友情提示:如果本网页打开太慢或显示不完整,请尝试鼠标右键“刷新”本网页!
a treatise on parents and children-第14部分
快捷操作: 按键盘上方向键 ← 或 → 可快速上下翻页 按键盘上的 Enter 键可回到本书目录页 按键盘上方向键 ↑ 可回到本页顶部! 如果本书没有阅读完,想下次继续接着阅读,可使用上方 "收藏到我的浏览器" 功能 和 "加入书签" 功能!
from it; to lie when the truth would shock or hurt its elders; to be
above all things obedient; and to be seen and not heard。 Here we have
two sets of precepts; each warranted to spoil a child hopelessly if
the other be omitted。 Unfortunately we do not allow fair play between
them。 The rebellious; intractable; aggressive; selfish set provoke a
corrective resistance; and do not pretend to high moral or religious
sanctions; and they are never urged by grown…up people on young
people。 They are therefore more in danger of neglect or suppression
than the other set; which have all the adults; all the laws; all the
religions on their side。 How is the child to be secured its due share
of both bodies of doctrine?
The Schoolboy and the Homeboy
In practice what happens is that parents notice that boys brought up
at home become mollycoddles; or prigs; or duffers; unable to take care
of themselves。 They see that boys should learn to rough it a little
and to mix with children of their own age。 This is natural enough。
When you have preached at and punished a boy until he is a moral
cripple; you are as much hampered by him as by a physical cripple; and
as you do not intend to have him on your hands all your life; and are
generally rather impatient for the day when he will earn his own
living and leave you to attend to yourself; you sooner or later begin
to talk to him about the need for self…reliance; learning to think;
and so forth; with the result that your victim; bewildered by your
inconsistency; concludes that there is no use trying to please you;
and falls into an attitude of sulky resentment。 Which is an
additional inducement to pack him off to school。
In school; he finds himself in a dual world; under two dispensations。
There is the world of the boys; where the point of honor is to be
untameable; always ready to fight; ruthless in taking the conceit out
of anyone who ventures to give himself airs of superior knowledge or
taste; and generally to take Lucifer for one's model。 And there is
the world of the masters; the world of discipline; submission;
diligence; obedience; and continual and shameless assumption of moral
and intellectual authority。 Thus the schoolboy hears both sides; and
is so far better off than the homebred boy who hears only one。 But
the two sides are not fairly presented。 They are presented as good
and evil; as vice and virtue; as villainy and heroism。 The boy feels
mean and cowardly when he obeys; and selfish and rascally when he
disobeys。 He looses his moral courage just as he comes to hate books
and languages。 In the end; John Ruskin; tied so close to his mother's
apron…string that he did not escape even when he went to Oxford; and
John Stuart Mill; whose father ought to have been prosecuted for
laying his son's childhood waste with lessons; were superior; as
products of training; to our schoolboys。 They were very conspicuously
superior in moral courage; and though they did not distinguish
themselves at cricket and football; they had quite as much physical
hardihood as any civilized man needs。 But it is to be observed that
Ruskin's parents were wise people who gave John a full share in their
own life; and put up with his presence both at home and abroad when
they must sometimes have been very weary of him; and Mill; as it
happens; was deliberately educated to challenge all the most sacred
institutions of his country。 The households they were brought up in
were no more average households than a Montessori school is an average
school。
The Comings of Age of Children
All this inculcated adult docility; which wrecks every civilization as
it is wrecking ours; is inhuman and unnatural。 We must reconsider our
institution of the Coming of Age; which is too late for some purposes;
and too early for others。 There should be a series of Coming of Ages
for every individual。 The mammals have their first coming of age when
they are weaned; and it is noteworthy that this rather cruel and
selfish operation on the part of the parent has to be performed
resolutely; with claws and teeth; for your little mammal does not want
to be weaned; and yields only to a pretty rough assertion of the right
of the parent to be relieved of the child as soon as the child is old
enough to bear the separation。 The same thing occurs with children:
they hang on to the mother's apron…string and the father's coat tails
as long as they can; often baffling those sensitive parents who know
that children should think for themselves and fend for themselves; but
are too kind to throw them on their own resources with the ferocity of
the domestic cat。 The child should have its first coming of age when
it is weaned; another when it can talk; another when it can walk;
another when it can dress itself without assistance; and when it can
read; write; count money; and pass an examination in going a simple
