This is a list of all the questions and their associated study carrel identifiers. One can learn a lot of the "aboutness" of a text simply by reading the questions.
identifier | question |
---|---|
9444 | And he hollered out agin,"Why hain''t there any Hall''s salve?" |
9444 | Sez she in the same sad axents, and wonderin'',"Did you ever have another day in your hull life as hard as this you are a- passin''through?" |
9444 | She asked me in a awe- stricken tone,"if I had such trials every day?" |
33700 | In her report she says:"Where were the women of Brussels during the days of the Congress? |
33700 | Or are moral duties, in this case also, meant only for woman? |
33700 | What became of the woman''s rights movement during this arbitrary military régime? |
33700 | Who will provide for her? |
33700 | _ Do You Know?_( pamphlet), 42. |
33700 | _ Why does the Working- woman need the Right to Vote?_( pamphlet), 33. |
9448 | Are you a professor? |
9448 | Not ring the church bells on the Sabbath day? |
9448 | What perswaision? |
9448 | ''Wall, what if it wuz?" |
9448 | Do I look broke down and weak?" |
9448 | They time their joys and their sorrows, and everything and everybody, all through the week, and why should they stop short off Sundays? |
9448 | Why not time themselves on goin''to meetin''? |
9448 | Will you promise me?" |
9448 | Wuz you ever nervous?" |
9448 | [ Illustration:"BEEN OUT TO TEND TO YOUR''HORSE CORSET,''HAVE YOU?"] |
9446 | I wonder how he would have liked it to have had Charley Lanfear''s mother set on him? 9446 I wonder if that is just? |
9446 | Would a delegation of wimmen keep such a man in the meetin''house if he paved the hull floor with fine gold? 9446 And I, wantin''to use her well, sez,What did they do there?" |
9446 | And sez I to Trueman''s wife, sez I,"How should_ you_ be expected to know it?" |
9446 | But Josiah said,"What would become of the meetin''house if it did n''t punish its unruly members?" |
9446 | But what hope does a mother have when down in the darkness that has no mornin'', her boy tears his hand from her weak grasp and plunges downward? |
9446 | But when He_ is_ right there, in the midst of our soul, our life, why,_ why_ should we kneel down in public and holler at Him?" |
9446 | Curius, hain''t it? |
9446 | I wonder how Deacon Widrig would have liked it to have had Miss Henn set on him? |
9446 | Now what good will doctrines o''any kind do to anybody after they are burnt up or choked to death? |
9446 | Sez I calmly,"Does it scare you, Trueman''s wife?" |
9446 | Where wuz his boastin''then? |
9446 | Young lips that smiled on their mothers till he gin''em that that changed the smiles to curses? |
9446 | hain''t it? |
5183 | What is it to offer a_ false reason?_ It is the alleging for, or against a law, something else than its good or evil effects. |
5183 | And I can hear the woman suffragist interject,"Is there not a grave danger that unflattering generalisations about woman may be erroneous?" |
5183 | And can any firm reasons be rendered for the belief that the giving of votes to women in England would be any whit more harmful than in the Colonies?" |
5183 | But I hear the reader interpose,"Is there not a grave danger that generalisations may be erroneous?" |
5183 | But I think I hear the reader interpose,"What, then, is chivalry if it is not a question of serving woman without reward?" |
5183 | How can one, then, without cold shudders think of that legal system which the female amateur legal reformer would bring to the birth? |
5183 | It is as if Bentham had never taught:--"What is it to offer a_ good reason_ with respect to a law? |
5183 | PART III IS THERE, IF THE SUFFRAGE IS BARRED, ANY PALLIATIVE OF CORRECTIVE FOR THE DISCONTENTS OF WOMAN? |
5183 | Quite marvelously has the woman suffragist in this connexion misapprehended; or would she have us say misrepresented? |
5183 | What kind of logical sanction is it, then, which can attach to reasonings such as are to be set out here? |
9447 | And why wuzn''t it proved? |
9447 | Who settled it? |
9447 | And I sez, with quite a lot of dignity,"Have I ever failed, Josiah Allen, to have good dinners for you, and on time too?" |
9447 | And I sez,"Did you go to the Wimmen''s Exchange and the Workin''Wimmen''s Association, that wuz held there while you wuz there?" |
9447 | And sez I,"How different? |
9447 | Do you see, Samantha?" |
9447 | Do you see, Samantha?" |
9447 | If they can legally vote for men to get in why ca n''t men vote for them?" |
9447 | Sez I,"If they wuz poor men would they have been kep'', or if it wuzn''t for the influence of men that like hard drink?" |
9447 | Who earned and left you the money you are a- usin''?" |
9447 | [ Illustration:"IS ROSTRUMS MUCH HIGHER THAN THEM BARELLS TO STAND ON?"] |
9447 | sez I,"who educated you and made your life easy before you?" |
9443 | Anythin''else? |
9443 | Hain''t there never been a cloud in our sky? |
9443 | Mean enough? |
9443 | Wall, I said so, did n''t I? 9443 Wall, hain''t_ he_?" |
9443 | Wall, what petickuler fault do you find? 9443 We have had a happy time together, Josiah Allen, for over twenty years, but has our sea of life always been perfectly smooth?" |
9443 | What do you mean? |
9443 | What wuz you dumbin''? |
9443 | You do? |
9443 | And I''d like to know what you have got to say about him any way?" |
9443 | And he sez to me:"What are you goin''to tackle now, Samantha?" |
9443 | And sez I,"How do you know?" |
9443 | And what will she think now about Wedlock''s Peaceful Repose?" |
9443 | And when she asked me in her sweet axents,"How I liked her lecture, and if I could see any faults in it?" |
9443 | But I threw out this question at''em, and stood by it--"If bein''set apart as a deacon did n''t mean anything? |
9443 | But what have you got to say about the Meetin''House, anyway?" |
9443 | Did you notice when she wuz goin''on perfectly beautiful, about the waveless sea of married life-- did you notice how it took the school house down? |
9443 | Hain''t I always holdin''you back from work?" |
9443 | I did n''t fairly ketch the words, and I spoke out agin, in dretful meanin''and harrowin''axents, and sez,"What will become of all this gospel work?" |
9443 | I love company dearly, but-- oh my soul, is there not a difference, a difference in visitors? |
9443 | Sez I, a whisperin''and puttin''my finger on my lip:"Wo n''t you be still?" |
9443 | Sez I,"You think when anybody is married they have got beyend all earthly trials, and nothin''but perfect peace and rest remains?" |
9443 | The papers had been full of the subject,"Is Marriage a Failure, or is it not?" |
9443 | What has_ he_ done lately to rile you up?" |
9443 | Why,"sez I,"hain''t we always hearn about the Mother Church, and do n''t the Bible tell about the Church bein''arrayed like a bride for her husband? |
9443 | [ Illustration:"WON''T YOU BE STILL?"] |
9443 | wuz not my sufferin''s with Lodema Trumble, a hard plow and a harrowin''one, and one that turned up deep furrows? |
9445 | Are they stoppin''here to warm? |
9445 | Cost? |
9445 | How did I know what they owned? 9445 Own up? |
9445 | They be mourners, hain''t they? |
9445 | Wall, why did n''t you make her a silver one, or a tin? |
9445 | Wall,sez I,"what do all these flowers, and empty carriages, and silver- plated nails, and crape, and so forth-- what does it all amount to?" |
9445 | Wall,sez he,"do n''t you believe it?" |
9445 | Wall,sez he,"would n''t it have been profitable to her if they had brought diamonds? |
9445 | What do I care about cost? 9445 What was the nater of the strain?" |
9445 | Why''ee,sez I,"Josiah Allen, why did n''t you tell me before, so I could have baked up somethin''nice? |
9445 | ( Wuz n''t it curius, Cephas Bodley never would think of the underpinnin''to anything?) |
9445 | And I sez to Cephas--"To save expense, you will probable have the moneygram W.N.B.H.?" |
9445 | And Josiah asked me to ask her"How she felt about that time?" |
9445 | And agin I sez,"What wuz the strain?" |
9445 | And are these the mourners?" |
9445 | And of course I ca n''t dispute that, when he faces me right down, and sez:"Hain''t she old enough?" |
9445 | I knew jest how dear crape wuz, and I tackled her on the subject, and sez I--"Do you know, S. Annie, these dresses of your''n will cost a sight?" |
9445 | Sez I,"I do n''t want to stop your doin''all you can for Lodema, but why not tell what you are a- goin''to do?" |
9445 | Sez I,"Why do you go on and be so secret about it? |
9445 | Sez I,"Wo n''t that and all these funeral expenses take about all the money he left?" |
9445 | Sez he in a skairful tone, and in his intense way--[ Illustration:"WHAT IS LIFE WORTH WHEN FOLKS TALK?"] |
9445 | She screamed right out,"Why, Josiah Allen, where is your conscience to talk in that way-- and your heart?" |
9445 | What a man you are to keep things; how long have you known it?" |
9445 | What have I got to own up? |
9445 | Why do n''t you tell your companion all about it, what you are a- goin''to do, and advise with her?" |
9445 | Would n''t it have been both surprisin''and profitable?" |
9445 | sez I,"has there been a funeral, or anything? |
9445 | sez I;"Josiah Allen, where is your conscience? |
9445 | sez he,"what is life worth when folks talk?" |
11672 | Are you afraid that Polydamas and the Trojan Ladies will prefer Labeo to me? |
11672 | Are the manufacturers willing to send their 1,300,000 female employees back to their"sphere"? |
11672 | But is she to be accorded an autonomy in outside affairs that is denied her in the home? |
11672 | But who said that Nature had acted scurvily with the characters of women and had contracted their virtues into a narrow sphere? |
11672 | Do we cast the twice- married from the Church? |
11672 | Do we condemn second marriages? |
11672 | Do you say that the young man who is of age does not represent his mother? |
11672 | Do you say that the young man who pledges at the altar to love, cherish, and protect his wife, does not represent her and his children when he votes? |
11672 | How many men realise these facts? |
11672 | If so, which of them is to yield, if a difference of opinion arises? |
11672 | Is this authority the conjoint privilege of husband and wife? |
11672 | No, the imperative question confronting us is this: What are we to do that her life once more may be full and useful as it used to be? |
11672 | Quare? |
11672 | Quis ergo iam quamlibet illicitam concupiscentiam potest recte a fornicationis genere separate, si avaritia fornicatio est? |
11672 | Quis fortem spoliatum crine peremit? |
11672 | Quis iusti sacrum caput ense recidit? |
11672 | Quis patrem natas vitiare coegit? |
11672 | Quis suasit primo vetitum gustare parenti? |
11672 | What sort of foolish stuff are you trying to inject into this tariff debate?... |
11672 | When the Christ of God came into this world to die for the sins of humanity, did he not die for all, males and females? |
11672 | [ 187] Persius, i, 4- 5: Ne mihi Polydamas et Troiades Labeonem praetulerint? |
11672 | [ 190] The famous verses of Martial: Quid tibi nobiscum, ludi scelerate magister? |
11672 | [ 244]Jerome expresses the more tolerant and orthodox view:"What then? |
2157 | And how is it with our homes-- how fares it with American women in the family circle? |
2157 | And if the vote be really no infallible talisman for man, why should we expect it to work magical wonders in the hands of woman? |
2157 | And is it indeed true that this grand work can effectually be brought about by the one step we are now urged to take? |
2157 | And why not exclude from the suffrage all habitual drunkards judicially so declared? |
2157 | And why should the entire nation be thrown into the perilous convulsions of a revolution more truly formidable than any yet attempted on earth? |
2157 | And why so? |
2157 | Are all voters enlightened? |
2157 | Are all voters faithful servants of their country? |
2157 | Are all voters honest? |
2157 | Are all voters true to their high responsibilities? |
2157 | Are all voters wise? |
2157 | But, in opposition to this theory, what is the testimony of positive facts known to us all? |
2157 | Is it not so? |
2157 | Is it the opposition of man, and the power which physical strength gives him, which have been the impediments? |
2157 | What has been the cause of this inferiority of education? |
2157 | What is the cause of this exclusion? |
2157 | What says actual experience on this point? |
2157 | What, therefore, is the ground women now occupy, and from whence they are to soar upward on the paper wings of the ballot? |
2157 | Where lies this dim necessity of thrusting upon women the burdens of the suffrage? |
2157 | Which of these positions has the most of true elevation connected with it? |
2157 | Why has not woman educated herself in past ages, as man has done? |
2157 | Why not enlarge the criminal classes from whom the suffrage is now withheld? |
2157 | Why not exclude every man convicted of any degrading legal crime, even petty larceny? |
59448 | , which is to be the guiding principle in Emile''s case, changes its character where Sophie is concerned, and becomes:Quel effet cela fera- t- il?" |
59448 | How d''ye do? |
59448 | If the female tongue will be in motion, he says, after complaining of their_ copia verborum_,"why should it not be set to go right?" |
59448 | Sérieusement, y a- t- il rien de plus bizarre que de voir comment on agit pour l''ordinaire en l''éducation des femmes? 59448 And who can be fitter for such a task than the girl''s own mother? 59448 But how is woman to be pleased? 59448 But supposing he should be right, to what cause would such a deplorable state of things be attributable? 59448 Even when married to a sensible husband, who thinks for her, what will be the fate of a woman who is left a widow with a large family? 59448 In deciding upon a course of action, the inevitable question was:What is the use?" |
59448 | It is there that we must look for an answer to the question:"Did Rousseau look upon women as partakers of the faculty of Reason?" |
59448 | Pray have you a fine Vauxhall and Ranelagh? |
59448 | She asks him what he would have had her do? |
59448 | Since they have the same improveable minds as the male part of the species, why should they not be cultivated by the same method? |
59448 | The former he is rather inclined to excuse, for"where the lesson taught is but to please, can Pleasure be a fault?" |
59448 | The lines: Shall Britain,_ where the soul of freedom reigns_, Forge chains for others she herself disdains? |
59448 | The question may be put whether upon the whole this remarkable event was favourable to the cause of feminism? |
59448 | The utilitarian question:"A quoi cela est- il bon? |
59448 | Was liberty to be the portion of men only; and was woman to continue in her state of bondage? |
59448 | Were all men to be partakers of Reason, guided by her only, whilst women had the use of that faculty denied them? |
59448 | What, in comparison with the great end in view, were the inevitable horrors of the Revolution, produced by desperate and enraged factions? |
59448 | Why did not Rousseau extend his excellent advice regarding outdoor sports and games to girls? |
59448 | Why should reason be left to itself in one of the sexes, and be disciplined with so much care in the other?" |
59448 | With him the ever recurring question is:"What will it profit the soul? |
59448 | prevails in the morning, and"What''s trumps?" |
9449 | How do you spell mit, Josiah Allen? |
9449 | Wall,sez I,"what business is it to him what she does with her own money and her own property?" |
9449 | we protest, you can not come in because of illegality? |
9449 | And then the question was sent back to be voted upon by both the men and the women? |
9449 | And why? |
9449 | Are we ready to send that question in that form down to the Annual Conferences for their action? |
9449 | Bishop Foss: Are you misrepresented? |
9449 | But I sez:"Why do n''t she come out openly and take the money she wants for her own use, and for church work, and charity?" |
9449 | Can this be done without an utter violation of law? |
9449 | Did Abraham Lincoln mean that any women or children can take any part in the government of the nation? |
9449 | Do you know there are 12,000 Methodist ministers that are ciphers all the time except when they vote for delegates? |
9449 | Do you not know that obstacles to progress are rem- o- o- v- e- d out of the way?" |
9449 | Dr. David Sherman, the mover of the motion to strike out the word"male,"now say of the prevailing sentiment on that day of great debate? |
9449 | Have you read the letter of Mrs. Caroline Wright in the_ Christian Advocate_, one of our most distinguished American Methodist women? |
9449 | I turned right round and looked at him, holdin''my flat- iron in my right hand, and sez I:"What do you mean, Josiah Allen? |
9449 | If the women were not to be recognized as laity here, why allow them to vote on the question of the laity at all? |
9449 | Is it the constitution of the men? |
9449 | Is she a layman in the sense of that word in the Discipline? |
9449 | Now, then, is a woman legally qualified to sit in the General Conference as a lay delegate? |
9449 | Now, what does the right of suffrage do? |
9449 | Submit''s heart begun to flutter, and her face grew red and then white, and she sez in a little fine tremblin''voice,"Who be you?" |
9449 | The question is this, Do those Restrictive Rules mean anything? |
9449 | WHAT ARE YOU TALKIN''ABOUT?"] |
9449 | What are you talkin''about?" |
9449 | What is the Constitution for? |
9449 | What sense is there in that? |
9449 | Who can go back of the interpretation of the supreme court of the Church?" |
9449 | Who is the"General Superintendent"by Webster or Worcester? |
9449 | Why was the word"layman"ever introduced? |
9449 | Why? |
9449 | With what consistency can laymen accept seats by the votes of the women and then deprive women of their seats? |
9449 | [ Illustration:"WHAT DO YOU MEAN, JOSIAH ALLEN? |
9449 | what are men in the Methodist meetin''house for, if it hain''t to guard the more weaker sect, and keep cares offen''em?" |
30051 | ( 2) Will the Bill be drafted in such a way as to admit of amendments introducing women on other terms than men? |
30051 | ( 2) Will you vote to submit to the voters an amendment to the constitution enfranchising the women of this State? |
30051 | ( 3) Will the Government undertake not to oppose such amendments? |
30051 | ... Suffragists frequently ask the question,"If we want to vote why should other people object?" |
30051 | Are the men who are to lead a great party as double- faced and untrustworthy as Mr. Roraback paints them? |
30051 | Are these evidences of a wave rapidly receding? |
30051 | At that time the question,"Will the House pass the bill notwithstanding the objections of the Governor?" |
30051 | By what right do you make this assumption? |
30051 | Did 30,000 go to the polls and fail to vote for anybody or anything?" |
30051 | Do you know of any other State where the entire campaign was carried on by but two paid workers-- a manager and a stenographer? |
30051 | Have they any advice to offer? |
30051 | Here the great need of a State organization was very apparent, as legislators constantly asked,"Where are the suffragists from my district?" |
30051 | How came it there? |
30051 | How can woman''s political influence be brought to bear most effectively on Parliaments and governments? |
30051 | How could such differences, each defended as it was by intense conviction, be united in a common platform?... |
30051 | In a symposium, Why Should Representative Governments Enfranchise Women? |
30051 | Many old- timers said:"What would our State have been without the women? |
30051 | Miss Clay''s address, entitled Who Works Against Woman Suffrage? |
30051 | Mrs. Münter gave an address on the Legal Position of Danish Women; Dr. Elizabeth Altmann Gottheiner, Germany, Does the Working Woman Need the Ballot? |
30051 | Old prospectors back in the mountains when approached and asked for their votes would say:"Do you ladies really want to vote? |
30051 | The Speaker, Stanley G. Allson, instead of asking the usual question"Shall the bill pass?" |
30051 | The founder of Smith College said she was led to leave her fortune for that purpose by reading his article, Ought Women Learn the Alphabet? |
30051 | Then why profess such a burden of personal responsibility in the matter? |
30051 | Then you think it would be much better to give the women the right to vote than the men? |
30051 | They gave everything asked for and inquired,"Is there anything else we can do for you?" |
30051 | War and Woman''s Service; What can we do? |
30051 | Were they laughing in their sleeves as they wrote the solemn pledges in the rest of the national platform? |
30051 | What can Men Do to Help the Movement for Woman Suffrage? |
30051 | What political work have the women of the enfranchised countries done, what is their relation to the different parties and how do these treat them? |
30051 | What should be the relation of the suffrage movement to political parties in the unenfranchised countries? |
30051 | What won the State? |
30051 | Who but women fighting for their freedom could ever have had the courage to keep on? |
30051 | Who led those bloodthirsty mobs? |
30051 | Who shrieked loudest in that hurricane of passion? |
30051 | Who were they? |
30051 | Will you be prepared to put it back?..." |
30051 | With the aid of the National Association 10,000 copies of Mrs. Catt''s leaflet, Do You Know? |
30051 | and furnished envelopes and stamps for them; 14,000 pieces of literature for advanced suffragists; 1,000 copies of Do You Know? |
30051 | put the question"Shall the bill be rejected?" |
12226 | A woman''s earnings are her own in Massachusetts, are they not? |
12226 | And will you keep the faith? |
12226 | Are they all in school? |
12226 | Are we allowed to receive men visitors in the house? |
12226 | Besides, where is the money to come from? |
12226 | But, Kittie,I said to her,"why do you work in a hotel, if it''s like that? |
12226 | Do you think they will pass up anything good because the store is not on their White List? |
12226 | Does your husband drink? |
12226 | How many children have you? |
12226 | If I went to work for a salary, should I have to be recorded in order to keep my own money? |
12226 | Persuade? |
12226 | Sadie, why did you do it? |
12226 | What could I say about it, when he went and got the papers? |
12226 | Why could n''t you help her? |
12226 | Why do n''t we do something about it? 12226 Why do you let them take her home away from her?" |
12226 | Why does n''t somebody complain to the authorities? |
12226 | Why not? |
12226 | Will you swear by the old Jewish oath of our fathers? |
12226 | And yet, what a revolution would the world witness were that program carried out? |
12226 | Are the children yours? |
12226 | Are you sure that they are sufficiently well ventilated?" |
12226 | Are you sure you know this? |
12226 | Are you willing to know the facts about the world, the underworld, from which the girl who cooks your food and takes care of your children is drawn? |
12226 | As a plain matter of cause and effect, what kind of a moral situation would you expect to evolve out of these materials? |
12226 | Ask a girl,"Why do you go to the dance hall? |
12226 | Can they ever hope to do more than reclaim a few individuals? |
12226 | Can you not imagine that it might be different from the one you live in so safely and comfortably? |
12226 | Can you picture them at night, streaming with light, gay with music, filled with dancing crowds? |
12226 | Could a more inverted scheme of things have been devised in a madhouse? |
12226 | Could nothing,_ nothing_ be done? |
12226 | Could they stand together in an industrial struggle which promised to be long and bitter? |
12226 | Did she need it to support herself? |
12226 | Do n''t you think eight hours a day is enough for a girl to walk?" |
12226 | Does any one question that this is the most important political fact the modern world has ever faced? |
12226 | Does that sound like justice to you? |
12226 | For who, of her own free will, would contract to work ten hours a day for less than the price of life? |
12226 | Have any of you crossed my corner of the park since the snow melted?" |
12226 | If she chose to go with a group of girls to a dance hall, what harm? |
12226 | If women had the guardianship of their children, would anything prevent them from taking the children and leaving home? |
12226 | In case of war and pillage could she defend it? |
12226 | Is the house yours? |
12226 | Nine times in ten her answer will be:"What should I do with myself, sitting home and twirling my fingers?" |
12226 | She was silent for a moment, then she said:"Do you know that every time you send me to the pantry it means a walk of three and a half blocks? |
12226 | That is-- of course you are recorded at the city clerk''s office?" |
12226 | The furniture yours? |
12226 | The income yours? |
12226 | The motor yours? |
12226 | To the anxious inquiry, What will women do with their votes? |
12226 | Was it true that the law took her home away from her,--the farm that descended to her from her father, the house she had lived in since childhood? |
12226 | What arguments did the California legislators use against the proposed measure? |
12226 | What can you do against testimony like that? |
12226 | What do you know about the employment office that sent her to you? |
12226 | What do you know of the world inhabited by servants and the people who deal in servants? |
12226 | What do you think, Madam President?" |
12226 | What more could they possibly ask? |
12226 | What then is the legal status of the American mother? |
12226 | What use had she for property? |
12226 | What use had she for wages? |
12226 | What was the difference? |
12226 | What would become of the sanctity of the home, with its lawful head shorn of his paternal dignity? |
12226 | What would happen if the church should invite them, not to pray but to play? |
12226 | What would happen if this army of women was suddenly withdrawn from the telephone exchanges? |
12226 | What would our Constitution- bound law makers say to such a proposition, if any one had the hardihood to suggest it? |
12226 | What, after all, do you really know about your servants? |
12226 | When the bench is full of women the judge turns to her to inquire:"Anybody there you want, Miss Miner?" |
12226 | Why do n''t you stay home evenings?" |
12226 | Why do n''t you take a place in a private family?" |
12226 | Why should I be?" |
12226 | Will they ever reach the heart of the problem? |
12226 | Will you help me to make amends?" |
12226 | Will you put what you have just suggested in the form of a motion?" |
12226 | not crowds from homes of wealth and comfort, but crowds from streets and byways; crowds for which, at present, the underworld spreads its nets? |
11376 | Did you not go out for a walk yesterday? |
11376 | Everything to lose? 11376 Have you anything to say in mitigation?" |
11376 | Is n''t he a rather rough sort of man, who goes about making rows? |
11376 | Is this the lady? |
11376 | Mr. BRADLAUGH: Would your lordship entertain an application to stay execution of the sentence? 11376 Mr. JUSTICE MELLOR: You will abstain yourself from circulating the book, and, so far as you can, suppress its circulation? |
11376 | So much for the past: what as to the future? 11376 The LORD CHIEF JUSTICE: And what Mr. Bradlaugh says, I understand that you, Mrs. Besant, also assent to? |
11376 | The LORD CHIEF JUSTICE: You will not continue the publication? 11376 The question is,"he urged,"what is to be the future course of your conduct? |
11376 | Well? |
11376 | What do you mean by that expression, Annie? |
11376 | What do you think of John Bright? |
11376 | What is that? |
11376 | Why did she leave the dead child on the bed? 11376 A lady appear in person? 11376 And you walked in the lanes for an hour and saw nothing, little No- eyes? 11376 Are we the sentient toys of an Almighty Power, who sports with our agony, and whose peals of awful mocking laughter echo the wailings of our despair? |
11376 | At last I said to Mr. Scott:"Mr. Scott, may I write a tract on the nature and existence of God?" |
11376 | Besant?". |
11376 | But what if God were only man''s own image reflected in the mirror of man''s mind? |
11376 | But, I questioned, are we sure that there is a Creator? |
11376 | By the way, why are Temperance Hotels so often lacking in cleanliness? |
11376 | Could any argument more thoroughly Atheistic be put before a mind which dared to think out to the logical end any train of thought? |
11376 | Did not the Lord promise that the presence of the Spirit should be ever with his Church, to guide her into all truth?" |
11376 | Does the lady really appear in person?" |
11376 | Given a just God, how can he punish people for being sinful, when they have inherited a sinful nature without their own choice and of necessity? |
11376 | Granted that, if there is, he must be above his highest creature, but-- is there such a being? |
11376 | He believed in Christ as God; what if I put my difficulties to him? |
11376 | He glanced at me keenly:"Ah, little lady; you are facing then that problem at last? |
11376 | How could I do aught but sympathise with any combination that aimed at the raising of these poor? |
11376 | How would an indictment for publishing an obscene book affect his candidature for Northampton? |
11376 | I felt as though it must be a crime to refuse submission when she urged it, but still-- to live a lie? |
11376 | If the leaders flinched how could the followers be expected to fight? |
11376 | In October he had printed a plea for Ireland, strong and earnest, asking:--"Where is our boasted English freedom when you cross to Kingstown pier? |
11376 | Irish family that did not trace itself back to some"kings"? |
11376 | Is such training wise? |
11376 | Mr. Besant had brought him to me while the child was at her worst, and I suppose something of the"Why is it?" |
11376 | Mr. Bradlaugh is rather a rough sort of speaker, is he not?" |
11376 | Now, what says Dr. Knowlton? |
11376 | One night only I spent in this struggle over the question:"Shall I examine the claims to Deity of Jesus of Nazareth?". |
11376 | Q.C., that I appeared in person:"Appear in person? |
11376 | So, queer as it may seem? |
11376 | That gentlemen did not disagree with it-- indeed he admitted that all educated persons must hold the views put forward-- but what would Society say? |
11376 | The same bad adviser who had before raised the difficulty of"what will Society say?" |
11376 | This principle, regarded by her as an illustration of the text,"Shall I give unto the Lord my God that which has cost me nothing?" |
11376 | Was it a ball to which we were going? |
11376 | Were these also to be resigned? |
11376 | What are positive checks? |
11376 | What has she done that she should suffer so? |
11376 | What if man were the creator, not the revelation of his God? |
11376 | What were we to do about the Knowlton pamphlet? |
11376 | What will she be at a year''s end? |
11376 | Where has it been for near two years? |
11376 | Wherein is our sister Ireland less than these? |
11376 | Why dost thou not kill her at once, and let her be at peace?" |
11376 | Why? |
11376 | Why? |
11376 | You will have discovered by this time, in Maurice''s''What is Revelation''( I suppose you have the''Sequel''too?) |
11376 | and the grave demand of my brother, conscious of superior age, at dinner- time:"May not Annie have a knife to- day, as she is four years old?" |
11376 | who inherit the diseases and adopt the crimes which poverty and misery have provided for them? |
354 | Are n''t you ashamed of yourself,she demanded,"to stop just because you have been laughed at once? |
354 | Are you going to pretend,he demanded,"that it was n''t a put- up job?" |
354 | But how can I promise that? |
354 | But why in Heaven''s name does any sensible Englishwoman want a lot of heathen to prostrate themselves as she goes up the street? |
354 | But why? |
354 | But,I insisted,"if you really believe in polygamy, why is it that some of your husbands have not taken more than one wife?" |
354 | Do n''t you know what a right bower is? |
354 | Do you want me to repeat my promise? |
354 | Have n''t I done any good? |
354 | Have you ever tried? |
354 | Her sermon? |
354 | Hev you got anything agin Miss Shaw? |
354 | How did you get here so soon? |
354 | How far up and down? |
354 | How many of you,I then asked,"are polygamous wives?" |
354 | Oh, did you? |
354 | Oh,he said,"why should I go? |
354 | Say, Miss Shaw,he yelled,"do n''t you want these children put out?" |
354 | Suppose your husband should refuse to allow you to preach? 354 Then may I tell him?" |
354 | Think she''s right, do you? |
354 | To New York? |
354 | Was n''t he very much surprised,demanded Miss Anthony, with growing interest,"to discover that he was not dead?" |
354 | Well,I said,"ca n''t you put your finger on that?" |
354 | What d''ye mean? |
354 | What has happened, Anna? |
354 | What must they think of me? |
354 | What''s that? |
354 | What''s the matter with you? |
354 | What? |
354 | When your aura goes visiting in the other world,she asked, curiously,"does it ever meet your old friend Charles Bradlaugh?" |
354 | Why should they mob me? |
354 | Why, did n''t you whistle before her? |
354 | Why, in that case,she said, cheerfully,"you''ll have to give us two boxes, wo n''t you?" |
354 | Will you agree to arrest the men only? |
354 | Would n''t I? |
354 | Would you like to have a son of yours go to Buffalo Bill''s Wild West Show on Sunday? |
354 | You are proud of your family, are you not? |
354 | You are proud of your great line? |
354 | You think you know me, do n''t you? |
354 | You''re not saying that merely to please me? |
354 | A few of them could sing, and we began with a Moody and Sankey hymn or two and the appealing ditty,"Where is my wandering boy to- night?" |
354 | And do n''t you see how ill she is? |
354 | And he demanded, triumphantly,"How is it possible for you to be the husband of a wife?" |
354 | And she added, scornfully,"What event have you got to reckon from?" |
354 | Anthony?" |
354 | But I added:"I hear you said I have n''t done a thing in seven years that any one can lay a finger on?" |
354 | Could she not select one more person, at least, to share the secret and act with me? |
354 | Do you all believe in it?" |
354 | Do you think I want to talk to you?" |
354 | Has that been charged against any other minister here?" |
354 | How can I preach to any one?" |
354 | I asked,"Can the Ethiopian change his spots or the leopard his skin?" |
354 | I had worked my way in the Northwest; why could I not work my way in Boston? |
354 | I was touched by this artless compliment, and anxious to know how I had won it, so I asked,"What did I say that the boys liked?" |
354 | In the old days, when we nominated a candidate we asked,''Can he hold the saloon vote?'' |
354 | Is it the desire of suffragists to force upon us the social equality of black and white women? |
354 | Is that it?" |
354 | Livermore''s husband''?" |
354 | Moreover, if it is unnatural, why did Jesus send a woman out as the first preacher?" |
354 | Now we ask,''Can he hold the women''s vote?'' |
354 | One day at luncheon Miss Thomas asked me, casually:"By the way, how do you raise the money to carry on your work?" |
354 | Shall I bring some books and read to you?" |
354 | She listened to his words with surprise, and then whispered to"Aunt Susan":"How CAN he say that? |
354 | So I arose and said:"I would like to ask how many men there are in the audience who intend to vote for the amendment to- morrow?" |
354 | Was there, perhaps, some lack in me and in my courage? |
354 | What had I said to give him such an impression? |
354 | What have you got there?" |
354 | What then?" |
354 | What was I doing in that rough country, he demanded, and why was I alone with him in those black woods at night? |
354 | What was he doing in the other world?" |
354 | What would you do to me if I came on board your ship and started a mutiny in your crew, or tried to give you orders?" |
354 | What, then, were we to do? |
354 | When this announcement had produced its full effect, he straightened up in his chair and asked, solemnly,"Will ye have me?" |
354 | When will men learn that what we ask is not praise, but justice?" |
354 | Where DID you get that subject? |
354 | Who knows? |
354 | Why should we not talk all night? |
354 | Why, then, do n''t they deserve as much credit for his election as the women?" |
7833 | And where are the children? |
7833 | And why is this meetin''any more onwomanly or immodest than the camp- meetin''where you wuz converted, and baptized the next Sunday in the creek? |
7833 | Be changed? 7833 Do you allude to our venerable speaker, Joe Cannon?" |
7833 | Do_ they_ know enough to vote? |
7833 | How would you put the objection? |
7833 | In jail? 7833 Indignant about what?" |
7833 | Is it not a part of woman''s life that she gave at the birth and crucifixion? 7833 Joseph?" |
7833 | Let? |
7833 | Pardon me, madam, but if you are happy in your married relations, and your husband is a temperate good man, why do you feel so upon this subject? |
7833 | Serepta Pester,sez I,"be you tellin''the truth?" |
7833 | The what? |
7833 | Then,sez I,"why do n''t you make the United States do right?" |
7833 | Well,sez I,"do you think the weather is goin''to moderate?" |
7833 | What? |
7833 | When are you goin''? |
7833 | Who is Josiah? |
7833 | Why should you be dyin''on the buttery shelf, Josiah? |
7833 | Why, where is their property gone? |
7833 | Why,sez I,"did they invite you? |
7833 | You look very fatigued; wo n''t you take something? |
7833 | And I hung back and asked her in a cautious tone,"How many she wanted canvassed, and how much canvas it would take?" |
7833 | And I stopped his complaints and his sithes by askin''in a voice that demanded a reply:"Can you and will you do Serepta''s errents? |
7833 | And he sez to me, real uppish,"Do you think them things know enough to vote?" |
7833 | And is her throne more shaky and tottlin''than theirn?" |
7833 | And sez I, in low but startlin''tones of principle:"Where, where is it a- drawin''''em to? |
7833 | And then thinkin''I must say sunthin''and wantin''to strike a safe subject and a good lookin''one, I sez:"Where is your Aunt Cassandra''s girl? |
7833 | And then to git her mind offen her sufferin''s, I asked how her sister Azuba wuz gittin''along? |
7833 | And when he asked me agin in tones full of awe and horrow:"Can it be that I heard my ear aright? |
7833 | And will you break the Whiskey Ring?" |
7833 | And would they do this if they did n''t think that their vile trades would suffer if women had the right to vote? |
7833 | And you can then throw your other eye over to Holland: is their sweet queen less worthy and beloved to- day than other European monarchs? |
7833 | Anthony?" |
7833 | But here an old man, who had jest dropped in and who wuz kinder deef and slow- witted, asked,"What it is about anyway? |
7833 | But thinkin''I must be sociable I sez:"Your aunt Cassandra is well, I spoze?" |
7833 | Change the laws of the United States? |
7833 | Do n''t you remember what one on''em writ to Uncle Sime Bentley and what he writ back? |
7833 | Errents full of truth and justice and eternal right?" |
7833 | God Himself called woman into that work, the divine work of saving a world, and why should n''t she continue in it? |
7833 | Hain''t they never been changed?" |
7833 | Have you a leanin''toward Natural history, madam? |
7833 | Have you ever read the Bible?" |
7833 | Have you ever studied into the habits and traits of our American Wad?" |
7833 | How can she fly when the weight of this infamous traffic is holdin''her down?" |
7833 | How would it work to stop the trouble by givin''the wimmen the rights they ask for, the rights of any other citizen?" |
7833 | I see you do not wear your lovely hair bang- like or a- pompadouris? |
7833 | I sez in pityin''tones, for I wuz truly sorry for Cassandra Keeler:"How did it end?" |
7833 | Is it drawin''''em down into a slavery ten times more abject and soul- destroyin''than African slavery ever wuz? |
7833 | Let me treat you to something; what will you take, mom?" |
7833 | Or did you speak of changin''the unalterable laws of the United States-- tampering with the Constitution?" |
7833 | Search the records and you''ll find it so, and why? |
7833 | Sez I,"Ca n''t the laws be changed?" |
7833 | Sez I,"Do you mean waddin''eight cents a sheet?" |
7833 | Sez I,"How duz it look before the nations to see Columbia led round half- tipsy by a Ring?" |
7833 | Sez I,"Where is Senator B.?" |
7833 | Sez I,"Who is the man or men?" |
7833 | Sez Josiah:"Does that_ thing_ know enough to vote?" |
7833 | Silence rained for some time; and finally I spoke out solemnly through the rain:"Will you do Serepta''s errents? |
7833 | That pretty girl I see to your house once?" |
7833 | These, mingled with the divine, the pure heavenly, have they not for nineteen hundred years been blessin''the world? |
7833 | They had seen their wives in the past chasin''Fashion and Amusement, and why should n''t they enjoy seein''them follow Principle and Justice? |
7833 | Was not Mr. Herod once in the United States Senate?" |
7833 | Was the rain of Victoria the Good less peaceful and prosperous than that of the male rulers who preceded her? |
7833 | Where is it drawin''the hull nation to? |
7833 | Who ever hearn of a angel foldin''up her wings and goin''to a poor- house or jail through the fault of somebody else? |
7833 | Who ever hearn of a angel havin''to take in washin''to support a drunken son or father or husband? |
7833 | Who wants to see her old bones?" |
7833 | Why ca n''t women stay to home and set down and knit? |
7833 | Will you give her her rights? |
7833 | Wo n''t you take something? |
7833 | You are not a member?" |
7833 | [ Illustration:"Sez Josiah,''Does that thing know enough to vote?''"] |
7833 | and tend to its picnics and suppers, and take care of the children? |
7833 | sez I,"what do you mean?" |
7833 | what could Justice do blind in one eye and wimmen on the blind side? |
7833 | what do the wimmen ask for when they are pounded and jailed and starved?" |
59283 | How did Bill like that, Simon? |
59283 | How do you make that out? |
59283 | Is it possible? |
59283 | No,sez Uncle Sime,"she wuz always good natered and dressed pretty, and why should n''t she?" |
59283 | Yes, indeed, and why ca n''t females settle down in matrimony and stay to home with their famblys, and take care of their children? |
59283 | Yes,sez Samantha reasonably,"a happy marriage is, I guess, about as nigh Heaven as folks ever git on earth, but how many do you find, Josiah?" |
59283 | You do know, do n''t you, dear Samantha, that it has always been men''s chief aim and desire to protect the weaker inferior sect? |
59283 | A rustic had broke down his team, I mused almost in tears, How can a yoke be borne along By half a pair of steers? |
59283 | And I told him the first we knew a female would snake a man up to the altar, and the minister would be made to say, Who giveth this man to this woman? |
59283 | And after he went out with''em I asked Samantha,"What do you spoze the Vice President wanted of sheep shears this time of year?" |
59283 | And how could she soothe and comfort anybody droudgin''round as she had all day and all wore out? |
59283 | And how much blood money is made yearly by whiskey sellin''? |
59283 | And if a grocer lets his eatin''stuff lay round outdoors for the flies to roost on, do you spoze they''ll buy that stuff? |
59283 | And she sez,"Why ca n''t they do both? |
59283 | And the appaulin''thought come to me onbid, if she did who would finish up the dinner? |
59283 | And what duz E Pluribus Unum mean? |
59283 | And when the minister asked,"Who giveth this woman to this man?" |
59283 | And which party is it, Josiah, that turns and twists every way to save money so her boy and girl can present a decent appearance before her mates? |
59283 | And why should n''t she dress pretty? |
59283 | Anon Betsy turned to her and sez,"Josiah Allen''s wife, will you not help plead with him in the name of a strugglin''sister woman?" |
59283 | As she made that damagin''insertion agin, is it any wonder that the plough of my manly judgment struck fire from her rocky obstinacy? |
59283 | But did I hear her say this? |
59283 | But what of it, what had that got to do with my great work that wuz seethin''through my brain? |
59283 | But''tennyrate she refused outright to soothe and comfort him, and if that hain''t a wife''s duty what is? |
59283 | Do you spoze that pa would stood it havin''a wife that acted as if she knew as much as he did? |
59283 | Do you think,"sez I anxiously,"that it will clog and weigh it down too much?" |
59283 | Even Condelick Henzy wuz took back and browbeat and sez mekanically,"What do you spoze they wuz goin''to do with the kettle?" |
59283 | Everybody would know that young Smith had a mother somewhere in the background, but what''s the use of bringin''her forward so and makin''on her? |
59283 | For as Uncle Sime sez,"What man is square in public life? |
59283 | For how can you curb in a outraged and high sperited nature when it is fully rousted up, and aggravation has gone too fur? |
59283 | For what connection, I ask, is there between the finest fruit in literature, and hens? |
59283 | Hain''t the eagle a male bird? |
59283 | Happier? |
59283 | Have you got a crick?" |
59283 | He wuz always boastin''about men''s courtesy and chivalry, and how did it come out?" |
59283 | How could I grant her request without sinkin''down to the low female level? |
59283 | How is it told on now? |
59283 | How many billions a year duz the useless extravagance of tobacco cost? |
59283 | How many millions a year duz the horse races, yot races and polo games and other manly amusements amount to? |
59283 | How would she felt if she had n''t been made? |
59283 | If wimmen do n''t need a man to protect her and take care on her, why is she so much more ignorant of sin and depravity? |
59283 | Is there any limit to a female''s aggravatin''? |
59283 | Now if a smart hustlin''saloon keeper is nominated for some high office and wimmen could vote, what would be the consequence? |
59283 | Oh, what would Bill''s great- grandma thought on''t? |
59283 | Or carry a vanity bag?" |
59283 | STANZAS ON DUTY_ By Betsy Bobbett_ Unless they do their duty see Oh who would spread their sail On matrimony''s cruel sea And face its angry gale? |
59283 | Samantha counted"two and two"to herself, and then said in a mild axent,"Why would a bad woman''s vote be worse than a bad man''s?" |
59283 | Sez I so scathin''ly that it seemed as if she must show signs of scorchin'',"Did you ever see a man wear a cosset? |
59283 | Sez I,"Do you ever pause to think, Samantha, of the inestimable boon wimmen owe to men? |
59283 | Sez I,"Hain''t that a solemn proof, Samantha, that females are inferior and wuzn''t considered worth writin''about?" |
59283 | Sez I,"Samantha, do n''t you believe this forthcomin''book of mine is goin''to be the greatest work of this age, or any age?" |
59283 | Sez I,"What do you think, Samantha, about my great projeck of destroyin''female suffrage? |
59283 | Sez I,"Would you honor Betsy by lettin''her put some of her verses in my great volume? |
59283 | Sez Samantha,"I admit there are beautiful instances of men protectin''and guardin''wimmen, but how wuz it with Fez Lanfear? |
59283 | Shall females be dragged to the altar, And down their freedom lay? |
59283 | Shall horses calmly brook a halter Who over fenceless pastures stray? |
59283 | What do you think of my writin''the book?" |
59283 | What do you think of that, Simon?" |
59283 | What is more affectin''than to see how Betsy tried to hide her lifelong pursuit of man, and matrimony, under the cold word,_ duty_? |
59283 | What jinin''link is there between the most scathin''and convincin''arguments ever writ by mortal man, and eggs? |
59283 | What would be the effect on Samantha? |
59283 | What wuz my duty in the matter? |
59283 | What wuz the use of draggin''a female''s initional into it? |
59283 | What''s the use on''t? |
59283 | Where is the good horse sense on''t? |
59283 | Where would they been then, and where would they be to- day?" |
59283 | Who ever hearn a man purr? |
59283 | Who wuz fascinated by it? |
59283 | Why is there five times more men in prisons and penitentiaries than there is wimmen, if they knowed as much about crime as men do? |
59283 | Would she be overcome and swoon away? |
59283 | Would she overwhelm me with reproaches and entreaties to stop and not ruin her sect? |
59283 | Would they venter if they had n''t found that it wuz a good thing?" |
59283 | Wuz it right for me to deny her the boon of immortality in the pages of my great work? |
59283 | have I ever got to see that day? |
59283 | how can they be? |
59283 | what are we a comin''to? |
59283 | what is the matter, Josiah? |
12044 | Hast thou ever asked thyself what the slave would think of thy book if he could read it? 12044 Now why should not_ all_ this be done immediately? |
12044 | Why, where do you want to sit? |
12044 | ''And why?'' |
12044 | ''But why,''I asked,''if thou really believest what thou contendest for, namely, that their situation is as good as thine?'' |
12044 | After arguing for some time, one evening, with an individual, I proposed the question:''Would''st thou be willing to be a slave thyself?'' |
12044 | After speaking two hours, we returned to his house to tea, and he asked:''Why did you not tell the people why you believed you had a right to speak?'' |
12044 | Again I put the query:''Suppose thou wast obliged to free thy slaves, or take their place, which wouldst thou do?'' |
12044 | Again and again she asked herself:"How can I give them up?" |
12044 | And how can you doubt of immortality when you look on your beloved''s face? |
12044 | And how is it in South America? |
12044 | And is it possible, I would ask myself to- night, is it possible that I have this day paid my last visit to the Presbyterian Church? |
12044 | And now, my dear friend, what does all thou hast said in many pages amount to? |
12044 | And what is the reason_ I_ am to be scolded because_ sister_ writes letters in the_ Spectator_? |
12044 | Any evidence that we are wrong, or that slavery is a good and wholesome institution? |
12044 | Are not the people in the West Indies principally mulatto? |
12044 | Are not these unfortunate creatures expected to act on principles directly opposite to our natural feelings and daily experience? |
12044 | Are the marks of discipleship changed, or who are thy true disciples? |
12044 | Are we aliens because we are women? |
12044 | Are we bereft of citizenship because we are the mothers, wives, and daughters of a mighty people? |
12044 | Beecher''s absurd views of woman that I had better suppress my own? |
12044 | But what should that be? |
12044 | But who got it up, God or the devil?... |
12044 | But, Is it? |
12044 | Can you believe that the soul which looked out of those eyes can be quenched in endless night? |
12044 | Did it once ascend to God in broken accents for the deliverance of the captive? |
12044 | Did they not amalgamate there? |
12044 | Did thy heart once swell with sympathy for thy sister in_ bonds_? |
12044 | Didst thou even ask thyself what the free man of color would think of it? |
12044 | Didst thou ever hear anything so absurd as what Catherine says about the certificate and a companion? |
12044 | Divining her thought, I said,''Is it death?'' |
12044 | Do you know how this subject has been agitated in the Virginia legislature?" |
12044 | Dost thou know that, from the beginning to the end, not a word of compassion for_ him_ has fallen from thy pen? |
12044 | Dr. Kolloch''s parting question to her, spoken in the most solemn tones,"Can you, then, dare to hesitate?" |
12044 | Hast thou thought of_ these_ things? |
12044 | Have women no country-- no interests staked on the public weal-- no partnership in a nation''s guilt and shame? |
12044 | He said,''And yet it is_ audaciously_ asked: What has the North to do with slavery?'' |
12044 | I am indeed thankful for it; how could I be otherwise, when it was so evident thou hadst my good at heart and really did for the best? |
12044 | I asked what had made them so depraved? |
12044 | In one of her letters she asks:"Dearest, does our precious mother seem to have any idea of leaving Carolina? |
12044 | In one she asks:"Didst thou know that great efforts are making in the House of Delegates in Virginia to abolish slavery?" |
12044 | In receiving and treating thee as an equal, a sister beloved in the Lord? |
12044 | In the latter part of the second letter she says:--"Dost thou ask what I mean by emancipation? |
12044 | In the spring, she writes in a letter to Thomas:--"The following proposition was made at a Colonization meeting in this city: is it strictly true? |
12044 | In what did it consist? |
12044 | Indeed, I should like to know what I have done yet? |
12044 | Is it any wonder that she tried to grasp too much at first? |
12044 | Is it not forgetting the great and dreadful wrongs of the slave in a selfish crusade against some paltry grievance of our own? |
12044 | Is it right that I should separate myself from a people whom I have loved so tenderly, and who have been the helpers of my joy? |
12044 | Is it right to give up instructing those dear children, whom I have so often carried in the arms of faith and love to the throne of grace? |
12044 | Is it such an exhibition of slavery and prejudice as will call down_ his_ blessing on thy head? |
12044 | Is n''t this cheering news? |
12044 | More stones were thrown at the windows, more glass crashed, but she only paused to ask:--"What is a mob? |
12044 | My story does n''t sound Southerny, does it? |
12044 | O Jesus, where is thy meek and merciful disposition to be found now? |
12044 | O sister, shall we ever wash our robes so white in the blood of the Lamb as to be clean enough to enter that pure and holy Temple of the Most High? |
12044 | Shall woman refuse her response to the call? |
12044 | She asked me if I thought it wrong to plant geraniums? |
12044 | She could, she says, think of nothing else; and the question continually before her was,"What can I do? |
12044 | She thus writes to a friend:--"Didst thou ever feel as if thou hadst no home on earth, except in the bosom of Jesus? |
12044 | Still the question was ever before her:"Is there nothing that I can do?" |
12044 | Thanks be to Him, I have not yet felt like complaining; nay, verily, the song of my heart is, Who so blest as I? |
12044 | The master burst out laughing, and exclaimed:"Why, are you a nigger too?" |
12044 | The meeting had been gathered some time when I arose, and after repeating our Lord''s thrice- repeated query to Peter,''Lovest thou me?'' |
12044 | The only answer she received was:"You are a girl; what do you want of Latin and Greek and philosophy? |
12044 | The question naturally arises: if a little, why not more? |
12044 | To his anxious question,''Pray, what is it?'' |
12044 | Was it not a fact that the minds of slaves were totally uncultivated, and their souls no more cared for by their owners than if they had none? |
12044 | Was the paper once moistened by the tear of pity? |
12044 | Weld, of more than two hours, on the question,''What is slavery?'' |
12044 | What a crowd of reflections throng the mind as we inquire,_ Why_ does her full heart thus overflow with gratitude? |
12044 | What am I to do? |
12044 | What can I do?" |
12044 | What does brother Thomas think will be the issue of the political contest? |
12044 | What dost thou think of some of_ them walking_ two, four, six, and eight miles to attend our meetings?" |
12044 | What is the matter with thee? |
12044 | What meaneth that loud acclaim with which they hail it? |
12044 | What will you run a tilt at next?" |
12044 | What would the breaking of every window be? |
12044 | Which of these things is to be done next year, and which the year after? |
12044 | Who shall dare to say when and where the echoes of her soul died away? |
12044 | Why ca n''t you have eyes to see this? |
12044 | Why, then, let me ask, is it necessary for you to enter the lists as controversial writers on this question? |
12044 | Will Christian women heed such advice? |
12044 | [ 4] Now, dearest, what dost thou think of it? |
12044 | or carest thou not for the blessings and prayers of these our suffering brethren? |
12044 | that I have taught my interesting class for the last time? |
12044 | there is no Christ to multiply the garments, and what are those I send among so many? |
12044 | why am I kept in Carolina? |
23233 | ''Not by her husband?'' 23233 ''Of the black rod?'' |
23233 | Are you sure that he is mad? |
23233 | Did you ever see the unfortunate being to whom these books belong? |
23233 | Do you really think me mad? |
23233 | I had two mattrasses on my bed; what did I want with two, when such a worthy creature must lie on the ground? 23233 I have no appetite,"replied Maria, who had previously determined to speak mildly,"why then should I eat?" |
