[The Infant System by Samuel Wilderspin]@TWC D-Link book
The Infant System

CHAPTER IX
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The great deficiency in our systems of education, with respect to moral training, is truly lamentable, from the highest down to the lowest schools in the land.

There is room for immense improvement in this matter, it is hardly possible to visit a school and witness proper efforts made on this important subject; and never will education produce the glorious effects anticipated from it, until this subject is legislated for and well understood by the public; and I pray to God that he will enable me to use arguments in this chapter to prove effective in the minds of my readers, so as to induce them to co-operate with me to produce another state of things.
In these days there is much said about education; it has at last arrested the attention of parliament; and through them, the government, and, as it should be, through the government, the sovereign.

Thus is truly encouraging and will act as a stimulus to practical men to develop a system workable in all its parts, and thus carry out the views and benevolent intentions of the legislature.
Infant education, however, must be the basis, this is beginning at the right end; if errors are committed here the superstructure is of little avail.

The foundation of moral training must be laid in infancy, it cannot be begun too soon, and is almost always commenced too late.

Mere infants can understand the doing as they would be done by; no child likes to be deprived of its play-things, his little toys, or any thing which he considers his property; he will always punish the aggressor if he can, and if he cannot he will cry, or put himself in a passion, or seek aid from his parents, or any other source where he thinks he may get justice done to him.


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