CERTAIN DIVERSITIES OF AMERICAN LIFE
By Charles Dudley Warner
This is a very interesting age.
Within the memory of men not yet come to middle life
the time of the trotting horse has been reduced from
two minutes forty seconds to two minutes eight and
a quarter seconds. During the past fifteen years
a universal and wholesome pastime of boys has been
developed into a great national industry, thoroughly
organized and almost altogether relegated to professional
hands, no longer the exercise of the million but a
spectacle for the million, and a game which rivals
the Stock Exchange as a means of winning money on
the difference of opinion as to the skill of contending
operators.
The newspapers of the country pretty
accurate and sad indicators of the popular taste devote
more daily columns in a week’s time to chronicling
the news about base-ball than to any other topic that
interests the American mind, and the most skillful
player, the pitcher, often college bred, whose entire
prowess is devoted to not doing what he seems to be
doing, and who has become the hero of the American
girl as the Olympian wrestler was of the Greek maiden
and as the matador is of the Spanish senorita, receives
a larger salary for a few hours’ exertion each
week than any college president is paid for a year’s
intellectual toil. Such has been the progress
in the interest in education during this period that
the larger bulk of the news, and that most looked for,
printed about the colleges and universities, is that
relating to the training, the prospects and achievements
of the boat crews and the teams of base-ball and foot-ball,
and the victory of any crew or team is a better means
of attracting students to its college, a better advertisement,
than success in any scholastic contest. A few
years ago a tournament was organized in the North
between several colleges for competition in oratory
and scholarship; it had a couple of contests and then
died of inanition and want of public interest.
During the period I am speaking of
there has been an enormous advance in technical education,
resulting in the establishment of splendid special
schools, essential to the development of our national
resources; a growth of the popular idea that education
should be practical, that is, such an education
as can be immediately applied to earning a living and
acquiring wealth speedily, and an increasing
extension of the elective system in colleges, based
almost solely on the notion, having in view, of course,
the practical education, that the inclinations of a
young man of eighteen are a better guide as to what
is best for his mental development and equipment for
life than all the experience of his predecessors.
In this period, which you will note
is more distinguished by the desire for the accumulation
of money than far the general production of wealth,
the standard of a fortune has shifted from a fair competence
to that of millions of money, so that he is no longer
rich who has a hundred thousand dollars, but he only
who possesses property valued at many millions, and
the men most widely known the country through, most
talked about, whose doings and sayings are most chronicled
in the journals, whose example is most attractive
and stimulating to the minds of youth, are not the
scholars, the scientists, the men of, letters, not
even the orators and statesmen, but those who, by
any means, have amassed enormous fortunes. We
judge the future of a generation by its ideals.
Regarding education from the point
of view of its equipment of a man to make money, and
enjoy the luxury which money can command, it must be
more and more practical, that is, it must be adapted
not even to the higher aim of increasing the general
wealth of the world, by increasing production and
diminishing waste both of labor and capital, but to
the lower aim of getting personal possession of it;
so that a striking social feature of the period is
that one-half that is hardly an overestimate one-half of the activity in America of
which we speak with so much enthusiasm, is not directed
to the production of wealth, to increasing its volume,
but to getting the money of other people away from
them. In barbarous ages this object was accomplished
by violence; it is now attained by skill and adroitness.
We still punish those who gain property by violence;
those who get it by smartness and cleverness, we try
to imitate, and sometimes we reward them with public
office.
It appears, therefore, that speed,-the
ability to move rapidly from place to place, a
disproportionate reward of physical over intellectual
science, an intense desire to be rich, which is strong
enough to compel even education to grind in the mill
of the Philistines, and an inordinate elevation in
public consideration of rich men simply because they
are rich, are characteristics of this little point
of time on which we stand. They are not the only
characteristics; in a reasonably optimistic view,
the age is distinguished for unexampled achievements,
and for opportunities for the well-being of humanity
never before in all history attainable. But these
characteristics are so prominent as to beget the fear
that we are losing the sense of the relative value
of things in this life.
