Page:Popular Science Monthly Volume 28.djvu/632

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
614
THE POPULAR SCIENCE MONTHLY.

value of such a report in determining the lines which woman's college education should follow, in the dearth of information upon the topic, is at once seen.

III. Specific Data for Future Movements.—These should be based upon confidential revelations made by the graduates themselves, together with the testimony of college officers and physicians. It should not be limited narrowly. They should go far beyond the question of bodily health. The statement of what each had found the greatest aid and the greatest hindrance in her collegiate training would be of much value. Experience alone can decide the exact form which these inquiries should take, but their importance can hardly be over-estimated in the moral and social aspects of the case.

Education must follow the example of the special sciences. It must organize. There is organization, and to spare, in the schools themselves; what we want is organized recognition of the problems of education; organized study for the discovery of methods of solution; organized application of these methods in the details of school-life. Co-operation in research and application is the key to the problem.

PROEM TO GENESIS:

A REPLY TO PROFESSOR HUXLEY.

By WILLIAM E. GLADSTONE.

VOUS avez une manière si aimable d’annoncer les plus mauvaises nouvelles, qu’elles perdent par lá de leurs désagrémens.[1] So wrote, de haut en bas (from above down), the Duchess of York to Beau Brummell, sixty or seventy years back;[2] and so write I, de bas en haut (from below up), to the two very eminent champions who have in the "Nineteenth Century" of December entered appearances on behalf of Dr. Réville's Prolégomènes, with a decisiveness of tone, at all events, which admits of no mistake: Professor Huxley and Professor Max Müller. My first duty is to acknowledge in both cases the abundant courtesy and indulgence with which I am personally treated. And my first thought is that, where even disagreement is made in a manner pleasant, it will be a duty to search and see if there be any points of agreement or approximation, which will be more pleasant still. This indulgence and courtesy deserves in the case of Professor Huxley a special warmth of acknowledgment, because, while thus more than liberal to the individual, he has for the class of Reconcilers, in which he places me, an unconcealed and un-

  1. You have so gentle a way of telling the worst news that it thereby loses its unpleasantness.
  2. "Life," by Jesse. Revised edition, i. 260.