Hidden fields
Books Books
" the future may prove it the greatest of his time, and the mainspring of the most striking part of his creative art —he was in accord with Mill. From his earliest days of reflection he said : "I have been oppressed by the injustice done to Women, the... "
The Works of Lord Morley ... - Page 43
by John Morley - 1921
Full view - About this book

George Meredith: His Life and Art in Anecdote and Criticism

Sir John Alexander Hammerton - Authors, English - 1911 - 516 pages
...on the question of femininism in a letter from which this is a quotation: Since I began to reflect I have been oppressed by the injustice done to women, the constraint put upon their natural aptitudes and their faculties, generally much to the degradation of the race. I have...
Full view - About this book

Letters of George Meredith, Volume 2

George Meredith - 1912 - 344 pages
...GEORGE MEREDITH. To Hugh W. Strong. Box HILL, DORKING, Jan. 1905. DEAR SIR,—Since I began to reflect I have been oppressed by the injustice done to women, the constraint put upon their natural aptitudes and their faculties, generally much to the degradation of the race. I have...
Full view - About this book

The Works of George Meredith, Volume 29

George Meredith - 1912 - 344 pages
...GEORGE MEREDITH. To Hugh W. Strong. Box HILL, DORKING, Jan. 1905. DEAR SIR,—Since I began to reflect I have been oppressed by the injustice done to women, the constraint put upon their natural aptitudes and their faculties, generally much to the degradation of the race. I have...
Full view - About this book

Letters of George Meredith: 1882-1909

George Meredith - 1912 - 342 pages
...GEORGE MEREDITH. To Hugh W. Strong. BOX HTT.T^ DoEKTNQ, Jan. 1905. DEAR SIR,—Since I began to reflect I have been oppressed by the injustice done to women, the constraint put upon their natural aptitudes and their faculties, generally much to the degradation of the race. I have...
Full view - About this book

The Works of George Meredith, Volume 29

George Meredith - 1912 - 354 pages
...GEORGE MEREDITH. To Hugh W. Strong. Box HILL, DORKING, Jan. 1905. DEAR SIR,—Since I began to reflect I have been oppressed by the injustice done to women, the constraint put upon their natural aptitudes and their faculties, generally much to the degradation of the race. I have...
Full view - About this book

The Works of George Meredith, Volume 29

George Meredith - English literature - 1912 - 346 pages
...GEORGE MEREDITH. To Hugh W. Strong. Box HILL, DORKING, Jan. 1905. DEAR SIR,—Since I began to reflect I have been oppressed by the injustice done to women, the constraint put upon their natural aptitudes and their faculties, generally much to the degradation of the race. I have...
Full view - About this book

LETTERS COLLECTED AND EDITED BY HIS SON

GEORGE MEREDITH - 1912 - 386 pages
...GEORGE MEREDITH. To Hugh W. Strong. Box HILL, DORKING, Jan. 1905. DEAR SIR,—Since I began to reflect I have been oppressed by the injustice done to women, the constraint put upon their natural aptitudes and their faculties, generally much to the degradation of the race. I have...
Full view - About this book

Book I. The republic of letters

John Morley - Great Britain - 1917 - 414 pages
...face? •_•-.-«-* We see a vacant place; We hear an iron heel. On one great question — perhaps the future may prove it the greatest of his time,...the injustice done to Women, the constraint put upon their natural aptitude and their faculties, generally much to the degradation of the race." He had...
Full view - About this book

Book I. The republic of letters

John Morley - Great Britain - 1917 - 408 pages
...the bold, proud face? We see a vacant place; We hear an iron heel. On one great question — perhaps the future may prove it the greatest of his time,...the injustice done to Women, the constraint put upon their natural aptitude and their faculties, generally much to the degradation of the race." He had...
Full view - About this book

Recollections, Volume 1

John Morley - Biography & Autobiography - 1917 - 408 pages
...the bold, proud face ? We see a vacant place; We hear an iron heel. On one great question — perhaps the future may prove it the greatest of his time,...the injustice done to Women, the constraint put upon their natural aptitude and their faculties, generally much to the degradation of the race." He had...
Full view - About this book




  1. My library
  2. Help
  3. Advanced Book Search
  4. Download EPUB
  5. Download PDF