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This being the ostensible state of things, people flatter themselves that the rule of mere force is ended; that the law of the strongest cannot be the reason of existence of anything which lias remained in full operation down to the present time. How­ever any of our present institutions may have be­gun, it can only, they think, have been preserved to this period of advanced civilization by a well- grounded feeling of its adaptation to human na­ture, and conduciveness to the general good. They do not understand the great vitality and dura­bility of institutions which place right on the side of might: how intensely they are clung to ; how the good as well as the bad propensities and senti­ments of those who have power in their hands, become identified with retaining it; how slowly these bad institutions give way, one at a time, the weakest first, beginning with those which are least interwoven with the daily habits of life ; and how very rarely those who have obtained legal power because they first had physical, have ever lost their hold of it until the physical power had passed over to the other side. Such shifting of the physical force not having taken place in the case of women; this fact, combined with all the peculiar and characteristic features of the parti­cular case, made it certain from the first that this branch of the system of right founded on might, though softened in its most atrocious features at an