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Advice To Young Men; And (Incidentally) To Young Women In The Middle And Higher Ranks Of Life. In A Series Of Letters, Addressed To A Youth, A Bachelor, A Lover, A Husband, A Father, A Citizen, Or A Subject.
Advice To Young Men; And (Incidentally) To Young Women In The Middle And Higher Ranks Of Life. In A Series Of Letters, Addressed To A Youth, A Bachelor, A Lover, A Husband, A Father, A Citizen, Or A Subject.
A candid, hopeful invitation to growth that still speaks to today's reader. A series of earnest letters to a youth, a husband, a father, a citizen, Advice To Young Men offers practical, humane guidance framed as intimate conversation and social critique. This is more than a memoir of advice; it's a compact handbook of character and conduct. Cobbett blends epistolary guidance with essays on social duty, domestic virtue, and the responsibilities of power, all set in early nineteenth-century Britain. The book crystallises a tradition of civic virtue and personal formation, and it reads with the brisk clarity of a social reform pamphlet reframed for the modern reader. Its themes-youthful resolve, steady marriage, prudent leadership, and the care of community-still resonate in discussions of personal character and public life. A work of literary and historical significance, the text stands as a bridge between classic moral exhortation and the reformist impulse that shaped generations. For casual readers, it offers accessible, engaging prose and practical guidance; for classic-literature collectors, it is a valued artefact of a pivotal era. Selling points reinforce its rarity and worth: out of print for decades, now republished by Alpha Editions; restored for today's and future generations; more than a reprint-a collector's item and a cultural treasure. This volume invites both reflection and admiration, and invites new readers to discover a quiet, enduring ethical conversation.