You are here
قراءة كتاب An Autobiography
تنويه: تعرض هنا نبذة من اول ١٠ صفحات فقط من الكتاب الالكتروني، لقراءة الكتاب كاملا اضغط على الزر “اشتر الآن"
An Autobiography
by
Catherine Helen Spence
CONTENTS
CHAPTER I. | EARLY LIFE IN SCOTLAND. |
CHAPTER II. | TOWARDS AUSTRALIA. |
CHAPTER III. | A BEGINNING AT SEVENTEEN |
CHAPTER IV. | LOVERS AND FRIENDS. |
CHAPTER V. | NOVELS AND A POLITICAL INSPIRATION. |
CHAPTER VI. | A TRIP TO ENGLAND. |
CHAPTER VII. | MELROSE REVISITED. |
CHAPTER VIII. | I VISIT EDINBURGH AND LONDON. |
CHAPTER IX. | MEETING WITH J. S. MILL AND GEORGE ELIOT. |
CHAPTER X. | RETURN FROM THE OLD COUNTRY. |
CHAPTER XI | WARDS OF THE STATE. |
CHAPTER XII. | PREACHING, FRIENDS, AND WRITING. |
CHAPTER XIII. | MY WORK FOR EDUCATION. |
CHAPTER XIV. | SPECULATION, CHARITY, AND A BOOK. |
CHAPTER XV. | JOURNALISM AND POLITICS. |
CHAPTER XVI. | SORROW AND CHANGE. |
CHAPTER XVII. | IMPRESSIONS OF AMERICA. |
CHAPTER XVIII. | BRITAIN, THE CONTINENT, AND HOME AGAIN. |
CHAPTER XIX. | PROGRESS OF EFFECTIVE VOTING. |
CHAPTER XX. | WIDENING INTERESTS. |
CHAPTER XXI | PROPORTIONAL REPRESENTATION AND FEDERATION. |
CHAPTER XXII. | A VISIT TO NEW SOUTH WALES. |
CHAPTER XXIII. | MORE PUBLIC WORK. |
CHAPTER XXIV. | THE EIGHTIETH MILESTONE AND THE END. |
CHAPTER I.
EARLY LIFE IN SCOTLAND.
Sitting down at the age of eighty-four to give an account of my life, I feel that it connects itself naturally with the growth and development of the province of South Australia, to which I came with my family in the year 1839, before it was quite three years old. But there is much truth in Wordsworth's line, "the child is father of the man," and no less is the mother of the woman; and I must go back to Scotland for the roots of my character and Ideals. I account myself well-born, for My father and my mother loved each other. I consider myself well descended, going back for many generations on both sides of intelligent and respectable people. I think I was well brought up, for my father and mother were of one mind regarding the care of the family. I count myself well educated, for the admirable woman at the head of the school which I attended from the age of four and a half till I was thirteen and a half, was a born teacher in advance of her own times. In fact. like my own dear mother, Sarah Phin was a New Woman without knowing it. The phrase was not known in the thirties.
I was born on October 31, 1825, the fifth of a family of eight born to David Spence and Helen Brodie, in the romantic village of