| 1831 - 400 pages
...that the poor Americans were men because they wanted beards, the sign of virility among other nations. We are all born savages, whether we are brought into...— the man of the woods and the literary recluse. Take a number of children from the niusery, place them apart, and allow them to grow up without instruction... | |
| 1831 - 398 pages
...that the poor Americans were men because they wanted beards, the sign of virility among other nations. We are all born savages, whether we are brought into...of commercial enterprise — the man of the woods und the literary recluse. Take a number of children from the nussery, place them apart, and allow them... | |
| 1831 - 418 pages
...that the poor Americans were men because they wanted beards, the sign of virility among other nations. We are all born savages, whether we are brought into...of commercial enterprise — the man of the woods und the literary recluse. Take a number of children from the nursery, place them apart, and allow them... | |
| 1832 - 510 pages
...that the poor Americans were men because they wanted beards, the sign of virility among other nations. We are all born savages, whether we are brought into...— the man of the woods and the literary recluse. Take a number of children from the nursery, place them apart, and allow them to grow up without instruction... | |
| Wilson Armistead - 1848 - 654 pages
...own creator. We are all born savages, whether we are brought into the world in the populous city or the lonely desert. It is the discipline of education,...— the listless savage and the man of commercial enterprize — the man of the woods and the literary recluse. The mind of man, like a garden, requires... | |
| Wilson Armistead - 1848 - 668 pages
...have to give a colouring of dark grey. Man may be said to be, in a great measure, his own creator. We are all born savages, whether we are brought into the world in the populous city or the lonely desert, It is the discipline of education, and the circumstances under which we are placed,... | |
| Ernest Bruce Iwan-Müller - 1902 - 800 pages
...germs of the policy which was to be so productive of future trouble. We are all born savages (he says), whether we are brought into the world in the populous...enterprise, the man of the woods and the literary recluse. . . . We may see what our ancestors were at the time Julius Cssar invaded Britain by the present condition... | |
| Ernest Bruce Iwan-Müller - 1902 - 798 pages
...germs of the policy which was to be so productive of future trouble. We are all born savages (he says), whether we are brought into the world in the populous...circumstances under which we are placed which create 1he difference between the rude barbarian and the polished citizen, the l1stless savage and the man... | |
| John L. Comaroff, Jean Comaroff - 2009 - 612 pages
...emphasize racialized difference and degeneracy (see below). Said Dr. Philip (1828,2:316-17), in the 1820s: We are all born savages, whether we are brought into...difference between the rude barbarian and the polished citizen—the listless savage and the man of commercial enterprise. ... [In South Africa] we see, as... | |
| Martin Daunton, Rick Halpern - 1999 - 422 pages
...the controversial London Missionary Society Superintendent Dr John Philip, insisted that it is only "the discipline of education and the circumstances...the rude barbarian and the polished citizen - the listlers savage and the man of commercial enterprise the man o1 the woods and the literary recluse".... | |
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