Few persons come to middle life without
some conception of these relative values. It
is in the heat and struggle that we fail to appreciate
what in the attainment will be most satisfactory to
us. After it is over we are apt to see that our
possessions do not bring the happiness we expected;
or that we have neglected to cultivate the powers and
tastes that can make life enjoyable. We come
to know, to use a truism, that a person’s highest
satisfaction depends not upon his exterior acquisitions,
but upon what he himself is. There is no escape
from this conclusion. The physical satisfactions
are limited and fallacious, the intellectual and moral
satisfactions are unlimited. In the last analysis,
a man has to live with himself, to be his own companion,
and in the last resort the question is, what can he
get out of himself. In the end, his life is worth
just what he has become. And I need not say that
the mistake commonly made is as to relative values, that
the things of sense are as important as the things
of the mind. You make that mistake when you devote
your best energies to your possession of material
substance, and neglect the enlargement, the training,
the enrichment of the mind. You make the same
mistake in a less degree, when you bend to the popular
ignorance and conceit so far as to direct your college
education to sordid ends. The certain end of yielding
to this so-called practical spirit was expressed by
a member of a Northern State legislature who said,
“We don’t want colleges, we want workshops.”
It was expressed in another way by a representative
of the lower house in Washington who said, “The
average ignorance of the country has a right to be
represented here.” It is not for me to say
whether it is represented there. Naturally, I
say, we ought by the time of middle life to come to
a conception of what sort of things are of most value.
By analogy, in the continual growth of the Republic,
we ought to have a perception of what we have accomplished
and acquired, and some clear view of our tendencies.
We take justifiable pride in the glittering figures
of our extension of territory, our numerical growth,
in the increase of wealth, and in our rise to the
potential position of almost the first nation in the
world. A more pertinent inquiry is, what sort
of people have we become? What are we intellectually
and morally? For after all the man is the thing,
the production of the right sort of men and women is
all that gives a nation value. When I read of
the establishment of a great industrial centre in
which twenty thousand people are employed in the increase
of the amount of steel in the world, before I decide
whether it would be a good thing for the Republic
to create another industrial city of the same sort,
I want to know what sort of people the twenty thousand
are, how they live, what their morals are, what intellectual
life they have, what their enjoyment of life is, what
they talk about and think about, and what chance they
have of getting into any higher life. It does
not seem to me a sufficient gain in this situation
that we are immensely increasing the amount of steel
in the world, or that twenty more people are enabled
on account of this to indulge in an unexampled, unintellectual
luxury. We want more steel, no doubt, but haven’t
we wit enough to get that and at the same time to
increase among the producers of it the number of men
and women whose horizons are extended, who are companionable,
intelligent beings, adding something to the intellectual
and moral force upon which the real progress of the
Republic depends?
There is no place where I would choose
to speak more plainly of our national situation today
than in the South, and at the University of the South;
in the South, because it is more plainly in a transition
state, and at the University of the South, because
it is here and in similar institutions that the question
of the higher or lower plane of life in the South
is to be determined.
To a philosophical observer of the
Republic, at the end of the hundred years, I should
say that the important facts are not its industrial
energy, its wealth, or its population, but the stability
of the federal power, and the integrity of the individual
States. That is to say, that stress and trial
have welded us into an indestructible nation; and not
of less consequence is the fact that the life of the
Union is in the life of the States. The next
most encouraging augury for a great future is the
marvelous diversity among the members of this republican
body. If nothing would be more speedily fatal
to our plan of government than increasing centralization,
nothing would be more hopeless in our development than
increasing monotony, the certain end of which is mediocrity.
Speaking as one whose highest pride
it is to be a citizen of a great and invincible Republic
to those whose minds kindle with a like patriotism,
I can say that I am glad there are East and North
and South, and West, Middle, Northwest, and Southwest,
with as many diversities of climate, temperament,
habits, idiosyncrasies, genius, as these names imply.
Thank Heaven we are not all alike; and so long as
we have a common purpose in the Union, and mutual
toleration, respect, and sympathy, the greater will
be our achievement and the nobler our total development,
if every section is true to the evolution of its local
traits. The superficial foreign observer finds
sameness in our different States, tiresome family likeness
in our cities, hideous monotony in our villages, and
a certain common atmosphere of life, which increasing
facility of communication tends to increase.
This is a view from a railway train. But as soon
as you observe closely, you find in each city a peculiar
physiognomy, and a peculiar spirit remarkable considering
the freedom of movement and intercourse, and you find
the organized action of each State sui generis
to a degree surprising considering the general similarity
of our laws and institutions. In each section
differences of speech, of habits of thought, of temperament
prevail. Massachusetts is unlike Louisiana, Florida
unlike Tennessee, Georgia is unlike California, Pennsylvania
is unlike Minnesota, and so on, and the unlikeness
is not alone or chiefly in physical features.
