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Article: (Of The) Institution And Education Of Children: Part III
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Part III
So doubtlesse he shall lesse be idle than others; for even as
the paces
we bestow walking in a gallerie, although they be twice as many more,
wearie
us not so much as those we spend in going a set journey: So our lesson
being
past over, as it were, by chance, or way of encounter, without strict
observance of time or place, being applied to all our actions, shall
be
digested, and never felt. All sports and exercises shall be a part
of his
study; running, wrestling, musicke, dancing, hunting, and managing
of armes
and horses. I would have the exterior demeanor or decencie, and the
disposition of his person to be fashioned together with his mind:
for, it is ...