23233 | If the state of this child affected me, what were my feelings at a discovery I made respecting Peggy----? 23233 Let me see it,"demanded Maria impatiently,"You surely are not afraid of trusting me with the effusions of a madman?" |
23233 | Woman,interrupted a sepulchral voice,"what have I to do with thee?" |
23233 | ''Indeed what could most women do? |
23233 | ''Necessity,''said Mr. S----; why should I reveal his name? |
23233 | ''Was it possible? |
23233 | ''Why was I,''I would ask thee, but thou didst not heed me,--''cut off from the participation of the sweetest pleasure of life?'' |
23233 | --Maria sighed intelligibly.--"Could any thing but madness produce such a disgust for food?" |
23233 | Are we ever to meet again? |
23233 | Are you tired of playing? |
23233 | Are you very busy? |
23233 | At breakfast, Jemima enquired whether she understood French? |
23233 | Besides, might not a woman, anxious to escape, conceal some of the circumstances which made against her? |
23233 | But I calmly silenced her, in the midst of a vulgar harangue, and turning to him, asked,''Why he vainly tormented me? |
23233 | But I must not dwell on this subject.--Will you not endeavour to cherish all the affection you can for me? |
23233 | But where are these reflections leading me? |
23233 | But, on the contrary, when we peruse a skilful writer, who does not coincide in opinion with us, how is the mind on the watch to detect fallacy? |
23233 | By force, or openly, what could be done? |
23233 | Did you fall? |
23233 | Do not tell me, that you are happier without us-- Will you not come to us in Switzerland? |
23233 | Do you think that the creature goes regularly to sleep? |
23233 | Do you want to know? |
23233 | For what am I reserved? |
23233 | For, feeling that I am happier than I ever was, do you wonder at my sometimes dreading that fate has not done persecuting me? |
23233 | Have I any thing more to say to you? |
23233 | Have you seen the baby? |
23233 | Have you yet heard of an habitation for me? |
23233 | He asked me, giving me a kiss,''If I had lost my senses?'' |
23233 | He fixed his eyes on me for a moment, then, calling me a fool, asked''How long I intended to continue this pretty farce? |
23233 | Here, alone, a poor solitary individual in a strange land, tied to one spot, and subject to the caprice of another, can I be contented? |
23233 | How are your affairs going on? |
23233 | How can passion gain strength any other way? |
23233 | How can you love to fly about continually-- dropping down, as it were, in a new world-- cold and strange!--every other day? |
23233 | How could you, with your discernment, think it so? |
23233 | How did you do when you were a baby like him? |
23233 | How does the woman deserve to be characterized, who marries one man, with a heart and imagination devoted to another? |
23233 | I HAVE been hurt by indirect enquiries, which appear to me not to be dictated by any tenderness to me.--You ask"If I am well or tranquil?" |
23233 | I burst into tears, I thought it was killing myself-- yet was such a self as I worth preserving? |
23233 | I have the sincerest esteem and affection for you-- but the desire of regaining peace,( do you understand me?) |
23233 | I hope this will be the last letter I shall write from England to you-- are you not tired of this lingering adieu? |
23233 | I shut the door, and, giving him the letter, simply asked,''whether he wrote it, or was it a forgery?'' |
23233 | I was indignant, especially when I saw her endeavouring to attract, shall I say seduce? |
23233 | In answer to any question, in his best humour, it was a drawling''What do you say, child?'' |
23233 | In the course of near nine- and- twenty years, I have gathered some experience, and felt many_ severe_ disappointments-- and what is the amount? |
23233 | Is it surprising then that they are often overlooked, even by those who are delighted by the same images concentrated by the poet? |
23233 | Is it then surprising, that so many forlorn women, with human passions and feelings, take refuge in infamy? |
23233 | Is she not an object of pity or contempt, when thus sacrilegiously violating the purity of her own feelings? |
23233 | Maria had no fear but of being detained--"Who are you? |
23233 | Now I am going towards the North in search of sunbeams!--Will any ever warm this desolated heart? |
23233 | Now she endeavoured to brace her mind to fortitude, and to ask herself what was to be her employment in her dreary cell? |
23233 | Peggy too was thrifty, and how could she manage to put his plan in execution alone? |
23233 | Perceiving his mistake, I seriously asked him how, using such language to me, he could profess to be my husband''s friend? |
23233 | Remember that it is not the morals of a particular people that I would decry; for are we not all of the same stock? |
23233 | Such angelic confidence demanded the fidelity of honour; but could he, feeling her in every pulsation, could he ever change, could he be a villain? |
23233 | The wind does not appear inclined to change, so I am still forced to linger-- When do you think that you shall be able to set out for France? |
23233 | These are attentions, more grateful to the heart than offers of service-- But why do I foolishly continue to look for them? |
23233 | They were silent-- yet discoursed, how eloquently? |
23233 | This is my third letter; when am I to hear from you? |
23233 | This morning I am better; will you not be glad to hear it? |
23233 | To put her children out to nurse was impossible: how far would her wages go? |
23233 | Venables''door was indeed open to me-- nay, threats and intreaties were used to induce me to return; but why? |
23233 | WHAT, you think that you shall soon be able to dress yourself entirely? |
23233 | Was I, indeed, free?'' |
23233 | Was it not to effect her escape, to fly to the succour of her child, and to baffle the selfish schemes of her tyrant-- her husband? |
23233 | Was truth to be expected from one who had been entrapped, kidnapped, in the most fraudulent manner?" |
23233 | Well, this you will say is trifling-- shall I talk about alum or soap? |
23233 | What a torrent of abuse rushed out? |
23233 | What are you about? |
23233 | What did this laugh say, when you could not speak? |
23233 | What do you want to say to me? |
23233 | What have I to do here? |
23233 | What indeed can equal the wretchedness of that state, in which there is no alternative, but to extinguish the affections, or encounter infamy?'' |
23233 | What shall we give him to eat? |
23233 | When do the trees put out their leaves? |
23233 | Where indeed could I go from his presence? |
23233 | Whither could I creep for shelter? |
23233 | Who had they to maintain them, but their husbands? |
23233 | Why are positive punishments? |
23233 | Why are women expected to surmount difficulties that men are not equal to? |
23233 | Why do you cry? |
23233 | Why do you smile? |
23233 | Why was I not born a man, or why was I born at all? |
23233 | Will you not grant you have forgotten yourself? |
23233 | Will you not then be a good boy, and come back quickly to play with your girls? |
23233 | Will you walk in the fields? |
23233 | With these assurances, is it extraordinary that I should believe what I wished? |
23233 | Would it not now be possible to arrange your business in such a manner as to avoid the inquietudes, of which I have had my share since your departure? |
23233 | Yes, says papa, and he tapped you on the cheek, you are old enough to learn to eat? |
23233 | and will you endeavour to render that meeting happier than the last? |
23233 | before she enquired--"Why?" |
23233 | but how can I expect that she will be shielded, when my naked bosom has had to brave continually the pitiless storm? |
23233 | can any thing? |
23233 | is he so unruly?" |
23233 | is our life then only to be made up of separations? |
23233 | or, to write very considerately, when will business permit you? |
23233 | what are you?" |
23233 | when do you think of coming home? |
23233 | who can paint thy power; or reflect the evanescent tints of hope fostered by thee? |
23233 | why was I not permitted to perform the last duties of one, and smooth the pillow of death? |
23233 | why were you suffered to adorn a world exposed to the inroad of such stormy elements?" |
23233 | you will ask, what is the result of all this reasoning? |
8642 | ''Consent-- you?'' 8642 Am I his? |
8642 | Am not I the head of my house? |
8642 | And how did he bear it? |
8642 | And will that hurt them? |
8642 | But, Lucy,said he, suddenly,"is that your baby you have in your arms? |
8642 | Can this be you? |
8642 | Certainly; how_ can_ you ask? 8642 Had she a comfortable home?" |
8642 | Have you asked her whether she was satisfied with these_ indulgences_? |
8642 | Have you made any use of these thoughts in your life, Almeria? |
8642 | How,it was asked of them,"did you come here?" |
8642 | If Paris be enamored of his bride, His Helen,--what concerns it me? 8642 Is he not kind to you?" |
8642 | Is it a daughter? 8642 Is it a son? |
8642 | It was hard for her? |
8642 | Lucy,said he,"do you suppose I would hurt_ your_ child?" |
8642 | Shall the woman be bound by the folly of the child? 8642 Should_ these_ die, myself Preserved, of prosperous future could I form One cheerful hope? |
8642 | The prophet? 8642 The question in my mind is,"she resumed,"have I not a right to fly? |
8642 | Was that a thought of joy to her? |
8642 | What is the world to me? |
8642 | What now absurdity? |
8642 | Why,they said,"did you choose so barren a spot?" |
8642 | ''At whom, then,_ did_ you look?'' |
8642 | ''Has England,''thought she,''a secret from us, while we have none from her?'' |
8642 | ... Dwell I but in the suburbs Of your good pleasure? |
8642 | A poor forsaken virgin who would deign To take in marriage? |
8642 | After the battle--"Cyrus calling to some of his servants,''Tell me, said he,''has any one seen Abradatus? |
8642 | Already deep questions are put by young girls on the great theme: What shall I do to enter upon the eternal life? |
8642 | And embrace my father heart to heart?" |
8642 | And has another''s life as large a scope? |
8642 | And how atone For all I''ve done, and left undone? |
8642 | And shall my life, my single life, Obstruct all this? |
8642 | And the result? |
8642 | And the result? |
8642 | And what had Almeria done? |
8642 | And what would Almeria think? |
8642 | And where is that? |
8642 | And why? |
8642 | And why? |
8642 | But here, in the_"Lettres d''un Voyageur,"_ what do I see? |
8642 | But how many fathers are there who would have understood at once such a child as Margaret Fuller was, or would have done even as wisely as he? |
8642 | But is it not surprising that such a description should apply to so few? |
8642 | But were these acts, whether performed judiciously or no,_ so_ bold as to dare before God and Man to partake the fruits of such offence as this? |
8642 | But what does this prove? |
8642 | But when she rejoins to this,"Very true; but suppose I choose not to have a husband, or am not chosen for a wife-- what then? |
8642 | But why call on God? |
8642 | But, in casting aside the shell, have we retained the kernel? |
8642 | Can I appreciate this work in a translation? |
8642 | Can I make V---- happy in solitude? |
8642 | Can any one assert that they have reason to repent this?] |
8642 | Can gallantry go further? |
8642 | Can he do, in secret, what he could not avow to the mother that bore him? |
8642 | Can his lips speak falsely? |
8642 | Can we find this much for ourselves in bustling America the next three or four years? |
8642 | Can we not get from the French something beside their worst novels? |
8642 | Clung with wild passion to a selfish resolve? |
8642 | Cobden is good; but if he had stood in Kossuth''s place, would he not have drawn his sword against the Austrian? |
8642 | Cyrus, receiving the Armenians whom he had conquered--"''Tigranes,''said he,''at what rate would you purchase the regaining of your wife?'' |
8642 | Did_ they_ believe purity more impossible to Man than to Woman? |
8642 | Didst thou put thyself into the position of the poor man, and do for him what thou wouldst have had one who was able to do for thee? |
8642 | Do you love anybody else?" |
8642 | Do you never think of your vow as sacred?" |
8642 | Do you not feel within you that which can reprove them, which can check, which can convince them? |
8642 | Do you not like these yellow flowers? |
8642 | Does he see in her a holy mother, worthy to guard the infancy of an immortal soul? |
8642 | Does his heart find other means to express itself there? |
8642 | Does it not show a sufficiently high view of Woman, of Marriage? |
8642 | Does not all this sound like a history of the seventeenth century? |
8642 | Effeminate, say you? |
8642 | Hast thou a sense of thy ill fate? |
8642 | He has given us many gifts from his love; shall we not ask him to join us here?" |
8642 | He wondered when he saw them, and inquired thus of Panthea:''And have you made me these arms, woman, by destroying your own ornaments?'' |
8642 | How could it end? |
8642 | I did not believe in God; for why had He permitted the dart to enter so unprepared a breast? |
8642 | I said,"Have you no religious scruples? |
8642 | I shall grieve my parents; but, were they truly such, would they not grieve still more that I must reject the life of mutual love? |
8642 | If at all, how often? |
8642 | In her pure vow of maiden chastity? |
8642 | Iphis says:"What shall this wretch now do? |
8642 | Is not manliness to thy thought purity, not lawlessness? |
8642 | Is not this sorrowful story of a lofty beauty? |
8642 | Is the happiness of my whole life to be sacrificed?" |
8642 | Is there no chance of your coming to Boston all this winter? |
8642 | Jesus of Nazareth died young; but had he not spoken and acted as much truth as the world could bear in his time? |
8642 | Many say,"Well, suppose we do all this; what then? |
8642 | May not that suffice to any man''s ambition? |
8642 | Merit in this? |
8642 | Merit in this? |
8642 | Must I never then love? |
8642 | My speech to thee was, leaning''gainst thy cheek,( Which with my hand I now caress):''And what Shall I then do for thee? |
8642 | Never marry one whom I could really love? |
8642 | Never? |
8642 | Now I ask you, my sisters, if the women at the fashionable house be not answerable for those women being in the prison? |
8642 | One spoke of his beauty and smallness of his person, and, on that, Tigranes asked his wife,''And do you, Armenian dame, think Cyrus handsome?'' |
8642 | Or go I to the house of Capaneus? |
8642 | Perhaps some one will here ask, whether the supremacy of Man over Woman is attributable to nature or custom? |
8642 | Revenged herself? |
8642 | Shall I be more fortunate if I go in person? |
8642 | Shall I receive My father when grown old, and in my house Cheer him with each fond office, to repay The careful nurture which he gave my youth?'' |
8642 | Shall not her name be for her era Victoria, for her country and life Virginia? |
8642 | Shall thousands, when their country''s injured, lift Their shields? |
8642 | Should they take turns, and stay with her by night as well as by day? |
8642 | Since Somerville has achieved so much, will any young girl be prevented from seeking a knowledge of the physical sciences, if she wishes it? |
8642 | Stifled under the Roman priesthood, would you not have thrown it off with all your force? |
8642 | The Earth waits for its King? |
8642 | The architecture is borrowed from England; why not the rest? |
8642 | The father of the count departs for the crusade; will his son join him, or remain to rule their domain, and we d her he loves? |
8642 | The female Greek, of our day, is as much in the street as the male to cry,"What news?" |
8642 | There inquires the spirit,"Is this rhetoric the bloom of healthy blood, or a false pigment artfully laid on?" |
8642 | There is a beautiful side, and a good reason here; but why must the beauty degenerate, and give place to meanness? |
8642 | Think you I am_ no stronger than my sex_, Being so fathered and so husbanded?" |
8642 | This form of appeal rarely fails to touch the basest man:--"Are you acting toward other women in the way you would have men act towards your sister?" |
8642 | To her child whom they are about to murder, the same that was frightened at the"glittering plume,"she says,"Dost thou weep, My son? |
8642 | Tormented all around her? |
8642 | Was I worthy to be parent of a soul, with its eternal, immense capacity for weal and woe? |
8642 | Was it so deemed forty years ago? |
8642 | Was not the calm equality they enjoyed as honorable as the devotion of chivalry? |
8642 | We care not for their urns; what inscription could we put upon them? |
8642 | Were brothers so dear, then, Antigone? |
8642 | Were her moral qualities, her beneficent life, the results of a renewed heart?" |
8642 | What can I do? |
8642 | What color should they be? |
8642 | What demon resists our good angel, and seems at such times to have the mastery? |
8642 | What is the cause of this? |
8642 | What is the house for, if good spirits can not peacefully abide there? |
8642 | What then? |
8642 | What word Can we reply? |
8642 | What would become of them, unhappy lovers? |
8642 | When shall we read of banquets prepared for the halt, the lame, and the blind, on the day that is said to have brought_ their_ friend into the world? |
8642 | When the queen says,"Dost thou sleep, My son? |
8642 | Where lies it, though thy name Ring over distant lands, meeting the wind Even on the extremest verge of the wide world? |
8642 | Who does not feel the sway of such a voice? |
8642 | Who else could have so carried through my family affairs? |
8642 | Who found such vast sums of money, and acquitted them on her own credit? |
8642 | Who lived so spotlessly before the world? |
8642 | Who so clearly set aside the Pharisaism which, as years passed, threatened to creep in among us? |
8642 | Who so deeply discerned as to the spirits of delusion which sought to bewilder us? |
8642 | Who so wisely aided me in my rejection of a dry morality? |
8642 | Who undertaken with him, and_ sustained_, such astonishing pilgrimages? |
8642 | Who would have governed my whole economy so wisely, richly and hospitably, when circumstances commanded? |
8642 | Who would not have lent a life- long credence to that voice of honor? |
8642 | Who would wish for sons From one so wretched? |
8642 | Who, amid such difficulties, would have always held up her head and supported me? |
8642 | Who, without a murmur, have seen her husband encounter such dangers by land and sea? |
8642 | Why am I not at liberty to declare unblushingly to all men that I will leave the man whom I_ do not_ love, and go with him I_ do_ love? |
8642 | Why am I not entitled, as a rational human being, to a voice in shaping them? |
8642 | Why did Korner so love Schneider? |
8642 | Why did Socrates so love Alcibiades? |
8642 | Why dost thou clasp me with thy hands, why hold My robes, and shelter thee beneath my wings, Like a young bird? |
8642 | Why is not all life music? |
8642 | Why of Perseus, name the town, Which Cyclopean ramparts crown? |
8642 | Why should I not be at liberty to earn it in any honest and useful calling?" |
8642 | Why should not the truth be spoken?" |
8642 | Why then, say some, lay such emphasis on the rights or needs of Woman? |
8642 | Why? |
8642 | Will any, poor or rich, fail to feel that the children of such a parent were rich when"Her virtues were their worldly dower"? |
8642 | Will there never be a being to combine a man''s mind and a woman''s heart, and who yet finds life too rich to weep over? |
8642 | Will you be as selfish and short- sighted as those who never plant trees to shade a hired house, lest some one else should be blest by their shade? |
8642 | Will you, this hour, take her place?" |
8642 | Wilt thou not aid One whose best hopes on thee are stayed? |
8642 | With religious joy, as one who knows that he who loves God can not fail to love his neighbor as himself? |
8642 | Would this be just? |
8642 | Would you have waited unknown centuries, hoping for the moment when you could see another method? |
8642 | You ask, what use will she make of liberty, when she has so long been sustained and restrained? |
8642 | You have the truth, you have the right, but could you act up to it in all circumstances? |
8642 | You, could you let a Croat insult your wife, carry off your son to be an Austrian serf, and leave your daughter bleeding in the dust? |
8642 | _ Aglauron._ Beautiful do you think her? |
8642 | _ Laurie._ And pray where was the husband all this time? |
8642 | _ Laurie._ Who is that beautiful lady to whom you bowed? |
8642 | and how Comes he to my destruction? |
8642 | are there_ none_? |
8642 | dost deny Thy woman''s nature with a manly scorn, And break away the gauds and armlets worn By weaker woman in captivity? |
8642 | have they bound those brows with no garland? |
8642 | his forever? |
8642 | how did you give? |
8642 | if this should take place, who will dare again to feel the throb of heavenly hope, as to the destiny of this country? |
8642 | or, if not married, can you find no way for him to lead a virtuous and happy life? |
8642 | shall thousands grasp the oar and dare, Advancing bravely''gainst the foe, to die For Greece? |
8642 | shed in the lamp no drop of ambrosial oil? |
8642 | should I run, wouldst thou be angry? |
8642 | thou brave and faithful soul, hast thou left us, and art thou gone?'' |
8642 | what is he? |
8642 | who knew_ thee_, as to me thou art known? |
8642 | with joy and freedom, as one who feels that it is the highest happiness of gift to us that we have something to give again? |
12052 | A chill and did not send for me? |
12052 | An old maid, Charlie? 12052 An''dinna ye think, ye too could be saved and conform?" |
12052 | And how do you cook without warm water? |
12052 | And what do you propose to call me? |
12052 | And where is she going? |
12052 | Are there fresh horses and men there? |
12052 | But, would they let me bring you anything? |
12052 | By whose authority? |
12052 | Can I prove it? |
12052 | Corporal Kendall, how_ dare_ you talk to me in that manner? 12052 Did you not know by their shoulders traps?" |
12052 | Do you always pray before going to sleep? |
12052 | Do you mean that that man has a groin wound in addition to all else? |
12052 | Do you remember a man there, that every one said was going to die, and you said he would n''t? |
12052 | Doctor Kelly, do you intend to let him lie there and die? |
12052 | Doctor, will not Mrs. Snooks do for a name, for all the time I shall be here? |
12052 | Does not the cause of the slave hang on the issue in Congress? |
12052 | Glad to have them? |
12052 | Have you had no meat? |
12052 | Have you, my dear-- and what have you boys been saying about me? |
12052 | He did? 12052 How many wounded men have you in this hospital?" |
12052 | How so, sister? |
12052 | If you dig us out here, how long will it be before we go in again? |
12052 | Is it possible? |
12052 | Is it true? |
12052 | Is not Mr. Webster''s influence all against it? |
12052 | Is there? |
12052 | It is not Mrs. Swisshelm''s voice? |
12052 | Lice? 12052 Like to remain with you? |
12052 | Meat? 12052 No warm water?" |
12052 | Oh, but tell us, good earnest, ai n''t you an old maid? |
12052 | Pardon for what, sir? 12052 Pay me for it, will you? |
12052 | Sanitary Commission, and half a box of lemons? 12052 Shoulderstraps? |
12052 | Something to eat? |
12052 | Something to quench thirst? 12052 Stay with you?" |
12052 | Then why do you counsel others to do it? |
12052 | Weel, what mair do ye want, than the salvation o''yer saul? |
12052 | Well, I think you intimated as much, did he not boys? |
12052 | What is the reason he can not be saved? |
12052 | Where is the kitchen? |
12052 | Who are you? |
12052 | Who is going with her? |
12052 | Why is it an injustice? |
12052 | Why not? |
12052 | Why? |
12052 | Would not that influence be very much less if the public knew just what he is? |
12052 | After breakfast, I went back to my room to continue my labor; but mother soon came and said:"Do you intend to let Elizabeth do all the work?" |
12052 | Am I greater than he? |
12052 | Are you insane? |
12052 | As Georgie passed the foot of the cabin stairs, Miss Dix was coming down, and called to her, saying:"What are you doing here?" |
12052 | As I knelt for her last words, she said:"Elizabeth?" |
12052 | But what matter? |
12052 | But what next? |
12052 | Can this nation ever, ever be forgiven for the blood of her innocent children? |
12052 | Charlie was commissioned to make discoveries, and the second day came, with a long face, and said:"Do you know what they say about you?" |
12052 | Church, appealing to that church for redress and spurned under the"Black Gag,"and I? |
12052 | Cloud with both horses? |
12052 | Cloud? |
12052 | Cloud?" |
12052 | Could I at any time be required to drink tea out of a coarse delf cup and sleep in such a bed? |
12052 | Could he believe his eyes? |
12052 | Could it be possible that was ancient history? |
12052 | Could they not spare two of you for duty?" |
12052 | Did I know it was an apple tree through which I looked up to the blue sky, over which white clouds scudded away toward the great hills? |
12052 | Did any one ever see such a saucy boy?" |
12052 | Did not Paul return Onesimus to his master? |
12052 | Do surgeons have shoulderstraps? |
12052 | Do you know there were three surgeons detailed for duty here, before you came, and none of them would stay? |
12052 | Do you not think James G. Birney and Gerrit Smith are anti- slavery?" |
12052 | Do you not think you are a pretty fellow to have me come all the way from Minnesota to wash your feet?" |
12052 | Do you suppose I would work over you as I have been doing, and then drop you for fear of a little more work?" |
12052 | Do you think I am going to lose my investment in you? |
12052 | Doctor, could you not take turns in amusing those ladies? |
12052 | Does he not know you would be insulted at every step if you work for a living? |
12052 | Had I actually given up the publication? |
12052 | Had I slept and been awakened by the wind to find myself in the world? |
12052 | Had he transferred his claim to the obedience of half the human family? |
12052 | He called, and when I came and talked with them, said:"Wo n''t you stay with us?" |
12052 | He clasped his hands, and together we repeated"Now I lay me down to sleep,"to the end; when I said:"Do you mean that, George? |
12052 | He had never before been angry or vexed with me, but now he was both, and said:"How could you do me such an injustice?" |
12052 | He had pushed his chair back from his desk, and sat regarding me in utter amazement while I stated the case, then said:"What do you mean? |
12052 | He had them all summoned in the front end of the large room, and in presence of the patients, said to them:"You see this lady? |
12052 | He laughed at the thought of my learning from him and said:"What shall I teach you? |
12052 | He might have spoken a hasty word, but was it right to lay it up against him? |
12052 | He said he could, and I added:"Will you pray before you sleep?" |
12052 | He said:"Why is it I have known nothing of all this? |
12052 | He stood at the foot of the bed, spread his chest, and inquired:"Well, brother, how is your soul in this solemn hour?" |
12052 | Her manner was too simple and natural to have any art in it; and why should she have pretended a friendship she did not feel? |
12052 | His black eyes twinkled, and he shook with laughter when I sat up, clasped my hands, and said:"Oh, dear? |
12052 | His master informed him he had a bet on him, and the other party commanded him to"curse Jesus?" |
12052 | How can you feel so? |
12052 | How could she but think that the influence was evil which could bring such result? |
12052 | How could you-- how dare you torture him?" |
12052 | How did they come to be standing around on corners and doorsteps by the hundred, like crows on a cornfield fence? |
12052 | How long could that weak woman maintain her respectability among all these men? |
12052 | How many could we afford to sacrifice in order to preserve a country for the use of cowards and traitors, and other inferior types of the race? |
12052 | How many of them would live to reach Washington on a diet of crackers and water? |
12052 | How many such men were there in this land? |
12052 | How many wounded have you?" |
12052 | How old do you call yourself?" |
12052 | How should I follow Christ? |
12052 | I called out:"Men, what have you had to eat?" |
12052 | I drew back, and he said:"Is it possible you will not take my hand?" |
12052 | I had a reckless abandon, for had I not thrown myself into the breach to die there, and would I not sell my life at its full value? |
12052 | I have been hunting for you to ask if you would like to remain with us?" |
12052 | I have not seen a woman in three months; what is your name?" |
12052 | I heard his grievance, and said:"Doctor, how many of you surgeons are on this boat?" |
12052 | I looked at him in much surprise, and said:"Who are you?" |
12052 | I looked at him inquiringly, and said:"Well, did you die?" |
12052 | I no curse Jesus; Jesus die for me, Massa; I die for Jesus?" |
12052 | I replied,"She is here, dear mother, what of her?" |
12052 | I said:"Is it your wife?" |
12052 | I sat at some distance with my back to him, dressing a wound; and, without turning, said,"Why? |
12052 | I sat talking with the man I had come to visit, and he said, in a whisper:"Are there lice in all the hospitals?" |
12052 | I stopped, looked at him, and said:"It is a very pleasant evening; had you not better walk on and enjoy it?" |
12052 | I was greatly grieved to think he had suffered from cold the last night of life, but how avoid any number of similar occurrences? |
12052 | I was startled and without looking up, said:"Am I old enough?" |
12052 | I was to die of overwork and want of sleep,"and then,"she exclaimed,"what will become of these men? |
12052 | If I were not ashamed of my articles, why not sign them? |
12052 | If he attacked me, could I defend myself with the hatchet? |
12052 | If he could only enlist her, the whole family would most likely follow into the abolition ranks; but the bounty money, alas, where could he raise it? |
12052 | If the cage were there, the great beast would probably go into it, but how get it there? |
12052 | Is it not enough?" |
12052 | Is this death?" |
12052 | It does him good to scold, and what is the use of a man having a mother if he can not scold her when he is in pain? |
12052 | It was a week or more after this conversation I found my patient, one morning, with blue lips and a pinched nose, and said to him:"What is this?" |
12052 | It was of course in the interests of the South, and meant to prevent the troops leaving the State; but why had not the tribes struck together? |
12052 | Its finances were desperate, and what else could I do? |
12052 | Let me feel your hand?" |
12052 | Milton epitomized Paul when he made Eve say to Adam,"Be God thy law, thou mine;"but was that the mind and will of God? |
12052 | More than once some of them said:"I wish, mother, we were back with you in the Old Theater?" |
12052 | Next time I was in Judiciary, a young man on crutches accosted me, saying:"Were not you in Ward Six, about six weeks ago?" |
12052 | Of what use could I be? |
12052 | Oh, death where is thy sting? |
12052 | Oh, how dared you? |
12052 | On his second, he inquired at table:"Is this the place where they put onions into everything?" |
12052 | One woman was printing her productions, and why should not all the rest do likewise? |
12052 | Ramsey received his, he turned it over, and said:"What am I to do with this?" |
12052 | Shall I order you a room?" |
12052 | She was greatly comforted; but a gentleman said, as she moved away:"I wish I could share your opinion; but what is to hinder their coming in?" |
12052 | Snooks?" |
12052 | So, shortly after midnight, the doorbell was rung, when Mr. Babbitt inquired:"Who is there?" |
12052 | Some one started a conundrum:"Why is Daniel Webster like Sisera? |
12052 | That command was given to me, but how could I obey it without eating and drinking damnation to myself? |
12052 | That evening, when we were saying the shorter catechism, the question,"What are the decrees of God?" |
12052 | The fire had gone out, and she came up to inquire if she should make a new one, and if so, where she should find kindling? |
12052 | The first day she attended, I asked her the question:"How many Gods are there?" |
12052 | The instant it rested on my hands the groans ceased, and I said:"Is that better?" |
12052 | The pickles had made him sick, and now there was a general laugh at his expense, but he stuck to his purpose and said:"Well, ai n''t you on old maid?" |
12052 | The_ Visiter_ was three years old when he turned one day, examined me critically, and exclaimed:"Why do you wear those hideous caps? |
12052 | The_ Visiter_ worked against the party, and the cry from the Whig press became:"Why attack our party? |
12052 | Then, after reflecting, said, why go at all, if there was no hope? |
12052 | There was very little soft bread-- it was theirs by right; what should I do? |
12052 | They said to him:"Dinna ye think that we, who ha''conformit may be saved?" |
12052 | This caught the fancy of the street boys, who called him,"Towser, where''s your collar?" |
12052 | Three nurses stood around him, and to my inquiry"What_ is_ the matter?" |
12052 | Was I such a monster that this old family friend thought it necessary to urge me to go to my dying mother? |
12052 | Was I to obey my husband in that way? |
12052 | Was ever money so well expended? |
12052 | Was every husband God to his wife? |
12052 | Was it any fault of his that"all that she( the wife) can acquire by her labor- service or act during coverture, belongs to her husband?" |
12052 | Was mine a saving faith, or did I, like the devils, believe and tremble? |
12052 | We might set type, but when it came to making and locking up a form, ha, ha, would n''t there be sport? |
12052 | We''re your boys; ai n''t we, mother? |
12052 | Were not servants told to obey their masters? |
12052 | Were they the men who were standing around Charlie? |
12052 | What could a just God want with such a people? |
12052 | What could he do but destroy them? |
12052 | What did I care for preachers and theological arguments? |
12052 | What did it all mean? |
12052 | What did it mean? |
12052 | What difference is it to me how he talks? |
12052 | What does your husband mean? |
12052 | What does your husband say?" |
12052 | What ever brought you here? |
12052 | What has ever become of them? |
12052 | What is that, again?" |
12052 | What is the matter with you?" |
12052 | What matter who sent me my bread, or whether I had any? |
12052 | What more could Peter do to prove that he knew not Jesus? |
12052 | What motive could I have for attempting to go on with it? |
12052 | What must he have thought? |
12052 | What shall I do?" |
12052 | What should I do with those scraps of white on that field of grime? |
12052 | What was Peter''s denial compared to mine? |
12052 | What was that significance? |
12052 | What was the spiritual significance of those externals? |
12052 | What was to be done? |
12052 | What wonder that she clutched it as Jacob did his angel? |
12052 | What would mother say?" |
12052 | Whatever had the Church of Rome done with the other six owned on the Isle of Patmos by him who stood in the midst of the seven golden candlesticks? |
12052 | When I reached my room I found in the berth a woman who raised up and said:"The stewardess told me this was your room; will you let me stay with you?" |
12052 | When he seemed to have finished, I asked:"How long since you learned my real character?" |
12052 | When it could so support a nigger, what might it not do for one of the superior race? |
12052 | When my aristocrat was elected, how should his luxury be applied? |
12052 | Where are the pictures I should have given to the world? |
12052 | Where should I go? |
12052 | While I made this statement he stood regarding me with ineffable disdain, and when I was through inquired:"Who are you?" |
12052 | While he continued his comments, I buried my head in pillows, saying,"Lord what wilt thou have me to do?" |
12052 | Who can we lean upon, in our old age? |
12052 | Who should elect the aristocrats to be cradled in such luxury amid that world of want? |
12052 | Who will take care of Johnny when we are gone? |
12052 | Whose orders?" |
12052 | Why did you not ask for one?" |
12052 | Why have I never put on canvas one pair of those pleading eyes, in which are garnered the woes of centuries? |
12052 | Why should I have blushed that my husband was a law- abiding citizen of the freest country in the world? |
12052 | Why should the discovery of its existence curdle my blood, stop my heart- beats, and send a rush of burning shame from forehead to finger- tip? |
12052 | Why, how did he know anything about it?" |
12052 | Why-- what does he know about me?" |
12052 | Will my peas burn? |
12052 | Will you come to the mill and let me show you how to put a log on the carriage?" |
12052 | Would I put it under his head or mangled limb? |
12052 | Would his friends permit this story to pass without a word of denial? |
12052 | Would wives appear in the general judgment at all, or if they did, would they hand in a schedule of marital commands? |
12052 | You know Secretary Stanton? |
12052 | and how much will you give me-- three cents?" |
12052 | does ye tink dey will get in?" |
12052 | groaned the sufferer,"what can she do?" |
12052 | he sneered;"call yourself good lookin'', do you?" |
12052 | how could I leave this head unsupported? |
12052 | how dared you to do such a thing?" |
12052 | is it not enough?" |
12052 | is it possible you let them talk in that manner about me, after the nice pickles I gave you?" |
12052 | said I,"I have heard that everything possible was being done for them?" |
12052 | who is he?" |
12052 | would relief never come? |
29878 | Can you tell me what will be in the platform of the Democratic party in 1916? |
29878 | Do we ask what this has to do with Municipal suffrage? |
29878 | Do you talk of chivalry? |
29878 | How about the women who have lost their husbands? |
29878 | How could you tell a Democratic woman''s vote from a Republican woman''s vote? |
29878 | If women voted,was one of them,"would they not have to sit on juries?" |
29878 | May I present next,said Miss Addams,"Mrs. Ida Husted Harper, of New York? |
29878 | Must I do that? |
29878 | Then why do you say the men did not know what they were about? |
29878 | Where did you get your figures? |
29878 | Who are the evil creatures we are supposed to meet there on election day? 29878 Who will care for the children during the mother''s absence?... |
29878 | Why have there not been more eminent women? |
29878 | Will exclusion from the suffrage educate and improve the illiterate masses more quickly than the use of it? |
29878 | Will women vote intelligently? 29878 Yet, after all,"she said,"are not these clubs doing good work for woman suffrage under another name? |
29878 | You are then opposed to having a State grant suffrage to its own women? |
29878 | ), Who Will Defend the Flag? |
29878 | ... Is it true? |
29878 | A reed shaken with the wind?'' |
29878 | Ai n''t we got de right on our side? |
29878 | Although she gives the same quality and the same amount of work yet she can not command the same wage, and why? |
29878 | And are not women taxed? |
29878 | And what is the result? |
29878 | And what is the result? |
29878 | And who among the workers are the weak? |
29878 | And who are the weak? |
29878 | And who better than she knows what the needs of the workers are in the factories? |
29878 | Another question was:"Have not men a better right to the suffrage because they have to support the family?" |
29878 | Answering the question,"Do we propose a mad revolution?" |
29878 | Are not our mothers quite as capable as our fathers to wage warfare against these, the enemies in our midst? |
29878 | Are not the effects of over- work and long hours in the household as great as are those of the factory or the office? |
29878 | Are the Indians more important than the women of America? |
29878 | Are the Mexican peons more to our Government than are the women of America? |
29878 | Are they less intelligent? |
29878 | Are they less moral, peaceful and law- abiding than men? |
29878 | Are they less public spirited and patriotic than men? |
29878 | Are we alone to refuse to learn the lesson? |
29878 | Are you afraid of intelligence? |
29878 | Are you going to do this because you think they are needed in the electorate and because they will make conditions better? |
29878 | Are you in favor of women voting? |
29878 | Are you not ready now to wipe out that paltry 2,000 majority which five years ago voted to continue this unjust condition? |
29878 | But do we not sit in silence when that flag waves over living conditions which should be an insult to all patriotism? |
29878 | Can they do it? |
29878 | Can we really bring up our sons with a clear sense of the civic responsibility which we ourselves have not? |
29878 | Can women, and do the average, every- day women in their present condition as subjects take a very lively interest in the real welfare of the State? |
29878 | Can you consistently oppose now the things for which you fought so bitterly a short time ago? |
29878 | Can you help me?'' |
29878 | Do children suffer because their mothers own property?" |
29878 | Do you not see how, in spite of politicians, the people have been writing direct primary laws? |
29878 | Do you stand in need of the trust of other peoples and of the trust of our own women? |
29878 | Does a desire for an environment of moral and civic purity show neglect of the highest good of the family? |
29878 | Does an intelligent interest in the education of a child render a woman less a mother? |
29878 | Does any one believe that we should have to boil all the water before we dared to drink it? |
29878 | Does it not mean that there is no class so wise, so benevolent that it is fitted to govern any other class? |
29878 | Does the record end here? |
29878 | Dr. Shaw closed her address with a beautiful delineation of Americanism, saying at its close: What is Americanism? |
29878 | Gentlemen, is it not manifestly unfair to demand of women a test which has never been made in the case of men in this or any other country? |
29878 | Go to your States, go anywhere but do not come to us?'' |
29878 | Hardly, and are not men and children affected by this indifference? |
29878 | Has not this movement a strong tendency to encourage the exodus from the land of bondage, otherwise known as matrimony and motherhood? |
29878 | Have we forgotten the cry of our forefathers which stirred the blood of every patriotic American, that"taxation without representation is tyranny?" |
29878 | Have we no right to a voice in the disposal of our wealth, the greatest that the world possesses, the priceless wealth of its womanhood? |
29878 | He looked out upon them and do you think he said,"I am convinced that the women of New York do want to vote and I will help them?" |
29878 | How about Idaho? |
29878 | How can a woman live an honorable life on such a sum? |
29878 | How can it be done? |
29878 | How can it plead for justice in the East when it denies this to its own women? |
29878 | How can those who refuse to give women the right to vote reconcile their opinion with the form of government in which they believe? |
29878 | How can we best spread our ideas in other organizations? |
29878 | How did this happen? |
29878 | How have they kept that promise?" |
29878 | How shall we dispose of our headquarters, our workers, our plans? |
29878 | How would men like such reasoning applied to themselves?... |
29878 | I ask you, in the name of common sense, is it safe or wise or sane to entrust to men alone the dealing with this age- long evil? |
29878 | I have said that the passage of this amendment is a vitally necessary war measure and do you need further proof? |
29878 | I saw men jump up on the seats and throw their hats in the air and shout:"What''s the matter with Champ Clark?" |
29878 | If an outlaw is to be arrested are you going to order a woman to get a gun and come with you? |
29878 | If dissolution is determined upon, what disposition shall be made of( a) the files of data;( b) the property;( c) the funds, if any remain? |
29878 | If it is a right, who can question it? |
29878 | If not, when shall the next be called? |
29878 | If the woman teacher''s need of the ballot is a debatable question then another very natural question arises: Do men teachers need the ballot?... |
29878 | If they had been 30,000 women with votes would he have said that? |
29878 | If this is done, to whom shall such a board render its final report and by whom shall it be officially discharged? |
29878 | If this is to be the last convention, shall a Board of Officers be elected at this convention to serve until all tasks are completed? |
29878 | If we can not get that peace out of this war what hope is there that it will ever come to humanity? |
29878 | If you should meet a new idea in the dark, would you shy? |
29878 | In New York in the constitutional convention of 1821 when some members advocated its removal others asked,"Where is the demand? |
29878 | In contrast we may ask what have women done? |
29878 | In such places the question next day is not,''Did the election go Democratic or Republican?'' |
29878 | In the event that the association shall be dissolved what agency shall become the auxiliary of the International Woman Suffrage Alliance? |
29878 | Is Limited Suffrage Worth While? |
29878 | Is it any wonder that so many of our little sisters are in the gutter? |
29878 | Is it any wonder that so many women prefer to go into factory life at less pay but where they can have some hours of their own? |
29878 | Is it fair for you_ not_ to tell us why you are opposed to us? |
29878 | Is it fair to say woman shall have no part in the every- day affairs of life when she must bear so much in war?" |
29878 | Is it for the protection of his property that he may have a voice in the governing of his wealth, of his stocks and bonds and merchandise? |
29878 | Is it not because it is a symbol of the hopes and aspirations of the men and women of the whole world? |
29878 | Is it not true that every free- lover, socialist, communist and anarchist the country over is openly in favor of female suffrage? |
29878 | Is it of no concern who compose Congress, who vote for members of Congress and for the President?" |
29878 | Is it true that the United States Constitution too is but a"scrap of paper"to be repudiated at will? |
29878 | Is it true that there is a lower birth- rate among working women than among those of the wealthy class? |
29878 | Is not that a true statement in the most practical form of the problem of the tariff? |
29878 | Is not this a survival of that old vice of womankind, indirection?... |
29878 | Is that a reason for considering that woman suffrage is a mistake? |
29878 | Is that trust an asset or is it not? |
29878 | Is the birth- rate less among women who are engaged in the occupations unknown to women of the past? |
29878 | Is there any justice underlying such a condition? |
29878 | It has been said to me when I have spoken for childhood,''You have no child?'' |
29878 | It is at least certain that a great many of these cornerstones of society are tottering, and why? |
29878 | Keep your mothers in a state of invalid remoteness from life and who shall arm the young with intelligent virtue? |
29878 | Led by Mrs. Ella Hawley Crossett, president of the New York association,"Should there be concentration on one bill or work for several"? |
29878 | Logical thinkers the world over have been led in consequence to ask: Are not women equally capable with men of self- government? |
29878 | May I say un- American, if you object to the word"radical"? |
29878 | Miss Miner said in answering the objection to"the immoral vote":"Is the fact that immoral women would have the vote a real objection? |
29878 | Mr. Taggart asked:"Why should the women of Kansas have the vote when it is denied to those of other States who need it as much or more?" |
29878 | Mrs. Catharine Waugh McCulloch presided at the conference on How can we nationalize our request for a 16th Amendment? |
29878 | Mrs. Craigie spoke on Citizenship-- What Is It? |
29878 | Mrs. Dudley represented the women of the South, saying in the course of her address: What has happened to the State''s rights doctrine? |
29878 | Mrs. Harriet Taylor Upton( Ohio); Well then what is the matter? |
29878 | Mrs. Kate S. Hilliard( Utah) answered the question, Will the Ballot Solve the Industrial Problem? |
29878 | Mrs. Kelley asked:"Why not do prenomination work?" |
29878 | Must we crawl on our knees to ask you for that which we feel we have a right to demand? |
29878 | Ninety days? |
29878 | Now if a good woman can develop the best in an individual man, may not all the good women together develop the best in a whole State? |
29878 | Now, why is the Shafroth- Palmer amendment easier to pass Congress than the Bristow- Mondell amendment? |
29878 | One afternoon was devoted to a conference on How Can We Best Utilize the Press? |
29878 | One of the gentlemen has asked:"What is the relation of all this labor talk to the ballot?" |
29878 | Or is the decline alike marked among those who are pursuing the ancient occupations but under different conditions?... |
29878 | Or shall they attempt to determine causes, apply remedies and clear the way for their own enfranchisement? |
29878 | Out of the present, its arrogant militarism, its sordid commercialism and worship of gold, is there anything to give us cheer and hope for tomorrow? |
29878 | President, are you or are you not for this Federal Amendment?'' |
29878 | Rabbi Emil G. Hirsch gave an able address under the title"Why Not?" |
29878 | Representative Littlefield of Maine inquired:"What do you say, Governor, about Miss McCracken''s article in the_ Outlook_?" |
29878 | Said he:"Ladies, why do you waste your time year after year in coming before us and asking for this appropriation? |
29878 | Shall it recommend its members to join the League of Women Voters? |
29878 | Shall the National American Woman Suffrage Association dissolve when the last task concerning the extension of suffrage to women is completed? |
29878 | Shall the National American Woman Suffrage Association drop work for State Referenda and concentrate on the Federal Amendment? |
29878 | Shall this be the last suffrage convention held under its auspices? |
29878 | Shall we admit them only to a partnership of suffering and sacrifice and toil and not to a partnership of privilege and right? |
29878 | Shall we be content with four stars or shall we provide the means to get a fifth?" |
29878 | She must take it from one or all of them and will she make herself or the world better by doing so?" |
29878 | Should We Work for Woman Suffrage in War Time? |
29878 | Surely it behooves us to do something at once or what sort of citizens shall we have? |
29878 | That is as far as you want them to go? |
29878 | That was after the election? |
29878 | The Chairman: That supposition applies to Congress also, does it? |
29878 | The Chinese woman-- the woman of the harem-- do they rule it? |
29878 | The Indian woman rocks the cradle; does she rule the world? |
29878 | The crystallized sentiments of an intelligent people? |
29878 | The following conversation then took place:"May I ask you a question?" |
29878 | The natural question, therefore, was, Should the association make plans to dissolve immediately upon ratification or was there reason for continuance? |
29878 | The program was as follows: What is the matter with the United States? |
29878 | The question before the men of the country is, Should the women have the suffrage and if they get it how will they use it?" |
29878 | There certainly can be no disagreement among us as to the latter statement but why is it more applicable to women than to men? |
29878 | There was at first no thought that the people should elect him but do you not see how quickly they assimilated the machinery which was provided? |
29878 | They gave much to us, did we give anything to them? |
29878 | To say that means what? |
29878 | Want it? |
29878 | Was it not something of this love which inspired that immortal Declaration made at the Woman''s Rights Convention on July 19- 20, 1848? |
29878 | Was there ever such a chance offered to the world before? |
29878 | What Can the Enfranchised Women Do to Secure Suffrage for the Women of the Entire Nation? |
29878 | What Good Will Woman Suffrage Do Our Country? |
29878 | What care they now when all the world is with them? |
29878 | What caused the doctors to come together in a Society for Sanitary and Moral Prophylaxis? |
29878 | What could be more appropriate than that such women should do for the coming generation what those of a preceding did for them? |
29878 | What could be more natural than that women having attained their political independence should desire to give service in token of their gratitude? |
29878 | What could be worse than that?'' |
29878 | What did I hear? |
29878 | What does that mean? |
29878 | What does the idea of government imply? |
29878 | What is done with them when their bones give out and they can not work any more? |
29878 | What is the Best Thing it Has Done for my State? |
29878 | What is the position of your organization with reference to the question of whether or not women should have the right to vote at all? |
29878 | What is your own mental attitude toward progress? |
29878 | What more could we expect of her son? |
29878 | What mysterious cause delayed them? |
29878 | What necessary qualification fits men for the exercise of this sacred right which is not likewise possessed by women? |
29878 | What of the working girl and her employer? |
29878 | What time will a woman have to prepare herself for these new duties of citizenship? |
29878 | What was the result? |
29878 | What was the result? |
29878 | What was the result? |
29878 | What''s de reason dat we women ca n''t vote, an''ai n''t got no say- so''bout makin''de laws dat bosses us? |
29878 | When I asked him about it he said:''Do you think I would notice a woman''s meeting?'' |
29878 | Where is yours?" |
29878 | White of Chicago; Mrs. Upton on What Next? |
29878 | Who are you that hesitate to promote, if you do not actually obstruct this Federal Amendment? |
29878 | Who better than she knows whether or not the cost of living advances more rapidly than the wage does? |
29878 | Who better than the mother who sees her boy and her girl playing in the streets knows the need of playgrounds? |
29878 | Who can think that intellectual divergence, disagreement upon great public questions, would disrupt a family worth holding together? |
29878 | Who is to blame if they do not have the keener sense? |
29878 | Who represents these if not women?... |
29878 | Who says"suffrage is going and not coming"? |
29878 | Who shall say that our triumph is to be long delayed? |
29878 | Who wants to vote that has no land?" |
29878 | Whom did I see at that first suffrage meeting, first in my experience? |
29878 | Why are we afraid? |
29878 | Why debar the better and enfranchise the worse? |
29878 | Why did not such evidence of a demand win the vote? |
29878 | Why did they not come sooner if men were so willing? |
29878 | Why do they neglect the women? |
29878 | Why do we care more about our flag than any other flag? |
29878 | Why do we want the ballot? |
29878 | Why is it tyranny to men but not to women? |
29878 | Why is the ballot given to him while it is denied to us? |
29878 | Why not directly into the governmental ear-- the ballot box? |
29878 | Why not then avail ourselves of this unique, this providential opportunity? |
29878 | Why persist in embarrassing us with this very troublesome question?" |
29878 | Why should they have grown more in the last sixty years than in all the years before?... |
29878 | Why should we breathe them only in the prayer meeting or in the parlors of our friends? |
29878 | Why should woman suffrage not come? |
29878 | Why should you take such an interest in defeating Democratic Congressmen and Senators? |
29878 | Why, when we have been travelling and seeing others, does the sight of the American flag bring tears to our eyes and warmth to our hearts? |
29878 | Will she take it from her home and husband or from her church and children or from her charities and social pleasures? |
29878 | Will the ballot in the hands of women pour oil on the troubled domestic waters? |
29878 | Will women help our courts to better administer justice? |
29878 | Would Congress fail to recognize such voting strength upon any other issue? |
29878 | Would it be unwomanly to ask why there should have been such wide divergence in the Divine Illumination which each Oracle received? |
29878 | You are aware that more Democrats voted for it than men of any other party? |
29878 | You ask by whom? |
29878 | You might say,"Why do you select this Democratic administration for your demand? |
29878 | You tried to defeat him, did you not? |
