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  • Dec. 14, 1861
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Dec. 14, 1861: Page 6

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Page 6

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Literature.

Schools ; ( 2 ) The private Commercial Academies ; and ( 3 ) The Parochial Schools , improved and supported by Government and the Religious Societies . To these perhaps I should add ( 4 ) The Oxford and Cambridge Middle-Class Examinations . " We next arrive at the reasons which are supposed to militate against the plan , and , according to our author , divided into three separate interests ; they

are" 1 . —The old County Grammar Schools have , of late years , languished , owing to the absorption of so many of the sons of the gentry and upper middle-class , once frequenting them , into a few great public schools , which have almost monopolized the higher education of the country . And at the same time the commercial classes , not finding in the classical course to which these grammar Schools have clung , the preparation they desired for an early entrance into practical life , have had recourse to private tuition ,

or , in the case of many of the farmers , have almost neglected education altogether . The decay or revival of these schools will he only indirectly affected by the deveiopement of a ' county system . ' If that system should , ever grow to the completeness of a county college and county degrees , then an influence , such as that formerly exercised by the universities on these grammar schools Avould te revived , viz . the influence of a higher grade upon the subordinate . Then many of the professional members of the count

y , would find in the grammar school and the county college and degree , a classical education far cheaper and not much inferior to that of Harrow and Rugby , Cambridge and Oxford ; Avhereas the neAV county school in ivhich the classics would only hold a subordinate position , would not offer to them any serious competition . I think , therefore , that the grammar schools have far more to hope than to fear from this system . " 2 .- —The effect of the public countschools on the private

y commercial academies may be other than I anticipate , but certainly it would seem that any great stimulus , encouragement , and honour applied to the education of the middle classes , must , by increasing the demand , benefit those ivho undertake the supply . And that whicli is found to be the case in the higher classes , will be found also in the middle , —that a public school system promotes and maintains an extensive apparatus of private tuition

, in which the qualifications of individual masters are adjusted to the special requirements of individual boys . It would be difficult to estimate too boldly the funds that may yet be forthcoming for the purposes of education , when its value is as extensively appreciated among all ranks as it is at at present among the higher . And it is reasonable to expect that the distribution of those funds , being left to the free option of parents , will affect public and private

• enterprise m about the same proportion as is now found to be the case in the education of the gentry ; a proportion of which the private tutors have no reason to complain . The general improvement in the standard of tuition , which would be likely to result from a public system , would , of course , be injurious to inferior schools aud inefficient teachers , a result which has , no doubt , generally followed the improvements introduced b y Dr . Arnold into the higher public schools . But the private loss is here so

clearly the public gain , that it would be a very false kindness , for the sake of the few who may , not undeservedly , suffer , to hinder the improvement from which the public generally , and all good schoolmasters will derive advantage . " 3 . —There is one view under which the establishment of a self-supporting system of education for the middle classes , and adapted specially for those immediatelabove the class of labourers

y , ought to be looked upon with favour by those engaged in the business and profession of schoolmasters . Eor such a system alone is likely to check the tendency to the spread of that other most mischevious public system which substitutes the state for the parent , and by artificially lowering the price to the parent , though in reality , enhancing to the nation the cost of education , not only treats every labourer in the country as a pauper , unable and unfit

to educate his own child , but , by the bribe of cheapness , degrades the farmer or tradesman who are tempted to avail themselves of the _ government schools . For no private master can compete against these schools in price , and few in quality : and I call it degradation in this country , when the independent classes look to government support ( or in other ivords to their neighbour ' s pocket ) , for the education of their own children . And there is good authorit

y for believing that this degradation is still so keenly felt by a large proportion of the farmers ancl tradesmen , that where no other schools exist , they prefer to keep their children at home to sending them to a government-aided school ; but that wherever a self-supporting public school is started they will thankfully pay the fair price . It remains onl y to show that such public schools can so compete with the government schools in quality , as to justify the higher price which their condition of independence must require them to charge . The improved quality of the Government Schools depends on the training of the instructors , a

Literature.

