What Is and What Might Be, by 
Edmond Holmes 
 
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Title: What Is and What Might Be A Study of Education in General 
and Elementary Education in Particular 
Author: Edmond Holmes 
Release Date: February 10, 2007 [EBook #20555] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 
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AND WHAT MIGHT BE *** 
 
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WHAT IS AND WHAT MIGHT BE 
A STUDY OF EDUCATION IN GENERAL AND ELEMENTARY
EDUCATION IN PARTICULAR 
BY 
EDMOND HOLMES 
AUTHOR OF "THE CREED OF CHRIST," "THE CREED OF 
BUDDHA," "THE SILENCE OF LOVE," "THE TRIUMPH OF 
LOVE," ETC. 
LONDON CONSTABLE & COMPANY 1912 
First published, May 1911. Second impression, July 1911. Third 
impression, September 1911. Fourth impression, November 1911. Fifth 
impression, January 1912. Sixth impression, October 1912. 
+----------------------------------------------------------------------+ 
|Transcriber's note: Obvious printer errors have been corrected. All | 
|other inconstancies in spelling or punctuation are as in the original.| 
+----------------------------------------------------------------------+ 
 
PREFACE 
My aim, in writing this book, is to show that the externalism of the 
West, the prevalent tendency to pay undue regard to outward and 
visible "results" and to neglect what is inward and vital, is the source of 
most of the defects that vitiate Education in this country, and therefore 
that the only remedy for those defects is the drastic one of changing our 
standard of reality and our conception of the meaning and value of life. 
My reason for making a special study of that branch of education which 
is known as "Elementary," is that I happen to have a more intimate 
knowledge of it than of any other branch, the inside of an elementary 
school being so familiar to me that I can in some degree bring the eye 
of experience to bear upon the problems that confront its teachers. I do 
not for a moment imagine that the elementary school teacher is more 
deeply tainted than his fellows with the virus of "Occidentalism." Nor 
do I think that the defects of his schools are graver than those of other
educational institutions. In my judgment they are less grave because, 
though perhaps more glaring, they have not had time to become so 
deeply rooted, and are therefore, one may surmise, less difficult to 
eradicate. Also there is at least a breath of healthy discontent stirring in 
the field of elementary education, a breath which sometimes blows the 
mist away and gives us sudden gleams of sunshine, whereas over the 
higher levels of the educational world there hangs the heavy stupor of 
profound self-satisfaction.[1] I am not exaggerating when I say that at 
this moment there are elementary schools in England in which the life 
of the children is emancipative and educative to an extent which is 
unsurpassed, and perhaps unequalled, in any other type or grade of 
school. 
I am careful to say all this because I foresee that, without a "foreword" 
of explanation, my adverse criticism of what I have called "a familiar 
type of school" may be construed into an attack on the elementary 
teachers as a body. I should be very sorry if such a construction were 
put upon it. No one knows better than I do that the elementary teachers 
of this country are the victims of a vicious conception of education 
which has behind it twenty centuries of tradition and prescription, and 
the malign influence of which was intensified in their case by thirty 
years or more[2] of Code despotism and "payment by results." 
Handicapped as they have been by this and other adverse conditions, 
they have yet produced a noble band of pioneers, to whom I, for one, 
owe what little I know about the inner meaning of education; and if I 
take an unduly high standard in judging of their work, the reason is that 
they themselves, by the brilliance of their isolated achievements, have 
compelled me to take it. I will therefore ask them to bear with me, 
while I expose with almost brutal candour the shortcomings of many of 
their schools. They will understand that all the time I am thinking of 
education in general even more than of elementary education, and using 
my knowledge of the latter to illustrate statements and arguments 
which are really intended to tell against the former. They will also 
understand that at the back of my mind I am laying the blame of their 
failures, not on them but    
    
		
	
	
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