summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
-rw-r--r--.gitattributes4
-rw-r--r--LICENSE.txt11
-rw-r--r--README.md2
-rw-r--r--old/66644-0.txt3623
-rw-r--r--old/66644-0.zipbin72177 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/66644-h.zipbin717316 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/66644-h/66644-h.htm4497
-rw-r--r--old/66644-h/images/frontispiece.jpgbin458495 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/66644-h/images/new-cover.jpgbin157806 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/66644-h/images/titlepage.pngbin21079 -> 0 bytes
10 files changed, 17 insertions, 8120 deletions
diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..d7b82bc
--- /dev/null
+++ b/.gitattributes
@@ -0,0 +1,4 @@
+*.txt text eol=lf
+*.htm text eol=lf
+*.html text eol=lf
+*.md text eol=lf
diff --git a/LICENSE.txt b/LICENSE.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6312041
--- /dev/null
+++ b/LICENSE.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,11 @@
+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
diff --git a/README.md b/README.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..7c45ea3
--- /dev/null
+++ b/README.md
@@ -0,0 +1,2 @@
+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #66644 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/66644)
diff --git a/old/66644-0.txt b/old/66644-0.txt
deleted file mode 100644
index 4f66c22..0000000
--- a/old/66644-0.txt
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,3623 +0,0 @@
-The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Origin and Ideals of the Modern School,
-by Francisco Ferrer
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: The Origin and Ideals of the Modern School
-
-Author: Francisco Ferrer
-
-Translator: Joseph McCabe
-
-Release Date: November 1, 2021 [eBook #66644]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-Produced by: Jeroen Hellingman and the Online Distributed Proofreading
- Team at https://www.pgdp.net/ for Project Gutenberg (This file
- was produced from images generously made available by The
- Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE ORIGIN AND IDEALS OF THE
-MODERN SCHOOL ***
-
-
-
- THE
- ORIGIN AND IDEALS
- OF THE
- MODERN SCHOOL
-
-
- BY
- FRANCISCO FERRER
-
- TRANSLATED BY JOSEPH McCABE
-
-
- [ISSUED FOR THE RATIONALIST PRESS ASSOCIATION, LIMITED]
-
- London:
- WATTS & CO.,
- 17 JOHNSON’S COURT, FLEET STREET, E.C.
- 1913
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
- PAGE
- Introduction vii
-
- Chap.
- I. The Birth of My Ideals 1
- II. Mlle. Meunier 7
- III. I Accept the Responsibility 12
- IV. The Early Programme 18
- V. The Co-Education of the Sexes 24
- VI. Co-Education of the Social Classes 32
- VII. School Hygiene 38
- VIII. The Teachers 40
- IX. The Reform of the School 43
- X. No Reward or Punishment 55
- XI. The General Public and the Library 60
- XII. Sunday Lectures 71
- XIII. The Results 75
- XIV. A Defensive Chapter 80
- XV. The Ingenuousness of the Child 88
- XVI. The “Bulletin” 96
- XVII. The Closing of the Modern School 102
-
- Epilogue 109
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-INTRODUCTION
-
-
-On October 12, 1909, Francisco Ferrer y Guardia was shot in the
-trenches of the Montjuich Fortress at Barcelona. A Military Council had
-found him guilty of being “head of the insurrection” which had, a few
-months before, lit the flame of civil war in the city and province. The
-clergy had openly petitioned the Spanish Premier, when Ferrer was
-arrested, to look to the Modern School and its founder for the source
-of the revolutionary feeling; and the Premier had, instead of rebuking
-them, promised to do so. When Ferrer was arrested the prosecution spent
-many weeks in collecting evidence against him, and granted a free
-pardon to several men who were implicated in the riot, for testifying
-against him. These three or four men were the only witnesses out of
-fifty who would have been heard patiently in a civil court of justice,
-and even their testimony would at once have crumbled under
-cross-examination. But there was no cross-examination, and no witnesses
-were brought before the court. Five weeks were occupied in compiling an
-enormously lengthy indictment of Ferrer; then twenty-four hours were
-given to an inexperienced officer, chosen at random, to analyse it and
-prepare a defense. Evidence sent in Ferrer’s favour was confiscated by
-the police; the witnesses who could have disproved the case against him
-were kept in custody miles away from Barcelona; and documents which
-would have tended to show his innocence were refused to the defending
-officer. And after the mere hearing of the long and hopelessly
-bewildering indictment (in which the evidence was even falsified), and
-in spite of the impassioned protest of the defending officer against
-the brutal injustice of the proceedings, the military judges found
-Ferrer guilty, and he was shot.
-
-Within a month of the judicial murder of Ferrer I put the whole
-abominable story before the British public. I showed the deep
-corruption of Church and politics in Spain, and proved that clergy and
-politicians had conspired to use the gross and pliable machinery of
-“military justice” to remove a man whose sole aim was to open the eyes
-of the Spanish people. A prolonged and passionate controversy followed.
-That controversy has not altered a line of my book. Mr. William Archer,
-in a cold and impartial study of the matter, has fully supported my
-indictment of the prosecution of Ferrer; and Professor Simarro, of
-Madrid University, has, in a voluminous study of the trial (El Proceso
-Ferrer—two large volumes), quoted whole chapters of my little work.
-When, in 1912, the Supreme Military Council of Spain was forced to
-declare that no single act of violence could be directly or indirectly
-traced to Ferrer (whereas the chief witness for the prosecution had
-sworn that he saw Ferrer leading a troop of rioters), and ordered the
-restoration of his property, the case for his innocence was closed. It
-remains only for Spain to wipe the foul stain from its annals by
-removing the bones of the martyred teacher from the trenches of
-Montjuich, and to declare, with real Spanish pride, that a grave
-injustice had been done.
-
-Meantime, the restoration of Ferrer’s property has enabled his trustees
-to resume his work. Among his papers they found a manuscript account,
-from his own pen, of the origin and ideals of the Modern School, and
-their first act is to give it to the world. In 1906 Ferrer had been
-arrested on the charge of complicity in the attempt of Morral to
-assassinate the King. He was kept in jail for a year, and the most
-scandalous efforts were made, in the court and the country, to secure a
-judicial murder; but it was a civil (or civilised) trial, and the
-charge was contemptuously rejected. Going to the Pyrenees in the early
-summer of 1908 to recuperate, Ferrer determined to write the simple
-story of his school, and it is this I now offer to English readers.
-
-In this work Ferrer depicts himself more truly and vividly than any
-friend of his has ever done. For my part, I had never seen Ferrer, and
-never seen Spain; but I was acquainted with Spanish life and letters,
-and knew that there had been committed in the twentieth century one of
-those old-world crimes by which the children of darkness seek to arrest
-the advance of man. I interpreted Ferrer from his work, his letters, a
-few journalistic articles he had written—he had never published a book,
-and the impressions of his friends and pupils. In this book the man
-portrays himself, and describes his aims with a candour that all will
-appreciate. The less foolish of his enemies have ceased to assert that
-he organised or led the riot at Barcelona in 1909. It was, they say,
-the tendency, the subtle aim, of his work which made him responsible.
-It may be remembered that the Saturday Review and other journals
-published the most unblushingly mendacious letters, from anonymous
-correspondents, saying that they had seen posters on the walls of
-Ferrer’s schools inciting children to violence. As the very zealous
-police did not at the trial even mention Ferrer’s schools, or the
-text-books used in them, these lies need no further exposure. But many
-persist in thinking, since there is now nothing further to think to the
-disadvantage of Ferrer, that his schools were really hot-beds of
-rebellion and were very naturally suppressed.
-
-Here is the full story of the Modern School, told in transparently
-simple language. Here is the whole man, with all his ideals, aims, and
-resentments. It shows, as we well knew, and could have proved with
-overwhelming force at his trial had we been permitted, that he was
-absolutely opposed to violence ever since, in his youth, he had taken
-part in an abortive revolution. It tells how he came to distrust
-violence and those who used it; how he concluded that the moral and
-intellectual training of children was to be the sole work of his
-career; how, when he obtained the funds, he turned completely from
-politics, and devoted himself to educating children in knowledge of
-science and in sentiments of peace and brotherhood.
-
-It tells also, with the same transparent plainness, why his
-noble-minded work incurred such violent enmity. He naively boasts that
-the education in the Modern School was free from dogmas. It was not,
-and cannot be in any school, free from dogmas, for dogma means
-“teaching,” and he gave teaching of a very definite character. Mr.
-Belloc’s indictment of his schools is, like Mr. Belloc’s indictment of
-his character and guilt, evidently based on complete ignorance of the
-facts and a very extensive knowledge of the recklessly mendacious
-literature of his opponents. Even Mr. Archer’s account of his school is
-grossly misleading. The Modern School was “avowedly a nursery of
-rebellious citizens” only in the same sense as is any Socialist
-Sunday-school in England or Germany; and the Spanish Government has
-never claimed, and could not claim, for a moment the right to close it,
-except in so far as it falsely charged the founder with crime and
-confiscated his property.
-
-Ferrer’s school was thoroughly rationalistic, and this embittered the
-clergy—for his system was spreading rapidly through Spain—without in
-the least infringing Spanish law. Further, Ferrer’s school explicitly
-taught children that militarism was a crime, that the unequal
-distribution of wealth was a thing to be abhorred, that the capitalist
-system was bad for the workers, and that political government is an
-evil. He had a perfect right under Spanish law to found a school to
-teach his ideas; as any man has under English or German law. The
-prohibited and damnable thing would be even to hint to children that,
-when they grew up, they might look forward to altering the industrial
-and political system by violence. This Ferrer not only did not teach,
-but strenuously opposed. We have overwhelming proof of this at every
-step of his later career. But he was a child of the workers, and he had
-a passionate and noble resentment of the ignorance, poverty, and
-squalor of the lives of so large a proportion of the workers. He was
-also an Anarchist, in the sense of Tolstoi; he believed that liberty
-was essential to the development of man, and central government an
-evil. But, as rigorously as Tolstoi, he relied on persuasion and
-abhorred violence. I would call attention to Chapter VI of this book,
-in which he pleads for “the co-education of the rich and poor”; and
-there were children of middle-class parents, even of
-university-professors, in his school. Most decidedly he preached no
-class-hatred or violence. I do not share his academic and innocent
-Anarchist ideal—which is far nearer to Conservatism than to
-Socialism—but I share to the full that intense and passionate longing
-for the uplifting and brightening of the poor, and for the destruction
-of superstition, which was the supreme ideal of his life and of his
-work. For that he was shot.
-
-Finally, the reader must strictly bear in mind the Spanish atmosphere
-of this tragedy. When Ferrer describes “existing schools” he means the
-schools of Spain, which are, for the most part, a mockery and a shame.
-When he talks of “ruling powers” he has in mind the politicians of
-Spain, my indictment of whom, in their own language, has never been
-questioned. When he talks of “superstition” he means primarily Spanish
-superstition; he refers to a priesthood that still makes millions every
-year by the sale of indulgences. If you remember these things, you
-will, however you dissent from his teaching in parts, appreciate the
-burning and unselfish idealism of the man, and understand why some of
-us see the brand of Cain on the fair brow of Spain for extinguishing
-that idealism in blood.
-
-
- J. M.
-
- February, 1913.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I.
-
-THE BIRTH OF MY IDEALS
-
-
-The share which I had in the political struggles of the last part of
-the nineteenth century put my early convictions to a severe test. I was
-a revolutionary in the cause of justice; I was convinced that liberty,
-equality, and fraternity were the legitimate fruit to be expected of a
-republic. Seeing, therefore, no other way to attain this ideal but a
-political agitation for a change of the form of government, I devoted
-myself entirely to the republican propaganda. [1]
-
-My relations with D. Manuel Ruiz Zorrilla, who was one of the leading
-figures in the revolutionary movement, brought me into contact with a
-number of the Spanish revolutionaries and some prominent French
-agitators, and my intercourse with them led to a sharp disillusion. I
-detected in many of them an egoism which they sought hypocritically to
-conceal, while the ideals of others, who were more sincere, seemed to
-me inadequate. In none of them did I perceive a design to bring about a
-radical improvement—a reform which should go to the roots of disorder
-and afford some security of a perfect social regeneration.
-
-The experience I acquired during my fifteen years’ residence at Paris,
-in which I witnessed the crises of Boulangism, Dreyfusism, and
-Nationalism, and the menace they offered to the Republic, convinced me
-that the problem of popular education was not solved; and, if it were
-not solved in France, there was little hope of Spanish republicanism
-settling it, especially as the party had always betrayed a lamentable
-inappreciation of the need of a system of general education.
-
-Consider what the condition of the present generation would be if the
-Spanish republican party had, after the banishment of Ruiz Zorrilla
-[1885], devoted itself to the establishment of Rationalist schools in
-connection with each committee, each group of Freethinkers, or each
-Masonic lodge; if, instead of the presidents, secretaries, and members
-of the committees thinking only of the office they were to hold in the
-future republic, they had entered upon a vigorous campaign for the
-instruction of the people. In the thirty years that have elapsed
-considerable progress would have been made in founding day-schools for
-children and night-schools for adults.
-
-Would the general public, educated in this way, be content to send
-members to Parliament who would accept an Associations Law presented by
-the monarchists? Would the people confine itself to holding meetings to
-demand a reduction of the price of bread, instead of resenting the
-privations imposed on the worker by the superfluous luxuries of the
-wealthy? Would they waste their time in futile indignation meetings,
-instead of organising their forces for the removal of all unjust
-privileges?
-
-My position as professor of Spanish at the Philotechnic Association and
-in the Grand Orient of France brought me into touch with people of
-every class, both in regard to character and social position; and, when
-I considered them from the point of view of their possible influence on
-the race, I found that they were all bent upon making the best they
-could of life in a purely individualist sense. Some studied Spanish
-with a view to advancing in their profession, others in order to master
-Spanish literature and promote their careers, and others for the
-purpose of obtaining further pleasure by travelling in countries where
-Spanish was spoken.
-
-No one felt the absurdity of the contradictions between belief and
-knowledge; hardly one cared to give a just and rational form to human
-society, in order that all the members of each generation might have a
-proportionate share in the advantages created by earlier generations.
-Progress was conceived as a kind of fatalism, independent of the
-knowledge and the goodwill of men, subject to vacillations and
-accidents in which the conscience and energy of man had no part. The
-individual, reared in a family circle, with its inveterate atavism and
-its traditional illusions maintained by ignorant mothers, and in the
-school with something worse than error—the sacramental untruth imposed
-by men who spoke in the name of a divine revelation—was deformed and
-degenerate at his entrance into society; and, if there is any logical
-relation between cause and effect, nothing could be expected of him but
-irrational and pernicious results.
-
-I spoke constantly to those whom I met with a view to proselytism,
-seeking to ascertain the use of each of them for the purpose of my
-ideal, and soon realised that nothing was to be expected of the
-politicians who surrounded Ruiz Zorrilla; they were, in my opinion,
-with a few honourable exceptions, impenitent adventurers. This gave
-rise to a certain expression which the judicial authorities sought to
-use to my disadvantage in circumstances of great gravity and peril.
-Zorrilla, a man of lofty views and not sufficiently on his guard
-against human malice, used to call me an “anarchist” when he heard me
-put forward a logical solution of a problem; at all times he regarded
-me as a deep radical, opposed to the opportunist views and the showy
-radicalism of the Spanish revolutionaries who surrounded and even
-exploited him, as well as the French republicans, who held a policy of
-middle-class government and avoided what might benefit the disinherited
-proletariate, on the pretext of distrusting Utopias.
-
-In a word, during the early years of the restoration there were men
-conspiring with Ruiz Zorrilla who have since declared themselves
-convinced monarchists and conservatives; and that worthy man, who
-protested earnestly against the coup d’État of January 3, 1874,
-confided in his false friends, with the result, not uncommon in the
-political world, that most of them abandoned the republican party for
-the sake of some office. In the end he could count only on the support
-of those who were too honourable to sell themselves, though they lacked
-the logic to develop his ideas and the energy to carry out his work.
-
-In consequence of this I restricted myself to my pupils, and selected
-for my purposes those whom I thought more appropriate and better
-disposed. Having now a clear idea of the aim which I proposed to myself
-and a certain prestige from my position as teacher and my expansive
-character, I discussed various subjects with my pupils when the lessons
-were over; sometimes we spoke of Spanish customs, sometimes of
-politics, religion, art, or philosophy. I sought always to correct the
-exaggerations of their judgments, and to show clearly how mischievous
-it is to subordinate one’s own judgment to the dogma of a sect, school,
-or party, as is so frequently done. In this way I succeeded in bringing
-about a certain agreement among men who differed in their creeds and
-views, and induced them to master the beliefs which they had hitherto
-held unquestioningly by faith, obedience, or sheer indolence. My
-friends and pupils found themselves happy in thus abandoning some
-ancient error and opening their minds to truths which uplifted and
-ennobled them.
-
-A rigorous logic, applied with discretion, removed fanatical
-bitterness, established intellectual harmony, and gave, to some extent
-at least, a progressive disposition to their wills. Freethinkers who
-opposed the Church and rejected the legends of Genesis, the imperfect
-morality of the gospels, and the ecclesiastical ceremonies; more or
-less opportunist republicans or radicals who were content with the
-futile equality conferred by the title of citizen, without in the least
-affecting class distinctions; philosophers who fancied they had
-discovered the first cause of things in their metaphysical labyrinths
-and established truth in their empty phrases—all were enabled to see
-the errors of others as well as their own, and they leaned more and
-more to the side of common sense.
-
-When the further course of my life separated me from these friends and
-brought on me an unmerited imprisonment, I received many expressions of
-confidence and friendship from them. From all of them I anticipate
-useful work in the cause of progress, and I congratulate myself that I
-had some share in the direction of their thoughts and endeavours.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II.
-
-MLLE. MEUNIER
-
-
-Among my pupils was a certain Mlle. Meunier, a wealthy old lady with no
-dependents, who was fond of travel, and studied Spanish with the object
-of visiting my country. She was a convinced Catholic and a very
-scrupulous observer of the rules of her Church. To her, religion and
-morality were the same thing, and unbelief—or “impiety,” as the
-faithful say—was an evident sign of vice and crime.
-
-She detested revolutionaries, and she regarded with impulsive and
-undiscriminating aversion every display of popular ignorance. This was
-due, not only to her education and social position, but to the
-circumstance that during the period of the Commune she had been
-insulted by children in the streets of Paris as she went to church with
-her mother. Ingenuous and sympathetic, without regard to antecedents,
-accessories, or consequences, she always expressed her dogmatic
-convictions without reserve, and I had many opportunities to open her
-eyes to the inaccuracy of her opinions.
-
-In our many conversations I refrained from taking any definite side; so
-that she did not recognise me as a partisan of any particular belief,
-but as a careful reasoner with whom it was a pleasure to confer. She
-formed so flattering an opinion of me, and was so solitary, that she
-gave me her full confidence and friendship, and invited me to accompany
-her on her travels. I accepted the offer, and we travelled in various
-countries. My conduct and our constant conversation compelled her to
-recognise the error of thinking that every unbeliever was perverse and
-every atheist a hardened criminal, since I, a convinced atheist,
-manifested symptoms very different from those which her religious
-prejudice had led her to expect.
-
-She thought, however, that my conduct was exceptional, and reminded me
-that the exception proves the rule. In the end the persistency and
-logic of my arguments forced her to yield to the evidence, and, when
-her prejudice was removed, she was convinced that a rational and
-scientific education would preserve children from error, inspire men
-with a love of good conduct, and reorganise society in accord with the
-demands of justice. She was deeply impressed by the reflection that she
-might have been on a level with the children who had insulted her if,
-at their age, she had been reared in the same conditions as they. When
-she had given up her belief in innate ideas, she was greatly
-preoccupied with the following problem: If a child were educated
-without hearing anything about religion, what idea of the Deity would
-it have on reaching the age of reason?
-
-After a while, it seemed to me that we were wasting time if we were not
-prepared to go on from words to deeds. To be in possession of an
-important privilege through the imperfect organisation of society and
-by the accident of birth, to conceive ideas of reform, and to remain
-inactive or indifferent amid a life of pleasure, seemed to me to incur
-a responsibility similar to that of a man who refused to lend a hand to
-a person whom he could save from danger. One day, therefore, I said to
-Mlle. Meunier:—
-
-“Mlle., we have reached a point at which it is necessary to reconsider
-our position. The world appeals to us for our assistance, and we cannot
-honestly refuse it. It seems to me that to expend entirely on comforts
-and pleasures resources which form part of the general patrimony, and
-which would suffice to establish a useful institution, is to commit a
-fraud; and that would be sanctioned neither by a believer nor an
-unbeliever. I must warn you, therefore, that you must not count on my
-company in your further travels. I owe myself to my ideas and to
-humanity, and I think that you ought to have the same feeling now that
-you have exchanged your former faith for rational principles.”
-
-She was surprised, but recognised the justice of my decision, and,
-without other stimulus than her own good nature and fine feeling, she
-gave me the funds for the establishment of an institute of rational
-education. The Modern School, which already existed in my mind, was
-thus ensured of realisation by this generous act.
-
-All the malicious statements that have been made in regard to this
-matter—for instance, that I had to submit to a judicial
-interrogation—are sheer calumnies. It has been said that I used a power
-of suggestion over Mlle. Meunier for my own purposes. This statement,
-which is as offensive to me as it is insulting to the memory of that
-worthy and excellent lady, is absolutely false. I do not need to
-justify myself; I leave my vindication to my acts, my life, and the
-impartial judgment of my contemporaries. But Mlle. Meunier is entitled
-to the respect of all men of right feeling, of all those who have been
-delivered from the despotism of sect and dogma, who have broken all
-connection with error, who no longer submit the light of reason to the
-darkness of faith nor the dignity of freedom to the yoke of obedience.
-
-She believed with honest faith. She had been taught that between the
-Creator and the creature there is a hierarchy of intermediaries whom
-one must obey, and that one must bow to a series of mysteries contained
-in the dogmas imposed by a divinely instituted Church. In that belief
-she remained perfectly tranquil. The remarks I made and advice I
-offered her were not spontaneous commentaries on her belief, but
-natural replies to her efforts to convert me; and, from her want of
-logic, her feeble reasoning broke down under the strength of my
-arguments, instead of her persuading me to put faith before reason. She
-could not regard me as a tempting spirit, since it was always she who
-attacked my convictions; and she was in the end vanquished by the
-struggle of her faith and her own reason, which was aroused by her
-indiscretion in assailing the faith of one who opposed her beliefs.
-
-She now ingenuously sought to exonerate the Communist boys as poor and
-uneducated wretches, the offspring of crime, disturbers of the social
-order on account of the injustice which, in face of such a disgrace,
-permits others, equal disturbers of the social order, to live
-unproductive lives, enjoy great wealth, exploit ignorance and misery,
-and trust that they will continue throughout eternity to enjoy their
-pleasures on account of their compliance with the rites of the Church
-and their works of charity. The idea of a reward of easy virtue and
-punishment of unavoidable sin shocked her conscience and moderated her
-religious feeling, and, seeking to break the atavistic chain which so
-much hampers any attempt at reform, she decided to contribute to the
-founding of a useful work which would educate the young in a natural
-way and in conditions which would help them to use to the full the
-treasures of knowledge which humanity has acquired by labour, study,
-observation, and the methodical arrangement of its general conclusions.
-
-In this way, she thought, with the aid of a supreme intelligence which
-veils itself in mystery from the mind of man, or by the knowledge which
-humanity has gained by suffering, contradiction, and doubt, the future
-will be realised; and she found an inner contentment and vindication of
-her conscience in the idea of contributing, by the bestowal of her
-property, to a work of transcendent importance.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III.
-
-I ACCEPT THE RESPONSIBILITY
-
-
-Once I was in possession of the means of attaining my object, I
-determined to put my hand to the task without delay. [2] It was now
-time to give a precise shape to the vague aspiration that had long
-haunted my imagination; and to that end, conscious of my imperfect
-knowledge of the art of pædagogy, I sought the counsel of others. I had
-not a great confidence in the official pædagogists, as they seemed to
-me to be largely hampered by prejudices in regard to their subject or
-other matters, and I looked out for some competent person whose views
-and conduct would accord with my ideals. With his assistance I would
-formulate the programme of the Modern School which I had already
-conceived. In my opinion it was to be, not the perfect type of the
-future school of a rational state of society, but a precursor of it,
-the best possible adaptation of our means; that is to say, an emphatic
-rejection of the ancient type of school which still survives, and a
-careful experiment in the direction of imbuing the children of the
-future with the substantial truths of science.
-
-I was convinced that the child comes into the world without innate
-ideas, and that during the course of his life he gathers the ideas of
-those nearest to him, modifying them according to his own observation
-and reading. If this is so, it is clear that the child should receive
-positive and truthful ideas of all things, and be taught that, to avoid
-error, it is essential to admit nothing on faith, but only after
-experience or rational demonstration. With such a training the child
-will become a careful observer, and will be prepared for all kinds of
-studies.
-
-When I had found a competent person, and while the first lines were
-being traced of the plan we were to follow, the necessary steps were
-taken in Barcelona for the founding of the establishment; the building
-was chosen and prepared, and the furniture, staff, advertisements,
-prospectuses, leaflets, etc., were secured. In less than a year all was
-ready, though I was put to great loss through the betrayal of my
-confidence by a certain person. It was clear that we should at once
-have to contend with many difficulties, not only on the part of those
-who were hostile to rational education, but partly on account of a
-certain class of theorists, who urged on me, as the outcome of their
-knowledge and experience, advice which I could only regard as the fruit
-of their prejudices. One man, for instance, who was afflicted with a
-zeal for local patriotism, insisted that the lessons should be given in
-Catalan [the dialect of the province of Barcelona], and would thus
-confine humanity and the world within the narrow limits of the region
-between the Ebro and the Pyrenees. I would not, I told the enthusiast,
-even adopt Spanish as the language of the school if a universal
-language had already advanced sufficiently to be of practical use. I
-would a hundred times rather use Esperanto than Catalan.
-
-The incident confirmed me in my resolution not to submit the settlement
-of my plan to the authority of distinguished men who, with all their
-repute, do not take a single voluntary step in the direction of reform.
-I felt the burden of the responsibility I had accepted, and I
-endeavoured to discharge it as my conscience directed. Resenting the
-marked social inequalities of the existing order as I did, I could not
-be content to deplore their effects; I must attack them in their
-causes, and appeal to the principle of justice—to that ideal equality
-which inspires all sound revolutionary feeling.
-
-If matter is one, uncreated, and eternal—if we live on a relatively
-small body in space, a mere speck in comparison with the innumerable
-globes about us, as is taught in the universities, and may be learned
-by the privileged few who share the monopoly of science—we have no
-right to teach, and no excuse for teaching, in the primary schools to
-which the people go when they have the opportunity, that God made the
-world out of nothing in six days, and all the other absurdities of the
-ancient legends. Truth is universal, and we owe it to everybody. To put
-a price on it, to make it the monopoly of a privileged few, to detain
-the lowly in systematic ignorance, and—what is worse—impose on them a
-dogmatic and official doctrine in contradiction with the teaching of
-science, in order that they may accept with docility their low and
-deplorable condition, is to me an intolerable indignity. For my part, I
-consider that the most effective protest and the most promising form of
-revolutionary action consist in giving the oppressed, the disinherited,
-and all who are conscious of a demand for justice, as much truth as
-they can receive, trusting that it will direct their energies in the
-great work of the regeneration of society.
-
-Hence the terms of the first announcement of the Modern School that was
-issued to the public. It ran as follows:—
-
-
- PROGRAMME.
-
- The mission of the Modern School is to secure that the boys and
- girls who are entrusted to it shall become well-instructed,
- truthful, just, and free from all prejudice.
-
- To that end the rational method of the natural sciences will be
- substituted for the old dogmatic teaching. It will stimulate,
- develop, and direct the natural ability of each pupil, so that he
- or she will not only become a useful member of society, with his
- individual value fully developed, but will contribute, as a
- necessary consequence, to the uplifting of the whole community.
-
- It will instruct the young in sound social duties, in conformity
- with the just principle that “there are no duties without rights,
- and no rights without duties.”
-
- In view of the good results that have been obtained abroad by mixed
- education, and especially in order to realise the great aim of the
- Modern School—the formation of an entirely fraternal body of men
- and women, without distinction of sex or class—children of both
- sexes, from the age of five upward, will be received.
-
- For the further development of its work, the Modern School will be
- opened on Sunday mornings, when there will be classes on the
- sufferings of mankind throughout the course of history, and on the
- men and women who have distinguished themselves in science, art, or
- the fight for progress. The parents of the children may attend
- these classes.
-
- In the hope that the intellectual work of the Modern School will be
- fruitful, we have, besides securing hygienic conditions in the
- institution and its dependencies, arranged to have a medical
- inspection of children at their entrance into the school. The
- result of this will be communicated to the parents if it is deemed
- necessary; and others will be held periodically, in order to
- prevent the spread of contagious diseases during the school hours.
-
-
-During the week which preceded the opening of the Modern School I
-invited the representatives of the press to visit the institution and
-make it known, and some of the journals inserted appreciative notices
-of the work. It may be of historical interest to quote a few paragraphs
-from El Diluvio:—
-
-
- The future is budding in the school. To build on any other
- foundation is to build on sand. Unhappily, the school may serve
- either the purposes of tyranny or the cause of liberty, and may
- thus serve either barbarism or civilisation.
-
- We are therefore pleased to see certain patriots and humanitarians,
- who grasp the transcendent importance of this social function,
- which our Government systematically overlooks, hasten to meet this
- pressing need by founding a Modern School; a school which will not
- seek to promote the interests of sect and to move in the old ruts,
- as has been done hitherto, but will create an intellectual
- environment in which the new generation will absorb the ideas and
- the impulses which the stream of progress unceasingly brings.
-
- This end can only be attained by private enterprise. Our existing
- institutions, tainted with all the vices of the past and weakened
- by all the trivialities of the present, cannot discharge this
- useful function. It is reserved for men of noble mind and unselfish
- feeling to open up the new path by which succeeding generations
- will rise to higher destinies.
-
- This has been done, or will be done, by the founders of the modest
- Modern School which we have visited at the courteous invitation of
- its directors and those who are interested in its development. This
- school is not a commercial enterprise, like most scholastic
- institutions, but a pædagogical experiment, of which only one other
- specimen exists in Spain (the Free Institution of Education at
- Madrid).
-
- Sr. Salas Antón brilliantly expounded the programme of the school
- to the small audience of journalists and others who attended the
- modest opening-festival, and descanted on the design of educating
- children in the whole truth and nothing but the truth, or what is
- proved to be such. His chief theme was that the founders do not
- propose to add one more to the number of what are known as “Lay
- Schools,” with their impassioned dogmatism, but a serene
- observatory, open to the four winds of heaven, with no cloud
- darkening the horizon and interposing between the light and the
- mind of man.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV.
-
-THE EARLY PROGRAMME
-
-
-The time had come to think of the inauguration of the Modern School.
-Some time previously I had invited a number of gentlemen of great
-distinction and of progressive sentiments to assist me with their
-advice and form a kind of Committee of Consultation. My intercourse
-with them at Barcelona was of great value to me, and many of them
-remained in permanent relation with me, for which I may express my
-gratitude. They were of opinion that the Modern School should be opened
-with some display—invitation-cards, a circular to the press, a large
-hall, music, and oratorical addresses by distinguished Liberal
-politicians. It would have been easy to do this, and we would have
-attracted an audience of hundreds of people who would have applauded
-with that momentary enthusiasm which characterises our public
-functions. But I was not seduced by the idea. As a Positivist and an
-idealist I was convinced that a simple modesty best befitted the
-inauguration of a work of reform. Any other method seemed to me
-disingenuous, a concession to enervating conventions and to the very
-evil which I was setting out to reform. The proposal of the Committee
-was, therefore, repugnant to my conscience and my sentiments, and I
-was, in that and all other things relating to the Modern School, the
-executive power.
-
-In the first number of the Bulletin of the Modern School, issued on
-October 30, 1901, I gave a general exposition of the fundamental
-principles of the School, which I may repeat here:—
-
-
- Those imaginary products of the mind, a priori ideas, and all the
- absurd and fantastical fictions hitherto regarded as truth and
- imposed as directive principles of human conduct, have for some
- time past incurred the condemnation of reason and the resentment of
- conscience. The sun no longer merely touches the tips of the
- mountains; it floods the valleys, and we enjoy the light of noon.
- Science is no longer the patrimony of a small group of privileged
- individuals; its beneficent rays more or less consciously penetrate
- every rank of society. On all sides traditional errors are being
- dispelled by it; by the confident procedure of experience and
- observation it enables us to attain accurate knowledge and criteria
- in regard to natural objects and the laws which govern them. With
- indisputable authority it bids men lay aside for ever their
- exclusivisms and privileges, and it offers itself as the
- controlling principle of human life, seeking to imbue all with a
- common sentiment of humanity.
-
- Relying on modest resources, but with a robust and rational faith
- and a spirit that will not easily be intimidated, whatever
- obstacles arise in our path, we have founded the Modern School. Its
- aim is to convey, without concession to traditional methods, an
- education based on the natural sciences. This new method, though
- the only sound and positive method, has spread throughout the
- civilised world, and has innumerable supporters of intellectual
- distinction and lofty principles.
-
- We are aware how many enemies there are about us. We are conscious
- of the innumerable prejudices which oppress the social conscience
- of our country. This is the outcome of a medieval, subjective,
- dogmatic education, which makes ridiculous pretensions to the
- possession of an infallible criterion. We are further aware that,
- in virtue of the law of heredity, strengthened by the influences of
- the environment, the tendencies which are connatural and
- spontaneous in the young child are still more pronounced in
- adolescence. The struggle will be severe, the work difficult; but
- with a constant and unwavering will, the sole providence of the
- moral world, we are confident that we will win the victory to which
- we aspire. We will develop living brains, capable of reacting on
- our instruction. We will take care that the minds of our pupils
- will sustain, when they leave the control of their teachers, a
- stern hostility to prejudice; that they will be solid minds,
- capable of forming their own rational convictions on every subject.
-
- This does not mean that we will leave the child, at the very outset
- of its education, to form its own ideas. The Socratic procedure is
- wrong, if it is taken too literally. The very constitution of the
- mind, at the commencement of its development, demands that at this
- stage the child shall be receptive. The teacher must implant the
- germs of ideas. These will, when age and strength invigorate the
- brain, bring forth corresponding flowers and fruit, in accordance
- with the degree of initiative and the characteristic features of
- the pupil’s mind.
-
- On the other hand, we may say that we regard as absurd the
- widespread notion that an education based on natural science stunts
- the organ of the idealist faculty. We are convinced that the
- contrary is true. What science does is to correct and direct it,
- and give it a wholesome sense of reality. The work of man’s
- cerebral energy is to create the ideal, with the aid of art and
- philosophy. But in order that the ideal shall not degenerate into
- fables, or mystic and unsubstantial dreams, and the structure be
- not built on sand, it is absolutely necessary to give it a secure
- and unshakable foundation in the exact and positive teaching of the
- natural sciences.
-
- Moreover, the education of a man does not consist merely in the
- training of his intelligence, without having regard to the heart
- and the will. Man is a complete and unified whole, in spite of the
- variety of his functions. He presents various facets, but is at the
- bottom a single energy, which sees, loves, and applies a will to
- the prosecution of what he has conceived or affected. It is a
- morbid condition, an infringement of the laws of the human
- organism, to establish an abyss where there ought to be a sane and
- harmonious continuity. The divorce between thought and will is an
- unhappy feature of our time. To what fatal consequences it has led!
- We need only refer to our political leaders and to the various
- orders of social life; they are deeply infected with this
- pernicious dualism. Many of them are assuredly powerful enough in
- respect of their mental faculties, and have an abundance of ideas;
- but they lack a sound orientation and the fine thoughts which
- science applies to the life of individuals and of peoples. Their
- restless egoism and the wish to accommodate their relatives,
- together with their leaven of traditional sentiments, form an
- impermeable barrier round their hearts and prevent the infiltration
- of progressive ideas and the formation of that sap of sentiment
- which is the impelling and determining power in the conduct of man.
- Hence the attempt to obstruct progress and put obstacles in the way
- of new ideas; hence, as a result of these attempts, the scepticism
- of multitudes, the death of nations, and the inevitable despair of
- the oppressed.
-
- We regard it as one of the first principles of our pædagogical
- mission that there is no such duality of character in any
- individual—one which sees and appreciates truth and goodness, and
- one which follows evil. And, since we take natural science as our
- guide in education, a further consequence will be recognised; we
- shall endeavour to secure that the intellectual impressions which
- science conveys to the pupil shall be converted into the sap of
- sentiment and shall be intensely loved. When sentiment is strong it
- penetrates and diffuses itself through the deepest recesses of a
- man’s being, pervading and giving a special colour to his
- character.
-
- And as a man’s conduct must revolve within the circle of his
- character, it follows that a youth educated in the manner we have
- indicated will, when he comes to rule himself, recognise science as
- the one helpful master of his life.
-
-
-The school was opened on September 8, 1901, with thirty pupils—twelve
-girls and eighteen boys. These sufficed for the purpose of our
-experiment, and we had no intention of increasing the number for a
-time, so that we might keep a more effective watch on the pupils. The
-enemies of the new school would take the first opportunity to criticise
-our work in co-educating boys and girls.
-
-The people present at the opening were partly attracted by the notices
-of our work published in the press, and partly consisted of the parents
-of the pupils and delegates of various working-class societies who had
-been invited on account of their assistance to me. I was supported in
-the chair by the teachers and the Committee of Consultation, two of
-whom expounded the system and aim of the school. In this quiet fashion
-we inaugurated a work that was destined to last. We created the Modern,
-Scientific, and Rational School, the fame of which soon spread in
-Europe and America. Time may witness a change of its name—the “Modern”
-School—but the description “scientific and rational” will be more and
-more fully vindicated.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V.
-
-THE CO-EDUCATION OF THE SEXES
-
-
-The most important point in our programme of rational education, in
-view of the intellectual condition of the country, and the feature
-which was most likely to shock current prejudices and habits, was the
-co-education of boys and girls.
-
-The idea was not absolutely new in Spain. As a result of necessity and
-of primitive conditions, there were villages in remote valleys and on
-the mountains where some good-natured neighbour, or the priest or
-sacristan, used to teach the catechism, and sometimes elementary
-letters, to boys and girls in common. In fact, it is sometimes legally
-authorised, or at least tolerated, by the State among small populations
-which have not the means to pay both a master and mistress. In such
-cases, either a master or mistress gives common lessons to boys and
-girls, as I had myself seen in a village not far from Barcelona. In
-towns and cities, however, mixed education was not recognised. One read
-sometimes of the occurrence of it in foreign countries, but no one
-proposed to adopt it in Spain, where such a proposal would have been
-deemed an innovation of the most utopian character.
-
-Knowing this, I refrained from making any public propaganda on the
-subject, and confined myself to private discussion with individuals. We
-asked every parent who wished to send a boy to the school if there were
-girls in the family, and it was necessary to explain to each the
-reasons for co-education. Wherever we did this, the result was
-satisfactory. If we had announced our intention publicly, it would have
-raised a storm of prejudice. There would have been a discussion in the
-press, conventional feeling would have been aroused, and the fear of
-“what people would say”—that paralysing obstacle to good
-intentions—would have been stronger than reason. Our project would have
-proved exceedingly difficult, if not impossible. Whereas, proceeding as
-we did, we were able to open with a sufficient number of boys and
-girls, and the number steadily increased, as the Bulletin of the school
-shows.
-
-In my own mind, co-education was of vital importance. It was not merely
-an indispensable condition of realising what I regard as the ideal
-result of rational education; it was the ideal itself, initiating its
-life in the Modern School, developing progressively without any form of
-exclusion, inspiring a confidence of attaining our end. Natural
-science, philosophy, and history unite in teaching, in face of all
-prejudice to the contrary, that man and woman are two complementary
-aspects of human nature, and the failure to recognise this essential
-and important truth has had the most disastrous consequences.
-
-In the second number of the Bulletin, therefore, I published a careful
-vindication of my ideas:—
-
-
- Mixed education (I said) is spreading among civilised nations. In
- many places it has already had excellent results. The principle of
- this new scheme of education is that children of both sexes shall
- receive the same lessons; that their minds shall be developed,
- their hearts purified, and their wills strengthened in precisely
- the same manner; that the sexes shall be in touch with each other
- from infancy, so that woman shall be, not in name only, but in
- reality and truth, the companion of man.
-
- A venerable institution which dominates the thoughts of our people
- declares, at one of the most solemn moments of life, when, with
- ceremonious pomp, man and woman are united in matrimony, that woman
- is the companion of man. These are hollow words, void of sense,
- without vital and rational significance in life, since what we
- witness in the Christian Church, in Catholicism particularly, is
- the exact opposite of this idea. Not long ago a Christian woman of
- fine feeling and great sincerity complained bitterly of the moral
- debasement which is put upon her sex in the bosom of the Church:
- “It would be impious audacity for a woman to aspire in the Church
- even to the position of the lowest sacristan.”
-
- A man must suffer from ophthalmia of the mind not to see that,
- under the inspiration of Christianity, the position of woman is no
- better than it was under the ancient civilisations; it is, indeed,
- worse, and has aggravating circumstances. It is a conspicuous fact
- in our modern Christian society that, as a result and culmination
- of our patriarchal development, the woman does not belong to
- herself; she is neither more nor less than an adjunct of man,
- subject constantly to his absolute dominion, bound to him—it may
- be—by chains of gold. Man has made her a perpetual minor. Once this
- was done, she was bound to experience one of two alternatives: man
- either oppresses and silences her, or treats her as a child to be
- coaxed—according to the mood of the master. If at length we note in
- her some sign of the new spirit, if she begins to assert her will
- and claim some share of independence, if she is passing, with
- irritating slowness, from the state of slave to the condition of a
- respected ward, she owes it to the redeeming spirit of science,
- which is dominating the customs of races and the designs of our
- social rulers.
-
-
-The work of man for the greater happiness of the race has hitherto been
-defective; in future it must be a joint action of the sexes; it is
-incumbent on both man and woman, according to the point of view of
-each. It is important to realise that, in face of the purposes of life,
-man is neither inferior nor (as we affect to think) superior to woman.
-They have different qualities, and no comparison is possible between
-diverse things.
-
-As many psychologists and sociologists observe, the human race displays
-two fundamental aspects. Man typifies the dominion of thought and of
-the progressive spirit; woman bears in her moral nature the
-characteristic note of intense sentiment and of the conservative
-spirit. But this view of the sexes gives no encouragement whatever to
-the ideas of reactionaries. If the predominance of the conservative
-element and of the emotions is ensured in woman by natural law, this
-does not make her the less fitted to be the companion of man. She is
-not prevented by the constitution of her nature from reflecting on
-things of importance, nor is it necessary that she should use her mind
-in contradiction to the teaching of science and absorb all kinds of
-superstitions and fables. The possession of a conservative disposition
-does not imply that one is bound to crystallise in a certain stage of
-thought, or that one must be obsessed with prejudice in all that
-relates to reality.
-
-“To conserve” merely means “to retain,” to keep what has been given us,
-or what we have ourselves produced. The author of The Religion of the
-Future says, referring to woman in this respect: “The conservative
-spirit may be applied to truth as well as to error; it all depends what
-it is you conserve. If woman is instructed in philosophical and
-scientific matters, her conservative power will be to the advantage,
-not to the disadvantage, of progressive thought.”
-
-On the other hand, it is pointed out that woman is emotional. She does
-not selfishly keep to herself what she receives; she spreads abroad her
-beliefs, her ideas, and all the good and evil that form her moral
-treasures. She insists on sharing them with all those who are, by the
-mysterious power of emotion, identified with her. With exquisite art,
-with invariable unconsciousness, her whole moral physiognomy, her whole
-soul, so to say, impresses itself on the soul of those she loves.
