The natural position of woman is clearly,
to a limited degree, a subordinate one. Such
it has always been throughout the world, in all ages,
and in many widely different conditions of society.
There are three conclusive reasons why we should expect
it to continue so for the future.
First. Woman in natural physical
strength is so greatly inferior to man that she is
entirely in his power, quite incapable of self-defense,
trusting to his generosity for protection. In
savage life this great superiority of physical strength
makes man the absolute master, woman the abject slave.
And, although every successive step in civilisation
lessens the distance between the sexes, and renders
the situation of woman safer and easier, still, in
no state of society, however highly cultivated, has
perfect equality yet existed. This difference
in physical strength must, in itself, always prevent
such perfect equality, since woman is compelled every
day of her life to appeal to man for protection, and
for support.
Secondly. Woman is also,
though in a very much less degree, inferior to man
in intellect. The difference in this particular
may very probably be only a consequence of greater
physical strength, giving greater power of endurance
and increase of force to the intellectual faculty
connected with it. In many cases, as between the
best individual minds of both sexes, the difference
is no doubt very slight. There have been women
of a very high order of genius; there have been very
many women of great talent; and, as regards what is
commonly called cleverness, a general quickness and
clearness of mind within limited bounds, the number
of clever women may possibly have been even larger
than that of clever men. But, taking the one
infallible rule for our guide, judging of the tree
by its fruits, we are met by the fact that the greatest
achievements of the race in every field of intellectual
culture have been the work of man. It is true
that the advantages of intellectual education have
been, until recently, very generally on the side of
man; had those advantages been always equal, women
would no doubt have had much more of success to record.
But this same fact of inferiority of education becomes
in itself one proof of the existence of a certain
degree of mental inequality. What has been the
cause of this inferiority of education? Why has
not woman educated herself in past ages, as man has
done? Is it the opposition of man, and the power
which physical strength gives him, which have been
the impediments? Had these been the only obstacles,
and had that general and entire equality of intellect
existed between the sexes, which we find proclaimed
to-day by some writers, and by many talkers, the genius
of women would have opened a road through these and
all other difficulties much more frequently than it
has yet done. At this very hour, instead of defending
the intellect of women, just half our writing and talking
would be required to defend the intellect of men.
But, so long as woman, as a sex, has not provided
for herself the same advanced intellectual education
to the same extent as men, and so long as inferiority
of intellect in man has never yet in thousands of years
been gravely discussed, while the inferiority of intellect
in woman has been during the same period generally
admitted, we are compelled to believe there is some
foundation for this last opinion. The extent of
this difference, the interval that exists between the
sexes, the precise degree of inferiority on the part
of women, will probably never be satisfactorily proved.
Believing then in the greater physical
powers of man, and in his superiority, to a limited
extent, in intellect also, as two sufficient reasons
for the natural subordination of woman as a sex, we
have yet a third reason for this subordination.
Christianity can be proved to be the safest and highest
ally of man’s nature, physical, moral, and intellectual,
that the world has yet known. It protects his
physical nature at every point by plain, stringent
rules of general temperance and moderation. To
his moral nature it gives the pervading strength of
healthful purity. To his intellectual nature,
while on one hand it enjoins full development and
vigorous action, holding out to the spirit the highest
conceivable aspirations, on the other it teaches the
invaluable lessons of a wise humility. This grand
and holy religion, whose whole action is healthful,
whose restraints are all blessings this
gracious religion, whose chief precepts are the love
of God and the love of man this same Christianity
confirms the subordinate position of woman, by allotting
to man the headship in plain language and by positive
precept. No system of philosophy has ever yet
worked out in behalf of woman the practical results
for good which Christianity has conferred on her.
Christianity has raised woman from slavery and made
her the thoughtful companion of man; finds her the
mere toy, or the victim of his passions, and it places
her by his side, his truest friend, his most faithful
counselor, his helpmeet in every worthy and honorable
task. It protects her far more effectually than
any other system. It cultivates, strengthens,
elevates, purifies all her highest endowments, and
holds out to her aspirations the most sublime for
that future state of existence, where precious rewards
are promised to every faithful discharge of duty,
even the most humble. But, while conferring on
her these priceless blessings, it also enjoins the
submission of the wife to the husband, and allots a
subordinate position to the whole sex while here on
earth. No woman calling herself a Christian,
acknowledging her duties as such, can, therefore,
consistently deny the obligation of a limited subordination
laid upon her by her Lord and His Church.
From these three chief considerations the
great inferiority of physical strength, a very much
less and undefined degree of inferiority in intellect,
and the salutary teachings of the Christian faith it
follows that, to a limited degree, varying with circumstances,
and always to be marked out by sound reason and good
feeling, the subordination of woman, as a sex, is
inevitable.