training complete in the case of the masters ; in progress among the pupil teachers . In this training is to be found the chief merit , but at the same time , the great cost of the government system . The merit is simply that the best educational resources of the . country have been turned to the object of producing skilled and scientific instruction . I need not say that Government has not created those reseources , but merely adopted them . To the universities and public schools it has looked for its agents , its :

inspectors , ancl principals of colleges ; and , what is more , the very idea of a training system , with the noble liberality , effort , ancl example that started it , were the peculiar merits of individuals , Shy J . Kay Shuttieworth and Mr . E . Tufihell . "

It is against this view that we contend . Our public schools have been perverted from their ori ginal design by making such places of learning as Eton , Harrow , Winchester , St . Paul ' s , Charterhouse , Christ ' s Hospital , and Westminster to be the rightful inheritance of the rich and noble , instead of the places of education for the poor . Our grammar schools , too , are open to the same objection . The

exhibitions founded in many of them , take Oakham for example , a richly endowed school , where the benefits aro chiefly confined to the boarders , those who can pay the masters , whilst the pupils for whom it was intended get but a minor education and little or no benefit . The way to popularise education would be to adhere to the original foundation deeds and the intentions of the founders ; then

the middle classes might have a chance to educate their children in something more than they can afford at present , and if this was acted on throughout the country , there would be no need of county or private colleges , for it is to the public schools of the country that the nation owes so much . If the reverend prebendary would turn his attention to these points he would be " doing the state some

service , " and furthering the great principle of national and superior education ; but whilst he , and other friends of that , good cause , seek only to palliate the abuses that have overspread the land by founding fresh schools ivhich must in time dwindle into mere proprietary establishments , the root of the evil remains untouched , and education for the rich will always be at the expense of the birthriht of the

g poor . We can heartily commend the pamphlet to all interested in the great cause of the proper education of youth , with one reservation , that for a public system , such as that indicated in the Eev . Mr . Brereton ' s fDamphlet , there are as good schools already belonging to the nation , though wofully misapplied .

Mr. Beeton's Publications.

Mr . Beeton ' s Publications .

Mr . S . 0 . Beeton seems destined to hold a hi gh place amongst the publishers of periodical literature , the Avhole of his works being in the best style of workmanship , and their tone of a nature to make them acceptable in every family . We have already spoken in terms of warm commendation of the Illustrated Family Bible , and need only say that the numbers now before us fully equal their

predecessors . The Fnglislncoman ' s Domestic Magazine for December is rich in illustrations of fashions and patterns for ladies work , ivhich we are assured are excellent ; and we should like to see the nimble figures that could execute within the month all the work which this Magazine so liberally provides . The literary portion of the work is light , cheerful , and well chosenand the domestic recipes

, good and useful . The Log ' s Ov ; n Library— "Wild Sports of the World "—goes merrily on , the last number treating of the Boar , the Bear , and the Ostrich . It is illustrated ivith tAvo excellent coloured plates , and a number of woodcuts , one of Avhich , the Morning after the Battle of Melville , is admirably executed , being quite a gem of the art of Avood engraving . The Boy ' s Oicn Magazine is as excellent as it

is cheap . The " Legend of Davy Jones , " with which the number ofthe past month opens , is excellent—full of excitement , and , above all , not too long . Then we have gymnastics , the continuation of " The Normans and Saxons , " " Four Tales told in a Forest , " with the nature of which ive shall not acquaint our readers , as ive wish them to buy the book ; " The Reminiscences of a Baven , " and much more ivhich cvei-y boy ought to read . Birds are at all times favourites , and more especially with the poor , through

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1861-12-14, Page 6” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 9 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_14121861/page/6/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
HONORARY GRAND OFFICERS. Article 1
A SUSPENSION IN INDIA. Article 1
THE MASON'S LAST REQUEST.—A SKETCH OF THE BATTLE-FIELD . Article 2
ARCHITECTURE AND ARCHÆOLOGY. Article 3
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 3
Literature. Article 5
Mr. Beeton's Publications. Article 6
GRATIFYING TESTIMONIALS. Article 7
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART. Article 7
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 8
EAST LANCASHIRE. Article 9
GRAND CONOLAVE AND THE BOARD OF GENERAL PURPOSES. Article 9
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 10
METROPOLITAN. Article 10
PROVINCIAL. Article 11
SCOTLAND. Article 12
INDIA. Article 13
KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. Article 17
MASONIC FESTIVITIES. Article 19
Obituary. Article 19
THE WEEK. Article 19
SPECIAL NOTICE. Article 20
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Literature.

