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Front Matter
"Among these boys was Roger Barker, the merchant's son."
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JANE ANDREWS' SCHOOL
[vii] So many children and their teachers all over the country
have become friends of my sister, Jane Andrews, through
their interest in her books, that I thought it might give
them pleasure to hear some account of the school which she
taught for over twenty-five years—the pupils of which she
had in mind in all her writing. This school was begun in an
upper chamber in our old home in Newburyport,
Massachusetts, where a distant glimpse of the ocean could be
seen through a side window, and the roar of the breakers
could be heard in the winter storms. The front windows of
this room look out on a broad, quiet street, running along
the ridge of a hill that slopes to the Merrimac river. High
above the windows
[viii] tower two great trees that shade the front
of the house, an English linden and a horse-chestnut, each
about eighty years old. Down the whole length of the side
yard is a long row of purple lilacs; under their shade the
school-children played in summer, and in winter built snow
forts beneath their bare branches. Here they had fierce
snowball battles, which Miss Andrews enjoyed from the
school-room window. When the warm sun of the winter
afternoon broke down the walls of the fort and destroyed the
ammunition, she wove it into a play lesson. The sun with his
lances of heat conquered the frost giants, and, in the
disguise of invisible vapor, carried them as prisoners to
his realm of the sky. These prisoners escape some day and
return to earth as rain or snow.
The children who heard these lessons, so full of joyous
play, never forgot the round of atmospheric changes. This is
but one of the many ways in which everyday life was woven
into a lesson. The wonderful workings of nature became vital
truths to these children, and their eyes opened to the world
[ix] around them. As the school increased in size, my sister, who
had first started it as an experiment, realized what a
delight it was becoming to her to enter into the lives of
children, and that it meant for her years of teaching. She
decided to fit up the upper chamber of our barn, a large
airy room, for a school-room. And here she taught for many
years, though she moved her school back into the house
during the later years of her life. This barn opened into
the same lilac-shaded yard that I have described, and the
back and side windows overlooked an old-fashioned, terraced
garden, shaded by peach and apple trees. Desks were built
all round this room and chairs of all sizes and shapes put
before them. At one side was a square soapstone stove, which
could be used as an open fire, and overhead were the heavy
beams bracing the roof, with the holes near their center,
where our swing used to hang when we were children, and
where the school-children, as I remember, at times had a
swing which they used at recess. Near the middle of the room
was Miss Andrews' table, and
[x] behind her a long blackboard,
which almost always contained the illustration of some
lesson. Over the west window, in the most prominent place in
the room, was the guiding motto, "Self-Control," the gospel
that Miss Andrews cared most to teach, the truth that no
outside help is of any use to us, unless the forces within
are held with a strong hand, and that we ourselves are the
shapers of our own lives.
Each day, on the board, she wrote some motto of helpfulness,
many of them pointed to this end; sometimes a verse of
poetry, sometimes a quotation from the Bible, all having
reference to every-day life. "He that ruleth his spirit is
greater than he that taketh a city" was one of her
favorites. Other mottoes were: "Whatever is brought upon
thee, take cheerfully." "The bee is little among such as fly,
but her fruit is first among sweet things." "First deserve
and then desire." "Wisdom is better than weapons of war."
"Behold how great a matter a little fire kindleth." "Weigh
thy words in a balance and make a door and a
[xi] bar for thy
mouth." These mottoes and many more were brought into
practical working every day. They were indelibly imprinted
on the children's memories, not by study and repetition, but
by talks of their meaning and interest in their application.
Many a child has come joyously to her to tell of success in
using one of these precepts, thus saving herself from doing
wrong, and this joy was not one of self-glorification, but
the deep satisfaction of living in the spirit of Miss
Andrews' teaching. Helpfulness was one of the lessons which
this school taught, both in theory and practice.
And in this connection let me tell you of a little Christmas
celebration which the children and their teacher held—I
think it was the Christmas of 1863. My sister had talked
with the children of the significance of Christmas, the
message of "Peace on earth, good will to men," and the
happiness of making this a season in which we bring joy to
others. She planned with them a Christmas tree, to which
they should each bring a guest, some poor child who needed
help and was not likely
[xii] otherwise to have presents. They
planned that the responsibility of each child for her guest
should include a cordial personal invitation, an escort to
the school, and two presents, one for use and one for
pleasure. To add to this, my sister provided bountiful
refreshments for all. The children entered into the plan
with enthusiasm, and about two o'clock the day before
Christmas the quaint little procession, straggling along by
twos and twos, came into the yard. Each pupil was dressed in
her school attire, not to widen the division between her and
her poorer guest. Up they streamed into the school-room,
each pupil full of responsibility. I can see them now, as I
recall it, some tiny girl leading by the hand a great,
clumsy guest, perhaps twice her size, whom she cared for
like a baby, seeing to her hood and mittens, and being very
anxious for fear her feet were wet. All this the guests
received in a sort of dazed wonder, which changed to smiles
and satisfaction when the curtain across the room was
withdrawn and the tree revealed. Then each child's name was
[xiii] called, accompanied by that of her guest, and she received
from the tree the presents which she herself had provided
for her protégé, and decked "her child," as she called her,
in new hood, or shawl, or cloak, with perhaps an extra pair
of mittens for the little brother at home, or a soft ball
for the baby sister too small to come. Then the books and
pictures and work-boxes and baskets showered down from the
tree, helped by willing hands, and it was hard to tell which
were the more joyous faces, those of giver or receiver; but
that day was long bright in both their memories, and the
lesson that the best charity not only included alms but a
friend, was practically learned.
