The Life of Sophia Jex-Blake

Biography & Memoir
Cover of the book The Life of Sophia Jex-Blake by Margaret Georgina Todd, anboco
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Margaret Georgina Todd ISBN: 9783736420298
Publisher: anboco Publication: June 22, 2017
Imprint: Language: English
Author: Margaret Georgina Todd
ISBN: 9783736420298
Publisher: anboco
Publication: June 22, 2017
Imprint:
Language: English

There are several reasons why it has seemed worth while to write the life of Sophia Jex-Blake at some length. 1. She was one of the people who really do live. In the present day a woman is fitted into her profession almost as a man is. Sixty years ago a highly dowered girl was faced by a great venture, a great quest. The life before her was an uncharted sea. She had to find her self, to find her way, to find her work. In many respects youth was incomparably the most interesting period of a life history. 2. S. J.-B. has left behind her (as probably no woman of equal power has done) the record of this quest. She was a born chronicler: almost in her babyhood she struggled laboriously to get on to paper her doings and dreams; and she was truthful to a fault. We have here the kind of thing that is constantly “idealised” in present day fiction,—have it in actual contemporary record,—with the added interest that here the story begins in an old-world conservative medium, and passes through the life of the modern educated working girl into the history of a great movement, of which the chronicler was indeed magna pars. The reader will see how more and more as the years went on S. J.-B.'s motto became “Not me, but us,” till one is tempted to say that she was the movement, that she stood, as it were, for women. 3. That, so to speak, was her “job”; but she never grew one-sided; never forgot the man's point of view. viiiNo woman ever took a saner and wider view of human affairs. 4. In spite of the heavy strain thrown by conflicting outlook and ideals on the relation between parents and child, the reader will see in the following pages how that relationship was preserved. This is perhaps the most remarkable thing in the whole history, and it is full of significance and helpful suggestion for us all in these critical days. 5. And lastly, it proved impossible to write the life in any other way. When S. J.-B.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

There are several reasons why it has seemed worth while to write the life of Sophia Jex-Blake at some length. 1. She was one of the people who really do live. In the present day a woman is fitted into her profession almost as a man is. Sixty years ago a highly dowered girl was faced by a great venture, a great quest. The life before her was an uncharted sea. She had to find her self, to find her way, to find her work. In many respects youth was incomparably the most interesting period of a life history. 2. S. J.-B. has left behind her (as probably no woman of equal power has done) the record of this quest. She was a born chronicler: almost in her babyhood she struggled laboriously to get on to paper her doings and dreams; and she was truthful to a fault. We have here the kind of thing that is constantly “idealised” in present day fiction,—have it in actual contemporary record,—with the added interest that here the story begins in an old-world conservative medium, and passes through the life of the modern educated working girl into the history of a great movement, of which the chronicler was indeed magna pars. The reader will see how more and more as the years went on S. J.-B.'s motto became “Not me, but us,” till one is tempted to say that she was the movement, that she stood, as it were, for women. 3. That, so to speak, was her “job”; but she never grew one-sided; never forgot the man's point of view. viiiNo woman ever took a saner and wider view of human affairs. 4. In spite of the heavy strain thrown by conflicting outlook and ideals on the relation between parents and child, the reader will see in the following pages how that relationship was preserved. This is perhaps the most remarkable thing in the whole history, and it is full of significance and helpful suggestion for us all in these critical days. 5. And lastly, it proved impossible to write the life in any other way. When S. J.-B.

More books from anboco

Cover of the book The American Occupation of the Philippines 1898-1912 by Margaret Georgina Todd
Cover of the book Bleeding Armenia: Its History and Horrors under the Curse of Islam by Margaret Georgina Todd
Cover of the book The Letters of Horace Walpole, Earl of Orford I by Margaret Georgina Todd
Cover of the book Works IV by Margaret Georgina Todd
Cover of the book Sea Power in its Relations to the War of 1812 by Margaret Georgina Todd
Cover of the book History and Romance of Crime. Chronicles of Newgate by Margaret Georgina Todd
Cover of the book Works I: Poetry by Margaret Georgina Todd
Cover of the book A Little Union Scout by Margaret Georgina Todd
Cover of the book With the Flag in the Channel by Margaret Georgina Todd
Cover of the book Buried Cities: Pompeii, Olympia, Mycenae by Margaret Georgina Todd
Cover of the book The Child's Book of American Biography by Margaret Georgina Todd
Cover of the book A Special Mortality among Infants at Loughton, ining Rural Sanitary District by Margaret Georgina Todd
Cover of the book Gulliver's Travels into Several Remote Nations of the World by Margaret Georgina Todd
Cover of the book The Iliad by Margaret Georgina Todd
Cover of the book Days to Remember: The British Empire in the Great War I by Margaret Georgina Todd
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy