A COMING MAN.
The New England Journal of Education gives the following inviting picture of a class among Americans :—": — " The badness of the bad boy in America — not necessarily the American bad boy — is acknowledged on all hands. He does not cease to be bad when be ceases to be a boy. Prom the street-corner rowdy he graduates as the saloon-slugger, the ward politician, and the sand-lot hoodlum. He is the same in all the large cities of the United States ; he is the same in the smaller cities and villages, or a little worse. Whether his local name is 'hoodlum,' 'larrikin,' 'blood-tup,' •plug-ugly,' ' dead-rabit,' 'bummer,' ' rough/ • loafer,' or ' bowery-boy,' he is mi generis, and has no counterpart in any other part of the world. He respects neither God nor man ; neither the bald head of the prophet, nor the eye-glass of the philosopher. Elisha's she bears would have no terrors for him. His theoretical knowledge of hunting, derived from the study of dime novels, and his practical skill with weapons, give him such confidence in himself, that if warned of the punishment visited upon the tormentors of Elisha, he would coolly reply, ' Trot out your old she-bears !' The bad boy has no contemporary in any other part of the world. In Europe youth is docile and respectful, in Asia and Africa childhood or youth is in keeping with its surroundings, but the bad boy of America is an anachronism ; he is savagely growing up in the midst of civilisation, impiety mocking at religion, lawlessness pulling at the gown and wig of law, and license masquerading in the costume of liberty. His mother is the ' old woman,' his father is 'dad,' his language is slang and profanity, his amusement is violence, his religion and education a blank, and, worst of all, he is peculiar to the United States of North America."
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Bibliographic details
Hawera & Normanby Star, Volume II, Issue 115, 21 May 1881, Page 4
Word Count
311A COMING MAN. Hawera & Normanby Star, Volume II, Issue 115, 21 May 1881, Page 4
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