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points of character, their standard is higher than that of men ; in the quality of justice, somewhat lower. As reg'ards the relations of private life it may he said generally, that their influence is, on the whole, encouraging to the softer virtues, discouraging to the sterner: though the state­ment must he taken with all the modifications dependent on individual character. In the chief of the greater trials to which virtue is subject in the concerns of lifethe conflict be­tween interest and principlethe tendency of womens influence is of a very mixed character. When the principle involved happens to be one of the very few which the course of their reli­gious or moral education has strongly impressed upon themselves, they are potent auxiliaries to virtue : and their husbands and sons are often prompted by them to acts of abnegation which they never would have been capable of without that stimulus. But, with the present education and position of women, the moral principles which have been impressed on them cover but a comparatively small part of the field of virtue, and are, moreover, principally negative ; forbid­ding particular acts, but having little to do with the general direction of the thoughts and pur­poses. I am afraid it must be said, that disinte­restedness in the general conduct of lifethe devotion of the energies to purposes which hold

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