29878 | You tried to defeat the man in the House who presented this resolution which you are having hearings for, did you not? |
29878 | Your organization spent a lot of time and money trying to defeat men on this committee that you are now before, did it not? |
29878 | [ 117] From the address of President Wilson: And what shall we say of the women?... |
29878 | [ 30] Our vice- president- at- large will speak to you on What Cheer?" |
29878 | [ 37] If this request was so"reasonable"why was the word"sex"included in the first place? |
29878 | and in amazement ask himself,"How does it happen that there have been any?" |
29878 | but''Was it license or no license?'' |
29878 | under the title What''s in a Name? |
43502 | ''Appy? 43502 Dizzy? |
43502 | Fear? |
43502 | Got us----? |
43502 | How did you get here so early? |
43502 | I knew you''d be surprised-- wasn''t it clever of me to manage it? 43502 Intriguing to get hold of?" |
43502 | Keep quiet, cawn''t yer? |
43502 | Mrs. or Miss? |
43502 | Political dynamite,eh? |
43502 | W''y do n''t the men''elp ye to get your rights? |
43502 | Women--"children"--wot about the_ men_? |
43502 | Yes, how about_ that?_) MISS E. B. |
43502 | _) MISS L. Accept it? 43502 ''E was awskin''me:''Ow would you like men to st''y at''ome and do the fam''ly washin''?" |
43502 | ''Elp us? |
43502 | ''Oo among you workin''men''as the most comfortable''omes? |
43502 | ''Oo are you talkin''to? |
43502 | ''Oo yer talkin''to? |
43502 | ''Oo''s Pilcher? |
43502 | ''Ow''re we goin''to know if you ca n''t tell us? |
43502 | (_ A great shout._) Yes-- seems funny, does n''t it? |
43502 | (_ Debating with herself._) You do n''t know about her, I suppose? |
43502 | (_ Hastily._) At least the papers said so, did n''t they? |
43502 | (_ He stares bewildered._ JEAN_ drops her hands in her lap and steadies her voice._) She went away from you, then? |
43502 | (_ Her watchful eye, leaving her husband for a moment, catches_ MISS LEVERING''S_ little involuntary gesture._) What''s the matter? |
43502 | (_ Hurries after_ MISS LEVERING_ as she advances to speak to the_ FREDDYS,_& c._) Why, God bless my soul, do you realise that''s_ drains_? |
43502 | (_ Laughter._) MR. P. Per''aps''e does n''t know much about women? |
43502 | (_ Pause._) After all... women are much more conservative than men-- aren''t they? |
43502 | (_ Quite low._) Then do n''t you know you must pay me in kind? |
43502 | (_ Raising his voice._) Why should I remind anybody of what I want only to forget? |
43502 | (_ She is about to speak, he advances on her._) Do you deny that you returned my letters unopened? |
43502 | (_ She stands looking out into the void._) One woman''s mishap?--what is that? |
43502 | (_ Voice_:"Mill? |
43502 | (_ With a sudden thought._) What has changed her? |
43502 | (_ With sudden change of tone._) Why do I waste time over myself? |
43502 | (_ goes straight on as if she had not heard_)--man asking: if the women get full citizenship, and a war is declared, will the women fight? |
43502 | --don''t you think? |
43502 | ... To have lived through_ that_ when she was... how old? |
43502 | A pilgrimage? |
43502 | And did n''t he? |
43502 | And if Geoffrey Stonor offered you-- what''s called"reparation"--you''d refuse it? |
43502 | And it''s like that? |
43502 | And it_ is n''t_ so? |
43502 | And still no work? |
43502 | And what did they decide? |
43502 | And what difference did it make? |
43502 | And why should n''t she? |
43502 | And why"could n''t"you? |
43502 | And you''re unchanged-- is that it? |
43502 | Angelic? |
43502 | Any complication? |
43502 | Any men here belongin''to the Labour Party? |
43502 | Are all who avail themselves of Lord Rowton''s hostels, are_ they_ all angels? |
43502 | Are we down-''earted? |
43502 | Are we down-''earted? |
43502 | Are you quite ready? |
43502 | Are you threatening me? |
43502 | Are you? |
43502 | Are-- you-- married? |
43502 | Are_ they_ all''appy? |
43502 | At the door I saw the helmets of two policemen, and I said to myself:"What sort of crime shall I have to sit and hear about? |
43502 | Bless me, am I such a chicken? |
43502 | But the time has come when a woman may look about her, and say,"What general significance has my secret pain? |
43502 | But where did you go-- dressed like that? |
43502 | But(_ pity and annoyance blended in her tone_)--you care about him still, Vida? |
43502 | But_ how_ did you get here? |
43502 | Ca n''t you do what the other four hundred have done? |
43502 | Ca n''t you see that this crazed campaign you''d start her on-- even if it''s successful, it can only be so through the help of men? |
43502 | Can you tell me, my man, which are the ones that-- a-- that make the disturbances? |
43502 | Could n''t you see the men were at their old game? |
43502 | D''you think_ we_ ought to st''y''ome and wash the dishes? |
43502 | Did he say anything? |
43502 | Did n''t Mr. Greatorex say women had been politely petitioning Parliament for forty years? |
43502 | Did n''t know? |
43502 | Did n''t the women sit quiet till ten minutes to closing time? |
43502 | Did n''t you say the 1.10? |
43502 | Did nobody want you to teach French or sing the little songs? |
43502 | Did you hear what Mrs. Heriot said about him? |
43502 | Did you know she''d got that old horror to give Lady John £ 8,000 for her charity before he died? |
43502 | Did you mean you are ready to do that? |
43502 | Did you want to? |
43502 | Do I always talk about Stonor? |
43502 | Do n''t you know there''s a third of the women o''this country ca n''t afford the luxury of stayin''in their''omes? |
43502 | Do n''t you think_ they_ know there''s been more said and written about it in these ten days since the scene, than in the ten years before it? |
43502 | Do you deny that you refused to see me-- and that, when I persisted, you vanished? |
43502 | Do you know that out of every hundred women in this country eighty- two are wage- earning women? |
43502 | Do you mean then that, after all-- it lived? |
43502 | Do you reely think we tyke them there low wyges because we got a_ lykin''_ for low wyges? |
43502 | Do you think the result should make us proud of our policy? |
43502 | Does it''join on''to anything?" |
43502 | Does she come every week- end? |
43502 | Does the Government want to punish_ all_ women because they do n''t like the manners of a handful? |
43502 | For what are you thanking God? |
43502 | For what was Mrs. Freddy too happily married and all the rest? |
43502 | For what? |
43502 | Freedom? |
43502 | Geoffrey Stonor is n''t going to be-- a little too old for you? |
43502 | Geoffrey Stonor? |
43502 | Go? |
43502 | Had n''t it been just as"favourable"before? |
43502 | Has Miss Levering come down yet? |
43502 | Has she never paid it back? |
43502 | Has_ she_ been seeing visions too? |
43502 | Have I ever failed? |
43502 | Have n''t you noticed that all their worst disturbances come when men are in charge? |
43502 | Have you got your lesson(_ with a little broken laugh_)_ by heart_ at last? |
43502 | Help you? |
43502 | How d''ye do, Mr. Freddy? |
43502 | How did the working man get the Suffrage, we asked ourselves? |
43502 | How do they know what''s womanly? |
43502 | How do you do, Mr. Stonor? |
43502 | How do you do, aunt? |
43502 | How do you do? |
43502 | How do you do? |
43502 | How do you do? |
43502 | How do you do? |
43502 | How do you know? |
43502 | How do you know? |
43502 | How do you know? |
43502 | How do_ you_ know? |
43502 | How many Platos are there here in this crowd? |
43502 | How many Shakespeares are there in all England to- day? |
43502 | How will he do that? |
43502 | How_ are_ you to know if we ca n''t somehow manage to tell you? |
43502 | How_ could_ you? |
43502 | I began to say to myself:"Is n''t it time the women lent a hand?" |
43502 | I forget, do you know Mr. Stonor personally, or(_ smiling_) are you just dazzled from afar? |
43502 | I s''y, Miss,''oo killed cock robin? |
43502 | I wonder if they did spit? |
43502 | I? |
43502 | I? |
43502 | If I gave you that much-- for your little projects-- what would you give me? |
43502 | If I hear that you persist in it I shall have to---- MISS L. What? |
43502 | If everybody said we were nice, well- behaved women, who''d come to hear us? |
43502 | If it wus only to use fur_ our_ comfort, d''ye think many o''you workin''men would be found turnin''over their wyges to their wives? |
43502 | If the House of Commons wo n''t give you justice, why do n''t you go to the House of Lords? |
43502 | If the vote ai n''t done us any good,''ow''ll it do the women any good? |
43502 | If the women want the vote w''y ai n''t they''ere to s''y so?" |
43502 | If women must be freed by women, we have need of such as--(_her eyes go to_ JEAN''S_ door_)--who knows? |
43502 | In the case of this poor little abandoned working girl, what man can be the fit judge of her deeds in that awful moment of half- crazed temptation? |
43502 | In_ our_ debt? |
43502 | Is it a woman, I wondered? |
43502 | Is n''t it angelic of him? |
43502 | Is n''t she wonderful? |
43502 | Is n''t that so? |
43502 | Is n''t the phrase consecrated to a different class? |
43502 | Is she here with you? |
43502 | Is she here? |
43502 | Is she one of them? |
43502 | Is that true? |
43502 | Is this a burglar coming along between the two big policemen, or will it be a murderer? |
43502 | Is this the effect seeing Geoffrey has? |
43502 | Is your grandfather worse? |
43502 | It''s only an effort to meet the greatest evil in the world? |
43502 | It''s so strange, Geoffrey, to see a man like you as much deluded as the Hyde Park loafers who say to Ernestine Blunt,"Who''s hurt_ your_ feelings?" |
43502 | Just tell me, my child, is it all right? |
43502 | Let me see, was n''t a deputation sent to you not long ago? |
43502 | Let us see, how we shall put it-- when the time comes-- shall we? |
43502 | MISS L. And now...? |
43502 | MISS L. At eleven at night? |
43502 | MISS L. At last? |
43502 | MISS L. But for the tramp population less conducive to savouriness, do n''t you think, than-- baths? |
43502 | MISS L. Do you picture the Suffragettes sitting in sackcloth? |
43502 | MISS L. Do you? |
43502 | MISS L. I-- I----(_ Stumbles and stops._)(_ Talking and laughing increases._"Wot''s''er name?" |
43502 | MISS L. Is that what he says? |
43502 | MISS L. Then why keep up that old pretence? |
43502 | MISS L. To keep you and her apart? |
43502 | MISS L. Well, have they primed you? |
43502 | MISS L. What terrible thing? |
43502 | MISS L. What? |
43502 | MISS L. When did you write this? |
43502 | MISS L. Why could that great, all- powerful body do nothing? |
43502 | MISS L. Why do you think I know? |
43502 | MISS L. You are_ not_ certain? |
43502 | MISS L. You think we would n''t be glad to go straight to the goal? |
43502 | MRS. F. Homeless women? |
43502 | MRS. F. My friends? |
43502 | MRS. F. Who got him to? |
43502 | MRS. F. You are n''t saying you think it was a good way to get what they wanted? |
43502 | MRS. F._ Here?_(_ Shrugs._) I do n''t beat the air. |
43502 | MRS. H. How did_ you_ happen to be there? |
43502 | May I? |
43502 | Mine? |
43502 | Miss Levering is? |
43502 | Mr. Greatorex-- he''s a Radical, is n''t he? |
43502 | My dear(_ to_ MISS LEVERING), have your things been sent down? |
43502 | My engagement? |
43502 | No? |
43502 | Not down yet-- the Elusive One? |
43502 | Not to your mother? |
43502 | Nothing reprehensible in what_ she_ said, was there? |
43502 | Now, are n''t you glad I brought you? |
43502 | Oh, have you been hearing him speak? |
43502 | Oh, is it question time? |
43502 | Oh, is she? |
43502 | Oh, is that true? |
43502 | Oh, shut up, cawn''t yer? |
43502 | Oh, was it like the papers said? |
43502 | Oh, why did you do it? |
43502 | Oh? |
43502 | Oh? |
43502 | Only one vacancy? |
43502 | Or does wrong- doing in a man not matter? |
43502 | Or(_ her eyes blaze_) did you dare to be afraid I would n''t? |
43502 | Power!--_you?_ JEAN. |
43502 | Rather too much, is n''t there, little girl? |
43502 | Run away? |
43502 | Said that, did he? |
43502 | Shall I tell you a secret? |
43502 | She went away from you? |
43502 | Slight pause._)(_ The words escaping from her in a miserable cry_) Why did you desert her? |
43502 | So that justice should n''t miscarry-- wasn''t it? |
43502 | Soper? |
43502 | Still talking over the Shelter plans? |
43502 | Still, you_ are_ an advocate of the Suffrage, are n''t you? |
43502 | Than men? |
43502 | That she was four years older than you? |
43502 | That you have very pink cheeks? |
43502 | The only question is upon what terms shall she continue to be in? |
43502 | Then what''s all the chatterment about? |
43502 | They are often asked elsewhere; and I would like to ask in return: Since when was human society held to exist for its handful of geniuses? |
43502 | They study music by thousands; where''s their Beethoven? |
43502 | This afternoon? |
43502 | Till----? |
43502 | To- day? |
43502 | Trent? |
43502 | W''y do n''t you stop in it? |
43502 | Was that because you would n''t marry her? |
43502 | Was that why you... was_ that_ why? |
43502 | Was there never a mysogynist of my sex who ended by deciding to make an exception? |
43502 | We were so happy out there in the summer- house, were n''t we? |
43502 | Well, Mrs. Freddy, what do you think of your friends now? |
43502 | Well, did he get back alive? |
43502 | Well, how spoilt is the great man? |
43502 | Well, why should n''t a man- hater on your side prove equally open to reason? |
43502 | Well----? |
43502 | Well? |
43502 | Well? |
43502 | Well? |
43502 | Were they Guelf or Ghibelline? |
43502 | What a pity she has n''t got a husband and a baby to keep her quiet"? |
43502 | What about my brother? |
43502 | What about? |
43502 | What advertisement is so sure of being remembered? |
43502 | What can I do for you? |
43502 | What did you do? |
43502 | What do you call the greatest evil in the world? |
43502 | What do you know about it? |
43502 | What do you mean? |
43502 | What do you mean? |
43502 | What do you propose she shall do, poor child? |
43502 | What do you say? |
43502 | What do you say? |
43502 | What do you think he was charged with? |
43502 | What do you think she said to me in London the other day? |
43502 | What does she do to tire her? |
43502 | What excuse shall you make your own soul for not going straight to the goal? |
43502 | What had he been stealing-- that small criminal? |
43502 | What happened? |
43502 | What if there is n''t? |
43502 | What in the name of---- What has she been saying to you? |
43502 | What is it you are asking of me? |
43502 | What made her write like that? |
43502 | What makes you think...? |
43502 | What men? |
43502 | What name? |
43502 | What news? |
43502 | What on the whole are the prospects? |
43502 | What others? |
43502 | What reason did she give? |
43502 | What resolution? |
43502 | What revolting views? |
43502 | What sort of felon is to stand in the dock before the women whose crime is they ask for the vote?" |
43502 | What they want? |
43502 | What woman is tried by hers? |
43502 | What''ave you done for yours? |
43502 | What''s the use of your going on denying it? |
43502 | What''s up? |
43502 | What? |
43502 | What? |
43502 | What? |
43502 | What? |
43502 | What? |
43502 | What? |
43502 | What? |
43502 | What_ could_ I do? |
43502 | When did he do anything like that? |
43502 | Where are you going? |
43502 | Where are you going? |
43502 | Where in all this were_ her_"peers"? |
43502 | Where is she now? |
43502 | Where''s the woman Shakespeare? |
43502 | Where''s their Plato? |
43502 | Whereabouts are you? |
43502 | Which of us d''you mean? |
43502 | Which? |
43502 | Who cartoons people who are of no importance? |
43502 | Who did? |
43502 | Who do you think is motoring up the drive? |
43502 | Who else? |
43502 | Who has? |
43502 | Who is Miss---- You do n''t mean to say there are other people? |
43502 | Who is he when he''s at home?") |
43502 | Who is the Elusive One? |
43502 | Who tells you that? |
43502 | Who told you that? |
43502 | Who told you that? |
43502 | Who? |
43502 | Whose story? |
43502 | Why are you catechising me? |
43502 | Why are you saying goodbye as if you were never coming back? |
43502 | Why are you so sure of that? |
43502 | Why did men so long ago insist on trial by"a jury of their peers"? |
43502 | Why did n''t you telegraph? |
43502 | Why do you dislike her so? |
43502 | Why do you say it like that? |
43502 | Why does he behave like that? |
43502 | Why does n''t she marry? |
43502 | Why have n''t I seen her before? |
43502 | Why is she intriguing to get hold of a man that, ten years ago, she flatly refused to see, or hold any communication with? |
43502 | Why not realise(_ going quite close to him_) this is a thing that goes deeper than personal experience? |
43502 | Why not? |
43502 | Why not? |
43502 | Why should it? |
43502 | Why should it? |
43502 | Why should you think that it''s only you, these ten years have taught something to? |
43502 | Why was it, then? |
43502 | Why, I thought you said you wanted me----? |
43502 | Why, where is he, then? |
43502 | Why? |
43502 | Why_ will_ you go on talking of what''s so long over and ended? |
43502 | Will that ghost give you no rest? |
43502 | Will you come? |
43502 | With Miss Levering? |
43502 | With----? |
43502 | Wot about the 96,000 textile workers? |
43502 | Wot about the Yorkshire tailoresses? |
43502 | Wot d''you expect from a pig but a grunt? |
43502 | Wot next? |
43502 | Wot''s the reason thousands do-- and the best and the soberest? |
43502 | Wot''s_ politics_? |
43502 | Would you have women magistrates? |
43502 | Yes-- what''a''they ever_ done_? |
43502 | Yes? |
43502 | You are n''t serious? |
43502 | You did n''t get it, then? |
43502 | You know one another? |
43502 | You may as well tell me-- do you mean to----? |
43502 | You mean that rowdy scene in the House of Commons? |
43502 | You must think he has a great deal of power---- MISS L. Power? |
43502 | You never asked yourselves,"_ Wot''s a Liberal, anyw''y?_"A VOICE. |
43502 | You remember Mrs. Freddy''s friend who came to tea here in the winter? |
43502 | You think I do n''t recall it correctly? |
43502 | You think that night of the scene-- you think the men did n''t_ mean_ to play fair? |
43502 | You think they were just putting off the issue till it was too late? |
43502 | You two still talking Soper? |
43502 | You want me to have a_ real_ share in it all, do n''t you, Geoffrey? |
43502 | You wanted it_ overlooked_? |
43502 | You''ll remind her of that first of all, wo n''t you? |
43502 | You''re trying to shield him---- MISS L. Why should I-- what is it to me? |
43502 | You''ve come to realise, then-- after all these years-- that you owed me something? |
43502 | _ Cleared up?_ JEAN. |
43502 | _ Does_ he? |
43502 | _ I?_ JEAN. |
43502 | _ I_ did n''t know her name was Vida; how did you? |
43502 | _ Is n''t_ it fun? |
43502 | _ One?_ Oh- h! |
43502 | _ Saw?_ Where? |
43502 | _ Saw?_ Where? |
43502 | _ W''y_ does any woman tyke less wyges than a man for the same work? |
43502 | _ What!_ Then how in the name of Heaven do you know-- that she wants-- what you ask? |
43502 | _ Whose?_ JEAN. |
43502 | _ Will_ you? |
43502 | _ You_ went? |
43502 | _''Ome_ do you call it? |
43502 | how am I ever going to be able to behave like a girl who is n''t engaged to the only man in the world worth marrying? |
43502 | what are the women of this country coming to? |
43502 | what can a woman like you_ know_ about it? |
53937 | A human being, does she find equality in the State? 53937 A wife-- does she find equality in love and marriage? |
53937 | But is she so? 53937 Do you believe that Madame de Girardin would deposit a less intelligent vote in the electoral urn than that of her footman?" |
53937 | In the name of this principle, what ameliorations have we demanded in the laws and customs? 53937 It is in marriage that the sources of good and evil are found; would you know why? |
53937 | Might he not have good reason for acting in this manner? |
53937 | Right, my child: but if a young man who was free should speak of love, and urge you to write to him in secret? |
53937 | Shall we speak of the present? 53937 Well, Madam, what did I tell you in my last letter? |
53937 | What is marriage? |
53937 | What is their existence to- day( that of women)? 53937 What principle has served us in this as a guide? |
53937 | What then are the means of subsistence for women destitute of fortune? 53937 What, mother, will he not always love me the same?" |
53937 | Why not? |
53937 | --_Id._ Do you understand clearly? |
53937 | --_Id._ Do you understand me now? |
53937 | --_Id._ What do you think of this theory? |
53937 | A few only demand their rights, you say; but is it in accordance with principle or with numbers that you judge of the justice of a cause? |
53937 | Among the working people, what class is most wretched? |
53937 | An ideal in the brain of a horse or a mare may pass, since there is a brain; but where will you lodge that of the male and female flower? |
53937 | And besides, do you think that liberty, which in man engenders individuality and virtue, would produce in woman moral degradation? |
53937 | And how can it help suffering if it is reduced to servitude and oppressed by the other? |
53937 | And if all this shame, all these griefs, all these crimes are true? |
53937 | And if there is no fortune? |
53937 | And in case the parents should be alike unworthy? |
53937 | And ought not all serious discipline to tend to develop, not one phase of the being, but the ponderation, the harmony of all its phases? |
53937 | And the men that belong to the great party of the future, how do you style them? |
53937 | And what enlightenment do you fancy that you have given us? |
53937 | And would you not fix the number of times that a divorced person might re- marry? |
53937 | Answer, women: Is it true that the great majority of seduced women are incapacitated, through shame and poverty, from rearing their children? |
53937 | Are all instincts good which are merely inclinations or attractions? |
53937 | Are not wrong and wretchedness found everywhere, because inequality, the offspring of insane classifications, is found everywhere? |
53937 | Are we not justified in asking you, whether you are for or against the Revolution? |
53937 | Are women ill on the recurrence of the law peculiar to their sex? |
53937 | Are you eclectic, then? |
53937 | Are you fully sure of comprehending yourself better than we comprehend you? |
53937 | Are you not of the same opinion? |
53937 | Are you quite sure, my children, that the end of these attractions is not the attraction itself, the procurement of a pleasure? |
53937 | Are you resolved to throw me into convulsions? |
53937 | As far as we can foresee, Society must necessarily? |
53937 | As to the rest, do they form a series? |
53937 | Besides have I not said that, had I formed a classification, I should not give it? |
53937 | Besides, what does Society do for them? |
53937 | Between the brain that discovers a great natural law and the one that reflects on nothing? |
53937 | Between the man of genius and the humble rag- picker? |
53937 | Between the philosopher who elevates the human mind and the porter who does not even know how to read? |
53937 | But among partners, is there really room for a ruling power? |
53937 | But do they differ as you say? |
53937 | But have you really the right to complain of it, you who have constituted yourself the chief whipper- in of the economists and the socialists? |
53937 | But how can two individuals who, instead of being ruled by truth, are ruled only by their misdirected passions,--how can these two make but one? |
53937 | But if the spouses ask to be divorced only on account of incompatibility of temper, and are both honorable? |
53937 | But in this respect, among the number of men that write how many are there who have genius, and who never borrow from any one? |
53937 | But tell me, what meaning do you give to the words_ sacrament_ and_ mystery_, that sound so hollow and false from your lips? |
53937 | But the future of the children? |
53937 | But then, Master, if man is all this, why do you reproach the men of our times with lack of courage, of dignity, of justice, of reason, of good faith? |
53937 | But were your affirmation true, is naught but_ strength_ employed in labor? |
53937 | But what did this Revolution do for them, I pray? |
53937 | But what if one of the parties through caprice or evil motives is unwilling that the other should do something that is proper and advantageous? |
53937 | But what is the use of discussing a thing that is devoid of meaning to the intellect? |
53937 | But you, who wish to annihilate woman, from what principle do you draw such a consequence? |
53937 | By reason of a purely accidental predominance, can one half of the human species be banished beyond the clouds of sentimentality? |
53937 | By what token can we know that our instinct has a right tendency? |
53937 | By whom are the boarding- schools, the farms, often even, the manufactories, sustained? |
53937 | Can any one of you admit such a possibility? |
53937 | Can it be possible that you trifle in this manner with your readers? |
53937 | Can it be said that woman is wounded because she is subjected to a periodical fracture, the cicatrice of which is almost imperceptible? |
53937 | Can such domination endure? |
53937 | Can you explain, then, why it is that so often he does_ not_ resemble him? |
53937 | Can you prove to me, a woman, that I desire to possess knowledge differently from you? |
53937 | Can you, a man of heart, can you treat women as wretched and corrupt because they are willing no longer to be slaves? |
53937 | Come; seriously, what means this jingle of empty words? |
53937 | Did not most among you, ladies, purchase your husbands with so much dowry, so much income, so much_ expectations_? |
53937 | Did you wait for the revendication of_ all_ the slaves of your colonies before emancipating them? |
53937 | Did you wait until_ all_ the male population demanded their right of universal suffrage in order to decree it to them? |
53937 | Do I dispute it? |
53937 | Do not women demand them, gentlemen? |
53937 | Do you admit that woman is identical in species with man? |
53937 | Do you comprehend at last? |
53937 | Do you consider Marriage as indissoluble? |
53937 | Do you deny that they are your equals because they are less intelligent as a whole than men? |
53937 | Do you deny that, if they differ, they should have different functions? |
53937 | Do you feel the deplorable courage to expose yourself to such risks?" |
53937 | Do you know who were, who are the infatuated? |
53937 | Do you know why, in 1848, so many women, especially among the people, declared themselves for the Revolution? |
53937 | Do you not even interdict to her those vocations in which strength is needed, or which are attended with danger? |
53937 | Do you not see that free marriages are happier and more lasting than any others? |
53937 | Do you reproach a man then for taking our part against the selfish and animal passions of his sex, and against the impunity accorded them by the laws? |
53937 | Do you reproach him for taking in hand the cause of morals and health, in opposition to the degradation of soul and body? |
53937 | Do you wish to save the perishing world? |
53937 | Do you wish women to take to heart matters of general interest? |
53937 | Does Proudhon remember how he threatens the priest who shall lay his hand on his children? |
53937 | Does he feel that this creed classes him among the abettors of the dogmatism of the Middle Age, and does he recoil before such a responsibility? |
53937 | Does this signify that woman should oppress man? |
53937 | During the suit for divorce, who shall have the control of the property? |
53937 | Either what they do is right, and therefore can not be wrong in woman; Or what they do is wrong; then why do they do it? |
53937 | Every organ supposes a function, it is true, but what_ facts_ authorize you to say that the married couple is the organ of justice? |
53937 | Has not this malady, impelling theocratists and legislators to divide humanity into castes and classes, caused most of the calamities of our species? |
53937 | Has woman less time and capacity than your working men, pinned twelve hours a day to their petty and stultifying tasks? |
53937 | Have we a right to say to half the human kind: you shall not have your share in life and in the state? |
53937 | Have we not seen your pretensions to superiority confounded by Catharine, who trampled under foot the masculine sex? |
53937 | Have you changed your opinion? |
53937 | Have you ever thought of doing so? |
53937 | Have you had at your disposal, can you place at ours these proofs_ de facto_? |
53937 | Have you not yourself admitted that to separate the parties in these unions, it often suffices to join them legally? |
53937 | Have you proved that in this menagerie, they think falsely, they write badly, they are worth nothing as to conscience until forty- five years of age? |
53937 | Have you proved this? |
53937 | He then continues in a serious strain:"What matters tradition to us? |
53937 | How did you form it? |
53937 | How long a time should elapse between the admission of the petition and the judgment of divorce? |
53937 | How shall we set to work to remedy this iniquitous and shameful state of affairs? |
53937 | How will she become the equal of man in civil dignity? |
53937 | I confine myself to a single question; what education do women receive? |
53937 | I have finished, Master; have you anything more to say? |
53937 | I said to myself, not without disquietude, What is the matter? |
53937 | If a woman should say such things, what a universal hue and cry would be raised? |
53937 | If she has no dowry, how can she marry in this world in which woman, never representing anything but a passive being, is forced to buy a husband?... |
53937 | If the union were without protection, who would suffer by it? |
53937 | In every other branch of administration, has not woman given lessons to man? |
53937 | In my turn, I ask you: What would have impelled Proudhon, a Roman slave, to play the part of Spartacus? |
53937 | In order to establish it, did you carry a dynamometer about through our districts and measure the strength of each man and of each woman? |
53937 | In the face of these undeniable facts, I ask you, yourself, what becomes of your theory? |
53937 | In which man is reputed to support by his labor those who often labor more than he, or who bring him a dowry? |
53937 | Is equality before the law based upon_ individual_ qualities? |
53937 | Is he not then,_ adequate to his destiny_, as you have affirmed? |
53937 | Is it in these things that his knowledge consists? |
53937 | Is it love? |
53937 | Is it not the duty of society to secure the progress of its members, and can any one have a right to keep a human being in ignorance and evil? |
53937 | Is it not to deny to them( to women) their title of human beings? |
53937 | Is it not to disinherit the state itself? |
53937 | Is it not to expose a woman to adultery, to marry her at seventeen or eighteen to a man of thirty, forty or even fifty years of age? |
53937 | Is it ours, who desire to please you and to be loved by you, or yours, who can only be attracted by dress? |
53937 | Is it so necessary that we should fight? |
53937 | Is it true, lastly, that this same selfishness and this same confidence are the cause of thousands of human lives being criminally sacrificed? |
53937 | Is not the moral liberty of the spouses as worthy of respect as that of nuns, priests and monks? |
53937 | Is not this somewhat exaggerated, Master? |
53937 | Is she in such haste to grow old?" |
53937 | Is she treated by us as an equal? |
53937 | Is this in conformity with our ideal of human love? |
53937 | Is this the cry of their outraged nature, or an aberration of their understanding? |
53937 | Is this to say that I admit all the ideas of M. de Girardin? |
53937 | Is this your intention? |
53937 | Is woman to- day, in so far as a human being, really treated as the equal of man? |
53937 | Is your intellect so feeble that it does not comprehend that, without marriage, there is not, there can not be justice? |
53937 | It is not so, my dear sister? |
53937 | It is true; but do you believe that to affirm this suffices to improve, to transform the method of education? |
53937 | It is true; but do you believe that to verify these things suffices to remedy our abasement? |
53937 | It is true; but do you think that to verify the evil suffices to cure it? |
53937 | Lastly, Master, what is the position of all women relatively to all men? |
53937 | Let men suffer themselves to be deceived by our mask, nothing is more natural; but what is the use of playing the farce among women? |
53937 | Look then at the men who have received a feminine education; have they not all the affectation, all the narrowness of mind of silly women? |
53937 | M. Legouvé, is this logic? |
53937 | Most assuredly; else what signifies our arguments against separation? |
53937 | My son, says she, what is the end of the attraction of mineral molecules towards each other? |
53937 | No; and if you neither have them nor can procure them, what is your thesis, if not the illusion of a brain sick with pride and with hatred of woman? |
53937 | Now I have never learned that any keeper of a seraglio had been transformed into an odahlic; have you? |
53937 | Now gentlemen, what becomes of these pretensions in the presence of_ facts_ that show you all unequal in strength and in intellect? |
53937 | Of what, then, is Michelet thinking, in laying such stress on the diseases of women in the face of the quite as numerous diseases of men? |
53937 | Old, ugly and forsaken, she must be thrown into the car of the condemned to be transported to the guillotine? |
53937 | On the other hand, do you cultivate the intellect of man by novels, theatres, and spectacles of criminal courts? |
53937 | Once more, am I to blame for it? |
53937 | Ought society to permit unions disproportioned in age? |
53937 | Poetry aside, can you, in exact and definite terms, explain to me what they mean? |
53937 | Shall I tell you what I really think? |
53937 | Shall we demand the suppression of separation from bed and board? |
53937 | Shall we impute this to it as a crime? |
53937 | Shall we refute such doctrines? |
53937 | Shall we, in conclusion, compare your doctrine concerning the right of woman with that which you profess concerning right in general? |
53937 | She therefore comprehends, feels, and loves justice? |
53937 | Since in our days men play the mandolin, is it not necessary that women should speak seriously? |
53937 | So there is neither liberty nor equality even for the woman who has not a father or husband? |
53937 | Tell me, is there commutability between the qualities that distinguish men from each other? |
53937 | Temperament, the source of right? |
53937 | That Society_ does not recognize vows_, and that proceedings can not be instituted against their violation? |
53937 | That she is an affective power, you say... yes, but, as to that, man is such, likewise; and is not woman, as well as he, alike intellect and activity? |
53937 | That slaves accustomed to their chains, do not feel them until their instigators to revolt show them the bruises on their flesh? |
53937 | That the compensation of labor and of competition should be regulated according to Labor, Capital and Talent? |
53937 | That the conversation of these women exhausts, enervates the men who are not there? |
53937 | That the most opposite, the most diverse passions are the conditions_ sine quâ non_ of harmony? |
53937 | That the primordial element of a system of society should be the Societary or Phalansterian association? |
53937 | That there, in the absence of men, the women take the initiative in affairs of love? |
53937 | That these women prefer the old, ugly and wicked men, or the pretty, mincing puppets, who are not at their disposal? |
53937 | That what you call a first fault, drives the greater part of them to make a traffic of their charms? |
53937 | That woman is elevated by man, who is elevated only by himself and by God? |
53937 | The division thus fixed, what ought woman to do? |
53937 | The divorce being granted, and the ex- partners restored to liberty, would you permit them to marry others? |
53937 | The excellent Leroux asks who does not feel, who does not admit at the present day the equality of the sexes? |
53937 | Then all of the animal and vegetable species in which the sexes are separated have an ideal in love? |
53937 | Then marriage is necessary to all? |
53937 | Then one does not perish entirely, as you taught your disciples? |
53937 | Then woman shall have rights if she is beautiful, and as long as she shall continue so; if she is beloved, and as long as she shall continue so? |
53937 | Then, great economist, what do we do with_ skill_? |
53937 | This may be very fine, but as to being_ rational_ and_ positive_--what do you think, readers? |
53937 | This regards civil Right in general; what reforms shall we demand concerning married women? |
53937 | To say that marriage is an institution_ sui generis_, a_ sacrament_, a_ mystery_, is to affirm what? |
53937 | To what inclination or attraction is Society due? |
53937 | To what new careers does she give them access? |
53937 | To which of our faculties, our virtues, our prerogatives; or else of our failings, our perfidies, our calamities, do they aspire? |
53937 | Upon men? |
53937 | Upon what elements do you base this proportion? |
53937 | Upon whom falls all the expense of illegitimate children? |
53937 | Upon whom then will you have a right to count, if you abandon yourselves? |
53937 | Was it not by becoming a child again in order to comprehend you, that I fulfilled my sacred task of instructor? |
53937 | We are about to speak of Marriage from the stand point of the modern ideal-- how do you define it? |
53937 | Well, is it not dangerous to accord it to those who would employ it against this end? |
53937 | Well, what happens most of the time, in cases of illegitimacy? |
53937 | What am I doing to- day, in the name of a legion of women of whom I am the interpreter? |
53937 | What are a host of American women doing at the present time? |
53937 | What are the reasons which you would consider valid for a petition for divorce? |
53937 | What are these functions relative to her degree of present development? |
53937 | What are these worth, I ask you, gentlemen? |
53937 | What are we to do, you say? |
53937 | What are we to do? |
53937 | What are you to do, ladies? |
53937 | What arguments do the adversaries of the emancipation of women use to refute the equality of the rights of the sexes? |
53937 | What did Jean Deroin, Pauline Roland and many others, do here in 1848? |
53937 | What do you hold as the basis of right? |
53937 | What does this mean in plain language? |
53937 | What does this prove? |
53937 | What follows from all this? |
53937 | What follows from these divergent affirmations? |
53937 | What follows from these undeniable facts? |
53937 | What harmony of sentiments and views can exist at that time between the spouses? |
53937 | What have a number of English women done already? |
53937 | What inspires him with the sentiment of his dignity, the scorn of falsehood, the hatred of injustice, the abhorence of all tyranny? |
53937 | What is it that troubles them? |
53937 | What is such a contract, if not the violation of the principle which affirms that no covenant can be made involving persons? |
53937 | What is the end of political right? |
53937 | What is the end of the attraction of the plant for heat, light, air, the elements which it absorbs? |
53937 | What is the object of Legouvé''s work? |
53937 | What is the ruling power? |
53937 | What is this institution, in which man is reputed to defend his wife and children with his sword, whom the law defends, even against him? |
53937 | What is this_ essence_, and this_ living elixir_ of science? |
53937 | What man would consent to we d a woman in the same position? |
53937 | What matters history to us? |
53937 | What part do you assign to Society in Marriage? |
53937 | What reasons do you give, besides, to support your opinions? |
53937 | What reforms do you demand with respect to the family council and guardianship? |
53937 | What rights would you grant these inferior and feeble natures? |
53937 | What should be these conditions for the enjoyment of political right, in your opinion? |
53937 | What would have impelled Proudhon, a Russian serf, to take the character of Poutgachef? |
53937 | What would have impelled Proudhon, a black slave, to become a Toussaint L''Ouverture? |
53937 | What would have impelled Proudhon, a citizen of''89, to overthrow the privileges of the nobility and the clergy? |
53937 | What would have impelled Proudhon, a feudal serf, to organize a Jacquerie? |
53937 | What would you think of the man who should act thus with respect to your own companion?" |
53937 | When will woman become the equal of man in marriage? |
53937 | When will woman become the equal of man in the employment of her activity and of her other faculties? |
53937 | When will you be ashamed of the part to which you are condemned? |
53937 | When will you respond to the appeal that generous and intelligent men have made to you? |
53937 | Whence comes it that you greet the queen with your sympathies, while you have nought but words of blame and contempt for the revolutionist? |
53937 | Where is now to- day the_ ville- pedaille_, the villains and base- tenants, fit only to drain ditches and to be stripped to the skin? |
53937 | Which of us two is the more reasonable and more rational? |
53937 | Who are they that earn from sixteen to eighteen sous for twelve hours of labor? |
53937 | Who bear all the disgrace of faults committed through passion? |
53937 | Who establish, who superintend the thousands of establishments of millinery and objects of taste? |
53937 | Who should take custody of the children and the property during the proceedings? |
53937 | Who would dare maintain such absurdities to- day, brave and upright Leroux? |
53937 | Who would dare maintain that woman is an inferior being, of whom man is the guide and beacon light? |
53937 | Why are all those women who produce, while their husbands and sons enjoy and dissipate, destitute of the rights which the latter possess? |
53937 | Why are intelligent women thus dissatisfied with so upright a man as Michelet? |
53937 | Why do both sexes of the same species experience an attraction towards each other? |
53937 | Why do not you do as much as they? |
53937 | Why do the females, and often males among animals experience an inclination or attraction to take care of the young? |
53937 | Why do we as well as the animals experience an inclination or attraction for certain kinds of food? |
53937 | Why fix it? |
53937 | Why he resembles a grandfather, an uncle, an aunt, a brother, a sister of one of the parents? |
53937 | Why is your letter in contradiction with this doctrine? |
53937 | Why many children resemble portraits which had attracted the attention of the mother? |
53937 | Why negresses who conceive from a white, bring into the world a mulatto, oftenest with thick lips, a flat nose, and woolly hair? |
53937 | Why not? |
53937 | Why ought every field of occupation to be accessible to woman? |
53937 | Why ought the testimony of woman to be admitted in all cases in which that of man is required? |
53937 | Why ought woman to be admitted to academies and professional schools? |
53937 | Why ought woman to have a place on the jury? |
53937 | Why ought woman to have her place in boards of trade and mercantile associations? |
53937 | Why ought woman to hold a place among civil functionaries? |
53937 | Why ought women to receive the same national education as men? |
53937 | Why then do you admit that they may associate things in a private contract which can not be subjected to a common measure? |
53937 | Why then do you claim that these men should be_ equal socially_? |
53937 | Why then, when the child has become a young man, do you say:_ Young men must sow their wild oats_? |
53937 | Why this sequestration in the midst of the nineteenth century, do you ask? |
53937 | Why, in fine, physiologists, impressed by numerous facts, have thought themselves justified in declaring woman_ the preserver of the type_? |
53937 | Will words, complaints and protestations have power to change any of these things? |
53937 | Will you generalize the character of this inclination or attraction in accordance with what we have just said? |
53937 | With what do they reproach us? |
53937 | Would he not be punished?" |
53937 | Yet, in the face of a task so complicated, you ask: what are we to do? |
53937 | You are inclined to seclude woman, instead of emancipating her? |
53937 | You claim that we have no morality, because we lack respect towards the dignity of others; who has set us this detestable example more than you? |
53937 | You do not admit the question of product into that of right when man is in question, why then do you admit it when woman is in question? |
53937 | You have been told that love is irrepressible; are we then beings of fatality? |
53937 | You, who style yourself the champion of the principles of''89--who are the men and women whom you attack? |
53937 | Your love will become transformed, why shall not his be the same? |
53937 | Your rivals organize industrial associations, why do not you imitate them? |
53937 | Youth, freshness, poetry-- does she wish, at the first blow, to abandon all these? |
53937 | _ All_ women do not make reclamations, no; but do you not know that every demand of right is made at first singly? |
53937 | _ The mania of imposing laws on Nature, instead of studying Nature''s own laws, afterwards confirmed this aphorism of ignorance._"Who said this? |
53937 | _ To which of our faculties, our virtues, our prerogatives does he aspire? |
53937 | can it be more lawful to alienate one''s person by a contract of slavery? |
53937 | do you dispute that marriage by_ confarreation is not the masterpiece of the human conscience_? |
53937 | do you fix the number of times that a widow or widower may marry again? |
53937 | do you think that it would be possible? |
53937 | even though it were true that women were inferior to men, would it follow that their rights were not the same? |
53937 | exclaims the classifiers, do you deny that the sexes differ? |
53937 | have you seen women outside of society, who would have taken men for monkeys? |
53937 | my learned Master, how do these things harmonize in your brain? |
53937 | nothing more? |
53937 | say you? |
53937 | what does this vile slave, this unworthy serf, this audacious and stupid citizen want of us, then? |
53937 | what essential difference do you find between this kind of contract, and those that are made to- day before the notary on the occasion of a marriage? |
53937 | what would you do?" |
53937 | you here? |
29870 | A daughter of Myron Holly? |
29870 | And why is she required to pay her husband''s poll tax? |
29870 | Are all those Mexicans dead? |
29870 | How can you expect me to say a word? |
29870 | What is meant,said he,"by this mysterious dictum,''Out of her sphere?'' |
29870 | Why was your campaign precipitated when our hands are so full? |
29870 | Would she be able to speak? |
29870 | ), Are Women Citizens? |
29870 | ), Why Do Not Women Vote? |
29870 | ***** What were the causes of this unique success? |
29870 | A dear and noble friend, one who aided our work most efficiently in the early days, said to me,"Why do you say the''emancipation of women?''" |
29870 | A man was asked,"How are you going to vote on the constitution?" |
29870 | After the meeting Miss Anthony said to me,"Anna, what did I say to make the people laugh so?" |
29870 | All we ever have asked is simply,"Do you believe in perfect equality for women?" |
29870 | And while they are both out what will become of the children? |
29870 | Are not these the very qualities most needed in our electorate? |
29870 | Are the rights of that class of citizens more sacred than ours? |
29870 | Are the violations of the fundamental principles of our Government in their case more dangerous than in ours?... |
29870 | Are the women of Wyoming and Washington better than your women, and do the men of those Territories love their women better than you love yours? |
29870 | Are they more so than the slaves were when the right of suffrage was conferred on them? |
29870 | Are they not constantly declaring themselves our slaves? |
29870 | Are they not worthy? |
29870 | Are they to take care of themselves? |
29870 | Are we prepared, after a hundred and twenty years, to own ourselves defeated?... |
29870 | Are you afraid to do right?'' |
29870 | Are you making a single law which does not touch me as much as it does you? |
29870 | Are you women not human beings? |
29870 | As a police judge and an independent voter? |
29870 | Ask her whether she would not want to have a vote then? |
29870 | At present this would be ruinous, and why? |
29870 | At the first evening session Miss Anthony, in her president''s address, answered the question,"What has been gained by the forty years''work?" |
29870 | Behind all of these has been the persistent demand for political rights, and the question naturally arises,"Why do these continue to be denied? |
29870 | Blackwell_--May I inquire what the organization is that the gentleman refers to? |
29870 | But did it give that family any accurate or adequate representation? |
29870 | But to them, what is that now? |
29870 | But what is a woman afraid of on a lonely road after dark? |
29870 | But why does she not possess it herself? |
29870 | But, it is asked,"Have not women had some sort of protection without the ballot?" |
29870 | By what power do the Mormons perpetuate their system of polygamy? |
29870 | Ca n''t you contrive an interview with the Queen?" |
29870 | Came it from nature? |
29870 | Can any one doubt which list represents the spirit of the future? |
29870 | Can it be that outside of all we have known, there lies a great unexplored universe to which the mind of man can yet attain?" |
29870 | Can it be that we distrust our mothers and sisters? |
29870 | Can she not prosecute one charged with the larceny of a whip? |
29870 | Can they not serve the nation as well as those men, who during the last war sent substitutes and to- day hold the highest places in the Government? |
29870 | Can we afford to dispute the benefit of this counseling in the advancement of our race? |
29870 | Can we ever cultivate any proper sense of self- respect as long as women take such sentiments from the mouths of the priesthood?... |
29870 | Citizens in the fullest sense of the word, why are they deprived of the suffrage in a country whose institutions rest upon individual representation?" |
29870 | Could this small hand that held a sickle hope to cut down those forests of time- honored prejudice and superstition? |
29870 | Did he renounce the faith of a lifetime? |
29870 | Did the suffragists offend him? |
29870 | Did we banish Mrs. Rose? |
29870 | Did women meet in council and voluntarily give up all their right to be their own law- makers? |
29870 | Do gentlemen claim it is unconstitutional to amend the Constitution? |
29870 | Do n''t you know that we are your natural protectors?" |
29870 | Do n''t you know that women will attend to such needs sooner than men? |
29870 | Do women deserve nothing? |
29870 | Do you ask why people can not see this? |
29870 | Do you not see it? |
29870 | Do you say that whenever all women wish the ballot they will have it? |
29870 | Do you think our sons can rise from such studies with a high ideal of womanhood? |
29870 | Do you wonder at the low estimate of American politics? |
29870 | Does it appeal to any one''s sense of fairness to give the stronger party in a struggle additional advantages and deny them to the weaker one? |
29870 | Does not Emerson say that friendship is the slowest fruit in the garden of God? |
29870 | Does not an emergency exist for a political influence which shall counterbalance these and tip the scale the other way? |
29870 | Educated, property- owning, self- reliant and public- spirited, why are women still refused a voice in the Government? |
29870 | Elizabeth Stuart Phelps wrote:"With all my head and with all my heart I believe in womanhood suffrage; can I say more for your convention?" |
29870 | Even a Mugwump is becoming a doubtful being.... Do not these wrongs which men suffer appeal to our tenderest sympathies? |
29870 | Even the advertisements in the street cars began with the query in large letters, Should Women Vote? |
29870 | From whence arises this misdirected ambition? |
29870 | Gentlemen, is this justice? |
29870 | Had any one of these beneficent propositions been submitted to the masses, do you believe a majority would have placed their sanction upon them? |
29870 | Has he had just standards set before him as to what a wife should be? |
29870 | Has the millennium yet dawned? |
29870 | Have the fears and predictions of the local opponents of woman suffrage been verified? |
29870 | Have the wheels of progress stopped? |
29870 | Have we not heretofore been the silent sex? |
29870 | Have we outlived this principle? |
29870 | Have women degenerated into low politicians, neglecting their homes and stifling the noblest emotions of womanhood? |
29870 | Her question to God is,''Who shall interpret Thee to me?'' |
29870 | How are justice and liberty depicted? |
29870 | How are these evils to be remedied? |
29870 | How can the young men of this nation be inspired with a love of justice? |
29870 | How can you expect such women as have addressed you here in this convention to teach the youth to honor a Government which thus dishonors women? |
29870 | How could he have represented all of them by his one vote unless he had voted"early and often?" |
29870 | How dare a man plead his private ease or comfort as an excuse for neglecting his public duties? |
29870 | How do you know? |
29870 | How has the transformation come? |
29870 | How is this mighty power embodied? |
29870 | How often do you think of the women of your States and of their interests in the laws you pass? |
29870 | How was that man to represent both his daughters by his single vote on the suffrage question? |
29870 | I will ask the American question"will it pay"to enfranchise the women of this nation-- I will not say republic? |
29870 | If it is not religion to promote a cause that will make men better and women wiser and happier, what is it? |
29870 | If it were proposed to take away our right to vote, we would think it a satisfactory answer that our influence would still remain? |
29870 | If not, why is it supposed to have no application to women? |
29870 | If she venture to obey, what is man that he should attempt to abrogate her sacred and divine mission? |
29870 | If that which is should therefore remain, why abolish the slavery of men? |
29870 | If the Chinese would have the right to vote if they were citizens, have not we the right to vote because of citizenship? |
29870 | If the right to vote be not that difference, what is? |
29870 | If the sacrifice is necessary, well and good; but how if it is not?... |
29870 | If there had been women on the commission, would they have pitched the camp five miles from water? |
29870 | If thus fitted to rule, are women unfitted to have a voice in choosing rulers? |
29870 | If women had some control over the conditions which tend to make men brutes, might the number not be lessened? |
29870 | If"governments deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed"does not mean that, what can it mean? |
29870 | In my section men are chivalric and say,"Do n''t you know that you shall have everything you ask as ladies? |
29870 | In speaking of the event after she had returned to the Riggs House, she said:"Was n''t it wonderful? |
29870 | In what a category is this to place women, after one hundred years and at the close of this nineteenth century? |
29870 | Is all progress at an end? |
29870 | Is democratic government impossible after all?" |
29870 | Is it any wonder that the tender grace of a day that is dead even now lingers and makes men loath to welcome change? |
29870 | Is it any wonder that women at large are dead to the importance of this matter?... |
29870 | Is it because they are untrained in public affairs? |
29870 | Is it indeed a fact? |
29870 | Is it just to American men? |
29870 | Is it not strange that men think that what to them would be degradation, slavery, is to women elevation, liberty? |
29870 | Is it not the highest exhibit of the moral superiority of our women that so very few consent to exchange pinching penury for gilded vice? |
29870 | Is it not too bad to leave him longer alone in his misery? |
29870 | Is it not, indeed, barbarous? |
29870 | Is it other than simple justice which I ask for them? |
29870 | Is it said that women must not vote because they can not bear arms? |
29870 | Is it to be the director of a hospital? |
29870 | Is it to the presidency of a board of visitors of an eleemosynary institution? |
