The establishment in the poorer districts of our great towns of schools whose education follows the method of the Kindergarten if accompanied by some system of feeding the child would do much to secure the after social efficiency of the rising generation, and would by its reaction on the home-life tend gradually to raise the ideals of the very poor.

FOOTNOTES:

[33] The Nervous System and Education, by Sir James Crichton Browne, ibid. p. 345.

[34] The Nervous System and Education, by Sir James Crichton Browne, ibid. p. 345.

[35] Cf. on this subject the chapter on "School Nurseries" in National Education and National Life, ibid.

[36] Suggestions for the Consideration of Teachers, chap. iii. (issued by the English Board of Education).

[37] Montmorency's National Education and National Life, ibid. p. 143. The chapter on "School Nurseries" should be read by everyone, and especially by every Scotsman interested in the education of young children.

[38] Cf. Charles Lamb's Essay on Popular Fallacies.