Page:A charge delivered at the ordinary visitation of the archdeaconry of Chichester in July, 1843.djvu/31

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pre-occupying the ground on which she is preparing to form her own lines of operation. It should never be forgotten that it is no question now whether or no the education of the English people is to be committed to the Church. The fact is, that from the preceptor of the Sovereign to the master of the parish-school, the work of education is already in the hands of the Church. Almost all the members of the nobility, higher commonalty, our statesmen, legislators, lawyers, clergy, and members of learned professions, and multitudes who retire into private life, pass through the universities,[1] or through public or private schools taught by members of the Church. It is calculated that in a population of 16,000,000 about 2,500,000 children of all classes ought to be under education; and that not less than 1,600,000 are actually educated by the Church: of these 1,150,000 are under daily instruction. Of the remainder a large proportion have no education at all. Out of the communion of the Church, in all sects taken together, 550,000 are claimed as Sunday-scholars; but I cannot find that more than 47,287 are under daily instruction.[2] What then could be more fatal to all hopes of restoring unity to this nation than the introduction of another and an incongruous system of education,

  1. In one of our universities many of the sons even of Dissenters are educated.
  2. Educational Statistics, p. 15; and Letter on National Education, p. 26.