[The Business of Being a Woman by Ida M. Tarbell]@TWC D-Link book
The Business of Being a Woman

CHAPTER II
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She has no patience with other points of view than her own.

They are _wrong_--therefore why consider them?
She detests uncertainties--questions which cannot be settled.

Only by man and the rare woman is it accepted that talk is a good enough end in itself.
The strength of woman's attack on man's life, apart from the essential soundness of the impulse which drove her to make it, lay then in its directness and practicality.

She began by asking to be educated in the same way that man educated himself.

Preferably she would enter his classroom, or if that was denied her, she would follow the "just-as-good" curriculum of the college founded for her.


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