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Josephine E. Cunningham - Indian Summer

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Josephine E. Cunningham Indian Summer

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JOSEPHINE E. BUTLER
Butler after G. Richmond, A.R.A. circa 1852.
title page

All rights reserved
Josephine E. Butler
AN AUTOBIOGRAPHICAL MEMOIR
EDITED BY
GEORGE W. AND LUCY A. JOHNSON
With Introduction by
JAMES STUART, M.A., LL.D.
SECOND IMPRESSION
Colophon
BRISTOL
J. W. Arrowsmith, 11 Quay Street
LONDON
Simpkin, Marshall, Hamilton, Kent & Company Limited
1909

PREFACE.
It is very difficult worthily to record the history of one of the noblest women who ever lived, but, having been asked by the Ladies National Association for the Abolition of Government Regulation of Vice to prepare a Memoir of Mrs. Josephine Butler, we have tried to tell her life story as far as possible in her own words, by means of extracts from her writings, with just sufficient thread of explanation to hold them together. The present volume is therefore to a large extent an autobiography, taken chiefly from her Recollections of George Butler, and from Personal Reminiscences of a Great Crusade; but selections have also been given from most of her principal publications, so as to give some idea of her extensive literary work. We have not included any private letters, as it was her strongly expressed wish that these should not be published.
Many of the quotations have been abridged, but they have not otherwise been altered, except in a few cases where dates, etc., have been corrected. We have however ventured, for the sake of securing a continuous narrative, occasionally to combine passages taken from different sources.
As this volume is intended to give an account of Mrs. Butlers own life and work, it has not been possible fully to sketch the history of the movement, with which her name was specially identified, or to allude to many of those associated with her in that movement, whose labours she so heartily appreciated, and whose friendship she so greatly valued.
We are much indebted to the editors of Josphine E. Butler: Souvenirs et Penses (Saint-Blaise, Foyer Solidariste, 1908), having in many cases used the same extracts as are given in that volume. We have also to thank Mrs. Butlers representatives and various publishers (Horace Marshall & Son, Macmillan & Co., and others) for permission to quote from copyright works.
G. W. J.
L. A. J.
May 1st, 1909.

CONTENTS
Page
INTRODUCTION
CHAPTER I.
DILSTON
CHAPTER II.
OXFORD
CHAPTER III.
CHELTENHAM
CHAPTER IV.
LIVERPOOL
CHAPTER V.
EDUCATION OF WOMEN
CHAPTER VI.
WOMENS REVOLT
CHAPTER VII.
COLCHESTER ELECTION
CHAPTER VIII.
APPEAL TO MAGNA CHARTA
CHAPTER IX.
MISSION TO CONTINENT
CHAPTER X.
THE FEDERATION
CHAPTER XI.
GOVERNMENT BY POLICE
CHAPTER XII.
REPEAL
CHAPTER XIII.
WINCHESTER
CHAPTER XIV.
INDIA
CHAPTER XV.
GENEVA
CHAPTER XVI.
PROPHETS AND PROPHETESSES
CHAPTER XVII.
THE STORM-BELL
CHAPTER XVIII.
TWO CONFERENCES
CHAPTER XIX.
MEMORIES
CHAPTER XX.
THE MORNING COMETH
APPENDIX

PORTRAITS.
JOSEPHINE BUTLER, circa 1852
GEORGE BUTLER
JOSEPHINE BUTLER, circa 1876
GEORGE BUTLER
JOSEPHINE BUTLER, 1900

INTRODUCTION.
Josephine Butler was one of the great people of the world. In character, in work done, in influence on others, she was among that few great people who have moulded the course of things. The world is different because she lived. Like most of the very great people of the world, she was extremely cosmopolitan. She belongs to all nations and to all time. The work she did, the people she influenced, prove this. Her Voice in the Desert has been translated into most languages of Europe, and has spoken like the voice of a compatriot to the people of every land. She was a great leader of men and women, and a skilful and intrepid general of the battles she fought. As an orator she touched the hearts of her hearers as no one else has done to whom I have listened. She aimed at a perfectly definite object, but round that object there gathered in her mind many others, all converging to the same end. She left behind her wherever she went new thoughts and new aims and new ideals.
Around her central thought grew up many others, and a host of good works have been left in many countries as living memorials of her influence. She thus not only led a great crusade, but she helped to raise the characters of the individuals engaged in it.
But while I write of her public work, it would be but half the truth unless I said a word about her personally. She was at home in every class of society. She was very beautiful, and of a very gracious presence, and the impression made by first seeing her and hearing her voice has, I expect, been forgotten by none who ever met her. She was of a very artistic temperament. She was a good painter, an extremely good musician. She was a bold rider, and active, though always of a somewhat weak health. Her industry and application was unbounded. She was very full of humour, and, while deeply in earnest, had the faculty of being at times charmingly gay. She dressed with great taste and simplicity. She, above all things, loved her home and her husband, and that love was wholly returned.
I have said she was extremely cosmopolitan, and all who have known her know how true that is. At the same time she was a great lover of her own country, and particularly of the borderland between England and Scotland, where she was born, and where she now lies buried in the churchyard of Kirknewton, where many of her ancestors lie. For she came of an old Border family; and bravery, and the alertness of battle, and the power of self-sacrifice, and the indignation against wrong which characterised her, came to her, perhaps, partly through her descent.
She was a great reader of the Bible, and a humble suppliant before the throne of God. But, while her own beliefs were clear and definite, she had no narrowness in her views, and the very names of those who have been her foremost supporters show how wide her sympathies were, and how acceptable she was to people of all creeds, as well as of all politics and of all climes.
She had to endure much, especially in the early stages of her crusadethe averted glances of former friends, the brutal attacks of ignorant opponentsbut the inspiration of a mighty purpose enabled her to rise above all that, and to preserve a serenity of mind and of manner through it all.
And now, what is the sum of it all? It seems to me to be this, that we must all be glad that she lived. We are each of us individually better, and the world as a whole is better, because she lived; and the seed that she has sown can never die.
JAMES STUART.

Josephine E. Butler.

CHAPTER I.
DILSTON.
Josephine Elizabeth Grey was born at Milfield Hill, in the county of Northumberland, on April 13th, 1828. She was the fourth daughter of John Grey, and of his wife Hannah Annett. In her Memoir of John Grey of Dilston, she writes thus of her birthplace and family.
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