29870 | Is it wilder than the dream of him who, oppressed by the tyranny of Alva, could dream of a day of perfect religious toleration? |
29870 | Is n''t this a case, kind mistress of a home, where you should remember those in bonds as bound with them? |
29870 | Is not every human being, who is of age, according to your Constitution, entitled to equal justice and freedom? |
29870 | Is not the right of petition a constitutional right? |
29870 | Is not this symbol a mockery while the women of the country are held in political slavery? |
29870 | Is not this the land where foreigners flock because they have heard the bugle call of freedom? |
29870 | Is that fair to Americans? |
29870 | Is that the office to which woman suffragists of this country ask us now to admit them? |
29870 | Is the recognition of this right desirable? |
29870 | Is there any reason why women should not have a vote in regard to water- works? |
29870 | Is there any very good reason why women should not be free to be consulted in this direct manner? |
29870 | Is this just? |
29870 | It proposed to take a vote of the men and women of the State on the question"Is it expedient that Municipal Suffrage should be extended to women?" |
29870 | MISS ANTHONY: Yet why should she have a right to vote? |
29870 | MISS LUCY E. ANTHONY: What salaries do the women legislators receive? |
29870 | MR. EUSTIS: I will ask the Senator whether he knows that under the laws of Washington Territory this is a legal excuse from serving on a jury? |
29870 | Men of the republic, why make life harder for your daughters by these artificial distinctions? |
29870 | Mrs. Mary B. Clay( Ky.) opened the last day''s session with a forcible address entitled, Are American Women Civil and Political Slaves? |
29870 | Must the Twentieth Century be consumed in securing for woman that which man spent a hundred years in obtaining for himself? |
29870 | My friend, who gave you the right to determine what that sphere should be? |
29870 | My friends, what is man''s idea of womanliness? |
29870 | Now I ask you if our religion teaches the dignity of woman? |
29870 | Now, what can be said to such a person? |
29870 | Now, why did he fail us? |
29870 | O, sun, what legend shines your arch above? |
29870 | Of what crime have we been guilty? |
29870 | Olympia Brown replied to the question, Where is the Mistake? |
29870 | Or is it probable that the advocates of territorial expansion will pause a moment to ponder on the woman side of that question? |
29870 | Or is our mere sex a fault for which we must be punished? |
29870 | Or ordered the soldiers to filter and boil their drinking water, without furnishing any filters or any vessels to boil it in? |
29870 | Or provided only one horse and one mule to bring the water for two companies? |
29870 | Ought we not admit that men have wrongs to complain of? |
29870 | Protect them from whom? |
29870 | Second, Is it desirable? |
29870 | Shall Immigration Be Restricted? |
29870 | She exclaimed,"Oh, when did Mrs. A. become a voter? |
29870 | So they have, but, gentlemen, has your sex been more generous to women than they have been generous toward you in their favors? |
29870 | Suffrage is representation, and it has been given in free governments to such class of persons as in their judgment[ whose judgment?] |
29870 | Suppose during these fifty years we had asked only for what we thought we could secure, where should we be now? |
29870 | That is what right bower means, is n''t it?" |
29870 | The day has come when the counsel and service of women are required by the highest interests of the State, and who shall gainsay their conscription? |
29870 | The maternal instinct is stronger in the hearts of most women than any moral sense.... What is the suffrage going to do for motherhood? |
29870 | The query persists in thrusting itself upon my mind, why should I be amenable to a law that does not accord me recognition? |
29870 | The question is, shall we secure that right by fundamental law? |
29870 | The question then arises why is the qualification of masculinity required? |
29870 | The text was chosen from Joshua, 1:9:"Have I not commanded thee? |
29870 | Then you think it would be much better to give the women the right to vote than the men? |
29870 | Then, too, have not men, poor fellows, had to do all the talking since the world began? |
29870 | There are women''s clubs all over the country; did you ever hear of one organized for other than an uplifting purpose? |
29870 | These statistics answer conclusively the question,"Do women want to vote?" |
29870 | These were not all phrased alike, but each asked the recipient:"What can be done to defeat the woman suffrage bill? |
29870 | They have everything they need, why ask the ballot? |
29870 | Third, Is it expedient? |
29870 | This pamphlet of over five thousand words which began,"What is the law of woman- life? |
29870 | To secure to the poor forsaken wife the right to her earnings? |
29870 | Upon what principle in a Government like ours can one- half the minds be denied expression at the polls? |
29870 | VOICE IN THE AUDIENCE: How many women are there in the Colorado Legislature? |
29870 | Valuable discussions were held on State and National Banks, Should the Governor Exercise the Veto Power? |
29870 | Was there ever apparently a more hopeless quest? |
29870 | We are Daughters of Evolution, and who can stop old Dame Evolution?... |
29870 | We ask,"Is the way difficult?" |
29870 | What brought about those improvements? |
29870 | What can they offer to offset the influences behind these bodies? |
29870 | What do these assertions mean? |
29870 | What do we know as yet of the womanly? |
29870 | What does this mean? |
29870 | What does this show if not that women wish to vote? |
29870 | What elections pertain to school matters? |
29870 | What excuse can be made for this monstrous perversion of liberty? |
29870 | What future election could be of more importance to women than this, and why should they hesitate to show their interest? |
29870 | What had she to work from? |
29870 | What had she to work with? |
29870 | What has been the verdict upon the work of those women on the poor- law board? |
29870 | What has caused heretofore the downfall of nations? |
29870 | What have women? |
29870 | What holds the Turkish woman in the harem? |
29870 | What is a republican form of Government? |
29870 | What is education for, what is religion for, but as a means to the end of the development of humanity? |
29870 | What is fanaticism? |
29870 | What is the gift, O winds, that ye have brought? |
29870 | What is the industrial condition of women to- day?... |
29870 | What is the name of it? |
29870 | What man in his senses would take from woman this sphere? |
29870 | What man would close to her the charitable institutions and eleemosynary establishments of the country? |
29870 | What mysterious power has brought it? |
29870 | What power is it that makes the Hindoo woman burn herself on the funeral pyre of her husband? |
29870 | What rights can women expect to have that they do not have now? |
29870 | What shall be the result of this double demand? |
29870 | What sort of a star shall we call Boston? |
29870 | What sort of justice is there in excluding from the basis of representation Indians who are not taxed and including in this basis women who are taxed? |
29870 | What then would be the status of the cases in which Mrs. Leach and other women had acted as attorney? |
29870 | What though it may have meant repression? |
29870 | What was she made woman for, and not man?" |
29870 | What was the result? |
29870 | What would Christianity be if it had only the Ten Commandments and not the Golden Rule? |
29870 | What would a herdsman say if you told him his sheepfold was all that was needed, and refused to give him a gun? |
29870 | What would her Parliament have thought? |
29870 | What would other nations have thought?... |
29870 | What would the farmer say if you gave him a cultivator but no plough? |
29870 | What, say they, shall we do to hasten the work? |
29870 | What, then, is the suffrage, and why is it necessary that woman should possess and exercise this function of freemen? |
29870 | When John Adams went courting Abigail Smith, her proud father said to her:"Who is this young Adams? |
29870 | When a ticket is presented to her, she asks,"Are these good men?" |
29870 | Whence came my right to speak those words? |
29870 | Whenever any of the delegates said,"Why, have n''t you read Maloney''s opinion that a woman can not hold the office or vote for trustee?" |
29870 | Where are the localities in which the strain upon popular government must come? |
29870 | Where are their large cities? |
29870 | Where did he come from?" |
29870 | Where else should a true woman be found? |
29870 | Which Would Benefit Boston Most, License or No License? |
29870 | Which is it? |
29870 | Which would you do? |
29870 | Who are the people? |
29870 | Who are they, and to what class do they belong? |
29870 | Who can tell now whether these commentaries may not prove a great help to woman''s emancipation from old superstitions which have barred its way? |
29870 | Who defends woman''s individuality in our modern State? |
29870 | Who have periled their lives for it? |
29870 | Who is to care for and train the children while she is absent in the discharge of these masculine duties? |
29870 | Who is to draw the line? |
29870 | Who made it? |
29870 | Who shall interpret to a woman the divine element in her being? |
29870 | Who to- day can tell the difference between a Democrat and a Republican? |
29870 | Who would think of calling a new- born infant antique? |
29870 | Why do I believe it? |
29870 | Why is it that, having accomplished so much, the woman suffrage movement does not force itself as a vital issue into the thoughts of the masses? |
29870 | Why is this true? |
29870 | Why not reach out a hand to woman and say,"Come and help us make the laws and secure fair play"? |
29870 | Why should I go to one- half of the people and ask whether so clear and explicit a declaration as this includes me? |
29870 | Why should man alone determine these conditions which often counteract all the mother''s training? |
29870 | Why should they not participate in the election of officers who are to govern them? |
29870 | Why should they think that we would pick out fools for our husbands?... |
29870 | Why, indeed, should I owe loyalty and allegiance to a Government that stamps my brow with the badge of servility and inferiority? |
29870 | Why, then, this change? |
29870 | Why? |
29870 | Why? |
29870 | Will not voting destroy the womanly instincts? |
29870 | Will not women be contaminated by going to the polls? |
29870 | Will the possession of the ballot multiply and widen these avenues to self- support and independence? |
29870 | Will they not take away employment from men? |
29870 | Will they not, under this influence, in a little while be driven to the wall and obliged to step down and out? |
29870 | Will this House take a step backward on this question? |
29870 | With the freedom she now has, see how she is arousing the public conscience on all questions of right.... What is conservatism? |
29870 | With this mass of prejudice, selfishness and inertia to overcome is there any hope of future success? |
29870 | Without her what is the prospect in this regard? |
29870 | Would not any body of men look upon disfranchisement as"a cruel and degrading penalty?" |
29870 | Would that be considered honorable-- would it be considered tolerable-- even among prize- fighters? |
29870 | Would they have done so if it had proved injurious to their homes? |
29870 | Would this be possible had they been obliged to have the duly recorded permission of a majority of all the men over twenty- one years old? |
29870 | Yet without the weapons of defense what could individuals and nations do in time of war for their own protection? |
29870 | You may ask, What reforms has Wyoming to show? |
29870 | You who have not hitherto been woman suffragists, why not espouse this cause now, when it is in the full flush of its heroic struggle? |
29870 | [ 171] Immediately afterwards the ladies said to one of the members,"Why did you break your pledge to us and vote against the bill?" |
29870 | [ 38] As every private family urgently needs the man and the woman, why are both not needed in this"great aggregation?" |
29870 | [ 39] Do women have no hardships or hazards in time of war? |
29870 | [ 40] If her duties are just as laborious, responsible and important as man''s, do they not entitle her to a voice in the Government? |
29870 | [ 43] Would any man be willing to exchange his influence for that of a woman in the affairs of government? |
29870 | [ 8] If a mother can confer this right on a son, why not on a daughter? |
29870 | [ Which?] |
29870 | and she quickly received the reply,"Why, the hen does not mind it"; and in her heathen innocence she inquired,"Did you ask the hen?" |
29870 | answered the question, Are Women Represented in our Government? |
29870 | but what sort of an office- holder? |
29870 | gave a brilliant address entitled What Answer? |
29870 | gave an eloquent address on The Outlook, answering the four stock questions: Why do not more women ask for the ballot? |
29870 | have you given her an opportunity of saying so? |
29870 | made a strong speech upon Partisan or Patriot? |
29870 | she would answer,"Yes, but have n''t you read my opinion that she can?" |
29870 | suff.? |
29870 | take part in? |
15380 | Air- raids? 15380 An injection in the arm? |
15380 | And yet he had won his case and got his-- what do you say? 15380 And you?" |
15380 | But do n''t you know why? |
15380 | But how are we to live? |
15380 | But our luggage? 15380 But,"said Vivie,"suppose your husband and these corporals are married already, in Germany?" |
15380 | By the bye, I suppose you have heard that von Bissing is very ill? 15380 D''you mind posting these letters as you go out? |
15380 | Dear miss,said the Directeur in French,"You are so wise, I know, you will do what I wish...?" |
15380 | Did Michael believe she really_ had_ done it? 15380 Did n''t she hunger- strike to force the Authorities to accord her better prison treatment?" |
15380 | Did you ever think about the Dinosaurs, father? |
15380 | Do n''t you think they''re perfectly wonderful? |
15380 | Do you remember a fortnight ago I told you some one, some Belgian had written a beautiful poem and sent it to me for one of our newspapers? 15380 H''m, Williams? |
15380 | How could I what? |
15380 | I know Honoria Fraser-- I know Mr. Praed the architect--"The A.R.A.? 15380 I wonder what we had better do?" |
15380 | I? 15380 If Madame is faint--?" |
15380 | Lie down again on your sofa, go on with your_ petit déjeuner_--which is surely rather late? 15380 Madame is ill?" |
15380 | May I communicate with my friends? |
15380 | Miss Warren? 15380 My daughter write to her friends to ask them to obstruct the government at such a time as this? |
15380 | Now you shall tell me everything-- is it not so? 15380 Qu''est- ce- que ça fait?" |
15380 | Read and write for you, father? 15380 Some_ use_? |
15380 | The Dinosaurs, my boy? 15380 Then why not marry and have children? |
15380 | Then why,Praddy would reply,"do n''t you go and live with your mother?" |
15380 | Think''ow good you was to your old father down in Wales,''i m as you called your father-- an''''oo''s to say''e was n''t? 15380 Vivie--_darling_--what do you want me to do? |
15380 | Was it wise to bring her in? |
15380 | Was n''t there once a firm,_ Fraser and Warren_, which set up to be some new dodge for establishing women in a city career?--Accountancy? 15380 Well, Nannie,"he said,"come for a gossip?" |
15380 | Well, what is it? |
15380 | Well: what you want? |
15380 | What about? |
15380 | What do you think about Religion, Viv old girl? |
15380 | What was that? |
15380 | What would be the good? 15380 What_ am_ I to do?" |
15380 | Who are your friends? |
15380 | Why are they sending you away? |
15380 | Why should they who had done all the fighting have none of the loot? |
15380 | Wo n''t you smoke? |
15380 | You''ve brought a reprieve? |
15380 | _ Mother_, I hope you have n''t missed me, have n''t been unwell? |
15380 | ''Army''dear, would you ask them to whistle for a taxi? |
15380 | ( He asks himself anxiously"Surely all that letter was burnt before she came in?") |
15380 | ( To Vivie)"Are you David Vavasour Williams?" |
15380 | ( To Vivie)"Do you know Mr. David Vavasour Williams, a barrister?" |
15380 | ("What about those peasants''stories?" |
15380 | --"But my dear Miss--?" |
15380 | --"Peg him down over a Driver Ants''nest?" |
15380 | ----,----,_ and_----? |
15380 | ----?" |
15380 | Absence of mind-- I''ve left you three fat ones") Architect? |
15380 | After her money? |
15380 | An''then I''d punch''is''ead.... An''I do n''t reckon myself a soft-''earted feller as a rule.... Reklect that Shillito Case--?" |
15380 | And Annie Kenney? |
15380 | And Bertie Adams? |
15380 | And Christabel? |
15380 | And Gardner? |
15380 | And Praddy? |
15380 | And an old woman comes up and says in French,''Madame est Anglaise?'' |
15380 | And as to you? |
15380 | And buttered toast-- or if you''ve got muffins...? |
15380 | And did n''t she give you''refreshers,''as they call them, from time to time? |
15380 | And have you ever remarked another thing about all paintings prior to the seventeenth century: how_ plain_, how_ ugly_ all the people are? |
15380 | And if he must always be dining out and spending the evening with other people, why did he not make himself more''general?'' |
15380 | And the Pethick Lawrences? |
15380 | And was she certain even of them? |
15380 | And where did you pick her up? |
15380 | And yet, I do n''t know? |
15380 | And-- would you mind-- you always try, I know-- bringing the things in very quietly-- here--? |
15380 | And_ he_ would n''t be such a fool as to have them bombed, would he?" |
15380 | Any more gone wrong?" |
15380 | Are n''t you over- trying your strength? |
15380 | Are n''t_ they_ at certain times not their normal selves? |
15380 | Are there fig trees in the Temple... still? |
15380 | Are you equal to walking? |
15380 | Are you interested in palæontology?" |
15380 | Are you of London?" |
15380 | As soon as political activities were resumed, the Conciliation Bill by the energies of the Liberal Whips was talked out( was n''t it?). |
15380 | As thus:--_ Counsel for the prosecution_:"We have in you the mainspring of this rebellious movement..."_ Vivie_:"Have you?" |
15380 | As to the United States: was their intervention going to be more than money loans and supplies of material? |
15380 | At Pontyffynon?" |
15380 | At any rate I want to help them to make an honest livelihood without depending on some one man.... Business seems to be good, eh? |
15380 | Besides,_ is_ it horrible? |
15380 | Both your voice and your face seem-- what should one say? |
15380 | Bother all this cackle...._ Will_ you marry me?" |
15380 | But I did remember one dream just before Michael went down to Newcastle to join you... was it about mermaids? |
15380 | But I... hear... it... is... your mother... who is the owner... from long time, and you are her daughter newly arrived from England? |
15380 | But Peace, you''d think, must come soon-- Seems like our poor old world is comin''to an end, do n''t it? |
15380 | But as a matter of fact, when he came down to Cambridge in--? |
15380 | But as she argued with Mrs. Warren, what else were they to do in their cruel situation? |
15380 | But ca n''t you find a little time to be social? |
15380 | But did you make any great effort to turn me from it? |
15380 | But do you mean to say you have already started this masquerade?" |
15380 | But either we have been rushed with business, or you''ve been anxious about Lady Fraser-- How is she?" |
15380 | But how did you hear about him?" |
15380 | But how? |
15380 | But if Lady Vera and Lady Helen knew all this for a fact, why not tell the Police? |
15380 | But if the New Woman_ is_ to go on the loose and be unmoral like the rabbits, wo n''t the cause suffer from middle- class opposition?" |
15380 | But probably their language was such as would shock Nannie.... Supposing Frank Gardner did come to England? |
15380 | But that as Rose and Lilian are going, Mrs.--what does she call herself, Claridge?" |
15380 | But were they not being surrounded by a hostile Alliance? |
15380 | But what about her luggage and her mother''s, and the remainder of the money? |
15380 | But what interested me particularly was his next admission: how different you were as a lad-- rather more than the ordinary wild oats-- eh? |
15380 | But what lunatic idea has entered your mind with regard to this poor waster?" |
15380 | But you are rebel?" |
15380 | But you could n''t say the places I supervise here and at Roquebrune are so bad? |
15380 | But you will trust me, wo n''t you? |
15380 | But you''ll let her know, wo n''t you, miss?... |
15380 | But... will you marry me? |
15380 | By the bye, my aunt was amnestied and so I suppose were you?" |
15380 | By the bye,_ where_ and_ how_ did you come to meet Honoria first?" |
15380 | Ca n''t I go and help every day in your hospitals? |
15380 | Can I rely on Praddy? |
15380 | Come and dine with us? |
15380 | Come often and see us and look upon me-- I must be fifteen years older than you are-- What,_ twenty- four_? |
15380 | Could Vivie see or communicate with Gräfin von Stachelberg?--with Pasteur Walcker? |
15380 | Could that be her own Michael? |
15380 | D''yer think_ I_ wanted to bother''er? |
15380 | D''you know I''m on the verge of thirty- seven-- and I have no definite career? |
15380 | D''you see?" |
15380 | Did he believe his son was dead?" |
15380 | Did his father know any such luminary of the law or any two such luminaries? |
15380 | Did it mean the suffragette, Vivien Warren, who had sometimes been here, and in whose adventures her husband seemed so unbecomingly interested? |
15380 | Did n''t you once have a pupil called Vavasour Williams?" |
15380 | Did she really? |
15380 | Did this kind lady know where a lodging could be obtained? |
15380 | Did you ever hear of such a ridiculous name as Petworth? |
15380 | Did you read those disgusting letters in the_ Times_ by the surgeon, the midwifery man, Sir Wrigsby Blane? |
15380 | Do n''t you know me? |
15380 | Do you ever hear from or of her now?" |
15380 | Do you ever see him now? |
15380 | Do you know any one in London, by the bye?" |
15380 | Do you know, she and I quite altered after the War began? |
15380 | Do you think you can rub along if I take my departure next week? |
15380 | Do you understand? |
15380 | Does everything seem to be going on all right?" |
15380 | Et qu''ont- ils fait pour nous, les Anglais? |
15380 | First, you are English?" |
15380 | For instance, why not come and be introduced to Michael Rossiter? |
15380 | For what is she notorious?" |
15380 | From Villa Beau- séjour, Vivien Warren passed on to the Oudekens''farm, wondering what she would see-- Some fresh horror? |
15380 | Gardner?" |
15380 | Had David really returned to him? |
15380 | Had Vivie before they left the hotel remembered to put some, at least, of this precious sum on her person? |
15380 | Had he recovered after the Boers had taken Colesberg? |
15380 | Had he-- er-- er-- many relations, I mean did he come of well- known people?" |
15380 | Had n''t she once caught Mrs. Howel Williams kissing a young stranger behind a holly bush and was n''t that why Bridget had really been sent away? |
15380 | Had she deserved this punishment by Fate? |
15380 | Have they had no mothers, no sweethearts, no sisters, no wives? |
15380 | Have you tried them? |
15380 | Have_ they_ got ductless glands, she wonders? |
15380 | He must be so exhausted...."And what about_ you_, miss? |
15380 | He must now be no more than--58? |
15380 | He must steep himself in the geography of South Africa-- Why not get Rossiter to propose him as a fellow of the Royal Geographical Society? |
15380 | He need n''t know too much about me, d''yer see? |
15380 | He seems awfully gone on you...?" |
15380 | How did he fare in these times? |
15380 | How did you think of it?") |
15380 | How many months or years would lie ahead of him before fees could be gained and a professional income be earned? |
15380 | How on earth did he become acquainted with this young man from South Wales? |
15380 | How she would solace herself that her dividends were not derived from the prostitution of English girls but only of''foreigners''?..." |
15380 | How soon was David coming down to see South Wales once more gloriously clothed with spring? |
15380 | How would he find room for them, poor man? |
15380 | How''d you have liked that, eh? |
15380 | How''re the bruises?" |
15380 | How_ can_ parents be so unthinking about Christian names? |
15380 | How_ could_ I have left it?" |
15380 | How_ could_ the Germans expect British women to turn against their own country in its hour of danger? |
15380 | I agree with you in disliking all this sexuality..."_ Norie_:"Does one_ ever_ quite know why one likes people? |
15380 | I always liked the smell of a smoking- room.... And your mother: how is she?" |
15380 | I am mad with myself...""Are you, miss? |
15380 | I could--""No, this is a Miss Vivien Warren--""Vivien? |
15380 | I dare say you remember as a boy of fifteen or so spraining your ankle in Griffith''s Hole? |
15380 | I do n''t know what you have in hand, but why not postpone your action till you are quite strong again?" |
15380 | I doubt if he was aware he had a niece.... Do n''t you remember he was killed in the Alps last autumn?..." |
15380 | I have never asked why-- a lawn- mowing machine? |
15380 | I know, miss, if you get away from here you''ll look after her and my kids? |
15380 | I like bein''respectable, but why_ will_ they always put me next a Bishop or an Archdeacon? |
15380 | I mean, are you one of Boyd Dawkins''s party to examine the new cave on the Gower coast?" |
15380 | I mean, that if your old man has not been exaggerating and that the difference between the naughty boy whom he sent up to London in-- what was it? |
15380 | I must_ rush_ back at once.... You''ll excuse me?" |
15380 | I only know that if we sinned against these human laws and conventions, your great career in Science-- and again, why in Science? |
15380 | I presume you explained everything to the Colonial Office after you got back to London and that you are now free to take up a civil career? |
15380 | I presume you''ve brought a lunch- basket?" |
15380 | I sent you, Vivie-- a newspaper with the announcement of my marriage-- Dj''ever get it?" |
15380 | I should have been an honest woman all the rest of me life...."What do_ you_ feel about morality? |
15380 | I suppose he is n''t any relation?" |
15380 | I suppose it is part of your make- up-- goes with the clothes and that turn- over collar, and the little safety pin through the tie--?" |
15380 | I suppose the real heart- felt question at the back of your mind is:_ can_ I let you have a room? |
15380 | I suppose the staff departed punctually at One? |
15380 | I suppose you''ve been in prison for some Suffrage offence? |
15380 | I suppose your father giv''you a bit of a shock? |
15380 | I thought barristers had all that marked on their briefs? |
15380 | I took him on in-- let me see? |
15380 | I took quite a lot... for theatre tickets... and you may be suspecting Bertie Adams... we ca n''t call this an Adamless Eden, can we? |
15380 | I wonder whether Linda would get to like me?" |
15380 | I wonder why we keep an office boy and not an office girl? |
15380 | I''m a bit stupidlike this evenin''... readin''too much.... May I stay and help you, Sir? |
15380 | I''ve come home a very different David to the one that left you-- what was it? |
15380 | If I am unreasonable what are_ they_? |
15380 | If it were poison sent by the German Government, what matter? |
15380 | If not perhaps this kind man would try to get us a cab...?" |
15380 | If the first half of this year is equalled by the second, I should think there would be a profit to be divided of quite a thousand pounds?" |
15380 | If the outer door of Michaelis''s office was locked how could Miss Kenney be expected to call and find this note awaiting her? |
15380 | If we neglected blood stock we would deal the farmer a deadly blow, we should-- er-- You know the sort of argument? |
15380 | If you could only say a word to that Colonel with whom you are living?" |
15380 | Is all your money in English and Belgian securities?'' |
15380 | Is it not_ always_ thus with our friends and acquaintances? |
15380 | Is it possible I might work up my acquaintance with that professor whom I met in the train? |
15380 | Is it the portrait of a former wife? |
15380 | Is it true that you struck a Cabinet minister the other day? |
15380 | Is n''t it funny that a man should care so much about women getting the vote? |
15380 | Is that the man you''re sweet on?" |
15380 | Is this discipline necessary to the improvement of the race? |
15380 | Is_ that_ why you know Xeres so well?" |
15380 | It might be unkind, but then were we not unkind towards her father''s country, Ireland? |
15380 | It was about_ you_--wasn''t that funny? |
15380 | J''ever have a sister?" |
15380 | Knowing what we British people are, ca n''t you almost predict the_ bias_ of Aunt Liz''s mind? |
15380 | Lady Feenix''s? |
15380 | Le nom Walcker? |
15380 | Linda wondered whether_ she_ could do any indexing? |
15380 | Madame had kept the Hotel Leopold II in the Rue Royale? |
15380 | Mais ou sqnt les lauriers que réserve l''Histoire A celui qui demain forcera la Victoire? |
15380 | Michael had wanted me to read Hans Andersen''s fairy stories-- don''t you think they''re pretty? |
15380 | Michaelis?" |
15380 | Might I ask if you are bound on the same errand as I am? |
15380 | Mr. Lloyd George going to address a pro- Boer meeting at Aberystwith( was it?) |
15380 | My appearance_ is_ rather Welsh, do n''t you think? |
15380 | My gals used to come in here and find me cryin''as often as not....''Comment, Madame,''they used to say,''pourquoi pleurez vous? |
15380 | Nicht wahr? |
15380 | No, Vera? |
15380 | No? |
15380 | No? |
15380 | Not well enough off? |
15380 | Now dear, are you ready with that lymph?" |
15380 | Or a bite from some passionate mistress in a buried past? |
15380 | Or chained? |
15380 | Or could Williams be spoony on Honoria? |
15380 | Or have you only made it up?" |
15380 | Or if you ai n''t reg''lar set on_''i m_, why not giv''up this suffrage business and live a bit with me here? |
15380 | Or is the cruelty in human disciplinary laws? |
15380 | Or of a sister who committed suicide? |
15380 | Or was it merely bought in Venice for the sake of the carving? |
15380 | Or why wait for that to marry? |
15380 | Or:"Mike, could you cut that cake and hand it round?" |
15380 | Perhaps the American Consul might help them? |
15380 | Permettez que je vous fasse la meme piqure?" |
15380 | Rossiter broke in:"Now what would you like to do in the afternoon, Miss Warren? |
15380 | Rossiter_ to_ Frank Gardner_, archly:"I suppose you''ve come home to be married?" |
15380 | Sam Gardner? |
15380 | Shall not General Sir Petworth Armstrong die in the great débacle of the world- wide War? |
15380 | Shall they call you a cab? |
15380 | She burst out:"_ Have_ you seen the Red Placard they have just put up?" |
15380 | She had a great friend-- what was it? |
15380 | She had known plenty young couples marry and live very happily on Two hundred and fifty a year, and Mr. Williams must surely be earning that? |
15380 | She is in the hall outside-- feels a little faint I think with shock-- might she-- might I?" |
15380 | She lives twenty miles from here, at Gower-- and... and... there''s an end of it...."Now you wo n''t run away back to London till you''re obliged? |
15380 | She often said about this time-- touching wood as she did so--"could any woman be happier?" |
15380 | She opened her eyes to meet his, as he bent over her, and said with the ghost of an arch smile:"I-- have been-- of some use-- to you, haven''t-- I? |
15380 | She seems to know a lot about Spain; but I do n''t feel encouraged to ask her:"Was your father in the wine trade? |
15380 | She would in the approach to Christmas, 1909, look round and survey her happiness: could any one have a more satisfactory husband? |
15380 | Should she even tell Rossiter? |
15380 | Should she go on with the bold adventure? |
15380 | Sie verstehen nicht Deutsch, gnädiges Fraulein?" |
15380 | So she can-- have I not shown it by what I have done? |
15380 | Sometimes however Michael at last roused to consciousness of the fretful little presence would say"What? |
15380 | Sort of morganatic Queen? |
15380 | Still... throw plenty of mud and some of it will stick.... And what_ was_ her full, true story? |
15380 | Stockbroking? |
15380 | Surely not putting my papers in order-- or rather disorder? |
15380 | Sweety? |
15380 | Tell me first, what really became of the real David Williams, the young man you met in the hospital and wrote to me about?" |
15380 | The Polizei answered that they had none to give.... Might she accompany her friend? |
15380 | The W.S.P.U.? |
15380 | The life I lead, the people who come here?" |
15380 | Their pleasant relations could thus continue-- perhaps-- who knows?--to the end of this War,"to that peace which will make us friends once more?" |
15380 | Then after a pause he resumed:"I think you said you were going to Swansea? |
15380 | These two sentences run over a period of-- what did I say? |
15380 | They are talking of turning her out of her club because of the things she says before the waitresses..."_ Vivie_:"What things?" |
15380 | They do say however she''s a great_ flirt_..."Indiscreet questions:"How much will you make out of this case? |
15380 | Though we would n''t be without''em, would we?" |
15380 | Three years ago Michael would have replied:"_ You?_ Nonsense, my dear. |
15380 | Twin brother, perhaps; but had she one?..." |
15380 | Violet? |
15380 | Vivie? |
15380 | Want any money?" |
15380 | Warren?" |
15380 | Warren?). |
15380 | Warren_:"Dj''ever see yer Aunt Liz?" |
15380 | Was Mr. Williams''s defence of Arbella so very wonderful as the evening papers said? |
15380 | Was ever Ministry in a greater dilemma? |
15380 | Was it a conspiracy into which they were luring her husband, already rather compromised as a man of science by his enthusiasm for the Suffrage cause? |
15380 | Was it a reprieve? |
15380 | Was she going to die soon and was there a hereafter?'' |
15380 | Was she handcuffed? |
15380 | Was this to be a Church revival? |
15380 | We had helped France to Morocco and Italy to Tripoli; why should we bother about Servia? |
15380 | Well then, as to sex disqualification, a few weeks hence I shall become David Vavasour Williams, and I presume he was a male? |
15380 | Well, I''ll be damned"( he was eventually)"I wonder whether the old gal had a son as well as that spitfire Vivie?!" |
15380 | Well: what is the quarrel now? |
15380 | Were the Germans to blame, she asked herself? |
15380 | Were we very tender towards national independence in Egypt, in Persia? |
15380 | What about Beryl?" |
15380 | What about your Dinosaurs? |
15380 | What an anxiety children were, were n''t they? |
15380 | What are we to do?" |
15380 | What business am I going specially to undertake in Mr. Michaelis''s office on the top storey of 88- 90? |
15380 | What did she lack for happiness? |
15380 | What did she wear when she was tried?" |
15380 | What do you want me to do? |
15380 | What do_ you_ dream about, Mr. Williams? |
15380 | What happened then to Vivie? |
15380 | What have you done with your duds? |
15380 | What is it?" |
15380 | What is the good of a peerage if it ends with your life? |
15380 | What should you say if I_ did_ marry-- Major Armstrong...? |
15380 | What silly notion have you got into your head?" |
15380 | What was it like seeing her in prison? |
15380 | What was that building now called? |
15380 | What were they?" |
15380 | What, then, have I to fear? |
15380 | When are you going to get your call?" |
15380 | When are you going to take me to Louvain?" |
15380 | Where am I? |
15380 | Where did_ Fraser and Warren_ have their office? |
15380 | Where do you live? |
15380 | Where is Mrs. Pankhurst? |
15380 | Where should they go? |
15380 | Where''s your luggage? |
15380 | Where, if she did, were they to go? |
15380 | Where, in this measureless universe-- which indeed might only be one of several universes-- was God to be found? |
15380 | Who are_ you_ and what are you doing here?" |
15380 | Who can say? |
15380 | Who gave you the money to pay in to my-- to Vivie''s account?" |
15380 | Who has given me that thousand pounds?" |
15380 | Who shall describe the hats of 1910?--and before and since-- in all but the very poorest women? |
15380 | Who was there to consult? |
15380 | Why be so morose? |
15380 | Why ca n''t they, with one so clever, shorten the term of probation? |
15380 | Why could he not have gone straight home and rested_ there_? |
15380 | Why did I go away? |
15380 | Why did n''t Mr. Williams marry some nice girl and make a home for himself? |
15380 | Why do n''t yer pick up a decent husband somewhere and drop all this foolishness about the Suffragettes? |
15380 | Why do n''t you-- but perhaps you do?--join evening classes at the Polytechnic?--or at this new London School of Economics which is close at hand? |
15380 | Why do you bother about Beryl? |
15380 | Why do you look so solemn? |
15380 | Why does he not marry and settle down? |
15380 | Why have they such a bitter feeling against your sex? |
15380 | Why may n''t we love where we please? |
15380 | Why not come out and dine with me at the Hans Crescent Hotel? |
15380 | Why not drop politics and take up philosophy? |
15380 | Why quarrel with her fate? |
15380 | Why was Michael Rossiter wedded to Linda Bennet when he was no more than twenty- five, and she just past her coming of age? |
15380 | Why, what''s the matter?" |
15380 | Why_ should_ we have wanted to be like men?... |
15380 | Will you introduce me to our young friend here?" |
15380 | Williams go abroad.... Do n''t you think there is something that ought to win over Providence in that happily chosen name? |
15380 | Williams stood in the yellow light of the west window, reading a letter..."Cousin? |
15380 | Wo n''t you do so? |
15380 | Wo n''t you share it?" |
15380 | Wodjer want to go fallin''in love with some chap as''as got a wife already? |
15380 | Wonder''ow she came to be''ere? |
15380 | Would Miss Warren care to come with me?" |
15380 | Would he sometimes read aloud and sometimes write his letters, or even the finish of his History? |
15380 | Would it be safe, d''you think, in that capacity to go down and see his old father?" |
15380 | Would it not tend to prolong the War? |
15380 | Would she ever turn against her nursling now, above all, when he was showing himself such a son to his old father? |
15380 | Would they really supply the fighting men, the one thing at this crisis necessary to defeat Germany? |
15380 | Would you mind showing him in here? |
15380 | Yer know since I''ve made my peace with you...._ Ai n''t_ it a rum go, by the bye? |
15380 | Yet why all this mystery? |
15380 | You are surely joking-- what do you say? |
15380 | You do n''t have to pass a medical examination for the Bar, do you?" |
15380 | You do n''t know? |
15380 | You done good wherever you went... to my pore mother-- wonder, by the bye, what_ she_ thinks and''ow_ she''s_ gettin''on? |
15380 | You have? |
15380 | You introduce all manner of irrelevant matter--"_ Counsel_:"You decline to answer my questions?" |
15380 | You know as well as I do that in most cases it makes little or no difference; and if it does, what about men? |
15380 | You know his address in Wales? |
15380 | You know how she grappled with that Norfolk estate business?" |
15380 | You know they howked him out of Woodcote? |
15380 | You know those Charles Davis shares I bought at 5_s._ 3_d._? |
15380 | You pull my leg? |
15380 | You remember, Praddy? |
15380 | You understand?" |
15380 | You will believe me when I say I''ve done_ nothing_ wrong, nothing that you, if you knew all the facts, would call wrong...?" |
15380 | You''ll always love me, wo n''t you? |
15380 | _ Blackbeard_:"What were you doing there?" |
15380 | _ Counsel_( to Vivie):"You heard my questions?" |
15380 | _ Counsel_:"Have you spoken of him as your cousin?" |
15380 | _ Counsel_:"Well-- er-- a member of the Bar-- well known in the criminal courts-- Shillito case--"_ Judge_:"Really? |
15380 | _ Counsel_:"Well-- er-- for being associated abroad with-- er-- a certain type of hotel synonymous with a disorderly house--"_ Vivie_:"Indeed? |
15380 | _ D.V._ Williams? |
15380 | _ David_:"You mean it did n''t come from those''Hotels''?" |
15380 | _ Father_:"Ah it''s Rossiter who puts all these ideas into your head, is it?" |
15380 | _ Frank_:"My story? |
15380 | _ Hawk_:"What was your crime?" |
15380 | _ He_ gave it to me-- you know whom I mean by''_ He_''? |
15380 | _ Honoria_:"Well, about Beryl?" |
15380 | _ I_ understand you are_ the_ Miss Warren, the Miss Warren who make the English Government afraid, nicht wahr? |
15380 | _ Judge_, interposing with a weary air:"_ Who_ is David Williams?" |
15380 | _ Norie_ continues:"Do you remember Beryl Clarges at Newnham?" |
15380 | _ Norie_:"How_ is_ she? |
15380 | _ Norie_:"I remember your going down to see your aunt after you broke off relations with your mother in-- in--1897...?" |
15380 | _ Norie_:"I suppose you are not refusing him for the same old reason-- that vague suggestion that he might be your half- brother?" |
15380 | _ Norie_:"So you really_ are_ going to take the plunge?" |
15380 | _ Praed_:"What, David, the Welsh boy? |
15380 | _ Quelle_ clientele, et pas chiche''--I suppose you understand French? |
15380 | _ Rossiter_:"You forget, dearie, you''ve got to open that Bazaar in Marylebone Town Hall--"_ Linda_:"Oh, have I? |
15380 | _ Surely_ you will let me go up to our room and pack it-- and take it away? |
15380 | _ Vivie_( flushing in the firelight):"Does he? |
15380 | _ Vivie_:"But those papers on my desk? |
15380 | _ Vivie_:"How''s your mother?" |
15380 | _ Why_ did you do this? |
15380 | _ Why_ did you risk your life to come here;_ oh why, oh why_?" |
15380 | _ Why_ do they drive us to these extremes? |
15380 | _ Will_ you marry me?" |
15380 | _ what_ did I say? |
15380 | _ why_ are we tortured like this? |
15380 | _ why_ was n''t_ I_ there, instead of in the House? |
15380 | client? |
15380 | no relation-- was Miss Warren...."What, one of the Warrens of Huddersfield? |
15380 | off-- I dare say you remember it? |
15380 | what is all the fuss about? |
15380 | what? |
15380 | when? |
15380 | why do you tolerate such people and why prostitute your studio to such unwholesome art?" |
15380 | why?" |
30855 | ''Ow_ can_ you, sir? |
30855 | ? |
30855 | A hundred? |
30855 | After the board? |
30855 | All right? |
30855 | Altogether? |
30855 | And did she? |
30855 | And have n''t we provided it,_ damn_ them? |
30855 | And if we look in-- shall we see hosts and regiments of mushrooms? 30855 And is that Eleanor now or Ellen or-- is there any other name that gives one Ella? |
30855 | And of whom are you going to enquire? |
30855 | And she is dead? |
30855 | And what is it exactly that is to take the place of these isolated little homes and these dreary little lodgings? 30855 And what may that be?" |
30855 | And what shall we do when we get there? |
30855 | Are n''t I always at your service? |
30855 | Are n''t they all rather surprised? |
30855 | Are you thinking of any new branches, Isaac? |
30855 | Are you_ George_ Brumley? |
30855 | Besides,said Mrs. Pembrose,"what else can one do?" |
30855 | Bull mastiff? |
30855 | But I do n''t like to think----Aren''t Great Men after all-- great? |
30855 | But Susan----You do n''t mean that anyone, anyone who''s really honest-- might get into trouble? |
30855 | But ca n''t I see her-- just for a moment? |
30855 | But could n''t he have got work again-- as a baker? |
30855 | But did she call on me? |
30855 | But did you see Sir Isaac? |
30855 | But does n''t it distress you highly, Mr. Brumley,one of the Perth ladies asked,"to be leaving Euphemia''s Home to strangers? |
30855 | But how much do the girls get a week? |
30855 | But how old are the girls they send out? |
30855 | But how, Lady Harman? 30855 But how?" |
30855 | But how? |
30855 | But how_ could_ such a thing have happened? |
30855 | But if no one found out,said Lady Harman,"how do you know?" |
30855 | But surely; is n''t his name enough? |
30855 | But was n''t it wretched in prison? 30855 But what are you going to do with this house?" |
30855 | But what do they do? |
30855 | But what do you mean, Isaac? |
30855 | But what should I have to do? |
30855 | But what, Mr. Brumley, what is to become of the landladies? |
30855 | But where can I escape? |
30855 | But where''s she gone, Snagsby? |
30855 | But where,asked Lady Harman,"could such a thing be done?" |
30855 | But where? 30855 But where?" |
30855 | But why did n''t you come to me? |
30855 | But why? |
30855 | But you, Susan? |
30855 | But,protested Mr. Brumley,"would men marry under those conditions?" |
30855 | But,said Lady Harman slowly, not advancing and pointing incredulously at the unwinking stare that met her own,"is he dead? |
30855 | But,she asked,"have n''t they always mattered?" |
30855 | But-- what are you going to do? |
30855 | But-- what can you do? |
30855 | But-- when will she be at home? |
30855 | Ca n''t we talk about it to Mrs. Pembrose? 30855 Can you suppose for a moment that these things conduce to self- control, to reserve, to consistency, to any of the qualities of a trustworthy man?... |
30855 | Chasing you? 30855 Could n''t you,"he said at last,"go somewhere?" |
30855 | Dead? |
30855 | Did n''t I say they were? |
30855 | Did she talk to you? |
30855 | Do n''t you see what''s the matter? |
30855 | Do n''t you? |
30855 | Do n''t you_ know_? |
30855 | Do you mind,she asked abruptly,"if I smoke?" |
30855 | Do you really think----? |
30855 | Do you think,she asked in a small voice and with the hesitation of one whom no refusal can surprise;"you could give me a cup of tea?" |
30855 | Do you understand nothing of_ love_? |
30855 | Do you understand, Agatha? 30855 Do you want him at once?" |
30855 | Eh? |
30855 | Est- il mauvais? |
30855 | Everything all right, Snagsby? |
30855 | Father''s inquest? |
30855 | Gone? |
30855 | Got a kiss for me, Elly? |
30855 | Have I ever refused you money? |
30855 | Have you been interested in this building? |
30855 | Have you found that work yet? |
30855 | He haggles? |
30855 | He''s-- hard? |
30855 | Health? |
30855 | Here they are, you see, right and ready,said Sir Isaac, and then with an inspiration,"Got any tea for us, Snagsby?" |
30855 | Here,said Sir Isaac,"ca n''t I get off? |
30855 | How are you feeling this afternoon? |
30855 | How can one suddenly turn on a friend? |
30855 | How could such a thing have come about? |
30855 | How did that chap get in? |
30855 | How do you know? |
30855 | How far,he asked,"is it from the nearest railway station?..." |
30855 | How many were there of you altogether? |
30855 | How_ does_ one sell jewels? |
30855 | I ask you what''s my business got to do with you? 30855 I suppose you do n''t know,"she began, addressing Susan''s industrious back;"you do n''t know who-- who owns these International Stores?" |
30855 | I suppose,she said,"you''ve come to see over the place?" |
30855 | I thought,he said after a silent scrutiny, and left her to imagine what he had thought...."But,"he urged to her protracted silence,"you_ care_?" |
30855 | I-- I suppose it''s all Right, dear, now? |
30855 | I----Are you looking at the house? |
30855 | If I want things done? 30855 If she wo n''t?" |
30855 | In any case? |
30855 | Into-- I do n''t quite understand-- what business? |
30855 | Is Sir Isaac----? |
30855 | Is a wife to be on no better footing than a daughter? 30855 Is anything the matter?" |
30855 | Is dear Sir Isaac at home? |
30855 | Is n''t it bad for them? |
30855 | Is n''t there a paper,she asked,"called the_ London Lion_?" |
30855 | Is she beautiful? |
30855 | Is that all you want me to do? |
30855 | Is that_ the_ Agatha Alimony? |
30855 | Is there----Is there someone else? |
30855 | Is this Black Strands? |
30855 | Is this likely to be a good thing at all? |
30855 | Isaac!--where are we going? |
30855 | It''s all right, is n''t it? |
30855 | It''s disheartening, is n''t it? |
30855 | Just take this paper to Mrs. Sawbridge,he said,"and ask her what she thinks of it?" |
30855 | Lady Beach- Mandarin called here----"But when? |
30855 | Lady Harman back yet? |
30855 | Lady Harman,_ what_ has he explained? |
30855 | Lady Harman? |
30855 | Morally? |
30855 | Mr. Brumley, is there a Tube station near here? |
30855 | Mr. Brumley,she said, looking up at him,"have you no thought for our Hostels?" |
30855 | Must we start at once, Clarence? |
30855 | My favourite flower? |
30855 | NO? |
30855 | Neo----? |
30855 | Now how long is that really? |
30855 | Now? |
30855 | Now_ where_? |
30855 | Or perhaps a Thoroughly Vicious collie? |
30855 | Perhaps you know my little Euphemia books? 30855 Pretty?" |
30855 | See Sir Isaac? |
30855 | Shall I place the tea- things in the garden, me lady? |
30855 | Shall I telegraph? |
30855 | She''s been here? |
30855 | Sir Isaac Harman? |
30855 | Sir Isaac? |
30855 | Sir Isaac? |
30855 | Someone else on my side? |
30855 | Someone else? |
30855 | Something,he said, and his face was deadly white--"_Some other man, Elly?_"She was suddenly crimson, a flaming indignation. |
30855 | Taxi, milady? |
30855 | Then he''s not the conventional vulgarian? |
30855 | Then they_ are_ my hostels? |
30855 | Then why did you come here to ask me about it? |
30855 | There is n''t a man? |
30855 | These are Awful questions,he gasped,"rather beyond Us do n''t you think?" |
30855 | This is Black Strands? |
30855 | Waiter,he said,"how do the trains run from here to Putney?" |
30855 | Well,cried Sir Isaac,"why in goodness could n''t you tell me that before, Elly? |
30855 | Well,--it''s your theory, you know-- bad characters? |
30855 | What about? |
30855 | What are you going to do with me then? |
30855 | What can make you think----? |
30855 | What could one infer about a wife from a man like that? 30855 What did you say, Isaac?" |
30855 | What do such things matter,he cried,"when a man is in love?" |
30855 | What do you mean to do? |
30855 | What do you mean? |
30855 | What do you suspect? 30855 What do you think you can do, Lady Harman? |
30855 | What else could they be? |
30855 | What ever d''you mean,he cried,"by making a fool of me in front of those fellers?... |
30855 | What exactly has Georgina done? |
30855 | What had he got to say to you? |
30855 | What have I_ done_? |
30855 | What is it, Isaac? |
30855 | What right have you to open my letter? |
30855 | What the Devil do you mean,he cried,"by chasing me all round the garden?" |
30855 | What the_ devil_? |
30855 | What trouble? |
30855 | What was father to_ do_? |
30855 | What who want? |
30855 | What you been thinking about, Elly,he asked,"subscribing to_ that_ thing?" |
30855 | What''s this? 30855 What, dear?" |
30855 | What? |
30855 | Where have I seen our friend to the left before? |
30855 | Where have you been? |
30855 | Where the devil you been? 30855 Where you been?" |
30855 | Where you been? |
30855 | Where''s Ellen gone? |
30855 | Where''s she got to? 30855 Where?" |
30855 | Who''s going to watch you? 30855 Why is n''t she back?" |
30855 | Why not make Hostels, Lady Harman, for married couples? 30855 Why?" |
30855 | Will you be going back, sir? |
30855 | With_ her_? |
30855 | Wo n''t_ you_ come on our Committee? |
30855 | Yes,he expostulated;"but these Hostels, these Hostels.... We''ve started them-- isn''t that good enough? |
30855 | Yes,said Susan after various explanations and exhibitions,"but where''s the home in it?" |
30855 | You ca n''t? |
30855 | You go to meetings, and try to get to the bottom of Movements, and you want to meet and know the people who write the wonderful things? 30855 You have n''t called?" |
30855 | You know what we are doing? |
30855 | You mean? |
30855 | You really think you would like us to have that house? |
30855 | You think it is likely to answer? |
30855 | You''re sure I can do nothing for you, mummy? |
30855 | You''ve known her a long time? |
30855 | You''ve not made her----? |
30855 | You''ve not taken a house? |
30855 | You''ve seen her again? |
30855 | You-- you write----the lady stopped, and then diverted a question that she perhaps considered too blunt,"there?" |
30855 | Your trouble with your waitresses is over, Sir Isaac? |
30855 | _ Did_ she? |
30855 | _ Dum----? 30855 _ How?_"he asked compactly. |
30855 | _ See?_he said. |
30855 | _ Still?_"No one better,said Mr. Brumley. |
30855 | _ What''s_ beautiful? |
30855 | _ What''s_ noble? 30855 _ What?_"he asked sharply. |
30855 | _ You''ll_ take a cup of tea? |
30855 | ( She was standing behind Mr. Brumley so that he could not see her but-- did their eyes meet?) |
30855 | ( Should he ask for credit? |
30855 | ("Now where are we going out to lunch?" |
30855 | (_ Why should n''t she?_ It would no doubt make Sir Isaac furiously angry-- if he heard of it. |
30855 | A birthday present of all presents is surely one''s very own? |
30855 | A man perhaps? |
30855 | After all, did n''t she owe obedience? |
30855 | All my life is comic-- the story of this-- this last absurdity could it make anything but a comic history? |
30855 | All round the garden?" |
30855 | And an infrequent service? |
30855 | And as for Harman----? |
30855 | And as for the articles themselves, what became of them? |
30855 | And besides, from whom could she borrow?... |
30855 | And had he ever had his desire or his hope, or felt the intensities of life? |
30855 | And he''s giving up the Academic Committee, is he? |
30855 | And if you''re going to have a lot of friends I have n''t got, where''re they coming to see you? |
30855 | And she was all in a flurry for going on.... Did you come down, Mr. Brumley, to see if Lady Harman was ill?" |
30855 | And then blushing vividly:"I''ve got lots of_ things_.... Susan, have you ever pawned anything?" |
30855 | And then with an air of being meticulously explicit,"I mean, is n''t there somewhere, where you might safely go?" |
30855 | And what''s this?" |
30855 | And when I tell him you are here he will want to see you.... You will come up and see him?" |
30855 | And who more worthy of patronage than William Shakespear? |
30855 | And why had she let it happen? |
30855 | And_ how_ is dear Lady Harman?" |
30855 | Are these watchers and trackers sometimes driven to buying things in shops? |
30855 | Bit more sensible than suffragetting, eh, Elly?" |
30855 | Blenker?" |
30855 | Brumley?" |
30855 | Brumley?" |
30855 | Brumley?" |
30855 | Brumley?" |
30855 | Brumley?" |
30855 | But I can hardly expect you to be interested in my troubles, can I?" |
30855 | But I do so wish----Have you seen those great borders at Hampton Court? |
30855 | But all the same,--though they''re mine,--_still_----Why should n''t a woman have work in the world, Mr. Brumley? |
30855 | But ca n''t I perhaps take you in a taxi?" |
30855 | But if I''m to advise----If my advice is to be worth anything....""Yes?" |
30855 | But if these things were not real, what was real? |
30855 | But it was the sort of thing other women of her class did; did n''t all the novels testify? |
30855 | But need ours be?" |
30855 | But that do n''t account for your being out to eight, does it? |
30855 | But the benefits were plain enough, space, light, baths, association, reasonable recreations, opportunities for improvement----"But freedom?" |
30855 | But then,----the Hostels?... |
30855 | But what could you have expected?" |
30855 | But what hope was there of her? |
30855 | But where-- where did he keep them?... |
30855 | Byzantine, with the gold of life stolen and the swans changed to geese? |
30855 | Ca n''t we carry her off right away, Mr. Brumley? |
30855 | Can a woman stay alone at an hotel? |
30855 | Could Isaac be going mad? |
30855 | Could Mr. Brumley give her that? |
30855 | Could anyone else have helped him? |
30855 | Could it be he was in pain again? |
30855 | Could it be that that hood really concealed her? |
30855 | Could it be?... |
30855 | Could n''t you come next Saturday afternoon? |
30855 | Could she have helped him? |
30855 | Could they guess? |
30855 | Did he mean to attempt-- Petruchio? |
30855 | Did n''t she in fact owe him the whole marriage service contract? |
30855 | Did n''t she owe him a subordinate''s co- operation? |
30855 | Did n''t you see him too, Susan?" |
30855 | Did she in any way_ look_--as though----?" |
30855 | Did she? |
30855 | Did they guess? |
30855 | Did you know he had mistresses? |
30855 | Do jewellers buy jewels as well as sell them? |
30855 | Do n''t you know, Lady Harman, that it''s your wifely duty to obey, to do as I say, to behave as I wish?" |
30855 | Do n''t you know, have n''t you an idea? |
30855 | Do n''t you think so?" |
30855 | Do n''t you_ see_?... |
30855 | Do you know, dear, I really think-- if I were to go for a little time to Bournemouth----?" |
30855 | Do you mind?" |
30855 | Does one send to the papers? |
