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84 BIANCA MILESI MOJON.
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XIV.—BIANCA MILE SI MOJON.
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About this time Madame Mojon lost her mo...
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
Additionally, when viewing full transcripts, extracted text may not be in the same order as the original document.
+ Beautiful As Weeds, Flowers If Left Un...
their banker ' s niay be added to , but not the comfort of their families . I / uxurious and idle they may make their wives and
daughters , but neither happy nor comfortable . civilized We read country in hist are ory handed what befall over s to nations " ease when and the leasure women . " t > When f any p
the poorer women are idle , and the richer frivolous , surely the hour should is come take when the f initiative athers , whose duty it clearly and imperatively is ,
of its nelect . in this matter , and . weigh well the consequences g To provide schools is one of the first steps to be taken . To send
girls to those schools , and enforce upon them the rules and laws of labor , is the second . To take as much pains and trouble with their
girls as with their boys ; not to wait until the former are mature o f trade to see b that usiness they art are or trained whatever , and emp sen loyment t to acquire best a b knowled efits their ge ,
position , in life and , the , ir individual tastes or talents , precisely as is done in the case of sons . To make use at once and without delay
the means of t better hose in ex p emp tending enin loymen gs w all hich t such of g . irls Such no and w avai p women lans labl for e is , the and the encouragement present to aid b b y ounden every of
duty of every father in the land . that When they , daug as well hters as are their thu fathers s _faught and that husbands " time , " are is inva _resjDonsib luable le , and for
its use or abuse , then , and not until then , will there be unity and happiness in domestic life . It will then have the basis it now wantsand a firmersurer foundation will be laid than that of
the and smiles all , those and silvery tears , , veils love- and songs rainbow and si mists ghs , snow with which and moonshin poets and e ,
sentimental novelists fill the hearts of our young girls .
A . K . L .
84 Bianca Milesi Mojon.
84 BIANCA MILESI MOJON .
Xiv.—Bianca Mile Si Mojon.
XIV . —BIANCA MILE SI MOJON . PAET II . ( Concluded from p . 19 . J
About This Time Madame Mojon Lost Her Mo...
About this time Madame Mojon lost her mother . Madame Milesi had shown such disinterested love for her daughter , that Bianca ' s
filial affection was heightened by gratitude , and she would have child been - crushed andadds by M her . Souvestr grief but e " for for the the solace happiness afforded of doing by her good own . "
This last , sourc , e of consolation , is always open to the afflicted , _wlio would find it much more productive than secluded grief or bitter
lamentation . One of the kind acts , the performance of which soothed Bianca at this juncturewas her interposition for an
unfortunate _xDerson who was still acknowled , ged as a friend by the great ladies of Milan . Madame Mojon exerted herself to obtain relief
from these rich ladies , and herself headed a subscription with 500
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Citation
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English Woman’s Journal (1858-1864), April 1, 1861, page 84, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/ewj/issues/ewj_01041861/page/12/
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