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V CHILD LIFE TO gain more definite insight into the life of the French children than was obtainable by casual acquaintance with them gathered in my flitting travels, I took advantage of the first convenient opportunity to visit a country school. Children get their character and future bent primarily from their home environment, but their lives are also largely influenced by the schools they attend, and whether these are good or bad is a matter of vital importance. The French schools have, of late, been entirely separated from the Catholic Church, both in their teaching and in their teachers. So far as I could judge, the change had been very beneficial, for in France, as elsewhere, denominationalism, of whatever sort, in elementary education, seems to sap the vitality of the work done as a whole. The school
I visited
was in a fair-sized village in the northern department of Oise. I went
into the
boys’ school first. They had a building to themselves, and were in two
rooms of
different grades, twenty or thirty in each apartment. The rooms were
high, well
lighted, and in good repair, and the walls were hung with maps and a
variety of
other helps, interspersed with a number of pictures. On shelves and in
cabinets
were books, objects of interest in natural history, a collection of
minerals,
and sets of models to illustrate metric weights and measures and
geometric
shapes. In front of the master’s desk was a small organ. The scholars’
desks
were the rudest part of the educational equipment. They were long and
unpainted, with benches to match, each intended for about half a dozen
occupants.
The worst of it was that the benches were backless, and the desks
behind not
near enough to furnish any relief. The
children ranged
in age from seven to thirteen. Most of them wore frocks that came down
nearly
to their shoe tops, and that looked very like dresses. The frocks were
usually
black, but in some cases were a checked blue. They protected the
clothes and
were serviceable and sensible; and they were so much the fashion in the
boy
world of the region that children of well-to-do parents were as anxious
to wear
them as those of the humbler classes. Another custom in apparel was
that of
wearing knickerbockers and short stockings which failed to make
connections, by
several inches, just below the knee. If only the bare tract had come
square on
the knees instead of below, one would have to concede that it saved
wear and
tear of clothing at a most vulnerable point, but as it was, I could not
see
that it had any advantage whatever. The
scholars seemed
to apply themselves diligently to their tasks, and the- master said
they liked
to study at home. By the time a boy gets to be nine or ten, he thinks
it
important that he should have a portfolio in which to carry his
belongings to
and from school. The portfolio is black, and it has a long strap to go
over the
owner’s shoulder; and when he first comes into possession of one of
these
insignia of scholarship, he feels he is a genuine student, as he never
has been
before. Portfolios of the same pattern are carried very commonly by
professional men in the large towns, and they therefore possess a
certain
manliness in their attributes that makes them far more essential to
the boy
mind than does the mere matter of use. Indeed, this portfolio is
considered by
the youths of a good deal more consequence than a hat. Many of the
children
went to school without the latter article; and, as there appeared to be
no
place reserved for hats in the school building, one might infer that
the
government regarded head protection for students with disfavor. Such
hats as
there were had to be hung on chance wall nails, or tucked into niches
about the
desks. The master
and his
family lived in the school building, and a door opened from the main
schoolroom into the family kitchen. A visitor was unusual; and when I
came in,
the master’s wife and daughter looked through the door from the kitchen
to see
who the stranger was. I thought the combination of domesticity and
education
in such close and familiar relations was rather primitive, and I
doubted its
expediency; yet it was plain that both the master and his assistant in
the next
room were capable men, that their methods were modern, and that the
children
were getting a very fair education. The girl’s
school
made the same favorable impression. The rooms were pleasant, and good
work was
being done, in spite of the fact that the lady principal affirmed to me
in an
aside that her pupils were “little devils.” They were more uneasy than
the boys
— more inclined to be self-conscious, and to twist and turn in the
unaccustomed
presence of an outsider; but these were not serious faults. Many of the
girls
wore dark outer frocks much like those worn by the boys. I noticed that
the
majority of them had rings in their ears. The fashion of ear-rings,
however, is
beginning to pass away in France, as in other civilized countries.
