To the most vertvovs Ladie
TO THE MOST VERTVOVS
LADIE, HIS MOST DEARE, AND
soueraine princesse, Elizabeth by the
grace of God Queene of England,
Fraunce, and Ireland, defendresse
of the faith &c.
My booke by the very argument, most excellent princesse, pretendeth a common good, bycause it concerneth the generall traine and bringing vp of youth, both to enrich their minds with learning, and to enable their bodies with health: and it craues the fauour of some speciall countenaunce farre aboue the common, or else it can not possiblie procure free passage. For what a simple credit is myne, to perswade so great a matter? or what force is there in common patronage, to commaunde conceites? I am therefore driuen vpon these so violent considerations, to presume so farre, as to present it, being my first trauell, that euer durst venture vpon the print, vnto your maiesties most sacred handes. For in neede of countenaunce, where best abilitie is most assurance, and knowne vertue the fairest warrant, who is more sufficient then your excellencie is, either for cunning to commend, or for credit to commaunde? And what reason is there more likely to procure the fauour of your maiesties most gracious countenaunce, either to commende the worke, or to commaunde it waie, then the honest pretence of a generall good, wherein you cannot be deceiued? For of your accustomed care you will circumspectlie consider, and by your singular iudgement, you can skillfully discerne, whether there be any appearance, that my booke shall performe so great a good, as it pretendeth to do, before you either praise it, or procure it passage. In deede it is an argument which craueth consideration, bycause it is the leader to a further consequence: and all your maiesties time is so busily employed, about many and maine affaires of your estate, as I may seeme verie iniurious to the common weale, besides some wrong offered to your owne person, to desire your Maiestie at this time to reade any part therof, much lesse the whole, the booke it selfe being very long, and your Maiesties leasure being very litle.
And yet if it maye please your most excellent Maiestie of some extraordinarie grace towardes a most obsequious subiect in way of encoraging his both toilsome and troublesome labour, to take but some taste of any one title, of smallest encumbraunce, by the very inscription, the paw of a Lion may bewraie the hole body in me by the prouerbe, in your highnesse by the propertie, as who can best iudge, what the Lion is. For the rest, which neither your Maiesties time can tarie on, neither my boldnesse dare desire that you should: other mens report, which shall haue time to read, and will lend an officious countrieman some parte of their leysure, will proue a referendarie, and certifie your highnesse how they finde me appointed. I haue entitled the booke Positions, bycause entending to go on further, for the auauncement of learning I thought it good at the first to put downe certaine groundes very needefull for my purpose, for that they be the common circunstances, that belong to teaching and are to be resolued on, eare we begin to teach. Wherin I craue consent of my countrey, to ioyne with me in conceit, if my reasons proue likely, that therby I may direct my whole currant in the rest, a great deale the better. Now if it maye stand with your Maiesties most gracious good will to bestow vpon me the fauourable smile of your good liking, to countenance me in this course, which as it pretendeth the publike commoditie, so it threateneth me with extreme paines, all my paine will proue pleasant vnto me, and that good which shall come thereby to the common weale shall be most iustly ascribed to your Maiesties especial goodnesse, which encoraged my labour, and commended it to my countrey. Which both encoragement to my selfe, and commendacion to my countrey, I do nothing doubt but to obtaine at your Maiesties most gracious handes, whether of your good nature, which hath alwaye furthered honest attemptes: or of your Princely conceit, which is thoroughly bent to the bettering of your state, considering my trauell doth tend that way. For the very ende of my whole labour (if my small power can attaine to that, which a great good will towards this my cuntrey hath deepely conceiued) is to helpe to bring the generall teaching in your Maiesties dominions, to some one good and profitable vniformitie which now in the middest of great varietie doth either hinder much, or profit litle, or at the least nothing so much, as it were like to do, if it were reduced to one certaine fourme. The effecting wherof pretendeth great honour to your Maiesties person, besides the profit, which your whole realme is to reape therby. That noble Prince king Henry the eight, your Maiesties most renowned father vouchesafed to bring all Grammers into one fourme, the multitude therof being some impediment to schoole learning in his happie time, and thereby both purchased himselfe great honour, and procured his subiectes a marueilous ease. Now if it shall please your Maiestie by that Royall example which otherwise you so rarely exceede, to further not onely the helping of that booke to a refining: but also the reducing of all other schoole bookes to some better choice: and all manner of teaching, to some redier fourme: can so great a good but sound to your Maiesties most endlesse renowne, whose least part gaue such cause of honour, to that famous King, your Maiesties father? By these few wordes your highnesse conceiueth my full meaning I am well assured, neither do I doubt, but that as you are well able to discerne it, so you will very depelie consider it, and see this so great a common good thoroughly set on foote. I know your Maiesties pacience to be exceeding great in verie petie arguments, if not I should haue bene afraid, to haue troubled you with so many wordes, and yet least tediousnesse do soure euen a sweete and sound matter, I will be no bolder. God blesse your Maiestie, and send you a long, and an healthfull life, to his greatest glorie, and your Maiesties most lasting honour.
