BEDFORDSHIRE: TURVEY 127 



to my home-life, as a result of which I have never been able 

 to use an oath, although I have frequently felt those impulses 

 and passions which in many people can only find adequate 

 expression in such language. This, I think, is a rather strik- 

 ing example of the effects of home influence during childhood, 

 and of that kind of education on which Robert Owen depended 

 for the general improvement of character and habits. 



