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Front Matter
"'Tis a false and lying charge."
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Preface
In
these progressive days, when so much energy and discussion are devoted to what is termed equality
and the rights of women, it is well to remember that there have been in the distant past women, and
girls even, who by their actions and endeavors proved themselves the equals of the men of their time
in valor, shrewdness, and ability.
This volume seeks to tell for the girls and boys of to-day the stories of some of their sisters of
the long-ago,—girls who by eminent position or valiant deeds became historic even before they had
passed the charming season of girlhood.
Their stories are fruitful of varying lessons, for some of these historic girls were willful as well
as courageous, and mischievous as well as tender-hearted.
But from all the lessons and from all the morals, one truth stands out most clearly—the fact that
age and country, time and surroundings, make but little change in the real girl-nature, that has
ever been impulsive, trusting, tender, and true, alike in the days of the Syrian Zenobia and in
those of the modern American school-girl.
After all, whatever the opportunity, whatever the limitation, whatever the possibilities of this
same never-changing girl-nature, no better precept can be laid down for our own bright young
maidens, as non better can be deduced from the stories herewith presented, than that phrased in
Kingsleys’s noble yet simple verse:
"Be good, sweet maid, and let who will be clever;
Do noble things, not dream them, all day long;
And so make life, death, and the vast forever
One grand, sweet song."
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Grateful acknowledgment is made by the author for the numerous expressions of interest that came to
him from his girl-readers as the papers now gathered into book-from appeared from time to time in
the pages of St. Nicholas. The approval of those for whom one studies and labors is the
pleasantest and most enduring return.
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