Your Maiesties most humble and
obedient subiect
Richard Mulcaster.
AVTHOR IPSE AD librum suum.
Insita naturæ nostræ sitis illa iuuandi
Ignauum vitæ desidis odit iter.
Parca cibi, saturata fame, deuota labori,
Prodiga nocturni luminis vrget opus.
Quod, simul ac lucis patiens fore viderit, edit
Inde licet multo plena timore gemat.
Pœnitet emissam per mille pericula prolem,
Quæ poterat patriæ tuta latere domi.
Iudicium[que] timens alieni pallida iuris
Omine spem lædit deteriore suam.
Sed sine sole nequit viui, prodire necesse est,
Cura[que] quod peperit publica, iura vocant.
Fortunæ credenda salus, quam prouida virtus
Quam patris æterni dextera magna regit.
Sic sua Neptuno committit vela furenti
Spem solam in medijs docta phaselus aquis.
Sic mihi spes maior, cui res cum gente Deorum,
Quæ certo dubijs numine rebus adest.
Perge igitur, sorti[que] tuæ te crede, parentis
Tessera parue liber prima future tui.
Et quia, quà perges, hominum liberrima de te
Iudicia in medijs experiere vijs,
Quidnam quis[que] notet, quidnam desideret in te,
Quo possim in reliquis cautior esse, refer.
Interea veniam supplex vtrique precare,
Nam meus error erat, qui tuus error erit.
Qui neutrius erit, cum, quis sit, sensero, quippe
Nullum in correcto crimine crimen erit.
Ergo tuæ partes, quæ sint errata, referre:
Emendare, mei cura laboris erit.
Nam[que] rei nouitas nulli tentata priorum
Hac ipsa, qua tu progrediere, via,
Vtri[que] errores multos, lapsus[que]; minatur,
Quos cum resciero, num superesse sinam?
Cui tam chara mei lectoris amica voluntas,
Vt deleta illi displicitura velim.
R. M.
THE ARGVMEMTES HANDLED
IN EVERY PARTICVLAR TITLE.
The entrie to the Positions, conteining the occasion of this present discourse, and the causes why it was penned in English. ([P. 1.])
Wherfore these Positions serue, what they be, and how necessarie it was to begin at them. ([P. 4.])
Of what force circunstance is in matters of action, and how warily authorities be to be vsed, where the contemplatiue reason receiues the check of the actiue circunstance, if they be not well applyed. Of the alledging of authours. ([P. 8.])
What time were best for the childe to begin to learne. What matters some of the best writers handle eare they determine this question. Of letes and libertie, whervnto the parentes are subiect in setting their children to schoole. Of the difference of wittes and bodies in children. That exercise must be ioyned with the booke, as the schooling of the bodie. ([P. 14.])
What thinges they be, wherein children are to be trained, eare they passe to the Grammar. That parentes, and maisters ought to examine the naturall abilities in children, whereby they become either fit, or vnfit, to this, or that kinde of life. The three naturall powers in children, Witte to conceiue by, Memorie to retaine by, Discretion to discerne by. That the training vp to good manners, and nurture, doth not belong to the teacher alone, though most to him, next after the parent, whose charge that is most, bycause his commaundement is greatest, ouer his owne childe, and beyond appeale. Of Reading, Writing, Drawing, Musicke by voice, and instrument: and that they be the principall principles, to traine vp the minde in. A generall aunswere to all obiections, which arise against any, or all of these. ([P. 25.])
Of exercises and training the body. How necessarie a thing exercise is. What health is, and how it is maintained: what sicknesse is, how it commeth, and how it is preuented. What a parte exercise playeth in the maintenaunce of health. Of the student and his health. That all exercises though they stirre some one parte most, yet helpe the whole bodie. ([P. 40.])
The braunching, order, and methode, kept in this discourse of exercises. ([P. 49.])
