Sally Bishop - A Romance by E. Temple (Ernest Temple) Thurston
page 57 of 488 (11%)
page 57 of 488 (11%)
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this civil warfare because she must. In her revolutionary ideas, Miss
Hallard follows the temperament of her inclinations. Whatever position women might hold, she would have disagreed with it. She is one of those of whom--like some strange animal that one sees, following instincts which seem the very reverse to Nature's needs--one wonders what her place in the scheme of things can be. Of this type are those whom the straining of a vocabulary has called--Suffragette. They are merely Nature's correctives. Of definite change in the position of women they will effect nothing. They are not regulars in the great army; only the wandering adventurers who take up arms for any cause, that they may be in the noise of the battle. It is the paid army--the regular troops--who finally place the standard upon the enemy's heights; for it is only the forces of Life itself that, in this life, are unconquerable. This, then, is Miss Hallard--adventuress in a great philosophy. Her thin lips, her shifting, disconcerting eyes, set deep beneath the brows; the long and narrow face, the high forehead on which the hair hangs heavily; that thin, reedy body, that ill-formed, unnatural breast which never was meant to suckle a child or nurse the drooping of a man's head--all these are the signs of her calling. A woman--by the irony of a fate that has thwarted the original design of Nature. Sally Bishop is a woman before everything. Miss Hallard is a woman last of all. How these two, in their blatant contrasts, were brought together, is an example of one of those mysterious forces in the great machinery of life which we are unable to comprehend. It is like the harnessing of electricity to the needs of civilization. We can make it do what we will; but of what it is, we know nothing. So we are |
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