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These picturesque martial incidents are being reproduced every day
in our ordinary life. We are bluffed by hardy simpletons and headstrong bounders as the
Russians were bluffed by Ney; and our Wellingtons are threadbound by slave-democracy as
Gulliver was threadbound by the Lilliputians. We are a mass of people living in a
submissive routine to which we have been drilled from our childhood. When you ask us to
take the simplest step outside that routine, we say shyly, "Oh, I really
couldnt," or "Oh, I shouldnt like to," without being able to point out the
smallest harm that could possibly ensue: victims, not of a rational fear of real dangers,
but of pure abstract fear, the quintessence of cowardice, the very negation of "the
fear of God." Dotted about among us are a few spirits relatively free from this
inculcated paralysis, sometimes because they are half-witted, sometimes because they are
unscrupulously selfish, sometimes because they are realists as to money and unimaginative
as to other things, sometimes even because they are exceptionally able, but always because
they are not afraid of shadows nor oppressed with nightmares. And we see these few rising
as if by magic into power and affluence, and forming, with the millionaires who have
accidentally gained huge riches by the occasional windfalls of our commerce, the governing
class. Now nothing is more disastrous than a governing class that does not know how to
govern. And how can this rabble of the casual products of luck, cunning, and folly, be
expected to know how to govern? The merely lucky ones and the hereditary ones do not owe
their position to their qualifications at all. As to the rest, the realism which seems
their essential qualification often consists not only in a lack of romantic imagination,
which lack is a merit, but of the realistic, constructive, Utopian imagination, which lack
is a ghastly defect. Freedom from imaginative illusion is therefore no guarantee whatever
of nobility of character: that is why inculcated submissiveness makes us slaves to people
much worse than ourselves, and why it is so important that submissiveness should no longer
be inculcated.
And yet as long as you have the compulsory school as we know it, we
shall have submissiveness inculcated. What is more, until the active hours of child life
are organized separately from the active hours of adult life, so that adults can enjoy the
society of children in reason without being tormented, disturbed, harried, burdened, and
hindered in their work by them as they would be now if there were no compulsory schools
and no children hypnotized into the belief that they must tamely go to them and be
imprisoned and beaten and over-tasked in them, we shall have schools under one pretext or
another; and we shall have all the evil consequences and all the social hopelessness that
result from turning a nation of potential freemen and freewomen into a nation of
two-legged spoilt spaniels with everything crushed out of their nature except dread of the
whip. Liberty is the breath of life to nations; and liberty is the one thing that parents,
schoolmasters, and rulers spend their lives in extirpating for the sake of an immediately
quiet and finally disastrous life.
The End |
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