When the revelation of his own peculiar taste and capacity comes to a young man, let him reverently give it welcome, thank God, and take courage. Thereafter he knows his way to happy, enthusiastic work, and, God willing, to usefulness and success. The Harvard Graduates' Magazine - Seite 562herausgegeben von - 1904Vollansicht - Über dieses Buch
| Charles William Eliot - 1898 - 434 Seiten
...to a young man, let him reverently give it welcome, thank God, and take courage. Thereafter he knows his way to happy, enthusiastic work, and, God willing,...of a people may be inferred from the variety of its 12 tools. There are thousands of years between the stone hatchet and the machine-shop. As tools multiply,... | |
| Charles William Eliot - 1898 - 438 Seiten
...to a young man, let him reverentlyjgive it welcome, thank God, and take courage. Thereafter he knows his way to happy, enthusiastic work, and, God willing,...usefulness and success. The civilization of a people may be jnferred fro toolsjr There are thousands of years between the "stone hatchet and the machine-shop.... | |
| Mayo Williamson Hazeltine - 1902 - 494 Seiten
...to a young man, let him reverently give it welcome, thank God, and take courage. Thereafter he knows his way to happy, enthusiastic work, and, God willing,...multiply, each is more ingeniously adapted to its own excluBive purpose. So with the men that make the State. For the individual, concentration, and the... | |
| Herman Harrell Horne - 1904 - 330 Seiten
...to a young man, let him reverently give it welcome, thank God, and take courage. Thereafter he knows his way to happy, enthusiastic work, and, God willing, to usefulness and success." In an unpublished educational address, President Tucker has said: " Education is the process whereby;... | |
| Mayo Williamson Hazeltine - 1905 - 464 Seiten
...to a young man, let him reverently give it welcome, thank God, and take courage. Thereafter he knows his way to happy, enthusiastic work, and, God willing,...multiply, each is more ingeniously adapted to its own exolusive purpose. So with the men that make the State. For the individual, concentration, and the... | |
| 1905 - 330 Seiten
...curse when divorced from culture. To be of service is a solid foundation for contentment in this world. The civilization of a people may be inferred from the variety of its tools. Toleration in religion is absolutely the best fruit of all the struggles, labors and sorrows of the... | |
| Albert Leonard, William Henry Metzler, Jacob Richard Street - 1907 - 528 Seiten
...President Eliot's whole endeavor." President Eliot expresses his views in one place in these words, "The civilization of a people may be inferred from...thousands of years between the stone hatchet and the machine shop. As tools multiply, each is more ingeniously adapted to its own exclusive purpose. So... | |
| Albert Edward Wiggam - 1927 - 432 Seiten
...to a young man, let him reverently give it welcome, thank God, and take courage. Thereafter he knows his way to happy, enthusiastic work, and God willing,...thousands of years between the stone hatchet and the machine shop. As tools multiply, each is more ingeniously adapted to its own exclusive purpose. So... | |
| Mark Antony De Wolfe Howe - 1928 - 230 Seiten
...to a young man, let him reverently give it welcome, thank God, and take courage. Thereafter he knows his way to happy enthusiastic work, and, God willing, to usefulness and success." The same note of liberation sounds again and again throughout the address. At the time of Eliot's retirement... | |
| Henry Hallam Saunderson - 1928 - 290 Seiten
...to a young man, let him reverently give it welcome, thank God, and take courage. Thereafter he knows his way to happy, enthusiastic work, and, God willing, to usefulness and success. . . . These principles are the justification of the system of elective studies which has been gradually... | |
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