Would mankind be at all better off if women were free? If not,
why disturb their minds, and attempt to make a social revolution
in the name of an abstract right?
It is hardly to be expected that this question will be asked
in respect to the change proposed in the condition of women in
marriage. The sufferings, immoralities, evils of all sorts,
produced in innumerable cases by the subjection of individual
women to individual men, are far too terrible to be overlooked.
Unthinking or uncandid persons, counting those cases alone which
are extreme, or which attain publicity, may say that the evils
are exceptional; but no one can be blind to their existence, nor,
in many cases, to their intensity. And it is perfectly obvious
that the abuse of the power cannot be very much checked while the
power remains.
It is a power given, or offered, not to good men, or to
decently respectable men, but to all men; the most brutal, and
the most criminal. There is no check but that of opinion, and
such men are in general within the reach of no opinion but that
of men like themselves. If such men did not brutally tyrannise
over the one human being whom the law compels to bear everything
from them, society must already have reached a paradisiacal
state.
There could be no need any longer of laws to curb men's
vicious propensities. Astraea must not only have returned to
earth, but the heart of the worst man must have become her
temple. The law of servitude in marriage is a monstrous
contradiction to all the principles of the modern world, and to
all the experience through which those principles have been
slowly and painfully worked out.
It is the sole case, now that negro slavery has been
abolished, in which a human being in the plenitude of every
faculty is delivered up to the tender mercies of another human
being, in the hope forsooth that this other will use the power
solely for the good of the person subjected to it. Marriage is
the only actual bondage known to our law. There remain no legal
slaves, except the mistress of every house. It is not, therefore,
on this part of the subject, that the question is likely to be
asked, Cui bono ~ We may be told that the evil would outweigh the
good, but the reality of the good admits of no dispute.
In regard, however, to the larger question, the removal of
women's disabilities--their recognition as the equals of men in
all that belongs to citizenship--the opening to them of all
honourable employments, and of the training and education which
qualifies for those employments--there are many persons for whom
it is not enough that the inequality has no just or legitimate
defence; they require to be told what express advantage would be
obtained by abolishing it. To which let me first answer, the
advantage of having the most universal and pervading of all human
relations regulated by justice instead of injustice. The vast
amount of this gain to human nature, it is hardly possible, by
any explanation or illustration, to place in a stronger light
than it is placed by the bare statement, to anyone who attaches a
moral meaning to words.
All the selfish propensities, the self-worship, the unjust
self-preference, which exist among mankind, have their source and
root in, and derive their principal nourishment from, the present
constitution of the relation between men and women. Think what it
is to a boy, to grow up to manhood in the belief that without any
merit or any exertion of his own, though he may be the most
frivolous and empty or the most ignorant and stolid of mankind,
by the mere fact of being born a male he is by right the superior
of all and every one of an entire half of the human race:
including probably some whose real superiority to himself he has
daily or hourly occasion to feel; but even if in his whole
conduct he habitually follows a woman's guidance, still, if he is
a fool, she thinks that of course she is not, and cannot be,
equal in ability and judgment to himself; and if he is not a
fool, he does worse--he sees that she is superior to him, and
believes that, notwithstanding her superiority, he is entitled to
command and she is bound to obey. What must be the effect on his
character, of this lesson ?
And men of the cultivated classes are often not aware how
deeply it sinks into the immense majority of male minds. For,
among right-feeling and wellbred people, the inequality is kept
as much as possible out of sight; above all, out of sight of the
children. As much obedience is required from boys to their mother
as to their father: they are not permitted to domineer over their
sisters, nor are they accustomed to see these postponed to them,
but the contrary; the compensations of the chivalrous feeling
being made prominent, while the servitude which requires them is
kept in the background. Well brought-up youths in the higher
classes thus often escape the bad influences of the situation in
their early years, and only experience them when, arrived at
manhood, they fall under the dominion of facts as they really
exist.
Such people are little aware, when a boy is differently
brought up, how early the notion of his inherent superiority to a
girl arises in his mind; how it grows with his growth and
strengthens with his strength; how it is inoculated by one
schoolboy upon another; how early the youth thinks himself
superior to his mother, owing her perhaps forbearance, but
no-real respect; ana how sublime and sultan-like a sense of
superiority he feels, above all, over the woman whom he honours
by admitting her to a partnership of his life. Is it imagined
that all this does not pervert the whole manner of existence of
the man, both as an individual and as a social being? It is an
exact parallel to the feeling of a hereditary king that he is
excellent above others by being born a king, or a noble by being
born a noble. The relation between husband and wife is very like
that between lord and vassal, except that the wife is held to
more unlimited obedience than the vassal was. However the
vassal's character may have been affected, for better and for
worse, by his subordination, who can help seeing that the lord's
was affected greatly for the worse? whether he was led to believe
that his vassals were really superior to himself, or to feel that
he was placed in command over people as good as himself, for no
merits or labours of his own, but merely for having, as Figaro
says, taken the trouble to be born.
The self-worship of the monarch, or of the feudal superior, is
matched by the self-worship of the male. Human beings do not grow
up from childhood in the possession of unearned distinctions,
without pluming themselves upon them. Those whom privileges not
acquired by their merit, and which they feel to be
disproportioned to it, inspire with additional humility, are
always the few, and the best few. The rest are only inspired with
pride, and the worst sort of pride, that which values itself upon
accidental advantages, not of its own achieving. Above all, when
the feeling of being raised above the whole of the other sex is
combined with personal authority over one individual among them;
the situation, if a school of conscientious and affectionate
forbearance to those whose strongest points of character are
conscience and affection, is to men of another quality a
regularly constituted academy or gymnasium for training them in
arrogance and overbearingness; which vices, if curbed by the
certainty of resistance in their intercourse with other men,
their equals, break out towards all who are in a position to be
obliged to tolerate them, and often revenge themselves upon the
unfortunate wife for the involuntary restraint which they are
obliged to submit to elsewhere.