30855 | During that time had he ever talked to a girl or woman with an unembarrassed sincerity? |
30855 | Eh? |
30855 | Eh? |
30855 | Empty? |
30855 | Get at the wonderful core of it?" |
30855 | H''m.... And what sort of people do we get about here?" |
30855 | Had he after all rather overloaded his memory of her real self with imaginative accessories? |
30855 | Had he anything to put beside her own fine detachment? |
30855 | Had he ever said or thought any really sweet or tender thing-- even about her? |
30855 | Had he ever suspected how alien? |
30855 | Had it ever been? |
30855 | Had she really understood what he had been saying to her in the garden? |
30855 | Have n''t you any idea at all?" |
30855 | Have n''t you seen him? |
30855 | Have you read Gissing''s_ Paying Guest_?..." |
30855 | Have you seen them? |
30855 | He perceived now with the astonishment of a man newly awakened just how the great obsession of sex had dominated him-- for how many years? |
30855 | He was really astonished,"Your_ own_?" |
30855 | He went and rapped at her door but after one muffled"Who''s that?" |
30855 | He went to his desk and wrote:--"_ My Dear, I want you to marry me._"What more was to be said? |
30855 | He----How can you imagine, Isaac----? |
30855 | How after all was she going to do things, with not a penny in the world to do them with? |
30855 | How can I be associated with that? |
30855 | How can anyone hope to escape? |
30855 | How can you_ ask_ me such a thing?" |
30855 | How can_ you_ tell what''s right and what is n''t right? |
30855 | How could he deny his complicity? |
30855 | How does one send to the papers? |
30855 | How far would he follow her and was it possible to shake him off? |
30855 | How long was it absolutely necessary for people to keep a home together for their children? |
30855 | How the Devil was I to get away, once she was through the verandah? |
30855 | How was father to know?..." |
30855 | How was_ he_ to know? |
30855 | How?" |
30855 | I am not in the least sorrowful or helpless...."But,"said Mr. Brumley,"are you so free?" |
30855 | I do n''t know if you found that in Venice?" |
30855 | I suppose there are n''t any_ literary_ people about here, musicians or that kind of thing, no advanced people of that sort?" |
30855 | I suppose you come a great deal into London, Lady Harman?" |
30855 | I suppose----Wouldn''t it be sometimes kinder if you took over the old shop-- made a sort of partner of him, or something?" |
30855 | If I want things altered?" |
30855 | If I was n''t in the garden, then where the Devil was I? |
30855 | If a certain separation from Mr. Brumley''s assiduous aid was demanded, was it too great a sacrifice? |
30855 | If he bought those socks, would they appear in Sir Isaac''s bill? |
30855 | If she gave way to this outrageous restriction to- day, what fresh limitations might not Sir Isaac impose to- morrow? |
30855 | If she went up and down on this, she wanted to know what he would do, would he run up and down the fixed flight? |
30855 | If you would care----?" |
30855 | In 1899 nobody would have dreamt of asking and in 1909 even Mr. Brumley was asking,"Are things going on much longer?" |
30855 | Is he really dead? |
30855 | Is there no way----?" |
30855 | It would include Mrs. Pembrose.... Do n''t you see what would happen? |
30855 | It''s a house on Putney Hill, is n''t it, where this Christian maiden, so to speak, is held captive? |
30855 | It''s good- bye-- and why-- why should n''t I go now?" |
30855 | It''s the home that we are going to alter and replace-- and what is it like?" |
30855 | Lady Harman heard a large aside to Lady Viping:"Is n''t she perfectly lovely?" |
30855 | Like that?" |
30855 | Many rooms are there?" |
30855 | May I enquire into it for you? |
30855 | Meanwhile? |
30855 | Might I borrow half a sovereign?" |
30855 | Might it be possible after dark to approach the house? |
30855 | Might she not at least have saved him his suspicion? |
30855 | More than you do for your husband?..." |
30855 | Mr. Brumley appeared attentive and then he said again:"But where have I seen him?" |
30855 | Mr. Brumley, what has a married woman to do with love? |
30855 | Natural for your sister, but why should you? |
30855 | No officers about?... |
30855 | Nothing in any way suburban? |
30855 | Nothing nearer than Aldershot.... That''s eleven miles, is it? |
30855 | Once at least he must have loved her? |
30855 | Only, why should I pretend? |
30855 | See? |
30855 | See? |
30855 | See? |
30855 | See? |
30855 | See? |
30855 | See?" |
30855 | See?" |
30855 | She had never realized before that he was pitiful.... Had she perhaps feared him too much, disliked him too much to deal fairly with him? |
30855 | She knew his address? |
30855 | She''s just a human, kindly little woman.... She''ll feel disgraced.... How can I let a thing like that occur?" |
30855 | Should he go in a state of virile resolution, force her hesitation as a man should? |
30855 | Should he still be formal, still write to"Dear Lady Harman,"or suddenly break into a new warmth? |
30855 | Should he write to her forthwith? |
30855 | Should she speak to him at the end of dinner? |
30855 | Should she speak to him while Snagsby was in the room? |
30855 | Should she still let the lawyer come out? |
30855 | Simply Ella?" |
30855 | So will you take me and put me in a green chair and-- tell me how afterwards I can find the Tube and get home? |
30855 | Some man that you care for? |
30855 | Something within herself seemed to answer,"But did n''t you know this all along?" |
30855 | Surely she must have understood----"But the waitress strike-- what has it got to do with the waitress strike?" |
30855 | Tell me, tell me exactly,_ why_ have you run away? |
30855 | That question originally put in Paradise,"Why should n''t we?" |
30855 | That roof,--a gardener''s cottage?... |
30855 | The bill was five shillings( Should he dispute it? |
30855 | The very under- housemaids were saying:"Where_ ever_ can her ladyship''ave got to?" |
30855 | There is n''t something been going on that I do n''t know?" |
30855 | There''s social work, there''s interests----Am I never to take any part-- in that?" |
30855 | Think_ I_''ve had no temptations?... |
30855 | This friendship has been going on----How can I end it suddenly?" |
30855 | To take some odd trunks with her, meet him somewhere, travel, travel through the evening, travel past nightfall? |
30855 | Was Lady Beach- Mandarin implicated? |
30855 | Was all this world a mere make- believe, and would Miss Beeton Clavier and every one about her presently cast aside a veil? |
30855 | Was anyone? |
30855 | Was death perhaps no more than the flinging off of grotesque outer garments by the newly arrived guests at the feast of living? |
30855 | Was he a married man? |
30855 | Was he very much away from home? |
30855 | Was it conceivable he would carry sacrifice to such a pitch as that?... |
30855 | Was it impossible to do that by going back to the front door of Black Strand? |
30855 | Was it perhaps in other planets, under those wonderful, many- mooned, silver- banded skies? |
30855 | Was n''t it her business to study out- of- the- way types? |
30855 | Was n''t it miserably cold? |
30855 | Was that impropriety? |
30855 | Was that perhaps it? |
30855 | Was that violence? |
30855 | Was there anything she could have done that she had not done? |
30855 | We''ve set them going....""Do you know,"she asked,"what would happen to the hostels if I were to marry?" |
30855 | Were there ever disputes about his expenses?... |
30855 | What after all did he get for it?... |
30855 | What am I that I should expect to be anything but a thwarted lover, a man mocked by his own attempts at service? |
30855 | What are people-- what are women tied up in such a way to do?" |
30855 | What becomes of the people if they do get hurt?" |
30855 | What could it be like? |
30855 | What could the man mean about unscheduled crime? |
30855 | What did he earn? |
30855 | What did he really think of these places? |
30855 | What did he think of Susan Burnet''s idea of ruined lodging- house keepers? |
30855 | What do you mean by it?" |
30855 | What do you mean? |
30855 | What do you think? |
30855 | What do_ you_ know of the rights and wrongs of business? |
30855 | What does one have to do when one''s husband is dead? |
30855 | What does one marry a wife for? |
30855 | What else can you do? |
30855 | What else in honour was there but to be a wife up to the hilt?... |
30855 | What else was there to do but be patient? |
30855 | What girl''s going to feel at home in a strange place like that?" |
30855 | What had he decided so far? |
30855 | What had you thought?" |
30855 | What honest over- nurse was there for him or helper and guide and friend for them, if she withdrew? |
30855 | What is to become of them? |
30855 | What might n''t he do next? |
30855 | What might she not presently be? |
30855 | What might she not presently do? |
30855 | What more was to be said or thought about it? |
30855 | What ought to be the marriageable age in a civilized community? |
30855 | What possible divorce law could the wit of man devise that would release a desired woman from that-- grip? |
30855 | What should she do to- morrow? |
30855 | What the deuce do you think you''ve been getting up to?" |
30855 | What was it? |
30855 | What was it? |
30855 | What was she thinking of? |
30855 | What was she, what did she know of the world into which she wanted to rush? |
30855 | What was the matter with him? |
30855 | What was there in Byzantium to parallel with the electric light, the electric tram, wireless telegraphy, aseptic surgery? |
30855 | What would he do to- morrow? |
30855 | What''s autonomy? |
30855 | What''s been putting ideers into your head? |
30855 | What''s life or anything but that? |
30855 | What''s my business got to do with you?" |
30855 | What''s the matter with you, Elly? |
30855 | What''s this other thing here? |
30855 | Where could they go if they struck? |
30855 | Where else could I be? |
30855 | Where else_ could_ I be?" |
30855 | Where had she got to? |
30855 | Where the devil----?" |
30855 | Where''s she gone? |
30855 | Where?" |
30855 | Who was she to turn upon her appointed life and declare it was n''t good enough? |
30855 | Why had she come back again? |
30855 | Why had she let it happen? |
30855 | Why had she not done as much years ago? |
30855 | Why not? |
30855 | Why not?" |
30855 | Why should I escape? |
30855 | Why should I expect to discover beauty and think that it wo n''t be snatched away from me? |
30855 | Why should n''t he? |
30855 | Why should n''t some of us this very afternoon----?" |
30855 | Why should she want to go away from her husband, go meeting other people, go gadding about? |
30855 | Why should you want to go out after things? |
30855 | Why, after all, should n''t she take life as she found it, that is to say, as Sir Isaac was prepared to give it to her? |
30855 | Within her pretty head, her mind rushed to and fro saying"Brumley? |
30855 | Would Mr. Brumley give her that? |
30855 | Would he have to be embalmed? |
30855 | Would he never be human and passionate and sincere? |
30855 | Would he speak to her at breakfast or should she speak first to him?... |
30855 | Would he try to watch them all? |
30855 | Yet what other wall in all the world was there for Lady Harman to set her back against? |
30855 | You follow all this, Lady Harman?" |
30855 | You said something?" |
30855 | You''re going to all these places-- how? |
30855 | You''re sure, Mr. Brumley, I''m not invading your time?" |
30855 | _ I!_ How can you dare? |
30855 | _ That''s_ a curious side development, is n''t it?" |
30855 | _ That_--that which you spoke of; what has it to do with me?" |
30855 | are you wise? |
30855 | asked Mr. Brumley,"and how?" |
30855 | he blundered,"you aren''t-- you are n''t getting somehow-- not fond of me?" |
30855 | he cried,"what have I done? |
30855 | he said,"is n''t it?"... |
30855 | in clear commanding tones whenever you suppose her to be within earshot? |
30855 | my lady?" |
30855 | or"What ails Portsmouth?" |
30855 | she asked,--"_the_ George Brumley?" |
30855 | she said,"what do you_ mean_? |
30855 | she said,"you do n''t mean you''ve run away?" |
30855 | there is n''t something below all this? |
30855 | what words are there for"taken worse"? |
15788 | Youmeaning, for instance... what authorities in the Church? |
15788 | A priesthood of women too? |
15788 | After all he''s not there in the room, is he? |
15788 | After six years of office, who would n''t? |
15788 | All I ask of myself is... can I pay Fate on demand? |
15788 | Am I? |
15788 | And Trebell...[_ He speaks through his teeth._]... do you think your accession to power in the party is popular at the best? |
15788 | And am I to conclude that you do n''t want Charles to change his mind? |
15788 | And are you the power behind your brother, Miss Trebell? |
15788 | And been suspected of the malpractice myself if he''d found it out? |
15788 | And do they still think it worth while to administer an oath to your witnesses? |
15788 | And if I do n''t fight... it''d be no fun for you, I suppose? |
15788 | And is that a reproach or a compliment? |
15788 | And that speech at Leeds was the crowning move I suppose; just asking the Nonconformists to bring things to a head? |
15788 | And then what we must do is to give the children power over their teachers? |
15788 | And then? |
15788 | And they do n''t? |
15788 | And think now... whatever love there may be between us has neither hatred nor jealousy in it, has it, Henry? |
15788 | And was n''t your bill going to be such a good piece of work? |
15788 | And what exactly do you mean by that? |
15788 | And what has become of your ideal? |
15788 | And what would be left of me at all I should like to know? |
15788 | And what''s all this nonsense about going to the country again next year? |
15788 | And you took all the adventures as seriously as the Don did? |
15788 | And... oh, was n''t I right?... |
15788 | Anyone coming? |
15788 | Are n''t they coming to dinner? |
15788 | Are there to be facilities for_ any_ of the teachers giving dogmatic instruction? |
15788 | Are we so incompetent? |
15788 | Are you busy, Henry? |
15788 | Are you doctoring him for once? |
15788 | Are you in for perjury, too? |
15788 | Are you in trouble? |
15788 | Are you joking? |
15788 | Are you serious? |
15788 | As well here as by moonlight? |
15788 | Because of...? |
15788 | Been here long? |
15788 | Billiards, Lucy? |
15788 | Bit of a charlatan, do n''t you think? |
15788 | But are we never to be happy and irresponsible... never for a moment? |
15788 | But do both of you consider how valuable, how vital Trebell is to us just at this moment? |
15788 | But how long do you think the spirit stays near the body... how long? |
15788 | But marriage is a very general and complete sort of partnership, is n''t it? |
15788 | But since Mrs. O''Connell is dead what is the excuse for a scandal? |
15788 | But supposing Mallaby and the Nonconformists had n''t been able to force the Liberals''hand? |
15788 | But tell me this... what education besides marriage does a woman get? |
15788 | But what did Nature care for that? |
15788 | But what has been the matter? |
15788 | But what makes you so sure? |
15788 | But you saw him, Farrant... and he gave you his opinion, did n''t he? |
15788 | But you would admit, would n''t you, that we can only deal with temporal things? |
15788 | But, again... have I been wrong to shrink from personal relations with Mr. Trebell? |
15788 | Ca n''t you open your heart like a child again? |
15788 | Ca n''t you see any wrinkles? |
15788 | Can I do nothing? |
15788 | Can I see him? |
15788 | Can nothing further be done? |
15788 | Can one impose a clever idea upon men and women? |
15788 | Can she? |
15788 | Can you accept thoroughly now the secular solution for all Primary Schools? |
15788 | Can you forecast the opinion you will have of it six months hence? |
15788 | Can you understand that? |
15788 | Can you? |
15788 | Can you? |
15788 | Can your cousins and aunts make it so awkward for you, Horsham? |
15788 | Cantelupe... what does perjury to that extent mean to a Roman Catholic? |
15788 | Could n''t you have kept the true state of the case from Sir Fielding? |
15788 | Could we not go and stay there only for a few days? |
15788 | D''you know her husband? |
15788 | D''you know why really I went back on the Liberals over this question? |
15788 | D''you think I have n''t tried? |
15788 | D''you think I--? |
15788 | D''you think life is a bit like them? |
15788 | Dead because she was afraid to bear your child, is n''t she? |
15788 | Demonstrating something with a... what''s that thing? |
15788 | Did her husband arrive in time? |
15788 | Did n''t Lord Charles want you to send the boys there till they were ready for Harrow? |
15788 | Did n''t you say she came to you first of all? |
15788 | Did she mind much? |
15788 | Did you expect Mr. Blackborough to get on well with Henry? |
15788 | Did you expect Percival''s objection to the finance of the scheme? |
15788 | Did you have a good holiday? |
15788 | Did you hear Lord Horsham at dinner on the lack of dignity in an irreligious state? |
15788 | Did you notice the light in my window as you came in? |
15788 | Do n''t I look a wreck? |
15788 | Do n''t you leave them to Mr. Kent? |
15788 | Do n''t you like her, Lady Davenport? |
15788 | Do n''t you see it''s only now that you''ve become a person of some importance to the world... and why? |
15788 | Do n''t you think an aristocracy of brains is the best aristocracy, Miss Trebell? |
15788 | Do n''t you think that is only sarcasm, Mr. O''Connell? |
15788 | Do n''t you think you''d better go and finish dressing? |
15788 | Do n''t you think, Cyril, it would be wiser to prevent your man coming into the room at all while we''re discussing this? |
15788 | Do people know? |
15788 | Do they place any time- limit to the effect of a mortal sin? |
15788 | Do you all mean to out- face the British Lion with me after to- morrow... dare to be Daniels? |
15788 | Do you expect me to go through with this? |
15788 | Do you feel justified in making public use of it? |
15788 | Do you find me so? |
15788 | Do you hear Aunt Mary wants to sell the Burford Holbein? |
15788 | Do you know how empty I feel of all virtue at this moment? |
15788 | Do you never wonder if it is n''t steering you? |
15788 | Do you really think everyone has gone to bed? |
15788 | Do you remember? |
15788 | Do you think I did n''t know that I was heartless and that she was socially in the wrong? |
15788 | Do you think he''d develop into anything else... but for me? |
15788 | Do you think it right, Julia, to finish with that after an hour''s Bach? |
15788 | Do you think it wise to leave agnostic science at the side of the plate? |
15788 | Do you think my daughter has been wasting her time and her tact? |
15788 | Do you think the things you like to have taught in schools are any use to one when one comes to deal with you? |
15788 | Do you think the world is grown up enough to do without dogma? |
15788 | Do you think they do n''t take their revenge sooner or later? |
15788 | Do you think they''ve met...? |
15788 | Do you want the chances? |
15788 | Do you want the curtains drawn back? |
15788 | Do you? |
15788 | Does he definitely disagree? |
15788 | Does he drink too? |
15788 | Does he like leading his party? |
15788 | Does he think so now?... |
15788 | Does it matter so much to you that I should have wished to be the father of your child? |
15788 | Does it work? |
15788 | Does my unworthiness then... if you like to call it so... make you unworthy now? |
15788 | Does n''t Blackborough mean to turn up at all? |
15788 | Does yours, Charles? |
15788 | Eh... O''Connell? |
15788 | Eh? |
15788 | Evans? |
15788 | Evans? |
15788 | FRANCES TREBELL... Cantelupe? |
15788 | Fanny... how fond are you of Amy O''Connell? |
15788 | Fanny... will it leave you so very lonely? |
15788 | Farrant, you do n''t seriously think that... outside his undoubted capabilities... Trebell is an acquisition to the party? |
15788 | Forward to what? |
15788 | Four years? |
15788 | From what motives have we thrown Trebell over? |
15788 | Full of dust? |
15788 | Had I better give you a sleeping draught? |
15788 | Had I better go round myself and see him? |
15788 | Had I the right to choose or had I not? |
15788 | Had Trebell any foreknowledge of what she did and the risk she was running and could he have stopped it? |
15788 | Has she told you so? |
15788 | Have I anything else in the world? |
15788 | Have I found you in this the beginnings of a new one? |
15788 | Have I stolen from Robespierre too? |
15788 | Have n''t we always preferred it to the undenominational? |
15788 | Have you anything better to do? |
15788 | Have you made up your mind to that? |
15788 | Have you not? |
15788 | He goes quickly as if it were an answer to his anxiety._"Yes?" |
15788 | He should have enquired into my character first, should n''t he, Cantelupe? |
15788 | He''s Roman Catholic, is n''t he? |
15788 | He''s very fond of me, if that''s what you mean? |
15788 | Henry, have you at last managed to overwork yourself? |
15788 | How are you, Cantelupe? |
15788 | How are you, Dr. Wedgecroft? |
15788 | How are you, Mrs. O''Connell? |
15788 | How are you? |
15788 | How can a man understand? |
15788 | How d''you do, Doctor? |
15788 | How d''you do? |
15788 | How do you do, Miss Trebell? |
15788 | How do you do? |
15788 | How do you know you''ve the power of recovery? |
15788 | How does he stomach me in prospect as a colleague, so far? |
15788 | How else could I tell Horsham that my work matters? |
15788 | How else? |
15788 | How ill is he? |
15788 | How long have I before Lord Charles--? |
15788 | How long were we together that night? |
15788 | How should I know? |
15788 | How was Trebell''s guilt discovered? |
15788 | How? |
15788 | Hullo... waiting? |
15788 | I could n''t have stopped it, could I? |
15788 | I did... of that affair of his with Mrs. Parkington... years ago? |
15788 | I do deserve them, do n''t I? |
15788 | I do n''t think I have been the cause of your dropping Trebell, have I? |
15788 | I have n''t been long there and back, have I? |
15788 | I have n''t been much of an interruption now, have I? |
15788 | I know that if your God did n''t make use of men, sins and all... what would ever be done in the world? |
15788 | I mean, till this election is over Trebell counts still as one of them, does n''t he, Miss Trebell? |
15788 | I mean... still nothing need come out? |
15788 | I presume Lord Charles thinks it''ll hand the Church over to him and his... dare I say''Sect''? |
15788 | I suddenly came over Chopinesque, Fanny;... what''s your objection? |
15788 | I wonder? |
15788 | If I accept your tests will you accept mine? |
15788 | If neither you-- nor Percival-- nor perhaps others will work with him... what am I to do? |
15788 | If this affair were twenty years old would you do as you are doing? |
15788 | If you do n''t grudge your own strength, why should you be tender of other people''s? |
15788 | If you had been in her place? |
15788 | Is he going to die? |
15788 | Is it the prospect of Disestablishment suddenly makes him so accommodating? |
15788 | Is it with your husband? |
15788 | Is it worth while? |
15788 | Is it? |
15788 | Is it? |
15788 | Is it? |
15788 | Is n''t Death divorce enough for her? |
15788 | Is that Tory cynicism or feminine? |
15788 | Is that a complaint? |
15788 | Is that difficult? |
15788 | Is that how you''re thinking of it? |
15788 | Is that sufficient? |
15788 | Is that true, Julia? |
15788 | Is the curse of barrenness to be nothing to a man? |
15788 | Is there any record of a speech that ever did? |
15788 | Is this a matter for intellectual jugglery? |
15788 | Is this what you call being in love? |
15788 | It''s not altogether a pleasant thing, is it... the selfishness of the hard worked man? |
15788 | Jude''s? |
15788 | Julia, Julia... is n''t it unbelievable? |
15788 | Just come? |
15788 | Let me see... do you know my cousin Charles Cantelupe? |
15788 | Mamma, have you ever discussed so- called anti- Christian science with Lord Charles? |
15788 | Mamma... how many people, do you think, believe that Cyril''s_ grande passion_ for me takes that form? |
15788 | May I ask, Cyril, why are we concerning ourselves with this wickedness at all? |
15788 | Mrs. O''Connell gone? |
15788 | My dear Horsham, what had it to do with our request to O''Connell? |
15788 | My discovery must be what to do with the men who think more of the state than their Church... the majority of parsons, do n''t you think? |
15788 | Need there be more suffering and reproaches? |
15788 | Never mind... you''re here now to hand me half the responsibility, are n''t you? |
15788 | No Chopin? |
15788 | No doubt you use the words Love and Hatred; but do you know that love and hatred for principles or persons should come from beyond a man? |
15788 | No matter what they teach? |
15788 | No one knows about you and poor Amy? |
15788 | Not founded with church money? |
15788 | Now shall we finish the conversation in prose? |
15788 | Now, what made your husband marry you? |
15788 | O''Connell? |
15788 | O''Connell? |
15788 | Of course, I''ve enough money to live on... so I could take up some woman''s profession... What are you smiling at? |
15788 | Oh, about dinner? |
15788 | Oh, are you to be here? |
15788 | Oh, my dear Horsham, ca n''t you see that if O''Connell had blabbed to- morrow it really would have been a blessing in disguise? |
15788 | Oh, my dear... what is wrong? |
15788 | Oh, what about Wedgecroft? |
15788 | Oh... am I in your way...? |
15788 | Oh... do n''t you think it was cruel of him? |
15788 | Oh... how do you do? |
15788 | Oh... you can do without compliments, ca n''t you? |
15788 | On what grounds? |
15788 | Or will they make a Tory of you? |
15788 | Praise is the greatest of luxuries, is n''t it, Henry? |
15788 | Providence limited... eh? |
15788 | Putting Appropriation, the Buildings and the Representation question on one side for the moment? |
15788 | Shall I bring him up here? |
15788 | Shall I carry you? |
15788 | Shall I drop you at Grosvenor Square? |
15788 | Shall I offer to give evidence at the inquest this morning? |
15788 | Shall you come, Aunt Julia? |
15788 | She must work through men, must n''t she? |
15788 | Should I have grown a beard and travelled abroad and after ten years timidly tried to climb my way back into politics? |
15788 | So I have provided just a first step, have I? |
15788 | So Justin lives at Linaskea alone? |
15788 | So far as you''ve made up your minds? |
15788 | So late? |
15788 | So late? |
15788 | So you need not have let them into the secret? |
15788 | Statutes? |
15788 | Suppose they convert me? |
15788 | Switch off some light, will you? |
15788 | Take Amy O''Connell that lace thing, will you, Lucy? |
15788 | That night we were together... it was for a moment different to everything that has ever been in your life before, was n''t it? |
15788 | That rather begs the question of your very existence, does n''t it? |
15788 | That seems simple enough, does n''t it? |
15788 | That''s always such a difficult sort of point to determine, is n''t it? |
15788 | That''s dead and buried now, is n''t it? |
15788 | That''s priggish, is n''t it? |
15788 | The Bill ca n''t be brought into the Lords... and who''s going to take Disestablishment through the Commons for us? |
15788 | The fear of life... do you think it was... which is the beginning of all evil? |
15788 | The little fool, the little fool... why did she kill my child? |
15788 | The rest is just mutual attraction? |
15788 | The rule of them is the same for all, is it not... from the tramp and the labourer to the plutocrat in his car? |
15788 | Then comes the test... have we faith enough to go on... to go through with the unknown thing? |
15788 | Then what did he say? |
15788 | Then why do you want to kiss me? |
15788 | Then why should she value your gift? |
15788 | Then you''d leave us, Trebell? |
15788 | There''d be others? |
15788 | There''s nobody that need be suspecting, is there? |
15788 | They wo n''t have to be answered now... will they? |
15788 | This looks like popularity and the great heart of the people, does n''t it? |
15788 | To get what I want, without paying more than it''s worth to me....? |
15788 | To the other inquest? |
15788 | To- night? |
15788 | Trebell, what did you want to come here for? |
15788 | Under public control? |
15788 | Walter? |
15788 | Want me to...? |
15788 | Was he told of the whole business? |
15788 | Was that before Lord Horsham wrote to you? |
15788 | Was that wrong... ought n''t I to have touched it? |
15788 | Was the end very sudden? |
15788 | We can stop thinking of this dead woman, ca n''t we? |
15788 | We''re a common sense couple, are n''t we? |
15788 | Wedgecroft, what is the utmost O''Connell will be called upon to do for us... for Trebell? |
15788 | Well now... will you explain to me this project for endowing Education with your surplus? |
15788 | Well, Mamma, can we do without Mr. Trebell? |
15788 | Well, what does that care as long as scandal''s its own copyright? |
15788 | Well, what''s to become of my bill? |
15788 | Well... he did n''t? |
15788 | Well... in here? |
15788 | Well... we could n''t carry a bill you disapproved of, could we? |
15788 | Well? |
15788 | Were n''t we doing our best? |
15788 | What about a messenger? |
15788 | What age are you now... forty- six... forty- seven? |
15788 | What are men to do when this is how women use the freedom we have given them? |
15788 | What are you writing? |
15788 | What are yours? |
15788 | What did it matter what I thought her? |
15788 | What do you do... just slide the bolt? |
15788 | What do you mean to do? |
15788 | What do you say to that? |
15788 | What do you start thinking of once the shock''s over? |
15788 | What do you think Trebell will do now? |
15788 | What does he propose? |
15788 | What does it matter? |
15788 | What does she say? |
15788 | What else can it be? |
15788 | What fool? |
15788 | What had Percival to say on the subject, Farrant? |
15788 | What has all that to do with it? |
15788 | What has it to do with you anyhow? |
15788 | What have I to do at all with Mr. Trebell as a man? |
15788 | What have you been working at? |
15788 | What have you to say about that? |
15788 | What is his point? |
15788 | What is it you''re worried about... if a mere sister may ask? |
15788 | What is it, Simpson? |
15788 | What is it? |
15788 | What is it? |
15788 | What is more crushingly finite than knowledge? |
15788 | What is to be said to Mr. O''Connell when he comes? |
15788 | What made them bring in Resolutions? |
15788 | What made you take up with me at all? |
15788 | What time did you ask him to come, Horsham? |
15788 | What time did you say, Wedgecroft? |
15788 | What will you have? |
15788 | What would you do with it? |
15788 | What''ll the Nonconformists say? |
15788 | What''s Now- a- days? |
15788 | What''s a woman to do? |
15788 | What''s beneath trust deeds and last wills and testaments, and even acts of Parliament and official creeds? |
15788 | What''s the test of godliness, but your power to receive the new idea in whatever form it comes and give it life? |
15788 | What''s this, Kent, about Trebell''s making you his secretary? |
15788 | What''s your brother working at? |
15788 | When did you last use that nursery name? |
15788 | When will you, then? |
15788 | When''ll he be up and about? |
15788 | Who ever proposed to insist on pillorying every case of spasmodic adultery? |
15788 | Who is going to put out a finger to make it less awkward for Horsham to stick to you if there''s a chance of your going under? |
15788 | Why ca n''t women take love- affairs so lightly? |
15788 | Why ca n''t you make up your mind? |
15788 | Why did you never believe in any woman? |
15788 | Why do n''t you tell me? |
15788 | Why has Lord Horsham thrown you over then... or has n''t that anything to do with it? |
15788 | Why have you been talking to me as if I were someone else? |
15788 | Why is it always the highest who fall? |
15788 | Why not turn all those theology mongers into doctors or schoolmasters? |
15788 | Why not? |
15788 | Why offensive? |
15788 | Why should I flinch? |
15788 | Why should they question her on such a point if O''Connell says nothing? |
15788 | Why should you cry out at a proof now and then of what''s always in the hearts of most of us? |
15788 | Why, is Walter a fool? |
15788 | Why... it is n''t known that he will definitely ask me to join? |
15788 | Why? |
15788 | Will the afternoon do? |
15788 | Will they...? |
15788 | Will you allow me that it is statecraft to make a profession profitable? |
15788 | Will you decide to- night? |
15788 | Will you dictate? |
15788 | Will you please to make allowance, Lord Charles, for a mediaeval scholar''s contempt of modern government? |
15788 | Will you take charge of the bill, Blackborough? |
15788 | Will you wear my skirt? |
15788 | Wo n''t he sell or wo n''t they purchase? |
15788 | Wo n''t it comfort you to think of drunkenness as a beautiful thing? |
15788 | Wo n''t it? |
15788 | Wo n''t you go in? |
15788 | Wo n''t you tell me whom to go to? |
15788 | Would they have thought of that and stopped whispering about the scandal? |
15788 | Yes, Charles? |
15788 | Yes... our minds have been much relieved within the last half hour, have n''t they? |
15788 | Yes... the scandal would smash you, would n''t it? |
15788 | Yes... what exactly do you propose we shall say to O''Connell, Wedgecroft? |
15788 | Yes? |
15788 | You are forming it to carry disestablishment, are you not, Cyril? |
15788 | You did n''t...? |
15788 | You have n''t very nice ideas, have you? |
15788 | You have sent for me, Lord Horsham? |
15788 | You know how this misery began? |
15788 | You make little treaties with Truth and with Beauty, and what can disturb you? |
15788 | You mean if they''d had to throw you over? |
15788 | You realise that, do n''t you? |
15788 | You think I''ve a mind to put an end to that same? |
15788 | You think Life''s an important thing, do n''t you? |
15788 | You think so? |
15788 | You value your work more than anything else in the world? |
15788 | You''d have me first your plaything and then Nature''s, would you? |
15788 | You''d marry me, would n''t you? |
15788 | You''ll dine at home? |
15788 | You''ll stand by and do what you can, wo n''t you? |
15788 | You''ll tell me what to do, wo n''t you? |
15788 | You''re in town, are n''t you, Farrant? |
15788 | You''re not ill... interviewing a doctor? |
15788 | Your choices in life have made you what you want to be, have n''t they? |
15788 | Your neuralgia better? |
15788 | Your own life is sufficient unto itself, is n''t it? |
15788 | Your trouble is nothing to do with Amy O''Connell, is it? |
15788 | [_ A little impatient._] What''s the good of that? |
15788 | [_ A little malicious._] Is there any particular reason he should treat her well? |
15788 | [_ A little subtly._] Still... now you and Horsham are cousins, are n''t you? |
15788 | [_ Affected; not quite convinced._] Do you think you can buy a tradition and transmute it? |
15788 | [_ After a little scrutiny of her- face._] Well, if marriage is only the means to an end... what''s the end? |
15788 | [_ Alert and cautious._] You want to endow colleges? |
15788 | [_ All show of resistance gone._] Did he? |
15788 | [_ Almost ill- temperedly._] How could he have stopped it? |
15788 | [_ Almost provokingly._] What about him? |
15788 | [_ Almost reprovingly._] No question of politics? |
15788 | [_ Angry, remorseful, rebellious._] When will men learn to know one woman from another? |
15788 | [_ As he bows over her hand._] And what has Education to do with it? |
15788 | [_ As if half his life depended on her answer._] Is that true? |
15788 | [_ Asking from real interest in her._] Was yours a deliberate choice and do you never regret it? |
15788 | [_ At the telephone._] Yes, bring him up, of course... is n''t Mr. Kent there? |
15788 | [_ Beckoning with her eyes._] What''s this, Mr. Trebell? |
15788 | [_ Brought to his mundane self_] Well... are you sure? |
15788 | [_ Clicking off all but his reading lamp._] So? |
15788 | [_ Coming nearer without haste or excitement._] Well? |
15788 | [_ Crying out._] Why... why did no woman teach you to be gentle? |
15788 | [_ Curiously._] Are you afraid of death? |
15788 | [_ Cutting her short, bitingly._] Has a time ever come to you when it was easier to die than to go on living? |
15788 | [_ Dealing out justice._] I find her quite charming to look at and talk to... but why should n''t Justin O''Connell live in Ireland for all that? |
15788 | [_ Dealing with the impertinence in her own fashion._] What would make you marry me? |
15788 | [_ Dismissing that subject._] Well... how''s Percival? |
15788 | [_ Disregardful._] And what is it makes my pressing attentions endurable... if one may ask? |
15788 | [_ Feeling that he must take part._] For instance? |
15788 | [_ Flashing at him, revengefully._] Why? |
15788 | [_ Forbiddingly commonplace._] What''s that letter? |
15788 | [_ Forcing the issue._] What meaning do you attach to it? |
15788 | [_ Forlornly sticking to his point._] What has all this to do with Trebell? |
15788 | [_ Gentle and ironic._] Have you ever, for one moment, thought in that sense of anyone else? |
15788 | [_ Glowing to white heat._] Is this a time to count the consequences to ourselves? |
15788 | [_ Going to the window as she buttons her gloves._] Were you on deck early this morning? |
15788 | [_ Gravely._] What does your father say? |
15788 | [_ Grimacing sweetly, her eyes only half lifted._] Does he? |
15788 | [_ Hardly._] May I ask you to interfere on my behalf no further? |
15788 | [_ He corrects himself smiling._] I mean, my dear Blackborough, why not stick to the Colonies? |
15788 | [_ He draws her from the window; then does not let her go._] May I kiss you again? |
15788 | [_ Her tone expressing quite wonderfully her sentiments towards the owner._] Do n''t you think she''d sooner catch cold? |
15788 | [_ His eyes shift beyond her; beyond the room._] What is it in your thoughts and actions which makes them bear fruit? |
15788 | [_ His face set in thought._] Where have you been since we met? |
15788 | [_ His thoughts shifting their plane._] Was she so very mad? |
15788 | [_ Humouring him._] Ought we to burn the house down? |
15788 | [_ Imploring comfort._] But should we have held together through Trebell''s bill? |
15788 | [_ In sudden agony._] D''you think I want it to be true? |
15788 | [_ Including_ HORSHAM_ now in his appeal._] Does anyone think he knows me now to be a worse man... less fit, less able... than he did a week ago? |
15788 | [_ Ironically._] Has he been pleased with the prospect? |
15788 | [_ Irritably._] Why are you picking me to pieces? |
15788 | [_ Kindly._] And you''re sure of yourself, are n''t you? |
15788 | [_ Kindly._] Why do you pretend to be callous? |
15788 | [_ Leaving the fellow to his subtleties._] Well, what about the maid? |
15788 | [_ Letting it be a fairy tale._] Is your mother the Wide World nothing to you? |
15788 | [_ Lifting the subject off its feet._] Not if I come out of the cabinet and preach revolution? |
15788 | [_ Listlessly._] Does it matter why? |
15788 | [_ Looking at_ FRANCES_ a little curiously._] Did n''t your instinct lead you to marry... or did you fight against it? |
15788 | [_ Losing her patience, childishly._] What do you mean by the World? |
15788 | [_ Measuring_ TREBELL_ with his eyes._] And by which shall I help you to a solution... telling lies or the truth to- morrow? |
15788 | [_ Not to be put down._] What is the prose for God? |
15788 | [_ Not too shocked to be curious._] Are there really? |
15788 | [_ Not without mischief._] And what was the effect on the pupils? |
15788 | [_ Only half humorously._] But what else is one to do with them? |
15788 | [_ Proceeding with her cynicism._] Humanity achieves... what? |
15788 | [_ Protesting._] No more? |
15788 | [_ Pugnaciously._] D''you mean I''m just pretending not to attack him personally? |
15788 | [_ Quite inexorable._] Would n''t any other woman have served the purpose... and is it less of a purpose because we did n''t know we had it? |
15788 | [_ Readily._] Do n''t you think I''m taking it in a way... by marrying Walter? |
15788 | [_ Really puzzled._] What do you mean? |
15788 | [_ She comes in._] Is it very late? |
15788 | [_ She puts a square envelope at his hand._] Is a letter marked private from the Education Office political or personal? |
15788 | [_ She remembers the doctor._] Oh... have you been attending her? |
15788 | [_ Shrill even at a momentary desertion._] What do you mean? |
15788 | [_ So bored by these metaphysics._] Faith in what? |
15788 | [_ So pleasantly sceptical._] Do you think they''d have outlasted the second reading? |
15788 | [_ Soft and friendly._] How far are you actually pledged to him? |
15788 | [_ Sotto voce._] Why did you ever make it? |
15788 | [_ Startled._] Who else? |
15788 | [_ Stealthily._] Is it, Horsham? |
15788 | [_ Struck with the idea._] Well... why not? |
15788 | [_ Struggling... with herself_] Oh, why do you rouse me like this? |
15788 | [_ Suddenly a thought strikes him._] D''you think it was Horsham and his little committee persuaded O''Connell? |
15788 | [_ Suddenly with nervous caution._] Walter, you do n''t know, do you? |
15788 | [_ Taking another path._] Shall I tell you something I believe? |
15788 | [_ The little snub almost bewildering her._] Anything private? |
15788 | [_ Then he breaks away again into great bitterness._] No... what do they make of this woman''s death? |
15788 | [_ Then hysterically._] God can make you believe in Him when he likes, ca n''t he? |
15788 | [_ Then surveying his three glum companions, bursts out._] Well...? |
15788 | [_ Then, as for the second time she reaches the door._] Do n''t take away my razors, will you? |
15788 | [_ They both get up, cheered considerably._] You wo n''t forget this, will you? |
15788 | [_ Thinking of those moments._] Did I? |
15788 | [_ Throwing in the monosyllable with sharp youthful enquiry._] Why? |
15788 | [_ Turning back enlightened a little._] That''s more the trouble then than the Cabinet question? |
15788 | [_ Vigorously making his point._] Then what would be the conditions of your remaining? |
15788 | [_ Waking to_ BLACKBOROUGH''S_ line of action._] Why on earth should you leave us, Trebell? |
15788 | [_ Who has been listening, sharp- eyed._] Contrariwise, he would n''t have liked a Radical Bill though, would he? |
15788 | [_ With a half smile._] Have you a vein of romance for holiday time? |
15788 | [_ With a twist of his mouth._] Promised, has he? |
15788 | [_ With an effort._] Kent? |
15788 | [_ With an incredulous grin._] You''re not going back to extending old- age pensions after turning the unfortunate Liberals out on it, are you? |
15788 | [_ With answering bitterness._] When will all women care to be one thing rather than the other? |
15788 | [_ With charming insinuation._] And have you calculated, Blackborough, what may become of us if Trebell has the pull of being out of it? |
15788 | [_ With coquetry._] You''re not interested in my character? |
15788 | [_ With cynical humour._] Which I''m not to tell him either? |
15788 | [_ With full voice._] But in the creed I''ll lay down as unalterable there shall be neither Jew nor Greek.... What do you think of St. Paul, Gilbert? |
15788 | [_ With keenness._] Do you mean superhuman? |
15788 | [_ With no trace of self- consciousness._] Well... how are you, after this long time? |
15788 | [_ With reasoning in his tone._] Well... why not? |
15788 | [_ Working up his protest._] Why on earth not? |
15788 | [_ Yielding._] If I do... do n''t let me go mad, will you? |
15788 | _ He is gone,_ TREBELL_ battles with uneasiness and at last mutters._"Oh... why did n''t she wait?" |
15788 | and am I to write my prescriptions in English? |
15788 | whose has been the real offence against Society... hers or mine? |
28556 | Abandoned? |
28556 | And do you think there is any danger of your being turned out? |
28556 | And now would you like to see the jail? |
28556 | And you are not lonesome out here? |
28556 | But Attorney- General Vanetta gave an adverse opinion as to the legality of your appointment? |
28556 | Did you have all your property before marriage? |
28556 | Do you refuse it on legal grounds? |
28556 | Do you think prohibition prohibits? |
28556 | Do you think the majority of women want to vote? |
28556 | Has your wife helped you in any way to earn it? |
28556 | Have I not just brought about a reconciliation between Tammany and the rest of New York? |
28556 | How can we soonest convince the demons that we have rights which must be respected? |
28556 | How long have you been married? |
28556 | How many children have you had? |
28556 | I do not; but is that any reason why you should deprive the one who does? 28556 Is English spoken in Connecticut?" |
28556 | Is it cold in Russia? |
28556 | Is she the only wife you ever had? |
28556 | Mr. President,I exclaimed,"by what right do you refuse to recognize women when their names are called? |
28556 | On what grounds do you refuse? |
28556 | Well, Jo,said Mrs. Stewart,"what did you do?" |
28556 | Where is my shawl? 28556 Why should I,"he continued,"bring this charge? |
28556 | Will not the ballot be used rather by that class who would not use it wisely than by those who are most competent? |
28556 | *** Mr. GARLAND: I should like to ask the senator from California if the courts of the United States can not admit them upon their own motion anyhow? |
28556 | --and I would add with emphasis, Without an education, what is woman?" |
28556 | :"Can the legislature empower women to vote for presidential electors?" |
28556 | A correspondent describing what the voters had to encounter, said: Is the question asked, why have not more women voted? |
28556 | A gentleman said to me last week:"What is the use of your doing this? |
28556 | A. BRONSON ALCOTT wrote:*** Where women lead-- the best women-- is it unsafe for men to follow? |
28556 | Abandoned of whom? |
28556 | Above all, is it manly or just to be charging corrupt motives on nine- tenths of those who advocate the reform? |
28556 | Add to this, that the Good Physician should heal him of his''chronic invalidism''and then-- well what''s the use of dreaming? |
28556 | After all, by what are governments organized and maintained? |
28556 | Again, addressing his audience at St. Clement''s, he says:"You may marry a bad man, but what of that? |
28556 | All day long women met each other, and asked:"Are you going to the election to- morrow?" |
28556 | Among the hundreds of questions asked me by that committee were these:"Do you want a prohibitory plank in our State constitution?" |
28556 | And I think as we slowly sail up the bay on our vessel, Does that deadened soul respond to what lies before him? |
28556 | And having the best means for deciding this question, have they not the right to decide? |
28556 | And how is it if she remains on this until her continued residence upon it has enabled her husband to prove up? |
28556 | And how was this most successful experiment in equal rights received and treated by the press and the people out of the territory? |
28556 | And if it was illegal in women and deserving of punishment, why should men escape? |
28556 | And if so, is it not better for the women delegates to go home?" |
28556 | And if, forsooth, they had, would not each one of you have declared such act unconstitutional and unjust? |
28556 | And now perhaps some materially- minded person will ask,"What are you going to do about it? |
28556 | And now, friends, in view of the present status of our cause, have we not much to encourage us in our work? |
28556 | And the other person I want to speak of? |
28556 | And what is this family impediment which is thus set up as a female disability? |
28556 | And why not? |
28556 | And why not? |
28556 | And why should any one be displeased? |
28556 | And, says Charles Sumner,"What can be more universal than the rights of man?" |
28556 | Are men the only lawful members of this Alliance? |
28556 | Are not all the men protecting you?" |
28556 | Are not the political disabilities of sex as grievous as those of color? |
28556 | Are our women less capable than these? |
28556 | Are the rights of American citizens more sacred on the soil of Great Britain or France than on the soil of one of our own States? |
28556 | Are the rights of women in all the Southern States, whose slaves are now their rulers, less sacred than those of the men of Louisiana? |
28556 | Are they in your prayers? |
28556 | Are they not rather intelligence, virtue, truth and patriotism? |
28556 | Are you willing to stand a legal prosecution?" |
28556 | As to its justice, who shall deny it? |
28556 | At the house of one of the members a discussion was held on this subject:"Does the Private Character of the Actor Concern the Public?" |
28556 | Before that Committee on Revolutionary Claims why could not this most revolutionary of all claims receive immediate and ample attention? |
28556 | Breathes there a woman with soul so dead that she would bring forth slaves? |
28556 | But do we want such men? |
28556 | But let me ask why, then, a large class of men remained disfranchised after these States again took up local government? |
28556 | But there are some who would say:"Would you have woman enjoy all the political rights of men?" |
28556 | But what is love, tenderness, protection, even, unless rooted in justice? |
28556 | But where slept his"sworn duty"when he recorded his vote in the Senate against woman suffrage? |
28556 | But who will tell me they would not have gained them sooner, with less heart- breaking labor, if they had had the political franchise? |
28556 | But why peer into the future? |
28556 | But would Mr. Leatham guarantee that the 2,000,000 men he proposes to enfranchise shall be perfectly pure and moral men? |
28556 | By brute force alone? |
28556 | By what authority do the police call women"abandoned"and arrest them because they are patrolling any public park or square? |
28556 | By what principle of democracy do men assume to legislate for women? |
28556 | By what right do men declare themselves invested with power to legislate for women? |
28556 | By what right? |
28556 | C. G. Ames concluded the course, November 18, with"What Does it Mean?" |
28556 | Can a future legislature, by the passage of a law not liable to the objection, that it violates the obligation of contracts, take away those rights? |
28556 | Can our friends inform us what is our crime, that we are denied the right of representation? |
28556 | Can the legislature repeal or modify this mandate? |
28556 | Can the sex, ordinarily so quick to pronounce pre- judgments, divest itself of them sufficiently to enter the jury- box with unbiased minds? |
28556 | Can there be any possible danger in trusting those who have trusted us? |
28556 | Can they point to any mental or moral deficiency, to render justifiable our being denied political rights? |
28556 | Certainly they would not be guilty of deceiving, for are they not"all honorable men"? |
28556 | Could any woman withstand that? |
28556 | Could satire go farther? |
28556 | Could the absoluteness of this right be expressed in plainer or more energetic terms? |
28556 | Did his honorable friend ask him to admit that the question deserved the fullest consideration? |
28556 | Did not this woman also suffer? |
28556 | Did not this woman bear her portion of the martyrdom? |
28556 | Did you all pay your taxes and stay at home and refrain from voting because the Covenanters did not vote? |
28556 | Do they deserve the classification? |
28556 | Do they enter into your plans? |
28556 | Do they lie on your hearts? |
28556 | Do they not deserve a share of its glories also? |
28556 | Do you doubt that I would use the ballot in the interests of order, retrenchment, and reform? |
28556 | Do you not believe I feel the duties it demands of its citizens? |
28556 | Do you think such women would not change the laws of inheritance if they had the power? |
28556 | Do you think, gentlemen, said Mrs. Stewart, that such women as attend our conventions, and speak from our platform, could make so ludicrous a blunder? |
28556 | Does Senator Wadleigh know nothing of that woman''s"experience in politics"? |
28556 | Does a man earn a hundred thousand dollars and lie down and die, saying,"It is all my boys''"? |
28556 | Does any one pretend to say that men alone constitute races and peoples? |
28556 | Does it become us to lay additional burdens on those who are already overweighted?" |
28556 | Does it need a prophet to tell us where to begin this work? |
28556 | Does it not affect to control the legislature in the exercise of its powers? |
28556 | Does not the physical and intellectual condition of the women of a nation decide the capacity and power of its men? |
28556 | Does not this suggest reasons why woman should wish to represent herself? |
28556 | Does our constitution provide any remedy whatever? |
28556 | Does she then share in its benefits? |
28556 | Does that mean the ballot_ for men only_ or the ballot_ for the people_, men and women too? |
28556 | Does this prove that Dr. Lord and every other Democrat in the State of Vermont is brutal and ignorant and disloyal? |
28556 | Dr. See-- May we have a season of prayer, sir? |
28556 | Finding ourselves quite in accord, I said,"how did you get those ideas in Georgia?" |
28556 | For what would not the patient, energetic mind of woman accomplish, when once resolved? |
28556 | Freedom to men and women alike is but a question of time-- is America now equal to the great occasion? |
28556 | Gentlemen, what does it all amount to? |
28556 | Graceful return for her devotion, was n''t it? |
28556 | H. R. The question is often asked, why are women so much more desirous than men to see their children educated? |
28556 | Had he ever read:"I will be master of what is my own; She is my goods, my chattels-- My horse, my ox, my ass, my anything"? |
28556 | Has her development expanded to that degree where her legislators can say in very truth, as of the colored man,"Let the oppressed go free"? |
28556 | Have they not equal right with bad men, to self- government? |
28556 | Have you the election law by you?" |
28556 | How can a mother give birth to a noble soul while herself a slave? |
28556 | How can justice be expected from those who instinctively combine to preserve their privilege to abuse women? |
28556 | How can men appreciate their injury? |
28556 | How can men justly judge a woman? |
28556 | How can she impart a free spirit when her own is servile? |
28556 | How can that form of government be called republican in which one- half the people are forever deprived of all participation in its affairs? |
28556 | How can you expect them to develop into patriotic American statesmen? |
28556 | How has woman''s work as county superintendent impressed other educators? |
28556 | How shall they estimate the part we bear in the unbroken line of the nation''s progress? |
28556 | How so? |
28556 | How was this to be accomplished? |
28556 | I ask you, therefore, for the sake of your own question, do you think it wise to pick my apples now? |
28556 | I would add,"What can be more universal than the rights of woman?" |
28556 | If any woman shall ask it, who shall deny it because another woman does not ask it? |
28556 | If he had, we usually troubled him no further; if he had not, we asked,"Can you vote for woman suffrage?" |
28556 | If it is not a crime to be a woman, why are women subjected to unequal payment with men for the same service? |
28556 | If one woman shall ask for a voice in the regulation of society of which she is at least one- half, who shall say her nay? |
28556 | If so, why not do it at once? |
28556 | If the United States has no voters of its own creation in the States, what are these men? |
28556 | If there is nothing new to be said in favor of suffrage for women, is there anything new to be urged against it? |
28556 | If they are more efficient as teachers is it not fair to presume that they would excel as committees? |
28556 | If they are really eligible, then why not have them selected and appointed? |
28556 | If they can be elected to that office, is it proper to say they shall have no voice in the elections? |
28556 | If woman asks for the ballot shall man deny it? |
28556 | If woman may fitly determine this question, for what question of public policy is she unfit? |
28556 | If you bring legislation here, what will you bring? |
28556 | In 1851 an order was introduced asking"whether any legislation was necessary concerning the wills of married women?" |
28556 | In asking for a voice in the government under which we live, have we been pursuing a shadow for forty years? |
28556 | In case it should become necessary, may I rely on your valuable services? |
28556 | In closing, I have only to ask, is there no man here present who appreciates the emergencies of this hour? |
28556 | In closing, he said:"But what think you, sisters, of the dangers that threaten the republic? |
28556 | In fact, unless you show that the exercise of your alleged right will be useful, can you logically conclude that you have any? |
