Summary of your 'study carrel' ============================== This is a summary of your Distant Reader 'study carrel'. The Distant Reader harvested & cached your content into a collection/corpus. It then applied sets of natural language processing and text mining against the collection. The results of this process was reduced to a database file -- a 'study carrel'. The study carrel can then be queried, thus bringing light specific characteristics for your collection. These characteristics can help you summarize the collection as well as enumerate things you might want to investigate more closely. This report is a terse narrative report, and when processing is complete you will be linked to a more complete narrative report. Eric Lease Morgan Number of items in the collection; 'How big is my corpus?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 18 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 82823 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 64 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 12 House 11 Parliament 11 Mr. 11 England 9 Government 8 Commons 8 Bill 8 Act 6 Lord 6 King 6 Crown 5 british 5 State 5 Sir 4 english 4 Union 4 Minister 4 London 4 Ireland 4 George 4 Constitution 4 Cabinet 3 liberal 3 Reform 3 Lords 3 Life 3 John 3 Home 3 Henry 3 Great 3 France 3 Duke 3 Charles 3 Britain 2 Women 2 William 2 Westminster 2 United 2 Trade 2 Speaker 2 South 2 Rule 2 Queen 2 Prime 2 Party 2 Mrs. 2 Mill 2 Labour 2 James 2 Irish Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 3130 man 2801 time 2462 member 2393 year 2206 power 2172 woman 2122 king 2098 government 2031 law 1932 party 1594 day 1594 case 1563 question 1526 people 1522 part 1425 country 1368 parliament 1243 bill 1182 right 1152 order 1134 matter 1081 fact 1064 p. 1006 authority 1001 policy 984 person 984 life 932 system 900 land 898 principle 893 place 893 house 891 nation 882 opinion 879 court 858 way 847 vote 835 work 827 hand 823 number 805 subject 799 thing 791 interest 791 class 790 war 783 course 768 election 758 measure 737 duty 725 one Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 8895 _ 3246 House 2670 Parliament 2237 Ireland 2030 Commons 1763 Lord 1686 Mr. 1597 England 1489 Government 1186 Lords 1070 Bill 933 Sir 904 Irish 902 Act 880 Home 806 Crown 744 Rule 744 . 721 State 669 Constitution 659 King 582 Council 581 Union 540 Great 515 Charles 506 Committee 503 Minister 502 Henry 493 English 483 Britain 470 London 456 United 427 Speaker 427 Cabinet 393 British 392 John 371 Clarendon 363 vol 360 Elizabeth 356 Life 355 Canada 354 i. 346 France 341 Westminster 340 James 333 Prime 315 Gladstone 309 George 309 Edward 306 Party Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 15115 it 7020 he 6880 they 4779 i 4645 we 3103 them 2014 him 1328 you 1091 us 1021 she 746 himself 741 themselves 694 itself 572 me 473 her 206 one 132 herself 121 myself 112 ourselves 27 ours 19 theirs 15 yourself 14 his 11 oneself 10 mine 6 yours 4 thee 3 pp 3 ii 3 hers 2 yourselves 1 £6,605,900 1 £3,626,322 1 york--"to 1 thyself 1 proofs 1 je 1 interest:-- 1 imperil 1 hopes-- 1 dulwich[11]--himself 1 attention:-- 1 36_s Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 58527 be 18564 have 4447 do 3640 make 2755 say 2351 take 2273 give 1489 see 1377 come 1239 find 1177 go 1142 know 1084 think 1028 bring 1022 seem 973 pass 967 become 960 call 920 hold 719 show 713 appear 712 leave 699 use 697 pay 695 carry 692 put 670 follow 665 speak 659 stand 619 keep 590 consider 558 write 550 believe 549 begin 542 tell 542 send 539 require 538 work 529 receive 529 exist 524 get 507 mean 472 sit 472 obtain 471 provide 465 remain 464 ask 457 accord 454 let 453 appoint Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 11337 not 3526 more 3351 so 2895 great 2765 other 2549 only 2241 very 1880 such 1764 well 1764 most 1759 much 1665 first 1658 as 1547 own 1493 many 1482 even 1434 same 1414 now 1376 political 1290 good 1223 long 1208 far 1198 new 1178 up 1171 public 1164 irish 1015 out 1013 then 999 never 997 however 996 also 971 less 970 general 915 still 868 little 865 present 818 too 815 always 812 whole 799 last 764 large 721 old 704 parliamentary 671 indeed 667 certain 665 high 660 english 651 few 638 ever 634 private Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 498 least 429 most 400 good 212 great 104 high 103 bad 56 strong 47 Most 46 manif 43 slight 40 early 35 small 34 near 30 large 30 eld 28 low 27 late 25 wise 21 full 20 able 17 poor 14 noble 13 simple 12 sure 12 old 11 deep 10 rich 9 close 9 clear 8 gross 7 wide 7 remote 7 grave 7 fine 6 keen 6 free 6 brave 5 weak 5 sound 5 short 5 plain 5 common 5 bitter 4 true 4 pure 4 mean 4 long 4 happy 4 fit 4 