But, in attending to outside charities and philanthropies,
my sister never forgot the home-life of her little school.
The relation was that of a harmonious family, in which the
daily pleasures and toils of each member are of vital
interest to all. Through all those years of teaching, Miss
Andrews laid great stress on interesting the children in
good stories, as a line of reading which a child is sure to
follow
[xiv] and in which she needs direction. (I have used "she"
for my pronoun throughout, but my sister had both boys and
girls in her school.) Kingsley's "Westward Ho!" Mrs. Shaw's
"Castle Blair" and "Hector," and Mrs. Ewing's "Great
Emergency," are some of the books which I remember her
reading to the school. And each of these books was not
merely read, but made to serve a purpose through the talks
which she encouraged the children to have with her about
them, and the lessons drawn from them. She set great value
on the acquisition of a store of good poetry.
From our earliest childhood our father had loved to repeat
poems to us, as we sat on his knee by the open fire. His
interest lay mostly in the Scotch and English ballads, and
Scott's poems; and many a canto of the "Lay of the Last
Minstrel," besides scores of old ballads, were stored in our
memories. This power of remembering poetry has always been
such a source of pleasure to us, and we traced it back so
directly to our early training,
[xv] that my sister placed a high
value on such training for her pupils; and many of them in
after-life have traced their facility for memorizing, as
well as their store of delightful poetry, back to that barn
chamber and Miss Andrews' school.
Although in her own school days, mathematics had been her
chief interest, yet the teaching of geography was her
specialty. Many and various were the devices by which she
made this study fascinating to the children. A lifeless
skeleton of descriptions was not her idea of the necessary
knowledge of a country. The dry facts were nothing without
the breath of life poured into them. And this she did by
tracing each fact into its intricate relations. The rice of
the South Carolina swamps, the cotton of the Sea Islands,
the exports of Bombay and Calcutta, the coffee from Mocha
and Java, all had their story, their connections with lands
and peoples—and the interweaving of the great commercial
interests of the world. Pictures, books of travel,
biographies, and scientific investigations all lent their
aid as
[xvi] materials in her hands, brought forward in such a
form that they appealed to the children. The little girl
whose aunt was in Florida presented the school with a pet
alligator; the children of an India merchant, sent back to
his native town for an education, brought stories of life in
India and summer in the Himalayas; the little girl who had
taken voyages with her sea-captain father brought tales of
the ocean and life in foreign ports as her contribution to
this very real geography; and so the whole world poured its
treasures into this little barn chamber, and kept the
children in sympathy with the daily life of the world and
the bond of mutual helpfulness in which we all live.
Nor were the physical phenomena forgotten. Those were
endowed with living interest, as all those will know who
have read "Sea-Life" (Stories Mother Nature Told), in which
my sister makes the gulf stream and the formation of coral
islands real to the children. She often vivified the lessons
of their physical geography by connecting them with events
in which the
[xvii] children had an interest, and thus the
association aided the memory and encouraged further
investigation when similar events came to their notice in
the news from various parts of the world. For this reason
the daily papers ceased, in a measure, to demoralize by
their fund of unwholesome gossip, and the children's
interest was drawn to the marine column, with the arrival of
the swift fruit steamer, Jehu, from the West Indies, or the
Victoria, from Bombay, laden with saltpeter, telling the
story of the commercial interests of the world. The
grumblings of Vesuvius and the drifting of the Arctic
explorers on their ice island, after the loss of the
Polaris, were eagerly related by the children, and the
forces of nature which governed all this recognized and
enthusiastically appreciated by them.
But the great lesson which Miss Andrews taught was a moral
one, the lesson that brings more "sweetness and light" and
brotherly love and helpfulness into the world. She sent out
from that school, boys and girls who felt their moral
responsibility and their relation
[xviii] to their fellow-beings.
Her children, as she called them, are now scattered all over
the length and breadth of the United States, glad to lend a
helping hand, acknowledging in this way their bond to their
teacher.
MADISON, WISCONSIN.
PREFACE
[xix] IN preparing this little book my purpose has been threefold.
First, To show my boy readers that the boys of long ago are
not to be looked upon as strangers, but were just as much
boys as themselves.
Second, In this age of self-complacency, to exhibit, for
their contemplation and imitation, some of those manly
virtues that stern necessity bred in her children.
Third, To awaken by my simple stories an interest in the
lives and deeds of our ancestors, that shall stimulate the
young reader to a study of those peoples from whom he has
descended, and to whom he owes a debt of gratitude for the
inheritance they have handed down to him.
As it has been my intention to trace our own race from its
Aryan source to its present type
[xx] I have not turned aside to
consider other races, perhaps not less interesting, with the
single exception of the incidental introduction of the
Hebrews in connection with the Persians.
It is scarcely possible for me to make a list of all the
authorities I have consulted in preparing this little book;
but I wish to say that without the assistance of the
valuable work by Eugene Viollet Le Duc on the "Habitations
of Man in all Ages," I could not have written the Aryan
chapter.
NEWBURYPORT, Sept. 29, 1885.
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