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Book Five
Of the Revenue of the Sovereign or Commonwealth.
CHAPTER I
Of the Expenses of the Sovereign or Commonwealth
PART 3
Of the Expense of Public Works and Public Institutions
ARTICLE II
Of the Expense of the Institutions for the Education of
Youth
Different plans and different institutions for education
seem to have taken place in other ages and nations.
In the republics of ancient Greece, every free citizen was
instructed, under the direction of the public magistrate, in
gymnastic exercises and in music. By gymnastic exercises it was
intended to harden his body, to sharpen his courage, and to
prepare him for the fatigues and dangers of war; and as the Greek
militia was, by all accounts, one of the best that ever was in
the world, this part of their public education must have answered
completely the purpose for which it was intended. By the other
part, music, it was proposed, at least by the philosophers and
historians who have given us an account of those institutions, to
humanize the mind, to soften the temper, and to dispose it for
performing all the social and moral duties both of public and
private life.
In ancient Rome the exercises of the Campus Martius answered
the purpose as those of the Gymnasium in ancient Greece, and they
seem to have answered it equally well. But among the Romans there
was nothing which corresponded to the musical education of the
Greeks. The morals of the Romans, however, both in private and
public life, seem to have been not only equal, but, upon the
whole, a good deal superior to those of the Greeks. That they
were superior in private life, we have the express testimony of
Polybius and of Dionysius of Halicarnassus, two authors well
acquainted with both nations; and the whole tenor if the Greek
and Roman history bears witness to the superiority of the public
morals of the Romans. The good temper and moderation of
contending factions seems to be the most essential circumstances
in the public morals of a free people. But the factions of the
Greeks were almost always violent and sanguinary; whereas, till
the time of the Gracchi, no blood had ever been shed in any Roman
faction; and from the time of the Gracchi the Roman republic may
be considered as in reality dissolved. Notwithstanding,
therefore, the very respectable authority of Plato, Aristotle,
and Polybius, and notwithstanding the very ingenious reasons by
which Mr. Montesquieu endeavours to support that authority, it
seems probable that the musical education of the Greeks had no
great effect in mending their morals, since, without any such
education, those of the Romans were upon the whole superior. The
respect of those ancient sages for the institutions of their
ancestors had probably disposed them to find much political
wisdom in what was, perhaps, merely an ancient custom, continued
without interruption from the earliest period of those societies
to the times in which they had arrived at a considerable degree
of refinement. Music and dancing are the great amusements of
almost all barbarous nations, and the great accomplishments which
are supposed to fit any man for entertaining his society. It is
so at this day among the negroes on the coast of Africa. It was
so among the ancient Celts, among the ancient Scandinavians, and,
as we may learn from Homer, among the ancient Greeks in the times
preceding the Trojan war. When the Greek tribes had formed
themselves into little republics, it was natural that the study
of those accomplishments should, for a long time, make a part of
the public and common education of the people.
The masters who instructed the young people, either in music
or in military exercises, do not seem to have been paid, or even
appointed by the state, either in Rome or even in Athens, the
Greek republic of whose laws and customs we are the best
informed. The state required that every free citizen should fit
himself for defending it in war, and should, upon that account,
learn his military exercises. But it left him to learn them of
such masters as he could find, and it seems to have advanced
nothing for this purpose but a public field or place of exercise
in which he should practise and perform them.
In the early ages both of the Greek and Roman republics, the
other parts of education seem to have consisted in learning to
read, write, and account according to the arithmetic of the
times. These accomplishments the richer citizens seem frequently
to have acquired at home by the assistance of some domestic
pedagogue, who was generally either a slave or a freed-man; and
the poorer citizens, in the schools of such masters as made a
trade of teaching for hire. Such parts of education, however,
were abandoned altogether to the care of the parents or guardians
of each individual. It does not appear that the state ever
assumed any inspection or direction of them. By a law of Solon,
indeed, the children were acquitted from maintaining those
parents in their old age who had neglected to instruct them in
some profitable trade or business.
In the progress of refinement, when philosophy and rhetoric
came into fashion, the better sort of people used to send their
children to the schools of philosophers and rhetoricians, in
order to be instructed in these fashionable sciences. But those
schools were not supported by the public. They were for a long
time barely tolerated by it. The demand for philosophy and
rhetoric was for a long time so small that the first professed
teachers of either could not find constant employment in any one
city, but were obliged to travel about from place to place. In
this manner lived Zeno of Elea, Protagoras, Gorgias, Hippias, and
many others. As the demand increased, the schools both of
philosophy and rhetoric became stationary; first in Athens, and
afterwards in several other cities. The state, however, seems
never to have encouraged them further than by assigning some of
them a particular place to teach in, which was sometimes done,
too, by private donors. The state seems to have assigned the
Academy to Plato, the Lyceum to Aristotle, and the Portico to
Zeno of Citta, the founder of the Stoics. But Epicurus bequeathed
his gardens to his own school. Till about the time of Marcus
Antonius, however, no teacher appears to have had any salary from
the public, or to have had any other emoluments but what arose
from the honoraries or fees of his scholars. The bounty which
that philosophical emperor, as we learn from Lucian, bestowed
upon one of the teachers of philosophy, probably lasted no longer
than his own life. There was nothing equivalent to the privileges
of graduation, and to have attended any of those schools was not
necessary, in order to be permitted to practise any particular
trade or profession. If the opinion of their own utility could
not draw scholars to them, the law neither forced anybody to go
to them nor rewarded anybody for having gone to them. The
teachers had no jurisdiction over their pupils, nor any other
authority besides that natural authority, which superior virtue
and abilities never fail to procure from young people towards
those who are entrusted with any part of their education.
