Women, Their Condition and Influence in Society, Volume 1C. Whittingham, 1803 - Women |
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Page 10
... night of ignorance from which they were them- selves seeking to emerge , but in which they obliged their companions to re- main . All the institutions of that time served , in a humiliating manner , to re- mind the women of the unhappy ...
... night of ignorance from which they were them- selves seeking to emerge , but in which they obliged their companions to re- main . All the institutions of that time served , in a humiliating manner , to re- mind the women of the unhappy ...
Page 26
... night Cold and flaky show'rs forebode , Thee I'll seek at dawning light To ease thee of thy chilly load . Should the distant thunders groan , The light'ning threat thee with its rage , Of Rachel's pray'r the tender tone For thee the ...
... night Cold and flaky show'rs forebode , Thee I'll seek at dawning light To ease thee of thy chilly load . Should the distant thunders groan , The light'ning threat thee with its rage , Of Rachel's pray'r the tender tone For thee the ...
Page 27
... nights beginning to wax cold , Laban consented that I should re- turn every evening to the house . We surrounded the young almond - tree with a quick fence ; our hands watered it when the earth was parched , and placed around it upon ...
... nights beginning to wax cold , Laban consented that I should re- turn every evening to the house . We surrounded the young almond - tree with a quick fence ; our hands watered it when the earth was parched , and placed around it upon ...
Page 28
... night she would pass without once closing her eyes in sleep , or obtaining a mo- ment's intermission to her pain ! Wan and meagre , a burning languor had almost effaced her beauty . She was like the olive which has shed its blos- soms ...
... night she would pass without once closing her eyes in sleep , or obtaining a mo- ment's intermission to her pain ! Wan and meagre , a burning languor had almost effaced her beauty . She was like the olive which has shed its blos- soms ...
Page 29
... night to her shall every bliss impart , This night shall end the wretched Leah's life ! After she had finished singing , she thus continued her complaint.- Why has light been given to the unfortunate , and life to those whose hearts are ...
... night to her shall every bliss impart , This night shall end the wretched Leah's life ! After she had finished singing , she thus continued her complaint.- Why has light been given to the unfortunate , and life to those whose hearts are ...
Common terms and phrases
Abdaral able Acorat ćra Almanza Amazons Amenophis ancient ancient Egypt appeared Appia arms arose Aspasia Athens beauty behold Celtes charms chivalry command concealed condition of women conduct courage courtezans cruel daugh daughter dear death desire despair dreadful Egyptians enemy Esau esteem eyes father favour fear feeble feet female Granada Greeks hand happiness heart herds Herodotus Hildebrand honour hope husband idea Isabella's camp Isvan Izaure Jacob Laban Lacedemon laws Leah length Leon Lord lover manners marriage means ment mind Mirza mistress Moorish Moors Mycerine ness night obliged passed passions Pedro placed pleasure Praxiteles prison Rachel racter ramparts received redoubt religion respect Romans Saint Lambert Sarmatians savage Scythians secret seemed silence slavery slaves soldiers soon Spaniards specting tain tears tender Teutoni thee ther thing thou art thought threw tion tower troubadour Urgelle virtue warrior wife wished wives woman word young
Popular passages
Page 279 - The women also with cords about them, sitting in the ways, burn bran for perfume : but if any of them, drawn by some that passeth by, lie with him, she reproacheth her fellow, that she was not thought as worthy as herself, nor her cord broken.
Page 275 - Then shall two be in the field; the one shall be taken, and the other left. Two women shall be grinding at the mill; the one shall be taken, and the other left.
Page 275 - And he took butter, and milk, and the calf which he had dressed, and set it before them; and he stood by them under the tree, and they did eat.
Page 76 - When any of their wives are indisposed, they fasten a silken thread round her wrist, the end of which is given to the physician, and it is only by the motion which the pulsation communicates to it that he is allowed to judge of the state of his patient. This precaution of jealousy is almost unique in its kind. Work* 1'ul.lMed by W. Wymn, HolyveU Street. Complete for One Penny, Tk
Page 200 - To protect the timid and innocent, to combat the Moors in Spain, the Saracens in the east, the tyrants of the castles in Germany, and to secure in France, the quiet of travellers," was, according to some historians, the origin of chivalry.
Page 185 - Whilst religious and political revolutions have successively changed the condition, the character, and the manners of women, it is to be remarked that the inhabitants of the East have uniformly remained in the same state. It is in vain that their country has often changed its master ; that it has been by turns subject to the arms and the laws of different usurpers : not one of these conquerors has ever thought of bursting the shackles of an unfortunate sex, 181 or of abating in the least the rigour...
Page 76 - The idolaters of beauty, the Chinese, are for ever at the feet of the beings whom they persecute When any of their wives are indisposed, they fasten a silken thread round her wrist, the...
Page 187 - I have above observed, in Asia alone have they submitted to slavery without hopes of relief; and, in order to discover some faint traces of their character, we can now only cite some secret intrigues, by which they endeavour, in the retirements of the seraglios, to ameliorate their destiny.
Page 1 - ... usurpation, and the severity of their caprices. The design of my work is to demonstrate the equality of the two sexes, different as they may be ; and to prove that every thing is compensated between them ; — that if the one seems to be endowed with peculiar qualities, not possessed by the other, we cannot deny the other advantages equally to be valued ; — that where corporeal strength is wanting, strength of soul supplies the deficiency ; — that our domination over the female sex is but...
Page 56 - I have oxen, donkeys, flocks, male and female slaves; and I have sent to tell my lord, in order that I may find favor in your sight.