The Philosophy of Ragged Schools, Volumen18W. Pickering, 1851 - 128 páginas |
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Página 21
... human nature . " This is a good government : and this is the beau ideal of the English law and constitution : - -the good government for which many a field has been fought over , and grown rich with the blood CHAPTER I. ...
... human nature . " This is a good government : and this is the beau ideal of the English law and constitution : - -the good government for which many a field has been fought over , and grown rich with the blood CHAPTER I. ...
Página 50
... human conduct which when once put in action will always lead to such results . Per- haps the best way of condensing this inquiry within due bounds , will be to take the history of one of these schools , where the writer can vouch for ...
... human conduct which when once put in action will always lead to such results . Per- haps the best way of condensing this inquiry within due bounds , will be to take the history of one of these schools , where the writer can vouch for ...
Página 55
... human endeavours , it was so here . It was very soon perceived that the extreme poverty of many of these children rendered theft or mendicancy their necessary subsistence : they had not learned to work at any lucrative employment , and ...
... human endeavours , it was so here . It was very soon perceived that the extreme poverty of many of these children rendered theft or mendicancy their necessary subsistence : they had not learned to work at any lucrative employment , and ...
Página 60
... human family is one , and that the difference of character which exists , is the effect of circumstances . At least two thou- sand children have passed through our Ragged * I may perhaps here be allowed to repeat a singular anecdote ...
... human family is one , and that the difference of character which exists , is the effect of circumstances . At least two thou- sand children have passed through our Ragged * I may perhaps here be allowed to repeat a singular anecdote ...
Página 75
... human beings of different dis- positions , breeding , and locality , during several years ; and we must come to the conclusion that some great spring of human nature has been touched , which had not been reached before , at least not in ...
... human beings of different dis- positions , breeding , and locality , during several years ; and we must come to the conclusion that some great spring of human nature has been touched , which had not been reached before , at least not in ...
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Términos y frases comunes
Aberdeen AGE OF Pericles amusement animal attention awakened B-Street believe benevolence better boys Brief View Catholic Emancipation cause character Chartist child Christ Christian Doctrine Church Classes Dangereuses crime criminal Dangerous Classes destitute dogmata effect endeavour England established evil feeling formed gentleman given Greek Philosophy heart holy hope ignorance instincts instruction intellectual Jack Sheppard John Pounds kind labour lads large number learning legislators less lesson London master ment mind moral never parents Paris perhaps persons perusal PHILOSOPHY OF RAGGED poor population Port Adelaide Port Phillip prisons punishment question Ragged School Union rational reader reform religion religious rience salles d'asile Second Edition sect seen society spiritual street school success Sunday Sunday School Society taught teachers teaching temptation thieves things thought tion told vice View of Greek weary whilst WILLIAM PICKERING wish workhouse wretched writer
Pasajes populares
Página 122 - Let us therefore follow after the things which make for peace, and things wherewith one may edify another.
Página 11 - Saviour was to the Jews a stumbling-block, and to the Greeks foolishness.
Página 32 - Hop,' to which the admission is one penny, and where two or three series of performances take place the same evening. It consists of a spacious room, fitted up in the rudest manner, with a stage, and seats on an inclined plane, the access to it is through a dark passage, and up a ladder staircase. On one occasion I was present, and found the audience to consist almost exclusively of boys and girls of the very lowest description, many without shoes or stockings, and to the number of 150. I pointed...
Página 127 - VI. A Brief View of Greek Philosophy from the Age of Socrates to the Coming of Christ.
Página 123 - The wind bloweth where it listeth, and thou hearest the sound thereof, but canst not tell whence it cometh, or whither it goeth, so is every one that is born of the spirit.
Página 127 - AN EXPOSITION OF VULGAR AND COMMON ERRORS, ADAPTED TO THE YEAR OF GRACE MDCCCXLV.
Página 37 - With regard to the committee of inspection it is observed, that " their functions are not confined to the watching over the intellectual and moral state of the pupils ; they hear from the chiefs of the establishment all the wants, not only of the children in regard to clothing, but also those of the parents who may be in extreme poverty. Not unfrequently these ladies themselves carry their benevolent assistance to the homes of the wretched.
Página 127 - A BRIEF VIEW OF GREEK PHILOSOPHY FROM THE AGE OF SOCRATES TO THE COMING OF CHRIST.
Página 11 - Rechercher, d'après des observations positives, quels sont les élémens dont se compose, à Paris, ou dans toute autre grande ville, cette partie de la population qui forme une classe dangereuse par ses vices, son ignorance et sa misère.
Página 28 - I'm blowed if there be not an old feller on the road there ; let's begin with him. Tom Snooks. — Done, Ned, done. Harry Finch. — Come, Ned, (patting him on the shoulder, and looking him coaxingly in the face) may I never have a button to my coat if you b'enta regular trump. Enter an eccentric-looking Stranger.