fair Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 1335 most 76 least 49 well 7 worst 2 lest 1 said:-- 1 near 1 highest Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 www.gutenberg.net Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 1 http://www.gutenberg.net/dirs/1/9/6/0/19609/19609-h/19609-h.htm 1 http://www.gutenberg.net/dirs/1/9/6/0/19609/19609-h.zip Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 21 _ see _ 10 government did not 8 _ is _ 8 house is not 8 ireland is not 8 parliament was not 7 parliament did not 7 parliament is not 7 people do not 6 commons does not 6 men do not 6 power is not 5 bill does not 5 day is not 5 government had not 5 government was not 5 house does not 5 ireland is still 5 lords did not 5 parliament are not 5 parliament had not 5 time had not 4 commons is not 4 commons were not 4 england is not 4 government does not 4 government have not 4 king was not 4 man is not 4 parliament does not 4 parliament were not 4 party did not 4 party were not 3 bills brought in 3 case is not 3 commons did not 3 commons was not 3 government has always 3 government has ever 3 government is always 3 government is not 3 government were not 3 ireland does not 3 ireland is now 3 ireland was not 3 king did not 3 king had long 3 king were not 3 law is not 3 law was not Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 3 parliament is no longer 2 king was not likely 2 woman has no vote 1 _ are not perfectly 1 bill does not incidentally 1 bill is not so 1 bill was not quite 1 bills have not infrequently 1 bills is not altogether 1 bills is not strictly 1 bills were not too 1 case are not impartial 1 case is not good 1 case is not so 1 cases were not only 1 commons does not often 1 commons had no reason 1 commons had no right 1 commons is not always 1 commons is not yet 1 commons showed no disposition 1 commons took no exception 1 commons was not so 1 commons were not impressed 1 commons were not thoroughly 1 countries are not yet 1 country is not capable 1 country was no less 1 country was not poor 1 day have no such 1 day is not at 1 day is not financial 1 day is not so 1 days did not actually 1 days was not so 1 england had no right 1 england is not even 1 england is not quite 1 england is not very 1 england was no longer 1 england was not only 1 england were not yet 1 government are no guarantee 1 government are no small 1 government are not merely 1 government are not only 1 government has not yet 1 government have not earnestly 1 government have not even 1 government having no part A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 10000 author = Anonymous title = The Magna Carta date = keywords = England; King; William; heir summary = (2) If any earl, baron, or other person that holds lands directly of the Crown, for military service, shall die, and at his death his heir knight''s ''fee'', and any man that owes less shall pay less, in When the heir comes of age, he shall restore the whole land to military service shall have died, and at the time of his death his heir land shall be committed to two lawful and discreet men of that fee, who 4. The guardian of the land of an heir who is thus under age, shall 4. The guardian of the land of an heir who is thus under age, shall 4. The guardian of the land of an heir who is thus under age, shall and we shall hold it in the same manner in which the baron held it. and we shall hold it in the same manner in which the baron held it. id = 4351 author = Bagehot, Walter title = The English Constitution date = keywords = Act; Cabinet; Commons; Constitution; England; English; George; Government; House; III; Lords; Minister; Ministry; Mr.; Palmerston; Parliament; Premier; President; Queen; Reform; parliamentary; presidential summary = I conceive, therefore, that the great power of the House of Lords It is true that a completely new House of Lords, mainly composed of men English world such a House of Lords would soon lose all influence. incited to form an opinion like a nation under a Cabinet government; assembly?" The French people said, "We will be governed by the one man Nor would any party like to trust to a weak man the great power which a the House of Lords at the time, and the Constitution of the country. the Lords, "Use the powers of your House as we like, or you shall not old institution like the House of Lords is necessarily great; its question--how the House of Commons comes to be able to govern at all? fix on some one great man whom it knows, but the English nation could are really governed by a Cabinet and a Parliament--men like themselves, id = 15086 author = Childers, Erskine title = The Framework of Home Rule date = keywords = Act; America; Australia; Bill; Britain; Canada; Colonial; Colonies; Colony; Constitution; Crown; Customs; Empire; England; Federal; Government; Great; Home; Ireland; Land; Lord; Mr.; Parliament; Rule; South; States; Union; United; british; english; imperial; irish summary = Irish abnormalities render Ireland unfit for self-government. Britain should govern Ireland on the ground that the British electorate, Ireland the Government was systematically anti-Irish. conceived the idea of governing Ireland according to Irish ideas, came Pitt, in the Legislative Union of Ireland and Great Britain nine years Colonial Office for Canada and the Irish Office for Ireland, both analogy to that Union of Britain and Ireland which had paralyzed Irish War of 1882 was brewing, and Ireland, where the Great Land Act of 1881 some form of Federal Home Rule for Ireland. Irish People," Lord Dunraven in "The Outlook in Ireland," and Mr. G.F.H. Berkeley in a paper contributed to "Home Rule Problems," have lucidly Ireland more control over Imperial matters affecting the self-governing to in the case of any other country than Ireland, but because Irish exist between Great Britain and Ireland will be to put upon the Irish id = 18419 author = Churchill, Winston title = Liberalism and the Social Problem date = keywords = Africa; Bill; Budget; Colony; Commons; Conservative; Constitution; Government; House; Labour; Liberal; Lords; Mr.; Parliament; Party; River; South; State; Trade; Transvaal; british summary = years--with Free Trade, Colonial Preferences, the South African those were good and expanding years of British trade and national this country exercises a great influence upon the Government. accorded to the Mother Country by the self-governing States of the to the Government of the Colony for the general purposes of State, and the present time a Liberal Government, however powerful, cannot look action of the House of Lords at the present time forces the Executive people of this country will elect a mad House of Commons, and that the "We like Free Trade and we are Liberals at heart, but this Government hours and the general conditions of labour are such as to cause great better for the country it governs and the Party it represents. that in our Constitution a Government, supported by a House of Commons In no great country in the new world or the old id = 19609 author = Clayton, Joseph title = The Rise of the Democracy date = keywords = Act; Anselm; Archbishop; Bill; Canterbury; Church; Commons; Crown; England; George; Government; Henry; House; John; King; Labour; London; Lords; Mr.; Parliament; Party; Pope; William summary = Local Government--The Workman in the House of Commons--Working-class Government--Bureaucracy--Working-Class Ascendancy--On Behalf of Democracy Parliament of elected members has become the real centre of government, is All "lawful" men are to have a free right to pass in and out of England in To-day democracy takes the form of representative government in civilised government by King, Lords, and Commons; but both were determined that the Parliament; the House of Commons could govern without a King. responsibility of the King''s Ministers to the Houses of Parliament. government is, and ought to be, by King, Lords, and Commons," and Charles Henceforth government was to be by King, Lords, and Commons; but Three representative working-class leaders in the House of Commons stand the House of Commons when a Liberal Government has been in power. Parliament, he can even be a member of the House of Commons. Parliament and proclaim democracy--"Government of the people, by the id = 15572 author = Dicey, Albert Venn title = A Leap in the Dark A Criticism of the Principles of Home Rule as Illustrated by the Bill of 1893 date = keywords = Act; Bill; Britain; England; English; Government; Great; Home; House; Imperial; Ireland; Irish; Kingdom; Mr.; Parliament; Rule; United; Westminster summary = shall decide whether a law passed by the Irish Parliament violates Ireland a Parliament intended to legislate on all, or nearly all, Irish of any Irish members at all, means under a scheme of Home Rule the ruin Irish Parliament must flit to and fro between Ireland and England, and the Imperial Parliament at Westminster, as, for example, whether Mr. Gladstone or Lord Salisbury shall be head of the British Cabinet, shall constitute the English Cabinet; on the Irish vote will depend Irish Parliament is, under the new constitution, competent to pass. England and Ireland, the English Government and the Irish The supremacy of the Imperial Parliament means to Irish Home Rulers and Home Rule, a new constitution for the United Kingdom, 1, 19; Home Rule, a new constitution for the United Kingdom, 1, 19; powers of the Irish Government under Home Rule