It is the height of selfishness for men, who fully appreciate in their own case the great advantage of a good education, to deny these advantages to women. There is no valid argument by which the exclusion of the female sex from the privilege of education can be defended. It is argued that women have their domestic duties to perform, and that, if they were educated, they would bury themselves in their books and have little time to manage their households. Of course, it is possible for women, as it is for men, to neglect necessary work with a view to sparing more time for reading sensational novels. But women are no more liable to this temptation than men, most women would be able to do their household work all the better for being able to refresh their minds in the intervals of leisure with a little reading. For education involves knowledge of the means by which health may be preserved and improved and enables a mother to consult such modern books as will tell her how to rear up her children into healthy men and women and skillfully nurse them and her husband when diseases attack her household.