-
-If the first ideas implanted in the mind of the child by the teacher
-are germs of truth and of positive knowledge; if the teacher himself is
-in touch with the scientific spirit of the time, the result will be
-good from every point of view. But if a man be fed in the first stage
-of his mental development with fables, errors, and all that is contrary
-to the spirit of science, what can be expected of his future? When the
-boy becomes a man he will be an obstacle to progress. The human
-conscience is in infancy of the same natural texture as the bodily
-organism; it is tender and pliant. It readily accepts what comes to it
-from without. In the course of time this plasticity gives place to
-rigidity; it loses its pliancy and becomes relatively fixed. From that
-time the ideas communicated to it by the mother will be encrusted and
-identified with the youth’s conscience.
-
-The acid of the more rational ideas which the youth acquires by social
-intercourse or private study may in cases relieve the mind of the
-erroneous ideas implanted in childhood. But what is likely to be the
-practical outcome of this transformation of the mind in the sphere of
-conduct? We must not forget that in most cases the emotions associated
-with the early ideas remain in the deeper folds of the heart. Hence it
-is that we find in so many men such a flagrant and lamentable
-antithesis between the thought and the deed, the intelligence and the
-will; and this often leads to an eclipse of good conduct and a
-paralysis of progress.
-
-This primary sediment which we owe to our mothers is so tenacious and
-enduring—it passes so intimately into the very marrow of our being—that
-even energetic characters, which have effected a sincere reform of mind
-and will, have the mortification of discovering this Jesuitical
-element, derived from their mothers, when they turn to make an
-inventory of their ideas.
-
-Woman must not be restricted to the home. The sphere of her activity
-must go out far beyond her home: it must extend to the very confines of
-society. But in order to ensure a helpful result from her activity we
-must not restrict the amount of knowledge we communicate to her; she
-must learn, both in regard to quantity and quality, the same things as
-man. When science enters the mind of woman it will direct her rich vein
-of emotion, the characteristic element of her nature, the glad
-harbinger of peace and happiness among men.
-
-It has been said that woman represents continuity, and man represents
-change: man is the individual, woman is the species. Change, however,
-would be useless, fugitive, and inconstant, with no solid foundation of
-reality, if the work of woman did not strengthen and consolidate the
-achievements of man. The individual, as such, is the flower of a day, a
-thing of ephemeral significance in life. Woman, who represents the
-species, has the function of retaining within the species the elements
-which improve its life, and to discharge this function adequately she
-needs scientific instruction.
-
-Humanity will advance more rapidly and confidently in the path of
-progress and increase its resources a hundredfold if it combines the
-ideas acquired by science with the emotional strength of woman. Ribot
-observes that an idea is merely an idea, an act of intelligence,
-incapable of producing or doing anything, unless it is accompanied by
-an emotional state, a motive element. Hence it is conceived as a
-scientific truth that, to the advantage of progress, an idea does not
-long remain in a purely contemplative condition when it appears. This
-is obviated by associating the idea with emotion and love, which do not
-fail to convert it into vital action.
-
-When will all this be accomplished? When shall we see the marriage of
-ideas with the impassioned heart of woman? From that date we shall have
-a moral matriarchate among civilised nations. Then, on the one hand,
-humanity, considered in the home circle, will have the proper teacher
-to direct the new generations in the sense of the ideal; and, on the
-other hand, it will have an apostle and enthusiastic propagandist who
-will impress the value of liberty on the minds of men and the need of
-co-operation upon the peoples of the world.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI.
-
-CO-EDUCATION OF THE SOCIAL CLASSES
-
-
-There must be a co-education of the different social classes as well as
-of the two sexes. I might have founded a school giving lessons
-gratuitously; but a school for poor children only would not be a
-rational school, since, if they were not taught submission and
-credulity as in the old type of school, they would have been strongly
-disposed to rebel, and would instinctively cherish sentiments of
-hatred.
-
-There is no escape from the dilemma. There is no middle term in the
-school for the disinherited class alone; you have either a systematic
-insistence, by means of false teaching, on error and ignorance, or
-hatred of those who domineer and exploit. It is a delicate point, and
-needs stating clearly. Rebellion against oppression is merely a
-question of statics, of equilibrium. Between one man and another who
-are perfectly equal, as is said in the immortal first clause of the
-famous Declaration of the French Revolution (“Men are born and remain
-free and equal in rights”), there can be no social inequality. If there
-is such inequality, some will tyrannise, the others protest and hate.
-Rebellion is a levelling tendency, and to that extent natural and
-rational, however much it may be discredited by justice and its evil
-companions, law and religion.
-
-I venture to say quite plainly: the oppressed and the exploited have a
-right to rebel, because they have to reclaim their rights until they
-enjoy their full share in the common patrimony. The Modern School,
-however, has to deal with children, whom it prepares by instruction for
-the state of manhood, and it must not anticipate the cravings and
-hatreds, the adhesions and rebellions, which may be fitting sentiments
-in the adult. In other words, it must not seek to gather fruit until it
-has been produced by cultivation, nor must it attempt to implant a
-sense of responsibility until it has equipped the conscience with the
-fundamental conditions of such responsibility. Let it teach the
-children to be men; when they are men, they may declare themselves
-rebels against injustice.
-
-It needs very little reflection to see that a school for rich children
-only cannot be a rational school. From the very nature of things it
-will tend to insist on the maintenance of privilege and the securing of
-their advantages. The only sound and enlightened form of school is that
-which co-educates the poor and the rich, which brings the one class
-into touch with the other in the innocent equality of childhood, by
-means of the systematic equality of the rational school.
-
-With this end in view I decided to secure pupils of every social rank
-and include them in a common class, adopting a system accommodated to
-the circumstances of the parents or guardians of the children; I would
-not have a fixed and invariable fee, but a kind of sliding scale, with
-free lessons for some and different charges for others. I later
-published the following article on the subject in the Bulletin (May 10,
-1905):—
-
-
- Our friend D. R. C. gave a lecture last Sunday at the Republican
- Club on the subject of “Modern Pædagogy,” explaining to his
- audience what we mean by modern education and what advantages
- society may derive from it. As I think that the subject is one of
- very great interest and most proper to receive public attention, I
- offer the following reflections and considerations on it. It seems
- to me that the lecturer was happy in his exposition of the ideal,
- but not in the suggestions he made with a view to realising it, nor
- in bringing forward the schools of France and Belgium as models to
- be imitated.
-
- Señor C., in fact, relies upon the State, upon Parliament or
- municipalities, for the building, equipment, and management of
- scholastic institutions. This seems to me a great mistake. If
- modern pædagogy means an effort towards the realisation of a new
- and more just form of society; if it means that we propose to
- instruct the rising generation in the causes which have brought
- about and maintain the lack of social equilibrium; if it means that
- we are anxious to prepare the race for better days, freeing it from
- religious fiction and from all idea of submission to an inevitable
- socio-economic inequality; we cannot entrust it to the State nor to
- other official organisms which necessarily maintain existing
- privileges and support the laws which at present consecrate the
- exploitation of one man by another, the pernicious source of the
- worst abuses.
-
- Evidence of the truth of this is so abundant that any person can
- obtain it by visiting the factories and workshops and other centres
- of paid workers, by inquiring what is the manner of life of those
- in the higher and those in the lower social rank, by frequenting
- what are called courts of justice, and by asking the prisoners in
- our penal institutions what were the motives for their misconduct.
- If all this does not suffice to prove that the State favours those
- who are in possession of wealth and frowns on those who rebel
- against injustice, it may be useful to notice what has happened in
- Belgium. Here, according to Señor C., the government is so
- attentive to education and conducts it so excellently that private
- schools are impossible. In the official schools, he says, the
- children of the rich mingle with the children of the poor, and one
- may at times see the child of wealthy parents arm in arm with a
- poor and lowly companion. It is true, I admit, that children of all
- classes may attend the Belgian schools; but the instruction that is
- given in them is based on the supposed eternal necessity for a
- division of rich and poor, and on the principle that social harmony
- consists in the fulfilment of the laws.
-
- It is natural enough that the masters should like to see this kind
- of education given on every side. It is a means of bringing to
- reason those who might one day be tempted to rebel. Not long ago,
- in Brussels and other Belgian towns, the sons of the rich, armed
- and organised in national troops, shot down the sons of the poor
- who were claiming universal suffrage. On the other hand, my
- acquaintance with the quality of Belgian education differs
- considerably from that of the lecturer. I have before me various
- issues of a Belgian journal (L’Exprèss de Liège) which devotes an
- article to the subject, entitled “The Destruction of our National
- System of Education.” The facts given are, unfortunately, very
- similar to the facts about education in Spain, though in this
- country there has been a great development of education by
- religious orders, which is, as everybody knows, the systematisation
- of ignorance. In fine, it is not for nothing that a violently
- clerical government rules in Belgium.
-
- As to the modern education which is given in French schools, we may
- say that not a single one of the books used in them serves the
- purpose of a really secular education. On the very day on which
- Señor C. was lecturing in Gracia the Parisian journal L’Action
- published an article, with the title “How Secular Morality is
- Taught,” in regard to the book Recueil de maximes et pensées
- morales, and quoted from it certain ridiculously anachronistic
- ideas which offend the most elementary common sense.
-
- We shall be asked, What are we to do if we cannot rely on the aid
- of the State, of Parliament, or municipalities? We must appeal to
- those whose interest it is to bring about a reform; to the workers,
- in the first place, then to the cultivated and privileged people
- who cherish sentiments of justice. They may not be numerous, but
- there are such. I am personally acquainted with several. The
- lecturer complained that the civic authorities were so dilatory in
- granting the reforms that are needed. I feel sure that he would do
- better not to waste his time on them, but appeal directly to the
- working class.
-
- The field has been well prepared. Let him visit the various working
- men’s societies, the Republican Fraternities, the Centres of
- Instruction, the Workers’ Athenæums, and all the bodies which are
- working for reform, [3] and let him give ear to the language of
- truth, the exhortations to union and courage. Let him observe the
- attention given to the problem of rational and scientific
- instruction, a kind of instruction which shows the injustice of
- privilege and the possibility of reforms. If individuals and
- societies continue thus to combine their endeavours to secure the
- emancipation of those who suffer—for it is not the workers only who
- suffer—Señor C. may rest assured of a positive, sound, and speedy
- result, while whatever may be obtained of the government will be
- dilatory, and will tend only to stupefy, to confuse ideas, and to
- perpetuate the domination of one class over another.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII.
-
-SCHOOL HYGIENE
-
-
-In regard to hygiene we are, in Spain, dominated by the abominable
-ideas of the Catholic Church. Saint Aloysius and Saint Benedict J.
-Labré are not the only, or the most characteristic, saints in the list
-of the supposed citizens of the kingdom of heaven, but they are the
-most popular with the masters of uncleanliness. With such types of
-perfection, [4] in an atmosphere of ignorance, cleverly and maliciously
-sustained by the clergy and the middle-class Liberals, it was to be
-expected that the children who would come to our school would be
-wanting in cleanliness; dirt is traditional in their world.
-
-We began a discreet and systematic campaign against it, showing the
-children how a dirty person or object inspires repugnance, and how
-cleanliness attracts esteem and sympathy; how one instinctively moves
-towards the cleanly person and away from the dirty and malodorous; and
-how we should be pleased to win the regard of those who see us and
-ashamed to excite their disgust.
-
-We then explained cleanliness as an aspect of beauty, and uncleanliness
-as a part of ugliness; and we at length entered expressly into the
-province of hygiene, pointing out that dirt was a cause of disease and
-a constant possible source of infection and epidemic, while cleanliness
-was one of the chief conditions of health. We thus soon succeeded in
-disposing the children in favour of cleanliness, and making them
-understand the scientific principles of hygiene.
-
-The influence of these lessons spread to their families, as the new
-demands of the children disturbed traditional habits. One child would
-ask urgently for its feet to be washed, another would ask to be bathed,
-another wanted a brush and powder for its teeth, another new clothes or
-boots, and so on. The poor mothers, burdened with their daily tasks,
-sometimes crushed by the hardness of the circumstances in which their
-life was passed, and probably under the influence of religious
-teaching, endeavoured to stop their petitions; but in the end the new
-life introduced into the home by the child triumphed, a welcome presage
-of the regeneration which rational education will one day accomplish.
-
-I entrusted the expounding of the principles of scholastic hygiene to
-competent men, and Dr. Martínez Vargas and others wrote able and
-detailed articles on the subject in the Bulletin. Other articles were
-written on the subject of games and play, on the lines of modern
-pædagogy. [5]
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII.
-
-THE TEACHERS
-
-
-The choice of teachers was another point of great difficulty. The
-tracing of a programme of rational instruction once accomplished, it
-remained to choose teachers who were competent to carry it out, and I
-found that in fact no such persons existed. We were to illustrate once
-more that a need creates its own organs.
-
-Certainly there were plenty of teachers. Teaching, though not very
-lucrative, is a profession by which a man can support himself. There is
-not a universal truth in the popular proverb which says of an
-unfortunate man: “He is hungrier than a schoolmaster.” [6] The truth is
-that in many parts of Spain the schoolmaster forms part of the local
-governing clique, with the priest, the doctor, the shopkeeper, and the
-money-lender (who is often one of the richest men in the place, though
-he contributes least to its welfare). The master receives a municipal
-salary, and has a certain influence which may at times secure material
-advantages. In larger towns the master, if he is not content with his
-salary, may give lessons in private schools, where, in accord with the
-provincial institute, he prepares young men for the University. Even if
-he does not obtain a position of distinction, he lives as well as the
-generality of his fellow townsmen.
-
-There are, moreover, teachers in what are called “secular schools”—a
-name imported from France, where it arose because the schooling was
-formerly exclusively clerical and conducted by religious bodies. This
-is not the case in Spain; however Christian the teaching is, it is
-always given by lay masters. However, the Spanish lay teachers,
-inspired by sentiments of freethought and political radicalism, were
-rather anti-Catholic and anti-clerical than Rationalist, in the best
-sense of the word.
-
-Professional teachers have to undergo a special preparation for the
-task of imparting scientific and rational instruction. This is
-difficult in all cases, and is sometimes rendered impossible by the
-difficulties caused by habits of routine. On the other hand, those who
-had had no pædagogical experience, and offered themselves for the work
-out of pure enthusiasm for the idea, stood in even greater need of
-preparatory study. The solution of the problem was very difficult,
-because there was no other place but the rational school itself for
-making this preparation.
-
-The excellence of the system saved us. Once the Modern School had been
-established by private initiative, with a firm determination to be
-guided by the ideal, the difficulties began to disappear. Every
-dogmatic imposition was detected and rejected, every excursion or
-deviation in the direction of metaphysics was at once abandoned, and
-experience gradually formed a new and salutary pædagogical science.
-This was due, not merely to my zeal and vigilance, but to my earliest
-teachers, and to some extent to the naive expressions of the pupils
-themselves. We may certainly say that if a need creates an organ, the
-organ speedily meets the need.
-
-Nevertheless, in order to complete my work, I established a Rationalist
-Normal School for the education of teachers, under the direction of an
-experienced master and with the co-operation of the teachers in the
-Modern School. In this a number of young people of both sexes were
-trained, and they worked excellently until the despotic authorities,
-yielding to our obscure and powerful enemies, put a stop to our work,
-and flattered themselves that they had destroyed it for ever.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX.
-
-THE REFORM OF THE SCHOOL
-
-
-There are two ways open to those who seek to reform the education of
-children. They may seek to transform the school by studying the child
-and proving scientifically that the actual scheme of instruction is
-defective, and must be modified; or they may found new schools in which
-principles may be directly applied in the service of that ideal which
-is formed by all who reject the conventions, the cruelty, the trickery,
-and the untruth which enter into the bases of modern society.
-
-The first method offers great advantages, and is in harmony with the
-evolutionary conception which men of science regard as the only
-effective way of attaining the end. They are right in theory, as we
-fully admit. It is evident that the progress of psychology and
-physiology must lead to important changes in educational methods; that
-the teachers, being now in a better position to understand the child,
-will make their teaching more in conformity with natural laws. I
-further grant that this evolution will proceed in the direction of
-greater liberty, as I am convinced that violence is the method of
-ignorance, and that the educator who is really worthy of the name will
-gain everything by spontaneity; he will know the child’s needs, and
-will be able to promote its development by giving it the greatest
-possible satisfaction.
-
-In point of fact, however, I do not think that those who are working
-for the regeneration of humanity have much to hope from this side.
-Rulers have always taken care to control the education of the people;
-they know better than any that their power is based entirely on the
-school, and they therefore insist on retaining their monopoly of it.
-The time has gone by when rulers could oppose the spread of instruction
-and put limits to the education of the masses. Such a policy was
-possible formerly because economic life was consistent with general
-ignorance, and this ignorance facilitated despotism. The circumstances
-have changed, however. The progress of science and our repeated
-discoveries have revolutionised the conditions of labour and
-production. It is no longer possible for the people to remain ignorant;
-education is absolutely necessary for a nation to maintain itself and
-make headway against its economic competitors. Recognising this, the
-rulers have sought to give a more and more complete organisation to the
-school, not because they look to education to regenerate society, but
-because they need more competent workers to sustain industrial
-enterprises and enrich their cities. Even the most reactionary rulers
-have learned this lesson; they clearly understand that the old policy
-was dangerous to the economic life of nations, and that it was
-necessary to adapt popular education to the new conditions.
-
-It would be a serious mistake to think that the ruling classes have not
-foreseen the danger to themselves of the intellectual development of
-the people, and have not understood that it was necessary to change
-their methods. In fact, their methods have been adapted to the new
-conditions of life; they have sought to gain control of the ideas which
-are in course of evolution. They have endeavoured to preserve the
-beliefs on which social discipline had been grounded, and to give to
-the results of scientific research and the ideas involved in them a
-meaning which will not be to the disadvantage of existing institutions;
-and it is this that has induced them to assume control of the school.
-In every country the governing classes, which formerly left the
-education of the people to the clergy, as these were quite willing to
-educate in a sense of obedience to authority, have now themselves
-undertaken the direction of the schools.
-
-The danger to them consists in the stimulation of the human mind by the
-new spectacle of life and the possible rise of thoughts of emancipation
-in the depths of their hearts. It would have been folly to struggle
-against the evolving forces; the effect would be only to inflame them,
-and, instead of adhering to earlier methods of government, they would
-adopt new and more effective methods. It did not require any
-extraordinary genius to discover the solution. The course of events
-itself suggested to those who were in power the way in which they were
-to meet the difficulties which threatened; they built schools, they
-sought generously to extend the sphere of education, and if there were
-at one point a few who resisted this impulse—as certain tendencies
-favoured one or other of the political parties—all soon understood that
-it was better to yield, and that the best policy was to find some new
-way of defending their interests and principles. There were then sharp
-struggles for the control of the schools, and these struggles continue
-to-day in every civilised country; sometimes the republican
-middle-class triumphs, sometimes the clergy. All parties appreciate the
-importance of the issue, and they shrink from no sacrifice to win the
-victory. “The school” is the cry of every party. The public good must
-be recognised in this zeal. Everybody seeks to raise himself and
-improve his condition by education. In former times it might have been
-said: “Those people want to keep thee in ignorance in order the better
-to exploit thee: we want to see thee educated and free.” That is no
-longer possible; schools of all kinds rise on every side.
-
-In regard to this general change of ideas among the governing classes
-as to the need of schools, I may state certain reasons for distrusting
-their intentions and doubting the efficacy of the means of reform which
-are advocated by certain writers. As a rule, these reformers care
-little about the social significance of education; they are men who
-eagerly embrace scientific truth, but eliminate all that is foreign to
-the object of their studies. They are patiently endeavouring to
-understand the child, and are eager to know—though their science is
-young, it must be remembered—what are the best methods to promote its
-intellectual development.
-
-This kind of professional indifference is, in my opinion, very
-prejudicial to the cause they seek to serve. I do not in the least
-think them insensible of the realities of the social world, and I know
-that they believe that the public welfare will be greatly furthered by
-their labours. “Seeking to penetrate the secrets of the life of man,”
-they reflect, “and unravelling the normal process of his physical and
-psychic development, we shall direct education into a channel which
-will be favourable to the liberation of energy. We are not immediately
-concerned with the reform of the school, and indeed we are unable to
-say exactly what lines it should follow. We will proceed slowly,
-knowing that, from the very nature of things, the reform of the school
-will result from our research. If you ask us what are our hopes, we
-will grant that, like you, we foresee a revolution in the sense of a
-placing of the child and humanity under the direction of science; yet
-even in this case we are persuaded that our work makes for that object,
-and will be the speediest and surest means of promoting it.”
-
-This reasoning is evidently logical. No one could deny this, yet there
-is a considerable degree of fallacy in it, and we must make this clear.
-If the ruling classes have the same ideas as the reformers, if they are
-really impelled by a zeal for the continuous reorganisation of society
-until poverty is at last eliminated, we might recognise that the power
-of science is enough to improve the lot of peoples. Instead of this,
-however, we see clearly that the sole aim of those who strive to attain
-power is the defence of their own interests, their own advantage, and
-the satisfaction of their personal desires. For some time now we have
-ceased to accept the phrases with which they disguise their ambitions.
-It is true that there are some in whom we may find a certain amount of
-sincerity, and who imagine at times that they are impelled by a zeal
-for the good of their fellows. But these become rarer and rarer, and
-the positivism of the age is very severe in raising doubts as to the
-real intentions of those who govern us.
-
-And just as they contrived to adapt themselves when the necessity
-arose, and prevented education from becoming a danger, they also
-succeeded in organising the school in accord with the new scientific
-ideas in such a way that nothing should endanger their supremacy. These
-ideas are difficult to accept, and one needs to keep a sharp look-out
-for successful methods and see how things are arranged so as to avoid
-verbal traps. How much has been, and is, expected of education! Most
-progressive people expect everything of it, and, until recent years,
-many did not understand that instruction alone leads to illusions. Much
-of the knowledge actually imparted in schools is useless; and the hope
-of reformers has been void because the organisation of the school,
-instead of serving an ideal purpose, has become one of the most
-powerful instruments of servitude in the hands of the ruling class. The
-teachers are merely conscious or unconscious organs of their will, and
-have been trained on their principles. From their tenderest years, and
-more drastically than anybody, they have endured the discipline of
-authority. Very few have escaped this despotic domination; they are
-generally powerless against it, because they are oppressed by the
-scholastic organisation to such an extent that they have nothing to do
-but obey. It is unnecessary here to describe that organisation. One
-word will suffice to characterise it—Violence. The school dominates the
-children physically, morally, and intellectually, in order to control
-the development of their faculties in the way desired, and deprives
-them of contact with nature in order to modify them as required. This
-is the explanation of the failure; the eagerness of the ruling class to
-control education and the bankruptcy of the hopes of reformers.
-“Education” means in practice domination or domestication. I do not
-imagine that these systems have been put together with the deliberate
-aim of securing the desired results. That would be a work of genius.
-But things have happened just as if the actual scheme of education
-corresponded to some vast and deliberate conception; it could not have
-been done better. To attain it teachers have inspired themselves solely
-with the principles of discipline and authority, which always appeal to
-social organisers; such men have only one clear idea and one will—the
-children must learn to obey, to believe, and to think according to the
-prevailing social dogmas. If this were the aim, education could not be
-other than we find it to-day. There is no question of promoting the
-spontaneous development of the child’s faculties, or encouraging it to
-seek freely the satisfaction of its physical, intellectual, and moral
-needs. There is question only of imposing ready-made ideas on it, of
-preventing it from ever thinking otherwise than is required for the
-maintenance of existing social institutions—of making it, in a word, an
-individual rigorously adapted to the social mechanism.
-
-It cannot be expected that this kind of education will have any
-influence on the progress of humanity. I repeat that it is merely an
-instrument of domination in the hands of the ruling classes, who have
-never sought to uplift the individual, and it is quite useless to
-expect any good from the schools of the present day. What they have
-done up to the present they will continue to do in the future. There is
-no reason whatever why they should adopt a different system; they have
-resolved to use education for their purposes, and they will take
-advantage of every improvement of it. If only they preserve the spirit
-of the school and the authoritative discipline which rules it, every
-innovation will tend to their advantage. For this they will keep a
-constant watch, and take care that their interests are secured.
-
-I would fix the attention of my readers on this point: the whole value
-of education consists in respect for the physical, intellectual, and
-moral faculties of the child. As in science, the only possible
-demonstration is demonstration by facts; education is not worthy of the
-name unless it be stripped of all dogmatism, and unless it leaves to
-the child the direction of its powers and is content to support them in
-their manifestations. But nothing is easier than to alter this meaning
-of education, and nothing more difficult than to respect it. The
-teacher is always imposing, compelling, and using violence; the true
-educator is the man who does not impose his own ideas and will on the
-child, but appeals to its own energies.
-
-From this we can understand how easily education is conducted, and how
-light is the task of those who seek to dominate the individual. The
-best conceivable methods become in their hands so many new and more
-effective means of despotism. Our ideal is that of science; we appeal
-to it in demanding the power to educate the child by fostering its
-development and procuring a satisfaction of its needs as they manifest
-themselves.
-
-We are convinced that the education of the future will be entirely
-spontaneous. It is plain that we cannot wholly realise this, but the
-evolution of methods in the direction of a broader comprehension of
-life and the fact that all improvement involves the suppression of
-violence indicate that we are on solid ground when we look to science
-for the liberation of the child.
-
-Is this the ideal of those who actually control the scholastic system?
-Is this what they propose to bring about? Are they eager to abandon
-violence? Only in the sense that they employ new and more effective
-methods to attain the same end—that is to say, the formation of
-individuals who will accept all the conventions, all the prejudices,
-and all the untruths on which society is based.
-
-We do not hesitate to say that we want men who will continue
-unceasingly to develop; men who are capable of constantly destroying
-and renewing their surroundings and renewing themselves; men whose
-intellectual independence is their supreme power, which they will yield
-to none; men always disposed for things that are better, eager for the
-triumph of new ideas, anxious to crowd many lives into the one life
-they have. Society fears such men; you cannot expect it to set up a
-system of education which will produce them.
-
-What, then, is our mission? What is the policy we must adopt in order
-to contribute to the reform of the school?
-
-Let us follow closely the work of the experts who are engaged in the
-study of the child, and let us endeavour to find a way of applying
-their principles to the education we seek to establish, aiming at an
-increasingly complete emancipation of the individual. But how are we to
-do this? By putting our hand energetically to the work, by promoting
-the establishment of new schools in which, as far as possible, there
-shall rule this spirit of freedom which, we feel, will colour the whole
-education of the future.
-
-We have already had proof that it leads to excellent results. We can
-destroy whatever there is in the actual school that savours of
-violence, all the artificial devices by which the children are
-estranged from nature and life, the intellectual and moral discipline
-which has been used to impose ready-made thoughts, all beliefs which
-deprave and enervate the will. Without fear of injury we may place the
-child in a proper and natural environment, in which it will find itself
-in contact with all that it loves, and where vital impressions will be
-substituted for the wearisome reading of books. If we do no more than
-this, we shall have done much towards the emancipation of the child.
-
-In such an environment we may freely make use of the data of science
-and work with profit. It is true that we could not realise all our
-hopes; that often we shall find ourselves compelled, from lack of
-knowledge, to use the wrong means. But we shall be sustained by the
-confident feeling that, without having achieved our entire aim, we
-shall have done a great deal more than is being done by the actual
-school. I would rather have the free spontaneity of a child who knows
-nothing than the verbal knowledge and intellectual deformation of one
-that has experienced the existing system of education.
-
-What we have sought to do in Barcelona is being done by others in
-various places. All of us saw that the work was possible. Dedicate
-yourself to it at once. We do not hope that the studies of children
-will be suspended that we may regenerate the school. Let us apply what
-we know, and go on learning and applying. A scheme of rational
-education is already possible, and in such schools as we advocate the
-children may develop freely according to their aspirations. Let us
-endeavour to improve and extend the work.
-
-Those are our aims. We know well the difficulties we have to face; but
-we have made a beginning in the conviction that we shall be assisted in
-our task by those who work in their various spheres to deliver men from
-the dogmas and conventions which secure the prolongation of the present
-unjust arrangement of society.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X.
-
-NO REWARD OR PUNISHMENT
-
-
-Rational education is, above all things, a means of defence against
-error and ignorance. To ignore truth and accept absurdities is,
-unhappily, a common feature in our social order; to that we owe the
-distinction of classes and the persistent antagonism of interests.
-Having admitted and practised the co-education of boys and girls, of
-rich and poor—having, that is to say, started from the principle of
-solidarity and equality—we are not prepared to create a new inequality.
-Hence in the Modern School there will be no rewards and no punishments;
-there will be no examinations to puff up some children with the
-flattering title of “excellent,” to give others the vulgar title of
-“good,” and make others unhappy with a consciousness of incapacity and
-failure.
-
-These features of the existing official and religious schools, which
-are quite in accord with their reactionary environment and aim, cannot,
-for the reasons I have given, be admitted into the Modern School. Since
-we are not educating for a specific purpose, we cannot determine the
-capacity or incapacity of the child. When we teach a science, or art,
-or trade, or some subject requiring special conditions, an examination
-may be useful, and there may be reason to give a diploma or refuse one;
-I neither affirm nor deny it. But there is no such specialism in the
-Modern School. The characteristic note of the school, distinguishing it
-even from some which pass as progressive models, is that in it the
-faculties of the children shall develop freely without subjection to
-any dogmatic patron, not even to what it may consider the body of
-convictions of the founder and teachers; every pupil shall go forth
-from it into social life with the ability to be his own master and
-guide his own life in all things.
-
-Hence, if we were rationally prevented from giving prizes, we could not
-impose penalties, and no one would have dreamed of doing so in our
-school if the idea had not been suggested from without. Sometimes
-parents came to me with the rank proverb, “Letters go in with blood,”
-on their lips, and begged me to punish their children. Others who were
-charmed with the precocious talent of their children wanted to see them
-shine in examinations and exhibit medals. We refused to admit either
-prizes or punishments, and sent the parents away. If any child were
-conspicuous for merit, application, laziness, or bad conduct, we
-pointed out to it the need of accord, or the unhappiness of lack of
-accord, with its own welfare and that of others, and the teacher might
-give a lecture on the subject. Nothing more was done, and the parents
-were gradually reconciled to the system, though they often had to be
-corrected in their errors and prejudices by their own children.
-
-Nevertheless, the old prejudice was constantly recurring, and I saw
-that I had to repeat my arguments with the parents of new pupils. I
-therefore wrote the following article in the Bulletin:—
-
-
- The conventional examinations which we usually find held at the end
- of a scholastic year, to which our fathers attached so much
- importance, have had no result at all; or, if any result, a bad
- one. These functions and their accompanying solemnities seem to
- have been instituted for the sole purpose of satisfying the vanity
- of parents and the selfish interests of many teachers, and in order
- to put the children to torture before the examination and make them
- ill afterwards. Each father wants his child to be presented in
- public as one of the prodigies of the college, and regards him with
- pride as a learned man in miniature. He does not notice that for a
- fortnight or so the child suffers exquisite torture. As things are
- judged by external appearances, it is not thought that there is any
- real torture, as there is not the least scratch visible on the
- skin....
-
- The parent’s lack of acquaintance with the natural disposition of
- the child, and the iniquity of putting it in false conditions so
- that its intellectual powers, especially in the sphere of memory,
- are artificially stimulated, prevent the parent from seeing that
- this measure of personal gratification may, as has happened in many
- cases, lead to illness and to the moral, if not the physical, death
- of the child.
-
- On the other hand, the majority of teachers, being mere
- stereotypers of ready-made phrases and mechanical inoculators,
- rather than moral fathers of their pupils, are concerned in these
- examinations with their own personality and their economic
- interests. Their object is to let the parents and the others who
- are present at the public display see that, under their guidance,
- the child has learned a good deal, that its knowledge is greater in
- quantity and quality than could have been expected of its tender
- years and in view of the short time that it has been under the
- charge of this very skilful teacher.
-
- In addition to this wretched vanity, which is satisfied at the cost
- of the moral and physical life of the child, the teachers are
- anxious to elicit compliments from the parents and the rest of the
- audience, who know nothing of the real state of things, as a kind
- of advertisement of the prestige of their particular school.
-
- Briefly, we are inexorably opposed to holding public examinations.
- In our school everything must be done for the advantage of the
- pupil. Everything that does not conduce to this end must be
- recognised as opposed to the natural spirit of positive education.
- Examinations do no good, and they do much harm to the child.
- Besides the illness of which we have already spoken, the nervous
- system of the child suffers, and a kind of temporary paralysis is
- inflicted on its conscience by the immoral features of the
- examination; the vanity provoked in those who are placed highest,
- envy and humiliation, grave obstacles to sound growth, in those who
- have failed, and in all of them the germs of most of the sentiments
- which go to the making of egoism.
-
-
-In a later number of the Bulletin I found it necessary to return to the
-subject:—
-
-
- We frequently receive letters from Workers’ Educational Societies
- and Republican Fraternities asking that the teachers shall chastise
- the children in our schools. We ourselves have been disgusted,
- during our brief excursions, to find material proofs of the fact
- which is at the base of this request; we have seen children on
- their knees, or in other attitudes of punishment.
-
- These irrational and atavistic practices must disappear. Modern
- pædagogy entirely discredits them. The teachers who offer their
- services to the Modern School, or ask our recommendation to teach
- in similar schools, must refrain from any moral or material
- punishment, under penalty of being disqualified permanently.
- Scolding, impatience, and anger ought to disappear with the ancient
- title of “master.” In free schools all should be peace, gladness,
- and fraternity. We trust that this will suffice to put an end to
- these practices, which are most improper in people whose sole ideal
- is the training of a generation fitted to establish a really
- fraternal, harmonious, and just state of society.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI.
-
-THE GENERAL PUBLIC AND THE LIBRARY
-
-
-In setting out to establish a rational school for the purpose of
-preparing children for their entry into the free solidarity of
-humanity, the first problem that confronted us was the selection of
-books. The whole educational luggage of the ancient system was an
-incoherent mixture of science and faith, reason and unreason, good and
-evil, human experience and revelation, truth and error; in a word,
-totally unsuited to meet the new needs that arose with the formation of
-a new school.
-
-If the school has been from remote antiquity equipped not for teaching
-in the broad sense of communicating to the rising generation the gist
-of the knowledge of previous generations, but for teaching on the basis
-of authority and the convenience of the ruling classes, for the purpose
-of making children humble and submissive, it is clear that none of the
-books hitherto used would suit us. But the severe logic of this
-position did not at once convince me. I refused to believe that the
-French democracy, which worked so zealously for the separation of
-Church and State, incurred the anger of the clericals, and adopted
-obligatory secular instruction, would resign itself to a semi-education
-or a sophisticated education. I had, however, to yield to the evidence,
-against my prejudice. I first read a large number of works in the
-French code of secular instruction, and found that God was replaced by
-the State, Christian virtue by civic duty, religion by patriotism,
-submission to the king, the aristocracy, and the clergy by subservience
-to the official, the proprietor, and the employer. Then I consulted an
-eminent Freethinker who held high office in the Ministry of Public
-Instruction, and, when I had told him my desire to see the books they
-used, which I understood to be purged of traditional errors, and
-explained my design and ideal to him, he told me frankly that they had
-nothing of the sort; all their books were, more or less cleverly and
-insidiously, tainted with untruth, which is the indispensable cement of
-social inequality. When I further asked if, seeing that they had
-replaced the decaying idol of deity by the idol of oligarchic
-despotism, they had not at least some book dealing with the origin of
-religion, he said that there was none; but he knew one which would suit
-me—Malvert’s Science and Religion. In point of fact, this was already
-translated into Spanish, and was used as a reading-book in the Modern
-School, with the title Origin of Christianity.
-
-In Spanish literature I found several works written by a distinguished
-author, of some eminence in science, who had produced them rather in
-the interest of the publishers than with a view to the education of
-children. Some of these were at first used in the Modern School, but,
-though one could not accuse them of error, they lacked the inspiration
-of an ideal and were poor in method. I communicated with this author
-with a view to interesting him in my plans and inducing him to write
-books for me, but his publishers held him to a certain contract and he
-could not oblige me.
-
-In brief, the Modern School was opened before a single work had been
-chosen for its library, but it was not long before the first appeared—a
-brilliant book by Jean Grave, which has had a considerable influence on
-our schools. His work, The Adventures of Nono, is a kind of poem in
-which a certain phase of the happier future is ingeniously and
-dramatically contrasted with the sordid realities of the present social
-order; the delights of the land of Autonomy are contrasted with the
-horrors of the kingdom of Argirocracy. The genius of Grave has raised
-the work to a height at which it escapes the strictures of the
-sceptical and conservative; he has depicted the social evils of the
-present truthfully and without exaggeration. The reading of the book
-enchanted the children, and the profundity of his thought suggested
-many opportune comments to the teachers. In their play the children
-used to act scenes from Autonomy, and their parents detected the causes
-of their hardships in the constitution of the kingdom of Argirocracy.
-
-It was announced in the Bulletin and other journals that prizes were
-offered for the best manuals of rational instruction, but no writers
-came forward. I confine myself to recording the fact without going into
-the causes of it. Two books were afterwards adopted for reading in
-school. They were not written for school, but they were translated for
-the Modern School and were very useful. One was called The Note Book,
-the other Colonisation and Patriotism. Both were collections of
-passages from writers of every country on the injustices connected with
-patriotism, the horrors of war, and the iniquity of conquest. The
-choice of these works was vindicated by the excellent influence they
-had on the minds of the children, as we shall see from the little
-essays of the children which appeared in the Bulletin, and the fury
-with which they were denounced by the reactionary press and
-politicians.
-
-Many think that there is not much difference between secular and
-rationalist education, and in various articles and propagandist
-speeches the two were taken to be synonymous. In order to correct this
-error I published the following article in the Bulletin:—
-
-
- The word education should not be accompanied by any qualification.
- It means simply the need and duty of the generation which is in the
- full development of its powers to prepare the rising generation and
- admit it to the patrimony of human knowledge. This is an entirely
- rational ideal, and it will be fully realised in some future age,
- when men are wholly freed from their prejudices and superstitions.
-
- In our efforts to realise this ideal we find ourselves confronted
- with religious education and political education: to these we must
- oppose rational and scientific instruction. The type of religious
- education is that given in the clerical and convent schools of all
- countries; it consists of the smallest possible quantity of useful
- knowledge and a good deal of Christian doctrine and sacred history.
- Political education is the kind established some time ago in
- France, after the fall of the Empire, the object of which is to
- exalt patriotism and represent the actual public administration as
- the instrument of the common welfare.
-
- Sometimes the qualification free or secular is applied abusively
- and maliciously to education, in order to distract or alienate
- public opinion. Orthodox people, for instance, call free schools
- certain schools which they establish in opposition to the really
- free tendency of modern pædagogy; and many are called secular
- schools which are really political, patriotic, and
- anti-humanitarian.
-
- Rational education is lifted above these illiberal forms. It has,
- in the first place, no regard to religious education, because
- science has shown that the story of creation is a myth and the gods
- legendary; and therefore religious education takes advantage of the
- credulity of the parents and the ignorance of the children,
- maintaining the belief in a supernatural being to whom people may
- address all kinds of prayers. This ancient belief, still
- unfortunately widespread, has done a great deal of harm, and will
- continue to do so as long as it persists. The mission of education
- is to show the child, by purely scientific methods, that the more
- knowledge we have of natural products, their qualities, and the way
- to use them, the more industrial, scientific, and artistic
- commodities we shall have for the support and comfort of life, and
- men and women will issue in larger numbers from our schools with a
- determination to cultivate every branch of knowledge and action,
- under the guidance of reason and the inspiration of science and
- art, which will adorn life and reform society.
-
- We will not, therefore, lose our time praying to an imaginary God
- for things which our own exertions alone can procure.
-
- On the other hand, our teaching has nothing to do with politics. It
- is our work to form individuals in the full possession of all their
- faculties, while politics would subject their faculties to other
- men. While religion has, with its divine power, created a
- positively abusive power and retarded the development of humanity,
- political systems also retard it by encouraging men to depend for
- everything on the will of others, on what are supposed to be men of
- a superior character—on those, in a word, who, from tradition or
- choice, exercise the profession of politics. It must be the aim of
- the rational schools to show the children that there will be
- tyranny and slavery as long as one man depends upon another, to
- study the causes of the prevailing ignorance, to learn the origin
- of all the traditional practices which give life to the existing
- social system, and to direct the attention of the pupils to these
- matters.
-
- We will not, therefore, lose our time seeking from others what we
- can get for ourselves.
-
- In a word, our business is to imprint on the minds of the children
- the idea that their condition in the social order will improve in
- proportion to their knowledge and to the strength they are able to
- develop; and that the era of general happiness will be the more
- sure to dawn when they have discarded all religious and other
- superstitions, which have up to the present done so much harm. On
- that account there are no rewards or punishments in our schools; no
- alms, no medals or badges in imitation of the religious and
- patriotic schools, which might encourage the children to believe in
- talismans instead of in the individual and collective power of
- beings who are conscious of their ability and knowledge.
-
- Rational and scientific knowledge must persuade the men and women
- of the future that they have to expect nothing from any privileged
- being (fictitious or real); and that they may expect all that is
- reasonable from themselves and from a freely organised and accepted
- social order.
-
-
-I then appealed in the Bulletin and the local press to scientific
-writers who were eager for the progress of the race to supply us with
-text-books on these lines. They were, I said, “to deliver the minds of
-the pupils from all the errors of our ancestors, encourage them in the
-love of truth and beauty, and keep from them the authoritarian dogmas,
-venerable sophisms, and ridiculous conventionalities which at present
-disgrace our social life.” A special note was added in regard to the
-teaching of arithmetic:—
-
-
- The way in which arithmetic has hitherto been generally taught has
- made it a powerful instrument for impressing the pupils with the
- false ideals of the capitalist règime which at present presses so
- heavily on society. The Modern School, therefore, invites essays on
- the subject of the reform of the teaching of arithmetic, and
- requests those friends of rational and scientific instruction who
- are especially occupied with mathematics to draw up a series of
- easy and practical problems, in which there shall be no reference
- to wages, economy, and profit. These exercises must deal with
- agricultural and industrial production, the just distribution of
- the raw material and the manufactured articles, the means of
- communication, the transport of merchandise, the comparison of
- human labour with mechanical, the benefits of machinery, public
- works, etc. In a word, the Modern School wants a number of problems
- showing what arithmetic really ought to be—the science of the
- social economy (taking the word “economy” in its etymological sense
- of “good distribution”).
-
- The exercises will deal with the four fundamental operations
- (integrals, decimals, and fractions), the metrical system,
- proportion, compounds and alloys, the squares and cubes of numbers,
- and the extraction of square and cube roots. As those who respond
- to this appeal are, it is hoped, inspired rather with the ideal of
- a right education of children than with the desire of profit, and
- as we wish to avoid the common practice in such circumstances, we
- shall not appoint judges or offer any prizes. The Modern School
- will publish the Arithmetic which best serves its purpose, and will
- come to an amicable agreement with the author as to his fee.
