The Philosophy of Ragged Schools, Volumen18W. Pickering, 1851 - 128 páginas |
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Página 101
... spiritual welfare of those who are subjected to its yoke . The attending public worship may be an act of homage to the Giver of all good , which the soul delights to pay to the Father whom in its inmost recesses it loves and honours ...
... spiritual welfare of those who are subjected to its yoke . The attending public worship may be an act of homage to the Giver of all good , which the soul delights to pay to the Father whom in its inmost recesses it loves and honours ...
Página 110
... spiritual : -the emotions belong- ing to the animal , the enduring will to the spiritual ; and we shall see that in order to bring the whole man to God , we must interest the pleasurable emotions in the business as well as the will ...
... spiritual : -the emotions belong- ing to the animal , the enduring will to the spiritual ; and we shall see that in order to bring the whole man to God , we must interest the pleasurable emotions in the business as well as the will ...
Página 111
... spiritual good , all the rest shall be added ; to show that the path of duty is also the path of happiness ; and by giving a foretaste of greater enjoyment , to show that there is something worth striving for . It is upon this plan that ...
... spiritual good , all the rest shall be added ; to show that the path of duty is also the path of happiness ; and by giving a foretaste of greater enjoyment , to show that there is something worth striving for . It is upon this plan that ...
Página 115
... having developed even the germ of a spiritual existence ; animal he entered , and ani- mal he leaves it , and then , if hunger presses , or indulgence is coveted , what hinders him from unscrupulously seeking CONCLUSION . 115.
... having developed even the germ of a spiritual existence ; animal he entered , and ani- mal he leaves it , and then , if hunger presses , or indulgence is coveted , what hinders him from unscrupulously seeking CONCLUSION . 115.
Página 121
... , and punishments of this kind have therefore no permanent moral effect . The distinction between the animal and the spiritual nature might be made clear , and parents might be instructed in like manner , from the pulpit CONCLUSION . 121.
... , and punishments of this kind have therefore no permanent moral effect . The distinction between the animal and the spiritual nature might be made clear , and parents might be instructed in like manner , from the pulpit CONCLUSION . 121.
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Términos y frases comunes
AGE OF PERICLES amusement animal awakened become believe benevolence better boys BRIEF VIEW Catholic Emancipation character Chartist Christ Christian Doctrine Church Classes Dangereuses crime criminal Dangerous Classes DOCTRINE AND PRACTICE dogmata effect endeavour England established evil feeling formed Gazette GREEK PHILOSOPHY happiness heart ignorance instincts instruction intellectual Jack Sheppard John Pounds kind labour lads large number legislators less lesson Literary Gazette London master ment mind moral never parents PERICLES persons perusal PHILOSOPHY OF RAGGED Physiology poor population Port Adelaide Port Phillip principles Promulgation of Christianity punishment question Ragged School Union rational readers rections religion religious rience salles d'asile SECOND EDITION sect Small Books society spiritual Street School success Sunday School Society Tale of Athens taught teachers teaching temptation thieves things thought tion ultro vice VIEW OF GREEK whilst WILLIAM PICKERING wish workhouse wretched writer
Pasajes populares
Página 114 - Let us therefore follow after the things which make for peace, and things wherewith one may edify another.
Página 120 - AN EXPOSITION OF VULGAR AND COMMON ERRORS, ADAPTED TO THE YEAR OF GRACE MDCCCXLV. 9.— AN INTRODUCTION TO VEGETABLE PHYSIOLOGY, WITH REFERENCES TO THE WORKS OF DE CANDOLLE, L1NDLEY, ic. 10.— ON THE PRINCIPLES OF CRIMINAL LAW. 11.— CHRISTIAN SECTS IN THE NINETEENTH CENTURY.
Página 3 - Saviour was to the Jews a stumbling-block, and to the Greeks foolishness.
Página 119 - A Brief View of Greek Philosophy from the Age of Socrates to the Coming of Christ.
Página 24 - 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 29 - 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 119 - A BRIEF VIEW OF GREEK PHILOSOPHY FROM THE AGE OF SOCRATES TO THE COMING OF CHRIST.
Página 124 - PERICLES; A TALE OF ATHENS IN THE EIGHTYTHIRD OLYMPIAD. By the Author of "A Brief View of Greek Philosophy." " A beautiful and bewitching narrative. We should not do justice to our feelings concerning this * Tale of Athens...
Página 123 - ... foundation for his researches in more extended works as well as for his personal observation of Nature. ...We can heartily recommend it to the student as by far the best Introduction to Geology which has come before us."— Critic, February, 1848. " We need go no further with this clear and well arranged exposition." Literary Gazette, September, 1848. XIV. ON THE STATE OF MAN BEFORE THE PROMULGATION OF CHRISTIANITY.
Página 25 - I had some conversation with the persons in the interior who appeared to have the management, and they stated in answer to my queries, that the theatre was almost always filled, and with boys ; that they had attempted to play Jack Sheppard, but in consequence of the frequent interruptions from the audience, who seemed all to wish to take a part in the performance, they were obliged to give it up...