Page:Thoughts on the Education of Daughters.djvu/49

Rh off from the expreion of the countenance, and the beautiful glow which modety, affection, or any other emotion of the mind, gives, can never be een. It is not "a mind-illumined face." "The body does not charm, becaue the mind is een," but jut the contrary; and if caught by it a man marries a woman thus diguied, he may chance not to be atisfied with her real peron. A made-up face may trike viitors, but will certainly digut dometic friends. And one obvious inference is drawn, truth is not expected to govern the inhabitant of o artificial a form. The fale life with which rouge animates the eyes, is not of the