.</i>, of boys who have fallen below it <b>A.</b> No doubt
-this is an effective spur, but I should fear it would in practice deliver
-the hindermost to Satan. The boy whom nature has made a
-“hinderer” is likely to have by no means a good time in that house.
-Do you know if such devices as you have mentioned are common in
-schools? <b>E.</b> I really can’t say. I have seen in American school papers
-accounts of class matches. In the New England <i>Journal of Education</i>
-(22nd November, 1888) Mr. A. E. Winship gave an account of some
-inter-class matches at Milwaukee. There is a match between three
-classes, say in penmanship. If there are seventy boys in the three
-classes together, each boy draws a number from one to seventy, and
-puts not his name but his number on his paper. The same lesson is set
-for all. The papers are collected, divided into three equal heaps, and
-looked over and marked by three masters. Finally the <i>average</i> of each
-class is taken. In mental arithmetic each class chooses its own
-champions. This would be fun, but would do nothing for the lower end
-of the class. The principal of McDonough School No. 12, New
-Orleans, Mr. H. E. Chambers, gives an account in the New York
-<i>School Journal</i> (8th December, 1888), how he organised sixteen boys
-into teams of four, putting the best and worst together as I did in
-making up scratch pairs. The match between these teams was to see
-which could get the best record for the month. As Mr. Chambers tells
-us the sharper boys managed with more success than the master to let<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_532" id="Page_532">[532]</a></span>
-light into the dull intellects of boys in the same team with them.
-This union of interests between the “strong” and the “weak” as the
-French call them, is a very good feature in combats of <i>sides</i>.</p>
-
-<p><b>The Jesuits.</b>—<b>A.</b> What is it that interests you so much in the
-Jesuits? <b>E.</b> Two things. First, the Jesuit shows the effects of a
-definitely planned and rigidly carried out system of education; and
-next, in such a society you find a continuity of effort which is and must
-be wanting in the life of an individual. If ever “we feel that we are
-greater than we know” it is when we can think of ourselves as parts of
-a society, a society which existed long before us, and will last after us.
-For instance, it is a great thing to be connected with an historical
-school such as Harrow. We then realise, as the school’s poet, Mr.
-E. E. Bowen, has said, that we are no mere “sons of yesterday,” and
-thinking of the connection between the mighty dead and the old school
-we join heartily in the chorus of the school song:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">“Their glory thus shall circle us</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">“Till time be done.”</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p><b>A.</b> I verily believe you expect your share in this “glory” for
-having invented the Harrow “Blue Book,” which is likely to outlive
-<i>Educational Reformers</i>; but if the boys ever thought of the inventor
-(which they don’t) they would naturally suppose that he was some
-contemporary of Cadmus or Deucalion. <i>Sic transit!</i> But what has
-this to do with the Jesuits? <b>E.</b> Only this, that by corporate life you
-secure a continuity of effort. There is to me something very attractive
-in the idea of a teaching society. How such a society might capitalise
-its discoveries! The Roman Church has shown a genius for such
-societies, witness the Jesuits and the Christian Brothers. The
-experience of centuries must have taught them much that we could
-learn of them. <b>A.</b> The Jesuits seem to me to be without the spirit of
-investigators and discoverers. The rules of their Society do not permit
-of their learning anything or forgetting anything. Ignatius Loyola was
-a wonderful man, but he must have been superhuman if he could
-legislate for all time. By the way, I see you say the first edition of the
-<i>Ratio</i> was published in 1585. What is your authority? <b>E.</b> I took
-the date from the copy in the British Museum. According to a volume
-published by Rivingtons in 1838 (<i>Constitutiones Societatis Jesu</i>) the
-<i>Constitutions</i> were first printed in 1558, but were not divulged till “the
-celebrated suit of the MM. Lionci and Father La Valette” in 1761.</p>
-
-<p><b>Alexander’s Doctrinale (p. 80).</b>—<b>A.</b> I thought you made it a rule
-to give only what was useful. What can be the use of the quotations<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_533" id="Page_533">[533]</a></span>
-which your old Appendix contained “from a celebrated grammar written
-by a Franciscan of Brittany about the middle of the 13th century”?
-<b>E.</b> Perhaps I had an attack of antiquarianism; but I rather think the
-quotations were given in order to shew our progress since those days.
-The Teachers’ art of making easy things difficult is well exemplified in
-Alexander’s rules for the first declension. But life is short, and folly is
-best forgotten.</p>
-
-<p><b>Lily’s Grammar (p. 80).</b> <b>A.</b> Would not your last remark rule out
-what you told us about Lily’s Grammar? <b>E.</b> As regards Lily’s
-assertion, “Genders of nouns be 7,” it certainly would. Surely nobody
-but a writer of school-books would ever have thought of making a
-“gender” out of “hic, hæc, hoc, felix”! But the absurdity did not
-originate with Lily. He was all for simplification, and though there
-were some changes in the Eton Latin Grammar which succeeded the
-“Short introduction of Grammar” known as Lily’s Grammar, these
-changes were, some of them at least, by no means improvements. The
-old book put <i>a</i> before <i>all</i> ablatives and taught that “by a kingdom”
-was <i>a regno</i>. If this was not any better than teaching that <i>domino</i> by
-itself was “by a Lord,” it was at least no worse. The optative of the
-old book (“<i>Utinam sim</i> I pray God I be; <i>Utinam Essem</i> would God
-I were, &amp;c.”) and the subjunctive (“<i>Cum Sim</i> When I am, &amp;c.,”) were
-better than the oracular statement which perplexed my youth, “The subjunctive
-mood is declined like the potential.” How often I said those
-words, and being of an inquiring mind wondered what on earth “the
-subjunctive mood” was!</p>
-
-<p><b>Colet.</b> <b>E.</b> The passage I refer to on page 80 from Colet is in a
-little book in the B.M. It is “Joannis Coleti theologi, olim Decani Divi
-Pauli, editio, una cum quibusdam G. Lilii Grammatices Rudimentis, &amp;c.
-Antuerpiæ 1535.” After the accidence of the eight parts of speech, he
-says:—“Of these eight parts of speech in order well construed, be
-made reasons and sentences, and long orations. But how and in what
-manner, and with what constructions of words, and all the varieties,
-and diversities, and changes in Latin speech (which be innumerable), if
-any man will know, and by that knowledge attain to understand Latin
-books, and to speak and to write clean Latin, let him, above all, busily
-learn and read good Latin authors of chosen poets and orators, and note
-wisely how they wrote and spake; and study always to follow them,
-desiring none other rules but their examples. For in the beginning men
-spake not Latin because such rules were made, but, contrariwise, because
-men spake such Latin, upon that followed the rules, and were made.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_534" id="Page_534">[534]</a></span>
-That is to say, Latin speech was before the rules, and not the rules
-before the Latin speech. Wherefore, well-beloved masters and teachers
-of grammar, after the parts of speech sufficiently known in our schools,
-read and expound plainly unto your scholars good authors, and show to
-them [in] every word, and in every sentence, what they shall note and
-observe, warning them busily to follow and do like both in writing and
-in speaking; and be to them your own self also speaking with them the
-pure Latin very present, and leave the rules; for reading of good books,
-diligent information of learned masters, studious advertence and taking
-heed of learners, hearing eloquent men speak, and finally, busy imitation
-with tongue and pen, more availeth shortly to get the true eloquent speech,
-than all the traditions, rules, and precepts of masters.” This passage is,
-I find, well known. It is given in Knights’ <i>Life of Colet</i> and is referred
-to by Mr. Seebohm. Mr. J. H. Lupton, Colet’s latest biographer, has
-kindly corrected the date for me: it is indistinct in the Museum copy.</p>
-
-<p><b>Mulcaster for English (p. 97).</b> <b>A.</b> Except in Clarke’s edition,
-your extracts from Mulcaster’s <i>Elementarie</i> have been omitted by your
-American reprinters. <b>E.</b> So I see. I should have thought the
-Americans would have been much interested by this early praise of our
-common language. The passage is certainly a very remarkable one,
-and Professor Masson has thought it worth quoting in his <i>Life of
-Milton</i>. The <i>Elementarie</i> is a scarce book; so I will not follow my
-reprinters in leaving out this passage:—“Is it not a marvellous bondage
-to become servants to one tongue, for learning’s sake, the most part of
-our time, with loss of most time, whereas we may have the very same
-treasure in our own tongue with the gain of most time? our own
-bearing the joyful title of our liberty and freedom, the Latin tongue
-remembering us of our thraldom and bondage? I love Rome, but
-London better; I favour Italy, but England more: I honour the Latin,
-but I worship the English.... I honour foreign tongues, but wish
-my own to be partaker of their honour. Knowing them, I wish my own
-tongue to resemble their grace. I confess their furniture, and wish it were
-ours.... The diligent labour of learned countrymen did so enrich
-those tongues, and not the tongues themselves; though they proved very
-pliable, as our tongue will prove, I dare assure it, of knowledge, if our
-learned countrymen will put to their labour. And why not, I pray you,
-as well in English as either Latin or any tongue else? Will ye say it is
-needless? sure that will not hold. If loss of time, while ye be pilgrims
-to learning, by lingering about tongues be no argument of need; if lack
-of sound skill while the tongue distracteth sense more than half to itself<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_535" id="Page_535">[535]</a></span>
-and that most of all in a simple student or a silly wit, be no argument
-of need, then ye say somewhat which pretend no need. But because
-we needed not to lose any time unless we listed, if we had such a
-vantage, in the course of study, as we now lose while we travail in
-tongues; and because our understanding also were most full in our
-natural speech, though we know the foreign exceedingly well—methink
-<i>necessity</i> itself doth call for <i>English</i>, whereby all that gaiety may be had
-at home which makes us gaze so much at the fine stranger.” Among
-various objections to the use of English which he answers, he comes to
-this one:—“But will ye thus break off the common conference with the
-learned foreign?” To this his answer is not very forcible:—“The
-conference will not cease while the people have cause to interchange
-dealings, and without the Latin it may well be continued: as in some
-countries the learneder sort and some near cousins to the Latin itself do
-already wean their pens and tongues from the use of the Latin, both
-in written discourse and spoken disputation, into their own natural, and
-yet no dry nurse being so well appointed by the milch nurse’s help.”
-Further on he says:—“The emperor Justinian said, when he made the
-Institutes of force, that the students were happy in having such a foredeal
-[<i>i.e.</i>, advantage—German <i>Vortheil</i>] as to hear him at once, and
-not to wait four years first. And doth not our languaging hold us back
-four years and that full, think you?... [But this is not all.] Our
-best understanding is in our natural tongue, and all our foreign learning
-is applied to our use by means of our own; and without the application
-to particular use, wherefore serves learning?... [As for dishonouring
-antiquity], if we must cleave to the eldest and not the best, we
-should be eating acorns and wearing old Adam’s pelts. But why not
-all in English, a tongue of itself both deep in conceit and frank in
-delivery? I do not think that any language, be it whatsoever, is better
-able to utter all arguments either with more pith or greater plainness
-than our English tongue is.... It is our accident which restrains
-our tongue and not the tongue itself, which will strain with the strongest
-and stretch to the furthest, for either government if we were conquerors,
-or for cunning if we were treasurers; not any whit behind either the
-subtle Greek for crouching close, or the stately Latin for spreading
-fair.”</p>
-
-<p><b>Marcel’s “Axiomatic Truths.”</b>—<b>A.</b> I have seen Marcel referred
-to as a great authority in education, but I look in vain for his name in
-Kiddle’s Cyclopædia and in Sonnenschein’s. <b>E.</b> You would be more
-successful in Buisson’s. There I see that Claude Marcel was born at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_536" id="Page_536">[536]</a></span>
-Paris in 1793, and died in 1876. He was one of Napoleon’s soldiers.
-After 40 years’ absence from France dating from 1825 he went back to
-Paris. He had been French Consul at Cork, and brought up nine
-children whom he taught entirely himself. In 1853 he published with
-Chapman and Hall his <i>Language as a Means of Mental Culture</i> (2
-vols.). This book was not very well named, for it contains in fact an
-analysis of the subject—education. To the study of this subject Marcel
-must have given his life, and it seems odd that his contribution to
-English (not French) pedagogic literature is so little known. A French
-abridgment of his work appeared in 1855 with the title <i>Premiers
-Principes d’Education</i>; and in 1867 he published in French <i>L’Études
-des Languages</i> (Paris, Borrani) of which a translation was published in
-the U.S.A. Marcel’s notion of education is threefold, viz., Physical,
-Intellectual, and Moral Education: the 1st aiming at <i>health</i>, <i>strength</i>,
-and <i>beauty</i>; the 2nd at <i>mental power</i> and the <i>acquisition of knowledge</i>;
-the 3rd at <i>piety</i>, <i>justice</i>, <i>goodness</i>, and <i>wisdom</i>. According to him the
-Creator has made the exercise of our faculties <i>pleasurable</i>. This will
-suggest his main lines. He expects to find general assent, for he quotes
-from Garrick:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">“When Doctrine meets with general approbation,</div>
-<div class="verse">“It is not heresy but reformation.”</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">But he has met with less approbation than neglect. His “axiomatic
-truths” that I quoted in the old appendix were abused without mercy
-by a critic of those days who accused me of “bookmaking” for putting
-them in. On the other hand my last American reprinter singles them
-out for honour and puts them at the beginning of the book. After this
-I suppose somebody likes them, so here they are:</p>
-
-<p>“<b>Axiomatic Truths of Methodology.</b>—1. The method of nature
-is the archetype of all methods, and especially of the method of learning
-languages.</p>
-
-<p>2. The classification of the objects of study should mark out to
-teacher and learner their respective spheres of action.</p>
-
-<p>3. The ultimate objects of the study should always be kept in view,
-that the end be not forgotten in pursuit of the means.</p>
-
-<p>4. The means ought to be consistent with the end.</p>
-
-<p>5. Example and practice are more efficient than precept and theory.</p>
-
-<p>6. Only one thing should be taught at one time; and an accumulation
-of difficulties should be avoided, especially in the beginning of the
-study.</p>
-
-<p>7. Instruction should proceed from the known to the unknown, from<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_537" id="Page_537">[537]</a></span>
-the simple to the complex, from concrete to abstract notions, from
-analysis to synthesis.</p>
-
-<p>8. The mind should be impressed with the idea before it takes
-cognisance of the sign that represents it.</p>
-
-<p>9. The development of the intellectual powers is more important
-than the acquisition of knowledge; each should be made auxiliary to
-the other.</p>
-
-<p>10. All the faculties should be equally exercised, and exercised in a
-way consistent with the exigencies of active life.</p>
-
-<p>11. The protracted exercise of the faculties is injurious: a change of
-occupation renews the energy of their action.</p>
-
-<p>12. No exercise should be so difficult as to discourage exertion, nor
-so easy as to render it unnecessary: attention is secured by making
-study interesting.</p>
-
-<p>13. First impressions and early habits are the most important, because
-they are the most enduring.</p>
-
-<p>14. What the learner discovers by mental exertion is better known
-than what is told him.</p>
-
-<p>15. Learners should not do with their instructor what they can do by
-themselves, that they may have time to do with him what they cannot
-do by themselves.</p>
-
-<p>16. The monitorial principle multiplies the benefits of public instruction.
