Whatever expense Government may incur in the education of the people will be amply repaid by the improvement of the country, for the general diffusion of knowledge is inseparably followed by more orderly habits, by increasing industry, by a taste for... The Quarterly Journal of Education - Page 161834Full view - About this book
| George Robert Gleig - India - 1830 - 472 pages
...public grants, and this small portion belongs chiefly to teachers of theology, law, and astronomy. Whatever expense Government may incur in the education...industry, by a taste for the comforts of life, by exertions to acquire them, and by the growing prosperity of the people. 8. It will be advisable to... | |
| Famines - 1874 - 428 pages
...great despatch with these memorable words: — "That any expenses which may be incurred for this object will be amply repaid by the improvement of the country,...more orderly habits, by increasing industry, by a tasto for the comforts of life, by exertion to acquire them, and by the growing prosperity of the people."... | |
| Sir Thomas Munro - Chennai (India) - 1881 - 422 pages
...public grants, and this small portion belongs chiefly to teachers of theology, law, and astronomy. Whatever expense Government may incur in the education...knowledge is inseparably followed by more orderly habits, hy increasing industry, by a taste for the comforts of life, by exertion to acquire them, and by the... | |
| Ramananda Chatterjee - India - 1913 - 422 pages
...country, is higher than it was in most European countries at no very distant period Whatever expense the Government may incur in the education of the people,...industry, by a taste for the comforts of life, by exertions to acquire them, and by the growing prosperity of the people." His Minute on the monopoly... | |
| George Devereux Oswell - Great Britain - 1908 - 224 pages
...introduction of a general system of education amongst the people, and he wrote thus on the subject : ' Whatever expense Government may incur in the education...industry, by a taste for the comforts of life, by exertions to acquire them, and by the growing prosperity of the people.' His views, moreover, of the... | |
| Sir Andrew Henderson Leith Fraser - Bengal (India) - 1911 - 454 pages
...by Sir Thomas Munro of Madras, to the effect that any expenses which may be incurred in education " will be amply repaid by the improvement of the country ; for the general diffusion of knowledge is invariably followed by more orderly habits, by increasing industry, by a taste for the comforts of... | |
| National Archives of India - 1922 - 538 pages
...Thomas Munro, in words used many years since, that any expense which may be incurred for this object " will be amply re-paid by the improvement of the country...more orderly habits, by increasing industry, by a test for the comforts of life, by exertion to acquire them, and by the growing prosperity of the people."... | |
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