The example afforded, and the education given to the
sentiments, by laying the foundation of domestic existence upon a
relation contradictory to the first principles of social justice
must, from the very nature of man, have a perverting influence of
such magnitude, that it is hardly possible with our present
experience to raise our imaginations to the conception of so
great a change for the better as would be made by its removal.
All that education and civilisation are doing to efface the
influences on character of the law of force, and replace them by
those of justice, remains merely on the surface, as long as the
citadel of the enemy is not attacked. The principle of the modern
movement in morals and politics, is that conduct, and conduct
alone, entitles to respect: that not what men are, but what they
do, constitutes their claim to deference; that, above all, merit,
and not birth, is the only rightful claim to power and
authority.
If no authority, not in its nature temporary, were allowed to
one human being over another, society would not be employed in
building up propensities with one hand which it has to curb with
the other. The child would really, for the first time in man's
existence on earth, be trained in the way he should go, and when
he was old there would be a chance that he would not depart from
it. But so long as the right of the strong to power over the weak
rules in the very heart of society, the attempt to make the equal
right of the weak ~h~. principle of its outward actions will
always be an uphill struggle; for the law of justice, which is
also that of Christianity, will never get possession of men's
inmost sentiments; they will be working against it, even when
bending to it.
The second benefit to be expected from giving to women the
free use of their faculties, by leaving them the free choice of
their employments, and opening to them the same field of
occupation and the same prizes and encouragements as to other
human beings, would be that of doubling the mass of mental
faculties available for the higher service of humanity. Where
there is now one person qualified to benefit mankind and promote
the general improvement, as a public teacher, or an administrator
of some branch of public or social affairs, there would then be a
chance of two. Mental superiority of any kind is at present
everywhere so much below the demand; there is such a deficiency
of persons competent to do excellently anything which it requires
any considerable amount of ability to do; that the loss to the
world, by refusing to make use of one half of the whole quantity
of talent it possesses, is extremely serious. It is true that
this amount of mental power is not totally lost.
Much of it is employed, and would in any case be employed, in
domestic management, and in the few other occupations open to
women; and from the remainder indirect benefit is in many
individual cases obtained, through the personal influence of
individual women over individual men. But these benefits are
partial; their range is extremely circumscribed; and if they must
be admitted, on the one hand, as a deduction from the amount of
fresh social power that would be acquired by giving freedom to
one-half of the whole sum of human intellect, there must be
added, on the other, the benefit of the stimulus that would be
given to the intellect of men by the competition; or (to use a
more true expression) by the necessity that would be imposed on
them of deserving precedency before they could expect to obtain
it.
This great accession to the intellectual power of the species,
and to the amount of intellect available for the good management
of its affairs, would be obtained, partly, through the better and
more complete intellectual education of women, which would then
improve pari passu with that of men. Women in general would be
brought up equally capable of understanding business, public
affairs, and the higher matters of speculation, with men In the
same class of society; and the select few of the one as well as
of the other sex, who were qualified not only to comprehend what
is done or thought by others, but to think or do something
considerable themselves, would meet with the same facilities for
improving and training their capacities in the one sex as in the
other. In this way, the widening of the sphere of action for
women would operate for good, by raising their education to the
level of that of men, and making the one participate in all
improvements made in the other.
But independently of this, the mere breaking down of the
barrier would of itself have an educational virtue of the highest
worth. The mere getting rid of the idea that all the wider
subjects of thought and action, all the things which are of
general and not solely of private interest, are men's business,
from which women are to be warned off--positively interdicted
from most of it, coldly tolerated in the little which is allowed
them--the mere consciousness a woman would then have of being a
human being like any other, entitled to choose her pursuits,
urged or invited by the same inducements as anyone else to
interest herself in whatever is interesting to human beings,
entitled to exert the share of influence on all human concerns
which belongs to an individual opinion, whether she attempted
actual participation in them or not--this alone would effect an
immense expansion of the faculties of women, as well as
enlargement of the range of their moral sentiments.
Besides the addition to the amount of individual talent
available for the conduct of human affairs, which certainly are
not at present so abundantly provided in that respect that they
can afford to dispense with one-half of what nature proffers; the
opinion of women would then possess a more beneficial, rather
than a greater, influence upon the general mass of human belief
and sentiment. I say a more beneficial, rather than a greater
influence; for the influence of women over the general tone of
opinion has always, or at least from the earliest known period,
been very considerable.
The influence of mothers on the early character of their sons,
and the desire of young men to recommend themselves to young
women, have in all recorded times been important agencies in the
formation of character, and have determined some of the chief
steps in the progress of civilisation. Even in the Homeric age,
[Greek word deleted] towards the [Greek phrase deleted] is an
acknowledged and powerful motive of action in the great Hector.
The moral influence of women has had two modes of operation.
First, it has been a softening influence. Those who were most
liable to be the victims of violence, have naturally tended as
much as they could towards limiting its sphere and mitigating its
excesses.
