登陆注册
15732800000010

第10章 THE SABBATH-SCHOOL(1)

"We-a love the Sunday-school.

We-a love the Sunday-school.

(Girls) - So do I.

(Boys)-So do I.

(School) - We all love the Sunday-school."SPARKLING DEWDROPS."

Some people believe that when General Conference assigned them to the Committee on Hymn-Book Revision, power and authority were given unto them to put a half-sole and a new heel on any and all poetry that might look to them to be a little run over on one side. If they felt as I do about the lines that head this article they would have "Sunday" scratched out and "Sabbath" written in before you could bat an eye. The mere substitution of one word for another may seem a light matter to a man that has never composed anything more literary than an obituary for the Western Advocate of Sister Jane Malinda Sprague, who was born in Westmoreland County, Pennsylvania, in 1816, removed with her parents at a tender age to New Sardis, Washington County, Ohio, where, etc., etc. If he wanted to extract a word he would do it, and never even offer to give the author gas. But I know just how it hurts. I know or can imagine how the gifted poet that penned the deathless lines I have quoted must have walked the floor in an agony until every word and syllable was just to suit him, and so, though I feel sure he meant to write "Sabbath-school," I don't dare change it.

To most persons one word seems about as good as another, Sunday or Sabbath, but when there are young people about the house you learn to be careful how you talk before them. Now, I would not go so far as to say that "Sunday" is what you might call exactly rowdy, but er . . . but . . . er . . . Let me illustrate. If a man says, "It's a beautiful Sunday morning," like enough he has on red-and-green stockings, baggy knickerbockers, a violet-and-purple sweater, a cap shaped like a milk-roll, and is smoking a pipe. He very likely carries a bagful of golf-sticks, or is pumping up his bicycle.

But if a man says, "This beautiful Sabbath morn," you know for a certainty that he wears a long-tailed black coat, a boiled shirt, and a white tie. He is bald from his forehead upward, his upper lip is shaven, and his views and those of the late Robert Reed on the disgusting habit of using tobacco are absolutely at one.

Not alone a regard for respectability, but the hankering to be historically accurate, urges me to make the change I speak of.

Originally the institution was a Sunday-school, and not very respectable either. I should hate to think any of my dear young friends were in the habit of attending such a low-class affair as Robert Raikes conducted. Sunday-schools were for "little ragamuffins," as he called them, who worked such long hours on week-days (from five in the morning until nine at night) that if they were to learn the common branches at all it had to be on a Sunday. A ragged school was bad enough in itself, putting foolish notions into the heads of gutter-brats and making them discontented and unhappy in their lot; but to teach a ragged school on Sunday was a little too much. So Robert Raikes encountered the most violent opposition, although from that beginning dates popular education in England.

To be able to read is no Longer a sign that Pa can afford to do without the young ones' wages on a Saturday night, and can even pay for their schooling. It is no longer a mark of wealth or even of hard-won privilege, but the common fate of all; to know the three R's, and Sunday is not now set apart for secular instruction. So good and wholesome an institution as the Sunday-school was not permitted to perish, but was changed to suit the environment. It is now become the Sabbath-school for the study of the Bible, a Christian recrudescence of the synagogue. For some eighteen centuries it was supposed that a regularly ordained minister should have exclusive charge of this work. At rare intervals nowadays a clergyman may be found to maintain that because a man has been to college and to the theological seminary, and has made the study of the Scriptures his life-work (moved to that decision after careful self-examination) that therefore he is better fitted to that ministry than Miss Susie Goldrick, who teaches a class in Sabbath-school very acceptably. Miss Goldrick is in the second year in the High School, and last Friday afternoon read a composition on English Literatoor, in which she spoke in terms of high praise of John Bunion, the well-known author of " Progress and Poverty." Miss Goldrick is very conscientious, and always keeps her thumbnail against the questions printed on the lesson-leaf, so as not to ask twice, "What did the disciples then do?"It were a grave error to suppose that no secular learning is acquired in the modern Sabbath-school. I remember once, when quite young, speaking to my teacher, in the interval between the regular class work and the closing exercises, about peacocks. I had read of them, but had never seen one. What did they look like? She said a peacock was something like a butterfly. I have always remembered that, and when I did finally see a peacock, I was interested to note the essential accuracy of the deion.

