Tracts on Republican Government and National Education: Addressed to the Inhabitants of the United States of America |
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Page 3
... republic in which the voice of the people is in theory , and ought to be in practice , the director of the people's affairs . The voice of the people , that is to say , the majority of their votes , ought to decide all great measures ...
... republic in which the voice of the people is in theory , and ought to be in practice , the director of the people's affairs . The voice of the people , that is to say , the majority of their votes , ought to decide all great measures ...
Page 8
... republic , that I might repeat in the ears of every citizen , the advice : " Vote for those men only who will support a State Education . Cast aside party feelings . Cast aside favourite schemes . Ask not if your candidate be a mason or ...
... republic , that I might repeat in the ears of every citizen , the advice : " Vote for those men only who will support a State Education . Cast aside party feelings . Cast aside favourite schemes . Ask not if your candidate be a mason or ...
Page 9
... republic unite to carry , they will carry - against riches , against patron- age , against sophistry , against intrigue against every power which sharp wits , rendered yet sharper by the sense of personal interest , can bring in array ...
... republic unite to carry , they will carry - against riches , against patron- age , against sophistry , against intrigue against every power which sharp wits , rendered yet sharper by the sense of personal interest , can bring in array ...
Page 11
... republic ? We have had enough of declarations ; let us have realities . We have said we are free and equal ; let us become so . It needs not the chain or the manacle to constitute the slave . There is a slavery beyond that of fetters ...
... republic ? We have had enough of declarations ; let us have realities . We have said we are free and equal ; let us become so . It needs not the chain or the manacle to constitute the slave . There is a slavery beyond that of fetters ...
Page 12
... republic , and the expences be defrayed by means of a property tax , and in addition , perhaps , as suggested by my co - editor , in her lecture on Existing Evils , by a light tax on each parent - if , I say , such a system of education ...
... republic , and the expences be defrayed by means of a property tax , and in addition , perhaps , as suggested by my co - editor , in her lecture on Existing Evils , by a light tax on each parent - if , I say , such a system of education ...
Other editions - View all
Tracts on Republican Government and National Education: Addressed to the ... Robert Dale Owen,Frances Wright No preview available - 2018 |
Tracts of Republican Government and National Education: Addressed to the ... Robert Dale Owen No preview available - 2016 |
Tracts of Republican Government and National Education: Addressed to the ... Robert Dale Owen No preview available - 2018 |
Common terms and phrases
abuses according awake to action character child choose citizens CITY ROAD common schools constitute dare not openly degradation difficulty district duty educa effect electors eloquence enemies England enlightened EQUAL NATIONAL EDUCATION establishments evils expences feel FRANCES WRIGHT free schools freemen happiness honest honour houses of refuge human hypocrite ignorance remain immoral situation inequality instruction intellectual interest opposed juvenile institution knowledge labour legislate less masters men of industry mind national improvement New-York obtain omnipotent opinions oppres oppressed parental tax party penal code people's perhaps Pledge yourselves political poor popular population Propose R. D. OWEN remedy repre representatives republic REPUBLICAN respects great measures righteous parent secure seek serfs servants slavery slaves sophistry spirit strength suffrages tion towns trifling twelve unite to carry universal reform voice vote contrary vote in decided wealth widows of Philadelphia wisely youth
Popular passages
Page 24 - For the purpose of public instruction, we hold every man subject to taxation in proportion to his property, and we look not to the question, whether he himself have, or have not, children to be benefited by the education for which he pays.
Page 24 - We do not, indeed, expect all men to be philosophers or statesmen ; but we confidently trust, and our expectation of the duration of our system of government rests on that trust, that by the diffusion of general knowledge and good and virtuous sentiments, the political fabric may be secure, as well against open violence and overthrow, as against the slow, but sure, undermining of licentiousness.
Page 5 - The working classes, in consequence of the injustice which has meted inordinate labor for their portion, have hitherto had but little time to improve their minds or form their manners. In consequence, there are few eloquent, and not a great many fluent speakers among them. This is to be regretted ; for eloquence is a giant power in a commonwealth like this. But we must take things as we find them, and make the best of them.
Page 24 - We seek to prevent, in some measure, the extension of the penal code, by inspiring a salutary and conservative principle of virtue, and of knowledge, in an early age. We hope to excite a feeling of respectability, and a sense of character, by enlarging the capacity, and increasing the sphere of intellectual enjoyment. By general instruction, we seek, as far as possible, to purify the whole moral atmosphere; to keep good sentiments uppermost, and to turn the strong current of feeling and opinion,...
Page 19 - I ask, to be fed and clothed, when, as all facts show, the labour of the parents is often insufficient for their own sustenance, and, almost universally, inadequate to the provision of the family without the united efforts of all its members ? In your manufacturing districts you have children worked for twelve hours a day; and, in the rapid and certain progress of the existing system, you will soon have them, as in England, worked to death, and yet unable, through the period of their miserable existence,...
Page 19 - I must hasten to the rapid developement of the system of instruction and protection which has occurred to me as capable, and alone capable, of opening the door to universal reform. In lieu of all common schools, high schools, colleges, seminaries, houses of refuge, or any other juvenile institution, instructional or protective, I would suggest that the state legislatures be directed (after laying off the whole in townships or hundreds) to organize, at suitable distances, and in convenient and healthy...
Page 20 - ... double tax might be at once expedient and politic. First, a moderate tax per head for every child, to be laid upon its parents conjointly, or divided between them, due attention being always paid to the varying strength of the two sexes, and to the undue depreciation which now rests on female labour.
Page 21 - Fed at a common board ; clothed in a common garb, uniting neatness with simplicity and convenience ; raised in the exercise of common duties, in the acquirement of the same knowledge and practice of the same industry, varied only according to individual taste and capabilities...
Page 20 - In the older establishments, the well directed and well protected labor of the pupil would, in time, suffice for, and, then, exceed their own support ; when the surplus might be devoted to the maintenance of the infant establishments. (in the beginning, and until all debt was cleared ofF, and so long as the same should be found favorable to the promotion of these best palladiums of a nation's happiness, a double tax might be at once expedient and politic. ) (First, a moderate tax per head for every...
Page 23 - In this particular, New England may be allowed to claim, I think, a merit of a peculiar character. She early adopted, and has constantly maintained the principle, that it is the undoubted right, and the bounden duty of government, to provide for the instruction of all youth.