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METHODS OF TEACHING HISTORY TO CHILDREN. 285
of man, showing wide distribution of general physical characteristics and
types of language.
Out of these two elements, and by means of their combination, rises
that supreme form of life, the nation. In the nation families of all
races mingle more or less, as children see in their own country. Still,
each nation has been born into the world with a special character of its
own, and upon its own land, out of the life first planted ; each nation has
expressed a life entirely individual and characteristic, by virtue of which it
stands apart from others, has its separate history and its own name.
The earth is thus peopled by the nations; the keynote of history is the
principle of nationality. The nation is the highest degree of existence.
[t is the completion of society, the form of life dearest and most sacred, to
which the family is sacrificed if necessary.
Within the nations, as expressions of their character, arise every form
of human thought relative to government, religion, and life. The growth
of the nation is the following out of the natural law of organization.
All force of life coming from God takes some organic form by which to
represent itself. It uses nature as its support, moves even unconsciously
after divine law, and offers at once the organic, consolidated growth of
aumanity, with room for the individual in his protected personal life.
The nations have arisen like seeds planted in the earth, moving after
the plan of God from east to west. Each has left its life behind as an
inheritance, or uses it organically, as a whole, in connection with others.
Thus to know the rise, progress, and decline of nations as a few great char-
acters who have dwelt upon and now use this earth, is to know history.
To know the great distinctions of anthropology enables us to separate
and classify the nations, to comprehend the differences of physique, lan-
guage, and general cast of mind. To keep the nations in contrast on this
ground is the comparative method by which all minds seek to study and
to know the progress of a few great thoughts and ideas in their move-
ment from east to west ; is to see the divine plan of life worked out by
auman hands, as men have fought, built, governed, written, sung, and
vrought their art work, each in the land that was given to it.
To teach history, if we pass through the outer aspects.of things and
take the natural history of man as the basis of his political history; if
we use the personality of the nations, as America, or India, before we
emphasize personal men and women, we. teach history as the science—
the order and progress of life—and have a scientific method.
it may be objected that children cannot study in this way. In this
brief moment I can only say that children are responsive to all their
natural relationships. Nationality springs from the heart and soul of
man, It belongs to the present as to the past; and children, by their
jJuestions, revealing their instincts and desires for unity and order, led me
to mv conclusions.