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Front Matter
Artabanus and the Ghost
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Preface
One
special object which the author of this series has had in
view, in the plan and method which he has followed in
the preparation of the successive volumes, has been to adapt
them to the purposes of text-books in schools. The
study of a general compend of history, such as
is frequently used as a text-book, is highly useful,
if it comes in at the right stage of education, when the
mind is sufficiently matured, and has acquired
sufficient preliminary knowledge to understand and
appreciate so condensed a generalization as a summary of the
whole history of a nation contained in an ordinary volume
must necessarily be. Without this degree of maturity
of mind, and this preparation, the study of such a work will
be, as it too frequently is, a mere mechanical
committing to memory of names, and dates, and phrases, which
awaken no interest, communicate no ideas, and
impart no useful knowledge to the mind.
A class of ordinary pupils, who have not yet become much
acquainted with history, would, accordingly, be more
benefited by having their attention concentrated, at first,
on detached and separate topics, such as those
which form the subjects, respectively, of these volumes. By
studying thus fully the history of individual
monarchs, or the narratives of single events, they can go
more fully into detail; they conceive of the
transactions described as realities; their reflecting and
reasoning powers are occupied on what they read; they
take notice of the motives of conduct, of the gradual
development of character, the good or ill desert of
actions, and of the connection of causes and consequences,
both in respect to the influence of wisdom and
virtue on the one hand, and, on the other, of folly and
crime. In a word, their minds and
hearts are occupied instead of merely their
memories. They reason, they sympathize, they pity, they
approve, and they condemn. They enjoy the real and true
pleasure which constitutes the charm of historical
study for minds that are mature; and they acquire a taste
for truth instead of fiction, which will tend to
direct their reading into proper channels in all future
years.
The use of these works, therefore, as text-books in classes,
has been kept continually in mind in the
preparation of them. The running index on the tops of the
pages is intended to serve instead of questions.
These captions can be used in their present form as
topics, in respect to which, when announced in the
class, the pupils are to repeat substantially what is said
on the page; or, on the other hand, questions in
form, if that mode is preferred, can be readily framed from
them by the teacher. In all the volumes, a very
regular system of division into chapters is observed, which
will greatly facilitate the assignment of lessons.
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