| 1804 - 476 pages
...them, from their obedience. What now was the cause of this ? " It was because the higher orders ders of the community could write, and the inferior or•ders...religiously educated in the various charity schools and Sunday .schools in this kingdom, and were thus made capable of reading and comprehending those... | |
| 1804 - 400 pages
...dangers that surrounded them ; prepared to meet them with vigour, and actually repelled mem with success. And what was the occasion of this happy change? It...religiously educated in the various charity schools and Sunday schools of this kingdom." " It has, I know, been sometimes asserted that ignorance is the... | |
| 1804 - 824 pages
...and actually repelled them with success. And what was the occasion of this happy change ? It wa«, because the higher orders of the community could write,...because, for more than twenty years before, upwards of three hundred thousand children of the poor had been religiously educated in the- various charity schools... | |
| 1805 - 590 pages
...that surrounded them : prepared to meet them with vigour, and actually repelled them with success. And what was the occasion of this happy change? It...because, for more than twenty years before, upwards of 30O.OOO children of the poor had been religiously educated in the various charity schools and Sunday... | |
| Beilby Porteus - 1823 - 556 pages
...that surrounded them ; prepared to meet them with vigour, and actually repelled them with success. And what was the occasion of this happy change? It...because, for more than twenty years before, upwards of three hundred thousand children of the poor had been religiously educated in the various charity schools... | |
| Emília Viotti da Costa - 1994 - 406 pages
...in England the "higher orders" of the community could write and the inferior could read. More than 300,000 children of the poor had been religiously...schools, Sunday schools, and schools of industry, and they were capable of reading and comprehending "those admirable discourses, sermons and tracts... | |
| Great Britain. Parliament. House of Commons - 1816 - 530 pages
...from their delirium. They saw through the wicked artifices of the abettors of anarchy and irreligion. And what was the occasion of this happy change ? It...inferior orders could read. It was because for more than 20 years before, upwards of three hundred thousand children of the poor had been religiously educated... | |
| |