THE CROSSING
A Wc are passing through a time of strain and change, and managing the necessary readjustments on the whole with good success. “1 trust for the general maintenance and gradual raising of the moral standard in.a society such as ours : first to the influence of the facts of life and the lessons taught by experience; next to the social instincts and the reaction of a well-or-ganised society upon its members by example, od-mition and training, by liking and disliking, admiration and •disapproval; and most of all to this inward Censor of whom the psychologists tell us, this inborn moral or aesthetic instinct, the ineradicable heritage of humanity, by which men have from the very beginnings of civilisation rejected and denied what tliev feel to he vile within them, sought what they love, and imitated what they admire.’’—Professor Gilbert Murray.
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Hokitika Guardian, 5 April 1930, Page 6
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141THE CROSSING Hokitika Guardian, 5 April 1930, Page 6
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