-
-
-A later note in the Bulletin was addressed to teachers:—
-
-
- We would call the attention of all who dedicate themselves to the
- noble ideal of the rational teaching of children and the
- preparation of the young to take a fitting share in life to the
- announcements of a Compendium of Universal History by Clémence
- Jacquinet, and The Adventures of Nono by Jean Grave, which will be
- found on the cover. [7] The works which the Modern School has
- published or proposes to publish are intended for all free and
- rational teaching institutions, centres of social study, and
- parents, who resent the intellectual restrictions which dogma of
- all kinds—religious, political, and social—imposes in order to
- maintain privilege at the expense of the ignorant. All who are
- opposed to Jesuitism and to conventional lies, and to the errors
- transmitted by tradition and routine, will find in our publications
- truth based upon evidence. As we have no desire of profit, the
- price of the works represents almost their intrinsic value or
- material cost; if there is any profit from the sale of them, it
- will be spent upon subsequent publications.
-
-
-In a later number of the Bulletin (No. 6, second year) the
-distinguished geographer Elisée Reclus wrote, at my request, a lengthy
-article on the teaching of geography. In a letter which Reclus
-afterwards wrote me from the Geographical Institute at Brussels,
-replying to my request that he should recommend a text-book, he said
-that there was “no text-book for the teaching of geography in
-elementary schools”; he “did not know one that was not tainted with
-religious or patriotic poison, or, what is worse, administrative
-routine.” He recommended that the teachers should use no manual in the
-Modern School, which he cordially commended (February 26, 1903).
-
-In the following number (7) of the Bulletin I published the following
-note on the origin of Christianity:—
-
-
- The older pædagogy, the real, if unavowed, aim of which was to
- impress children with the uselessness of knowledge, in order that
- they might be reconciled to their hard conditions and seek
- consolation in a supposed future life, used reading-books in the
- elementary school which swarmed with stories, anecdotes, accounts
- of travels, gems of classical literature, etc. There was a good
- deal of error mixed with what was sound and useful in this, and the
- aim was not just. The mystical idea predominated, representing that
- a relation could be established between a Supreme Being and men by
- means of priests, and this priesthood was the chief foundation of
- the existence of both the privileged and the disinherited, and the
- cause of much of the evil that they endured.
-
- Among other books of this class, all tainted with the same evil, we
- remember one which inserted an academic discourse, a marvel of
- Spanish eloquence, in praise of the Bible. The gist of it is
- expressed in the barbarous declaration of Omar when he condemned
- the Library of Alexandria to the flames: “The whole truth is
- contained in the sacred book. If those other books are true, they
- are superfluous; if they are not true, they should be burned.”
-
- The Modern School, which seeks to form free minds, with a sense of
- responsibility, fitted to experience a complete development of
- their powers, which is the one aim of life, must necessarily adopt
- a very different kind of reading-book, in harmony with its method
- of teaching. For this reason, as it teaches established truth and
- is interested in the struggle between light and darkness, it has
- deemed it necessary to produce a critical work which will enlighten
- the mind of the child with positive facts. These may not be
- appreciated in childhood, but will later, in manhood, when the
- child takes its place in social life and in the struggle against
- the errors, conventions, hypocrisies, and infamies which conceal
- themselves under the cloak of mysticism. This work reminds us that
- our books are not merely intended for children; they are destined
- also for the use of the Adult Schools which are being founded on
- every side by associations of workers, Freethinkers, Co-operators,
- social students, and other progressive bodies who are eager to
- correct the illiteracy of our nation, and remove that great
- obstacle to progress.
-
- We believe that the section of Malvert’s work (Science and
- Religion) which we have entitled “The Origin of Christianity” will
- be useful for this purpose. It shows the myths, dogmas, and
- ceremonies of the Christian religion in their original form;
- sometimes as exoteric symbols concealing a truth known to the
- initiated, sometimes as adaptations of earlier beliefs, imposed by
- sheer routine and preserved by malice. As we are convinced and have
- ample evidence of the usefulness of our work, we offer it to the
- public with the hope that it will bear the fruit which we
- anticipate. We have only to add that certain passages which are
- unsuitable for children have been omitted; the omissions are
- indicated, and adults may consult the passages in the complete
- edition.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII.
-
-SUNDAY LECTURES
-
-
-The Modern School did not confine itself to the instruction of
-children. Without for a moment sacrificing its predominant character
-and its chief object, it also undertook the instruction of the people.
-We arranged a series of public lectures on Sundays, and they were
-attended by the pupils and other members of their families, and a large
-number of workers who were anxious to learn.
-
-The earlier lectures were wanting in method and continuity, as we had
-to employ lecturers who were quite competent in regard to their own
-subjects, but gave each lecture without regard to what preceded or
-followed. On other occasions, when we had no lecturer, we substituted
-useful readings. The general public attended assiduously, and our
-advertisements in the Liberal press of the district were eagerly
-scanned.
-
-In view of these results, and in order to encourage the disposition of
-the general public, I held a consultation with Dr. Andrés Martínez
-Vargas and Dr. Odón de Buen, Professors at the Barcelona University, on
-the subject of creating a popular university in the Modern School. In
-this the science which is given—or, rather, sold—by the State to a
-privileged few in the universities should be given gratuitously to the
-general public, by way of restitution, as every human being has a right
-to know, and science, which is produced by observers and workers of all
-ages and countries, ought not to be restricted to a class.
-
-From that time the lectures became continuous and regular, having
-regard to the different branches of knowledge of the two lecturers. Dr.
-Martínez Vargas expounded physiology and hygiene, and Dr. Odón de Buen
-geography and natural science, on alternate Sundays, until we began to
-be persecuted. Their teaching was eagerly welcomed by the pupils of the
-Modern School, and the large audiences of mixed children and adults.
-One of the Liberal journals of Barcelona, in giving an account of the
-work, spoke of the function as “the scientific Mass.”
-
-The eternal light-haters, who maintain their privileges on the
-ignorance of the people, were greatly exasperated to see this centre of
-enlightenment shining so vigorously, and did not delay long to urge the
-authorities, who were at their disposal, to extinguish it brutally. For
-my part, I resolved to put the work on the firmest foundation I could
-conceive.
-
-I recall with the greatest pleasure that hour we devoted once a week to
-the confraternity of culture. I inaugurated the lectures on December
-15, 1901, when Don Ernesto Vendrell spoke of Hypatia as a martyr to the
-ideals of science and beauty, the victim of the fanatical Bishop Cyril
-of Alexandria. Other lectures were given on subsequent Sundays, as I
-said, until, on October 5, 1902, the lectures were organised in regular
-courses of science. On that day Dr. Andrés Martínez Vargas, Professor
-of the Faculty of Medicine (child diseases) at Barcelona University,
-gave his first lecture. He dealt with the hygiene of the school, and
-expounded its principles in plain terms adapted to the minds of his
-hearers. Dr. Odón de Buen, Professor of the Faculty of Science, dealt
-with the usefulness of the study of natural history.
-
-The press was generally in sympathy with the Modern School, but when
-the programme of the third scholastic year appeared some of the local
-journals, the Noticiero Universal and the Diario de Barcelona, broke
-out. Here is a passage that deserves recording as an illustration of
-the way in which conservative journals dealt with progressive
-subjects:—
-
-
- We have seen the prospectus of an educational centre established in
- this city, which professes to have nothing to do with “dogmas and
- systems.” It proposes to liberate everybody from “authoritarian
- dogmas, venerable sophisms, and ridiculous conventions.” It seems
- to us that this means that the first thing to do is to tell the
- boys and girls—it is a mixed school—that there is no God, an
- admirable way of forming good children, especially young women who
- are destined to be wives and mothers.
-
-
-The writer continues in this ironical manner for some time, and ends as
-follows:—
-
-
- This school has the support of a professor of Natural Science (Dr.
- Odón de Buen) and another of the Faculty of Medicine. We do not
- name the latter, as there may be some mistake in including him
- among the men who lend their support to such a work.
-
-
-These insidious clerical attacks were answered by the anti-clerical
-journals of Barcelona at the time.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII.
-
-THE RESULTS
-
-
-At the beginning of the second scholastic year I once more drew up a
-programme. Let us, I said, confirm our earlier programme; vindicated by
-results, approved in theory and practice, the principle which from the
-first informed our work and governs the Modern School is now
-unshakable.
-
-Science is the sole mistress of our life. Inspired with this thought,
-the Modern School proposes to give the children entrusted to it a
-mental vitality of their own, so that when they leave our control they
-will continue to be the mortal enemies of all kinds of prejudices and
-will form their own ideas, individually and seriously, on all subjects.
-
-Further, as education does not consist merely in the training of the
-mind, but must include the emotions and the will, we shall take the
-utmost care in the training of the child that its intellectual
-impressions are converted into the sap of sentiment. When this attains
-a certain degree of intensity, it spreads through the whole being,
-colouring and refining the individual character. And as the conduct of
-the youth revolves entirely in the sphere of character, he must learn
-to adopt science as the sole mistress of his life.
-
-To complete our principle we must state that we are enthusiastically in
-favour of mixed education, so that, having the same education, the
-woman may become the real companion of man, and work with him for the
-regeneration of society. This task has hitherto been confined to man;
-it is time that the moral influence of woman was enlisted in it.
-Science will illumine and guide her rich vein of sentiment, and utilise
-her character for the welfare of the race. Knowing that the chief need
-in this country is a knowledge of natural science and hygiene, the
-Modern School intends to help to supply it. In this it has the support
-of Dr. de Buen and Dr. Vargas, who lecture, alternately, on their
-respective subjects.
-
-On June 30, 1903, I published in the Bulletin the following
-declaration:—
-
-
- We have now passed two years in expounding our principles,
- justifying them by our practice, and enjoying the esteem of all who
- have co-operated in our work. We do not see in this any other
- triumph than that we are able to confirm confidently all that we
- have proclaimed. We have overcome the obstacles which were put in
- our way by interest and prejudice, and we intend to persevere in
- it, counting always on that progressive comradeship which dispels
- the darkness of ignorance with its strong light. We resume work
- next September, after the autumn vacation. We are delighted to be
- able to repeat what we said last year. The Modern School and its
- Bulletin renew their life, for they have filled, with some measure
- of satisfaction, a deeply-felt need. Without making promises or
- programmes, we will persevere to the limit of our powers.
-
-
-In the same number of the Bulletin was published the following list of
-the pupils who had attended the school during the first two years:—
-
-
- ------------+------------------+----------------+-----------------
- | GIRLS. | BOYS. | TOTAL.
- MONTHS. | | |
- | 1901-2. 1902-3. | 1901-2. 1902-3.| 1st Yr. 2nd Yr.
- ------------+------------------+----------------+-----------------
- Opening day | 12 — | 18 — | 30 —
- September | 16 23 | 23 40 | 39 63
- October | 18 28 | 25 40 | 43 68
- November | 21 31 | 29 40 | 50 71
- December | 22 31 | 30 40 | 52 71
- January | 22 31 | 32 44 | 54 75
- February | 23 31 | 32 48 | 55 79
- March | 25 33 | 34 47 | 59 80
- April | 26 32 | 37 48 | 63 80
- May | 30 33 | 38 48 | 68 81
- June | 32 34 | 38 48 | 70 82
- ------------+------------------+----------------+-----------------
-
-
-At the beginning of the third year I published with special pleasure
-the following article in the Bulletin on the progress of the School:—
-
-
- On the eighth of the present month we opened the new scholastic
- year. A large number of pupils, their relatives, and members of the
- general public who were in sympathy with our work and lectures,
- filled the recently enlarged rooms, and, before the commencement of
- the function, inspected the collections which give the school the
- appearance of a museum of science. The function began with a short
- address from the director, who formally declared the opening of the
- third year of school life, and said that, as they now had more
- experience and were encouraged by success, they would carry out
- energetically the ideal of the Modern School.
-
- Dr. de Buen congratulated us on the enlargement of the School, and
- supported its aims. Education should, he said, reflect nature, as
- knowledge can only consist in our perception of what actually
- exists. On the part of his children, who study at the School and
- live in the neighbourhood, he paid a tribute to the
- good-comradeship among the pupils, with whom they played and
- studied in a perfectly natural way. He said that even in orthodox
- education, or rather on the part of the professors engaged in it,
- there were, for all its archaic features, certain tendencies
- similar to those embodied in the Modern School. This might be
- gathered from his own presence, and that of Dr. Vargas and other
- professors. He announced that there was already a similar school at
- Guadalajara, or that one would shortly be opened there, built by
- means of a legacy left for the purpose by a humanitarian. He wished
- to contribute to the redemption of children and their liberation
- from ignorance and superstition; and he expressed a hope and very
- strong wish that wealthy people would, at their death, restore
- their goods in this way to the social body, instead of leaving them
- to secure an imaginary happiness beyond the grave.
-
- Dr. Martínez Vargas maintained, against all who thought otherwise,
- that the purely scientific and rational education given in the
- Modern School is the proper basis of instruction; no better can be
- conceived for maintaining the relations of the children with their
- families and society, and it is the only way to form, morally and
- intellectually, the men of the future. He was glad to hear that the
- scholastic hygiene which had been practised in the Modern School
- during the previous two years, involving a periodical examination
- of the children, and expounded in the public lectures, had received
- the solemn sanction of the Hygienic Congress lately held at
- Brussels.
-
- Going on to resume his lectures, and as a means of enforcing oral
- instruction by visual perception, he exhibited a series of
- lantern-slides illustrating various hygienic exercises, certain
- types of disease, unhealthy organs, etc., which the speaker
- explained in detail. An accident to the lantern interrupted the
- pictures; but the professor continued his explanations, speaking of
- the mischievous effects of corsets, the danger of microbic
- infection by trailing dresses or by children playing with soil,
- insanitary houses and workshops, etc., and promised to continue his
- medical explanations during the coming year.
-
- The audience expressed its pleasure at the close of the meeting,
- and the sight of the great joy of the pupils was some consolation
- amid the hardships of the present, and a good augury for the
- future.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV.
-
-A DEFENSIVE CHAPTER
-
-
-Our programme for the third scholastic year (1903–4) was as follows:—
-
-
- To promote the progressive evolution of childhood by avoiding all
- anachronistic practices, which are merely obstacles placed by the
- past to any real advance towards the future, is, in sum, the
- predominant aim of the Modern School. Neither dogmas nor systems,
- moulds which confine vitality to the narrow exigencies of a
- transitory form of society, will be taught. Only solutions approved
- by the facts, theories accepted by reason, and truths confirmed by
- evidence, shall be included in our lessons, so that each mind shall
- be trained to control a will, and truths shall irradiate the
- intelligence, and, when applied in practice, benefit the whole of
- humanity without any unworthy and disgraceful exclusiveness.
-
- Two years of success are a sufficient guarantee to us. They prove,
- in the first place, the excellence of mixed education, the
- brilliant result—the triumph, we would almost say—of an elementary
- common sense over prejudice and tradition. As we think it
- advisable, especially that the child may know what is happening
- about it, that physical and natural science and hygiene should be
- taught, the Modern School will continue to have the services of Dr.
- de Buen and Dr. Vargas. They will lecture on alternate Sundays,
- from eleven to twelve, on their respective subjects in the
- school-room. These lectures will complete and further explain the
- classes in science held during the week.
-
- It remains only to say that, always solicitous for the success of
- our work of reform, we have enriched our scholastic material by the
- acquisition of new collections which will at once assist the
- understanding and give an attractiveness to scientific knowledge;
- and that, as our rooms are now not large enough for the pupils, we
- have acquired other premises in order to have more room and give a
- favourable reply to the petitions for admission which we have
- received.
-
-
-The publication of this programme attracted the attention of the
-reactionary press, as I said. In order to give them a proof of the
-logical strength of the position of the Modern School, I inserted the
-following article in the Bulletin:—
-
-
- Modern pædagogy, relieved of traditions and conventions, must raise
- itself to the height of the rational conception of man, the actual
- state of knowledge, and the consequent ideal of mankind. If from
- any cause whatever a different tendency is given to education, and
- the master does not do his duty, it would be just to describe him
- as an impostor; education must not be a means of dominating men for
- the advantage of their rulers. Unhappily, this is exactly what
- happens. Society is organised, not in response to a general need
- and for the realisation of an ideal, but as an institution with a
- strong determination to maintain its primitive forms, defending
- them vigorously against every reform, however reasonable it may be.
-
- This element of immobility gives the ancient errors the character
- of sacred beliefs, invests them with great prestige and a dogmatic
- authority, and arouses conflicts and disturbances which deprive
- scientific truths of their due efficacy or keep them in suspense.
- Instead of being enabled to illumine the minds of all and realise
- themselves in institutions and customs of general utility, they are
- unhappily restricted to the sphere of a privileged few. The effect
- is that, as in the days of the Egyptian theocracy, there is an
- esoteric doctrine for the cultivated and an exoteric doctrine for
- the lower classes—the classes destined to labour, defence, and
- misery.
-
- On this account we set aside the mystic and mythical doctrine, the
- domination and spread of which only befits the earlier ages of
- human history, and embrace scientific teaching, according to its
- evidence. This is at present restricted to the narrow sphere of the
- intellectuals, or is at the most accepted in secret by certain
- hypocrites who, so that their position may not be endangered, make
- a public profession of the contrary. Nothing could make this absurd
- antagonism clearer than the following parallel, in which we see the
- contrast between the imaginative dreams of the ignorant believer
- and the rational simplicity of the scientist:—
-
-
-THE BIBLE. ANTHROPISM.
-
-The Bible contains the annals of One of the main supports of the
-the heavens, the earth, and the reactionary system is what we may
-human race; like the Deity call “anthropism.” I designate by
-himself, it contains all that was, this term that powerful and
-is, and will be. On its first page world-wide group of erroneous
-we read of the beginning of time opinions which opposes the human
-and of things, and on its last organism to the whole of the rest
-page the end of time and of of nature, and represents it as
-things. It begins with Genesis, the preordained end of organic
-which is an idyll, and ends with creation, an entity essentially
-Revelation, which is a funeral distinct from it, a god-like
-chant. Genesis is as beautiful as being. Closer examination of this
-the fresh breeze which sweeps over group of ideas shows it to be made
-the world; as the first dawn of up of three different dogmas,
-light in the heavens; as the first which we may distinguish as the
-flower that opens in the meadows; anthropocentric, the
-as the first word of love spoken anthropomorphic, and the
-by men; as the first appearance of anthropolatrous.
-the sun in the east. Revelation is
-as sad as the last palpitation of 1. The anthropocentric dogma
-nature; as the last ray of the culminates in the idea that man is
-sun; as the last breath of a dying the preordained centre and aim of
-man. And between the funeral chant all terrestrial life—or, in a
-and the idyll there pass in wider sense, of the whole
-succession before the eyes of God universe. As this error is
-all generations and all peoples. extremely conducive to man’s
-The tribes and the patriarchs go interest, and as it is intimately
-by; the republics and the connected with the creation-myth
-magistrates; the monarchies and of the three great Mediterranean
-their kings; the empires and their religions, and with the dogmas of
-emperors. Babylon and all its the Mosaic, Christian, and
-abominations go by; Nineveh and Mohammedan theologies, it still
-all its pomps; Memphis and its dominates the greater part of the
-priests; Jerusalem and its civilised world.
-prophets and temple; Athens and
-its arts and heroes; Rome and its 2. The anthropomorphic dogma,
-diadem of conqueror of the world. also, is connected with the
-Nothing lasts but God; all else creation-myth of the three
-passes and dies, like the froth aforesaid religions and of many
-that tips the wave. others. It likens the creation and
- control of the world by God to the
- artificial creation of an able
- engineer or mechanic, and to the
-A prodigious book, which mankind administration of a wise ruler.
-began to read three and thirty God, as creator, sustainer, and
-centuries ago, and of which, if it ruler of the world, is thus
-read all day and night, it would represented after a purely human
-not exhaust the wealth. A fashion in his thought and work.
-prodigious book in which all was Hence it follows that man in turn
-calculated before the science of is god-like. “God made man to his
-arithmetic was invented; in which own image and likeness.” The
-the origin of language is told older, naive theology is pure
-without any knowledge of “homotheism,” attributing human
-philology; in which the shape, flesh, and blood to the
-revolutions of the stars are gods. It is more intelligible than
-described without any knowledge of the modern mystic theosophy which
-astronomy; in which history is adores a personal God as an
-recorded without any documents of invisible—properly speaking,
-history; in which the laws of gaseous—being, yet makes him
-nature are unveiled without any think, speak, and act in human
-knowledge of physics. A prodigious fashion; it offers us the
-book, that sees everything and paradoxical picture of a gaseous
-knows everything; that knows the vertebrate.
-thoughts hidden in the hearts of
-men and those in the mind of God; 3. The anthropolatric dogma
-that sees what is happening in the naturally results from this
-abysses of the sea and in the comparison of the activity of God
-bowels of the earth; that records and man; it ends in the apotheosis
-or foretells all the catastrophes of human nature. A further result
-of nations, and in which are is the belief in the personal
-accumulated all the treasures of immortality of the soul, and the
-mercy, of justice, and of dualistic dogma of the twofold
-vengeance. A book, in fine, which, nature of man, whose “immortal”
-when the heavens are folded like a soul is conceived as the temporary
-gigantic fan, and the earth sinks, inhabitant of a mortal frame. Thus
-and the sun withdraws its light, these three anthropistic dogmas,
-and the stars are extinguished, variously adapted to the
-will remain with God, because it respective professions of the
-is his eternal word, echoing for different religions, came at
-ever in the heights. [8] length to be vested with
- extraordinary importance, and
- proved to be the source of the
- most dangerous errors. [9]
-
-
- In face of this antagonism, maintained by ignorance and
- self-interest, positive education, which proposes to teach truths
- that issue in practical justice, must arrange and systematise the
- established results of natural research, communicate them to
- children, and thus prepare the way for a more equitable state of
- society, in which, as an exact expression of sociology, it must
- work for the benefit of all as well as of the individual. Moses, or
- whoever was the author of Genesis, and all the dogmatisers, with
- their six days of creation out of nothing after the Creator has
- passed an eternity in doing nothing, must give place to Copernicus,
- who showed the revolution of the planets round the sun; to Galileo,
- who proclaimed that the sun, not the earth, is the centre of the
- planetary universe; to Columbus and others who, believing the earth
- to be a sphere, set out in search of other peoples, and gave a
- practical basis to the doctrine of human brotherhood; to Linnæus
- and Cuvier, the founders of natural history; to Laplace, the
- inventor of the established cosmogony; to Darwin, the author of the
- evolutionary doctrine, which explains the formation of species by
- natural selection; and to all who, by means of observation and
- experiment, have discredited the supposed revelation, and tell us
- the real nature of the universe, the earth, and life.
-
- Against the evils engendered by generations sunk in ignorance and
- superstition, from which so many are now delivered, only to fall
- into an anti-social scepticism, the best remedy, without excluding
- others, is to instruct the rising generation in purely humanist
- principles and in the positive and rational knowledge provided by
- science. Women educated thus will be mothers in the true sense of
- the word, not transmitters of traditional superstitions; they will
- teach their children integrity of life, the dignity of life, social
- solidarity, instead of a medley of outworn and sterile dogmas and
- submission to illegitimate hierarchies. Men thus emancipated from
- mystery, miracle, and distrust of themselves and their fellows, and
- convinced that they were born, not to die, as the wretched teaching
- of the mystics says, but to live, will hasten to bring about such
- social conditions as will give to life its greatest possible
- development. In this way, preserving the memory of former
- generations and other frames of mind as a lesson and a warning, we
- will once for all close the religious period, and enter definitely
- into that of reason and nature.
-
-
-In June, 1904, the Bulletin published the following figures in regard
-to the attendance at school. At that time the publications of the
-Modern School were in use in thirty-two other schools throughout the
-country, and its influence was thus felt in Seville and Malaga,
-Tarragona and Cordova, and other towns, as well as Barcelona and the
-vicinity. The number of scholars in our schools was also steadily
-rising, as the following table shows:—
-
-
-
-LIST OF THE PUPILS IN THE MODERN SCHOOL DURING THE FIRST THREE YEARS.
-
-------------+---------------------------+-------------------------+-------------------
- | GIRLS. | BOYS. | TOTAL.
- MONTHS. | | |
- | 1901-2. 1902-3. 1903-4. | 1901-2. 1902-3. 1903-4.| 1st 2nd 3rd
- | | | year. year. year.
-------------+---------------------------+-------------------------+-------------------
-Opening day | 12 – – | 18 – – | 30 – –
-September | 16 23 24 | 23 40 40 | 39 63 64
-October | 18 28 43 | 25 40 59 | 43 68 102
-November | 21 31 44 | 29 40 59 | 50 71 103
-December | 22 31 45 | 30 40 59 | 52 71 104
-January | 22 31 47 | 32 44 60 | 54 75 107
-February | 23 31 47 | 32 48 61 | 55 79 108
-March | 25 33 49 | 34 47 61 | 59 80 110
-April | 26 32 50 | 37 48 61 | 63 80 111
-May | 30 33 51 | 38 48 62 | 68 81 113
-June | 32 34 51 | 38 48 63 | 70 82 114
-------------+---------------------------+-------------------------+-------------------
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV.
-
-THE INGENUOUSNESS OF THE CHILD
-
-
-In the Bulletin of September 30, 1903, we published the work of the
-pupils in the various classes of the Modern School, which had been read
-on the closing day of the second scholastic year. In these writings, in
-which the children are requested to apply their dawning judgment to
-some particular subject, the influence of mind over the inexpert,
-ingenuous reasoning power, inspired by the sentiment of justice, is
-more apparent than the observance of rules. The judgments are not
-perfect from the logical point of view, only because the child has not
-the knowledge necessary for the formation of a perfectly sound opinion.
-This is the opposite of what we usually find, as opinions are generally
-founded only on prejudice arising from traditions, interests, and
-dogmas.
-
-A boy of twelve, for instance, gave the following principle for judging
-the value of nations:—
-
-
- To be called civilised, a nation or State must be free from the
- following—
-
-
-Let me interrupt for a moment to point out that the young author
-identifies “civilised” with “just,” and especially that, putting aside
-prejudice, he describes certain evils as curable, and regards the
-healing of them as an essential condition of justice. These evils are:—
-
-
- 1º. The co-existence of poor and rich, and the resultant
- exploitation.
- 2º. Militarism, a means of destruction employed by one nation
- against another, due to the bad organisation of society.
- 3º. Inequality, which allows some to rule and command, and obliges
- others to humble themselves and obey.
-
-
-This principle is fundamental and simple, as we should expect to find
-in an imperfectly informed mind, and it would not enable one to solve a
-complete sociological problem; but it has the advantage of keeping the
-mind open to fresh knowledge. It is as if one asked: What does a sick
-man need to recover health? And the reply is: His suffering must
-disappear. This is a naive and natural reply, and would certainly not
-be given by a child brought up in the ordinary way; such a child would
-be taught first to consider the will of supposed supernatural beings.
-It is clear that this simple way of putting the problem of life does
-not shut out the hope of a reasonable solution; indeed, the one
-logically demands the other, as the same child’s essay shows:—
-
-
- I do not mean that, if there were no rich, or soldiers, or rulers,
- or wages, people would abuse their liberty and welfare, but that,
- with everybody enjoying a high degree of civilisation, there would
- be universal cordiality and friendship, and science would make much
- greater progress, not being interrupted by wars and political
- stagnation.
-
-
-A girl of nine made the following sensible observation, which we leave
-in her own incorrect language:—
-
-
- A criminal is condemned to death; if the murderer deserves this
- punishment, the man who condemns him and the man who kills him are
- also murderers; logically, they ought to die as well, and so
- humanity would come to an end. It would be better, instead of
- punishing a criminal by committing another crime, to give him good
- advice, so that he will not do it again. Besides, if we are all
- equal, there would be no thieves, or assassins, or rich people, or
- poor, but all would be equal and love work and liberty.
-
-
-The simplicity, clearness, and soundness of this observation need no
-commentary. One can understand our astonishment to hear it from the
-lips of a tender and very pretty little girl, who looked more like a
-symbolical representation of truth and justice than a living reality.
-
-A boy of twelve deals with sincerity, and says:—
-
-
- The man who is not sincere does not live peacefully; he is always
- afraid of being discovered: when one is sincere, if one has done
- wrong, the sincere declaration relieves the conscience. If a man
- begins to tell lies in childhood, he will tell bigger lies when he
- grows up, and may do much harm. There are cases in which one need
- not be sincere. For instance, if a man comes to our house, flying
- from the police, and we are asked afterwards if we have seen him,
- we must deny it; the contrary would be treachery and cowardice.
-
-
-It is sad that the mind of a child who regards truth as an incomparable
-good, “without which it is impossible to live,” is induced by certain
-grave abuses to consider lying a virtue in some cases.
-
-A girl of thirteen writes of fanaticism, and, regarding it as a
-characteristic of backward countries, she goes on to seek the cause:—
-
-
- Fanaticism is the outcome of the state of ignorance and
- backwardness of women; on that account Catholics do not want to see
- women educated, as they are the chief support of their system.
-
-
-A profound observation on the causes of fanaticism, and the cause of
-the causes. Another girl of thirteen indicates the best remedy of the
-evil in the following lines:—
-
-
- The mixed school, for both sexes, is supremely necessary. The boy
- who studies, works, and plays in the society of girls learns
- gradually to respect and help her, and the girl reciprocally;
- whereas, if they are educated separately, and the boy is told that
- the girl is not a good companion and she is worse than he, the boy
- will not respect women when he is a man, and will regard her as a
- subject or a slave, and that is the position in which we find
- women. So we must all work for the foundation of mixed schools,
- wherever it is possible, and where it is not possible we must try
- to remove the difficulties.
-
-
-A boy of twelve regards the school as worthy of all respect, because we
-learn in it to read, write, and think, and it is the basis of morality
-and science; he adds:—
-
-
- If it were not for the school we should live like savages, walk
- naked, eat herbs and raw flesh, and dwell in caves and trees; that
- is to say, we should live a brutal life. In time, as a result of
- the school, everybody will be more intelligent, and there will be
- no wars or inflamed populations, and people will look back on war
- with horror as a work of death and destruction. It is a great
- disgrace that there are children who wander in the streets and do
- not go to school, and when they become men it is more disgraceful.
- So let us be grateful to our teachers for the patience they show in
- instructing us, and let us regard the school with respect.
-
-
-If that child preserves and develops the faculties it exhibits, it will
-know how to harmonise egoism and altruism for its own good and that of
-society. A girl of eleven deplores that nations destroy each other in
-war, and laments the difference of social classes and that the rich
-live on the work and privation of the poor. She ends:—
-
-
- Why do not men, instead of killing each other in wars and hating
- each other for class-differences, devote themselves cheerfully to
- work and the discovery of things for the good of mankind? Men ought
- to unite to love each other and live fraternally. [10]
-
-
-A child of ten, in an essay which is so good that I would insert it
-whole if space permitted, and if it were not for the identity in
-sentiment with the previous passages, says of the school and the
-pupil:—
-
-
- Reunited under one roof, eager to learn what we do not know,
- without distinction of classes [there were children of university
- professors among them, it will be remembered], we are children of
- one family guided to the same end.... The ignorant man is a
- nullity; little or nothing can be expected of him. He is a warning
- to us not to waste time; on the contrary, let us profit by it, and
- in due course we will be rewarded. Let us not miss the fruits of a
- good school, and, honouring our teachers, our family, and society,
- we shall live happily.
-
-
-A child of ten philosophises on the faults of mankind, which, in her
-opinion, can be avoided by instruction and goodwill:—
-
-
- Among the faults of mankind are lying, hypocrisy, and egoism. If
- men, and especially women, were better instructed, and women were
- entirely equal to men, these faults would disappear. Parents would
- not send their children to religious schools, which inculcate false
- ideas, but to rational schools, where there is no teaching of the
- supernatural, which does not exist; nor to make war; but to live in
- solidarity and work in common.
-
-
-We will close with the following essay, written by a young lady of
-sixteen, which is correct enough in form and substance to quote in
-entirety:—
-
-
- What inequality there is in the present social order! Some working
- from morning to night without more profit than enough to buy their
- insufficient food; others receiving the products of the workers in
- order to enjoy themselves with the superfluous. Why is this so? Are
- we not all equal? Undoubtedly we are; but society does not
- recognise it, while some are destined to work and suffering, and
- others to idleness and enjoyment. If a worker shows that he
- realises the exploitation to which he is subject, he is blamed and
- cruelly punished, while others suffer the inequality with patience.
- The worker must educate himself; and in order to do this it is
- necessary to found free schools, maintained by the wages which the
- rich give. In this way the worker will advance more and more, until
- he is regarded as he deserves, since the most useful mission of
- society depends on him.
-
-
-Whatever be the logical value of these ideas, this collection shows the
-chief aim of the Modern School—namely, that the mind of the child,
-influenced by what it sees and informed by the positive knowledge it
-acquires, shall work freely, without prejudice or submission to any
-kind of sect, with perfect autonomy and no other guide but reason,
-equal in all, and sanctioned by the cogency of evidence, before which
-the darkness of sophistry and dogmatic imposition is dispelled.
-
-In December, 1903, the Congress of Railway Workers, which was then held
-at Barcelona, informed us that, as a part of its programme, the
-delegates would visit the Modern School. The pupils were delighted, and
-we invited them to write essays to be read on the occasion of the
-visit. The visit was prevented by unforeseen circumstances; but we
-published in the Bulletin the children’s essays, which exhaled a
-delicate perfume of sincerity and unbiassed judgment, graced by the
-naive ingenuousness of the writers. No suggestion was made to them, and
-they did not compare notes, yet there was a remarkable agreement in
-their sentiments. At another time the pupils of the Workers’ School at
-Badalona sent a greeting to our pupils, and they again wrote essays,
-from which we compiled a return letter of greeting. [11]
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI.
-
-THE BULLETIN
-
-
-The Modern School needed and found its organ in the Press. The
-political and ordinary press, which at one time favoured us and at
-another time denounced us as dangerous, cannot maintain an impartial
-attitude. It either gives exaggerated or unmerited praise, or
-calumnious censures. The only remedy for this was the sincerity and
-clearness of our own indications. To allow these libels to pass without
-correction would have done us considerable harm, and the Bulletin
-enabled us to meet them.
-
-The directors published in it the programme of the school, interesting
-notes about it, statistical details, original pædagogical articles by
-the teachers, accounts of the progress of rational education in our own
-and other countries, translations of important articles from foreign
-reviews and periodicals which were in harmony with the main character
-of our work, reports of the Sunday lectures, and announcements of the
-public competitions for the engagement of teachers and of our library.
-
-One of the most successful sections of the Bulletin was that devoted to
-the publication of the ideas of the pupils. Besides showing their
-individual ideas it revealed the spontaneous manifestation of common
-sense. Girls and boys, with no appreciable difference in intellect
-according to sex, in contact with the realities of life as indicated by
-the teachers, expressed themselves in simple essays which, though
-sometimes immature in judgment, more often showed the clear logic with
-which they conceived philosophical, political, or social questions of
-some importance. The journal was at first distributed without charge
-among the pupils, and was exchanged with other periodicals; but there
-was soon a demand for it, and a public subscription had to be opened.
-When this was done, the Bulletin became a philosophical review, as well
-as organ of the Modern School; and it retained this character until the
-persecution began and the school was closed. An instance of the
-important mission of the Bulletin will be found in the following
-article, which I wrote in No. 5 of the fourth year, in order to correct
-certain secular teachers who had gone astray:—
-
-
- A certain Workers’ School has introduced the novelty of
- establishing a savings-bank, administered by the pupils. This piece
- of information, reproduced in terms of great praise by the press as
- a thing to be imitated, induces us to express our opinion on the
- subject. While others have their own right to decide and act, we
- have the same right to criticise, and thus to create a rational
- public opinion.
-
- In the first place we would observe that the word economy is very
- different from, if not the opposite of, the idea of saving. One may
- teach children the knowledge and practice of economy without
- necessarily teaching them to save. Economy means a prudent and
- methodical use of one’s goods: saving means a restriction of one’s
- use of one’s goods. By economising, we avoid waste; by saving, the
- man who has nothing superfluous deprives himself of what is
- necessary.
-
- Have the children who are taught to save any superfluous property?
- The very name of the society in question assures us that they have
- not. The workers who send their children to this school live on
- their wages, the minimum sum, determined by the laws of supply and
- demand, which is paid for their work by the employers; and as this
- wage gives them nothing superfluous, and the social wealth is
- monopolised by the privileged classes, the workers are far from
- obtaining enough to live a life in harmony with the progress of
- civilisation. Hence, when these children of workers, and future
- workers themselves, are taught to save—which is a voluntary
- privation under the appearance of interest—they are taught to
- prepare themselves to submit to privilege. While the intention is
- to initiate them to the practice of economy, what is really done is
- to convert them into victims and accomplices of the present unjust
- order.
-
- The working-class child is a human child, and, as such, it has a
- right to the development of all its faculties, the satisfaction of
- all its needs, moral and physical. For that purpose society was
- instituted. It is not its function to repress or subject the
- individual, as is selfishly pretended by the privileged and
- reactionary class, and all who enjoy what others produce; it has to
- hold the balance justly between the rights and duties of all
- members of the commonwealth.
-
- As it is, the individual is asked to sacrifice his rights, needs,
- and pleasures to society; and, as this disorder demands patience,
- suffering, and sophistical reasoning, let us commend economy and
- blame saving. We do not think it right to teach children to look
- forward to being workers in a social order in which the average
- mortality of the poor, who live without freedom, instruction, or
- joy, reaches an appalling figure in comparison with that of the
- class which lives in triumph on their labour. Those who, from
- sociolatry, would derogate in the least from the rights of man,
- should read the fine and vigorous words of Pi y Margall: “Who art
- thou to prevent my use of my human rights? Perfidious and
- tyrannical society, thou wert created to defend, not to coerce us.
- Go back to the abyss whence thou came.”
-
- Starting from these principles, and applying them to pædagogy, we
- think it necessary to teach children that to waste any class of
- objects is contrary to the general welfare; that if a child spoils
- paper, loses pens, or destroys books, it does an injustice to its
- parents and the school. Assuredly one may impress on the child the
- need of prudence in order to avoid getting imperfect things, and
- remind it of lack of employment, illness, or age; but it is not
- right to insist that a provision be made out of a salary which does
- not suffice to meet the needs of life. That is bad arithmetic.
-
- The workers have no university training; they do not go to the
- theatre or to concerts; they never go into ecstasies before the
- marvels of art, industry, or nature; they have no holiday in which
- to fill their lungs with life-giving oxygen; they are never
- uplifted by reading books or reviews. On the contrary, they suffer
- all kinds of privations, and may have to endure crises due to
- excessive production. It is not the place of teachers to hide these
- sad truths from the children, and to tell them that a smaller
- quantity is equal to, if not better than, a larger. In order that
- the power of science and industry be shared by all, and all be
- invited to partake of the banquet of life, we must not teach in the
- school, in the interest of privilege, that the poor should organise
- the advantages of crumbs and leavings. We must not prostitute
- education.
-
-
-On another occasion I had to censure a different departure from our
-principles:—
-
-
- We were distressed and indignant on reading the list of
- contributions voted by the Council of Barcelona for certain popular
- societies which are interested in education. We read of sums
- offered to Republican Fraternities and similar societies; and we
- find that, instead of rejecting them, they forwarded votes of
- thanks to the Council.
-
- The meaning of these things in a Catholic and ultra-conservative
- nation is clear. The Church and the capitalist system only maintain
- their ascendency by a judicious system of charity and protection.
- With this they gratify the disinherited class, and continue to
- enjoy its respect. But we cannot see republicans acting as if they
- were humble Christians without raising a cry of alarm.
-
- Beware, we repeat, beware! You are educating your children badly,
- and taking the wrong path towards reform, in accepting alms. You
- will neither emancipate yourselves nor your children if you trust
- in the strength of others, and rely on official or private support.
- Let the Catholics, ignorant of the realities of life, expect
- everything of God, or St. Joseph, or some similar being, and, as
- they have no security that their prayers will be heard in this
- life, trust to receive a reward after death. Let gamblers in the
- lottery fail to see that they are morally and materially victimised
- by their rulers, and trust to receive by chance what they do not
- earn by energy. But it is sad to see men hold out the hand of a
- beggar who are united in a revolutionary protest against the
- present system; to see them admitting and giving thanks for
- humiliating gifts, instead of trusting their own energy, intellect,
- and ability.
-
- Beware, then, all men of good faith! That is not the way to set up
- a true education of children, but the way to enslave them.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII.
-
-THE CLOSING OF THE MODERN SCHOOL
-
-
-I have reached the culmination of my life and my work. My enemies, who
-are all the reactionaries in the world, represented by the
-reactionaries of Barcelona and of Spain, believed that they had
-triumphed by involving me in a charge of attempted assassination. But
-their triumph proved to be only an episode in the struggle of practical
-Rationalism against reaction. The shameful audacity with which they
-claimed sentence of death against me (a claim that was refused on
-account of my transparent innocence rather than on account of the
-justice of the court) drew on me the sympathy of all liberal men—all
-true progressives—in all parts of the world, and fixed attention on the
-meaning and ideal of the Rational School. There was a universal and
-uninterrupted movement of protest and admiration for a whole year—from
-May, 1906, to May and June, 1907—echoed in the Press of every civilised
-country, and in meetings and other popular manifestations.
-
-It proved in the end that the mortal enemies of our work were its most
-effective supporters, as they led to the establishment of international
-Rationalism.
-
-I felt my own littleness in face of this mighty manifestation. Led
-always by the light of the ideal, I conceived and carried out the
-International League for the Rational Education of Children, in the
-various branches of which, scattered over the world, are found men in
-the front ranks of culture [Anatole France, Ernst Haeckel, etc.]. It
-has three organs, L’École Renovée in France, the Bulletin in Barcelona,
-and La Scuola Laica at Rome, which expound, discuss, and spread all the
-latest efforts of pædagogy to purify science from all defilement of
-error, to dispel all credulity, to bring about a perfect harmony
-between belief and knowledge, and to destroy that privileged esoteric
-system which has always left an exoteric doctrine to the masses.
-
-This great concentration of knowledge and research must lead to a
-vigorous action which will give to the future revolution the character
-of practical manifestation of applied sociology, without passion or
-demand of revenge, with no terrible tragedies or heroic sacrifices, no
-sterile movements, no disillusion of zealots, no treacherous returns to
-reaction. For scientific and rational education will have pervaded the
-masses, making each man and woman a self-conscious, active, and
-responsible being, guiding his will according to his judgment, free for
-ever from the passions inspired by those who exploit respect for
-tradition and for the charlatanry of the modern framers of political
-programmes.
-
-If progress thus loses this dramatic character of revolution, it will
-gain in firmness, stability, and continuity, as evolution. The vision
-of a rational society, which revolutionaries foresaw in all ages, and
-which sociologists confidently promise, will rise before the eyes of
-our successors, not as the mirage of dreamy utopians, but as the
-positive and merited triumph won by the revolutionary power of reason
-and science.
-
-The new repute of the educational work of the Modern School attracted
-the attention of all who appreciated the value of sound instruction.
-There was a general demand for knowledge of the system. There were
-numbers of private secular schools, or similar institutions supported
-by societies, and their directors made inquiry concerning the
-difference of our methods from theirs. There were constant requests to
-visit the school and consult me. I gladly satisfied them, removed their
-doubts, and pressed them to enter on the new way; and at once efforts
-were made to reform the existing schools, and to create others on the
-model of the Modern School.
-
-There was great enthusiasm and the promise of mighty things; but one
-serious difficulty stood in the way: we were short of teachers, and had
-no means of creating them. Professional teachers had two
-disadvantages—traditional habits and dread of the contingencies of the
-future. There were very few who, in an unselfish love of the ideal,
-would devote themselves to the progressive cause. Instructed young men
-and women might be found to fill the gap; but how were we to train them
-? Where could they pass their apprenticeship? Now and again I heard
-from workers’ or political societies that they had decided to open a
-school; they would find rooms and appliances, and we could count upon
-their using our school manuals. But whenever I asked if they had
-teachers, they replied in the negative, and thought it would be easy to
-supply the want. I had to give in.
