[Pelham<br> Complete by Edward Bulwer-Lytton]@TWC D-Link book
Pelham
Complete

CHAPTER XV
3/8

Now common sense is all that is necessary to distinguish what is good and evil, whether it be in life or in books: but then your education must not be that of public teaching and private fooling; you must not counteract the effects of common sense by instilling prejudice, or encouraging weakness; your education may not be carried to the utmost goal: but as far as it does go you must see that the road is clear.

Now, for instance, with regard to fiction, you must not first, as is done in all modern education, admit the disease, and then dose with warm water to expel it; you must not put fiction into your child's hands, and not give him a single principle to guide his judgment respecting it, till his mind has got wedded to the poison, and too weak, by its long use, to digest the antidote.

No; first fortify his intellect by reason, and you may then please his fancy by fiction.

Do not excite his imagination with love and glory, till you can instruct his judgment as to what love and glory are.

Teach him, in short, to reflect, before you permit him full indulgence to imagine." Here there was a pause.


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