The young are often accused of being
thoughtless, rash, and unwilling to be advised.
That the former of these charges is
in a great measure just, is not denied. Indeed,
what else could be expected? They are thoughtless,
for they are yet almost strangers to the world, and
its cares and perplexities. They are forward,
and sometimes rash; but this generally arises
from that buoyancy of spirits, which health and vigor
impart. True, it is to be corrected, let the cause
be what it may; but we shall correct with more caution,
and probably with greater success, when we understand
its origin.
That youth are unwilling to be
advised, as a general rule, appears to me untrue.
At least I have not found it so. When the feeling
does exist, I believe it often arises from parental
mismanagement, or from an unfortunate method of advising.
The infant seeks to grasp the burning
lamp; the parent endeavors to dissuade
him from it. At length he grasps it, and suffers
the consequences. Finally, however, if the parent
manages him properly, he learns to follow his advice,
and obey his indications, in order to avoid pain.
Such, at least, is the natural result of rational
management. And the habit of seeking parental
counsel, once formed, is not easily eradicated.
It is true that temptation and forgetfulness may lead
some of the young occasionally to grasp the
lamp, even after they are told better; but
the consequent suffering generally restores them to
their reason. It is only when the parent neglects
or refuses to give advice, and for a long time manifests
little or no sympathy with his child, that the habit
of filial reliance and confidence is destroyed.
In fact there are very few children indeed, however
improperly managed, who do not in early life acquire
a degree of this confiding, inquiring, counsel-seeking
disposition.
Most persons, as they grow old, forget
that they have ever been young themselves. This
greatly disqualifies them for social enjoyment.
It was wisely said; ’He who would pass the latter
part of his life with honor and decency, must, when
he is young, consider that he shall one day be old,
and when he is old, remember that he has once been
young.’ But if forgetfulness on this point
disqualifies a person for self enjoyment, how
much more for that which is social?
Still more does it disqualify us for
giving advice. While a lad, I was at play, one
day, with my mates, when two gentlemen observing us,
one of them said to the other; ’Do you think
you ever acted as foolishly as those boys do?’
‘Why yes; I suppose I did;’ was the reply.
‘Well,’ said the other, ‘I never
did; I know I never did.’
Both of these persons has the name
of parent, but he who could not believe he had ever
acted like a child himself, is greatly destitute of
the proper parental spirit. He never or
scarcely ever puts himself to the slightest
inconvenience to promote, directly, the happiness of
the young, even for half an hour.
He supposes every child ought to be
grave, like himself. If he sees the young engaged
in any of those exercises which are really adapted
to their years, he regards it as an entire loss of
time, besides being foolish and unreasonable.
He would have them at work, or at their studies.
Whereas there is scarcely any thing that should give
a parent more pleasure than to see his children, in
their earliest years, enjoying that flow of spirits,
which leads them forth to active, vigorous, blood-stirring
sports.
Of all persons living, he who does
not remember that he has once been young, is the most
completely disqualified for giving youthful counsel.
He obtrudes his advice occasionally, when the youth
is already under temptation, and borne along with
the force of a vicious current; but because he disregards
it, he gives him up as heedless, perhaps as obstinate.
If advice is afterwards asked, his manners are cold
and repulsive. Or perhaps he frowns him away,
telling him he never follows his advice, and
therefore it is useless to give it. So
common is it to treat the young with a measure of
this species of roughness, that I cannot wonder the
maxim has obtained that the young, generally, ’despise
counsel.’ And yet, I am fully convinced,
no maxim is farther from the truth.
When we come to the very close of
life, we cannot transfer, in a single moment, that
knowledge of the world and of human nature which an
experience of 70 years has afforded us. If, therefore,
from any cause whatever, we have not already dealt
it out to those around us, it is likely to be lost; and
lost for ever. Now is it not a pity that what
the young would regard as an invaluable treasure, could
they come at it in such a manner, and at such seasons,
as would be agreeable to them, and that, too,
which the old are naturally so fond of distributing,
should be buried with their bodies?
