Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Aims of the Edition
- Volume Editors’ Acknowledgements
- Note on the Present Edition
- Volume the First Peter’s Letters to his Kinsfolk
- Volume the Second Peter’s Letters to his Kinsfolk
- Volume the Third Peter’s Letters to his Kinsfolk
- Postscript: To the Third Edition
- Peter’s Letters to his Kinsfolk
- Introduction
- Emendation List
- Hyphenation List
- Explanatory Notes
- The Engravings
- Index to the Text of Peter’s Letters
Letter XXIV
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 13 March 2025
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Aims of the Edition
- Volume Editors’ Acknowledgements
- Note on the Present Edition
- Volume the First Peter’s Letters to his Kinsfolk
- Volume the Second Peter’s Letters to his Kinsfolk
- Volume the Third Peter’s Letters to his Kinsfolk
- Postscript: To the Third Edition
- Peter’s Letters to his Kinsfolk
- Introduction
- Emendation List
- Hyphenation List
- Explanatory Notes
- The Engravings
- Index to the Text of Peter’s Letters
Summary
OMAN’S, TUESDAY EVENING
DEAR DAVID,
IN a place where education is so much diffused among the men, it is natural to suppose, that the women also must, in no inconsiderable degree, be imbued with some passion for literature. The kinds of information most in request here, (and, indeed, necessarily so, when we reflect on the means of education which the place affords,) are evidently much more within the reach of the Fair Sex, than in most other cities of the same importance. To be able to talk with fluency about the Politics and Belles Lettres of the day, is all that is required of an accomplished man in Edinburgh, and these are accomplishments which the ladies, modest as they are, would require more modesty than is either natural or proper to suppose themselves incapable of acquiring. That ignorance of the learned languages and ancient literature, which the men have not the assurance to attempt disguising, has broken down effectually the first and most insurmountable barrier which separates the intellectual pretensions of the two sexes in England, and, indeed, in almost all the capitals of Europe. The universal neglect with which the more ancient and massy literature, even of our own island, seems to be treated, has removed another mighty, although not quite so insurmountable barrier; and, in short, between the men and the women, for aught I can see, there is no “gulf fixed.” The men, indeed, seem still to be anxious to prolong, in their own favour, the existence of something of that old prestige, which owes the decay of its vigour entirely to themselves. But the greatest Mysogynists in the world have never accused the sex of being deficient in acuteness of discernment, and the ladies of Edinburgh are quite sufficiently quick-sighted, not to allow the advantages which have been given them, to slip unused through their fingers.
So far as I may judge from my own short experience, however, the Scottish ladies, in general, are very far from pushing these advantages to any undue extent. It is not necessary to enter minutely into the causes of their forbearance in this respect; for a much slower person than Mr David Williams would have no great difficulty in forming a pretty fair guess, as to the most efficient of them.
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- Information
- Peter's Letters to his KinsfolkThe Text and Introduction, Notes, and Editorial Material, pp. 165 - 170Publisher: Edinburgh University PressPrint publication year: 2023