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the new machiavelli-第5部分

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inevitably ensure the Supply。  An industry of 〃Grant earning〃 was 

created; and this would give education as a necessary by…product。



In the end this belief was found to need qualification; but Grant…

earning was still in full activity when I was a small boy。  So far 

as the Science and Art Department and my father are concerned; the 

task of examination was entrusted to eminent scientific men; for the 

most part quite unaccustomed to teaching。  You see; if they also 

were teaching similar classes to those they examined; it was feared 

that injustice might be done。  Year after year these eminent persons 

set questions and employed subordinates to read and mark the 

increasing thousands of answers that ensued; and having no doubt the 

national ideal of fairness well developed in their minds; they were 

careful each year to re…read the preceding papers before composing 

the current one; in order to see what it was usual to ask。  As a 

result of this; in the course of a few years the recurrence and 

permutation of questions became almost calculable; and since the 

practical object of the teaching was to teach people not science; 

but how to write answers to these questions; the industry of Grant…

earning assumed a form easily distinguished from any kind of genuine 

education whatever。



Other remarkable compromises had also to be made with the spirit of 

the age。  The unfortunate conflict between Religion and Science 

prevalent at this time was mitigated; if I remember rightly; by 

making graduates in arts and priests in the established church 

Science Teachers EX OFFICIO; and leaving local and private 

enterprise to provide schools; diagrams; books; material; according 

to the conceptions of efficiency prevalent in the district。  Private 

enterprise made a particularly good thing of the books。  A number of 

competing firms of publishers sprang into existence specialising in 

Science and Art Department work; they set themselves to produce 

text…books that should supply exactly the quantity and quality of 

knowledge necessary for every stage of each of five and twenty 

subjects into which desirable science was divided; and copies and 

models and instructions that should give precisely the method and 

gestures esteemed as proficiency in art。  Every section of each book 

was written in the idiom found to be most satisfactory to the 

examiners; and test questions extracted from papers set in former 

years were appended to every chapter。  By means of these last the 

teacher was able to train his class to the very highest level of 

grant…earning efficiency; and very naturally he cast all other 

methods of exposition aside。  First he posed his pupils with 

questions and then dictated model replies。



That was my father's method of instruction。  I attended his classes 

as an elementary grant…earner from the age of ten until his death; 

and it is so I remember him; sitting on the edge of a table; 

smothering a yawn occasionally and giving out the infallible 

formulae to the industriously scribbling class sitting in rows of 

desks before him。  Occasionally be would slide to his feet and go to 

a blackboard on an easel and draw on that very slowly and 

deliberately in coloured chalks a diagram for the class to copy in 

coloured pencils; and sometimes he would display a specimen or 

arrange an experiment for them to see。  The room in the Institute in 

which he taught was equipped with a certain amount of apparatus 

prescribed as necessary for subject this and subject that by the 

Science and Art Department; and this my father would supplement with 

maps and diagrams and drawings of his own。



But he never really did experiments; except that in the class in 

systematic botany he sometimes made us tease common flowers to 

pieces。  He did not do experiments if he could possibly help it; 

because in the first place they used up time and gas for the Bunsen 

burner and good material in a ruinous fashion; and in the second 

they were; in his rather careless and sketchy hands; apt to endanger 

the apparatus of the Institute and even the lives of his students。  

Then thirdly; real experiments involved washing up。  And moreover 

they always turned out wrong; and sometimes misled the too observant 

learner very seriously and opened demoralising controversies。  Quite 

early in life I acquired an almost ineradicable sense of the 

unscientific perversity of Nature and the impassable gulf that is 

fixed between systematic science and elusive fact。  I knew; for 

example; that in science; whether it be subject XII。; Organic 

Chemistry; or subject XVII。; Animal Physiology; when you blow into a 

glass of lime water it instantly becomes cloudy; and if you continue 

to blow it clears again; whereas in truth you may blow into the 

stuff from the lime…water bottle until you are crimson in the face 

and painful under the ears; and it never becomes cloudy at all。  And 

I knew; too; that in science if you put potassium chlorate into a 

retort and heat it over a Bunsen burner; oxygen is disengaged and 

may be collected over water; whereas in real life if you do anything 

of the sort the vessel cracks with a loud report; the potassium 

chlorate descends sizzling upon the flame; the experimenter says 

〃Oh! Damn!〃 with astonishing heartiness and distinctness; and a lady 

student in the back seats gets up and leaves the room。



Science is the organised conquest of Nature; and I can quite 

understand that ancient libertine refusing to cooperate in her own 

undoing。  And I can quite understand; too; my father's preference 

for what he called an illustrative experiment; which was simply an 

arrangement of the apparatus in front of the class with nothing 

whatever by way of material; and the Bunsen burner clean and cool; 

and then a slow luminous description of just what you did put in it 

when you were so ill…advised as to carry the affair beyond 

illustration; and just exactly what ought anyhow to happen when you 

did。  He had considerable powers of vivid expression; so that in 

this way he could make us see all he described。  The class; freed 

from any unpleasant nervous tension; could draw this still life 

without flinching; and if any part was too difficult to draw; then 

my father would produce a simplified version on the blackboard to be 

copied instead。  And he would also write on the blackboard any 

exceptionally difficult but grant…earning words; such as 

〃empyreumatic〃 or 〃botryoidal。〃



Some words in constant use he rarely explained。  I remember once 

sticking up my hand and asking him in the full flow of description; 

〃Please; sir; what is flocculent?〃



〃The precipitate is。〃



〃Yes; sir; but what does it mean?〃



〃Oh! flocculent! 〃 said my father; 〃flocculent!  Why〃 he extended 

his hand and arm and twiddled his fingers for a second in the air。  

〃Like that;〃 he said。



I thought the explanation sufficient; but he paused for a moment 

after giving it。  〃As in a flock bed; you know;〃 he added and 

resumed his discourse。





3



My father; I am afraid; carried a natural incompetence in practical 

affairs to an exceptionally high level。  He combined practical 

incompetence; practical enterprise and a thoroughly sanguine 

temperament; in a manner that I have never seen paralleled in any 

human being。  He was always trying to do new things in the briskest 

manner; under the suggestion of books or papers or his own 

spontaneous imagination; and as he had never been trained to do 

anything whatever in his life properly; his futilities were 

extensive and thorough。  At one time he nearly gave up his classes 

for intensive culture; so enamoured was he of its possibilities; the 

peculiar pungency of the manure he got; in pursuit of a chemical 

theory of his own; has scarred my olfactory memories for a lifetime。  

The intensive culture phase is very clear in my memory; it came near 

the end of his career and when I was between eleven and twelve。  I 

was mobilised to gather caterpillars on several occasions; and 

assisted in nocturnal raids upon the slugs by lantern…light that 

wrecked my preparation work for school next day。  My father dug up 

both lawns; and trenched and manured in spasms of immense vigour 

alternating with periods of paralysing distaste for the garden。  And 

for weeks he talked about eight hundred pounds an acre at every 

meal。



A garden; even when it is not exasperated by intensive methods; is a 

thing as exacting as a baby; its moods have to he watched; it does 

not wait upon the cultivator's convenience; but has times of its 

own。  Intensive culture greatly increases this disposition to 

trouble mankind; it makes a garden touchy and hysterical; a drugged 

and demoralised and over…irritated garden。  My father got at cross 

purposes with our two patches at an early stage。  Everything grew 

wrong from the first to last; and i

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