-
-Circumstances had made me the director of rationalist education, and I
-had constant consultations and demands on the part of aspirants for the
-position of teacher. This made me realise the defect, and I endeavoured
-to meet it by private advice and by admitting young assistants in the
-Modern School. The result was naturally mixed. There are now worthy
-teachers who will carry on the work of rational education elsewhere;
-others failed from moral or intellectual incapacity.
-
-Not feeling that the pupils of the Modern School who devoted themselves
-to teaching would find time for their work, I established a Normal
-School, of which I have already spoken. I was convinced that, if the
-key of the social problem is in the scientific and rational school, it
-is essential, to make a proper use of the key, that fitting teachers be
-trained for so great a destiny.
-
-As the practical and positive result of my work, I may say that the
-Modern School of Barcelona was a most successful experiment, and that
-it was distinguished for two characters:—
-
- 1º. While open to successive improvements, it set up a standard of
- what education should be in a reformed state of society.
-
- 2º. It gave an impulse to the spread of this kind of education.
-
-There was up to that time no education in the true sense of the word.
-There were, for the privileged few in the universities, traditional
-errors and prejudices, authoritarian dogmas, mixed up with the truths
-which modern research has brought to light. For the people there was
-primary instruction, which was, and is, a method of taming children.
-The school was a sort of riding-school, where natural energies were
-subdued in order that the poor might suffer their hard lot in silence.
-Real education, separated from faith—education that illumines the mind
-with the light of evidence—is the creation of the Modern School.
-
-During its ephemeral existence [12] it did a marvellous amount of good.
-The child admitted to the school and kept in contact with its
-companions rapidly changed its habits, as I have observed. It
-cultivated cleanliness, avoided quarrels, ceased to be cruel to
-animals, took no notice in its games of the barbarous spectacle which
-we call the national entertainment [bull-fight], and, as its mind was
-uplifted and its sentiments purified, it deplored the social injustices
-which abound on the very face of life. It detested war, and would not
-admit that national glory, instead of consisting in the highest
-possible moral development and happiness of a people, should be placed
-in conquest and violence.
-
-The influence of the Modern School, extended to other schools which had
-been founded on its model and were maintained by various working-men
-societies, penetrated the families by means of the children. Once they
-were touched by the influence of reason and science they were
-unconsciously converted into teachers of their own parents, and these
-in turn diffused the better standards among their friends and
-relatives.
-
-This spread of our influence drew on us the hatred of Jesuitism of all
-kinds and in all places, and this hatred inspired the design which
-ended in the closing of the Modern School. It is closed; but in reality
-it is concentrating its forces, defining and improving its plan, and
-gathering the strength for a fresh attempt to promote the true cause of
-progress.
-
-That is the story of what the Modern School was, is, and ought to be.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-EPILOGUE
-
-By J. M.
-
-
-“That is the story of what the Modern School was, is, and ought to be.”
-When Ferrer wrote this, in the summer of 1908, he was full of plans for
-the continuation of his work in various ways. He was fostering such
-free schools as the Government still permitted. He was promoting his
-“popular university,” and multiplying works of science and sociology
-for the million. His influence was growing, and he saw with glad eyes
-the light breaking on the ignorant masses of his fellows. In the summer
-of 1909 he came to England to study the system of moral instruction
-which, under the inspiration of the Moral Instruction League, is used
-in thousands of English schools. A friend in London begged him never to
-return to Spain, as his life was sought. He knew it, but nothing would
-divert him from his ideal. And three months later he was shot, among
-the graves of criminals, in the trenches of Montjuich.
-
-Form your own opinion of him from his words. He conceals nothing. He
-was a rebel against religious traditions and social inequalities; he
-wished children to become as resentful of poverty and superstition as
-he. There is no law of Spain, or of any other country, that forbids
-such enterprise as his. He might be shot in Russia, of course; for the
-law has been suspended there for more than a decade. In Spain men had
-to lie in order to take his life.
-
-With the particular value of his scheme of education I am not
-concerned. He was well acquainted with pædagogical literature, and
-there were few elementary schools in Spain to equal his. Writers who
-have spoken slightingly of his school, apart from its social dogmas,
-know little or nothing about it. Ferrer was in close and constant
-association with two of the ablest professors in the university of
-Barcelona, one of whom sent his children to the school, and with
-distinguished scholars in other lands. There was more stimulating work
-done in the Modern School than, probably, in any other elementary
-school in Spain, if not elsewhere. All that can be questioned is the
-teaching of an explicit social creed to the children. Ferrer would have
-rejoined that there was not a school in Europe that does not teach an
-explicit social creed. But, however we may differ from his creed, we
-cannot fail to recognise the elevated and unselfish idealism of the
-man, and deplore the brutality and illegality with which his genial
-life was prematurely brought to a close.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-NOTES
-
-
-[1] This was in the early eighties, when Ferrer, then in his early
-twenties, was secretary to the republican leader Ruiz Zorrilla. To this
-phase of his career, which he rapidly outgrew, belongs the
-revolutionary document which was malignantly and dishonestly used
-against him twenty-five years afterwards.—J. M.
-
-[2] Mlle. Meunier died, leaving about £30,000 unconditionally to
-Ferrer, before he returned to Spain in 1900.—J. M.
-
-[3] These societies are particularly numerous in Spain, where the
-government system of education is deplorable, and schools are often
-established in connection with them.—J. M.
-
-[4] It is especially commended in the life of Benedict J. Labré and
-others that they deliberately cultivated filthiness of person.—J. M.
-
-[5] These articles are reproduced in the Spanish edition. As they are
-not from Ferrer’s pen, I omit them.—J. M.
-
-[6] £20 a year is a not uncommon salary of masters and mistresses in
-Spain, and many cannot obtain even that.—J. M.
-
-[7] It should be stated that both the writers are Anarchists, in the
-sense I have indicated in the Preface. Except on special subjects—the
-famous geographer Odón de Buen, for instance, co-operated with Ferrer
-in regard to geography—no other writers were likely to embody Ferrer’s
-ideals. All, however, were as opposed to violence as Ferrer himself,
-and Mr. W. Archer has shown in his life of Ferrer that the charges
-brought against Mme. Jacquinet by Ferrer’s persecutors at his trial are
-officially denied by our Egyptian authorities.—J. M.
-
-[8] Extract from a speech delivered by Donoso Cortés at his admission
-into the Academy.
-
-[9] Haeckel’s Riddle of the Universe, Chap. I.
-
-[10] I omit some of Ferrer’s short comments on these specimens of
-reasoning and sentiment, as he regards them. One can recognise the echo
-of the teacher’s words. The children were repeating their catechism.
-But (1) this is no catechism of violence and class-hatred, and (2)
-there is a distinct appreciation of the ideas and sentiments on the
-part of the children. I translate the passages as literally as
-possible.—J. M.
-
-[11] This letter and the preceding essays are given in the Spanish
-edition. As they are a repetition of the sentiments expressed in the
-extracts already given, it is unnecessary to reproduce them here.
-Except that I have omitted papers incorporated by Ferrer, but not
-written by him, this is the only modification I have allowed myself.—J.
-M.
-
-[12] The Modern School was closed after Ferrer’s arrest in 1906.—J. M.
-
-
-*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE ORIGIN AND IDEALS OF THE MODERN
-SCHOOL ***
-
-Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions will
-be renamed.
-
-Creating the works from print editions not protected by U.S. copyright
-law means that no one owns a United States copyright in these works,
-so the Foundation (and you!) can copy and distribute it in the
-United States without permission and without paying copyright
-royalties. Special rules, set forth in the General Terms of Use part
-of this license, apply to copying and distributing Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works to protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm
-concept and trademark. Project Gutenberg is a registered trademark,
-and may not be used if you charge for an eBook, except by following
-the terms of the trademark license, including paying royalties for use
-of the Project Gutenberg trademark. If you do not charge anything for
-copies of this eBook, complying with the trademark license is very
-easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose such as creation
-of derivative works, reports, performances and research. Project
-Gutenberg eBooks may be modified and printed and given away--you may
-do practically ANYTHING in the United States with eBooks not protected
-by U.S. copyright law. Redistribution is subject to the trademark
-license, especially commercial redistribution.
-
-START: FULL LICENSE
-
-THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
-PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
-
-To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
-distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
-(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full
-Project Gutenberg-tm License available with this file or online at
-www.gutenberg.org/license.
-
-Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-
-1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
-and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
-(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
-the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or
-destroy all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your
-possession. If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a
-Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound
-by the terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the
-person or entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph
-1.E.8.
-
-1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
-used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
-agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
-things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
-paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this
-agreement and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works. See paragraph 1.E below.
-
-1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the
-Foundation" or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection
-of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual
-works in the collection are in the public domain in the United
-States. If an individual work is unprotected by copyright law in the
-United States and you are located in the United States, we do not
-claim a right to prevent you from copying, distributing, performing,
-displaying or creating derivative works based on the work as long as
-all references to Project Gutenberg are removed. Of course, we hope
-that you will support the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting
-free access to electronic works by freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm
-works in compliance with the terms of this agreement for keeping the
-Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with the work. You can easily
-comply with the terms of this agreement by keeping this work in the
-same format with its attached full Project Gutenberg-tm License when
-you share it without charge with others.
-
-1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
-what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are
-in a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States,
-check the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this
-agreement before downloading, copying, displaying, performing,
-distributing or creating derivative works based on this work or any
-other Project Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no
-representations concerning the copyright status of any work in any
-country other than the United States.
-
-1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
-
-1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other
-immediate access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear
-prominently whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work
-on which the phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the
-phrase "Project Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed,
-performed, viewed, copied or distributed:
-
- This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
- most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no
- restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it
- under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this
- eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the
- United States, you will have to check the laws of the country where
- you are located before using this eBook.
-
-1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is
-derived from texts not protected by U.S. copyright law (does not
-contain a notice indicating that it is posted with permission of the
-copyright holder), the work can be copied and distributed to anyone in
-the United States without paying any fees or charges. If you are
-redistributing or providing access to a work with the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the work, you must comply
-either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 or
-obtain permission for the use of the work and the Project Gutenberg-tm
-trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-
-1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
-with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
-must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any
-additional terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms
-will be linked to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works
-posted with the permission of the copyright holder found at the
-beginning of this work.
-
-1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
-License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
-work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
-
-1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
-electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
-prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
-active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm License.
-
-1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
-compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including
-any word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access
-to or distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format
-other than "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official
-version posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm website
-(www.gutenberg.org), you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense
-to the user, provide a copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means
-of obtaining a copy upon request, of the work in its original "Plain
-Vanilla ASCII" or other form. Any alternate format must include the
-full Project Gutenberg-tm License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
-
-1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
-performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
-unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-
-1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
-access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-provided that:
-
-* You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
- the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
- you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is owed
- to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he has
- agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments must be paid
- within 60 days following each date on which you prepare (or are
- legally required to prepare) your periodic tax returns. Royalty
- payments should be clearly marked as such and sent to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the address specified in
- Section 4, "Information about donations to the Project Gutenberg
- Literary Archive Foundation."
-
-* You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
- you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
- does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
- License. You must require such a user to return or destroy all
- copies of the works possessed in a physical medium and discontinue
- all use of and all access to other copies of Project Gutenberg-tm
- works.
-
-* You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of
- any money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
- electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days of
- receipt of the work.
-
-* You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
- distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
-
-1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work or group of works on different terms than
-are set forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing
-from the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the manager of
-the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the Foundation as set
-forth in Section 3 below.
-
-1.F.
-
-1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
-effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
-works not protected by U.S. copyright law in creating the Project
-Gutenberg-tm collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may
-contain "Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate
-or corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other
-intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or
-other medium, a computer virus, or computer codes that damage or
-cannot be read by your equipment.
-
-1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
-of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
-liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
-fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
-LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
-PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
-TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
-LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
-INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
-DAMAGE.
-
-1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
-defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
-receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
-written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
-received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium
-with your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you
-with the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in
-lieu of a refund. If you received the work electronically, the person
-or entity providing it to you may choose to give you a second
-opportunity to receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If
-the second copy is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing
-without further opportunities to fix the problem.
-
-1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
-in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS', WITH NO
-OTHER WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT
-LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
-
-1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
-warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of
-damages. If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement
-violates the law of the state applicable to this agreement, the
-agreement shall be interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or
-limitation permitted by the applicable state law. The invalidity or
-unenforceability of any provision of this agreement shall not void the
-remaining provisions.
-
-1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
-trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
-providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in
-accordance with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the
-production, promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works, harmless from all liability, costs and expenses,
-including legal fees, that arise directly or indirectly from any of
-the following which you do or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this
-or any Project Gutenberg-tm work, (b) alteration, modification, or
-additions or deletions to any Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any
-Defect you cause.
-
-Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
-electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of
-computers including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It
-exists because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations
-from people in all walks of life.
-
-Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
-assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
-goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
-remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
-and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future
-generations. To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation and how your efforts and donations can help, see
-Sections 3 and 4 and the Foundation information page at
-www.gutenberg.org
-
-Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation
-
-The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non-profit
-501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
-state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
-Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
-number is 64-6221541. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent permitted by
-U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
-
-The Foundation's business office is located at 809 North 1500 West,
-Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887. Email contact links and up
-to date contact information can be found at the Foundation's website
-and official page at www.gutenberg.org/contact
-
-Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
-Literary Archive Foundation
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without
-widespread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
-increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
-freely distributed in machine-readable form accessible by the widest
-array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
-($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
-status with the IRS.
-
-The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
-charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
-States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
-considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
-with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
-where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To SEND
-DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any particular
-state visit www.gutenberg.org/donate
-
-While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
-have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
-against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
-approach us with offers to donate.
-
-International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
-any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
-outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
-
-Please check the Project Gutenberg web pages for current donation
-methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
-ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations. To
-donate, please visit: www.gutenberg.org/donate
-
-Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-
-Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm concept of a library of electronic works that could be
-freely shared with anyone. For forty years, he produced and
-distributed Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of
-volunteer support.
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
-editions, all of which are confirmed as not protected by copyright in
-the U.S. unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not
-necessarily keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper
-edition.
-
-Most people start at our website which has the main PG search
-facility: www.gutenberg.org
-
-This website includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
-including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
-subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
diff --git a/old/66644-0.zip b/old/66644-0.zip
deleted file mode 100644
index baa2939..0000000
--- a/old/66644-0.zip
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/66644-h.zip b/old/66644-h.zip
deleted file mode 100644
index d2570dc..0000000
--- a/old/66644-h.zip
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/66644-h/66644-h.htm b/old/66644-h/66644-h.htm
deleted file mode 100644
index 8980ca8..0000000
--- a/old/66644-h/66644-h.htm
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,4497 +0,0 @@
-<!DOCTYPE html
-PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/loose.dtd">
-<!-- This HTML file has been automatically generated from an XML source on 2021-11-01T07:01:08Z using SAXON HE 9.9.1.8 . -->
-<html lang="en">
-<head>
-<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=utf-8">
-<title>The Origin and Ideals of the Modern School</title>
-<meta name="generator" content="tei2html.xsl, see https://github.com/jhellingman/tei2html">
-<meta name="author" content="Francisco Ferrer Guardia (1859–1909)">
-<link rel="coverpage" href="images/new-cover.jpg">
-<link rel="schema.DC" href="http://dublincore.org/documents/1998/09/dces/">
-<meta name="DC.Creator" content="Francisco Ferrer Guardia (1859–1909)">
-<meta name="DC.Title" content="The Origin and Ideals of the Modern School">
-<meta name="DC.Language" content="en">
-<meta name="DC.Format" content="text/html">
-<meta name="DC.Publisher" content="Project Gutenberg">
-<style type="text/css"> /* <![CDATA[ */
-html {
-line-height: 1.3;
-}
-body {
-margin: 0;
-}
-main {
-display: block;
-}
-h1 {
-font-size: 2em;
-margin: 0.67em 0;
-}
-hr {
-height: 0;
-overflow: visible;
-}
-pre {
-font-family: monospace, monospace;
-font-size: 1em;
-}
-a {
-background-color: transparent;
-}
-abbr[title] {
-border-bottom: none;
-text-decoration: underline;
-text-decoration: underline dotted;
-}
-b, strong {
-font-weight: bolder;
-}
-code, kbd, samp {
-font-family: monospace, monospace;
-font-size: 1em;
-}
-small {
-font-size: 80%;
-}
-sub, sup {
-font-size: 67%;
-line-height: 0;
-position: relative;
-vertical-align: baseline;
-}
-sub {
-bottom: -0.25em;
-}
-sup {
-top: -0.5em;
-}
-img {
-border-style: none;
-}
-body {
-font-family: serif;
-font-size: 100%;
-text-align: left;
-margin-top: 2.4em;
-}
-div.front, div.body {
-margin-bottom: 7.2em;
-}
-div.back {
-margin-bottom: 2.4em;
-}
-.div0 {
-margin-top: 7.2em;
-margin-bottom: 7.2em;
-}
-.div1 {
-margin-top: 5.6em;
-margin-bottom: 5.6em;
-}
-.div2 {
-margin-top: 4.8em;
-margin-bottom: 4.8em;
-}
-.div3 {
-margin-top: 3.6em;
-margin-bottom: 3.6em;
-}
-.div4 {
-margin-top: 2.4em;
-margin-bottom: 2.4em;
-}
-.div5, .div6, .div7 {
-margin-top: 1.44em;
-margin-bottom: 1.44em;
-}
-.div0:last-child, .div1:last-child, .div2:last-child, .div3:last-child,
-.div4:last-child, .div5:last-child, .div6:last-child, .div7:last-child {
-margin-bottom: 0;
-}
-blockquote div.front, blockquote div.body, blockquote div.back {
-margin-top: 0;
-margin-bottom: 0;
-}
-.divBody .div1:first-child, .divBody .div2:first-child, .divBody .div3:first-child, .divBody .div4:first-child,
-.divBody .div5:first-child, .divBody .div6:first-child, .divBody .div7:first-child {
-margin-top: 0;
-}
-h1, h2, h3, h4, h5, h6, .h1, .h2, .h3, .h4, .h5, .h6 {
-clear: both;
-font-style: normal;
-text-transform: none;
-}
-h3, .h3 {
-font-size: 1.2em;
-}
-h3.label {
-font-size: 1em;
-margin-bottom: 0;
-}
-h4, .h4 {
-font-size: 1em;
-}
-.alignleft {
-text-align: left;
-}
-.alignright {
-text-align: right;
-}
-.alignblock {
-text-align: justify;
-}
-p.tb, hr.tb, .par.tb {
-margin: 1.6em auto;
-text-align: center;
-}
-p.argument, p.note, p.tocArgument, .par.argument, .par.note, .par.tocArgument {
-font-size: 0.9em;
-text-indent: 0;
-}
-p.argument, p.tocArgument, .par.argument, .par.tocArgument {
-margin: 1.58em 10%;
-}
-td.tocDivNum {
-vertical-align: top;
-}
-td.tocPageNum {
-vertical-align: bottom;
-}
-.opener, .address {
-margin-top: 1.6em;
-margin-bottom: 1.6em;
-}
-.addrline {
-margin-top: 0;
-margin-bottom: 0;
-}
-.dateline {
-margin-top: 1.6em;
-margin-bottom: 1.6em;
-text-align: right;
-}
-.salute {
-margin-top: 1.6em;
-margin-left: 3.58em;
-text-indent: -2em;
-}
-.signed {
-margin-top: 1.6em;
-margin-left: 3.58em;
-text-indent: -2em;
-}
-.epigraph {
-font-size: 0.9em;
-width: 60%;
-margin-left: auto;
-}
-.epigraph span.bibl {
-display: block;
-text-align: right;
-}
-.trailer {
-clear: both;
-margin-top: 3.6em;
-}
-span.abbr, abbr {
-white-space: nowrap;
-}
-span.parnum {
-font-weight: bold;
-}
-span.corr, span.gap {
-border-bottom: 1px dotted red;
-}
-span.num, span.trans, span.trans {
-border-bottom: 1px dotted gray;
-}
-span.measure {
-border-bottom: 1px dotted green;
-}
-.ex {
-letter-spacing: 0.2em;
-}
-.sc {
-font-variant: small-caps;
-}
-.asc {
-font-variant: small-caps;
-text-transform: lowercase;
-}
-.uc {
-text-transform: uppercase;
-}
-.tt {
-font-family: monospace;
-}
-.underline {
-text-decoration: underline;
-}
-.overline, .overtilde {
-text-decoration: overline;
-}
-.rm {
-font-style: normal;
-}
-.red {
-color: red;
-}
-hr {
-clear: both;
-border: none;
-border-bottom: 1px solid black;
-width: 45%;
-margin-left: auto;
-margin-right: auto;
-margin-top: 1em;
-text-align: center;
-}
-hr.dotted {
-border-bottom: 2px dotted black;
-}
-hr.dashed {
-border-bottom: 2px dashed black;
-}
-.aligncenter {
-text-align: center;
-}
-h1, h2, .h1, .h2 {
-font-size: 1.44em;
-line-height: 1.5;
-}
-h1.label, h2.label {
-font-size: 1.2em;
-margin-bottom: 0;
-}
-h5, h6 {
-font-size: 1em;
-font-style: italic;
-}
-p, .par {
-text-indent: 0;
-}
-p.firstlinecaps:first-line, .par.firstlinecaps:first-line {
-text-transform: uppercase;
-}
-.hangq {
-text-indent: -0.32em;
-}
-.hangqq {
-text-indent: -0.42em;
-}
-.hangqqq {
-text-indent: -0.84em;
-}
-p.dropcap:first-letter, .par.dropcap:first-letter {
-float: left;
-clear: left;
-margin: 0 0.05em 0 0;
-padding: 0;
-line-height: 0.8;
-font-size: 420%;
-vertical-align: super;
-}
-blockquote, p.quote, div.blockquote, div.argument, .par.quote {
-font-size: 0.9em;
-margin: 1.58em 5%;
-}
-.pageNum a, a.noteRef:hover, a.pseudoNoteRef:hover, a.hidden:hover, a.hidden {
-text-decoration: none;
-}
-.advertisement, .advertisements {
-background-color: #FFFEE0;
-border: black 1px dotted;
-color: #000;
-margin: 2em 5%;
-padding: 1em;
-}
-.footnotes .body, .footnotes .div1 {
-padding: 0;
-}
-.fnarrow {
-color: #AAAAAA;
-font-weight: bold;
-text-decoration: none;
-}
-.fnarrow:hover, .fnreturn:hover {
-color: #660000;
-}
-.fnreturn {
-color: #AAAAAA;
-font-size: 80%;
-font-weight: bold;
-text-decoration: none;
-vertical-align: 0.25em;
-}
-a {
-text-decoration: none;
-}
-a:hover {
-text-decoration: underline;
-background-color: #e9f5ff;
-}
-a.noteRef, a.pseudoNoteRef {
-font-size: 67%;
-line-height: 0;
-position: relative;
-vertical-align: baseline;
-top: -0.5em;
-text-decoration: none;
-margin-left: 0.1em;
-}
-.displayfootnote {
-display: none;
-}
-div.footnotes {
-font-size: 80%;
-margin-top: 1em;
-padding: 0;
-}
-hr.fnsep {
-margin-left: 0;
-margin-right: 0;
-text-align: left;
-width: 25%;
-}
-p.footnote, .par.footnote {
-margin-bottom: 0.5em;
-margin-top: 0.5em;
-}
-p.footnote .fnlabel, .par.footnote .fnlabel {
-float: left;
-min-width: 1.0em;
-margin-left: -0.1em;
-padding-top: 0.9em;
-padding-right: 0.4em;
-}
-.apparatusnote {
-text-decoration: none;
-}
-table.tocList {
-width: 100%;
-margin-left: auto;
-margin-right: auto;
-border-width: 0;
-border-collapse: collapse;
-}
-td.tocPageNum, td.tocDivNum {
-text-align: right;
-min-width: 10%;
-border-width: 0;
-white-space: nowrap;
-}
-td.tocDivNum {
-padding-left: 0;
-padding-right: 0.5em;
-}
-td.tocPageNum {
-padding-left: 0.5em;
-padding-right: 0;
-}
-td.tocDivTitle {
-width: auto;
-}
-p.tocPart, .par.tocPart {
-margin: 1.58em 0;
-font-variant: small-caps;
-}
-p.tocChapter, .par.tocChapter {
-margin: 1.58em 0;
-}
-p.tocSection, .par.tocSection {
-margin: 0.7em 5%;
-}
-table.tocList td {
-vertical-align: top;
-}
-table.tocList td.tocPageNum {
-vertical-align: bottom;
-}
-table.inner {
-display: inline-table;
-border-collapse: collapse;
-width: 100%;
-}
-td.itemNum {
-text-align: right;
-min-width: 5%;
-padding-right: 0.8em;
-}
-td.innerContainer {
-padding: 0;
-margin: 0;
-}
-.index {
-font-size: 80%;
-}
-.index p {
-text-indent: -1em;
-margin-left: 1em;
-}
-.indexToc {
-text-align: center;
-}
-.transcriberNote {
-background-color: #DDE;
-border: black 1px dotted;
-color: #000;
-font-family: sans-serif;
-font-size: 80%;
-margin: 2em 5%;
-padding: 1em;
-}
-.missingTarget {
-text-decoration: line-through;
-color: red;
-}
-.correctionTable {
-width: 75%;
-}
-.width20 {
-width: 20%;
-}
-.width40 {
-width: 40%;
-}
-p.smallprint, li.smallprint, .par.smallprint {
-color: #666666;
-font-size: 80%;
-}
-span.musictime {
-vertical-align: middle;
-display: inline-block;
-text-align: center;
-}
-span.musictime, span.musictime span.top, span.musictime span.bottom {
-padding: 1px 0.5px;
-font-size: xx-small;
-font-weight: bold;
-line-height: 0.7em;
-}
-span.musictime span.bottom {
-display: block;
-}
-ul {
-list-style-type: none;
-}
-.splitListTable {
-margin-left: 0;
-}
-.numberedItem {
-text-indent: -3em;
-margin-left: 3em;
-}
-.numberedItem .itemNumber {
-float: left;
-position: relative;
-left: -3.5em;
-width: 3em;
-display: inline-block;
-text-align: right;
-}
-.itemGroupTable {
-border-collapse: collapse;
-margin-left: 0;
-}
-.itemGroupTable td {
-padding: 0;
-margin: 0;
-vertical-align: middle;
-}
-.itemGroupBrace {
-padding: 0 0.5em !important;
-}
-.titlePage {
-border: #DDDDDD 2px solid;
-margin: 3em 0 7em 0;
-padding: 5em 10% 6em 10%;
-text-align: center;
-}
-.titlePage .docTitle {
-line-height: 1.7;
-margin: 2em 0 2em 0;
-font-weight: bold;
-}
-.titlePage .docTitle .mainTitle {
-font-size: 1.8em;
-}
-.titlePage .docTitle .subTitle, .titlePage .docTitle .seriesTitle,
-.titlePage .docTitle .volumeTitle {
-font-size: 1.44em;
-}
-.titlePage .byline {
-margin: 2em 0 2em 0;
-font-size: 1.2em;
-line-height: 1.5;
-}
-.titlePage .byline .docAuthor {
-font-size: 1.2em;
-font-weight: bold;
-}
-.titlePage .figure {
-margin: 2em auto;
-}
-.titlePage .docImprint {
-margin: 4em 0 0 0;
-font-size: 1.2em;
-line-height: 1.5;
-}
-.titlePage .docImprint .docDate {
-font-size: 1.2em;
-font-weight: bold;
-}
-div.figure {
-text-align: center;
-}
-.figure {
-margin-left: auto;
-margin-right: auto;
-}
-.floatLeft {
-float: left;
-margin: 10px 10px 10px 0;
-}
-.floatRight {
-float: right;
-margin: 10px 0 10px 10px;
-}
-p.figureHead, .par.figureHead {
-font-size: 100%;
-text-align: center;
-}
-.figAnnotation {
-font-size: 80%;
-position: relative;
-margin: 0 auto;
-}
-.figTopLeft, .figBottomLeft {
-float: left;
-}
-.figTopRight, .figBottomRight {
-float: right;
-}
-.figure p, .figure .par {
-font-size: 80%;
-margin-top: 0;
-text-align: center;
-}
-img {
-border-width: 0;
-}
-td.galleryFigure {
-text-align: center;
-vertical-align: middle;
-}
-td.galleryCaption {
-text-align: center;
-vertical-align: top;
-}
-tr, td, th {
-vertical-align: top;
-}
-tr.bottom, td.bottom, th.bottom {
-vertical-align: bottom;
-}
-td.label, tr.label td {
-font-weight: bold;
-}
-td.unit, tr.unit td {
-font-style: italic;
-}
-td.leftbrace, td.rightbrace {
-vertical-align: middle;
-}
-span.sum {
-padding-top: 2px;
-border-top: solid black 1px;
-}
-table.inlinetable {
-display: inline-table;
-}
-table.borderOutside {
-border-collapse: collapse;
-}
-table.borderOutside td {
-padding-left: 4px;
-padding-right: 4px;
-}
-table.borderOutside .cellHeadTop, table.borderOutside .cellTop {
-border-top: 2px solid black;
-}
-table.borderOutside .cellHeadBottom {
-border-bottom: 1px solid black;
-}
-table.borderOutside .cellBottom {
-border-bottom: 2px solid black;
-}
-table.borderOutside .cellLeft, table.borderOutside .cellHeadLeft {
-border-left: 2px solid black;
-}
-table.borderOutside .cellRight, table.borderOutside .cellHeadRight {
-border-right: 2px solid black;
-}
-table.verticalBorderInside {
-border-collapse: collapse;
-}
-table.verticalBorderInside td {
-padding-left: 4px;
-padding-right: 4px;
-border-left: 1px solid black;
-}
-table.verticalBorderInside .cellHeadTop, table.verticalBorderInside .cellTop {
-border-top: 2px solid black;
-}
-table.verticalBorderInside .cellHeadBottom {
-border-bottom: 1px solid black;
-}
-table.verticalBorderInside .cellBottom {
-border-bottom: 2px solid black;
-}
-table.verticalBorderInside .cellLeft, table.verticalBorderInside .cellHeadLeft {
-border-left: 0 solid black;
-}
-table.borderAll {
-border-collapse: collapse;
-}
-table.borderAll td {
-padding-left: 4px;
-padding-right: 4px;
-border: 1px solid black;
-}
-table.borderAll .cellHeadTop, table.borderAll .cellTop {
-border-top: 2px solid black;
-}
-table.borderAll .cellHeadBottom {
-border-bottom: 1px solid black;
-}
-table.borderAll .cellBottom {
-border-bottom: 2px solid black;
-}
-table.borderAll .cellLeft, table.borderAll .cellHeadLeft {
-border-left: 2px solid black;
-}
-table.borderAll .cellRight, table.borderAll .cellHeadRight {
-border-right: 2px solid black;
-}
-tr.borderTop td, tr.borderTop th, th.borderTop, td.borderTop {
-border-top: 1px solid black !important;
-}
-tr.borderRight td, tr.borderRight th, th.borderRight, td.borderRight {
-border-right: 1px solid black !important;
-}
-tr.borderLeft td, tr.borderLeft th, th.borderLeft, td.borderLeft {
-border-left: 1px solid black !important;
-}
-tr.borderBottom td, tr.borderBottom th, th.borderBottom, td.borderBottom {
-border-bottom: 1px solid black !important;
-}
-tr.borderHorizontal td, tr.borderHorizontal th, th.borderHorizontal, td.borderHorizontal {
-border-top: 1px solid black !important;
-border-bottom: 1px solid black !important;
-}
-tr.borderVertical td, tr.borderVertical th, th.borderVertical, td.borderVertical {
-border-right: 1px solid black !important;
-border-left: 1px solid black !important;
-}
-tr.borderAll td, tr.borderAll th, th.borderAll, td.borderAll {
-border: 1px solid black !important;
-}
-tr.noBorderTop td, tr.noBorderTop th, th.noBorderTop, td.noBorderTop {
-border-top: none !important;
-}
-tr.noBorderRight td, tr.noBorderRight th, th.noBorderRight, td.noBorderRight {
-border-right: none !important;
-}
-tr.noBorderLeft td, tr.noBorderLeft th, th.noBorderLeft, td.noBorderLeft {
-border-left: none !important;
-}
-tr.noBorderBottom td, tr.noBorderBottom th, th.noBorderBottom, td.noBorderBottom {
-border-bottom: none !important;
-}
-tr.noBorderHorizontal td, tr.noBorderHorizontal th, th.noBorderHorizontal, td.noBorderHorizontal {
-border-top: none !important;
-border-bottom: none !important;
-}
-tr.noBorderVertical td, tr.noBorderVertical th, th.noBorderVertical, td.noBorderVertical {
-border-right: none !important;
-border-left: none !important;
-}
-tr.borderAll td, tr.borderAll th, th.borderAll, td.noBorderAll {
-border: none !important;
-}
-.cellDoubleUp {
-border: 0 solid black !important;
-width: 1em;
-}
-td.alignDecimalIntegerPart {
-text-align: right;
-border-right: none !important;
-padding-right: 0 !important;
-margin-right: 0 !important;
-}
-td.alignDecimalFractionPart {
-text-align: left;
-border-left: none !important;
-padding-left: 0 !important;
-margin-left: 0 !important;
-}
-td.alignDecimalNotNumber {
-text-align: center;
-}
-body {
-padding: 1.58em 16%;
-}
-.pageNum {
-display: inline;
-font-size: 70%;
-font-style: normal;
-margin: 0;
-padding: 0;
-position: absolute;
-right: 1%;
-text-align: right;
-}
-.marginnote {
-font-size: 0.8em;
-height: 0;
-left: 1%;
-position: absolute;
-text-indent: 0;
-width: 14%;
-text-align: left;
-}
-.right-marginnote {
-font-size: 0.8em;
-height: 0;
-right: 3%;
-position: absolute;
-text-indent: 0;
-text-align: right;
-width: 11%
-}
-.cut-in-left-note {
-font-size: 0.8em;
-left: 1%;
-float: left;
-text-indent: 0;
-width: 14%;
-text-align: left;
-padding: 0.8em 0.8em 0.8em 0;
-}
-.cut-in-right-note {
-font-size: 0.8em;
-left: 1%;
-float: right;
-text-indent: 0;
-width: 14%;
-text-align: right;
-padding: 0.8em 0 0.8em 0.8em;
-}
-span.tocPageNum, span.flushright {
-position: absolute;
-right: 16%;
-top: auto;
-text-indent: 0;
-}
-.pglink::after {
-content: "\0000A0\01F4D8";
-font-size: 80%;
-font-style: normal;
-font-weight: normal;
-}
-.catlink::after {
-content: "\0000A0\01F4C7";
-font-size: 80%;
-font-style: normal;
-font-weight: normal;
-}
-.exlink::after, .wplink::after, .biblink::after, .qurlink::after, .seclink::after {
-content: "\0000A0\002197\00FE0F";
-color: blue;
-font-size: 80%;
-font-style: normal;
-font-weight: normal;
-}
-.pglink:hover {
-background-color: #DCFFDC;
-}
-.catlink:hover {
-background-color: #FFFFDC;
-}
-.exlink:hover, .wplink:hover, .biblink:hover, .qurlink:hover, .seclin:hover {
-background-color: #FFDCDC;
-}
-body {
-background: #FFFFFF;
-font-family: serif;
-}
-body, a.hidden {
-color: black;
-}
-h1, h2, .h1, .h2 {
-text-align: center;
-font-variant: small-caps;
-font-weight: normal;
-}
-p.byline {
-text-align: center;
-font-style: italic;
-margin-bottom: 2em;
-}
-.div2 p.byline, .div3 p.byline, .div4 p.byline, .div5 p.byline, .div6 p.byline, .div7 p.byline {
-text-align: left;
-}
-.figureHead, .noteRef, .pseudoNoteRef, .marginnote, .right-marginnote, p.legend, .verseNum {
-color: #660000;
-}
-.rightnote, .pageNum, .lineNum, .pageNum a {
-color: #AAAAAA;
-}
-a.hidden:hover, a.noteRef:hover, a.pseudoNoteRef:hover {
-color: red;
-}
-h1, h2, h3, h4, h5, h6 {
-font-weight: normal;
-}
-table {
-margin-left: auto;
-margin-right: auto;
-}
-.tablecaption {
-text-align: center;
-}
-.arab { font-family: Scheherazade, serif; }
-.aran { font-family: 'Awami Nastaliq', serif; }
-.grek { font-family: 'Charis SIL', serif; }
-.hebr { font-family: Shlomo, 'Ezra SIL', serif; }
-.syrc { font-family: 'Serto Jerusalem', serif; }
-/* CSS rules generated from @rend attributes in TEI file */
-.xd31e1268 {
-width:50%; padding-right:0.5em;
-}
-.xd31e1269 {
-width:50%; padding-left:0.5em;
-}
-.xd31e1043 {
-font-size:small;
-}
-.cover-imagewidth {
-width:480px;
-}
-.xd31e98 {
-font-size:large; text-align:center;
-}
-.frontispiecewidth {
-width:510px;
-}
-.titlepage-imagewidth {
-width:403px;
-}
-.xd31e1848 {
-text-align:center;
-}
-.xd31e1863 {
-text-align:center; font-size:large;
-}
-.xd31e1867 {
-font-size:xx-large;
-}
-.xd31e1872 {
-text-align:center; font-size:large; font-weight:bold;
-}
-.indentxd31e1879 {
-padding-left: 1em;
-}
-.indentxd31e1881 {
-padding-left: 2em;
-}
-.indentxd31e1883 {
-padding-left: 3em;
-}
-.indentxd31e1885 {
-padding-left: 4em;
-}
-.indentxd31e1887 {
-padding-left: 5em;
-}
-.indentxd31e1890 {
-padding-left: 6em;
-}
-.indentxd31e1892 {
-padding-left: 7em;
-}
-.xd31e1957 {
-text-align:center; font-size:small;
-}
-@media handheld {
-}
-/* ]]> */ </style>
-</head>
-<body>
-
-<div style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Origin and Ideals of the Modern School, by Francisco Ferrer</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online
-at <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
-are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the
-country where you are located before using this eBook.
-</div>
-
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: The Origin and Ideals of the Modern School</p>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Francisco Ferrer</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Translator: Joseph McCabe</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: November 1, 2021 [eBook #66644]</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Character set encoding: UTF-8</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Produced by: Jeroen Hellingman and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net/ for Project Gutenberg (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)</div>
-
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE ORIGIN AND IDEALS OF THE MODERN SCHOOL ***</div>
-<div class="front">
-<div class="div1 cover"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divBody">
-<p class="first"></p>
-<div class="figure cover-imagewidth"><img src="images/new-cover.jpg" alt="Newly Designed Front Cover." width="480" height="720"></div><p>
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb.i">[<a href="#pb.i">i</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class="div1 frenchtitle"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divBody">
-<p class="first xd31e98">THE ORIGIN AND IDEALS OF<br>
-THE MODERN SCHOOL
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb.ii">[<a href="#pb.ii">ii</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class="div1 frontispiece"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divBody">
-<p class="first"></p>
-<div class="figure frontispiecewidth"><img src="images/frontispiece.jpg" alt="FRANCISCO FERRER." width="510" height="716"><p class="figureHead">FRANCISCO FERRER.</p>
-<p class="first">FROM A PHOTOGRAPH REPRODUCED FROM “THE LITERARY GUIDE.”</p>
-</div><p>
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb.iii">[<a href="#pb.iii">iii</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class="div1 titlepage"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divBody">
-<p class="first"></p>
-<div class="figure titlepage-imagewidth"><img src="images/titlepage.png" alt="Original Title Page." width="403" height="720"></div><p>
-</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class="titlePage">
-<div class="docTitle">
-<div class="mainTitle">THE<br>
-ORIGIN AND IDEALS<br>
-OF THE<br>
-MODERN SCHOOL</div>
-</div>
-<div class="byline">BY<br>
-<span class="docAuthor">FRANCISCO FERRER</span>
-<br>
-TRANSLATED BY <span class="docAuthor">JOSEPH McCABE</span></div>
-<div class="docImprint">[ISSUED FOR THE RATIONALIST PRESS ASSOCIATION, LIMITED]
-<br>
-<span class="sc">London</span>:<br>
-WATTS &amp; CO.,<br>
-17 JOHNSON’S COURT, FLEET STREET, E.C.<br>
-<span class="docDate">1913</span></div>
-</div>
-<p><span class="pageNum" id="pb.v">[<a href="#pb.v">v</a>]</span></p>
-<div id="toc" class="div1 contents"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
-<h2 class="main">CONTENTS</h2>
-<table class="tocList">
-<tr>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7">
-</td>
-<td class="tocPageNum">PAGE</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><span class="sc"><a href="#intro" id="xd31e160">Introduction</a></span>
-</td>
-<td class="tocPageNum">vii</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tocDivNum"><span class="sc">Chap.</span></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7">
-</td>
-<td class="tocPageNum"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tocDivNum">I.</td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"> <span class="sc"><a href="#ch1" id="xd31e176">The Birth of My Ideals</a></span> </td>
-<td class="tocPageNum">1</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tocDivNum">II.</td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"> <span class="sc"><a href="#ch2" id="xd31e186">Mlle. Meunier</a></span> </td>
-<td class="tocPageNum">7</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tocDivNum">III.</td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"> <span class="sc"><a href="#ch3" id="xd31e196">I Accept the Responsibility</a></span> </td>
-<td class="tocPageNum">12</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tocDivNum">IV.</td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"> <span class="sc"><a href="#ch4" id="xd31e206">The Early Programme</a></span> </td>
-<td class="tocPageNum">18</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tocDivNum">V.</td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"> <span class="sc"><a href="#ch5" id="xd31e216">The Co-Education of the Sexes</a></span> </td>
-<td class="tocPageNum">24</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tocDivNum">VI.</td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"> <span class="sc"><a href="#ch6" id="xd31e226">Co-Education of the Social Classes</a></span> </td>
-<td class="tocPageNum">32</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tocDivNum">VII.</td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"> <span class="sc"><a href="#ch7" id="xd31e236">School Hygiene</a></span> </td>
-<td class="tocPageNum">38</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tocDivNum">VIII.</td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"> <span class="sc"><a href="#ch8" id="xd31e246">The Teachers</a></span> </td>
-<td class="tocPageNum">40</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tocDivNum">IX.</td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"> <span class="sc"><a href="#ch9" id="xd31e257">The Reform of the School</a></span> </td>
-<td class="tocPageNum">43</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tocDivNum">X.</td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"> <span class="sc"><a href="#ch10" id="xd31e267">No Reward or Punishment</a></span> </td>
-<td class="tocPageNum">55</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tocDivNum">XI.</td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"> <span class="sc"><a href="#ch11" id="xd31e277">The General Public and the Library</a></span> </td>
-<td class="tocPageNum">60</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tocDivNum">XII.</td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"> <span class="sc"><a href="#ch12" id="xd31e287">Sunday Lectures</a></span> </td>
-<td class="tocPageNum">71</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tocDivNum">XIII.</td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"> <span class="sc"><a href="#ch13" id="xd31e297">The Results</a></span> </td>
-<td class="tocPageNum">75</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tocDivNum">XIV.</td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"> <span class="sc"><a href="#ch14" id="xd31e307">A Defensive Chapter</a></span> </td>
-<td class="tocPageNum">80</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tocDivNum">XV.</td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"> <span class="sc"><a href="#ch15" id="xd31e317">The Ingenuousness of the Child</a></span> </td>
-<td class="tocPageNum">88</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tocDivNum">XVI.</td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"> <span class="sc"><a href="#ch16" id="xd31e327">The “Bulletin”</a></span> </td>
-<td class="tocPageNum">96</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tocDivNum">XVII.</td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"> <span class="sc"><a href="#ch17" id="xd31e337">The Closing of the Modern School</a></span>
-</td>
-<td class="tocPageNum">102</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><span class="sc"><a href="#epilogue" id="xd31e345">Epilogue</a></span> </td>
-<td class="tocPageNum">109</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="pageNum" id="pb.vii">[<a href="#pb.vii">vii</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="intro" class="div1 introduction"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#xd31e160">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
-<h2 class="main">INTRODUCTION</h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">On October 12, 1909, Francisco Ferrer y Guardia was shot in the trenches of the Montjuich
-Fortress at Barcelona. A Military Council had found him guilty of being “head of the
-insurrection” which had, a few months before, lit the flame of civil war in the city
-and province. The clergy had openly petitioned the Spanish Premier, when Ferrer was
-arrested, to look to the Modern School and its founder for the source of the revolutionary
-feeling; and the Premier had, instead of rebuking them, promised to do so. When Ferrer
-was arrested the prosecution spent many weeks in collecting evidence against him,
-and granted a free pardon to several men who <i>were</i> implicated in the riot, for testifying against him. These three or four men were
-the only witnesses out of fifty who would have been heard patiently in a civil court
-of justice, and even their testimony would at once have crumbled under cross-examination.
