Book/Printed Material The new womanhood National American Woman Suffrage Association Collection copy
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Image 1 of National American Woman Suffrage Association Collection copy THE LIBRARY OF CONGRESS RARE BOOK COLLECTION LIBRARY CARRIE CHAPMAN CATT SUBJECT Section VII Woman Suffrage Campaign NO 63
- Contributor: Cooley, Winnifred Harper - National American Woman Suffrage Association Collection (Library of Congress) - Catt, Carrie Chapman
- Date: 1904
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Image 2 of National American Woman Suffrage Association Collection copy WINNIFRED H. COOLEY
- Contributor: Cooley, Winnifred Harper - National American Woman Suffrage Association Collection (Library of Congress) - Catt, Carrie Chapman
- Date: 1904
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Image 3 of National American Woman Suffrage Association Collection copy The New Womanhood by Winnifred Harper Cooley New York, 1904 Broadway Publishing Company
- Contributor: Cooley, Winnifred Harper - National American Woman Suffrage Association Collection (Library of Congress) - Catt, Carrie Chapman
- Date: 1904
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Image 4 of National American Woman Suffrage Association Collection copy Copyright, 1904, BY WINNIFRED HARPER COOLEY. All Rights Reserved.
- Contributor: Cooley, Winnifred Harper - National American Woman Suffrage Association Collection (Library of Congress) - Catt, Carrie Chapman
- Date: 1904
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Image 5 of National American Woman Suffrage Association Collection copy TO MY MOTHER, IDA HUSTED HARPER, Whom I consider not only a great winter, but the most maternal of women, AND TO MY HUSBAND, Rev. George Eliot Cooley, Who is my great...
- Contributor: Cooley, Winnifred Harper - National American Woman Suffrage Association Collection (Library of Congress) - Catt, Carrie Chapman
- Date: 1904
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Image 6 of National American Woman Suffrage Association Collection copy CONTENTS. PAGE Poem—A Woman to Her Poet 1 I.—The Eternal Feminine 3 II.—The Bachelor Maiden 8 III.—The Evolution of the New Woman 15 Poem—The New Paradise 33 IV.—Co-education and Democracy 34 V.—Woman's...
- Contributor: Cooley, Winnifred Harper - National American Woman Suffrage Association Collection (Library of Congress) - Catt, Carrie Chapman
- Date: 1904
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Image 7 of National American Woman Suffrage Association Collection copy THE NEW WOMANHOOD. A WOMAN TO HER POET. Time was when I repelled the least suggestion That woman's mind to man's in awe should bow, My genius I believed in without question,...
- Contributor: Cooley, Winnifred Harper - National American Woman Suffrage Association Collection (Library of Congress) - Catt, Carrie Chapman
- Date: 1904
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Image 8 of National American Woman Suffrage Association Collection copy 2 But now, I have transferred each aspiration, ‘Tis now what laurels I, but thou shalt win. (Who livest only on my approbation)— I bury not my talents,—that were sin; But I...
- Contributor: Cooley, Winnifred Harper - National American Woman Suffrage Association Collection (Library of Congress) - Catt, Carrie Chapman
- Date: 1904
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Image 9 of National American Woman Suffrage Association Collection copy 3 I. THE ETERNAL FEMININE. What Goethe meant by his immortal phrase, Die Ewigweibliche, is not certain, but the eternal womanliness (literally, wifeliness) is a sufficiently plastic term to be made to...
- Contributor: Cooley, Winnifred Harper - National American Woman Suffrage Association Collection (Library of Congress) - Catt, Carrie Chapman
- Date: 1904
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Image 10 of National American Woman Suffrage Association Collection copy 4 should be striven for a the ideal also of men ? While public opinion—than which no legal or physical force is more powerful—has encouraged women to develop along these peculiar lines,...