Those who were not taught to fight, have naturally inclined in
favour of any other mode of settling differences rather than that
of fighting. In general, those who have been the greatest
sufferers by the indulgence of selfish passion, have been the
most earnest supporters of any moral law which offered a means of
bridling passion. Women were powerfully instrumental in inducing
the northern conquerors to adopt the creed of Christianity, a
creed so much more favourable to women than any that preceded it.
The conversion of the Anglo-Saxons and of the Franks may be said
to have been begun by the wives of Ethelbert and Clovis. The
other mode in which the effect of women's opinion has been
conspicuous, is by giving, a powerful stimulus to those qualities
in men, which, not being themselves trained in, it was necessary
for them that they should find in their protectors. Courage, and
the military virtues generally, have at all times been greatly
indebted to the desire which men felt of being admired by women:
and the stimulus reaches far beyond this one class of eminent
qualities, since, by a very natural effect of their position, the
best passport to the admiration and favour of women has always
been to be thought highly of by men.
From the combination of the two kinds of moral influence thus
exercised by women, arose the spirit of chivalry: the peculiarity
~,f which is, to aim at combining the highest standard of the
warlike qualities with the cultivation of a totally different
class of virtues--those of gentleness, generosity, and
self-abnegation, towards the non-military and defenseless classes
generally, and a special submission and worship directed towards
women; who were distinguished from the other defenceless classes
by the high rewards which they had it in their power voluntarily
to bestow on those who endeavoured to earn their favour, instead
of extorting their subjection.
Though the practice of chivalry fell even more sadly short of
its theoretic standard than practice generally falls below
theory, it remains one of the most precious monuments of the
moral history of our race; as a remarkable instance of a
concerted and organised attempt by a most disorganised and
distracted society, to raise up and carry into practice a moral
ideal greatly in advance of its social condition and
institutions; so much so as to have been completely frustrated in
the main object, yet never entirely inefficacious, and which has
left a most sensible, and for the most part a highly valuable
impress on the ideas and feelings of all subsequent times.
The chivalrous ideal is the acme of the influence of women's
sentiments on the moral cultivation of mankind: and if women are
to remain in their subordinate situation, it were greatly to be
lamented that the chivalrous standard should have passed away,
for it is the only one at all capable of mitigating the
demoralising influences of that position. But the changes in the
general state of the species rendered inevitable the substitution
of a totally different ideal of morality for the chivalrous one.
Chivalry was the attempt to infuse moral elements into a state of
society in which everything depended for good o~ evil on
individual prowess, under the softening influences of individual
delicacy and generosity.
In modern societies, all things, even in the military
department of affairs, are decided, not by individual effort, but
by the combined operations of numbers; while the main occupation
of society has changed from fighting to business, from military
to industrial life. The exigencies of the new life are no more
exclusive of the virtues of generosity than those of the old, but
it no longer entirely depends on them. The main foundations of
the moral life of modern times must be justice and prudence; the
respect of each for the rights of every other, and the ability of
each to take care of himself. Chivalry left without legal check
all forms of wrong which reigned unpunished throughout society;
it only encouraged a few to do right in preference to wrong, by
the direction it gave to the instruments of praise and
admiration. But the real dependence of morality must always be
upon its penal sanctions--its power to deter from evil. The
security of society cannot rest on merely rendering honour to
right, a motive so comparatively weak in all but a few, and which
on very many does not operate at all.
Modern society is able to repress wrong through all
departments of life, by a fit exertion of the superior strength
which civilisation has given it, and thus to render the existence
of the weaker members of society (no longer defenseless but
protected by law) tolerable to them, without reliance on the
chivalrous feelings of those who are in a position to tyrannise.
The beauties and graces of the chivalrous character are still
what they were, but the rights of the weak, and the general
comfort of human life, now rest on a far surer and steadier
support; or rather, they do so in every relation of life except
the conjugal. At present the moral influence of women is no less
real, but it is no longer of so marked and definite a character:
it has more nearly merged in the general influence of public
opinion.
Both through the contagion of sympathy, and through the desire
of men to shine in the eyes of women, their feelings have great
effect in keeping alive what remains of the chivalrous ideal--in
fostering the sentiments and continuing the traditions of spirit
and generosity. In these points of character, their standard is
higher than that of men; in the quality of justice, somewhat
lower. As regards the relations of private life it may be said
generally, that their influence is, on the whole, encouraging to
the softer virtues, discouraging to the sterner: though the
statement must be taken with all the modifications dependent on
individual character. In the chief of the greater trials to which
virtue is subject in the concerns of life--the conflict between
interest and principle--the tendency of women's influence- is of
a very mixed character. When the principle involved happens to be
one of the very few which the course of their religious or moral
education has strongly impressed upon themselves, they are potent
auxiliaries to virtue: and their husbands and sons are often
prompted by them to acts of abnegation which they never would
have been capable of without that stimulus.
But, with the present education and position of women, the
moral principles which have been impressed on them cover but a
comparatively small part of the field of virtue, and are,
moreover, principally negative; forbidding particular acts, but
having little to do with the general direction of the thoughts
and purposes. I am afraid it must be said, that disinterestedness
in the general conduct of life--the devotion of the energies to
purposes which hold out no promise of private advantages to the
family--is very seldom encouraged or supported by women's
influence. It is small blame to them that they discourage objects
of which they have not learnt to see the advantage, and which
withdraw their men from them, and from the interests of the
family. But the consequence is that women's influence is often
anything but favourable to public virtue. Women have, however,
some share of influence in giving the tone to public moralities
since their sphere of action has been a little widened, and since
a considerable number of them have occupied themselves
practically in the promotion of objects reaching beyond their own
family and household.