-But there was <span class="pageNum" id="pb.viii">[<a href="#pb.viii">viii</a>]</span>no cross-examination, and no witnesses were brought before the court. Five weeks were
-occupied in compiling an enormously lengthy indictment of Ferrer; then twenty-four
-hours were given to an inexperienced officer, chosen at random, to analyse it and
-prepare a defense. Evidence sent in Ferrer’s favour was confiscated by the police;
-the witnesses who could have disproved the case against him were kept in custody miles
-away from Barcelona; and documents which would have tended to show his innocence were
-refused to the defending officer. And after the mere hearing of the long and hopelessly
-bewildering indictment (in which the evidence was even falsified), and in spite of
-the impassioned protest of the defending officer against the brutal injustice of the
-proceedings, the military judges found Ferrer guilty, and he was shot.
-</p>
-<p>Within a month of the judicial murder of Ferrer I put the whole abominable story before
-the British public. I showed the deep corruption of Church and politics in Spain,
-and proved that clergy and politicians had conspired to use the gross and pliable
-machinery of “military justice” to remove a man whose sole aim was to open the eyes
-of the Spanish <span class="pageNum" id="pb.ix">[<a href="#pb.ix">ix</a>]</span>people. A prolonged and passionate controversy followed. That controversy has not
-altered a line of my book. Mr. William Archer, in a cold and impartial study of the
-matter, has fully supported my indictment of the prosecution of Ferrer; and Professor
-Simarro, of Madrid University, has, in a voluminous study of the trial (<i lang="es">El Proceso Ferrer</i>—two large volumes), quoted whole chapters of my little work. When, in 1912, the Supreme
-Military Council of Spain was forced to declare that no single act of violence could
-be directly or indirectly traced to Ferrer (whereas the chief witness for the prosecution
-had sworn that he saw Ferrer leading a troop of rioters), and ordered the restoration
-of his property, the case for his innocence was closed. It remains only for Spain
-to wipe the foul stain from its annals by removing the bones of the martyred teacher
-from the trenches of Montjuich, and to declare, with <i>real</i> Spanish pride, that a grave injustice had been done.
-</p>
-<p>Meantime, the restoration of Ferrer’s property has enabled his trustees to resume
-his work. Among his papers they found a manuscript account, from his own pen, of the
-origin and ideals of the Modern <span class="pageNum" id="pb.x">[<a href="#pb.x">x</a>]</span>School, and their first act is to give it to the world. In 1906 Ferrer had been arrested
-on the charge of complicity in the attempt of Morral to assassinate the King. He was
-kept in jail for a year, and the most scandalous efforts were made, in the court and
-the country, to secure a judicial murder; but it was a civil (or civilised) trial,
-and the charge was contemptuously rejected. Going to the Pyrenees in the early summer
-of 1908 to recuperate, Ferrer determined to write the simple story of his school,
-and it is this I now offer to English readers.
-</p>
-<p>In this work Ferrer depicts himself more truly and vividly than any friend of his
-has ever done. For my part, I had never seen Ferrer, and never seen Spain; but I was
-acquainted with Spanish life and letters, and knew that there had been committed in
-the twentieth century one of those old-world crimes by which the children of darkness
-seek to arrest the advance of man. I interpreted Ferrer from his work, his letters,
-a few journalistic articles he had written—he had never published a book, and the
-impressions of his friends and pupils. In this book the man portrays himself, and
-describes his aims with a candour that all will appreciate. The less foolish of <span class="pageNum" id="pb.xi">[<a href="#pb.xi">xi</a>]</span>his enemies have ceased to assert that he organised or led the riot at Barcelona in
-1909. It was, they say, the tendency, the subtle aim, of his work which made him responsible.
-It may be remembered that the <i>Saturday Review</i> and other journals published the most unblushingly mendacious letters, from anonymous
-correspondents, saying that they had seen posters on the walls of Ferrer’s schools
-inciting children to violence. As the very zealous police did not at the trial even
-mention Ferrer’s schools, or the text-books used in them, these lies need no further
-exposure. But many persist in thinking, since there is now nothing further to think
-to the disadvantage of Ferrer, that his schools were really hot-beds of rebellion
-and were very naturally suppressed.
-</p>
-<p>Here is the full story of the Modern School, told in transparently simple language.
-Here is the whole man, with all his ideals, aims, and resentments. It shows, as we
-well knew, and could have proved with overwhelming force at his trial had we been
-permitted, that he was absolutely opposed to violence ever since, in his youth, he
-had taken part in an abortive revolution. It tells how he came to distrust <span class="pageNum" id="pb.xii">[<a href="#pb.xii">xii</a>]</span>violence and those who used it; how he concluded that the moral and intellectual training
-of children was to be the sole work of his career; how, when he obtained the funds,
-he turned completely from politics, and devoted himself to educating children in knowledge
-of science and in sentiments of peace and brotherhood.
-</p>
-<p>It tells also, with the same transparent plainness, why his noble-minded work incurred
-such violent enmity. He naively boasts that the education in the Modern School was
-free from dogmas. It was not, and cannot be in any school, free from dogmas, for dogma
-means “teaching,” and he gave teaching of a very definite character. Mr. Belloc’s
-indictment of his schools is, like Mr. Belloc’s indictment of his character and guilt,
-evidently based on complete ignorance of the facts and a very extensive knowledge
-of the recklessly mendacious literature of his opponents. Even Mr. Archer’s account
-of his school is grossly misleading. The Modern School was “avowedly a nursery of
-rebellious citizens” only in the same sense as is any Socialist Sunday-school in England
-or Germany; and the Spanish Government has never claimed, and could not claim, for
-a moment <span class="pageNum" id="pb.xiii">[<a href="#pb.xiii">xiii</a>]</span>the right to close it, except in so far as it falsely charged the founder with crime
-and confiscated his property.
-</p>
-<p>Ferrer’s school was thoroughly rationalistic, and this embittered the clergy—for his
-system was spreading rapidly through Spain—without in the least infringing Spanish
-law. Further, Ferrer’s school explicitly taught children that militarism was a crime,
-that the unequal distribution of wealth was a thing to be abhorred, that the capitalist
-system was bad for the workers, and that political government is an evil. He had a
-perfect right under Spanish law to found a school to teach his ideas; as any man has
-under English or German law. The prohibited and damnable thing would be even to hint
-to children that, when they grew up, they might look forward to altering the industrial
-and political system by violence. This Ferrer not only did not teach, but strenuously
-opposed. We have overwhelming proof of this at every step of his later career. But
-he was a child of the workers, and he had a passionate and noble resentment of the
-ignorance, poverty, and squalor of the lives of so large a proportion of the workers.
-He was also an Anarchist, in the sense of Tolstoi; he <span class="pageNum" id="pb.xiv">[<a href="#pb.xiv">xiv</a>]</span>believed that liberty was essential to the development of man, and central government
-an evil. But, as rigorously as Tolstoi, he relied on persuasion and abhorred violence.
-I would call attention to Chapter VI of this book, in which he pleads for “the co-education
-of the rich and poor”; and there were children of middle-class parents, even of university-professors,
-in his school. Most decidedly he preached no class-hatred or violence. I do not share
-his academic and innocent Anarchist ideal—which is far nearer to Conservatism than
-to Socialism—but I share to the full that intense and passionate longing for the uplifting
-and brightening of the poor, and for the destruction of superstition, which was the
-supreme ideal of his life and of his work. For that he was shot.
-</p>
-<p>Finally, the reader must strictly bear in mind the Spanish atmosphere of this tragedy.
-When Ferrer describes “existing schools” he means the schools of Spain, which are,
-for the most part, a mockery and a shame. When he talks of “ruling powers” he has
-in mind the politicians of Spain, my indictment of whom, in their own language, has
-never been questioned. When he talks of “superstition” he <span class="pageNum" id="pb.xv">[<a href="#pb.xv">xv</a>]</span>means primarily Spanish superstition; he refers to a priesthood that still makes millions
-every year by the sale of indulgences. If you remember these things, you will, however
-you dissent from his teaching in parts, appreciate the burning and unselfish idealism
-of the man, and understand why some of us see the brand of Cain on the fair brow of
-Spain for extinguishing that idealism in blood.
-</p>
-<p class="signed">J. M.
-</p>
-<p class="dateline"><i>February, 1913.</i>
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb1">[<a href="#pb1">1</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class="body">
-<div id="ch1" class="div1 chapter"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#xd31e176">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
-<h2 class="label"><span class="sc">Chapter I.</span></h2>
-<h2 class="main">THE BIRTH OF MY IDEALS</h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">The share which I had in the political struggles of the last part of the nineteenth
-century put my early convictions to a severe test. I was a revolutionary in the cause
-of justice; I was convinced that liberty, equality, and fraternity were the legitimate
-fruit to be expected of a republic. Seeing, therefore, no other way to attain this
-ideal but a political agitation for a change of the form of government, I devoted
-myself entirely to the republican propaganda.<a class="noteRef" id="xd31e408src" href="#xd31e408">1</a>
-</p>
-<p>My relations with D. Manuel Ruiz Zorrilla, who was one of the leading figures in the
-revolutionary movement, brought me into contact with a number of the Spanish revolutionaries
-and some prominent French agitators, and my intercourse with them led to a sharp disillusion.
-I detected in many of them an egoism which they sought hypocritically to conceal,
-while the ideals of others, who were more sincere, seemed to me inadequate. In none
-of them did I perceive a design to bring about a radical improvement<span class="pageNum" id="pb2">[<a href="#pb2">2</a>]</span>—a reform which should go to the roots of disorder and afford some security of a perfect
-social regeneration.
-</p>
-<p>The experience I acquired during my fifteen years’ residence at Paris, in which I
-witnessed the crises of Boulangism, Dreyfusism, and Nationalism, and the menace they
-offered to the Republic, convinced me that the problem of popular education was not
-solved; and, if it were not solved in France, there was little hope of Spanish republicanism
-settling it, especially as the party had always betrayed a lamentable inappreciation
-of the need of a system of general education.
-</p>
-<p>Consider what the condition of the present generation would be if the Spanish republican
-party had, after the banishment of Ruiz Zorrilla [1885], devoted itself to the establishment
-of Rationalist schools in connection with each committee, each group of Freethinkers,
-or each Masonic lodge; if, instead of the presidents, secretaries, and members of
-the committees thinking only of the office they were to hold in the future republic,
-they had entered upon a vigorous campaign for the instruction of the people. In the
-thirty years that have elapsed considerable progress would have been made in founding
-day-schools for children and night-schools for adults.
-</p>
-<p>Would the general public, educated in this way, be content to send members to Parliament
-who would accept an Associations Law presented by the monarchists? Would the people
-confine itself to holding meetings to demand a reduction of the price <span class="pageNum" id="pb3">[<a href="#pb3">3</a>]</span>of bread, instead of resenting the privations imposed on the worker by the superfluous
-luxuries of the wealthy? Would they waste their time in futile indignation meetings,
-instead of organising their forces for the removal of all unjust privileges?
-</p>
-<p>My position as professor of Spanish at the Philotechnic Association and in the Grand
-Orient of France brought me into touch with people of every class, both in regard
-to character and social position; and, when I considered them from the point of view
-of their possible influence on the race, I found that they were all bent upon making
-the best they could of life in a purely individualist sense. Some studied Spanish
-with a view to advancing in their profession, others in order to master Spanish literature
-and promote their careers, and others for the purpose of obtaining further pleasure
-by travelling in countries where Spanish was spoken.
-</p>
-<p>No one felt the absurdity of the contradictions between belief and knowledge; hardly
-one cared to give a just and rational form to human society, in order that all the
-members of each generation might have a proportionate share in the advantages created
-by earlier generations. Progress was conceived as a kind of fatalism, independent
-of the knowledge and the goodwill of men, subject to vacillations and accidents in
-which the conscience and energy of man had no part. The individual, reared in a family
-circle, with its inveterate atavism and its traditional illusions maintained by ignorant
-mothers, and in the school with something worse than error—the sacramental <span class="pageNum" id="pb4">[<a href="#pb4">4</a>]</span>untruth imposed by men who spoke in the name of a divine revelation—was deformed and
-degenerate at his entrance into society; and, if there is any logical relation between
-cause and effect, nothing could be expected of him but irrational and pernicious results.
-</p>
-<p>I spoke constantly to those whom I met with a view to proselytism, seeking to ascertain
-the use of each of them for the purpose of my ideal, and soon realised that nothing
-was to be expected of the politicians who surrounded Ruiz Zorrilla; they were, in
-my opinion, with a few honourable exceptions, impenitent adventurers. This gave rise
-to a certain expression which the judicial authorities sought to use to my disadvantage
-in circumstances of great gravity and peril. Zorrilla, a man of lofty views and not
-sufficiently on his guard against human malice, used to call me an “anarchist” when
-he heard me put forward a logical solution of a problem; at all times he regarded
-me as a deep radical, opposed to the opportunist views and the showy radicalism of
-the Spanish revolutionaries who surrounded and even exploited him, as well as the
-French republicans, who held a policy of middle-class government and avoided what
-might benefit the disinherited proletariate, on the pretext of distrusting Utopias.
-</p>
-<p>In a word, during the early years of the restoration there were men conspiring with
-Ruiz Zorrilla who have since declared themselves convinced monarchists and conservatives;
-and that worthy man, who protested earnestly against the <i lang="fr">coup d’État</i> of January 3, 1874, confided in his false friends, with the result, not <span class="pageNum" id="pb5">[<a href="#pb5">5</a>]</span>uncommon in the political world, that most of them abandoned the republican party
-for the sake of some office. In the end he could count only on the support of those
-who were too honourable to sell themselves, though they lacked the logic to develop
-his ideas and the energy to carry out his work.
-</p>
-<p>In consequence of this I restricted myself to my pupils, and selected for my purposes
-those whom I thought more appropriate and better disposed. Having now a clear idea
-of the aim which I proposed to myself and a certain prestige from my position as teacher
-and my expansive character, I discussed various subjects with my pupils when the lessons
-were over; sometimes we spoke of Spanish customs, sometimes of politics, religion,
-art, or philosophy. I sought always to correct the exaggerations of their judgments,
-and to show clearly how mischievous it is to subordinate one’s own judgment to the
-dogma of a sect, school, or party, as is so frequently done. In this way I succeeded
-in bringing about a certain agreement among men who differed in their creeds and views,
-and induced them to master the beliefs which they had hitherto held unquestioningly
-by faith, obedience, or sheer indolence. My friends and pupils found themselves happy
-in thus abandoning some ancient error and opening their minds to truths which uplifted
-and ennobled them.
-</p>
-<p>A rigorous logic, applied with discretion, removed fanatical bitterness, established
-intellectual harmony, and gave, to some extent at least, a progressive disposition
-to their wills. Freethinkers who opposed <span class="pageNum" id="pb6">[<a href="#pb6">6</a>]</span>the Church and rejected the legends of <i>Genesis</i>, the imperfect morality of the gospels, and the ecclesiastical ceremonies; more or
-less opportunist republicans or radicals who were content with the futile equality
-conferred by the title of citizen, without in the least affecting class distinctions;
-philosophers who fancied they had discovered the first cause of things in their metaphysical
-labyrinths and established truth in their empty phrases—all were enabled to see the
-errors of others as well as their own, and they leaned more and more to the side of
-common sense.
-</p>
-<p>When the further course of my life separated me from these friends and brought on
-me an unmerited imprisonment, I received many expressions of confidence and friendship
-from them. From all of them I anticipate useful work in the cause of progress, and
-I congratulate myself that I had some share in the direction of their thoughts and
-endeavours.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb7">[<a href="#pb7">7</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-<div class="footnotes">
-<hr class="fnsep">
-<div class="footnote-body">
-<div id="xd31e408">
-<p class="footnote"><span class="fnlabel"><a class="noteRef" href="#xd31e408src">1</a></span> This was in the early eighties, when Ferrer, then in his early twenties, was secretary
-to the republican leader Ruiz Zorrilla. To this phase of his career, which he rapidly
-outgrew, belongs the revolutionary document which was malignantly and dishonestly
-used against him twenty-five years afterwards.—J. M.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd31e408src" title="Return to note 1 in text.">↑</a></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="ch2" class="div1 chapter"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#xd31e186">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
-<h2 class="label"><span class="sc">Chapter II.</span></h2>
-<h2 class="main">MLLE. MEUNIER</h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">Among my pupils was a certain Mlle. Meunier, a wealthy old lady with no dependents,
-who was fond of travel, and studied Spanish with the object of visiting my country.
-She was a convinced Catholic and a very scrupulous observer of the rules of her Church.
-To her, religion and morality were the same thing, and unbelief—or “impiety,” as the
-faithful say—was an evident sign of vice and crime.
-</p>
-<p>She detested revolutionaries, and she regarded with impulsive and undiscriminating
-aversion every display of popular ignorance. This was due, not only to her education
-and social position, but to the circumstance that during the period of the Commune
-she had been insulted by children in the streets of Paris as she went to church with
-her mother. Ingenuous and sympathetic, without regard to antecedents, accessories,
-or consequences, she always expressed her dogmatic convictions without reserve, and
-I had many opportunities to open her eyes to the inaccuracy of her opinions.
-</p>
-<p>In our many conversations I refrained from taking any definite side; so that she did
-not recognise me as a partisan of any particular belief, but as a careful <span class="pageNum" id="pb8">[<a href="#pb8">8</a>]</span>reasoner with whom it was a pleasure to confer. She formed so flattering an opinion
-of me, and was so solitary, that she gave me her full confidence and friendship, and
-invited me to accompany her on her travels. I accepted the offer, and we travelled
-in various countries. My conduct and our constant conversation compelled her to recognise
-the error of thinking that every unbeliever was perverse and every atheist a hardened
-criminal, since I, a convinced atheist, manifested symptoms very different from those
-which her religious prejudice had led her to expect.
-</p>
-<p>She thought, however, that my conduct was exceptional, and reminded me that the exception
-proves the rule. In the end the persistency and logic of my arguments forced her to
-yield to the evidence, and, when her prejudice was removed, she was convinced that
-a rational and scientific education would preserve children from error, inspire men
-with a love of good conduct, and reorganise society in accord with the demands of
-justice. She was deeply impressed by the reflection that she might have been on a
-level with the children who had insulted her if, at their age, she had been reared
-in the same conditions as they. When she had given up her belief in innate ideas,
-she was greatly preoccupied with the following problem: If a child were educated without
-hearing anything about religion, what idea of the Deity would it have on reaching
-the age of reason?
-</p>
-<p>After a while, it seemed to me that we were wasting time if we were not prepared to
-go on from words to deeds. To be in possession of an important privilege <span class="pageNum" id="pb9">[<a href="#pb9">9</a>]</span>through the imperfect organisation of society and by the accident of birth, to conceive
-ideas of reform, and to remain inactive or indifferent amid a life of pleasure, seemed
-to me to incur a responsibility similar to that of a man who refused to lend a hand
-to a person whom he could save from danger. One day, therefore, I said to Mlle. Meunier:—
-</p>
-<p>“Mlle., we have reached a point at which it is necessary to reconsider our position.
-The world appeals to us for our assistance, and we cannot honestly refuse it. It seems
-to me that to expend entirely on comforts and pleasures resources which form part
-of the general patrimony, and which would suffice to establish a useful institution,
-is to commit a fraud; and that would be sanctioned neither by a believer nor an unbeliever.
-I must warn you, therefore, that you must not count on my company in your further
-travels. I owe myself to my ideas and to humanity, and I think that you ought to have
-the same feeling now that you have exchanged your former faith for rational principles.”
-</p>
-<p>She was surprised, but recognised the justice of my decision, and, without other stimulus
-than her own good nature and fine feeling, she gave me the funds for the establishment
-of an institute of rational education. The Modern School, which already existed in
-my mind, was thus ensured of realisation by this generous act.
-</p>
-<p>All the malicious statements that have been made in regard to this matter—for instance,
-that I had to submit to a judicial interrogation—are sheer calumnies. <span class="pageNum" id="pb10">[<a href="#pb10">10</a>]</span>It has been said that I used a power of suggestion over Mlle. Meunier for my own purposes.
-This statement, which is as offensive to me as it is insulting to the memory of that
-worthy and excellent lady, is absolutely false. I do not need to justify myself; I
-leave my vindication to my acts, my life, and the impartial judgment of my contemporaries.
-But Mlle. Meunier is entitled to the respect of all men of right feeling, of all those
-who have been delivered from the despotism of sect and dogma, who have broken all
-connection with error, who no longer submit the light of reason to the darkness of
-faith nor the dignity of freedom to the yoke of obedience.
-</p>
-<p>She believed with honest faith. She had been taught that between the Creator and the
-creature there is a hierarchy of intermediaries whom one must obey, and that one must
-bow to a series of mysteries contained in the dogmas imposed by a divinely instituted
-Church. In that belief she remained perfectly tranquil. The remarks I made and advice
-I offered her were not spontaneous commentaries on her belief, but natural replies
-to her efforts to convert me; and, from her want of logic, her feeble reasoning broke
-down under the strength of my arguments, instead of her persuading me to put faith
-before reason. She could not regard me as a tempting spirit, since it was always she
-who attacked my convictions; and she was in the end vanquished by the struggle of
-her faith and her own reason, which was aroused by her indiscretion in assailing the
-faith of one who opposed her beliefs.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb11">[<a href="#pb11">11</a>]</span></p>
-<p>She now ingenuously sought to exonerate the Communist boys as poor and uneducated
-wretches, the offspring of crime, disturbers of the social order on account of the
-injustice which, in face of such a disgrace, permits others, equal disturbers of the
-social order, to live unproductive lives, enjoy great wealth, exploit ignorance and
-misery, and trust that they will continue throughout eternity to enjoy their pleasures
-on account of their compliance with the rites of the Church and their works of charity.
-The idea of a reward of easy virtue and punishment of unavoidable sin shocked her
-conscience and moderated her religious feeling, and, seeking to break the atavistic
-chain which so much hampers any attempt at reform, she decided to contribute to the
-founding of a useful work which would educate the young in a natural way and in conditions
-which would help them to use to the full the treasures of knowledge which humanity
-has acquired by labour, study, observation, and the methodical arrangement of its
-general conclusions.
-</p>
-<p>In this way, she thought, with the aid of a supreme intelligence which veils itself
-in mystery from the mind of man, or by the knowledge which humanity has gained by
-suffering, contradiction, and doubt, the future will be realised; and she found an
-inner contentment and vindication of her conscience in the idea of contributing, by
-the bestowal of her property, to a work of transcendent importance.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb12">[<a href="#pb12">12</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="ch3" class="div1 chapter"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#xd31e196">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
-<h2 class="label"><span class="sc">Chapter III.</span></h2>
-<h2 class="main">I ACCEPT THE RESPONSIBILITY</h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">Once I was in possession of the means of attaining my object, I determined to put
-my hand to the task without delay.<a class="noteRef" id="xd31e482src" href="#xd31e482">1</a> It was now time to give a precise shape to the vague aspiration that had long haunted
-my imagination; and to that end, conscious of my imperfect knowledge of the art of
-pædagogy, I sought the counsel of others. I had not a great confidence in the official
-pædagogists, as they seemed to me to be largely hampered by prejudices in regard to
-their subject or other matters, and I looked out for some competent person whose views
-and conduct would accord with my ideals. With his assistance I would formulate the
-programme of the Modern School which I had already conceived. In my opinion it was
-to be, not the perfect type of the future school of a rational state of society, but
-a precursor of it, the best possible adaptation of our means; that is to say, an emphatic
-rejection of the ancient type of school which still survives, and a careful experiment
-in the direction of imbuing the children of the future with the substantial truths
-of science.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb13">[<a href="#pb13">13</a>]</span></p>
-<p>I was convinced that the child comes into the world without innate ideas, and that
-during the course of his life he gathers the ideas of those nearest to him, modifying
-them according to his own observation and reading. If this is so, it is clear that
-the child should receive positive and truthful ideas of all things, and be taught
-that, to avoid error, it is essential to admit nothing on faith, but only after experience
-or rational demonstration. With such a training the child will become a careful observer,
-and will be prepared for all kinds of studies.
-</p>
-<p>When I had found a competent person, and while the first lines were being traced of
-the plan we were to follow, the necessary steps were taken in Barcelona for the founding
-of the establishment; the building was chosen and prepared, and the furniture, staff,
-advertisements, prospectuses, leaflets, etc., were secured. In less than a year all
-was ready, though I was put to great loss through the betrayal of my confidence by
-a certain person. It was clear that we should at once have to contend with many difficulties,
-not only on the part of those who were hostile to rational education, but partly on
-account of a certain class of theorists, who urged on me, as the outcome of their
-knowledge and experience, advice which I could only regard as the fruit of their prejudices.
-One man, for instance, who was afflicted with a zeal for local patriotism, insisted
-that the lessons should be given in Catalan [the dialect of the province of Barcelona],
-and would thus confine humanity and the world within the narrow limits of the region
-between the <span class="pageNum" id="pb14">[<a href="#pb14">14</a>]</span>Ebro and the Pyrenees. I would not, I told the enthusiast, even adopt Spanish as the
-language of the school if a universal language had already advanced sufficiently to
-be of practical use. I would a hundred times rather use Esperanto than Catalan.
-</p>
-<p>The incident confirmed me in my resolution not to submit the settlement of my plan
-to the authority of distinguished men who, with all their repute, do not take a single
-voluntary step in the direction of reform. I felt the burden of the responsibility
-I had accepted, and I endeavoured to discharge it as my conscience directed. Resenting
-the marked social inequalities of the existing order as I did, I could not be content
-to deplore their effects; I must attack them in their causes, and appeal to the principle
-of justice—to that ideal equality which inspires all sound revolutionary feeling.
-</p>
-<p>If matter is one, uncreated, and eternal—if we live on a relatively small body in
-space, a mere speck in comparison with the innumerable globes about us, as is taught
-in the universities, and may be learned by the privileged few who share the monopoly
-of science—we have no right to teach, and no excuse for teaching, in the primary schools
-to which the people go when they have the opportunity, that God made the world out
-of nothing in six days, and all the other absurdities of the ancient legends. Truth
-is universal, and we owe it to everybody. To put a price on it, to make it the monopoly
-of a privileged few, to detain the lowly in systematic ignorance, and—what is worse—impose
-on them a dogmatic and <span class="pageNum" id="pb15">[<a href="#pb15">15</a>]</span>official doctrine in contradiction with the teaching of science, in order that they
-may accept with docility their low and deplorable condition, is to me an intolerable
-indignity. For my part, I consider that the most effective protest and the most promising
-form of revolutionary action consist in giving the oppressed, the disinherited, and
-all who are conscious of a demand for justice, as much truth as they can receive,
-trusting that it will direct their energies in the great work of the regeneration
-of society.
-</p>
-<p>Hence the terms of the first announcement of the Modern School that was issued to
-the public. It ran as follows:—
-</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="first"><span class="sc">Programme.</span>
-</p>
-<p>The mission of the Modern School is to secure that the boys and girls who are entrusted
-to it shall become well-instructed, truthful, just, and free from all prejudice.
-</p>
-<p>To that end the rational method of the natural sciences will be substituted for the
-old dogmatic teaching. It will stimulate, develop, and direct the natural ability
-of each pupil, so that he or she will not only become a useful member of society,
-with his individual value fully developed, but will contribute, as a necessary consequence,
-to the uplifting of the whole community.
-</p>
-<p>It will instruct the young in sound social duties, in conformity with the just principle
-that “there are no duties without rights, and no rights without duties.”
-</p>
-<p>In view of the good results that have been obtained abroad by mixed education, and
-especially in order to realise the great aim of the Modern School—the <span class="pageNum" id="pb16">[<a href="#pb16">16</a>]</span>formation of an entirely fraternal body of men and women, without distinction of sex
-or class—children of both sexes, from the age of five upward, will be received.
-</p>
-<p>For the further development of its work, the Modern School will be opened on Sunday
-mornings, when there will be classes on the sufferings of mankind throughout the course
-of history, and on the men and women who have distinguished themselves in science,
-art, or the fight for progress. The parents of the children may attend these classes.
-</p>
-<p>In the hope that the intellectual work of the Modern School will be fruitful, we have,
-besides securing hygienic conditions in the institution and its dependencies, arranged
-to have a medical inspection of children at their entrance into the school. The result
-of this will be communicated to the parents if it is deemed necessary; and others
-will be held periodically, in order to prevent the spread of contagious diseases during
-the school hours.</p>
-</blockquote><p>
-</p>
-<p>During the week which preceded the opening of the Modern School I invited the representatives
-of the press to visit the institution and make it known, and some of the journals
-inserted appreciative notices of the work. It may be of historical interest to quote
-a few paragraphs from <i lang="es">El Diluvio</i>:—
-</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="first">The future is budding in the school. To build on any other foundation is to build
-on sand. Unhappily, the school may serve either the purposes of tyranny or the cause
-of liberty, and may thus serve either barbarism or civilisation.
-</p>
-<p>We are therefore pleased to see certain patriots and humanitarians, who grasp the
-transcendent importance of this social function, which our Government <span class="pageNum" id="pb17">[<a href="#pb17">17</a>]</span>systematically overlooks, hasten to meet this pressing need by founding a Modern School;
-a school which will not seek to promote the interests of sect and to move in the old
-ruts, as has been done hitherto, but will create an intellectual environment in which
-the new generation will absorb the ideas and the impulses which the stream of progress
-unceasingly brings.
-</p>
-<p>This end can only be attained by private enterprise. Our existing institutions, tainted
-with all the vices of the past and weakened by all the trivialities of the present,
-cannot discharge this useful function. It is reserved for men of noble mind and unselfish
-feeling to open up the new path by which succeeding generations will rise to higher
-destinies.
-</p>
-<p>This has been done, or will be done, by the founders of the modest Modern School which
-we have visited at the courteous invitation of its directors and those who are interested
-in its development. This school is not a commercial enterprise, like most scholastic
-institutions, but a pædagogical experiment, of which only one other specimen exists
-in Spain (the Free Institution of Education at Madrid).
-</p>
-<p>Sr. Salas Antón brilliantly expounded the programme of the school to the small audience
-of journalists and others who attended the modest opening-festival, and descanted
-on the design of educating children in the <i>whole</i> truth and <i>nothing but</i> the truth, or what is proved to be such. His chief theme was that the founders do
-not propose to add one more to the number of what are known as “Lay Schools,” with
-their impassioned dogmatism, but a serene observatory, open to the four winds of heaven,
-with no cloud darkening the horizon and interposing between the light and the mind
-of man.</p>
-</blockquote><p>
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb18">[<a href="#pb18">18</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-<div class="footnotes">
-<hr class="fnsep">
-<div class="footnote-body">
-<div id="xd31e482">
-<p class="footnote"><span class="fnlabel"><a class="noteRef" href="#xd31e482src">1</a></span> Mlle. Meunier died, leaving about £30,000 unconditionally to Ferrer, before he returned
-to Spain in 1900.—J. M.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd31e482src" title="Return to note 1 in text.">↑</a></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="ch4" class="div1 chapter"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#xd31e206">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
-<h2 class="label"><span class="sc">Chapter IV.</span></h2>
-<h2 class="main">THE EARLY PROGRAMME</h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">The time had come to think of the inauguration of the Modern School. Some time previously
-I had invited a number of gentlemen of great distinction and of progressive sentiments
-to assist me with their advice and form a kind of Committee of Consultation. My intercourse
-with them at Barcelona was of great value to me, and many of them remained in permanent
-relation with me, for which I may express my gratitude. They were of opinion that
-the Modern School should be opened with some display—invitation-cards, a circular
-to the press, a large hall, music, and oratorical addresses by distinguished Liberal
-politicians. It would have been easy to do this, and we would have attracted an audience
-of hundreds of people who would have applauded with that momentary enthusiasm which
-characterises our public functions. But I was not seduced by the idea. As a Positivist
-and an idealist I was convinced that a simple modesty best befitted the inauguration
-of a work of reform. Any other method seemed to me disingenuous, a concession to enervating
-conventions and to the very evil which I was setting out to reform. The proposal of
-the Committee was, therefore, repugnant <span class="pageNum" id="pb19">[<a href="#pb19">19</a>]</span>to my conscience and my sentiments, and I was, in that and all other things relating
-to the Modern School, the executive power.
-</p>
-<p>In the first number of the <i>Bulletin of the Modern School</i>, issued on October 30, 1901, I gave a general exposition of the fundamental principles
-of the School, which I may repeat here:—
-</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="first">Those imaginary products of the mind, <i>a priori</i> ideas, and all the absurd and fantastical fictions hitherto regarded as truth and
-imposed as directive principles of human conduct, have for some time past incurred
-the condemnation of reason and the resentment of conscience. The sun no longer merely
-touches the tips of the mountains; it floods the valleys, and we enjoy the light of
-noon. Science is no longer the patrimony of a small group of privileged individuals;
-its beneficent rays more or less consciously penetrate every rank of society. On all
-sides traditional errors are being dispelled by it; by the confident procedure of
-experience and observation it enables us to attain accurate knowledge and criteria
-in regard to natural objects and the laws which govern them. With indisputable authority
-it bids men lay aside for ever their exclusivisms and privileges, and it offers itself
-as the controlling principle of human life, seeking to imbue all with a common sentiment
-of humanity.
-</p>
-<p>Relying on modest resources, but with a robust and rational faith and a spirit that
-will not easily be intimidated, whatever obstacles arise in our path, we have founded
-the Modern School. Its aim is to convey, without concession to traditional methods,
-an education based on the natural sciences. This new method, though the only sound
-and positive <span class="pageNum" id="pb20">[<a href="#pb20">20</a>]</span>method, has spread throughout the civilised world, and has innumerable supporters
-of intellectual distinction and lofty principles.
-</p>
-<p>We are aware how many enemies there are about us. We are conscious of the innumerable
-prejudices which oppress the social conscience of our country. This is the outcome
-of a medieval, subjective, dogmatic education, which makes ridiculous pretensions
-to the possession of an infallible criterion. We are further aware that, in virtue
-of the law of heredity, strengthened by the influences of the environment, the tendencies
-which are connatural and spontaneous in the young child are still more pronounced
-in adolescence. The struggle will be severe, the work difficult; but with a constant
-and unwavering will, the sole providence of the moral world, we are confident that
-we will win the victory to which we aspire. We will develop living brains, capable
-of reacting on our instruction. We will take care that the minds of our pupils will
-sustain, when they leave the control of their teachers, a stern hostility to prejudice;
-that they will be solid minds, capable of forming their own rational convictions on
-every subject.
-</p>
-<p>This does not mean that we will leave the child, at the very outset of its education,
-to form its own ideas. The Socratic procedure is wrong, if it is taken too literally.
-The very constitution of the mind, at the commencement of its development, demands
-that at this stage the child shall be receptive. The teacher must implant the germs
-of ideas. These will, when age and strength invigorate the brain, bring forth corresponding
-flowers and fruit, in accordance with the degree of initiative and the characteristic
-features of the pupil’s mind.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb21">[<a href="#pb21">21</a>]</span></p>
-<p>On the other hand, we may say that we regard as absurd the widespread notion that
-an education based on natural science stunts the organ of the idealist faculty. We
-are convinced that the contrary is true. What science does is to correct and direct
-it, and give it a wholesome sense of reality. The work of man’s cerebral energy is
-to create the <i>ideal</i>, with the aid of art and philosophy. But in order that the ideal shall not degenerate
-into fables, or mystic and unsubstantial dreams, and the structure be not built on
-sand, it is absolutely necessary to give it a secure and unshakable foundation in
-the exact and positive teaching of the natural sciences.
-</p>
-<p>Moreover, the education of a man does not consist merely in the training of his intelligence,
-without having regard to the heart and the will. Man is a complete and unified whole,
-in spite of the variety of his functions. He presents various facets, but is at the
-bottom a single energy, which sees, loves, and applies a will to the prosecution of
-what he has conceived or affected. It is a morbid condition, an infringement of the
-laws of the human organism, to establish an abyss where there ought to be a sane and
-harmonious continuity. The divorce between thought and will is an unhappy feature
-of our time. To what fatal consequences it has led! We need only refer to our political
-leaders and to the various orders of social life; they are deeply infected with this
-pernicious dualism. Many of them are assuredly powerful enough in respect of their
-mental faculties, and have an abundance of ideas; but they lack a sound orientation
-and the fine thoughts which science applies to the life of individuals and of peoples.
-Their restless egoism and the wish to <span class="pageNum" id="pb22">[<a href="#pb22">22</a>]</span>accommodate their relatives, together with their leaven of traditional sentiments,
-form an impermeable barrier round their hearts and prevent the infiltration of progressive
-ideas and the formation of that sap of sentiment which is the impelling and determining
-power in the conduct of man. Hence the attempt to obstruct progress and put obstacles
-in the way of new ideas; hence, as a result of these attempts, the scepticism of multitudes,
-the death of nations, and the inevitable despair of the oppressed.
-</p>
-<p>We regard it as one of the first principles of our pædagogical mission that there
-is no such duality of character in any individual—one which sees and appreciates truth
-and goodness, and one which follows evil. And, since we take natural science as our
-guide in education, a further consequence will be recognised; we shall endeavour to
-secure that the intellectual impressions which science conveys to the pupil shall
-be converted into the sap of sentiment and shall be intensely loved. When sentiment
-is strong it penetrates and diffuses itself through the deepest recesses of a man’s
-being, pervading and giving a special colour to his character.
-</p>
-<p>And as a man’s conduct must revolve within the circle of his character, it follows
-that a youth educated in the manner we have indicated will, when he comes to rule
-himself, recognise science as the one helpful master of his life.</p>
-</blockquote><p>
-</p>
-<p>The school was opened on September 8, 1901, with thirty pupils—twelve girls and eighteen
-boys. These sufficed for the purpose of our experiment, and we had no intention of
-increasing the number for a time, <span class="pageNum" id="pb23">[<a href="#pb23">23</a>]</span>so that we might keep a more effective watch on the pupils. The enemies of the new
-school would take the first opportunity to criticise our work in co-educating boys
-and girls.
-</p>
-<p>The people present at the opening were partly attracted by the notices of our work
-published in the press, and partly consisted of the parents of the pupils and delegates
-of various working-class societies who had been invited on account of their assistance
-to me. I was supported in the chair by the teachers and the Committee of Consultation,
-two of whom expounded the system and aim of the school. In this quiet fashion we inaugurated
-a work that was destined to last. We created the Modern, Scientific, and Rational
-School, the fame of which soon spread in Europe and America. Time may witness a change
-of its name—the “Modern” School—but the description “scientific and rational” will
-be more and more fully vindicated.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb24">[<a href="#pb24">24</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="ch5" class="div1 chapter"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#xd31e216">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
-<h2 class="label"><span class="sc">Chapter V.</span></h2>
-<h2 class="main">THE CO-EDUCATION OF THE SEXES</h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">The most important point in our programme of rational education, in view of the intellectual
-condition of the country, and the feature which was most likely to shock current prejudices
-and habits, was the co-education of boys and girls.
-</p>
-<p>The idea was not absolutely new in Spain. As a result of necessity and of primitive
-conditions, there were villages in remote valleys and on the mountains where some
-good-natured neighbour, or the priest or sacristan, used to teach the catechism, and
-sometimes elementary letters, to boys and girls in common. In fact, it is sometimes
-legally authorised, or at least tolerated, by the State among small populations which
-have not the means to pay both a master and mistress. In such cases, either a master
-or mistress gives common lessons to boys and girls, as I had myself seen in a village
-not far from Barcelona. In towns and cities, however, mixed education was not recognised.
-One read sometimes of the occurrence of it in foreign countries, but no one proposed
-to adopt it in Spain, where such a proposal would have been deemed an innovation of
-the most utopian character.
-</p>
-<p>Knowing this, I refrained from making any public <span class="pageNum" id="pb25">[<a href="#pb25">25</a>]</span>propaganda on the subject, and confined myself to private discussion with individuals.
-We asked every parent who wished to send a boy to the school if there were girls in
-the family, and it was necessary to explain to each the reasons for co-education.
-Wherever we did this, the result was satisfactory. If we had announced our intention
-publicly, it would have raised a storm of prejudice. There would have been a discussion
-in the press, conventional feeling would have been aroused, and the fear of “what
-people would say”—that paralysing obstacle to good intentions—would have been stronger
-than reason. Our project would have proved exceedingly difficult, if not impossible.
-Whereas, proceeding as we did, we were able to open with a sufficient number of boys
-and girls, and the number steadily increased, as the <i>Bulletin</i> of the school shows.
-</p>
-<p>In my own mind, co-education was of vital importance. It was not merely an indispensable
-condition of realising what I regard as the ideal result of rational education; it
-was the ideal itself, initiating its life in the Modern School, developing progressively
-without any form of exclusion, inspiring a confidence of attaining our end. Natural
-science, philosophy, and history unite in teaching, in face of all prejudice to the
-contrary, that man and woman are two complementary aspects of human nature, and the
-failure to recognise this essential and important truth has had the most disastrous
-consequences.
-</p>
-<p>In the second number of the <i>Bulletin</i>, therefore, I published a careful vindication of my ideas:—
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb26">[<a href="#pb26">26</a>]</span></p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="first">Mixed education (I said) is spreading among civilised nations. In many places it has
-already had excellent results. The principle of this new scheme of education is that
-children of both sexes shall receive the same lessons; that their minds shall be developed,
-their hearts purified, and their wills strengthened in precisely the same manner;
-that the sexes shall be in touch with each other from infancy, so that woman shall
-be, not in name only, but in reality and truth, the companion of man.
-</p>
-<p>A venerable institution which dominates the thoughts of our people declares, at one
-of the most solemn moments of life, when, with ceremonious pomp, man and woman are
-united in matrimony, that woman is the companion of man. These are hollow words, void
-of sense, without vital and rational significance in life, since what we witness in
-the Christian Church, in Catholicism particularly, is the exact opposite of this idea.
-Not long ago a Christian woman of fine feeling and great sincerity complained bitterly
-of the moral debasement which is put upon her sex in the bosom of the Church: “It
-would be impious audacity for a woman to aspire in the Church even to the position
-of the lowest sacristan.”