28556 | In replying, read between the lines of my tedious story and bear in mind the words of Voltaire:"Who would dare change a law that time has consecrated? |
28556 | In seeking political power, are we abdicating that social throne where they tell us our influence is unbounded? |
28556 | In the course of their conversation Professor Dwight said;"Do you think girls know enough to study law?" |
28556 | In the first place-- accepting that prophecy as true-- why will women not marry? |
28556 | In thus affirming Mrs. McFarland''s right to marry Mr. Richardson, has the Supreme Court of the United States sanctioned free- love? |
28556 | In view of the terrible corruption of our politics, people ask, can we maintain universal suffrage? |
28556 | In view of these facts, does it not appear that if there is any one distinctively feminine characteristic, it is the mother- instinct for government? |
28556 | In_ The Revolution_ of March 26, 1868, we find the following: It is often asked, would you make women police officers? |
28556 | Is it a matter of regret to us that they should have these aspirations? |
28556 | Is it at all more indelicate for a woman to go to the polls, than it is for her to go to the court- house and pay her taxes? |
28556 | Is it not time that this aristocracy of sex should be overthrown? |
28556 | Is it possible that the editor regards such a relation of protest and disgust as consistent with the unity of Christian marriage? |
28556 | Is not liberty as sweet to her as to him? |
28556 | Is not the same principle involved in both cases? |
28556 | Is she then half owner of the land? |
28556 | Is the Republican party therefore"low company"? |
28556 | Is the ballot more precious than the soul of your child? |
28556 | Is the meaning this, that all citizens shall have the right to vote, or simply that citizenship shall be the basis of suffrage? |
28556 | Is the oppression to last forever? |
28556 | Is there any remedy? |
28556 | Is there no one among you who will rise on the floor of congress as the champion of this unrepresented half of the people of the United States? |
28556 | Is this all woman is to do? |
28556 | Is to be a wife and mother, and nothing else, the sole end and aim of woman? |
28556 | It has recently been asked in congressional debates,"What is the grand idea of the centennial?" |
28556 | It is a pertinent question now, shall all other contradictory principles be retained in the constitution until they, too, are expounded by civil war? |
28556 | It was impossible, he was out, and what could they do? |
28556 | Just here, in imagination, is heard the question,"How much help could we expect from women on financial questions?" |
28556 | MARY A. STEWART of Delaware said: The negroes are a race inferior, you must admit, to your daughters, and yet that race has the ballot, and why? |
28556 | May I ask you to bring to that labor as fair a spirit, as unprejudiced an outlook, as just a decision as he would have done? |
28556 | May this not be one reason why the Swedish legislature has been so liberal toward women? |
28556 | Men of Melrose, Concord and Malden, why persecute us? |
28556 | Miss SMITH said:_ Gentlemen of the Committee_--This is the first time in my life that I have trod these halls, and what has brought me here? |
28556 | More than that, as I said before, if there is any tribunal that could give undivided time and dignified attention, is it not this committee? |
28556 | Mr. BAYARD: Is it in order for me to move the reference of the subject to the Committee on the Judiciary? |
28556 | Mr. HARRIS: Did not the senator from Missouri[ Mr. Vest] offer an amendment? |
28556 | Mr. HOAR: Will the senator allow me to interrupt him for a moment? |
28556 | Mr. INGALLS: What is the regular order? |
28556 | Mr. JONES of Florida: I ask for information how long the morning hour is to extend? |
28556 | Mr. MCMILLIN: Then you have no opinion beyond his decision? |
28556 | Mr. MCMILLIN: Will the gentleman permit me to ask him a question? |
28556 | Mr. MCMILLIN: Would you not, as a parliamentarian, concede that this does change the existing rules of the House? |
28556 | Mr. SPRINGER: Can you have a committee without a rule of the House providing for it? |
28556 | Mr. SPRINGER: Does the Chair hold that the making of a new rule is not a change of the existing rules? |
28556 | Mr. SPRINGER: Is this not a new rule? |
28556 | Mr. SPRINGER: It is not? |
28556 | Mr. SPRINGER: What does the Chair decide? |
28556 | Mrs. Blake spoke on the question,"Is it a Crime to be a Woman?" |
28556 | Mrs. Duniway, will you not favor us with a speech?" |
28556 | My theme was,"What has Christianity done for Woman?" |
28556 | N. J. Burton, said:"Has not this convention been a success? |
28556 | Need we tell you where to find this master- hand which has planned so wisely? |
28556 | Now the question is,"Will the women vote for this man, if we nominate him?" |
28556 | Of what use was woman in the ranks of any political party, with no vote outside the caucus? |
28556 | On the other hand, what is centralization? |
28556 | On what authority are women taxed while unrepresented? |
28556 | On what just ground is discrimination made between men and women? |
28556 | On what theory is it less dangerous to defraud twenty million women of their inalienable rights than four million negroes? |
28556 | One day a dude accosted Miss Bridget on the road, and said, in the usual manner:"Beg pardon, but may I walk with you?" |
28556 | One man asked me, though not rudely,"Who is cooking your husband''s dinner?" |
28556 | Or is there not other work in God''s universe which some woman may possibly be called upon to do? |
28556 | Or will it, as so repeatedly in the past, turn a deaf ear to reason, and still continue to deny the rights of half the human family? |
28556 | Ought it not rather to be a subject of satisfaction and of pride? |
28556 | Our course was somewhat as follows: On the approach of a voter, we would ask him,"have you voted?" |
28556 | Perhaps the women would be lenient to you( the sexes do favor each other), but would you be satisfied? |
28556 | Polling places were gaily decorated; banners floated to the breeze, bearing suggestive mottoes:"Are Women Citizens?" |
28556 | Said I,"Why do you pay your tax?" |
28556 | Says the editor of the Boston_ Index_: What is local self- government? |
28556 | Shaking my finger at the clergymen, I exclaimed:"How_ dare_ you make such charges against the mothers of men? |
28556 | Shall I describe this box, twelve inches long and six wide, and originally a grape- box? |
28556 | Shall it not be done? |
28556 | Shall it then be recorded of us that the demand and the protest of the women were not made in vain? |
28556 | Shall we now hold that it can not apply to black men? |
28556 | She has more privileges than she could vote herself into,"says Mr. H. Has she, indeed? |
28556 | Since woman has proved faithful over a few things, need you fear to summon her to your side to assist you in executing the will of the nation? |
28556 | Some may say,"But what is to be the end?" |
28556 | Standing over him, the warrior asked,"Diogenes, what can I do for you?" |
28556 | Suppose many women would not avail themselves of such a function, are those with higher, or other views, to be therefore kept in tutelage? |
28556 | Suppose the court should exclude women, but not on account of sex, then what is their remedy? |
28556 | Suppose they are; have not the masses of all oppressed classes been apathetic and indifferent until partial success crowned the enthusiasm of the few? |
28556 | Ten minutes were given Miss Anthony to plead the cause of 10,000,000--yes, 20,000,000 citizens of this republic(? |
28556 | The PRESIDENT_ pro tempore_: Are there further"concurrent or other resolutions"? |
28556 | The PRESIDENT_ pro tempore_: Does the Chair understand that the senator from Missouri has offered an amendment? |
28556 | The PRESIDENT_ pro tempore_: Is the Senate ready for the question on the motion of the senator from Delaware? |
28556 | The PRESIDENT_ pro tempore_: Is there objection? |
28556 | The VICE- PRESIDENT: The question is, Will the Senate agree to the resolution? |
28556 | The importance of this education to the future-- who can measure it? |
28556 | The method of reasoning is the same, but it do n''t sound quite fair and honorable, does it? |
28556 | The only question was, would the ballot cure these wrongs? |
28556 | The power to fight? |
28556 | The questions presented by the demurrer were:_ First_--Is the defendant eligible to this office, she being neither a practicing nor a learned lawyer? |
28556 | The territorial legislature of Utah conferred upon the females of that territory the right of suffrage, and how have they exercised that right? |
28556 | There are inconveniences and cares in all possessions; but who argues that therefore they should be abandoned? |
28556 | There are many men who do not value their citizenship; shall other men therefore be deprived of the ballot? |
28556 | They are citizens, they are tax- payers; they bear the burdens of government-- why should they be denied the rights of citizens? |
28556 | They have sat as jurors, and have the laws been less faithfully and justly administered, and criminals less promptly and adequately punished? |
28556 | They replied,"What of it? |
28556 | They wore white ribbon badges on which was printed,"Are we citizens?" |
28556 | This raised a delicate question, for how could women take part in celebrating the triumphs of their country whose laws disfranchised them? |
28556 | This we say to all who are contending for liberty, for what is liberty if the claims of women be disregarded? |
28556 | Thus, suppose the question to be,"Is the family or the individual the political basis of the State of Connecticut?" |
28556 | Underhill, Sarah E., i, 308--sketch of, i, 313 United States a nation? |
28556 | Was ever such sublime womanly heroism and self- sacrifice before known? |
28556 | Was ever such worth of culture, such wealth of womanhood, laid on the altar of country and humanity? |
28556 | We may doubt it is policy for women to vote, but who can draw the line and say that naturally she has not a right to do so? |
28556 | We might just as well ask,"Is the climate cold in a State?" |
28556 | Well, I have been examining a little into the conduct of those ladies who do stay at home so much, and what do I find? |
28556 | Well, what of it? |
28556 | Were all you men disfranchised because that class or sect up in New York would not vote? |
28556 | Were his dreams of freedom less real because the stolid masses were not awake to their significance? |
28556 | Were not her talents and virtues too much confined to private, social and domestic life? |
28556 | Were not the political fortunes and the sacred honor(?) |
28556 | Were not this plainly a violation of the constitution? |
28556 | What answer? |
28556 | What are the newspapers but sheets sold out to the highest bidder? |
28556 | What are the qualifications for the ballot? |
28556 | What avails a decree of divorce or separation for woman, if the court can give the children to the father at its pleasure? |
28556 | What business have these women with so much money?" |
28556 | What can they not accomplish, if, with their whole hearts they set about it? |
28556 | What child would wish to have a public- speaking mother? |
28556 | What did he care what the newspapers said? |
28556 | What do we ask? |
28556 | What do you mean by it? |
28556 | What does the senator propose to do to- day? |
28556 | What does this provide? |
28556 | What else could one expect? |
28556 | What for education? |
28556 | What for sobriety? |
28556 | What for social purity? |
28556 | What has been the strong motive that has taken us away from the quiet and comfort of our own homes and brought us before you to- day? |
28556 | What has she wrought? |
28556 | What if she did hunger and thirst after knowledge? |
28556 | What is female justice, or what is it likely to be? |
28556 | What is the fact? |
28556 | What is the proposition on the table? |
28556 | What laws did they mean? |
28556 | What more can be said of any one than that? |
28556 | What more can we ask, unless, indeed, it be for a very conscientious idea of duty? |
28556 | What more could one expect from such a disturber of public peace? |
28556 | What other city on this continent can present such a showing? |
28556 | What question of equal importance will ever be submitted to her decision? |
28556 | What shall they say of us? |
28556 | What then? |
28556 | What then? |
28556 | What unheard of oppressions drove these people to the mad attempt? |
28556 | What were the women to gain by waiting? |
28556 | What would be the next effect of such an extension of the suffrage? |
28556 | What would have been thought thirty years ago, if women had studied finance, banks and banking, money, currency, sociology and political science? |
28556 | What would woman do with the ballot if she had it? |
28556 | What_ is_ a vote? |
28556 | What_ shall_ we say to them? |
28556 | When any man expresses doubt to me as to the use that I or any other woman might make of the ballot if we had it, my answer is, What is that to you? |
28556 | When we say children, do we not mean girls as well as boys? |
28556 | When we say parents, do we not mean mothers as well as fathers? |
28556 | When we say people, do we not mean women as well as men? |
28556 | When will the verdict be rendered and what will it be? |
28556 | Where are the boundaries of your jurisdiction? |
28556 | Where did you get the right to_ give_ Massachusetts women the right to vote? |
28556 | Where is now the family representation? |
28556 | Where is the boasted chivalry of the English- speaking nations? |
28556 | Where is the necessity of raising the number of voters in the United States from 10,000,000 to 20,000,000? |
28556 | Where next? |
28556 | Where was their State sovereignty? |
28556 | Whether the wise(?) |
28556 | Which party can play this game the longer? |
28556 | Who are more interested than mothers in the sanitary condition of our schools and streets, and in the moral atmosphere of our towns and cities? |
28556 | Who can answer? |
28556 | Who challenges a male juror and demands whether he left his family well provided, and his wife well cherished? |
28556 | Who could assign a reason why women should vote in one and not in the other? |
28556 | Who have upheld it? |
28556 | Who should fear the result who desires the public welfare? |
28556 | Who stay at home from the election? |
28556 | Whose blood paid for yours? |
28556 | Why are they forced at times to don men''s clothes in order to obtain employment that will keep them from starvation? |
28556 | Why deny me a voice in any or all of these? |
28556 | Why does not man establish them for woman, his wife, his mother?" |
28556 | Why is this? |
28556 | Why not also of men? |
28556 | Why not open the doors of that institution and let her make the experiment? |
28556 | Why not? |
28556 | Why send a man to do a boy''s work, or a boy to do that which a shepherd dog can do just as well? |
28556 | Why send your mothers, wives and daughters to the unwashed, unlettered, unthinking masses that carry popular elections? |
28556 | Why should the family requirement, which man throws off so easily, be made a yoke for woman? |
28556 | Why should they not vote for a member of parliament? |
28556 | Why should we do right for nothing? |
28556 | Why should women, more than men, be denied trial by a jury of their peers? |
28556 | Why should women, more than men, be governed without their own consent? |
28556 | Why was it defeated? |
28556 | Why would it not be a good idea for women to leave these conservative gentlemen alone in the churches? |
28556 | Why would not the same results be wrought out by their presence at the ballot- box? |
28556 | Will it be wise enough to seize it for self preservation, if not from principle? |
28556 | Will the_ Watchman_ assert that the people of Vermont"throw scorn on the marriage relation"? |
28556 | Will the_ Watchman_ call Chief- Justice Chase and the Supreme Court free- lovers? |
28556 | Will there be found in this party enough of spiritual life to lay hold of the help now proffered it, and once more renew its strength thereby? |
28556 | Will this fact lessen the alarm of some men for the safety of the babies of enfranchised women on election day? |
28556 | Will women revolutionize justice? |
28556 | Will you call on all women of the State who can do so to assemble at Lincoln during the session of the legislature, appointing the day, etc.? |
28556 | Will you forbid them having any voice in relation to the taxation of that property? |
28556 | Will you make woman suffrage an underlying principle in your platform? |
28556 | Will you make yourselves the party of the future? |
28556 | Will you please inform me if this is to be the form of petition to be presented during the present session of the legislature? |
28556 | Will you receive it?" |
28556 | Will you recognize woman''s right of self- government? |
28556 | Will you say that the wives and the mothers, the house and homekeepers of this small territory, have no interest in all these things? |
28556 | Will you take from her all voice in relation to the public schools established for the education of those children? |
28556 | Will you visit Dakota again? |
28556 | Without it what is man?'' |
28556 | Woman''s equality, why so long denied?... |
28556 | Women have voted, and have the officers chosen been less faithful and zealous and the legislature less able and upright? |
28556 | Would any professor agree to lecture to the women separately? |
28556 | Would any professor favor the admission of women into the female wards of the hospitals? |
28556 | Would giving her the right to vote interfere with her home duties any more than it does with a man''s business? |
28556 | Would he propose a clause to exclude from the franchise those men who lead and retain in vice and degradation these unfortunate women? |
28556 | Would not every criminal be a monster, provided not a female? |
28556 | Would those statesmen have dared to tax those landholders and yet deny them the privilege of choosing their representatives? |
28556 | Would twelve women return the same verdict as twelve men, supposing that each twelve had heard the same case? |
28556 | Would you disfranchise them, sir? |
28556 | Would you feel that such an arrangement was exactly the just and fair thing? |
28556 | Would you like to be a slave? |
28556 | Would you like to be bound to respect the laws which you can not make? |
28556 | Would you like to be disfranchised? |
28556 | You did n''t see the hatching department of my chicken- house? |
28556 | You may ask,"Do not your husbands protect you? |
28556 | You raise your committee and allow the agitators to come before them, yea, more than that, you invite them to come; and what is the result? |
28556 | [ 166] See Appendix for Mr. Hooker''s article,"Is the Family the Basis of the State?" |
28556 | [ 449] Miss Marion Lowell recited"The Legend,"by Mary Agnes Ticknor, and"Was he Henpecked?" |
28556 | _ Is the Family the Basis of the State?_ BY JOHN HOOKER. |
28556 | _ Second_--Is the defendant eligible to this office, she being a female? |
28556 | and amend it by adding,"What is woman, that they never thought of her?" |
28556 | and we ask in the name of justice, must we continue ever the silent and servile victims of this injustice? |
28556 | and would she not, if entrusted with it, exercise it for the elevation of a common humanity? |
28556 | for does she not toil early and late in the factory, and in every department of life subject to the despotism of men? |
28556 | make me true to the duties about to be laid upon me; make me worthy of being free? |
28556 | of men in jeopardy? |
28556 | or if, through his detention in court, the cupboard will be bare, the wife neglected, or the children with holes in their trousers? |
28556 | or,"Is the English language spoken in a State?" |
28556 | perform all the drudgery of his political societies and never possess a single political right? |
28556 | the other,"Shall One Federal Judge Abolish Trial by Jury?" |
28556 | the strong will, the clear brain, the warm heart, the pure soul? |
28556 | you_ here?" |
28020 | And a''n''t I a woman? 28020 And what are they going to do in Kansas?" |
28020 | Are there to be_ two_ World''s Conventions? |
28020 | But, Mrs. Nichols, you would not have women go down into the muddy pool of politics? |
28020 | Could it then,said she,"be a Church of Christ?" |
28020 | Den dey talks''bout dis ting in de head; what dis dey call it? |
28020 | Did Dr. Hewitt rule out from office Mr. Barnum on the ground that he( Mr. Barnum) was an infidel? |
28020 | Did Mayor Barstow occasion the schism in the temperance ranks, by refusing to recognize the feminine element in the movement? |
28020 | Did you hear the cheering? |
28020 | Do you love peace as well as Christ loved it, and can you do thus? |
28020 | Do you think,says one,"that Christ would have done so?" |
28020 | Hannah, Hannah,cried her husband,"do you not see these are no questions for you? |
28020 | How can the proposed Convention be a_ World''s_ Convention, if women and all who do not belong to a particular Church are to be excluded? |
28020 | How many have you? |
28020 | If women are, according to your admission, fitted for the higher plane, why keep them on the lower? |
28020 | If you complain of education in sons, what shall I say in regard to daughters, who every day experience the want of it? |
28020 | Is it equal to that of man? |
28020 | Is not our conduct mean and dastardly? 28020 Is she not my wife?" |
28020 | Ladies,I said,"it takes me no longer to speak than you to listen; what have you done with your children the two hours you have been sitting here? |
28020 | Madam,he inquired,"can you tell me where all these people are from, and where they are going?" |
28020 | On what subjects? |
28020 | Rachel,said the astonished husband,"where is that ninepence I gave thee day before yesterday?" |
28020 | Sir, we have got along for eighteen hundred years, and shall we change now? 28020 Some one remarked to her one day,''Are you sure your men vote as they promise?'' |
28020 | That is not it,do you say? |
28020 | The call is unexceptionably broad,we were reminded,"it invites all and excludes nobody, then why not accept it and hold but one Convention?" |
28020 | The grandfather made legal custodian by the father, was he? 28020 Then?" |
28020 | Well, in what way can you better the cause? 28020 Well, is it not?" |
28020 | What does it all mean? |
28020 | What greater cause could there be? 28020 What is it?" |
28020 | What is the use of Conventions? 28020 What, Anna, does thee go to hear that Fanny Wright?" |
28020 | Who can that creature be? |
28020 | Who is it? |
28020 | Who votes under it? |
28020 | Why do you women meddle in politics? |
28020 | Why,I asked,"are they bad men?" |
28020 | Will they the felon fox restrain, And yet take oft the tiger''s chain? |
28020 | Will you sign one if drawn up? |
28020 | You do n''t say anything about slavery in your woman''s rights''lectures, do you? |
28020 | ... What do we toil for? |
28020 | 1.--Have you tried your experiment of education on any little nigger yet? |
28020 | A laborer to whom the architect showed it, said:"Do n''t she know e''en as much as some men?" |
28020 | A lady who was among the audience said to me afterward,"How could you do it? |
28020 | Accordingly, you submit your Constitution for ratification-- to whom? |
28020 | After a moment of silence, he said:"Were any of your family up, Lydia, on the night when I received my company here?" |
28020 | After this, should I very handsomely make an exception in favor of Mr. Saxe, would he feel complimented? |
28020 | Again I ask, is it possible to discuss all the laws of a relation, and not touch the relation itself? |
28020 | Agitation? |
28020 | And a''n''t I a woman? |
28020 | And a''n''t I a woman? |
28020 | And a''n''t, I a woman? |
28020 | And after dinner, she says to her husband,"Where shall we go this evening?" |
28020 | And as to the disorder which prevailed throughout the Convention, who made that disorder? |
28020 | And do you ask for fortitude, energy, and perseverance? |
28020 | And do you ask, did this not retard the cause of Temperance? |
28020 | And do you call yourselves republicans? |
28020 | And do you think these labors will be in vain? |
28020 | And if she is, what right has man to deprive her of her natural and inalienable rights? |
28020 | And if they have called the Master of the house Beelzebub, how much more them of his household? |
28020 | And now, added the old gentleman,"I would like to hear what Mrs. Nichols has to say on this point?" |
28020 | And pray, why should he not have chastised her? |
28020 | And shall she still continue the wife? |
28020 | And shall such women be denied seats in this Convention? |
28020 | And shall such women be refused seats here in a Convention seeking the emancipation of slaves throughout the world? |
28020 | And was the material for God''s image all worked up in creating Adam? |
28020 | And what are these female delegates? |
28020 | And what are those obligations? |
28020 | And what are ye who strive with God Against the ark of His salvation, Moved by the breath of prayer abroad, With blessings for a dying nation? |
28020 | And what fitter occasion could occur? |
28020 | And what follows, as a natural result? |
28020 | And what has been the consequence? |
28020 | And what has it to do with the question of her intellectual equality, that she was created_ afterward_? |
28020 | And what is our position politically? |
28020 | And what is the characteristic glory of the nineteenth century? |
28020 | And what is the result? |
28020 | And what of your experiment, what of your wives, your homes? |
28020 | And what woman of them all has shown so much"dare- devil independence"as Jane G. Swisshelm? |
28020 | And wherefore? |
28020 | And who were these women? |
28020 | And who would blame them? |
28020 | And why is not a like provision made for the girls? |
28020 | And why with reckless hand I plant A nettle on the graves ye honor? |
28020 | And why, in the name of reason and justice, why should she not have the same rights? |
28020 | And why? |
28020 | And will ye ask me, why this taunt Of memories sacred from the scorner? |
28020 | And yet is injustice to a colored man a greater sin than to a woman? |
28020 | And yet, with a free platform, where is the human being who cares to argue the question? |
28020 | And, also, how many rights has any woman? |
28020 | And, on the other hand, can not men"nurse"the babies, or preside at the wash- tub, or boil a pot as safely and as well as women? |
28020 | Another voice chimes in with:"Do you love the Temperance cause? |
28020 | Another"Friend,"seeing her frequently pass, hailed her on one occasion, and said,"Anna, where does thee go every day?" |
28020 | Any evidence that we are wrong, or that slavery is a good and wholesome institution? |
28020 | Are all the duties of husband and father to be made subservient to those of statesman and politician? |
28020 | Are not the natural wants and emotions of humanity common to, and shared equally by, both sexes? |
28020 | Are not these delicate matters left wholly to the discretion of courts? |
28020 | Are not these fair subjects for discussion? |
28020 | Are not women under the special leading and direction of their clergymen? |
28020 | Are the former good Samaritans, pouring into my wounded heart the oil and the wine? |
28020 | Are there to be no more children? |
28020 | Are they orthodox in religion? |
28020 | Are we meting out fair and equal justice?... |
28020 | Are we not entitled to their superior light? |
28020 | Are we to put the stamp of truth upon the libel here set forth, that men and women, in the matrimonial relation, are to be equal? |
28020 | Are we, sir, to give the least countenance to claims so preposterous, disgraceful, and criminal as are embodied in this address? |
28020 | Are women, in New York, persons, people, citizens, members of the State? |
28020 | As citizens of a republic, which should we most highly prize, social privileges or civil rights? |
28020 | As regards voting, why should not women go to the polls? |
28020 | As to moral equality, has she not conquered it by the power of sentiment? |
28020 | Because I can not make a steam engine, shall all other men be denied that right? |
28020 | Because I can not stand on my head, shall we deny that right to all acrobats in our circuses? |
28020 | Because all men can not stand on a platform and make a speech, shall I be denied the exercise of that right? |
28020 | Because she is woman? |
28020 | Because they know nothing of governments, or rights, and therefore ask nothing, shall my petitions be unheard? |
28020 | But Mr. Greeley asks,"How could the mother look the child in the face, if she married a second time?" |
28020 | But are they equal in rights? |
28020 | But can it be that here, too, there are tyrants who violate the individual right to express opinions on any subject? |
28020 | But do not women_ now_ work right earnestly? |
28020 | But elevation, instead of destroying, show? |
28020 | But for your club- houses and newspapers, what would social life be to you? |
28020 | But has the law the right to be prejudiced-- ought it not to stand pure, and noble, and magnanimous, founded on the natural rights of the human soul? |
28020 | But here is a petition to which I am adding names as I find opportunity; will you place your name on the roll of honor?" |
28020 | But how comes it that the author of the bill of 1860, residing at the capital, never heard of its repeal? |
28020 | But how is it now? |
28020 | But how much worse would it have been for those women to have gone to the polls with a brother or husband, instead of with this man? |
28020 | But if they are dead, what then? |
28020 | But if women can conduct their own business, by means of presidents and secretaries of their own sex, can he tell us why they should not? |
28020 | But is it so? |
28020 | But is this the state of things? |
28020 | But it had always been a question among metaphysicians, which was really the most natural condition for man-- the savage or the civilized state? |
28020 | But it is said by some, our"books and papers do not speak the truth"; why, then, do they not contradict what we say? |
28020 | But she pushed him gently back, saying to the startled group:"Have you made your decision, gentlemen? |
28020 | But suppose we had done nothing but talk? |
28020 | But what becomes of the union divinely instituted, which death only should part? |
28020 | But what can we do now, when even the motion to retain the mother''s joint guardianship is voted, down? |
28020 | But what has induced them, what has enabled them, to do that work? |
28020 | But what is marriage? |
28020 | But what is property without the right to protect that property by law? |
28020 | But what is she worth as a nurse of the sick without a knowledge of the art of healing? |
28020 | But what is the present remedy? |
28020 | But what of that? |
28020 | But what right, I ask, has the law to presume at all on the subject? |
28020 | But what was the honorable gentleman''s reply? |
28020 | But what was the primary cause of that tragic end? |
28020 | But what were our reasons for going to that Convention? |
28020 | But what''s all dis here talkin''''bout? |
28020 | But where shall be the battle- ground for this indispensable self- conquest? |
28020 | But while prizes continue to be awarded, can any good reason be given why the name of the girl should not be published as well as that of the boy? |
28020 | But who does not revolt at the idea of perpetuating a race inferior to ourselves? |
28020 | But why attack the Church? |
28020 | But, admitting it to be a political question, have we no interest in the welfare of our country? |
28020 | But, say you, are not all women sufficiently represented by their fathers, husbands, and brothers? |
28020 | But, say you, does not separation cover all these difficulties? |
28020 | But,"in the settlement of national difficulties,"it is said,"the last resort is war; shall we summon our wives and mothers to the battle- field?" |
28020 | Came it from nature? |
28020 | Can a Convention be called for a nobler purpose? |
28020 | Can antiquity make wrong right? |
28020 | Can any human being be benefited by such gross violations of humanity? |
28020 | Can his soul writhe in more bitter agony under the consciousness of evil or wrong? |
28020 | Can injustice go beyond this? |
28020 | Can man ever raise them to that lofty height? |
28020 | Can noble men be born of infirm women? |
28020 | Can not women fill an office, or cast a vote, or conduct a campaign, as judiciously and vigorously as men? |
28020 | Can one man in his brief hour hope to see the beginning and end of any reform? |
28020 | Can the father annul the relation which exists between himself and his child? |
28020 | Can the mother ever destroy the relation which exists between herself and her child? |
28020 | Can woman then receive evil from this rule, and man receive good? |
28020 | Can woman watch the large, the all- absorbing interest she has at stake? |
28020 | Can you continue here and see all this confusion prevailing around you? |
28020 | Can you deny it? |
28020 | Charles the First refused to recognize the competency of the tribunal which condemned him: For how, said he, can subjects judge a king? |
28020 | Could I aid in taking down that magnificent entablature from its proud elevation, and placing it in the dust and dirt that surround the pedestal? |
28020 | Did Elizabeth Fry lose any of her feminine qualities by the public walk into which she was called? |
28020 | Did he meet it openly and fairly? |
28020 | Did it ever enter into the mind of man that woman too had an inalienable right to life, liberty, and the pursuit of her individual happiness? |
28020 | Did not our petitions last winter cause a bill for its prohibition to be reported in the Legislature, which was lost in the House by a small majority? |
28020 | Did one ever trust in God and meet with disappointment? |
28020 | Did she inherit from her husband his great intellect? |
28020 | Did she lose the delicacy of woman by her acts? |
28020 | Did she stand beside her sisters who were laboring for the right? |
28020 | Did the flowing robes of Christ Himself render His life less grand and beautiful? |
28020 | Did the hearts of our fathers fail? |
28020 | Did we go there to forward the cause of Temperance or to forward the cause of woman, or what were our motives in going? |
28020 | Did woman meet with him in council and voluntarily give up all her claim to be her own law- maker? |
28020 | Did you ever hear of the old man who went to the doctor, and asked him to teach him to speak prose? |
28020 | Did you meet to settle doctrines, or to conspire against slavery? |
28020 | Do I believe that the wife ought to take her own earnings, as her own earnings? |
28020 | Do husbands toil through a life- time to support their aunts, and uncles, and cousins? |
28020 | Do not sound philosophy and long experience teach us that man and woman should be educated together? |
28020 | Do not the German women and our market women labor right earnestly? |
28020 | Do not the above citations clearly prove inequality? |
28020 | Do not the majority of women in every town support themselves, and very many their husbands, too? |
28020 | Do not the men of this nation know ever since the landing of the pilgrims, that they are wrong in making subject one- half of the people? |
28020 | Do not the wives of our farmers and mechanics toil? |
28020 | Do we really think so badly of our mothers, wives, sister, daughters? |
28020 | Do we shrink from reading the announcement that Mrs. Somerville is made an honorary member of a scientific association? |
28020 | Do wise, Christian legislators need any arguments to convince them that the sacredness of the family relation should be protected at all hazards? |
28020 | Do women encounter no such evils in their homes? |
28020 | Do you ask me why I have dwelt on this Institution for Social Science, cataloguing the noble names that do it honor? |
28020 | Do you ask, then,"What has the North to do?" |
28020 | Do you ask,"What has the North to do with slavery?" |
28020 | Do you feel you are doing any good?" |
28020 | Do you know what a country we come from? |
28020 | Do you laugh? |
28020 | Do you not hear the cry which, in New England, a woman is raising in the world''s ears against the foul wrong which America is working in the world? |
28020 | Do you not see that you are making yourself ridiculous?" |
28020 | Do you suppose they would dare to tell me how they charge that work on their slowly- paying customer''s bills? |
28020 | Do you tell me that the Bible is against our rights? |
28020 | Do you tell me what Paul or Peter says on the subject? |
28020 | Do you think the women of Boston would shut a bright boy out of the High- School or Latin- School, because he was black in the face? |
28020 | Do you want the compliments of the satanic press,_ The New York Times_,_ Express_, and_ Herald_? |
28020 | Does Mrs. Stanton not know that nunneries belong to a past age, that people who had nothing to do might go there and try to expiate their own sins? |
28020 | Does a woman desire a_ thorough_ medical education, where is the institution fully and property endowed to receive her? |
28020 | Does any respectable woman keep house so badly as the United States? |
28020 | Does he claim it under law of the land? |
28020 | Does he draw his authority from God, from the language of holy writ? |
28020 | Does he love and hate, hope and fear, joy and sorrow more than woman? |
28020 | Does his heart thrill with a deeper pleasure in doing good? |
28020 | Does it cost too much to educate the future mothers of this nation in the science of life? |
28020 | Does it pertain to the city of New York, or to the Empire State? |
28020 | Does man hunger and thirst, suffer cold and heat more than woman? |
28020 | Does not the abuse of the religious element in woman demand our earnest attention and investigation? |
28020 | Does not the morality of our politics demonstrate a great want of the two qualities so characteristic of woman, heart and conscience? |
28020 | Does not the same interest, the same strong tie, bind the mother to her children, that bind the father? |
28020 | Does not this apply to the latest period? |
28020 | Does not this nation know how great its guilt is in enslaving one- sixth of its people? |
28020 | Does she eat at the same table? |
28020 | Does she sit in the same room with you? |
28020 | Does that prove they should be deprived of all civil rights? |
28020 | Does that reason not hold as good in the case of the husband as in that of the wife? |
28020 | Does the Christian, in his love to all mankind, wait for the majority of the benighted heathen to ask him for the gospel? |
28020 | Does the State wait for the criminal to ask for his prison- house? |
28020 | Does the accident of sex place woman outside of all ordinary principles of law and justice? |
28020 | Does woman? |
28020 | Does your literature complain of it-- of the waste of human life, the slaughter of human souls, the butchery of woman? |
28020 | Duty is the professed object of the pulpit, and if it does not teach that, what in Heaven''s name does it teach? |
28020 | E. H. Chapin, on the ground that he was a Universalist?" |
28020 | ELIZABETH OAKES SMITH: My friends, do we realize for what purpose we are convened? |
28020 | Echo answers,"what?" |
28020 | Fathers and brothers, shall woman in her agony, and man in his degradation, appeal to you in vain? |
28020 | Fathers, do you say, let your daughters pay a life- long penalty for one unfortunate step? |
28020 | For how much is really covered by that duty? |
28020 | For how, said they, can a king judge rebels? |
28020 | For instance: What is the right to property without the right to protect it? |
28020 | For is woman not included in that phrase,"all men are created free and equal"? |
28020 | For the sake of argument admitting this to be true, what then? |
28020 | For what is life without liberty, and what is liberty without equality of rights? |
28020 | For what one civil right is worth a rush, after a man''s property is subject to be taken from him at the pleasure of another?" |
28020 | From Coke down to Kent, who can cite one clause of the marriage contract where woman has the advantage? |
28020 | From time to time I put these questions to myself: How is it that woman can longer silently consent to her present false position? |
28020 | From what power the vested right to place woman-- his partner, his companion, his helpmeet in life-- in an inferior position? |
28020 | Grew married a second time? |
28020 | Grew say that woman can not preach, in the face of such a preacher as LUCRETIA MOTT? |
28020 | Had she not a perfect right to do so? |
28020 | Had that helpless child no claims on his protection? |
28020 | Hannah Arnett listened in silence until the last abject word was spoken, when she rapidly inquired:"But what if we should live after all?" |
28020 | Has God led us thus far to desert us now? |
28020 | Has a single church denied his degrading theory? |
28020 | Has any Woman''s Rights Convention been a failure? |
28020 | Has any one the right to condemn such a man unproved? |
28020 | Has nature thus merged it? |
28020 | Has she a right to sit there? |
28020 | Has she been wanting in ardor and enthusiasm? |
28020 | Has she ceased to exist and feel pleasure and pain? |
28020 | Has she not mingled her blood with that of her husband, son, and sire? |
28020 | Has she not the same capacity to teach them that the father has? |
28020 | Has woman then been idle during the contest between"right and might"? |
28020 | Hath He not joined in each human being necessities and ability to supply them? |
28020 | Hath He not joined mother and child in body and spirit? |
28020 | Have men ever aimed so high? |
28020 | Have protests against his blasphemous doctrine been made by his brother clergymen? |
28020 | Have the women put their faith And philosophy to shame? |
28020 | Have they disgraced themselves or the Society which has confided in them? |
28020 | Have they proved by their follies, their extravagances, their unwomanly boldness and want of a just sense of decorum that these great men were wrong? |
28020 | Have we not given £ 20,000,000 of our money for the purpose of doing away with the abominations of slavery? |
28020 | Have you chosen the part of men, or traitors?" |
28020 | Have you done justice? |
28020 | Have you ever seen a little boy running along the street, and carefully dodging between two big boys? |
28020 | Have you loved mercy? |
28020 | Having discarded the idea of the oneness of the sexes, how can man judge of the needs and wants of a being so wholly unlike himself? |
28020 | Having the public ear one- seventh part of the time, if the men of the pulpit do not educate the public mind, who does educate it? |
28020 | He asked whether the claims of woman, which had been stated and advocated in the Convention, were founded on Nature or Revelation? |
28020 | He can spend all she has at the gaming- table, and who can hinder him? |
28020 | He is admitted into Legislative halls, and to all places where men"most do congregate;"why, then, should she not admit him to her parlor? |
28020 | He said: Gentlemen, the question before you is, Shall the women of Massachusetts have equal rights with the men? |
28020 | He seriously declared that on more than one occasion he had heard an American woman say to her husband,"Dear, will you bring me my shawl?" |
28020 | Here they expect to find freedom of speech; here, for if we can not claim it here, where should we go for it? |
28020 | Hewitt''s?" |
28020 | His peers made the law, and shall law- makers lay nets for those of their own rank? |
28020 | Horace Greeley once said to Margaret Fuller:"If you should ask a woman to carry a ship round Cape Horn, how would she go to work to do it? |
28020 | How came I, she asks, to be excluded from all these precious privileges? |
28020 | How can a mother, who does not understand, and therefore can not appreciate the rights of humanity, train up her child in the way it should go? |
28020 | How can he judge of the agonies of soul that impelled her to such an outrage of maternal instincts? |
28020 | How can he make laws for his own benefit and woman''s too at the same time? |
28020 | How can man enter into the feelings of that mother? |
28020 | How can she calmly contemplate the barbarous code of laws which govern her civil and political existence? |
28020 | How can she tolerate our social customs, by which womankind is stripped of all true virtue, dignity, and nobility? |
28020 | How can society be otherwise than a gainer by the increased moral and mental influence of one- half of its members? |
28020 | How can the servant, bound hand and foot by the master, do the bidding of the tyrant? |
28020 | How can the weak control the strong? |
28020 | How can we discuss all the laws and conditions of marriage, without perceiving its essential essence, end, and aim? |
28020 | How can woman have a right to her children when the right to herself is taken away? |
28020 | How can you expect, from such women, any nobleness or appreciation of nobleness? |
28020 | How cogent the eloquent appeal of Macaulay:"What right have we to take this question for granted? |
28020 | How could man ever look thus on woman? |
28020 | How did woman first become subject to man as she now is all over the world? |
28020 | How do we know them? |
28020 | How does the objector know that women do not desire equality of freedom? |
28020 | How does this happen? |
28020 | How has this Woman''s Rights movement been treated in this country, on the right hand and on the left? |
28020 | How is that? |
28020 | How is woman fulfilling her divine mission? |
28020 | How long will they consent to be poor? |
28020 | How many of these husbands return to their homes as happy and contented, as pure and loving, as when they left? |
28020 | How many of you have ever read even the laws concerning them that now disgrace your statute- books? |
28020 | How much do fathers generally do toward bringing them up? |
28020 | How much of this waste of treasure is traceable to defective family government? |
28020 | How old is the oppression which we have met to look in the face? |
28020 | How shall I earn bread?" |
28020 | How shall we open for woman''s energies new spheres of well remunerated industry? |
28020 | How stands it now? |
28020 | How, I ask you, can that be called justice, which makes such a distinction as this between man and woman? |
28020 | I ask for her liberty to do whatever moral and useful deed she proves able to do-- why should I ask in vain? |
28020 | I ask you, fathers and brethren, tell me what you would do in my place? |
28020 | I ask, are we to depend on a Christianity like that to restore woman her rights? |
28020 | I ask, did God give woman aspirations which it is a sin for her to gratify? |
28020 | I asked why there should be this difference made; why the girls too should not have the black- board? |
28020 | I did not make all the use I might of the opportunity; but when are we ever wise enough to do it? |
28020 | I have no time to question; but should not a Christian community offer womanly ministrations to its imprisoned women? |
28020 | I heard of the circumstance of your exclusion at a distance, and immediately said:"Excluded on the ground that they are women?" |
28020 | I know that, but what is it that educates? |
28020 | I said,''do women vote here?'' |
28020 | I wonder if the Judge-- he is that now, and a benedict-- remembers? |
28020 | I would ask if such a code of laws does not require change? |
28020 | If Mrs. Fry felt that she had a higher truth, how did she know that she might not influence Mrs. Mott for good? |
28020 | If a contract, why is there no remedy for its violation either in law or equity, as is the case with other contracts? |
28020 | If a woman can thus have the highest right conceded to her, why should not woman have a lower? |
28020 | If anger and turbulence disgrace woman, what can they add to the dignity of man? |
28020 | If deception and intrigue, the elements of political craft, be degrading to woman, can they be ennobling to man? |
28020 | If it be proper for a woman to open her lips in jubilee to sing nonsense, how can it be improper for her to open them and speak sense? |
28020 | If it be unwomanly for a girl to have a whole education, why is it not unwomanly for her to have even a half one? |
28020 | If marriage be a contract, why is it not governed by the same rules that govern other contracts? |
28020 | If my cup wo n''t hold but a pint, and yourn holds a quart, would n''t ye be mean not to let me have my little half- measure full?" |
28020 | If nature has not made the sex so clearly defined as to be seen through any disguise, why should we make the difference so striking? |
28020 | If patience and forbearance adorn a woman, are they not equally essential to a manly character? |
28020 | If politics are necessarily corrupting, ought not good men, as well as good women, to be exhorted to quit voting? |
28020 | If prosecuted under the law of libel before a court of women for his late remarks, does he think he would get his deserts? |
28020 | If she desires a course of thorough disciplinary study for any purpose whatsoever, where is she to find means or the institution to receive her? |
28020 | If she did not, what is the common sense of such a statute? |
28020 | If so, by what occult power do we understand that different nature to dictate by metes and bounds its wants and spheres? |
28020 | If such a condition of the wife in society does not claim redress? |
28020 | If that be the heavenly order, is it not our duty to render earth as near like heaven as we may? |
28020 | If the Bible is against woman''s equality, what are you to do with it? |
28020 | If the few only, or no one, is really married, why do you object to a law that shall acknowledge the fact? |
28020 | If the power is a just one, from what source did they derive it? |
28020 | If the pulpit should speak out fully and everywhere, upon this subject, would not woman obey it? |
28020 | If there is none such, can you tell me of any paper that advocates our claims more warmly than the_ North Star_? |
28020 | If there is, it is unfair to have one determine both; if there is not, why does tyrannous custom separate her? |
28020 | If they are not literary, artistic, or philanthropic, what can they do? |
28020 | If they are not, then why are they numbered in the census, taxed by assessors, and subjected to legal penalties? |
28020 | If they are unsuccessful in married life, who suffers more the bitter consequences of poverty than the wife? |
28020 | If they are, then why is authority exercised over them without their consent asked or granted? |
28020 | If this question is not legitimate, what is? |
28020 | If we have private griefs( and what human heart, in a large sense, is without them? |
28020 | If woman''s judgment were exercised, why might she not aid in making the laws by which she is governed? |
28020 | If you admit the construction put upon the Bible by friend Barker, to be a false one, or Miss Brown''s construction to be the true one, what then? |
28020 | If you answer, as you must, that it is done in violation of all law, then we ask you, when and how is this great wrong to be righted? |
28020 | In answer to the popular query,"Why should woman desire to meddle with public affairs?" |
28020 | In case of separation, why should the children be taken from the protecting care of the mother? |
28020 | In finding duties abroad, has any"refined man felt that something of beauty has gone forth from her"? |
28020 | In marriage, the man offers love for love and hand for hand, but what is the consideration for those personal rights of which he dispossesses her? |
28020 | In the time of Luther, it was a question:"Can a woman choose her own creed?" |
28020 | In your own circle of friends, do you not know refined women, whose whole lives are darkened and saddened by gross and brutal associations? |
28020 | Indeed, I would ask, if this modesty is not attractive also, when manifested in the other sex? |
28020 | Inferior in what? |
28020 | Is Dorothea Dix throwing off her womanly nature and appearance in the course she is pursuing? |
28020 | Is God the impartial Father of humanity? |
28020 | Is He no respecter of persons? |
28020 | Is any land so lost in self- respect-- so sunk in infamy-- that God- defying, Bible- abhorring sacrilege will be civilly allowed? |
28020 | Is his post profitable? |
28020 | Is it a new thing in this country to allow civil rights to a woman? |
28020 | Is it a wonder that women are driven to prostitution? |
28020 | Is it any wonder, then, that woman regards herself as a mere machine, a tool for men''s pleasure? |
28020 | Is it because a lady''s"Yes"is always so fixed a certainty, that it never can be transformed to a"No,"at a later period? |
28020 | Is it because they have not as much power to understand what is true and right as man? |
28020 | Is it consistent with the profession; and, if there were no profession, is it right, is it just? |
28020 | Is it easy for women to break the way into new avenues? |
28020 | Is it he who has all his knowledge at second- hand, rather than she who has it in all her consciousness? |
28020 | Is it here only that woman can touch man''s sympathy? |
28020 | Is it just, politic, and wise, that universities and colleges endowed by Government should be open only to men? |
28020 | Is it local? |
28020 | Is it necessary to explode a volcano under the foundation of the family union?" |
28020 | Is it not a reasonable request which women make, when they ask for something to do? |
28020 | Is it not a shame it should happen first in a slave State? |
28020 | Is it not legitimate in this to discuss the social degradation, the legal disabilities of the drunkard''s wife? |
28020 | Is it of to- day? |
28020 | Is it true that there is known neither male nor female in Christ Jesus? |
28020 | Is it wise in policy? |
28020 | Is it young in years, or is it as old as the world itself? |
28020 | Is not a beautiful mind and a retiring modesty still conspicuous in her? |
28020 | Is not everything managed by female influence? |
28020 | Is not our conduct on this head ungenerous and ignoble to the other sex? |
28020 | Is not such injustice as grievous to woman as man? |
28020 | Is not that proof that we are in earnest about it? |
28020 | Is not that self- evident? |
28020 | Is not the aid of man equally important in the family, and would his necessary duties in the home conflict with his duties as a citizen and a patriot? |
28020 | Is not the light all around us? |
28020 | Is not the question a fair one,--how many women have any rights? |
28020 | Is not the work of the_ mothers_ in our land as important as that of the father? |
28020 | Is not this one reason amply sufficient for any honest- minded man? |
28020 | Is not, then, the fault in thee?" |
28020 | Is she compromising her womanly dignity in going forth to seek to better the condition of the insane and afflicted? |
28020 | Is she not beloved, honored, guarded, cherished? |
28020 | Is she not included in that expression? |
28020 | Is she then not included in that declaration? |
28020 | Is she, the most interested party, to have no voice in the solution of a question which is to her of such overwhelming interest? |
28020 | Is that a marriage which must not be dissolved? |
28020 | Is that the union which"death only should part"? |
28020 | Is the fault to be charged to the removal of the restraint; or is it to be charged to the first imposition of the restraint? |
28020 | Is the public mind sufficiently enlightened to accept a constitution recognizing the right of women to vote and hold office? |
28020 | Is the world to be depopulated? |
28020 | Is there any worthy woman who rules her household as wickedly as the nations are ruled? |
28020 | Is this as it should be? |
28020 | Is this asking too much? |
28020 | Is this indeed so? |
28020 | Is this the welcome you give her to the shores of republican America? |
28020 | Is woman really the creator of the sentiment? |
28020 | Is woman represented? |
28020 | Is woman taxed? |
28020 | It does not satisfy us to assert that they proceed from the depravity of man; how came he depraved? |
28020 | It has never been asserted that man and woman are alike; if they were, where would be the necessity for urging the claims of the one? |
28020 | It is also often asked if women want more rights, why do they not take them? |
28020 | It is asked of a lady,"Has she married well?" |
28020 | It is not sufficient to say that these are consequences of human imperfection; that we know; but whence arises the imperfection? |
28020 | It is often asked,"if political equality would not rouse antagonisms between the sexes?" |
28020 | It is said that a tacit consent has been hitherto given by the absence of open protest? |
