The Suffragette

The Suffragette
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"The Suffragette" by E. Sylvia Pankhurst. Published by Good Press. Good Press publishes a wide range of titles that encompasses every genre. From well-known classics & literary fiction and non-fiction to forgotten−or yet undiscovered gems−of world literature, we issue the books that need to be read. Each Good Press edition has been meticulously edited and formatted to boost readability for all e-readers and devices. Our goal is to produce eBooks that are user-friendly and accessible to everyone in a high-quality digital format.

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E. Sylvia Pankhurst. The Suffragette

The Suffragette

Table of Contents

CHAPTER I. EARLY DAYS

CHAPTER II. THE BEGINNING OF THE MILITANT TACTICS

CHAPTER III. THE GENERAL ELECTION OF 1906

CHAPTER IV. JANUARY TO MAY, 1906

CHAPTER V. MAY TO AUGUST, 1906

CHAPTER VI. OCTOBER TO NOVEMBER, 1906

CHAPTER VII. NOVEMBER, 1906, TO FEBRUARY, 1907

CHAPTER VIII. FEBRUARY AND MARCH, 1907

CHAPTER IX. A CROP OF BY-ELECTIONS, MARCH TO MAY, 1907

CHAPTER X. THE FORMATION OF THE WOMEN'S FREEDOM LEAGUE. REVIVAL OF MILITANT TACTICS

CHAPTER XI. THE THIRD WOMEN'S PARLIAMENT, AND MORE MILITANT TACTICS

CHAPTER XII. APRIL AND MAY, 1908

CHAPTER XIII. JUNE, 1908

CHAPTER XIV. JULY TO OCTOBER, 1908

CHAPTER XV. OCTOBER, 1908

CHAPTER XVII. OCTOBER TO THE END OF 1908

CHAPTER XVIII. NOVEMBER TO THE END OF 1908

CHAPTER XIX. JANUARY TO MARCH, 1909

CHAPTER XX. JUNE AND JULY, 1909

CHAPTER XXI. JULY TO SEPTEMBER, 1909

CHAPTER XXII. SEPTEMBER TO OCTOBER, 1909

CHAPTER XXIII. OCTOBER, 1909, TO JANUARY, 1910

CHAPTER XXIII. DECEMBER, 1909, TO JANUARY, 1910

CHAPTER XXIV. 1910

INDEX

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E. Sylvia Pankhurst

The History of the Women's Militant Suffrage Movement, 1905-1910

.....

The news of what was being done had gradually filtered into the Lobby, and the attitude of the assembled women had changed from one of pleased expectancy to anger and dismay. A feeling of tense excitement seemed to run through the gathering. Some of the faces were flushed and others white, whilst many had tears in their eyes. Especially amongst the working women Co-operators feeling was running high. These women were eagerly looking forward to the time when they would be able to take their part side by side with men in settling the terrible social problems with which they were met on every hand. They bitterly resented the way in which they were being insulted by Members of the House of Commons; they wanted to do something to express their feelings of disapproval and when the order for strangers to leave the House was given, many of them seemed disinclined to go. Then some of the women who had been listening to the debate from behind the Grille in the Ladies' gallery, came down into the Lobby and told us that a strange man in the adjoining gallery had suddenly sprung up to protest against the way in which our question was being "talked out," he had been thrown out of the House by the police, and was now at the entrance to the Lobby. This piece of news created a diversion. The women flocked out to thank him. It was not until afterwards that we or they learned that the man was one of the unemployed bootmakers who had marched up from Leicester, and that he had not made his protest in our favour, but because he saw that the House was wasting hour after hour in laughing and joking, though the Government had assured him that it had no time to attend to the grievances of starving men.

My mother now suggested that a meeting of protest should be held outside, and Mrs. Wolstenholme Elmy, the oldest worker in the Suffrage movement present, began to speak. The women crowded round to listen, but almost at once the police ordered us away and began striding in and out amongst us and pushing us apart. We thereupon moved to the foot of the Richard I statue, which stands just outside the door of the House of Lords, but again the police intervened, till, at last, after much argument, the Inspector of Police offered to take us to a place where a meeting might be held. Mrs. Pankhurst then called upon Mrs. Martel, as an Australian woman voter, to lead us and, joined by a single Member of Parliament, Mr. Keir Hardie, we marched with the police to Broad Sanctuary, close to the gates of Westminster Abbey. Here we adopted a Resolution condemning the procedure of the House of Commons, which had made it possible for a small minority of opponents to prevent a vote being taken upon the Women's Enfranchisement Bill, and calling upon the Government to rescue it now and carry it into law. The meeting then dispersed, vowing political vengeance upon the Government if this should not be done.

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