Book Summary
The publisher of this book utilises modern printing technologies as well as photocopying processes for reprinting and preserving rare works of literature that are out-of-print or on the verge of becoming lost. This book is one such reprint. Purchase of this book includes free trial access to www.million-books.com where you can read more than a million books for free. This is an OCR edition with typos. Excerpt from book: licious persons may not destroy the crop. How effectually would the reception of one passage of scripture eradicate all these fears : " The prayers of the wicked are an abomination to the Lord." How absent from the minds of this people are all ideas of the essential necessity of holy dispositions in our approaches to the Almighty. Hindoo mothers display an excessive attachment to their offspring : but this fondness, confining its cares to the body, leads them to feed their children to excess ; to indulge them with pernicious food, which brings on early diseases-; and to permit evil tempers to grow without correction : and thus maternal affection is converted into the greatest possible bane. The exercises of the village school exhibit an exclusive concern for secular interests, without the least reference to the enlargement of the mind. A Hindoo has not the most distant idea that schools ought to inculcate morals, and the first principles of religion. It is by mere accident that the names of the gods, mingled with other names, form a spelling lesson : a schoolmaster.in the same manner as a head servant, is termed a sirkar ; he teaches a certain art useful in obtaining a livelihood. That this is the only idea the Hindoos have of schools, is further proved by the disgraceful fact, that all India does not supply a single school for girls ! Their ideas are, that the employments of women-do not require the assistance of education : she can sweep the house, cook, collect cow- dnng for fuel, wait on her lord, and feed her children without it, and having discharged hrse offices with fidelity, the whole work of her life is accomplished. The use of the needle, knitting, and imparting knowledge to her children, are duties to which she has no call, and for which she is wholly incapacitat...
Book Details
Book Name | A View Of The History, Literature, And Religion, Of The Hindoos |
Author | William Ward |
Publisher | General Books (Oct 2010) |
ISBN | 9780217313193 |
Pages | 310 |
Language | English |
Price | 1511 |