Schools ; ( 2 ) The private Commercial Academies ; and ( 3 ) The Parochial Schools , improved and supported by Government and the Religious Societies . To these perhaps I should add ( 4 ) The Oxford and Cambridge Middle-Class Examinations . " We next arrive at the reasons which are supposed to militate against the plan , and , according to our author , divided into three separate interests ; they

are" 1 . —The old County Grammar Schools have , of late years , languished , owing to the absorption of so many of the sons of the gentry and upper middle-class , once frequenting them , into a few great public schools , which have almost monopolized the higher education of the country . And at the same time the commercial classes , not finding in the classical course to which these grammar Schools have clung , the preparation they desired for an early entrance into practical life , have had recourse to private tuition ,

or , in the case of many of the farmers , have almost neglected education altogether . The decay or revival of these schools will he only indirectly affected by the deveiopement of a ' county system . ' If that system should , ever grow to the completeness of a county college and county degrees , then an influence , such as that formerly exercised by the universities on these grammar schools Avould te revived , viz . the influence of a higher grade upon the subordinate . Then many of the professional members of the count

y , would find in the grammar school and the county college and degree , a classical education far cheaper and not much inferior to that of Harrow and Rugby , Cambridge and Oxford ; Avhereas the neAV county school in ivhich the classics would only hold a subordinate position , would not offer to them any serious competition . I think , therefore , that the grammar schools have far more to hope than to fear from this system . " 2 .- —The effect of the public countschools on the private

y commercial academies may be other than I anticipate , but certainly it would seem that any great stimulus , encouragement , and honour applied to the education of the middle classes , must , by increasing the demand , benefit those ivho undertake the supply . And that whicli is found to be the case in the higher classes , will be found also in the middle , —that a public school system promotes and maintains an extensive apparatus of private tuition

, in which the qualifications of individual masters are adjusted to the special requirements of individual boys . It would be difficult to estimate too boldly the funds that may yet be forthcoming for the purposes of education , when its value is as extensively appreciated among all ranks as it is at at present among the higher . And it is reasonable to expect that the distribution of those funds , being left to the free option of parents , will affect public and private

• enterprise m about the same proportion as is now found to be the case in the education of the gentry ; a proportion of which the private tutors have no reason to complain . The general improvement in the standard of tuition , which would be likely to result from a public system , would , of course , be injurious to inferior schools aud inefficient teachers , a result which has , no doubt , generally followed the improvements introduced b y Dr . Arnold into the higher public schools . But the private loss is here so

clearly the public gain , that it would be a very false kindness , for the sake of the few who may , not undeservedly , suffer , to hinder the improvement from which the public generally , and all good schoolmasters will derive advantage . " 3 . —There is one view under which the establishment of a self-supporting system of education for the middle classes , and adapted specially for those immediatelabove the class of labourers

y , ought to be looked upon with favour by those engaged in the business and profession of schoolmasters . Eor such a system alone is likely to check the tendency to the spread of that other most mischevious public system which substitutes the state for the parent , and by artificially lowering the price to the parent , though in reality , enhancing to the nation the cost of education , not only treats every labourer in the country as a pauper , unable and unfit

to educate his own child , but , by the bribe of cheapness , degrades the farmer or tradesman who are tempted to avail themselves of the _ government schools . For no private master can compete against these schools in price , and few in quality : and I call it degradation in this country , when the independent classes look to government support ( or in other ivords to their neighbour ' s pocket ) , for the education of their own children . And there is good authorit

y for believing that this degradation is still so keenly felt by a large proportion of the farmers ancl tradesmen , that where no other schools exist , they prefer to keep their children at home to sending them to a government-aided school ; but that wherever a self-supporting public school is started they will thankfully pay the fair price . It remains onl y to show that such public schools can so compete with the government schools in quality , as to justify the higher price which their condition of independence must require them to charge . The improved quality of the Government Schools depends on the training of the instructors , a

