"A principal aim of education is to give students a taste for literature, for the books of life and power, and to accomplish this, it is necessary that their minds be held aloof from the babblement and discussions of the hour, that they may accustom themselves to take interest in the words and deeds of the greatest men, and so make themselves able and worthy to shape a larger and nobler future; but if their hours of leisure are spent over journals and reviews, they will, in later years, become the helpless victims of the newspaper habit."
Quote Details
Added by wikiquote-import-bot
Unverified quote
0 likes
Original Language: English
Available Languages (1)
Sources
p. 148
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/John_Lancaster_Spalding
Revision History
No revisions have been submitted for this quote.
Categories
John Lancaster Spalding
John Lancaster Spalding (June 2, 1840 β August 25, 1916) was the first bishop of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Peoria from 1877 to 1908, a notable scholarly writer of the time and, a co-founder of The Catholic University of America.
202 quotes on TrueQuotesView all quotes by John Lancaster Spalding β
Related Quotes
"If the young are watched too closely, if they are kept habitually under surveillance, the spring of action is weakeneβ¦"
"The best money can procure for thee is freedom to live in thy true self. It is more apt however to enslave than to liβ¦"
"If thy friends tire of thee, remember that it is human to tire of everything."
"They who think they know all, learn nothing."
"Agitators and declaimers may heat the blood, but they do not illumine the mind."
"Wouldst thou bestow some precious gift upon thy fellows, make thyself a noble man."
"What we think out for ourselves forms channels in which other thoughts will flow."
"If we are disappointed that men give little heed to what we utter is it for their sake or our own?"
"Be content that others have position, if thou hast ability: that others have riches, if thou hast virtue."
"The value of a mind is measured by the nature of the objects it habitually contemplates. They whose thoughts are of tβ¦"