Of exercise in generall, and what it is. And that it is Athleticall for games, Martiall for the fielde, Physicall for health, preparatiue before, postparatiue after the standing exercise: some within dores, for foule whether, some without for faire. ([P. 51.])
Of the particular exercises. Why I do appoint so manie, and how to iudge of them, or to deuise the like. ([P. 54.])
Of lowd speaking. How necessarie, and how proper an exercise it is for a scholer. ([P. 55.])
Of lowd singing, and in what degree it commeth to be one of the exercises. ([P. 59.])
Of lowde, and soft reading. ([P. 60.])
Of much talking and silence. ([P. 62.])
Of laughing, and weeping. And whether children be to be forced toward vertue and learning. ([P. 63.])
Of holding the breath. ([P. 68.])
Of daunsing, why it is blamed, and how deliuered from blame. ([P. 72.])
Of wrastling. ([P. 76.])
Of fensing, or the vse of the weapon. ([P. 78.])
Of the Top, and scourge. ([P. 80.])
Of walking. ([P. 82.])
Of running. ([P. 89.])
Of leaping. ([P. 92.])
Of swimming. ([P. 94.])
Of riding. ([P. 96.])
Of hunting. ([P. 98.])
Of shooting. ([P. 101.])
Of the ball. ([P. 103.])
Of the circumstances, which are to be considered in exercise. ([P. 108.])
The nature and qualitie of the exercise. ([P. 109.])
Of the bodies which are to be exercised. ([P. 110.])
Of the exercising places. ([P. 114.])
Of the exercising time. ([P. 115.])
Of the quantitie that is to be kept in exercise. ([P. 118.])
Of the manner of exercising. ([P. 122.])
An aduertisement to the training master. Why both the teaching of the minde and the training of the bodie be assigned to the same master. The inconueniences which ensue, where the bodie and the soule be made particular subiectes to seuerall professions. That who so will execute any thing well, must of force be fully resolued, in the excellencie of his owne subiect. Out of what kinde of writers the exercising maister maie store himselfe with cunning. That the first groundes would be laide by the cunningest workeman. That priuate discretion in any executour is of more efficacie, then his skill. ([P. 124.])
That both yong boyes, and yong maidens are to be put to learne. Whether all boyes be to be set to schoole. That to many learned be burdenous: to few to bare: wittes well sorted ciuill: missorted seditious. That all may learne to write and reade without daunger. The good of choice, the ill of confusion. The children which are set to learne hauing either rich or poore freindes, what order and choice is to be vsed in admitting either of them to learne. Of the time to chuse. (P. [133.])
The meanes to restraine the ouerflowing multitude of scholers. The cause why euery one desireth, to haue his childe learned, and yet must yeilde ouer his owne desire to the disposition of his countrie. That necessitie and choice be the best restrainers. That necessitie restraineth by lacke and law. Why it may be admitted that all may learne to writ and reade that can, but no further. What is to be thought of the speaking and vnderstanding of latine, and in what degree of learning that is. That considering our time, and the state of religion in our time law must needes helpe this restraint, with the aunswere to such obiections as are made to the contrarie. That in choice of wittes, which must deale with learning, that wit is fittest for our state which aunswereth best the monarchie, and how such a wit is to be knowne. That choice is to helpe in schooling, in admission into colledges, in proceding to degrees, in preferring to liuings, where the right and wrong of all the foure pointes be handled at full. (P. [142].)
That yong maindens are to be set to learning, which is proued by the custome of our countrie, by our duetie towardes them, by their naturall abilitie, and by the worthie effectes of such, as haue bene well trained. The ende whereunto their education serueth, which is the cause why and how much they learne. Which of them are to learne. When they are to beginne to learne: What and how much they may learne. Of whom and where they ought to be taught. (P. [166].)
Of the training vp of yong gentlemen. Of priuate and publike education, with their generall goodes and illes. That there is no better way for gentlemen to be trained by in any respect, then the common is, being well appointed. Of rich mens children, which be no gentlemen. Of nobilitie in generall. Of gentlemanly exercises. What it is to be a nobleman or a gentleman. That infirmities in noble houses be not to be triumphed ouer. The causes and groundes of nobilitie. Why so many desire to be gentlemen. That gentlemen ought to professe learning, and liberall sciences for many good and honorable effectes. Of trauelin into forraine contries, with all the braunches, allowance and disallowance thereof: and that it were to be wished that gentlemen would professe, to make sciences liberall in vse, which are liberall in name. Of the training vp of a yong prince. (P. [183].)
