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N. PEEMANENT INVALIDS. 187
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XXXHL—PERMANENT INVALIDS.
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¦> •_«_*¦ i, iim«m ¦ i _« Eng ing death ...
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.
Chapter'vi. • I " Milliners Have Already...
To enumerate the different grades of young peop business le I had and in
my all of workroom whom I at drafted the tim off e of into my other retirement houses , from I may state , that
officer one was two the daug daug hters hter of of a a country military brewer and another one , of a of clerk a naval to a
, , three London who brewer had , been a jeweller lad ' s ' s maids daughter & c , a & c tailor . & c ' . s , and Some a grocer of them ' s , y
, , much had were been exceeding looking with ly me after ste a ad long y Among good , and girls my some , and very a others shorter good of cours g term irls e . wante I Some may d
. , from mention Boston most in esp Lincolnshire ecially one . who She came lived to with me as me an two improver years ,
illness and nursed . I was me , most some tenderl two years y throug afterwards h a long , stay and ing dangerous a short
time at Rde , when I was delighted to find her occupying a business very responsible there y _, the position principal in the of which most spoke fashion of able her house in the of
will hi Mary ghest Ann terms t it B as . , a - I s h just chance ave tribute since to quite see to her this lost worth notice sight . of of her her , , but I beg should she
accep
N. Peemanent Invalids. 187
N . PEEMANENT INVALIDS . 187
Xxxhl—Permanent Invalids.
_XXXHL—PERMANENT INVALIDS .
¦> •_«_*¦ I, Iim«M ¦ I _« Eng Ing Death ...
_¦> _•_«_*¦ i , iim « m ¦ i __« Eng ing death _" Why over lish beds did lad her y you where , dead with die . at ? sadness " " Wh las cries t y the as the don sufferer deep ' half t you - when savage lies die ? she asleep " Irish thinks looks woman but the on at , , gentle not wail sick at - -
- , beds something and useful where lives worse invalids are , upon sacrificed are slowl their y to drawing nearest those alread relation down y their beyond s , when own all health fate hope , or y . domestic affections
For what with the tenderness of our , our illness general ments of without ignorance public having op of inion the in , laws the scarcel course of y health any of , it one and prepare the dies larg after d , e like require a som long e -
African , chiefsat least one victim to follow him . But while generall Let these it barbarian not y upon for , moment s enemies always , be fix we supposed upon commonl strangers th y at select we for treat the this neares the purpose sufferings t : of , kin and .
p and of sympathizing hysical the hopelessness sick tortures lig a htl person y which . and Probabl in are th health ink often y what they added can are these im to greater ag weariness ine must . than Think be , monotony with the of most the the ,
resist consciousness their influence that , the mind It is onl is becoming because less we fe and el strong less able ly the to y
evils allows of one such invalid a state to . that be the we cause deprecate of others the . folly Let which any one so often who
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Citation
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English Woman’s Journal (1858-1864), Nov. 2, 1863, page 187, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/ewj/issues/ewj_02111863/page/43/
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