| George Eliot - 1885 - 368 str.
...bitterness in the language of parties, and by the growing habit of attributing, for political effect, the most shameful motives to distinguished statesmen....and that she was among the earliest contributors to Girlon College. After meeting Mr. and Mrs. Henry Sidgwick, in September, 1880, when they had gone to... | |
| George Eliot - 1885 - 512 str.
...that she particularly disliked everything generally asso428 Her Ideal of Womanhood. [WITLEY, ciated with the idea of a "masculine woman." She was, and...that George Eliot was deeply interested in the higher education of women, and that she was amongst the earliest contributors to Girton College. After meeting... | |
| Mary Ann Evans - 1885 - 506 str.
...her needle, and an admirable musician." She was proud, too, of being an excellent housekeeper—an excellence attained from knowing how things ought...that George Eliot was deeply interested in the higher education of women, and that she was amongst the earliest contributors to Girton College. After meeting... | |
| George Eliot - 1885 - 502 str.
...her needle, and an admirable musician." She was proud, too, of being an excellent housekeeper—an excellence attained from knowing how things ought...that George Eliot was deeply interested in the higher education of women, and that she was amongst the earliest contributors to Girton College. After meeting... | |
| 1885 - 222 str.
...housekeeper — an excellence attained from knowing how things ought to be done, from her earliest training, and from an inborn habit of extreme orderliness....be absolved, from her ordinary household duties." " Happy the house in which character marries, and not confusion and a miscellany of unavowable motives.... | |
| Margaret Lonsdale - 1886 - 70 str.
...of sweet natures, of gentleness, and of true feminine characteristics, are especially insisted on. " Nothing offended her more than the idea that because...or be absolved from her ordinary household duties." What her powers were, and how cultivated and stimulated, and how fervent the desire that she might... | |
| 1888 - 364 str.
...home. It is written of George Eliot that "she was proud of being an excellent housekeeper and that nothing offended her more than the idea that because a woman had exceptionally intellectual powers, therefore it was right that she should absolve herself or be absolved... | |
| George Eliot - 1895 - 418 str.
...growing habit of attributing, for political effect, the most shameful motives to distinguished statesmen. the community. This, she thought, could best be effected...that George Eliot was deeply interested in the higher education of women, and that she was amongst the earliest contributors to Girton College. After meeting... | |
| George Eliot - 1895 - 408 str.
...growing habit of attributing, for political effect, the most shameful motives to distinguished statesmen. the community. This, she thought, could best be effected...that George Eliot was deeply interested in the higher education of women, and that she was amongst the earliest contributors to Girton College. After meeting... | |
| George Eliot - 1908 - 386 str.
...bitterness in the language of parties, and by the growing habit of attributing, for political effect, the most shameful motives to distinguished statesmen....that George Eliot was deeply interested in the higher education of women, and that she was amongst the earliest contributors to Girton College. After meeting... | |
| |