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Thomas Wentworth Higginson, Carlyle's laugh and other surprises 1 1 Browse Search
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Thomas Wentworth Higginson, Carlyle's laugh and other surprises, chapter 18 (search)
ry. Forty were at last got together to have the conditions explained--ten agreed to go next morning, of whom one arrived at the station, and she would not go alone! On another occasion we read in the Diary : We talked of Father Taylor, and he [Atkinson] told us that the great orator once began a sermon by leaning over the pulpit, with his arms folded, and saying, You people ought to be very good, if you're not, for you live in Paradise already. The conversation, in which Sir Louis Malet took part, turned to Mill's economical heresies, especially that which relates to the fostering of infant industries. Atkinson drew a striking picture of the highly primitive economic condition of the South before the war, and said that now factories of all kinds are springing up throughout the country in spite of the keen competition of the North. He cited a piece of advice given to his brother by Theodore Parker, Never try to lecture down to your audience. This maxim is in strict a