-</p>
-<p>A man must suffer from ophthalmia of the mind not to see that, under the inspiration
-of Christianity, the position of woman is no better than it was under the ancient
-civilisations; it is, indeed, worse, and has aggravating circumstances. It is a conspicuous
-fact in our modern Christian society that, as a result and culmination of our patriarchal
-development, the woman does not belong to herself; she is neither more nor less than
-an adjunct of man, subject constantly to his absolute dominion, bound to him—it may
-be—by chains of gold. Man has made her <span class="pageNum" id="pb27">[<a href="#pb27">27</a>]</span>a perpetual minor. Once this was done, she was bound to experience one of two alternatives:
-man either oppresses and silences her, or treats her as a child to be coaxed—according
-to the mood of the master. If at length we note in her some sign of the new spirit,
-if she begins to assert her will and claim some share of independence, if she is passing,
-with irritating slowness, from the state of slave to the condition of a respected
-ward, she owes it to the redeeming spirit of science, which is dominating the customs
-of races and the designs of our social rulers.</p>
-</blockquote><p>
-</p>
-<p>The work of man for the greater happiness of the race has hitherto been defective;
-in future it must be a joint action of the sexes; it is incumbent on both man and
-woman, according to the point of view of each. It is important to realise that, in
-face of the purposes of life, man is neither inferior nor (as we affect to think)
-superior to woman. They have different qualities, and no comparison is possible between
-diverse things.
-</p>
-<p>As many psychologists and sociologists observe, the human race displays two fundamental
-aspects. Man typifies the dominion of thought and of the progressive spirit; woman
-bears in her moral nature the characteristic note of intense sentiment and of the
-conservative spirit. But this view of the sexes gives no encouragement whatever to
-the ideas of reactionaries. If the predominance of the conservative element and of
-the emotions is ensured in woman by natural law, this does not make her the less fitted
-to be the companion of man. She is not prevented by <span class="pageNum" id="pb28">[<a href="#pb28">28</a>]</span>the constitution of her nature from reflecting on things of importance, nor is it
-necessary that she should use her mind in contradiction to the teaching of science
-and absorb all kinds of superstitions and fables. The possession of a conservative
-disposition does not imply that one is bound to crystallise in a certain stage of
-thought, or that one must be obsessed with prejudice in all that relates to reality.
-</p>
-<p>“To conserve” merely means “to retain,” to keep what has been given us, or what we
-have ourselves produced. The author of <i>The Religion of the Future</i> says, referring to woman in this respect: “The conservative spirit may be applied
-to truth as well as to error; it all depends what it is you conserve. If woman is
-instructed in philosophical and scientific matters, her conservative power will be
-to the advantage, not to the disadvantage, of progressive thought.”
-</p>
-<p>On the other hand, it is pointed out that woman is emotional. She does not selfishly
-keep to herself what she receives; she spreads abroad her beliefs, her ideas, and
-all the good and evil that form her moral treasures. She insists on sharing them with
-all those who are, by the mysterious power of emotion, identified with her. With exquisite
-art, with invariable unconsciousness, her whole moral physiognomy, her whole soul,
-so to say, impresses itself on the soul of those she loves.
-</p>
-<p>If the first ideas implanted in the mind of the child by the teacher are germs of
-truth and of positive knowledge; if the teacher himself is in touch with the scientific
-spirit of the time, the result will be good <span class="pageNum" id="pb29">[<a href="#pb29">29</a>]</span>from every point of view. But if a man be fed in the first stage of his mental development
-with fables, errors, and all that is contrary to the spirit of science, what can be
-expected of his future? When the boy becomes a man he will be an obstacle to progress.
-The human conscience is in infancy of the same natural texture as the bodily organism;
-it is tender and pliant. It readily accepts what comes to it from without. In the
-course of time this plasticity gives place to rigidity; it loses its pliancy and becomes
-relatively fixed. From that time the ideas communicated to it by the mother will be
-encrusted and identified with the youth’s conscience.
-</p>
-<p>The acid of the more rational ideas which the youth acquires by social intercourse
-or private study may in cases relieve the mind of the erroneous ideas implanted in
-childhood. But what is likely to be the practical outcome of this transformation of
-the mind in the sphere of conduct? We must not forget that in most cases the emotions
-associated with the early ideas remain in the deeper folds of the heart. Hence it
-is that we find in so many men such a flagrant and lamentable antithesis between the
-thought and the deed, the intelligence and the will; and this often leads to an eclipse
-of good conduct and a paralysis of progress.
-</p>
-<p>This primary sediment which we owe to our mothers is so tenacious and enduring—it
-passes so intimately into the very marrow of our being—that even energetic characters,
-which have effected a sincere reform of mind and will, have the mortification of discovering
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb30">[<a href="#pb30">30</a>]</span>this Jesuitical element, derived from their mothers, when they turn to make an inventory
-of their ideas.
-</p>
-<p>Woman must not be restricted to the home. The sphere of her activity must go out far
-beyond her home: it must extend to the very confines of society. But in order to ensure
-a helpful result from her activity we must not restrict the amount of knowledge we
-communicate to her; she must learn, both in regard to quantity and quality, the same
-things as man. When science enters the mind of woman it will direct her rich vein
-of emotion, the characteristic element of her nature, the glad harbinger of peace
-and happiness among men.
-</p>
-<p>It has been said that woman represents <i>continuity</i>, and man represents change: man is the individual, woman is the species. Change,
-however, would be useless, fugitive, and inconstant, with no solid foundation of reality,
-if the work of woman did not strengthen and consolidate the achievements of man. The
-individual, as such, is the flower of a day, a thing of ephemeral significance in
-life. Woman, who represents the species, has the function of retaining within the
-species the elements which improve its life, and to discharge this function adequately
-she needs scientific instruction.
-</p>
-<p>Humanity will advance more rapidly and confidently in the path of progress and increase
-its resources a hundredfold if it combines the ideas acquired by science with the
-emotional strength of woman. Ribot observes that an idea is merely an idea, an act
-of <span class="pageNum" id="pb31">[<a href="#pb31">31</a>]</span>intelligence, incapable of producing or doing anything, unless it is accompanied by
-an emotional state, a motive element. Hence it is conceived as a scientific truth
-that, to the advantage of progress, an idea does not long remain in a purely contemplative
-condition when it appears. This is obviated by associating the idea with emotion and
-love, which do not fail to convert it into vital action.
-</p>
-<p>When will all this be accomplished? When shall we see the marriage of ideas with the
-impassioned heart of woman? From that date we shall have a moral matriarchate among
-civilised nations. Then, on the one hand, humanity, considered in the home circle,
-will have the proper teacher to direct the new generations in the sense of the ideal;
-and, on the other hand, it will have an apostle and enthusiastic propagandist who
-will impress the value of liberty on the minds of men and the need of co-operation
-upon the peoples of the world.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb32">[<a href="#pb32">32</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="ch6" class="div1 chapter"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#xd31e226">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
-<h2 class="label"><span class="sc">Chapter VI.</span></h2>
-<h2 class="main">CO-EDUCATION OF THE SOCIAL CLASSES</h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">There must be a co-education of the different social classes as well as of the two
-sexes. I might have founded a school giving lessons gratuitously; but a school for
-poor children only would not be a rational school, since, if they were not taught
-submission and credulity as in the old type of school, they would have been strongly
-disposed to rebel, and would instinctively cherish sentiments of hatred.
-</p>
-<p>There is no escape from the dilemma. There is no middle term in the school for the
-disinherited class alone; you have either a systematic insistence, by means of false
-teaching, on error and ignorance, or hatred of those who domineer and exploit. It
-is a delicate point, and needs stating clearly. Rebellion against oppression is merely
-a question of statics, of equilibrium. Between one man and another who are perfectly
-equal, as is said in the immortal first clause of the famous Declaration of the French
-Revolution (“Men are born and remain free and equal in rights”), there can be no social
-inequality. If there is such inequality, some will tyrannise, the others protest and
-hate. Rebellion is a levelling tendency, and to that extent natural and rational,
-however much it may be <span class="pageNum" id="pb33">[<a href="#pb33">33</a>]</span>discredited by justice and its evil companions, law and religion.
-</p>
-<p>I venture to say quite plainly: the oppressed and the exploited have a right to rebel,
-because they have to reclaim their rights until they enjoy their full share in the
-common patrimony. The Modern School, however, has to deal with children, whom it prepares
-by instruction for the state of manhood, and it must not anticipate the cravings and
-hatreds, the adhesions and rebellions, which may be fitting sentiments in the adult.
-In other words, it must not seek to gather fruit until it has been produced by cultivation,
-nor must it attempt to implant a sense of responsibility until it has equipped the
-conscience with the fundamental conditions of such responsibility. Let it teach the
-children to be men; when they are men, they may declare themselves rebels against
-injustice.
-</p>
-<p>It needs very little reflection to see that a school for rich children only cannot
-be a rational school. From the very nature of things it will tend to insist on the
-maintenance of privilege and the securing of their advantages. The only sound and
-enlightened form of school is that which co-educates the poor and the rich, which
-brings the one class into touch with the other in the innocent equality of childhood,
-by means of the systematic equality of the rational school.
-</p>
-<p>With this end in view I decided to secure pupils of every social rank and include
-them in a common class, adopting a system accommodated to the circumstances <span class="pageNum" id="pb34">[<a href="#pb34">34</a>]</span>of the parents or guardians of the children; I would not have a fixed and invariable
-fee, but a kind of sliding scale, with free lessons for some and different charges
-for others. I later published the following article on the subject in the <i>Bulletin</i> (May 10, 1905):—
-</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="first">Our friend D.&nbsp;R.&nbsp;C. gave a lecture last Sunday at the Republican Club on the subject
-of “Modern Pædagogy,” explaining to his audience what we mean by modern education
-and what advantages society may derive from it. As I think that the subject is one
-of very great interest and most proper to receive public attention, I offer the following
-reflections and considerations on it. It seems to me that the lecturer was happy in
-his exposition of the ideal, but not in the suggestions he made with a view to realising
-it, nor in bringing forward the schools of France and Belgium as models to be imitated.
-</p>
-<p>Señor C., in fact, relies upon the State, upon Parliament or municipalities, for the
-building, equipment, and management of scholastic institutions. This seems to me a
-great mistake. If modern pædagogy means an effort towards the realisation of a new
-and more just form of society; if it means that we propose to instruct the rising
-generation in the causes which have brought about and maintain the lack of social
-equilibrium; if it means that we are anxious to prepare the race for better days,
-freeing it from religious fiction and from all idea of submission to an inevitable
-socio-economic inequality; we cannot entrust it to the State nor to other official
-organisms which necessarily maintain existing privileges and support the laws which
-at present consecrate the exploitation of <span class="pageNum" id="pb35">[<a href="#pb35">35</a>]</span>one man by another, the pernicious source of the worst abuses.
-</p>
-<p>Evidence of the truth of this is so abundant that any person can obtain it by visiting
-the factories and workshops and other centres of paid workers, by inquiring what is
-the manner of life of those in the higher and those in the lower social rank, by frequenting
-what are called courts of justice, and by asking the prisoners in our penal institutions
-what were the motives for their misconduct. If all this does not suffice to prove
-that the State favours those who are in possession of wealth and frowns on those who
-rebel against injustice, it may be useful to notice what has happened in Belgium.
-Here, according to Señor C., the government is so attentive to education and conducts
-it so excellently that private schools are impossible. In the official schools, he
-says, the children of the rich mingle with the children of the poor, and one may at
-times see the child of wealthy parents arm in arm with a poor and lowly companion.
-It is true, I admit, that children of all classes may attend the Belgian schools;
-but the instruction that is given in them is based on the supposed eternal necessity
-for a division of rich and poor, and on the principle that social harmony consists
-in the fulfilment of the laws.
-</p>
-<p>It is natural enough that the masters should like to see this kind of education given
-on every side. It is a means of bringing to reason those who might one day be tempted
-to rebel. Not long ago, in Brussels and other Belgian towns, the sons of the rich,
-armed and organised in national troops, shot down the sons of the poor who were claiming
-universal suffrage. On the other hand, my acquaintance with the quality of Belgian
-education differs <span class="pageNum" id="pb36">[<a href="#pb36">36</a>]</span>considerably from that of the lecturer. I have before me various issues of a Belgian
-journal (<i lang="fr">L’Exprèss de Liège</i>) which devotes an article to the subject, entitled “The Destruction of our National
-System of Education.” The facts given are, unfortunately, very similar to the facts
-about education in Spain, though in this country there has been a great development
-of education by religious orders, which is, as everybody knows, the systematisation
-of ignorance. In fine, it is not for nothing that a violently clerical government
-rules in Belgium.
-</p>
-<p>As to the modern education which is given in French schools, we may say that not a
-single one of the books used in them serves the purpose of a really secular education.
-On the very day on which Señor C. was lecturing in Gracia the Parisian journal <i lang="fr">L’Action</i> published an article, with the title “How Secular Morality is Taught,” in regard
-to the book <i lang="fr">Recueil de maximes et pensées morales</i>, and quoted from it certain ridiculously anachronistic ideas which offend the most
-elementary common sense.
-</p>
-<p>We shall be asked, What are we to do if we cannot rely on the aid of the State, of
-Parliament, or municipalities? We must appeal to those whose interest it is to bring
-about a reform; to the workers, in the first place, then to the cultivated and privileged
-people who cherish sentiments of justice. They may not be numerous, but there are
-such. I am personally acquainted with several. The lecturer complained that the civic
-authorities were so dilatory in granting the reforms that are needed. I feel sure
-that he would do better not to waste his time on them, but appeal directly to the
-working class.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb37">[<a href="#pb37">37</a>]</span></p>
-<p>The field has been well prepared. Let him visit the various working men’s societies,
-the Republican Fraternities, the Centres of Instruction, the Workers’ Athenæums, and
-all the bodies which are working for reform,<a class="noteRef" id="xd31e682src" href="#xd31e682">1</a> and let him give ear to the language of truth, the exhortations to union and courage.
-Let him observe the attention given to the problem of rational and scientific instruction,
-a kind of instruction which shows the injustice of privilege and the possibility of
-reforms. If individuals and societies continue thus to combine their endeavours to
-secure the emancipation of those who suffer—for it is not the workers only who suffer—Señor
-C. may rest assured of a positive, sound, and speedy result, while whatever may be
-obtained of the government will be dilatory, and will tend only to stupefy, to confuse
-ideas, and to perpetuate the domination of one class over another.</p>
-</blockquote><p>
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb38">[<a href="#pb38">38</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-<div class="footnotes">
-<hr class="fnsep">
-<div class="footnote-body">
-<div id="xd31e682">
-<p class="footnote"><span class="fnlabel"><a class="noteRef" href="#xd31e682src">1</a></span> These societies are particularly numerous in Spain, where the government system of
-education is deplorable, and schools are often established in connection with them.—J.
-M.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd31e682src" title="Return to note 1 in text.">↑</a></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="ch7" class="div1 chapter"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#xd31e236">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
-<h2 class="label"><span class="sc">Chapter VII.</span></h2>
-<h2 class="main">SCHOOL HYGIENE</h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">In regard to hygiene we are, in Spain, dominated by the abominable ideas of the Catholic
-Church. Saint Aloysius and Saint Benedict J. Labré are not the only, or the most characteristic,
-saints in the list of the supposed citizens of the kingdom of heaven, but they are
-the most popular with the masters of uncleanliness. With such types of perfection,<a class="noteRef" id="xd31e694src" href="#xd31e694">1</a> in an atmosphere of ignorance, cleverly and maliciously sustained by the clergy and
-the middle-class Liberals, it was to be expected that the children who would come
-to our school would be wanting in cleanliness; dirt is traditional in their world.
-</p>
-<p>We began a discreet and systematic campaign against it, showing the children how a
-dirty person or object inspires repugnance, and how cleanliness attracts esteem and
-sympathy; how one instinctively moves towards the cleanly person and away from the
-dirty and malodorous; and how we should be pleased to win the regard of those who
-see us and ashamed to excite their disgust.
-</p>
-<p>We then explained cleanliness as an aspect of <span class="pageNum" id="pb39">[<a href="#pb39">39</a>]</span>beauty, and uncleanliness as a part of ugliness; and we at length entered expressly
-into the province of hygiene, pointing out that dirt was a cause of disease and a
-constant possible source of infection and epidemic, while cleanliness was one of the
-chief conditions of health. We thus soon succeeded in disposing the children in favour
-of cleanliness, and making them understand the scientific principles of hygiene.
-</p>
-<p>The influence of these lessons spread to their families, as the new demands of the
-children disturbed traditional habits. One child would ask urgently for its feet to
-be washed, another would ask to be bathed, another wanted a brush and powder for its
-teeth, another new clothes or boots, and so on. The poor mothers, burdened with their
-daily tasks, sometimes crushed by the hardness of the circumstances in which their
-life was passed, and probably under the influence of religious teaching, endeavoured
-to stop their petitions; but in the end the new life introduced into the home by the
-child triumphed, a welcome presage of the regeneration which rational education will
-one day accomplish.
-</p>
-<p>I entrusted the expounding of the principles of scholastic hygiene to competent men,
-and Dr. Martínez Vargas and others wrote able and detailed articles on the subject
-in the <i>Bulletin</i>. Other articles were written on the subject of games and play, on the lines of modern
-pædagogy.<a class="noteRef" id="xd31e707src" href="#xd31e707">2</a>
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb40">[<a href="#pb40">40</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-<div class="footnotes">
-<hr class="fnsep">
-<div class="footnote-body">
-<div id="xd31e694">
-<p class="footnote"><span class="fnlabel"><a class="noteRef" href="#xd31e694src">1</a></span> It is especially commended in the life of Benedict J. Labré and others that they deliberately
-cultivated filthiness of person.—J. M.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd31e694src" title="Return to note 1 in text.">↑</a></p>
-</div>
-<div id="xd31e707">
-<p class="footnote"><span class="fnlabel"><a class="noteRef" href="#xd31e707src">2</a></span> These articles are reproduced in the Spanish edition. As they are not from Ferrer’s
-pen, I omit them.—J. M.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd31e707src" title="Return to note 2 in text.">↑</a></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="ch8" class="div1 chapter"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#xd31e246">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
-<h2 class="label"><span class="sc">Chapter VIII.</span></h2>
-<h2 class="main">THE TEACHERS</h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">The choice of teachers was another point of great difficulty. The tracing of a programme
-of rational instruction once accomplished, it remained to choose teachers who were
-competent to carry it out, and I found that in fact no such persons existed. We were
-to illustrate once more that a need creates its own organs.
-</p>
-<p>Certainly there were plenty of teachers. Teaching, though not very lucrative, is a
-profession by which a man can support himself. There is not a universal truth in the
-popular proverb which says of an unfortunate man: “He is hungrier than a schoolmaster.”<a class="noteRef" id="xd31e719src" href="#xd31e719">1</a> The truth is that in many parts of Spain the schoolmaster forms part of the local
-governing clique, with the priest, the doctor, the shopkeeper, and the money-lender
-(who is often one of the richest men in the place, though he contributes least to
-its welfare). The master receives a municipal salary, and has a certain influence
-which may at times secure material advantages. In larger towns the master, if he is
-not <span class="pageNum" id="pb41">[<a href="#pb41">41</a>]</span>content with his salary, may give lessons in private schools, where, in accord with
-the provincial institute, he prepares young men for the University. Even if he does
-not obtain a position of distinction, he lives as well as the generality of his fellow
-townsmen.
-</p>
-<p>There are, moreover, teachers in what are called “secular schools”—a name imported
-from France, where it arose because the schooling was formerly exclusively clerical
-and conducted by religious bodies. This is not the case in Spain; however Christian
-the teaching is, it is always given by lay masters. However, the Spanish lay teachers,
-inspired by sentiments of freethought and political radicalism, were rather anti-Catholic
-and anti-clerical than Rationalist, in the best sense of the word.
-</p>
-<p>Professional teachers have to undergo a special preparation for the task of imparting
-scientific and rational instruction. This is difficult in all cases, and is sometimes
-rendered impossible by the difficulties caused by habits of routine. On the other
-hand, those who had had no pædagogical experience, and offered themselves for the
-work out of pure enthusiasm for the idea, stood in even greater need of preparatory
-study. The solution of the problem was very difficult, because there was no other
-place but the rational school itself for making this preparation.
-</p>
-<p>The excellence of the system saved us. Once the Modern School had been established
-by private initiative, with a firm determination to be guided by the ideal, the difficulties
-began to disappear. Every dogmatic imposition was detected and rejected, <span class="pageNum" id="pb42">[<a href="#pb42">42</a>]</span>every excursion or deviation in the direction of metaphysics was at once abandoned,
-and experience gradually formed a new and salutary pædagogical science. This was due,
-not merely to my zeal and vigilance, but to my earliest teachers, and to some extent
-to the naive expressions of the pupils themselves. We may certainly say that if a
-need creates an organ, the organ speedily meets the need.
-</p>
-<p>Nevertheless, in order to complete my work, I established a Rationalist Normal School
-for the education of teachers, under the direction of an experienced master and with
-the co-operation of the teachers in the Modern School. In this a number of young people
-of both sexes were trained, and they worked excellently until the despotic authorities,
-yielding to our obscure and powerful enemies, put a stop to our work, and flattered
-themselves that they had destroyed it for ever.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb43">[<a href="#pb43">43</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-<div class="footnotes">
-<hr class="fnsep">
-<div class="footnote-body">
-<div id="xd31e719">
-<p class="footnote"><span class="fnlabel"><a class="noteRef" href="#xd31e719src">1</a></span> £20 a year is a not uncommon salary of masters and mistresses in Spain, and many cannot
-obtain even that.—J. M.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd31e719src" title="Return to note 1 in text.">↑</a></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="ch9" class="div1 chapter"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#xd31e257">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
-<h2 class="label"><span class="sc">Chapter IX.</span></h2>
-<h2 class="main">THE REFORM OF THE SCHOOL</h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">There are two ways open to those who seek to reform the education of children. They
-may seek to transform the school by studying the child and proving scientifically
-that the actual scheme of instruction is defective, and must be modified; or they
-may found new schools in which principles may be directly applied in the service of
-that ideal which is formed by all who reject the conventions, the cruelty, the trickery,
-and the untruth which enter into the bases of modern society.
-</p>
-<p>The first method offers great advantages, and is in harmony with the evolutionary
-conception which men of science regard as the only effective way of attaining the
-end. They are right in theory, as we fully admit. It is evident that the progress
-of psychology and physiology must lead to important changes in educational methods;
-that the teachers, being now in a better position to understand the child, will make
-their teaching more in conformity with natural laws. I further grant that this evolution
-will proceed in the direction of greater liberty, as I am convinced that violence
-is the method of ignorance, and that the educator who is really worthy of the name
-will <span class="pageNum" id="pb44">[<a href="#pb44">44</a>]</span>gain everything by spontaneity; he will know the child’s needs, and will be able to
-promote its development by giving it the greatest possible satisfaction.
-</p>
-<p>In point of fact, however, I do not think that those who are working for the regeneration
-of humanity have much to hope from this side. Rulers have always taken care to control
-the education of the people; they know better than any that their power is based entirely
-on the school, and they therefore insist on retaining their monopoly of it. The time
-has gone by when rulers could oppose the spread of instruction and put limits to the
-education of the masses. Such a policy was possible formerly because economic life
-was consistent with general ignorance, and this ignorance facilitated despotism. The
-circumstances have changed, however. The progress of science and our repeated discoveries
-have revolutionised the conditions of labour and production. It is no longer possible
-for the people to remain ignorant; education is absolutely necessary for a nation
-to maintain itself and make headway against its economic competitors. Recognising
-this, the rulers have sought to give a more and more complete organisation to the
-school, not because they look to education to regenerate society, but because they
-need more competent workers to sustain industrial enterprises and enrich their cities.
-Even the most reactionary rulers have learned this lesson; they clearly understand
-that the old policy was dangerous to the economic life of nations, and <span class="pageNum" id="pb45">[<a href="#pb45">45</a>]</span>that it was necessary to adapt popular education to the new conditions.
-</p>
-<p>It would be a serious mistake to think that the ruling classes have not foreseen the
-danger to themselves of the intellectual development of the people, and have not understood
-that it was necessary to change their methods. In fact, their methods have been adapted
-to the new conditions of life; they have sought to gain control of the ideas which
-are in course of evolution. They have endeavoured to preserve the beliefs on which
-social discipline had been grounded, and to give to the results of scientific research
-and the ideas involved in them a meaning which will not be to the disadvantage of
-existing institutions; and it is this that has induced them to assume control of the
-school. In every country the governing classes, which formerly left the education
-of the people to the clergy, as these were quite willing to educate in a sense of
-obedience to authority, have now themselves undertaken the direction of the schools.
-</p>
-<p>The danger to them consists in the stimulation of the human mind by the new spectacle
-of life and the possible rise of thoughts of emancipation in the depths of their hearts.
-It would have been folly to struggle against the evolving forces; the effect would
-be only to inflame them, and, instead of adhering to earlier methods of government,
-they would adopt new and more effective methods. It did not require any extraordinary
-genius to discover the solution. The course of events itself suggested to those who
-were in power the way in which they were to meet the <span class="pageNum" id="pb46">[<a href="#pb46">46</a>]</span>difficulties which threatened; they built schools, they sought generously to extend
-the sphere of education, and if there were at one point a few who resisted this impulse—as
-certain tendencies favoured one or other of the political parties—all soon understood
-that it was better to yield, and that the best policy was to find some new way of
-defending their interests and principles. There were then sharp struggles for the
-control of the schools, and these struggles continue to-day in every civilised country;
-sometimes the republican middle-class triumphs, sometimes the clergy. All parties
-appreciate the importance of the issue, and they shrink from no sacrifice to win the
-victory. “The school” is the cry of every party. The public good must be recognised
-in this zeal. Everybody seeks to raise himself and improve his condition by education.
-In former times it might have been said: “Those people want to keep thee in ignorance
-in order the better to exploit thee: we want to see thee educated and free.” That
-is no longer possible; schools of all kinds rise on every side.
-</p>
-<p>In regard to this general change of ideas among the governing classes as to the need
-of schools, I may state certain reasons for distrusting their intentions and doubting
-the efficacy of the means of reform which are advocated by certain writers. As a rule,
-these reformers care little about the social significance of education; they are men
-who eagerly embrace scientific truth, but eliminate all that is foreign to the object
-of their studies. They are patiently endeavouring <span class="pageNum" id="pb47">[<a href="#pb47">47</a>]</span>to understand the child, and are eager to know—though their science is young, it must
-be remembered—what are the best methods to promote its intellectual development.
-</p>
-<p>This kind of professional indifference is, in my opinion, very prejudicial to the
-cause they seek to serve. I do not in the least think them insensible of the realities
-of the social world, and I know that they believe that the public welfare will be
-greatly furthered by their labours. “Seeking to penetrate the secrets of the life
-of man,” they reflect, “and unravelling the normal process of his physical and psychic
-development, we shall direct education into a channel which will be favourable to
-the liberation of energy. We are not immediately concerned with the reform of the
-school, and indeed we are unable to say exactly what lines it should follow. We will
-proceed slowly, knowing that, from the very nature of things, the reform of the school
-will result from our research. If you ask us what are our hopes, we will grant that,
-like you, we foresee a revolution in the sense of a placing of the child and humanity
-under the direction of science; yet even in this case we are persuaded that our work
-makes for that object, and will be the speediest and surest means of promoting it.”
-</p>
-<p>This reasoning is evidently logical. No one could deny this, yet there is a considerable
-degree of fallacy in it, and we must make this clear. If the ruling classes have the
-same ideas as the reformers, if they are really impelled by a zeal for the continuous
-reorganisation of society until poverty is at last eliminated, <span class="pageNum" id="pb48">[<a href="#pb48">48</a>]</span>we might recognise that the power of science is enough to improve the lot of peoples.
-Instead of this, however, we see clearly that the sole aim of those who strive to
-attain power is the defence of their own interests, their own advantage, and the satisfaction
-of their personal desires. For some time now we have ceased to accept the phrases
-with which they disguise their ambitions. It is true that there are some in whom we
-may find a certain amount of sincerity, and who imagine at times that they are impelled
-by a zeal for the good of their fellows. But these become rarer and rarer, and the
-positivism of the age is very severe in raising doubts as to the real intentions of
-those who govern us.
-</p>
-<p>And just as they contrived to adapt themselves when the necessity arose, and prevented
-education from becoming a danger, they also succeeded in organising the school in
-accord with the new scientific ideas in such a way that nothing should endanger their
-supremacy. These ideas are difficult to accept, and one needs to keep a sharp look-out
-for successful methods and see how things are arranged so as to avoid verbal traps.
-How much has been, and is, expected of education! Most progressive people expect everything
-of it, and, until recent years, many did not understand that instruction alone leads
-to illusions. Much of the knowledge actually imparted in schools is useless; and the
-hope of reformers has been void because the organisation of the school, instead of
-serving an ideal purpose, has become one of the most powerful instruments of servitude
-in the <span class="pageNum" id="pb49">[<a href="#pb49">49</a>]</span>hands of the ruling class. The teachers are merely conscious or unconscious organs
-of their will, and have been trained on their principles. From their tenderest years,
-and more drastically than anybody, they have endured the discipline of authority.
-Very few have escaped this despotic domination; they are generally powerless against
-it, because they are oppressed by the scholastic organisation to such an extent that
-they have nothing to do but obey. It is unnecessary here to describe that organisation.
-One word will suffice to characterise it—Violence. The school dominates the children
-physically, morally, and intellectually, in order to control the development of their
-faculties in the way desired, and deprives them of contact with nature in order to
-modify them as required. This is the explanation of the failure; the eagerness of
-the ruling class to control education and the bankruptcy of the hopes of reformers.
-“Education” means in practice domination or domestication. I do not imagine that these
-systems have been put together with the deliberate aim of securing the desired results.
-That would be a work of genius. But things have happened just as if the actual scheme
-of education corresponded to some vast and deliberate conception; it could not have
-been done better. To attain it teachers have inspired themselves solely with the principles
-of discipline and authority, which always appeal to social organisers; such men have
-only one clear idea and one will—the children must learn to obey, to believe, and
-to think according to the prevailing social dogmas. If this were the aim, education
-could not be other <span class="pageNum" id="pb50">[<a href="#pb50">50</a>]</span>than we find it to-day. There is no question of promoting the spontaneous development
-of the child’s faculties, or encouraging it to seek freely the satisfaction of its
-physical, intellectual, and moral needs. There is question only of imposing ready-made
-ideas on it, of preventing it from ever thinking otherwise than is required for the
-maintenance of existing social institutions—of making it, in a word, an individual
-rigorously adapted to the social mechanism.
-</p>
-<p>It cannot be expected that this kind of education will have any influence on the progress
-of humanity. I repeat that it is merely an instrument of domination in the hands of
-the ruling classes, who have never sought to uplift the individual, and it is quite
-useless to expect any good from the schools of the present day. What they have done
-up to the present they will continue to do in the future. There is no reason whatever
-why they should adopt a different system; they have resolved to use education for
-their purposes, and they will take advantage of every improvement of it. If only they
-preserve the spirit of the school and the authoritative discipline which rules it,
-every innovation will tend to their advantage. For this they will keep a constant
-watch, and take care that their interests are secured.
-</p>
-<p>I would fix the attention of my readers on this point: the whole value of education
-consists in respect for the physical, intellectual, and moral faculties of the child.
-As in science, the only possible demonstration is demonstration by facts; education
-is not worthy of the name unless it be <span class="pageNum" id="pb51">[<a href="#pb51">51</a>]</span>stripped of all dogmatism, and unless it leaves to the child the direction of its
-powers and is content to support them in their manifestations. But nothing is easier
-than to alter this meaning of education, and nothing more difficult than to respect
-it. The teacher is always imposing, compelling, and using violence; the true educator
-is the man who does not impose his own ideas and will on the child, but appeals to
-its own energies.
-</p>
-<p>From this we can understand how easily education is conducted, and how light is the
-task of those who seek to dominate the individual. The best conceivable methods become
-in their hands so many new and more effective means of despotism. Our ideal is that
-of science; we appeal to it in demanding the power to educate the child by fostering
-its development and procuring a satisfaction of its needs as they manifest themselves.
-</p>
-<p>We are convinced that the education of the future will be entirely spontaneous. It
-is plain that we cannot wholly realise this, but the evolution of methods in the direction
-of a broader comprehension of life and the fact that all improvement involves the
-suppression of violence indicate that we are on solid ground when we look to science
-for the liberation of the child.
-</p>
-<p>Is this the ideal of those who actually control the scholastic system? Is this what
-they propose to bring about? Are they eager to abandon violence? Only in the sense
-that they employ new and more effective methods to attain the same end—that is to
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb52">[<a href="#pb52">52</a>]</span>say, the formation of individuals who will accept all the conventions, all the prejudices,
-and all the untruths on which society is based.
-</p>
-<p>We do not hesitate to say that we want men who will continue unceasingly to develop;
-men who are capable of constantly destroying and renewing their surroundings and renewing
-themselves; men whose intellectual independence is their supreme power, which they
-will yield to none; men always disposed for things that are better, eager for the
-triumph of new ideas, anxious to crowd many lives into the one life they have. Society
-fears such men; you cannot expect it to set up a system of education which will produce
-them.
-</p>
-<p>What, then, is our mission? What is the policy we must adopt in order to contribute
-to the reform of the school?
-</p>
-<p>Let us follow closely the work of the experts who are engaged in the study of the
-child, and let us endeavour to find a way of applying their principles to the education
-we seek to establish, aiming at an increasingly complete emancipation of the individual.
-But how are we to do this? By putting our hand energetically to the work, by promoting
-the establishment of new schools in which, as far as possible, there shall rule this
-spirit of freedom which, we feel, will colour the whole education of the future.
-</p>
-<p>We have already had proof that it leads to excellent results. We can destroy whatever
-there is in the actual school that savours of violence, all the artificial devices
-by which the children are estranged from <span class="pageNum" id="pb53">[<a href="#pb53">53</a>]</span>nature and life, the intellectual and moral discipline which has been used to impose
-ready-made thoughts, all beliefs which deprave and enervate the will. Without fear
-of injury we may place the child in a proper and natural environment, in which it
-will find itself in contact with all that it loves, and where vital impressions will
-be substituted for the wearisome reading of books. If we do no more than this, we
-shall have done much towards the emancipation of the child.
-</p>
-<p>In such an environment we may freely make use of the data of science and work with
-profit. It is true that we could not realise all our hopes; that often we shall find
-ourselves compelled, from lack of knowledge, to use the wrong means. But we shall
-be sustained by the confident feeling that, without having achieved our entire aim,
-we shall have done a great deal more than is being done by the actual school. I would
-rather have the free spontaneity of a child who knows nothing than the verbal knowledge
-and intellectual deformation of one that has experienced the existing system of education.
-</p>
-<p>What we have sought to do in Barcelona is being done by others in various places.
-All of us saw that the work was possible. Dedicate yourself to it at once. We do not
-hope that the studies of children will be suspended that we may regenerate the school.
-Let us apply what we know, and go on learning and applying. A scheme of rational education
-is already possible, and in such schools as we advocate the children may develop freely
-according to their aspirations. <span class="pageNum" id="pb54">[<a href="#pb54">54</a>]</span>Let us endeavour to improve and extend the work.
-</p>
-<p>Those are our aims. We know well the difficulties we have to face; but we have made
-a beginning in the conviction that we shall be assisted in our task by those who work
-in their various spheres to deliver men from the dogmas and conventions which secure
-the prolongation of the present unjust arrangement of society.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb55">[<a href="#pb55">55</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="ch10" class="div1 chapter"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#xd31e267">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
-<h2 class="label"><span class="sc">Chapter X.</span></h2>
-<h2 class="main">NO REWARD OR PUNISHMENT</h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">Rational education is, above all things, a means of defence against error and ignorance.
-To ignore truth and accept absurdities is, unhappily, a common feature in our social
-order; to that we owe the distinction of classes and the persistent antagonism of
-interests. Having admitted and practised the co-education of boys and girls, of rich
-and poor—having, that is to say, started from the principle of solidarity and equality—we
-are not prepared to create a new inequality. Hence in the Modern School there will
-be no rewards and no punishments; there will be no examinations to puff up some children
-with the flattering title of “excellent,” to give others the vulgar title of “good,”
-and make others unhappy with a consciousness of incapacity and failure.
-</p>
-<p>These features of the existing official and religious schools, which are quite in
-accord with their reactionary environment and aim, cannot, for the reasons I have
-given, be admitted into the Modern School. Since we are not educating for a specific
-purpose, we cannot determine the capacity or incapacity of the child. When we teach
-a science, or art, or trade, or some subject requiring special conditions, <span class="pageNum" id="pb56">[<a href="#pb56">56</a>]</span>an examination may be useful, and there may be reason to give a diploma or refuse
-one; I neither affirm nor deny it. But there is no such specialism in the Modern School.
-The characteristic note of the school, distinguishing it even from some which pass
-as progressive models, is that in it the faculties of the children shall develop freely
-without subjection to any dogmatic patron, not even to what it may consider the body
-of convictions of the founder and teachers; every pupil shall go forth from it into
-social life with the ability to be his own master and guide his own life in all things.
-</p>
-<p>Hence, if we were rationally prevented from giving prizes, we could not impose penalties,
-and no one would have dreamed of doing so in our school if the idea had not been suggested
-from without. Sometimes parents came to me with the rank proverb, “Letters go in with
-blood,” on their lips, and begged me to punish their children. Others who were charmed
-with the precocious talent of their children wanted to see them shine in examinations
-and exhibit medals. We refused to admit either prizes or punishments, and sent the
-parents away. If any child were conspicuous for merit, application, laziness, or bad
-conduct, we pointed out to it the need of accord, or the unhappiness of lack of accord,
-with its own welfare and that of others, and the teacher might give a lecture on the
-subject. Nothing more was done, and the parents were gradually reconciled to the system,
-though they often had to be corrected in their errors and prejudices by their own
-children.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb57">[<a href="#pb57">57</a>]</span></p>
-<p>Nevertheless, the old prejudice was constantly recurring, and I saw that I had to
-repeat my arguments with the parents of new pupils. I therefore wrote the following
-article in the <i>Bulletin</i>:—
-</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="first">The conventional examinations which we usually find held at the end of a scholastic
-year, to which our fathers attached so much importance, have had no result at all;
-or, if any result, a bad one. These functions and their accompanying solemnities seem
-to have been instituted for the sole purpose of satisfying the vanity of parents and
-the selfish interests of many teachers, and in order to put the children to torture
-before the examination and make them ill afterwards. Each father wants his child to
-be presented in public as one of the prodigies of the college, and regards him with
-pride as a learned man in miniature. He does not notice that for a fortnight or so
-the child suffers exquisite torture. As things are judged by external appearances,
-it is not thought that there is any real torture, as there is not the least scratch
-visible on the skin.…
-</p>
-<p>The parent’s lack of acquaintance with the natural disposition of the child, and the
-iniquity of putting it in false conditions so that its intellectual powers, especially
-in the sphere of memory, are artificially stimulated, prevent the parent from seeing
-that this measure of personal gratification may, as has happened in many cases, lead
-to illness and to the moral, if not the physical, death of the child.
-</p>
-<p>On the other hand, the majority of teachers, being mere stereotypers of ready-made
-phrases and mechanical inoculators, rather than <i>moral fathers</i> of their pupils, are concerned in these examinations <span class="pageNum" id="pb58">[<a href="#pb58">58</a>]</span>with their own personality and their economic interests. Their object is to let the
-parents and the others who are present at the public display see that, under their
-guidance, the child has learned a good deal, that its knowledge is greater in quantity
-and quality than could have been expected of its tender years and in view of the short
-time that it has been under the charge of this very skilful teacher.
-</p>
-<p>In addition to this wretched vanity, which is satisfied at the cost of the moral and
-physical life of the child, the teachers are anxious to elicit compliments from the
-parents and the rest of the audience, who know nothing of the real state of things,
-as a kind of advertisement of the prestige of their particular school.
-</p>
-<p>Briefly, we are inexorably opposed to holding public examinations. In our school everything
-must be done for the advantage of the pupil. Everything that does not conduce to this
-end must be recognised as opposed to the natural spirit of positive education. Examinations
-do no good, and they do much harm to the child. Besides the illness of which we have
-already spoken, the nervous system of the child suffers, and a kind of temporary paralysis
-is inflicted on its conscience by the immoral features of the examination; the vanity
-provoked in those who are placed highest, envy and humiliation, grave obstacles to
-sound growth, in those who have failed, and in all of them the germs of most of the
-sentiments which go to the making of egoism.</p>
-</blockquote><p>
-</p>
-<p>In a later number of the <i>Bulletin</i> I found it necessary to return to the subject:—
-</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="first">We frequently receive letters from Workers’ <span class="pageNum" id="pb59">[<a href="#pb59">59</a>]</span>Educational Societies and Republican Fraternities asking that the teachers shall chastise
-the children in our schools. We ourselves have been disgusted, during our brief excursions,
-to find material proofs of the fact which is at the base of this request; we have
-seen children on their knees, or in other attitudes of punishment.
-</p>
-<p>These irrational and atavistic practices must disappear. Modern pædagogy entirely
-discredits them. The teachers who offer their services to the Modern School, or ask
-our recommendation to teach in similar schools, must refrain from any moral or material
-punishment, under penalty of being disqualified permanently. Scolding, impatience,
-and anger ought to disappear with the ancient title of “master.” In free schools all
-should be peace, gladness, and fraternity. We trust that this will suffice to put
-an end to these practices, which are most improper in people whose sole ideal is the
-training of a generation fitted to establish a really fraternal, harmonious, and just
-state of society.</p>
-</blockquote><p>
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb60">[<a href="#pb60">60</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="ch11" class="div1 chapter"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#xd31e277">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
-<h2 class="label"><span class="sc">Chapter XI.</span></h2>
-<h2 class="main">THE GENERAL PUBLIC AND THE LIBRARY</h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">In setting out to establish a rational school for the purpose of preparing children
-for their entry into the free solidarity of humanity, the first problem that confronted
-us was the selection of books. The whole educational luggage of the ancient system
-was an incoherent mixture of science and faith, reason and unreason, good and evil,
-human experience and revelation, truth and error; in a word, totally unsuited to meet
-the new needs that arose with the formation of a new school.
-</p>
-<p>If the school has been from remote antiquity equipped not for teaching in the broad
-sense of communicating to the rising generation the gist of the knowledge of previous
-generations, but for teaching on the basis of authority and the convenience of the
-ruling classes, for the purpose of making children humble and submissive, it is clear
-that none of the books hitherto used would suit us. But the severe logic of this position
-did not at once convince me. I refused to believe that the French democracy, which
-worked so zealously for the separation of Church and State, incurred the anger of
-the <span class="pageNum" id="pb61">[<a href="#pb61">61</a>]</span>clericals, and adopted obligatory secular instruction, would resign itself to a semi-education
-or a sophisticated education. I had, however, to yield to the evidence, against my
-prejudice. I first read a large number of works in the French code of secular instruction,
-and found that God was replaced by the State, Christian virtue by civic duty, religion
-by patriotism, submission to the king, the aristocracy, and the clergy by subservience
-to the official, the proprietor, and the employer. Then I consulted an eminent Freethinker
-who held high office in the Ministry of Public Instruction, and, when I had told him
-my desire to see the books they used, which I understood to be purged of traditional
-errors, and explained my design and ideal to him, he told me frankly that they had
-nothing of the sort; all their books were, more or less cleverly and insidiously,
-tainted with untruth, which is the indispensable cement of social inequality. When
-I further asked if, seeing that they had replaced the decaying idol of deity by the
-idol of oligarchic despotism, they had not at least some book dealing with the origin
-of religion, he said that there was none; but he knew one which would suit me—Malvert’s
-<i>Science and Religion</i>. In point of fact, this was already translated into Spanish, and was used as a reading-book
-in the Modern School, with the title <i>Origin of Christianity</i>.
