On this page
- Departments (1)
-
Text (3)
-
f THE DEAKIN INSTITUTION. 41
-
VI.—THE DEAKIN INSTITUTION. •
-
Amid the din of warthe strife of parties...
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
-
-
Transcript
-
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
Additionally, when viewing full transcripts, extracted text may not be in the same order as the original document.
It Lias Been Remarked That, In Soine Res...
aba It ting was a the dreary wind ni had ght sunk "within only and now without and then , bu g t iv the ing storm out a seemed
shiver-; , ing gus the t , like morn a ch arose ild that bri ht and bbin bold g in as its if sleep it had . had nothing to do g
for with weal the th wre and cks the of strugg the nig le ht for before bread . were London renewed awoke . , and What the a tran trife - where
sition from the silence and gloom of the closely curtained room hi the ther dead and lay thither , to the and public there was street the . edd There ying vehicles crowd of were pedes rattling trians ,
one a and cul wou there prit ld by was hardl the Punch y , l lar , and g and ine Jud a that troop y , and C ( the of ther tatterdemalions living e was know the policeman that at they his heels must with ;
die . " It is due to Mrs . Norton to say , that she took the desolate child t tlain
that to her the own brother home — ; bu who t it had would been some much tim more e abroad than due and who o exp seemed , to his sisters
considerable a to t have regular profited intervals sum , b a y favor . his And misfortunes they farther were , — bidden some had remitted b thenceforward enevolent persons to expect who t a
had arran become gements in for terested her futur in e provi the delicate sion . ' Tis orp best han , to were have concer the whole ing truth as far . as we know it . Another part of the truth is , that MrsNorton did thus bring herself into contact with her betters in
the character . of a most charitable lady . That might not influence her We much— temp -and ted it mi but ght . we not jude one another " there is
are , may g , Assuredl One that jud each geth will . " be It is rew ours arded to do accor good ding as as we his have work opportunit shall be y . .
Conscience y will not slumber always . The time will come when we may be summoned to a review of the past ; and it is in life ' s
they tion gloomiest , who the , hour loom fearless s of that old of her memory sorcery and commences the , may loom pass her of the to incantations the shadow gloom of of : death _hajDjyy afflic . - ageg
, g , M . N .
F The Deakin Institution. 41
f THE DEAKIN INSTITUTION . 41
Vi.—The Deakin Institution. •
VI . —THE DEAKIN INSTITUTION .
Amid The Din Of Warthe Strife Of Parties...
Amid the din of warthe strife of parties , the bustle of everlargement increasing of commerce views , and the , the excitement superabundant of rap energy id locomotion displayed , the in en all
drous directions ineteenth , and in century every , sp it here is o le f asing action to hear this now sign- and full then and amid
wonthe clamor n a whisper in , aid of p woman . Not woman here as of the true spiritual i
elementthe home-refiner of man ' s life ( in which sphappness she , needs neither help nor sympathy from the le outer in world the world ) , but
woman toiling , . struggling , even as man has to ' strugg , " ' s
-
-
Citation
-
English Woman’s Journal (1858-1864), Sept. 1, 1860, page 41, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse-os.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/periodicals/ewj/issues/ewj_01091860/page/41/
-