Of the generall place and time of education. Publike places elementarie, grammaticall, collegiat. Of bourding of children abroad from their parentes howses: and whether that be the best. The vse and commoditie of a large and well situate training place. Observations to be kept in the generall time. (P. [222].)
Of teachers and trainers in generall: and that they be either Elementarie, Grammatticall, or Academicall. Of the elementarie teachers abilitie and entertainement: of the grammer maisters abilitie and his entertainement. A meane to haue both excellent teachers and cunning professours in all kindes of learning: by the diuision of colledges according to professions: by sorting like yeares into the same rowmes: by bettering the studentes allowance and liuing: by prouiding and maintaining notable well learned readers. That for bringing learning forward in her right and best course, there would be seuen ordinarie ascending colledges for tounges, for mathematikes, for philosophie, for teachers, for physicians, for lawyers, for diuines. And that the generall studie of law, would be but one studie. Euery of these pointes with his particular proufes sufficient for a position. Of the admission of teachers. (P. [232].)
How long the childe is to continew in the elementarie, eare he passe to the toungues and grammer. The incurable infirmities which posting haste maketh in the whole course of studie. How necessarie a thing sufficient time is for a scholer. (P. [256].)
How to cut of most inconueniences wherewith schooles and scholers, masters and parentes be in our schooling now most troubled: whereof there be too meanes, vniformitie in teaching and publishing of schoole orders. That vniformitie in teaching hath for companions dispatch in learning and sparing of expenses. Of the abbridging of the number of bookes. Of curtesie and correction. Of schoole faultes. Of friendlines betwene parentes and maisters. (P. [262].)
That conference betwene those which haue interest in children: Certaintie of direction in places where children vse most: and Constancie in well keeping that, which is certainely appointed, be the most profitable circunstances both for vertuous mannering and cunning schooling. (P. [281].)
The peroration, wherein the summe of the whole booke is recapitulated and proofes vsed, that this enterprise was first to be begon by Positions, and that these be the most proper to this purpose. A request concerning the well taking of that which is so well meant. (P. [292].)
| [Chapter 1]—— | PAGE | |
| Author aims at improving Schools | [2] | |
| Why he writes in English | [3] | |
| [Chapter 2]—— | ||
| Settling first Principles | [4] | |
| The three Stages of Learning | [5] | |
| The first Stage chosen | [6] | |
| Matters to be discussed | [7] | |
| [Chapter 3]—— | ||
| Mistake of neglecting Circumstance | [8] | |
| Consideration of Circumstance | [9] | |
| The Realm of Circumstance | [10] | |
| Authority affected by Circumstance | [11] | |
| Use of previous writers | [12] | |
| Right Reason the best Authority | [13] | |
| Truth no Respecter of Persons | [14] | |
| [Chapter 4]—— | ||
| The Ideal and the Possible | [15] | |
| What Parents want | [16] | |
| At what age should schooling begin? | [17] | |
| Circumstances limit choice | [18] | |
| Against forcing young wits | [19] | |
| Powers of mind and body | [20] | |
| Father must decide Care of the body | [21] | |
| Parents’ duty in training the body | [22] | |
| Meet schoolroom stillness by regulated exercise | [23] | |
| Parents must consult with Schoolmaster | [24] | |
| [Chapter 5]—— | ||
| Discerning of ingenerate abilities | [25] | |
| Measure of ripeness in soul or body | [26] | |
| Three Powers: Perception, Memory, Judgment | [27] | |
| Morals the care of Parents and Teachers | [28] | |
| Instruction before Grammar Age. Reading | [29] | |
| Reading English before Latin | [30] | |
| Rote for Youth: Reason for Years. English | [31] | |
| Writing invented before Reading | [32] | |