- Contributor: Cooley, Winnifred Harper - National American Woman Suffrage Association Collection (Library of Congress) - Catt, Carrie Chapman
- Date: 1904
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Image 11 of National American Woman Suffrage Association Collection copy 5 whither he scarcely dared or cared to ascend, yet strenuously fought to prevent other men from reaching. He has secluded her in cloister or harem; he has shut her in gloomy...
- Contributor: Cooley, Winnifred Harper - National American Woman Suffrage Association Collection (Library of Congress) - Catt, Carrie Chapman
- Date: 1904
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Image 12 of National American Woman Suffrage Association Collection copy 6 But even in the darkness of ignorance and apathy, the eternal feminine was groping for individual expression. Whether it were in the soul-developing spirit of mother-love that always says, “Not my...
- Contributor: Cooley, Winnifred Harper - National American Woman Suffrage Association Collection (Library of Congress) - Catt, Carrie Chapman
- Date: 1904
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Image 13 of National American Woman Suffrage Association Collection copy 7 identical. No one would from this foolish fear dwarf and starve the fair lily! The eternal feminine will never be the less womanly for becoming more broadly and intelligently human! Woman...
- Contributor: Cooley, Winnifred Harper - National American Woman Suffrage Association Collection (Library of Congress) - Catt, Carrie Chapman
- Date: 1904
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Image 14 of National American Woman Suffrage Association Collection copy 8 II. THE BACHELOR MAIDEN. The subject of this sketch is an object of curiosity to the whole civilized world. She is the product essentially of the nineteenth century. She is regarded...
- Contributor: Cooley, Winnifred Harper - National American Woman Suffrage Association Collection (Library of Congress) - Catt, Carrie Chapman
- Date: 1904
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Image 15 of National American Woman Suffrage Association Collection copy 9 simply, yet we may be sure individuals endured much opposition and ostracism. The girl with a talent for art or music could not always have a mother to chaperone her for...
- Contributor: Cooley, Winnifred Harper - National American Woman Suffrage Association Collection (Library of Congress) - Catt, Carrie Chapman
- Date: 1904
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Image 16 of National American Woman Suffrage Association Collection copy 10 the healthy joys of the wage-earner, who sees a material value set upon her labor, and feels that there are joyful recompenses for her work; and failing to find the inestimable...
- Contributor: Cooley, Winnifred Harper - National American Woman Suffrage Association Collection (Library of Congress) - Catt, Carrie Chapman
- Date: 1904
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Image 17 of National American Woman Suffrage Association Collection copy 11 conditions, many men have criticized women reformers, the unwed, because they did not marry; and when the married women reformers were pointed to triumphantly, have criticized these because they took an...
- Contributor: Cooley, Winnifred Harper - National American Woman Suffrage Association Collection (Library of Congress) - Catt, Carrie Chapman
- Date: 1904
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Image 18 of National American Woman Suffrage Association Collection copy 12 waited forty years for her Robert Browning, and then gave the world some of the greatest love-poems ever written. Many a Bachelor Maiden has waited a lifetime for the “hundredth man,”...
- Contributor: Cooley, Winnifred Harper - National American Woman Suffrage Association Collection (Library of Congress) - Catt, Carrie Chapman
- Date: 1904
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Image 19 of National American Woman Suffrage Association Collection copy 13 experiences, for travel, for divers means of development, the gratification of which is more satisfying even to the intensely feminine nature than men might believe. Blessed is she who finds these...
- Contributor: Cooley, Winnifred Harper - National American Woman Suffrage Association Collection (Library of Congress) - Catt, Carrie Chapman
- Date: 1904
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Image 20 of National American Woman Suffrage Association Collection copy 14 The Bachelor Maid, then, has her raison d'être (her reason for being, and her right to be) as well as her especial joys and duties. She should be accepted as a...
- Contributor: Cooley, Winnifred Harper - National American Woman Suffrage Association Collection (Library of Congress) - Catt, Carrie Chapman
- Date: 1904
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Image 21 of National American Woman Suffrage Association Collection copy 15 III. THE EVOLUTION OF THE NEW WOMAN. There is this fundamental difference between the development of man, and that of woman: he has developed through encouragement; she in spite of discouragement....
