Cambridge Essays on Education by Various
page 15 of 216 (06%)
page 15 of 216 (06%)
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true of many branches of that administrative work which is now being
thrust, in growing volume, upon the State and its officials. If we feel this as respects the internal economic life of our country, is it not true also of the international life of the world? In the stress and competition of our times, the future belongs to the nations that recognise the worth of Knowledge and Thought, and best understand how to apply the accumulated experience of the past. In the long run it is knowledge and wisdom that rule the world, not knowledge only, but knowledge applied with that width of view and sympathetic comprehension of men, and of other nations, which are the essence of statesmanship. [Footnote 1: This has been clearly seen and admirably stated by the present President of the Board of Education.] [Footnote 2: Take for instance this little fragment of Alcman: Greek: _Ou m heti, parthenikai meligaryest imerophônoi, Gyia pherein dynatai. Bale dê Bale kêrylos eiên, Hos t hepi kymatos hanthos ham alkyonessi potêtai Nêleges hêtor hechôn haliporphyros eiaros hornis._ What can be more exquisite than the epithets in the first line, or more fresh and delicate and tender in imaginative quality than the three last? A modern poet of equal genius would treat the topic with equal force and grace, but the charm, the untranslatable charm of antique simplicity, would be absent.] |
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