MORAL EDUCATION OF THE QUAKERS: CHAPTER I
Moral Education of the Quakers — amusements
necessary for youth — Quakers distinguish
between the useful and the hurtful — the latter
specified and forbidden.
When the blooming spring sheds abroad
its benign influence, man feels it equally with the
rest of created nature. The blood circulates more
freely, and a new current of life seems to be diffused,
in his veins. The aged man is enlivened, and
the sick man feels himself refreshed. Good spirits
and cheerful countenances succeed. But as the
year changes in its seasons, and rolls round to its
end, the tide seems to slacken, and the current of
feeling to return to its former level.
But this is not the case with the
young. The whole year to them is a kind of perpetual
spring. Their blood runs briskly throughout.
Their spirits are kept almost constantly alive; and
as the cares of the world occasion no drawback, they
feel a perpetual disposition to cheerfulness and to
mirth. This disposition seems to be universal
in them. It seems too to be felt by us all; that
is, the spring, enjoyed by youth, seems to operate
as spring to maturer age. The sprightly and smiling
looks of children, their shrill, lively, and cheerful
voices, their varied and exhilarating sports, all
these are interwoven with the other objects of our
senses, and have an imperceptible, though an undoubted
influence, in adding to the cheerfulness of our minds.
Take away the beautiful choristers from the woods,
and those, who live in the country, would but half
enjoy the spring. So, if by means of any unparalleled
pestilence, the children of a certain growth were
to be swept away, and we were to lose this infantile
link in the chain of age, those, who were left behind,
would find the creation dull, or experience an interruption
in the cheerfulness of their feelings, till the former
were successively restored.
The bodies, as well as the minds of
children, require exercise for their growth:
and as their disposition is thus lively and sportive,
such exercises, as are amusing, are necessary, and
such amusements, on account of the length of the spring
which they enjoy, must be expected to be long.
The Quakers, though they are esteemed
an austere people, are sensible of these wants or
necessities of youth. They allow their children
most of the sports or exercises of the body, and most
of the amusements or exercises of the mind, which
other children of the island enjoy; but as children
are to become men, and men are to become moral
characters, they believe that bounds should be
drawn, or that an unlimited permission to follow every
recreation would be hurtful.
The Quakers therefore have thought
it proper to interfere on this subject, and to draw
the line between those amusements, which they consider
to be salutary, and those, which they consider to be
hurtful. They have accordingly struck out of
the general list of these such, and such only, as,
by being likely to endanger their morality, would be
likely to interrupt the usefulness, and the happiness,
of their lives. Among the bodily exercises, dancing,
and the diversions of the field, have been
proscribed; among the mental, music, novels,
the theatre, and all games of chance,
of every description, have been forbidden. These
are the principal prohibitions, which the Quakers have
made on the subject of their moral education.
They were suggested, most of them, by George Fox,
but were brought into the discipline, at different
times, by his successors.
I shall now consider each of these
prohibitions separately, and I shall give all the
reasons, which the Quakers themselves give, why, as
a society of Christians, they have, thought it right
to issue and enforce them.