28020 | It is very important in a republic, that the people should respect the laws, for if we throw them to the winds, what becomes of civil government? |
28020 | It will not be identical with the old one; but, even if it were, you propose to ask a renewed consent from men, and why not from women? |
28020 | It would be quite as sound logic to maintain, as some do, that, as last in the series which commenced in nothing(?) |
28020 | LYDIA JENKINS: Is there any law to prevent women voting in this State? |
28020 | Leave me for such a thing as this?" |
28020 | Let woman demand the highest education in our land, and what college, with the exception of Oberlin, will receive her? |
28020 | Life is valueless without liberty, and shall we not claim that which is dearer than life? |
28020 | Look next at the professional sphere of women, properly so called; and who shall deny her right and claim to that position? |
28020 | Man has assumed to himself the power of being"lord of creation"; yet what has he done for his kind? |
28020 | Many times and oft it has been asked us, with, unaffected seriousness,"What do you women want? |
28020 | May not the"ornament of a meek and quiet spirit"exist with an upright mind and enlightened intellect? |
28020 | May we not permit a thought to stray beyond the narrow limits of our own family circle and of the present hour? |
28020 | May we not then conclude that the fears which have been proved absolutely groundless in the one case, may be equally so in the other? |
28020 | Men say,"Why do you come here? |
28020 | Millions of dollars are paid for this education, and if they do not educate the public mind in its morals, what, I ask, are we paying our money for? |
28020 | Miss Brown was asked while standing on the platform,"Do you love the temperance cause?" |
28020 | Moreover, if it is fitting that woman should dress in every color of the rainbow, why not man also? |
28020 | Moreover, the South has entreated, nay, commanded us, to be silent; and what greater evidence of the truth of our publications could be desired? |
28020 | Mr. GARRISON said: The first pertinent question is, what has brought us together? |
28020 | Mr. Garrison made no resistance, and when released, he calmly surveyed his antagonist and said,"Do you feel better, my friend? |
28020 | Mr. Smith speaks of reforms as failures; what can he mean? |
28020 | Mr. Sully asked, when the two heads disagree, who must decide? |
28020 | Mrs. Gage also discussed the question so often put,"What has woman to do with politics?" |
28020 | Mrs. HALLOCK: Is n''t it a pity that our laws-- are they ours? |
28020 | Mrs. Stanton asks,"Would you send a young girl into a nunnery, when she has made a mistake?" |
28020 | Must you not? |
28020 | Now can anything be clearer than that? |
28020 | Now do you understand me? |
28020 | Now does this question grow legitimately out of the great question of woman''s equality? |
28020 | Now is this movement right in principle? |
28020 | Now what becomes of the"tenant for life"? |
28020 | Now, do you believe, men and women, that all these wretched matches are made in heaven? |
28020 | Now, do you candidly think these wives do not wish to control the wages they earn-- to own the land they buy-- the houses they build? |
28020 | Now, gentlemen, we would fain know by what authority you have disfranchised one- half the people of this State? |
28020 | Now, the question is, not whether the Jews are converted, or whether the Gospel ever reaches the islands, but, Does the agent flourish? |
28020 | Now, what is the remedy? |
28020 | Now, who is to educate them and control them? |
28020 | Now, why should that same law base their union or oneness on inequality or subjugation? |
28020 | Now, you men that hiss, you would like to have them help you elect your candidate this year, would n''t you? |
28020 | Of what advantage is it to us to live in a Republic? |
28020 | Of what rights is she deprived? |
28020 | Oh, brother- men, who make these things, is this a pleasant sight? |
28020 | On what else, I ask, are the hundreds of women depending, who this hour demand in our courts a release from burdensome contracts? |
28020 | On what principle is proscription on account of color more cruel than on account of sex? |
28020 | On what principle of republican government is one class of tax- payers thus defrauded of one of the most sacred rights of citizenship? |
28020 | Or are we to adopt the French mode, which is too well known to need explanation? |
28020 | Or that Miss Mitchell, of Nantucket, has lately discovered a planet, long looked for? |
28020 | Or to have deposited two votes in perhaps five minutes''time, than to have spent four hours in soliciting some other person to give one? |
28020 | Ought not we to raise him up; and is there one in this Hall who sees nothing for himself to do? |
28020 | Perhaps, had the person making this demand had this question put to him, namely:"What reasons are there why men should vote?" |
28020 | Pray what is it but superstition that could prompt him to such violation of benevolence and common- sense? |
28020 | Raising her voice still louder, she repeated,"Whar did your Christ come from? |
28020 | Recovering myself, I said,"Is it possible, Mrs. Seward, that you agree with me? |
28020 | Responsibilities indeed there are, if they but felt them; but as to burdens, what are they? |
28020 | Said I,"Suppose in spite of the vote of excommunication the Spirit should move you to speak, what could the chairman do, and which would you obey? |
28020 | Said the judge:"How can you allow it? |
28020 | Said the son,"Why did n''t you allow her to speak?" |
28020 | Say you,"These are but the opinions of men"? |
28020 | Say, delegates of the people of Indiana, answer and say whether you, whether those who sent you here are guiltless in this thing? |
28020 | Separate? |
28020 | Shall I be answered that woman''s home influence must keep her children and her husband in the paths of virtue and honor? |
28020 | Shall he therefore be put under guardianship, and forbidden to vote? |
28020 | Shall it be made in vain to you? |
28020 | Shall the Fultons say to the Raphaels, because you can not make steam engines, therefore you shall not vote? |
28020 | Shall we accept it, or shall we strive against it? |
28020 | Shall we block the way to any individual aspiration? |
28020 | Shall we not, then, at once demand of them-- demand of every sovereign State in the Union-- the elective franchise for woman? |
28020 | Shall we talk of failure, because forty, twenty, or seven years have not perfected all things? |
28020 | Shall we talk of the Anti- Slavery Cause as a"failure,"while our whole great nation is shaking as if an Etna were boiling below? |
28020 | She said to herself:"What is to hinder me from going into this business? |
28020 | Should she not be left where the Turkish women are left? |
28020 | Should the females of New York be placed on a level of equality with males before the law? |
28020 | Should the king of the United States be greater, or more crueler, or more harder? |
28020 | Should we then have to give these up? |
28020 | So they say; but why not hear her on the matter? |
28020 | Speaking to the men in a strangely quiet, voice, she said:"Can you not tell me? |
28020 | Suppose I should go to vote, and some man should push me back and say,"You want to be Governor, do n''t you?" |
28020 | Suppose woman, though equal, does differ essentially in her intellect from man, is that any ground for disfranchising her? |
28020 | Take the case of slavery: How has the anti- slavery cause been received? |
28020 | Tell me if Christianity has not ever held the reins in this country; and what has it done for woman? |
28020 | Tell me what you would wish the Church to do toward you, were you in my place? |
28020 | Tell me, Mr. C----, are you helping the other party as a favor, or in your official capacity? |
28020 | Tell me, is marriage to be merely a contract-- something entered into for a time, and then broken again-- or is the true marriage permanent? |
28020 | That Miss Herschel has made some discoveries, and is prepared to take her equal part in science? |
28020 | The President laid the request before the Convention, and asked, Will you remain? |
28020 | The Professor, more perplexed than before, said:"What is the pleasure of the Convention?" |
28020 | The ability of Napoleon-- what was it? |
28020 | The family, that great conservator of national virtue and strength, how can you hope to build it up in the midst of violence, debauchery, and excess? |
28020 | The general object of these conferences, as declared in her programme, was to supply answers to these questions:"What are we born to do?" |
28020 | The interests of marriage are such that they can not be destroyed, and the only question must be,"Has there been a marriage in this case or not?" |
28020 | The meeting of a convention of men to amend the Constitution of our(?) |
28020 | The other hundred dollars goes-- whither? |
28020 | The question is frequently asked,"What more do these women want?" |
28020 | The question is often asked of us on this platform, will the children of these reformers take up the work that falls from their hands? |
28020 | The question is often asked,"What does woman want, more than she enjoys? |
28020 | The question naturally suggests itself to any fair mind, why not deprive the men of the suffrage, and let the women vote themselves each one husband? |
28020 | The question naturally suggests itself, where are the young women of Ohio, who will take up this noble cause and carry it to its final triumph? |
28020 | The question simply is, shall this petition be received? |
28020 | The woman-- the crowning glory of the model republic among the nations of the earth-- what must she not be? |
28020 | The world still asks, What is Truth? |
28020 | The writer from whom we glean these facts, says:"Can you fancy the scene? |
28020 | Then do we not ask for laws which are not equal between man and woman? |
28020 | Then what is all your pettifogging about technicalities worth? |
28020 | Then why should she not be allowed to choose her party? |
28020 | Then why, when I was so hard pressed with foes on every side, did you not come to the defence? |
28020 | Then, can the father and mother annul the relation which exists between themselves, the parents of the child? |
28020 | There are those in our movement who ask,"What is the use of these Conventions? |
28020 | There has lately been a petition carried into the British Parliament, asking-- for what? |
28020 | There is no Lord Chancellor to whom to apply, and does not St. Paul strictly enjoin obedience to husbands, and that man shall be head of the woman? |
28020 | Think you she is not capable of as much justice, disinterested devotion, and abiding affection, as he is? |
28020 | Think you she would act less generously toward him, than he toward her? |
28020 | Think you, women_ thus_ educated would long remain the weak, dependent beings we now find them? |
28020 | This is law, but where is the justice of it? |
28020 | To her is presented, what kind of a life? |
28020 | To take that tailor by the throat, and gibbet him in_ The New York Tribune_? |
28020 | To the husband''s father or mother? |
28020 | To use the contemptuous word applied in the lecture alluded to, is she becoming"mannish"? |
28020 | True, he can, if he will, but does he? |
28020 | Two years ago Mr. Greeley said to one of the ladies,"Why do n''t you ladies go to work?" |
28020 | Until all this folly is unlearned, how can she be self- dependent and truly womanly? |
28020 | Was Christ less a Christ in His vesture, woven without a seam, than He would have been in the suit of a Broadway dandy? |
28020 | Was I grieved? |
28020 | Was I indignant? |
28020 | Was it best, under all the circumstances, to introduce it now? |
28020 | Was it not through this means, we obtained the law under which a vote of the majority excluded the sale of intoxicating liquors amongst us? |
28020 | Was it the love of the temperance cause that raised the outcry against her? |
28020 | Was it thus with those, your predecessors, Who sealed with racks, and fire, and ropes Their loving- kindness to transgressors? |
28020 | Was the gentleman answered? |
28020 | Was the old Roman in his toga less of a man than he now is in swallow- tail and tights? |
28020 | Was the old Roman less a man in his cumbrous toga, than Washington in his tights? |
28020 | Was there ever any story, which had such a hold upon the readers of a generation, as"Charlotte Temple"? |
28020 | We believe in woman''s rights; we have some conclusions(?) |
28020 | We have heard many instances of the tyranny inflicted on women; but is that a reason that they should vote? |
28020 | We often hear the question asked,"What shall we do?" |
28020 | Well, what would she see there? |
28020 | Whar did your Christ come from?" |
28020 | What all these advertisements in our public prints, these family guides, these female medicines, these Madame Restells? |
28020 | What are his arguments? |
28020 | What are the experiences of days and months and years in the lifetime of a mighty nation? |
28020 | What are the rights which can not rightfully be denied her? |
28020 | What are the strongest arguments, which one of the greatest champions on any question which he chooses to espouse, has brought forward? |
28020 | What are they? |
28020 | What are they? |
28020 | What are you aiming at?" |
28020 | What avails it that we point out the wrongs of woman in social life; the victim of passion and lust? |
28020 | What better are our Republican legislators? |
28020 | What but conscious guilt? |
28020 | What but the temperance cause had brought her to the Convention? |
28020 | What can they do now? |
28020 | What can woman want under such a government? |
28020 | What care we for her progress or her wrongs?" |
28020 | What could I say? |
28020 | What could have been more insulting than such a question as that at that moment? |
28020 | What did I meet with? |
28020 | What do our present divorce laws amount to? |
28020 | What do the leaders of the Woman''s Rights Convention want? |
28020 | What do we seek to overturn? |
28020 | What do you, the guides of our youth, say? |
28020 | What else? |
28020 | What evil-- what but good can come from enlarging woman''s power of usefulness? |
28020 | What father of a family, at the loss of his wife, has ever been able to meet his responsibilities as woman has done? |
28020 | What good are you going to do? |
28020 | What has Christianity done for woman for two hundred years past? |
28020 | What has a man at stake in society? |
28020 | What has all this to do with the meeting at the Brick Chapel? |
28020 | What has done it? |
28020 | What has he to risk by his ballot? |
28020 | What has man ever done, that woman, under the same advantages, could not do? |
28020 | What has this indicated on the part of the nation? |
28020 | What have we been doing here in New York State? |
28020 | What have we gained since 1855? |
28020 | What have women and negroes to do with rights? |
28020 | What is a mob? |
28020 | What is it that we oppose? |
28020 | What is it? |
28020 | What is she seeking to obtain? |
28020 | What is talk? |
28020 | What is the Spirit of God? |
28020 | What is the appropriate remedy? |
28020 | What is the result? |
28020 | What is the sphere of woman? |
28020 | What is the use of this constant iteration of the same things?" |
28020 | What is their design? |
28020 | What is there unfeminine or revolting in her preaching the truth which Jenny Lind may sing without objection and amid universal applause? |
28020 | What is there, for instance, in theology, which she should not strive to learn? |
28020 | What is this oppression of which we complain? |
28020 | What is this usurpation? |
28020 | What is woman? |
28020 | What kind of justice is that? |
28020 | What know they of government, war, or glory? |
28020 | What logical argument can be made to prove"the unreasonableness of this demand,"for one class above all others? |
28020 | What made that woman? |
28020 | What marvel, if at times they spurn The ancient yoke of your dominion? |
28020 | What marvel, if the people learn To claim the right of free opinion? |
28020 | What mean these asylums all over the land for the deaf and dumb, the maim and blind, the idiot and the raving maniac? |
28020 | What measure of content could you draw from the literature of the past? |
28020 | What moral reason is there for this, under the American idea? |
28020 | What more could be expected of a progeny of slaves? |
28020 | What mother can not bear me witness to untold sufferings which cruel, vindictive fathers have visited upon their helpless children? |
28020 | What mother, she asked, ever taught her son to drink rum, gamble, swear, smoke, and chew tobacco? |
28020 | What organization in the world''s history has not encumbered the unfettered action of those who created it? |
28020 | What particle of evidence is there then for supposing that in the parallel announcement He commanded man to rule over woman? |
28020 | What privileges are withheld from her?" |
28020 | What question of theology or any other department? |
28020 | What question was ever settled by the Bible? |
28020 | What reduces both the woman and the slave to this condition? |
28020 | What reform was ever yet begun and carried on with any reputation in the day thereof? |
28020 | What reform, however glorious and divine, was ever advocated at the outset with rejoicing? |
28020 | What right has the law to intrust the interest and happiness of one being into the hands of another? |
28020 | What right have the advocates of moral reform, woman''s rights, abolition, temperance, etc., to call in question any man''s religious opinions? |
28020 | What rights have either women or negroes that we have any reason to respect? |
28020 | What say you to facts like these? |
28020 | What then? |
28020 | What then? |
28020 | What then? |
28020 | What think you of a law like that, on the statute book of a civilized and a Christian land? |
28020 | What voice is strongest, raised in continental Europe, pleading for the oppressed and down- trodden? |
28020 | What was the expression of God to Adam? |
28020 | What was the result? |
28020 | What wildness, what fanaticism, what strange freaks will we not take on next? |
28020 | What worse can you say of any oligarchy? |
28020 | What would the levelling of this hall be? |
28020 | What''s dat got to do wid womin''s rights or nigger''s rights? |
28020 | What, but the stubble and the hay To perish, even as flax consuming, With all that bars His glorious way, Before the brightness of His coming? |
28020 | What, then, is the substance of our demand? |
28020 | When and where have they yet been recognized by society, or by themselves, as equals? |
28020 | When did the North ever stand, as now, defiant of slavery? |
28020 | When he supplies his wants, is it enough to satisfy her nature? |
28020 | When man rises in revolution, with the sword in his right hand, trembling wealth and conservatism say,"What do you want? |
28020 | When she breaks the moral laws, does he suffer the punishment? |
28020 | When she violates the laws of her being, does her husband pay the penalty? |
28020 | When you compare the public sentiment and social customs of our day with what they were fifty years ago, how can you despair of the temperance cause? |
28020 | Whence came they? |
28020 | Whence come these terrible crimes? |
28020 | Whence originates the necessity of a penal code? |
28020 | Where and when have the sexes yet been equal in physical or mental education, in position, or in law? |
28020 | Where are the crowds of educated dependents-- where the long line of pensioners on man''s bounty? |
28020 | Where are the loving friends who keep midnight vigils with young girls arraigned in the courts for infanticide? |
28020 | Where are the societies to rescue unfortunate women from the bondage they suffer under unjust law? |
28020 | Where are the underground railroads and watchful friends at every point to help fugitive wives from brutal husbands? |
28020 | Where are your beautiful women? |
28020 | Where are your philanthropic ladies who assist her? |
28020 | Where do we see, in Church or State, in school- house or at the fireside, the much talked- of moral power of woman? |
28020 | Where do you see it? |
28020 | Where does the wrong originate? |
28020 | Where have they made any provision for her to learn the laws? |
28020 | Where is he who by false vows thus blasted this trusting woman? |
28020 | Where is she to go when her work is done? |
28020 | Where is the Law School for our daughters? |
28020 | Where is the justice of this state of things? |
28020 | Where is the man who presents himself decently, and proffers a word of reasonable argument against our cause? |
28020 | Where shall we find it? |
28020 | Where the fruits of that victory that gave to the world the motto,"Liberty, Equality, and Fraternity"? |
28020 | Where the glory of the Revolution of 1848, in which shone forth the pure and magnanimous spirit of an oppressed nation struggling for Freedom? |
28020 | Where then did man get the authority that he now claims over one- half of humanity? |
28020 | Where, I again ask, is the result of those noble achievements, when woman, ay, one- half of the nation, is deprived of her rights? |
28020 | Where, under our Declaration of Independence, does the white Saxon man get his power to deprive all women and negroes of their inalienable rights? |
28020 | Where? |
28020 | Wherein are her rights infringed, or her liberties curtailed?" |
28020 | Wherein, your remonstrant would inquire, is the justice, equality, or wisdom of this? |
28020 | Which ground shall we take? |
28020 | Which of England''s kings has shown more executive ability than Elizabeth, or which has been more conscientious and discreet than Annie and Victoria? |
28020 | Which of the women of this Convention have sent their daughters as apprentices to a watchmaker? |
28020 | Who are the mothers of great men? |
28020 | Who are these women? |
28020 | Who are they? |
28020 | Who are_ they_? |
28020 | Who can estimate how much greater are the expenses incurred by our ignorant violation of the laws of health? |
28020 | Who cared for the husband of Jenny Lind, or of Mrs. Norton? |
28020 | Who could say, that if those women had been voters, they might not have reformed it? |
28020 | Who does not feel that this is intrinsically wrong? |
28020 | Who does not see gross injustice in this inequality of wages and violation of rights? |
28020 | Who does not see that their wages, social standing, and means of securing independence, would be far inferior to those they now enjoy? |
28020 | Who doubts the fate of the system under such legislation? |
28020 | Who ever dreamed of"dragging"Christianity here when they came to advocate the rights of woman in the name of Christ? |
28020 | Who ever saw a human being that would not abuse unlimited power? |
28020 | Who has a better right to them than she? |
28020 | Who has said a word about Church but this writer, and about excluding women from the Convention and all its entertainments? |
28020 | Who hath made us a judge betwixt her and her Maker? |
28020 | Who keeps, them there? |
28020 | Who knows but that if woman acted her part in governmental affairs, there might be an entire change in the turmoil of political life? |
28020 | Who make the laws? |
28020 | Who placed them in their present position? |
28020 | Who questions woman''s right to vote? |
28020 | Who shall say that mathematics are wasted on a woman after that? |
28020 | Who shall say that the just men of some State will not even accord to us the franchise we claim? |
28020 | Who so well fitted to fill the pulpits of our day as woman? |
28020 | Who would ever have expected it? |
28020 | Who, then, best knows those instincts and desires? |
28020 | Whose exploits leave the brightest lines of moral courage on the historic page? |
28020 | Whose hands and whose eyes so proper for this as his daughters? |
28020 | Why am I in the prime of life in such feeble health? |
28020 | Why are the press and the pulpit, with all their eulogiums of her virtues, so oblivious to the humiliating fact of her disfranchisement? |
28020 | Why are there so many women in the Church? |
28020 | Why did you make that issue at that time? |
28020 | Why do women talk thus? |
28020 | Why do you not do something?" |
28020 | Why does she claim them? |
28020 | Why go to the Bible to settle this question? |
28020 | Why go to the Bible? |
28020 | Why have they so little practical effect? |
28020 | Why have we come from the East and from the West, and from the North? |
28020 | Why is it brought here but to kindle up sectarian fires? |
28020 | Why is it that one- half the people of this nation are held in abject dependence-- civilly, politically, socially, the slaves of man? |
28020 | Why is it worse to go to the ballot- box with our male friends, than to the church, parties, or picnics, etc.? |
28020 | Why may not women claim to be tried by a jury of their peers, with exactly the same right as men claim to be and actually are? |
28020 | Why may she not obey this impulse, and bear the tidings of a world''s salvation to those perishing in darkness and sin? |
28020 | Why must they? |
28020 | Why not go to work?" |
28020 | Why not treat the subject with some show of honesty? |
28020 | Why not vote, then? |
28020 | Why proclaim our sex on the house- tops, seeing that it is a badge of degradation, and deprives us of so many rights and privileges wherever we go? |
28020 | Why refer this to the Bible? |
28020 | Why should it not be so? |
28020 | Why should not the polls, also, be civilized by her presence? |
28020 | Why should not wives, equally with husbands, be entitled to their own earnings? |
28020 | Why should not woman seek to be a reformer? |
28020 | Why should not woman''s work be paid for according to the quality of the work done, and not the sex of the worker? |
28020 | Why should she not be? |
28020 | Why should women vote? |
28020 | Why should women, any more than men, be taxed without representation? |
28020 | Why talk? |
28020 | Why then should the wife, at the death of her husband, not be his heir to the same extent that he is heir to her? |
28020 | Why, said he, are there no young women sitting at the reporters''desks, taking note of the proceedings of this Convention? |
28020 | Why? |
28020 | Why? |
28020 | Wider and deeper its ravages threaten to extend themselves; and to every benevolent mind comes the earnest question, What must now be done? |
28020 | Will He who led our fathers across the stormy winter seas forsake their children who have put their trust in Him? |
28020 | Will Mr. Beecher go to the Bible for his justification? |
28020 | Will Mr. Beecher limit his wife and sisters in the given case to their pens? |
28020 | Will he pay John fifty cents for cooking, and take the rest himself? |
28020 | Will it be answered that we are factious, discontented spirits, striving to disturb the public order, and tear up the old fastnesses of society? |
28020 | Will our American brethren put us in this position? |
28020 | Will that be, to us, an argument that the tyrant is in the right? |
28020 | Will you correct your error? |
28020 | Will you give me your authority?" |
28020 | Will you give me your reasons?" |
28020 | Will you go to St. Joseph and lecture on woman''s rights? |
28020 | Will you not teach them to do so? |
28020 | Will you permit me to answer and remark upon a few of his inquiries? |
28020 | Will you tell us, that women have no Newtons, Shakespeares, and Byrons? |
28020 | Wirt on this subject:"Is not_ our_ conduct toward this sex ill- advised and foolish in relation to our own happiness? |
28020 | With a humorous, give- it- up sort of laugh, he remarked, abruptly:"You are an editor; do you ever lecture?" |
28020 | With what decent show of justice, then, can man, thus dishonored, claim a continuance of this suicidal confidence? |
28020 | Woman is a part of the human commonwealth; why deprive her of a voice in its government? |
28020 | Would any gentleman like to have that law reversed? |
28020 | Would any of you like such power as that to be placed in our hands? |
28020 | Would he have taken the place he has now? |
28020 | Would he impose it? |
28020 | Would not one code answer for all of like needs and wants? |
28020 | Would not your whole soul revolt from such an union? |
28020 | Would you find room for some of my lucubrations? |
28020 | Yes, she can assert it, but does that assertion constitute a true marriage? |
28020 | Yet what is there in the highest range of intellectual pursuits, to which woman may not rightfully aspire? |
28020 | Yet, is it not as fair that married women should dispose of their property, as that married men should dispose of theirs? |
28020 | You ask, would you have woman, by engaging in political party bickerings and noisy strife, sacrifice her integrity and purity? |
28020 | You open to her the door of science: why should she enter? |
28020 | You say she_ can not_ do this and that, but if so, what need of a law to prevent her? |
28020 | Your pastoral rights and powers from harm, Think ye, can words alone preserve them? |
28020 | _ Reverend_ for what? |
28020 | _ Reverend_ for what? |
28020 | and often more? |
28020 | and yet shall she find there no woman''s face or voice to pity and defend? |
28020 | and"How shall we do it?" |
28020 | are there not sorrows enough in our best condition? |
28020 | do you hope thus to break the force of my argument?" |
28020 | have we not temptations strong enough within and without? |
28020 | is this not adding insult to injury? |
28020 | my dear Horace, it is done; now say, what shall woman: do next?" |
28020 | said I,"women?" |
28020 | that all these sad, miserable people are bound together by God? |
28020 | that under our present laws married women have no right to the wages they earn? |
28020 | the Spirit or the Convention?" |
28020 | the insane, the idiot, the deaf and dumb for his asylum? |
28020 | to have at their disposal their own children, without being subject to the constant interference and tyranny of an idle, worthless profligate? |
28020 | what are the motives that impel them to this course of action? |
28020 | what do they want? |
28020 | what does she do out?" |
28020 | what does the term mean? |
28020 | what would the breaking of every window be? |
28020 | where is the home- shelter that guards the delicacy of the drunkard''s wife and daughter? |
28020 | where is thy glory? |
28020 | where the law office, the bar, or the bench, now urging them to take part in the jurisprudence of the nation? |
28020 | who hires bullies to fight for her? |
28020 | with so much bribery, so much corruption, so much quarrelling in the domestic councils? |
28020 | would have made every thirty- fifth voter a rum- seller? |
28020 | your frail ones, taught to lean lovingly and confidingly on man? |
28039 | But Theodore is not a weekly; why did he not come to the Convention and tell us what he thought? |
28039 | But what is we to do? 28039 But would you have woman hold elections like ours"? |
28039 | But,I said,"did n''t he know how black you were before he married you?" |
28039 | But,said Ting,"what is the special object of your preaching Christianity?" |
28039 | Can you let me stay anywhere? |
28039 | How many have you? |
28039 | Is she to be taxed in South Carolina to support the aristocracy? |
28039 | Shall Maria pay a tax and have no voice? |
28039 | Shall this softer, gentler, more fragile creature be the equal of the ruder, stouter man? |
28039 | Well, dare you? |
28039 | Well, then, why do you try to convert the women? |
28039 | Well,said I,"why do n''t he support the children?" |
28039 | What does it mean? 28039 What have you done?" |
28039 | What next? |
28039 | What relations? |
28039 | Why has he left you? |
28039 | Will you walk into my parlor, said the spider to the fly? |
28039 | Would you have a woman participate in the scenes preliminary to an election? |
28039 | ''Who has we but the Lord and you?'' |
28039 | ''s misapprehension of his rights justify his act? |
28039 | ..."What then, is the next step,"he asks,"in the progress of reconstruction?" |
28039 | 2. Who may act as attorneys? |
28039 | 7: Secondly, who are capable of becoming agents? |
28039 | A LADY: I want to ask the lady who just spoke if the women of the Revolution found it necessary to form Loyal Leagues? |
28039 | A LADY: If the men would give themselves, why not freely? |
28039 | A MAN IN THE AUDIENCE: The question was asked, as I entered this house,"Is it right for women to meet here and intermeddle in our public affairs?" |
28039 | A VOICE: Allow me to inquire if men have a right to vote on this question? |
28039 | A VOICE:--Is that not all true about black women? |
28039 | A VOICE:--What are they doing? |
28039 | A change might come-- even to them, but if it did not, ought they not to pity other women whose situation was less comfortable than their own? |
28039 | A lady of society asked me,"Are you in favor of woman''s rights?" |
28039 | A lady says to me,"What more can be expected of women if men fail to some extent in our military affairs?" |
28039 | A thousand times in the last years, in this struggle for bread, have I been asked,"Why do n''t you let your sons support you?" |
28039 | Again, if the right to share in the joint government is not inherent, from whence does it come? |
28039 | Again, in the trial of the inspectors of election, why were both judge and jurymen so merciful? |
28039 | Amendment apply to her? |
28039 | Amendment declaring that it shall not be denied on account of either race, color, or previous condition of servitude, to be regarded? |
28039 | Amendment speaks of all persons, etc., and declares them to be citizens, it means all male persons and unmarried females? |
28039 | Amendment, are qualified to hold office? |
28039 | Amendment, by what possible authority are they voting by hundreds of thousands throughout this country? |
28039 | Amendment, the privilege of earning a livelihood by practicing at the bar of a judicial court? |
28039 | Amendment? |
28039 | Amendment? |
28039 | Amendment? |
28039 | Amendment? |
28039 | Amendments secured suffrage to women as well as to colored men, who would be willing to admit that they desired to obtain suffrage through trickery? |
28039 | Amendments, in some way or other, the colored man came into possession of this right of suffrage; and the question is, where did he get it? |
28039 | Among these is the question,"Are women equal with men?" |
28039 | And I say to the oldest daughter,"Can you shoot?" |
28039 | And are there any intrinsic necessary conditions that go to constitute liberty in society? |
28039 | And do you know why? |
28039 | And has not also the moral and spiritual nature its inalienable rights? |
28039 | And how shall provision be made for us unless we make it ourselves by voting for it? |
28039 | And how shall we acquire this unless we are taught? |
28039 | And how shall we be taught unless provision is made for us? |
28039 | And if a man may divest himself of this right, what right is sacred from his renunciation? |
28039 | And if a woman is bad enough to commit a heinous crime, must we absurdly assume that women are too good to know that there is such a crime? |
28039 | And if exemptions which appertain to males may be recognized as valid, why not similar exemptions for like reason when applied to females? |
28039 | And if it be either of these, shall we say that education has unsphered and unsexed her? |
28039 | And if men can not live in this country in safe homes, except their neighbor men are enfranchised, can they live without enfranchised women any more? |
28039 | And if not, is there any reason why she should not do directly what she does indirectly? |
28039 | And if suffrage was necessarily one of the absolute rights of citizenship, why confine the operation of the limitation to male inhabitants? |
28039 | And if that be so, how can their admission rightfully depend upon the majority? |
28039 | And is not their political subjection as absolute as was that of the African slaves? |
28039 | And is there a man who does not know, that when questions of justice and humanity are blended, woman''s instinct is better than man''s judgment? |
28039 | And now, let me ask you, what are these men sent here for and who sent them? |
28039 | And now, may a woman be an artist? |
28039 | And shall an American woman shrink from her duty when there is so much power in her hands for good? |
28039 | And shall it not also be pre- eminently so with woman? |
28039 | And shall we say that a woman may properly command an army, and yet can not vote for a Common Councilman in the city of Washington? |
28039 | And should not the ballot- box be as respectable, and as respected, and as sacred as the church? |
28039 | And the great question of to- day is, How shall work find leisure, and in leisure knowledge and refinement? |
28039 | And upon what principle ought they to be asked? |
28039 | And what grew there? |
28039 | And what has the great little Napoleon done? |
28039 | And when I say,"Is it so?" |
28039 | And where can there be a virtuous and happy home unless a Christian marriage shall have consecrated it? |
28039 | And who does not know that they govern us? |
28039 | And who, by common consent, is the educator of the world? |
28039 | And why now, and why not ten, fifteen, or twenty years ago? |
28039 | And why should not even Republican government take to itself other modes of administration without infraction of its fundamental liberties? |
28039 | And why so? |
28039 | And why? |
28039 | And why? |
28039 | And will our force all fail, having done that? |
28039 | And would the gentleman also contend that a lack of power to cut off a thing not in existence also creates the thing? |
28039 | Are lawyers, merchants, tailors, cobblers, bootblacks less skilled in their specialties because they vote? |
28039 | Are not all our chief possessions held in common? |
28039 | Are not these interests equal to those of the negro and of his race? |
28039 | Are not women as much interested in good government as men? |
28039 | Are not women people? |
28039 | Are not"the truths as self- evident"to- day to the intelligent public as they were a century ago? |
28039 | Are politicians so pure, politics so exalted, the polls so immaculate, men so moral, that woman would pollute the ballot and contaminate the voters? |
28039 | Are the instincts of woman so low that unless man puts up a bar, she will immediately fall into man''s obscene conversation and disreputable habits? |
28039 | Are the men alone to say? |
28039 | Are there not large classes even among men in this country who are exempt from service in our armies for physical incapacity and for other reasons? |
28039 | Are there seventeen students in Harvard College who take mathematical astronomy, do you think?" |
28039 | Are there two laws in this country, one for the negro, and another for woman? |
28039 | Are these to be excluded from the polls? |
28039 | Are they capacities merely? |
28039 | Are they capacities merely? |
28039 | Are they degraded? |
28039 | Are they lacking in the necessary intelligence? |
28039 | Are they not also rights? |
28039 | Are they not also rights? |
28039 | Are they not shown to be subjects of the other half, who are the sovereigns? |
28039 | Are we and future generations to be ever imprisoned in the uncouth alternative of monarchical or democratic forms as they now obtain? |
28039 | Are we only a handful? |
28039 | Are we sure that he, once entrenched in all his inalienable rights, may not be an added power to hold us at bay? |
28039 | Are we to have no progress in the modes of government among men? |
28039 | Are women not Saxons? |
28039 | Are women politically oppressed that they need the ballot for their protection? |
28039 | Are you a rich man, afraid of your money? |
28039 | Are you to compel wickedness and crime? |
28039 | Are you to force prostitution and wrong upon those people by these unjust laws? |
28039 | Are you willing to believe, women, that your girls are sixteen times less valuable than the boys? |
28039 | As I asked one of my friends one day,"What are you rebelling for? |
28039 | As Milton so grandly says in Paradise Lost: What though the field be lost? |
28039 | As capital has ever ground labor to the dust, is it just and generous to disfranchise the poor and ignorant because they are so? |
28039 | As to her not being protected, what lady has ever said that her rights were not protected because she had not the right of suffrage? |
28039 | At that time, in an article entitled,"Can a Judge Direct a Verdict of Guilty? |
28039 | Ay, sir, did it not only respond to a demand which was there pressed, but did it not imply a duty, a pledge which this party ought to redeem? |
28039 | Aye, more, that a principle He has made true, it is not safe not to apply? |
28039 | Because a man is a father, must he needs be nothing else? |
28039 | Because it is not a natural right, is it any less unjust to deprive a large part of the people of it? |
28039 | Because some women are mothers, shall all women concentrate every thought in that direction? |
28039 | Because the freedman has that talisman in his hands which the politician is looking after? |
28039 | Because they have learned our Constitution? |
28039 | Before the art of printing, were all men fools? |
28039 | But I ask you, to- day,"Is it safe to bring in a million black men to vote, and not safe to bring in your mother, your wife, and your sister to vote?" |
28039 | But are women, who are not infants, ever included in this category? |
28039 | But at what age has any nation of any period or place become wise, rich, or even strong; to say nothing of good? |
28039 | But did any revolution or any special trouble grow out of this recognition of woman''s right? |
28039 | But does this concession belittle the importance of woman''s political rights? |
28039 | But have they done as they promised? |
28039 | But have women, then, no sphere as women? |
28039 | But how could the amendment be written without the word"male"? |
28039 | But how is it with men? |
28039 | But how was it to be obtained? |
28039 | But if she can make two dollars to his one, allowing him to carry out his part of the appointments of life, why should not she do it? |
28039 | But if we are to have a new general in his place, we may ask, what has become of Sigel? |
28039 | But is a self- made woman less honorable than a self- made man? |
28039 | But is it enough, if the work for which the war is_ now_ prosecuted is not accomplished? |
28039 | But is it true that the equality of man and woman would not be useful to society? |
28039 | But it is asked, why make this disturbance? |
28039 | But it is asked: What do you want of the ballot? |
28039 | But it may be asked: If this be so, why was not the question sooner raised? |
28039 | But it may be said, if the States had no power to abridge the right of suffrage, why the necessity of prohibiting them? |
28039 | But suppose that a majority do not want the ballot, how does that affect the rights of the minority who do want it? |
28039 | But the question remains, What relief can be granted? |
28039 | But the war being over, and a new million of black males being added to the many million white males as rulers of the land, what do we find to- day? |
28039 | But they can load all the four rifles, and he can not fire half as fast as they can load; and I say to the mother,"Can you shoot?" |
28039 | But what are compromises, and what is laid down in those constitutions? |
28039 | But what does election day do for him? |
28039 | But what great reformatory movement was ever treated any better at the outset? |
28039 | But what is an organ played with the feet, if all the upper part is left unused? |
28039 | But what political agency has righted so many? |
28039 | But what practical use will the ballot be to women? |
28039 | But what put the dram- bottle out of the home? |
28039 | But what was the result to the country? |
28039 | But what were the rights? |
28039 | But what word can I speak that will not be better spoken? |
28039 | But what would it be if every foreigner and every ignorant man could not go out on election day, and prove that he was as good as anybody? |
28039 | But when her duties called her there, who ever found her unfaithful to her trust? |
28039 | But when they came to do that, they then asked themselves,"Where are our good right hands?" |
28039 | But when was the consent of woman ever asked to one single act on all the statute books? |
28039 | But who ever heard of a right being conferred by omission? |
28039 | But who shall decide as to"spears?" |
28039 | But who would be willing to banish from the literary world to- day such names as Browning, Hemans, Stowe, and Gage? |
28039 | But why exclude women? |
28039 | But would you, seriously, I am asked, would you drag women down into the mire of politics? |
28039 | But yet I will descend a step lower; and doth not our law, temporal and spiritual, admit of women to be executrixes and administratrixes? |
28039 | But, shall we have a woman for President? |
28039 | But, the objectors continue, would you have women hold office? |
28039 | But, to look at it seriously, what is the defect of this statement? |
28039 | But,"said Sojourner,"where is Theodore Tilton''s paper?" |
28039 | By Judge Selden:_ Q._ Did they advise the registry or did they not? |
28039 | By what right, then, except that of mere force, do you deny me a voice in the laws which I am forced to obey?" |
28039 | C. Storrs, a United States Commissioner, in the city of Rochester, when her case was examined? |
28039 | CAN A WOMAN PRACTICE LAW OR HOLD ANY OFFICE IN ILLINOIS? |
28039 | CHIEF- JUSTICE-- Coverture then incapacitated a woman from voting? |
28039 | CONKLING.--May I ask a question? |
28039 | Ca n''t get rum? |
28039 | Can a ballot in the hand of woman, and dignity on her brow, more unsex her than do a scepter and a crown? |
28039 | Can any one give a good reason why there should be such a difference between the rights of the widow and the widower? |
28039 | Can any one tell a good reason why? |
28039 | Can any one tell a good reason why? |
28039 | Can any one tell me a good reason why? |
28039 | Can it be said that the people acquire their privileges from the instrument that they themselves establish? |
28039 | Can it be that any colored person feels like that?" |
28039 | Can men do less than empty their pockets for the good of the race? |
28039 | Can not they see, also, that two entire opposing civilizations are mustered into the conflict? |
28039 | Can sex either qualify or disqualify a chooser, one of the people to cast a ballot for President? |
28039 | Can such accusers look each other in the face and not laugh? |
28039 | Can that be abridged which does not exist? |
28039 | Can there be a more direct recognition of a right? |
28039 | Can this court say that married women have no rights that are to be respected? |
28039 | Can you Republicans so utterly stultify yourselves, can you so entirely work against yourselves, as to refuse us a Declaratory Law? |
28039 | Can you longer deny us the protection we ask? |
28039 | Can you think of any model so good as the divine model set before us in the family? |
28039 | Could a State disfranchise and deprive of the right to a vote all citizens who have red hair; or all citizens under six feet in height? |
28039 | Could ideas of justice, and liberty, and equality be more grandly and beautifully expressed than in the preamble to our Federal Constitution? |
28039 | Cross- examination by Judge Selden:_ Q._ Prior to the election, was there a registry of voters in that district made? |
28039 | Deprive a man or woman of that, and of what use is your habeas corpus act, of what use your law of penalties or acquittal? |
28039 | Did Elizabeth unsex herself? |
28039 | Did Southern slaveholders ever understand the humiliations of slavery to a proud man like Frederick Douglass? |
28039 | Did any brave Englishman who rode into the jaws of death at Balaklava serve England on the field more truly than Florence Nightingale? |
28039 | Did any despot ever say anything else? |
28039 | Did his loyalty in the army count for more than her educational work in teaching the people sound principles of government? |
28039 | Did it respond to no demand? |
28039 | Did it show the wisdom of British Conservatism that it waited to grant the Reform bill of 1832 until England hung upon the edge of civil war? |
28039 | Did man put woman in the parlor? |
28039 | Did not Joan of Arc save France when the king had fled, and the armies were scattered, and English soldiers did their will in all that land? |
28039 | Did that mean nothing? |
28039 | Did the children, fully armed and equipped for the battle of life, spring, Minerva- like, from the brains of their fathers? |
28039 | Did the coarse, low- bred master ever doubt his capacity to govern the negro better than he could govern himself? |
28039 | Did the defendant vote in good faith in that belief? |
28039 | Did the men of that period become mere satellites of the dinner- pot, the wash- tub, or the spinning- wheel? |
28039 | Did the negro''s rough services in camp and battle outweigh the humanitarian labors of woman in all departments of government? |
28039 | Did the sexes change places? |
28039 | Did they say,"Go away from here; this is no place for women; you will unsex yourself?" |
28039 | Did we wait for emancipation until the slaves petitioned to be free? |
28039 | Did woman put man in that bar room? |
28039 | Did you ever analyze a voter-- hold him up and see what he was? |
28039 | Did you tell me that Mr. Greeley is a delegate to the Constitutional Convention?" |
28039 | Do cow- boys, hostlers, pot- house politicians ever doubt their capacity to prescribe woman''s sphere better than she could herself? |
28039 | Do n''t know? |
28039 | Do n''t you perceive, then, the importance of the elective franchise? |
28039 | Do n''t you represent her? |
28039 | Do not all great thoughts come from the heart? |
28039 | Do not moral principles, like water, seek a common level? |
28039 | Do not the American people vote in this Senate to- day on this question? |
28039 | Do our intelligent and refined women desire to plunge into the vortex of political excitement and agitation? |
28039 | Do they desert their workshops, their plows, and offices, to pass their time at the polls? |
28039 | Do they not vote in the House of Representatives? |
28039 | Do they not, in that event, occupy politically exactly the position which the learned Chief- Justice assigns to the African slaves? |
28039 | Do we expect any massive concentration of results? |
28039 | Do we expect the whole- hearted sympathy of any monarchy? |
28039 | Do we find any recognition of inequality of rights? |
28039 | Do we not claim that here all men and women are nobles-- all heirs apparent to the throne? |
28039 | Do you believe women should vote? |
28039 | Do you deprive them of the ballot? |
28039 | Do you know, my friends, what will take place if something decisive is not soon done? |
28039 | Do you mean me, General? |
28039 | Do you not know, Theodore, that we have vowed never to go disfranchised into the Kingdom of Heaven? |
28039 | Do you point me to the Cabinet? |
28039 | Do you say that Northern Republicans would not accept such a proposition? |
28039 | Do you suppose if they had ballots they would not make their voices heard here and get for the same work the same pay? |
28039 | Do you think the spirit of our society is wholly different? |
28039 | Do you think we can disembarrass ourselves of history? |
28039 | Do you, said she, own your own persons, according to the law of God, or do you not? |
28039 | Does Congress intend to sustain State Rights? |
28039 | Does any lawyer doubt my statement of the legal status of married women? |
28039 | Does any man say that there is any sense or any justice in that distinction? |
28039 | Does any one question whether Lucy Stone may speak? |
28039 | Does any such principle of exclusion apply to them? |
28039 | Does domestic peace exist in the exact ratio of a woman''s inferiority to the man she calls her husband? |
28039 | Does he believe in the absolute right of women to vote? |
28039 | Does he give it to his slave? |
28039 | Does he not here recognize the enunciation of a principle as directly opposed to liberty as even Judge Hunt''s control of jury trial? |
28039 | Does it mean the male freedman only, or does it mean the freedwoman also? |
28039 | Does it not prove that there is nothing in the argument so far as it involves the question of right? |
28039 | Does it, or does it not give to the possessor the right to vote? |
28039 | Does it, then,"provide for the common defense,"to deny to one half the adult citizens of the republic that voice and vote? |
28039 | Does not his republicanism revolt from such a sentiment? |
28039 | Does some officer distinguish himself by an act of personal bravery in the army of the West? |
28039 | Does the Constitution of the United States recognize or permit class distinctions to be made between its citizens? |
28039 | Does the act injure her? |
28039 | Does the creature extend rights, privileges and immunities to the creator? |
28039 | Does the honorable gentleman think, therefore, that women only should make the laws? |
28039 | Does the preamble look like it? |
28039 | Does this really abrogate the servitude of the wife, and invoke in her favor the action of Congress? |
28039 | During the Convention Lucy got a dispatch from Lawrence as follows:"Will you lecture for the Library Association? |
28039 | During the dynasty of women and negroes, does history record any social revolution peculiar to that period? |
28039 | EDMUNDS.--I am not asking whether I am mistaken or not; I am asking if the clause remains as it stood reported by the committee? |
28039 | Enter any Western hotel and what do you see, General? |
28039 | For instance, when we say"the ladies,"do we not mean them all? |
28039 | For that reason, shall we say to a woman,"You shall not walk in the road?" |
28039 | For what one civil right is worth a rush after a man''s property is subject to be taken from him at pleasure without his consent? |
28039 | For what one civil right is worth a rush, after a man''s property is subject to be taken from him at pleasure without his consent? |
28039 | For, what one civil right is worth a rush after a man''s property is subject to be taken from him at pleasure without his consent? |
28039 | Forty years ago that conscience asked,"Do men have fair play in this country?" |
28039 | Grew''s question-- why the_ Tribune_ does not inquire about these ignorant men who are abusing the franchise? |
28039 | Has it come to this, that because she is a woman the defendant can not get a fair and impartial trial? |
28039 | Has nature ordained that the lark shall rise fluttering and singing to the sun in the spring? |
28039 | Has not each State a right to amend her own Constitution and establish a genuine republic within her own boundaries? |
28039 | Has society been injured thereby? |
28039 | Has the prisoner anything to say why sentence shall not be pronounced? |
28039 | Have I not as many interests at stake as he has? |
28039 | Have not 200,000 names been sent in to Congress already? |
28039 | Have not petitions been already made? |
28039 | Have not those who are training up sons and daughters an interest beyond the home, in the great outer world, where they are soon to act their part? |
28039 | Have not"black male citizens"been heard to say they doubted the wisdom of extending the right of suffrage to women? |
28039 | Have they been injured by mixing with the rude affairs of war in camps and among soldiers? |
28039 | Have they not been as good wives as they were formerly? |
28039 | Have they the means of giving their consent to it? |
28039 | Have they, then, been battling for over thirty years for a fraction of a principle? |
28039 | Have you heard of a State in which women and women only bear rule, and the constitution of which was made by women only? |
28039 | Have you read the_ Herald_ too, children? |
28039 | Having had considerable experience with officers of justice(? |
28039 | He comes here, and what does he find? |
28039 | Hear people say,"What will be the effect?" |
28039 | How can man''s intellect determine what kind of legislation suits the condition of woman? |
28039 | How can statesmen believe the Nation secure unless personal rights are held inviolable? |
28039 | How can that form of government be republican, when one- half the people are forever deprived of all participation in its affairs? |
28039 | How can the State deny or abridge the right of the citizen, if the citizen does not possess it? |
28039 | How can we purify them? |
28039 | How can you abridge a thing that does not exist? |
28039 | How can you know it? |
28039 | How can you know yours as women, but by obedience to the same law? |
28039 | How could a woman be responsible for her deeds to God if somebody had control over her conscience? |
28039 | How could anyone that had no self- government enjoy any inalienable right? |
28039 | How could the four million negroes be made voters if the two million women were not included? |