This subordination once established,
a difference of position, and a consequent difference
of duties, follow as a matter of course. There
must, of necessity, in such a state of things, be certain
duties inalienably connected with the position of
man, others inalienably connected with the position
of woman. For the one to assume the duties of
the other becomes, first, an act of desertion, next,
an act of usurpation. For the man to discharge
worthily the duties of his own position becomes his
highest merit. For the woman to discharge worthily
the duties of her own position becomes her highest
merit. To be noble the man must be manly.
To be noble the woman must be womanly. Independently
of the virtues required equally of both sexes, such
as truth, uprightness, candor, fidelity, honor, we
look in man for somewhat more of wisdom, of vigor,
of courage, from natural endowment, combined with
enlarged action and experience. In woman we look
more especially for greater purity, modesty, patience,
grace, sweetness, tenderness, refinement, as the consequences
of a finer organization, in a protected and sheltered
position. That state of society will always be
the most rational, the soundest, the happiest, where
each sex conscientiously discharges its own duties,
without intruding on those of the other.
It is true that the world has often
seen individual women called by the manifest will
of Providence to positions of the highest authority,
to the thrones of rulers and sovereigns. And
many of these women have discharged those duties with
great intellectual ability and great success.
It is rather the fashion now among literary men to
depreciate Queen Elizabeth and her government.
But it is clear that, whatever may have been her errors and
no doubt they were grave she still appears
in the roll of history as one of the best sovereigns
not only of her own house, but of all the dynasties
of England. Certainly she was in every way a
better and a more successful ruler than her own father
or her own brother-in-law, and better also than the
Stuarts who filled her throne at a later day.
Catherine of Russia, though most unworthy as a woman,
had a force of intellectual ability quite beyond dispute,
and which made itself felt in every department of
her government. Isabella I. of Spain gave proof
of legislative and executive ability of the very highest
order; she was not only one of the purest and noblest,
but also, considering the age to which she belonged,
and the obstacles in her way, one of the most skillful
sovereigns the world has ever seen. Her nature
was full of clear intelligence, with the highest moral
and physical courage. She was in every way a
better ruler than her own husband, to whom she proved
nevertheless an admirable wife, acting independently
only where clear principle was at stake. The two
greet errors of her reign, the introduction of the
Inquisition and the banishment of the Jews, must be
charged to the confessor rather than to the Queen,
and these were errors in which her husband was as closely
involved as herself. On the other hand, some of
the best reforms of her reign originated in her own
mind, and were practically carried out under her own
close personal supervision. Many other skillful
female rulers might be named. And it is not only
in civilized life and in Christendom that woman has
shown herself wise in governing; even among the wildest
savage tribes they have appeared, occasionally, as
leaders and rulers. This is a singular fact.
It may be proved from the history of this continent,
and not only from the early records of Mexico and
Cuba and Hayti, but also from the reports of the earliest
navigators on our own coast, who here and there make
mention incidentally of this or that female chief
or sachem. But a fact far more impressive and
truly elevating to the sex also appears on authority
entirely indisputable. While women are enjoined
by the Word of God to refrain from public teaching
in the Church, there have been individual women included
among the Prophets, speaking under the direct influence
of the Most Holy Spirit of God, the highest dignity
to which human nature can attain. But all these
individual cases, whether political or religious, have
been exceptional. The lesson to be learned from
them is plain. We gather naturally from these
facts, what may be learned also from other sources,
that, while the positions of the two sexes are as such
distinct, the one a degree superior, the other a degree
inferior, the difference between them is limited it
is not impassable in individual cases. The two
make up but one species, one body politic and religious.
There are many senses besides marriage in which the
two are one. It is the right hand and the left,
both belonging to one body, moved by common feeling,
guided by common reason. The left hand may at
times be required to do the work of the right, the
right to act as the left. Even in this world
there are occasions when the last are first, the first
last, without disturbing the general order of things.
These exceptional cases temper the general rule, but
they can not abrogate that rule as regards the entire
sex. Man learns from them not to exaggerate his
superiority a lesson very often needed.
And woman learns from them to connect self-respect
and dignity with true humility, and never, under any
circumstances, to sink into the mere tool and toy
of man a lesson equally important.
Such until the present day has been
the general teaching and practice of Christendom,
where, under a mild form, and to a limited point, the
subordination of woman has been a fact clearly established.
But this teaching we are now called upon to forget,
this practice we are required to abandon. We
have arrived at the days foretold by the Prophet,
when “knowledge shall be increased, and many
shall run to and fro.” The intellectual
progress of the race during the last half century
has indeed been great. But admiration is not
the only feeling of the thoughtful mind when observing
this striking advance in intellectual acquirement.
We see that man has not yet fully mastered the knowledge
he has acquired. He runs to and fro. He rushes
from one extreme to the other. How many chapters
of modern history, both political and religious, are
full of the records of this mental vacillation of
our race, of this illogical and absurd tendency to
pass from one extreme to the point farthest from it!
