and remit him to his ancient condition—tied
for life to a bit of ground, which should supply all
his simple wants; his wife should weave the clothes
for the family; his children should learn nothing
but the catechism and to speak the truth; he should
take his religion without question from the hearty,
fox-hunting parson, and live and die undisturbed by
ideas. Now, it seems to me that if Mr. Ruskin
could realize in some isolated nation this idea of
a pastoral, simple existence, under a paternal government,
he would have in time an ignorant, stupid, brutal
community in a great deal worse case than the agricultural
laborers of England are at present. Three-fourths
of the crime in the kingdom of Bavaria is committed
in the Ultramontane region of the Tyrol, where the
conditions of popular education are about those that
Mr. Ruskin seems to regret as swept away by the present
movement in England—a stagnant state of
things, in which any wind of heaven would be a blessing,
even if it were a tornado. Education of the modern
sort unsettles the peasant, renders him unfit for labor,
and gives us a half-educated idler in place of a conscientious
workman. The disuse of the apprentice system
is not made good by the present system of education,
because no one learns a trade well, and the consequence
is poor work, and a sham civilization generally.
There is some truth in these complaints. But
the way out is not backward, but forward. The
fault is not with education, though it may be with
the kind of education. The education must go
forward; the man must not be half but wholly educated.
It is only half-knowledge like half-training in a trade
that is dangerous.
But what I wish to say is, that notwithstanding certain
unfavorable things in the condition of the English
laborer and mechanic, his chance is better in the
main than it was fifty years ago. The world is
a better world for him. He has the opportunity
to be more of a man. His world is wider, and
it is all open to him to go where he will. Mr.
Ruskin may not so easily find his ideal, contented
peasant, but the man himself begins to apprehend that
this is a world of ideas as well as of food and clothes,
and I think, if he were consulted, he would have no
desire to return to the condition of his ancestors.
In fact, the most hopeful symptom in the condition
of the English peasant is his discontent. For,
as skepticism is in one sense the handmaid of truth,
discontent is the mother of progress. The man
is comparatively of little use in the world who is
contented.
There is another thought pertinent here. It is
this: that no man, however humble, can live a
full life if he lives to himself alone. He is
more of a man, he lives in a higher plane of thought
and of enjoyment, the more his communications are
extended with his fellows and the wider his sympathies
are. I count it a great thing for the English
peasant, a solid addition to his life, that he is
every day being put into more intimate relations with
every other man on the globe.