VS
e
J)
0
‘e
sU
(r
'S
‘e
J
‘n
18
i=
nN
$e
g
ct
‘1
v
0
d
i=
d
8}
I
Vy
il
n
e
1
ff
e
SHOULD LATIN OR SOME MODERN LANGUAGE COME FIRST? 237
After two years of this, and in what is usually the first year of the
secondary school, the English class, while still reading under criticism as
:0 matters elocutionary, makes this advance, that there is less of com-
ment upon the contents of their book than upon its language, attention
being given mainly to rhetorical qualities. Of course this is rhetoric for
:he boy ; elementary, practical, found in what he reads and writes.
Technical terms are introduced when their use is convenient, but no
wtempt whatever is made to present all the chapters of a treatise on
rhetoric, or observe their due proportions. Boys of thirteen naturally
like poetry better than prose, impassioned oratory better than speech less
rich in rhetorical features, and with a little encouragement and teaching
they become bold and original and thoughtful critics. They have an ear
tor the melody of a line or the correctness of a rhyme, as they have an ear
for music. They can appreciate the force and beauty of a simile or meta-
ohor, are responsive to pathos and humor, are sensitive to differences of
style, as a child is sensitive to the parent’s tone and manner. They learn
50 pronounce upon questions of propriety, of clearness and force, of order
‘n narration and argumentation. They will grasp the idea of paragraph-
ing, of periodic and of loose sentence construction. Boys are, indeed,
excessively fond of brilliant rhetoric, and are liable to be misled by florid
writing ; and yet they learn to detect a line masquerading as poetry, which,
stripped of its rhyme and restored to its natural order, is found to be
sheer commonplace. The language of poetry and passion is simple. The
Bible, Shakespeare, Longfellow, and Charles Dudley Warner will furnish
the right sort of material. There is no other part of the school course
which affords such opportunity for use of the Socratic method. The
snthusiasm that can be aroused, and the high order of critical work that
san be done, would astonish one who has not seen rhetoric taught at this
stage and in this way. The work satisfies the teacher that he is calling
into healthy and effective activity powers just ready for use, and that he
is establishing friendship between his pupils and the masters of English
literature.
in the next year the pupils pass from the dynamics to the statics of
ianguage ; to formal grammar, with a text-book. They have learned
fo enjoy language in action, bringing them knowledge and entertain-
ment, glowing with warmth and power of life. Now they are to take
portions of its anatomy for dissection ; are to classify and describe the
arts and their relations.
But as part of their preparation for study of English grammar, the
slags for a year or more studied Latin.
Now, the introduction of Latin a year or more before English grammar
is regularly studied, or any other modern language attempted, is our
answer to the question proposed to us, and calls for explanation and
defense.