CHAPTER XIV - CONCLUSION.
“Far out the strange ships go:
Their broad sails flashing red
As flame, or white as snow:
The ships, as David said.
’Winds rush and waters roll:
Their strength, their beauty, brings
Into mine heart the whole
Magnificence of things.’”
LIONEL
JOHNSON.
The conclusion is only an opportunity
for repeating how much there is still to be said,
and even more to be thought of and to be done, in the
great problem and work of educating girls. Every
generation has to face the same problem, and deals
with it in a characteristic way. For us it presents
particular features of interest, of hope and likewise
of anxious concern. The interest of education
never flags; year after year the material is new,
the children come up from the nursery to the school-room,
with their life before them, their unbounded possibilities
for good, their confidence and expectant hopefulness
as to what the future will bring them. We have
our splendid opportunity and are greatly responsible
for its use. Each precious result of education
when the girl has grown up and leaves our hands is
thrown into the furnace to be tried fired like
glass or fine porcelain. Those who educate have,
at a given moment, to let go of their control, and
however solicitously they may have foreseen and prepared
for it by gradually obliging children to act without
coercion and be responsible for themselves, yet the
critical moment must come at last and “every
man’s work shall be manifest,” “the
fire shall try every man’s work, of what sort
it is” (1 Cor. III). Life tries
the work of education, “of what sort it is.”
If it stands the test it is more beautiful than before,
its colours are fixed. If it breaks, and some
will inevitably break in the trial, a Catholic education
has left in the soul a way to recovery. Nothing,
with us, is hopelessly shattered, we always know how
to make things right again. But if we can we
must secure the character against breaking, our effort
in education must be to make something that will last,
and for this we must often sacrifice present success
in consideration of the future, we must not want to
see results. A small finished building is a more
sightly object than one which is only beginning to
rise above its foundations, yet we should choose that
our educational work should be like the second rather
than the first, even though it has reached “the
ugly stage,” though it has its disappointments
and troubles before it, with its daily risks and the
uncertainty of ultimate success. But it is a truer
work, and a better introduction to the realities of
life.
A “finished education”
is an illusion or else a lasting disappointment; the
very word implies a condition of mind which is opposed
to any further development, a condition of self-satisfaction.
What then shall we call a well-educated girl, whom
we consider ready for the opportunities and responsibilities
of her new life? An equal degree of fitness cannot
be expected from all, the difference between those
who have ten talents and those who have only two will
always be felt. Those who have less will be well
educated if they have acquired spirit enough not to
be discontented or disheartened at feeling that their
resources are small; if we have been able to inspire
them with hope and plodding patience it will be a
great thing, for this unconquerable spirit of perseverance
does not fail in the end, it attains to something worthy
of all honour, it gives us people of trust whose character
is equal to their responsibilities, and that is no
little thing in any position of life; and, if to this
steadiness of will is added a contented mind, it will
always be superior to its circumstances and will not
cease to develop in the line of its best qualities.
It is not these who disappoint in
fact they often give more than was expected of them.
It is those of great promise who are more often disappointing
in failing to realize what they might do with their
richer endowments; they fail in strength of will.
Now if we want a girl to grow to the
best that a woman ought to be it is in two things
that we must establish her fundamentally quiet
of mind and firmness of will. Quiet of mind equally
removed from stagnation and from excitement.
In stagnation her mind is open to the seven evil spirits
who came into the house that was empty and swept;
under excitement it is carried to extremes in any
direction which occupies its attention at the time.
The best minds of women are quiet, intuitive, and full
of intellectual sympathies. They are not in general
made for initiation and creation, but initiation and
creation lean upon them for understanding and support.
And their support must be moral as well as mental,
for this they need firmness of will. Support
cannot be given to others without an inward support
which does not fail towards itself in critical moments.
The great victories of women have been won by this
inward support, this firmness and perseverance of
will based upon faith. The will of a woman is
strong, not in the measure of what it manifests without,
as of what it reserves within, that is to say in the
moderation of its own impulsiveness and emotional
tendency, in the self-discipline of perseverance,
the subordination of personal interest to the good
of whatever depends upon it for support. It is
great in self-devotion, and in this is found its only
lasting independence.
To give much and ask little in personal return is
independence of the highest kind. But faith alone can make it possible. The
Catholic Faith gives that particular orientation of mind which is independent of
this world, knowing the account which it must give to God. To some it is duty
and the reign of conscience, to others it is detachment and the reign of the
love of God, the joyful flight of the soul towards heavenly things. The
particular name matters little, it has a centre of gravity. As everlasting
foundations upon a solid rock, so the commandments of God in the heart of a holy
woman.