IT often happens that a daughter possesses
greatly superior advantages to those enjoyed, in early
years, by either her father or mother. She is
not compelled to labour as hard as they were obliged
to labour when young; and she is blessed with the means
of education far beyond what they had. Her associations,
too, are of a different order, all tending to elevate
her views of life, to refine her tastes, and to give
her admission into a higher grade of society than
they were fitted to move in.
Unless very watchful of herself and
very thoughtful of her parents, a daughter so situated
will be led at times to draw comparisons between her
own cultivated intellect and taste and the want of
such cultivation in her parents, and to think indifferently
of them, as really inferior, because not so well educated
and accomplished as she is. A distrust of their
judgment and a disrespect of their opinions will follow,
as a natural consequence, if these thoughts and feelings
be indulged. This result often takes place with
thoughtless, weak-minded girls; and is followed by
what is worse, a disregard to their feelings, wishes,
and express commands.
A sensible daughter, who loves her
parents, will hardly forget to whom she is indebted
for all the superior advantages she enjoys. She
will also readily perceive that the experience which
her parents have acquired, and their natural strength
of mind, give them a real and great superiority over
her, and make their judgment, in all matters of life,
far more to be depended upon than hers could possibly
be. It may be that her mother has never learned
to play upon the piano, has never been to a dancing-school,
has never had any thing beyond the merest rudiments
of an education; but she has good sense, prudence,
industry, economy; understands and practises all the
virtues of domestic life; has a clear, discriminating
judgment; has been her husband’s faithful friend
and adviser for some twenty or thirty years; and has
safely guarded and guided her children up to mature
years. These evidences of a mother’s title
to her respect and fullest confidence cannot long
be absent from a daughter’s mind, and will prevent
her acting in direct opposition to her judgment.
Thoughtless indeed must be that child
who can permit an emotion of disrespect toward her
parents to dwell in her bosom for more than a single
moment!
Respect and love toward parents are
absolutely necessary to the proper formation of the
character upon that true basis which will bring into
just order and subordination all the powers of the
mind. Without this order and subordination there
can be no true happiness. A child loves and respects
his parents, because from them he derived his being,
and from them receives every blessing and comfort.
To them, and to them alone, does his mind turn as
the authors of all the good gifts he possessed.
As a mere child, it is right for him thus to regard
his parents as the authors of his being and the originators
of all his blessings. But as reason gains strength,
and he sees more deeply into the nature and causes
of things, which only takes place as the child approaches
the years of maturity, it is then seen that the parents
were only the agents through which life, and all the
blessings accompanying it, came from God, the great
Father of all. If the parents have been loved
with a truly filial love, then the mind has been suitably
opened and prepared for love toward God, and an obedience
to his divine laws, without which there can be no
true happiness. When this new and higher truth
takes possession of the child’s mind, it in
no way diminishes his respect for his earthly parents,
but increases it. He no longer obeys them because
they command obedience, but he regards the truth of
their precepts, and in that truth hears the voice
of God speaking to him. More than ever is he
now careful to listen to their wise counsels, because
he perceives in them the authority of reason, which
is the authority of God.
Most young ladies, on attaining the
age of responsibility, will perceive a difference
in the manner of their parents. Instead of opposing
them, as heretofore, with authority, they will oppose
them with reason, where opposition is deemed necessary.
The mother, instead of saying, when she disapproves
any thing, “No, my child, you cannot do it;”
or, “No you must not go, dear;” will say,
“I would rather not have you do so;” or,
“I do not approve of your going.”
If you ask her reasons, she will state them, and endeavour
to make you comprehend their force. It is far
too often the case, that the daughter’s desire
to do what her mother disapproves is so active, that
neither her mother’s objections nor reasons are
strong enough to counteract her wishes, and she follows
her own inclinations instead of being guided by her
mother’s better judgment. In these instances,
she almost always does wrong, and suffers therefore
either bodily or mental pain.
Obedience in childhood is that by
which we are led and guided into right actions.
When we become men and women, reason takes the place
of obedience; but, like a young bird just fluttering
from its nest, reason at first has not much strength
of wing; and we should therefore suffer the reason
of those who love us, like the mother-bird, to stoop
under and bear us up in our earlier efforts, lest
we fall bruised and wounded to the ground. To
whose reason should a young girl look to strengthen
her own, so soon as to her mother’s, guided
as it is by love? But it too often happens that,
under the first impulses of conscious freedom, no voice
is regarded but the voice of inclination and passion.