-</p>
-<p>In Spanish literature I found several works written by a distinguished author, of
-some eminence in science, who had produced them rather in the interest of the publishers
-than with a view to the education of <span class="pageNum" id="pb62">[<a href="#pb62">62</a>]</span>children. Some of these were at first used in the Modern School, but, though one could
-not accuse them of error, they lacked the inspiration of an ideal and were poor in
-method. I communicated with this author with a view to interesting him in my plans
-and inducing him to write books for me, but his publishers held him to a certain contract
-and he could not oblige me.
-</p>
-<p>In brief, the Modern School was opened before a single work had been chosen for its
-library, but it was not long before the first appeared—a brilliant book by Jean Grave,
-which has had a considerable influence on our schools. His work, <i>The Adventures of Nono</i>, is a kind of poem in which a certain phase of the happier future is ingeniously
-and dramatically contrasted with the sordid realities of the present social order;
-the delights of the land of Autonomy are contrasted with the horrors of the kingdom
-of Argirocracy. The genius of Grave has raised the work to a height at which it escapes
-the strictures of the sceptical and conservative; he has depicted the social evils
-of the present truthfully and without exaggeration. The reading of the book enchanted
-the children, and the profundity of his thought suggested many opportune comments
-to the teachers. In their play the children used to act scenes from Autonomy, and
-their parents detected the causes of their hardships in the constitution of the kingdom
-of Argirocracy.
-</p>
-<p>It was announced in the <i>Bulletin</i> and other journals that prizes were offered for the best manuals of rational instruction,
-but no writers came forward. I confine <span class="pageNum" id="pb63">[<a href="#pb63">63</a>]</span>myself to recording the fact without going into the causes of it. Two books were afterwards
-adopted for reading in school. They were not written for school, but they were translated
-for the Modern School and were very useful. One was called <i>The Note Book</i>, the other <i>Colonisation and Patriotism</i>. Both were collections of passages from writers of every country on the injustices
-connected with patriotism, the horrors of war, and the iniquity of conquest. The choice
-of these works was vindicated by the excellent influence they had on the minds of
-the children, as we shall see from the little essays of the children which appeared
-in the <i>Bulletin</i>, and the fury with which they were denounced by the reactionary press and politicians.
-</p>
-<p>Many think that there is not much difference between secular and rationalist education,
-and in various articles and propagandist speeches the two were taken to be synonymous.
-In order to correct this error I published the following article in the <i>Bulletin</i>:—
-</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="first">The word <i>education</i> should not be accompanied by any qualification. It means simply the need and duty
-of the generation which is in the full development of its powers to prepare the rising
-generation and admit it to the patrimony of human knowledge. This is an entirely rational
-ideal, and it will be fully realised in some future age, when men are wholly freed
-from their prejudices and superstitions.
-</p>
-<p>In our efforts to realise this ideal we find ourselves confronted with religious education
-and political education: to these we must oppose rational and scientific instruction.
-The type of religious education <span class="pageNum" id="pb64">[<a href="#pb64">64</a>]</span>is that given in the clerical and convent schools of all countries; it consists of
-the smallest possible quantity of useful knowledge and a good deal of Christian doctrine
-and sacred history. Political education is the kind established some time ago in France,
-after the fall of the Empire, the object of which is to exalt patriotism and represent
-the actual public administration as the instrument of the common welfare.
-</p>
-<p>Sometimes the qualification <i>free</i> or <i>secular</i> is applied abusively and maliciously to education, in order to distract or alienate
-public opinion. Orthodox people, for instance, call <i>free schools</i> certain schools which they establish in opposition to the really free tendency of
-modern pædagogy; and many are called <i>secular schools</i> which are really political, patriotic, and anti-humanitarian.
-</p>
-<p>Rational education is lifted above these illiberal forms. It has, in the first place,
-no regard to religious education, because science has shown that the story of creation
-is a myth and the gods legendary; and therefore religious education takes advantage
-of the credulity of the parents and the ignorance of the children, maintaining the
-belief in a supernatural being to whom people may address all kinds of prayers. This
-ancient belief, still unfortunately widespread, has done a great deal of harm, and
-will continue to do so as long as it persists. The mission of education is to show
-the child, by purely scientific methods, that the more knowledge we have of natural
-products, their qualities, and the way to use them, the more industrial, scientific,
-and artistic commodities we shall have for the support and comfort of life, and men
-and women will issue in larger numbers from our schools with a determination to <span class="pageNum" id="pb65">[<a href="#pb65">65</a>]</span>cultivate every branch of knowledge and action, under the guidance of reason and the
-inspiration of science and art, which will adorn life and reform society.
-</p>
-<p><i>We will not, therefore, lose our time praying to an imaginary God for things which
-our own exertions alone can procure.</i>
-</p>
-<p>On the other hand, our teaching has nothing to do with politics. It is our work to
-form individuals in the full possession of all their faculties, while politics would
-subject their faculties to other men. While religion has, with its divine power, created
-a positively abusive power and retarded the development of humanity, political systems
-also retard it by encouraging men to depend for everything on the will of others,
-on what are supposed to be men of a superior character—on those, in a word, who, from
-tradition or choice, exercise the profession of politics. It must be the aim of the
-rational schools to show the children that there will be tyranny and slavery as long
-as one man depends upon another, to study the causes of the prevailing ignorance,
-to learn the origin of all the traditional practices which give life to the existing
-social system, and to direct the attention of the pupils to these matters.
-</p>
-<p><i>We will not, therefore, lose our time seeking from others what we can get for ourselves.</i>
-</p>
-<p>In a word, our business is to imprint on the minds of the children the idea that their
-condition in the social order will improve in proportion to their knowledge and to
-the strength they are able to develop; and that the era of general happiness will
-be the more sure to dawn when they have discarded all religious and other superstitions,
-which have up to the present done so much harm. On that account there are no rewards
-or punishments in our schools; no alms, no <span class="pageNum" id="pb66">[<a href="#pb66">66</a>]</span>medals or badges in imitation of the religious and patriotic schools, which might
-encourage the children to believe in talismans instead of in the individual and collective
-power of beings who are conscious of their ability and knowledge.
-</p>
-<p>Rational and scientific knowledge must persuade the men and women of the future that
-they have to expect nothing from any privileged being (fictitious or real); and that
-they may expect all that is reasonable from themselves and from a freely organised
-and accepted social order.</p>
-</blockquote><p>
-</p>
-<p>I then appealed in the <i>Bulletin</i> and the local press to scientific writers who were eager for the progress of the
-race to supply us with text-books on these lines. They were, I said, “to deliver the
-minds of the pupils from all the errors of our ancestors, encourage them in the love
-of truth and beauty, and keep from them the authoritarian dogmas, venerable sophisms,
-and ridiculous conventionalities which at present disgrace our social life.” A special
-note was added in regard to the teaching of arithmetic:—
-</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="first">The way in which arithmetic has hitherto been generally taught has made it a powerful
-instrument for impressing the pupils with the false ideals of the capitalist règime
-which at present presses so heavily on society. The Modern School, therefore, invites
-essays on the subject of the reform of the teaching of arithmetic, and requests those
-friends of rational and scientific instruction who are especially occupied with mathematics
-to draw up a series of easy and practical problems, in which there shall be no reference
-to wages, economy, and profit. These exercises must deal with agricultural and industrial
-production, <span class="pageNum" id="pb67">[<a href="#pb67">67</a>]</span>the just distribution of the raw material and the manufactured articles, the means
-of communication, the transport of merchandise, the comparison of human labour with
-mechanical, the benefits of machinery, public works, etc. In a word, the Modern School
-wants a number of problems showing what arithmetic really ought to be—the science
-of the social economy (taking the word “economy” in its etymological sense of “good
-distribution”).
-</p>
-<p>The exercises will deal with the four fundamental operations (integrals, decimals,
-and fractions), the metrical system, proportion, compounds and alloys, the squares
-and cubes of numbers, and the extraction of square and cube roots. As those who respond
-to this appeal are, it is hoped, inspired rather with the ideal of a right education
-of children than with the desire of profit, and as we wish to avoid the common practice
-in such circumstances, we shall not appoint judges or offer any prizes. The Modern
-School will publish the Arithmetic which best serves its purpose, and will come to
-an amicable agreement with the author as to his fee.</p>
-</blockquote><p>
-</p>
-<p>A later note in the <i>Bulletin</i> was addressed to teachers:—
-</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="first">We would call the attention of all who dedicate themselves to the noble ideal of the
-rational teaching of children and the preparation of the young to take a fitting share
-in life to the announcements of a <i>Compendium of Universal History</i> by Clémence Jacquinet, and <i>The Adventures of Nono</i> by Jean Grave, which will be found on the cover.<a class="noteRef" id="xd31e932src" href="#xd31e932">1</a> The <span class="pageNum" id="pb68">[<a href="#pb68">68</a>]</span>works which the Modern School has published or proposes to publish are intended for
-all free and rational teaching institutions, centres of social study, and parents,
-who resent the intellectual restrictions which dogma of all kinds—religious, political,
-and social—imposes in order to maintain privilege at the expense of the ignorant.
-All who are opposed to Jesuitism and to conventional lies, and to the errors transmitted
-by tradition and routine, will find in our publications truth based upon evidence.
-As we have no desire of profit, the price of the works represents almost their intrinsic
-value or material cost; if there is any profit from the sale of them, it will be spent
-upon subsequent publications.</p>
-</blockquote><p>
-</p>
-<p>In a later number of the <i>Bulletin</i> (No. 6, second year) the distinguished geographer Elisée Reclus wrote, at my request,
-a lengthy article on the teaching of geography. In a letter which Reclus afterwards
-wrote me from the Geographical Institute at Brussels, replying to my request that
-he should recommend a text-book, he said that there was “no text-book for the teaching
-of geography in elementary schools”; he “did not know one that was not tainted with
-religious or patriotic poison, or, what is worse, administrative routine.” He recommended
-that the teachers should use no manual in the Modern School, which he cordially commended
-(February 26, 1903).
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb69">[<a href="#pb69">69</a>]</span></p>
-<p>In the following number (7) of the <i>Bulletin</i> I published the following note on the origin of Christianity:—
-</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="first">The older pædagogy, the real, if unavowed, aim of which was to impress children with
-the uselessness of knowledge, in order that they might be reconciled to their hard
-conditions and seek consolation in a supposed future life, used reading-books in the
-elementary school which swarmed with stories, anecdotes, accounts of travels, gems
-of classical literature, etc. There was a good deal of error mixed with what was sound
-and useful in this, and the aim was not just. The mystical idea predominated, representing
-that a relation could be established between a Supreme Being and men by means of priests,
-and this priesthood was the chief foundation of the existence of both the privileged
-and the disinherited, and the cause of much of the evil that they endured.
-</p>
-<p>Among other books of this class, all tainted with the same evil, we remember one which
-inserted an academic discourse, a marvel of Spanish eloquence, in praise of the Bible.
-The gist of it is expressed in the barbarous declaration of Omar when he condemned
-the Library of Alexandria to the flames: “The whole truth is contained in the sacred
-book. If those other books are true, they are superfluous; if they are not true, they
-should be burned.”
-</p>
-<p>The Modern School, which seeks to form free minds, with a sense of responsibility,
-fitted to experience a complete development of their powers, which is the one aim
-of life, must necessarily adopt a very different kind of reading-book, in harmony
-with its method of teaching. For this reason, as it teaches established <span class="pageNum" id="pb70">[<a href="#pb70">70</a>]</span>truth and is interested in the struggle between light and darkness, it has deemed
-it necessary to produce a critical work which will enlighten the mind of the child
-with positive facts. These may not be appreciated in childhood, but will later, in
-manhood, when the child takes its place in social life and in the struggle against
-the errors, conventions, hypocrisies, and infamies which conceal themselves under
-the cloak of mysticism. This work reminds us that our books are not merely intended
-for children; they are destined also for the use of the Adult Schools which are being
-founded on every side by associations of workers, Freethinkers, Co-operators, social
-students, and other progressive bodies who are eager to correct the illiteracy of
-our nation, and remove that great obstacle to progress.
-</p>
-<p>We believe that the section of Malvert’s work (<i>Science and Religion</i>) which we have entitled “The Origin of Christianity” will be useful for this purpose.
-It shows the myths, dogmas, and ceremonies of the Christian religion in their original
-form; sometimes as exoteric symbols concealing a truth known to the initiated, sometimes
-as adaptations of earlier beliefs, imposed by sheer routine and preserved by malice.
-As we are convinced and have ample evidence of the usefulness of our work, we offer
-it to the public with the hope that it will bear the fruit which we anticipate. We
-have only to add that certain passages which are unsuitable for children have been
-omitted; the omissions are indicated, and adults may consult the passages in the complete
-edition.</p>
-</blockquote><p>
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb71">[<a href="#pb71">71</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-<div class="footnotes">
-<hr class="fnsep">
-<div class="footnote-body">
-<div id="xd31e932">
-<p class="footnote"><span class="fnlabel"><a class="noteRef" href="#xd31e932src">1</a></span> It should be stated that both the writers are Anarchists, in the sense I have indicated
-in the Preface. Except on special subjects—the famous geographer Odón de Buen, for
-instance, <span class="pageNum" id="pb68n">[<a href="#pb68n">68</a>]</span>co-operated with Ferrer in regard to geography—no other writers were likely to embody
-Ferrer’s ideals. All, however, were as opposed to violence as Ferrer himself, and
-Mr. W. Archer has shown in his life of Ferrer that the charges brought against Mme.
-Jacquinet by Ferrer’s persecutors at his trial are officially denied by our Egyptian
-authorities.—J. M.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd31e932src" title="Return to note 1 in text.">↑</a></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="ch12" class="div1 chapter"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#xd31e287">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
-<h2 class="label"><span class="sc">Chapter XII.</span></h2>
-<h2 class="main">SUNDAY LECTURES</h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">The Modern School did not confine itself to the instruction of children. Without for
-a moment sacrificing its predominant character and its chief object, it also undertook
-the instruction of the people. We arranged a series of public lectures on Sundays,
-and they were attended by the pupils and other members of their families, and a large
-number of workers who were anxious to learn.
-</p>
-<p>The earlier lectures were wanting in method and continuity, as we had to employ lecturers
-who were quite competent in regard to their own subjects, but gave each lecture without
-regard to what preceded or followed. On other occasions, when we had no lecturer,
-we substituted useful readings. The general public attended assiduously, and our advertisements
-in the Liberal press of the district were eagerly scanned.
-</p>
-<p>In view of these results, and in order to encourage the disposition of the general
-public, I held a consultation with Dr. Andrés Martínez Vargas and Dr. Odón de Buen,
-Professors at the Barcelona University, on the subject of creating a popular university
-in the Modern School. In this the science which is given—or, rather, sold—by the State
-to a privileged <span class="pageNum" id="pb72">[<a href="#pb72">72</a>]</span>few in the universities should be given gratuitously to the general public, by way
-of restitution, as every human being has a right to know, and science, which is produced
-by observers and workers of all ages and countries, ought not to be restricted to
-a class.
-</p>
-<p>From that time the lectures became continuous and regular, having regard to the different
-branches of knowledge of the two lecturers. Dr. Martínez Vargas expounded physiology
-and hygiene, and Dr. Odón de Buen geography and natural science, on alternate Sundays,
-until we began to be persecuted. Their teaching was eagerly welcomed by the pupils
-of the Modern School, and the large audiences of mixed children and adults. One of
-the Liberal journals of Barcelona, in giving an account of the work, spoke of the
-function as “the scientific Mass.”
-</p>
-<p>The eternal light-haters, who maintain their privileges on the ignorance of the people,
-were greatly exasperated to see this centre of enlightenment shining so vigorously,
-and did not delay long to urge the authorities, who were at their disposal, to extinguish
-it brutally. For my part, I resolved to put the work on the firmest foundation I could
-conceive.
-</p>
-<p>I recall with the greatest pleasure that hour we devoted once a week to the confraternity
-of culture. I inaugurated the lectures on December 15, 1901, when Don Ernesto Vendrell
-spoke of Hypatia as a martyr to the ideals of science and beauty, the victim of the
-fanatical Bishop Cyril of Alexandria. Other lectures were given on subsequent Sundays,
-as I said, until, on October 5, 1902, the lectures were organised <span class="pageNum" id="pb73">[<a href="#pb73">73</a>]</span>in regular courses of science. On that day Dr. Andrés Martínez Vargas, Professor of
-the Faculty of Medicine (child diseases) at Barcelona University, gave his first lecture.
-He dealt with the hygiene of the school, and expounded its principles in plain terms
-adapted to the minds of his hearers. Dr. Odón de Buen, Professor of the Faculty of
-Science, dealt with the usefulness of the study of natural history.
-</p>
-<p>The press was generally in sympathy with the Modern School, but when the programme
-of the third scholastic year appeared some of the local journals, the <i lang="es">Noticiero Universal</i> and the <i lang="es">Diario de Barcelona</i>, broke out. Here is a passage that deserves recording as an illustration of the way
-in which conservative journals dealt with progressive subjects:—
-</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="first">We have seen the prospectus of an educational centre established in this city, which
-professes to have nothing to do with “dogmas and systems.” It proposes to liberate
-everybody from “authoritarian dogmas, venerable sophisms, and ridiculous conventions.”
-It seems to us that this means that the first thing to do is to tell the boys and
-girls—it is a mixed school—that there is no God, an admirable way of forming good
-children, especially young women who are destined to be wives and mothers.</p>
-</blockquote><p>
-</p>
-<p>The writer continues in this ironical manner for some time, and ends as follows:—
-</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="first">This school has the support of a professor of Natural Science (Dr. Odón de Buen) and
-another of the Faculty of Medicine. We do not name the latter, as there may be some
-mistake in including <span class="pageNum" id="pb74">[<a href="#pb74">74</a>]</span>him among the men who lend their support to such a work.</p>
-</blockquote><p>
-</p>
-<p>These insidious clerical attacks were answered by the anti-clerical journals of Barcelona
-at the time.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb75">[<a href="#pb75">75</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="ch13" class="div1 chapter"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#xd31e297">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
-<h2 class="label"><span class="sc">Chapter XIII.</span></h2>
-<h2 class="main">THE RESULTS</h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">At the beginning of the second scholastic year I once more drew up a programme. Let
-us, I said, confirm our earlier programme; vindicated by results, approved in theory
-and practice, the principle which from the first informed our work and governs the
-Modern School is now unshakable.
-</p>
-<p><i>Science is the sole mistress of our life.</i> Inspired with this thought, the Modern School proposes to give the children entrusted
-to it <i>a mental vitality of their own</i>, so that when they leave our control they will continue to be the mortal enemies
-of all kinds of prejudices and will form their own ideas, individually and seriously,
-on all subjects.
-</p>
-<p>Further, as education does not consist merely in the training of the mind, but must
-include the emotions and the will, we shall take the utmost care in the training of
-the child that its intellectual impressions are converted into the sap of sentiment.
-When this attains a certain degree of intensity, it spreads through the whole being,
-colouring and refining the individual character. And as the conduct of the youth revolves
-entirely in the sphere of character, he must learn to adopt science as the sole mistress
-of his life.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb76">[<a href="#pb76">76</a>]</span></p>
-<p>To complete our principle we must state that we are enthusiastically in favour of
-mixed education, so that, having the same education, the woman may become the real
-companion of man, and work with him for the regeneration of society. This task has
-hitherto been confined to man; it is time that the moral influence of woman was enlisted
-in it. Science will illumine and guide her rich vein of sentiment, and utilise her
-character for the welfare of the race. Knowing that the chief need in this country
-is a knowledge of natural science and hygiene, the Modern School intends to help to
-supply it. In this it has the support of Dr. de Buen and Dr. Vargas, who lecture,
-alternately, on their respective subjects.
-</p>
-<p>On June 30, 1903, I published in the <i>Bulletin</i> the following declaration:—
-</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="first">We have now passed two years in expounding our principles, justifying them by our
-practice, and enjoying the esteem of all who have co-operated in our work. We do not
-see in this any other triumph than that we are able to confirm confidently all that
-we have proclaimed. We have overcome the obstacles which were put in our way by interest
-and prejudice, and we intend to persevere in it, counting always on that progressive
-comradeship which dispels the darkness of ignorance with its strong light. We resume
-work next September, after the autumn vacation. We are delighted to be able to repeat
-what we said last year. The Modern School and its <i>Bulletin</i> renew their life, for they have filled, with some measure of satisfaction, a deeply-felt
-need. Without making promises or programmes, we will persevere to the limit of our
-powers.</p>
-</blockquote><p>
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb77">[<a href="#pb77">77</a>]</span></p>
-<p>In the same number of the <i>Bulletin</i> was published the following list of the pupils who had attended the school during
-the first two years:—
-</p>
-<div class="table">
-<table class="verticalBorderInside">
-<thead>
-<tr class="label">
-<td rowspan="2" class="rowspan cellHeadLeft cellHeadTop cellHeadBottom">MONTHS.
-</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="colspan cellHeadTop">GIRLS.
-</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="colspan cellHeadTop">BOYS.
-</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="colspan cellHeadRight cellHeadTop">TOTAL.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="label">
-<td class="xd31e1043 cellHeadBottom">1901–2. </td>
-<td class="xd31e1043 cellHeadBottom">1902–3.
-</td>
-<td class="xd31e1043 cellHeadBottom">1901–2. </td>
-<td class="xd31e1043 cellHeadBottom">1902–3.
-</td>
-<td class="xd31e1043 cellHeadBottom">1st Yr. </td>
-<td class="xd31e1043 cellHeadRight cellHeadBottom">2nd Yr.
-</td>
-</tr>
-</thead>
-<tbody>
-<tr>
-<td class="cellLeft">Opening day </td>
-<td>12 </td>
-<td>— </td>
-<td>18 </td>
-<td>— </td>
-<td>30 </td>
-<td class="cellRight">—</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="cellLeft">September </td>
-<td>16 </td>
-<td>23 </td>
-<td>23 </td>
-<td>40 </td>
-<td>39 </td>
-<td class="cellRight">63</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="cellLeft">October </td>
-<td>18 </td>
-<td>28 </td>
-<td>25 </td>
-<td>40 </td>
-<td>43 </td>
-<td class="cellRight">68</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="cellLeft">November </td>
-<td>21 </td>
-<td>31 </td>
-<td>29 </td>
-<td>40 </td>
-<td>50 </td>
-<td class="cellRight">71</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="cellLeft">December </td>
-<td>22 </td>
-<td>31 </td>
-<td>30 </td>
-<td>40 </td>
-<td>52 </td>
-<td class="cellRight">71</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="cellLeft">January </td>
-<td>22 </td>
-<td>31 </td>
-<td>32 </td>
-<td>44 </td>
-<td>54 </td>
-<td class="cellRight">75</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="cellLeft">February </td>
-<td>23 </td>
-<td>31 </td>
-<td>32 </td>
-<td>48 </td>
-<td>55 </td>
-<td class="cellRight">79</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="cellLeft">March </td>
-<td>25 </td>
-<td>33 </td>
-<td>34 </td>
-<td>47 </td>
-<td>59 </td>
-<td class="cellRight">80</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="cellLeft">April </td>
-<td>26 </td>
-<td>32 </td>
-<td>37 </td>
-<td>48 </td>
-<td>63 </td>
-<td class="cellRight">80</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="cellLeft">May </td>
-<td>30 </td>
-<td>33 </td>
-<td>38 </td>
-<td>48 </td>
-<td>68 </td>
-<td class="cellRight">81</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="cellLeft cellBottom">June </td>
-<td class="cellBottom">32 </td>
-<td class="cellBottom">34 </td>
-<td class="cellBottom">38 </td>
-<td class="cellBottom">48 </td>
-<td class="cellBottom">70 </td>
-<td class="cellRight cellBottom">82</td>
-</tr>
-</tbody>
-</table>
-</div><p>
-</p>
-<p>At the beginning of the third year I published with special pleasure the following
-article in the <i>Bulletin</i> on the progress of the School:—
-</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="first">On the eighth of the present month we opened the new scholastic year. A large number
-of pupils, their relatives, and members of the general public who were in sympathy
-with our work and lectures, filled the recently enlarged rooms, and, before the commencement
-of the function, inspected the collections which give the school the appearance of
-a museum of science. The function began with a short address from the director, who
-formally declared the opening of the third year of school life, and said that, as
-they now had more experience and were encouraged by <span class="pageNum" id="pb78">[<a href="#pb78">78</a>]</span>success, they would carry out energetically the ideal of the Modern School.
-</p>
-<p>Dr. de Buen congratulated us on the enlargement of the School, and supported its aims.
-Education should, he said, reflect nature, as knowledge can only consist in our perception
-of what actually exists. On the part of his children, who study at the School and
-live in the neighbourhood, he paid a tribute to the good-comradeship among the pupils,
-with whom they played and studied in a perfectly natural way. He said that even in
-orthodox education, or rather on the part of the professors engaged in it, there were,
-for all its archaic features, certain tendencies similar to those embodied in the
-Modern School. This might be gathered from his own presence, and that of Dr. Vargas
-and other professors. He announced that there was already a similar school at Guadalajara,
-or that one would shortly be opened there, built by means of a legacy left for the
-purpose by a humanitarian. He wished to contribute to the redemption of children and
-their liberation from ignorance and superstition; and he expressed a hope and very
-strong wish that wealthy people would, at their death, restore their goods in this
-way to the social body, instead of leaving them to secure an imaginary happiness beyond
-the grave.
-</p>
-<p>Dr. Martínez Vargas maintained, against all who thought otherwise, that the purely
-scientific and rational education given in the Modern School is the proper basis of
-instruction; no better can be conceived for maintaining the relations of the children
-with their families and society, and it is the only way to form, morally and intellectually,
-the men of the future. He was glad to hear that the scholastic hygiene which had been
-practised in the <span class="pageNum" id="pb79">[<a href="#pb79">79</a>]</span>Modern School during the previous two years, involving a periodical examination of
-the children, and expounded in the public lectures, had received the solemn sanction
-of the Hygienic Congress lately held at Brussels.
-</p>
-<p>Going on to resume his lectures, and as a means of enforcing oral instruction by visual
-perception, he exhibited a series of lantern-slides illustrating various hygienic
-exercises, certain types of disease, unhealthy organs, etc., which the speaker explained
-in detail. An accident to the lantern interrupted the pictures; but the professor
-continued his explanations, speaking of the mischievous effects of corsets, the danger
-of microbic infection by trailing dresses or by children playing with soil, insanitary
-houses and workshops, etc., and promised to continue his medical explanations during
-the coming year.
-</p>
-<p>The audience expressed its pleasure at the close of the meeting, and the sight of
-the great joy of the pupils was some consolation amid the hardships of the present,
-and a good augury for the future.</p>
-</blockquote><p>
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb80">[<a href="#pb80">80</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="ch14" class="div1 chapter"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#xd31e307">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
-<h2 class="label"><span class="sc">Chapter XIV.</span></h2>
-<h2 class="main">A DEFENSIVE CHAPTER</h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">Our programme for the third scholastic year (1903–4) was as follows:—
-</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="first">To promote the progressive evolution of childhood by avoiding all anachronistic practices,
-which are merely obstacles placed by the past to any real advance towards the future,
-is, in sum, the predominant aim of the Modern School. Neither dogmas nor systems,
-moulds which confine vitality to the narrow exigencies of a transitory form of society,
-will be taught. Only solutions approved by the facts, theories accepted by reason,
-and truths confirmed by evidence, shall be included in our lessons, so that each mind
-shall be trained to control a will, and truths shall irradiate the intelligence, and,
-when applied in practice, benefit the whole of humanity without any unworthy and disgraceful
-exclusiveness.
-</p>
-<p>Two years of success are a sufficient guarantee to us. They prove, in the first place,
-the excellence of mixed education, the brilliant result—the triumph, we would almost
-say—of an elementary common sense over prejudice and tradition. As we think it advisable,
-especially that the child may know what is happening about it, that physical and natural
-science and hygiene should be taught, the Modern School will continue to have the
-services of Dr. de <span class="pageNum" id="pb81">[<a href="#pb81">81</a>]</span>Buen and Dr. Vargas. They will lecture on alternate Sundays, from eleven to twelve,
-on their respective subjects in the school-room. These lectures will complete and
-further explain the classes in science held during the week.
-</p>
-<p>It remains only to say that, always solicitous for the success of our work of reform,
-we have enriched our scholastic material by the acquisition of new collections which
-will at once assist the understanding and give an attractiveness to scientific knowledge;
-and that, as our rooms are now not large enough for the pupils, we have acquired other
-premises in order to have more room and give a favourable reply to the petitions for
-admission which we have received.</p>
-</blockquote><p>
-</p>
-<p>The publication of this programme attracted the attention of the reactionary press,
-as I said. In order to give them a proof of the logical strength of the position of
-the Modern School, I inserted the following article in the <i>Bulletin</i>:—
-</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="first">Modern pædagogy, relieved of traditions and conventions, must raise itself to the
-height of the rational conception of man, the actual state of knowledge, and the consequent
-ideal of mankind. If from any cause whatever a different tendency is given to education,
-and the master does not do his duty, it would be just to describe him as an impostor;
-education must not be a means of dominating men for the advantage of their rulers.
-Unhappily, this is exactly what happens. Society is organised, not in response to
-a general need and for the realisation of an ideal, but as an institution with a strong
-determination to maintain its primitive forms, defending them vigorously against every
-reform, however reasonable it may be.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb82">[<a href="#pb82">82</a>]</span></p>
-<p>This element of immobility gives the ancient errors the character of sacred beliefs,
-invests them with great prestige and a dogmatic authority, and arouses conflicts and
-disturbances which deprive scientific truths of their due efficacy or keep them in
-suspense. Instead of being enabled to illumine the minds of all and realise themselves
-in institutions and customs of general utility, they are unhappily restricted to the
-sphere of a privileged few. The effect is that, as in the days of the Egyptian theocracy,
-there is an esoteric doctrine for the cultivated and an exoteric doctrine for the
-lower classes—the classes destined to labour, defence, and misery.
-</p>
-<p>On this account we set aside the mystic and mythical doctrine, the domination and
-spread of which only befits the earlier ages of human history, and embrace scientific
-teaching, according to its evidence. This is at present restricted to the narrow sphere
-of the intellectuals, or is at the most accepted in secret by certain hypocrites who,
-so that their position may not be endangered, make a public profession of the contrary.
-Nothing could make this absurd antagonism clearer than the following parallel, in
-which we see the contrast between the imaginative dreams of the ignorant believer
-and the rational simplicity of the scientist:—
-</p>
-<p></p>
-<div class="table">
-<table>
-<tr>
-<td class="xd31e1268 cellLeft cellTop cellBottom"><span class="sc">The Bible.</span>
-<p>The Bible contains the annals of the heavens, the earth, and the human race; like
-the Deity himself, it contains all that was, is, and will be. On its first page we
-read of the beginning of time and of things, and on <span class="pageNum" id="pb83a">[<a href="#pb83a">83</a>]</span>its last page the end of time and of things. It begins with <i>Genesis</i>, which is an idyll, and ends with <i>Revelation</i>, which is a funeral chant. <i>Genesis</i> is as beautiful as the fresh breeze which sweeps over the world; as the first dawn
-of light in the heavens; as the first flower that opens in the meadows; as the first
-word of love spoken by men; as the first appearance of the sun in the east. <i>Revelation</i> is as sad as the last palpitation of nature; as the last ray of the sun; as the last
-breath of a dying man. And between the funeral chant and the idyll there pass in succession
-before the eyes of God all generations and all peoples. The tribes and the patriarchs
-go by; the republics and the magistrates; the monarchies and their kings; the empires
-and their emperors. Babylon and all its abominations go by; Nineveh and all its pomps;
-Memphis and its priests; Jerusalem and its prophets and temple; Athens and its arts
-and heroes; Rome and its diadem of conqueror of the world. Nothing lasts but God;
-all else passes and dies, like the froth that tips the wave.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb84a">[<a href="#pb84a">84</a>]</span></p>
-<p class="tb">. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .</p><p>
-</p>
-<p>A prodigious book, which mankind began to read three and thirty centuries ago, and
-of which, if it read all day and night, it would not exhaust the wealth. A prodigious
-book in which all was calculated before the science of arithmetic was invented; in
-which the origin of language is told without any knowledge of philology; in which
-the revolutions of the stars are described without any knowledge of astronomy; in
-which history is recorded without any documents of history; in which the laws of nature
-are unveiled without any knowledge of physics. A prodigious book, that sees everything
-and knows everything; that knows the thoughts hidden in the hearts of men and those
-in the mind of God; that sees what is happening in the abysses of the sea and in the
-bowels of the earth; that records or foretells all the catastrophes of nations, and
-in which are accumulated all the treasures of mercy, of justice, and of vengeance.
-A book, in fine, which, when the heavens are folded like a gigantic fan, and the earth
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb85a">[<a href="#pb85a">85</a>]</span>sinks, and the sun withdraws its light, and the stars are extinguished, will remain
-with God, because it is his eternal word, echoing for ever in the heights.<a class="noteRef" id="xd31e1295src" href="#xd31e1295">1</a>
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb82b">[<a href="#pb82b">82</a>]</span></p>
-</td>
-<td class="xd31e1269 cellRight cellTop cellBottom"><span class="sc">Anthropism.</span>
-<p>One of the main supports of the reactionary system is what we may call “anthropism.”
-I designate by this term that powerful and world-wide group of erroneous opinions
-which opposes the human organism <span class="pageNum" id="pb83">[<a href="#pb83">83</a>]</span>to the whole of the rest of nature, and represents it as the preordained end of organic
-creation, an entity essentially distinct from it, a god-like being. Closer examination
-of this group of ideas shows it to be made up of three different dogmas, which we
-may distinguish as the <i>anthropocentric</i>, the <i>anthropomorphic</i>, and the <i>anthropolatrous</i>.
-</p>
-<p>1. The <i>anthropocentric</i> dogma culminates in the idea that man is the preordained centre and aim of all terrestrial
-life—or, in a wider sense, of the whole universe. As this error is extremely conducive
-to man’s interest, and as it is intimately connected with the creation-myth of the
-three great Mediterranean religions, and with the dogmas of the Mosaic, Christian,
-and Mohammedan theologies, it still dominates the greater part of the civilised world.
-</p>
-<p>2. The <i>anthropomorphic</i> dogma, also, is connected with the creation-myth of the three aforesaid religions
-and of many others. It likens the creation and control of the world by God to the
-artificial creation of an able engineer or mechanic, and to the administration of
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb84">[<a href="#pb84">84</a>]</span>a wise ruler. God, as creator, sustainer, and ruler of the world, is thus represented
-after a purely human fashion in his thought and work. Hence it follows that man in
-turn is god-like. “God made man to his own image and likeness.” The older, naive theology
-is pure “homotheism,” attributing human shape, flesh, and blood to the gods. It is
-more intelligible than the modern mystic theosophy which adores a personal God as
-an invisible—properly speaking, gaseous—being, yet makes him think, speak, and act
-in human fashion; it offers us the paradoxical picture of a gaseous vertebrate.
-</p>
-<p>3. The <i>anthropolatric</i> dogma naturally results from this comparison of the activity of God and man; it ends
-in the apotheosis of human nature. A further result is the belief in the personal
-immortality of the soul, and the dualistic dogma of the twofold nature of man, whose
-“immortal” soul is conceived as the temporary inhabitant of a mortal frame. Thus these
-three anthropistic dogmas, variously adapted to the respective professions of the
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb85">[<a href="#pb85">85</a>]</span>different religions, came at length to be vested with extraordinary importance, and
-proved to be the source of the most dangerous errors.<a class="noteRef" id="xd31e1329src" href="#xd31e1329">2</a>
-</p>
-</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-</div><p>
-</p>
-<p>In face of this antagonism, maintained by ignorance and self-interest, positive education,
-which proposes to teach truths that issue in practical justice, must arrange and systematise
-the established results of natural research, communicate them to children, and thus
-prepare the way for a more equitable state of society, in which, as an exact expression
-of sociology, it must work for the benefit of all as well as of the individual. Moses,
-or whoever was the author of <i>Genesis</i>, and all the dogmatisers, with their six days of creation out of nothing after the
-Creator has passed an eternity in doing nothing, must give place to Copernicus, who
-showed the revolution of the planets round the sun; to Galileo, who proclaimed that
-the sun, not the earth, is the centre of the planetary universe; to Columbus and others
-who, believing the earth to be a sphere, set out in search of other peoples, and gave
-a practical basis to the doctrine of human brotherhood; to Linnæus and Cuvier, the
-founders of natural history; to Laplace, the inventor of the established cosmogony;
-to Darwin, the author of the evolutionary doctrine, which explains the formation of
-species by natural selection; and to all who, by means of observation and experiment,
-have discredited the supposed <span class="pageNum" id="pb86">[<a href="#pb86">86</a>]</span>revelation, and tell us the real nature of the universe, the earth, and life.
-</p>
-<p>Against the evils engendered by generations sunk in ignorance and superstition, from
-which so many are now delivered, only to fall into an anti-social scepticism, the
-best remedy, without excluding others, is to instruct the rising generation in purely
-humanist principles and in the positive and rational knowledge provided by science.
-Women educated thus will be mothers in the true sense of the word, not transmitters
-of traditional superstitions; they will teach their children integrity of life, the
-dignity of life, social solidarity, instead of a medley of outworn and sterile dogmas
-and submission to illegitimate hierarchies. Men thus emancipated from mystery, miracle,
-and distrust of themselves and their fellows, and convinced that they were born, not
-to die, as the wretched teaching of the mystics says, but to live, will hasten to
-bring about such social conditions as will give to life its greatest possible development.
-In this way, preserving the memory of former generations and other frames of mind
-as a lesson and a warning, we will once for all close the religious period, and enter
-definitely into that of reason and nature.</p>
-</blockquote><p>
-</p>
-<p>In June, 1904, the <i>Bulletin</i> published the following figures in regard to the attendance at school. At that time
-the publications of the Modern School were in use in thirty-two other schools throughout
-the country, and its influence was thus felt in Seville and Malaga, Tarragona and
-Cordova, and other towns, as well as Barcelona and the vicinity. The number of scholars
-in our schools was also steadily rising, as the following table shows:—
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb87">[<a href="#pb87">87</a>]</span>
-</p>
-<p><span class="sc">List of the Pupils in the Modern School During the First Three Years.</span>
-</p>
-<div class="table">
-<table class="verticalBorderInside">
-<thead>
-<tr class="label">
-<td rowspan="2" class="rowspan cellHeadLeft cellHeadTop cellHeadBottom">MONTHS.
-</td>
-<td colspan="3" class="colspan cellHeadTop">GIRLS.
-</td>
-<td colspan="3" class="colspan cellHeadTop">BOYS.
-</td>
-<td colspan="3" class="colspan cellHeadRight cellHeadTop">TOTAL.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="label">
-<td class="xd31e1043 cellHeadBottom">1901–2. </td>
-<td class="xd31e1043 cellHeadBottom">1902–3. </td>
-<td class="xd31e1043 cellHeadBottom">1903–4.
-</td>
-<td class="xd31e1043 cellHeadBottom">1901–2. </td>
-<td class="xd31e1043 cellHeadBottom">1902–3. </td>
-<td class="xd31e1043 cellHeadBottom">1903–4.
-</td>
-<td class="xd31e1043 cellHeadBottom">1st year. </td>
-<td class="xd31e1043 cellHeadBottom">2nd year. </td>
-<td class="xd31e1043 cellHeadRight cellHeadBottom">3rd year.
-</td>
-</tr>
-</thead>
-<tbody>
-<tr>
-<td class="cellLeft">Opening day </td>
-<td>12 </td>
-<td>— </td>
-<td>— </td>
-<td>18 </td>
-<td>— </td>
-<td>— </td>
-<td>30 </td>
-<td>— </td>
-<td class="cellRight">—</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="cellLeft">September </td>
-<td>16 </td>
-<td>23 </td>
-<td>24 </td>
-<td>23 </td>
-<td>40 </td>
-<td>40 </td>
-<td>39 </td>
-<td>63 </td>
-<td class="cellRight"> 64</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="cellLeft">October </td>
-<td>18 </td>
-<td>28 </td>
-<td>43 </td>
-<td>25 </td>
-<td>40 </td>
-<td>59 </td>
-<td>43 </td>
-<td>68 </td>
-<td class="cellRight">102</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="cellLeft">November </td>
-<td>21 </td>
-<td>31 </td>
-<td>44 </td>
-<td>29 </td>
-<td>40 </td>
-<td>59 </td>
-<td>50 </td>
-<td>71 </td>
-<td class="cellRight">103</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="cellLeft">December </td>
-<td>22 </td>
-<td>31 </td>
-<td>45 </td>
-<td>30 </td>
-<td>40 </td>
-<td>59 </td>
-<td>52 </td>
-<td>71 </td>
-<td class="cellRight">104</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="cellLeft">January </td>
-<td>22 </td>
-<td>31 </td>
-<td>47 </td>
-<td>32 </td>
-<td>44 </td>
-<td>60 </td>
-<td>54 </td>
-<td>75 </td>
-<td class="cellRight">107</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="cellLeft">February </td>
-<td>23 </td>
-<td>31 </td>
-<td>47 </td>
-<td>32 </td>
-<td>48 </td>
-<td>61 </td>
-<td>55 </td>
-<td>79 </td>
-<td class="cellRight">108</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="cellLeft">March </td>
-<td>25 </td>
-<td>33 </td>
-<td>49 </td>
-<td>34 </td>
-<td>47 </td>
-<td>61 </td>
-<td>59 </td>
-<td>80 </td>
-<td class="cellRight">110</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="cellLeft">April </td>
-<td>26 </td>
-<td>32 </td>
-<td>50 </td>
-<td>37 </td>
-<td>48 </td>
-<td>61 </td>
-<td>63 </td>
-<td>80 </td>
-<td class="cellRight">111</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="cellLeft">May </td>
-<td>30 </td>
-<td>33 </td>
-<td>51 </td>
-<td>38 </td>
-<td>48 </td>
-<td>62 </td>
-<td>68 </td>
-<td>81 </td>
-<td class="cellRight">113</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="cellLeft cellBottom">June </td>
-<td class="cellBottom">32 </td>
-<td class="cellBottom">34 </td>
-<td class="cellBottom">51 </td>
-<td class="cellBottom">38 </td>
-<td class="cellBottom">48 </td>
-<td class="cellBottom">63 </td>
-<td class="cellBottom">70 </td>
-<td class="cellBottom">82 </td>
-<td class="cellRight cellBottom">114</td>
-</tr>
-</tbody>
-</table>
-</div><p>
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb88">[<a href="#pb88">88</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-<div class="footnotes">
-<hr class="fnsep">
-<div class="footnote-body">
-<div id="xd31e1295">
-<p class="footnote"><span class="fnlabel"><a class="noteRef" href="#xd31e1295src">1</a></span> Extract from a speech delivered by Donoso Cortés at his admission into the Academy.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd31e1295src" title="Return to note 1 in text.">↑</a></p>
-</div>
-<div id="xd31e1329">
-<p class="footnote"><span class="fnlabel"><a class="noteRef" href="#xd31e1329src">2</a></span> Haeckel’s <i>Riddle of the Universe</i>, Chap. I.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd31e1329src" title="Return to note 2 in text.">↑</a></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="ch15" class="div1 chapter"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#xd31e317">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
-<h2 class="label"><span class="sc">Chapter XV.</span></h2>
-<h2 class="main">THE INGENUOUSNESS OF THE CHILD</h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">In the <i>Bulletin</i> of September 30, 1903, we published the work of the pupils in the various classes
-of the Modern School, which had been read on the closing day of the second scholastic
-year. In these writings, in which the children are requested to apply their dawning
-judgment to some particular subject, the influence of mind over the inexpert, ingenuous
-reasoning power, inspired by the sentiment of justice, is more apparent than the observance
-of rules. The judgments are not perfect from the logical point of view, only because
-the child has not the knowledge necessary for the formation of a perfectly sound opinion.
