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ings may confidently fie inferred from those which prevail in the circle by which the person is sur­rounded. Not so with those whose opinions and feelings are an emanation from their own nature and faculties. It is only a man here and there who has any tolerable knowledge of the character even of the women of his own family. I do not mean, of their capabilities; these nobody knows, not even themselves, because most of them have never been called out. I mean their actually existing thoughts and feelings. Many a man thinks he perfectly understands women, because he has had amatory relations with several, perhaps w r ith many of them. If he is a good observer, and his experience extends to quality as well as quantity, he may have learnt something of one narrow" department of their naturean important department, no doubt. But of all the rest of it, few persons are gene­rally more ignorant, because there are few from whom it is so carefully hidden. The most favourable case which a man can generally have for studying the character of a Avoman, is that of his ow r n wife : for the opportunities are greater, and the cases of complete sympathy not so un­speakably rare. And in fact, this is the source from Avhich any knowledge worth having on the subject has, I believe, generally come. But most men have not had the opportunity of studying in