errand involving a purchase and a journey by rail or other public
method of locomotion; it should have quite a majority。 At present the
children of laborers are soon mobile and able to shift for themselves;
whereas it is possible to find grown…up women in the rich classes who
are actually afraid to take a walk in the streets unattended and
unprotected。 It is true that this is a superstition from the time
when a retinue was part of the state of persons of quality; and the
unattended person was supposed to be a common person of no quality;
earning a living; but this has now become so absurd that children and
young women are no longer told why they are forbidden to go about
alone; and have to be persuaded that the streets are dangerous places;
which of course they are; but people who are not educated to live
dangerously have only half a life; and are more likely to die
miserably after all than those who have taken all the common risks of
freedom from their childhood onward as matters of course。
The Conflict of Wills
The world wags in spite of its schools and its families because both
schools and families are mostly very largely anarchic: parents and
schoolmasters are good…natured or weak or lazy; and children are
docile and affectionate and very shortwinded in their fits of
naughtiness; and so most families slummock along and muddle through
until the children cease to be children。 In the few cases when the
parties are energetic and determined; the child is crushed or the
parent is reduced to a cipher; as the case may be。 When the opposed
forces are neither of them strong enough to annihilate the other;
there is serious trouble: that is how we get those feuds between
parent and child which recur to our memory so ironically when we hear
people sentimentalizing about natural affection。 We even get
tragedies; for there is nothing so tragic to contemplate or so
devastating to suffer as the oppression of will without conscience;
and the whole tendency of our family and school system is to set the
will of the parent and the school despot above conscience as something
that must be deferred to abjectly and absolutely for its own sake。
The strongest; fiercest force in nature is human will。 It is the
highest organization we know of the will that has created the whole
universe。 Now all honest civilization; religion; law; and convention
is an attempt to keep this force within beneficent bounds。 What
corrupts civilization; religion; law; and convention (and they are at
present pretty nearly as corrupt as they dare) is the constant
attempts made by the wills of individuals and classes to thwart the
wills and enslave the powers of other individuals and classes。 The
powers of the parent and the schoolmaster; and of their public
analogues the lawgiver and the judge; become instruments of tyranny in
the hands of those who are too narrow…minded to understand law and
exercise judgment; and in their hands (with us they mostly fall into
such hands) law becomes tyranny。 And what is a tyrant? Quite simply
a person who says to another person; young or old; 〃You shall do as I
tell you; you shall make what I want; you shall profess my creed; you
shall have no will of your own; and your powers shall be at the
disposal of my will。〃 It has come to this at last: that the phrase
〃she has a will of her own;〃 or 〃he has a will of his own〃 has come to
denote a person of exceptional obstinacy and self…assertion。 And even
persons of good natural disposition; if brought up to expect such
deference; are roused to unreasoning fury; and sometimes to the
commission of atrocious crimes; by the slightest challenge to their
authority。 Thus a laborer may be dirty; drunken; untruthful;
slothful; untrustworthy in every way without exhausting the indulgence
of the country house。 But let him dare to be 〃disrespectful〃 and he
is a lost man; though he be the cleanest; soberest; most diligent;
most veracious; most trustworthy man in the county。 Dickens's
instinct for detecting social cankers never served him better than
when he shewed us Mrs Heep teaching her son to 〃be umble;〃 knowing
that if he carried out that precept he might be pretty well anything
else he liked。 The maintenance of deference to our wills becomes a
mania which will carry the best of us to any extremity。 We will allow
a village of Egyptian fellaheen or Indian tribesmen to live the lowest
life they please among themselves without molestation; but let one of
them slay an Englishman or even strike him on the strongest
provocation; and straightway we go stark mad; burning and destroying;
shooting and shelling; flogging and hanging; if only such survivors as
we may leave are thoroughly cowed in the presence of a man with a
white face。 In the committee room of a local council or city
corporation; the humblest employees of the committee find defenders if
they complain of harsh treatment。 Gratuities are voted; indulgences
and holidays are p
快捷操作: 按键盘上方向键 ← 或 → 可快速上下翻页 按键盘上的 Enter 键可回到本书目录页 按键盘上方向键 ↑ 可回到本页顶部!
温馨提示: 温看小说的同时发表评论,说出自己的看法和其它小伙伴们分享也不错哦!发表书评还可以获得积分和经验奖励,认真写原创书评 被采纳为精评可以获得大量金币、积分和经验奖励哦!