hide Sorting

You can sort these results in two ways:

By entity (current method)
Chronological order for dates, alphabetical order for places and people.
By position
As the entities appear in the document.

You are currently sorting in ascending order. Sort in descending order.

hide Most Frequent Entities

The entities that appear most frequently in this document are shown below.

Entity Max. Freq Min. Freq
Julia Ward Howe 173 7 Browse Search
Diva Julia 152 0 Browse Search
Newport (Rhode Island, United States) 135 1 Browse Search
Samuel Ward 117 5 Browse Search
Oak Glen (New Jersey, United States) 110 0 Browse Search
Villa Julia 108 0 Browse Search
Jesus Christ 106 0 Browse Search
Charles Sumner 92 2 Browse Search
Julia Ward 77 1 Browse Search
Battle Hymn 74 0 Browse Search
View all entities in this document...

Browsing named entities in a specific section of Laura E. Richards, Maud Howe, Florence Howe Hall, Julia Ward Howe, 1819-1910, in two volumes, with portraits and other illustrations: volume 1. Search the whole document.

Found 157 total hits in 75 results.

... 3 4 5 6 7 8
New England (United States) (search for this): chapter 14
ould not waste it in murder. For the tenderness of the one class is set by God to restrain the violence of the other. The New York meeting was followed by one in Boston. In the spring of 1871 the friends of peace met in the rooms of the New England Woman's Club, and formed an American Branch of the Women's International Peace Association: Julia Ward Howe, president. It took five meetings to accomplish this; the minutes of these meetings are curious and interesting. Mr. Moncure D. Con things to be like his own control over things committed to his authority. Then Christ began, perhaps, to see that the other nations of the world would profit by his work and doctrine before his Jewish brethren. My first presidency at the New England Woman's Club.... I do not shine in presiding over a business meeting and some others can do much better than I. Still I think it best to fulfil all expected functions of ordinary occasions, living and learning. ... Negro Christianity. It i
Troy, N. Y. (New York, United States) (search for this): chapter 14
a more excellent way. Again, Come now, let us reason together, saith the Lord. Though your sins be as scarlet, they shall be as wool. This treating of injuries from the high ground of magnanimity is the action that shall save the world. The special faults of women are those incidental to a class that has never been allowed to work out its ideal. Must work to earn some money, but will not sacrifice greater ends to this one. Hear that the Greek mission is given to an editor in Troy, New York. Sad for Greece and for Chev, who longs so to help her. Civil liberty is that which the one cannot have without the many, or the many without the one. The liberty of the State, like its solvency, concerns and affects all its citizens. Equal sacredness of rights is its political side, equal stringency of duties its moral side. The virtue of single individuals will not give them civil liberty in a despotic state, but the only safeguard of civil liberty to all is the virtue of each i
Mystic, Connecticut (Connecticut, United States) (search for this): chapter 14
her man's wife, but any woman's husband might have intercourse with other women. Christ showed how men did offend against this same law which worked so absolutely and partially against women. An unchaste thought in the breast of the man infringed the high law of purity. This teaching of the tender mutual obligations of married life was probably new to many of his hearers. The present style of woman has really been fashioned by man, and is only quasi feminine. Peace meeting at Mystic, Connecticut. Spoke morning and afternoon, best in the morning. The natural unfolding of reform. His purposes will ripen fast --Watts's verse. Providence does not plant so as to gather all its crops in one day. First the flowers, then the fruits, then the golden grain. John Fiske's lecture, first in the course on the theory of Evolution. ... Did not think the lecture a very profitable one, yet we must be willing that our opposites should think and speak out their belief. In the spring o
Edward Twisleton (search for this): chapter 14
ugh better than I feared I might. Felt the method to be the right one, speaking face to face and heart to heart. June 10. Small beer going out of fashion leaves women one occupation the less. Fools are still an institution; and will remain such. To suckle fools and chronicle small beer. Othello. June 16.... A good attendance in spite of the heat.... Agonized over my failure to come up to what I had designed to do in the discourse. June 18.... Saw the last of my dear friend E. Twisleton, who took me to the National Gallery, where we saw many precious gems of art.... At parting, he said: The good Father above does not often give so great a pleasure as I have had in these meetings with you. Let me enshrine this charming and sincere word in my most precious recollection, from the man of sixty-three to the woman of fifty-three. June 27. Left Leeds at 7 A. M., rising at 4.30 .... To Miss [Frances Power] Cobbe's, where met Lady Lyall, Miss Clough, Mrs. Gorton, Jacob Bright
Theodore Watts (search for this): chapter 14
e law which worked so absolutely and partially against women. An unchaste thought in the breast of the man infringed the high law of purity. This teaching of the tender mutual obligations of married life was probably new to many of his hearers. The present style of woman has really been fashioned by man, and is only quasi feminine. Peace meeting at Mystic, Connecticut. Spoke morning and afternoon, best in the morning. The natural unfolding of reform. His purposes will ripen fast --Watts's verse. Providence does not plant so as to gather all its crops in one day. First the flowers, then the fruits, then the golden grain. John Fiske's lecture, first in the course on the theory of Evolution. ... Did not think the lecture a very profitable one, yet we must be willing that our opposites should think and speak out their belief. In the spring of 1872 she went to England, hoping to hold a Woman's Peace Congress in London. She also hoped to found and foster a Woman's Aposto
... 3 4 5 6 7 8