A Lecture on Physical Development, and its Relations to Mental and Spiritual Development | Page 5

S.R. Calthrop
I feel just now. I can feel
the very blessing of God descending on your labors, just as if I could
see it with mine eyes. What piety have been at work here, in the
construction of this colossal system of education! What inspired energy
was needed to work it out! What charity is necessary to carry it on!
Many a teacher saw I there, unknown, may-be, to all the world,
carrying on her work with noble zeal and earnestness, to whom the
quick young brains around bore abundant testimony. When I saw them,
I blessed them in my heart, I magnified mine office, and said to myself,
I, too, am a teacher.
I spent four or five days doing little else than going through these truly
wonderful schools. I stayed more than three hours in one of them,
wondering at all I saw, admiring the stately order, the unbroken
discipline of the whole arrangements, and the wonderful quickness and
intelligence of the scholars. That same evening I went to see a friend,
whose daughter, a child of thirteen, was at one of the ward schools. I
examined her in algebra, and found that the little girl of thirteen could
hold her own with many of a larger growth. Did she go to school to-day?
asked I. No, was the answer, she has not been for some time, as she was
beginning to get quite a serious curvature of the spine, so now she goes
regularly to a gymnastic doctor. I almost feel ashamed to criticize such
noble institutions as the schools of New York; but truth compels me to
do this. Hitherto, nothing whatever has been done to train the bodies of
the tens of thousands who are educated there. All that is done is
excellent, is wonderful, but fearful drawbacks come into play, in the
shape of physical weakness, and positive male-formation of body.
The only remedy which can be devised, I think, in a crowded city like

New York, where it is impossible to get open ground, is to have large
gymnasiums attached to every ward school, and daily exercise therein
should form an essential part of the education there. The importance of
this to New York cannot be estimated, and I heard with joy, that a
gymnasium was established in at least one of the ward schools, and I
found out that the teachers of others were alive to this most crying need.
I read too, with very great pleasure, that a Mr. Sedgwick of New York
was appointed to deliver a lecture on the importance of physical
education, at the next meeting of the Teachers Association, in that State;
and indeed every one begins to feel that something must be done, and
that quickly. Miss Beecher's book enlightened most people on this
subject, and reform is already inaugurated. It is well that it is so, or the
race would dwindle away before our very eyes. Listen to some
serio-comic verse upon this subject, taken out of your Lecturer's
portfolio. It is an address to America, dictated by an ancient sage:--
'Oh! latest born of time, the wise man said, A mighty destiny surrounds
thy head; Great is thy mission, but the puny son Lacks strength to finish
what the sires begun; Thy hapless daughters breathe the poison'd air,
Fair they may be, but fragile more than fair; They know not, doom'd
ones, that the air of heaven, For breathing purposes to man was given;
They know not half the things which life requires, But melt their lives
away where stoves and fires, And furnace issuing from the realms
beneath, Distils through parlor floors its poisonous breath. Sooner or
later must the slighted air And exercise take vengeance on the fair. Ah!
one by one I see them fade and fall, Both old and young, fair, dark or
short or tall, Till one stupendous ruin wraps them all.'
One can sometimes, in a smiling way, give utterance to truths which
seem hard and stern when spoken in grim earnest. Let us see whether
we cannot find some allegory to represent what we mean.
Some time ago, I read a tale which related that a certain gentleman was,
once on a time, digging a deep hole in his garden. He had, as I myself
had in my younger days, a perfect passion for digging holes, for the
mere pleasure of doing it; but the hole which he was now digging was
by far the deepest which he had ever attempted. At last he became
perfectly fascinated, carried away by his pursuit, and actually had his
dinner let down to him by a bucket. Well, he dug on late and early,
when just as he was plunging in his spade with great energy for a new

dig, he penetrated right
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