The mother may oppose, and warn, and urge the most
serious considerations, but the daughter turns a deaf
ear to all. She thinks that she knows best.
“You are not going to-night,
Mary?” said a mother, coming into her daughter’s
room, and finding her dressing for a ball. She
had been rather seriously indisposed for some days,
with a cold that had fallen upon her throat and chest,
which was weak, but was now something better.
“I think I will, mother, for
I am much better than I was yesterday, and have improved
since morning. I have promised myself so much
pleasure at this ball, that I cannot think of being
disappointed.”
The mother shook her head.
“Mary,” she replied, “you
are not well enough to go out. The air is damp,
and you will inevitably take more cold. Think
how badly your throat has been inflamed.”
“I don’t think it has been so very
bad, mother.”
“The doctor told me it was badly
inflamed, and said you would have to be very careful
of yourself, or it might prove serious.”
“That was some days ago.
It is a great deal better now.”
“But the least exposure may cause it to return.”
“I will be very careful not
to expose myself. I will wrap up warm and go
in a carriage. I am sure there is not the least
danger, mother.”
“While I am sure that there
is very great danger. You cannot pass from the
door to the carriage, without the damp air striking
upon your face, and pressing into your lungs.”
“But I must not always exclude
myself from the air, mother. Air and exercise,
you know, the doctor says, are indispensable to health.”
“Dry, not damp air. This
makes the difference. But you must act for yourself,
Mary. You are now a woman, and must freely act
in the light of that reason which God has given you.
Because I love you, and desire your welfare, I thus
seek to convince you that it is wrong to expose your
health to-night. Your great desire to go blinds
you to the real danger, which I can fully see.”
“You are over-anxious, mother,”
urged Mary. “I know how I feel much better
than you possibly can, and I know I am well enough
to go.”
“I have nothing more to say,
my child,” returned the mother. “I
wish you to act freely, but wisely. Wisely I
am sure you will not act if you go to-night.
A temporary illness may not alone be the consequence;
your health may receive a shock from which it will
never recover.”
“Mother wishes to frighten me,”
said Mary to herself, after her mother had left the
room. “But I am not to be so easily frightened.
I am sorry she makes such a serious matter about my
going, for I never like to do any thing that is not
agreeable to her feelings. But I must go to this
ball. William is to call for me at eight, and
he would be as much disappointed as myself if I were
not to go. As to making more cold, what of that?
I would willingly pay the penalty of a pretty severe
cold rather than miss the ball.”
Against all her mother’s earnestly
urged objections, Mary went with her lover to the
ball. She came home, at one o’clock, with
a sharp pain through her breast, red spots on her
cheeks, oppression of the chest, and considerable
fever. On the next morning she was unable to
rise from her bed. When the doctor, who was sent
for, came in, he looked grave, and asked if there
had been any exposure by which a fresh cold could
be taken.
“She was at the ball last night,” replied
the mother.
“Not with your approval, madam?”
he said quickly, looking with a stern expression into
the mother’s face.
“No, doctor. I urged her
not to go; but Mary thought she knew best. She
did not believe there was any danger.”
A strong expression rose to the doctor’s
lips, but he repressed it, lest he should needlessly
alarm the patient. On retiring from her chamber,
he declared the case to be a very critical one; and
so it proved to be. Mary did not leave her room
for some months; and when she did, it was with a constitution
so impaired that she could not endure the slightest
fatigue, nor bear the least exposure. Neither
change of climate nor medicine availed any thing toward
restoring her to health. In this feeble state
she married, about twelve months afterward, the young
man who had accompanied her to the ball. One
year from the period at which that happy event took
place, she died, leaving to stranger hands a babe
that needed all her tenderest care, and a husband
almost broken-hearted at his loss.
This is not merely a picture from
the imagination, and highly coloured. It is from
nature, and every line is drawn with the pencil of
truth. Hundreds of young women yearly sink into
the grave, whose friends can trace to some similar
act of imprudence, committed in direct opposition
to the earnest persuasions of parents or friends,
the cause of their premature decay and death.
And too often other, and sometimes even worse, consequences
than death, follow a disregard of the mother’s
voice of warning.