Until
recently the habit was well-nigh universal, but now the girls in the
more
intelligent families do not have their ears pierced. The seats
occupied by the
smaller scholars were as lacking in comfort as those of the boys; but
the
larger girls were favored with benches that had slender back supports. School
began at
eight o’clock in the morning, and ended at four in the afternoon. A
two-hours’
intermission was allowed at noon, and a short recess in each session.
Then
there was, of course, a weekly holiday; though this came on Thursday
instead of
on Saturday, as in England and America. The playground used by the
boys was a
barren, treeless inclosure of dusty earth. That of the girls was
hardly less
dusty and earthy, but it was in part shadowed by a double row of stumpy
trees.
Fronting on this playground there were, besides the girls’ building, a
lesser
structure, in which the very little boys and girls were taught, and a
cottage
occupied by the women teachers. A very
interesting
provision is made in the French educational system for encouraging the
children
in the habit of saving. The teachers are empowered to receive any sums
from one
sou upwards which the scholars choose to place on deposit, and these
are collected
monthly by agents of the savings-banks. Every depositor receives a
bank-book,
only the child with savings under one franc gets a small bank-book,
while the
child with above that amount has a large one. During the last seventeen
years
the boys and girls have opened more than half a million accounts in the
savings-banks. Many children, or their parents for them, deposit in an
endowment fund intended to give them a capital of from one to two
thousand
dollars when they become of age. Most
French children
leave school for once and all by the time they are thirteen, and it is
not
always easy, after they are old enough to be of assistance at home, to
get
parents, especially peasant parents, to send them continuously even to
that
age. But they at least learn to read; though that may mean the
gathering of
little more book knowledge than is possessed by their elders, who were
never
taught anything. That the peasants have very hazy ideas about
geography, I
early discovered. If I stopped to talk with a laborer in the fields,
and
mentioned that I was from America, he would want to know whether I was
from
North or South America. “North,” I
reply;
and then he inquires if I am from Canada. “No; from
the
United States.” “Ah! “ and
he looks
as if he had heard of that country, but had a very indistinct notion of
what
and where it was. But if I speak of having sailed from New York, he
brightens
perceptibly. He knows that city much better than he does the United
States. The
matter of placing me being as satisfactorily settled as could be
expected, he
asks if I am rich; and when I tell him I am not, he looks sceptical,
for all
Americans are rich in the belief of French peasants. A boy,
unless his
parents have means, has almost no chance of education beyond what he
gets at
the elementary schools. In a very few scattered towns, the government
maintains
advanced special schools; but it only in part pays the scholars’
expenses, and
none save the cleverest prize-takers are sent to them. Catholic schools
in
which the priests and nuns teach after their time-honored
ecclesiastical manner
are still common, but the Church no longer furnishes teachers and
dictates
methods to the public schools. In other ways, however, Church supervision of the child is as unrelaxed as ever, and at present it divides this supervision with the State about evenly. Notice must be sent within twenty-four hours of a baby’s birth to the office of the village mayor, so that the official physician may call and assure himself as to various facts which the law requires shall be recorded. Then the father, accompanied by two witnesses, goes to the mayor’s office, and, between them all, a birth certificate is filled out, and the child thus gets a legal, documented position in the commonwealth, to which he or she will be obliged to have recourse in all the great and frequently in the minor affairs of life. Without it the child could not enter a school, and in later years could not be enrolled in the army, or get married, and might even have trouble in being buried. The baptismal names declared by the child’s relatives must always be placed in the same order in all future deeds and papers, and the least mistake is liable to upset French officialism entirely, and only vast expenditure of time and talk will serve to straighten matters. SCHOOLBOYS If the
State,
through the statistical physician, is usually the first to take
cognizance of
the new baby, the Church is not much behind. A priest is sure soon to
appear to
administer unction, and insure the little one a place in heaven in case
it
should not have long to live. The baby’s
first
outing is apt to be a month or two later, when, some Sunday afternoon,
it is
carried to the church for the sacrament of baptism. All the family and
the
friends are present, and the baby is sumptuously dressed. Its sponsors
