| 1906 - 810 páginas
...occasions, It mends their morals, never mind the pain. BYRON, Don Juan, Canto ii, st. i Flogging. — There is now less flogging in our great schools than...what the boys get at one end they lose at the other. SAMUEL JOHNSON, Life, by Boswell, 1775 Flood. — You may as well go stand upon the beach And bid the... | |
| Samuel Johnson - 1907 - 172 páginas
...Elsewhere he says, ' the writer of an epitaph must not be considered as saying nothing but what is true. Allowance must be made for some degree of exaggerated...In lapidary inscriptions a man is not upon oath.' (Boswell's Johnson, ed. Hill, ii. 407.) P. 9, 1. 7. These Italian testimonies are printed in the Globe... | |
| Samuel Johnson - 1913 - 220 páginas
...Johnson approved of this kind of discipline and regretted its disuse. Cf. Boswell, ' Life,' anno 1775. ' There is now less flogging in our great schools than...what the boys get at one end they lose at the other.' Cf. also, on the other side, Herbert Spencer, 'On the Study of Sociology' in the International Scientific... | |
| 1911 - 440 páginas
...one hundred years ago : "There is now less flogging in our schools than formerly, but there is less learned there ; so that what the boys get at one end they lose at the other." The abatement of flogging in the schools of Indianapolis had not begun in the early thirties. There... | |
| James Boswell - 1916 - 370 páginas
...' ' "The writer of an epitaph should not be considered as saying nothing but what is strictly true. Allowance must be made for some degree of exaggerated...schools than formerly, but then less is learned there, ' ' "More is learned in public than in private schools, from emulation ; there is the collision of... | |
| Edwin Lillie Miller - 1917 - 690 páginas
...hate each other." On another occasion, he said, " There is less flogging in our public schools now than formerly, but then less is learned there, so that what the boys gain at one end they lose at the other." At the age of sixteen his schooling came abruptly to an end,... | |
| New York (N.Y.). Board of Education - 1955 - 764 páginas
...expression for both the speaker and the critics. Philip Dodell JHS 240, Brooklyn THE ENDS AND THE MEANS There is now less flogging in our great schools than...what the boys get at one end they lose at the other. — Samuel Johnson, 1775 137 IN THE WORK OF THE HIGH SCHOOLS OF NEW YORK CITY EDITOR HENRY I. CHRIST... | |
| James Boswell - 1921 - 574 páginas
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| 1934 - 602 páginas
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| Adolph Charles Babenroth - 1922 - 420 páginas
...Without that, Sir, I should have done nothing." Concerning Dr. Rose's lenient methods, Johnson remarked: "There is now less flogging in our great schools than...what the boys get at one end they lose at the other." (Boswell's Johnson). corporal punishment." Less than five years after this announcement, Barrow was... | |
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