-By teaching we learn.</p>
-
-<p>17. The more concentrated is the professor’s teaching, the more
-comprehensive and efficient his instruction.</p>
-
-<p>18. In a class the time must be so employed that no learner shall
-be idle, and the business so contrived, that learners of different degrees
-of advancement shall derive equal advantage from the instructor.</p>
-
-<p>19. Repetition must mature into a habit what the learner wishes to
-remember.</p>
-
-<p>20. Young persons should be taught only what they are capable of
-clearly understanding, and what may be useful to them in after-life.”</p>
-
-<p><b>A.</b> What do <i>you</i> think of these? <b>E.</b> I confess they bring into my
-mind the advice given to a learner in billiards: “When in doubt
-cannon and pocket the red.” First catch your “Method of Nature,”
-as Mrs. Glass might have said. As to No. 10 again, who shall say
-what “all the faculties” are? And is smelling a faculty that must be
-equally exercised with seeing? When the young Marcels went to
-Paris I fancy they found there far more that was worth seeing
-than worth smelling. <b>A.</b> After what you have said about pupil-teachers<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_538" id="Page_538">[538]</a></span>
-I infer you do not advocate the “monitorial principle”?
-<b>E.</b> Not exactly. “By teaching we learn.” This is very true. But
-if we can’t teach we can’t learn by teaching. <b>A.</b> But may we not
-gain by trying to teach? And short of teaching a good deal may be
-done by monitors. <b>E.</b> If by the monitorial principle we mean “Encourage
-the young to make themselves useful” it is a capital principle.</p>
-
-<p><b>Words and Things.</b>—<b>A.</b> In your Sturm Essay you say: “The
-schoolmaster’s art always has taken, and I suppose, in the main, always
-will take for its material the means of expression.” Surely the signs of
-the times do not indicate this. Have not the tongue and the pen had
-their day, and is not the schoolmaster turning his attention from them,
-not perhaps to the brain, but certainly to the eye and the hand? It has
-at length occurred to him to ask like Shylock “Hath not a boy eyes?
-Hath not a boy hands?” And as it seems certain that the boy has
-these organs, the schoolmaster wants to find employment for them.
-Till now no scholastic use has been found for the eye except reading, or
-for the hand except making strokes with the pen and receiving them
-from the cane. But it will be different in the future. Words have had
-their day. Things will have theirs. <b>E.</b> You may be right; but be
-careful in your use of terms. As is usually the case with “cries,” if we
-want a meaning we may take our choice. The contrast between
-“words” and “things” is sometimes between studies like grammar,
-logic, and rhetoric on the one hand, and, on the other, <i>Realien</i>, studies
-which in some way have Things for their subject. Then again we have
-<i>words</i> as the vocal or visible symbols of ideas contrasted with the ideas
-themselves. Those who complain of the time spent on words are thinking,
-some of them, of the time spent on the art of expression, others of the
-time given to symbols which do not, to the learner, symbolize anything.
-But in our day Words and Things are supposed to represent the study
-of literature and the study of natural science. At present there is a rage
-for Things, but it is a little early to adjudicate on the comparative claims
-of, say Homer and James Watt, on the gratitude of mankind. The
-great book of our day on Education, Herbert Spencer’s, would make
-short work with “words”; and yet two School Commissions, the
-Public Schools Commission of 1862, and the Middle Schools Commission
-of 1867 have defended “words.” The first of these says: “Grammar
-is the logic of common speech, and there are few educated men who are not
-sensible of the advantages they gained, as boys, from the steady practice of
-composition and translation, and from their introduction to etymology.
-The study of literature is the study, not indeed of the physical, but of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_539" id="Page_539">[539]</a></span>
-intellectual and moral world we live in, and of the thoughts, lives, and
-characters of those men whose writings or whose memories succeeding
-generations have thought it worth while to preserve.” The Commissioners
-on Middle Schools express a similar opinion:—“The ‘human’
-subjects of instruction, of which the study of language is the beginning,
-appear to have a distinctly greater educational power than the ‘material.’
-As all civilisation really takes its rise in human intercourse, so the most
-efficient instrument of education appears to be the study which most bears
-on that intercourse, the study of human speech. Nothing appears to
-develop and discipline the whole man so much as the study which
-assists the learner to understand the thoughts, to enter into the feelings,
-to appreciate the moral judgments of others. There is nothing so
-opposed to true cultivation, nothing so unreasonable, as excessive
-narrowness of mind; and nothing contributes to remove this narrowness
-so much as that clear understanding of language which lays open
-the thoughts of others to ready appreciation. Nor is equal clearness
-of thought to be obtained in any other way. Clearness of thought
-is bound up with clearness of language, and the one is impossible
-without the other. When the study of language can be followed by that
-of literature, not only breadth and clearness, but refinement becomes
-attainable. The study of history in the full sense belongs to a still later
-age: for till the learner is old enough to have some appreciation of
-politics, he is not capable of grasping the meaning of what he studies.
-But both literature and history do but carry on that which the study of
-language has begun, the cultivation of all those faculties by which man
-has contact with man.” (Middle Schools Report, vol. i, c. iv, p. 22.)
-As Matthew Arnold says, in comparing two things it is “a kind of
-disadvantage” to be totally ignorant about one of them; and I labour
-under this disadvantage in comparing literature and science. But I
-own I do not expect the ultimate victory will be with those who
-may kill, or even cure or carry, the body, and after that have no more
-that they can do. Milton says of fine music, that it “brings all
-heaven before our eyes.” Similarly fine literature can at least bring all
-earth and its inhabitants, and the best thoughts and actions the world
-has known. I remember Matthew Arnold in conversation dwelling on
-the difference it makes to us <i>what we read</i>. Surely one of the great
-things education should do is to enable and to accustom the thoughts of the
-young to follow the guidance which is offered us in “the words of the
-wise.”</p>
-
-<p><b>Seneca</b> <i>v.</i> <b>Comenius</b>.—<b>A.</b> I like your quotation on p. 169 from<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_540" id="Page_540">[540]</a></span>
-Dr. John Brown. After your see-saw fashion, you have, in a note on
-p. 365, expressed a fondness for “a notion of the whole.” E. I am
-there thinking of <i>minute</i> instruction about parts. But in most things
-notions of the parts precede the notion of the whole; and in this
-matter I think Seneca was wiser than Comenius: “More easily are
-we led through the parts into a conception of the whole. Facilius per
-partes in cognitionem totius adducimur.” (Ep. 88, 1.) A. May I
-ask to whom you are indebted for this erudition? E. To Wuestemann.
-(<i>Promptuarium.</i> Gotha, 1856.)</p>
-
-<p><b>Useful Knowledge.</b>—A. I am inclined to think that now and then
-you do not attach sufficient importance to the possession of knowledge
-and skill. E. Perhaps I do not. What I wish to cultivate is, not
-so much knowledge as the desire for knowledge, and further, the activity
-of mind that will turn knowledge to account. Knowledge driven in
-from without, so to speak, and skill obtained by enforced practice are,
-I will not say valueless, but very different in quality from the knowledge
-and skill that their possessor has sought for. Knowledge is a tool. He
-who has acquired it without caring for it, will have neither the skill nor
-the will to use it. A. Does not this apply to the knowledges recommended
-by Herbert Spencer, knowledge how to bring up children, &amp;c.,
-and to the knowledge of physiological facts and rules of health which
-you yourself say would be “of great practical value” (p. 444)? E.
-Certainly it does, and also to the “domestic economy” of our Board
-schools; still more to the lessons in morality which it seems are, at
-least in France if not elsewhere, to supersede religion. If you can get
-the learners to care for such lessons, the lessons are worth giving; if
-not, not. Care, not for the thing, but for the examination in the thing,
-is different, and can produce only a very inferior article. I expect there
-are instances in which care for the examination develops into care for
-the subject of the examination; but these cases are so rare that they
-may be neglected. A. I see you would not take a deep interest in
-the “Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge.” And yet how
-terrible are the results of ignorance! Herbert Spencer is great on
-knowledge for earning a livelihood. It would add, perhaps, three or
-four shillings a week to the wages of the working man if his wife had
-learnt to cook. In matters of food the waste from ignorance among the
-English poor is appalling. E. In this case the school might do much,
-as girls would be anxious to learn. And though we cannot lay down
-as a general rule that it is “never too late to learn,” this rule might
-be applied to cooking. I see that in Govan, a suburb of Glasgow, the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_541" id="Page_541">[541]</a></span>
-widow of the great ship-builder, John Elder, employs a trained teacher
-of cookery to instruct both by demonstrations, and also by visiting
-houses to which he (or she?) is invited. The results are said to be
-excellent. May this good lady find many imitators!</p>
-
-<p><b>Memorizing Poetry.</b>—A. About learning poetry by heart, did
-you ever hear of the old Winchester plan of “Standing up”? In the
-regular “exams.” (“trials” as we called them at Harrow), each boy
-had to state in how much Homer and Virgil he was ready to “stand
-up.” The master examined into the boy’s power of saying this by
-heart, and of construing all he said. From the very first the boy
-always gave in the <i>same</i> poetry, only adding to it each time. E. I
-have heard of it. Why, I wonder, was this plan given up? A. I
-have asked old Wykamists, but nobody seems to know. Perhaps the
-quantities learnt became absurdly large. But this method of accretion,
-if not overdone, would leave something behind it for life. Let me
-show you a passage from Æschines (Agnst Ktesip. § 135) which I have
-seen, not in Æschines, but in J. H. Krause’s “Education among the
-Greeks” (<i>Gesch. d. Erziehg bei d. Griechen</i>). It is so simple that
-even <i>you</i> may construe it. Διὰ τοῦτο γὰρ οἶμαι ἠμᾶς παῖδας ὄντας τὰς
-τῶν ποιητῶν γνώμας ἔκμανθάνειν ἵν’ ἄνδρες ὄντὲς αὐταῖς χρώμεθα.
-E. There is very little left of my Littlego Greek, but I will try: “For
-it is, I suppose, with this object that, when we are boys, we thoroughly
-commit to memory the sayings of the poets—in order to turn them to
-account when we are men.” I wish the old Greek custom were continued.
-I believe in learning by heart what is worthy of it (<a href="#Page_74">see <i>supra</i>,
-p. 74, <i>n.</i></a>). A. But the poetry that appeals to children they grow out
-of. E. This cannot be said of the best of it; but of this best there
-is, to be sure, a very small quantity. By “appeals to,” I suppose you
-mean “written on purpose for.” But in a sense much melodious
-poetry appeals to children even when they can get only a vague notion
-that it <i>has</i> a meaning. I have known children delight in “The
-splendour falls on castle walls,” and Hohen Linden pleases them much
-better than anything of Jane Taylor’s. But here, at all events, there
-can be no doubt about the wisdom of Tranio’s rule: “Study what you
-most affect.” As I have said in an old paper of mine (<i>How to Train
-the Memory</i>; Kellogg’s <i>Teachers Manuals</i>, No. 9), the teacher may
-read aloud some selected pieces, and let the children separately “give
-marks” for each. He can then choose “what they most affect.”</p>
-
-<p><b>Books for Teachers.</b>—A. Don’t you think you might give some
-useful advice to young teachers about the books they should read? E.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_542" id="Page_542">[542]</a></span>
-I had intended giving some advice, but in reading tastes differ widely,
-and after all the best advice is Tranio’s, “Study what you most affect.”
-There are three Englishmen who have written so well that, as it seems,
-they will be read by English-speaking teachers of all time. These are
-Ascham, Locke, and Herbert Spencer. If a teacher does not know
-these he is not likely to know or care anything about the literature of
-education. These authors have attained to the position of classics by
-writing short books in excellent English. After these, I must know
-something of the student before I ventured on a recommendation. If
-he (or more probably <i>she</i>) be a student indeed, nothing will be found
-more valuable than Henry Barnard’s vols. especially those of the
-<i>English Pedagogy</i>. But the majority of mankind want books that are
-readable, <i>i.e.</i>, can be read easily. I do not know any books on
-teaching that I have found easier reading than D’Arcy Thompson’s
-<i>Day-Dreams of a Schoolmaster</i> and H. Clay Trumbull’s <i>Teaching and
-Teachers</i> (Eng. edition is Hodder and Stoughton’s). But some very
-valuable books are by no means easy reading. Take <i>e.g.</i> Froebel’s
-<i>Education of Man</i> (trans. by Hailmann, Appletons). This book is a
-fount of ideas, but Froebel seems to want interpreters, and happily he
-has found them. The Baroness Marenholtz-Bülow has done good work
-for him in German, and in English he has had good interpreters as
-<i>e.g.</i>, Miss Shirreff, Mr. H. C. Bowen, and Supt. Hailmann. In the
-case of Froebel there is certainly a want of literary talent; but even
-where this talent is clearly shown, a book may be by no means “easy
-reading.” It may make great demands on our thinking power, and
-thought is never easy. This will probably prevent Thring’s <i>Theory
-and Practice of Teaching</i> (Pitt Press, 4<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>) from ever being a
-popular book, though every teacher who has read it will feel that he is
-the better for it. Sometimes the size of a book stands in the way of its
-popularity. This seems to me the case with Joseph Payne’s <i>Science
-and Art of Teaching</i> (Longmans, 10<i>s.</i>); but this book is popular in
-the United States, and I take this as a proof that the American teachers
-are more in earnest than we are. All the essentials of popularity are
-combined in Fitch’s <i>Lectures on Teaching</i> (Pitt Press, 5<i>s.</i>), and this is
-now (and long may it continue!) one of our most read educational works.
-A. But what about less known books? Cannot you recommend
-anything as yet unknown to fame? E. Ah! you want me to tell you
-what books deserve fame, that is, to—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse indent11">“Look into the seeds of time</div>
-<div class="verse">“And say which grain will grow, and which will not.”</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_543" id="Page_543">[543]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="noindent">But I have no intention of posing as the representative of the readers of
-our day, still less of the future. Indeed, far from being able to tell you
-what other people would like or should like, I can hardly say what I
-like myself. Perhaps I come across a book and read it with delight.
