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THE VALUE OF CLASSICAL
LEARNING
Poplar Forest, August 24, 1819
SIR, -- The acknowledgment of your favor of July 15th, and thanks
for the Review which it covered of Mr. Pickering's Memoir on the Modern Greek, have been delayed by a visit to an occasional but distant residence
from Monticello, and to an attack here of rheumatism which is just now
moderating. had been much pleased with the memoir, and was much also with your
review of it. I have little hope indeed of the recovery of the ancient
pronunciation of that finest of human languages, but still I rejoice at the
attention the subject seems to excite with you, because it is an evidence that
our country begins to have a taste for something more than merely as much Greek as
will pass a candidate for clerical ordination.
You
ask my opinion on the extent to which classical learning should be carried in
our country. A sickly condition permits me to think, and a rheumatic hand to
write too briefly on this litigated question. The utilities we derive from the
remains of the Greek
and Latin languages are, first, as models of pure taste in writing. To these we
are certainly indebted for the national and chaste style of modern composition
which so much distinguishes the nations to whom these languages ae familiar.
Without these models we should probably have continued the inflated style of
our northern ancestors, or the hyperbolical and vague one of the east. Second.
Among the values of classical learning, I estimate the luxury of reading the Greek
and Roman authors in all the beauties of their originals. And why should not
this innocent and elegant luxury take its preminent stand ahead of all those
addressed merely to the senses? I think myself more indebted to my father for
this than for all the other luxuries his cares and affections have placed
within my reach; and more now than when younger, and more susceptible of
delights from other sources. When the decays of age have enfeebled the useful
energies of the mind, the classic pages fill up the vacuum of ennui, and become sweet composers to
that rest of the grave into which we are all sooner or later to descend. Third.
A third value is in the stores of real science deposited and transmitted us in
these languages, to-wit: in history, ethics, arithmetic, geometry, astronomy,
natural history, &c.
But
to whom are these things useful? Certainly not to all men. There are conditions
of life to which they must be forever estranged, and there are epochs of life
too, after which the endeavor to attain them would be a great misemployment of
time. Their acquisition should be the occupation of our early years only, when
the memory is susceptible of deep and lasting impressions, and reason and
judgment not yet strong enough for abstract speculations. To the moralist they
are valuable, because they furnish ethical writings highly and justly esteemed:
although in my own opinion, the moderns are far advanced beyond them in this
line of science, the divine finds in the Greek language a translation of his primary code,
of more importance to him than the original because better understood; and, in
the same language, the newer code, with the doctrines of the earliest fathers,
who lived and wrote before the simple precepts of the founder of this most
benign and pure of all systems of morality became frittered into subtleties and
mysteries, and hidden under jargons incomprehensible to the human mind. To
these original sources he must now, therefore, return, to recover the virgin
purity of his religion. The lawyer finds in the Latin language the system of
civil law most conformable with the principles of justice of any which has ever
yet been established among men, and from which much has been incorporated into
our own. The physician as good a code of his art as has been given us to this
day. Theories and systems of medicine, indeed, have been in perpetual change
from the days of the good Hippocrates to the days of the good Rush, but which
of them is the true one? the present, to be sure, as long as it is the present,
but to yield its place in turn to the next novelty, which is then to become the
true system, and is to mark the vast advance of medicine since the days of
Hippocrates. Our situation is certainly benefited by the discovery of some new
and very valuable medicines; and substituting those for some of his with the
treasure of facts, and of sound observations recorded by him (mixed to be sure
with anilities of his day) and we shall have nearly the present sum of the
healing art. The statesman will find in these languages history, politics,
mathematics, ethics, eloquence, love of country, to which he must add the
sciences of his own day, for which of them should be unknown to him? And all
the sciences must recur to the classical languages for the etymon, and sound
understanding of their fundamental terms. For the merchant I should not say
that the languages are a necessary. Ethics, mathematics, geography, political
economy, history, seem to constitute the immediate foundations of his calling.
The agriculturist needs ethics, mathematics, chemistry and natural philosophy.
The mechanic the same. To them the languages are but ornament and comfort. I
know it is often said there have been shining examples of men of great
abilities in all the businesses of life, without any other science than what
they had gathered from conversations and intercourse with the world. But who
can say what these men would not have been had they started in the science on
the shoulders of a Demosthenes or Cicero, of a Locke or Bacon, or a Newton? To
sum the whole, therefore, it may truly be said that the classical languages are
a solid basis for most, and an ornament to all the sciences.
I
am warned by my aching fingers to close this hasty sketch, and to place here my
last and fondest wishes for the advancement of our country in the useful
sciences and arts, and my assurances of respect and esteem for the Reviewer of
the Memoir on modern Greek.
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