The Age of Great CitiesJackson and Walford, 1843 - 376 psl. |
Knygos viduje
Rezultatai 1–5 iš 52
74 psl.
... School became divided against school , and , as the next step , nation became divided against nation . But to judge wisely concerning any such change , we must look upon it broadly , and as a whole . Despotism has its seasons of repose ...
... School became divided against school , and , as the next step , nation became divided against nation . But to judge wisely concerning any such change , we must look upon it broadly , and as a whole . Despotism has its seasons of repose ...
117 psl.
... schools in relation to the policy most in harmony with the genius of a people . Political knowledge never dif- fuses itself more wholesomely among a people , than when it results , in this manner , slowly and steadily , from ...
... schools in relation to the policy most in harmony with the genius of a people . Political knowledge never dif- fuses itself more wholesomely among a people , than when it results , in this manner , slowly and steadily , from ...
134 psl.
... school of art is just such an improvement on the Dutch school , as the wide and powerful influence which has thus come upon our affairs might have led the sagacious to expect . Nor should it be overlooked , that the qualities of aris ...
... school of art is just such an improvement on the Dutch school , as the wide and powerful influence which has thus come upon our affairs might have led the sagacious to expect . Nor should it be overlooked , that the qualities of aris ...
142 psl.
... school . Many of them have never been sufficiently students in such matters to be capable of perceiving the nicer distinction of terms , or of deriving pleasure from great refinement and beauty of expression ; and as the many whom they ...
... school . Many of them have never been sufficiently students in such matters to be capable of perceiving the nicer distinction of terms , or of deriving pleasure from great refinement and beauty of expression ; and as the many whom they ...
144 psl.
... school , into alliance with the directness , aptitude , and force of the other . The widely different , and the variously blended aspects of society , as existing in this country , are thus faithfully reflected in our literature . If we ...
... school , into alliance with the directness , aptitude , and force of the other . The widely different , and the variously blended aspects of society , as existing in this country , are thus faithfully reflected in our literature . If we ...
Kiti leidimai - Peržiūrėti viską
The Age of Great Cities:– Or, Modern Society Viewed in Its Relation to ... Robert Vaughan Visos knygos peržiūra - 1843 |
The Age of Great Cities– Or, Modern Society Viewed in Its Relation to ... Robert Vaughan Visos knygos peržiūra - 1843 |
The Age of Great Cities– Or, Modern Society Viewed in Its Relation to ... Robert Vaughan Trumpų ištraukų rodinys - 1971 |
Pagrindiniai terminai ir frazės
accordingly adverted ancient ancient Rome aristocracy Athens become Carthage Catholic Catholicism cause character Christianity church cities citizens civil commercial common compared connexion consequence course danger degree Demosthenes depravity despotism diffused disposed districts Divine doctrine eastern world effect Europe everything everywhere evil existence expected fact favourable feeling feudal freedom give greater number Greece habits human improvement influence institutions instruction intelligence irreligion kind labour Lancashire less liberty ligion literature look Louis XIV manner manufactures matters means ment military mind modern society moral multitude nations nature object observed parish passions patriotism persons Poor Law popular population possess present principle progress Protestantism Prussia Prussian education system racter realized reason regard relation religion religious respect Rome schools SECTION shew social Sparta spect spirit Sunday schools tendency things tion towns truth tural Varteg vice virtue wealth
Populiarios ištraukos
324 psl. - LORD, remainest for ever ; thy throne from generation to generation. Wherefore dost thou forget us for ever, and forsake us so long time? Turn thou us unto thee, 0 LORD, and we shall be turned ; renew our days as of old.
349 psl. - I call heaven and earth to witness against you this day, that ye shall soon utterly perish from off the land whereunto ye go over Jôr'dan to possess it; ye shall not prolong your days upon it, but shall utterly be destroyed.
349 psl. - Keep therefore and do them ; for this is your wisdom and your understanding in the sight of the peoples, which shall hear all these statutes, and say, Surely this great nation is a wise and understanding people.
18 psl. - go down to the sea in ships, who do business in great waters, and see wonders in the deep.
237 psl. - I have the authority of a high military officer, and also that of other persons, for saying that the streets of Manchester, at ten o'clock at night, are as retired as those of the most rural districts. When we look at the extent of this parish, containing at least 300,000 souls, — more than the population of the half of our counties, — can we be surprised that there is a great amount of immorality ? But a great proportion of that immorality is committed by those who have been already nursed in...
349 psl. - For what nation is there so great, who hath God so nigh unto them, as the LORD our God is in all things that we call upon liirafor? 8 And what nation is there so great that hath statutes and judgments so righteous as all this law, which I set before you this day...
335 psl. - The sleek, fat, narrow-minded, wealthy drone, is now to be sought for on the episcopal bench, or in the prebendal stall of the Lutheran or Anglican churches ; the well-off, comfortable parish minister, yeoman-like in mind, intelligence, and social position, in the manse and glebe of the Calvinistic church. The poverty-stricken, intellectual recluse, never seen abroad, but on his way to or from his studies or church duties, living nobody knows how...
295 psl. - ... be nothing the worse of the addition of a little industry to earn a new coat to stick their honours upon — the people, be their forms of government what they may, are but in a low social and industrial condition — are ages behind us in their social economy, and in their true social...
124 psl. - ... what we call public opinion has set up a despotism, such as exists nowhere else ? Public opinion, — a tyrant, sitting in the dark, wrapt up in mystification and vague terrors of obscurity ; deriving power no one knows from whom ; like an Asian monarch, unapproachable, unimpeachable, undethronable, perhaps illegitimate, — but irresistible in its power to quell thought, to repress action, to silence conviction; — and bringing the timid perpetually under an unworthy bondage of mean fear to...
219 psl. - ... that they should receive it from our hands in a safe and unobjectionable form. It is desirable also, that they should not be accustomed to consider, that there is anything like an opposition between the doctrines and precepts of our holy religion and other legitimate objects of intellectual inquiry ; or that it is difficult to reconcile a due regard to the supreme importance of the one with a certain degree of laudable curiosity about the other.