-Remembering the very favourable impression made by the first reading
-I go back to the book some years afterwards and I then in some cases
-cannot discover what it was that pleased me. A. That reminds me of
-Wordsworth’s similar experience—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse indent7">“I sometimes could be sad</div>
-<div class="verse">To think of, to read over, many a page,</div>
-<div class="verse">Poems withal of name, which at that time</div>
-<div class="verse">Did never fail to entrance me, and are now</div>
-<div class="verse">Dead in my eyes, dead as a theatre</div>
-<div class="verse">Fresh emptied of spectators.” (<i>Prelude</i> v.)</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">I suppose this has happened to all of us. We go back and the things
-are the same and yet look so different. It is like after the night of an
-illumination looking at the designs by daylight. E. Not many of our
-designs will bear “the light of common day.” And if we tried to settle
-which, we should probably be quite wrong. Of my three English
-Educational Classics one can hardly understand why the peoples who
-speak English have retained Ascham while Mulcaster, Brinsley, and
-Hoole are forgotten. Locke had his reputation as a philosopher to
-keep his <i>Thoughts</i> from neglect, and yet at the beginning of 1880 1 found
-that there was no <i>English</i> edition in print. Perhaps some of the old
-writers will come into the field of view again. <i>E.g.</i>, my friend Dr.
-Bülbring, of Heidelberg, the editor of De Foe’s <i>Compleat Gentleman</i>,
-talks of reviving the fame of Mary Astell, who at the end of the
-seventeenth century took up the rights of women and put very
-vigorously some of the pet ideas of the nineteenth century. A. I will
-not ask you to “look into the seeds of time,” and I will not take you
-for a representative person in any way. On these conditions perhaps
-you will give me the names of some of the books that have made such
-a favourable impression on first reading—at least in cases where that
-impression has not been effaced by further acquaintance. E. Agreed.
-I ought to begin with psychology, but I must with sorrow confess that
-I never read a <i>whole</i> book on the science of mind; so this most
-important section of the subject must be omitted. French and German
-books I will also omit unless they exist in an English translation.
-About the historical and biographical part of the subject I have already
-named many books such as S. S. Laurie’s <i>Comenius</i> and Russell’s
-Guimps’s <i>Pestalozzi</i>. F. V. N. Painter’s <i>History of Education</i> is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_544" id="Page_544">[544]</a></span>
-pleasantly written; but no really satisfactory history of education can be
-held in one small volume. This objection <i>in limine</i> also applies to G.
-Compayré’s <i>History of Pedagogy</i> (trans. by W. H. Payne) which is far
-too full of matter. In it we find <i>many things</i>, but only a very advanced
-student can find <i>much</i>. Little has been written about English-speaking
-educators, but there are good accounts of Bell, Lancaster, Wilderspin,
-and Stow in J. Leitch’s <i>Practical Educationists</i> (Macmillans, 6<i>s.</i>).
-Turning to books about principles and methods I have found nothing
-that with reference to the first stage of instruction seems to me better
-than Colonel F. W. Parker’s <i>Talks on Teaching</i> (New York, Kelloggs).
-Fitch’s more complete book I have named already. A. Geikie’s
-<i>Teaching of Geography</i> (Macmillans, 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>) is a book I read with
-great delight. For principles Joseph Payne seems to me one of our
-best educational writers, and we shall before long have, I hope, the
-much expected volume of his papers on the history of education. Some
-of the smaller books that I remember reading with especial gratification
-are Jacob Abbott’s <i>Teacher</i>, Calderwood <i>On Teaching</i>, A. Sidgwick’s
-lectures on <i>Stimulus</i> (Pitt Press) and on <i>Discipline</i> (Rivingtons), and
-Mrs. Malleson’s <i>Notes on Early Training</i> (Sonnenschein). There
-seemed to me a very fine tone in a book much read in the United
-States—D. P. Page’s <i>Theory and Practice of Teaching</i>. T. Tate’s
-<i>Philosophy of Education</i> I liked very much, and the book has been
-revived by Colonel Parker (Kelloggs). There are some books that are
-worth getting “by opportunity,” as the Germans say, good books now
-out of print. Among them I should name Rollin’s <i>Method</i> in three
-volumes, Rousseau’s <i>Emilius</i> in four, De Morgan’s <i>Arithmetic, Essays
-on a Liberal Education</i> edited by Farrar. I know or have known all
-the books here named, but my knowledge and time for reading do not
-extend as far as my bookshelves, and I see before me some books that
-I have not mentioned and yet feel sure I ought to mention. Among
-them are Compayré’s <i>Lectures on Pedagogy</i>, translated by W. H. Payne,
-which seems an admirable compilation (Boston, Heath; London,
-Sonnenschein); Shaw and Donnell’s <i>School Devices</i> (Kelloggs) in
-which I have seen some good “wrinkles”; and T. J. Morgan’s
-<i>Educational Mosaics</i> (Boston; Silver, Rogers &amp; Co.). J. Landon’s
-<i>School Management</i> (London, K. Paul) I have heard spoken of as an
-excellent book, and I like what I have seen of it. But I set out with a
-promise to mention not all our good books, but those which I thought
-good <i>after reading them</i>. There still remain some that fall under this
-category and have not been mentioned, <i>e.g.</i>, <i>The Action of Examinations</i>,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_545" id="Page_545">[545]</a></span>
-by H. Latham, Cotterill’s <i>Reforms in Public Schools</i>, W. H. Payne’s
-<i>Contributions</i>, and a pamphlet from which I formed a very high
-estimate of the writer’s ability to give us some first-rate books about
-teaching. I mean <i>A Pot of Green Feathers</i>, by T. G. Rooper.</p>
-
-<p><b>Professional Knowledge.</b>—A. What a pity it is that in English
-we have no name for <i>Kernsprüche</i>! When an important truth has been
-aptly expressed, the very expression may be an important event in the
-history of thought. Take <i>e.g.</i> Milton’s words which I observe you
-have quoted more than once, about “the understanding founding itself
-on sensible things” (p. 510). Here we have a “kernel-saying” that
-might have sprung up and yielded a rich crop of improvements in
-teaching if it had only taken root in teachers’ minds. Why don’t you
-make a collection of such “kernel-sayings”? E. I have had thoughts
-of doing so, and I have a collection of collections of <i>Kernsprüche</i> in
-German. A. Well, German is <i>not</i> the language I should choose for
-the expression of thought. According to Heine, in everything the
-Germans do there is a thought embodied; and we may add that in
-everything they say a thought is embedded; but I rather shrink from
-the labour of digging it out. E. You would find a collection of
-“kernel-sayings” in any language rather stiff reading. And after all,
-the sayings which strike us are just those which give utterance to our
-own thought. This is probably the reason why in reading such a book
-so few sayings seem to us worthy of selection. I had intended prefacing
-these essays with some mottoes, as Dr. W. B. Hodgson used to do
-when he wrote, but finally I have left my readers to collect for themselves.
-A. I should like to know the sort of thing you intended for
-your “first course.” E. Here is one of them from Professor Stanley
-Hall, of Worcester, Mass.: “Modern life in all its departments is
-ruled by experts and by those who have attained the mastery that
-comes by concentration.” (New England <i>J. of Ed.</i>, 27th February,
-1890.) A. According to you, sayings strike us only when they express
-our own thought. In that case Professor Hall’s saying would not make
-much impression on the generality of your scholastic friends. Many of
-the best paid schoolmasters in England would burst out laughing if
-anyone spoke of them as “educational experts.” Educational experts?
-Why they have never even thought of the art of teaching, leave alone
-the science of education. They are “good scholars” who at one time
-thought enough of preparing for the Tripos or the Honour Schools;
-and having got a good degree they thought (and small blame to them!)
-how to employ their knowledge of classics so as to secure a comfortable<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_546" id="Page_546">[546]</a></span>
-income for life. Accordingly they took a mastership, and soon settled
-down into the groove of work. But as for the science of education they
-have thought of it about as much as they have thought of the sea-serpent,
-and would probably tell you with Mr. Lowe (now forgotten as Lord
-Sherbrooke) that “there is no such thing.” E. No doubt they feel the
-force of Dr. Harris’s words: “For the most part the teacher who is
-theoretically inclined is lame in the region of details of work.” It
-would be a pity indeed if their “resolution” to make a good income
-were “sicklied o’er with the pale cast of thought.” A. They had to
-think how to prepare for the Tripos; and before long they will have to
-think how to do their work of teaching and educating better than they
-have done it hitherto. The future will demand something more than
-“a good degree.” Professor Hall is right. The day of the experts is
-coming. But does not even Dr. Harris warn teachers against being
-“too theoretical”? E. It is rather jumping at conclusions to assume
-with some of our countrymen that if a man does not think, he
-does act. Goethe’s aphorism which Dr. Harris quotes is this:
-“Thought expands, but lames; action narrows, but intensifies.” Now
-a good many men who do not expend energy in thought are
-by no means strong in action. In education they have no desire
-either to think the best that is thought or to do the best that is done.
-They won’t inquire about either; and they show the most impartial
-ignorance of both. Like Dr. Ridding they are of opinion that
-professional knowledge is to be sought only by persons without the
-advantages of having been at a public school and of “a good degree.”
-As for reading books about teaching they leave that sort of thing to
-national schoolmasters. And yet if teaching is an art, they might get
-at least as much good from books as the golf-player gets or the whist-player.
-“How marvellous it is when one comes to consider the
-matter, that a man should decline to receive instruction on a technical
-subject from those who have eminently distinguished themselves in it
-and have systematised for the benefit of others the results of the
-experience of a lifetime!” Mr. James Payn who wrote this (<i>Some
-Private Views</i>, p. 176) was thinking of books not on teaching but on
-whist; but his words would come home to teachers if they took as
-much interest in teaching as he takes in whist. A. I fancy you have
-spotted the real deficiency; it is want of interest. It is only when a
-man becomes thoroughly interested in whist that he desires to play
-better, and when he becomes thoroughly interested in teaching that he
-desires to teach better. And if only he <i>desires</i> to improve he will<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_547" id="Page_547">[547]</a></span>
-seek all the professional knowledge within his reach. “Every one,”
-says Matthew Arnold, “every one is aware how those who want to
-cultivate any sense or endowment in themselves must be habitually
-conversant with the works of people who have been eminent for that
-sense, must study them, catch inspiration from them. Only in this
-way can progress be made.” (Quoted by Momerie). Let us hope that
-you have incited some young teachers to study and catch inspiration
-from the great thinkers and workers in the educational field. E. This
-is the object I have aimed at. If I wanted a motto I think I should
-choose this from Froebel interpreted by Miss Shirreff:</p>
-
-<p>“The duty of each generation is to gather up its inheritance from
-the past, and thus to serve the present, and prepare better things for the
-future.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_548" id="Page_548">[548]</a></span></p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_549" id="Page_549">[549]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>SYLLABUS<br />
-OF QUICK’S EDUCATIONAL REFORMERS.</h2>
-
-<p class="center"><i>From the International Reading Circle Course of
-Professional Study.</i></p>
-
-<h3>Pages 1 to 62.</h3>
-
-<h4>I. THE RENASCENCE.</h4>
-
-<div class="blockquote hanging">
-
-<p>1. The essential element in literature.</p>
-
-<p>2. Classical literature in education.</p>
-
-<p>3. The educational classes produced by renascence tendencies.</p>
-
-<p>4. How much of the error of the “renascence ideal” still
-survives?</p>
-
-<p>5. Is this harm overbalanced by the good influences of that
-ideal?</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<h4>II. STURM.</h4>
-
-<p class="center">(<i>See Painter, pp. 160-162, for Sturm’s Course of Study.</i>)</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote hanging">
-
-<p>1. What two or more influences of Sturm’s school would
-you mention as most prominently retained in our
-larger schools of to-day?</p>
-
-<p>2. How far are these influences good, and in what ways are
-they evil?</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<h4>III. THE JESUITS.</h4>
-
-<div class="blockquote hanging">
-
-<p>1. Their motive.</p>
-
-<p>2. Their elements of excellence.</p>
-
-<p>3. What value attaches to their provisions for securing
-thoroughness?</p>
-
-<p>4. What to their instruction in morals?</p>
-
-<p>5. What to their physical training?</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<h3>Pages 63 to 171.</h3>
-
-<h4>RABELAIS.</h4>
-
-<div class="blockquote hanging">
-
-<p>1. His products of education: wisdom, eloquence, and
-piety.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_550" id="Page_550">[550]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>2. His emphasis upon the study of <i>things</i>.</p>
-
-<p>3. His standard of physical training.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<h4>MONTAIGNE.</h4>
-
-<div class="blockquote hanging">
-
-<p>1. His prime product of education: wisdom, in thought
-and action; not knowledge.</p>
-
-<p>2. The practical errors in his theory of educational methods.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<h4>ASCHAM.</h4>
-
-<div class="blockquote hanging">
-
-<p>1. His method of Latin instruction.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<h4>MULCASTER.</h4>
-
-<div class="blockquote hanging">
-
-<p>1. His principles of education as identical with the best of
-to-day.</p>
-
-<p>2. His recognition of the need for trained teachers.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<h4>RATKE.</h4>
-
-<div class="blockquote hanging">
-
-<p>1. His practical failure due to the characteristics of the
-man, not to faults in his principles of education.</p>
-
-<p>2. Nine cardinal principles of didactics as gathered from
-his writings upon method.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<h4>COMENIUS.</h4>
-
-<div class="blockquote hanging">
-
-<p>1. The first to treat education in a scientific spirit.</p>
-
-<p>2. Based educational method upon an understanding of the
-nature of the child.</p>
-
-<p>3. Insisted upon the direct study of external Nature, and
-upon the learning of words only in connection with
-things.</p>
-
-<p>4. Recognized education as the development of all the
-faculties of body and of mind.</p>
-
-<p>5. Demanded the equal instruction of both sexes.</p>
-
-<p>6. Taught that languages must be learned through practice,
-not by means of rules.</p>
-
-<p>7. Made provision for education through the hand as well
-as through the eye and ear.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_551" id="Page_551">[551]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3>Pages 172 to 218.</h3>
-
-<h4>THE PORT-ROYALISTS.</h4>
-
-<div class="blockquote hanging">
-
-<p>1. Purpose and method of Saint Cyran’s “Little Schools.”</p>
-
-<p>2. Actual results of English public-school influences as opposed
-to St. Cyran’s theory.</p>
-
-<p>3. Port-Royalists’ restoration of the mother tongue as the
-subject-matter of elementary instruction.</p>
-
-<p>4. Literature study as distinguished from grammar study
-of Latin and Greek.</p>
-
-<p>5. Logic, or the act of thinking.</p>
-
-<p>6. The principles set forth in the pedagogic writings of the
-Port-Royalists.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<h4>SOME ENGLISH WRITERS BEFORE LOCKE.</h4>
-
-<div class="blockquote hanging">
-
-<p>1. Francis Bacon: first great leader of the <i>realists</i>—of
-those who sought to know the facts of Nature rather
-than the thoughts of man.</p>
-
-<p>2. Charles Hoole: “one of the pioneer educators of his
-century.”</p>
-
-<p>3. Dury and Petty: extending the doctrines of <i>realism</i>.</p>
-
-<p>4. Milton: elevating the moral nature to the first place in
-his theory of a complete education.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<h3>Pages 219 to 238.</h3>
-
-<h4>JOHN LOCKE.</h4>
-
-<p class="center">(See Painter’s History, pp. 218-223.)</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote hanging">
-
-<p>1. From the standpoints of reason he rejected the established
-methods.</p>
-
-<p>2. His definition of knowledge.</p>
-
-<p>3. Development of body and mind, and formation of right
-habits the true aim of education.</p>
-
-<p>4. Locke’s comparison of the child to white paper or wax.</p>
-
-<p>5. The <i>naturalistic</i> school of educational thinkers.</p>
-
-<p>6. Objections to classing Locke as a utilitarian.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_552" id="Page_552">[552]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3>Pages 239 to 289.</h3>
-
-<h4>ROUSSEAU.</h4>
-
-<div class="blockquote hanging">
-
-<p>1. To be classed with the thinkers, not with the doers, in
-educational work.</p>
-
-<p>2. The value of his destructive work.</p>
-
-<p>3. His three kinds of education—from Nature, from men,
-from things.</p>
-
-<p>4. The first essential in the work of education is to understand
-the mind of childhood.</p>
-
-<p>5. Some characteristics of the mode of acting of the child’s
-mind.</p>
-
-<p>6. Evil of over-directing in both discipline and instruction.</p>
-
-<p>7. Right and wrong views of the value of self-teaching.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<h4>BASEDOW.</h4>
-
-<div class="blockquote hanging">
-
-<p>1. His mode of thought and manner of life.</p>
-
-<p>2. The theory outlined in his Elementary and in his Book
-of Method.</p>
-
-<p>3. Interesting devices used at the Philanthropinum.</p>
-
-<p>4. The training of the senses and acquirement of knowledge
-through the senses pre-eminent both in Rousseau’s
-and in Basedow’s theories.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<h3>Pages 290 to 383.</h3>
-
-<h4>PESTALOZZI. I. HIS LIFE.</h4>
-
-<div class="blockquote hanging">
-
-<p>1. His personal characteristics as shown in his early life
-and in his farming venture.</p>
-
-<p>2. His view of the nature and purpose of education.</p>
-
-<p>3. The first experiment at Neuhof and its failure.</p>
-
-<p>4. The orphanage at Stanz.</p>
-
-<p>5. The experiences at Burgdorf.</p>
-
-<p>6. The Institute at Yverdun.</p>
-
-<p>7. The last success at Clindy.</p>
-
-<p>8. Death of Pestalozzi at Neuhof.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_553" id="Page_553">[553]</a></span></p>
-
-<h4>II. PESTALOZZI’S PRINCIPLES.</h4>
-
-<div class="blockquote hanging">
-
-<p>1. The main object of the school not to teach but to
-develop.</p>
-
-<p>2. The child first to be trained to <i>love</i>; moral education.</p>
-
-<p>3. The child next to be trained to <i>think</i>; intellectual education.</p>
-
-<p>4. The child also to be trained to <i>work</i>; physical education.</p>
-
-<p>5. The <i>self-activity</i> of the pupil the real force in all true
-education.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<h3>Pages 384 to 413.</h3>
-
-<h4>FRIEDRICH FROEBEL.</h4>
-
-<div class="blockquote hanging">
-
-<p>1. The best tendencies of educational thought embodied
-in Froebel’s teachings.</p>
-
-<p>2. Froebel imperfectly understood even by the most earnest
-students.</p>
-
-<p>3. Influence of his own neglected youth upon his after
-consideration for children.</p>
-
-<p>4. His communion with Nature in the Thuringian Forest.</p>
-
-<p>5. His transfer from the study of architecture to the practice
-and study of education.</p>
-
-<p>6. His association with Pestalozzi at Yverdun.</p>
-
-<p>7. The influence of his military experience in showing him
-the value of discipline and united action.</p>
-
-<p>8. His experiences in teaching prior to his first kindergarten.</p>
-
-<p>9. The edict forbidding the establishment of schools based
-upon Froebel’s principles.</p>
-
-<p>10. His death at threescore years and ten.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<h4>FROEBEL’S EDUCATIONAL PRINCIPLES.</h4>
-
-<div class="blockquote hanging">
-
-<p>11. To find in science the expression of the mind of God.</p>
-
-<p>12. To view education as founded upon religion, and leading
-to unity with God.</p>
-
-<p>13. To regard the educational process as a process of development.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_554" id="Page_554">[554]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>14. To seek development, or evolution of power, in the exercise
-of those functions, in the use of those faculties,
-that it is desired to develop.</p>
-
-<p>15. That the exercise productive of true development must
-be in harmony with the function or faculty to be developed,
-and proportioned to its present strength.</p>
-
-<p>16. That to be most truly efficient the exercise must arise
-from and be sustained by the <i>self</i>-activity of the function
-or faculty to be developed.</p>
-
-<p>17. That this self-activity must manifest itself not in receptive
-action or acquisition alone, but in expressive
-action or production.</p>
-
-<p>18. Practically, that children should be busied with things
-that they can not only see but can handle and use in
-the making or representing of new things to express
-their growing ideas.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<h3>Pages 414 to 469.</h3>
-
-<h4>JACOTOT.</h4>
-
-<div class="blockquote hanging">
-
-<p>1. Set pupils to learning by their own investigation and
-refrained from giving them direct instruction.</p>
-
-<p>2. Asserted that all human beings are equally capable of
-learning.</p>
-
-<p>3. Declared that every one can teach; and, moreover, can
