English:
Identifier: mycountrytisofth00john (find matches)
Title: "My country, 'tis of thee!" or, The United States of America; past, present and future. A philosophic view of American history and of our present status, to be seen in the Columbian exhibition
Year: 1892 (1890s)
Authors: Johnson, Willis Fletcher, 1857-1931 Habberton, John, 1842-1921
Subjects:
Publisher: Philadelphia, J. Y. Huber co.
Contributing Library: The Library of Congress
Digitizing Sponsor: Sloan Foundation
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f the sexes, and particularly with whatis alleged to be love, it is commonly assumed thatyoung women are sufficiently instructed throughdesultory reading on what is frequently calledthe grand passion. This appellation, grandpassion, truly describes what the novelistsusually give us as love, and is no more educationor preparation of the young person contemplat-ing marriage than the outside of a lot of school-books would be to a student desiring to graduateat a college. The novelist prudently ends hisstory where marriage begins. Up to that timeeverything is very plain sailing for both manand woman, but there, where the necessity forknowledge begins, the novelist discreetly endshis tale. How can he do more ? Were he tomake his story as it should be, in the light ofhuman experience, it is doubtful whether youngmen and young women would read it at all. Is all the blame of marriage failures to be at-tributed to women ? By no means. The menare terribly faulty creatures, but it is the generaJ
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societys foundation-stone. 257 opinion that, tlirougH some reason or collectionof reasons, the conjugal instinct in man is morefully developed than in woman. Most of us knowof men not very good, some of them not good atall, who become model husbands from the timeof marriage. How many know of wild women,of careless girls, of whom the same could besaid ? Whether this is due to the invisible con-nection between the material and the spiritual;whether womans nature is kept in an embryonicstate to the verge of deterioration by the moderncustom of bringing up girls in-doors, denyingthem physical exercise, separating them from as-sociations with their brothers, to say nothing ofother members of the ruder sex; whether theincreasing prosperity of the world, which makesit no longer necessary that the entire interestsof the family, including some of the confidencesbetween husband and wife, should be heard bychildren as once they were, the fact certainly isthat the opinion which the young girl at
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