The life and correspondence of Thomas Arnold, Volume 1B. Fellowes, 1844 - 548 pages |
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Page 14
... points believed by them both to be of essential importance . These two held their opinions with a zeal and tenacity propor- tionate to their importance ; each believed the other in error pernicious to the faith and dangerous to him ...
... points believed by them both to be of essential importance . These two held their opinions with a zeal and tenacity propor- tionate to their importance ; each believed the other in error pernicious to the faith and dangerous to him ...
Page 19
... points of a prospect , for all which he was remarkable in after life , we noticed in him then . When Professor Buckland , then one of our Fellows , began his career in that science , to the advancement of which he has contributed so ...
... points of a prospect , for all which he was remarkable in after life , we noticed in him then . When Professor Buckland , then one of our Fellows , began his career in that science , to the advancement of which he has contributed so ...
Page 20
... points in the Articles ; these were not low nor rationalistic in their tendency , according to the bad sense of that term ; there was no indisposition in him to believe merely because the article transcended his reason ; he doubted the ...
... points in the Articles ; these were not low nor rationalistic in their tendency , according to the bad sense of that term ; there was no indisposition in him to believe merely because the article transcended his reason ; he doubted the ...
Page 25
... first volume of Sermons , in speaking of the various points on which the communication of his friend's views had " extended or confirmed his own . " For the next four years he remained at Oxford taking private pu- pils.
... first volume of Sermons , in speaking of the various points on which the communication of his friend's views had " extended or confirmed his own . " For the next four years he remained at Oxford taking private pu- pils.
Page 26
... points where he was inferior to his competitors , indicated an ap- proaching superiority . And widely different as were his juvenile compositions in many points from those of his after life , yet it is interesting to observe in them the ...
... points where he was inferior to his competitors , indicated an ap- proaching superiority . And widely different as were his juvenile compositions in many points from those of his after life , yet it is interesting to observe in them the ...
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Common terms and phrases
admiration amidst amongst Archbishop Whately Archdeacon Hare Arnold believe boys chapel character Christ Christian Church clergy course delight duty earnest effect endeavour English evil expression fear feeling felt Fledborough friends GEORGE CORNISH give Gospel Greek happiness head-master Herodotus hope impression influence intellectual intercourse interest Isle of Wight J. T. COLERIDGE JOHN TUCKER Junior Common Room knowledge labour Laleham language later Latin less lessons letters living Livy look matter mind moral natural never notion object once opinions Oxford party peculiar points political practical preached Pref principles public school pupils question racter recollections regard religious reverence rience Roman History Rome Rugby scholars school discipline Scripture seemed sense Serm sermons Sixth Form society speak spirit sure Swan River thing thought Thucydides tion tone truth views whilst whole Winchester wish words writing
Popular passages
Page 91 - ... active man, and one who has common sense, and understands boys. I do not so much care about scholarship, as he will have immediately under him the lowest forms in the school ; but yet, on second thoughts, I do care about it very much, because his pupils may be in the highest forms ; and besides...
Page 111 - will never be what it might be, and what it ought to be." The remonstrances which he encountered both on public and private grounds were vehement and numerous.
Page 101 - And few scenes can be recorded more characteristic of him than on one of these occasions, when, in consequence of a disturbance, he had been obliged to send away several boys, and when, in the midst of the general spirit of discontent which this excited, he stood in his place before the assembled school, and said, " It is not necessary that this should be a school of three hundred, or one hundred, or of fifty boys ; but it is necessary that it should be a school of Christian gentlemen.
Page 122 - Latin fixed themselves in the boys' memories, when learned in English were forgotten. The changes in his views resulted, on the whole, from his increasing conviction, that " it was not knowledge, but the means of gaining knowledge, which he had to teach ; " as well as by his increasing...
Page 180 - ... mischief of the reaction against them. There was besides a peculiar importance attaching, in his view, to political questions, with which every reader of his works must be familiar. The life of the Commonwealth is to him the main subject of history— the laws of political science the main lesson of history — " the desire of taking an active share in the great work of government, the highest earthly desire of the ripened mind.
Page 33 - I have always thought," he writes in 1823, " with regard to ambition, that I should like to be aut Caesar aut nullus, and as it is pretty well settled for me that I shall not be Caesar, I am quite content to live in peace as nullus.
Page 256 - There is nothing so revolutionary, because there is nothing so unnatural and so convulsive to society as the strain to keep things fixed, when all the world is by the very law of its creation in eternal progress...
Page 121 - The study of language," he said, " seems to me as if it was given for the very purpose of forming the human mind in youth ; and the Greek and Latin languages, in themselves so perfect, and at the same time freed from the insuperable difficulty which must attend any attempt to teach boys philology through the medium of their own spoken language, • seem the very instruments, by which this is to be effected.
Page 109 - ... that you have an anxious duty — a duty which some might suppose was too heavy for your years. But it seems to me, the nobler as well as the truer way of stating the case to say, that it is the great privilege of this and other such institutions, to anticipate the common time of manhood ; that by their whole training they fit the character for manly duties at an age when, under another system, such duties would be impracticable...
Page 34 - ... philosophical speculations, impressed themselves upon his intellectual nature. There is naturally but little to interrupt the retirement of his life at Laleham, which was only broken by the short tours in England or on the Continent, in which then, as afterwards, he employed his vacations. Still it is not without interest to dwell on these years the profound peace of which is contrasted so strongly with the almost incessant agitations of his subsequent life, and " to remain awhile" (thus applying...