| John Bristed - Economic history - 1818 - 570 pages
...to prosper, for he has no control over any other head, eyes, or hands, than hi* own. Owing, perhaps, to the very popular nature of our institutions, the...comfort, and of the welfare of the children themselves. Of course, where there is no parental authority, there can be no discipline in schools and colleges.... | |
| John Bristed - Economic history - 1818 - 528 pages
...for he has no control over any other head, eyes, or hands, than hi* own. Owing, perhaps, to the veiy popular nature of our institutions, the American children...comfort, and of the welfare of the children themselves. Of course, where there is no parental authority, there can be no discipline in schools and colleges.... | |
| William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, Sir John Murray (IV), Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle) - English literature - 1819 - 592 pages
...to prosper, for he has no controul over any other head, eyes, or hands than his own. Owing, perhaps, to the very popular nature of our institutions, the...comfort and of the welfare of the children themselves. Of course, where where there is no parental authority there can be no discipline in schools and colleges.... | |
| 1819 - 596 pages
...to prosper, for he has no controul over any other head, eyes, or hands than his own. Owing, perhaps, to the very popular nature of our institutions, the...comfort and of the welfare of the children themselves. Of course, where where there is no parental authority there can be no discipline in schools and colleges.... | |
| Arthur Wallace Calhoun - Families - 1918 - 400 pages
...subordination in the United States. Parents have no command over their children. . . Owing perhaps to the very popular nature of our institutions, the...are at once the basis of domestic comfort and of the wel81 Janson. Stranger in America, 297. fare of the children themselves. . . Nay the independence of... | |
| Samuel Eagle Forman - Industries - 1928 - 536 pages
...to prosper, for he has no control over any other head, eyes, or hands than his own. Owing, perhaps, to the very popular nature of our institutions, the...comfort, and of the welfare of the children themselves. Of course, where there is no parental authority, there can be no discipline in schools and colleges.... | |
| Donald Rutherford - Classical school of economics - 1996 - 520 pages
...to prosper, for he has no controul over any other head, eyes, or hands than his own. Owing, perhaps, to the very popular nature of our institutions, the...comfort and of the welfare of the children themselves. Of course, where there is no parental authority there can be no discipline in schools and colleges.... | |
| John Bristed - Economic history - 1818 - 534 pages
...prosper, for he has no iebntrol over any other head, eyes, or hands, than hii ::- tftfn. Owing, perhaps, to the very popular nature of our institutions, the...comfort, and of the welfare of the children themselves. Of course, where there is no parental authority, there * -can be no discipline in schools and colleges.... | |
| North American review and miscellaneous journal - 1818 - 448 pages
...to prosper, for he has no control over any other head, eyes or hands, than hia own. Owing, perhaps, to the very popular nature of our institutions, the...seldom taught that profound reverence for, and strict obedi• ence to their parents, which are at once the basis of domestic comfort, and of the welfare... | |
| Thomas Campbell, Samuel Carter Hall, Edward Bulwer Lytton Baron Lytton, Theodore Edward Hook, Thomas Hood, William Harrison Ainsworth, William Ainsworth - 1818 - 612 pages
...control ovtr any other head, eyes, or hand*, than bis own. Owing, perhaps, to the very popular nsture of our institutions, the American children are seldom...that profound reverence for, and strict obedience to thrir parents, wdich are at once the basis of domestic comfort, and of the welfare of the children... | |
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