[Man and Wife by Wilkie Collins]@TWC D-Link bookMan and Wife CHAPTER THE NINETEENTH 14/29
Which am I, as a boy, naturally most ready to do--to try how high I can jump? or to try how much I can learn? Which training comes easiest to me as a young man? The training which teaches me to handle an oar? or the training which teaches me to return good for evil, and to love my neighbor as myself? Of those two experiments, of those two trainings, which ought society in England to meet with the warmest encouragement? And which does society in England practically encourage, as a matter of fact ?" "What did you say yourself just now ?" from One, Two, and Three. "Remarkably well put!" from Smith and Jones. "I said," admitted Sir Patrick, "that a man will go all the better to his books for his healthy physical exercise.
And I say that again--provided the physical exercise be restrained within fit limits. But when public feeling enters into the question, and directly exalts the bodily exercises above the books--then I say public feeling is in a dangerous extreme.
The bodily exercises, in that case, will be uppermost in the youth's thoughts, will have the strongest hold on his interest, will take the lion's share of his time, and will, by those means--barring the few purely exceptional instances--slowly and surely end in leaving him, to all good moral and mental purpose, certainly an uncultivated, and, possibly, a dangerous man." A cry from the camp of the adversaries: "He's got to it at last! A man who leads an out-of-door life, and uses the strength that God has given to him, is a dangerous man.
Did any body ever hear the like of that ?" Cry reverberated, with variations, by the two human echoes: "No! Nobody ever heard the like of that!" "Clear your minds of cant, gentlemen," answered Sir Patrick.
"The agricultural laborer leads an out-of-door life, and uses the strength that God has given to him.
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