Prize Essay and Lectures, Delivered Before the American Institute of Instruction ... Including the Journal of Proceedings ..., Volume 11List of members included in each volume, beginning with 1891. |
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Page 19
... boys were not both ruined . Thousands , under similar treatment , have unquestionably formed early and unconquerable pre- judices against particular studies , and been thus induced to neglect them entirely ; or to pursue them ...
... boys were not both ruined . Thousands , under similar treatment , have unquestionably formed early and unconquerable pre- judices against particular studies , and been thus induced to neglect them entirely ; or to pursue them ...
Page 67
... boy to do errands , or for the daughter in domestic pursuits , as so much net gain . The one sending messages for new books ; the other flaming against teacher , and committee perhaps , for requiring so many books . The instructer would ...
... boy to do errands , or for the daughter in domestic pursuits , as so much net gain . The one sending messages for new books ; the other flaming against teacher , and committee perhaps , for requiring so many books . The instructer would ...
Page 69
... boys , and see the spirit within them . He should have a comprehensive one , and reflect on that class of misses , not as so many dolls he is to array for the gala day of life , but as beings formed for glorious ends , souls , some of ...
... boys , and see the spirit within them . He should have a comprehensive one , and reflect on that class of misses , not as so many dolls he is to array for the gala day of life , but as beings formed for glorious ends , souls , some of ...
Page 70
... boy studied vigorously to learn it ? Did he , while at the black - board , toil and try ? If so , he was gaining power ; and even though he failed of the answer , he deserves your approbation . A lad may be prepared , in a shorter ...
... boy studied vigorously to learn it ? Did he , while at the black - board , toil and try ? If so , he was gaining power ; and even though he failed of the answer , he deserves your approbation . A lad may be prepared , in a shorter ...
Page 73
... boys , and after measuring one of them proceeded to make jackets for the remaining twenty or thirty by his dimensions ? Yet what else are we daily doing in much of our instruction ? We prepare a common garment for all our pupils . One ...
... boys , and after measuring one of them proceeded to make jackets for the remaining twenty or thirty by his dimensions ? Yet what else are we daily doing in much of our instruction ? We prepare a common garment for all our pupils . One ...
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Common terms and phrases
acquisition animal apoplexy appeal to motives appeals appetite applied attention bearing benevolence Boston boys brain branches called Cambridgeport cation cause character cherish child children and youth christian Committee complaints connexion course courtesy daily degree digestion duty dyspepsia effect effort emulation energies evil excite exercise exert expedients faculties feel furnished gastric juice give habits happiness heart hope and fear human importance improvement indolent influence insisted Institute intellectual interest Jacob Abbott JOSHUA BATES knowledge labor language learning lecture lesson manner means mind Monitorial system moral motives nature neglect nerves ness never nexion object organs parents passions perhaps portion powers practice present principle produce punishments pupils racter regard requisite rule scholars school-room secure spirit stomach sympathy taught teacher teaching Thayer things THOMAS CUSHING tion true glory ture USHER PARSONS whole William Russell word young
Popular passages
Page 124 - Merciful heaven! What, man! ne'er pull your hat upon your brows; Give sorrow words: the grief that does not speak Whispers the o'erfraught heart, and bids it break.
Page 23 - For honour travels in a strait so narrow, W'here one but goes abreast: keep then the path; For emulation hath a thousand sons, That one by one pursue: If you give way, Or hedge aside from the direct forthright, Like to an enter'd tide, they all rush by, And leave you hindmost...
Page 23 - For honour travels in a strait so narrow, Where one but goes abreast ; keep, then, the path ; For Emulation hath a thousand sons That one by one pursue ; if you give way, Or hedge aside from the direct forthright, Like to an enter'd tide, they all rush by, And leave you hindmost.
Page 97 - I CONSIDER a human soul without education like marble in the quarry, which shows none of its inherent beauties, till the skill of the polisher fetches out the colours, makes the surface shine, and discovers every ornamental cloud, spot, and vein, that runs through the body of it.
Page 119 - There appears to be a sense of perfect intelligence conveyed from the stomach to the encephalic centre, which, in health, invariably dictates what quantity of aliment (responding to the sense of hunger and its due satisfaction) is naturally required for the purposes of life ; and which, if noticed and properly attended to, would prove the most salutary monitor of health, and effectual preventive of disease.
Page 119 - ... to the sense of hunger and its due satisfaction) is naturally required for the purposes of life ; and which, if noticed and properly attended to, would prove the most salutary monitor of health, and effectual preventive of disease. It is not...
Page 97 - ... every ornamental cloud, spot, and vein, that runs through the body of it. Education, after the same manner, when it works upon a noble mind, draws out to view every latent virtue and perfection, which, without such helps, are never able to make their appearance.
Page 128 - ... lustre on its name. But in exact proportion as the picture becomes brighter to their fancy, the probability of its being realized becomes less ; for the brain, worn out by premature exertion, either becomes diseased or loses its tone, leaving the mental powers imbecile and depressed for the remainder of life. The expected prodigy is thus easily outstripped in the social race by many whose dull outset promised him an easy victory.
Page 119 - It is when the stomach says enough, and is distinguished from satiety by the difference of the sensations — the former feeling enough — the latter too much. The first is produced by the timely reception into the stomach of proper aliment, in exact proportion to the requirements of nature, for the perfect digestion of which a definite quantity of gastric juice is furnished by the proper gastric apparatus. But to effect this most agreeable of all sensations and conditions — the real...
Page 106 - If he is talking, arguing, or, more appropriately, if he is driving a bargain, you find him plying this, his wonted trade, with all the energy and dexterity of a beaver ; and, as it was once said of an English advocate, that he could never plead, without a piece of packthread in his hands, so the Yankee would lose half his thrift, unless the knife and wood were concomitants of his chaffering.