the rights of capital, to gratify ardent longings
without trouble, and to provide the much-coveted means
of enjoyment! The Titans have tried to scale the
heavens, and have fallen into the most degrading materialism.
Purely speculative dogmatism sinks into materialism.”
(M. Wolowski’s Essay on the Historical Method,
prefixed to his translation of Roscher’s Political
Economy.)]—We need to remember that the
Creator of man, and not man himself, formed society
and instituted government; that God is always behind
human society and sustains it; that marriage and the
family and all social relations are divinely established;
that man’s duty, coinciding with his right, is,
by the light of history, by experience, by observation
of men, and by the aid of revelation, to find out
and make operative, as well as he can, the divine
law in human affairs. And it may be added that
the sovereignty of the people, as a divine trust,
may be as logically deduced from the divine institution
of government as the old divine right of kings.
Government, by whatever name it is called, is a matter
of experience and expediency. If we submit to
the will of the majority, it is because it is more
convenient to do so; and if the republic or the democracy
vindicate itself, it is because it works best, on
the whole, for a particular people. But it needs
no prophet to say that it will not work long if God
is shut out from it, and man, in a full-blown socialism,
is considered the ultimate authority.
II. Equality of education. In our American
system there is, not only theoretically but practically,
an equality of opportunity in the public schools,
which are free to all children, and rise by gradations
from the primaries to the high-schools, in which the
curriculum in most respects equals, and in variety
exceeds, that of many third-class “colleges.”
In these schools nearly the whole round of learning,
in languages, science, and art, is touched. The
system has seemed to be the best that could be devised
for a free society, where all take part in the government,
and where so much depends upon the intelligence of
the electors. Certain objections, however, have
been made to it. As this essay is intended only
to be tentative, we shall state some of them, without
indulging in lengthy comments.
( 1. ) The first charge is superficiality—a
necessary consequence of attempting too much—and
a want of adequate preparation for special pursuits
in life.
( 2. ) A uniformity in mediocrity is alleged from
the use of the same text-books and methods in all
schools, for all grades and capacities. This
is one of the most common criticisms on our social
state by a certain class of writers in England, who
take an unflagging interest in our development.
One answer to it is this: There is more reason
to expect variety of development and character in
a generally educated than in an ignorant community;
there is no such uniformity as the dull level of ignorance.