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I THE
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Vol. II. October 1, 1858. No. 8.
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XL—DOMESTIC LIFE,
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"In a multitude of councillorsthere , is...
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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Transcript
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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.
I The
I THE
ENGLISH WOMAN'S JOURNAL .
PUBLISHED MONTHLY .
Vol. Ii. October 1, 1858. No. 8.
Vol . II . October 1 , 1858 . No . 8 .
Xl—Domestic Life,
XL—DOMESTIC LIFE ,
"In A Multitude Of Councillorsthere , Is...
"In a multitude of councillorsthere , is safety . " _Pboveisbs , ehap .. xi ., ver , 14 ,. " With the well advised is wisdom . " _Pboveirbs _,, chap , xiii ., ver . 10 ,
public Those who whether place by themselves founding in an close institution relation publishing to , any section a popular of the >
work tarting , , adop a periodical ting the responsibilities designed for the of discussio any , active n of profession _questions , and or
learn princi s p the les existence affecting of the a cc multi t vital tude interes of councillors ts of _hxunani , " t y , will , if t soon hey
be Wisdom themselves —the wise word , will in endeavor which to are . extract summed wisdom up the therefrom intellectual .
them attributes —— of the Creator when used , in so in far reference as we to can our conceive human faculties or name _,,
of the that the largest fine ancie expresses balance attainable nt world , of the sum it mental was of app mu and licable ch con moral truth sidered powers . ; B to y , the which say -p of hilosop resul one ts hers that in _,
he in sacred was a his " w tory ise man , and " So was cra the tes in ghes profane t t of commendations , claimed tch t it as . peculiarl t Solomo much n y
s their tar-gazing own ; , but it oug to Thales t certai , n ly to . fell be refused o a .. In hroug those periods oo of English literary development , during which the classics exercised so
bu grea t t now a sway t we ? , we seldom W find e dou t hear he bt * ! " wise the The phrase man i " . re- the appearing Have inductive we o yet n p every hilosop any page sages her _* , _, _, gen
amongs the an element gentlemen us of of national the press intellect , have ; almos his ideas , t extin are gui amongst shed the us sage ; his as .
p own rophecies are being with worked claim out ; but to superior were he pretension to re-appear , we in fear his any
he man Is would proper did this arrogate to be person be snubbed regretted to , himself on ? every We a balanced hand are not by sure the power . irreverent Just which because is herd trul . the y above wise wise in hiconceit
humani lig He ht was , and . ty apt , his he to w whole be as of occasionall thi cast s generation of character y immensel , ra was of ther y the in than mouth diametric of the s of own children babes opposition and of . _,
to those of whom it was said , " Out sucklings Yet if wi Thou sdom ha b s brou t g ht ter forth all the praise nobl ! " t height to which , a man
can aspire , it is none e n the o less indispensable for the prosecution of
VOL . II . G *
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Citation
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English Woman’s Journal (1858-1864), Oct. 1, 1858, page unpag, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/ewj/issues/ewj_01101858/page/1/
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