| Skill in Writing: its value for the child | [33] | |
| Write English hand first. Drawing | [34] | |
| Value of Drawing. Painting? | [35] | |
| Music | [36] | |
| Music good for mind and body | [37] | |
| Objections to Music answered | [38] | |
| For child reading, writing, drawing, music | 39 | |
| [Chapter 6]—— | ||
| Training needed for both body and mind | [40] | |
| Bodily exercise needed by student | [41] | |
| Exercise and health | [42] | |
| What is health and sickness? | [43] | |
| Dangers to health of the body | [44] | |
| Use of exercise The Student | [45] | |
| Parents’ and Masters’ parts | [46] | |
| Parts of the body and their train | [47] | |
| Heart, liver, brain, &c. | [48] | |
| Exercises for the various parts | [49] | |
| [Chapter 7]—— | ||
| Four Points to be treated of | [50] | |
| [Chapter 8]—— | ||
| Exercise athletical | [51] | |
| Exercise martial | [52] | |
| Exercise for health | [53] | |
| [Chapter 9]—— | ||
| The particular exercises chosen | [54] | |
| Defence of the choice | [55] | |
| [Chapter 10]—— | ||
| Loud speaking | [55] | |
| Good effects of loud speaking | [56] | |
| Cautions in loud speaking | [57] | |
| Recitations | [58] | |
| [Chapter 11]—— | ||
| Music and health | [59] | |
| Music and health | [60] | |
| [Chapter 12]—— | ||
| Reading aloud | [60] | |
| Reading aloud approved by Ancients | [61] | |
| Soft Reading | [62] | |
| [Chapter 13]—— | ||
| Talking | [62] | |
| [Chapter 14]—— | ||
| Laughing. Weeping | [63] | |
| Laughing and weeping as exercises | [64] | |
| Weeping no Exercise | [66] | |
| Keep the Young in awe | [67] | |
| [Chapter 15]—— | ||
| Soundness of Wind | [68] | |
| Use of holding the Breath | [69] | |
| Effects of holding the Breath | [70] | |
| Cautions | [71] | |
| [Chapter 16]—— | ||
| Defence of Dancing | [72] | |
| Dancing: its use and misuse | [73] | |
| Kinds and causes of Dancing | [74] | |
| Ancient and modern Dancing | [75] | |
| [Chapter 17]—— | ||
| Kinds of Wrestling | [76] | |
| Cautions to Wrestlers | 77 | |
| [Chapter 18]—— | ||
| Kinds of Fencing. The Ancients | [78] | |
| Counsels for Fencing | [79] | |
| [Chapter 19]—— | ||
| Tops ancient and modern | [80] | |
| Use both Hands alike. Plato quoted | [81] | |
| [Chapter 20]—— | ||
| Walking commonest and best for health | [82] | |
| Kinds of Walking | [83] | |
| Kinds of Walking and their effects | [84] | |
| Walking up and down hill, &c. | [86] | |
| Choice of place: by the sea, &c. | [87] | |
| Times of Walking | [88] | |
| [Chapter 21]—— | ||
| Running, its importance | [89] | |
| Vehement Running unhealthy | [90] | |
| Moderate Running. Running backwards, &c. | [91] | |
| [Chapter 22]—— | ||
| Of Leaping | [92] | |
| Kinds of Leaping. Spartan women | [93] | |
| Leaping. Skipping | [94] | |
| [Chapter 23]—— | ||
| Of Swimming | [94] | |
| Swimming: where best | [95] | |
| Swimming in salt water | [96] | |
| [Chapter 24]—— | ||
| Riding, ancient and modern | [97] | |
| Trotting: Ambling: Posting | [98] | |
| [Chapter 25]—— | ||
| Hunting combines all exercises | [99] | |
| Hunting on horseback and on foot | [100] | |
| [Chapter 26]—— | ||
| Shooting practised in Islands | [101] | |
| Archery v. Hunting. Ascham | [102] | |
| Prince Arthur’s Knights | [103] | |
| [Chapter 27]—— | ||
| Ball games ancient and modern. Handball | [104] | |
| Handball and Football | [105] | |
| Football and Armball | [106] | |
| Why some classic games are left out | [107] | |
| [Chapter 28]—— | ||
| Rules must vary in practice | [108] | |
| [Chapter 29]—— | ||
| Galen’s triple division | [109] | |
| [Chapter 30]—— | ||
| Diseases are of three kinds | [110] | |
| When exercise helps in disease | [111] | |
| Exercises for the weak and old | [112] | |
| Exercise according to state of the body | [113] | |
| [Chapter 31]—— | ||
| Place for exercise | [114] | |
| Pure air | 115 | |
| [Chapter 32]—— | ||
| Time of exercise | [115] | |
| Times according to Hippocrates, &c. | [116] | |