The influence of women counts for a great deal in two of the
most marked features of modern European life--its aversion to
war, and its addiction to philanthropy. Excellent characteristics
both; but unhappily, if the influence of women is valuable in the
encouragement it gives to these feelings in general, in the
particular applications the direction it gives to them is at
least as often mischievous as useful. In the philanthropic
department more particularly, the two provinces chiefly
cultivated by women are religious proselytism and charity.
Religious proselytism at home, is but another word for
embittering of religious animosities: abroad, it is usually a
blind running at an object, without either knowing or heeding the
fatal mischiefs--fatal to the religious object itself as well as
to all other desirable objects --which may be produced by the
means employed.
As for charity, it is a matter in which the immediate effect
on the persons directly concerned, and the ultimate consequence
to the general good, are apt to be at complete war with one
another: while the education given to women--an education of the
sentiments rather than of the understanding--and the habit
inculcated by their whole life, of looking to immediate effects
on persons, and not to remote effects on classes of persons--
make them both unable to see, and unwilling to admit, the
ultimate evil tendency of any form of charity or philanthropy
which commends itself to their sympathetic feelings.
The great and continually increasing mass of unenlightened and
shortsighted benevolence, which, taking the care of people's
lives out of their own hands, and relieving them from the
disagreeable consequences of their own acts, saps the very
foundations of the self-respect, self-help, and self-control
which are the essential conditions both of individual prosperity
and of social virtue-- this waste of resources and of benevolent
feelings in doing harm instead of good, is immensely swelled by
women's contributions, and stimulated by their influence. Not
that this is a mistake likely to be made by women, where they
have actually the practical management of schemes of
beneficence.
It sometimes happens that women who administer public
charities--with that insight into present fact, and especially
into the minds and feelings of those with whom they are in
immediate contact, in which women generally excel men-- recognise
in the clearest manner the demoralising influence of the alms
given or the help afforded, and could give lessons on the subject
to many a male political economist. But women who only give their
money, and are not brought face to face with the effects it
produces, how can they be expected to foresee them ?
A woman born to the present lot of women, and content with it,
how should she appreciate the value of self-dependence ? She is
not self-dependent; she is not taught self-dependence; her
destiny is to receive everything from others, and why should what
is good enough for her be bad for the poor? Her familiar notions
of good are of blessings descending from a superior. She forgets
that she is not free, and that the poor are; that if what they
need is given to them unearned, they cannot be compelled to earn
it: that everybody cannot be taken care of by everybody, but
there must be some motive to induce people to take care of
themselves; and that to be helped-to help themselves, if they are
physically capable of it, is the only charity which proves to be
charity in the end. These considerations show how usefully the
part which women take in the formation of general opinion, would
be modified for the better by that more enlarged instruction, and
practical conversancy with the things which their opinions
influence, that would necessarily arise from their social and
political emancipation.
But the improvement it would work through the influence they
exercise, each in her own family, would be still more remarkable.
It is often said that in the classes most exposed to temptation,
a man's wife and children tend to keep him honest and
respectable, both by the wife's direct influence, and by the
concern he feels for their future welfare. This may be so, and no
doubt often is so, with those who are more weak than wicked; and
this beneficial influence would be preserved and strengthened
under equal laws; it does not depend on the woman's servitude,
but is, on the contrary, diminished by the disrespect which the
inferior class of men always at heart feel towards those who are
subject to their power.
But when we ascend higher in the scale, we come among a
totally different set of moving forces. The wife's influence
tends, as far as it goes, to prevent the husband from falling
below the common standard of approbation of the country.
It tends quite as strongly to hinder him from rising above it.
The wife is the auxiliary of the common public opinion. A man who
is married to a woman his inferior in intelligence, finds her a
perpetual dead weight, or, worse than a dead weight, a drag, upon
every aspiration of his to be better than public opinion requires
him to be. It is hardly possible for one who is in these bonds,
to attain exalted virtue. If he differs in his opinion from the
mass--if he sees truths which have not yet dawned upon them, or
if, feeling in his heart truths which they nominally recognise,
he would like to act up to those truths more conscientiously than
the generality of mankind-- to all such thoughts and desires,
marriage is the heaviest of drawbacks, unless he be so fortunate
as to have a wife as much above the common level as he himself
is.
For, in the first place, there is always some sacrifice of
personal interest required; either of social consequence, or of
pecuniary means; perhaps the risk of even the means of
subsistence. These sacrifices and risks he may be willing to
encounter for himself; but he will pause before he imposes them
on his family. And his family in this case means his wife and
daughters; for he always hopes that his sons will feel as he
feels himself, and that what he can do without, they will do
without, willingly, is the same cause. But his daughters- -their
marriage may depend upon it: and his wife, who is unable to enter
into or understand the objects for which these sacrifices are
made-- who, if she thought them worth any sacrifice, would think
so on trust, and solely for his sake--who could participate in
none of the enthusiasm or the self-approbation he himself may
feel, while the things which he is disposed to sacrifice are all
in all to her; will not the best and most unselfish man hesitate
the longest before bringing on her this consequence?
