[The Measure of a Man by Amelia Edith Huddleston Barr]@TWC D-Link book
The Measure of a Man

PREFACE
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"Give me one domestic grace," said a famous leader of men, "and I will turn it into a hundred public virtues." A Home, however splendidly appointed, is ill furnished without the sound of children's voices; and the patter of children's feet.

It may be strictly orderly, but it is silent and forlorn; and has an air of solitude.

Solitude is a great affliction, and Domestic Solitude is one of its hardest forms.

No number of balls and dinner parties, no visits from friends, can make up for the absence of sons and daughters round the family table and the family hearth.
Yet there certainly is a restless feminine minority, who declare, both by precept and example, Family Life to be a servitude.

Alas! They have not given themselves opportunity to discover that self-sacrifice is the meat and drink of all true affection.
But women have learned within the last two decades to listen to every side of an argument.


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