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the corresponding words in other languages, I will not stop to inquire; it is enough for me that our word is suitable to the character of our girls-English girls, I mean-for the word has nothing to do with Scotland, where "lassic" has its own delicious sense and admirable appropriateness. The English "girl" is the being whom the word. was meant to describe, and no being or thing could have a designation more descriptive.

Neck of lily, cheeks of rose, and eyes of heaven. Hair of sunny auburn, whose tiny tendrils dance with the slightest motion. A face nearer round than oval, but irradiated by the unsetting sun of a kind. nature. A figure, meek and graceful, wreathed in innocent muslin, and perpetually undulating and bending into lines of beauty. Such is the fair Saxon girl of Old England, as she grows in some sheltered nook of the merry land, unsmitched by the smoke and sophistications of cities, and little knowing of any other world than the little one which forms her home. It is the fortune of few eyes to behold this fair girl, for her parents prefer a life of retirement; but to the few who have once seen her, she is as the recollection of the Caaba is to the Mohammedan pilgrim-an idea to be cherished for ever. She chiefly holds intercourse with nature-with the more beautiful parts of it for there is a sympathy in lovely things that makes them love one another. She dotes upon flowers-fair roses, sisters to herself, and rhododendrons that strive to match her in stature: nor is there even a little violet in the garden but every day exchanges with her kind looks, as if the dew-drop lurking in it were a mirror to her own smiling loveliness, diminishing the object, but not leaving a lineament unexpressed. Out of these troops of floral friends she is ever and anon choosing some one more endeared than the rest, to wear for a while in her bosom; a preference which might make those which remained die sooner than that which was cropped. Her favourite seat is under a laburnum, which seems to be showering a new birth of beauty upon her head. There she sits in the quiet of nature, thinking thoughts as beautiful as flowers, with feelings as gentle as

the gales which fan them. She knows no evil, and therefore she does none. Untouched by earthly experiences, she is perfectly happyand the happy are good. Affection remains in her as a treasure, hereafter to be brought into full use. As yet she only spends a small share of the interest of her heart's wealth upon the objects around

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her: the principal will, on some future and timely day, be given to one worthy, I hope, to possess a thing so valuable. Meanwhile, she

loves as a daughter and a sister may do. Every morning and evening. she comes to her parents with her pure and unharming kiss; nor, when some cheerful brother returns from college or from countinghouse to enliven home for a brief space, is the same salutation wanting to assure him of the continuance of her most sweet regards. Often, too, she is found intertwining her loveliness with that of her sistersarm clasping waist, and neck crossing neck, and bosom pressed to bosom-till all seems one inextricable knot of beauty. No jealousy, no guile, no envy-no more than what possesses a bunch of lilies growing from the same stem. She has some spare fondness, moreover, for a variety of pets in the lower orders of creation. There are chickens which will leave the richest morsels at the sound of her voice, and little dogs which will give up yelping, even at the most provoking antagonists, if she only desires them. Her chief favourite, however, is a lamb, which follows her wherever she goes, a heavensent emblem of herself. To see her fondling this spotless creature on the green-innocence reposing upon innocence-you might suppose the golden age had returned, and that there was to be no more wickedness seen on earth.

Our "English girl" may be seen in various places. You meet her on a walk, and are charmed with her fresh complexion and blue modest eyes, as half seen under the averted bonnet. Then there are her neat shoes and white stockings, so pretty as compared with the hard outline of the booted foot, in which the ladies of other countries delight. There are also her gauzy frock, and its streaming sashes and ribbons, and her hair depending in massy ringlets adown her lovely neck. The whole figure breathes of the free and pure mind which animates it. At another time she is found in some pretty withdrawing-room, whose casements open upon flowery walks or green verandas. Her head is now invested only with the grace of nature-her flowing hair. Her countenance, instead of being flushed, as in the other case, by the open air, beams from the gentle toil of some domestic duty in which she has been assisting her mother.

Appropriate to her late task, she still wears her neat apron, edged with blue trimming, and from the front of which perk out two smart provoking-looking pockets, which gush over with all kinds of female paraphernalia, such as scissors, cotton-balls, and knitting-wires. You enter, and, being a friend of the family, she is so glad to see you. In five minutes you know all about the accomplishments of her canaries, the late behaviour of Bob the spaniel, an accident which happened that morning to her best frock, and the annual which she has received as a present" from a friend," as the inscription has it-and here she evidently wishes you rather to look into the inside of the book than dwell on the initial pages. She has also a few of the nothings called "ladies' work," light visionary fabrics of card and wafers, which she has been executing for a charity sale that is soon to take place: these are all brought out and displayed before you. Then there is her album, with holograph poems by three authors of reputation, and a thousand contributions, both original and selected, from less distinguished persons-the whole being garnished by her own drawings. All these things you must inspect, for she only shows them in the hope of entertaining you; and then she turns to music. She has had selections from the last opera sent to her, and these she runs over, for your amusement, on the pianoforte; carefully taking you bound, however, to observe that she has not yet sufficiently practised them to be quite perfect in their execution. In truth, you little need such apologies for her deficiencies. It is not for her external accomplishments-though these are considerable-that you value this fair specimen of humanity. You appreciate her for her beauty, which nature could never have conferred if it had not been intended as a reverencecompelling merit-for her gentle and artless nature so well enshrined in that form of native and indefeasible grace-and because, by dwelling on the contemplation of such a being, your estimation of your kind is elevated; a gratification in itself, and one of the highest order.

Such is the "English girl," as she still exists in many of the happy homes throughout this pleasant land. She is one of the creations of

nature, which, though decaying in generations, live nevertheless for ever as a race. It would be as absurd to expect that the next spring should fail to prank the sod of England with primroses, as to suppose that there will ever be a time with us when the cheeks of girls shall not bloom, and their hearts cease to be stored with those blessed influences which tend so much to cheer the rest of their kind. We may be ruined twice over-in the newspapers-but there will never be a time when the lover of nature shall want objects to solace himself withal. For him shall the ground year after year be covered with a new robe of green, the trees redress their dishevelled locks, the flowers once more put on their bloom; and for him there shall never be wanting sweet faces decked with maiden smiles, and painted with perennial roses, to assure him that England is still "right at the heart."

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