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there are important matters of public administra­tion to -which few men are equally competent with such women ; among others, the detailed control of expenditure. But what we are now discussing is not the need which society has of the services of women in public business, but the dull and hopeless life to which it so often con­demns them, by forbidding them to exercise the practical abilities which many of them are con­scious of, in any wider field than one which to some of them never was, and to others is no longer, open. If there is anything vitally im­portant to the happiness of human beings, it is that they should relish their habitual pursuit. This requisite of an enjoyable life is very imper­fectly granted, or altogether denied, to a large part of mankind ; and by its absence many a life is a failure, which is provided, in appearance, with every requisite of success. But if circumstances which society is not yet skilful enough to over­come, render such failures often for the present inevitable, society need not itself inflict them. The injudiciousness of parents, a youths own inexperience, or the absence of external oppor­tunities for the congenial vocation, and their presence for an uncongenial, condemn numbers of men to pass their lives in doing one thing reluc­tantly and ill, when there are other things wdiich they could have done well and happily. But on