Thank you for visiting SNEWPapers!
Sign up free
Literary
May 10, 1857
Nashville Union And American
Nashville, Davidson County, Tennessee
What is this article about?
Lord Jeffrey argues that habitually gratifying children's desires leads to selfishness, especially in the privileged, while practical discipline in overcoming self-interest fosters generosity and magnanimity.
OCR Quality
98%
Excellent
Full Text
Discipline in Childhood.—Young people who have been habitually gratified in all their desires will infallibly take it more amiss when the feelings or happiness of others require that they should be thwarted, than those who have been practically trained to the habit of subduing and restraining them; and consequently will, in general, sacrifice the happiness of others to their own selfish indulgence. To what else is the selfishness of princes and other great people to be attributed? It is in vain to think of cultivating principles of generosity and beneficence by mere exhortation and reasoning. Nothing but the practical habit of overcoming our selfishness, and of familiarly encountering privations and discomfort on account of others, will ever enable us to do it when required. And, therefore, I am firmly persuaded that indulgence infallibly produces selfishness and hardness of heart, and that nothing but a pretty severe discipline and control can lay the foundation of a magnanimous character.—Lord Jeffrey.
What sub-type of article is it?
Essay
What themes does it cover?
Moral Virtue
What keywords are associated?
Childhood Discipline
Selfishness
Moral Character
Indulgence
Generosity
Lord Jeffrey
What entities or persons were involved?
Lord Jeffrey.
Literary Details
Title
Discipline In Childhood.
Author
Lord Jeffrey.
Subject
On The Effects Of Indulgence Versus Discipline In Child Rearing
Key Lines
Indulgence Infallibly Produces Selfishness And Hardness Of Heart, And That Nothing But A Pretty Severe Discipline And Control Can Lay The Foundation Of A Magnanimous Character.