-This is the opposite of what we usually find, as opinions are generally founded only
-on prejudice arising from traditions, interests, and dogmas.
-</p>
-<p>A boy of twelve, for instance, gave the following principle for judging the value
-of nations:—
-</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="first">To be called civilised, a nation or State must be free from the following—</p>
-</blockquote><p>
-</p>
-<p>Let me interrupt for a moment to point out that the young author identifies “civilised”
-with “just,” and especially that, putting aside prejudice, he describes certain evils
-as curable, and regards the healing of <span class="pageNum" id="pb89">[<a href="#pb89">89</a>]</span>them as an essential condition of justice. These evils are:—
-</p>
-<ul>
-<li class="numberedItem"><span class="itemNumber">1º.</span> The co-existence of poor and rich, and the resultant exploitation.
-</li>
-<li class="numberedItem"><span class="itemNumber">2º.</span> Militarism, a means of destruction employed by one nation against another, due to
-the bad organisation of society.
-</li>
-<li class="numberedItem"><span class="itemNumber">3º.</span> Inequality, which allows some to rule and command, and obliges others to humble themselves
-and obey.</li>
-</ul><p>
-</p>
-<p>This principle is fundamental and simple, as we should expect to find in an imperfectly
-informed mind, and it would not enable one to solve a complete sociological problem;
-but it has the advantage of keeping the mind open to fresh knowledge. It is as if
-one asked: What does a sick man need to recover health? And the reply is: His suffering
-must disappear. This is a naive and natural reply, and would certainly not be given
-by a child brought up in the ordinary way; such a child would be taught first to consider
-the will of supposed supernatural beings. It is clear that this simple way of putting
-the problem of life does not shut out the hope of a reasonable solution; indeed, the
-one logically demands the other, as the same child’s essay shows:—
-</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="first">I do not mean that, if there were no rich, or soldiers, or rulers, or wages, people
-would abuse their liberty and welfare, but that, with everybody enjoying a high degree
-of civilisation, there would be universal cordiality and friendship, and science would
-make much greater progress, not being interrupted by wars and political stagnation.</p>
-</blockquote><p>
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb90">[<a href="#pb90">90</a>]</span></p>
-<p>A girl of nine made the following sensible observation, which we leave in her own
-incorrect language:—
-</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="first">A criminal is condemned to death; if the murderer deserves this punishment, the man
-who condemns him and the man who kills him are also murderers; logically, they ought
-to die as well, and so humanity would come to an end. It would be better, instead
-of punishing a criminal by committing another crime, to give him good advice, so that
-he will not do it again. Besides, if we are all equal, there would be no thieves,
-or assassins, or rich people, or poor, but all would be equal and love work and liberty.</p>
-</blockquote><p>
-</p>
-<p>The simplicity, clearness, and soundness of this observation need no commentary. One
-can understand our astonishment to hear it from the lips of a tender and very pretty
-little girl, who looked more like a symbolical representation of truth and justice
-than a living reality.
-</p>
-<p>A boy of twelve deals with sincerity, and says:—
-</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="first">The man who is not sincere does not live peacefully; he is always afraid of being
-discovered: when one is sincere, if one has done wrong, the sincere declaration relieves
-the conscience. If a man begins to tell lies in childhood, he will tell bigger lies
-when he grows up, and may do much harm. There are cases in which one need not be sincere.
-For instance, if a man comes to our house, flying from the police, and we are asked
-afterwards if we have seen him, we must deny it; the contrary would be treachery and
-cowardice.</p>
-</blockquote><p>
-</p>
-<p>It is sad that the mind of a child who regards truth as an incomparable good, “without
-which it is <span class="pageNum" id="pb91">[<a href="#pb91">91</a>]</span>impossible to live,” is induced by certain grave abuses to consider lying a virtue
-in some cases.
-</p>
-<p>A girl of thirteen writes of fanaticism, and, regarding it as a characteristic of
-backward countries, she goes on to seek the cause:—
-</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="first">Fanaticism is the outcome of the state of ignorance and backwardness of women; on
-that account Catholics do not want to see women educated, as they are the chief support
-of their system.</p>
-</blockquote><p>
-</p>
-<p>A profound observation on the causes of fanaticism, and the cause of the causes. Another
-girl of thirteen indicates the best remedy of the evil in the following lines:—
-</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="first">The mixed school, for both sexes, is supremely necessary. The boy who studies, works,
-and plays in the society of girls learns gradually to respect and help her, and the
-girl reciprocally; whereas, if they are educated separately, and the boy is told that
-the girl is not a good companion and she is worse than he, the boy will not respect
-women when he is a man, and will regard her as a subject or a slave, and that is the
-position in which we find women. So we must all work for the foundation of mixed schools,
-wherever it is possible, and where it is not possible we must try to remove the difficulties.</p>
-</blockquote><p>
-</p>
-<p>A boy of twelve regards the school as worthy of all respect, because we learn in it
-to read, write, and think, and it is the basis of morality and science; he adds:—
-</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="first">If it were not for the school we should live like savages, walk naked, eat herbs and
-raw flesh, and dwell in caves and trees; that is to say, we should live a brutal life.
-In time, as a result of the school, <span class="pageNum" id="pb92">[<a href="#pb92">92</a>]</span>everybody will be more intelligent, and there will be no wars or inflamed populations,
-and people will look back on war with horror as a work of death and destruction. It
-is a great disgrace that there are children who wander in the streets and do not go
-to school, and when they become men it is more disgraceful. So let us be grateful
-to our teachers for the patience they show in instructing us, and let us regard the
-school with respect.</p>
-</blockquote><p>
-</p>
-<p>If that child preserves and develops the faculties it exhibits, it will know how to
-harmonise egoism and altruism for its own good and that of society. A girl of eleven
-deplores that nations destroy each other in war, and laments the difference of social
-classes and that the rich live on the work and privation of the poor. She ends:—
-</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="first">Why do not men, instead of killing each other in wars and hating each other for class-differences,
-devote themselves cheerfully to work and the discovery of things for the good of mankind?
-Men ought to unite to love each other and live fraternally.<a class="noteRef" id="xd31e1693src" href="#xd31e1693">1</a></p>
-</blockquote><p>
-</p>
-<p>A child of ten, in an essay which is so good that I would insert it whole if space
-permitted, and if it were not for the identity in sentiment with the previous passages,
-says of the school and the pupil:—
-</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="first">Reunited under one roof, eager to learn what we <span class="pageNum" id="pb93">[<a href="#pb93">93</a>]</span>do not know, without distinction of classes [there were children of university professors
-among them, it will be remembered], we are children of one family guided to the same
-end.… The ignorant man is a nullity; little or nothing can be expected of him. He
-is a warning to us not to waste time; on the contrary, let us profit by it, and in
-due course we will be rewarded. Let us not miss the fruits of a good school, and,
-honouring our teachers, our family, and society, we shall live happily.</p>
-</blockquote><p>
-</p>
-<p>A child of ten philosophises on the faults of mankind, which, in her opinion, can
-be avoided by instruction and goodwill:—
-</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="first">Among the faults of mankind are lying, hypocrisy, and egoism. If men, and especially
-women, were better instructed, and women were entirely equal to men, these faults
-would disappear. Parents would not send their children to religious schools, which
-inculcate false ideas, but to rational schools, where there is no teaching of the
-supernatural, which does not exist; nor to make war; but to live in solidarity and
-work in common.</p>
-</blockquote><p>
-</p>
-<p>We will close with the following essay, written by a young lady of sixteen, which
-is correct enough in form and substance to quote in entirety:—
-</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="first">What inequality there is in the present social order! Some working from morning to
-night without more profit than enough to buy their insufficient food; others receiving
-the products of the workers in order to enjoy themselves with the superfluous. Why
-is this so? Are we not all equal? Undoubtedly we are; but society does not recognise
-it, while some are destined to work and suffering, and others to <span class="pageNum" id="pb94">[<a href="#pb94">94</a>]</span>idleness and enjoyment. If a worker shows that he realises the exploitation to which
-he is subject, he is blamed and cruelly punished, while others suffer the inequality
-with patience. The worker must educate himself; and in order to do this it is necessary
-to found free schools, maintained by the wages which the rich give. In this way the
-worker will advance more and more, until he is regarded as he deserves, since the
-most useful mission of society depends on him.</p>
-</blockquote><p>
-</p>
-<p>Whatever be the logical value of these ideas, this collection shows the chief aim
-of the Modern School—namely, that the mind of the child, influenced by what it sees
-and informed by the positive knowledge it acquires, shall work freely, without prejudice
-or submission to any kind of sect, with perfect autonomy and no other guide but reason,
-equal in all, and sanctioned by the cogency of evidence, before which the darkness
-of sophistry and dogmatic imposition is dispelled.
-</p>
-<p>In December, 1903, the Congress of Railway Workers, which was then held at Barcelona,
-informed us that, as a part of its programme, the delegates would visit the Modern
-School. The pupils were delighted, and we invited them to write essays to be read
-on the occasion of the visit. The visit was prevented by unforeseen circumstances;
-but we published in the <i>Bulletin</i> the children’s essays, which exhaled a delicate perfume of sincerity and unbiassed
-judgment, graced by the naive ingenuousness of the writers. No suggestion was made
-to them, and they did not compare notes, yet there was a remarkable <span class="pageNum" id="pb95">[<a href="#pb95">95</a>]</span>agreement in their sentiments. At another time the pupils of the Workers’ School at
-Badalona sent a greeting to our pupils, and they again wrote essays, from which we
-compiled a return letter of greeting.<a class="noteRef" id="xd31e1724src" href="#xd31e1724">2</a>
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb96">[<a href="#pb96">96</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-<div class="footnotes">
-<hr class="fnsep">
-<div class="footnote-body">
-<div id="xd31e1693">
-<p class="footnote"><span class="fnlabel"><a class="noteRef" href="#xd31e1693src">1</a></span> I omit some of Ferrer’s short comments on these specimens of reasoning and sentiment,
-as he regards them. One can recognise the echo of the teacher’s words. The children
-were repeating their catechism. But (1) this is no catechism of violence and class-hatred,
-and (2) there is a distinct appreciation of the ideas and sentiments on the part of
-the children. I translate the passages as literally as possible.—J. M.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd31e1693src" title="Return to note 1 in text.">↑</a></p>
-</div>
-<div id="xd31e1724">
-<p class="footnote"><span class="fnlabel"><a class="noteRef" href="#xd31e1724src">2</a></span> This letter and the preceding essays are given in the Spanish edition. As they are
-a repetition of the sentiments expressed in the extracts already given, it is unnecessary
-to reproduce them here. Except that I have omitted papers incorporated by Ferrer,
-but not written by him, this is the only modification I have allowed myself.—J. M.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd31e1724src" title="Return to note 2 in text.">↑</a></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="ch16" class="div1 chapter"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#xd31e327">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
-<h2 class="label"><span class="sc">Chapter XVI.</span></h2>
-<h2 class="main">THE <i>BULLETIN</i></h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">The Modern School needed and found its organ in the Press. The political and ordinary
-press, which at one time favoured us and at another time denounced us as dangerous,
-cannot maintain an impartial attitude. It either gives exaggerated or unmerited praise,
-or calumnious censures. The only remedy for this was the sincerity and clearness of
-our own indications. To allow these libels to pass without correction would have done
-us considerable harm, and the <i>Bulletin</i> enabled us to meet them.
-</p>
-<p>The directors published in it the programme of the school, interesting notes about
-it, statistical details, original pædagogical articles by the teachers, accounts of
-the progress of rational education in our own and other countries, translations of
-important articles from foreign reviews and periodicals which were in harmony with
-the main character of our work, reports of the Sunday lectures, and announcements
-of the public competitions for the engagement of teachers and of our library.
-</p>
-<p>One of the most successful sections of the <i>Bulletin</i> was that devoted to the publication of the ideas of the pupils. Besides showing their
-individual ideas it <span class="pageNum" id="pb97">[<a href="#pb97">97</a>]</span>revealed the spontaneous manifestation of common sense. Girls and boys, with no appreciable
-difference in intellect according to sex, in contact with the realities of life as
-indicated by the teachers, expressed themselves in simple essays which, though sometimes
-immature in judgment, more often showed the clear logic with which they conceived
-philosophical, political, or social questions of some importance. The journal was
-at first distributed without charge among the pupils, and was exchanged with other
-periodicals; but there was soon a demand for it, and a public subscription had to
-be opened. When this was done, the <i>Bulletin</i> became a philosophical review, as well as organ of the Modern School; and it retained
-this character until the persecution began and the school was closed. An instance
-of the important mission of the <i>Bulletin</i> will be found in the following article, which I wrote in No. 5 of the fourth year,
-in order to correct certain secular teachers who had gone astray:—
-</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="first">A certain Workers’ School has introduced the novelty of establishing a savings-bank,
-administered by the pupils. This piece of information, reproduced in terms of great
-praise by the press as a thing to be imitated, induces us to express our opinion on
-the subject. While others have their own right to decide and act, we have the same
-right to criticise, and thus to create a rational public opinion.
-</p>
-<p>In the first place we would observe that the word <i>economy</i> is very different from, if not the opposite of, the idea of <i>saving</i>. One may teach children the knowledge and practice of economy without necessarily
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb98">[<a href="#pb98">98</a>]</span>teaching them to save. <i>Economy</i> means a prudent and methodical use of one’s goods: <i>saving</i> means a restriction of one’s use of one’s goods. By economising, we avoid waste;
-by saving, the man who has nothing superfluous deprives himself of what is necessary.
-</p>
-<p>Have the children who are taught to save any superfluous property? The very name of
-the society in question assures us that they have not. The workers who send their
-children to this school live on their wages, the minimum sum, determined by the laws
-of supply and demand, which is paid for their work by the employers; and as this wage
-gives them nothing superfluous, and the social wealth is monopolised by the privileged
-classes, the workers are far from obtaining enough to live a life in harmony with
-the progress of civilisation. Hence, when these children of workers, and future workers
-themselves, are taught to save—which is a voluntary privation under the appearance
-of interest—they are taught to prepare themselves to submit to privilege. While the
-intention is to initiate them to the practice of economy, what is really done is to
-convert them into victims and accomplices of the present unjust order.
-</p>
-<p>The working-class child is a human child, and, as such, it has a right to the development
-of all its faculties, the satisfaction of all its needs, moral and physical. For that
-purpose society was instituted. It is not its function to repress or subject the individual,
-as is selfishly pretended by the privileged and reactionary class, and all who enjoy
-what others produce; it has to hold the balance justly between the rights and duties
-of all members of the commonwealth.
-</p>
-<p>As it is, the individual is asked to sacrifice his <span class="pageNum" id="pb99">[<a href="#pb99">99</a>]</span>rights, needs, and pleasures to society; and, as this disorder demands patience, suffering,
-and sophistical reasoning, let us commend economy and blame saving. We do not think
-it right to teach children to look forward to being workers in a social order in which
-the average mortality of the poor, who live without freedom, instruction, or joy,
-reaches an appalling figure in comparison with that of the class which lives in triumph
-on their labour. Those who, from sociolatry, would derogate in the least from the
-rights of man, should read the fine and vigorous words of Pi y Margall: “Who art thou
-to prevent my use of my human rights? Perfidious and tyrannical society, thou wert
-created to defend, not to coerce us. Go back to the abyss whence thou came.”
-</p>
-<p>Starting from these principles, and applying them to pædagogy, we think it necessary
-to teach children that to waste any class of objects is contrary to the general welfare;
-that if a child spoils paper, loses pens, or destroys books, it does an injustice
-to its parents and the school. Assuredly one may impress on the child the need of
-prudence in order to avoid getting imperfect things, and remind it of lack of employment,
-illness, or age; but it is not right to insist that a provision be made out of a salary
-which does not suffice to meet the needs of life. That is bad arithmetic.
-</p>
-<p>The workers have no university training; they do not go to the theatre or to concerts;
-they never go into ecstasies before the marvels of art, industry, or nature; they
-have no holiday in which to fill their lungs with life-giving oxygen; they are never
-uplifted by reading books or reviews. On the contrary, they suffer all kinds of privations,
-and may have to endure <span class="pageNum" id="pb100">[<a href="#pb100">100</a>]</span>crises due to excessive production. It is not the place of teachers to hide these
-sad truths from the children, and to tell them that a smaller quantity is equal to,
-if not better than, a larger. In order that the power of science and industry be shared
-by all, and all be invited to partake of the banquet of life, we must not teach in
-the school, in the interest of privilege, that the poor should organise the advantages
-of crumbs and leavings. We must not prostitute education.</p>
-</blockquote><p>
-</p>
-<p>On another occasion I had to censure a different departure from our principles:—
-</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="first">We were distressed and indignant on reading the list of contributions voted by the
-Council of Barcelona for certain popular societies which are interested in education.
-We read of sums offered to Republican Fraternities and similar societies; and we find
-that, instead of rejecting them, they forwarded votes of thanks to the Council.
-</p>
-<p>The meaning of these things in a Catholic and ultra-conservative nation is clear.
-The Church and the capitalist system only maintain their ascendency by a judicious
-system of charity and protection. With this they gratify the disinherited class, and
-continue to enjoy its respect. But we cannot see republicans acting as if they were
-humble Christians without raising a cry of alarm.
-</p>
-<p>Beware, we repeat, beware! You are educating your children badly, and taking the wrong
-path towards reform, in accepting alms. You will neither emancipate yourselves nor
-your children if you trust in the strength of others, and rely on official or private
-support. Let the Catholics, ignorant of the realities of life, expect everything of
-God, or St. Joseph, or <span class="pageNum" id="pb101">[<a href="#pb101">101</a>]</span>some similar being, and, as they have no security that their prayers will be heard
-in this life, trust to receive a reward after death. Let gamblers in the lottery fail
-to see that they are morally and materially victimised by their rulers, and trust
-to receive by chance what they do not earn by energy. But it is sad to see men hold
-out the hand of a beggar who are united in a revolutionary protest against the present
-system; to see them admitting and giving thanks for humiliating gifts, instead of
-trusting their own energy, intellect, and ability.
-</p>
-<p>Beware, then, all men of good faith! That is not the way to set up a true education
-of children, but the way to enslave them.</p>
-</blockquote><p>
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb102">[<a href="#pb102">102</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="ch17" class="div1 chapter"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#xd31e337">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
-<h2 class="label"><span class="sc">Chapter XVII.</span></h2>
-<h2 class="main">THE CLOSING OF THE MODERN SCHOOL</h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">I have reached the culmination of my life and my work. My enemies, who are all the
-reactionaries in the world, represented by the reactionaries of Barcelona and of Spain,
-believed that they had triumphed by involving me in a charge of attempted assassination.
-But their triumph proved to be only an episode in the struggle of practical Rationalism
-against reaction. The shameful audacity with which they claimed sentence of death
-against me (a claim that was refused on account of my transparent innocence rather
-than on account of the justice of the court) drew on me the sympathy of all liberal
-men—all true progressives—in all parts of the world, and fixed attention on the meaning
-and ideal of the Rational School. There was a universal and uninterrupted movement
-of protest and admiration for a whole year—from May, 1906, to May and June, 1907—echoed
-in the Press of every civilised country, and in meetings and other popular manifestations.
-</p>
-<p>It proved in the end that the mortal enemies of our work were its most effective supporters,
-as they led to the establishment of international Rationalism.
-</p>
-<p>I felt my own littleness in face of this mighty <span class="pageNum" id="pb103">[<a href="#pb103">103</a>]</span>manifestation. Led always by the light of the ideal, I conceived and carried out the
-International League for the Rational Education of Children, in the various branches
-of which, scattered over the world, are found men in the front ranks of culture [Anatole
-France, Ernst Haeckel, etc.]. It has three organs, <i lang="fr">L’École Renovée</i> in France, the <i>Bulletin</i> in Barcelona, and <i lang="it">La Scuola Laica</i> at Rome, which expound, discuss, and spread all the latest efforts of pædagogy to
-purify science from all defilement of error, to dispel all credulity, to bring about
-a perfect harmony between belief and knowledge, and to destroy that privileged esoteric
-system which has always left an exoteric doctrine to the masses.
-</p>
-<p>This great concentration of knowledge and research must lead to a vigorous action
-which will give to the future revolution the character of practical manifestation
-of applied sociology, without passion or demand of revenge, with no terrible tragedies
-or heroic sacrifices, no sterile movements, no disillusion of zealots, no treacherous
-returns to reaction. For scientific and rational education will have pervaded the
-masses, making each man and woman a self-conscious, active, and responsible being,
-guiding his will according to his judgment, free for ever from the passions inspired
-by those who exploit respect for tradition and for the charlatanry of the modern framers
-of political programmes.
-</p>
-<p>If progress thus loses this dramatic character of revolution, it will gain in firmness,
-stability, and continuity, as evolution. The vision of a rational <span class="pageNum" id="pb104">[<a href="#pb104">104</a>]</span>society, which revolutionaries foresaw in all ages, and which sociologists confidently
-promise, will rise before the eyes of our successors, not as the mirage of dreamy
-utopians, but as the positive and merited triumph won by the revolutionary power of
-reason and science.
-</p>
-<p>The new repute of the educational work of the Modern School attracted the attention
-of all who appreciated the value of sound instruction. There was a general demand
-for knowledge of the system. There were numbers of private secular schools, or similar
-institutions supported by societies, and their directors made inquiry concerning the
-difference of our methods from theirs. There were constant requests to visit the school
-and consult me. I gladly satisfied them, removed their doubts, and pressed them to
-enter on the new way; and at once efforts were made to reform the existing schools,
-and to create others on the model of the Modern School.
-</p>
-<p>There was great enthusiasm and the promise of mighty things; but one serious difficulty
-stood in the way: we were short of teachers, and had no means of creating them. Professional
-teachers had two disadvantages—traditional habits and dread of the contingencies of
-the future. There were very few who, in an unselfish love of the ideal, would devote
-themselves to the progressive cause. Instructed young men and women might be found
-to fill the gap; but how were we to train them ? Where could they pass their apprenticeship?
-Now and again I heard from <span class="pageNum" id="pb105">[<a href="#pb105">105</a>]</span>workers’ or political societies that they had decided to open a school; they would
-find rooms and appliances, and we could count upon their using our school manuals.
-But whenever I asked if they had teachers, they replied in the negative, and thought
-it would be easy to supply the want. I had to give in.
-</p>
-<p>Circumstances had made me the director of rationalist education, and I had constant
-consultations and demands on the part of aspirants for the position of teacher. This
-made me realise the defect, and I endeavoured to meet it by private advice and by
-admitting young assistants in the Modern School. The result was naturally mixed. There
-are now worthy teachers who will carry on the work of rational education elsewhere;
-others failed from moral or intellectual incapacity.
-</p>
-<p>Not feeling that the pupils of the Modern School who devoted themselves to teaching
-would find time for their work, I established a Normal School, of which I have already
-spoken. I was convinced that, if the key of the social problem is in the scientific
-and rational school, it is essential, to make a proper use of the key, that fitting
-teachers be trained for so great a destiny.
-</p>
-<p>As the practical and positive result of my work, I may say that the Modern School
-of Barcelona was a most successful experiment, and that it was distinguished for two
-characters:—
-</p>
-<ul>
-<li class="numberedItem"><span class="itemNumber">1º.</span> While open to successive improvements, it set up a standard of what education should
-be in a reformed state of society.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb106">[<a href="#pb106">106</a>]</span></li>
-<li class="numberedItem"><span class="itemNumber">2º.</span> It gave an impulse to the spread of this kind of education.</li>
-</ul><p>
-</p>
-<p>There was up to that time no education in the true sense of the word. There were,
-for the privileged few in the universities, traditional errors and prejudices, authoritarian
-dogmas, mixed up with the truths which modern research has brought to light. For the
-people there was primary instruction, which was, and is, a method of taming children.
-The school was a sort of riding-school, where natural energies were subdued in order
-that the poor might suffer their hard lot in silence. Real education, separated from
-faith—education that illumines the mind with the light of evidence—is the creation
-of the Modern School.
-</p>
-<p>During its ephemeral existence<a class="noteRef" id="xd31e1836src" href="#xd31e1836">1</a> it did a marvellous amount of good. The child admitted to the school and kept in
-contact with its companions rapidly changed its habits, as I have observed. It cultivated
-cleanliness, avoided quarrels, ceased to be cruel to animals, took no notice in its
-games of the barbarous spectacle which we call the national entertainment [bull-fight],
-and, as its mind was uplifted and its sentiments purified, it deplored the social
-injustices which abound on the very face of life. It detested war, and would not admit
-that national glory, instead of consisting in the highest possible moral development
-and happiness of a people, should be placed in conquest and violence.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb107">[<a href="#pb107">107</a>]</span></p>
-<p>The influence of the Modern School, extended to other schools which had been founded
-on its model and were maintained by various working-men societies, penetrated the
-families by means of the children. Once they were touched by the influence of reason
-and science they were unconsciously converted into teachers of their own parents,
-and these in turn diffused the better standards among their friends and relatives.
-</p>
-<p>This spread of our influence drew on us the hatred of Jesuitism of all kinds and in
-all places, and this hatred inspired the design which ended in the closing of the
-Modern School. It is closed; but in reality it is concentrating its forces, defining
-and improving its plan, and gathering the strength for a fresh attempt to promote
-the true cause of progress.
-</p>
-<p>That is the story of what the Modern School was, is, and ought to be.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb109">[<a href="#pb109">109</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-<div class="footnotes">
-<hr class="fnsep">
-<div class="footnote-body">
-<div id="xd31e1836">
-<p class="footnote"><span class="fnlabel"><a class="noteRef" href="#xd31e1836src">1</a></span> The Modern School was closed after Ferrer’s arrest in 1906.—J.M.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd31e1836src" title="Return to note 1 in text.">↑</a></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class="back">
-<div id="epilogue" class="div1 epilogue"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#xd31e345">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
-<h2 class="main">EPILOGUE</h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first xd31e1848"><span class="sc">By J. M.</span>
-</p>
-<p>“That is the story of what the Modern School was, is, and ought to be.” When Ferrer
-wrote this, in the summer of 1908, he was full of plans for the continuation of his
-work in various ways. He was fostering such free schools as the Government still permitted.
-He was promoting his “popular university,” and multiplying works of science and sociology
-for the million. His influence was growing, and he saw with glad eyes the light breaking
-on the ignorant masses of his fellows. In the summer of 1909 he came to England to
-study the system of moral instruction which, under the inspiration of the Moral Instruction
-League, is used in thousands of English schools. A friend in London begged him never
-to return to Spain, as his life was sought. He knew it, but nothing would divert him
-from his ideal. And three months later he was shot, among the graves of criminals,
-in the trenches of Montjuich.
-</p>
-<p>Form your own opinion of him from his words. He conceals nothing. He was a rebel against
-religious traditions and social inequalities; he wished children to become as resentful
-of poverty and superstition as he. There is no law of Spain, or of any <span class="pageNum" id="pb110">[<a href="#pb110">110</a>]</span>other country, that forbids such enterprise as his. He might be shot in Russia, of
-course; for the law has been suspended there for more than a decade. In Spain men
-had to lie in order to take his life.
-</p>
-<p>With the particular value of his scheme of education I am not concerned. He was well
-acquainted with pædagogical literature, and there were few elementary schools in Spain
-to equal his. Writers who have spoken slightingly of his school, apart from its social
-dogmas, know little or nothing about it. Ferrer was in close and constant association
-with two of the ablest professors in the university of Barcelona, one of whom sent
-his children to the school, and with distinguished scholars in other lands. There
-was more stimulating work done in the Modern School than, probably, in any other elementary
-school in Spain, if not elsewhere. All that can be questioned is the teaching of an
-explicit social creed to the children. Ferrer would have rejoined that there was not
-a school in Europe that does not teach an explicit social creed. But, however we may
-differ from his creed, we cannot fail to recognise the elevated and unselfish idealism
-of the man, and deplore the brutality and illegality with which his genial life was
-prematurely brought to a close.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb111">[<a href="#pb111">111</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class="div1 advertisement"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divBody">
-<p class="first xd31e1848">Price 6d. net in paper cover (by post 8d.), or in cloth 1s. net (by post 1s. 3d.).
-</p>
-<p class="xd31e1863">THE<br>
-<span class="xd31e1867">MARTYRDOM OF<br>
-FERRER.</span>
-</p>
-<p class="xd31e1872">A True Account of His Life and Work.
-</p>
-<p class="xd31e1863">By JOSEPH McCABE.
-</p>
-<p>Contents:—
-</p>
-<p>Introduction.
-<br><span class="indentxd31e1879"></span>The Life and Aims of Ferrer.
-<br><span class="indentxd31e1881"></span>The Church in Spain.
-<br><span class="indentxd31e1883"></span>The Political System of Spain.
-<br><span class="indentxd31e1885"></span>The Modern Schools.
-<br><span class="indentxd31e1887"></span>The Reply of Corruption.
-<br><span class="indentxd31e1890"></span>The Indictment of Ferrer.
-<br><span class="indentxd31e1892"></span>The Death of Ferrer—and the Echo.
-</p>
-<p>London: <span class="sc">Watts &amp; Co.</span>, 17 Johnson’s Court, Fleet Street, E.C.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb112">[<a href="#pb112">112</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class="div1 advertisement"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divBody">
-<p class="first xd31e1848">433 pp.; in paper cover, 6d. net, by post 9d.; cloth, 1s. 6d. net, by post 1s. 9d.;
-Library Edition, 3s. 6d. net, by post 3s. 10d.
-</p>
-<p class="xd31e1863"><a class="pglink xd31e44" title="Link to Project Gutenberg ebook" href="https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/45053">THE<br>
-<span class="xd31e1867">CHURCHES AND MODERN<br>
-THOUGHT:</span></a>
-</p>
-<p class="xd31e1872">An Inquiry into the Grounds of Unbelief and An Appeal for Candour.
-</p>
-<p class="xd31e1863">By PHILIP VIVIAN.
-</p>
-<p class="xd31e1848">A Few (of many) Appreciations.
-</p>
-<p>“Happening to dip into the first page, I found myself insensibly drawn along, and
-so continued, devoting to it the few half-hours at my disposal for recreative reading,
-without missing a word, until I had reached with regret the last page.”—<span class="sc">A.&nbsp;W. Benn</span>, author of <i>The History of English Rationalism in the Nineteenth Century</i>, etc.
-</p>
-<p>“I possessed myself some time ago of a copy of your <i>Churches and Modern Thought</i>, and read it with great interest. I regard it as a serious, able, and useful work.”—Dr.
-<span class="sc">J. Sutherland Black</span>, Assistant Editor of the ninth edition of the <i>Encyclopædia Britannica</i>, Joint Editor of the <i>Encyclopædia Biblica</i>, and on the Editorial Board of the <i>Hibbert Journal</i>.
-</p>
-<p>“I have read your excellently arranged book with great admiration.… It seems to me
-an excellent statement of the case.”—<span class="sc">H.&nbsp;G. Wells</span>, author of <i>Anticipations</i>, etc.
-</p>
-<p>“I have just finished the reading of your most interesting and valuable book, and
-may I say that I greatly admire its remarkable dignity and tone?”—<span class="sc">C.&nbsp;W. Saleeby</span>, M.D.
-</p>
-<p class="xd31e1848">London: <span class="sc">Watts &amp; Co.</span>, 17 Johnson’s Court, Fleet Street, E.C.
-</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class="div1 imprint"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divBody">
-<p class="first xd31e1957">PRINTED BY WATTS AND CO., 17 JOHNSON’S COURT, FLEET STREET, E.C.
-</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class="transcriberNote">
-<h2 class="main">Colophon</h2>
-<h3 class="main">Availability</h3>
-<p class="first">This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project
-Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at <a class="seclink xd31e44" title="External link" href="https://www.gutenberg.org/" rel="home">www.gutenberg.org</a>.
-</p>
-<p>This eBook is produced by the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at <a class="seclink xd31e44" title="External link" href="https://www.pgdp.net/">www.pgdp.net</a>.
-</p>
-<p>Scans of this book are available from the Internet Archive (copy <a class="seclink xd31e44" title="External link" href="https://archive.org/details/ferreroriginidea00ferr">1</a>, <a class="seclink xd31e44" title="External link" href="https://archive.org/details/originidealsofmo00ferr">2</a>).
-</p>
-<h3 class="main">Metadata</h3>
-<table class="colophonMetadata" summary="Metadata">
-<tr>
-<td><b>Title:</b></td>
-<td>The Origin and Ideals of the Modern School</td>
-<td></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><b>Author:</b></td>
-<td>Francisco Ferrer Guardia (1859–1909)</td>
-<td><a href="https://viaf.org/viaf/9855615/" class="seclink">Info</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><b>Translator:</b></td>
-<td>Joseph McCabe (1867–1955)</td>
-<td><a href="https://viaf.org/viaf/54303634/" class="seclink">Info</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><b>Language:</b></td>
-<td>English</td>
-<td></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><b>Original publication date:</b></td>
-<td>1913</td>
-<td></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-<h3 class="main">Revision History</h3>
-<ul>
-<li>2021-10-31 Started.
-</li>
-</ul>
-<h3 class="main">External References</h3>
-<p>This Project Gutenberg eBook contains external references. These links may not work
-for you.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:4em'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE ORIGIN AND IDEALS OF THE MODERN SCHOOL ***</div>
-<div style='text-align:left'>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-Updated editions will replace the previous one&#8212;the old editions will
-be renamed.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-Creating the works from print editions not protected by U.S. copyright
-law means that no one owns a United States copyright in these works,
-so the Foundation (and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United
-States without permission and without paying copyright
-royalties. Special rules, set forth in the General Terms of Use part
-of this license, apply to copying and distributing Project
-Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works to protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG&#8482;
-concept and trademark. Project Gutenberg is a registered trademark,
-and may not be used if you charge for an eBook, except by following
-the terms of the trademark license, including paying royalties for use
-of the Project Gutenberg trademark. If you do not charge anything for
-copies of this eBook, complying with the trademark license is very
-easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose such as creation
-of derivative works, reports, performances and research. Project
-Gutenberg eBooks may be modified and printed and given away--you may
-do practically ANYTHING in the United States with eBooks not protected
-by U.S. copyright law. Redistribution is subject to the trademark
-license, especially commercial redistribution.
-</div>
-
-<div style='margin:0.83em 0; font-size:1.1em; text-align:center'>START: FULL LICENSE<br>
-<span style='font-size:smaller'>THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE<br>
-PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK</span>
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-To protect the Project Gutenberg&#8482; mission of promoting the free
-distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
-(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase &#8220;Project
-Gutenberg&#8221;), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full
-Project Gutenberg&#8482; License available with this file or online at
-www.gutenberg.org/license.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; font-size:1.1em; margin:1em 0; font-weight:bold'>
-Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg&#8482;
-electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
-and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
-(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
-the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or
-destroy all copies of Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works in your
-possession. If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a
-Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic work and you do not agree to be bound
-by the terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person
-or entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.B. &#8220;Project Gutenberg&#8221; is a registered trademark. It may only be
-used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
-agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
-things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works
-even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
-paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
-Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works if you follow the terms of this
-agreement and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg&#8482;
-electronic works. See paragraph 1.E below.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation (&#8220;the
-Foundation&#8221; or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection
-of Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works. Nearly all the individual
-works in the collection are in the public domain in the United
-States. If an individual work is unprotected by copyright law in the
-United States and you are located in the United States, we do not
-claim a right to prevent you from copying, distributing, performing,
-displaying or creating derivative works based on the work as long as
-all references to Project Gutenberg are removed. Of course, we hope
-that you will support the Project Gutenberg&#8482; mission of promoting
-free access to electronic works by freely sharing Project Gutenberg&#8482;
-works in compliance with the terms of this agreement for keeping the
-Project Gutenberg&#8482; name associated with the work. You can easily
-comply with the terms of this agreement by keeping this work in the
-same format with its attached full Project Gutenberg&#8482; License when
-you share it without charge with others.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
-what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are
-in a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States,
-check the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this
-agreement before downloading, copying, displaying, performing,
-distributing or creating derivative works based on this work or any
-other Project Gutenberg&#8482; work. The Foundation makes no
-representations concerning the copyright status of any work in any
-country other than the United States.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other
-immediate access to, the full Project Gutenberg&#8482; License must appear
-prominently whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg&#8482; work (any work
-on which the phrase &#8220;Project Gutenberg&#8221; appears, or with which the
-phrase &#8220;Project Gutenberg&#8221; is associated) is accessed, displayed,
-performed, viewed, copied or distributed:
-</div>
-
-<blockquote>
- <div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
- This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
- other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
- whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
- of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online
- at <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
- are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws
- of the country where you are located before using this eBook.
- </div>
-</blockquote>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic work is
-derived from texts not protected by U.S. copyright law (does not
-contain a notice indicating that it is posted with permission of the
-copyright holder), the work can be copied and distributed to anyone in
-the United States without paying any fees or charges. If you are
-redistributing or providing access to a work with the phrase &#8220;Project
-Gutenberg&#8221; associated with or appearing on the work, you must comply
-either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 or
-obtain permission for the use of the work and the Project Gutenberg&#8482;
-trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic work is posted
-with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
-must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any
-additional terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms
-will be linked to the Project Gutenberg&#8482; License for all works
-posted with the permission of the copyright holder found at the
-beginning of this work.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg&#8482;
-License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
-work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg&#8482;.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
-electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
-prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
-active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
-Gutenberg&#8482; License.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
-compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including
-any word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access
-to or distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg&#8482; work in a format
-other than &#8220;Plain Vanilla ASCII&#8221; or other format used in the official
-version posted on the official Project Gutenberg&#8482; website
-(www.gutenberg.org), you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense
-to the user, provide a copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means
-of obtaining a copy upon request, of the work in its original &#8220;Plain
-Vanilla ASCII&#8221; or other form. Any alternate format must include the
-full Project Gutenberg&#8482; License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
-performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg&#8482; works
-unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
-access to or distributing Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works
-provided that:
-</div>
-
-<div style='margin-left:0.7em;'>
- <div style='text-indent:-0.7em'>
- &bull; You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
- the use of Project Gutenberg&#8482; works calculated using the method
- you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is owed
- to the owner of the Project Gutenberg&#8482; trademark, but he has
- agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments must be paid
- within 60 days following each date on which you prepare (or are
- legally required to prepare) your periodic tax returns. Royalty
- payments should be clearly marked as such and sent to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the address specified in
- Section 4, &#8220;Information about donations to the Project Gutenberg
- Literary Archive Foundation.&#8221;
- </div>
-
- <div style='text-indent:-0.7em'>
- &bull; You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
- you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
- does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg&#8482;
- License. You must require such a user to return or destroy all
- copies of the works possessed in a physical medium and discontinue
- all use of and all access to other copies of Project Gutenberg&#8482;
- works.
- </div>
-
- <div style='text-indent:-0.7em'>
- &bull; You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of
- any money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
- electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days of
- receipt of the work.
- </div>
-
- <div style='text-indent:-0.7em'>
- &bull; You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
- distribution of Project Gutenberg&#8482; works.
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project
-Gutenberg&#8482; electronic work or group of works on different terms than
-are set forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing
-from the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the manager of
-the Project Gutenberg&#8482; trademark. Contact the Foundation as set
-forth in Section 3 below.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.F.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
-effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
-works not protected by U.S. copyright law in creating the Project
-Gutenberg&#8482; collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg&#8482;
-electronic works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may
-contain &#8220;Defects,&#8221; such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate
-or corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other
-intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or
-other medium, a computer virus, or computer codes that damage or
-cannot be read by your equipment.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the &#8220;Right
-of Replacement or Refund&#8221; described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
-Gutenberg&#8482; trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
-Gutenberg&#8482; electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
-liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
-fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
-LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
-PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
-TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
-LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
-INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
-DAMAGE.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
-defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
-receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
-written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
-received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium
-with your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you
-with the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in
-lieu of a refund. If you received the work electronically, the person
-or entity providing it to you may choose to give you a second
-opportunity to receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If
-the second copy is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing
-without further opportunities to fix the problem.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
-in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you &#8216;AS-IS&#8217;, WITH NO
-OTHER WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT
-LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
-warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of
-damages. If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement
-violates the law of the state applicable to this agreement, the
-agreement shall be interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or
-limitation permitted by the applicable state law. The invalidity or
-unenforceability of any provision of this agreement shall not void the
-remaining provisions.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
-trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
-providing copies of Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works in
-accordance with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the
-production, promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg&#8482;
-electronic works, harmless from all liability, costs and expenses,
-including legal fees, that arise directly or indirectly from any of
-the following which you do or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this
-or any Project Gutenberg&#8482; work, (b) alteration, modification, or
-additions or deletions to any Project Gutenberg&#8482; work, and (c) any
-Defect you cause.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; font-size:1.1em; margin:1em 0; font-weight:bold'>
-Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg&#8482;
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-Project Gutenberg&#8482; is synonymous with the free distribution of
-electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of
-computers including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It
-exists because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations
-from people in all walks of life.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
-assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg&#8482;&#8217;s
-goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg&#8482; collection will
-remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
-and permanent future for Project Gutenberg&#8482; and future
-generations. To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation and how your efforts and donations can help, see
-Sections 3 and 4 and the Foundation information page at www.gutenberg.org.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; font-size:1.1em; margin:1em 0; font-weight:bold'>
-Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non-profit
-501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
-state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
-Revenue Service. The Foundation&#8217;s EIN or federal tax identification
-number is 64-6221541. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent permitted by
-U.S. federal laws and your state&#8217;s laws.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-The Foundation&#8217;s business office is located at 809 North 1500 West,
-Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887. Email contact links and up
-to date contact information can be found at the Foundation&#8217;s website
-and official page at www.gutenberg.org/contact
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; font-size:1.1em; margin:1em 0; font-weight:bold'>
-Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-Project Gutenberg&#8482; depends upon and cannot survive without widespread
-public support and donations to carry out its mission of
-increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
-freely distributed in machine-readable form accessible by the widest
-array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
-($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
-status with the IRS.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
-charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
-States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
-considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
-with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
-where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To SEND
-DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any particular state
-visit <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org/donate/">www.gutenberg.org/donate</a>.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
-have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
-against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
-approach us with offers to donate.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
-any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
-outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-Please check the Project Gutenberg web pages for current donation
-methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
-ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations. To
-donate, please visit: www.gutenberg.org/donate
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; font-size:1.1em; margin:1em 0; font-weight:bold'>
-Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project
-Gutenberg&#8482; concept of a library of electronic works that could be
-freely shared with anyone. For forty years, he produced and
-distributed Project Gutenberg&#8482; eBooks with only a loose network of
-volunteer support.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-Project Gutenberg&#8482; eBooks are often created from several printed
-editions, all of which are confirmed as not protected by copyright in
-the U.S. unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not
-necessarily keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper
-edition.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-Most people start at our website which has the main PG search
-facility: <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-This website includes information about Project Gutenberg&#8482;,
-including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
-subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-</body>
-</html>
diff --git a/old/66644-h/images/frontispiece.jpg b/old/66644-h/images/frontispiece.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 7c9cafc..0000000
--- a/old/66644-h/images/frontispiece.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/66644-h/images/new-cover.jpg b/old/66644-h/images/new-cover.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 594303e..0000000
--- a/old/66644-h/images/new-cover.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/66644-h/images/titlepage.png b/old/66644-h/images/titlepage.png
deleted file mode 100644
index a70592a..0000000
--- a/old/66644-h/images/titlepage.png
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