The candidate is expected to read intelligently all the books prescribed. He should read them as he reads other books; he is expected, not to know them minutely, but to have freshly in mind their most important parts. School Science and Mathematics - Page 1381910Full view - About this book
| Arthur Wentworth Hamilton Eaton - 1892 - 120 pages
...Eliot's Silas Marner. The candidate is expected to read intelligently all the books prescribed. He should read them as he reads other books ; he is expected,...to have freshly in mind their most important parts. In every case the examiner will regard knowledge of the book as less important than ability to write... | |
| Harvard University - 1893 - 594 pages
...read intelligently all the books prescribed. He should read them as he reads other books; he will be expected not to know them minutely, but to have freshly in mind their most important parts. Whatever the subject of the composition, the examiner will regard knowledge of the book as less important... | |
| Harvard University - 1894 - 640 pages
...Eliot's Silas Marner. The candidate is expected to read intelligently all the books prescribed. He should read them as he reads other books; he is expected,...to have freshly in mind their most important parts. In every case the examiner will regard knowledge of the book as less important than ability to write... | |
| University of Chicago - 1895 - 420 pages
...House of Seven Gables. The candidate is expected to read intelligently all the books prescribed. He should read them as he reads other books ; he is expected,...to have freshly in mind their most important parts. In every case the examiner will regard knowledge of the book as less important than ability to write... | |
| Harvard University - 1895 - 668 pages
...expected to read intelligently all the books prescribed. He should read them as he reads other books; lie is expected, not to know them minutely, but to have freshly in mind their most important parts. In every case the examiner will regard knowledge of the bock as less important than ability to write... | |
| Harvard University - 1896 - 74 pages
...Eliot's Silas Marner. " The candidate is expected to read intelligently all the books prescribed. He should read them as he reads other books ; he is expected,...to have freshly in mind their most important parts. In every case the examiner will regard knowledge of the book as less important than ability to write... | |
| Lawrence Scientific School - 1896 - 204 pages
...Eliot's Silas Marner. The candidate is expected to read intelligently all the hooks prescribed. He should read them as he reads other books; he is expected,...to have freshly in mind their most important parts. In every case the examiner will regard knowledge of the book as less important than ability to write... | |
| Harvard University - 1898 - 700 pages
...House of the Seven Gables. The candidate is expected to read intelligently all the books prescribed. He should read them as he reads other books; he is expected, not to know them minutely, but to have freshly iu mind their most important parts. In every case the examiner will regard knowledge of the book as... | |
| Harvard University - 1899 - 712 pages
...use of the Seven Gables. The candidate is expected to read intelligently all the books prescribed. He should read them as he reads other books; he is expected, not to know them minutciy, but to have freshly in mind their most important parts. In every ease the examiner will regard... | |
| Harvard University - 1901 - 898 pages
...Marner. The candidate is expected to read intelligently all the books prescribed. He should read them us he reads other books ; he is expected, not to know...to have freshly in mind their most important parts. In every case the examiner will regard knowledge of the book as less important than ability to write... | |
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