Lecture Delivered Before the Georgia Historical Society, February 29th and March 4th, 1844, on the Subject of EducationPress of Locke and Davis, 1844 - 24 páginas |
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... humanity , which have too often marked the progress of society , her sons can point to the spirit of their founders with proud exultation , and challenge the world for a purer origin . Philanthropy suggested the project ; Philanthropy ...
... humanity , which have too often marked the progress of society , her sons can point to the spirit of their founders with proud exultation , and challenge the world for a purer origin . Philanthropy suggested the project ; Philanthropy ...
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... human ear . The past history of Georgia abounds , Gentlemen , with thrilling incidents , and especially when taken ... humanity , in the developement of the benevolence of her founder and his colleagues . Her resources and her climate ...
... human ear . The past history of Georgia abounds , Gentlemen , with thrilling incidents , and especially when taken ... humanity , in the developement of the benevolence of her founder and his colleagues . Her resources and her climate ...
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... humanity . Thus the Past and the Present , com- mingling their streams , could be made to bear with fertilizing power upon the Future . The sanguine expectations of the first settlers of Georgia were not the wild dreams of enthusiasm ...
... humanity . Thus the Past and the Present , com- mingling their streams , could be made to bear with fertilizing power upon the Future . The sanguine expectations of the first settlers of Georgia were not the wild dreams of enthusiasm ...
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... human existence - when the passions are strong and the inexperience entire and when the youth is excluded from all the wholesome restraints of the domestic roof ; vicious example some- times makes fearful havoc among the thoughtless and ...
... human existence - when the passions are strong and the inexperience entire and when the youth is excluded from all the wholesome restraints of the domestic roof ; vicious example some- times makes fearful havoc among the thoughtless and ...
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... human mind must have been cast in a finer mould , and then all its powers kept on a stretch to have attained to their unapproachable superiority . Or they would seem to have been like a race of demigods , scorn- ing the ordinary beaten ...
... human mind must have been cast in a finer mould , and then all its powers kept on a stretch to have attained to their unapproachable superiority . Or they would seem to have been like a race of demigods , scorn- ing the ordinary beaten ...
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
LECTURE DELIVERED BEFORE THE G Samuel K. (Samuel Kennedy) 179 Talmage,Georgia Historical Society,Joseph Meredith Toner Collection (Librar Sin vista previa disponible - 2016 |
Lecture Delivered Before the Georgia Historical Society, February 29th and ... Samuel K. Talmage Sin vista previa disponible - 2018 |
LECTURE DELIVERED BEFORE THE G Samuel K. (Samuel Kennedy) 179 Talmage,Georgia Historical Society,Joseph Meredith Toner Collection (Librar Sin vista previa disponible - 2016 |
Términos y frases comunes
ANACREON ancient languages Architecture-the stately Doric authority of Heaven's boy—in every motion child classical College confessed the model Corinthian orders criticise a foot crowded with philosophers DIODORUS SICULUS DION CASSIUS DIONYSIUS Of Halicarnassus dissatisfied spectator doubtless ever stand early embody ideal perfection enquiry EURIPIDES fame is engraven forty books genius Georgia Historical Society Grecian Greece Greek and Latin HERODOTUS historians human humble cobbler ventured institutions instruction intoxicated to madness invited general criticism Italy knowledge learning letters of adamant LIVY maidens from Crotona mental modern artists moral motion hideously nature nearest to PHIDIAS painter was mortified pass by HOMER Philological Science PINDAR PLUTARCH POLYBIUS poor youth powers profound refined language register of immortality Roman Rome SAMUEL K SOPHOCLES spirit stranger revisits Athens style surprising that CATO sweetness of THEOCRITUS TALMAGE tenderness of MENANDER THEOCRITUS THUCYDIDES tion unwilling to unveil Whilst wonder world of wonders XENOPHON
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Página 11 - Yet must I think less wildly:— I have thought Too long and darkly; till my brain became, In its own eddy boiling and o'erwrought, A whirling gulf of phantasy and flame: And thus, untaught in youth my heart to tame, My springs of life were poisoned.
Página 10 - ... prevented his allowing such an opportunity to pass unimproved. "The object of education," says he, "is to make man intelligent, wise, useful, happy. In its enlarged sense, it is to prepare him for action and felicity in two worlds," — p. 8. What, then, is the natural order of imparting this education? "In childhood, the first object is to exercise the senses, and learn the qualities of those things on which life and health and freedom from pain depend,
Página 12 - ... best mode of college organization." In which last he decides, that it is better to have many well educated than a few profoundly instructed, — and, of consequence, that many colleges, scattered through the country, are to be preferred to one or two great central ones. "Eaton and Harrow, of England, are far more efficient sources of discipline and enlightenment than Oxford and Cambridge.