| Salem Town - 1854 - 412 páginas
...men, and without any previous defmite application to iheir own peculiar calling ? 5. The profession of ladies, to which the bent of their instruction...should be turned, is that of daughters, wives, mothers, ind mistresses of families. They should be, therefore, trained with a view to these several conditions,... | |
| Salem Town - 1856 - 420 páginas
...men, and without any previous definite application to their own peculiar calling? 5 The profession of ladies, to which the bent of their instruction...of ideas, and principles, and qualifications, and habit* 5>6 ready to be applied and appropriated, as occasion may demand, to each of these respective... | |
| Hannah More - 1856 - 578 páginas
...application to their own peculiar call ing- ? The professions of ladies, to which the bent of Iheir instruction should be turned, is that of daughters,...and mistresses of families. They should be therefore trainee with a view to these several conditions, and be • See Catiline's Conspiracy, urnished with... | |
| Hannah More - 1856 - 630 páginas
...should be therefore trained to (lies« several conditions, and be * BeeCaUline'iConipirncy, "urnishcd with a stock of ideas, and principles, and qualifications and habits, ready lobe applied and appropriated, afi occasion may demand, to :ach of these respective situations. For... | |
| Salem Town - 1858 - 418 páginas
...men, and without any previous definite application to their own peculiar calling ? 5. The profession of ladies, to which the bent of their instruction...several conditions, and be furnished with a stock uf ideas, and principles, and qualifications, and habits, ready to be applied and appropriated, as... | |
| John Angell James - 1862 - 486 páginas
...other men, and without any previous definite application to their own peculiar calling? The profession of ladies, to which the bent of their instruction...that of daughters, wives, mothers, and mistresses of i'amilies. They should be therefore trained with a view to these several conditions, and be furnished... | |
| Helen Cross Knight - 1872 - 302 páginas
...other men, and without any previous definite application to their own peculiar calling? The profession of ladies to which the bent of their instruction should be turned,, is that oT daughters, wives, mothers, and mistresses of families. They should be, therefore, trained with a... | |
| Alice Zimmern - 1898 - 272 páginas
...ladies,' while they quite forgot that ' the profession of ladies to which the best of their education should be turned is that of daughters, wives, mothers, and mistresses of families.' 1 She even ventured to fly in the face of public opinion by asserting that ' a young lady may excel... | |
| Walter Lyon Blease - 1910 - 302 páginas
...labour, as the sweetners of our pleasures and enjoyments."2 " The profession of ladies," says another, "to which the bent of their instruction should be turned, is that of daughters, wives, mothers, and essay in her Legacy to Young Ladies (1826), and the Memoir of Mrs. Barbauld by Lucy Aikin (1825). One... | |
| Walter Lyon Blease - 1913 - 450 páginas
...this deprivation of her economic independence. " The profession of ladies," said Mrs. Hannah More, " to which the bent of their instruction should be turned,...daughters, wives, mothers, and mistresses of families." 1 " Men," said Mrs. Barbauld, " have various departments in life ; women have but one. ... It is, to... | |
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