Thank you for correcting the text in this article. Your corrections improve Papers Past searches for everyone. See the latest corrections.

This article contains searchable text which was automatically generated and may contain errors. Join the community and correct any errors you spot to help us improve Papers Past.

Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image

THE "ERA OF YOUTH."

If the nineteenth century has been the

“ Woman's Era ” (says a writer in the ‘ Fortnightly Review ’), there are distinct signs that in the new one some very interesting and surprising developments are in store for us. The “ Woman’s Era ”is being succeeded by the “ Era of Youth,” for the important characteristic of the new century is the increasingly prominent part that the young generation are going to play in our social and intellectual life. One of the most distinctive signs of to-day is the repudiation of age. No one is old, and no one can afford to get older. The life, the occupations, the interests, the amusements, the ambitions of to-day are those of a youthful epoch, of a time when to be old is sin. We see it on every side, especially among women. Every mother is as young as her children in dress and appearance, and grandmothers younger than either. .The reverence for age. the tender respect with which it used to be regarded, is only a tradition, and the strong influence of youth is what inspires our life and dominates us in this new century. It is not wonderful that it should be so, for life is so pleasant to-day. Its duties, its occupations, are easy, and do not need any great effort for their accomplishment. Life formerly was serious and real, there was no artistic, no ideal side to it, and as women and young people influence the life and society of their day, so in proportion as their lives were narrow and uninteresting was existence dull and bornee. CHANGED MANNERS.

There was a didness and stiffness in every relation in life between husband and wife, parents and children. The wife was hardly a companion to' her husband, but much more his housekeeper; parents were stem, unsympathetic, and exacting as regarded their children ; and the only class with whom any feelings of equality or sentiment existed seemed to be between master and servant. When we contrast the simplicity of English life of only fifty years ago, the position of women, and the relations between parents and their children, with the luxury and equality of to-day, we realise how extraordinary and far-reaching is the change. Many causes have combined to bring it about; the softening influence of a woman as queen, the increasing facilities of communication, the improvement in education, the great increase in wealth, and last, but not least, the effect of American life and thought on the Mother Country, are sufficient to account for a change which is only logically the result of the marvellous developments of the nineteenth century. AFTER FIFTY YEARS. If some Rip Van Winkle, fallen t<> sleep in 1850, could now awake from his slumber and enter our modern everyday life, he would certainly not believe it was the same England lie said good-bye to fifty years ago. He would, indeed, look in vain for many of the landmarks and characteristics of his time. For the tranquillity and sleepiness of life, he would awake to the hurry and bustle of an age in which life is not long enough to accomplish all that has grown out of our modern requirements, with its iuex'easing interests and occupations which vary every year in character and number. Ho would look in vain for the old-world nooks of England, with their traditions and fancies, their quiet, tranquil existence, and see giant express trains rushing through the hamlet where he spent his youth ; smoking mills belching out black fumes by the stream that used to ripple softly in the noon-day heat, the smart newly-built town hall in the street of the old-fashioned village he knew so well; the Haring electric light, where he hud often stood under the gleam of the oil lamp in the softly darkening evening, watching the sha-

(lows descending on a, sleeping world. He would find a bustling, active, strong-minded matron where he left the gentle, tender-eyed grandmother; a loud-voiced managing wife, full of interest in every kind of terrible question unknown and unheard of before ; and a tall, slight, gaily-dressed young lady, selfassertive, capable, and independent, in the place of the gentle smiling maiden he remembered in the days he went a-courting. This and so many more transformations would he find so incomprehensible that he would fain return once again to the sleep he had broken and say god-bye to a world so strange and bewildering.

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/DUNST19010111.2.46

Bibliographic details

Dunstan Times, Issue 2050, 11 January 1901, Page 6

Word Count
739

THE "ERA OF YOUTH." Dunstan Times, Issue 2050, 11 January 1901, Page 6

THE "ERA OF YOUTH." Dunstan Times, Issue 2050, 11 January 1901, Page 6

Help

Log in or create a Papers Past website account

Use your Papers Past website account to correct newspaper text.

By creating and using this account you agree to our terms of use.

Log in with RealMe®

If you’ve used a RealMe login somewhere else, you can use it here too. If you don’t already have a username and password, just click Log in and you can choose to create one.


Log in again to continue your work

Your session has expired.

Log in again with RealMe®


Alert