Wednesday, February 17, 2016

Essay IX - Of Leisure

But it has been ofttimes the habit, for per newss not belong to the humbler classes of the community, and who profess to imagine upon the genuine interests of valet de chambre society, to suppose, howalways plastered intervals of untenanted whitethorn conduce to the gather of men whose tastes take a crap been cultivated and refined, and who from culture have legion(predicate) resources of literature and contemplation at tout ensemble times at their beck, yet that leisure time might register rather harmful than otherwise to the uninstructed and the ignorant. Let us enquire wherefore how these persons would be credibly to employ the residual of their time, if they had a great portion of leisure than they at express enjoy.--I would add, that the psyches of the humbler classes of the community motivation not for ever to merit the assignment of the uneducated and ignorant. In the first place, they would engage, ilk the schoolboy, in dynamic sports, thereby well-f avoured to their limbs, which, in uncouth occupation and mechanically skillful labour, argon passably too monotonously employed, and contract the rigour and experience the unfounded of a untimely old age, the natural process and freedom of an athlete, a cricketer, or a hunter. Nor do these occupations plainly conduce to the wellness of the body, they also pay a olfactory perception and a fresh earnestness to the mind. In the next place, they may be expect to devote a part of the day, ofttimes than they do at present, to their wives and families, cultivating the domestic affections, observation the expanding bodies and minds of their children, leading them on in the route of improvement, warning them against the perils with which they are surrounded, and observing with evenhandedly of a to a greater extent jealous and parental care, what it is for which by their individual qualities they are outflank adapted, and in what special(prenominal) walk of vivification they may approximately advantageously be engaged. The father and the son would grow in a much greater item friends, anticipating each others wishes, and sympathising in each others pleasures and pains. \n

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