298 THE POPULAR SCIENCE MONTHLY. 



within which is of itself an education, where they find wise and dis- 

 criminating assistance in their studies, and encouragement and incite- 

 ment to effort. 



But the case is not by any means fully stated. The gymnasium 

 not only gets better material to work upon than its rival, but it has 

 also a superior corps of teachers. The writer was told by a gentleman 

 who was a graduate of a real school, and who had been a teacher 

 in one for some time, but had afterward made up the Greek and 

 Latin of a gymnasium course in order to qualify himself for teaching 

 in a gymnasium, that no teacher of ability and enterprise would re- 

 main in a real school any longer than he was obliged to remain there. 

 "There is no career in that line of work," said he, " and only block- 

 heads and lazy hides {Dummkbpfe unci Faulpelze) stay in it." Of 

 course, that was a great exaggeration, and yet it contained an element 

 of truth, viz., that a process of selection is going on between these 

 two schools, not only in regard to pupils, but also in regard to teach-, 

 ers, and the gymnasium has its pick of both. 



The reason is not far to seek. It is to be found in the higher so- 

 cial position which tradition assigns to the office of gymnasial teacher, 

 and the better career which the Government opens to it. How idle, in 

 the face of all these facts, is the assertion that the Berlin report 

 has settled the question between the real school and the gymnasium, 

 or that it is of paramount significance in the deeper question of clas- 

 sical against modern training ! 



To get a fair idea of the significance of this report, let one imagine 

 the state of things which would exist in this country if the law of the 

 land had for generations permitted no one to practice law or medicine, or 

 enter the ministry or the civil service, or become a teacher in our higher 

 schools and colleges, w T ho had not first completed the classical course 

 in an average college, and then attended a professional school for three 

 years. Suppose that, after such a law had been enforced for a century, 

 a proposition were made to allow such scientific schools as could spring 

 up under those circumstances to present their students for certain sub- 

 ordinate places in the civil service and in the academic career. Can 

 there be any doubt that the adherents of the classical culture would 

 point with pride to the fact that every eminent professional man for 

 several generations had been the graduates of classical schools, and 

 would make that a reason, as they do now in Germany, for refusing 

 to admit any man with a different education to the practice of those 

 professions'? "Would they not dwell on the great danger to the na- 

 tional civilization which would arise from the fact that an element of 

 discord would be introduced into the culture of the people by educat- 

 ing the young along two widely different lines ? * 



* This argument plays a large part in the German defense of a single school and a 

 single course in preparation for all higher professions. " Our education," says one, "is 

 homogeneous. Let the real school carry its point, and a hopeless and fatal element of 



