They showed the natural aptitude of the sex for refinement. These women were among the so-called worst, and all from the lowest haunts of vice. Yet nothing could have been more decorous than their conduct, while it was also frank; and they showed a sensibility and sense of propriety, which would not have disgraced any society. All passed, indeed, much as in one of my Boston classes. I told them I was writing about Woman; and, as my path had been a favored one, I wanted to gain information from those who had been tempted and afflicted. They seemed to reply in the same spirit in which I asked. Several, however, expressed a wish to see me alone, as they could then say all, which they could not bear to before one another. I shall go there again, and take time for this. It is very gratifying to see the influence these few months of gentle and intelligent treatment have had upon these women; indeed, it is wonderful.’
So much were her sympathies awakened by this visit,
that she rejoiced in the opportunity, soon after offered,
of passing Christmas with these outcasts, and gladly
consented to address the women in their chapel. “There
was,” says one present, “a most touching tenderness,
blended with dignity, in her air and tone, as, seated in
the desk, she looked round upon her fallen sisters, and
begun: ‘To me the pleasant office has been given, of
wishing you a happy Christmas.’ A simultaneous
movement of obeisance rippled over the audience, with
a murmured ‘Thank you;’ and a smile was spread
upon those sad countenances, like sunrise sparkling on
a pool.” A few words from this discourse, — which was
extemporaneous, but of which she afterward made an