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People Educated at Beverley Grammar School (X)

       
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The Religious Dimension

By: Donald Broadribb

...uan Chang “Tao and the Sympathy of All Things” is based on a lecture given at the Eranos Conference in Ascona in 1955 and was published in Eranos 24-1... ...ms Acknowledgments The Sacred Land: Australian Aboriginal Religion 238 The People The Dreaming Totems And Increase Sacred Knowledge The Present Concl... ...had some type of religious instruction. Whether as children we were taught at a church Sunday school or some other religious institution, or we absorb... ... us grow up in a religious vacuum. Through most of history the majority of people appear to have been reasonably satisfied with the religious culture ... ... start to a need to make use of radically other than Western categories of grammar and thought, as well as other than Christian categories of spiritua... ...ht find something requiring an analysis that escapes the limits of English grammar and Aristotelian categories of substance and property. Walker menti... ...e or unjust or ruinous taxation by a tyrannical monarch. This was for many educated colonial and early American white men the most progressive and exc... ...re about seven hundred people overall in several camps which include white-educated part-Aborigines from surrounding pastoral stations (ranches) and f... ...re and Human Values, vol. VIII, no. 1, Winter 1990, pp. 44-8. Hungry Wolf, Beverley: The Ways of My Grandmothers, Quill, New York, 1980. Hurt, R. Dou...

...Most readers of this book will have had some type of religious instruction. Whether as children we were taught at a church Sunday school or some other religious institution, or weabsorbed simple social assumptions from the culture we live in, none of us grow up in a religious vacuum. Through most of history the majority of people appe...

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Democracy in America

By: Alexis de Tocqueville

...y person using this document file, for any purpose, and in any way does so at his or her own risk. Neither the Pennsylvania State University nor Jim M... ...hat were essential to the preservation of the liberties which had been won at great cost and with heroic labors and sacrifices. Their studies were con... ...stablished in ordinances sealed with blood, in many great struggles of the people. They were not new to the people. They were consecrated theories, bu... ...nto license and result in the tyranny of absolutism, without saving to the people the power so often found necessary of repressing or destroying their... ...ia,” by William Stith. “History of Virginia, from the Earliest Period,” by Beverley. ***It was not till some time later that a certain number of rich ... ...y methods and of cheap science, the human mind can never be instructed and educated with- out devoting a considerable space of time to those objects. ... ...following fact: – “I formerly knew a young Indian,” said he, “who had been educated at a college in New England, where he had greatly distinguished hi... ...e former, however, the inhabitants were obliged to cultivate the soil *See Beverley’s “History of Virginia.” See also in Jefferson’s “Memoirs” some cu... ...ld do more towards the attainment of this object than a vast number of bad grammar schools, where superfluous mat- ters, badly learned, stand in the w...

...minds of America were bent upon the study of the principles of government that were essential to the preservation of the liberties which had been won at great cost and with heroic labors and sacrifices. Their studies were conducted in view of the imperfections that experience had developed in the government of the Confederation, and they were, therefore, practical and thor...

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The Caged Lion

By: Charlotte Mary Yonge

...y person using this document file, for any purpose, and in any way does so at his or her own risk. Neither the Pennsylvania State University nor Jim M... ...een space for it during Henry’s progress to the North to pay his devotions at Beverley Minster. The hero of the story is likewise invention, though, a... ... space for it during Henry’s progress to the North to pay his devotions at Beverley Minster. The hero of the story is likewise invention, though, as F... ...g in Scotland, and founder of her earliest University, having been himself educated at Paris. The Abbey of Coldingham is described from a local com- p... ...e as well as to suffer,’ there was an approach of footsteps, and two young people entered the hall; the first a girl, with a family likeness to Malcol... ...dom hath he? What hope is there of his return? Can he brook to hear of his people’s wretchedness?’ This was the first question at which Sir James atte... ... said the chief robber. ‘I knew you would be. So, when Ned Marmion came to Beverley, and would have us to see his hunting at Tanfield, we came on thin... ... dames with two husbands besides.’ ‘One would have cancelled the other, as grammarians tell us,’ said Harry, ‘if thy charms, John, had cancelled thine... ...ste to remove his fair niece from the convent at Dijon, where she had been educated, lest the Cistercians should become possessed of her lands. He had...

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Memorials and Other Papers

By: Thomas de Quincey

...y person using this document file, for any purpose, and in any way does so at his or her own risk. Neither the Pennsylvania State University nor Jim M... ...the eyes of those who have taken an interest in the original se- ries. But at all events, good or bad, they are now tendered to the appropriation of y... ... any, had been already tried for me vicariously amongst the Ameri- cans; a people so nearly repeating our own in style of intel- lect, and in the comp... ...rciful bloodshed”—In reading either the later religious wars of the Jewish people under the Maccabees, or the ear- lier under Joshua, every philosophi... ...ore earnestly a student than his friend Lord Massey, who had probably been educated at home un- der a private tutor. He read everything connected with... ..., with a view to my pecuniary interests, was to place me at the Manchester Grammar School; not with a view to further improvement in my classical know... ...a certain Dr. Bailey, a clergyman of this city, who had published a Hebrew Grammar. The doctor was the most unworldly and guileless of men. Amongst hi... ...traint of young men, or even as at all contemplating any such control. The Beverleys would have us suppose, not only that the great body of the studen... ...ing composed of those who are “noble;” the other, of families equally well educated and accomplished, but not, in the continental sense, “noble.” The ...

...motion. Some of these new papers, I hope, will not be without their value in the eyes of those who have taken an interest in the original series. But at all events, good or bad, they are now tendered to the appropriation of your individual house, the Messrs. Ticknor & Fields, according to the amplest extent of any power to make such a transfer that I may be found to posses...

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Framley Parsonage

By: Anthony Trollope

...per- son using this document file, for any purpose, and in any way does so at his or her own risk. Neither the Pennsylvania State University nor Jim M... ... blessed with an excellent disposition. This father was a physician living at Exeter. He was a gentleman possessed of no private means, but enjoying a... ... assistance. And Lord Lufton was there of course; and 8 Framley Parsonage people protested that he would surely fall in love with one of the four bea... ... You know I don’t mean it. But Lady Lufton does not like those Chaldicotes people. You know Lord Lufton was with you the last time you were there; and... ...ent income—give them hardly any income at all. Is it not a scandal that an educated gentleman with a family should be made to work half his life, and ... ...e world had given him credit for possessing. Who ever does? Dr Robarts had educated a large family, had always lived with every comfort, and had never... ...who was studiously endeavouring to initiate them in the early mysteries of grammar. To tell the truth, Mrs Robarts would much preferred that Mr Crawle... ...hile, had risen from his seat with his finger between the leaves of an old grammar out of which he had been teach- ing his two elder children. The who... ...he mining interests and wash white the blackamoors of Newcastle: Bishop of Beverley he should be called. But, in opposition to this, the giants, it wa...

...o say all good things to him, and to extol his fortune in that he had a son blessed with an excellent disposition. This father was a physician living at Exeter. He was a gentleman possessed of no private means, but enjoying a lucrative practice, which had enabled him to maintain and educate a family with all the advantages which money can give in this country. Mark was his...

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