Answer: The education that will fit her to discharge the duties in the largest sphere of human usefulness will best fit her for whatever special work she may be compelled to do.
In this excerpt, Elizabeth Cady Stanton complains of the fact that women's education is determined by her relationships to other people as mothers, sisters, daughters and wives. This is true even when women do not fulfill these roles (for example, unmarried or childless women). This is different from the education of men, which is pursued by considering him an individual in his own right. She argues that, whatever work women decided to perform, their being educated would allow them to perform them in a much better way than if they were ignorant.
Answer:
Expositions are the place to show the reader a little bit of the location and what kind of time is involved in the story, along with some of the major characters.
Answer: Unity is the key to well-being, strength, and resilience.
Explanation:
Answer:
Philosophical, Feverish, Urgent, Serious, Dark
Explanation:
<h2>Hope this helped.</h2>
Uhm, if you'd like, I could paraphrase it? I can't tell what exactly you'd like me to do, and I wanted to let you know that <em>I can edit this, so if it's not correct, I can change it. Also, what are 'stirrings'?</em>
"For a minute, he recalled his dream again. The dream was delightful. He was confused, he thought that he enjoyed feeling that his mother had called Stirrings. He remembered when he woke up, he wanted to feel the Stirrings again."
<em>Please, if this is incorrect, don't refrain to tell me.</em>