The Spirit of Youth and the City Streets

Jane Addams
Spirit of Youth and the City Streets, The

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Title: The Spirit of Youth and the City Streets
Author: Jane Addams
Release Date: July 6, 2005 [EBook #16221]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
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THE SPIRIT OF YOUTH AND THE CITY STREETS

THE MACMILLAN COMPANY NEW YORK �� BOSTON �� CHICAGO �� DALLAS ATLANTA �� SAN FRANCISCO
MACMILLAN & CO., LIMITED LONDON �� BOMBAY �� CALCUTTA MELBOURNE
THE MACMILLAN COMPANY OF CANADA, LIMITED TORONTO

THE SPIRIT OF YOUTH AND THE CITY STREETS
By JANE ADDAMS
HULL HOUSE, CHICAGO
_Author of Democracy and Social Ethics Newer Ideals of Peace, etc._
New York THE MACMILLAN COMPANY 1930

COPYRIGHT, 1909, By THE MACMILLAN COMPANY.
Set up and electrotyped. Published October, 1909
Norwood Press: Berwick & Smith Co., Norwood, Mass., U.S.A.

TO MY DEAR FRIEND
Louise de Koben Bowen
WITH SINCERE ADMIRATION FOR HER UNDERSTANDING OF THE NEEDS OF CITY CHILDREN AND WITH WARM APPRECIATION OF HER SERVICE AS PRESIDENT OF THE JUVENILE PROTECTIVE ASSOCIATION OF CHICAGO

CONTENTS

CHAPTER I
Youth in the City 3

CHAPTER II
The Wrecked Foundations of Domesticity 25

CHAPTER III
The Quest for Adventure 51

CHAPTER IV
The House of Dreams 75

CHAPTER V
The Spirit of Youth and Industry 107

CHAPTER VI
The Thirst for Righteousness 139

FOREWORD
Much of the material in the following pages has appeared in current publications. It is here presented in book form in the hope that it may prove of value to those groups of people who in many cities are making a gallant effort to minimize the dangers which surround young people and to provide them with opportunities for recreation.


CHAPTER I
YOUTH IN THE CITY
Nothing is more certain than that each generation longs for a reassurance as to the value and charm of life, and is secretly afraid lest it lose its sense of the youth of the earth. This is doubtless one reason why it so passionately cherishes its poets and artists who have been able to explore for themselves and to reveal to others the perpetual springs of life's self-renewal.
And yet the average man cannot obtain this desired reassurance through literature, nor yet through glimpses of earth and sky. It can come to him only through the chance embodiment of joy and youth which life itself may throw in his way. It is doubtless true that for the mass of men the message is never so unchallenged and so invincible as when embodied in youth itself. One generation after another has depended upon its young to equip it with gaiety and enthusiasm, to persuade it that living is a pleasure, until men everywhere have anxiously provided channels through which this wine of life might flow, and be preserved for their delight. The classical city promoted play with careful solicitude, building the theater and stadium as it built the market place and the temple. The Greeks held their games so integral a part of religion and patriotism that they came to expect from their poets the highest utterances at the very moments when the sense of pleasure released the national life. In the medieval city the knights held their tourneys, the guilds their pageants, the people their dances, and the church made festival for its most cherished saints with gay street processions, and presented a drama in which no less a theme than the history of creation became a matter of thrilling interest. Only in the modern city have men concluded that it is no longer necessary for the municipality to provide for the insatiable desire for play. In so far as they have acted upon this conclusion, they have entered upon a most difficult and dangerous experiment; and this at the very moment when the city has become distinctly industrial, and daily labor is continually more monotonous and subdivided. We forget how new the modern city is, and how short the span of time in which we have assumed that we can eliminate public provision for recreation.
A further difficulty lies in the fact that this industrialism has gathered together multitudes of eager young creatures from all quarters of the earth as a labor supply for the countless factories and workshops, upon which the present industrial city is based. Never before in civilization have such numbers of young girls been suddenly released from the protection of the home and permitted to walk unattended upon city streets and to work under alien roofs; for the first time they are being prized more for their labor power than for their innocence, their tender beauty, their ephemeral gaiety.
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