Bill, 66 _et seq_., Irish Government Act, _see_ Home Rule Bill id = 48614 author = Fawcett, Millicent Garrett, Dame title = Women''s Suffrage: A Short History of a Great Movement date = keywords = Act; Bill; Government; House; Mill; Miss; Mr.; Mrs.; Parliament; Reform; Sir; Suffrage; Union; Women summary = PRESIDENT OF THE NATIONAL UNION OF WOMEN''S SUFFRAGE SOCIETIES last time he ever gave a vote for women''s suffrage. formed the nucleus of the National Union of Women''s Suffrage Societies, in the House of Commons of the women''s suffrage movement. Bill, the 73 members who voted for women''s suffrage included about 10 the experienced political men who supported women''s suffrage told us Reform Bill of 1884, the most vehement opposition was offered by Mr. Gladstone; not indeed even then to the principle of women''s suffrage, adoption of women''s suffrage in New Zealand and in South Australia. success of women''s suffrage in New Zealand and South Australia in 1892. "That the Council of the National Union of Women''s Suffrage Societies Women''s Suffrage society on non-party lines, which should by meetings, opposed a women''s suffrage amendment to the Reform Bill of that year. favourable to women''s suffrage, and representing the parties--Liberal, _Times, The_, on Women''s Suffrage, 77 id = 32612 author = Figgis, Darrell title = The Irish Constitution Explained by Darrell Figgis date = keywords = Chamber; Constitution; Eireann; Free; Ireland; Irish; Parliament; State; article summary = "The Supreme Court of the Irish Free State shall, with such Council of the Irish Free State shall respectively pass such further State/Saorstat Eireann and shall within the limits of the Irish Free The Chamber/Dail Eireann shall be composed of members who represent of whom four Ministers shall be Members of the Chamber/Dail Eireann and a The judicial power of the Irish Free State/Saorstat Eireann shall be The Supreme Court of the Irish Free State/Saorstat Eireann shall, with Government of the Irish Free State/Saorstat Eireann shall be regarded as Constitution of the Irish Free State as by law established and that I to elect members of the Council of Ireland shall after the Parliament of 1920, but the Parliament and Government of the Irish Free State shall in 1920, but the Parliament and Government of the Irish Free State shall in the constitution of a Parliament and Government of the Irish Free State in id = 41304 author = Graham, Harry title = The Mother of Parliaments date = keywords = Act; Bill; Cabinet; Chair; Chamber; Chancellor; Charles; Committee; Commons; Court; Crown; Duke; Edward; England; George; Government; Great; Hall; House; John; King; Life; Lord; Memoirs; Minister; Mr.; Parliament; Prime; Queen; Sir; Speaker; Westminster; history summary = House of Lords by Act of Parliament in 1640--Cromwell omitted to of Parliament the House of Lords consisted almost entirely of life in 1831, when Sidney Smith likened the House of Lords to Mrs. Partington, the old lady of Sidmouth who, during the great storm of a member of the House of Lords was tried by his peers, on July 18, "House of Commons tact." Sir Robert Peel, Lord John Russell, and the Speaker of the House of Commons, was appointed Lord Keeper in £10,000--£5000 as Lord Chancellor, and £5000 as Speaker of the House Reading Clerk of the House of Lords, desires the faithful Commons to In the House of Lords peers address their fellows; in the Commons Justice informed the House of Lords that the High Court of Parliament Lord Chancellor, addressed the House three times on the day he took members of Parliament, in the special House of Commons'' gallery, or at id = 39711 author = Hallam, Henry title = Constitutional History of England, Henry VII to George II. Volume 1 of 3 date = keywords = Annals; Bacon; Buckingham; Burleigh; Burnet; Cecil; Charles; Coke; Commons; Cranmer; Crown; D''Ewes; Duke; Earl; Edward; Elizabeth; England; France; God; Henry; House; Idaho; James; King; Life; Lingard; London; Lord; Mary; Mr.; Norfolk; Parker; Rome; Sir; Spain; State; Strype; Suffolk; VIII; Whitgift; english summary = the king''s courts; but in these the common rules of law and the mode of given to the king by acts of parliament in the last year of Henry, and the House of Commons, attended by several lords, to declare the king''s James the Fifth, late King of Scots, otherwise called Mary Queen of the king having bound himself to use according to law that power, it so the King''s Bench, Common Pleas, and other courts, to their great charges house._--The Commons asserted in this reign, perhaps for the first time, queen says: "By our common law, although there be for the prince laws made publicly in parliament may by the king''s authority