Page:Labour and childhood.djvu/140

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been validated.
114
LABOUR AND CHILDHOOD

So much for the physique. Now for the other great "result."

The ambition of the educated mechanic is a thing by itself, and is not to be confounded with the ambition of even the highest order of literary man. It is quite as ardent, but it is a great deal more confident. This enthusiasm and ambition effervesces in even the younger artisan boys. They are all going to make improvements and inventions, and they know of a score that require to be made, and that they may very well take a part in. As a matter of fact the young mechanic's ambitions are quite reasonable. There is no other field of invention where so many may make useful contributions; and the pupils know this.

Each knows that by working hard he may do some very important thing—that he may improve a machine, discover an improved way of dyeing, forging, tempering, a new way of applying what he has learned. Compare this with the ambition of the poet, the artist, the politician, the orator, so vague, troubled. … It is not, perhaps, a higher ambition. It may appear at the first blush a humbler one; but it is more impersonal. It makes less appeal to vanity and egoistic desires. The desire for "fame" plays but a small part in it. The incentives to vanity are not quickened in dealing, as