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As liberty and intelligence have increased the people have more and more revolted against the theological dogmas that contradict common sense and wound the tenderest sensibilities of the soul.
Catharine Beecher
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Catharine Beecher
Age: 77 †
Born: 1800
Born: September 8
Died: 1878
Died: May 12
Teacher
Writer
East Hampton
New York
Catharine Esther Beecher
Catherine Beecher
Catherine Esther Beecher
Intelligence
Sensibilities
Liberty
Contradict
Common
Theological
Sense
Wound
Soul
Dogma
People
Increased
Tenderest
Sensibility
Revolted
Wounds
Dogmas
More quotes by Catharine Beecher
Unusual precocity in children, is usually the result of an unhealthy state of the brain and, in such cases, medical men would now direct, that the wonderful child should be deprived of all books and study, and turned to play or work in the fresh air.
Catharine Beecher
When the precepts and example of Jesus Christ fully interpermeate society, to labor with the hands will be regarded not only as a duty but a privilege.
Catharine Beecher
Good manners are the expressions of benevolence in personal intercourse, by which we endeavor to promote the comfort and enjoyment of others, and to avoid all that gives needless uneasiness.
Catharine Beecher
... a large portion of those who demand woman suffrage are persons who have not been trained to reason, and are chiefly guided by their generous sensibilities.
Catharine Beecher
We now come to the grand law of the system in which we are placed, as it has been developed by the experience of our race, and that, in one word, is SACRIFICE!
Catharine Beecher
... any men who would give up the law-making power to women in order to remedy existing evils, would surely be those most ready to enact the needful laws themselves.
Catharine Beecher
The great want of our race is perfect educators to train new-born minds, who are infallible teachers of what is right and true.
Catharine Beecher
Coffee it is best to buy by the bag, as it improves by keeping. Let it hang in the bag, in a dry place, and it loses its rank smell and taste.
Catharine Beecher
The principle of subordination is the great bond of union and harmony through the universe.
Catharine Beecher
... all education must be unsound which does not propose for itself some object and the highest of all objects must be that of living a life in accordance with God's Will.
Catharine Beecher
... pure and intelligent women can be deceived and misled by the baser sort, their very innocence and experience making them credulous and the helpless tools of the guilty and bold.
Catharine Beecher
... the history of the race, from infancy through its stages of barbarism, heathenism, civilization, and Christianity, is a process of suffering, as the lower principles of humanity are gradually subjected to the higher.
Catharine Beecher
In civil and political affairs, American women take no interest or concern, except so far as they sympathize with their family and personal friends but in all cases, in which they do feel a concern, their opinions and feelings have a consideration, equal or even superior, to that of the other sex.
Catharine Beecher
Half of the receipts in our cookbooks are mere murder to such constitutions and stomachs as we grow here. ...in America, owing to our brighter skies and more fervid climate, we have developed an acute, nervous delicacy of temperament far more akin to that of France than of England.
Catharine Beecher
Work of all kinds is got from poor women, at prices that will not keep soul and body together, and then the articles thus made aresold for prices that give monstrous prices to the capitalist, who thus grows rich on the hard labor of our sex.
Catharine Beecher
Woman's great mission is to train immature, weak and ignorant creatures to obey the laws of God the physical, the intellectual, the social and the moral.
Catharine Beecher
... it is the right and duty of every woman to employ the power of organization and agitation in order to gain those advantages which are given to the one sex and unjustly withheld from the other.
Catharine Beecher
If all females were not only well educated themselves but were prepared to communicate in an easy manner their stores of knowledge to others if they not only knew how to regulate their own minds, tempers, and habits but how to effect improvements in those around them, the face of society would be speedily changed.
Catharine Beecher