../ggcms/src/templates/revoltsource/view/display_greatgrandchildof_quotes.php
19th-Century Muckraker, Journalist, and Author Focusing on Social Problems of Tenements
Quote #7 on Political Struggle Quotes >> Society and Progress
“And after all, this whole business of thinking of others that evidences itself in summer and in winter too, is simply a matter of kindly feeling, showing itself in a variety of ways. Some of us pooh-pooh at any philanthropic movement that does not show a definite result, others like to see a balance on the right side of the sheet. There are those who sneak in their sympathy with the bald contribution of "a friend," and a large number of men and women do their work because they like it and feel in a measure that it is their duty. Whether they build tenements or provide potted plants for the sick, there is little real difference between them. They are all tarred with the same stick, kindly feeling.”
Source: "The Poor in Summer," by Robert Alston Stevenson, Scribner's Magazine, XXX, (September 1901): 259-277.
"The Poor in Summer," by Robert Alston Stevenson, Scribner's Magazine, XXX, (September 1901): 259-277.
No comments so far. You can be the first!
<< Last Entry in Progress | Current Entry in Progress 7 | Next Entry in Progress >> |
All Nearby Items in Progress
|