be king''s absolute power, and not in a grant of parliament; a point, parliaments upon it, though the law could never be respected if the king knew the true and ancient common law to be the most favourable to kings id = 42179 author = Hallam, Henry title = Constitutional History of England, Henry VII to George II. Volume 2 of 3 date = keywords = April; Burnet; Charles; Clarendon; Commons; Cromwell; Crown; Duke; Earl; England; France; God; Henry; Holland; House; Idaho; James; January; John; Journals; King; Laud; Life; London; Lord; Monk; Mr.; Oxford; Papers; Parl; Scotland; Scots; Sir; State; Strafford; Thurloe; Trials; Whitelock; York; english summary = Difficulties about the Restoration -New Parliament -King parliament," says Justice Crawley, "appertains to the king originally, acts of parliament to bind the king not to command the subjects, their [154] The king had long before said that "parliaments are like cats; Commons that it is high treason in the King of England for the time two powerful bodies, whom neither kings nor parliaments in England proposals by the king''s letter to the two houses of parliament. parliament from the time of the king''s return till their dissolution act in the House of Lords, notwithstanding the king''s personal The House of Commons voted that the king''s parliament." The king, in a speech to the House of Lords, complained king to govern by a standing army was treason at common law, and seems purpose; and that the court party in the House of Lords were powerful id = 45773 author = James I, King of England title = A Proclamation Declaring His Maiesties Pleasure Concerning the Dissoluing of the Present Conuention of Parliament date = keywords = Wee summary = Wee neede not giue account thereof vnto any: yet, according to Our more respect then euer any House of Commons did to Vs, or (as Wee of good and profitable Lawes: Yet Wee gaue them time and scope for declared, that Wee would make a Recesse on the fourth day of Iune next We appointed to adiourne the Parliament on the fourth day of Iune, adiournement, which being made knowen vnto Vs, Wee againe signified Our pleasure to both Houses, that on the fourth day of Iune the Parliament Parliament, and made offer thereof vnto them, which being in effect of the house of Commons making it their choise, Wee made a Recesse by free pardon and good Lawes to bee passed, as they had both by the great this Our resolution, with the reasons thereof vnto all Our Subiects, and conuenient time, which Wee hope shall not bee long, to Call and id = 34471 author = Lowell, A. Lawrence (Abbott Lawrence) title = The Government of England (Vol. I) date = keywords = Act; Bill; Board; Committee; Commons; Council; Crown; England; Federation; General; Gladstone; Hans; House; Ibid; Ireland; Lord; Minister; Mr.; National; Office; Parliament; Rep.; Secretary; Ser; Sir; Speaker; Treasury; Union; conservative; english; liberal; sidenote summary = local government acts, no charter conferring political power can now be electing members to the House of Commons;[25:3] and the power to create life peers with votes in the House of Lords.[25:4] Other powers again, general rule which excludes from the House of Commons all office-holders judge, as the presiding officer of the House of Lords, and as a member only in the case of great party measures, where both sides of the House private members, orders of the day practically mean bills, and notices of private members to the work of the House, which forms the subject of member without any order of the House; but under the present rules an committees were under the control of the government the private member [Sidenote: Few Party Votes in Committees.] the officers of the House of Lords, carried against the government in [Sidenote: Officers of the House of Lords.] id = 15681 author = Milner, Alfred Milner, Viscount title = Constructive Imperialism date = keywords = Free; House; Reform; Reformer; Tariff; Unionist; british; great summary = Tariff Reform in a sound national policy, for, indeed, it seems to me duties upon foreign imports as so-called Free Traders go blindly think Tariff Reformers want to put duties on foreign goods for the fun duties of Tariff Reformers to keep people''s eyes fixed upon this vital great trading nation are bound to think of your markets, not only your all doubt and question so much more work for British hands. looking at public questions from other than party points of view. From my point of view, social reform is a national affair. Unionist party going to confront the great problems of the present think that those people, with whom Tariff Reformers agree on almost the great Tariff Reform campaign was inaugurated in this country by a few