By the different style of living I can tell when I
cross the line between Connecticut and New York as
certainly as when I cross the line between Vermont
and Canada. The Virginian expanded in Kentucky
is not the same man he was at home, and the New England
Yankee let loose in the West takes on proportions
that would astonish his grandfather. Everywhere
there is a variety in local sentiment, action, and
development. Sit down in the seats of the State
governments and study the methods of treatment of
essentially the common institutions of government,
of charity and discipline, and you will be impressed
with the variety of local spirit and performance in
the Union. And this, diversity is so important,
this contribution of diverse elements is so necessary
to the complex strength and prosperity of the whole,
that one must view with alarm all federal interference
and tendency to greater centralization.
And not less to be dreaded than monotony
from the governmental point of view, is the obliteration
of variety in social life and in literary development.
It is not enough for a nation to be great and strong,
it must be interesting, and interesting it cannot
be without cultivation of local variety. Better
obtrusive peculiarities than universal sameness.
It is out of variety as well as complexity in American
life, and not in homogeneity and imitation, that we
are to expect a civilization noteworthy in the progress
of the human race.
Let us come a little closer to our
subject in details. For a hundred years the South
was developed on its own lines, with astonishingly
little exterior bias. This comparative isolation
was due partly to the institution of slavery, partly
to devotion to the production of two or three great
staples. While its commercial connection with
the North was intimate and vital, its literary relation
with the North was slight. With few exceptions
Northern authors were not read in the South, and the
literary movement of its neighbors, such as it was,
from 1820 to 1860, scarcely affected it. With
the exception of Louisiana, which was absolutely ignorant
of American literature and drew its inspiration and
assumed its critical point of view almost wholly from
the French, the South was English, but mainly English
of the time of Walter Scott and George the Third.
While Scott was read at the North for his knowledge
of human nature, as he always will be read, the chivalric
age which moves in his pages was taken more seriously
at the South, as if it were of continuing importance
in life. In any of its rich private libraries
you find yourself in the age of Pope and Dryden, and
the classics were pursued in the spirit of Oxford
and Cambridge in the time of Johnson. It was
little disturbed by the intellectual and ethical agitation
of modern England or of modern New England. During
this period, while the South excelled in the production
of statesmen, orators, trained politicians, great
judges, and brilliant lawyers, it produced almost no
literature, that is, no indigenous literature, except
a few poems and a few humorous character-sketches;
its general writing was ornately classic, and its
fiction romantic on the lines of the foreign romances.
From this isolation one thing was
developed, and another thing might in due time be
expected. The thing developed was a social life,
in the favored class, which has an almost unique charm,
a power of being agreeable, a sympathetic cordiality,
an impulsive warmth, a frankness in the expression
of emotion, and that delightful quality of manner which
puts the world at ease and makes life pleasant.
The Southerners are no more sincere than the Northerners,
but they have less reserve, and in the social traits
that charm all who come in contact with them, they
have an element of immense value in the variety of
American life.
The thing that might have been expected
in due time, and when the call came and
it is curious to note that the call and cause of any
renaissance are always from the outside was
a literary expression fresh and indigenous. This
expectation, in a brief period since the war, has
been realized by a remarkable performance and is now
stimulated by a remarkable promise. The acclaim
with which the Southern literature has been received
is partly due to its novelty, the new life it exhibited,
but more to the recognition in it of a fresh flavor,
a literary quality distinctly original and of permanent
importance. This production, the first fruits
of which are so engaging in quality, cannot grow and
broaden into a stable, varied literature without scholarship
and hard work, and without a sympathetic local audience.
But the momentary concern is that it should develop
on its own lines and in its own spirit, and not under
the influence of London or Boston or New York.
I do not mean by this that it should continue to attract
attention by peculiarities of dialect-which is only
an incidental, temporary phenomenon, that speedily
becomes wearisome, whether “cracker” or
negro or Yankee but by being true to the
essential spirit and temperament of Southern life.
During this period there was at the
North, and especially in the East, great intellectual
activity and agitation, and agitation ethical and
moral as well as intellectual. There was awakening,
investigation, questioning, doubt. There was
a great deal of froth thrown to the surface.
