Excerpt: ... and this object the Visiter would support with the best arguments in its power. This was vitriol dressing on a raw wound, and the suppression of the Visiter was expected by Judge Lynch. Brave men held their breath to see me beard the lion in his den, not knowing my armor as I did. Then came an announcement with a great flourish of trumpets of a lecture on "Woman," by the Hon. Shepley, the great legal light and democratic orator of Minnesota. The lecture was delivered in due time to a densely packed house, and ...
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Excerpt: ... and this object the Visiter would support with the best arguments in its power. This was vitriol dressing on a raw wound, and the suppression of the Visiter was expected by Judge Lynch. Brave men held their breath to see me beard the lion in his den, not knowing my armor as I did. Then came an announcement with a great flourish of trumpets of a lecture on "Woman," by the Hon. Shepley, the great legal light and democratic orator of Minnesota. The lecture was delivered in due time to a densely packed house, and was as insulting as possible. The lecture divided women into four classes-coquettes, flirts, totally depraved, and strong-minded. He painted each class and found some redeeming trait in all save the last. The speaker might as well have named me as the object of his attack, and his charges thus publicly made were not to be misunderstood. At every point there were rounds and shouts of applause by clacquers, and brother Harry once rose in a towering rage, but I dragged him down and begged him to keep quiet. In my review of the lecture, I praised it, commended its eloquence and points, but suggested that the learned gentleman had not included all women in his classification. For instance, he had left out the frontier belle who sat up all night playing cards with gentlemen; could beat any man at a game of poker, and laugh loud enough to be heard above the roaring of a river. In this I struck at gambling as a social amusement, which was then rapidly coming into fashion in our little city, and which to me was new and alarming. Mr. Shepley pretended to think that the picture resembled his wife, and this idea was seized upon as drowning men catch at straws. Behind this they sought to conceal the whole significance of the quarrel. Gen. Lowrie cared not for my attacks on himself. Oh, no, indeed! He was suddenly seized by a fit of chivalry, and would defend to the death, a lady whom he had never seen. An effort was made to dispose of me by mob, as a...
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Seller's Description:
With no dust jacket. 0876810733. Ex-Library copy; with typical markings. Library label on front board and on spine tail. Just a bit of light rubbing at tips of corners. Small faint smudge on the front board. Slight spine twist. Pages clean, but for library markings. No dustjacket.; BIH16D; 1 x 9 x 6 Inches; 363 pages; Ex-Library.
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Seller's Description:
Fine- No Dust Jacket Present. 8vo-over 7¾"-9¾" tall. 363 pages. First published in 1880, this is a reprint of the 1880 edition. "To supply one quota of the inside history of the great Abolition war, is the primary object of this work; but scarcely secondary in this object is that of recording incidents characteristic of the Peculiar Institution overthrown that struggle. Another object, and one which struggles for precedence, is to give an inside history of the hospitals during the war of the Rebellion that the American people may not forget the cost of that Government so often imperiled through their indifference." FINE-HARDCOVER, red cloth covers, lettering is bright on the spine.