The only knowledge worth having and which lasts us for life must not be cut and dry, but on the contrary must be living and growing knowledge, knowledge of which we know the beginning, the middle, and the end, knowledge of which we can produce the title-deeds whenever they are called for.


In: Mayo Williamson Hazeltine, Orations from Homer to William McKinley, On Some Lessons of Antiquity (p. 8597), P.F. Collier & Son. 1902


The only knowledge worth having and which lasts us for life must not be cut and dry, but on the contrary must be living and growing knowledge,...

The only knowledge worth having and which lasts us for life must not be cut and dry, but on the contrary must be living and growing knowledge,...

The only knowledge worth having and which lasts us for life must not be cut and dry, but on the contrary must be living and growing knowledge,...

The only knowledge worth having and which lasts us for life must not be cut and dry, but on the contrary must be living and growing knowledge,...