Sorosis was the first professional women's club in the United States. The club was organized in New York City with 12 members in March 1868, by Jane Cunningham Croly. Among its founding members were Josephine Pollard, a children's author, and Fanny Fern Parton, a popular columnist who had been angered at newspaper women being excluded from the all-male New York Press Club when it had an honorary dinner for the author Charles Dickens the month before. Sorosis was incorporated in January 1869. Alice Cary was the first president. Within one year, Sorosis had 83 members.
Sorosis meant "aggregation". Its object was to further the educational and social activities of women, and to bring together for mutual helpfulness, representative women in art, literature, science, and kindred pursuits.
Children drifting and dying
Epidemies spreading on the land
The chaos is above our heads
But everyone tries to survive
See the desperation in their eyes
Listen to their cries of agony
Their hands fight with strenght
For little crumbs of food
Welcome to misery
There's nowhere to go
Where few have the power
Where people live as pigs
And the image is of sadness
Everyone live to make money
Misery can be seen by everybody
But the great corrupt ones
Try to survive in this land