id,comments,provenance,dictionary,created_at,reviewed_on,work_id,theme,context,updated_at,metaphor,text 15794,"","Reading Sheryl O' Donnell's ""Mr. Locke and the Ladies: The Indelible Words on the Tabula Rasa,"" Studies in Eighteenth-Century Culture. 8 (1979): 151–64. p. 157.","",2005-07-06 00:00:00 UTC,2007-10-12,5949,"","",2009-09-14 19:44:41 UTC,"""[W]hat knowledge they [women] have gotten stands out as it were above the very surface of their minds, like the appliquée of the embroiderer, instead of having been interwoven with the growth of the piece, so as to have become a part of the stuff. They did not, like men, acquire what they know while the texture was forming.""","what knowledge they [women] have gotten stands out as it were above the very surface of their minds, like the appliquée fo the embroiderer, instead of having been interwoven with the growth of the piece, so as to have become a part of the stuff. They did not, like men, acquire what they know while the texture was forming."