It will be noticed that all the Australian States have now granted women's suffrage. That they have done so proves that they realised its beneficial effects, where they could actually see it in working as State after State came into line.
LIST OF BOOKS
- The Subjection of Women. By J. S. Mill.
- On Liberty. By J. S. Mill
- On Representative Government. By J. S. Mill.
- Essays and Dissertations (vol. ii.). By J. S. Mill. Article by Mrs. Mill on the Enfranchisement of Women.
- Letters. By J. S. Mill. Edited by Hugh Elliot.
- Record of Women's Suffrage. By Helen Blackburn.
- A Handbook for Women. By Helen Blackburn.
- Articles on Women's Rights in Encyclopædia Britannica and in Chambers's Encyclopædia.
- The Emancipation of English Women. By W. Lyon Blease.
- Questions Relating to Women. By Emily Davies, LL.D.
- Women and Labour. By Olive Schreiner.
- The Suffragette. By E. Sylvia Pankhurst.
- The Status of Women, 1066-1909. By the Misses Wallis Chapman.
- Women's Work in Local Government. By Jane E. Brownlow.
- The Life of Josephine Butler.
- Pioneer Work in Opening the Medical Profession to Women. By Dr. Elizabeth Blackwell.
- Women's Suffrage in Many Lands. By Alice Zimmern.
- The Englishwoman. By David Staars.
- The Women's Franchise Movement in New Zealand. By W. Sidney Smith.
- Le Vote des Femmes. Par Ferdinand Buisson, Député de la Seine et Président de la Commission du Suffrage Universel.
- Women and Economies. By Charlotte Perkins Gilman.
- Common-sense Applied to Women's Suffrage. By Mary Putnam Jacobi, M.D.
- Equal Suffrage. By Helen Sumner, Ph.D.
- A Short History of Women's Rights. By Eugene Hecker.
- Reports of the International Women's Suffrage Alliance.
FOOTNOTES
[[1]] Vindication of the Rights of Women, published in 1792.
[[2]] See Le vote des Femmes, pp. 16-22, par Ferdinand Buisson, Député de la Seine et Président de la Commission du Suffrage Universelle. Condorcet had a predecessor in Mademoiselle Jars de Gournay, the friend of Montaigne. See Miss E. Sichel's Michel de Montaigne, p. 137.
[[3]] Helen Blackburn's Record of Women's Suffrage, also Women in English Life, by Miss Georgina Hill. Mrs. Wheeler's daughter Rosina, married Mr. Lytton Bulwer, afterwards the first Lord Lytton. The present Earl of Lytton is thus the great-grandson of the lady who prompted the reply to James Mill's article referred to in the text.