Lectures to Young WomenCrosby, Nichols, 1856 - 196 من الصفحات |
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الصفحة 32
... amusements , to the waste of time , and to false ideas of respectability , nor to the fas- cination which she sometimes throws around the first steps of intemperance . Such sub- jects will have their proper place in other lectures . We ...
... amusements , to the waste of time , and to false ideas of respectability , nor to the fas- cination which she sometimes throws around the first steps of intemperance . Such sub- jects will have their proper place in other lectures . We ...
الصفحة 52
... amusement is made to take the place of rational enjoyment , where the influence of the mother fails to commend virtue and religion to her sons and daughters . We would not imply that every thing in the home depends upon the female ...
... amusement is made to take the place of rational enjoyment , where the influence of the mother fails to commend virtue and religion to her sons and daughters . We would not imply that every thing in the home depends upon the female ...
الصفحة 54
... amusement , their happiness , away from home , in gardens , in cafés , in the streets , as it is in France and Italy , and it would be as diffi- cult to maintain our republic , as it has been to establish one in Paris or Rome . No one ...
... amusement , their happiness , away from home , in gardens , in cafés , in the streets , as it is in France and Italy , and it would be as diffi- cult to maintain our republic , as it has been to establish one in Paris or Rome . No one ...
الصفحة 70
... amusement , we seem to exalt , and are treating her as a child whom we ought to treat as an equal . It would be better if the adulation were less and the respect greater . She can dispense with the empty compliments , which men are ...
... amusement , we seem to exalt , and are treating her as a child whom we ought to treat as an equal . It would be better if the adulation were less and the respect greater . She can dispense with the empty compliments , which men are ...
الصفحة 89
... amusement or scorn , deserves to be called by some worse name than coquette , if a worse name can be found . Her own sex should rebuke her , and from men she should receive that which is to her the only severe punishment , neglect ...
... amusement or scorn , deserves to be called by some worse name than coquette , if a worse name can be found . Her own sex should rebuke her , and from men she should receive that which is to her the only severe punishment , neglect ...
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50 cents 62 cents accomplish admiration adorning affections amusement beauty become better Boston Cambridge Chronicle cation Channing character chiefly Christian Examiner Christian Register Co.'s PUBLICATIONS comfort CROSBY daughter disappointment dissipation duty Edition elevate enjoyment equal eral excite exerting faith fashion faults feel female fluence frivolous gentle give greater happiness heart home influence hope household intel intellectual irreligion JAMES FREEMAN CLARKE labor less ligious Lincoln's Inn lives marriage MARTYRIA ment mind moral and religious mother nature neglect ness NICHOLS perhaps philanthropy pleasant pleasure Portsmouth prayer Price religion respect sake selfish sermons smile social society sometimes soul speak spirit strength SUNDAY SCHOOL taste teach temper temptation thing thought tion true Unitarianism virtue volume whole wife WILLIAM ELLERY CHANNING WILLIAM G woman woman's education women words worldly wrong young lady
مقاطع مشهورة
الصفحة 3 - Favour is deceitful, and beauty is vain: but a woman that feareth the Lord, she shall be praised.
الصفحة 60 - And the harp, and the viol, the tabret, and pipe, and wine, are in their feasts : but they regard not the work of the LORD, neither consider the operation of his hands.
الصفحة 198 - THE PROPHETS AND KINGS OF THE OLD TESTAMENT. A Series of Sermons preached in the Chapel of Lincoln's Inn. By Rev.
الصفحة 198 - No one could desire., for sister, daughter, or friend, a more instructive, pleasing, or touching lesson of the quiet, unobtrusive, simple virtues of domestic life, than this unpretending volume, prepared by one at once so appreciative of the virtues of his subject, and so well qualified to do them justice.