At Rome, the study of the civil law made a part of the
education, not of the greater part of the citizens, but of some
particular families. The young people, however, who wished to
acquire knowledge in the law, had no public school to go to, and
had no other method of studying it than by frequenting the
company of such of their relations and friends as were supposed
to understand it. It is perhaps worth while to remark, that
though the Laws of the Twelve Tables were, many of them, copied
from those of some ancient Greek republics, yet law never seems
to have grown up to be a science in any republic of ancient
Greece. In Rome it became a science very early, and gave a
considerable degree of illustration to those citizens who had the
reputation of understanding it. In the republics of ancient
Greece, particularly in Athens, the ordinary courts of justice
consisted of numerous, and therefore disorderly, bodies of
people, who frequently decided almost at random, or as clamour,
faction, and party spirit happened to determine. The ignominy of
an unjust decision, when it was to be divided among five hundred,
a thousand, or fifteen hundred people (for some of their courts
were so very numerous), could not fall very heavy upon any
individual. At Rome, on the contrary, the principal courts of
justice consisted either of a single judge or of a small number
of judges, whose characters, especially as they deliberated
always in public, could not fail to be very much affected by any
rash or unjust decision. In doubtful cases such courts, from
their anxiety to avoid blame, would naturally endeavour to
shelter themselves under the example or precedent of the judges
who had sat before them, either in the same or in some other
court. This attention to practice and precedent necessarily
formed the Roman law into that regular and orderly system in
which it has been delivered down to us; and the like attention
has had the like effects upon the laws of every other country
where such attention has taken place. The superiority of
character in the Romans over that of the Greeks, so much remarked
by Polybius and Dionysius of Halicarnassus, was probably more
owing to the better constitution of their courts of justice than
to any of the circumstances to which those authors ascribe it.
The Romans are said to have been particularly distinguished for
their superior respect to an oath. But the people who were
accustomed to make oath only before some diligent and
well-informed court of justice would naturally be much more
attentive to what they swore than they who were accustomed to do
the same thing before mobbish and disorderly assemblies.
The abilities, both civil and military, of the Greeks and
Romans will readily be allowed to have been at least equal to
those of any modern nation. Our prejudice is perhaps rather to
overrate them. But except in what related to military exercises,
the state seems to have been at no pains to form those great
abilities, for I cannot be induced to believe that the musical
education of the Greeks could be of much consequence in forming
them. Masters, however, had been found, it seems, for instructing
the better sort of people among those nations in every art and
science in which the circumstances of their society rendered it
necessary or convenient for them to be instructed. The demand for
such instruction produced what it always produces- the talent for
giving it; and the emulation which an unrestrained competition
never fails to excite, appears to have brought that talent to a
very high degree of perfection. In the attention which the
ancient philosophers excited, in the empire which they acquired
over the opinions and principles of their auditors, in the
faculty which they possessed of giving a certain tone and
character to the conduct and conversation of those auditors, they
appear to have been much superior to any modern teachers. In
modern times, the diligence of public teachers is more or less
corrupted by the circumstances which render them more or less
independent of their success and reputation in their particular
professions. Their salaries, too, put the private teacher, who
would pretend to come into competition with them, in the same
state with a merchant who attempts to trade without a bounty in
competition with those who trade with a considerable one. If he
sells his goods at nearly the same price, he cannot have the same
profit, and at least, if not bankruptcy and ruin, will infallibly
be his lot. If he attempts to sell them much dearer, he is likely
to have so few customers that his circumstances will not be much
mended. The privileges of graduation, besides, are in many
countries necessary, or at least extremely convenient, to most
men of learned professions, that is, to the far greater part of
those who have occasion for a learned education. But those
privileges can be obtained only by attending the lectures of the
public teachers. The most careful attendance upon the ablest
instructions of any private teacher cannot always give any title
to demand them. It is from these different causes that the
private teacher of any of the sciences which are commonly taught
in universities is in modern times generally considered as in the
very lowest order of men of letters. A man of real abilities can
scarce find out a more humiliating or a more unprofitable
employment to turn them to. The endowment of schools and colleges
have, in this manner, not only corrupted the diligence of public
teachers, but have rendered it almost impossible to have any good
private ones.
Were there no public institutions for education, no system,
no science would be taught for which there was not some demand,
or which the circumstances of the times did not render it either
necessary, or convenient, or at least fashionable, to learn. A
private teacher could never find his account in teaching either
an exploded and antiquated system of a science acknowledged to be
useful, or a science universally believed to be a mere useless
and pedantic heap of sophistry and nonsense. Such systems, such
sciences, can subsist nowhere, but in those incorporated
societies for education whose prosperity and revenue are in a
great measure independent of their reputation and altogether
independent of their industry. Were there no public institutions
for education, a gentleman, after going through with application
and abilities the most complete course of education which the
circumstances of the times were supposed to afford, could not
come into the world completely ignorant of everything which is
the common subject of conversation among gentlemen and men of the
world.
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