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TAYLOR. * * * * * WOMEN AND TORTOISES. I had intended sending you a paper on Bishop Taylor's _Similes_, with Illustrative Notes on some Passages in his Works; but I soon found that your utmost indulgence could not afford me a tithe of {535} the space I would require. Instead, therefore, send you an illustration of a single simile, as it is short, and not the least curious in the lot: "All _vertuous women_, _like tortoises_, carry their house on their heads, and their chappel in their heart, and their danger in their eye, and their souls in their hands, and God in all their actions."--_Life of Christ_, Part I. s. ii. 4. "_Phidias made the statue of Venus at Elis with one foot upon the shell of a tortoise_, to signify two great duties of a virtuous woman, which are to keep home and be silent."--_Human Prudence_, by W. De Britaine, 12th edit.: Dublin, 1726, 12mo., p. 134. "Vertuous women should keep house, and 'twas well performed and ordered by the Greeks: ' . . . mulier ne qua in publicum Spectandam se sine arbitro praebeat viro:' Which made Phidias, belike, at Elis paint _Venus treading on a tortoise_: a symbole of women's silence and housekeeping.... I know not what philosopher he was, that would have women come but thrice abroad all their time, to be _baptized_, _married_, _and buried_; but he was too straitlaced."--Burton's _Anat. Mel._, part iii. sec. 3. mem. 4. subs. 2. "_Apelles us'd to paint a good housewife upon a snayl_; which intimated that she should be as slow from gadding abroad, and when she went she shold carry her house upon her back: that is, she shold make all sure at home. Now, to a good housewife, her house shold be as the sphere to a star (I do not mean a _wandring_ star), wherin she shold twinckle as a star in its orb."--Howell's _Parly of Beasts_: Lond. 1660, p. 58. The last passage reminds us of the fine lines of Donne (addressed to _both_ sexes): "Be then thine own home, and in thyself dwell; Inn anywhere; And seeing the _snail_, which everywhere doth roam, Carrying his own home still, still is at home, Follow (for he is easy-paced) this _snail_: Be thine own palace, or the world's thy jail." EIRIONNACH. * * * * * WEATHER RULES. (Vol. vii., pp. 373. 522. 599. 627.) J. A., Ju
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