Aims and Aids for Girls and Young Women on the Various Duties of Life, Physical, Intellectual, and Moral Development; Self-Culture, Improvement, Their Duties to Young Men, Marriage, Womanhood and Happiness

Nonfiction, Religion & Spirituality, New Age, History, Fiction & Literature
Cover of the book Aims and Aids for Girls and Young Women on the Various Duties of Life, Physical, Intellectual, and Moral Development; Self-Culture, Improvement, Their Duties to Young Men, Marriage, Womanhood and Happiness by George Sumner Weaver, Library of Alexandria
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: George Sumner Weaver ISBN: 9781465504906
Publisher: Library of Alexandria Publication: March 8, 2015
Imprint: Language: English
Author: George Sumner Weaver
ISBN: 9781465504906
Publisher: Library of Alexandria
Publication: March 8, 2015
Imprint:
Language: English

My interest in woman and our common humanity is my only apology for writing this book. I see multitudes of young women about me, whose general training is so deficient in all that pertains to the best ideas of life, and whose aims and efforts are so unworthy of their powers of mind and heart, that I can not make peace with my own conscience without doing something to elevate their aims and quicken their aspirations for the good and pure in thought and life. Our female schools are but poor apologies for the purposes of mind-culture and soul-development. The idea of life they inspire is but a skeleton of custom-service and fashion-worship. It is altogether subservient to what is, not what should be. Society does little else than to teach its girls to be dolls and drudges. The prevailing current of instruction and influence is deplorably low. I feel confident that the best part of society is longing for something better. To obtain it, each one has but to live out, and express to the world his idea of a true life. In regard to the book I may say, whatever it lacks it has the merit of being in earnest. I hope those who see its deficiencies will make haste to supply them in some form of instruction or encouragement to the class the book addresses. Thinking fathers and mothers and teachers will not complain of this humble effort to serve their daughters and pupils, but will rather add more in a similar direction, and seek to complete what I have endeavored to begin. While life is spared, I hope to work in this field, that my own daughters, as well as those of others, may attain a worthy womanhood. G. S. W. St. Louis, 1855

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

My interest in woman and our common humanity is my only apology for writing this book. I see multitudes of young women about me, whose general training is so deficient in all that pertains to the best ideas of life, and whose aims and efforts are so unworthy of their powers of mind and heart, that I can not make peace with my own conscience without doing something to elevate their aims and quicken their aspirations for the good and pure in thought and life. Our female schools are but poor apologies for the purposes of mind-culture and soul-development. The idea of life they inspire is but a skeleton of custom-service and fashion-worship. It is altogether subservient to what is, not what should be. Society does little else than to teach its girls to be dolls and drudges. The prevailing current of instruction and influence is deplorably low. I feel confident that the best part of society is longing for something better. To obtain it, each one has but to live out, and express to the world his idea of a true life. In regard to the book I may say, whatever it lacks it has the merit of being in earnest. I hope those who see its deficiencies will make haste to supply them in some form of instruction or encouragement to the class the book addresses. Thinking fathers and mothers and teachers will not complain of this humble effort to serve their daughters and pupils, but will rather add more in a similar direction, and seek to complete what I have endeavored to begin. While life is spared, I hope to work in this field, that my own daughters, as well as those of others, may attain a worthy womanhood. G. S. W. St. Louis, 1855

More books from Library of Alexandria

Cover of the book The Ballotless Victim of One-Party Government by George Sumner Weaver
Cover of the book In the Heart of Africa by George Sumner Weaver
Cover of the book Theological Essays by George Sumner Weaver
Cover of the book The Prem Sagur of Lallu Lal by George Sumner Weaver
Cover of the book Catharine's Peril, or the Little Russian Girl Lost in a Forest and Other Stories by George Sumner Weaver
Cover of the book The Candle of Vision by George Sumner Weaver
Cover of the book The International Development of China by George Sumner Weaver
Cover of the book Life of Thomas Paine: Written Purposely to Bind With His Writings by George Sumner Weaver
Cover of the book A Thane of Wessex by George Sumner Weaver
Cover of the book Dante: Six Sermons by George Sumner Weaver
Cover of the book Principles of Decorative Design by George Sumner Weaver
Cover of the book La Vérité en Marche: L'affaire Dreyfus by George Sumner Weaver
Cover of the book Mad: A Story of Dust and Ashes by George Sumner Weaver
Cover of the book Minorities Versus Majorities by George Sumner Weaver
Cover of the book God's Country and The Woman by George Sumner Weaver
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy