"A  word more on the subject of home life, as one in which the interests of  the whole sex are most closely involved. It is clear that those  interests are manifold, highly important to the welfare of the race,  unceasing in their recurrence, urgent and imperative in their nature,  requiring for their successful development such devotion of time, labor,  strength, thought, feeling, that they must necessarily leave but little  leisure to the person who faithfully discharges them. The comfort,  health, peace, temper, recreation, general welfare, intellectual, moral,  and religious training of a family make up, indeed, a charge of the  very highest dignity, and one which must tax to the utmost every faculty  of the individual to whom it is entrusted. The commander of a regiment  at the head of his men, the member of Congress in his seat, the judge on  his bench, scarcely holds a position so important, so truly honorable,  as that of the intelligent, devoted, faithful American wife and mother,  wisely governing her household. And what are the interests of the  merchant, the manufacturer, the banker, the broker, the speculator, the  selfish politician, when compared with those confided to the Christian  wife and mother? They are too often simply contemptible--a wretched,  feverish, maddening struggle to pile up lucre, which is any thing but  clean. Where is the superior merit of such a life, that we should hanker  after it, when placed beside that of the loving, unselfish, Christian  wife and mother--the wife, standing at her husband's side, to cheer, to  aid, to strengthen, to console, to counsel, amidst the trials of life;  the mother, patiently, painfully, and prayerfully cultivating every  higher faculty of her children for worthy action through time and  eternity?"
While Miss Cooper's handling of the subject hits rather bluntly upon our modern sensibilities, her essay,
 Female Suffrage: A Letter to the Christian Women of America, is worth a perusal. Find it 
here.
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