instances that a policy of Tariff Reform is not a thing in the one of great national importance, because the sweated workers are id = 35184 author = Muir, Ramsay title = The Character of the British Empire date = keywords = Africa; Britain; Empire; India; british summary = Nearly all the great self-governing nations of the world are now Russian, British or French, it is equally the foe of free government." self-governing Colonies of the British Empire without any compulsion self-governing British colonies, or by imitation, as in all other cases. British peoples alone had the habit and instinct of self-government in development) has been strikingly shown in the Great War. Thus British institutions--the institutions of national self-government, all the seas of the world, the British Empire would undoubtedly be modern European history, then, British naval power has been the ultimate the great self-governing dominions, Canada, Australia, South Africa, New Clearly, so far as concerns the great dominions, the British Empire is What, then, has the establishment of British power meant in India? the British power was established, India had in all her long history the self-governing Colonies, membership of the British Empire does not id = 34856 author = Pankhurst, Emmeline title = My Own Story date = keywords = Asquith; Bill; Cabinet; Christabel; Commons; England; George; Government; Home; House; King; London; Minister; Mr.; Mrs.; Pankhurst; Parliament; Prime; Union; Women; liberal summary = break down opposition to suffrage by showing the men that women possess the women guardians'' demand for a reform of one part of the Poor Law. That section deals with the little children who are boarded out, not by opening day of Parliament, the association sent a deputation of women to responsible leaders that the new Government would make women''s suffrage Government, calling themselves Liberal, were reactionary so far as women Liberal Government would give women the vote. voice: "Will the Liberal Government give women the vote?" Liberal party until women are given votes on equal terms with men. Government still refused to notice the women''s question; they declared offenders in a common police court, and I said that we were not women women meeting outside the House." And that this committee said to the House of Commons not only that they must vote for a women''s suffrage id = 17294 author = Various title = Essays in Liberalism Being the Lectures and Papers Which Were Delivered at the Liberal Summer School at Oxford, 1922 date = keywords = Act; Balance; Board; Cabinet; Europe; France; Germany; Government; House; India; League; Lord; Nations; Parliament; Power; Trade; british; liberal; state summary = Balance of Power and the League of Nations. form of League of Nations, the idea of the Balance of Power was not Balance of Power and the League of Nations is so fundamental as the problem are these; the need to protect special industries for war for the wages in the protected industries of the States were so far from keep on foot, on a large scale, an industry which in time of war has In any modern State the control of the action of Government is largely produces a chronic state of internal war which saps industrial activity of the three greatest industrial countries in the world, Great Britain believe it can be done, for almost every great industry in the country. It is time that the general public outside the industry took the matter the war-time system of Agricultural Wages Boards. Government interference with industry, and cut out the power of control id = 5183 author = Wright, Almroth title = The Unexpurgated Case Against Woman Suffrage date = keywords = England; Justice; Mill; State; argument; law; morality; question; suffrage; suffragist; woman summary = woman that Mill sets himself to work out the benefits which women Non-Voter--The Grievance of Woman being Required to Obey Man-Made Non-Voter--The Grievance of Woman being Required to Obey Man-Made equity limited in its application to the case between man and woman. question not only in connexion with such an issue as woman suffrage, The man who looks forward to the intellectual development of woman woman has to submit herself to "_man-made laws_." The _third_ point in which the law distinguishes between man and woman that an ordinary man and an ordinary woman are, from the point of view that we may appropriately, in comparing the morals of man and woman, clearly, the point that woman''s moral ideals are personal and man feels that he and woman belong to different intellectual castes, much is under civilisation done for woman by man. man and woman have in the countries in question been conspicuously between man and woman.