In his speeches, in his explanations of his views, and especially in his fables, he is constantly comparing the education of man, even from the intellectual and moral point of view, to the development and growth of a plant. It is evident that, in his... Pestalozzi: His Life and Work - Side 123af Roger de baron Guimps - 1904 - 438 siderFuld visning - Om denne bog
| Roger de baron Guimps - 1890 - 474 sider
...the gentle rains, the glittering dew, and the refreshing rest of night. Teach me, summer day, that man, formed from the dust of the earth, grows and ripens like the plant rooted in the soil." Pestalozzi paints one of the most touching and original features of... | |
| Robert Hebert Quick - 1890 - 612 sider
...hands of Pestalozzi and Froebel. The passage quoted by Guimps is this : " Teach me, summer day, that man formed from the dust of the earth, grows and ripens like the plant rooted in the soil." § 37. Between the close of the year 1787 and 1797 Pestalozzi did not... | |
| Charles Larrabee Street - 1926 - 186 sider
...of the individual growing from within, like a plant or a tree. He says: "Teach me, summer day, that man, formed from the dust of the earth, grows and ripens like a plant, rooted in the soil." Mill mentions Pestalozzi as a particularly important figure in the history of the development of the... | |
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