-teach that which he does not know.</p>
-
-<p>4. Has done great service by giving prominence to the
-principle that the mental faculties must be developed
-and trained by being put to actual work.</p>
-
-<p>5. By his doctrine “All is in all,” he gave prominence to the
-correlation of knowledge.</p>
-
-<p>6. Made the thorough mastery of a single book and the
-retention of it all in the memory his basis of all further
-accumulation.</p>
-
-<p>7. His methodology summarized: Learn something, repeat
-it, reflect upon it, test all related facts by it.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<h4>HERBERT SPENCER.</h4>
-
-<div class="blockquote hanging">
-
-<p>1. The value in the views of one who comes to educational
-problems free from tradition and prejudice.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_555" id="Page_555">[555]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>2. The teaching that gives the most valuable knowledge
-also best disciplines in the mental faculties.</p>
-
-<p>3. The end and aim of education is to prepare us for complete
-living.</p>
-
-<p>4. The test of the relative value of knowledge lies in its
-power to influence action in right or wrong directions.</p>
-
-<p>5. In method we must proceed from the simple to the complex;
-from the known to the unknown; from the
-concrete to the abstract.</p>
-
-<p>6. Every study should have a purely experimental introduction,
-and children should be led to make their own
-investigations and draw their own inferences.</p>
-
-<p>7. Instruction must excite the interest of pupils and therefore
-be pleasurable to them.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<h3>Pages 470 to 503.</h3>
-
-<h4>I. THOUGHTS AND SUGGESTIONS.</h4>
-
-<div class="blockquote hanging">
-
-<p>1. The ideal of public-school work is to beget a healthy
-interest and pleasure in the doing of hard work.</p>
-
-<p>2. The interest to arise from the nature of the subject
-itself, or from the recognized usefulness of the subject,
-or from emulation.</p>
-
-<p>3. The value of pictures in the teaching of children as a
-means of awakening active interest.</p>
-
-<p>4. The first teaching in reading and number to begin with
-the objective method and pass thence to the subjective.</p>
-
-<p>5. In geography and history the lively description and the
-interesting story to precede the formal compend.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<h4>II. MORAL AND RELIGIOUS INFLUENCE.</h4>
-
-<div class="blockquote hanging">
-
-<p>6. Sources and means of the teacher’s influence upon his
-pupils.</p>
-
-<p>7. Causes of the loss of his good influence.</p>
-
-<p>8. The influence of a few leading spirits among the pupils
-themselves.</p>
-
-<p>9. A mode of religious training.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_556" id="Page_556">[556]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3>Pages 504 to 547.</h3>
-
-<h4>REVIEW OF EDUCATIONAL PROGRESS.</h4>
-
-<div class="blockquote hanging">
-
-<p>1. The good and the ill influences of the Jesuits as the
-“first reformers” in educational practice.</p>
-
-<p>2. Rabelais, the first to advocate training as distinguished
-from teaching.</p>
-
-<p>3. Comenius, founder of the science of education, recognizing
-in his scheme the threefold nature of man.</p>
-
-<p>4. Rousseau, the originator of the “new education” as
-based upon the inherent nature of the child.</p>
-
-<p>5. Pestalozzi and Froebel, reformers of the processes of
-education, seeking to secure the development of each
-faculty by its own activity in appropriate exercise.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_557" id="Page_557">[557]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>INDEX.</h2>
-
-<ul>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Abbott, E. A., on Montaigne and Locke, <a href="#Page_231">231, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— Jacob; Teacher, <a href="#Page_544">544</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Accomplishments, <a href="#Page_451">451</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Action, the root of Ed., <a href="#Page_403">403</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">“Advice to a Young Lord” (1691), <a href="#Page_234">234, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Æschines on memorizing, <a href="#Page_541">541</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Æsop’s Fables, Locke’s, <a href="#Page_238">238, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Alexander De Villa Dei, <a href="#Page_80">80</a>, <a href="#Page_532">532</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">All can learn, Jacotot, <a href="#Page_416">416</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— Education for, <a href="#Page_356">356</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— Education for. Comenius, <a href="#Page_515">515</a>, <a href="#Page_522">522</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— is in all. Jacotot, <a href="#Page_423">423</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— to be educated. Comenius, <a href="#Page_146">146</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Altdorf burnt, <a href="#Page_326">326</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Analogies for illustration not proof, <a href="#Page_155">155</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Anchoran edits C.’s <i>Janua</i>, <a href="#Page_163">163</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Andreæ, J. V., <a href="#Page_122">122</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Anschauung</i>, Pestalozzi on, <a href="#Page_360">360</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— Froebel for, <a href="#Page_408">408</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Apparatus, <a href="#Page_462">462</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Aquaviva and Jesuit schools, <a href="#Page_36">36</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Arber, Prof., <a href="#Page_82">82, <i>n.</i></a>, <a href="#Page_83">83</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Arithmetic, Children’s. Comenius, <a href="#Page_145">145</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— for children, <a href="#Page_479">479</a>, <a href="#Page_482">482</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Armstrong, Ld., on cry for Useless Knowledge, <a href="#Page_78">78, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Arnauld, his <i>Règlement</i>, <a href="#Page_189">189</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— the Philosopher of Port-Royal, <a href="#Page_187">187</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Arnaulds, The, and the Jesuits, <a href="#Page_173">173</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Arnold, Dr., educator of English type, <a href="#Page_219">219</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— History Primer, <a href="#Page_487">487</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— on citizens’ duties, <a href="#Page_447">447</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Arnold, M., about the Middle Age, <a href="#Page_240">240</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— Barbarian’s inaptitude for ideas, <a href="#Page_178">178</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— on importance of reading, <a href="#Page_539">539</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— on studying great authorities, <a href="#Page_547">547</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— on Words and Things, <a href="#Page_154">154</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Arnstädt, F. A.: <i>Rabelais</i>, <a href="#Page_69">69</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Art learnt by right practice, <a href="#Page_420">420</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— of observing children, <a href="#Page_252">252</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ascham against epitomes, <a href="#Page_486">486, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— and Jacotot, <a href="#Page_425">425</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ascham’s method for Latin, <a href="#Page_84">84</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— “six points,” <a href="#Page_85">85</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">“Ascott Hope,” quoted, <a href="#Page_498">498, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Athletic public schoolmen, <a href="#Page_514">514, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Audition, Hint for, <a href="#Page_429">429, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Augsburg, Ratke at, <a href="#Page_106">106</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Bacon against epitomes, <a href="#Page_446">446, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— for Jesuits, <a href="#Page_33">33, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— for study of Nature, <a href="#Page_408">408</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— on “young plants,” <a href="#Page_406">406</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— studied by Comenius, <a href="#Page_122">122</a>, <a href="#Page_149">149</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Baconian teaching, Effect of, <a href="#Page_510">510</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bahrd, <a href="#Page_289">289</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Balliet, T. M., quoted, <a href="#Page_156">156, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Banzet, Sara, <a href="#Page_408">408</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Barbauld, Mrs., on women’s concealment of knowledge, <a href="#Page_98">98, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Barbier, <i>La Discipline</i>, <a href="#Page_60">60, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bardeen’s <i>Orbis Pictus</i>, <a href="#Page_168">168</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Barnard, H., <i>English Pedagogy</i>, <a href="#Page_542">542</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— <i>Eng. Pedagogy</i>, <a href="#Page_91">91, <i>n.</i></a>, <a href="#Page_212">212, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— on Kindergarten, <a href="#Page_409">409</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— Opinion of <i>Positions</i>, <a href="#Page_91">91, and <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— <i>The Kindergarten</i>, <a href="#Page_413">413</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bartle Massey in <i>Adam Bede</i>, <a href="#Page_507">507</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Basedow and Goethe, <a href="#Page_277">277</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Basedow</i>, Pinloche’s mentioned, <a href="#Page_289">289, <i>n.</i></a>, <a href="#Page_527">527</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bateus, <a href="#Page_160">160, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bath, W., <a href="#Page_160">160, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Beaconsfield, Ld. His “two nations,” <a href="#Page_371">371</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Beautiful, Pestalozzi on sense of the, <a href="#Page_339">339</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Beginners shall have best teachers. Mulcaster, <a href="#Page_95">95</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_558" id="Page_558">[558]</a></span>Bell, Dr., at Yverdun, <a href="#Page_352">352</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bellers, John, for hand-work, <a href="#Page_211">211, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Benham, D. His <i>Comenius</i>, <a href="#Page_119">119</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— His trans. of <i>Sch. of Infancy</i>, <a href="#Page_142">142</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Besant, W. Readings in Rabelais, <a href="#Page_67">67, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Biographies before history, <a href="#Page_489">489</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Birmingham lecture quoted, <a href="#Page_193">193, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Blackboard, Drawing on, <a href="#Page_476">476</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Blunder of insisting on repulsive tasks, <a href="#Page_467">467</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— of not getting clear ideas about definitions, <a href="#Page_460">460</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— of giving only book knowledge, <a href="#Page_458">458</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— of teaching epitomes, <a href="#Page_485">485</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— of teaching words without ideas, <a href="#Page_475">475</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— of “cramming” children, <a href="#Page_374">374</a>, <a href="#Page_375">375</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— of not beginning at the beginning, <a href="#Page_468">468</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— of assuming knowledge in pupil, <a href="#Page_468">468</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— of neglecting interest, <a href="#Page_464">464</a>, <a href="#Page_474">474</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— of teaching the incomprehensible, <a href="#Page_195">195</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— about “first principles,” <a href="#Page_461">461</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bluntschli warns Pestalozzi, <a href="#Page_293">293</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bodily health, Jesuits cared for, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>, <a href="#Page_507">507</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bodmer, <a href="#Page_291">291</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Body, its part in education, <a href="#Page_566">566</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— must be educated, <a href="#Page_411">411</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— Rabelais’s care of the, <a href="#Page_508">508</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Boileau’s <i>Arrêt</i>, <a href="#Page_187">187, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bookishness of Renascence. Montaigne, <a href="#Page_76">76</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Book-learning, connected with life, <a href="#Page_459">459</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Books for teachers, <a href="#Page_541">541</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">“Books, Miserable,” <a href="#Page_153">153</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— Reaction against, <a href="#Page_510">510</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— Respect for, <a href="#Page_481">481</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— Rousseau against, <a href="#Page_259">259</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— useful in learning an art, <a href="#Page_546">546</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bowen, E. E., <a href="#Page_118">118, <i>n.</i></a>, <a href="#Page_532">532</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bowen, H. C., on connected teaching, <a href="#Page_424">424, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— on development, <a href="#Page_399">399</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— on Kindergartens without idea, <a href="#Page_410">410</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bréal, M., quoted, <a href="#Page_286">286, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— on child-collectors, <a href="#Page_429">429, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— on teachers, <a href="#Page_455">455, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Brewer, Prof., <a href="#Page_98">98</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Brinsley, J., <a href="#Page_200">200</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— on training teachers, <a href="#Page_99">99, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Brown, Dr. John, <i>Ed. through senses</i>, <a href="#Page_458">458, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— <i>Horæ Sub.</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_169">169</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Browning, Oscar, on Humanists, &amp;c., <a href="#Page_231">231</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Buchanan and Infant Schools, <a href="#Page_409">409</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Buisson on Intuition, <a href="#Page_361">361</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bülbring, Dr., and Mary Astell, <a href="#Page_543">543</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Burgdorf Institute, <a href="#Page_341">341</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— Pestalozzi at, <a href="#Page_335">335</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Burke, quoted, <a href="#Page_437">437</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Buss, <a href="#Page_341">341</a>, <a href="#Page_365">365</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Butler, Bp., on Ed., <a href="#Page_147">147</a>, <a href="#Page_148">148, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Butler, Samuel, quoted, <a href="#Page_30">30</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Cadet on Port-Royal, <a href="#Page_195">195</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Calkins, Prof., on learning thro’ senses, <a href="#Page_150">150, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cambridge exam, of teachers, <a href="#Page_219">219, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— man, 40 years ago, <a href="#Page_431">431, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Campanella, <a href="#Page_122">122</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Campe, <a href="#Page_287">287</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Capitalizing discoveries, <a href="#Page_517">517</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Carlyle about the Schoolmen, <a href="#Page_10">10, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— on divine message, <a href="#Page_401">401</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— on History, quoted, <a href="#Page_145">145, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— on Knowledge, <a href="#Page_223">223</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— on “nag for sand-cart,” <a href="#Page_467">467</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— on teaching religion, <a href="#Page_359">359, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Carlyle’s “mostly fools,” <a href="#Page_517">517, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— “Succedaneum for salt,” <a href="#Page_498">498</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Carré on Port-Royal, <a href="#Page_195">195</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cat, Rousseau on the, <a href="#Page_258">258</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cato’s <i>Distichs</i>, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>, <a href="#Page_121">121</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Chambers, H. E., of N. Orleans, on “teams,” <a href="#Page_531">531</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Channing, Eva, Trans, of <i>L. and G.