Reveries of a Schoolmaster 
 
Project Gutenberg's Reveries of a Schoolmaster, by Francis B. Pearson 
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Title: Reveries of a Schoolmaster 
Author: Francis B. Pearson 
Release Date: July 29, 2004 [EBook #13049] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ASCII 
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK REVERIES 
OF A SCHOOLMASTER *** 
 
Produced by Al Haines 
 
REVERIES OF A SCHOOLMASTER 
BY 
FRANCIS B. PEARSON 
STATE SUPERINTENDENT OF PUBLIC INSTRUCTION FOR
OHIO 
AUTHOR OF "THE EVOLUTION OF THE TEACHER," "THE 
HIGH-SCHOOL PROBLEM," "THE VITALIZED SCHOOL." 
 
CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS 
NEW YORK CHICAGO BOSTON 
 
COPYRIGHT, 1917, BY 
CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS 
 
CONTENTS 
CHAPTER 
I. 
IN MEDIAS RES II. RETROSPECT III. BROWN IV. 
PSYCHOLOGICAL V. BALKING VI. LANTERNS VII. COMPLETE 
LIVING VIII. MY SPEECH IX. SCHOOL-TEACHING X. 
BEEFSTEAK XI. FREEDOM XII. THINGS XIII. TARGETS XIV. 
SINNERS XV. HOEING POTATOES XVI. CHANGING THE MIND 
XVII. THE POINT OF VIEW XVIII. PICNICS XIX. 
MAKE-BELIEVE XX. BEHAVIOR XXI. FOREFINGERS XXII. 
STORY-TELLING XXIII. GRANDMOTHER XXIV. MY WORLD 
XXV. THIS OR THAT XXVI. RABBIT PEDAGOGY XXVII. 
PERSPECTIVE XXVIII. PURELY PEDAGOGICAL XXIX. 
LONGEVITY XXX. FOUR-LEAF CLOVER XXXI. 
MOUNTAIN-CLIMBING
REVERIES OF A SCHOOLMASTER 
CHAPTER I 
IN MEDIAS RES 
I am rather glad now that I took a little dip (one could scarce call it a 
baptism) into the Latin, and especially into Horace, for that good soul 
gave me the expression in medias res. That is a forceful expression, 
right to the heart of things, and applies equally well to the writing of a 
composition or the eating of a watermelon. Those who have crossed the 
Channel, from Folkstone to Boulogne, know that the stanch little ship 
Invicta had scarcely left dock when they were in medias res. They were 
conscious of it, too, if indeed they were conscious of anything not 
strictly personal to themselves. This expression admits us at once to the 
light and warmth (if such there be) of the inner temple nor keeps us 
shivering out in the vestibule. 
Writers of biography are wont to keep us waiting too long for 
happenings that are really worth our while. They tell us that some one 
was born at such a time, as if that were really important. Why, anybody 
can be born, but it requires some years to determine whether his being 
born was a matter of importance either to himself or to others. When I 
write my biographical sketch of William Shakespeare I shall say that in 
a certain year he wrote "Hamlet," which fact clearly justified his being 
born so many years earlier. 
The good old lady said of her pastor: "He enters the pulpit, takes his 
text, and then the dear man just goes everywhere preaching the 
Gospel." That man had a special aptitude for the in medias res method 
of procedure. Many children in school who are not versed in Latin 
would be glad to have their teachers endowed with this aptitude. They 
are impatient of preliminaries, both in the school and at the dinner-table. 
And it is pretty difficult to discover just where childhood leaves off in 
this respect. 
So I am grateful to Horace for the expression. Having started right in 
the midst of things, one can never get off the subject, and that is a great
comfort. Sometimes college graduates confess (or perhaps boast) that 
they have forgotten their Latin. I fear to follow their example lest my 
neighbor, who often drops in for a friendly chat, might get to 
wondering whether I have not also forgotten much of the English I am 
supposed to have acquired in college. He might regard my English as 
quite as feeble when compared with Shakespeare or Milton as my Latin 
when compared with Cicero or Virgil. So I take counsel with prudence 
and keep silent on the subject of Latin. 
When I am taking a stroll in the woods, as I delight to do in the 
autumn-time, laundering my soul with the gorgeous colors, the music 
of the rustling leaves, the majestic silences, and the sounds that are less 
and more than sounds, I often wonder, when I take one bypath, what 
experiences I might have had if I had taken the other. I'll never know, 
of course, but I keep on wondering. So it is with this Latin. I wonder 
how much worse matters could or would have been if I had never 
studied it at all. As the old man said to the young fellow who consulted 
him as to getting married: "You'll be sorry if you do, and sorry if you 
don't." I used to feel a sort of    
    
		
	
	
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