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CHILDREN AND BEAUTY

Not all children of course have musical ability but practically all of them have an ear for music. Why do we sing a baby to sleep? Because the experience of generations proveß that the chihl’s senses arc soothed and gratified by musical sound. Why do children delight in nursery rhymes long before they have any understanding of the words? Simply because they have an instinctive sense of time, of the regular beat of the metre, an appreciation of rhythm, which is perhaps stronger then than in later life. ' f The trouble is that many of the gifts which are natural to the child, not only do not develop with his growth, but are sometimes completely lost before he reaches his teens. The schools are sometimes blamed for this, but often the mischief is done long before the child has reached school-age. More and more it is being realised that the early years are the decisive years; that up to the age of seven, while ne is still in the plastic stage, is the time when we can do most for the child.

And surely, of all the things that could be done, there is none better worth doing than'to develop the sense of beauty latent in the child mind. If you can sing, sing to him. But don’t degrade his taste by singing some tuneless comic song, or strumming a fragment of jazz. If you can neither sing nor play, let him hear good records on the gramophone * and listen when there* is something worth while on the wireless, It needn’t be “highbrow” or beyond his range. But you will very soon see that his range is by no means So limited as you perhaps Imagined. While some children perceive beauty of sound, others receive pleasurable impressions more readily by the eye. Such, children early reveal delight in colour or. in shape. They will find joy in the colour of the flowers they are gathering, or perhaps in the fine lines of the vase in which they place them. Such children only need opportunity and a little guidance to develop their artistic taste. They may never become great painters or sculptors, but at least they may learn to appreciate a good picture, or a fine building, or well-de-signed furniture.' How many grownups can do as much? Yet we probably all ‘'had it in us" if only there had been someone to bring it out at the right time.

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/SNEWS19280717.2.29

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Shannon News, 17 July 1928, Page 4

Word count
Tapeke kupu
411

CHILDREN AND BEAUTY Shannon News, 17 July 1928, Page 4

CHILDREN AND BEAUTY Shannon News, 17 July 1928, Page 4

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