when allowed 
to continue, most invariably proves pernicious to her spiritual and 
temporal welfare. 
Hence, she stands in need of a true friend, a faithful adviser, on whom 
she can depend for safe instruction, and to whom she can have recourse 
as often as need be. The "_Serious Hours_" is unquestionably all this; it 
speaks openly, firmly, but mildly. It inspires the young girl with that 
genuine, lofty esteem that she should have for herself and for the 
dignity of her sex. It clearly defines her line of conduct in all the most
critical incidents and circumstances of life, so that she cannot be 
deceived unless that she wilfully shuts her eyes to the light of truth. It is 
all that the author proposed to make it, a first class book of instruction 
for young ladies, showing a careful study of all their wants and a happy 
choice of the remedies to meet them. And, believing that such a 
valuable book ought to be made accessible to all nations, we have 
ventured to present it to the public in an English dress. How far we 
have succeeded in rendering both its form and spirit we leave the public 
to decide. And, while we are fully aware that, in transferring the genius 
of one language to another, some of the original delicate shades of 
beauty must be inevitably sacrificed--the present translation not 
excepted--still we are happy to say that the work was one of love and 
deep interest to us, on account of its importance and good to society. 
TRANSLATOR. 
 
CONTENTS: 
Translator's Preface 
CHAPTER I 
.--Importance of the Time of Youth; Difficulties and Dangers that 
Women Meet With in Life, and the Necessity of Providing for Them
 
CHAPTER II 
.--Illusions of Youth; Value of Time at this Period of Life 
CHAPTER III 
.--The Heart of Woman; the Necessity of Regulating it During Youth 
CHAPTER IV 
.--The Dignity of Woman 
CHAPTER V 
.--Eve and Mary 
CHAPTER VI 
.--Eve and Mary (Continued) 
CHAPTER VII 
.--The World 
CHAPTER VIII 
.--The Same Subject (Continued)
CHAPTER IX 
--The Will 
CHAPTER X 
.--The Imagination 
CHAPTER XI 
.--Piety 
CHAPTER XII 
.--Vocation 
CHAPTER XIII 
.--A Serious Mind 
CHAPTER XIV 
.--Choice of Companions 
CHAPTER XV 
.--Toilet 
CHAPTER XVI 
.--Desire to Please 
CHAPTER XVII 
.--Curiosity 
CHAPTER XVIII 
.--Meditation and Reflection 
CHAPTER XIX 
.--Obedience to Parents 
CHAPTER XX 
.--Melancholy 
CHAPTER XXI 
.--On Reading 
CHAPTER XXII 
.--Same Subject (Continued) 
 
CHAPTER I 
. 
IMPORTANCE OF THE TIME OF YOUTH; DIFFICULTIES AND 
DANGERS THAT WOMEN MEET WITH IN LIFE, AND THE 
NECESSITY OF PROVIDING FOR THEM.
The most important period of life is that in which we are the better able, 
in making good use of the present, to repair the past and prepare for the 
future; that period holds the intermediate place between the age of 
infancy and the age of maturity, embracing the advantages of both, 
presenting at the same time the flowers of the one with the fruits of the 
other. In order to prepare for the future we need a certain assistance 
from the past, for this preparation demands a certain maturity of 
judgment and a force of will that experience alone can give. 
The child, devoid as it is of personal experience, can, by turning that of 
others to good account, make up for the deficiencies of its youth, and 
prepare for the future without having to learn in the severe school of 
self-experience. But, through an unfortunate occurrence of 
circumstances, and very often without any fault of theirs, the greater 
part of children attain the age of manhood and womanhood without 
having reaped the precious advantages offered them by the first stage of 
life, when the soul is most susceptible of receiving the impress of grace 
and virtue. A vitiated or inadequate primitive education, bad example, 
pernicious instruction? perchance, or at least personal levity of 
character, combined with that of childhood, deprive this age of many 
advantages, and call for a total reparation of the past, at a period of life 
that should be the living figure of hope. 
Happy, indeed, are those who have only the levity and negligences of 
childhood to repair, and who have never felt the crushing weight of a 
humiliating and grievous fault! Alas! that purity, that innocence so 
common formerly among children, is every day disappearing from their 
midst, many among them have become the victims of sin ere the 
passions of the heart manifested their presence; and their hearts have 
quivered from the sting of remorse ere they felt the perfidious lurings 
of pleasure. Many have received from sin that doleful experience, that 
premature craftiness, which, far from enlightening the mind, obscures 
and blinds it,--which, far from fortifying the will, enfeebles and 
enervates it. 
Such is the light by which we can truly see the importance that should 
be attached to the time    
    
		
	
	
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