11 Avenue de la Grande Armée, Paris.—Sends a copy of her reply to Lord Lytton on the Lords debate. Commends the strategy of contrasting the Government’s treatment of the WSPU with its treatment of Ulster unionists.
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Transcript
11 av de la Grande Armée | Paris.
14th May 1914
My dearest Con,
Lord Lytton was kind enough to write to me about the debate and his impressions of it. You may be interested to see a copy of my reply.
More & more & more one sees that the way to win is to get the Govt wedged between militancy & the impossibility of punishing militancy—in short—to create the Ulster situation over again.
Now there is no help that is any use from the practical point of view that does not fit into that scheme. It is all very well to rejoice over the sympathy & understand[in]g shown in the Lords, but the House of Commons was sympathising & understand[in]g in the year 1870!
Sympathy & understand[in]g are a snare unless they are pounded into something more definite in the shape of an Act of Parliament.
You know, anti-militancy does affect the reasoning faculty adversely. People who are most rational & logical & enlightened when other political movements are at stake suddenly lose their bearings when the question of how to get votes for women comes uppermost.
You will see how the General {1} & Mrs Dacre Fox have been throwing the search-light upon the contrast between the Govt’s treatment of themselves & Carson & Lansdowne.
The W.S.P.U. leaves them all far behind doesn’t it.
The anti-militant ladies simply don’t come into anybody’s calculations these days. Why can’t they see & become a force by adopting a sane policy?
I am sure that you feel proud and happy when you read of our fighters’ exploits.
You and I, the Exiles, have a very joyful life in that sense have we not!
So very sorry I am dearest Con, to hear you have been ill again. I hope it has passed now.
You wrote of my dog the other day. She is indeed a little beauty, full of intelligence & affection. It is years since I could have a dog and to have this one is a joy.
As for my home here, it is to me just like a room in Lincoln’s Inn House. Outside I feel is not the Avenue de la Grande Armee, but Kingsway. {2} In the next rooms are the organisers.
And yet it is Paris too—the beloved Paris that I really will & must come back to from time to time.
Imagine how one loves a place—delightful in any case—which has been one’s haven!
I am immeasurably happy in being here and in the thought of being some day—perhaps soon—back in London.
Back in London will be when the vote is won—not before. That might be so very soon if everybody w[oul]d do their best. {2}
The barriers are so slight—the opposition so weak.
It is the weakness of pro Suffragists that is the enemy now.
But fighting is victory so it is well whatever happens.
When I go home one of the very early things I shall do is go & see you!
My love to you
Christabel Pankhurst
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Letters omitted from words abbreviated by superscript letters have been supplied in square brackets.
{1} Flora Drummond.
{2} Full stop supplied.