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 inferiority, that Iphigenia is made to say, "One man, forsooth, is better than ten thousand women."

Though the Jewish women were treated more leniently, and enjoyed greater privileges than their sex in other nations, yet it is evident, from a variety of circumstances in Old Testament history, that they were not wholly emancipated from a state of unnatural inferiority. Polygamy was practised amongst the Jews, and its debasing effects were obvious. The harems, the veils, and eunuchs were not uncommon to their women. Weakness of moral character was imputed to them; unfaithfulness and incontinency were dilated upon (Num. v. 12; Prov. xxxi. 10; Eccl. vii. 28). Josephus tells us that women, in consequence of their natural levity, were not admitted as legal witnesses in courts of justice. Maimonides teaches the same; "There are," says this great luminary, "ten sorts of disqualifications, and every individual in whom one of them is found, is disqualified from giving evidence; and these are women, slaves, children, idiots, the deaf, the blind, the wicked, the despised, relations, and those interested in their testimony; these are the ten." The Rabbins endeavour to justify this inhuman treatment of women from the law of Moses. "Women," say they, "are disqualified by the law from giving testimony: for it is said, 'At the mouth of two witnesses,' where the word 'witnesses' is of the masculine, and not feminine gender." It is not to be wondered at, therefore, that the Jew, among his thanksgivings, should say to the Almighty every morning, "Blessed be thou, O Lord our God, King of the universe, that thou hast not created me a woman."

Now, if one sex of the human family has been so degraded by the other; if she whom God created to be a help-mate and counterpart has been reduced by man to the slave of his carnal lusts; if such slavish and inhuman treatment has been justified on the false plea of the natural unfaithfulness and incontinency