Aims and Aids for Girls and 
Young Women, by 
 
George Sumner Weaver This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere 
at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, 
give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg 
License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org 
Title: Aims and Aids for Girls and Young Women On the Various 
Duties of Life, Physical, Intellectual, And Moral Development; 
Self-Culture, Improvement, Dress, Beauty, Fashion, Employment, 
Education, The Home Relations, Their Duties To Young Men, 
Marriage, Womanhood And Happiness. 
Author: George Sumner Weaver 
Release Date: March 14, 2007 [EBook #20819] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK AIMS AND 
AIDS FOR GIRLS *** 
 
Produced by Bryan Ness, Marcia and the Online Distributed 
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[Transcriber's Note: Obvious printer errors, including punctuation, have 
been corrected. All other inconsistencies have been left as they were in 
the original.] 
AIMS AND AIDS FOR Girls and Young Women, 
ON THE 
VARIOUS DUTIES OF LIFE, 
INCLUDING 
PHYSICAL, INTELLECTUAL, AND MORAL DEVELOPMENT; 
SELF-CULTURE, IMPROVEMENT, DRESS, BEAUTY, FASHION, 
EMPLOYMENT, EDUCATION, THE HOME RELATIONS, THEIR 
DUTIES TO YOUNG MEN, MARRIAGE, WOMANHOOD AND 
HAPPINESS. 
BY REV. G. S. WEAVER, 
AUTHOR OF "HOPES AND HELPS," "MENTAL SCIENCE," 
"WAYS OF LIFE," ETC. 
NEW YORK: FOWLER AND WELLS, PUBLISHERS, 308 
BROADWAY. London: William Horsell, 492 Oxford Street. 
BOSTON: } 1856. { PHILADELPHIA: 142 Washington-st.} { No. 231 
Arch-street. 
ENTERED, ACCORDING TO ACT OF CONGRESS, IN THE YEAR 
1855, BY FOWLER AND WELLS, IN THE CLERK'S OFFICE OF 
THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE UNITED STATES FOR THE 
SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK. 
DAVIES AND ROBERTS, STEREOTYPERS, 201 William Street, 
New York.
PREFACE. 
My interest in woman and our common humanity is my only apology 
for writing this book. I see multitudes of young women about me, 
whose general training is so deficient in all that pertains to the best 
ideas of life, and whose aims and efforts are so unworthy of their 
powers of mind and heart, that I can not make peace with my own 
conscience without doing something to elevate their aims and quicken 
their aspirations for the good and pure in thought and life. Our female 
schools are but poor apologies for the purposes of mind-culture and 
soul-development. The idea of life they inspire is but a skeleton of 
custom-service and fashion-worship. It is altogether subservient to 
what is, not what should be. Society does little else than to teach its 
girls to be dolls and drudges. The prevailing current of instruction and 
influence is deplorably low. I feel confident that the best part of society 
is longing for something better. To obtain it, each one has but to live 
out, and express to the world his idea of a true life. 
In regard to the book I may say, whatever it lacks it has the merit of 
being in earnest. I hope those who see its deficiencies will make haste 
to supply them in some form of instruction or encouragement to the 
class the book addresses. Thinking fathers and mothers and teachers 
will not complain of this humble effort to serve their daughters and 
pupils, but will rather add more in a similar direction, and seek to 
complete what I have endeavored to begin. While life is spared, I hope 
to work in this field, that my own daughters, as well as those of others, 
may attain a worthy womanhood. 
G. S. W. ST. LOUIS, 1855. 
 
CONTENTS. 
Lecture One. 
GIRLHOOD. 
Angels view Girlhood with Solicitude and Delight--Beauty no
perpetual Pledge of Safety--Nothing in Man or Things impels a 
Provident Regard for it--Blossoming Womanhood an Object of Deep 
Interest and Pity--Girlhood's first Work is to Form a Character--It 
should be Pure and Energetic--Woman only a Thing--Her Education 
progressing--Physical Health should be Preserved--A Woman not 
Herself without Physical Strength--Woman must be Independent, and 
Earn her own Livelihood--Character must Embody Itself in an Outward 
Form to be of Service to the World Page 9-21 
Lecture Two. 
BEAUTY. 
God a Lover of Beauty--Every thing in the Universe Beautiful--The 
Admirer of Beauty should Reverence its Author--The Love of Beauty 
elevating in its Tendency--Its Abuses Fearful--Man a Part of Nature, 
and God in all--Woman the most Perfect Type of Beauty--Youthful 
Woman exposed to great Temptation--Beauty a Charming, but 
Dangerous Gift--The most Beautiful should be the most Pious--Beauty 
of Person Worthless without Loveliness of Character--"Strong-minded" 
Women not Beautiful--Beauty the Nurse of Vanity--Value of Character 
depreciates with Increase of Beauty when substituted for Moral 
Worth--Beauty only Skin-deep--Beauty Two-fold: Inward and 
Outward--Inward Beauty shines through--Beauty of Soul made 
Washington, Josephine, and Channing glorious--Every Woman may be 
Beautiful--Cheerfulness, Agreeable Manners, a Correct Taste, and 
Kindness should    
    
		
	
	
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