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A Busy Year at the Old
Squire's CHAPTER I MASTER PIERSON COMES BACK MASTER
JOEL PIERSON arrived the
following Sunday afternoon, as he had promised in his letter of
Thanksgiving
Day eve, and took up his abode with us at the old Squire's for the
winter term
of school. Cousin
Addison drove to the village
with horse and pung to fetch him; and the pung, I remember, was filled
with the
master's belongings, including his school melodeon, books and seven
large wall
maps for teaching geography. For Master Pierson brought a complete
outfit, even
to the stack of school song-books which later were piled on the top of
the
melodeon that stood in front of the teacher's desk at the schoolhouse.
Every
space between the windows was covered by those wall maps. No other
teacher had
ever made the old schoolhouse so attractive. No other teacher had ever
entered
on the task of giving us instruction with such zeal and such
enthusiasm. It was
a zeal, too, and an enthusiasm which embraced every pupil in the room
and
stopped at nothing short of enlisting that pupil's best efforts to
learn. Master
Pierson put life and hard
work into everything that went on at school — even into the old
schoolhouse
itself. Every morning he would be off from the old Squire's at eight
o'clock,
to see that the schoolhouse was well warmed and ready to begin lessons
at nine;
and if there had been any neglect in sweeping or dusting, he would do
it
himself, and have every desk and bench clean and tidy before school
time. What was
more, Master Pierson
possessed the rare faculty of communicating his own zeal for learning
to his
pupils. We became so interested, as weeks passed, that of our own
accord we
brought our school books home with us at night, in order to study
evenings; and
we asked for longer lessons that we might progress faster. My cousin
Halstead was one of those
boys (and their name is Legion) who dislike study and complain of their
lessons
that they are too long and too hard. But strange to say, Master Joel
Pierson
somehow led Halse to really like geography that winter. Those large
wall maps
in color were of great assistance to us all. In class we took turns
going to
them with a long pointer, to recite the lesson of the day. I remember
just how
the different countries looked and how they were bounded — though many
of these
boundaries are now, of course, considerably changed. When
lessons dragged and dullness
settled on the room, Master Joel was wont to cry, "Halt!" then sit
down at the melodeon and play some school song as lively as the
instrument
admitted of, and set us all singing for five or ten minutes, chanting
the
multiplication tables, the names of the states, the largest cities of
the
country, or even the Books of the Bible. At other times he would throw
open the
windows and set us shouting Patrick Henry's speech, or Byron's
Apostrophe to
the Ocean. In short, "old Joel" was what now would be called a
"live wire." He was twenty-two then and a student working his own way
through Bates College. After graduating he migrated to a far western
state where
he taught for a year or two, became supervisor of schools, then State
Superintendent, and afterwards a Representative to Congress. He is an
aged man
now and no word of mine can add much to the honors which have worthily
crowned
his life. None the less I want to pay this tribute to him — even if he
did rub
my ears at times and cry, "Wake up, Round-head! Wake up and find out
what
you are in this world for." (More rubs!) "You don't seem to know yet.
Wake up and find out about it. We have all come into the world to do
something.
Wake up and find out what you are here for!" — and then more rubs! It wasn't
his fault if I never
fairly waked up to my vocation — if I really had one. For the life of
me I
could never feel sure what I was for! Cousin Addison seemed to know
just what
he was going to do, from earliest boyhood, and went straight to it.