</i>, <a href="#Page_306">306, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Children and poetry, <a href="#Page_541">541</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— care for things and animals, <a href="#Page_475">475</a>, <a href="#Page_521">521</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— not small men, <a href="#Page_250">250</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Childhood the sleep of Reason, <a href="#Page_245">245</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Christopher and Eliza</i>, <a href="#Page_309">309</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Church, Dean R. W., on Montaigne, <a href="#Page_71">71, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Citizens’ duties, <a href="#Page_447">447</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Classics, “Discovery” of the, <a href="#Page_3">3</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— do not satisfy modern wants, <a href="#Page_7">7</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— in Public Schools, <a href="#Page_76">76</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— too hard for boys, <a href="#Page_16">16</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Classification, Thoughts on, <a href="#Page_232">232</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Classifiers, Caution against, <a href="#Page_232">232</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Class matches, <a href="#Page_42">42</a>, <a href="#Page_529">529</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Clindy, Pestalozzi at, <a href="#Page_353">353</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Clough, quoted, <a href="#Page_358">358</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Colet, Dean, <a href="#Page_80">80</a>, <a href="#Page_533">533</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_559" id="Page_559">[559]</a></span>Columbus and geography, <a href="#Page_2">2</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Comenius and Science of ed., <a href="#Page_512">512</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— Books about, <a href="#Page_170">170</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— at Amsterdam, <a href="#Page_133">133</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— in London, <a href="#Page_126">126</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— criticized by Lancelot, <a href="#Page_186">186, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— stiftung, <a href="#Page_119">119</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Compayré, <i>Hist. of Pedagogy</i> and <i>Lectures</i>, <a href="#Page_544">544</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— on Jesuits, <a href="#Page_56">56</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— on Port-Royal, <a href="#Page_196">196</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Compendia Dispendia, <a href="#Page_169">169</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Complete living, H. Spencer on, <a href="#Page_442">442</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">“Complete Retainers,” <a href="#Page_89">89</a>, <a href="#Page_426">426, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Composition, <a href="#Page_483">483</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Compulsion, Nothing on, <a href="#Page_112">112</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Concept, Larger, how formed, <a href="#Page_457">457</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Concertations, <a href="#Page_42">42</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Concrete, Start from, <a href="#Page_461">461</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Conduct of Understanding</i> and Reason, <a href="#Page_221">221</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Conférences pédagogiques</i>, <a href="#Page_362">362</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Connexion of knowledges, <a href="#Page_424">424</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Consolation</i>, &amp;c., Brinsley, <a href="#Page_200">200</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cooking should be taught, <a href="#Page_540">540</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Coote, Edward, <i>English Scholemaster</i>, <a href="#Page_91">91</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Corporal punishment, Pestalozzi for, <a href="#Page_327">327</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cotterill, C. C., <i>Suggested Reforms</i>, <a href="#Page_545">545</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cowley’s Proposition, &amp;c., <a href="#Page_202">202</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cowper on man and animals, <a href="#Page_517">517</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Creative instinct. Froebel, <a href="#Page_404">404</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Daniel, Canon, quoted, <a href="#Page_155">155, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Daniel, Le P. Ch., quoted, <a href="#Page_62">62, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Day-dreams of a Schoolmaster</i>, <a href="#Page_541">541</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Day-schools wanted, <a href="#Page_499">499</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dead knowledge, <a href="#Page_524">524</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Decimal scale universal, <a href="#Page_479">479</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">De Garmo, Dr., on language work. <a href="#Page_481">481, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— quoted, <a href="#Page_403">403, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">De Geer and Comenius, <a href="#Page_130">130</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>De Imitatione</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_398">398</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">De Morgan, quoted, <a href="#Page_433">433, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">De Quincey, quoted, <a href="#Page_153">153, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Derby, Ld., on criminals, <a href="#Page_358">358</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— quoted, <a href="#Page_256">256, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Development, Froebel’s theory of, <a href="#Page_400">400</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Didactic teaching, Rousseau against, <a href="#Page_268">268</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Diderot, quoted, <a href="#Page_365">365, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Diesterweg on dead knowledge, <a href="#Page_365">365</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Diesterweg’s rule for repetition, <a href="#Page_111">111</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Dilucidatio</i> of Comenius, <a href="#Page_123">123</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Discentem oportet credere</i>, <a href="#Page_152">152</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dislike often from ignorance, <a href="#Page_466">466</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Doctrinale</i>, <a href="#Page_80">80</a>, <a href="#Page_532">532</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Double Translating, <a href="#Page_86">86</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— translation judged, <a href="#Page_89">89</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Drawing, Comenius for, <a href="#Page_146">146</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— Pestalozzi on, <a href="#Page_368">368</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— Rousseau for, <a href="#Page_261">261</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Drill, Need of, <a href="#Page_526">526</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Drudgery defined, <a href="#Page_472">472</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Drummond, Henry, quoted, <a href="#Page_502">502, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Dunciad</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>, <a href="#Page_422">422</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dupanloup, Bp., quoted, <a href="#Page_113">113</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dupanloup against Public Schools, <a href="#Page_179">179</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dury’s <i>Reformed Schoole</i>, <a href="#Page_203">203</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— watch simile, <a href="#Page_205">205</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Early education negative, <a href="#Page_244">244</a>, <a href="#Page_402">402</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ecclesiasticus, quoted, <a href="#Page_77">77</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">École modèle, books not used, <a href="#Page_154">154, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">“Economy of Nature,” <a href="#Page_440">440</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Education of Man</i>, published 1826, <a href="#Page_392">392</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Educational Reformers.</i> History of the book, <a href="#Page_527">527</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— in America, <a href="#Page_529">529</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Educations. Rousseau’s three, <a href="#Page_248">248</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Edwardes, Rev. D., quoted, <a href="#Page_499">499, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Elbing, Comenius at, <a href="#Page_130">130</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Elementarie.</i> Mulcaster’s, <a href="#Page_92">92</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Elementary, Basedow’s, published, <a href="#Page_275">275</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— course. Mulcaster, <a href="#Page_97">97</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— studies. Comenius, <a href="#Page_141">141</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Elizabeth, Queen, Ascham’s pupil, <a href="#Page_88">88</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Elyot’s <i>Governour</i>, <a href="#Page_91">91</a>, <a href="#Page_202">202</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Emerson, R. W., quoted, <a href="#Page_501">501</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Empirical before Rational, <a href="#Page_462">462</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Emulation cultivated by Jesuits, <a href="#Page_42">42</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— Forms of, <a href="#Page_530">530</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Encyclopædia Bri., <a href="#Page_385">385, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Endter. Publisher of <i>Orbis Rictus</i>, <a href="#Page_167">167</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">English, Mulcaster’s eulogy of, <a href="#Page_534">534</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— party questions, <a href="#Page_381">381</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— tongue, Mulcaster on, <a href="#Page_92">92</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— without Verbs and Substantives, <a href="#Page_460">460, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Epitomes. Against, <a href="#Page_485">485</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Erasmus against ignorance, <a href="#Page_523">523, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— for small schools, <a href="#Page_180">180, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— the Scholar, <a href="#Page_23">23</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Erinnerungen eines Jesuitenzöglings</i>, <a href="#Page_60">60</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Eruditio</i> in Jesuit Schools, <a href="#Page_40">40</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Eve, H. W., on old and young teachers, <a href="#Page_506">506</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_560" id="Page_560">[560]</a></span><i>Evening Hour of Hermit</i>, <a href="#Page_302">302</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Evolution and Froebel, <a href="#Page_399">399</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Examination of children for scholarships, <a href="#Page_97">97</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— knowledge, <a href="#Page_540">540</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Examinations cause pressure, <a href="#Page_77">77</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Exercises, Correcting, <a href="#Page_484">484</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— Hints for, <a href="#Page_429">429, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Experience <i>v.</i> Theory, <a href="#Page_107">107</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Experts needed in modern life, <a href="#Page_545">545</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Eyes, Use of, <a href="#Page_411">411</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Eyre, Father, on the <i>Ratio</i>, <a href="#Page_57">57</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Fables for Composition, <a href="#Page_483">483</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— Pestalozzi’s, <a href="#Page_312">312</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Faculties, Equal attention to all, <a href="#Page_537">537</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fag-end, Children not the, <a href="#Page_354">354</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Faust</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_426">426</a>, <a href="#Page_428">428</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fellenberg, <a href="#Page_344">344</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fichte and Pestalozzi, <a href="#Page_347">347</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Final opinions, Demand for, <a href="#Page_410">410</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fire like knowledge, <a href="#Page_433">433</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">First-hand knowledge not enough, <a href="#Page_224">224</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">First impressions important, <a href="#Page_194">194</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fischer, O., <a href="#Page_366">366, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fitch’s <i>Lectures on Teaching</i>, <a href="#Page_542">542</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Folk-schools, Importance of, <a href="#Page_376">376</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Forcing, Comenius against, <a href="#Page_144">144</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Formative instinct. Froebel, <a href="#Page_404">404</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Franklin, B., on reading aloud, <a href="#Page_482">482</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Froebel and Bacon, <a href="#Page_408">408</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— on preparing better things for future, <a href="#Page_547">547</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— showed the right road, <a href="#Page_384">384</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Froude, J. A., on use of hagiology, <a href="#Page_503">503, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">“Furtherers” and “Hinderers,” <a href="#Page_531">531</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Garbovicianu on Basedow, <a href="#Page_289">289, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gargantua’s Education, <a href="#Page_63">63</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Garrick, David, “When doctrine, &amp;c.,” <a href="#Page_536">536</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Geikie, A.: <i>Teaching of Geography</i>, <a href="#Page_544">544</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Generalization, <a href="#Page_461">461</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">General view should not come first, <a href="#Page_169">169</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Geography absent from Trivium and Quadrivium, <a href="#Page_2">2</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— Beginnings in, <a href="#Page_489">489</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— how begun, Comenius, <a href="#Page_145">145</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gerard, Father (S. J.), quoted, <a href="#Page_57">57</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">German not a good medium of thought, <a href="#Page_545">545</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">“Gertrude,” Account of, <a href="#Page_301">301</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gesner, J. M., for <i>Statarisch</i> and <i>Cursorisch</i>, <a href="#Page_32">32</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">“Gifts.” Froebel’s, <a href="#Page_408">408</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Girard, Père, and Pestalozzi, <a href="#Page_349">349</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Girardin, St. M., on Rousseau, <a href="#Page_264">264, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Girls, Schoolmistresses’ blunders about, <a href="#Page_443">443</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Giving “G.’s,” <a href="#Page_530">530</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Goethe and bad pictures, <a href="#Page_487">487</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— on Basedow, <a href="#Page_276">276</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— on unity of man, <a href="#Page_518">518, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— on Voices and Echoes, <a href="#Page_504">504</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— on thought and action, <a href="#Page_546">546</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Golden Age, in Past or Future? <a href="#Page_22">22</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Goldsmith against epitomes, <a href="#Page_486">486, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">“Good scholars” as schoolmasters, <a href="#Page_545">545</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— spirits needed for teaching, <a href="#Page_497">497</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Grammar, <a href="#Page_481">481, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— learnt from good authors, Ascham, <a href="#Page_85">85</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— Mistakes about, <a href="#Page_460">460</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Grant’s, H., <i>Arithmetic</i>, <a href="#Page_482">482</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">“Gratis receive, gratis give.” Jesuit rule, <a href="#Page_39">39</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Greaves, J. P., at Yverdun, <a href="#Page_352">352, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Grounding, Importance of, Mulcaster, <a href="#Page_96">96, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Groundwork by best workman, Mulcaster, <a href="#Page_95">95</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Grubé’s method, <a href="#Page_479">479</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Guesses at Truth</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_24">24</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Guillaume’s Pestalozzi mentioned, <a href="#Page_383">383, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Guimps, <a href="#Page_383">383, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Guimps’s Pestalozzi, <a href="#Page_317">317, &amp;c.</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Habrecht, Isaac, <a href="#Page_161">161, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hack, Miss, <i>Tales of Travelers</i>, <a href="#Page_490">490</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hailmann, W. H., on creative doing, <a href="#Page_412">412</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hale, Sir Matthew, for realism, <a href="#Page_212">212, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hall, Stanley, about <i>L. &amp; G.</i>, <a href="#Page_306">306, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— Experts needed, <a href="#Page_545">545</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hallam on Comenius, <a href="#Page_158">158</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hallé, Children’s Lessons at, <a href="#Page_475">475</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hancock, Supt. J., quoted, <a href="#Page_46">46, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Handelschulen, <a href="#Page_445">445</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hands, Children’s use of, <a href="#Page_407">407</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— use of, <a href="#Page_411">411</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— use of, <a href="#Page_538">538</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Handwork at Neuhof, <a href="#Page_297">297</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— Comenius for, <a href="#Page_146">146</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— Petty on, <a href="#Page_211">211</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— Rabelais for, <a href="#Page_66">66</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— Rousseau for, <a href="#Page_271">271</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Harmar, J. <a href="#Page_161">161, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_561" id="Page_561">[561]</a></span>Harris, W. T., on “Nature,” <a href="#Page_109">109</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— started public Kindergartens, <a href="#Page_410">410</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— on thought and action, <a href="#Page_546">546</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Harrow “Bluebook,” <a href="#Page_532">532</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— Class-matches at, <a href="#Page_529">529</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— Religious instruction at, <a href="#Page_500">500</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hartlib, S., <a href="#Page_124">124, <i>n.</i></a>, <a href="#Page_130">130</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hazlitt, W. C., <a href="#Page_91">91, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Helplessness produced by bad teaching, <a href="#Page_464">464</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Helps, Sir A., for science, <a href="#Page_447">447, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— on looking straight at things, <a href="#Page_481">481</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— on open-mindedness, <a href="#Page_502">502</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— quoted, <a href="#Page_434">434, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Herbart at Burgdorf, <a href="#Page_367">367, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— on Rousseau, <a href="#Page_269">269</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Herbert, Ld., of Cherbury, on physical ed., <a href="#Page_227">227</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hewitson on Stonyhurst, <a href="#Page_59">59</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">“Hinter dem Berge,” <a href="#Page_449">449</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hints from pupils, <a href="#Page_367">367, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">History, Beginnings in, <a href="#Page_489">489</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— H. Spencer on, <a href="#Page_448">448</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Home and School, <a href="#Page_342">342</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Honesty the best policy, <a href="#Page_529">529</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hoole’s <i>A new discovery</i>, &amp;c., <a href="#Page_200">200</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— trans. of <i>Orbis Pictus</i>, <a href="#Page_166">166</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Humility to be taught, <a href="#Page_503">503</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hymns to be used, <a href="#Page_501">501</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Ickelsamer, <a href="#Page_116">116</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ideal, high, <a href="#Page_496">496</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— value of, <a href="#Page_382">382</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— want of an, <a href="#Page_471">471</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ideas before symbols, <a href="#Page_253">253</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">“Idols,” escape from, <a href="#Page_514">514</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ignorance, Erasmus agst., <a href="#Page_523">523</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Il faut apprendre</i>, &amp;c., Jacotot, <a href="#Page_424">424</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">“Impressionists,” <a href="#Page_89">89</a>, <a href="#Page_426">426, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Improvements suggested by Mulcaster, <a href="#Page_92">92</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Inclinations should be studied, <a href="#Page_465">465</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Industrial school at Neuhof, <a href="#Page_297">297</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">“Infelix divortium verum et verborum,” <a href="#Page_139">139</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Innovators, <a href="#Page_103">103</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">“Inquiry into course of Nature,” <a href="#Page_311">311</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Instruct</i> is <i>instruere</i>, <a href="#Page_432">432</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Instruction an exercise of faculty, <a href="#Page_332">332</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Intellect before critical faculty. Comenius, <a href="#Page_138">138</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Interest, Degrees in, <a href="#Page_113">113</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— in teaching needed, <a href="#Page_546">546</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— needed for activity, <a href="#Page_474">474</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— needed for mental exertion, <a href="#Page_193">193, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— No success without, <a href="#Page_473">473</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Interesting, Can learning be? <a href="#Page_465">465</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Intuition = <i>Anschauung</i>, <a href="#Page_361">361</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— Froebel for, <a href="#Page_408">408</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Investigation, Method of, <a href="#Page_437">437</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">“Ipse dixit,” Comenius against, <a href="#Page_152">152</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Iselin, editor of <i>Ephemerides</i>, <a href="#Page_298">298</a>, <a href="#Page_302">302</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">“Jacob’s Ladder,” Pestalozzi, <a href="#Page_356">356</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Jahn on Froebel, <a href="#Page_386">386</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Jansenius and St.