[Annie Besant by Annie Besant]@TWC D-Link book
Annie Besant

CHAPTER X
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We only say that the effect of their judgment is cruel, and it shows that the holding of unpopular opinions is, in the eye of the law, an offence which, despite all we had thought to the contrary, may be visited with the severest punishment a woman and a mother can be possibly called on to bear." The outcome of all this long struggle and of another case of sore injustice--in which Mrs.Agar-Ellis, a Roman Catholic, was separated from her children by a judicial decision obtained against her by her husband, a Protestant--was a change in the law which had vested all power over the children in the hands of the father, and from thenceforth the rights of the married mother were recognised to a limited extent.

A small side-fight was with the National Sunday League, the president of which, Lord Thurlow, strongly objected to me as one of the vice-presidents.

Mr.P.A.Taylor and others at once resigned their offices, and, on the calling of a general meeting, Lord Thurlow was rejected as president.

Mr.P.A.
Taylor was requested to assume the presidency, and the vice-presidents who had resigned were, with myself, re-elected.

Little battles of this sort were a running accompaniment of graver struggles during all these battling years.
And through all the struggles the organised strength of the Freethought party grew, 650 new members being enrolled in the National Secular Society in the year 1878-79, and in July, 1879, the public adhesion of Dr.Edward B.Aveling brought into the ranks a pen of rare force and power, and gave a strong impulse to the educational side of our movement.


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