Elizabeth Frye's biography Elizabeth Frye is one of the eleven children living with John Gurney, a father, Norwich's banker Orem. They belong to the society of friends - also known as "Quaq Club". Quakers believe that Christian sacraments like baptism are not important. What they call "more important" is to bring people closer to God using the "inner light" of Jesus in the soul. Because of this "inner light", Quaker joined the social reform movement.
In the UK, prison reform was led by Quaker, especially Victorian Elizabeth Fry. Elizabeth Fry visited the prison and presented prisoners with basic human rights such as privacy and prisoners' actions. Fly pay particular attention to the rights of women. Congress began to recognize that numerous prisoners committed crimes of mental illness and passed "County Asylum Law" (1808). By doing this, peace judges in each county can establish and manage their poor shelter.
A female prisoner Elizabeth Fry met in London's New Gate did not provide enough clothes and bedding to himself or herself and was often imprisoned. Frye organized a society to help female prisoners go to school for their children and help them make their bedding and clothes. In the United States, from the late 17th century to the early 18th century, William Payne's experiment included a criminal trial experiment. In Pennsylvania, the death penalty was abolished for all offenses except for the pre - meditation killings. Pennsylvania introduced the concept of prison labor - he learned this concept from a prison in the Netherlands; while a man categorized and formed trees in a "crouching house", the women spun in the "spinning room" . By 1718, however, the British Penal Code violated the University of Pennsylvania University experiment and death penalty, as well as extensive corporal punishment as a characteristic of the Penal Code.
She is still suffering from the death of Roger Fry and Julian Bell. And they decided to try out the theory of experimental novel biography in Fry's life. As she admitted in biography (1939), the bystander of evidence made her think almost of the possibility of writing an imaginative biography. To complete the biography of Fry, Wolf wrote a poem about the history of British literature. Her next novel "Pointz Hall" (later renamed "Acts") will be a magnificent event for the villagers and will convey the various reactions of Gentry against it. As another festival of Fly's biography, Wolf returned to his childhood with "past sketches", memories of her complicated sentiments about her parents and their past and memoirs of writing himself . In the last minute borrowed from the letter between Fry and Vanessa, Wolf concluded her biography.