| Jared Sparks, Edward Everett, James Russell Lowell, Henry Cabot Lodge - 1829 - 618 pagine
...that the women do not enjoy that station in society, which has been allotted to them elsewhere ; and consequently much of that important and habitual influence,...fortunately arranged communities, seems to be lost.' Now we grant the Captain, that there is an important influence exercised by women, in what he calls... | |
| Basil Hall - 1829 - 670 pagine
...that the women do not enjoy that station in society which has been allotted to them elsewhere ; and consequently much of that important and habitual influence...fortunately arranged communities, seems to be lost. In touching upon so delicate a subject, it is right to state at once, and in the most explicit terms,... | |
| 1829 - 586 pagine
...enjoy that station in society which has been allotted to them elsewhere ; and consequently sequently much of that important and habitual influence which,...fortunately arranged communities, seems to be lost. ' In touching upon so delicate a subject, it is right to state at once, and in the most explicit terms,... | |
| Theodore L. Flood, Frank Chapin Bray - 1906 - 876 pagine
...that the women do not enjoy that station in society which has been allotted to them elsewhere ; and consequently much of that important and habitual influence...fortunately arranged communities, seems to be lost." All things are working, he thinks, to give the two sexes in the United States "such different classes... | |
| John Graham Brooks - 1908 - 444 pagine
...that the women do not enjoy that station in society which has been allotted to them elsewhere; and consequently much of that important and habitual influence...fortunately arranged communities, seems to be lost." All things are working, he thinks, to give the two sexes in the United States "such different classes... | |
| john graham brooks - 1908 - 446 pagine
...that the women do not enjoy that station in society which has been allotted to them elsewhere; and consequently much of that important and habitual influence...fortunately arranged communities, seems to be lost." All things are working, he thinks, to give the two sexes in the United States "such different classes... | |
| William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, Sir John Murray IV, Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle) - 1829 - 584 pagine
...enjoy that station in society which has been allotted to them elsewhere ; and consequently sequently much of that important and habitual influence which,...fortunately arranged communities, seems to be lost. ' In touching upon so delicate a subject, it is right to state at once, and in the most explicit terms,... | |
| Peter Moore, Tyler - 1999 - 638 pagine
...station in society which has been allotted to them elsewhere; and consequently much of that importance and habitual influence which, from the peculiarity...society in more fortunately arranged communities, seem to be lost. 3 Serious-minded though they were, the young De Tocqueville and De Beaumont obviously... | |
| Henry Duhring - 1833 - 230 pagine
...Do not the Americans pay the greatest esteem, the greatest and sincerest homage, to the fairer sex, in every station of life ? Are their females not preserved...to so strange a statement when, at a cattle-show at 75 Brighton, in the vicinity of Boston, he counted during the whole day, amongst several thousand persons,... | |
| 1830 - 528 pagine
...that the women do not enjoy that station in society which has been allotted to them elsewhere; and consequently much of that important and habitual influence,...fortunately arranged communities, seems to be lost." vol. ii. p. 153. This is certainly a most singular conclusion to be deduced from the fact of seeing... | |
| |