- Contributor: Cooley, Winnifred Harper - National American Woman Suffrage Association Collection (Library of Congress) - Catt, Carrie Chapman
- Date: 1904
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Image 22 of National American Woman Suffrage Association Collection copy 16 she desired, unwed? There was, fortunately, this saving grace: an opportunity to inherit from the father as well as from the mother, and thus, bold, untrammeled spirits and brilliant minds sometimes...
- Contributor: Cooley, Winnifred Harper - National American Woman Suffrage Association Collection (Library of Congress) - Catt, Carrie Chapman
- Date: 1904
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Image 23 of National American Woman Suffrage Association Collection copy 17 than ever before. She has appeared at intervals throughout all time, in the guise of an inspired warrior, a brilliant orator, or organizer, a Greek poetess, a scholar, or a queen....
- Contributor: Cooley, Winnifred Harper - National American Woman Suffrage Association Collection (Library of Congress) - Catt, Carrie Chapman
- Date: 1904
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Image 24 of National American Woman Suffrage Association Collection copy 18 wife was that of the bereaved farmer: “She was such a good woman to work!” Chance songster, modest and timid, who sometimes had their verses collected by some old gentleman after...
- Contributor: Cooley, Winnifred Harper - National American Woman Suffrage Association Collection (Library of Congress) - Catt, Carrie Chapman
- Date: 1904
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Image 25 of National American Woman Suffrage Association Collection copy 19 wholesale, and is not even mentioned in the cyclopedia! Gradually, step by step, grudgingly, man has yielded what was never morally his to yield, but was originally won by brute force,...
- Contributor: Cooley, Winnifred Harper - National American Woman Suffrage Association Collection (Library of Congress) - Catt, Carrie Chapman
- Date: 1904
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Image 26 of National American Woman Suffrage Association Collection copy 20 the hearts of warriors, and went before them into battle. Deborah was soldier, poet, prophet, judge. Vashti defined the canons of obedience to husband and monarch and risked death when she...
- Contributor: Cooley, Winnifred Harper - National American Woman Suffrage Association Collection (Library of Congress) - Catt, Carrie Chapman
- Date: 1904
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Image 27 of National American Woman Suffrage Association Collection copy 21 Even the great-hearted Victor Hugo put himself on record thus: “Dolls are the playthings of children, children of men, men of women, and women are the playthings of the devil!” Rousseau,...
- Contributor: Cooley, Winnifred Harper - National American Woman Suffrage Association Collection (Library of Congress) - Catt, Carrie Chapman
- Date: 1904
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Image 28 of National American Woman Suffrage Association Collection copy 22 were women. Mrytis and Corinna were teachers of the renowned Pindar, and Corinna defeated him five times in public debate. Telesilla, a poetess, armed the women in war against Sparta, and...
- Contributor: Cooley, Winnifred Harper - National American Woman Suffrage Association Collection (Library of Congress) - Catt, Carrie Chapman
- Date: 1904
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Image 29 of National American Woman Suffrage Association Collection copy 23 never were called legally wed, or their children legitimate. Aspasia, brilliant “with beauty, love, and roses,” came as a girl from Miletus, where women enjoyed great freedom. She calmly mingled with...
- Contributor: Cooley, Winnifred Harper - National American Woman Suffrage Association Collection (Library of Congress) - Catt, Carrie Chapman
- Date: 1904
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Image 30 of National American Woman Suffrage Association Collection copy 24 matron” stands for ability and dignity. One triumvirate, undoubtedly exaggerating, said of women, “They govern our houses, our tribunals, our armies.” Yet they were uneducated, and suffered many inequalities before the...
