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    The Schoolmaster and the Empire

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    "If Youth but Knew" is the title of a book published some years ago, but
    still with a quite living interest, by "Kappa"; it is the bitter
    complaint of a distressed senior against our educational system. He is
    hugely disappointed in the public-school boy, and more particularly in
    one typical specimen. He is--if one might hazard a guess--an uncle
    bereft of great expectations. He finds an echo in thousands of other
    distressed uncles and parents. They use the most divergent and
    inadequate forms of expression for this vague sense that the result has
    not come out good enough; they put it contradictorily and often wrongly,
    but the sense is widespread and real and justifiable and we owe a great
    debt to "Kappa" for an accurate diagnosis of what in the aggregate
    amounts to a grave national and social evil.

    The trouble with "Kappa's" particular public-school boy is his unlit
    imagination, the apathetic commonness of his attitude to life at large.
    He is almost stupidly not interested in the mysteries of material fact,
    nor in the riddles and great dramatic movements of history, indifferent
    to any form of beauty, and pedantically devoted to the pettiness of
    games and clothing and social conduct. It is, in fact, chiefly by his
    style in these latter things, his extensive unilluminated knowledge of
    Greek and Latin, and his greater costliness, that he differs from a
    young carpenter or clerk. A young carpenter or clerk of the same
    temperament would have no narrower prejudices nor outlook, no less
    capacity for the discussion of broad questions and for imaginative
    thinking. And it has come to the mind of "Kappa" as a discovery, as an
    exceedingly remarkable and moving thing, a thing to cry aloud about,
    that this should be so, that this is all that the best possible modern
    education has achieved. He makes it more than a personal issue. He has
    come to the conclusion that this is not an exceptional case at all, but
    a fair sample of what our upper-class education does for the imagination
    of those who must presently take the lead among us. He declares plainly
    that we are raising a generation of rulers and of those with whom the

    duty of initiative should chiefly reside, who have minds atrophied by
    dull studies and deadening suggestions, and he thinks that this is a
    matter of the gravest concern for the future of this land and Empire. It
    is difficult to avoid agreeing with him either in his observation or in
    his conclusion. Anyone who has seen much of undergraduates, or medical
    students, or Army candidates, and also of their social subordinates,
    must be disposed to agree that the difference between the two classes is
    mainly in unimportant things--in polish, in manner, in
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