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Rh he does not utter a falehood when he borrows the language of adoration. His imagination may raie the idol of his heart, unblamed, above humanity; and happy would it be for women, if they were only flattered by the men who loved them; I mean who loved the individual, not the ex; but hould a grave preacher interlard his dicoures with uch fooleries?

In ermons or novels, however, voluptuounes is always true to its text. Men are allowed by moralits to cultivate, as Nature directs, different qualities, and aume the different characters, that the ame paions, modified almot to infinity, give to each individual. A virtuous man may have a choleric or a anguine contitution, be gay or grave, unreproved; be firm till he is almot overbearing, or, weakly ubmiive, have no will or opinion of his own; but all women are to be levelled, by meeknes and docility, into one character of yielding oftnes and gentle compliance.

I will ue the preacher's own words. 'Let it be oberved, that in your ex manly exercies are never graceful; that in them a tone and figure, as well as an air and deportment, of the maculine kind, are always forbidding; and that men of enibility deire in every woman oft features, and a flowing voice, a form, not robut, and demeanour delicate and gentle.'

Is not the following portrait—the portrait of a houe lave? 'I am atonihed at the folly of many women, who are till reproaching their hubands for leaving them alone, for preferring this or that company to theirs, for treating them&ensp;