Harry Pollard:

> Ed,
>
> Considering the miserable subject, this was a fun post.
>
> Classically, we don't want to work - which is why we follow the "least
> exertion" principle. We want the fruits of our labor - preferably without
> the labor.
>
> So, we don't want jobs, but we take them reluctantly because without them
> we are soon hungry. Religion comes into play always to make us do the
> miserable jobs because we will get a later reward - or because it's
penance
> for our inadequacies.

Harry, I suspect that we really do want to work, whatever the exertion, not
only because of biblical injunctions, but for many other reasons.  It's
partly a class thing - not to work, not to put forward the effort,
identifies you as social trash.  Parents with a sense of the importance of
their position in life encourage their kids to work from an early age not
only for the sake of independence but in order to maintain the status of the
family.  Friends of ours, both professional, have a nineteen year old who
does not want to work or go on to higher education.  They are appalled!
When they are not beating him over the head and shoulders they are beating
themselves over the head and shoulders.

Despite how the Classicists put it for theoretical purposes, I'm sure they
recognized the implications of work for maintaining class and self- and
family-respect.  Robert Louis Stevenson's life overlapped the later
Classists.  His "Child's Garden of Verses" contains several little mantras
to help keep children moving in the right direction.  For example, the poem
"System":

Every night my prayers I say,
And get my dinner every day;
And every day that I've been good,
I get an orange after food.

The child that is not clean and neat,
With lots of toys and things to eat,
He is a naughty child, I'm sure ---
Or else his dear papa is poor.

Work means not only food on the table, but Godliness, cleanliness and
status.

Ed

Ed Weick
577 Melbourne Ave.
Ottawa, ON, K2A 1W7
Canada
Phone (613) 728 4630
Fax     (613)  728 9382


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