The Fundamental Principle of a Republic by 安娜·霍华德·萧
when i came into your hall tonight, i thought of the last time i was in your city. twenty-one years ago i came here with susan b. anthony, and we came for exactly the same purpose as that for which we are here tonight. boys have been born since that time and have become voters, and the women are still trying to persuade american men to believe in the fundamental principles of democracy, and i never quite feel as if it was a fair field to argue this question with men, because in doing it you have to assume that a man who professes to believe in a republican form of government does not believe in a republican form of government, for the only thing that woman's enfranchisement means at all is that a government which claims to be a republic should be a republic, and not an aristocracy. the difficulty with discussing this question with those who oppose us is that they make any number of arguments but none of them have anything to do with woman's suffrage; they always have something to do with something else, therefore the arguments which we have to make rarely ever have anything to do with the subject, because we have to answer our opponents who always escape the subject as far as possible in order to have any sort of reason in connection with what they say.
now one of two things is true: either a republic is a desirable form of government, or else it is not. if it is, then we should have it, if it is not then we ought not to pretend that we have it. we ought at least be true to our ideals, and the men of new york have for the first time in their lives, the rare opportunity on the second day of next november, of making the state truly a part of the republic. it is the greatest opportunity which has ever come to the men of the state. they have never had so serious a problem to solve before, they will never have a more serious problem to solve in any future of our nation's life, and the thing that disturbs me more than anything else in connection with it is that so few people realize what a profound problem they have to solve on november 2. it is not merely a trifling matter; it is not a little thing that does not concern the state, it is the most vital problem we could have, and any man who goes to the polls on the second day of next november without thoroughly informing himself in regard to this subject is unworthy to be a citizen of this state, and unfit to cast a ballot.
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