| Advice on the education
of a granddaughter (about 400 A.D.)
Jerome gives Laeta advice on educating
the daughter of Paula, the granddaughter of Paula, Jerome's friend, who lived
with him in Bethlehem. The Bible has pride of place in this education.
The very words which she tries bit by bit to put
together and to pronounce ought not to be chance ones, but names specially
fixed upon and heaped together for the purpose, those for example of the
prophets or the apostles or the list of patriarchs from Adam downwards as
it is given by Matthew and Luke. In this way, while her tongue will be
well trained her memory will be likewise developed.
Let her take as a model some aged virgin of
approved faith, character and chastity, apt to instruct her by word and by
example. She ought to rise at night to recite prayers and psalms; to sing
hymns in the morning; at the third, sixth and ninth hours to take her
place in the line to do battle for Christ; and lastly, to kindle her lamp
and to offer her evening sacrifice.
Let her treasures be not silks or gems but
manuscripts of the holy scriptures, and in these let her think less of
gilding and Babylonian parchment, and arabesque patterns, than of
correctness and accurate punctuation. Let her begin by learning the
psalter, and then let her gather rules of life out of the proverbs of
Solomon. From the Preacher let her gain the habit of despising the world
and its vanities. Let her follow the example set in Job of virtue and of
patience. Then let her pass on to the Gospels, never to be laid aside when
once they have been taken in hand. Let her also drink in with a willing
heart the Acts of the Apostles and the Epistles. As soon as she has
enriched the storehouse of her mind with these treasures, let her commit
to memory the prophets, the Heptateuch, the books of Kings and of
Chronicles, the rolls also of Ezra and Esther.
When she has done all these she may safely read
the Song of Songs, but not before: for, were she to read it at the
beginning, she would fail to understand that, though it is written in
fleshly words, it is a marriage song of a spiritual bridal. Let her avoid
all apocryphal writings. . . It requires infinite discretion to look for
gold in the midst of dirt. Jerome, Letter
107, 4, 9, 12 |