Let me counsel the young, then, to
do every thing they can, consistently with the rules
of good breeding, to draw forth from the old the treasures
of which I have been speaking. Let them even make
some sacrifice of that buoyant feeling which, at their
age, is so apt to predominate. Let them conform,
for the time, in some measure, to the gravity of the
aged, in order to gain their favor, and secure their
friendship and confidence. I do not ask them wholly
to forsake society, or their youthful pastimes for
this purpose, or to become grave habitually;
for this would be requiring too much. But there
are moments when old people, however disgusted they
may be with the young, do so far unbend themselves
as to enter into cheerful and instructive conversation.
I can truly say that when a boy, some of my happiest
hours were spent in the society of the aged those
too, who were not always what they should have been.
The old live in the past, as truly as the young do
in the future. Nothing more delights them than
to relate stories of ‘olden time,’ especially
when themselves were the heroes. But they
will not relate them, unless there is somebody to
hear. Let the young avail themselves of this propensity,
and make the most of it. Some may have been heroes
in war; some in travelling the country; others in
hunting, fishing, agriculture or the mechanic arts;
and it may be that here and there one will boast of
his skill, and relate stories of his success in that
noblest of arts and employments the making
of his fellow creatures wise, and good, and happy.
In conversation with all these persons,
you will doubtless hear much that is uninteresting.
But where will you find any thing pure or perfect
below the sun? The richest ores contain dross.
At the same time you cannot fail, unless the fault
is your own, to learn many valuable things from them
all. From war stories, you will learn history;
from accounts of travels, geography, human character,
manners and customs; and from stories of the good
or ill treatment which may have been experienced,
you will learn how to secure the one, and avoid the
other. From one person you will learn one
thing; from another something else. Put these
shreds together, and in time you will form quite a
number of pages in the great book of human nature.
You may thus, in a certain sense, live several lives
in one.
One thing more is to be remembered.
The more you have, the more you are bound to
give. Common sense, as well as the Scripture,
says, ’It is more blessed to give than to receive.’
Remember that as you advance in years you are bound
to avoid falling into the very errors which, ‘out
of your own mouth’ you have ‘condemned’
in those who have gone before you; and to make yourselves
as acceptable as you can to the young, in order to
secure their confidence, and impart to them, little
by little, those accumulated treasures of experience
which you have acquired in going through life, but
which must otherwise, to a very great extent, be buried
with you in your graves.
But, my young friends, there is one
method besides conversation, in which you may come
at the wisdom of the aged; and that is through the
medium of books. Many old persons have written
well, and you cannot do better than to avail yourselves
of their instructions. This method has even one
advantage over conversation. In the perusal of
a book, you are not so often prejudiced or disgusted
by the repulsive and perhaps chilling manner of him
who wrote it, as you might have been from his conversation
and company.
I cannot but indulge the hope that
you will find some valuable information and useful
advice in this little book. It has cost
me much labor to embody, in so small a compass, the
results of my own experience on such a variety of
subjects, and to arrange my thoughts in such a manner
as seemed to me most likely to arrest and secure your
attention. The work, however, is not wholly the
result of my own experience, for I have derived many
valuable thoughts from other writers.
An introductory chapter or preface
is usually rather dry, but if this should prove sufficiently
interesting to deserve your attention till you have
read it, and the table of contents, thoroughly, I have
strong hopes that you will read the rest of the book.
And in accordance with my own principles, I believe
you will try to follow my advice; for I take it for
granted that none will purchase and read this work
but such as are willing to be advised. I repeat
it, therefore I go upon the presumption
that my advice will, in the main, be followed.
Not at every moment of your lives, it is true; for
you will be exposed on all sides to temptation, and,
I fear, sometimes fall. But when you come to review
the chapter (for I hope I have written nothing but
what is worth a second reading) which contains directions
on that particular subject wherein you have failed,
and find, too, how much you have suffered by neglecting
counsel, and rashly seizing the lamp, I am persuaded
you will not soon fall again in that particular direction.
In this view, I submit these pages
to the youth of our American States. If the work
should not please them, I shall be so far from attributing
it to any fault or perversity of theirs, that I shall
at once conclude I have not taken a wise and proper
method of presenting my instructions.