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AMERICAN

ANNALS OF EDUCATION,

FOR

THE YEAR 1838.

EDITED BY WILLIAM A ALCOTT,

AUTHOR OF THE YOUNG MAN'S GUIDE, THE HOUSE I LIVE IN,' THE YOUNG MOTHER,' &e AND AD TORGF THE LIBRARY OF HEALTH.

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Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1837,

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AMERICAN

ANNALS OF EDUCATION.

JANUARY, 1838.

RECOLLECTIONS OF THE DEAF AND DUMB;

TO ILLUSTRATE THE PRINCIHLES OF FAMILY AND SCHOOL DISCIPLINE.

BY REV. T. H. GALLAUDET.

An incident, which occurred in the early history of the American Asylum, at Hartford, Connecticut, for the education of the deaf and dumb, has left an impression on the memory of the writer, of the efficacy of religious influence upon an untutored mind, which is still vivid with the freshness, as it were,

of yesterday. Which is still vivid with the

A boy had come to the institution; from a considerable distance, of a striking, and in many respects, very interesting character. He was the son of a widow, living in one of our large seaports. She was in moderate circumstances; and, as is too often the case with parents who have a deaf and dumb child, had treated him with a degree of indulgence alike excessive and unwise. He had been brought under little or no restraint, and, by roaming about the city, and, especially on the wharves and among the shipping, had acquired habits which made him a singularly fit subject on which to exercise all the skill and patience of those who had the charge of his instruction and gov

ernment.

He was under ten years of age, but possessed of great muscular power and bodily activity. The tone of his will was equally strong; his temperament quick, ardent and courageous, -it might be said, reckless.

Subordination, in all its forms, he had yet to learn; and to teach this, in any good degree, was no easy task. If any

4

Anecdote of a Deaf Mute.

physical coercion, affecting the free use of his locomotive powers, was attempted, or corporeal discipline threatened, he had a habit of uttering a violent and piercing shriek, of no small volume and extent of sound. He had probably found, at home, that doing this was the means of exciting either so much alarm or sympathy, as to arrest the course of parental discipline; and he resorted to the old device for relief on the new emergencies, believing that his success would be equally great.

It was necessary to watch him at all points, and, by a proper mixture of firmness and tenderness, to let him see that obedience to rightful and reasonable authority, would not be dispensed with.

There was then no chapel in the Asylum, as there is at present, and no religious exercises were held on the Sabbath, during the usual hours of public worship, a custom which has since been introduced and continued, with deep interest, and, it is hoped, with great benefit, on the part of the pupils.

--

For the sake of forming a salutary religious habit, and of impressing their minds with some notions of the sacredness of the day and of the solemnities of public service, as visible to them in the large assembly and devotional aspect of a body of worshippers, the pupils of the Asylum were required to attend at one of the churches in the city. They were distributed in several pews in the gallery, accompanied by the teachers; the males occupying one portion, and the females another. And, generally, their deportment was of the most. decorous kind, impressed as they appeared to be, with the solemnity of the place and the

occasion.

--

Now and then there were exceptions, of which the boy to whom I have referred was one. It was thought best to have him under my immediate inspection. He was accordingly brought from his usual seat among the boys, and placed in the pew where I sat, and which was occupied by female pupils.

One Sabbath forenoon, he seemed to be more restless than usual, and as full, as his overflowing animal spirits could make him, of a half-malicious sportiveness, showing itself in sly, antic movements of his hands and feet, and droll expressions of countenance, so irresistibly ludicrous, that really it was hard to blame the smiles and half-suppressed laughter which ran round the circle of his pew-mates.

After several severe admonitions with my eye and finger, which only answered the purpose of making him more cautious, so as to turn his former fuller expressions of roguery into more concealed, though not less provoking, hints and allusions of merriment, (as we of speech would say,) I directed him to

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