The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction - Volume 13, No. 368, May 2, 1829 by Various
page 48 of 58 (82%)
page 48 of 58 (82%)
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* * * * * EDUCATION AND AMUSEMENTS OF THE LOWER CLASSES. A correspondent of the _Gardener's Magazine_ observes that "next to the existing school societies, there is nothing I am more anxious to see, or would more gladly contribute to, than a _Society for promoting the Rational Amusements of the Lower Classes_, the first aim of which should be to instruct itinerant teachers of music, singing, and dancing, in improved modes of imparting their arts, and thus fairly set the plan agoing, when it would soon work its own way, and might then be extended to higher objects. The taste for flowers among the Paisley weavers, for gooseberry-growing at Manchester, and for music among the west of Yorkshire clothiers, originally sprang up from imitation of one or two amateurs of each pursuit; and there only needs a similar _first impulse_, which a society with a few thousands a year might give, to spread a general taste for music, singing, and dancing, and ultimately for other branches of the fine arts, as drawing and painting, as well as for natural history, and the cultivation of flowers and fruits, &c. "The lower classes in England, thus improved in morals and manners by a better education and more humanising amusements, might be safely left to choose their time of contracting marriage, and would then no more make beasts of themselves by drinking fermented liquors, than do the lower classes in the city from which I write, (Brussels) where probably more beer (and that by no means weak) is drank than in any |
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