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62 woman in "the land of the free and the home of the brave" was then and there inaugurated. As the ladies were not allowed to speak in the Convention, they kept up a brisk fire morning, noon, and night at their hotel on the unfortunate gentlemen who were domiciled at the same house. Mr. Birney, with his luggage, promptly withdrew after the first encounter, to some more congenial haven of rest, while the Rev. Nathaniel Colver, from Boston, who always fortified himself with six eggs well beaten in a large bowl at breakfast, to the horror of his host and a circle of esthetic friends, stood his ground to the last — his physical proportions being his shield and buckler, and his Bible (with Colver's commentaries) his weapon of defence.

The movement for woman's suffrage, both in England and America, may be dated from this World's Anti-Slavery Convention.