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GADSBY |
I |
If Youth, throughout all history, had had a champion to stand up for |
it; to show a doubting world that a child can think; and, possibly, |
do it practically; you wouldn't constantly run across folks today |
who claim that "a child don't know anything." A child's brain starts |
functioning at birth; and has, amongst its many infant convolutions, |
thousands of dormant atoms, into which God has put a mystic possibility |
for noticing an adult's act, and figuring out its purport. |
Up to about its primary school days a child thinks, naturally, only of |
play. But many a form of play contains disciplinary factors. "You can't |
do this," or "that puts you out," shows a child that it must think, |
practically, or fail. Now, if, throughout childhood, a brain has no |
opposition, it is plain that it will attain a position of "status quo," |
as with our ordinary animals. Man knows not why a cow, dog or lion was |
not born with a brain on a par with ours; why such animals cannot add, |
subtract, or obtain from books and schooling, that paramount position |
which Man holds today. |
But a human brain is not in that class. Constantly throbbing and |
pulsating, it rapidly forms opinions; attaining an ability of its own; |
a fact which is startlingly shown by an occasional child "prodigy" |
in music or school work. And as, with our dumb animals, a child's |
inability convincingly to impart its thoughts to us, should not class |
it as ignorant. |
Upon this basis I am going to show you how a bunch of bright young |
folks did find a champion; a man with boys and girls of his own; a man |
of so dominating and happy individuality that Youth is drawn to him |
as is a fly to a sugar bowl. It is a story about a small town. It is |
not a gossipy yarn; nor is it a dry, monotonous account, full of such |
customary "fill-ins" as "romantic moonlight casting murky shadows down |
a long, winding country road." Nor will it say anything about tinklings |
lulling distant folds; robins carolling at twilight, nor any "warm glow |
of lamplight" from a cabin window. No. It is an account of up-and-doing |
activity; a vivid portrayal of Youth as it is today; and a practical |
discarding of that worn-out notion that "a child don't know anything." |
Now, any author, from history's dawn, always had that most important |
aid to writing:--an ability to call upon any word in his dictionary in |
building up his story. That is, our strict laws as to word construction |
did not block his path. But in _my_ story that mighty obstruction |
_will_ constantly stand in my path; for many an important, common word |
I cannot adopt, owing to its orthography. |
I shall act as a sort of historian for this small town; associating |
with its inhabitants, and striving to acquaint you with its youths, |
in such a way that you can look, knowingly, upon any child, rich |
or poor; forward or "backward;" your own, or John Smith's, in your |
community. You will find many young minds aspiring to know how, and WHY |
such a thing is so. And, if a child shows curiosity in that way, how |
ridiculous it is for you to snap out:-- |
"Oh! Don't ask about things too old for you!" |
Such a jolt to a young child's mind, craving instruction, is apt so |
to dull its avidity, as to hold it back in its school work. Try to |
look upon a child as a small, soft young body and a rapidly growing, |
constantly inquiring brain. It must grow to maturity slowly. Forcing a |
child through school by constant night study during hours in which it |
should run and play, can bring on insomnia; handicapping both brain and |
body. |
Now this small town in our story had grown in just that way:--slowly; |
in fact, much _too_ slowly to stand on a par with many a thousand |
of its kind in this big, vigorous nation of ours. It was simply |
stagnating; just as a small mountain brook, coming to a hollow, might |
stop, and sink from sight, through not having a will to find a way |
through that obstruction; or around it. You will run across such a |
dormant town, occasionally; possibly so dormant that only outright |
isolation by a fast-moving world, will show it its folly. If you will |
tour Asia, Yucatan, or parts of Africa and Italy, you will find many |
sad ruins of past kingdoms. Go to Indo-China and visit its gigantic |
Ankhor Vat; call at Damascus, Baghdad and Samarkand. What sorrowful |
lack of ambition many such a community shows in thus discarding such |
high-class construction! And I say, again, that so will Youth grow |
dormant, and hold this big, throbbing world back, if no champion backs |
it up; thus providing it with an opportunity to show its ability for |
looking forward, and improving unsatisfactory conditions. |
So this small town of Branton Hills was lazily snoozing amidst |
up-and-doing towns, as Youth's Champion, John Gadsby, took hold of it; |
and shook its dawdling, flabby body until its inhabitants thought a |
tornado had struck it. Call it tornado, volcano, military onslaught, |
or what you will, this town found that it had a bunch of kids who had |
wills that would admit of no snoozing; for that is Youth, on its |
forward march of inquiry, thought and action. |
If you stop to think of it, you will find that it is customary for |
our "grown-up" brain to cast off many of its functions of its youth; |
and to think only of what it calls "topics of maturity." Amongst such |
discards, is many a form of happy play; many a muscular activity such |
as walking, running, climbing; thus totally missing that alluring "joy |
of living" of childhood. If you wish a vacation from financial affairs, |
just go out and play with Youth. Play "blind-man's buff," "hop-scotch," |
"ring toss," and football. Go out to a charming woodland spot on a |