In the free action of individual thought and expression
grew eccentricities of belief and of practice, and
a crop of so-called “isms,” more or less
temporary, unprofitable, and pernicious. Public
opinion attained an astonishing degree of freedom, I
never heard of any community that was altogether free
of its tyranny. At least extraordinary latitude
was permitted in the development of extreme ideas,
new, fantastic, radical, or conservative. For
instance, slavery was attacked and slavery was defended
on the same platform, with almost equal freedom.
Indeed, for many years, if there was any exception
to the general toleration it was in the social ostracism
of those who held and expressed extreme opinions in
regard to immediate emancipation, and were stigmatized
as abolitionists. There was a general ferment
of new ideas, not always fruitful in the direction
taken, but hopeful in view of the fact that growth
and movement are better than stagnation and decay.
You can do something with a ship that has headway;
it will drift upon the rocks if it has not. With
much foam and froth, sure to attend agitation, there
was immense vital energy, intense life.
Out of this stir and agitation came
the aggressive, conquering spirit that carried civilization
straight across the continent, that built up cities
and States, that developed wealth, and by invention,
ingenuity, and energy performed miracles in the way
of the subjugation of nature and the assimilation
of societies. Out of this free agitation sprang
a literary product, great in quantity and to some
degree distinguished in quality, groups of historians,
poets, novelists, essayists, biographers, scientific
writers. A conspicuous agency of the period was
the lecture platform, which did something in the spread
and popularization of information, but much more in
the stimulation of independent thought and the awakening
of the mind to use its own powers.
Along with this and out of this went
on the movement of popular education and of the high
and specialized education. More remarkable than
the achievements of the common schools has been the
development of the colleges, both in the departments
of the humanities and of science. If I were writing
of education generally, I might have something to say
of the measurable disappointment of the results of
the common schools as at present conducted, both as
to the diffusion of information and as to the discipline
of the mind and the inculcation of ethical principles;
which simply means that they need improvement.
But the higher education has been transformed, and
mainly by the application of scientific methods, and
of the philosophic spirit, to the study of history,
economics, and the classics. When we are called
to defend the pursuit of metaphysics or the study
of the classics, either as indispensable to the discipline
or to the enlargement of the mind, we are not called
on to defend the methods of a generation ago.
The study of Greek is no longer an exercise in the
study of linguistics or the inspection of specimens
of an obsolete literature, but the acquaintance with
historic thought, habits, and polity, with a portion
of the continuous history of the human mind, which
has a vital relation to our own life.
However much or little there may be
of permanent value in the vast production of northern
literature, judged by continental or even English
standards, the time has came when American scholarship
in science, in language, in occidental or oriental
letters, in philosophic and historical methods, can
court comparison with any other. In some branches
of research the peers of our scholars must be sought
not in England but in Germany. So that in one
of the best fruits of a period of intellectual agitation,
scholarship, the restless movement has thoroughly vindicated
itself.
I have called your attention to this
movement in order to say that it was neither accidental
nor isolated. It was in the historic line, it
was fed and stimulated by all that had gone before,
and by all contemporary activity everywhere.
New England, for instance, was alert and progressive
because it kept its doors and windows open. It
was hospitable in its intellectual freedom, both of
trial and debate, to new ideas. It was in touch
with the universal movement of humanity and of human
thought and speculation. You lose some quiet
by this attitude, some repose that is pleasant and
even desirable perhaps, you entertain many errors,
you may try many useless experiments, but you gain
life and are in the way of better things. New
England, whatever else we may say about it, was in
the world. There was no stir of thought, of investigation,
of research, of the recasting of old ideas into new
forms of life, in Germany, in France, in Italy, in
England, anywhere, that did not touch it and to which
it did not respond with the sympathy that common humanity
has in the universal progress. It kept this touch
not only in the evolution and expression of thought
and emotion which we call literature (whether original
or imitative), but in the application of philosophic
methods to education, in the attempted regeneration
of society and the amelioration of its conditions
by schemes of reform and discipline, relating to the
institutions of benevolence and to the control of the
vicious and criminal. With all these efforts
go along always much false sentimentality and pseudo-philanthropy,
but little by little gain is made that could not be
made in a state of isolation and stagnation.
In fact there is one historic stream
of human thought, aspiration, and progress; it is
practically continuous, and with all its diversity
of local color and movement it is a unit. If
you are in it, you move; if you are out of it, you
are in an eddy. The eddy may have a provincial
current, but it is not in the great stream, and when
it has gone round and round for a century, it is still
an eddy, and will not carry you anywhere in particular.
