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The Story of Mankind [187]

By Root 2270 0
June 26, xxi.





AN ANIMATED CHRONOLOGY,

500,000 B.C.--A.D. 1922





THE END







CONCERNING THE PICTURES



CONCERNING THE PICTURES OF THIS BOOK AND A FEW

WORDS ABOUT THE BIBLIOGRAPHY.





The day of the historical textbook without illustrations has gone.

Pictures and photographs of famous personages and equally famous

occurrences cover the pages of Breasted and Robinson and Beard. In

this volume the photographs have been omitted to make room for a

series of home-made drawings which represent ideas rather than events.



While the author lays no claim to great artistic excellence (being

possessed of a decided leaning towards drawing as a child, he was

taught to play the violin as a matter of discipline,) he prefers to

make his own maps and sketches because he knows exactly what he

wants to say and cannot possibly explain this meaning to his more

proficient brethren in the field of art. Besides, the pictures were all

drawn for children and their ideas of art are very different from those

of their parents.



To all teachers the author would give this advice--let your boys and

girls draw their history after their own desire just as often as you have

a chance. You can show a class a photograph of a Greek temple or a

mediaeval castle and the class will dutifully say, ``Yes, Ma'am,'' and

proceed to forget all about it. But make the Greek temple or the

Roman castle the centre of an event, tell the boys to make their own

picture of ``the building of a temple,'' or ``the storming of the castle,''

and they will stay after school-hours to finish the job. Most children,

before they are taught how to draw from plaster casts, can draw after

a fashion, and often they can draw remarkably well. The product of

their pencil may look a bit prehistoric. It may even resemble the

work of certain native tribes from the upper Congo. But the child is

quite frequently prehistoric or upper-Congoish in his or her own tastes,

and expresses these primitive instincts with a most astonishing accuracy.



The main thing in teaching history, is that the pupil shall remember

certain events ``in their proper sequence.'' The experiments of

many years in the Children's School of New York has convinced the

author that few children will ever forget what they have drawn, while

very few will ever remember what they have merely read.



It is the same with the maps. Give the child an ordinary conventional

map with dots and lines and green seas and tell him to revaluate

that geographic scene in his or her own terms. The mountains will be

a bit out of gear and the cities will look astonishingly mediaeval. The

outlines will be often very imperfect, but the general effect will be

quite as truthful as that of our conventional maps, which ever since

the days of good Gerardus Mercator have told a strangely erroneous

story. Most important of all, it will give the child a feeling of intimacy

with historical and geographic facts which cannot be obtained in any

other way.



Neither the publishers nor the author claim that ``The Story of Mankind''

is the last word to be said upon the subject of history for children.

It is an appetizer. The book tries to present the subject in such

a fashion that the average child shall get a taste for History and shall

ask for more.



To facilitate the work of both parents and teachers, the publishers

have asked Miss Leonore St. John Power (who knows more upon this

particular subject than any one else they could discover) to compile a

list of readable and instructive books.



The list was made and was duly printed.



The parents who live near our big cities will experience no difficulty

in ordering these volumes from their booksellers. Those who

for the sake of fresh air and quiet, dwell in more remote spots, may

not find it convenient to go to a book-store. In that case, Boni and

Liveright will be happy to act as middle-man
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