man would come and take him away; this so frightened
the child, that he fell into a violent fit, and never
afterwards could bear the sight of this woman.
On the mother getting the child admitted into our
school, she desired me to be very gentle with him,
relating to me all the above story, except that the
child had had a fit. About a fortnight after the
admission of the child, he came running one day into
the school, exclaiming, “I’ll be a good
boy, master! master! I’ll be a good boy.”
As soon as he caught sight of me, he clung round,
and grasped me with such violence, that I really thought
the child was mad; in a few minutes after this he
went into strong convulsions, and was such a dreadful
spectacle, that I thought the child would die in my
arms. In this state he remained for about twenty
minutes, and I fully expected he would be carried
out of the school a corpse. I sent for the mother,
but on her arrival I perceived she was less alarmed
than myself; she immediately said, the child was in
a fit, and that I had frightened him into it.
I told her that she was mistaken; that the child had
only just entered the school, and I was ignorant of
the cause of his fright; but several of my little
scholars soon set the matter to rest, by stating the
particulars of the fright, which they observed when
coming to school. It seems that a man was in
the street, who sweeps chimneys with a machine, and
just as the little fellow passed him, he called out,
“Sweep;” this so alarmed the child, that
he thought the man was going to take him, and was
affected by his fears in the way I have stated.
The child, however, getting better, and the mother
hearing what the children said, begged my pardon for
having accused me wrongfully, and then told me the
whole particulars of his first fright and the woman
and the coal-hole. I had the greatest difficulty
imaginable to persuade him, that a sweep was a human
being, and that he loved little children as much as
other persons. After some time, the child got
somewhat the better of his fears, but not wholly so.
He had but one fit afterwards. This shews how
improper it is to confine children by themselves,
or to threaten them in the manner described. Many
persons continue nervous all their lives through such
treatment, and are so materially injured, that they
are frightened at their own shadow.
It is also productive of much mischief to talk of mysteries, ghosts, and hobgoblins, before children, which many persons are too apt to do. Some deal so much in the marvellous, that I really believe they frighten many children out of their senses. I recollect, when I was a child, hearing such stories, till I have actually been afraid to look behind me. How many persons are frightened at such a little creature as a mouse, because the nature of that little creature has not been explained to them in their infancy. Indeed, children should have all things shewn them, if possible, that they are likely to meet with: and above all, it should be impressed upon their minds,