This ingenious age, when studied,
seems not less remarkable for its division of labor
than for the disposition of people to shift labor on
to others’ shoulders. Perhaps it is only
another aspect of the spirit of altruism, a sort of
backhanded vicariousness. In taking an inventory
of tendencies, this demands some attention.
The notion appears to be spreading
that there must be some way by which one can get a
good intellectual outfit without much personal effort.
There are many schemes of education which encourage
this idea. If one could only hit upon the right
“electives,” he could become a scholar
with very little study, and without grappling with
any of the real difficulties in the way of an education.
It is no more a short-cut we desire, but a road of
easy grades, with a locomotive that will pull our
train along while we sit in a palace-car at ease.
The discipline to be obtained by tackling an obstacle
and overcoming it we think of small value. There
must be some way of attaining the end of cultivation
without much labor. We take readily to proprietary
medicines. It is easier to dose with these than
to exercise ordinary prudence about our health.
And we readily believe the doctors of learning when
they assure us that we can acquire a new language
by the same method by which we can restore bodily
vigor: take one small patent-right volume in six
easy lessons, without even the necessity of “shaking,”
and without a regular doctor, and we shall know the
language. Some one else has done all the work
for us, and we only need to absorb. It is pleasing
to see how this theory is getting to be universally
applied. All knowledge can be put into a kind
of pemican, so that we can have it condensed.
Everything must be chopped up, epitomized, put in
short sentences, and italicized. And we have
primers for science, for history, so that we can acquire
all the information we need in this world in a few
hasty bites. It is an admirable saving of time-saving
of time being more important in this generation than
the saving of ourselves.
And the age is so intellectually active,
so eager to know! If we wish to know anything,
instead of digging for it ourselves, it is much easier
to flock all together to some lecturer who has put
all the results into an hour, and perhaps can throw
them all upon a screen, so that we can acquire all
we want by merely using the eyes, and bothering ourselves
little about what is said. Reading itself is almost
too much of an effort. We hire people to read
for us to interpret, as we call it Browning
and Ibsen, even Wagner. Every one is familiar
with the pleasure and profit of “recitations,”
of “conversations” which are monologues.
There is something fascinating in the scheme of getting
others to do our intellectual labor for us, to attempt
to fill up our minds as if they were jars. The
need of the mind for nutriment is like the need of
the body, but our theory is that it can be satisfied
in a different way. There was an old belief that
in order that we should enjoy food, and that it should
perform its function of assimilation, we must work
for it, and that the exertion needed to earn it brought
the appetite that made it profitable to the system.
We still have the idea that we must eat for ourselves,
and that we cannot delegate this performance, as we
do the filling of the mind, to some one else.
We may have ceased to relish the act of eating, as
we have ceased to relish the act of studying, but
we cannot yet delegate it, even although our power
of digesting food for the body has become almost as
feeble as the power of acquiring and digesting food
for the mind.
It is beautiful to witness our reliance
upon others. The house may be full of books,
the libraries may be as free and as unstrained of
impurities as city water; but if we wish to read anything
or study anything we resort to a club. We gather
together a number of persons of like capacity with
ourselves. A subject which we might grapple with
and run down by a few hours of vigorous, absorbed
attention in a library, gaining strength of mind by
resolute encountering of difficulties, by personal
effort, we sit around for a month or a season in a
club, expecting somehow to take the information by
effortless contiguity with it. A book which we
could master and possess in an evening we can have
read to us in a month in the club, without the least
intellectual effort. Is there nothing, then,
in the exchange of ideas? Oh yes, when there are
ideas to exchange. Is there nothing stimulating
in the conflict of mind with mind? Oh yes, when
there is any mind for a conflict. But the mind
does not grow without personal effort and conflict
and struggle with itself. It is a living organism,
and not at all like a jar or other receptacle for
fluids. The physiologists say that what we eat
will not do us much good unless we chew it. By
analogy we may presume that the mind is not greatly
benefited by what it gets without considerable exercise
of the mind.
Still, it is a beautiful theory that
we can get others to do our reading and thinking,
and stuff our minds for us. It may be that psychology
will yet show us how a congregate education by clubs
may be the way. But just now the method is a
little crude, and lays us open to the charge which
every intelligent person of this scientific age will
repudiate of being content with the superficial;
for instance, of trusting wholly to others for our
immortal furnishing, as many are satisfied with the
review of a book for the book itself, or a
refinement on that with a review of the
reviews. The method is still crude. Perhaps
we may expect a further development of the “slot”
machine. By dropping a cent in the slot one can
get his weight, his age, a piece of chewing-gum, a
bit of candy, or a shock that will energize his nervous
system. Why not get from a similar machine a
“good business education,” or an “interpretation”
of Browning, or a new language, or a knowledge of
English literature? But even this would be crude.
We have hopes of something from electricity. There
ought to be somewhere a reservoir of knowledge, connected
by wires with every house, and a professional switch-tender,
who, upon the pressure of a button in any house, could
turn on the intellectual stream desired. [Prophecy
of the Internet of the year 2000 from 110 years ago.
D.W.] There must be discovered in time
a method by which not only information but intellectual
life can be infused into the system by an electric
current. It would save a world of trouble and
expense. For some clubs even are a weariness,
and it costs money to hire other people to read and
think for us.