renounce Satan’s works and pomps in the child’s name, while the baby
wails with
the distress of its unusual clothes and surroundings, and protests
mightily
against the sprinkling of holy water on its bare head and the laying of
salt on
its tiny tongue. A christening among the peasantry is always
accompanied by a
great feast, and the file of guests walking in couples, arm in arm, to
and from
church behind the godparents, makes quite an imposing procession. The
bells
ring merrily, and sugared almonds and pennies are thrown right and left
to
gladden the hearts of the village urchins. The nurse receives presents
from
every one, the godfather gives the godmother a present, another to the
mother,
and, without fail, bestows on his godchild a silver mug, fork, and
spoon. After the
children
get to be eight or ten years old, boys and girls are no longer the free
associates they have been hitherto, and with the first communion, when
the
girls are eleven and the boys twelve, there is still less of
companionship than
before. The separation is in part natural, for their interests are
different in
the amusements that appeal to them, and they have not the same rights
or
duties. The girls seem by nature to be more religiously inclined than
the boys,
though this is largely a result of the influence of mothers and
teachers, and
because it is expected of them. The boys pattern more after their
fathers,
whose lives seem to argue that religion is not of any great concern to
the
masculine portion of the race. Among
peasants and
laborers, child life is comparatively unhampered, but among the upper
classes,
the unwritten repressive social laws applying to young people are many,
and
they are punctiliously observed. It is a part of the parental creed
that the
way to make a daughter most maidenly and attractive is to allow her few
associates and to keep her constantly under surveillance. Thus it
happens that
she is rarely given the opportunity to engage in any robust physical
exertion,
and her toilet is her chief concern, from the age of five up. The
system of
chaperonage makes her subject to perpetual companionship with servants;
and the
servants, however willing, good-natured, and even devoted, are often
ignorant,
superstitious, and deceitful. Frequently the protection rendered by
the
chaperoning servant seems theoretical rather than real; as, for
instance, when
the respectability of a young lady in her twenties, on her way to
visit at the
house of a friend, is guarded by a little maid not more than half her
mistress’s size and age. Most girls
of the
well-to-do class finish their education at a convent school. It is
said that
they get there adequate exercise and recreation, and that their health
is
generally good. Certainly they are preserved from nervous excitement,
if
nothing more. Perhaps the worst feature of the convent is its hostility
to all
progress. Both the good and the evil of modern times are under a ban,
and
contact with the world is held to be about the same as contamination.
In some
convents, when the relatives come to see the girls, they are only
allowed to
talk to them through a grating; but in most institutions the rules give
them
liberty to see each other in the same room, though a guardian nun must
always
be present. All letters sent or received are read by the superior, and
the
separation between mothers and daughters is nearly complete, save in
the two
months of vacation. It is no wonder, then, if marriage is hailed with
delight
by most French girls as a relief from this unending espionage and
repression.
It brings them, at least, freedom. The condition of the boys at the priests’ schools is much the same as that of the girls at the convents. Their liberty would hardly be more curtailed if they were criminals. It is a melancholy sight to see these schoolboys taking what is called recreation. They walk in pairs, with their masters accompanying, and even in the seminaries, as young men preparing for the priesthood, they are in custody almost as much as ever. They work long hours, and are noticeably pallid and slender. They get little of the rough and tumble exercise which falls to the lot of our English and American youth, and they are less robust and, I think, less happy. At the age of sixteen or eighteen, the young Frenchman may have more general information and more polish, but he is a forced and precocious hothouse growth, and the consequence of his training is inevitable — when the reins are loosened and the boy is his own master, there is a reaction, and this is not so apt to take the form of healthy sport and pleasure as it is to run to dissipation. THE READER As a whole, the French treatment of youth seemed to me in many ways mistaken and unfortunate, yet there is at least one bright ray of hope auguring better things for the future, and that is, the great advance in effectiveness made within very recent years by the public schools. This leaven working in the national life cannot but make for a more natural and wiser social status. |