Home > Books > The Woman They Could Not Silence: One Woman, Her Incredible Fight for Freedom, and the Men Who Tri(174)

The Woman They Could Not Silence: One Woman, Her Incredible Fight for Freedom, and the Men Who Tri(174)

Author:Kate Moore

19“I do hope”: EP, GD, 1:214.

20“that in every”: EP, PHL, 313.

21“Could I not”: Ibid.

22“fan this embryo”: EP, MK, 94.

23“I intend to”: EP, PHL, 188.

24“modify [their] thoughts”: Review of Moral Medicine, 160.

25“exceedingly sorrowful”: EP, PHL, 259.

26“beloved sisters”: SO, MO, 26, in PHL, page 380 in PDF.

27“dare to do”: EP, “A Defense,” TE, 95.

28“protector, instead”: Ibid.

29“I find it”: Natascha Kampusch, 2010 interview with the Guardian, quoted in Kathryn Westcott, “What Is Stockholm Syndrome?” BBC News, August 22, 2013, https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-22447726 [italics added].

CHAPTER 26

1“a reasonable and”: EP, PHL, 266.

2“new spirit seemed”: Ibid., 152–53.

3“free and full”: Ibid., 305–6.

4“It is a rule”: Ray, “Doubtful Recoveries,” 31.

5“it was thought”: EP on what Dr. Tenny reportedly said, Mrs. Packard’s Reproof, 20.

6“every [strait]jacket”: Mrs. S. A. Kain, “Letter from an Attendant in the Jacksonville Insane Asylum,” January 1866, in “Insanity a Crime!” Daily Illinois State Register, February 22, 1867.

7“no more than”: Special Report of the Trustees, 27.

8“liars by nature”: Isaac Ray, “The Popular Feeling Toward the Hospitals for the Insane,” AJOI 9 (1852): 36–65, in Geller and Harris, Women of the Asylum, 28.

9“tendency to have”: Ibid.

10“but small importance”: Special Report of the Trustees, 85.

11“unreliability of”: Ibid.

12“had great influence”: “Third Annual Report of the Trustees of State Lunatic Hospital, December, 1835,” in Reports and Other Documents, 95.

13“intimate friends”: Dr. J. Parigot, “Legislation on Lunacy,” AJOI 21 (October 1864): 215.

14“but relatives by”: Ibid.

15“imprisoned…simply”: EP, “Mrs. Packard’s Address,” 2, in MPE, page 146 in PDF.

16“tasteful head-dress”: EP, PHL, 306.

17“queenlike feeling”: Ibid.

18“I have been”: Ibid., 287.

19“the sanctimonious gravity”: Ibid., 308.

20“Mrs. Packard”: Mr. Brown, quoted by EP, MPE, 6.

21“in a quiet”: EP, ibid.

22“could almost hear”: EP, PHL, 307.

23“a spiritual woman”: EP, “Statement Before the Trustees,” TE, 23.

24“I now ask”: Ibid., 24.

25“so still”: EP, MPE, 7.

26“You say”: EP, “Statement Before the Trustees,” TE, 24–25.

27“They did not”: EP, MPE, 7.

28“the darkest parts”: Ibid.

29“exposed their wicked”: Ibid.

30“So long as”: EP, TE, 28.

31“manifested a kindly”: Ibid., 39.

32“benevolent intentions”: EP, GD, 1:208.

33“not as [she]”: EP, TE, 37.

34“a natural growth”: Ibid., 38.

35“My husband placing”: Ibid.

36“roar of laughter”: Ibid.

37“accompanied by”: Ibid.

38“hear roars and”: Ibid., 29.

39“protested against”: AM, in “Annual Meeting of the AMSAII,” 91.

40“In relation to”: Trustees’ Records, September 4, 1862, quoted in Special Report of the Trustees, 31.

41“I regard them”: EP, TE, 39.

42“I am satisfied”: Ibid., 31.

43“The tide has”: Ibid.

44“I proposed to”: AM, in “Annual Meeting of the AMSAII,” 91.

CHAPTER 27

1Conversation between AM and EP: Recounted by EP in PHL, 310.

2“Write what you”: AM, quoted by EP, MPE, 111.

3“Well done”: EP, PHL, 311.

4“to liberty”: “A Friend of Justice,” Chicago Tribune, December 26, 1867, in MK, 101.

5“It seems to”: EP, MPE, 82.

6“hitherto prison-bound”: Ibid., 112.

7“The subject so”: EP, TE, 18.

8“Reason taught me”: EP, GD, 4:137.

9“so that my”: Ibid.

10“the most delightful”: EP, MPE, 112.

11“Write it out”: AM, quoted by EP, PHL, 311.

12“their names will”: EP, GD, 2:166.