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  • (1) My purpose in this address is to set forth […] the marked merits, and the no less patent defects, of the present system of legal study, and to show what is the field which this system leaves open for professorial and academical teaching. (2) The prevailing method of reading in chambers is […] a method of instruction which would strike a foreigner as strange […]. When a student “reading for the bar” enters the chambers of a barrister […] the [barrister] does not in any way undertake to teach. Our student pays a hundred guineas, and the barrister undertakes that his pupil shall see all the work that goes on in chambers, and have an opportunity of trying his own hand at doing it […]. What teaching (if any) he may obtain is a matter of chance […]. Our young man reading for the bar […] [if] he is to learn law, he must pick it up for himself […]. The oddity of the thing is, that he after all gets in due time, mainly by the process of imitation, to make pretty tolerable bricks […]. [...]

  • Working Men! To you I dedicate a work, in which I have tried to lay before my German Countrymen a faithful picture of your condition, of your sufferings and struggles, of your hopes and prospects. I have lived long enough amidst you to know something about your circumstances; I have devoted to their knowledge my most serious attention, I have studied the various official and non-official documents as far as I was able to get hold of them - I have not been satisfied with this, I wanted more than a mere abstract knowledge of my subject, I wanted to see you in your own homes, to observe you in your every-day life, to chat with you on your condition and grievances, to witness your struggles against the social and political power of your oppressors.[...]

  • Sir, – I observe that the Post Office clerks who have charge of the telegraphs have been holding a meeting to suggest improvements in the conduct of the service. To judge by my experience, there are some improvements they might contrive to introduce without any such ceremony; and it may be useful if you will let me give your readers an instance of the manner in which telegraphic business is now conducted in the City of London. [...]

  • The Office of the Chief Secretary was the head administrative office of the Civil Government: through it were chanelled all departmental, consular, ecclesiastical and individual correspondence, and all naval and military correspondence concerning civil matters. Local Government policy emanated only from this office, through letters and orders to the various heads of department, ordinances and publications in the Government Gazette. [...]

  • Wie wichtig es für die Entwicklung nicht nur unserer industriellen und ökonomischen Verhältnisse, sondern unseres gesamten Kulturlebens ist, Erzeugnisse aus fremden Zonen und Welttheilen, sie mögen der Pflanzen- oder Thierwelt angehören, auf den heimischen Boden überzusiedeln, bedarf hier wohl keiner näheren Auseinandersetzung, da es schon anderweitig oft genug überzeugend nachgewiesen worden ist. Man denke nur daran, daß z.B. die Kartoffel jetzt das Hauptnahrungsmittel von Millionen Menschen, erst aus der neuen Welt bei uns eingeführt worden ist, daß sie Heimath der meisten unserer Getreidearten und Obstbäume in weiten Fernen liegt und auch unsere Hausthiere ursprünglich ganz andere Länder bewohnt haben! Mit jeder Pflanze, mit jeder Frucht, mit jedem nutzbaren Thiere, dessen Einführung uns gelingt, ist ein Schritt weiter zur Emanzipation des Vaterlandes von der Fremde gethan. [...]

  • The object of this Company is to realise the rights granted by the Government of Ecuador, to the holders of its Land Warrants, by obtaining possession of the lands allotted by that Government in discharge of its obligations, and developing their varied resources for the benefit of the Company. These lands offer a vast field for enterprise, as well in the cultivation of a rich and fertile soil, yielding in abundance Timber, Tobacco, Maize, Quinine, Cotton, Wheat, Cocoa, Coffee, Vanilla, Panama Straw, India-Rubber, and Cochineal, as in the exploration of the Gold, Silver, Quicksilver, Copper, and Emerald Mines, abounding in those parts. [...]

  • Die Idee ist mir oft gekommen, inmitten der Schönheiten der Weltausstellung, einen Blick auf die Lebensbedingungen und den Charakter der verschiedenen Arbeiter zu werfen, die der Ausstellung alle Ehre gemacht haben, und zu untersuchen, welche geheimnisvollen Beziehungen zwischen ihnen und ihren Arbeiten bestehen. Warum zeichnet sich jedes Land durch einen eigenständigen nationalen Stil aus, der dazu führt, dass die ausgestellten Möbel, Waffen, Spitzen und Stoffe sich in Paris, London, Wien oder Madrid so deutlich voneinander unterscheiden? [...]

  • As I pass through the wide streets, I am delighted with everything I see. The houses so lofty and clean, and white, the novel appearance of the trees planted along the pavements, the fine buildings, the massive bronze lamps, and the magnificent cafés, the tinkling of bells on the horses, so singular to my ear. […]