| Time for exercise and meals | [117] | |
| Morning best | [118] | |
| [Chapter 33]—— | ||
| Limits in exercise | [118] | |
| Limits. Strong and weak. Old and young | [119] | |
| Time of year. Condition of the body | [120] | |
| Kind of life | [121] | |
| [Chapter 34]—— | ||
| Rubbing the body | [122] | |
| Practice of the Ancients | [123] | |
| [Chapter 35]—— | ||
| Same trainer for body and mind | [124] | |
| The Divine and the Physician | [125] | |
| Against specialising | [126] | |
| Trainer to magnify his office | [127] | |
| Praise of health. Trainer’s knowledge | [128] | |
| Physician the Trainer’s Friend | [129] | |
| Importance of Groundwork | [130] | |
| Discretion in applying Knowledge | [131] | |
| Art general; Discretion particular | [132] | |
| [Chapter 36]—— | ||
| Boys and girls. Boys first | [133] | |
| Train tests wit. Is school for all? | [134] | |
| Danger from too many learned | [135] | |
| This danger universally admitted | [136] | |
| Evils from too few learned. Choice | [137] | |
| Sorting of wits. Dangers from misplacement | [138] | |
| Reading and writing for all. Rich and poor scholars | [139] | |
| Middle sort best for learning | [140] | |
| School not for all. Choosing | [141] | |
| [Chapter 37]—— | ||
| All parents would have children learned | [142] | |
| The Country must decide | [143] | |
| Necessity a good restraint | [144] | |
| Number of scholars kept down by law | [145] | |
| Private opinion must yield to public | [146] | |
| The poor and the rich | [147] | |
| Fewer bookmen needed since Reformation | [148] | |
| A learned paucity. Choice | [149] | |
| Right choice in a monarchy | [150] | |
| Ideal monarchy scholar | [151] | |
| His patience with masters and comrades | [152] | |
| Less clear cases. Master first chooser | [153] | |
| Against early choice. Some dullards kept | [154] | |
| Schoolmaster and parent | [155] | |
| The same. Colleges not almshouses | [156] | |
| Evils from bad elections | [157] | |
| Catchers in Colleges | [158] | |
| College factions warned | [159] | |
| Influence of the great misused by the little | [160] | |
| Abuse of patronage | 161 | |
| Bursuries. Degrees gained by favour | [162] | |
| Daws as peacocks | [163] | |
| Evils ensuing. Livings | [164] | |
| Preferment to livings | [165] | |
| Professions overcrowded | [166] | |
| [Chapter 38]—— | ||
| Teaching of girls | [166] | |
| Four reasons. First, English custom | [167] | |
| Second, Our duty | [168] | |
| Physical education of girls | [169] | |
| Third, Girls’ natural towardness | [170] | |
| Fourth, Good results accruing | [171] | |
| Plutarch, &c., about women | [172] | |
| Panegyric of Queen Elizabeth | [173] | |
| Limits. Learning allowed | [174] | |
| Choice, as with boys | [175] | |
| Studies for girls. Reading | [176] | |
| Writing. Music. Housewifery | [177] | |
| Learning suited to station | [178] | |
| How much? | [179] | |
| Professions denied. Drawing allowed | [180] | |
| Languages, &c. To what age? | [181] | |
| Where? and by whom? | [182] | |
| [Chapter 39]—— | ||
| Need of train in women and in gentlemen | [183] | |
| Public training best for gentlemen. Private | [184] | |
| Private education and public | [185] | |
| Disadvantages of private training | [186] | |
| The same | [187] | |
| The same | [188] | |
| Why prefer private to public? | [189] | |
| Public school with a private tutor | [190] | |
| Public schools and private | [191] | |
| Studies of a gentleman | [192] | |
| Gentlemen. The new rich | [193] | |
| The new rich | [194] | |
| Noblesse oblige | [195] | |
| What makes the gentleman | [196] | |
| Nobility and gentry | [197] | |
| “As they be true gentlemen” | [198] | |
| Virtues not tied to the person | [199] | |
| Noble and gentle | [200] | |
| Learning useful to noblemen | [201] | |
| A wise counsellor | [202] | |
| The Divine | [203] | |
| The lawyer and the physician | [204] | |
| Apes | [205] | |
| What is needed for the gentleman | [206] | |
| The same | [207] | |
| Travelling beyond sea | [208] | |
