|
|
|
|
Woman throughout the ages has been mistress to the law, as man has been its master. |
Woman was taken out of man; not out of his head to top him, nor out of his feet to be trampled underfoot; but out of his side to be equal to him, under his arm to be protected, and near his heart to be loved |
|
Woman: the peg on which the wit hangs his jest, the preacher his text, the cynic his grouch and the sinner his justification |
|
|
Women are among the most gracious phenomenons ever to walk the earth. I only sympathize for the many men who consider to be more manly is to be as much not like a woman. |
|
|
Women are as wavering as the wind |
|