The Reports of the Society for bettering the condition and increasing the comforts of the poor. [Ed. by sir T. Bernard]. (1st-40th report, 1797-1817)., Volume 4 |
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... CXXIII . Extract from an account of the mode of employing parish children at Birmingham . By the Rev. Josiah Pratt , A. M. 197 206 211 228 238 245 256 264 277 No. CXXIV . -PAGE Extract from an account of a CONTENTS .
... CXXIII . Extract from an account of the mode of employing parish children at Birmingham . By the Rev. Josiah Pratt , A. M. 197 206 211 228 238 245 256 264 277 No. CXXIV . -PAGE Extract from an account of a CONTENTS .
Page 2
... employed , can only equal the call for exertion . Attentions , which in my private and retired walk of life may be approved as directed to an appropriate object , might in your station be a neglect of office and a dereliction of duty ...
... employed , can only equal the call for exertion . Attentions , which in my private and retired walk of life may be approved as directed to an appropriate object , might in your station be a neglect of office and a dereliction of duty ...
Page 16
... employed , without parental protection , and without any discrimination of age , or sex , or character , it will appear from some of the reports , how necessary it is become , that the Le- gislature should pay a constant attention to ...
... employed , without parental protection , and without any discrimination of age , or sex , or character , it will appear from some of the reports , how necessary it is become , that the Le- gislature should pay a constant attention to ...
Page 39
... employed the period of tranquillity , in meliorating the character and condition of his fellow - sub- jects ; -of HIM , whose administration shall have been marked by a systematic arrange- ment of measures , -for preserving the great ...
... employed the period of tranquillity , in meliorating the character and condition of his fellow - sub- jects ; -of HIM , whose administration shall have been marked by a systematic arrange- ment of measures , -for preserving the great ...
Page 49
... employed in reading the 6th chapter of St. John's Gos- pel , accompanied with similar questions and explanations , addressed to them in such a manner as to fix their attention , and to improve their understanding . A lady , who has ...
... employed in reading the 6th chapter of St. John's Gos- pel , accompanied with similar questions and explanations , addressed to them in such a manner as to fix their attention , and to improve their understanding . A lady , who has ...
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advantage afford annual apprentices assistance attention Avebury Bart BISHOP OF DURHAM boys character charity cleanliness comfort conduct considerable cottage Cotton Mills distress Earl effects employed employment establishment exertions expense Extract families favour Female Poor fever free Chapel fund guineas habits house of recovery idle improvement increase infection instruction Ireland JAMES PLUMPTRE John John Charles Villiers John Julius Angerstein labour Ladies Committee Leeds linen London Lord Bishop Lord Carrington lying-in M. P. William manufacture Marquis of Bute means ment metropolis Mongewell moral neighbourhood neighbours Nicholas Vansittart object OBSERVATIONS parents parish parochial patients Patrick Colquhoun persons present produce reader received relief religious Reports respect schools shillings sick Society for bettering split straw straw platt Subscribers subscriptions Sunday supply THOMAS BERNARD tion vice week William Garrow William Wilberforce women workhouse
Popular passages
Page 166 - The Lord hath created medicines out of the earth; and he that is wise will not abhor them.
Page 262 - Foolishness is bound in the heart of a child; but the rod of correction shall drive it far from him (xxii.
Page 236 - In addition to this, the same trouble which teaches twenty, will suffice to teach sixty or a hundred, by employing some of the senior boys to inspect the slates of the others, they not omitting to spell the word themselves ; and, on a signal given by them to the principal teacher, that the word is finished by all the boys they overlook, he is informed when to dictate another to the class. This experiment has been tried with some hundreds of children, and it has been found, that they could all write,...
Page 262 - The rod and reproof give wisdom ; but a child left to himself, bringeth his mother to shame.
Page 168 - Open me the gates of ! righteousness : that I may go into them, and give thanks unto the Lord.
Page 262 - He that spareth his rod hateth his son: but he that loveth him chasteneth him betimes.
Page 167 - Then give place to the physician, for the Lord hath created him: let him not go from thee, for thou hast nerd of him. "13. There is a time when in their hands there is good success.
Page 65 - The Reports of the Society for Bettering the Condition and Increasing the Comforts of the Poor, 5 vols.
Page 166 - The skill of the physician shall lift up his head: and in the sight of great men he shall be in admiration.
Page 233 - the whole system of tuition is almost entirely conducted by boys,' he 'adds, ' the writing books are ruled with exactness and all the writers supplied with good pens by the same means. In the first instance the school is divided into classes, to each of these a lad is appointed as monitor; he is responsible for the morals, improvement, good order, and cleanliness of the whole class.