One of the members states, "women need to be helped into carriages, and lifted over ditches, and to have the best place ever" (756). With moving words and a booming voice like a freight train, Sojourner counters the man's argument with the simple truth. No one aids her when climbing into carriages, no one helps her when stepping over puddles of mud, and no one provides her with the best place to stay. She then proposes a question to the audience, "Aren't I a woman?" (756). Sojourner proclaims to the audience that even though she partakes in activities usually done by a man, even though she can "eat as much as a man" (756) and can "bear the lash" (756), she is nonetheless a
One of the members states, "women need to be helped into carriages, and lifted over ditches, and to have the best place ever" (756). With moving words and a booming voice like a freight train, Sojourner counters the man's argument with the simple truth. No one aids her when climbing into carriages, no one helps her when stepping over puddles of mud, and no one provides her with the best place to stay. She then proposes a question to the audience, "Aren't I a woman?" (756). Sojourner proclaims to the audience that even though she partakes in activities usually done by a man, even though she can "eat as much as a man" (756) and can "bear the lash" (756), she is nonetheless a