If it be not the comforts of life, but only social
consideration, that is at stake, the burthen upon his conscience
and feelings is still very severe. Whoever has a wife and
children has given hostages to Mrs. Grundy. The approbation of
that potentate may be a matter of indifference to him, but it is
of great importance to his wife. The man himself may be above
opinion, or may find sufficient compensation in the opinion of
those of his own way of thinking. But to the women connected with
him, he can offer no compensation.
The almost invariable tendency of the wife to place her
influence in the same scale with social consideration, is
sometimes made a reproach to women, and represented as a peculiar
trait of feebleness and childishness of character in them: surely
with great injustice. Society makes the whole life of a woman, in
the easy classes, a continued self sacrifice; it exacts from her
an unremitting restraint of the whole of her natural
inclinations, and the sole return it makes to her for what often
deserves the name of a martyrdom, is consideration. Her
consideration is inseparably connected with that of her husband,
and after paying the full price for it, she finds that she is to
lose it, for no reason of which she can feel the cogency.
She has sacrificed her whole life to it, and her husband will
not sacrifice to it a whim, a freak, an eccentricity; something
not recognised or allowed for by the world, and which the world
will agree with her in thinking a folly, if it thinks no worse !
The dilemma is hardest upon that very meritorious class of men,
who, without possessing talents which qualify them to make a
figure among those with whom they agree in opinion, hold their
opinion from conviction, and feel bound in honour and conscience
to serve it, by making profession of their belief, and giving
their time, labour, and means, to anything undertaken in its
behalf. The worst case of all is when such men happen to be of a
rank and position which of itself neither gives them, nor
excludes them from, what is considered the best society; when
their admission to it depends mainly on what is thought of them
personally--and however unexceptionable their breeding and
habits, their being identified with opinions and public conduct
unacceptable to those who give the tone to society would operate
as an effectual exclusion.
Many a woman flatters herself (nine times out of ten quite
erroneously) that nothing prevents her and her husband from
moving in the highest society of her neighbourhood--society in
which others well known to her, and in the same class of life,
mix freely--except that her husband is unfortunately a Dissenter,
or has the reputation of mingling in low radical politics. That
it is, she thinks, which hinders George from getting a commission
or a place, Caroline from making an advantageous match, and
prevents her and her husband from obtaining invitations, perhaps
honours, which, for aught she sees, they are as well entitled to
as some folks. With such an influence in every house, either
exerted actively, or operating all the more powerfully for not
being asserted, is it any wonder that people in \general are kept
down in that mediocrity of respectability which is becoming a
marked characteristic of modern times?
There is another very injurious aspect in which the effect,
not of women's disabilities directly, but of the broad line of
difference which those disabilities create between the education
and character of a woman and that of a man, requires to be
considered. Nothing can be more unfavourable to that union of
thoughts and inclinations which is the ideal of married life.
Intimate society between people radically dissimilar to one
another, is an idle dream. .Unlikeness may attract, but it is
likeness which retains; and in proportion to the likeness is the
suitability of the individuals to give each other a happy life.
While women are so unlike men, it is not wonderful that selfish
men should feel the need of arbitrary power in their own hands,
to arrest in limine the life-long conflict of inclinations, by
deciding every question on the side of their own preference. When
people are extremely unlike, there can be no real identity of
interest.
Very often there is conscientious difference of opinion
between married people, on the highest points of duty. Is there
any reality in the marriage union where this takes place? Yet it
is not uncommon anywhere, when the woman has any earnestness of
character; and it is a very general case indeed in Catholic
countries, when she is supported in her dissent by the only other
authority to which she is taught to bow, the priest. With the
usual barefacedness of power not accustomed to find itself
disputed, the influence of priests over women is attacked by
Protestant and Liberal writers, less for being bad in itself,
than because it is a rival authority to the husband, and raises
up a revolt against his infallibility. In England, similar
differences occasionally exist when an Evangelical wife has
allied herself with a husband of a different quality; but in
general this source at least of dissension is got rid of, by
reducing the minds of women to such a nullity, that they have no
opinions but those of Mrs. Grundy, or those which the husband
tells them to have. When there is no difference of opinion,
differences merely of taste may be sufficient to detract greatly
from the happiness of married life. And though it may stimulate
the amatory propensities of men, it does not conduce to married
happiness, to exaggerate by differences of education whatever may
be the native differences of the sexes.
If the married pair are well-bred and well-behaved people,
they tolerate each other's tastes; but is mutual toleration what
people look forward to, when they enter into marriage? These
differences of inclination will naturally make their wishes
different, if not restrained by affection or duty, as to almost
all domestic questions which arise. What a difference there must
be in the society which the two persons will wish to frequent, or
be frequented by ! Each will desire associates who share their
own tastes: the persons agreeable to one, will be indifferent or
positively disagreeable to the other; yet there can be none who
are not common to both, for married people do not now live in
different parts of the house and have totally different visiting
lists, as in the reign of Louis XV.
They cannot help having different wishes as to the bringing up
of the children: each wi]l wish to see reproduced in them their
own tastes and sentiments: and there is either a compromise, and
only a half satisfaction to either, or the wife has to
yield--often with bitter suffering; and, with or without
intention, her occult influence continues to counterwork the
husband's purposes. It would of course be extreme folly to
suppose that these differences of feeling and inclination only
exist because women are brought up differently from men, and that
there would not be differences of taste under any imaginable
circumstances. But there is nothing beyond the mark in saying
that the distinction in bringing up immensely aggravates those
differences, and renders them wholly inevitable.
