What has been said of the understanding and dispositions of servants, relates only to servants as they are now educated. Their vices and their ignorance arise from the same causes, the want of education. They are. aot a separate cast in society, doomed... Practical Education - Side 109av Maria Edgeworth - 1801Uten tilgangsbegrensning - Om denne boken
| Maria Edgeworth, Richard Lovell Edgeworth - 1815 - 512 sider
...nursery-maids ; and let as little and for as short a time as possible be left to their discretion. What has been said of the understanding and dispositions...separate cast in society, doomed to ignorance, or degrade*! jby inherent vice ; they are capable, they are desirous .of instruction . Let them he well... | |
| Maria Edgeworth - 1822 - 436 sider
...nursery-maids ; and let as little and for as short a time as possible be left to their discretion. What has been said of the understanding and dispositions...the same causes, the want of education. They are. aot a separate cast in society, doomed to ignorance, or degraded by inherent vice ; they are capable,... | |
| William Russell, William Channing Woodbridge, Fordyce Mitchell Hubbard - 1838 - 608 sider
...ignorance and want of correct education. They are not, as Mrs Edgeworth justly says, a separate class in society, doomed to ignorance or degraded by inherent...desirous of instruction. Let them be well educated and instructed, and as early as possible ; and the difference in their intelligence and moral conduct will... | |
| 1838 - 636 sider
...ignorance and want of correct education. They are not, as Mrs Edgeworth justly says, a separate class in society, doomed to ignorance or degraded by inherent...desirous of instruction. Let them be well educated and instructed, and as early as possible ; and the difference in their intelligence and moral conduct will... | |
| Jenny Davidson - 2004 - 256 sider
..."Advertisement" (xiii) and 1.188-93. The Edgeworths also offer here the qualification that they refer to "servants as they are now educated": "Their vices...the want of education. They are not a separate cast [sic] in society doomed to ignorance, or degraded by inherent vice" (1.191). For another partial retraction,... | |
| Julie Nash - 2006 - 236 sider
...their way to explain that the flaws in the characters of servants are a result of their circumstances:' What has been said of the understanding and dispositions of servants, relates only to servants as they now are educated. Their vices and their ignorance arise from the same causes, the want of education.... | |
| Julie Nash - 2007 - 150 sider
...that the flaws in the characters of servants are a result of their circumstances, not their nature: What has been said of the understanding and dispositions of servants, relates only to servants as they now are educated. Their vices and their ignorance arise from the same causes, the want of education.... | |
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