English Pedagogy: Education, the School and the Teacher, in English Literature, Volum 2 |
Des de l'interior del llibre
Pągina 128
The best and most legitimate use to which you can put endowments is to
encourage studies which will not , so to speak , encourage themselves , and I
should be sorry if there were ever a time when a few persons in this country could
not write ...
The best and most legitimate use to which you can put endowments is to
encourage studies which will not , so to speak , encourage themselves , and I
should be sorry if there were ever a time when a few persons in this country could
not write ...
Pągina 136
What an individual ought and often does derive from the feeling that he is born of
an old and illustrious race , from being familiar from his childhood with the walls
and trees , which speak of the past no less than of the present , and make both ...
What an individual ought and often does derive from the feeling that he is born of
an old and illustrious race , from being familiar from his childhood with the walls
and trees , which speak of the past no less than of the present , and make both ...
Pągina 144
I speak of us as a society , as a school , as a Christian school , as a place , that is
, to which the sons of Christian parents , and of no other , are sent to receive a
Christian education . Such a society is beyond all doubt in its idea or institution a
...
I speak of us as a society , as a school , as a Christian school , as a place , that is
, to which the sons of Christian parents , and of no other , are sent to receive a
Christian education . Such a society is beyond all doubt in its idea or institution a
...
Pągina 145
They are very different in this , that when we speak of idleness or falsehood we
mean things altogether evil , which are plainly and altogether to be avoided and
abhorred ; but when we speak of combination or companionship , we Dame
things ...
They are very different in this , that when we speak of idleness or falsehood we
mean things altogether evil , which are plainly and altogether to be avoided and
abhorred ; but when we speak of combination or companionship , we Dame
things ...
Pągina 146
... our companions ' , then the feeling of companionship , if I may so speak , being
extended to all our relations , would produce no harm at all , but merely good : it
would then , in fact , be no other than the perfection of our nature , - perfect love .
... our companions ' , then the feeling of companionship , if I may so speak , being
extended to all our relations , would produce no harm at all , but merely good : it
would then , in fact , be no other than the perfection of our nature , - perfect love .
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English Pedagogy: Education, the School, and the Teacher in English Literature Henry Barnard Visualització completa - 1876 |
English Pedagogy: Education, the School, and the Teacher, in English Literature Henry Barnard Visualització completa - 1876 |
Education, the School and the Teacher, in English Literature Henry Barnard Visualització completa - 1876 |
Frases i termes més freqüents
able according answer appear attend begin body boys called cause character child Christian classes classical common construe course desire direct duty England English especially examination excellent exercise four give given grammar Greek hand hath head heart instruction knowledge language Latin laws learning least less lessons letters living London manner master mathematics means mind moral natural necessary never object observe once parents pass person play practice present pupils question reason received respect rest rules scholars sometimes speak sure taught teacher teaching things thought tion tongue translate true turn understanding University verb verses whole write young