
A thoughtful schoolmaster opens his notebook with a playful meditation on the Latin phrase “in medias res,” using it as a lens to examine both writing and everyday life. He muses that beginning a story—or a watermelon—right in the middle can spare us endless preliminaries, a point he extends to the impatient minds of his pupils. With gentle humor, he ponders the fading of classical studies in modern education, wondering whether his own forgetting of Latin might betray a deeper loss of eloquence.
From there the narrative drifts to the quiet of an autumn walk, where rustling leaves and vivid colors inspire reflections on choices and missed opportunities. He likens the act of teaching to hoeing a potato patch: the teacher, like a farmer, can only prepare the soil and tend the conditions, never forcing growth itself. This earthy metaphor invites listeners to consider the subtle art of nurturing young minds, the patience required, and the simple, often unnoticed, work that underpins both crops and character.
Language
en
Duration
~4 hours (252K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2004-07-29
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
1853–1938
A longtime American educator who turned practical school experience into clear, useful books for teachers, students, and families. His writing reflects an early-20th-century faith in education as a way to build character and citizenship.
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