While women are brought up as they are, a man and a woman will
but rarely find in one another real agreement of tastes and
wishes as to daily life. They will generally have to give it up
as hopeless, and renounce the attempt to have, in the intimate
associate of their daily life, that idem velle, idem nolle, which
is the recognised bond of any society that is really such: or if
the man succeeds in obtaining it, he does so by choosing a woman
who is so complete a nullity that she has no velle or nolle at
all, and is as ready to comply with one thing as another if
anybody tells her to do so. Even this calculation is apt to fail;
dullness and want of spirit are not always a guarantee of the
submission which is so confidently expected from them. But if
they were, is this the ideal of marriage ? What, in this case,
does the man obtain by it, except an upper servant, a nurse, or a
mistress? on the contrary, when each of two persons, instead of
being a nothing, is a something; when they are attached to one
another, and are not too much unlike to begin with; the constant
partaking in the same things, assisted by their sympathy, draws
out the latent capacities of each for being interested in the
things which were at first interesting only to the other; and
works a gradual assimilation of the tastes and characters to one
another, partly by the insensible modification of each, but more
by a real enriching of the two natures, each acquiring the tastes
and capacities of the other in addition to its own.
This often happens between two friends of the same sex, who
are much associated in their daily life: and it would be a
common, if not the commonest, case in marriage, did not the
totally different bringing up of the two sexes make it next to an
impossibility to form a really well-assorted union. Were this
remedied, whatever differences there might still be in individual
tastes, there would at least be, as a general rule, complete
unity and unanimity as to the great objects of life. When the two
persons both care for great objects, and are a help and
encouragement to each other in whatever regards these, the minor
matters on which their tastes may differ are not all-important to
them; and there is a foundation for solid friendship, of an
enduring character, more likely than anything else t~ make it,
through the whole of life, a greater pleasure to each to give
pleasure to the other, than to receive it.
I have considered, thus far, the effects on the pleasures and
benefits of the marriage union which depend on the mere
unlikeness between the wife and the husband: but the evil
tendency is prodigiously aggravated when the unlikeness is
inferiority. Mere unlikeness, when it only means difference of
good qualities, may be more a benefit in the way of mutual
improvement, than a drawback from comfort. When each emulates,
and desires and endeavours to acquire, the other's peculiar
qualities the difference does not produce diversity of interest,
but increased identity of it, and makes each still more valuable
to the other. But when one is much the inferior of the to in
mental ability and cultivation, and is not actively attempting by
the other's aid to rise to the other's level, the whole influence
of the connexion upon the development of the superior of the two
is deteriorating: and still more so in a tolerably happy marriage
than in an unhappy one.
It is not with impunity that the superior in intellect shuts
himself up with an inferior, and elects that inferior for his
chosen, and sole completely intimate, associate. Any society
which is not improving is deteriorating: and the more so, the
closer and more familiar it is. Even a really superior man almost
always begins to deteriorate when he is habitually (as the phrase
is) king of his company: and in his most habitual company the
husband who has a wife inferior to him is always so. While his
self-satisfaction is incessantly ministered to on the one hand,
on the other he insensibly imbibes the modes of feeling, and of
looking at things, which belong to a more vulgar or a more
limited mind than his own.
This evil differs from many of those which have hitherto been
dwelt on, by being an increasing one. The association of men with
women in daily life is much closer and more complete than it ever
was before. Men's life is more domestic. Formerly, their
pleasures and chosen occupations were among men, and in men's
company: their wives had but a fragment of their lives. At the
present time, the progress of civilisation, and the turn of
opinion against the rough amusements and convivial excesses which
formerly occupied most men in their hours of relaxation--
together with (it must be said) the improved tone of modern
feeling as to the reciprocity of duty which binds the husband
towards the wife--have thrown the man very much more upon home
and its inmates, for his personal and social pleasures: while the
kind and degree of improvement which has been made in women's
education, has made them in some degree capable of being his
companions in ideas and mental taste, while leaving them, in most
cases, still hopelessly inferior to him. His desire of mental
communion is thus in general satisfied by a communion from which
he learns nothing.
An unimproving and unstimulating companionship is substituted
for (what he might otherwise have been obliged to seek) the
society of his equals in powers and his fellows in the higher
pursuits. We see, accordingly, that young men of the greatest
promise generally cease to improve as soon as they marry, and,
not improving, inevitably degenerate. If the wife does not push
the husband forward, she always holds him back. He ceases to care
for what she does not care for; he no longer desires, and ends by
disliking and shunning, society congenial to his former
aspirations, and which would now shame his falling-off from them;
his higher faculties both of mind and heart cease to be called
into activity. And this change coinciding with the new and
selfish interests which are created by the family, after a few
years he differs in no material respect from those who have never
had wishes for anything but the common vanities and the common
pecuniary objects.
What marriage may be in the case of two persons of cultivated
faculties, identical in opinions and purposes, between whom there
exists that best kind of equality, similarity of powers and
capacities with reciprocal superiority in them--so that each can
enjoy the luxury of looking up to the other, and can have
alternately the pleasure of leading and of being led in the path
of development--I will not attempt to describe. To those who can
conceive it, there is no need; to those who cannot, it would
appear the dream of an enthusiast. But I maintain, with the
profoundest conviction, that this, and this only, is the ideal of
marriage; and that all opinions, customs, and institutions which
favour any other notion of it, or turn the conceptions and
aspirations connected with it into any other direction, by
whatever pretences they may be coloured, are relics of primitive
barbarism.
