Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, Volume 142William Blackwood, 1887 - England |
From inside the book
Results 6-10 of 74
Page 81
... effect such an educa- tional revolution as to close the uni- versity door upon all but scholars of secondary schools . But such a revolution is not required . What is wanted is , not that all students should go through a secondary ...
... effect such an educa- tional revolution as to close the uni- versity door upon all but scholars of secondary schools . But such a revolution is not required . What is wanted is , not that all students should go through a secondary ...
Page 83
... effect of the ordinary pupil - teacher course ; it is only the very best minds that rise superior to it . Here is a proof of it . Under the present system , a certain picked number of those who enter the training colleges are allowed to ...
... effect of the ordinary pupil - teacher course ; it is only the very best minds that rise superior to it . Here is a proof of it . Under the present system , a certain picked number of those who enter the training colleges are allowed to ...
Page 91
... effect on pub- lic opinion of the publication of the disclosures thus brought to light . We were indeed doing here what the Duke of Wellington would have described as washing our dirty linen abroad , " and were rewarded by hearing our ...
... effect on pub- lic opinion of the publication of the disclosures thus brought to light . We were indeed doing here what the Duke of Wellington would have described as washing our dirty linen abroad , " and were rewarded by hearing our ...
Page 106
... effect to his greater books . The two or three feeble ones in which his great powers are subdued by a less noble purpose and characters less worthy of him have dropped , and are not of enough importance in his literary history to ...
... effect to his greater books . The two or three feeble ones in which his great powers are subdued by a less noble purpose and characters less worthy of him have dropped , and are not of enough importance in his literary history to ...
Page 121
... effect in its day , and still ad- dresses those who prefer to listen rather than to stare . We apply these general remarks with some limitations to the par- ticular book before us . The cor- respondence between Goethe and Carlyle ...
... effect in its day , and still ad- dresses those who prefer to listen rather than to stare . We apply these general remarks with some limitations to the par- ticular book before us . The cor- respondence between Goethe and Carlyle ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
able arms army Austria Axel Munthe beautiful believe Bellendean better called Captain Church Colonel course cried CXLII.-NO daugh dear delightful door doubt England English eyes face fact father feeling felt force French friends German girl give Gladstone Government hand Hayward head heart honour Ireland Irish Janet Joyce Joyce's kind King knew lady land LĂ©opoldville Liberal Unionists live look Lord Lord Castlereagh Lord Hartington Lord Palmerston means ment military mind Miss natural ness never night officers once Parliament party passed perhaps Poland present question river round Russia scarcely Scotland seemed Serk side sion Sir Charles Dilke Sitwell speak standing stood strange sure Taplow tell thing thought tion took turned Vistula voice War Office wife woman wonder words young