< Page:American Journal of Sociology Volume 2.djvu
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A DAY AT HULL HOUSE
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also waits to serve, for calls for the doctor or telegraph boys temper the night to the general average of the ward.
To speak of the external activities of the house; its holiday entertainments, its Sunday lectures and concerts, its summer
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vacation home and school, its lending of pictures and books, its art exhibits, its maps and records, would be but an extension of its inner life. To describe its attitude toward the school, the saloon, and the church, to interpret its action in regard to strikes, arbitration, and municipal politics, would be to attempt its psychology. What has been here presented is the method alone.
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