Rambles in Womanland
n to do many things
s a virtue not to loathe
en carried too f
y. If you let your envy be appar
ss common tha
you buy. A bill owing is like port w
significance at the end of a letter of insult
fe is to make a living dishon
the good that happens to them very seldom does us any harm. Peop
e made a fool of myself!' who
es signed by two honourable persons
n that, like drums, they are empty. Many othe
man. You may say what you like, but I have heard many women admit tha
try not to see it. What we d
aware of his worth; a conceited man is genera
in the Metropolis. Life in small towns is like life in glass
by great grievances or even great
by somewhat objectionable adventurers. When they ha
, knows how to make the best of them. The good diplomatist is not the one who successfully takes people i
e the error of his ways and improve. He may even be lovable. The self-righ
standing of a woman fro
, never one she has despised, seldom
ents, but if her bosom friend has on purpose or by mere chance eclipsed her
onest of men, because their minds are c
ed on the shoulders to stand su
d by men of talent, b
r ill of himself. A modest man