Literature.

training complete in the case of the masters ; in progress among the pupil teachers . In this training is to be found the chief merit , but at the same time , the great cost of the government system . The merit is simply that the best educational resources of the . country have been turned to the object of producing skilled and scientific instruction . I need not say that Government has not created those reseources , but merely adopted them . To the universities and public schools it has looked for its agents , its :

inspectors , ancl principals of colleges ; and , what is more , the very idea of a training system , with the noble liberality , effort , ancl example that started it , were the peculiar merits of individuals , Shy J . Kay Shuttieworth and Mr . E . Tufihell . "

It is against this view that we contend . Our public schools have been perverted from their ori ginal design by making such places of learning as Eton , Harrow , Winchester , St . Paul ' s , Charterhouse , Christ ' s Hospital , and Westminster to be the rightful inheritance of the rich and noble , instead of the places of education for the poor . Our grammar schools , too , are open to the same objection . The

exhibitions founded in many of them , take Oakham for example , a richly endowed school , where the benefits aro chiefly confined to the boarders , those who can pay the masters , whilst the pupils for whom it was intended get but a minor education and little or no benefit . The way to popularise education would be to adhere to the original foundation deeds and the intentions of the founders ; then

the middle classes might have a chance to educate their children in something more than they can afford at present , and if this was acted on throughout the country , there would be no need of county or private colleges , for it is to the public schools of the country that the nation owes so much . If the reverend prebendary would turn his attention to these points he would be " doing the state some

service , " and furthering the great principle of national and superior education ; but whilst he , and other friends of that , good cause , seek only to palliate the abuses that have overspread the land by founding fresh schools ivhich must in time dwindle into mere proprietary establishments , the root of the evil remains untouched , and education for the rich will always be at the expense of the birthriht of the

g poor . We can heartily commend the pamphlet to all interested in the great cause of the proper education of youth , with one reservation , that for a public system , such as that indicated in the Eev . Mr . Brereton ' s fDamphlet , there are as good schools already belonging to the nation , though wofully misapplied .

Mr. Beeton's Publications.

Mr . Beeton ' s Publications .

Mr . S . 0 . Beeton seems destined to hold a hi gh place amongst the publishers of periodical literature , the Avhole of his works being in the best style of workmanship , and their tone of a nature to make them acceptable in every family . We have already spoken in terms of warm commendation of the Illustrated Family Bible , and need only say that the numbers now before us fully equal their

predecessors . The Fnglislncoman ' s Domestic Magazine for December is rich in illustrations of fashions and patterns for ladies work , ivhich we are assured are excellent ; and we should like to see the nimble figures that could execute within the month all the work which this Magazine so liberally provides . The literary portion of the work is light , cheerful , and well chosenand the domestic recipes

, good and useful . The Log ' s Ov ; n Library— "Wild Sports of the World "—goes merrily on , the last number treating of the Boar , the Bear , and the Ostrich . It is illustrated ivith tAvo excellent coloured plates , and a number of woodcuts , one of Avhich , the Morning after the Battle of Melville , is admirably executed , being quite a gem of the art of Avood engraving . The Boy ' s Oicn Magazine is as excellent as it

is cheap . The " Legend of Davy Jones , " with which the number ofthe past month opens , is excellent—full of excitement , and , above all , not too long . Then we have gymnastics , the continuation of " The Normans and Saxons , " " Four Tales told in a Forest , " with the nature of which ive shall not acquaint our readers , as ive wish them to buy the book ; " The Reminiscences of a Baven , " and much more ivhich cvei-y boy ought to read . Birds are at all times favourites , and more especially with the poor , through

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