In a school, or hospital, or other considerable assemblage of people, the purity of the air may be pretty accurately measured by the amount of cheerfulness, activity, and lively interest, which pervades it ; and yet so little do people think or care... The Educational Journal of Virginia - Página 257editado por - 1872Visualização integral - Acerca deste livro
| Isaac Ray - 1863 - 366 páginas
...exhilaration, pervades the whole mental condition. In a school, or hospital, or any other considerable assembly of people, the purity of the air may be pretty accurately...their lives, inspire more or less highly vitiated air. In the school-room, where many a youth spends a large portion of his early life, the same air is generally... | |
| Thomas Henry Huxley, William Jay Youmans - 1868 - 446 páginas
...correctness of the judgment and brilliancy of the imagination depend directly upon pure air." Dr. Ray remarks : " In a school, or hospital, or other considerable...existing arrangements there are very few who do not everyday of their lives inspire more or less highly vitiated air. The listlessness and stupidity of... | |
| Charles Woodhouse - 1868 - 192 páginas
...exhilaration, pervades the whole mental condition. In a school, or hospital, or any other considerable assembly of people, the purity of the air may be pretty accurately...subject, that, under existing arrangements, there are 15 very few who do not, every day of their lives, inspire more or less highly vitiated air. In the... | |
| Thomas Henry Huxley, William Jay Youmans - 1878 - 530 páginas
...correctness of the judgment, and brilliancy of the imagination, depend directlv upon pure air." Dr. Ray remarks : " In a school, or hospital, or other considerable assemblage of people, the puritv of the air may be pretty accurately measured by the amount of cheerfulness, activity, and lively... | |
| 1874 - 852 páginas
...writer has very justly observed that, " In a school, or hospital, or other considerable assemblages of people, the purity of the air .may be pretty accurately measured by the amount of cheerful ness, activity, and Hvely interest which pervade it ; and yet so little do people thiuk or... | |
| Edward Isidore Sears - 1875 - 436 páginas
...writer has very justly observed that, "In a school, or hospital, or other considerable assemblages of people, the purity of the air may be pretty accurately...cheerfulness, activity, and lively interest which pervade it ; and yet so little do people think or care about this subject that, under existing arrangements,... | |
| Thomas Henry Huxley, William Jay Youmans - 1878 - 508 páginas
...correctness of the judgment, and brilliancy of the imagination, depend directly upon pure air." Dr. Ray remarks : " In a school, or hospital, or other considerable...not every day of their lives inspire more or less highlyvitiated air. The listlessness and stupidity of students, and especially of children confined... | |
| 1881 - 476 páginas
...the correctness of the judgment and brilliancy of the imagination, depend directly upon pure air. In school or hospital, or other considerable assemblage...arrangements there are very few who do not every day inspire more or less highly vitiated air. The listlessness and stupidity of students, and especially... | |
| 1905 - 1248 páginas
...Judgment, and brilliancy of the imagination, depend directly on pure air. In the same work Dr. Ray remarks: In a school, or hospital, or other considerable...there are very few who do not every day of their lives Inhale more or less highly vitiated air. The llstlessness and stupidity of students, and especially... | |
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