Contributions to the Science of Charity1879 - Charities |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 89
Page 4
... visitors will give nothing from the society tor of their own - subject to the exception which over- rules all law of absolute and immediate suffering . And even this exception must substantially disappear when the new plan of work is ...
... visitors will give nothing from the society tor of their own - subject to the exception which over- rules all law of absolute and immediate suffering . And even this exception must substantially disappear when the new plan of work is ...
Page 6
... visitor looks him up , and lets him know he will be prosecuted and shut up in the workhouse . And so on . In each case the best decision , on their best judgment , after brief consultation . Visitors are not selected at hap - hazard ...
... visitor looks him up , and lets him know he will be prosecuted and shut up in the workhouse . And so on . In each case the best decision , on their best judgment , after brief consultation . Visitors are not selected at hap - hazard ...
Page 9
... visitors of the different relief - giving societies into mutual acquaintance with each other , and their ways and works , so that intelligent co - operation . may replace conflict and competition and overlapping . A district conference ...
... visitors of the different relief - giving societies into mutual acquaintance with each other , and their ways and works , so that intelligent co - operation . may replace conflict and competition and overlapping . A district conference ...
Page 10
... visitors . " And yet , after the picture I have drawn , does not the word " visitor❞ jar on your mind ? The lack in the English language of a fit word to express the new idea , is a serious hinderance to our work . How can we explain ...
... visitors . " And yet , after the picture I have drawn , does not the word " visitor❞ jar on your mind ? The lack in the English language of a fit word to express the new idea , is a serious hinderance to our work . How can we explain ...
Page 11
... visitor , as wisely as they can , who is best suited to each case . Inform him or her of the nature of the case , and what objects to work for . In most cases our friendly visitors must go under peremptory orders not to give any money ...
... visitor , as wisely as they can , who is best suited to each case . Inform him or her of the nature of the case , and what objects to work for . In most cases our friendly visitors must go under peremptory orders not to give any money ...
Common terms and phrases
agent alms almshouse apostolic succession Asso Associated Charities better Board of Health boys Brooklyn building cent CHAIRMAN Charities of Boston Charity Organization Charity Organization Society Chicago Christian Church Club Churchmen Club and Institute Committee Conference coöperation degraded district duty earnings England Episcopal evil fact friendly visitors friends give grow Historic Episcopate hope influence interest John labor live loan Massachusetts meeting ment Miss months needy Octavia Hill outdoor relief Overseers park paupers persons Philadelphia Phillips Brooks poor President problem received reform Registration ROBERT TREAT PAINE rooms Secretary sent Seward Park social Society spirit sure sympathy tenement tenement house thence things thought tion trachoma visited Volunteer Visitors Ward whole widow wise women workingmen York
Popular passages
Page 91 - Pray for my soul. More things are wrought by prayer Than this world dreams of. Wherefore, let thy voice Rise like a fountain for me night and day. For what are men better than sheep or goats That nourish a blind life within the brain, If, knowing God, they lift not hands of prayer Both for themselves and those who call them friend t For so the whole round earth is every way Bound by gold chains about the feet of God.
Page 9 - The first and most essential of all conditions, a principle which we find universally admitted, even by those whose practice is at variance with it, is, that his situation on the whole shall not be made really or apparently so eligible as the situation of the independent labourer of the lowest class.
Page 27 - A poor man, served by thee, shall make thee rich ; A sick man, helped by thee, shall make thee strong ; Thou shalt be served thyself by every sense Of service which thou renderest.
Page 2 - To study in common how to apply the moral truths and principles of Christianity to the social and economic difficulties of the present time.
Page 6 - First of all, I think they make them really poorer. Then I think they degrade them and make them less independent. Thirdly, I think they destroy the possibility of really good relations between you and them. Surely, when you go among them, you have better things to do for them than to give them half-crowns. You want to know them, — to enter into their lives, their thoughts ; to let them enter into some of your brightness ; to make their lives a little fuller, a little gladder. You who know so much...
Page 83 - Creed as the baptismal symbol, and the Nicene Creed as the sufficient statement of the Christian faith. III. The two sacraments ordained by Christ Himself,— baptism and the Supper of the Lord,— ministered with unfailing use of Christ's words of institution and of the elements ordained by Him. IV. The historic episcopate, locally adapted in the methods of its administration to the varying needs of the nations and peoples rtailed of God into the unity of His church.
Page 5 - Boston, in order To raise the needy above the need of relief, prevent begging and imposition, and diminish pauperism. To encourage thrift, self-dependence and industry through friendly intercourse, advice and sympathy, and to aid the poor to help themselves. To prevent children from growing up as paupers. To aid in the diffusion of knowledge on subjects connected with the relief of the poor.
Page 34 - We are told incessantly that unskilled labor creates the wealth of the world. It would be nearer the truth to say that large classes of / unskilled labor hardly create their own subsistence. The laborers '" that have no adaptiveness, that bring no new ideas to their work, that have no suspicion of the next best thing to turn to in an emergency, might much better be identified with the dependent classes than with the wealth creators.18 Whether it be so or not, the facts remain as they have been outlined...
Page 18 - Has not the new charity organization movement too long been content to aim at a system to relieve or even uplift judiciously single cases without asking if there are not prolific causes permanently at work...
Page 8 - Oh, my friends ! what strange perversion ot words this seems to me. I may deserve reproach ; I may have forgotten many a poor man, and done as careless a thing as any one ; but I cannot help thinking that to give one's self, rather than one's money, to the poor, is not exactly turning one's face from him. If I, caring for him and striving for him, do in my inmost heart believe that my money, spent in providing what he might by effort provide for himself, is harmful to him, surely he and I may be...