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" By all means, have you give great attention to your arithmetic, as its advantages are so many and important. "
Dorothea Dix
Your
Great
Attention
Related Quotes:
" Happy are those who dwell apart from the harrowing tumults of public life! "
Dorothea Dix
Public
Who
Those
" The fact is that, in all prisons everywhere, cruelties on the one hand and injudicious laxity of discipline on the other have at times appeared and will, at intervals, be renewed except the most vigilant oversight is maintained. "
Dorothea Dix
Hand
Discipline
Fact
" The olive branch has been consecrated to peace, palm branches to victory, the laurel to conquest and poetry, the myrtle to love and pleasure, the cypress to mourning, and the willow to despondency. "
Dorothea Dix
Victory
Pleasure
Peace
" Floral emblems have been often adopted. The houses of York and Lancaster had their roses, the Bourbons of France, the fleur-de-lis, Scotland her thistle, and Ireland her shamrock. "
Dorothea Dix
Ireland
France
Scotland
" All my habits through life have been singularly removed from any condition of reliance on others, and the feeling - right or wrong - that aloneness is my proper position has prevailed since my early childhood, no doubt nourished and strengthened by many and quick-following bereavements. "
Dorothea Dix
Early
Childhood
Life
" I was early taught by sorrow to shed tears, and now when sudden joy lights up, or any unexpected sorrow strikes my heart, I find it difficult to repress the full and swelling tide of feeling. "
Dorothea Dix
Unexpected
Tears
Joy
" The duties of a teacher are neither few nor small, but they elevate the mind and give energy to the character. "
Dorothea Dix
Character
Mind
Small
" No blessing, no good, can follow in the path trodden by slavery. "
Dorothea Dix
Slavery
Path
Good
" Society during the last hundred years has been alternately perplexed and encouraged respecting the two great questions: how shall the criminal and pauper be disposed of in order to reduce crime and reform the criminal on the one hand and, on the other, to diminish pauperism and restore the pauper to useful citizenship? "
Dorothea Dix
Citizenship
Society
Questions
" The rose is the flower and handmaiden of love - the lily, her fair associate, is the emblem of beauty and purity. "
Dorothea Dix
Flower
Fair
Beauty
" I may be too craving of that rich gift, the power of sharing other minds. I have drunk deeply, long, and oh! how blissfully at this fountain in a foreign clime. Hearts met hearts, minds joined with minds; and what were the secondary trials of pain to the enfeebled, suffering body when daily was administered the soul's medicine and food! "
Dorothea Dix
Power
Gift
Food
" Your minds may now be likened to a garden, which will, if neglected, yield only weeds and thistles; but, if cultivated, will produce the most beautiful flowers, and the most delicious fruits. "
Dorothea Dix
Flowers
Beautiful
Now
" I believe the best mode of aiding convicts is so to apportion their tasks in prison as to give to the industrious the opportunity of earning a sum for themselves by 'over-work.' A man usually values that most for which he has labored; he uses that most frugally which he has toiled hour by hour and day by day to acquire. "
Dorothea Dix
Day
Believe
Opportunity
" What greater bliss than to look back on days spent in usefulness, in doing good to those around us. "
Dorothea Dix
Good
Back
Doing
" Of my English friends, I should find language too poor to speak the just praise and the excellence which shines in their characters and lives. "
Dorothea Dix
Speak
Language
Excellence
" 'Know,' says a wise writer, the historian of kings, 'Know the men that are to be trusted'; but how is this to be? The possession of knowledge involves both time and opportunities. Neither of these are 'handservants at command.' "
Dorothea Dix
Wise
Know
Kings
" My happiest hours are spent in school, surrounded by those I hope to benefit. "
Dorothea Dix
Hours
Benefit
Happiest
" I must study alone, as I am condemned to do every thing alone, I believe, in this life. "
Dorothea Dix
Believe
Life
I Believe
" Think how slow would be your progress in learning without printed books: you could study only manuscripts, and those necessarily must be very few in number. Learn from this to value your books, and always handle them with care. "
Dorothea Dix
Value
Think
Progress
" Rules must be established and enforced, and, as numbers are increased in prisons, the necessity for vigilance increases. These rules, let it be understood, may be kindly while firmly enforced. I would never suffer any exhibition of ill-temper or an arbitrary exercise of authority. "
Dorothea Dix
Exercise
Numbers
Rules
" There is, in our nature, a disposition to indulgence, a secret desire to escape from labor, which, unless hourly combated, will overcome and destroy the best faculties of our minds and paralyze our most useful powers. "
Dorothea Dix
Escape
Best
Nature
" I shall be well enough when I get to Kentucky or Alabama. The tonic I need is the tonic of opposition. That always sets me on my feet. "
Dorothea Dix
Feet
Me
Need
" If we had only those things which are procured with ease and freedom from danger, we should find the comforts and luxuries, if not many of the necessaries of life, considerably diminished. "
Dorothea Dix
Danger
Find
Freedom
" Indulged habits of dependence create habits of indolence, and indolence opens the portal to petty errors, to many degrading habits, and to vice and crime with their attendant train of miseries. "
Dorothea Dix
Habits
Train
Crime
" Attention to any subject will in a short time render it attractive, be it ever so disagreeable and tedious at first. "
Dorothea Dix
Will
Time
Short
" Time passed solely in the pursuit of pleasure leaves no solid enjoyment for the future; but from the hours you spend in reading and studying useful books, you will gather a golden harvest in future years. "
Dorothea Dix
Harvest
Reading
You
" Always remember those things that tend to strengthen and improve your understanding. You cannot learn without attention, neither retain those lessons that you have once learnt without frequently reflecting upon and reviewing them in your mind; by this means, things long past will remain impressed upon your memory. "
Dorothea Dix
Past
Memory
Long
" They say, 'Nothing can be done here!' I reply, 'I know no such word in the vocabulary I adopt!' "
Dorothea Dix
Know
Here
Nothing
" My wish is to be known only thru my work. "
Dorothea Dix
Wish
Thru
Known
" In order to do good, a man must be good; and he will not be good except he have instruction by counsel and by example. "
Dorothea Dix
Will
Counsel
Order