Practical Education, Volume II Practical Education, Volume II

Practical Education, Volume II

Publisher Description

As long as gentlemen feel a deficiency in their own education, when they have not a competent knowledge of the learned languages, so long must a parent be anxious, that his son should not be exposed to the mortification of appearing inferiour to others of his own rank. It is in vain to urge, that language is only the key to science; that the names of things are not the things themselves; that many of the words in our own language convey scarcely any, or at best but imperfect, ideas; that the true genius, pronunciation, melody, and idiom of Greek, are unknown to the best scholars, and that it cannot reasonably be doubted, that if Homer or Xenophon were to hear their works read by a professor of Greek, they would mistake them for the sounds of an unknown language.

RELEASED
1849
22 May
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
413
Pages
PUBLISHER
Public Domain
SIZE
408.2
KB

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