The value of the modern method of teaching and study
is that it teaches the solidarity of human history,
the continuance of human thought, in literature, government,
philosophy, the unity of the divine purpose, and that
nothing that has anywhere befallen the human race
is alien to us.
I am not undervaluing the part, the
important part, played by conservatism, the conservatism
that holds on to what has been gained if it is good,
that insists on discipline and heed to the plain teaching
of experience, that refuses to go into hysterics of
enthusiasm over every flighty suggestion, or to follow
every leader simply because he proposes something
new and strange I do not mean the conservatism
that refuses to try anything simply because it is
new, and prefers to energetic life the stagnation
that inevitably leads to decay. Isolation from
the great historic stream of thought and agitation
is stagnation. While this is true, and always
has been true in history, it is also true, in regard
to the beneficent diversity of American life, which
is composed of so many elements and forces, as I have
often thought and said, that what has been called
the Southern conservatism in respect to beliefs and
certain social problems, may have a very important
part to play in the development of the life of the
Republic.
I shall not be misunderstood here,
where the claims of the higher life are insisted on
and the necessity of pure, accurate scholarship is
recognized, in saying that this expectation in regard
to the South depends upon the cultivation and diffusion
of the highest scholarship in all its historic consciousness
and critical precision. This sort of scholarship,
of widely apprehending intellectual activity, keeping
step with modern ideas so far as they are historically
grounded, is of the first importance. Everywhere
indeed, in our industrial age, in a society
inclined to materialism, scholarship, pure and simple
scholarship for its own sake, no less in Ohio than
in Tennessee, is the thing to be insisted on.
If I may refer to an institution, which used to be
midway between the North and the South, and which
I may speak of without suspicion of bias, an institution
where the studies of metaphysics, the philosophy of
history, the classics and pure science are as much
insisted on as the study of applied sciences, the
College of New Jersey at Princeton, the question in
regard to a candidate for a professorship or instructorship,
is not whether he was born North or South, whether
he served in one army or another or in neither, whether
he is a Democrat or a Republican or a Mugwump, what
religious denomination he belongs to, but is he a scholar
and has he a high character? There is no provincialism
in scholarship.
We are not now considering the matter
of the agreeableness of one society or another, whether
life is on the whole pleasanter in certain conditions
at the North or at the South, whether there is not
a charm sometimes in isolation and even in provincialism.
It is a fair question to ask, what effect upon individual
lives and character is produced by an industrial and
commercial spirit, and by one less restless and more
domestic. But the South is now face to face with
certain problems which relate her, inevitably, to
the moving forces of the world. One of these is
the development of her natural resources and the change
and diversity of her industries. On the industrial
side there is pressing need of institutions of technology,
of schools of applied science, for the diffusion of
technical information and skill in regard to mining
and manufacturing, and also to agriculture, so that
worn-out lands may be reclaimed and good lands be
kept up to the highest point of production. Neither
mines, forests, quarries, water-ways, nor textile
fabrics can be handled to best advantage without scientific
knowledge and skilled labor. The South is everywhere
demanding these aids to her industrial development.
But just in the proportion that she gets them, and
because she has them, will be the need of higher education.
The only safety against the influence of a rolling
mill is a college, the only safety against the practical
and materializing tendency of an industrial school
is the increased study of whatever contributes to
the higher and non-sordid life of the mind. The
South would make a poor exchange for her former condition
in any amount of industrial success without a corresponding
development of the highest intellectual life.
But, besides the industrial problem,
there is the race problem. It is the most serious
in the conditions under which it is presented that
ever in all history confronted a free people.
Whichever way you regard it, it is the nearest insoluble.
Under the Constitution it is wisely left to the action
of the individual States. The heavy responsibility
is with them. In the nature of things it is a
matter of the deepest concern to the whole Republic,
for the prosperity of every part is vital to the prosperity
of the whole. In working it out you are entitled,
from the outside, to the most impartial attempt to
understand its real nature, to the utmost patience
with the facts of human nature, to the most profound
and most helpful sympathy. It is monstrous to
me that the situation should be made on either side
a political occasion for private ambition or for party
ends.
I would speak of this subject with
the utmost frankness if I knew what to say. It
is not much of a confession to say that I do not.
The more I study it the less I know, and those among
you who give it the most anxious thought are the most
perplexed, the subject has so many conflicting aspects.
