| 1852 - 372 páginas
...teaching miners ; men who understand their ways of conceiving and estimating truth ; why not train others for teaching imaginative men, and political men, and...men, and scientific men, who bear the world in hand 1" In this volume, he continued, he had " set the example of two new methods of handling religious... | |
| Washington Wilks - 1854 - 308 páginas
...miners ; men who understand their ways of conceiving and estimating truth — why not train others for teaching imaginative men, and political men, and...men, and scientific men, who bear the world in hand ? ' In this volume, the preface continued, the author had ' set the example of two new methods of handling... | |
| 1858 - 796 páginas
...not be come at — whymeana should not be taken to come at them, can any good reason be assigned f They prepare for teaching gipsies, for teaching bargemen,...legal men, and scientific men, who bear the world iu hundí and having got the key to their several chambers of delusion and résistance, why not enter... | |
| Jared Sparks, Edward Everett, James Russell Lowell, Henry Cabot Lodge - 1862 - 624 páginas
...doubtingly patronized, stepped at once, as though by conscious right, into his new sphere as instructor of " imaginative men, and political men, and legal men, and scientific men, who bear the world in hand." The secret of his sudden popularity lay doubtless somewhat in his personal aspect, — his tall stature,... | |
| 1862 - 620 páginas
...other preachers), but it was filled with the very audience after •which he had longed, — with • imaginative men, and political men, and ' legal men, and scientific men, who bear the world in hand.' The Duke of York had been already interested in him at his first outset; Wilkie soon found him out... | |
| Margaret Oliphant Oliphant - 1862 - 448 páginas
...had not found the true method, had not learned the most effective way of discharging their duty. " They prepare for teaching gipsies, for teaching bargemen, for teaching miners, by apprehending their way of conceiving and estimating truth ; and why not prepare," he asks, with eloquent wonder, and a... | |
| 1862 - 636 páginas
...had not found the true method, had not learned the most effective way of discharging their duty. ' They prepare for teaching gipsies, for teaching bargemen, for teaching miners, by apprehending their way of conceiving and estimating truth ; and why not prepare,' he asks, with eloquent wonder, and a... | |
| 1863 - 734 páginas
...presentation of Christianity. Other preachers, he thought, aimed too low. "They prepare," said he, "for teaching gipsies, for teaching bargemen, for teaching miners, by apprehending their way of conceiving and estimating truth, and why not prepare lor teaching imaginative men, and political... | |
| Frances Williams-Wynn - 1864 - 404 páginas
...Hatton Garden was not only crowded, but filled, with the very audience after which he had longed, ' with imaginative men, and political men, and legal men, and scientific men, who bear the world * Twiss's Life of Eldon, vol. ii. p. 483. in hand. The Duke of York (continues the reviewer) had been... | |
| Joseph Fitzgerald Molloy - 1903 - 330 páginas
...failed to convey those truths, because ignorant of the most effective way of discharging their duty. " They prepare for teaching gipsies, for teaching bargemen, for teaching miners, by apprehending their way of conceiving and estimating truth ; and why not prepare for teaching imaginative men, and political... | |
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