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Memoirs and Posthumous Works of Mary Wollstonecraft Godwin, Vol. 1 cover

Memoirs and Posthumous Works of Mary Wollstonecraft Godwin, Vol. 1

Chapter 92: LETTER ON THE MANAGEMENT OF INFANTS.
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About This Book

A frank biographical narrative traces the subject’s upbringing and character, recounting family dynamics marked by parental partiality and harsh discipline, childhood hardships, and the gradual emergence of intellectual independence and moral sensibility. The volume combines personal reminiscence with collected correspondence and posthumous essays on subjects such as the French nation and the management of infants, and it draws on conversations, notes, and testimonies from acquaintances to reconstruct the formative experiences and habits that shaped her thought and later writings.

LETTER
ON THE
MANAGEMENT OF INFANTS.

I ought to appologize for not having written to you on the subject you mentioned; but, to tell you the truth, it grew upon me: and, instead of an answer, I have begun a series of letters on the management of children in their infancy. Replying then to your question, I have the public in my thoughts, and shall endeavour to shew what modes appear to me necessary, to render the infancy of children more healthy and happy. I have long thought, that the cause which renders children as hard to rear as the most fragile plant, is our deviation from simplicity. I know that some able physicians have recommended the method I have pursued, and I mean to point out the good effects I have observed in practice. I am aware that many matrons will exclaim against me and dwell on the number of children they have brought up, as their mothers did before them without troubling themselves with new-fangled notions; yet, though, in my uncle Toby’s words, they should attempt to silence me, by “wishing I had seen their large” families, I must suppose, while a third part of the human species, according to the most accurate calculation, die during their infancy, just at the threshold of life, that there is some errors in the modes adopted by mothers and nurses, which counteracts their own endeavours. I may be mistaken in some particulars; for general rules, founded on the soundest reason, demand individual modification; but, if I can persuade any of the rising generation to exercise their reason on this head, I am content. My advice will probably be found most useful to mothers in the middle class; and it is from that the lower imperceptibly gains improvement. Custom, produced by reason in one, may safely be the effect of imitation in the other.

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