The Southern Quarterly Review, 26. kötetDaniel Kimball Whitaker, Milton Clapp, William Gilmore Simms, James Henley Thornwell E. H. Britton, 1854 |
Részletek a könyvből
53. oldal
... progress . In order to understand why this is so , it is necessary to bear in mind , that the main spring to progress is the desire of individuals to better their condition ; and that the strongest impulse which can be given to it , is ...
... progress . In order to understand why this is so , it is necessary to bear in mind , that the main spring to progress is the desire of individuals to better their condition ; and that the strongest impulse which can be given to it , is ...
55. oldal
... progress through life . He has , then , an even chance with all his fellows . If he does not become their equal , his case is beyond the reach of society , and to complain , would be to quarrel with his own nature . " It cannot be ...
... progress through life . He has , then , an even chance with all his fellows . If he does not become their equal , his case is beyond the reach of society , and to complain , would be to quarrel with his own nature . " It cannot be ...
57. oldal
... progress set . Great as is the amount of ava- rice and ambition , in the grand category of motives to hu- man exertion , the search after wealth , and the thirst for dis- tinction , which constitute the right and left arms of civiliza ...
... progress set . Great as is the amount of ava- rice and ambition , in the grand category of motives to hu- man exertion , the search after wealth , and the thirst for dis- tinction , which constitute the right and left arms of civiliza ...
61. oldal
... progress of events would have found a termination ? And whence did support and consolation flow in those tumultu- ous times , but from the conservative influences which society exerted over the frugal and patient people ? And what ...
... progress of events would have found a termination ? And whence did support and consolation flow in those tumultu- ous times , but from the conservative influences which society exerted over the frugal and patient people ? And what ...
65. oldal
... progress in knowledge and in the arts , never passing a certain low point , so that they exhibit the only instance in the history of our species of improve- ment being permanently arrested in its progress ; the resources of this ...
... progress in knowledge and in the arts , never passing a certain low point , so that they exhibit the only instance in the history of our species of improve- ment being permanently arrested in its progress ; the resources of this ...
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