in the choices it has made. A past period becomes
our own in so far as we translate it through its personalities
and its art; the original documents matter little,
except when they become misleading, as they frequently
do, when read through contemporary spectacles.
Now the great figures of a time are not only princes
and politicians, conquerors and conspirators, they
are quite as apt to be the knights and heroes and
brave gentlemen who held no conspicuous position in
Church or state. I think we need what might be
called “The Golden Book of Knighthood”—or
a series of text books adapted to elementary and advanced
schools—made up of the lives and deeds
(whether attested by “original documents,”
or legendary or even fabulous does not matter) of
those in all times, and amongst all peoples, who were
the glory of knighthood; the “parfait gentyl
Knyghtes” “without fear and without reproach.”
Such for example, to go no farther back than the Christian
Era, as St. George and St. Martin, King Arthur and
Launcelot and Galahad, Charles Martel and Roland,
St. Louis, Godfrey de Bouillon and Saladin, the Earl
of Strafford, Montrose and Claverhouse, the Chevalier
Bayard, Don John of Austria, Washington and Robert
Lee and George Wyndham. These are but a few names,
remembered at random; there are scores besides, and
I think that they should be held up to honour and
emulation throughout the formative period of youth.
After all, they became, during the years when these
qualities were exalted, the personification of the
ideals of honour and chivalry, of compassion and generosity,
of service and self-sacrifice and courtesy, and these,
the qualifications of a gentleman and a man or honour,
are, with the religion that fostered them, and the
practice of that religion, the just objective of education.
Much of all this can even now be taught through a
judicious use of the opportunities offered instructors
in English, whether this is through the graded “readers”
of elementary education, or the more extended courses
in colleges and universities. Very frequently
these opportunities are ignored, and will be until
we achieve something of a new orientation in the matter
of teaching English.
Now it may be I hold a vain and untenable view of
this subject, but I am willing to confess that I believe
the object of teaching English is the unlocking of
the treasures of thought, character and emotion preserved
in the written records of the tongue, and the arousing
of a desire to know and assimilate these treasures
on the part of the pupil. I am very sure that
English should not be taught as a thing ending in “ology,”
not as an intricate science with all sorts of laws
and rules and exceptions; not as a system whereby
the little children of the Ghetto, and the offspring
of Pittsburgh millionaires, and the spectacled infant
elect of Beacon Hill may all be raised to the point
where they can write with acceptable fluency the chiseled
phrases of Matthew Arnold, the cadenced Latinity of
Sir Thomas Browne, the sonorous measures of Bolingbroke
or the distinguished and resonant periods of the King
James Bible. Such an aim as this will always
result in failure.