The moral regeneration of mankind will only really commence,
when the most fundamental of the social relations is placed under
the rule of equal justice, and when human beings learn to
cultivate their strongest sympathy with an equal in nights and in
cultivation. Thus far, the benefits which it has appeared that
the world would gain by ceasing to make sex a disqualification
for privileges and a badge of subjection, are social rather than
individual; consisting in an increase of the general fund of
thinking and acting power, and an improvement in the general
conditions of the association of men with women.
But it would be a grievous understatement of the case to omit
the most direct benefit of all, the unspeakable gain in private
happiness to the liberated half of the species; the difference to
them between a life of subjection to the will of others, and a
life of rational freedom. After the primary necessities of food
and raiment, freedom is the first and strongest want of human
nature. While mankind are lawless, their desire is for lawless
freedom. When they have learnt to understand the meaning of duty
and the value of reason, they incline more and more to be guided
and restrained by these in the exercise of their freedom; but
they do not therefore desire freedom less; they do not become
disposed to accept the will of other people as the representative
and interpreter of those guiding principles. on the contrary, the
communities in which the reason has been most cultivated, and in
which the idea of social duty has been most powerful, are those
which have most strongly asserted the freedom of action of the
individual--the liberty of each to govern his conduct by his own
feelings of duty, and by such laws and social restraints as his
own conscience can subscribe to.
He who would rightly appreciate the worth of personal
independence as an element of happiness, should consider the
value he himself puts upon it as an ingredient of his own. There
is no subject on which there is a greater habitual difference of
judgment between a man judging for himself, and the same man
judging for other people. When he hears others complaining that
they are not allowed freedom of action--that their own will has
not sufficient influence in the regulation of their affairs--his
inclination is, to ask, what are their grievances ? what positive
damage they sustain? and in what respect they consider their
affairs to be mismanaged ? and if they fail to make out, in
answer to these questions, what appears to him a sufficient case,
he turns a deaf ear, and regards their complaint as the fanciful
querulousness of people whom nothing reasonable will satisfy. But
he has a quite different standard of judgment when he is deciding
for himself.
Then, the most unexceptionable administration of his interests
by a tutor set over him, does not satisfy his feelings: his
personal exclusion from the deciding authority appears itself the
greatest grievance of all, rendering it superfluous even to enter
into the question of mismanagement. It is the same with nations.
What citizen of a free country would listen to any offers of good
and skilful administration, in return for the abdication of
freedom? Even if he could believe that good and skilful
administration can exist among a people ruled by a will not their
own, would not the consciousness of working out their own destiny
under their own moral responsibility be a compensation to his
feelings for great rudeness and imperfection in the details of
public affairs ?
Let him rest assured that whatever he feels on this point,
women feel in a fully equal degree. Whatever has been said or
written, from the time of Herodotus to the present, of the
ennobling influence of free government--the nerve and spring
which it gives to all the faculties, the larger and higher
objects which it presents to the intellect and feelings, the more
unselfish public spirit, and calmer and broader views of duty,
that it engenders, and the generally loftier platform on which it
elevates the individual as a moral, spiritual, and social
being--is every particle as true of women as of men. Are these
things no important part of individual happiness ?
Let any man call to mind what he himself felt on emerging from
boyhood--from the tutelage and control of even loved and
affectionate elders--and entering upon the responsibilities of
manhood. Was it not like the physical effect of taking off a
heavy weight, or releasing him from obstructive, even if not
otherwise painful, bonds? Did he not feel twice as much alive,
twice as much a human being, as before ?
And does he imagine that women have none of these feelings?
But it is a striking fact, that the satisfactions and
mortifications of personal pride, though all in all to most men
when the case is their own, have less allowance made for them in
the case of other people, and are less listened to as a ground or
a justification of conduct, than any other natural human
feelings; perhaps because men compliment them in their own case
with the names of so many other qualities, that they are seldom
conscious how mighty an influence these feelings exercise in
their own lives.
No less large and powerful is their part, we may assure
ourselves, in the lives and feelings of women. Women are schooled
into suppressing them in their most natural and most healthy
direction, but the internal principle remains, in a different
outward form. An active and energetic mind, if denied liberty,
will seek for power: refused the command of itself, it will
assert its personality by attempting to control others. To allow
to any human beings no existence of their own but what depends on
others, is giving far too high B premium on bending others to
their purposes. Where liberty cannot be hoped for, and power can,
power becomes the grand object of human desire; those to whom
others will not leave the undisturbed management of their own
affairs, will compensate themselves, if they can, by meddling for
their own purposes with the affairs of others. Hence also women's
passion for personal beauty, and dress and display; and all the
evils that flow from it, in the way of mischievous luxury and
social immorality.
The love of power and the love of liberty are in eternal
antagonism. Where there is least liberty, the passion for power
is the most ardent and unscrupulous. The desire of power over
others can only cease to be a depraving agency among mankind,
when each of them individually is able to do without it: which
can only be where respect for liberty in the personal concerns of
each is an established principle. But it is not only through the
sentiment of personal dignity, that the free direction and
disposal of their own faculties is a source of individual
happiness, and to be fettered and restricted in it, a source of
unhappiness, to human beings, and not least to women. There is
nothing, after disease, indigence, and guilt, so fatal to the
pleasurable enjoyment of life as the want o~ a worthy outlet for
the active faculties.