- Contributor: Cooley, Winnifred Harper - National American Woman Suffrage Association Collection (Library of Congress) - Catt, Carrie Chapman
- Date: 1904
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Image 31 of National American Woman Suffrage Association Collection copy 25 each wife's fortune, and turn her adrift. Naturally, they were anxious to marry as often as possible, and morals became very lax. Emperors separated families and broke up homes. Plotina, Trajan's...
- Contributor: Cooley, Winnifred Harper - National American Woman Suffrage Association Collection (Library of Congress) - Catt, Carrie Chapman
- Date: 1904
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Image 32 of National American Woman Suffrage Association Collection copy 26 the Bible which is now called the Latin Vulgate, and revised with him the psalter used today in Catholic churches; yet who ever heard one work of the credit of authorship...
- Contributor: Cooley, Winnifred Harper - National American Woman Suffrage Association Collection (Library of Congress) - Catt, Carrie Chapman
- Date: 1904
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Image 33 of National American Woman Suffrage Association Collection copy 27 at twenty-six, leaving seven children! Guiliano de Medici, a great Italian prince, considered women “capable of governing cities and commanding armies; any inferiority being accidental, not essential.” Yet in Italy, men...
- Contributor: Cooley, Winnifred Harper - National American Woman Suffrage Association Collection (Library of Congress) - Catt, Carrie Chapman
- Date: 1904
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Image 34 of National American Woman Suffrage Association Collection copy 28 Woman has ever been a sovereign or a slave. The new woman seeks only to be a free individual. John Knox, Calvin, and Milton contributed their flings at women. “One thing...
- Contributor: Cooley, Winnifred Harper - National American Woman Suffrage Association Collection (Library of Congress) - Catt, Carrie Chapman
- Date: 1904
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Image 35 of National American Woman Suffrage Association Collection copy 29 They have attacked antique laws that permitted men to abuse wives, forbade women to own their own property,clothes,or even the children they had borne, and denied them divorce from drunken brutes....
- Contributor: Cooley, Winnifred Harper - National American Woman Suffrage Association Collection (Library of Congress) - Catt, Carrie Chapman
- Date: 1904
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Image 36 of National American Woman Suffrage Association Collection copy 30 authority, or necessity for the girl to “be supported,” what hope is there for the future generations? The progress of women throughout the centuries has been a struggle, too often an...
- Contributor: Cooley, Winnifred Harper - National American Woman Suffrage Association Collection (Library of Congress) - Catt, Carrie Chapman
- Date: 1904
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Image 37 of National American Woman Suffrage Association Collection copy 31 marriage almost to prostitution, or the widow who supports her family, is not as fine a product of humanity as the helpless domestic woman of the past. Who does not know...
- Contributor: Cooley, Winnifred Harper - National American Woman Suffrage Association Collection (Library of Congress) - Catt, Carrie Chapman
- Date: 1904
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Image 38 of National American Woman Suffrage Association Collection copy 32 times have accomplished much, as a class they have been set aside to minister to men's comfort. But when once the higher has been tried, civilization repudiates the lower. Men have...
- Contributor: Cooley, Winnifred Harper - National American Woman Suffrage Association Collection (Library of Congress) - Catt, Carrie Chapman
- Date: 1904
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Image 39 of National American Woman Suffrage Association Collection copy 33 THE NEW PARADISE. God give us women—who will do and dare, And in the larger issues dare to do! Girls who are strong and brave as well as chaste, (And men...
- Contributor: Cooley, Winnifred Harper - National American Woman Suffrage Association Collection (Library of Congress) - Catt, Carrie Chapman
- Date: 1904
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Image 40 of National American Woman Suffrage Association Collection copy 34 IV. CO-EDUCATION AND DEMOCRACY. One would suppose that so simple, and natural a system as the co-association of boys and girls during the years devoted mainly to schooling, as well as...
- Contributor: Cooley, Winnifred Harper - National American Woman Suffrage Association Collection (Library of Congress) - Catt, Carrie Chapman
- Date: 1904