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Adventures among Books by Andrew Lang
Book, page 191 / 197


described by Colonel Raleigh Chichester, "are never without
surveillance of some sort." This is true of most French schools,
and any one who wishes to understand the consequences (there) may
read the published confessions of a pion--an usher, or "spy." A
more degraded and degrading life than that of the wretched pion, it
is impossible to imagine. In an English private school, the system
of espionnage and tale bearing, when it exists, is probably not
unlike what Mr. Anstey describes in Vice Versa. But in the
Catholic schools spoken of by Colonel Raleigh Chichester, the
surveillance may be, as he says, "that of a parent; an aid to the
boys in their games rather than a check." The religious question
as between Catholics and Protestants has no essential connection
with the subject. A Protestant school might, and Grimstone's did,
have tale-bearers; possibly a Catholic school might exist without
parental surveillance. That system is called by its foes a
"police," by its friends a "paternal" system. But fathers don't
exercise the "paternal" system themselves in this country, and we
may take it for granted that, while English society and religion
are as they are, surveillance at our large schools will be
impossible. If any one regrets this, let him read the descriptions
of French schools and schooldays, in Balzac's Louis Lambert, in the
"Memoirs" of M. Maxime du Camp, in any book where a Frenchman
speaks his mind about his youth. He will find spying (of course)
among the ushers, contempt and hatred on the side of the boys,
unwholesome and cruel punishments, a total lack of healthy
exercise; and he will hear of holidays spent in premature
excursions into forbidden and shady quarters of the town.

No doubt the best security against bullying is in constant
occupation. There can hardly (in spite of Master George Osborne's
experience in "Vanity Fair") be much bullying in an open cricket-
field. Big boys, too, with good hearts, should not only stop
bullying when they come across it, but make it their business to
find out where it exists. Exist it will, more or less, despite all
precautions, while boys are boys--that is, are passing through a
modified form of the savage state.

There is a curious fact in the boyish character which seems, at
first sight, to make good the opinion that private education, at
home, is the true method. Before they go out into school life,

 
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