My Own Story Quotes
My Own Story
by
Emmeline Pankhurst2,556 ratings, 4.15 average rating, 261 reviews
My Own Story Quotes
Showing 1-17 of 17
“Men make the moral code and they expect women to accept it. They have decided that it is entirely right and proper for men to fight for their liberties and their rights, but that it is not right and proper for women to fight for theirs.”
― My Own Story
― My Own Story
“Governments have always tried to crush reform movements, to destroy ideas, to kill the thing that cannot die. Without regard to history, which shows that no Government have ever succeeded in doing this, they go on trying in the old, senseless way.”
― My Own Story
― My Own Story
“I had to get a close-hand view of the misery and unhappiness of a man made world, before I reached the point where I could successfully revolt against it.”
― My Own Story
― My Own Story
“I thought I had been a suffragist before I became a Poor Law Guardian, but now I began to think about the vote in women's hands not only as a right but as a desperate necessity.”
― My Own Story
― My Own Story
“It is obvious to you that the struggle will be an unequal one, but I shall make it - I shall make it as long as I have an ounce of strength left in me, or any life left in me.”
― My Own Story
― My Own Story
“The militancy of men, through all the centuries, has drenched the world with blood, and for these deeds of horror and destruction men have been rewarded with monuments, with great songs and epics.”
― My Own Story
― My Own Story
“I do not remember a time when I could not read, nor any time when reading was not a joy and a solace.”
― My Own Story
― My Own Story
“Every man with a vote was considered a foe to woman suffrage unless he was prepared to be actively a friend.”
― My Own Story
― My Own Story
“Justice and judgement lie often a world apart.”
― My Own Story
― My Own Story
“Yet, while still a very young child, I began instinctively to feel that there was something lacking, even in my own home, some false conception of family relations, some incomplete ideal.”
― My Own Story
― My Own Story
“Patrick Henry, summed up the causes that led to the American Revolution. He said: "We have petitioned, we have remonstrated, we have supplicated, we have prostrated ourselves at the foot of the throne, and it has all been in vain. We must fight—I repeat it, sir, we must fight.”
― My Own Story
― My Own Story
“Is there not a single man in the House of Commons," I cried, "one who will stand up for us, who will make the House see that the amendment must go forward?”
― My Own Story
― My Own Story
“Mr. Lloyd-George said that he agreed with everything Mr. Churchill had said "both relevant and irrelevant." He made the amazing assertion that the Conciliation Committee that had drafted the bill was a "committee of women meeting outside the House." And that this committee said to the House of Commons not only that they must vote for a women's suffrage bill but "You must vote for the particular form upon which we agree, and we will not even allow you to deliberate upon any other form.”
― My Own Story
― My Own Story
“Everywhere I found the Americans kind and keen, and I cannot say too much for the wonderful hospitality they showed me.”
― My Own Story
― My Own Story
“At last it is realized that women are fighting for freedom, as their fathers fought. If they want twelve women, aye, and more than twelve, if a hundred women are wanted to be tried under that act and sent to prison for three months, they can be found.”
― My Own Story
― My Own Story
“I continued: "Mr. Asquith has said that the parents of children have a right to be consulted in the matter of their children's education, especially upon such questions as the kind of religious instruction they should receive. Women are parents. Does not Mr. Asquith think that women should have the right to control their children's education, as men do, through the vote?”
― My Own Story
― My Own Story
