Prince Albert's golden precepts: or, The opinions and maxims of ... the prince consort, selected from his addresses, etc |
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Page 8
... existence - one might say , the whole face of the globe . We owe this to science , and to science alone ; and she has other treasures in store for us , if we will but call her to our assistance . DETERMINATION TO AVOID POLITICAL PARTIES ...
... existence - one might say , the whole face of the globe . We owe this to science , and to science alone ; and she has other treasures in store for us , if we will but call her to our assistance . DETERMINATION TO AVOID POLITICAL PARTIES ...
Page 9
... existence to whom it had become my privilege , I could belong only to the nation at large , free from the trammels and above the dissensions of political parties . I well remember , too , how much pleased I was when the two Companies ...
... existence to whom it had become my privilege , I could belong only to the nation at large , free from the trammels and above the dissensions of political parties . I well remember , too , how much pleased I was when the two Companies ...
Page 21
... existence , and to secure a permanent peace to Europe . Since the last jubilee , the American colonies , which had originally been peopled chiefly by British subjects who had left their homes to escape the yoke of religious intole rance ...
... existence , and to secure a permanent peace to Europe . Since the last jubilee , the American colonies , which had originally been peopled chiefly by British subjects who had left their homes to escape the yoke of religious intole rance ...
Page 27
... existence . When , on the 27th of September , 1831 , the meet ing of the Yorkshire Philosophical Society took place at York , in the theatre of the Yorkshire Museum , under the presidency of the late Earl Fitzwilliam , then Viscount ...
... existence . When , on the 27th of September , 1831 , the meet ing of the Yorkshire Philosophical Society took place at York , in the theatre of the Yorkshire Museum , under the presidency of the late Earl Fitzwilliam , then Viscount ...
Page 39
... existence ; and yet he aims at the gradual approximation to divine truth itself . If , then , there exists no difference between the work of the man of Science and that of the merest child , what constitutes the distinction ? Merely the ...
... existence ; and yet he aims at the gradual approximation to divine truth itself . If , then , there exists no difference between the work of the man of Science and that of the merest child , what constitutes the distinction ? Merely the ...
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Common terms and phrases
abstract laws advantage agricultural ALEXANDER VON HUMBOLDT Almighty amongst appreciation attention become begging-box blessings British Association capital cause census character Charterhouse Schools Christian Church City of Aberdeen classes common condition counties of Scotland CRADLE OF POLITICAL CREATE NEW SCIENCES direct discovery Divine Domesday Book duty Edinburgh National Gallery efforts enabled establishment evil exertions Exhibition of 1851 existence feeling further gratifying happiness highest hope human important increase individual industry influence inquiry interest International Statistical Congress knowledge labours lative laws laws of form master means ment Metropolitan Cattle Market mind moral nature noble object observations opinion peace peculiar point of sight POLITICAL ARITHMETIC production progress prosperity public at large pursuits recognised religious rendered require Roman Forum sacred schools scientific servant Society Sovereign spirit STARTLING FACTS statistical science subjects thought tion truth unity vast wants whilst whole Windsor Castle
Popular passages
Page 1 - DEPEND upon it, the interests of classes too often contrasted are identical, and it is only ignorance which prevents their uniting for each other's advantage. To dispel that ignorance, to show how man can help man, notwithstanding the complicated state of...
Page 44 - I conceive it to be the duty of every educated person closely to watch and study the time in which he lives, and, as far as in him lies, to add his humble mite of individual exertion to further the accomplishment of what he believes Providence to have ordained.
Page 45 - ... unity which breaks down the limits and levels the peculiar characteristics of the different nations of the earth, but rather a unity the result and product of those very national varieties and antagonistic qualities. The distances which separated the different nations and parts of the globe are...
Page 57 - The Exhibition of 1851 is to give us a true test and a living picture of the point of development at which the whole of mankind has arrived in this great task, and a new starting point from which all nations will be able to direct their further exertions.
Page 106 - ... all, can only embrace a comparatively short space of time, and a small number of experiments. From none of these causes can we hope for much progress ; for the mind, however ingenious, has no materials to work with, and remains in presence of phenomena, the causes of which are hidden from it. But...
Page 95 - Please to recollect that this species of bore is a most useful animal, well adapted for the ends for which Nature intended him. He alone, by constantly returning to the charge, and repealing the same truths and the same requests, succeeds in awakening attention to the cause which he advocates, and obtains that hearing which is granted him at last for self-protection, as the minor evil compared to his importunity, but which is requisite to make his cause understood.
Page 11 - The products of all quarters of the globe are placed at our disposal, and we have only to choose which is the best and the cheapest for our purposes, and the powers of production are intrusted to the stimulus of competition and capital.
Page 52 - ... the vast number of distinguished men who labour in her sacred cause, and whose achievements, while spreading innumerable benefits, justly attract the admiration of mankind, contrasted strongly in my mind with the consciousness of my own insignificance in this respect. I, a simple .admirer and would-be student of Science, to take the place of the chief and spokesman of the scientific men of the day, assembled in furtherance of their important objects !—the thing appeared to me impossible.
Page 15 - It was peculiar to him that in great things, as in small, all the difficulties and objections occurred to him ; first he would anxiously consider them, pause, and warn against rash resolutions ; but having convinced himself, after a long and careful investigation, that a step was not only right to be taken, but of the practical mode also of safely taking it, it became a necessity and a duty to him to take it ; all his caution and apparent timidity changed into courage and power of action, and at...
Page 7 - ... to know and worship Him, but endowed with the power of self-determination, having reason given him. for his guide. He can develop his faculties, place himself in harmony with his Divine prototype, and attain that happiness which is offered to him on earth, to be completed hereafter in entire union with Him through the mercy of Christ. But he can also leave these faculties unimproved, and miss his mission on earth. He will then sink to the level of the lower animals, forfeit happiness, and separate...