Page:Stories and story-telling (1915).djvu/20

 exercise it, as we do, for example, the reason. We say glibly that imagination is at the root of the successful man's arrival at material profit, of the explorer's discovery and the practical scientist's invention, of the poet's song and the philanthropist's vision of a state of society in which the kingdom of heaven will be nearer at hand; but we give little or no training to the imagination. Here again is the story's opportunity. Through the story the interpretative story-teller may give the imagination consistent exercise.

(3) The story will arouse and direct the pupil's feelings. The school to-day is emphasizing the necessity of educating the heart, the climactic third of the three great H's,—the Head, the Hand, and the Heart. And psychologists are telling us that to educate a child to be kind, unselfish, filial, reverent, gentle, courageous, good-tempered, to educate him to admire goodness, justice, valor, to be sensible of beauty, to aspire and make effort toward excellence, is as practicable as to train him to do or to make something. It calls for more delicate but not different treatment; working not by dictation, but by magnetic suggestion. The story-teller may render a great service to the individual and to the community by helping to form right feeling-habit.