| A | B |
| Wollstonecraft's response to Burke | Vindication of Rights of Men |
| Edmund Burke | author-Reflections on Revolution in France |
| Natural Rights | Given by God equally to all rational creatures |
| Isaac Watts | author-Against Evil Company |
| Romantic Age | values nature, individualism, freedom (anti-authority) |
| Description of Wollstonecraft | governess, self-educated |
| Jean-Jacques Rousseau | "Man is born free & everywhere he is in chains" |
| William Godwin | Wollstonecraft's husband |
| Enlightenment | "Age of Reason" |
| Gilbert Imlay | Wollstonecraft's partner |
| Wollstonecraft's daughter | Mary Shelley |
| scofflaw | violator of laws |
| WilliamBlake | author - Songs of Innocence/Experience |
| prelapsarian | before the fall of man |
| mind-forged manacles | psychological chains of man |
| egalitarianism | equality for all (social/political/economic rights) |
| "While he wept with joy to hear" | illustrates Blake's idea of embracing contraries |
| "and be like him and he will then love me" | wrong lesson that mother seems to have instilled in child |