Much the
same way, cousin Theodora's warm, generous heart led her directly to
that labor
of love which she has so faithfully performed. As for Halstead, he was
perfectly sure, cock-sure, more than twenty times, what he was going to
do in
life; but always in the course of a few weeks or months, he discovered
he was
on the wrong trail. What can be said of us who either have no vocation
at all,
or too many? What are we here for? In
addition to our daily studies at
the schoolhouse, we resumed Latin, in the old sitting-room, evenings,
Thomas
and Catherine Edwards coming over across the field to join us. To save
her
carpet, grandmother Ruth put down burlap to bear the brunt of our many
restless
feet — for there was a great deal of trampling and sometimes outbreaks
of
scuffling there. Thomas and
I, who had forgotten much
we had learned the previous winter, were still delving in Ęsop's Fables. But Addison,
Theodora and
Catherine were going on with the first book of Cęsar's Gallic War. Ellen, two years
younger, was
still occupied wholly by her English studies. Study hours were from
seven till
ten, with interludes for apples and pop-corn. Halstead,
who had now definitely
abandoned Latin as something which would never do him any good, took up
Comstock's Natural Philosophy,
or
made a feint of doing so, in order to have something of his own that
was
different from the rest of us. Natural philosophy, he declared, was far
and
away more important than Latin. Memory
goes back very fondly to
those evenings in the old sitting-room, they were so illumined by great
hopes
ahead. Thomas and I, at a light-stand apart from the others, were
usually
puzzling out a Fable — The Lion,
The Oxen,
The Kid and the Wolf, The Fox and the Lion, or some one of a
dozen
others — holding noisy arguments over it till Master Pierson from the
large
center table, called out, "Less noise over there among those Latin
infants! Cęsar is building his bridge over the Rhine. You are
disturbing him."
Addison,
always very quiet when
engrossed in study, scarcely noticed or looked up, unless perhaps to
aid
Catherine and Theodora for a moment, with some hard passage. It was Tom
and I
who made Latin noisy, aggravated at times by pranks from Halstead,
whose
studies in natural philosophy were by no means diligent. At intervals
of
assisting us with our translations of Cęsar and the Fables, Master
Pierson
himself was translating the Greek of Demosthenes' Orations, and also
reviewing
his Livy — to keep up with his Class at College. But, night or day, he
was
always ready to help or advise us, and push us on. "Go ahead!" was
"old Joel's" motto, and "That's what we're here for." He
appeared to be possessed by a profound conviction that the human race
has a
great destiny before it, and that we ought all to work hard to hurry it
up and
realize it. It is
quite wonderful what an
influence for good a wide-awake teacher, like Master Pierson, can exert
in a
school of forty or fifty boys and girls like ours in the old Squire's
district,
particularly where many of them "don't know what they are in the world
for," and have difficulty in deciding on a vocation in life. At that
time there was much being
said about a Universal Language. As there are fifty or more diverse
languages,
spoken by mankind, to say nothing of hundreds of different dialects,
and as
people now travel freely to all parts of the earth, the advantages of
one
common language for all nations are apparent to all who reflect on the
subject.
At present, months and years of our short lives are spent learning
foreign
languages. A complete education demands that the American whose mother
tongue
is the English, must learn French, German, Spanish and Italian, to say
nothing
of the more difficult languages of eastern Europe and the Orient.
Otherwise the
traveler, without an interpreter, cannot make himself understood, and
do
business outside his own country. The want
of a common means of
communication therefore has long been recognized; and about that time
some one had
invented a somewhat imperfect method of universal speech, with the idea
of
having everybody learn it, and so be able to converse with the
inhabitants of
all lands without the well-nigh impossible task of learning five, or
ten, or
fifty different languages. The idea
impressed everybody as a
good one, and enjoyed a considerable popularity for a time. But
practically
this was soon found to be a clumsy and inadequate form of speech, also
that
many other drawbacks attended its adoption. But the
main idea held good; and
since that time Volapuk, Bolak, Esperanto and Ido have appeared, but
without
meeting with great success. The same disadvantages attend them, each
and all. In
thinking the matter over and
talking of it, one night at the old Squire's, that winter, Master
Pierson hit
on the best, most practical plan for a universal language which I have
ever
heard put forward. "Latin is the foundation of all the modern languages
of
Christendom," he said. "Or if not the foundation, it enters largely
into all of them. Law, theology, medicine and philosophy are dependent
on Latin
for their descriptive terms. Without Latin words, modern science would
be a
jargon which couldn't be taught at all. Without Latin, the English
language,
itself, would relapse to the crude, primitive Saxon speech of our
ancestors. No
one can claim to be well educated till he has studied Latin. "Now as we
have need to learn
Latin anyway, why not kill two birds with one stone, and make Latin our
universal language? Why not have a colloquial, everyday Latin, such as
the
Romans used to speak in Italy? In point of fact, Latin was the
universal
language with travelers and educated people all through the Middle
Ages. We
need to learn it anyhow, so why not make it our needed form of common
speech?"
