Then are you aware, that in every work the beginning is the most important part, especially in dealing with anything young and tender? for that is the time when any impression, which one may desire to communicate, is most readily stamped and taken. Albany Medical Annals - Page 6731913Full view - About this book
| Plato - 1866 - 576 pages
...meant when I said that music ought to be taken up before gymnastic. You are right. Then are you aware, that in every work the beginning is the most important...especially in dealing with anything young and tender? for that is the time when any impression, which one may desire to communicate, is most readily stamped... | |
| John Stuart Blackie - 1866 - 550 pages
...when I said that music ought to be taken up before gymnastic. " You are right. " Then are you aware, that in every work the beginning is the most important...especially in dealing with anything young and tender : for yonth is the season when any impression, which one may desire to communicate, is most readily... | |
| Homerus - 1866 - 506 pages
...when I said that music ought to be taken up before gymnastic. " You are right. " Then are you aware, that in every work the beginning is the most important...especially in dealing with anything young and tender : for youth is the season when any impression, which one may desire to communicate, is most readily... | |
| Roger William Bede Vaughan - 1871 - 900 pages
...taught to children. Does not the following, mutatis mutandis, apply to our day? — "Then you are aware that, in every work, the beginning is the most important...especially in dealing with anything young and tender ? for that is the time when any impression, which one may desire to communicate, is most readily stamped... | |
| abp. Roger William Bede Vaughan - 1871 - 884 pages
...children. Does not the following, mutatis mutandis •, apply to our day? — " Then you are aware that, in every work, the beginning is the most important...especially in dealing with anything young and tender ? for that is the time when any impression, which one may desire to communicate, is most readily stamped... | |
| Charles Henry Ham - 1886 - 442 pages
...for example, this proposition of Plato — * "Emilius and Sophia," Vol. I., p. 40. London: 1767. " The beginning is the most important part, especially in dealing with anything young and tender, for that is the time when any impression which one may desire to communicate is most readily stamped... | |
| Plato - 1888 - 422 pages
...meant when I said that music ought to be taken up before gymnastic. You are right. Then are you aware, that in every work the beginning is the most important...especially in dealing with anything young and tender? for that is the time when any impression, which one may desire to communicate, is most readily stamped... | |
| 1888 - 596 pages
...against disaster, than to the underlying principles oi a child's education. It was Plato who said, "the beginning is the most important part, especially in dealing with anything young and tender, for that is the time when any impression which we may desire to communicate is most readily stamped... | |
| Robert Hebert Quick - 1890 - 618 pages
...subjects, wise men go on saying the same thing in all ages and nobody listens to them. Plato said " In every work the beginning is the most important...especially in dealing with anything young and tender." (Rep., bk. ii, 377 ; Davies and Vaughan, p. 65.) And the complaints about " bad grounding " prove our... | |
| 1895 - 620 pages
...Come, then, like idle story-tellers in a story, let us describe the education. . . Then you are aware that In every work the beginning is the most important...especially in dealing with anything young and tender? — Plato, " Republic," 375-377. Plato, not Fru'bel, is the creator of the kindergarten and of modern... | |
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