Page:Woman in the Nineteenth Century 1845.djvu/131

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TEMPLE OF JUNO.
125
White, pure as light,
Makes gentle shroud as worthy weed as bridal robe had been.[1]

We are now in a transition state, and but few steps have yet been taken. From polygamy, Europe passed to the marriage de convenance. This was scarcely an improvement. An attempt was then made to substitute genuine marriage, (the mutual choice of souls inducing a permanent union,) as yet baffled on every side by the haste, the ignorance, or the impurity of man.

Where man assumes a high principle to which he is not yet ripened; it will happen, for a long time, that the few will be nobler than before; the many worse. Thus now. In the country of Sidney and Milton, the metropolis is a den of wickedness, and a stye of sensuality; in the country of Lady Russell, the custom of English Peeresses, of selling their daughters to the highest bidder, is made the theme and jest of fashionable novels by unthinking children who would stare at the idea of sending them to a Turkish slave dealer, though the circumstances of the bargain are there less degrading, as the will and thoughts of the person sold are not so degraded by it, and it is not done in defiance of an acknowledged law of right in the land and the age.

I must here add that I do not believe there ever was

  1. (As described by the historian.)

    The temple of Juno is like what the character of woman should be.

    Columns! graceful decorums, attractive yet sheltering.

    Porch! noble inviting aspect of the life.

    Kaos! receives the worshippers. See here the statue of the Divinity.

    Ophistodomos! Sanctuary where the most precious possessions were kept safe from the hand of the spoiler and the eye of the world.