28039 | How could we know it but that, unconstrained by art, their winking eyes respond to that soft breath? |
28039 | How do I know my sphere as a man, but by repelling everything that would arbitrarily restrict my choice? |
28039 | How do they answer it? |
28039 | How does he know? |
28039 | How does he overtake her swift steps? |
28039 | How goes the good fight? |
28039 | How is it in military affairs? |
28039 | How is it on the deck of a battle- ship? |
28039 | How is it that our courts act in this way? |
28039 | How is the voice of women on this subject to be heard? |
28039 | How many of the male bipeds who do our voting are qualified to hold high offices? |
28039 | How often have mothers governed large kingdoms, as regents, during the minority of their sons, and governed them well? |
28039 | How shall we improve the one? |
28039 | How stands the comparison, Aristocratic England and Democratic America? |
28039 | How tame and bind her fiery soul? |
28039 | How then could the defendant be lawfully deprived of the right to ask every juror if the verdict had his assent? |
28039 | How was my presence regarded by the populace? |
28039 | How would the honorable Senator from Massachusetts face the recent meeting of the Equal Rights Society in Philadelphia? |
28039 | I am often jeeringly asked,"If the Constitution gives you this right, why do n''t you take it?" |
28039 | I answer, there is an inconsiderable minority which deserve such epithets; but even if all women deserved them, who is in fault? |
28039 | I ask honorable Senators of his faith how they are to answer those ladies there? |
28039 | I ask the honorable Chairman of the Committee, whether he thinks that a citizen should have no vote because he has influence? |
28039 | I ask what is our duty? |
28039 | I ask you what sort of peace, what sort of prosperity, have we had? |
28039 | I ask you whether the women of this country have ever given their consent to this Government? |
28039 | I ask you, men of the Empire State, where on the footstool do you find such a class of citizens politically so degraded? |
28039 | I can not ask you,"Is it safe to leave them in the hands of the Government or the city?" |
28039 | I do n''t deny it, but how do you know it? |
28039 | I have been asked"Why not wait for the settlement of the one that now fills the minds of men? |
28039 | I have had persons say to me,"Would you, now, take your daughter and your wife, and walk down to the polls with them?" |
28039 | I have sometimes been asked, even by sensible men,"If woman had the elective franchise, would she go to the polls to mix with rude men?" |
28039 | I pray our opponents to tell us then what is conferred by this first section of this wonderful article, if it be not these rights? |
28039 | I refer to this for the purpose of coming, by and by, to the question,"What ought to be done?" |
28039 | I repeat, if they are represented, when was the choice made? |
28039 | I said to her,"Have you no husband?" |
28039 | I said to their shadows in another world,"Why did you leave this accursed system of slavery for us to suffer and die under? |
28039 | I was often asked,"Why do n''t the Government pay my wife''s earnings to me?" |
28039 | If Hindoo women could have shaped the laws of India, would widows for ages have been burned on the funeral pyres of their deceased husbands? |
28039 | If I am asked what do women want the ballot for, I answer the question with another, what do men want it for? |
28039 | If I am not admitted, the public will ask,''Where is Douglass? |
28039 | If any man says to me,"Why will you agitate the woman''s question, when it is the hour for the black man?" |
28039 | If duty requires him to go out into the world and fight its battles, who blames him, or puts a ban upon him? |
28039 | If it does not belong to the individual whence does it come? |
28039 | If it is a question of precedence merely, on what principle of justice or courtesy should woman yield her right of enfranchisement to the negro? |
28039 | If it is proper that her opinion should influence a man''s vote, is there any good reason why it should not be independently expressed? |
28039 | If it were, do you not perceive that it applies as well to infants as to adults? |
28039 | If men can not be trusted to legislate for their own sex, how can they legislate for the opposite sex, of whose wants and needs they know nothing? |
28039 | If not, where is the argument? |
28039 | If seventy years be the life of a man, what should be the life of a nation? |
28039 | If she believed she had a right to vote, and voted in reliance upon that belief, does that relieve her from the penalty? |
28039 | If she finds the complement of her incomplete being, what more can she want? |
28039 | If so, then did women acquire it by the same amendment? |
28039 | If suffrage was one of these privileges or immunities, why amend the Constitution to prevent its being denied on account of race, etc.? |
28039 | If suffrage was one of these privileges or immunities, why amend the Constitution to prevent its being denied on account of race, etc.? |
28039 | If taxation and representation are to go hand in hand, why should they not go hand in hand with regard to the female as well as the male? |
28039 | If that be true, why not incorporate some other element? |
28039 | If the act of Virginia affects Ballard''s citizenship so far as respects that State, can it touch his citizenship so far as regards the United States? |
28039 | If the framers of the Constitution meant they should not, why did they not distinctly say so? |
28039 | If the question were put to me, If I thought the woman''s reform contrary to Christianity, would I throw it overboard? |
28039 | If these Southern aristocrats are to be colonized, Mrs. President, do n''t you think England is the best place for them? |
28039 | If they are capable and desirous, why not? |
28039 | If this right of suffrage is not an individual right, from what place and body did you get it? |
28039 | If we are given over to fashion, frivolity, and vice, does it follow that rights and privileges, duties and responsibilities will not help us? |
28039 | If women should vote one day in the year, must every duty and function of their being be subordinated to that one act during the whole 365? |
28039 | If you can not live in safety with irresponsible men in your midst, how can you live with irresponsible women? |
28039 | If you vote, are you ready to fight?" |
28039 | If, then, voting is a matter of State control alone, what authority had the United States to prosecute Susan B. Anthony? |
28039 | In like manner, what determines the sphere of any morally responsible being, but perfect liberty of choice and liberty of development? |
28039 | In making up His jewels at the last great day, will not the Lord say of her as of one of old,"She has loved much, and much is forgiven her?" |
28039 | In that case would they think the time past for discussion and petition? |
28039 | In that view of the case, is there anything to go to the jury? |
28039 | In the first place, what has been the effect upon woman of enlarging the sphere of her influence? |
28039 | In the light of the history of your Confederacy, can any Southerner fear to trust the women of the South with the ballot? |
28039 | In the light of the recent action of the British Parliament, is this asking too much? |
28039 | In the name of all womanhood, and of all manhood, I beg to know why this may not be so? |
28039 | In the oft- repeated experiments of class and caste, who can number the nations that have risen but to fall? |
28039 | In what way is it different? |
28039 | Is Susan with you? |
28039 | Is a conscription itself consistent with freedom? |
28039 | Is a negro a man? |
28039 | Is a woman demeaned by dropping her ballot into the box? |
28039 | Is any one afraid of it? |
28039 | Is he a rational, accountable man or not? |
28039 | Is it a credit to a_ man_ to be called a professional politician? |
28039 | Is it a mere question of privilege or immunity? |
28039 | Is it a natural right or an acquired right? |
28039 | Is it any reason if I do not choose to avail myself of my rights that I should be deprived of them? |
28039 | Is it for the court to say, in advance, that it will not admit a married woman? |
28039 | Is it graceful, I ask, to walk on one leg? |
28039 | Is it no wrong? |
28039 | Is it not an anomaly that the lesser rights shall be held by the Nation, the greater by the States? |
28039 | Is it not as safe that woman should govern in the halls of national legislation as in the family and in the school? |
28039 | Is it not because we have no voice in public affairs that Europe is on fire now? |
28039 | Is it not our election day? |
28039 | Is it of any importance to you whether the dram- shops be closed or not? |
28039 | Is it on the ground of color or sex, that the black man finds greater favor in the eyes of the law than the daughters of the State? |
28039 | Is it only stupidity, ignorance and rascality which ought to possess political power? |
28039 | Is it right and safe that the women of this country should have a voice in its administration? |
28039 | Is it said that she influences the man now? |
28039 | Is it said that this right exists by virtue of State citizenship, and State laws and Constitutions? |
28039 | Is it strange that with such foremothers we should love liberty? |
28039 | Is it that they ought not to go to public political meetings? |
28039 | Is it the nature of flowers to open to the south wind? |
28039 | Is it to perfect this bill? |
28039 | Is it to vindicate a principle in which he believes? |
28039 | Is my honorable friend from Maine afraid of it? |
28039 | Is n''t such a position, I ask you, humiliating enough to be called"servitude"? |
28039 | Is not change the primal condition on which all life is permitted to exist? |
28039 | Is not that a distinction without a difference? |
28039 | Is not that the kind of government, sir, which we wish to propose for this State? |
28039 | Is not the only amendment needed to Article 1st, Section 3d, to strike out the exceptions which follow"respective numbers?" |
28039 | Is not the property of a woman as secure under this provision as that of a man? |
28039 | Is not the wife as much interested in the preservation of property as her husband? |
28039 | Is not this a great step in advance? |
28039 | Is that a reason for denying the right to those who would vote? |
28039 | Is that born again? |
28039 | Is that not enough? |
28039 | Is the United States a Nation? |
28039 | Is the gentleman in favor of the amendment he has indicated? |
28039 | Is the giving of the ballot to a foreigner who comes among us a burden so great that he should not have it imposed upon him? |
28039 | Is the right to vote one of the privileges or immunities of citizens? |
28039 | Is the_ World_ Horace Greeley''s paper?" |
28039 | Is there any doubt now as to what"citizen"means? |
28039 | Is there any force in that? |
28039 | Is there any one of us who believes that? |
28039 | Is there any reason why Mrs. Smith should be governed by a goat- head of a mayor any more than John Smith, if he could correct it? |
28039 | Is there any reason why that should not take place? |
28039 | Is there any reason why the emoluments of place should more than repay the labor it calls for? |
28039 | Is there anything essentially different in such duties and the powers necessary to perform them from the functions of legislation? |
28039 | Is there anything in this world that has so great a reputation for lawlessness as a camp? |
28039 | Is there no part of God''s great work in providence that should lead you to be discontented with your ease and privileges until you are enfranchised? |
28039 | Is there no radical method, no force yet untried, a power not only of skillful checks, which I do not undervalue, but of controlling character? |
28039 | Is there no remedy? |
28039 | Is there not a clear distinction between the regulation of a right and its destruction? |
28039 | Is there then any natural incapacity in women to understand politics? |
28039 | Is this an extreme view? |
28039 | Is this no injustice? |
28039 | Is this right of franchise a conventional arrangement, a privilege that society or government may grant or withhold at pleasure? |
28039 | Is this what Mr. Editor of the Albany_ Law Journal_ means? |
28039 | Is"taxation without representation"justice established? |
28039 | It asks another question,"Do women have fair play in this country?" |
28039 | It has been sometimes said"Can this be done?" |
28039 | It is alleged that women are already represented by men? |
28039 | It is asked sometimes,"Would you like to have your wife or daughter go to the polls and vote?" |
28039 | It is sometimes said as a triumphant argument in favor of the exercise of this power,"Has not the judge the power to order a verdict of acquittal?" |
28039 | It seems to me that the voice of God''s providence to you to- day is,"Oh messenger of mine, where are the words that I sent you to speak? |
28039 | It was pertinently asked,"If this may be done in one instance, why not in all?" |
28039 | Let me ask you if you will agree to give every woman a family that has n''t got one? |
28039 | Let the Democrats, as they are now called, get into office, and what would be the consequence? |
28039 | Liberty is the steam, responsibility puts on the brakes, and then what is the safety- valve, I ask you? |
28039 | Loyal to what? |
28039 | MADAME DE HERICOURT said: I wish to ask if rights have their source in ability, in functions, in qualities? |
28039 | MERRIMON.--Why do you want to go into a remote, sparsely settled Territory to make the experiment? |
28039 | MERRIMON.--Why not try it in this city? |
28039 | MORTON.--Does the Senator speak of the Constitution of the United States? |
28039 | MORTON.--How? |
28039 | MORTON.--Will the Senator cite what follows? |
28039 | MY DEAR FRIENDS: I once had a neighbor who was for years entirely crippled with rheumatism, and she, when asked,"How are you to- day?" |
28039 | May she sing in public? |
28039 | May she speak in public? |
28039 | May she vote, or sit upon committees in matters pertaining to local or National interests? |
28039 | May they, therefore, be properly and justly disfranchised? |
28039 | Men strike from their workshops and they succeed, and why? |
28039 | Miss ANTHONY: I would like to know if the testimony of a person who has been convicted of a crime can be taken? |
28039 | Miss ANTHONY:--Will some one put the motion? |
28039 | Miss Anthony has made all my arrangements; but perhaps you will allow me to ask you if Mr. Wood is a democrat? |
28039 | Mr. BAYARD: Did the Senator from Indiana answer the Senator from Vermont in the affirmative or negative? |
28039 | Mr. BAYARD: I ask are the rights of children different from those of men? |
28039 | Mr. BROOKS: How exclude them, when Chinese are to be included in the basis of representation? |
28039 | Mr. BROOKS: How exclude them? |
28039 | Mr. COWAN: I should like to ask whether the presence of ladies on an occasion of that kind would not tend to suppress everything of that sort? |
28039 | Mr. DOUGLASS:--I want to know if granting you the right of suffrage will change the nature of our sexes? |
28039 | Mr. EDMUNDS: Morally, legally, and every other way? |
28039 | Mr. EDMUNDS: Suppose I should answer the Senator and say I do not know? |
28039 | Mr. EDMUNDS: What right? |
28039 | Mr. EDMUNDS: Which way was the report? |
28039 | Mr. FOSTER:--What are these principles? |
28039 | Mr. MERRIMON: What clause of the Constitution does the Senator assert creates the right? |
28039 | Mr. MORTON: I ask the Senator, if there are natural rights, do not the natural and necessary means to protect those rights become a part of them? |
28039 | Mr. SARGENT: Why not? |
28039 | Mr. SEAVER rose to a point of order, and asked,"Who are the men shaking in their boots?" |
28039 | Mr. STEVENS: Is the gentleman from N.Y.[ Mr. Brooks] in favor of that amendment? |
28039 | Mr. STEVENS: Is the gentleman in favor of his own amendment? |
28039 | Mr. STEWART: Is it a natural or acquired right? |
28039 | Mr. STEWART: Then what right has society, the body of men, to govern an individual? |
28039 | Mr. STEWART: What right have they to take from him his freedom in his savage state to do as he pleases? |
28039 | Mr. TILTON-- How is it that you know so much more about corkscrews than about Galatians? |
28039 | Mr. VAN VOORHIS: If the jury should find a verdict of not guilty, could your honor set it aside? |
28039 | Mr. VAN VOORHIS: Then why should it go to the jury? |
28039 | Mr. VAN VOORHIS: You took the two oaths there, did you? |
28039 | Mrs. H. M. TRACY CUTLER said: Many of us have grown old in this work, and yet some people say,"Why do you still work in a hopeless cause?" |
28039 | Mrs. MARY A. LIVERMORE:--Is it quite generous to bring George Francis Train on this platform when he has retired from_ The Revolution_ entirely? |
28039 | Mrs. SPENCE asked( for information) whether they were willing to receive the Conscription law as it was? |
28039 | Mrs. SPENCE: If your husbands propose to pay three hundred dollars, would you urge them to go themselves? |
28039 | Must we be told that woman herself does not ask the ballot? |
28039 | Napoleon once said to Madame de Stael,"Why will you women meddle with politics?" |
28039 | Not rule? |
28039 | Now what do we behold? |
28039 | Now what is proposed by the reformers of the present time? |
28039 | Now what is the ballot? |
28039 | Now would Mr. Ward with Mr. Wade, do this, and so let me breathe and live? |
28039 | Now, I ask if women are a part of"the governed?" |
28039 | Now, I ask you, can a woman or negro vote in Missouri? |
28039 | Now, I ask, why not take a shorter course, and ask to have the men do for us what we might do for ourselves if we had the ballot? |
28039 | Now, could not twelve honest, intelligent jurymen be trusted to defend their birthright against one woman? |
28039 | Now, is it not possible to have republican institutions and to eliminate or decrease largely this element of evil? |
28039 | Now, ladies, what is really the legal status of marriage, so far as the condition of the wife is concerned? |
28039 | Now, sir, to come down to the main question, I ask if the women of this country have given their consent to this Government? |
28039 | Now, sir, what is the sincerity of this proposition? |
28039 | Now, what are abstract rights? |
28039 | Now, what does this discussion mean? |
28039 | Now, what is his position? |
28039 | Now, what is this idea? |
28039 | Now, who is their target? |
28039 | OLYMPIA BROWN: How about Minnesota without Train? |
28039 | OLYMPIA BROWN: How is it now? |
28039 | OLYMPIA BROWN: What is it? |
28039 | OLYMPIA BROWN: Why did Republican Kansas vote down negro suffrage? |
28039 | Of course, his conclusion is correct if his premises are true; but is the right to vote a natural right? |
28039 | Of the three, which should take the precedence? |
28039 | Of what crime are American women guilty that they are to be compelled to stand on a political platform with such men as these? |
28039 | On what principle, then, do you deny her representation? |
28039 | One gentleman remarked,"Why do you push Pomeroy forward in your movement? |
28039 | Or Margaret Fuller, or Julia Ward Howe, do you call these women unwomanly? |
28039 | Or do you say that she was an exceptional woman? |
28039 | Or is it said that she is represented by men? |
28039 | Or that they should not go to the polls? |
28039 | Or, will it be said that women do not want the ballot and ought to be asked? |
28039 | Ought it not to be as much as possible like the government of a well- ordered family? |
28039 | Our Saxon men have held the ballot in this country for a century, and what honest man can claim that it has been used for woman''s protection? |
28039 | Our household gods be desecrated, and our proud lips, ever taught to sing peans to liberty, made to swear allegiance to the god of slavery? |
28039 | Please look at the paper now shown you and see if it contains the minutes you kept upon that occasion? |
28039 | Pound, was she asked there if she had any doubt about her right to vote, and did she answer,"Not a particle"? |
28039 | Pray, what means"loyal"? |
28039 | Pretty soon, however, when the dinner reached the point of champagne, some one exclaimed,"Who has a corkscrew?" |
28039 | Re- direct examination by Mr. CROWLEY:_ Q._ Was Miss Anthony challenged before the Board of Registry? |
28039 | Robinson came to her and said,"Where''s Mrs. Stanton? |
28039 | SARGENT.--What clause is he commenting on? |
28039 | SARGENT.--Will my friend allow me a moment? |
28039 | SARGENT.--Will the Senator allow me to direct his mind to one consideration? |
28039 | STANTON.--Is such the law in case of a daughter? |
28039 | STEPHEN S. FOSTER: Will you give us the evidence that the statement that the women of this country do not want the ballot is not true? |
28039 | STEWART.--The Senator from North Carolina asks,"Why not try it here?" |
28039 | STEWART.--Why not try it everywhere? |
28039 | STEWART.--Will the Senator allow me to ask him a question? |
28039 | Said a rumseller who is bitterly opposed to female suffrage,"What more do you want? |
28039 | Says a French lady in a private letter received a few days since,"Oh, is it not time that women come? |
28039 | Set bounds to the political, social, or religious liberty of a man, and what figures of speech would he employ? |
28039 | Shall I give you a picture of him? |
28039 | Shall I tell her that she is"owned"by some living man, or is some dead man''s"relict,"as the old phrase was? |
28039 | Shall Maria pay a tax and have no voice?" |
28039 | Shall an American Congress pay less honor to the daughter of a President than a British Parliament to the daughter of a King? |
28039 | Shall it be heard from that class only who are satisfied with their protection, or shall the voice of the weak and the starving be heard? |
28039 | Shall it not have it? |
28039 | Shall nothing ever be done by statesmen until wrongs are so intolerable that they take society by the throat? |
28039 | Shall our free presses and free schools, our palace homes, colleges, churches, and stately capitols all be leveled to the dust? |
28039 | Shall the lawyer? |
28039 | Shall the merchant? |
28039 | Shall the minister vote? |
28039 | Shall the poor man? |
28039 | Shall the rich man? |
28039 | Shall the right of suffrage be extended to negroes? |
28039 | Shall the right of suffrage be extended to women? |
28039 | Shall the sun of the nineteenth century go down on wrongs like these, in this nation, consecrated in its infancy to justice and freedom? |
28039 | Shall their unthinking acquiescence or the intelligent wish of their thoughtful sisters decide the question? |
28039 | Shall there not be one law for the brothers and the daughters throughout this entire country? |
28039 | Shall we be beggars for that which is, of right, ours? |
28039 | Shall we dare to go on for another period of our national existence knowing that at the foundation of our government there is a tremendous wrong? |
28039 | Shall we not, in this"crisis of our country''s destiny,"imitate the example of these heroic worthies, if"hereunto we are called"? |
28039 | Shall we prolong and perpetuate such injustice, and by increasing this power risk worse oppressions for ourselves and daughters? |
28039 | Shall we refuse them? |
28039 | Shall we send men to Liberia who are ready to tread the black man under their feet? |
28039 | Shall we who are in some sense the weaker sex have no guarantee for our rights? |
28039 | Shall women govern the country? |
28039 | She gave an able address, answering the questions,"What is to be gained and what is to be lost, by giving women the ballot?" |
28039 | She has a right to think,--has she a right to practice? |
28039 | She has been growing up in the scale of power; has she been going down in the scale of moral character? |
28039 | She liked the idea of working women, but she would like to know if it was broad enough to take colored women? |
28039 | She looked up, and said,"What was I made for? |
28039 | She said,"Is it possible that any person thinks like that? |
28039 | She wished to know who, loving the black man, could take this pledge? |
28039 | Should not our petitions command as respectful a hearing in a republican Senate as a speech of Victoria in the House of Lords? |
28039 | Should she be placed in the militia to enforce the results of a ballot? |
28039 | Some one said,"Who has a New Testament?" |
28039 | State whether that is the poll list of voters kept upon the day of election in the first election district of the 8th Ward, of the city of Rochester? |
28039 | Stone?" |
28039 | Suffrage and amnesty to whom? |
28039 | Suppose I concede that, what then? |
28039 | Suppose the assertion true, is it a peculiarity of this reform?... |
28039 | Taxes are not to be laid on the people"( are not women and negroes people?) |
28039 | That the Border States will join with the now crippled rebel States? |
28039 | That the balance of power between parties is held by a very small number of voters; and in practical action what is the fact? |
28039 | That the elective franchise is conferred upon persons of African descent, or those who have suffered from a previous condition of servitude? |
28039 | The CLERK: Gentlemen, have you agreed upon your verdict? |
28039 | The CLERK: How say you, do you find the prisoners at the bar guilty of the offense whereof they stand indicted, or not guilty? |
28039 | The COURT: Is there anything upon which I can give you any advice gentlemen, or any information? |
28039 | The COURT: What? |
28039 | The COURT: You presented yourself as a female, claiming that you had a right to vote? |
28039 | The Democratic party obtained the control of the Government for two generations because it appealed to that sense of justice? |
28039 | The LADY: What kind of soldiers would copperheads make? |
28039 | The PRESIDENT_ pro tem._: Does the Chair understand the Senator from Missouri as yielding the floor? |
28039 | The PRESIDENT_ pro tem._: Will the Senator from Missouri suggest the disposition he wishes made of this petition? |
28039 | The SPEAKER.--Is there objection? |
28039 | The SPEAKER.--With the names? |
28039 | The ancients did all this, but where are those haughty omnipotences now? |
28039 | The case of Cooper_ vs._ The Mayor of Savannah( 4 Geo., 72), involved the question whether a free negro was a citizen of the United States? |
28039 | The men of Kansas in their speeches would say,"What would be to us the comparative advantage of the amendments? |
28039 | The only question left to be settled now, is: Are women persons? |
28039 | The only question to be asked in connection with this movement is, is it right, is it just?--not, is it expedient? |
28039 | The practical question, therefore, is how shall this protection be best attained? |
28039 | The question with me is, is it right? |
28039 | The right to see came with the eye and the light: did it not? |
28039 | The world says:"Why do you not labor to build up fortunes and reputations for yourselves if you will labor? |
28039 | Then if we say,"Shall a woman vote?" |
28039 | Then why say it to women? |
28039 | Then, gentlemen, what would you gain by this exclusion? |
28039 | There is no escape, and where is the use of courting disgrace and defeat? |
28039 | There may have been slaves who preferred to remain slaves-- was that an argument against freedom? |
28039 | These are certainly great ameliorations of the law; but how have they been produced? |
28039 | These men tell what their wives have done, and then ask, shall such women be left without a vote? |
28039 | They said,"How can we form a true Union?" |
28039 | They_ do nothing_, why should we?" |
28039 | Think you the women of America then had no interest in public measures? |
28039 | Think you they would continue to be the servants of mere fashion, as too many of them now are? |
28039 | This being our political state at present with reference to electoral action, what do you propose? |
28039 | This being the case, is it presumable that a foreign citizen is intended to be placed higher than one born on our soil? |
28039 | Time? |
28039 | To correct your system? |
28039 | To his wife? |
28039 | To reform existing evils and abuses? |
28039 | To study it as patriots, as men of reflection and good sense? |
28039 | To what class, however rich, or intelligent, or honest, they would themselves surrender_ their_ power? |
28039 | To whom do you owe the most-- your father or your mother? |
28039 | To whom? |
28039 | Under the operation of this Amendment, what will become of the family hearthstone around which cluster the very best influences of human education? |
28039 | Upon what reasonable grounds does it rest? |
28039 | Very well; do you object to that? |
28039 | Visit the solemn battle- field, and in anguish we murmur,"My God, why hast Thou forsaken us?" |
28039 | Was Elizabeth incompetent? |
28039 | Was ever a more disreputable phrase penned? |
28039 | Was everything turned upside down? |
28039 | Was it an inherent right in them as a part of"the people?" |
28039 | Was that mere euphuism, mere phrasing? |
28039 | Was the defendant legally entitled to vote at the election in question? |
28039 | We all came together by one common instinct-- saying,"What shall we do?" |
28039 | We are often asked the question,"On what do you base your assertion that the ballot can achieve so much for woman? |
28039 | We frankly say to fathers, brothers, Husbands, too, and several others, We''re bound to win our right of voting, Do n''t you hear the music floating? |
28039 | We have got all Europe, and all Asia is coming, and who sends them? |
28039 | Well knowing how a single petition is suffocated, would it not be well for all the States to unite, and be presented at the same time? |
28039 | Well, may all orphan women, and unmarried women, and women that have no abiding place of residence vote? |
28039 | Well, now, since compromises are coming into vogue again, will you compromise with me, and agree that until a woman has a home she may vote? |
28039 | Well, would I go to the church to mix with rude men? |
28039 | Were the Apostles and martyrs worth$ 250? |
28039 | Were the laws of nature suspended? |
28039 | Were they dwarfed and crippled in body and soul, while their enfranchised wives and mothers became giants in stature and intellect? |
28039 | Were they not the more women? |
28039 | Were you ever so cruelly hurt by any course of lectures before? |
28039 | Whar did she come from? |
28039 | What State of the thirty- seven has power to make a treaty, to form an alliance, to declare war? |
28039 | What am woman? |
28039 | What are the facts? |
28039 | What are the privileges and immunities of citizens? |
28039 | What are the privileges and immunities of the citizens of the United States? |
28039 | What are we beside that giant?" |
28039 | What are we to do with our conquered provinces of the South? |
28039 | What are wealth and jewels, home and ease, sires and sons, to the birthright of freedom, secured to us by the heroes of the Revolution? |
28039 | What are you afraid of? |
28039 | What are you seaboard people doing to vindicate your honor? |
28039 | What argument is not already familiar to the reading and thinking mind? |
28039 | What better is it for those 10,000 men that they became naturalized? |
28039 | What business man studies a business foreign to his own? |
28039 | What can I say? |
28039 | What can free us from their laws so unjust?" |
28039 | What can liberty expect from such a man? |
28039 | What can woman hope from such a party? |
28039 | What did they say when the women came among them? |
28039 | What did they think of the$ 300 clause about substitutes? |
28039 | What do I infer, then, from all this? |
28039 | What do the character and status of citizens import? |
28039 | What do we gain in this? |
28039 | What do we mean when we say the privileges? |
28039 | What do you do with men who are past the years of military service and exempted by your laws? |
28039 | What do you think, Sojourner, of free trade? |
28039 | What does he have of it, then? |
28039 | What does it confer? |
28039 | What does it mean? |
28039 | What does this article say? |
28039 | What else but its recognition to drive every liquor- saloon from the land, making temperance universal? |
28039 | What else does woman suffrage mean? |
28039 | What else have they given women to do? |
28039 | What else is needed but this principle to settle the vexed question of"Solid North"or"Solid South"? |
28039 | What for? |
28039 | What freedom have you given us to act independently and earnestly? |
28039 | What gives influence? |
28039 | What has brought on this war? |
28039 | What have we done? |
28039 | What have you given us to do well? |
28039 | What if their mothers on this platform be angular, old, wrinkled, and gray? |
28039 | What if woman did not carry the bayonet on the battle- field? |
28039 | What if woman should even abuse the use of the ballot at first? |
28039 | What is a slave? |
28039 | What is an attorney? |
28039 | What is he doing? |
28039 | What is involved in the right of the Magdalen to be a woman redeemed and disenthralled from the bondage of sin? |
28039 | What is it that the woman''s reform asks for woman? |
28039 | What is it? |
28039 | What is servitude? |
28039 | What is the chief glory of our democratic institutions? |
28039 | What is the difference between putting a fraudulent ballot in, and keeping a lawful ballot out? |
28039 | What is the effect of it? |
28039 | What is the high and holy mission of any woman but to be the best and most efficient human being possible? |
28039 | What is the meaning of"regulate"and"establish?" |
28039 | What is the motive of my honorable friend in introducing it? |
28039 | What is the proposition now before the Senate? |
28039 | What is the question? |
28039 | What is the reason of this low valuation of woman? |
28039 | What is the right worth if that be denied? |
28039 | What is the right? |
28039 | What is the sum total of his citizenship? |
28039 | What is the trouble between us?" |
28039 | What is the"white male citizen"--the voter in the Republic of the United States? |
28039 | What is woman going to do with the ballot? |
28039 | What is your State unless it is founded upon virtuous and happy homes? |
28039 | What less than_ this_ would the loving Saviour of men have done for one like her? |
28039 | What less would_ you_, who have battled half a century for her freedom, have done in a case like that? |
28039 | What matters it that the tyranny be of many instead of one? |
28039 | What means the right of the drunkard''s wife to be a woman? |
28039 | What next? |
28039 | What next? |
28039 | What particular function does it require to vote? |
28039 | What phantom can the sons of the Pilgrims be chasing, when they make merchandise of a power like this? |
28039 | What place would henceforth be safe from the assaults of these irrepressible amazons of reform? |
28039 | What privilege does the vote give to the"white male citizen"of the United States? |
28039 | What privilege or immunity has California or Oregon the constitutional right to deny them, save that of the ballot? |
28039 | What shall I say? |
28039 | What shall we learn from the other? |
28039 | What should the government of a nation be? |
28039 | What then? |
28039 | What thinking man can talk of_ coming down_ into the arena of politics? |
28039 | What to either class was the nation''s life, so long as the flag gave them no protection against the humiliating distinctions of caste? |
28039 | What to them were boasted republican institutions, so long as their rights, privileges, and immunities as citizens were denied? |
28039 | What victories have been achieved, what defeats suffered with patience? |
28039 | What was meant by them? |
28039 | What was that woman to do? |
28039 | What was the old theory of the common law? |
28039 | What was the result? |
28039 | What was the theory of it? |
28039 | What were the conditions? |
28039 | What will this law do? |
28039 | What woman studies a business foreign to her own? |
28039 | What would be the effect upon their minds? |
28039 | What would he do here? |
28039 | What would he naturally do, with his old world antecedents and training, when he is thus aggrieved as he conceives himself to be? |
28039 | What would money be worth to you without it? |
28039 | What would the family be with a father and without a mother? |
28039 | What wrong is done her? |
28039 | What, pray, does the resident alien acquire by the transmuting process of naturalization? |
28039 | What, then, are the"privileges and immunities of citizens of the United States"which are secured against such abridgment, by this section? |
28039 | What, then, is the basis of rights? |
28039 | What, then, was the law upon this subject when the Constitution was adopted? |
28039 | What? |
28039 | When a man has seen the error of his ways and confesses it, what more is there to be done except to receive him seventy and seven times? |
28039 | When she heard this she asked herself what part women had in such a celebration? |
28039 | When such women come up now and ask for the right of suffrage, who will deny their request? |
28039 | When the Democrats said that my vote should_ not_ go in the box, one Republican said to the other,"What do you say, Marsh?" |
28039 | When there was no father''s hand or brother''s arm to help, what could woman do? |
28039 | When we want a response from men how do we propound the question? |
28039 | When you proclaimed emancipation, did you go to slaveholders and ask if a majority of them were in favor of freeing their slaves? |
28039 | When you propose legislation so fatal to the best interests of woman and the nation, shall we be silent till the deed is done? |
28039 | When you ring the changes on"negro suffrage"from Maine to California, have you proof positive that a majority of the freedmen demand the ballot? |
28039 | When, therefore, the Committee declare that voting is at war with the distribution of functions between the sexes, what do they mean? |
28039 | Whence arises the right of the majority to govern and the obligation of the minority to obey? |
28039 | Whence did they derive it? |
28039 | Whence, then, does he derive it? |
28039 | Where a cave of dimensions equal to those of the Mammoth Cave of Kentucky? |
28039 | Where are Cleopatra and Semiramis, and Zenobia and Catharine, and Elizabeth and Victoria? |
28039 | Where are there any women, as wives and mothers, more beautiful in their home life than Lucretia Mott and Lucy Stone, or Antoinette Brown Blackwell? |
28039 | Where are they so represented? |
28039 | Where can I get some pamphlets containing the best arguments for universal suffrage? |
28039 | Where does it reside? |
28039 | Where does self- government begin? |
28039 | Where has been the assembly at which this right of representation was conferred? |
28039 | Where has been the assembly at which this right of representation was conferred? |
28039 | Where has this provision wrought anything but good? |
28039 | Where is the Democrat who favors woman suffrage? |
28039 | Where is there a mob such that the announcement that a woman is present does not bring down the loudest of them? |
28039 | Where shall we find another Niagara? |
28039 | Where was the compact made? |
28039 | Where was the compact made? |
28039 | Where would Story be now, if living? |
28039 | Where, gentlemen, did you get the right to deny the ballot to all women and black men not worth$ 250? |
28039 | Where, when, and how did they get it? |
28039 | Wherein is the foundation for any democratic society, predicated on the rights of individuals? |
28039 | Which is the superior to- day? |
28039 | Which shall I treat first, the wrong done to the individual or that done to society? |
28039 | Which way am she gwine to?" |
28039 | While all men, everywhere, are rejoicing in new- found liberties, shall woman alone be denied the rights, privileges, and immunities of citizenship? |
28039 | Whither is a nation tending when brains count for less than bullion, and clowns make laws for queens? |
28039 | Who belittle their capacities? |
28039 | Who can doubt it? |
28039 | Who can give the right to govern another? |
28039 | Who can hesitate to decide, when the question lies between educated women and ignorant negroes?" |
28039 | Who can say he is not just as good at twenty- nine? |
28039 | Who controlled the family most effectually? |
28039 | Who does realize in life all that in starting was looked for? |
28039 | Who does she belong to? |
28039 | Who ever knew a labor strike of women to succeed? |
28039 | Who governed you when you were children? |
28039 | Who has been? |
28039 | Who has nothing to regret? |
28039 | Who have carried the spelling- book to the South? |
28039 | Who is it that ought to be protected by these republican governments? |
28039 | Who is to carry them there? |
28039 | Who is willing to shut the pulpit against Mrs. Mott, when she has filled it with such acceptance, in so many places, and on so many occasions? |
28039 | Who knows but that to- night we are laying the corner- stone of an equally grand movement? |
28039 | Who ought to possess the ballot? |
28039 | Who says that she does not want it? |
28039 | Who shall bring it up if he refuses to do it? |
28039 | Who squeeze their minds?" |
28039 | Who will venture to judge the future by any political almanac of by- gone times? |
28039 | Who would n''t maintain the peace when entreated from such a quarter? |
28039 | Who, asked Mrs. Rose, was the first to call a National Convention of women-- New York or Massachusetts? |
28039 | Who, to- day, considers it improper for Lucy Stone, Anna Dickinson, Mrs. Stanton, Mrs. Gage, to appear upon a public platform? |
28039 | Whose dull, dead ear has been raised to life by that vocalization of heaven, that was given to you more than to any other one?" |
28039 | Whose laws, pray? |
28039 | Whose right is it? |
28039 | Why ca n''t you be satisfied?" |
28039 | Why divert and distract their thoughts?" |
28039 | Why do the British workmen at this moment so urgently demand it? |
28039 | Why do they get up meetings for the colored men, and call them fellow- men, brothers, and gentlemen? |
28039 | Why do they not at the same time protect the negro woman? |
28039 | Why do we want it? |
28039 | Why do you consult women if this right shall be given them? |
28039 | Why do you give him the ballot, pray, or permit him to take it for himself? |
28039 | Why do you scold us, poor weak women, for being fashionable and dressy, when snares are set at every corner to tempt us? |
28039 | Why do you waste your time and efforts on this ungrateful soil?" |
28039 | Why does that disinterested, noble- minded, freedom- loving man in vain ask of the Administration to give him an army to lead into the field? |
28039 | Why had nobody thought about it? |
28039 | Why have I so recently arrived at that conclusion? |
28039 | Why have all former republics vanished out of existence? |
28039 | Why have they not this right politically, as well as men? |
28039 | Why ignore 15,000,000 women in the reconstruction? |
28039 | Why is he not seen in the convention?'' |
28039 | Why is it that every father in this country is educating his daughter as well as his son in all branches of science? |
28039 | Why is it that labor is oppressed and that working women and working men are in some respects worse off than ever before? |
28039 | Why is it, my friends, that Congress has enacted laws to give the negro of the South the right to vote? |
28039 | Why is this term"male"used in the constitutions, pray? |
28039 | Why is this? |
28039 | Why may a colored citizen be admitted to the bar? |
28039 | Why may a colored citizen buy, hold, and sell land in any State of the Union? |
28039 | Why not begin the experiment? |
28039 | Why not further amelioration and adaptation? |
28039 | Why not go back to the tribal custom of the desert, and let the patriarch do all the voting? |
28039 | Why not let a woman, if it is desired that she should be a student, inquire of her husband? |
28039 | Why not try it in North Carolina? |
28039 | Why not, Mr. President? |
28039 | Why not? |
28039 | Why not? |
28039 | Why not? |
28039 | Why ought she? |
28039 | Why say a man can not be a member of the Senate until he is thirty years of age? |
28039 | Why should I not be sincere? |
28039 | Why should I or any person be forbidden to select the agent whom we think the most competent and truly representative of our will? |
28039 | Why should n''t they? |
28039 | Why should not large reductions transpire in those opportunities that invite the most sinister combination for offices and spoils? |
28039 | Why should not the landlady of that hotel over the way share the profits of their joint labors with the landlord? |
28039 | Why should the African prove more just and generous than his Saxon compeers? |
28039 | Why should the head of the household, or rather the_ hand_ of the household, be masculine rather than feminine? |
28039 | Why should the woman who does not care to vote prevent the voting of her neighbor who does? |
28039 | Why should the word_ male_ be in it? |
28039 | Why should there be any restriction? |
28039 | Why should they desire to overturn the existing order of things? |
28039 | Why should this church be granted for such a meeting as this, but for the progress of the cause? |
28039 | Why should we? |
28039 | Why should women, whose supple fingers can set type-- why should not they be type- setters? |
28039 | Why should you not throw them in? |
28039 | Why such zeal, such more than Roman sternness? |
28039 | Why this partiality to the black man? |
28039 | Why this, if it was not in the power of the Legislature to deny the right of suffrage to some male inhabitants? |
28039 | Why was it limited to those three causes? |
28039 | Why, do n''t you know that a woman had seven devils in her: and do you suppose a woman is fit to rule the nation?" |
28039 | Why, in organizing a system of liberality and justice, not recognize in the case of free women as well as free negroes the right of representation? |
28039 | Why, in this hour of reconstruction, with the experience of generations before us, make another experiment in the same direction? |
28039 | Why, then, should not the females have a right to participate in their construction as well as the male part of the community? |
28039 | Why? |
28039 | Why? |
28039 | Why? |
28039 | Why? |
28039 | Why? |
28039 | Why? |
28039 | Will America obey heaven''s voice, or does republicanism exist only in name? |
28039 | Will God perform a miracle to feed this multitude? |
28039 | Will Mrs. Griffing let Mr. Sumner know what institution or person should disburse the money appropriated? |
28039 | Will it be said that the renunciation of allegiance to the former implies or draws after it a renunciation of allegiance to the latter? |
28039 | Will it be said that this sex does not claim a right to representation? |
28039 | Will it not in fact sever those relations to which I have referred as being essential for the virtue and safety of a State? |
28039 | Will men never learn that a principle which God has made true He has also made it safe to apply? |
28039 | Will not their weakness render them subservient to the strong and their ignorance to the artful? |
28039 | Will not these new electors you propose to introduce be more approachable than men who now vote to all corrupt influences? |
28039 | Will that ever be remedied until woman has the right to vote? |
28039 | Will the Clerk poll the jury? |
28039 | Will the gentleman accept an amendment to that resolution that there shall be no distinction in regard to sex? |
28039 | Will they not be more easily caught and enraptured by superficial declamation, because more incapable of profound reflection? |
28039 | Will they not be more passionate, and therefore more easily influenced by the demagogue? |
28039 | Will woman be deprived of the guarantees in this section and the right of trial by jury because the masculine pronoun is used? |
28039 | Will you also give me the names of members whom you think would present petitions for us? |
28039 | Will you be good enough to tell me which woman you think to- day is the superior? |
28039 | Will you have Rome? |
28039 | Will you let me know distinctly if you propose to commit yourselves to the idea of loyalty to the present Government? |
28039 | Will you not give to every woman the power to maintain the integrity of her womanhood-- the ownership of herself? |
28039 | Will you pay the debt that has been incurred?" |
28039 | Will you tell me Democracy, Republicanism, consecrated by Christianity, is the remedy for all these ills? |
28039 | Will you, sir, please send me whatever is said or done with our petitions? |
28039 | With all this equity in their favor, may they not be allowed, without censure, to avail themselves of a legal right? |
28039 | With its 75,000 subscribers, and five times that number of readers, what can the poor little_ Standard_ do for us, compared with that? |
28039 | With the argument all on our side, the only question that remains is, does woman herself demand the right of suffrage at this hour? |
28039 | Woman has been fined, whipped, branded with red- hot irons, imprisoned and hung; but when was woman ever tried by a jury of her peers? |
28039 | Woman has been tried in every office from the throne to the position of the humblest servant; and where has she been found remiss? |
28039 | Women of the North, will you not strive for your own enfranchisement? |
28039 | Women of the South, will you not work for your own freedom? |
28039 | Would he contend that therefore every new- born baby might at once grasp a musket? |
28039 | Would it not be well for the women of to- day to emulate Deborah in her zeal and love of country? |
28039 | Would it not turn the blackguard into a gentleman, so that we should have nothing but good conduct? |
28039 | Would not the charge of cowardice, certain to be brought against you, prove more damaging than that of amalgamation? |
28039 | Would revolvers, bowie- knives, whisky barrels, profane oaths, brutal rowdyism, be the feature of elections if women were present? |
28039 | Would that policy in any way conduce to their peace, their purity, and their happiness? |
28039 | Would the Senator argue from that, that they had no natural rights, or that they were consenting to their bondage? |
28039 | Would you have it otherwise? |
28039 | Would you not be branded all over the land as dastardly hypocrites, professing principles which you have no wish or intention of carrying out? |
28039 | You may, perhaps, ask me, before I go any further,"What is the use of preaching to us that we_ ought_ to do it, when we are not permitted to do it?" |
28039 | You might as well ask,"Are all men equal to each other?" |
28039 | You say what of course you can not know, but even if it were so, what then? |
28039 | You say you find the defendant guilty of the offense whereof she stands indicted, and so say you all? |
28039 | _ First Clown._ How can that be, unless she drowned herself in her own defense? |
28039 | _ Plaintiffs''Attorneys._ But is this law? |
28039 | _ Q._ And on that advice the registry was made with the judgment of the inspectors? |
28039 | _ Q._ And she was registered accordingly? |
28039 | _ Q._ At the time of the registry, when her name was registered, was the Supervisor of Election present at the Board? |
28039 | _ Q._ By and between whom? |
28039 | _ Q._ Did she give evidence? |
28039 | _ Q._ Did she name any particular amendment? |
28039 | _ Q._ Did she, upon that occasion, state that she consulted or talked with Judge Henry R. Selden, of Rochester, in relation to her right to vote? |
28039 | _ Q._ Did the Board consider that and decide that she was entitled to register? |
28039 | _ Q._ Did the Board consider the question of her right to registry, and decide that she was entitled to registry as a voter? |
28039 | _ Q._ Did you keep minutes of evidence on that occasion? |
28039 | _ Q._ Did you receive the tickets from Miss Anthony? |
28039 | _ Q._ Did you see her vote? |
28039 | _ Q._ Do you know the defendant, Miss Susan B. Anthony? |
28039 | _ Q._ Do you know the defendant, Susan B. Anthony? |
28039 | _ Q._ From that poll list what tickets does it purport to show that she voted upon that occasion? |
28039 | _ Q._ Had the Board of Inspectors been regularly organized? |
28039 | _ Q._ In what Congressional District was the city of Rochester at the time? |
28039 | _ Q._ In what capacity were you acting upon that day, if any, in relation to elections? |
28039 | _ Q._ In what election district were you inspector of elections? |
28039 | _ Q._ Into how many election districts is the 8th Ward divided, if it contains more than one? |
28039 | _ Q._ It was canvassed previous to election day between them? |
28039 | _ Q._ On what ground? |
28039 | _ Q._ She was not challenged on the day she voted? |
28039 | _ Q._ State generally what was done, or what occupied that hour''s time? |
28039 | _ Q._ State to the jury whether you had separate boxes for the several tickets voted in that election district? |
28039 | _ Q._ State, if you please, what occurred when you presented yourself at the polls on election day? |
28039 | _ Q._ That she was a woman? |
28039 | _ Q._ There was a stenographic reporter there, was there not? |
28039 | _ Q._ Turn to the evidence of Susan B. Anthony? |
28039 | _ Q._ Under that she claimed her right to vote? |
28039 | _ Q._ Upon the 5th day of November, did the defendant, Susan B. Anthony, vote in the first election district of the 8th Ward of the city of Rochester? |
28039 | _ Q._ Was Miss Anthony challenged upon that occasion? |
28039 | _ Q._ Was he consulted upon the question of whether she was entitled to registry, or did he express an opinion on the subject to the inspectors? |
28039 | _ Q._ Was not this question put to her,"Did you have any doubt yourself of your right to vote?" |
28039 | _ Q._ Was she called as a witness in her own behalf upon that examination? |
28039 | _ Q._ Was she challenged at any time? |
28039 | _ Q._ Was she sworn? |
28039 | _ Q._ Was the preliminary and the general oath administered? |
28039 | _ Q._ Was there a poll list kept of the voters of the first election district of the 8th Ward on the day of election? |
28039 | _ Q._ Was there any objection made, or any doubt raised as to her right to vote? |
28039 | _ Q._ Well, was the question of your right to be registered a subject of discussion there? |
28039 | _ Q._ Were you one of the officers engaged in making that registry? |
28039 | _ Q._ What did you do with them when you received them? |
28039 | _ Q._ What number is it? |
28039 | _ Q._ What was the defect in her right to vote as a citizen? |
28039 | _ Q._ When she offered her vote, was the same objection brought up in the Board of Inspectors, or question made of her right to vote as a woman? |
28039 | _ Q._ When the registry was being made did Miss Anthony appear before the Board of Registry and claim to be registered as a voter? |
28039 | _ Q._ Where were you living on the 5th of November, 1872? |
28039 | _ Q._ Who were inspectors with you? |
28039 | _ Q._ Will you state to the jury what tickets she voted, whether State, Assembly, Congress and Electoral? |
28039 | _ Q._ Wo n''t you state what Miss Anthony said, if she said anything, when she came there and offered her name for registration? |
28039 | _ Q._ You did n''t hear any such statement as that? |
28039 | _ Second Clown._ But is this law? |
28039 | _ What can woman do?_ has been with me from the beginning of this war a question of the uppermost importance. |
28039 | and can those who are mothers be nothing else? |
28039 | and did she not answer,"Not a particle"? |
28039 | and how can any give what he has not got? |
28039 | and what effect did it produce? |
28039 | and what they would do if any class attempted to usurp that power? |
28039 | and when was the choice made? |
28039 | but what does that mean? |
28039 | can there be an extreme view, when one is considering individual freedom? |
28039 | or Mrs. Livermore? |
28039 | or Mrs. Stanton? |
28039 | or expired at last in sunsets of serenity and glory, and been embalmed and enshrined in the tears and gratitude of mankind? |
28039 | or has achieved proportionally, so long a life? |
28039 | or not? |
28039 | or why woman as a student, a wife, a mother, a widow, and a citizen, should be held at such a disadvantage? |
28039 | to exalt ignorance above education, vice above virtue, brutality and barbarism above refinement and religion? |
28039 | to which the reply was,"Yes, now and ever heart and soul a woman"; that Judge Hunt should ask her"if she voted as a female"? |
28039 | what came of all these dark forebodings of timid men? |
28039 | when he classes adults as fully capable of exercising an enlightened judgment as himself with infants? |
28039 | which commands most respect? |
28039 | why do n''t these brothers of ours call us, the reserves, into action? |
28039 | why do n''t they call the reserves into action? |