Seventeenth-Century Mother’s Advice Books


Book Description

Advice books published by women were a popular genre in Seventeenth and early Eighteenth-century England and they were moral manuals with strong religious overtones. Here, Urban highlights a notable exception: Age Rectified, which counsels women to acquire a 'disposition of mind' in old age which allows them to be accepted by younger generations.













Genghis Khan's Mother's Advice to Her Son Before He Leaves Home to Conquer the World And Other Poems


Book Description

Genghis Khan’s Mother’s Advice to Her Son Before He Leaves Home to Conquer the World and Other Poems is a collection of poetry containing colorful, controversial poetry, offering a dramatic view of life and death in 21st century America. About the Author Paavo Hall has a Master's degree in History from the University of Nevada, Las Vegas and a Master of Fine Arts degree in Playwrighting from the Yale University School of Drama. He is an army veteran and has been employed at various times as a Craps dealer at the Mint Hotel in Las Vegas, a cab driver in New York City, and a language instructor at universities in Iraq and Saudi Arabia. Hall has published a play in LUCKY THIRTEEN, a volume of short plays edited by Red Shuttleworth, published by the University of Nevada Press. He has written plays that have been performed off-off Broadway, the Utah Shakespearean Festival, and the Yale Cabaret, Hollywood. Hall lives in Great Falls, Montana along the Lewis and Clark Trail and is the chairman of the library committee of the Lewis and Clark Trail Heritage Foundation.













Mother's Advice


Book Description

Mothers Advice is a book of poems. These poems are the light of true living. A great house is built on the solid foundation. From the solid foundation are the strong pillars. The poems in this book are arranged in subsets known as pillars. These pillars are the living virtues of human existence.




Mother’s Advice Books


Book Description

Early modern works of advice can be typified by a number of texts by Erasmus falling into a variety of categories: advice on family conduct; manners; study plans and piety. A close relation to these works of advice was the parental advice book, usually written by a father to his son. It was not until the early 17th century that the mother's advice book evolved and even then these were often legitimated by the female authors claiming that sickness, or even impending death, made relaying their motherly advice by a means other than print impossible. The contents of the present volume, ordered chronologically by the date of the first edition of each advice book, are limited to works attributed to named mothers, even though information about these historical women is not always abundant. Miscellanea was the attempt of Elizabeth Grymeston to distill advice to her only surviving. It was first published in 1604. The text reproduced here is the 1608 edition which was the first to include the additional substantive Prayers. Even though listings indicate there were 19 editions of The Mother’s Blessing before 1640 very little is known of Dorothy Leigh. The first edition (1616), reproduced here, describes her as a gentle-woman, not long deceased and her dedicatory epistle to her three sons identifies her as a widow. Elizabeth Clinton wrote her advice book when she had become countess-dowager. It was dedicated to her daughter-in-law and addresses an area where she had apparently been deficient - the imperative directed at early modern women by domestic conduct books that mothers should nurse their own children. The edition reproduced here is the British Library copy. Elizabeth Brook Joceline composed her Legacy whilst awaiting the birth of her first child, having become convinced that she would die in childbirth. She died in 1622, nine days after the birth of a daughter. Possibly the most poignant of the mother's advice books, this was intended to stand in for her instructi