-Cyran, <a href="#Page_175">175</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Janua</i>, English versions of C.’s, <a href="#Page_165">165</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— Jesuits, <a href="#Page_160">160, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— of Comenius published, <a href="#Page_123">123</a>, <a href="#Page_163">163</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Jebb on Erasmus, <a href="#Page_523">523, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Jesuit a trained teacher, <a href="#Page_37">37</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— course included <i>Studia Superiora et inferiora</i>, <a href="#Page_38">38</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— exams., <a href="#Page_47">47</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— shows effect of planned system, <a href="#Page_532">532</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— teaching. An example of, <a href="#Page_44">44</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Jesuits. Books about, <a href="#Page_34">34</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— the army of the Church, <a href="#Page_55">55</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— the first reformers, <a href="#Page_506">506</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Johnson, Richard, <i>Gram. Commentaries</i>, <a href="#Page_82">82</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Johnson, Dr., on knowledge of education <a href="#Page_410">410</a>, <a href="#Page_525">525</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— on <i>Scholemaster</i>, <a href="#Page_82">82</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Jonson, Ben. “Soul for salt,” <a href="#Page_498">498, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Jullien on Intuition, <a href="#Page_362">362</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Jung, <a href="#Page_106">106</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Kant and Intuition, <a href="#Page_361">361</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— on the Philanthropinum, <a href="#Page_288">288</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kay-Shuttleworth and Pestalozzi, <a href="#Page_352">352</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kempe, W., <i>Ed. of Children</i>, <a href="#Page_83">83</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">“Kernsprüche,” <a href="#Page_545">545</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kindergarten and Comenius, <a href="#Page_143">143</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— a German word, <a href="#Page_409">409, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— Froebel on aim of, <a href="#Page_409">409</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— Notion of, <a href="#Page_406">406</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— The first, <a href="#Page_394">394</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kinglake’s <i>Eothen</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_15">15</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kingsley on Jesuits, <a href="#Page_54">54</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Knowing, after Being and Doing, <a href="#Page_307">307</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— by heart, <a href="#Page_74">74, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Knowledge and Locke, <a href="#Page_513">513</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— a tool, <a href="#Page_540">540</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— and Comenius, <a href="#Page_512">512</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— Danger from, <a href="#Page_78">78</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— Desire for, <a href="#Page_540">540</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— despised by New Educationists, <a href="#Page_526">526</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— Genesis of, <a href="#Page_462">462</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— Locke’s definition of, <a href="#Page_222">222</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_562" id="Page_562">[562]</a></span>— must not be dead knowledge, <a href="#Page_524">524</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— not fastened to mind, Montaigne, <a href="#Page_71">71</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— over-estimated by Comenius, <a href="#Page_168">168</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— Perfect, impossible, <a href="#Page_226">226</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— spreads like fire, <a href="#Page_433">433</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— self-gained, Locke, <a href="#Page_515">515</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— Teaching what it is, <a href="#Page_453">453</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Knowledges, Relative value of, <a href="#Page_442">442</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— Connexion of, Comenius, <a href="#Page_157">157</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Known to Unknown, <a href="#Page_457">457</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Koethen, Ratke fails at, <a href="#Page_107">107</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kruesi joins Pestalozzi, <a href="#Page_340">340</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Lancelot on Comenius, <a href="#Page_186">186</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— on learning Latin, <a href="#Page_185">185</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Landon, J., School Management, <a href="#Page_544">544</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Langethal and Froebel, <a href="#Page_390">390</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Language-learning, Lancelot on, <a href="#Page_186">186, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— Method for, <a href="#Page_426">426, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Language lives in small vocabulary, <a href="#Page_169">169</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— not Literature, <a href="#Page_17">17</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— teaching, Ratke’s plan, <a href="#Page_116">116</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Languages, Comenius on learning, <a href="#Page_140">140</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Latham, H., <i>Action of Exam.</i>, <a href="#Page_544">544</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Latin, Comenius for, <a href="#Page_159">159</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Laurie, S. S., his <i>Comenius</i>, <a href="#Page_119">119</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— on books of Comenius, <a href="#Page_135">135</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— on Milton, <a href="#Page_214">214</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lavater and Basedow, <a href="#Page_276">276</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— and Pestalozzi, <a href="#Page_291">291</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Learn, Every one can, Jacotot, <a href="#Page_416">416</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Learning as employment, <a href="#Page_75">75</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— begins with birth. Pestalozzi, <a href="#Page_537">537</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— by heart wrong. Ratke, <a href="#Page_113">113</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— by heart. <a href="#Memorizing"><i>See</i> Memorizing</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— for the few, Mulcaster, <a href="#Page_93">93</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— may be borrowed, Montaigne, <a href="#Page_73">73</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— must not be play, <a href="#Page_367">367</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— not Knowledge, Montaigne, <a href="#Page_71">71</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Leipzig, Dr. Vater at, <a href="#Page_477">477</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Leisure hours, <a href="#Page_450">450</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— often useless, <a href="#Page_498">498</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Leitch, J., Practical Educationists, <a href="#Page_409">409</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— Practical Educationists, <a href="#Page_544">544</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lemaître, <a href="#Page_186">186, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Leonard and Gertrude</i>, <a href="#Page_305">305</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lessing on Raphael, <a href="#Page_420">420</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Leszna sacked, <a href="#Page_132">132</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">“Letters,” Comm. for, <a href="#Page_538">538</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lewis, Prince, and Ratke, <a href="#Page_106">106</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Light from within, Nicole, <a href="#Page_190">190</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Likes and Dislikes, Study, <a href="#Page_466">466</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lily’s <i>Carmen Mon.</i>, <a href="#Page_81">81</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— Grammar, <a href="#Page_533">533</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Literature and Science, <a href="#Page_154">154</a>, <a href="#Page_539">539</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— at Port-Royal, <a href="#Page_184">184</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— in education, <a href="#Page_539">539</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— or Letters, <a href="#Page_9">9</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— What is? <a href="#Page_6">6</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">“Little Schools,” <a href="#Page_176">176</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Locke against sugar and salt, <a href="#Page_466">466</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— and Froebel, <a href="#Page_407">407</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— behind Comenius, <a href="#Page_230">230</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— Books on, <a href="#Page_238">238</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— for Working Schools, <a href="#Page_211">211, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— on Public Schools, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>, <a href="#Page_513">513</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— and Rousseau, <a href="#Page_227">227</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— against ordinary learning, <a href="#Page_234">234</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— predecessor of Pestalozzi, <a href="#Page_362">362</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— two characteristics, <a href="#Page_220">220</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— teacher disposes influence, <a href="#Page_513">513</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— Was he a utilitarian? <a href="#Page_234">234</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Locksley Hall</i> quoted, <a href="#Page_152">152</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Louis XIV and Port-Royalists, <a href="#Page_176">176</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Love the essential principle, <a href="#Page_358">358</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Loyola on body and soul, <a href="#Page_62">62</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lowe or Pestalozzi? <a href="#Page_379">379</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lubinus, E., <a href="#Page_166">166, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Ludus Literarius</i>, <a href="#Page_200">200</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lupton, J. H., and Colet, <a href="#Page_534">534</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lupton, J. H., on <i>Catechismus</i> P., <a href="#Page_102">102, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Lux in tenebris</i>, <a href="#Page_133">133</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lytton, Ld., on mother’s interference, <a href="#Page_371">371</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">MacAlister, James, and <i>Anschauung</i>, <a href="#Page_361">361</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Macaulay on French Revolution, <a href="#Page_246">246</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— wanted, <a href="#Page_488">488</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">“Magis magnos clericos, &amp;c.,” <a href="#Page_70">70</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Maine, Sir H. S., on studying teaching scientifically, <a href="#Page_410">410, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Malleson, Mrs., <i>Notes on Early Training</i>, <a href="#Page_544">544</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mangnall’s Questions, <a href="#Page_374">374</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Manning, Miss E. A., a Froebelian, <a href="#Page_413">413</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Manual labour at Stanz, <a href="#Page_331">331</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Marcel, C., <a href="#Page_535">535</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Marenholtz-Bülow and Froebel, <a href="#Page_394">394</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Marion’s fraud, <a href="#Page_173">173</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Martineau, Miss, and comet, <a href="#Page_223">223</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Masham, Lady, on Locke, <a href="#Page_220">220, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Masson, D., quotes Mulcaster, <a href="#Page_534">534</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Masson, D., quotes <i>Didac. Mag.</i>, <a href="#Page_140">140, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Masson’s <i>Milton</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_127">127, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Masters and religion, <a href="#Page_492">492</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_563" id="Page_563">[563]</a></span>Masters, The “open” and the “reserved,” <a href="#Page_494">494</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mastery, <a href="#Page_365">365</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Maurice and Froebel, <a href="#Page_406">406</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Maurice, F. D., on Jesuits, <a href="#Page_54">54</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Max Müller, a descendant of Basedow’s, <a href="#Page_289">289, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mayo, Dr., <a href="#Page_352">352, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mayor, J. E. B., on <i>Scholemaster</i>, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>, <a href="#Page_83">83</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mazzini on humanity, <a href="#Page_518">518, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Measuring for arithmetic, <a href="#Page_480">480</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mediæval art excelled Renascence, <a href="#Page_5">5</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">“<i>Melius est scire paucca</i>, &amp;c.,” <a href="#Page_168">168</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx" id="Memorizing">Memorizing, <a href="#Page_113">113</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— poetry, <a href="#Page_541">541</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— Sacchini on, <a href="#Page_50">50, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Memory after senses, Comenius, <a href="#Page_138">138</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— alone can be driven, <a href="#Page_474">474</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— and interest, <a href="#Page_487">487</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— depending on associating sounds, <a href="#Page_193">193, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— helped by association, <a href="#Page_424">424</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— Jacotot’s demands on, <a href="#Page_425">425</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— stuffed, Montaigne, <a href="#Page_73">73</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— subservient to other powers, <a href="#Page_411">411</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— The carrying, <a href="#Page_77">77</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— Waste of, <a href="#Page_431">431</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— without books, <a href="#Page_257">257</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Methodology, Truths of, <a href="#Page_536">536</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Methods defined, <a href="#Page_414">414</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">“Methods teach the Teachers,” <a href="#Page_82">82</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Methodus Linguarum</i>, published, <a href="#Page_131">131</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Michaelis and Moore, Trans. of Froebel, <a href="#Page_413">413</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Michelet on Montaigne, <a href="#Page_94">94</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— on Montaigne, <a href="#Page_229">229, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— on Stanz, <a href="#Page_317">317</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Middendorff and Froebel, <a href="#Page_390">390</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Middle Age blind to beauty in human form and literature, <a href="#Page_5">5</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Middle-class education without ideal, <a href="#Page_470">470</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Middle Schools Comm., quoted, <a href="#Page_538">538</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mill, J. S., against specializing, <a href="#Page_453">453, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— for teaching classics, <a href="#Page_444">444</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— on history, <a href="#Page_449">449, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Milton a great scholar, <a href="#Page_212">212</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— a Verbal Realist, <a href="#Page_215">215</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— and Realism, <a href="#Page_23">23</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— on learning through the senses, <a href="#Page_150">150</a>, <a href="#Page_213">213</a>, <a href="#Page_510">510</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Milwaukee, Inter-class matches at, <a href="#Page_531">531</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mind like sea-anemone, <a href="#Page_474">474</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Model book, Ascham for, <a href="#Page_87">87</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— Jacotot’s use of, <a href="#Page_436">436</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— Ways of studying, <a href="#Page_426">426</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Molyneux on geography, <a href="#Page_225">225</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Moncrieff, H., quoted, <a href="#Page_498">498, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Monitorial principle, <a href="#Page_538">538</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Monitors at Stanz, <a href="#Page_333">333</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Monotony wearing to the young, <a href="#Page_531">531</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Montaigne and Froebel, <a href="#Page_407">407</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Montaigne for educating mind and body, <a href="#Page_509">509</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— his paradox of ham, <a href="#Page_419">419, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Moral development first, <a href="#Page_358">358</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Morality is development of infant’s gratitude, <a href="#Page_309">309</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Morals, Rousseau on, <a href="#Page_263">263</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Morf, Summary of Pestalozzi’s principles, <a href="#Page_368">368</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Morgan, T. J., <i>Educational Mosaics</i>, <a href="#Page_544">544</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mother-tongue, <a href="#Page_104">104</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— Everything through, <a href="#Page_111">111</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— first at Port-Royal, <a href="#Page_184">184</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— Jacotot’s plan for, <a href="#Page_435">435</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— only, till ten, Comenius, <a href="#Page_139">139</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— Ratke for, <a href="#Page_108">108</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mulcaster for English, <a href="#Page_534">534</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mulcaster’s elementary subject, <a href="#Page_97">97</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— Life, <a href="#Page_102">102</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— proposed reforms, <a href="#Page_92">92</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— style fatal, <a href="#Page_92">92</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Music, Benefit from, <a href="#Page_452">452</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— Rousseau for, <a href="#Page_261">261</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Naef, Eliz., at Neuhof, <a href="#Page_300">300</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Nägeli, <a href="#Page_368">368</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Napoleon I and Pestalozzi, <a href="#Page_343">343</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Narrow-mindedness, How to avoid, <a href="#Page_503">503</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Natural History at Stanz, <a href="#Page_333">333</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Natural <i>v.