| Travel not necessary | [209] | |
| Against foreign travel | [210] | |
| The same | [211] | |
| Women do not travel. Queen Elizabeth | [212] | |
| Socrates. Plato on travel | 213 | |
| Plato’s traveller | [214] | |
| His treatment on return | [215] | |
| Plato’s reception of foreigners | [216] | |
| Doubts about travel | [217] | |
| Gentlemen and the professions | [218] | |
| Gentlemen’s advantages | [219] | |
| Must not be smatterers. Princes | [220] | |
| Training of a Prince. Elizabeth | [221] | |
| [Chapter 40]—— | ||
| Three stages of school education | [222] | |
| School building: 1, superior; 2, primary | [223] | |
| 3, Secondary. Buildings and hours | [224] | |
| Boarding schools, pro and con | [225] | |
| Grammar schools in suburbs | [226] | |
| Master’s pay dependent on diligence | [227] | |
| Changing schools. Master’s pay | [228] | |
| Moving schools out of towns | [229] | |
| School buildings. Times | [230] | |
| Hours best for study and play | [231] | |
| [Chapter 41]—— | ||
| Same trainer for mind and body | [232] | |
| Elementary master most important | [233] | |
| Pay elementary master highest | [234] | |
| Grammar master and his pay | [235] | |
| Good masters stopt by bad pay | [236] | |
| Teacher’s training. University reform | [237] | |
| A college for tongues | [238] | |
| A college for mathematics? | [239] | |
| Tongues too much thought of. Ascham | [240] | |
| Sir J. Cheeke on Cambridge mathematics | [241] | |
| Talking Latin. Mathematics | [242] | |
| College for Philosophy | [243] | |
| Study of words. Necessity of mathematics | [244] | |
| Philo and Aristotle | [245] | |
| Mathematics studied by Ancients | [246] | |
| Mathematics and Philosophy | [247] | |
| Law Reform. Training College | [248] | |
| Use of the seven colleges | [249] | |
| Sorting by age. Uniting of colleges | [250] | |
| University Readers | [251] | |
| University Reform. Readerships | [252] | |
| The same | [253] | |
| Learned Professors needed | [254] | |
| Admission of teachers | [255] | |
| [Chapter 42]—— | ||
| Against forcing | [256] | |
| Ills from haste | [257] | |
| Degrees taken too young | [258] | |
| Over-hasting. Vives | [259] | |
| Value of time | [260] | |
| Limit of elementary course | [261] | |
| [Chapter 43]—— | ||
| Schoolmasters’ troubles. Melanchthon | [262] | |
| Want of uniformity | [263] | |
| Proposal of common scheme | 264 | |
| Able and ordinary teachers | [265] | |
| Gains from uniformity | [266] | |
| Changing schools. The common Grammar | [267] | |
| Too many school books | [268] | |
| Choice of books. Chrestomathies | [269] | |
| The same. No poetic fury | [270] | |
| Profit from uniformity | [271] | |
| Mulcaster will write himself | [272] | |
| Printed rules of hours, punishments, &c. | [273] | |
| Parents and punishments | [274] | |
| Monitors. The rod needed | [275] | |
| The rod | [276] | |
| Socrates. Plato. Xenophon | [277] | |
| Coat story in Cyropædeia | [278] | |
| Tarif of stripes | [279] | |
| Great offences. Master’s age | [280] | |
| Master’s calling | [281] | |
| [Chapter 44]—— | ||
| Confer with parents | [281] | |
| Conference with neighbours | [282] | |
| Teachers and neighbours | [283] | |
| Teachers and parents. Xenophon | [284] | |
| Conference of teachers | [285] | |
| The same. Certainty in direction | [286] | |
| Certainty at school and at home | [287] | |
| Certainty at home and at Church | [288] | |
| Advantage from certainty. Constancy | [289] | |
| Discretion in change | [290] | |
| Summing up | [291] | |
| [Chapter 45]—— | ||
| Plan of this book | [292] | |
| Author’s intention | [293] | |
| Reason of his prolixity | [294] | |
| His choice of subject | [295] | |
| Advantage of ideal | [296] | |
| Why girls’ training is treated of | [297] | |
| Wishes | [298] | |
POSITIONS CONCERNING
THE
TRAINING VP OF CHILDREN.
FIRST CHAPTER.
THE ENTRIE TO THE POSITIONS,
Conteining the occasion of this present discourse, and the causes why it was penned in english.
