Mention246026

Download triples
rdf:type qkg:Mention
so:isPartOf https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Henry_Adams
so:description Chapter VII Roses and Apses (en)
so:description Chapter I Saint Michiel de la Mer del Peril (en)
so:description Chapter IV Normandy and the Ile de France (en)
so:description Chapter II La Chanson de Roland (en)
so:description Chapter X The Court of the Queen of Heaven (en)
so:description Chapter III The Merveille (en)
so:description Chapter VI The Virgin of Chartres (en)
so:description Chapter V Towers and Portals (en)
so:description Chapter VIII The Twelfth Century Glass (en)
so:text The superiority of the woman was not a fancy but a fact. Man's business was to fight, or hunt, or feast or make love. The man was also the travelling partner in commerce, commonly absent from home for months together, while the woman carried on the business. The woman ruled the household and the workshop; cared for the economy; supplied the intelligence and dictated the taste. Her ascendancy was secured by her alliance with the Church, into which she sent her most intelligent children; and a priest or clerk, for the most part, counted socially as a woman. Both physically and mentally the woman was robust, as the men often complained, and she did not greatly resent being treated as a man. Sometimes the husband beat her, dragged her about by the hair, locked her up in the house; but he was quite conscious that she always got even with him in the end. As a matter of fact, probably she got more than even. On this point, history, legend, poetry, romance, and especially the popular Fabliaux,— invented to amuse the gross tastes of the coarser class,— are all agreed, and one could give scores of volumes illustrating it. (en)
so:description Chapter IX The Legendary Windows (en)
so:description Chapter XI The Three Queens (en)
so:description Mont Saint Michel and Chartres (1904) (en)
Property Object

Triples where Mention246026 is the object (without rdf:type)

qkg:Quotation231748 qkg:hasMention
Subject Property