To us, too, the future of the United States is of incalculable importance. Already we feel their influence much, and we shall feel it more. We have a good deal to learn from them ; we shall find in them, also, many things to beware of, many points in... American Institutions and Their Preservation - Pagina 5door William Wilson Cook - 1927 - 403 pagina’sVolledige weergave - Over dit boek
| 1888 - 1008 pagina’s
...Arnold has in his famous classification of his countrymen into Barbarians, Philistines, and Populace, an upper class materialized, a middle class vulgarized, and a lower class brutalized. Arnold has not the Hellenic joyousness, youthfulness, and spontaneity. His is a " sad lucidity of soul,"... | |
| World alliance of reformed Churches - 1880 - 1218 pagina’s
...sinew of the people will not be, even to that extent, hypocritical. Matthew Arnold has said of England: "We have an upper class materialized, a middle class vulgarized, and a lower class brutalized." Such distinctions will not be acknowledged in this land. As Hoi yoke says, " There are no common people... | |
| Edward Livermore Burlingame, Robert Bridges, Alfred Sheppard Dashiell, Harlan Logan - 1926 - 840 pagina’s
...not Matthew Arnold assert again and again, and yet again, that in his day in Great Britain there was "an upper class materialized, a middle class vulgarized, and a lower class brutalized"? Did not Macaulay perch his fabled New Zealander on a broken arch of London Bridge two or three tunes... | |
| Matthew Arnold - 1888 - 216 pagina’s
...States is of incalculable importance. Already we feel their influence much, and we shall feel it more. We have a good deal to learn from them ; we shall...middle class vulgarized, and a lower class brutalized. But the predominance of the common and ignoble, born of the predominance of the average man, is a malady... | |
| 1888 - 572 pagina’s
...States is of incalculable importance. Already we feel their influence much, and we shall feel it more. We have a good deal to learn from them ; we shall...malady here may no longer be that we have an upper elass materialized, a middle class vulgarized, and a lower elass brutalized. But the predominance of... | |
| 1888 - 892 pagina’s
...States is of incalculable importance. Already we feel their influence much, and we shall feel it more. We have a good deal to learn from them ; we shall...As our country becomes more democratic, the malady hete may no longer be that we have an upper class materialized, a middle class vulgarized, and a lower... | |
| Matthew Arnold - 1888 - 212 pagina’s
...• of incaleulable",'importance. Already we feel their influence much, and We shall feel it more. We have a good deal to learn from them; we Shall find...things to beware ''• of, many points in which it is 1x3 be hoped our \ , democracy may not be like theirs. As our country becomes more democratic, the... | |
| 1888 - 498 pagina’s
...branch of the business—the study of spending."— KUSKJN, Lecture on Traffic. nold's accusation of "an upper class materialized, a middle class vulgarized, and a lower class brutalized." But here the ethical explorer is sternly bidden to halt, and read the warning of the god Terminus:... | |
| 1889 - 606 pagina’s
..."che humanization of man in society." The struggle in his own country, he asserts, has resulted in "an upper class materialized, a middle class vulgarized, and a lower class brutalized." We trust that our efforts have yielded better fruit; and since medical science and medical men are... | |
| |