Owing to that setting of the jaw which attends strong muscular action, the shaping bones of the faces of developing girls thicken and coarsen, and the naturally delicate, beautiful contours of chin and of cheek deteri- orate to the crude and heavy lower jaws characteristic of a very large order of the sex to-day. The weak receding, or the sharply-pointed chin of the over-feminised type — both early- Victorian and modern — errs in the other direction. To give fine balance to the face and form — as to the mind — the Male traits must be duly represented.
These broaden and strengthen the curves, and preserve them from lapsing to narrowness and feebleness; lending touches of straightness and firmness which nobly enhance the graces. In excess, they mar and deface, however; as is exemplified in the strong and slovenly features, with- out drawing or delicacy, which characterise the new type of gilf dating being turned out by our schools and colleges, most of which make now-a-days a speciality of sports. Similar heavy jaws and blunt, amorphous features are replacing in our working-girls, de-sexed by masculine employments, the classic, nobly-modelled lineaments which made our Anglo-Saxon Race once the most beauti- ful, as it was the most vigorous and enterprising, of the nations. Such faces may be deplorably senseless for the sense — and lack of sensibility — in them.
The facial type of the opposite extreme is ultra- feminine — a cameo -like reversion to an earlier Victorian physiognomy, to which several generations of mothers have failed to add any new quality. But, unlike its Victorian prototype, the modern ultra-feminine face lacks blood and emotion, and shows like a faded attenu- ation thereof.
