“ No class of people are more remarkable for quietness and propriety of deportment, and for household order and domestic excellence. By the admission of this liberty, the world is now and then gifted with a woman like Elizabeth Fry, while the family state loses none of its security and sacredness. ”
Harriet Beecher Stowe, Sunny Memories of Foreign Lands (1854). copy citation
Author | Harriet Beecher Stowe |
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Source | Sunny Memories of Foreign Lands |
Topic | quietness sacredness |
Date | 1854 |
Language | English |
Reference | |
Note | |
Weblink | http://www.gutenberg.org/files/13945/13945-h/13945-h.htm |
Context
“Paul alludes to women praying and prophesying in the public assemblies of the Christians, and only enjoins that it should be done with becoming attention to the established usages of female delicacy. The example of the Quakers is a sufficient proof that acting upon this idea does not produce discord and domestic disorder. No class of people are more remarkable for quietness and propriety of deportment, and for household order and domestic excellence. By the admission of this liberty, the world is now and then gifted with a woman like Elizabeth Fry, while the family state loses none of its security and sacredness. No one in our day can charge the ladies of the Quaker sect with boldness or indecorum; and they have demonstrated that even public teaching, when performed under the influence of an overpowering devotional spirit, does not interfere with feminine propriety and modesty.
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