Abstract
WE may surely regard it as a hopeful sign of progress that a whole page of the Times, as well as of other daily papers, of last Friday was practically devoted to the discussion of matters connected with Science and Art. When we find the daily papers giving so great prominence to these subjects, and when men of such position and mark as Prince Leopold, Mr. Gladstone, and the Lord Chief Justice, take what is evidently a genuine interest in the progress of science and art education among the lower classes, it seems quite safe to infer that this movement has at last taken a prominent and important place in the everyday life of the country.
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Mr. Gladstone at Greenwich . Nature 13, 41–42 (1875). https://doi.org/10.1038/013041a0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/013041a0