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Evenings at Home; Or, The Juvenile Budget Opened cover

Evenings at Home; Or, The Juvenile Budget Opened

Chapter 96: LEDYARD’S PRAISE OF WOMEN.
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About This Book

A framed miscellany of short, accessible pieces presented as evening readings for young listeners, combining fables, dialogues, and natural-history sketches to instruct and amuse. The selections progress from simpler tales to more challenging explanations, offering animal stories, botanical and geological sketches, elementary scientific demonstrations, and occasional dramatic pieces. Many entries translate observation into practical lessons about conduct, industry, and curiosity, typically concluding with a clear moral or explanation. The overall aim is to cultivate understanding, reflection, and a taste for composition through varied subjects, plain language, and a gentle, graduated difficulty suitable for different ages.

LEDYARD’S PRAISE OF WOMEN.

Through many a land and clime a ranger
With toilsome steps, I’ve held my way,
A lonely, unprotected stranger,
To all the stranger’s ills a prey.
While steering thus my course precarious,
My fortune still had been to find
Men’s hearts and dispositions various,
But gentle Woman ever kind.
Alive to every tender feeling,
To deeds of mercy ever prone,
The wounds of pain and sorrow healing
With soft compassion’s sweetest tone.
No proud delay, no dark suspicion,
Stints the free bounty of their heart;
They turn not from the sad petition,
But cheerful aid at once impart.
Formed in benevolence of nature,
Obliging, modest, gay, and mild,
Woman’s the same endearing creature
In courtly town and savage wild.
When parched with thirst, with hunger wasted,
Her friendly hand refreshment gave,
How sweet the coarsest food has tasted!
What cordial in the simple wave!
Her courteous looks, her words caressing,
Shed comfort on the fainting soul:
Woman’s the stranger’s general blessing,
From sultry India to the Pole.

EVENING XXVII.