Stray Thoughts for Girls by Lucy H. M. Soulsby
page 27 of 157 (17%)
page 27 of 157 (17%)
|
servants, she will lend a helping hand, but she will be wise in her
industry, and understand that riches are a call, not to idleness, but to another kind of work--overseeing and directing, but not doing. "One good head is worth a hundred good hands," but the head must know how things should be done, and therefore the Virtuous Woman will make it a point of conscience to know how to cook, and equally a point of conscience not to do it, if she has servants who ought to see to it. "_Her children shall rise up and call her blessed, her husband also, and he praiseth her_." My Virtuous Woman may never marry, but she will be a mother in Israel in spite of that. Every woman finds scope for motherliness if it is in her; one way or another she will find children looking to her for love and help, and she must fit herself to educate those children, for this is a woman's main duty in life; she should never be satisfied till she has earned a right to the compliment which Steele paid his wife--that "to know her was a liberal education," until "Men at her side Grow nobler, girls purer, and, through the whole town, The children are gladder that pull at her gown." "_A woman that feareth the Lord, she shall be praised_." I may seem to have made my last words to you consist of merely worldly-wise counsels, and to have left out of sight "the one thing needful," but in many other Scripture lessons we have spoken of that Prayer, and Bible reading, that "going in the strength of the Lord God," which is the only source of strength for man or woman. I have tried to give a few practical counsels for everyday life, believing, as I do firmly, that the best part of this world's wisdom is |
|