Another book on my bookshelf down. It's in a similar format as Peter S. Seymour's "Dear Daughter", but I slightly more enjoy the collection of poems and quotes. A lot of the rhetoric is outdated or in conflict with one another, but it's a sweet book that is broken up into sections based on daughters, men, women, love and marriage, and then life -- all in the context of speaking to one's daughter and lessons you'd want her to know.
It's cute and was a sweet gift my grandmother had gifted my mother back in 1991.