In the first place there is the evolution of an undeveloped
race. Every race has a right to fair play in the
world and to make the most of its capacities, and
to the help of the more favored in the attempt.
If the suggestion recently made of a wholesale migration
to Mexico were carried out, the South would be relieved
in many ways, though the labor problem would be a
serious one for a long time, but the “elevation”
would be lost sight of or relegated to a foreign missionary
enterprise; and as for results to the colored people
themselves, there is the example of Hayti. If
another suggestion, that of abandoning certain States
to this race, were carried out, there is the example
of Hayti again, and, besides, an anomaly introduced
into the Republic foreign to its traditions, spirit,
aspirations, and process of assimilation, alien to
the entire historic movement of the Aryan races, and
infinitely more dangerous to the idea of the Republic
than if solid Ireland were dumped down in the Mississippi
valley as an independent State.
On the other hand, there rests upon
you the responsibility of maintaining a civilization the
civilization of America, not of Hayti or of Guatemala
which we have so hardly won. It is neither to
be expected nor desired that you should be ruled by
an undeveloped race, ignorant of law, letters, history,
politics, political economy. There is no right
anywhere in numbers or unintelligence to rule intelligence.
It is a travesty of civilization. No Northern
State that I know of would submit to be ruled by an
undeveloped race. And human nature is exactly
in the South what it is in the North. That is
one impregnable fact, to be taken as the basis of
all our calculations; the whites of the South will
not, cannot, be dominated, as matters now stand, by
the colored race.
But, then, there is the suffrage,
the universal, unqualified suffrage. And here
is the dilemma. Suffrage once given, cannot be
suppressed or denied, perverted by chicane or bribery
without incalculable damage to the whole political
body. Irregular methods once indulged in for one
purpose, and towards one class, so sap the moral sense
that they come to be used for all purposes. The
danger is ultimately as great to those who suppress
or pervert as it is to the suppressed and corrupted.
It is the demoralization of all sound political action
and life. I know whereof I speak. In the
North, bribery in elections and intimidation are fatal
to public morality. The legislature elected by
bribery is a bribable body.
I believe that the fathers were right
in making government depend upon the consent of the
governed. I believe there has been as yet discovered
no other basis of government so safe, so stable as
popular suffrage, but the fathers never contemplated
a suffrage without intelligence. It is a contradiction
of terms. A proletariat without any political
rights in a republic is no more dangerous than an
unintelligent mob which can be used in elections by
demagogues. Universal suffrage is not a universal
panacea; it may be the best device attainable, but
it is certain of abuse without safeguards. One
of the absolutely necessary safeguards is an educational
qualification. No one ought anywhere to exercise
it who cannot read and write, and if I had my way,
no one should cast a ballot who had not a fair conception
of the effect of it, shown by a higher test of intelligence
than the mere fact of ability to scrawl his name and
to spell out a line or two in the Constitution.
This much the State for its own protection is bound
to require, for suffrage is an expediency, not a right
belonging to universal humanity regardless of intelligence
or of character.
The charge is, with regard to this
universal suffrage, that you take the fruits of increased
representation produced by it, and then deny it to
a portion of the voters whose action was expected
to produce a different political result. I cannot
but regard it as a blunder in statesmanship to give
suffrage without an educational qualification, and
to deem it possible to put ignorance over intelligence.
You are not, responsible for the situation, but you
are none the less in an illogical position before
the law. Now, would you not gain more in a rectification
of your position than you would lose in other ways,
by making suffrage depend upon an educational qualification?
I do not mean gain party-wise, but in political morals
and general prosperity. Time would certainly be
gained by this, and it is possible in this shifting
world, in the growth of industries and the flow of
populations, that before the question of supremacy
was again upon you, foreign and industrial immigration
would restore the race balance.
We come now to education. The
colored race being here, I assume that its education,
with the probabilities this involves of its elevation,
is a duty as well as a necessity. I speak both
of the inherent justice there is in giving every human
being the chance of bettering his condition and increasing
his happiness that lies in education unless
our whole theory of modern life is wrong and
also of the political and social danger there is in
a degraded class numerically strong. Granted integral
membership in a body politic, education is a necessity.
I am aware of the danger of half education, of that
smattering of knowledge which only breeds conceit,
adroitness, and a consciousness of physical power,
without due responsibility and moral restraint.
Education makes a race more powerful both for evil
and for good. I see the danger that many apprehend.
