FOOTNOTES:
[61] Philanthropy and the State, p. 303.
[62] John Stuart Mill, Principles of Political Economy, p. 577.
[63] Ibid., p. 575.
[64] William McDougal, An Introduction to Social Psychology, p. 14, et seq.
[65] Porter R. Lee, at the National Conference of Social Work, 1920, p. 468.
[66] Charities Review, 1898, p. 9.
[67] Hamlet, Act III, Sc. 2, line 379.
[68] Emil Muensterberg, Impressions of American Charity, in Charity and the Commons, 1907, p. 268.
[69] H. G. Wells, The Outline of History, Vol. II, p. 339.
[70] John Boyle O’Reilly, In Bohemia, quoted in The Cry for Justice, p. 497.
[71] S. A. Queen, Social Work in the Light of History, Chap. II.
[72] Sidney and Beatrice Webb, The Prevention of Destitution, p. 281.
[73] Arthur J. Todd, at the National Conference, 1920, p. 271.
[74] Charles A. Ellwood, at the National Conference, 1920, p. 271.
[75] Count Leo Tolstoy, quoted in The Cry for Justice, p. 88.
[76] Arthur Hugh Clough, “Say not the struggle nought availeth,” in Poems.
[77] Frank Parsons, Legal Doctrine and Social Progress, p. 212.
[78] John Masefield, A Consecration, in Poems.
[79] Philanthropy and the State, p. 20.
[80] John Masefield, Multitude and Solitude.