The Friend of WomenJohn Conrad & Company no. 30, Chesnut Street; M. & J. Conrad, & Company no. 138 Market Street, Baltimore; Rapin, Conrad, & Company Washington City; Bonsal & Conrad, Norfolk; and Somervell, Conrad, & Company Petersburg. H. Maxwell, Printer., 1803 - 196 páginas |
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... Marriage X. VI . Of the Dress of women · VII . Of the Character and Disposition of VIII . Of Love and Gallantry · Education of Children XI . Of Domestic Government XII . Virtues of Women XIII . Conclusion • • 71 81 • · 104 · 115 133 ...
... Marriage X. VI . Of the Dress of women · VII . Of the Character and Disposition of VIII . Of Love and Gallantry · Education of Children XI . Of Domestic Government XII . Virtues of Women XIII . Conclusion • • 71 81 • · 104 · 115 133 ...
Página 66
... marry with regret , often very late , and a great many never at all . Why cannot the two things that men love the ... Marriage is only decried in ages of lux- ury . The greater number of men are afraid of its expences , which caprice and ...
... marry with regret , often very late , and a great many never at all . Why cannot the two things that men love the ... Marriage is only decried in ages of lux- ury . The greater number of men are afraid of its expences , which caprice and ...
Página 67
... marry a man of mean birth , died of chagrin within a year . These alliances are not uncommon in the present day , and have not such fatal consequences . A brilliant equipage makes up for the want of quality in the husband . A plume of ...
... marry a man of mean birth , died of chagrin within a year . These alliances are not uncommon in the present day , and have not such fatal consequences . A brilliant equipage makes up for the want of quality in the husband . A plume of ...
Página 68
... married woman , they ask a thousand questions concerning her clothes and laces ; whether she has diamonds , a handsome carriage , & c .; and only inquire slightly about the character of the husband . The minds of women glide lightly ...
... married woman , they ask a thousand questions concerning her clothes and laces ; whether she has diamonds , a handsome carriage , & c .; and only inquire slightly about the character of the husband . The minds of women glide lightly ...
Página 97
... marriage . " Could we exist , O Romans ! without wives , we might certainly avoid the inconvenience of the matrimonial tie . But since by Nature it is so ordained , and that we can neither live K at ease with them nor without them , the ...
... marriage . " Could we exist , O Romans ! without wives , we might certainly avoid the inconvenience of the matrimonial tie . But since by Nature it is so ordained , and that we can neither live K at ease with them nor without them , the ...
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The Friend of Women (1803) Pierre-Joseph Boudier De Villemert,Alexander Morrice Sin vista previa disponible - 2009 |
Términos y frases comunes
advantage affections agreeable amiable amusement Andromache antient appear Aspasia attention Bavaria beauty become blush caprice cause CHAP character charms connex Daubigné daughter delicate desire devo disposed disposition dress fair sex false female frequently friend of humanity friends friendship frivolous gallantry give graces greater greatest handsome happy heart honour human husband idle indolence kind King labour ladies less lively Louis XIV lovers luxury mad love MADAME DE MAINTENON Madame Maintenon manners marriage married means ment merit minds of women modesty moral mother Nature Navarre necessary ness never objects ornaments passions persons pleasures possess present day preserve pretty pretty woman qualities rank reign Royal Highness Sappho Scarron seek select society sensible sentiments shew sions society soul sweet taste tender thing tion trifles truth vanity vice virtue vivacity whilst whole wife wise wish woman young
Pasajes populares
Página 100 - Loses discountenanc'd, and like Folly shows ; Authority and Reason on her wait, As one intended first, not after made Occasionally ; and, to consummate all, Greatness of mind and Nobleness their seat Build in her loveliest, and create an awe About her, as a guard angelick plac'd.
Página 100 - Yet when I approach Her loveliness, so absolute she seems And in herself complete, so well to know Her own, that what she wills to do or say, Seems wisest, virtuousest, discreetest, best.
Página 100 - Neither her outside form'd so fair, nor aught In procreation common to all kinds, Though higher of the genial bed by far, And with mysterious reverence I deem, So much delights me, as those graceful acts, Those thousand decencies that daily flow From all her words and actions, mix'd with love And sweet compliance, which declare unfeign'd Union of mind, or in us both one soul ; Harmony to behold in wedded pair More grateful than harmonious sound to the ear.
Página 179 - I not make you sensible of that uneasiness which preys upon the great, and the difficulty they labour under to employ their time ? Do you not see, that I am dying with melancholy, in a height of fortune which once my imagination could scarce have conceived ? I have been young and beautiful, have had a high relish of pleasure, and have been the universal object of love.
Página 179 - Do not you see that I am dying with melancholy, in a height of fortune, which once my imagination could scarcely have conceived ? I have* been young and beautiful, have had a relish for pleasures, and have been the universal object of love. In a more advanced age, I have...
Página 175 - ... was paid to the great and pompous Louis; nor could all the reserve and dignity of the widow efface the impression made by the remembrance of her buffoonish husband. It was necessery, therefore, that madam de Maintenon should obliterate madam Scarron. In the mean time, her elevation was to her only a retreat. Shut up in her apartment, which was on the same floor with the king's, she confined herself to the society of two or three ladies, as retired as herself; and even these she saw but seldom....
Página 167 - I do not look upon you," she said, in dying, " as a person whose error has cost me my life, but as a benefactor, who advances my entry into a happy immortality. As the •world may judge otherwise,! have put you in a situation, by my will, to quit your profession...
Página 59 - ... which they called perpetual kind wishes and serenity of temper; and the whole was strongly perfumed with the desire of pleasing, which gave it a most grateful smell, and was a sure restorative against vapours of all sorts.
Página 194 - Where ever-restless, busy Strife, Leaves look'd-for Happiness behind. There flattery o'er my youthful cheek Has spread a momentary glow ; There vanity has made me seek The gilded roofs of hidden woe. There have I seen neglected Worth, Abash'd, decline her honest head, While Vice in gaudy robes came forth ; By Pride and Adulation led. There Envy steeps the poison'd dart, To strike at Merit's open breast; There smooth, insinuating Art, Deceives the wisest and the best. The nobles who were wont to raise...
Página 93 - If the delicacy of their constitution, and other physical causes, allow the female sex a smaller share of some mental powers, they possess others in a superior degree, which are no less respectable in their own nature, and of as great importance to society. Instead of descanting at large on their powers of mind, and supporting my assertions by the instances of a Hypatia, a Schurman, a Zenobia, an Elisabeth, &c. I may repeat the account given of the sex by a person of uncommon experience, who saw...