character-第7部分
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!
————未阅读完?加入书签已便下次继续阅读!
upon those about him for nurture and culture。 From the very first
breath that he draws; his education begins。 When a mother once
asked a clergyman when she should begin the education of her
child; then four years old; he replied: 〃Madam; if you have not
begun already; you have lost those four years。 From the first
smile that gleams upon an infant's cheek; your opportunity
begins。〃
But even in this case the education had already begun; for the
child learns by simple imitation; without effort; almost through
the pores of the skin。 〃A figtree looking on a figtree becometh
fruitful;〃 says the Arabian proverb。 And so it is with children;
their first great instructor is example。
However apparently trivial the influences which contribute to form
the character of the child; they endure through life。 The child's
character is the nucleus of the man's; all after…education is but
superposition; the form of the crystal remains the same。 Thus the
saying of the poet holds true in a large degree; 〃The child is
father of the man;〃 or; as Milton puts it; 〃The childhood shows
the man; as morning shows the day。〃 Those impulses to conduct
which last the longest and are rooted the deepest; always have
their origin near our birth。 It is then that the germs of virtues
or vices; of feelings or sentiments; are first implanted which
determine the character for life。
The child is; as it were; laid at the gate of a new world; and
opens his eyes upon things all of which are full of novelty and
wonderment。 At first it is enough for him to gaze; but by…and…by
he begins to see; to observe; to compare; to learn; to store up
impressions and ideas; and under wise guidance the progress which
he makes is really wonderful。 Lord Brougham has observed that
between the ages of eighteen and thirty months; a child learns
more of the material world; of his own powers; of the nature of
other bodies; and even of his own mind and other minds; than he
acquires in all the rest of his life。 The knowledge which a child
accumulates; and the ideas generated in his mind; during this
period; are so important; that if we could imagine them to be
afterwards obliterated; all the learning of a senior wrangler at
Cambridge; or a first…classman at Oxford; would be as nothing to
it; and would literally not enable its object to prolong his
existence for a week。
It is in childhood that the mind is most open to impressions; and
ready to be kindled by the first spark that falls into it。 Ideas
are then caught quickly and live lastingly。 Thus Scott is said to
have received; his first bent towards ballad literature from his
mother's and grandmother's recitations in his hearing long before
he himself had learned to read。 Childhood is like a mirror; which
reflects in after…life the images first presented to it。 The first
thing continues for ever with the child。 The first joy; the first
sorrow; the first success; the first failure; the first
achievement; the first misadventure; paint the foreground of
his life。
All this while; too; the training of the character is in progress
of the temper; the will; and the habitson which so much of
the happiness of human beings in after…life depends。 Although man
is endowed with a certain self…acting; self…helping power of
contributing to his own development; independent of surrounding
circumstances; and of reacting upon the life around him; the bias
given to his moral character in early life is of immense
importance。 Place even the highest…minded philosopher in the
midst of daily discomfort; immorality; and vileness; and he will
insensibly gravitate towards brutality。 How much more susceptible
is the impressionable and helpless child amidst such surroundings!