</i> Usual, <a href="#Page_516">516</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Nature, Comenius about, <a href="#Page_136">136</a>, <a href="#Page_137">137</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— Laws of, <a href="#Page_134">134</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— Ratke for, <a href="#Page_109">109</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— Return to, <a href="#Page_515">515</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Negative education, Rousseau, <a href="#Page_519">519</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">New Code of 1890, <a href="#Page_379">379, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">“New Education” started by Rousseau, <a href="#Page_271">271</a>, <a href="#Page_522">522</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— education and old, <a href="#Page_524">524</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— Froebel’s in 1816, <a href="#Page_391">391</a>, <a href="#Page_411">411</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Newman, J. H., on Locke, <a href="#Page_235">235</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— on connexion of knowledges, <a href="#Page_158">158</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— on nature of literature, <a href="#Page_7">7, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">New master, Advice to, <a href="#Page_60">60, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_564" id="Page_564">[564]</a></span>New road, Pestalozzi’s, <a href="#Page_337">337</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— York <i>School Journal</i> and New Education, <a href="#Page_411">411</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Nicole on Ed., <a href="#Page_190">190</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Niebuhr’s <i>Heroengeschichten</i>, <a href="#Page_428">428, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Niemeyer on thoroughness, <a href="#Page_366">366, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Nihil est in intellectu</i> &amp;c., <a href="#Page_138">138</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Noah’s Ark for words, <a href="#Page_161">161</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Nonconformist</i>, <a href="#Page_504">504</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Normal Schools on increase, <a href="#Page_414">414</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Nouvelle Héloïse</i>, Family life, <a href="#Page_242">242</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Number of boarders in Port-Royalist schools small, <a href="#Page_179">179</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Numbers, First knowledge of, <a href="#Page_479">479</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Numeration before notation, <a href="#Page_479">479</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Oberlin, <a href="#Page_408">408</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Observation, Poetry for cultivating, <a href="#Page_209">209</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Observing children, <a href="#Page_251">251</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">“Omnia sponte fluant,” Comenius, <a href="#Page_136">136</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">One thing at a time, Ratke, <a href="#Page_109">109</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Opinion, Education of, <a href="#Page_502">502</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— Sensible men cannot differ in, Locke, <a href="#Page_221">221, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Orbis Pictus</i> published, <a href="#Page_132">132</a>, <a href="#Page_167">167</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">“Over and over again,” Ratke, <a href="#Page_110">110</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Over-directing, Rousseau against, <a href="#Page_265">265</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Overworking teachers, <a href="#Page_497">497</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Oxenstiern sees Comenius, <a href="#Page_128">128</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Painter, F. V. N., <i>History of Education</i>, <a href="#Page_543">543</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Parallel Grammar Series, <a href="#Page_114">114, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Parænesis by Sacchini, <a href="#Page_34">34, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Parker, F. W., and Kindergarten, <a href="#Page_411">411</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— on reading, <a href="#Page_482">482</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— <i>Talks on Teaching</i>, <a href="#Page_544">544</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Parker, C. S., in <i>Essays on Lib. Ed.</i>, <a href="#Page_32">32</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Parkin, John, <a href="#Page_366">366, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Parkman, Francis, on Jesuits, <a href="#Page_55">55</a>, <a href="#Page_56">56</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pascal and Loyola, <a href="#Page_172">172</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Past, No escape from the, <a href="#Page_2">2</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pattison, Mark, on exams., <a href="#Page_228">228, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— on dearth of books, <a href="#Page_12">12</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— on what is education, <a href="#Page_228">228</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— on Milton</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pattison’s account of Renascence, <a href="#Page_4">4</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Paul III recognizes Jesuits, <a href="#Page_35">35</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Paulsen on Jesuits, <a href="#Page_55">55</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— on Comenius, <a href="#Page_153">153</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Payn, James, on learning from books, <a href="#Page_546">546</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Payne, Joseph, on Pestalozzi, <a href="#Page_359">359, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— on observation, <a href="#Page_361">361</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— on child’s unrest, <a href="#Page_407">407, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— <i>Science and Art of Teaching</i>, <a href="#Page_542">542</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— Papers on History of Ed., <a href="#Page_544">544</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— summing up Pestalozzi, <a href="#Page_369">369, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— a disciple of Jacotot, <a href="#Page_415">415</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— and International Copyright, <a href="#Page_529">529</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— on women’s ed., <a href="#Page_98">98</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Payne, Dr. J. F., notes to Locke, <a href="#Page_228">228, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Payne, W. H., <i>Science of Ed.</i>, <a href="#Page_545">545</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Perez, B., on Jacotot, <a href="#Page_438">438</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Perfect familiarity, <a href="#Page_433">433</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pestalozzian books, <a href="#Page_383">383</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pestalozzianism lies in aim, <a href="#Page_354">354</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pestalozzi’s school at Neuhof, <a href="#Page_296">296</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— talks with children at Stanz, <a href="#Page_325">325</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pestalozzi, a strange schoolmaster, <a href="#Page_334">334</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— A portrait of, <a href="#Page_345">345</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— and Bacon, <a href="#Page_408">408</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— His poverty, <a href="#Page_340">340</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— His severity, <a href="#Page_308">308</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Petty’s Battlefield simile, <a href="#Page_207">207</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— Realism, <a href="#Page_208">208</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Philanthropinum, Subjects taught at, <a href="#Page_279">279</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Physical education for health, <a href="#Page_104">104</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— Ed. neglected by Port-Royalists, <a href="#Page_188">188</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— Ed., Rabelais for, <a href="#Page_67">67</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Physician’s defective science, <a href="#Page_519">519</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Picture-book for History, Dr. Arnold, <a href="#Page_487">487</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pictures for teaching, <a href="#Page_476">476</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Piety at Port-Royal, <a href="#Page_181">181</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pinloche’s Basedow mentioned, <a href="#Page_289">289, <i>n.</i></a>, <a href="#Page_527">527</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Plants and education, Rousseau, <a href="#Page_255">255</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Plato against compulsion, <a href="#Page_113">113</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— on literary instruction, <a href="#Page_14">14</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Play and learning different, <a href="#Page_367">367</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pleasant, Learning must be, <a href="#Page_138">138</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pleasurable, Exercise is, <a href="#Page_464">464</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pleasure in learning, Jesuits, <a href="#Page_506">506</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— in learning. Ratke, <a href="#Page_112">112</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— in sch. work. Sacchini, <a href="#Page_52">52</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— in sch. work. Mulcaster, <a href="#Page_98">98</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— in study at Port-Royal, <a href="#Page_183">183</a>, <a href="#Page_194">194</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Poetry, Memorizing, <a href="#Page_483">483</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pomey’s <i>Indiculus</i>, <a href="#Page_40">40</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pope. <i>Dunciad</i> quoted, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>, <a href="#Page_422">422</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— on Locke and Montaigne, <a href="#Page_230">230, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— on “Nature,” <a href="#Page_109">109</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— quoted, <a href="#Page_451">451, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pope’s “Little Knowledge,” <a href="#Page_446">446</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Port-Royal des Champs and the Solitaries, <a href="#Page_174">174</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Posture, Importance of, <a href="#Page_327">327</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_565" id="Page_565">[565]</a></span>Potter, Miss J. D., quoted, <a href="#Page_21">21</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pouring-in theory, <a href="#Page_507">507</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Practice does not make perfect, <a href="#Page_182">182</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Preparatory Schools, <a href="#Page_374">374</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Prendergast and language learning, <a href="#Page_426">426, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pressure, Causes of, <a href="#Page_77">77</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— Mulcaster against, <a href="#Page_97">97</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Principles of the Innovators, <a href="#Page_104">104</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— H. Spencer’s summing up, <a href="#Page_454">454</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Printing, Effect of, <a href="#Page_10">10</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— spread literature at Renascence, <a href="#Page_9">9</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Private prayer, <a href="#Page_502">502</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Prize-giving in Jesuit schools, <a href="#Page_58">58</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Prodromus</i> of Comenius, <a href="#Page_125">125</a>, <a href="#Page_126">126</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Prussia adopts Pestalozzianism, <a href="#Page_346">346</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Prussian edict against Froebel, <a href="#Page_395">395</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Psychologizing instruction, <a href="#Page_338">338</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Public education must imitate domestic, Pestalozzi, <a href="#Page_321">321</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— schools, <a href="#Page_513">513, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— schools Comm., quoted, <a href="#Page_531">531</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— school freedom, <a href="#Page_265">265</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— schools leave boys to themselves, <a href="#Page_177">177</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— schools undermastered, <a href="#Page_514">514, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Punishments for moral offences only. Comenius, <a href="#Page_139">139</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— in Jesuit schools, <a href="#Page_48">48</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— Pestalozzi on, <a href="#Page_327">327</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pupil teachers, <a href="#Page_377">377, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Quadrivium preferred by Rabelais, <a href="#Page_65">65</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Queen Louisa on Pestalozzi, <a href="#Page_346">346</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Questioning, art of, <a href="#Page_428">428, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— Rousseau, on art of, <a href="#Page_266">266</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Questions by pupils at Port-Royal, <a href="#Page_190">190</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Quidlibet ex quolibet</i>, <a href="#Page_423">423</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Quintilian on rudiments, <a href="#Page_195">195, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Rabelais for intuition, <a href="#Page_508">508</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— His detachment, <a href="#Page_63">63</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— on Curriculum, <a href="#Page_67">67, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Racine and Port-Royal, <a href="#Page_187">187</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ramsauer and Pestalozzi, <a href="#Page_336">336</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">“Rapid impressionists,” <a href="#Page_89">89</a>, <a href="#Page_426">426, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">“Ratich,” <a href="#Page_105">105</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ratio Studd, Soc. Jesu, <a href="#Page_34">34, <i>note</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ratke and Ascham, <a href="#Page_117">117</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ratke’s promises, <a href="#Page_105">105</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Raumer on Comenius, <a href="#Page_146">146</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Reaction in 17th century against books, <a href="#Page_510">510</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Reading after study of things. Petty, <a href="#Page_209">209</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— badly taught, <a href="#Page_115">115, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— begun with Mother-tongue at Port-Royal, <a href="#Page_183">183</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— in elementary schools, <a href="#Page_257">257, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— Jacotot’s plan for, <a href="#Page_435">435</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— Rousseau against, <a href="#Page_256">256</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— silent and vocal, <a href="#Page_482">482</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Realism, Birth of, <a href="#Page_198">198</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— Comenius for, <a href="#Page_149">149</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— Rabelais, <a href="#Page_66">66</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rearing offspring, to be taught, <a href="#Page_447">447</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Reason, Locke’s dependence on, <a href="#Page_221">221</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— No education before, <a href="#Page_242">242</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Reformation of Schools</i>, <a href="#Page_125">125</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Reformers, Attitude towards, <a href="#Page_396">396</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Reimarus and Basedow, <a href="#Page_273">273</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Rejected Addresses</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_505">505</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Relative value of Knowledges, <a href="#Page_442">442</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Religion and Science, <a href="#Page_147">147</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">“Religion” lessons in Germany, <a href="#Page_501">501</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Religious and moral Training, <a href="#Page_359">359</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Religious instruction, <a href="#Page_500">500</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Renan, quoted, <a href="#Page_247">247, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Renascence defects. <a href="#CONTENTS"><i>See</i> Table of Contents</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— gave a new bend to ideas, <a href="#Page_2">2</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— re-awakening to beauty in lit., <a href="#Page_5">5</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— settled Curriculum, <a href="#Page_4">4</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Repetitio, <a href="#Page_45">45</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Restlessness, The Child’s, <a href="#Page_406">406</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">“Retainers,” <a href="#Page_89">89</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— <a href="#Page_426">426, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Reverence to be taught, <a href="#Page_503">503</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Richelieu and Saint-Cyran, <a href="#Page_174">174</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Richter, J. P., on nurse’s influence, <a href="#Page_373">373, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ritter, Karl, on Pestalozzi, <a href="#Page_347">347</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Robertson, a methodiser, <a href="#Page_426">426, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— Croome, on inherited Knowledge, <a href="#Page_364">364, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rollin’s <i>Traité des Etudes</i>, <a href="#Page_192">192</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rooper, T. G., <i>A Pot of Green Feathers</i>, <a href="#Page_545">545</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rousseau against schoolroom lore, <a href="#Page_363">363</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— first shook off Renascence, <a href="#Page_246">246</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— His