Also, one day a new lady taught our class, Miss Evans having gone up to Marion to spend a Sunday with her brother, who kept a stove store there, and this new lady borrowed two flower vases from off the pulpit and a piece of string from Turkey-egg McLaughlin to explain to us boys how the earth went around the sun. We had too much manners to tell her that we knew that years and years ago when we were in Miss Humphreys's room. I don't remember what the earth going around the sun had to do with the lesson for the day, which was about Samuel anointing David's head with oil - did I ever tell you how I anointed my own head with coal oil? - but I do remember that she broke both the vases and cut her finger, and had to keep sucking it the rest of the time, because she didn't want to get her handkerchief all bloodied up. It was a kind of fancy handkerchief, made of thin stuff trimmed with lace - no good.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 一字顶轮王念诵仪轨(依忉利天宫所说经译)

    一字顶轮王念诵仪轨(依忉利天宫所说经译)

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 颜倾万世,界妖预言师

    颜倾万世,界妖预言师

    坐卧云天斜晖阳,醉叹千丈红尘缘!霖深叠影漩漪涟,醉潭千丈红尘愿!
  • 邪魅校草掠取狂拽丫头

    邪魅校草掠取狂拽丫头

    【此文作者表示无节操】身为圣樱学院的永恒校草,花心而玩世不恭,却为了迎接新生而被泼了一身水?!又是哪个造反的敢抱走了他的卡哇伊表弟?!哼哼,没错,就是她!简单利落,酷跑飙车啥的最在行,假小子暴力女等称号从来没有从她身上移走过!“老天啊~我只是想好好上学而已,需要搬个大小姐和大少爷来考验我的耐心吗?!5555~我美好的校园生活啊!!”【某逗比泪着吐槽】注:封面为虞家阿九所做
  • 荼蘼三生之今生如花

    荼蘼三生之今生如花

    时光荏苒,光阴静穆。疑心生暗鬼,旧的愤怒酝酿成新的悲剧。潮崖、汐崖身份互换,在潮崖默默守护素雪和紫玉安居净土的千年中,汐崖苦修魔功,培植势力,血洗天庭,篡夺帝位。帝后被囚,日神战死,月神逃遁,神界凋零。汐崖袭来,潮崖力战,拼尽全力将素雪和紫玉送出净土,但二人分散人间,各自挣扎求生。人界纷争,风云变色,家国情仇,明争暗斗。力量危殆的素雪能否凭着仅存的法力和执着的意念寻回昔日亲友爱侣?爱恨交织的真相揭开,素雪和紫玉能否破镜重圆?黑白一念,潮崖汐崖,谁又能获得重生?天界人间,烽烟再起……
  • 守望家园的小鸟

    守望家园的小鸟

    《守望家园的小鸟》是一本由独山子石化公司办公室编写的反映独山子地区生态美的观鸟画册,画册中还创作了大量的与大自然这一飞翔的精灵相呼应的美文。使得拍摄的画面伸展出诗意的翅膀。画册内越140余张摄影作品,精彩的反映了鸟儿的做客、筑巢、停留、驻足……
  • 周易述

    周易述

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 九梵

    九梵

    他叫九梵,曾乃是地球上的一名修炼天才。仅用一千年的时间就达到了九劫飞升境。只要度过九六天劫即可飞升成仙,对比之老一辈还在苦苦挣扎九劫一境的强者可谓早上了几千年。一般正常的修炼者,在地球上想要达到九劫飞升境没有个三五千年几乎不可能,而九梵却创造了不可能的可能。只是,不知道是天妒英才还是他太倒霉了,原本一个很普通的九六天劫硬是变成了九九天罚。最后的结果脚趾头都能猜到,只是没想到当他醒来后发现自己竟然还活着,活在天罚之下,虽然不知道自己被劈到那里去了,但是真真切切还活着,这也太不安剧本来走了。只是好景不长,醒来后发现自己修为不但没了,而且天罚追随还没完,这一波三折,让九梵欲哭无泪。
  • 狼犊户

    狼犊户

    黄昏破晓,啼笑忐忑,人神之别不过所念之分。很久以前有一只狼,它从夜空中来,有人说它来自于天上的那条河畔,是距离天道最近的生灵,它于混沌乱世中来到了人间分割天地,如神若圣。现实世界的癌症青年黄智龙于异世重生,继承了万中无一的天神体魄,命中注定要成为那个传说中解放天地的狼犊户,只是他的道路并不会比他的前世平坦一分,生死的磨砺,冰火的锤炼,一条重生后的逆袭之路就此展开。
  • 三世泪的传说

    三世泪的传说

    三年花开,盼君归来,孤独等待,一人离开!一世结束一世开始,是悲是喜是否还有记忆?君不见红颜落单,然又在何处生还!
  • 造化天之主

    造化天之主

    三千世界为一道域,三千道域为一道界,道界之上为鸿蒙,鸿蒙之上独尊造化天。人间九境,仙路七重,神道五步,超脱三重天,造化天之主“帝”,万世轮回归来。看他在天才井喷,妖孽横行的大时代,打破一切,横推诸天万界,重镇九天。。。