I remember
just how earnest old Joel
became as he set forth this new idea of his. He jumped up and tore
round the
old sitting-room. He rubbed my ears again, rumpled Tom's hair, caught
Catherine
by both her hands and went ring-round-the-rosy with her, nearly
knocking down
the table, lamp and all! "The greatest idea yet!" he shouted.
"Just what's wanted for a Universal Language!" He went and drew in
the old Squire to hear about it; and the old Squire admitted that it
sounded
reasonable. "For I can see," he said, "that it would keep Latin,
and the derivation of words from it, fresh in our minds. It would prove
a
constant review of the words from which our language has been formed. "But Latin
always looked to me
rather heavy and perhaps too clumsy for every-day talk," the old
gentleman
remarked. "Think you could talk it?" "Sure!"
Master Pierson
cried. "The old Romans spoke it. So can we. And that's just what I will
do. "I will
get up a book of
conversational Latin — enough to make a Common Language for every-day
use." And in point of fact that was what old Joel was doing, for four
or
five weeks afterwards. He had Theodora and Catherine copy out page
after page
of it — as many as twenty pages. He wanted us each to have a copy of
it; and
for a time at least, he intended to have it printed. A few days
ago I came upon some of
those faded, yellow pages, folded up in an old text book of Ęsop's Latin Fables
— the one Tom and I were then using; and I will set down a few of the
sentences
here, to illustrate what Master Pierson thought might be done with
Latin as a
universal language. Master
Pierson's Universal Language
in Latin, which he named Dic
from
dico, meaning to
speak. 1 It is time to get up. =
Surgendi
tempus est. 2 The sun is up already.
= Sol
jamdudum ortus. 3 Put on your shoes. =
Indue tibi
ocreas. 4 Comb your head. = Pecte caput tuum. 5 Light a candle and
build a fire =
Accende lucernum, et facut luceat faculus. 6 Carry the lantern. We
must water
the horses. = Vulcanum in cornu
geras. Equi
aquatum agenda sunt. 7 It is a very hot day. =
Dies est
ingens ęstus. 8 Let's go to the barn. =
Jam imus
horreum. 9 Grind the axes. =
Acuste ascias. 10 It is near twelve
o'clock. =
Instat hora duodecima. 11 It is time for dinner.
=
Prandenti tempus adest. 12 Please take dinner
with = Quesso
nobiscum hodie ussumas prandiolum. 13 Make a good fire. =
Instruas
optimum focum. 14 This chimney smokes. =
Male fumat
hic caminus. 15 The wood is green. =
Viride est
hoc lignum. 16 Fetch kindling wood. =
Affer
fomitem. 17 Lay the table cloth. =
Sterne
mappam. 18 Dinner is ready. =
Cibus est
appositus. 19 Don't spoil it by
delay. = Ne
corrumpatur mora vestra. 20 Sit down. = Accumbe. 21 This is my place. =
Hic mihi
locus. 22 Let him sit next me. =
Assideat
mihi. 23 Say grace, or ask a
blessing.. =
Recita consecrationem. 24 Give me brown bread. =
Da mihi
panem atrum. 25 I am going to school.
= Eo ad
scholam. 26 What time is it? =
Quota est hora?
27 It is past seven. =
Pręteriit
hora septima. 28 The bell has rung. =
Sonuit
tintinnabulum. 29 Go with me. = Vade
mecum. 30 The master will soon
be here.=
Brevi pręceptor aderit. 31 I am very cold. =
Valde frigeo. 32 My hands are numb. =
Obtorpent
manus. 33 Mend the fire. = Apta
ignem. I have
copied out only a few of the
shorter sentences. There were, as I have said, fully twenty pages of
it, enough
for quite a respectable "Universal Language," or at least the
beginnings of one. Perhaps some ambitious linguist will yet take it up
in
earnest. |