It is not possible to rear a kindly nature; sensitive to evil;
pure in mind and heart; amidst coarseness; discomfort; and
impurity。
Thus homes; which are the nurseries of children who grow up into
men and women; will be good or bad according to the power that
governs them。 Where the spirit of love and duty pervades the home
where head and heart bear rule wisely therewhere the daily
life is honest and virtuouswhere the government is sensible;
kind; and loving; then may we expect from such a home an issue of
healthy; useful; and happy beings; capable; as they gain the
requisite strength; of following the footsteps of their parents;
of walking uprightly; governing themselves wisely; and
contributing to the welfare of those about them。
On the other hand; if surrounded by ignorance; coarseness; and
selfishness; they will unconsciously assume the same character;
and grow up to adult years rude; uncultivated; and all the more
dangerous to society if placed amidst the manifold temptations of
what is called civilised life。 〃Give your child to be educated by
a slave;〃 said an ancient Greek; 〃and instead of one slave; you
will then have two。〃
The child cannot help imitating what he sees。 Everything is to
him a modelof manner; of gesture; of speech; of habit; of
character。 〃For the child;〃 says Richter; 〃the most important era
of life is that of childhood; when he begins to colour and mould
himself by companionship with others。 Every new educator effects
less than his predecessor; until at last; 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。〃 (2)
Models are therefore of every importance in moulding the nature of
the child; and if we would have fine characters; we must
necessarily present before them fine models。 Now; the model most
constantly before every child's eye is the Mother。
One good mother; said George Herbert; is worth a hundred
schoolmasters。 In the home she is 〃loadstone to all hearts; and
loadstar to all eyes。〃 Imitation of her is constantimitation;
which Bacon likens to 〃a globe of precepts。〃 But example is far
more than precept。 It is instruction in action。 It is teaching
without words; often exemplifying more than tongue can teach。 In
the face of bad example; the best of precepts are of but little
avail。 The example is followed; not the precepts。 Indeed;
precept at variance with practice is worse than useless; inasmuch
as it only serves to teach the most cowardly of viceshypocrisy。
Even children are judges of consistency; and the lessons of the
parent who says one thing and does the opposite; are quickly seen
through。 The teaching of the friar was not worth much; who
preached the virtue of honesty with a stolen goose in his sleeve。
By imitation of acts; the character becomes slowly and
imperceptibly; but at length decidedly formed。 The several acts
may seem in themselves trivial; but so are the continuous acts of
daily life。 Like snowflakes; they。 fall unperceived; each flake
added to the pile produces no sensible change; and yet the
accumulation of snowflakes makes the avalanche。 So do repeated
acts; one following another; at length become consolidated in
habit; determine the action of the human being for good or for
evil; and; in a word; form the character。
It is because the mother; far more than the father; influences the
action and conduct of the child; that her good example is of so
much greater importance in the home。 It is easy to understand how
this should be so。 The home is the woman's domainher kingdom;
where she exercises entire control。 Her power over the little
subjects she rules there is absolute。 They look up to her for
everything。 She is the example and model constantly before their
eyes; whom they unconsciously observe and imitate。
Cowley; speaking of the influence of early example; and ideas
early implanted in the mind; compares them to letters cut in the
bark of a young tree; which grow and widen with age。 The
impressions then made; howsoever slight they may seem; are never
effaced。 The ideas then implanted in the mind are like seeds
dropped into the ground; which lie there and germinate for a time;
afterwards springing up in acts and thoughts and habits。 Thus the
mother lives again in her children。 They unconsciously mould
themselves after her manner; her speech; her conduct; and her
method of life。 Her habits become theirs; and her character is
visibly repeated in them。
This maternal love is the visible providence of our race。 Its
influence is constant and universal。 It begins with the education
of the human being at the out…start of life; and is prolonged by
virtue of the powerful influence which every good mother exercises
over her children through life。 When launched into the world;
each to take part in its labours; anxieties; and trials; they
still turn to their mother for consolation; if not for counsel; in
their time of trouble and difficulty。 The pure and good thoughts
she has implanted in their minds when children; continue to grow
up into good acts; long after she is dead; and when there is
nothing but a memory of her left; her children rise up and
call her blessed。
It is not saying too much to aver that the happiness or misery;
the enlightenment or ignorance; the civilisation or barbarism of
the world; depends in a very high degree upon the exercise of
woman's power within her special kingdom of home。 Indeed; Emerson
says; broadly and truly; that 〃a sufficient measure of
civilisation is the influence of good women。〃 Posterity may be
said to lie before us in the person of the child in the mother's
lap。 What that child will eventually become; mainly depends upon
the training and example which he has received from his first and
most influential educator。
Woman; above all other educators; educates humanly。 Man is the
brain; but woman is the heart of humanity; he its judgment; she
its feeling; he its strength; she its grace; ornament; and solace。
Even the understanding of the best woman seems to work mai