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6 THE PKOFESSION OF THE TEACHER.
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
Additionally, when viewing full transcripts, extracted text may not be in the same order as the original document.
The Annual Reports Of The Governesses' B...
couches of the female wards , and thou wilt find there drifted waifs ai months * d strays and from the in " upper clothing and middle upon a classes pauper " ' s who fare . pass long
Such a search years would pauper convince the brave and honest independence of those who say , " Let us work hard -while we have strength , on do
the terms that society allows ; and when we cannot so any more , let substitute us suffer for privation sufficient in silence " that , let the us wide not - accep spread t charity efforts mad as a e wages
b for y rule the governesses of occasion life can . during No deny one the what who last , Turks accep fifteen and ts years the Pagan Christian have s both been preach reli justified gion and as
a practise , —that the simple direct effort to relieve pain and poverty is " civilized one * of the " commun primary ity duties , where of a a degraded human creature class exists . In who a hig live hly and whom indiscriminate
systematically upon the fruits of begging , street destitute aid can - giving on families ly corru of half p with t further pence six , small to there blind children may beggars be cogent of impossible with reasons baskets relative against , and
while ages , walking listening in to the a graduated political economist procession who at warns a snail us ' s that trot . charity But in
is the often seeds onl of y greater another misery name than for self it - professes indulgence to alleviate feeling , , we sowing must doctrine b
not forget that the limitations to this imposed y justice and by religion are sufficient of themselves class to to constitute the a exertions positive
of code others . We but must we not must train set up ourselves any to work depend to on help those who sufferin ; such a way as may tend to lessen their present pain
and th , eir future need , without counting too closely the money value of the precious ointment bestowed upon that humanity which
we share in common . out We scanty very hel much with doubt a whether gruding the hand action which of our seems poor- to law offer , doling an
p g , ill to -defined our lower ri than ght classes in alms the bestowed p tha lace n of almsg honest b iving those charit . who We y , is throw are not sure more their it degradin hearts is more in g degrading y
hungry while with them striving and . to But clothe that at benefit the any naked rate to , it the and is individual to our afford plainest shelter shall duty not to to the result feed aged the in ,
injury For and be it degradation observedlife to the is no class such . smooth and easy matter that
fault we can or , say that of of any any one one , who now has living fallen . into It has misfortun pleased e that Providence it is their to
p we lace cannot , us in in a many moral cases atmosp assi here gn the of particular so many ming causes led of elements a particular that
hel povert tary less incapacity y . hundreds There ;— are banks and such a will things commercial break as hereditary and crisis swallow drags diseases up into the and fortunes its heredi vortex of
p ,
6 The Pkofession Of The Teacher.
6 THE _PKOFESSION OF THE TEACHER .
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Citation
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English Woman’s Journal (1858-1864), March 1, 1858, page 6, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/ewj/issues/ewj_01031858/page/6/
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