Page:The Higher Education of Women.djvu/58

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54
THINGS AS THEY ARE.

absurde, inspire un mécontentement trop fondé.'[1]

Such things the modern girl reads, and every word is confirmed by her own experience. With the practical English mind, which she has inherited from her father, she applies it all to herself. She seeks for counsel, and she finds it. She is bidden to 'look around her'—to do the duty that lies nearest—to teach in the schools, or visit the poor—to take up a pursuit—to lay down a course of study and stick to it. She looks around her, and sees no particular call to active exertion. The duties that lie in the way are swallowed up by an energetic mother or elder sister; very possibly she has no

  1. Sermons par T. Colani.—Deuxième Recueil, p. 293.