proposals, <a href="#Page_267">267</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— His two dogs, <a href="#Page_312">312</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">—His great influence, <a href="#Page_240">240</a>, <a href="#Page_290">290</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— on Common Knowledge, <a href="#Page_458">458, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— studied by all, <a href="#Page_248">248</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rousseauism, <a href="#Page_516">516</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rousseau’s work, <a href="#Page_520">520</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Routine work a refuge, <a href="#Page_498">498</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rudiments not to be made repulsive, <a href="#Page_194">194</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rules, Hoole about, <a href="#Page_202">202</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ruskin on things and words, <a href="#Page_159">159, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_566" id="Page_566">[566]</a></span>Russell, John, translator of Guimps, <a href="#Page_317">317</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Sacchini quoted, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>, <a href="#Page_47">47</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Saint-Cyran and Port-Royal, <a href="#Page_174">174</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sainte-Beuve on Port-Royal, <a href="#Page_195">195</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Salzmann, <a href="#Page_287">287</a>, <a href="#Page_289">289</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Saros-Patak. Comenius at, <a href="#Page_132">132</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Savoir par cœur</i>, &amp;c., <a href="#Page_74">74, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Scheppler, Louise, <a href="#Page_408">408</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Schmid, Josef, goes to Yverdun, <a href="#Page_349">349</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Schmid, J. A., on Jesuits, <a href="#Page_34">34</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Schuepfenthal, School at, <a href="#Page_289">289</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Schola materni gremii</i>, <a href="#Page_142">142</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Scholemaster</i>, When published, <a href="#Page_81">81</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">School-hours of Jesuits short, <a href="#Page_43">43</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Schoolmaster and words, <a href="#Page_538">538</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— his test of knowledge, <a href="#Page_222">222</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— in Education, <a href="#Page_177">177</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— art led to Verbalism, <a href="#Page_30">30</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">School means different things, <a href="#Page_522">522</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Schoolroom rubbish, <a href="#Page_252">252</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Schuppius, <i>in spem</i>, &amp;c., <a href="#Page_432">432</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Science of Education dates from Comenius, <a href="#Page_512">512</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— of Education denied by Lowe, <a href="#Page_379">379</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— of Education growing, <a href="#Page_505">505</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— of education, Importance of, <a href="#Page_456">456</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— of education like medicine, <a href="#Page_519">519</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— of Education, Mulcaster for, <a href="#Page_94">94</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— of education, only beginning. H. Spencer, <a href="#Page_455">455</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— the thought of God, <a href="#Page_413">413</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Scientific foundation for Method, <a href="#Page_412">412</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— knowledge now valued, <a href="#Page_77">77</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Scioppius edits <i>Janua</i>, <a href="#Page_161">161, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">“Scratch pairs,” <a href="#Page_530">530</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Seeley, J. R., on language teaching, <a href="#Page_460">460</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— on use of tongue, <a href="#Page_112">112, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Self-activity, <a href="#Page_401">401</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— the main thing, <a href="#Page_524">524</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Self-development, H. Spencer for, <a href="#Page_462">462</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Self-education, Locke for, <a href="#Page_236">236</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Self-preservation, Education for, <a href="#Page_443">443</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Self-teaching: Jacotot, <a href="#Page_415">415</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Seneca for knowing few things, <a href="#Page_168">168</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— on learning through parts, <a href="#Page_540">540</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sense, Art learnt by. Dury, <a href="#Page_206">206</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Senses, Everything through, Rousseau, <a href="#Page_259">259</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— Error of neglecting, <a href="#Page_151">151</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— first, Comenius, <a href="#Page_138">138</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— Hoole about, <a href="#Page_20">20</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— How to cultivate. Rousseau, <a href="#Page_260">260</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— Insufficiency of, <a href="#Page_152">152</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— Learning from. Comenius, <a href="#Page_149">149</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— Rousseau on training, <a href="#Page_257">257</a>, <a href="#Page_258">258</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— Teach by the. Nicole, <a href="#Page_191">191</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— Training of the. Mulcaster, <a href="#Page_95">95, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sequences of nature arranged by man, <a href="#Page_314">314</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Severity, Wolsey against, <a href="#Page_81">81, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Shakespeare and Mulcaster, <a href="#Page_91">91</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— “No profit grows, &amp;c.,” <a href="#Page_473">473</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— quoted, <a href="#Page_17">17</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Shaw and Donnell: <i>School Devices</i>, <a href="#Page_544">544</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Shirreff, Miss, a Froebelian, <a href="#Page_413">413, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sides, Good of, <a href="#Page_532">532</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sidgwick, A.; Lectures on <i>Stimulus</i> and <i>Discipline</i>, <a href="#Page_544">544</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Simple to complex, <a href="#Page_456">456</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Singing, <a href="#Page_368">368</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Skyte sees Comenius, <a href="#Page_128">128</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Small schools worse than large, <a href="#Page_179">179</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Societas Professa</i> of Jesuits, <a href="#Page_36">36</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sociology, <a href="#Page_449">449</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sonnenschein’s parallel Grammars, <a href="#Page_114">114, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">“Soul instead of salt,” Ben Jonson, <a href="#Page_498">498, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Spartan Ed. preferred by Montaigne, <a href="#Page_72">72</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">S.P.C.K. pictures, <a href="#Page_476">476, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">“<i>Spectator’s</i> C. in easy chair,” quoted, <a href="#Page_527">527</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Spelling, <a href="#Page_483">483</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— Jacotot’s plan for, <a href="#Page_436">436</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Spencer, H., Conclusions about, <a href="#Page_452">452</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— his “Economy of nature,” <a href="#Page_235">235</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stanford Rivers, Mulcaster at, <a href="#Page_102">102, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stanz, Pestalozzi at, <a href="#Page_316">316</a>, <a href="#Page_318">318, <i>ff.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— The French at, <a href="#Page_315">315</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Starting-points of the Sciences, Comenius, <a href="#Page_144">144</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stephen, Sir J., quoted, <a href="#Page_434">434</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Stonyhurst College</i>, by Hewitson, <a href="#Page_59">59</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Street for Mediæval art, <a href="#Page_5">5</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Study depends on will, <a href="#Page_193">193</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sturmius. <a href="#CONTENTS"><i>See</i> Table of Contents</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stylists, <a href="#Page_26">26</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sugar needed, <a href="#Page_466">466</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sunrise can’t be hastened, <a href="#Page_191">191</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Superintendence, the educator’s function, <a href="#Page_357">357</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sweetmeats, Locke against, <a href="#Page_466">466</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Swiss Journal</i>, Pestalozzi, <a href="#Page_309">309</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Talleyrand on methods, <a href="#Page_82">82</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Teach, Everyone can, Jacotot, <a href="#Page_417">417</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— Meaning of word, <a href="#Page_417">417</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Teacher a gardener, <a href="#Page_512">512</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— Can he write on Education? <a href="#Page_439">439</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_567" id="Page_567">[567]</a></span>— does not begin at beginning, <a href="#Page_468">468</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Teachers, Books for, <a href="#Page_541">541</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Teachers, College for. Mulcaster, <a href="#Page_100">100</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— Harm of overworking, <a href="#Page_497">497</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— ignorant of principles, <a href="#Page_455">455</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— must be trained, <a href="#Page_412">412</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— Old, overdo repetition, <a href="#Page_506">506</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— Young, neglect repetition, <a href="#Page_506">506</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Teacher’s business, <a href="#Page_272">272</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— personality, Force of, <i>Forum</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_380">380</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Teaching, causing to learn, <a href="#Page_417">417</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— gained from pupils, <a href="#Page_497">497</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— Good, escapes common tests, <a href="#Page_192">192</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— needs good spirits, <a href="#Page_497">497</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Télémaque, <a href="#Page_423">423</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">“Telling,” H. Spencer against, <a href="#Page_463">463</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Theorists, Use of, <a href="#Page_383">383</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Things before words, <a href="#Page_104">104</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— Children’s delight in. Petty, <a href="#Page_210">210</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">“Things” in education, <a href="#Page_521">521</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Things, Rabelais for, <a href="#Page_65">65</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Threefold life, Comenius, <a href="#Page_135">135</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Thring. <i>Theory and Practice of Teaching</i>, <a href="#Page_542">542</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tillich’s bricks, <a href="#Page_480">480, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tithonus, Quotation from Tennyson’s, <a href="#Page_518">518, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tobler, <a href="#Page_341">341</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tone of school and big boys, <a href="#Page_500">500</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Tout est en tout</i>, <a href="#Page_423">423</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tradition, loss and gain from, <a href="#Page_518">518</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— needed, <a href="#Page_182">182</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Trainer better than teacher, <a href="#Page_422">422</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Training of teachers, Mulcaster, <a href="#Page_99">99</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— of teachers needed, <a href="#Page_520">520</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Transcription, Hint for, <a href="#Page_429">429, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Translating both ways, <a href="#Page_86">86</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Translations at Port-Royal, <a href="#Page_185">185</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— discouraged at Renascence, <a href="#Page_8">8</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— would be literature, <a href="#Page_15">15</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Travelers, Tales of</i>, <a href="#Page_490">490</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Trench, Archbishop, on 13th century art, <a href="#Page_5">5</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Trumbull, H. K. <i>Teaching and Teachers</i>, <a href="#Page_542">542</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Trivium and Quadrivium, <a href="#Page_2">2</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— like squirrel’s revolving cage, <a href="#Page_10">10</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tyndall on teaching, <a href="#Page_468">468, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Uniformity, Ratke for, <a href="#Page_114">114</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Unity, Froebel’s desire for, <a href="#Page_398">398</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— of Universe, Froebel, <a href="#Page_389">389</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Universities excluded Baconian teaching, <a href="#Page_511">511</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">University men in middle class education, <a href="#Page_472">472</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Unum necessarium</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_133">133</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Upton, Editor of <i>Scholemaster</i>, <a href="#Page_82">82</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Useful knowledge, <a href="#Page_540">540</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Usual contrasted with natural, <a href="#Page_516">516</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Utilitarianism defined, <a href="#Page_235">235</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Variations, Prendergastian, <a href="#Page_428">428, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Vater, Dr., at Leipzig, <a href="#Page_477">477</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ventilabrum Sapientiæ, <a href="#Page_135">135</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Verbal Realism, <a href="#Page_25">25</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— Rabelais, <a href="#Page_65">65</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Verbalism, Milton against, <a href="#Page_213">213</a>, <a href="#Page_214">214</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">“Visibles” used for Realien, <a href="#Page_70">70, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Vive la destruction</i>, <a href="#Page_1">1</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Vogel, Dr., at Leipzig, <a href="#Page_478">478</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Vogel, A., on Comenius, <a href="#Page_156">156</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Ward, James, on Kindergarten, <a href="#Page_410">410</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Weighing for arithmetic, <a href="#Page_480">480</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Welldon, J. E. C., on schools for young boys, <a href="#Page_499">499, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Well-educated, When, <a href="#Page_525">525</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Widgery, W. H., quoted, <a href="#Page_90">90</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wilderspin and Infant Schools, <a href="#Page_409">409</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Will, learning depends on. Jacotot, <a href="#Page_416">416</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— needed for study, <a href="#Page_193">193</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wilson, H. B., on Mulcaster, <a href="#Page_102">102</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wilson, J. M., against “telling,” <a href="#Page_422">422</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— on training, <a href="#Page_422">422</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Winchester, “Standing up,” <a href="#Page_541">541</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Winship, A. E., on inter-class matches, <a href="#Page_531">531</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">“Wisdom cried of old,” &amp;c., <a href="#Page_77">77</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wisdom in “the general,” <a href="#Page_517">517, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— must be our own, Montaigne, <a href="#Page_73">73</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wolf, F. A., for self-teaching, <a href="#Page_268">268</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— on child-collectors, <a href="#Page_429">429, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wolf, Hiero., quoted, <a href="#Page_31">31</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wolsey, <a href="#Page_80">80</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Women Commissioners, <a href="#Page_308">308</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Women’s education, <a href="#Page_98">98</a>, <a href="#Page_412">412</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— education, Comenius, <a href="#Page_141">141</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— interest in education, <a href="#Page_106">106</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wooding, W., on numbering, <a href="#Page_479">479</a>, <a href="#Page_480">480, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Words and Things, <a href="#Page_538">538</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Words, Learning from, <a href="#Page_364">364, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— studying, <a href="#Page_154">154</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— taught without meaning, <a href="#Page_467">467</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">“Words,” Various meanings of, <a href="#Page_538">538</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wordsworth on action of man, <a href="#Page_516">516</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— on children’s games, <a href="#Page_407">407</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_568" id="Page_568">[568]</a></span>— on general truths, <a href="#Page_496">496</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— on need of pleasure, <a href="#Page_473">473, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— quoted, <a href="#Page_20">20</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— Taste in books changes, <a href="#Page_543">543</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— on tendency, <a href="#Page_516">516</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— on unity of man, <a href="#Page_518">518, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">— “We live by admiration &amp;c.,” <a href="#Page_154">154</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Working-schools, Locke’s, <a href="#Page_211">211, <i>n.</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Worship connected with instruction, <a href="#Page_501">501</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Writing, Jacotot’s plan for, <a href="#Page_435">435</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Yverdun, Pestalozzi goes to, <a href="#Page_344">344</a></li>
-
-</ul>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
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