And the outlook, with any amount of education, would
be hopeless, not only as regards the negro and those
in neighborhood relations with him, if education should
not bring with it thrift, sense of responsibility
as a citizen, and virtue. What the negro race
under the most favorable conditions is capable of
remains to be shown; history does not help us much
to determine thus far. It has always been a long
pull for any race to rise out of primitive conditions;
but I am sure for its own sake, and for the sake of
the republic where it dwells, every thoughtful person
must desire the most speedy intellectual and moral
development possible of the African race. And
I mean as a race.
Some distinguished English writers
have suggested, with approval, that the solution of
the race problem in this country is fusion, and I have
even heard discouraged Southerners accept it as a possibility.
The result of their observation of the amalgamation
of races and colors in Egypt, in Syria, and Mexico,
must be very different from mine. When races of
different color mingle there is almost invariably loss
of physical stamina, and the lower moral qualities
of each are developed in the combination. No
race that regards its own future would desire it.
The absorption theory as applied to America is, it
seems to me, chimerical.
But to return to education. It
should always be fitted to the stage of development.
It should always mean discipline, the training of the
powers and capacities. The early pioneers who
planted civilization on the Watauga, the Holston,
the Kentucky, the Cumberland, had not much broad learning they
would not have been worse if they had had more but
they had courage, they were trained in self-reliance,
virile common sense, and good judgment, they had inherited
the instinct and capacity of self-government, they
were religious, with all their coarseness they had
the fundamental elements of nobility, the domestic
virtues, and the public spirit needed in the foundation
of states. Their education in all the manly arts
and crafts of the backwoodsman fitted them very well
for the work they had to do. I should say that
the education of the colored race in America should
be fundamental. I have not much confidence in
an ornamental top-dressing of philosophy, theology,
and classic learning upon the foundation of an unformed
and unstable mental and moral condition. Somehow,
character must be built up, and character depends
upon industry, upon thrift, upon morals, upon correct
ethical perceptions. To have control of one’s
powers, to have skill in labor, so that work in any
occupation shall be intelligent, to have self-respect,
which commonly comes from trained capacity, to know
how to live, to have a clean, orderly house, to be
grounded in honesty and the domestic virtues, these
are the essentials of progress. I suppose that
the education to produce these must be an elemental
and practical one, one that fits for the duties of
life and not for some imaginary sphere above them.
To put it in a word, and not denying
that there must be schools for teaching the teachers,
with the understanding that the teachers should be
able to teach what the mass most needs to know what
the race needs for its own good today, are industrial
and manual training schools, with the varied and practical
discipline and arts of life which they impart.
What then? What of the ‘modus
vivendi’ of the two races occupying the
same soil? As I said before, I do not know.
Providence works slowly. Time and patience only
solve such enigmas. The impossible is not
expected of man, only that he shall do today the duty
nearest to him. It is easy, you say, for an outsider
to preach waiting, patience, forbearance, sympathy,
helpfulness. Well, these are the important lessons
we get out of history. We struggle, and fume,
and fret, and accomplish little in our brief hour,
but somehow the world gets on. Fortunately for
us, we cannot do today the work of tomorrow.
All the gospel in the world can be boiled down into
a single precept. Do right now. I have observed
that the boy who starts in the morning with a determination
to behave himself till bedtime, usually gets through
the day without a thrashing.
But of one thing I am sure. In
the rush of industries, in the race problem, it is
more and more incumbent upon such institutions as the
University of the South to maintain the highest standard
of pure scholarship, to increase the number of men
and women devoted to the intellectual life. Long
ago, in the middle of the seventeenth century, John
Ward of Stratford-on-Avon, clergyman and physician,
wrote in his diary: “The wealth of a nation
depends upon its populousness, and its populousness
depends upon the liberty of conscience that is granted
to it, for this calls in strangers and promotes trading.”
Great is the attraction of a benign climate and of
a fruitful soil, but a greater attraction is an intelligent
people, that values the best things in life, a society
hospitable, companionable, instinct with intellectual
life, awake to the great ideas that make life interesting.
As I travel through the South and
become acquainted with its magnificent resources and
opportunities, and know better and love more the admirable
qualities of its people, I cannot but muse in a fond
prophecy upon the brilliant part it is to play in
the diversified life and the great future of the American
Republic. But, North and South, we have a hard
fight with materializing tendencies. God bless
the University of the South!