Whosoever shall consider with any iudgement the maner of training vp children, which we vse generally within this Realme cannot but wish, that the thing were bettered, as I my selfe do: though I do not thinke it good here to displaie the particular defectes, bycause I am in hope to see them healed, without any so sharp a rehersall, (“for the error being once graunted and well knowen straight way craueth helpe without aggrauation, and that way in helping must needes be most gracious, which the partie helped confesseth least greiuouse.”) If I should discouer all those inconueniences, wherby parentes and maisters, teachers and learners, do but enterchaunge displeasures, if I should rip vp those difficulties, wherby the traine it selfe, and bringing vp of children is maruellously empeached, I might reuiue great gaules, and euen therby worse remedie the greifes. And though I remedied them yet the partie pacient might beare in minde, how churlishly he was cured, and though he payed well for the healing, yet be ill apayd for the handling. Wherefore in helping thinges, that be amisse I do take that to be the aduisedest way, which saueth the man, and sowreth not the meane. If without quoting the quarrelles, I set down that right, whervnto I am led, vpon reasonable grounds, that it is both the best, and most within compasse, the wrong by comparison is furthwith bewraied, and the chek giuen without anie chiding.
The occasion of this discourse.
I haue taught in publike without interrupting my course, now two and twentie yeares, and haue alwaie had a very great charge vnder my hand, which how I haue discharged, they can best iudge of me, which will iudge without me. During which time both by that, which I haue seene in teaching so long, and by that which I haue tryed, in training vp so many, I do well perceiue, vpon such lettes, as both my selfe am subiect vnto, and other teachers no lesse then I, that neither I haue don so much as I might, neither any of them so much as they could. Which lettes me thinke I haue both learned, what they be, and withall conceiued the meane, how to get them remoued. Wherby both I and all other maie do much more good, then either I or anie other heretofore haue don. Wherin as I meane to deale for the common good, so must I appeal to the common curtesie, that my good will maie be well thought of, though my good hope do not hit right. For I do but that, which is set free to all, to vtter in publike a priuate conceit, and to claime kindnes of all, for good will ment vnto all: as I my selfe am ready both freindly and fauorably, to esteme of others, who shall enterprise the like, requiring euery one, which shall vse my trauell, either as a reader, to peruse, or as a reaper to profit, that he will think well of me, which may cause him allow: or if he do not, that yet he will be sorie for me, that so good a meaning had so meane an issue.
Why it is penned in English.
I do write in my naturall English toungue, bycause though I make the learned my iudges, which vnderstand Latin, yet I meane good to the vnlearned, which vnderstand but English. And better it is for the learned to forbeare Latin, which they neede not then for the vnlearned to haue it, which they know not. By the English both shall see, what I say, by Latin but the one, which were some wrong, where both haue great interest, and the vnlearned the greater, bycause the vnlearned haue not any but only such English helpes, the learned can fetch theirs from the same fountaines, whence I fetch mine. My meaning is principally to helpe mine owne countrie, whose language will helpe me, to be vnderstood of them, whom I would perswade: to get some thankes of them, for my good will to do well: to purchace pardon of them, if my good will do not well. The parentes and freindes with whom I haue to deale, be mostwhat no latinistes: and if they were, yet we vnderstand that tongue best, whervnto we are first borne, as our first impression is alwaie in English, before we do deliuer it in Latin. And in perswading a knowen good by an vnknowen waie, are we not to cal vnto vs, all the helpes that we can, to be thoroughly vnderstood? He that vnderstands no Latin can vnderstand English, and he that vnderstands Latin very well, can vnderstand English farre better, if he will confesse the trueth, though he thinke he haue the habite and can Latin it exceading well. When mine argument shall require Latin, as it will eare long, I will not then spare it, in the degree, that I haue it, but till it do, I will serue my countrie that waie, which I do surely thinke will proue most intelligible vnto her. For though the argument, which is dedicate to learning, and must therfore of force vse the termes of learning: which be mysteries to the multitude, maie seeme to offer some darkness and difficultie in that point: yet it is to be construed, that the thing it selfe must be presented in her owne colours, which the learned can discry, at the first blush, as of their acquaintance, who must be spoken to in their owne kinde: as the vnlearned must be content to enquire, bycause we straine our termes to haue them intitled. And yet, in all my drift, for all my faire promise, I dare warrant my countrie no more, then probabilitie doth me, which if it deceiue me, yet I haue it to leane vnto, and perhaps of such pith, as might easely haue beguiled a wiser man then me. But till I proue beguiled, I will dwell in hope, that I am not, to deliuer my minde with the better courage, and therby to shew that I thinke my selfe right. For the greatest enemy, that can be to any wel meaning conceit is, to mistrust his own power, and to dispaire of his good speede where happy fortune makes euident shew.