THE CHAIRMAN’S OPENING ADDRESS. 249
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of this period upon all future activities. The tinkling of a bell in the
Alpine fastnesses may set in motion the avalanche ; and yet no figure of
speech can set forth the sensitiveness of these years, or the tenacity of
impressions, and consequently their far-reaching influence. Do men seek
to perpetuate their memory in brass and stone ? When all these memori-
als shall have perished, some words, some truth impressed on youthful
minds, shall live immortal. In view of these responsibilities it is not
surprising that great reforms in education have been concentrated upon
elementary instruction, or that legislation and taxation expend their
efforts upon it, or that educational literature and organization are occupied
with it.
Teachers’ institutes and normal schools are provided for the prepara-
tion of elementary teachers. Nor ig it surprising that a revival of education
in the past should have marked its supremacy by selecting its best teachers
tor elementary grades. But to gain a deep sense of the import of the
work we represent, we need make no comparison with other phases of
aducation.
According to the computations of Dr. Klemm of the United States
Bureau of Education, directed by Commissioner Harris, where we all go
for statistics of instruction, there are in the educational world to-day one
hundred millions receiving the rudiments of knowledge. This responsi-
bility, unmeasured in its vastness and accountability, is represented by this
sccasion.
But, great as are these numbers, adopting as our standard the element-
ary school attendance in Germany, or eighteen per cent. of the popula-
tion, the present attendance should be more than doubled ; it should be
advanced from 100,000.000 up to 267,170,000. or by the addition of 167,-
170,000.
When there is lack of this instruction, there is the absence of what is
adequate in all that is special or higher. So benighted is our race, so
great is the work before us to be accomplished ! Fortunately for us, our
era awakens those interests that previously have been indifferent.
The rudest labor finds greater profit in the skill imparted by intelligence.
Irade, commerce, manufacture, and agriculture join themselves to science,
and count their increase of profits by the light of learning. All the
considerations of religion add their admonitions. Bearing our respective
parts in this work, elsewhere and previously we may have had our local or
national conferences. We may have marshalled all the history on our
different lines. 'Wé may have sought by travel or by literature to reach
over and gather the ripe fruit of experience from other races or nationali-
ides. But now, these diverse spheresof experience, these varied conditions
of current elementary education, bearing their best products from the ages
that have past, are here present, by their competent representatives, to speak
to us their wisdom from living lips. They will instruct us in what has