Women who have the cares of a family, and while they have the
cares of a family, have this outlet, and it generally suffices
for them: but what of the greatly increasing number of women, who
have had no opportunity of exercising the vocation which they are
mocked by telling them is their proper one? What of the women
whose children have been lost to them by death or distance, or
have grown up, married, and formed homes of their own? There are
abundant examples of men who, after a life engrossed by business,
retire with a competency to the enjoyment, as they hope, of rest,
but to whom, as they are unable to acquire new interests and
excitements that can replace the old, the change to a life of
inactivity brings ennui, melancholy, and premature death. Yet no
one thinks of the parallel case of so many worthy and devoted
women, who, having paid what they are told is their debt to
society--having brought up a family blamelessly to manhood and
womanhood--having kept a house as long as they had a house
needing to be kept--are deserted by the sole occupation for which
they have fitted themselves; and remain with undiminished
activity but with no employment for it, unless perhaps a daughter
or daughter-in-law is willing to abdicate in their favour the
discharge of the same functions in her younger household.
Surely a hard lot for the old age of those who have worthily
discharged, as long as it was given to them to discharge, what
the world accounts their only social duty. Of such women, and of
those others to whom this duty has not been committed at
all--many of whom pine through life with the consciousness of
thwarted vocations, and activities which are not suffered to
expand--the only resources, speaking generally, are religion and
charity. But their religion, though it may be one of feeling, and
of ceremonial observance, cannot be a religion of action, unless
in the form of charity. For charity many of them are by nature
admirably fitted; but to practise it usefully, or even without
doing mischief, requires the education, the manifold preparation,
the knowledge and the thinking powers, of a skilful
administrator.
There are few of the administrative functions of government
for which a person would not be fit, who is fit to bestow charity
usefully. In this as in other cases (pre-eminently in that of the
education of children), the duties permitted to women cannot be
performed properly, without their being trained for duties which,
to the great loss of society, are not permitted to them. And here
let me notice the singular way in which the question of women's
disabilities is frequently presented to view, by those who find
it easier to draw a ludicrous picture of what they do not like,
than to answer the arguments for it. When it is suggested that
women's executive capacities and prudent counsels might sometimes
be found valuable in affairs of State, these lovers of fun hold
up to the ridicule of the world, as sitting in Parliament or in
the Cabinet, girls in their teens, or young wives of two or three
and twenty, transported bodily, exactly as they are, from the
drawing-room to the House of Commons.
They forget that males are not usually selected at this early
age for a seat in Parliament, or for responsible political
functions. Common sense would tell them that if such trusts were
confided to women, it would be to such as having no special
vocation for married life, or preferring another employment of
their faculties (as many women even now prefer to marriage some
of the few honourable occupations within their reach), have spent
the best years of their youth in attempting to qualify themselves
for the pursuits in which they desire to engage; or still more
frequently perhaps, widows or wives of forty or fifty, by whom
the know- ledge of life and faculty of government which they have
acquired in their families, could by the aid of appropriate
studies be made available on a less contracted scale.
There is no country of Europe in which the ablest men have not
frequently experienced, and keenly appreciated, the value of the
advice and help of clever and experienced women of the world, in
the attainment both of private and of public objects; and there
are important matters of public administration to which few men
are equally competent with such women; among others, the detailed
control of expenditure. But what we are now discussing is not the
need which society has of the services of women in public
business, but the dull and hopeless life to which it so often
condemns them, by forbidding them to exercise the practical
abilities which many of them are conscious of, in any wider field
than one which to some of them never was, and to others is no
longer, open.
If there is anything vitally important to the happiness of
human beings, it is that they should relish their habitual
pursuit. This requisite of an enjoyable life is very imperfectly
granted, or altogether denied, to a large part of mankind; and by
its absence many a life is a failure, which is provided, in
appearance, with every requisite of success. But if circumstances
which society is not yet skilful enough to overcome, render such
failures often for the present inevitable, society need not
itself inflict them. The injudiciousness of parents, a youth's
own inexperience, or the absence of external opportunities for
the congenial vocation, and their presence for an uncongenial,
condemn numbers of men to pass their lives in doing one thing
reluctantly and ill, when there are other things which they could
have done well and happily.
But on women this sentence is imposed by actual law, and by
customs equivalent to law. What, in unenlightened societies,
colour, race, religion, or in the case of a conquered country,
nationality, are to some men, sex is to all women; a peremptory
exclusion from almost all honourable occupations, but either such
as cannot be fulfilled by others, or such as those others do not
think worthy of their acceptance. Sufferings arising from causes
of this nature usually meet with so little sympathy, that few
persons are aware of the great amount of unhappiness even now
produced by the feeling of a wasted life. The case will be even
more frequent, as increased cultivation creates a greater and
greater disproportion between the ideas and faculties- of women,
and the scope which society allows to their activity.
When we consider the positive evil caused to the disqualified
half of the human race by their disqualification--first in the
loss of the most inspiriting and elevating kind of personal
enjoyment, and next in the weariness, disappointment, and
profound dissatisfaction with life, which are so often the
substitute for it; one feels that among all the lessons which men
require for carrying on the struggle against the inevitable
imperfections of their lot on earth, there is no lesson which
they more need, than not to add to the evils which nature
inflicts, by their jealous and prejudiced restrictions on one
another. Their vain fears only substitute other and worse evils
for those which they are idly apprehensive of: while every
restraint on the freedom of conduct of any of their human
fellow-creatures (otherwise than by making them responsible for
any evil actually caused by it), dries up pro tanto the principal
fountain of human happiness, and leaves the species less rich, to
an inappreciable degree, in all that makes life valuable to the
individual human being.
[End]