[Autobiography by John Stuart Mill]@TWC D-Link book
Autobiography

CHAPTER IV
18/48

The third channel was that of a younger generation of Cambridge undergraduates, contemporary, not with Austin, but with Eyton Tooke, who were drawn to that estimable person by affinity of opinions, and introduced by him to my father: the most notable of these was Charles Buller.

Various other persons individually received and transmitted a considerable amount of my father's influence: for example, Black (as before mentioned) and Fonblanque: most of these, however, we accounted only partial allies; Fonblanque, for instance, was always divergent from us on many important points.

But indeed there was by no means complete unanimity among any portion of us, nor had any of us adopted implicitly all my father's opinions.

For example, although his _Essay on Government_ was regarded probably by all of us as a masterpiece of political wisdom, our adhesion by no means extended to the paragraph of it in which he maintains that women may, consistently with good government, be excluded from the suffrage, because their interest is the same with that of men.

From this doctrine, I, and all those who formed my chosen associates, most positively dissented.


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