... faculty of combination ; save and except also that the savage, as I have known him, is to a large extent free from the greed of money, which eats like a cancer into the heart of the white man. It is a depressing conclusion, but in all essentials the... The American Federationist - 220. lappuse1899Pilnskats - Par šo grāmatu
| 1887 - 722 lapas
...as the savage is, so is the white man, only the latter is more inventive, and possesses the faculty of combination ; save and except also that the savage,...but in all essentials the savage and the child of civilisation are identical. I daresay that the highly civilised lady reading this, will smile at an... | |
| BARCROFT BOAKE - 1897 - 512 lapas
...few sentences to show the drift of this:— 'Ah ! this civilisation, what does it all come to? ... It is a depressing conclusion, but in all essentials the savage and the child of civilisation are identical . . . Civilisation is only savagery silver-gilt. . . So, when the heart... | |
| Henry Rider Haggard - 1899 - 362 lapas
...that as the savage is, so is the white man, only the latter is more inventive, and possesses a faculty of combination ; save and except also that the savage,...but in all essentials the savage and the child of civilisation are identical. I dare say that the highly civilised lady reading this will smile at an... | |
| 1915 - 522 lapas
...that as the savage is, so the white man, only the latter is more inventive, and possesses the faculty of combination, — save and except also, that the savage, as I have known him, is free from the greed of money, which eats like a cancer into the heart of the white man In savage lands... | |
| George Hubbard Blakeslee, Granville Stanley Hall, Harry Elmer Barnes - 1915 - 522 lapas
...that as the savage is, so the white man, only the latter is more inventive, and possesses the faculty of combination, — save and except also, that the savage, as I have known him, is free from the greed of money, which eats like a cancer into the heart of the white man In savage lands... | |
| Martin Burgess Green - 1991 - 268 lapas
...the refined ways of those "children of light," his countrymen, but he can't because he believes that "in all essentials the savage and the child of civilization are identical" (p. 14). This was, of course, what many people were saying then — for instance, Freud's cultural... | |
| Christopher Lane - 1995 - 348 lapas
...is the white man, only the latter is more inventive, and possesses the faculty of combination. ... It is a depressing conclusion, but in all essentials the savage and the child of civilisation are identical. I dare say that the highly civilised lady reading this will smile at an... | |
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