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- Q7745090 subject Q6683816.
- Q7745090 subject Q8122986.
- Q7745090 subject Q8314292.
- Q7745090 subject Q8446314.
- Q7745090 abstract "The Ladies' Defence, Or, a Dialogue Between Sir John Brute, Sir William Loveall, Melissa, and a Parson, is an essay in verse published by Lady Mary Chudleigh in 1701. The piece was written in response to a wedding sermon, The Bride-Woman's Counselor, published by the minister John Sprint in 1700. The sermon insists that women's entire duty in life is to love, honor, and be obedient to a husband. As an intellectual poet, Chudleigh felt that women were fit for nothing but subservience only because men held low expectations for them. In her feminist work, she advocates for increased educational opportunities for women and questions the psychological stifling that often happened as a result of women's near-servanthood in marriage.".
- Q7745090 wikiPageExternalLink defence.html.
- Q7745090 wikiPageExternalLink writers.html.
- Q7745090 wikiPageWikiLink Q60797.
- Q7745090 wikiPageWikiLink Q6258701.
- Q7745090 wikiPageWikiLink Q6470416.
- Q7745090 wikiPageWikiLink Q6683816.
- Q7745090 wikiPageWikiLink Q8122986.
- Q7745090 wikiPageWikiLink Q8314292.
- Q7745090 wikiPageWikiLink Q8446314.
- Q7745090 comment "The Ladies' Defence, Or, a Dialogue Between Sir John Brute, Sir William Loveall, Melissa, and a Parson, is an essay in verse published by Lady Mary Chudleigh in 1701. The piece was written in response to a wedding sermon, The Bride-Woman's Counselor, published by the minister John Sprint in 1700. The sermon insists that women's entire duty in life is to love, honor, and be obedient to a husband.".
- Q7745090 label "The Ladies' Defence".