THE SOCIAL DYNAMIC AND ‘RESPECTABILITY’ for daily survival had no time to sew infants’ clothes The events leading up to an application could involve prolonged and complicated hardship yet the need could be remarkably simple, as this woman’s request for a walking dress for herself and clothing for her 7- and 5-year-old children shows: My husband was for years at—, but continued illness in the form of rheumatism has deprived him of the use of his hands… I have wandered about doing what I could—a short engagement, for which I got very little money, set me up for a time till my youngest child was born I had to cut up some of my own things, bad as they were, to provide it with clothing… When I was strong enough I joined Mr.—’s company, with whom I was for four weeks, getting an average of 10s a week, and sometimes my eldest child was able to earn a little more by going on when required But business was terribly bad, and I had no money to send my husband Then I secured an engagement at—where I had to walk It was very wet, and when I arrived I was very ill from cold and want of food… All seemed bright again, when business fell off, and again my share dropped down to a few shillings a week I have pawned all I can possibly without, and now am looking forward with some degree of hope, for Mr.—has promised to give me an engagement But I cannot join him for want of clothing I not want money.42 From June 1892, clothing for six-month old infants, children, and adults was also dispensed for a small charge, depending on an applicant’s ability to pay, along with tickets for the Convalescent Dinners Society and admittance to maternity hospitals and a seaside convalescent home The radical nature of the Guild is apparent in the report of the first annual general meeting, in February 1893, when 320 of the 355 members gathered on the stage of the Lyceum Theatre Mrs Theodore Wright urged that women doctors be employed in maternity cases More surprisingly, Geneviève Ward chastised members who claimed that the Guild encouraged immorality, and she successfully ‘pleaded for deserving women to be still helped, without reference to husbands’ Fanny Brough, the President, emphatically assured everyone that the Guild would continue to assist single mothers— which was more than the Royal Maternity Charity was prepared to 61