| John Gill - 1876 - 328 pages
...many of these establishments of earlier formation. It seems to have produced in some of them what I do not know how to designate otherwise than as the...have been designated a little ' drama,' in which the clever children had each their little part of ' representation ' by rote. Conceit, envy, and fretfulness,... | |
| John Gill - 1887 - 334 pages
...many of these establishments of earlier formation. It seems to have produced in some of them what 1 do not know how to designate otherwise than as the...under which the quicker children were to be wonders of euvy and admiration to the rest, and the whole school in which they were exhibited one of admiration,... | |
| Alfred Ewen Fletcher - 1889 - 592 pages
...of ¡ these establishments of earlier foundation. It seems to have produced in some of them wliat I do not know how to designate otherwise than as the...admiration, if not of envy, to its friends and neighbours. . . . Conceit, envy, and fretfulness, ill restrained by fear, were the leading moral elements of such... | |
| Alfred Ewen Fletcher - 1892 - 582 pages
...many of these establishments of earlier foundation. It seems to have produced in some of them what I do not know how to designate otherwise than as the...admiration, if not of envy, to its friends and neighbours. . . . Conceit, envy, and fretfulness, ill restrained by fear, were the leading moral elements of such... | |
| David Salmon - 1898 - 310 pages
...many of those establishments of earlier foundation. It seems to have produced in some of them . . . the prodigy system under which the quicker children were to be wonders of envy and admiration of the rest, and the whole school in which they were exhibited one of admiration if not of envy to... | |
| John Gill - 1903 - 334 pages
...many of these establishments of earlier formation. It seems to have produced in some of them what I do not know how to designate otherwise than as the...under which the quicker children were to be wonders of euvy and admiration to the rest, and the whole school in which they were exhibited one of admiration,... | |
| David Salmon, Winifred Hindshaw - 1904 - 344 pages
...many of those establishments of earlier foundation. It seems to have produced in some of them . . . the ' prodigy system,' under which the quicker children...admiration, if not of envy, to its friends and neighbours on the occasion of each ' examination,' which might more truly have been designated a little drama in... | |
| Ilse Forest - 1927 - 456 pages
...many of these establishments of earlier foundation. It seems to have produced in some of them what I do not know how to designate otherwise than as the...to be wonders of envy and admiration to the rest. . . . Conceit, envy, and fretfulness, ill-restrained by fear, were the leading moral 1 Early Discipline,... | |
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