[1]The idea of giving a lad a "schooling" and then turning him
loose to earn his own living in the world was contrary to all Athenian
theory and practice.
[2]About the only boon gained by this foul usage was the fact
that, thanks to it, the number of physically unfit persons in Athens
was probably pretty small, for no one would think of bringing up a
child which, in its first babyhood, promised to be a cripple.
[3]Owing to this simplicity and the relatively small number of
Athenian names, a directory of the city would have been a perplexing
affair.
[4]It is not always easy to get the exact details of such ancient
games, for the "rules" have seldom come down to us; but generally
speaking, the games of Greek children seem extremely like those of the
twentieth century.
[6]There has come down to us a charming Greek terra-cotta (it is
true, not from Athens) showing a girl seated on her mother's knee, and
learning from a roll which she holds.
[7]Plato suggested in his "Republic" (V. 451 f.) that women should
receive the same educational opportunities as the men. This was a
proposition for Utopia and never struck any answering chord.