An adventurous party among us, weary
of the old paths, is now eagerly proclaiming theories
and doctrines entirely novel on this important subject.
The emancipation of woman is the name
chosen by its advocates for this movement. They
reject the idea of all subordination, even in the
mildest form, with utter scorn. They claim for
woman absolute social and political equality with
man. And they seek to secure these points by
conferring on the whole sex the right of the elective
franchise, female suffrage being the first step in
the unwieldy revolutions they aim at bringing about.
These views are no longer confined to a small sect.
They challenge our attention at every turn. We
meet them in society; we read them in the public prints;
we hear of them in grave legislative assemblies, in
the Congress of the Republic, in the Imperial Parliament
of Great Britain. The time has come when it is
necessary that all sensible and conscientious men and
women should make up their minds clearly on a subject
bearing upon the future condition of the entire race.
There is generally more than one influence
at work in all public movements of importance.
The motive power in such cases is very seldom simple.
So it has been with the question of female suffrage.
The abuses inflicted on woman by legislation, the
want of sufficient protection for her interests when
confided to man, are generally asserted by the advocates
of female suffrage as the chief motives for a change
in the laws which withhold from her the power of voting.
But it is also considered by the friend of the new
movement that to withhold the suffrage from half the
race is an inconsistency in American politics; that
suffrage is an inalienable right, universal in its
application; that women are consequently deprived
of a great natural right when denied the power of
voting. A third reason is also given for this
proposed change in our political constitution.
It is asserted that the entire sex would be greatly
elevated in intellectual and moral dignity by such
a course; and that the effect on the whole race would
therefore be most advantageous, as the increased influence
of woman in public affairs would purify politics,
and elevate the whole tone of political life.
Here we have the reason for this movement as advanced
by its advocates. These are the points on which
they lay the most stress:
First. The abuse of legislative
power in man, by oppressing the sex.
Secondly. The inalienable
natural right of woman to vote; and imperatively so
in a country where universal suffrage is a great political
principle.
Thirdly. The elevation of
the sex, and the purification of politics through
their influence.
Let us consider each of these points separately.
FIRST. THE ABUSE OF LEGISLATIVE POWER BY MAN IN THE OPPRESSION OF WOMEN.
In some countries of Europe much of
wrong is still done to woman, at the present day,
by old laws owing their existence to a past state of
things, and which have not yet been repealed or modified
to suit existing circumstances. But we are writing
now to American women, and, instead of the evils existing
in the other hemisphere, we are looking at a very
different state of society. Let us confine ourselves,
therefore, to the subject as it affects ourselves.
To go into all the details which might be drawn together from
the statute books of the different States of the Union bearing on this point,
and to do them full justice, would require volumes. Such a course is not
necessary. The question can be decided with truth and justice on general
principleson generally admitted facts. We admit, then, that in some
Statesperhaps in allthere may be laws in which the natural and acquired
rights of woman have not been fairly considered; that in some cases she has
needed more legal protection and more privileges than she has yet received.
But while this admission is made, attention is at the same time demanded for a
fact inseparably connected with it; namely, the marked and generous liberality
which American men have thus far shown in the considerate care and protection
they have, as a general rule, given to the interests of women. In no
country, whether of ancient or modern times, have women had less to complain of
in their treatment by man than in America. This is no rhetorical
declamation; it is the simple statement of an undeniable fact. It is a
matter of social history. Since the days of early colonial life to the
present houror, in other words, during the last two hundred and fifty
yearssuch has been the general course of things in this country. The
hardest tasks have been taken by man, and a generous tenderness has been shown
to women in many of the details of social life, pervading all classes of
society, to a degree beyond what is customary even in the most civilized
countries of Europe. Taking these two facts togetherthat certain abuses
still exist, that certain laws and regulations need changing and that, as a
general rule, American women have thus far been treated by their countrymen with
especial consideration, in a legal and in a social sensethe inference becomes
perfectly plain. A formidable and very dangerous social revolution is not
needed to correct remaining abuses. Any revolution aiming at upsetting the
existing relations of the sexesrelations going back to the earliest records
and traditions of the racecan not be called less than formidable and
dangerous. Let women make full use of the influences already at their
command, and all really needed changes may be effected by means both sure and
safemeans already thoroughly tried. Let them use all the good sense, all
the information, all the eloquence, and, if they please, all the wit, at their
command when talking over these abuses in society. Let them state their
views, their needs, their demands, in conscientiously written papers. Let
them appeal for aid to the best, the wisest, the most respected men of the
country, and the result is certain. Choose any one real, existing abuse as
a test of the honesty and the liberality of American men toward the women of the
country, and we all know before-hand what shall be the result.
If husbands, fathers, brothers, are
ready any day to shed their heart’s blood for
our personal defense in the hour of peril, we may feel
perfectly assured that they will also protect us, when
appealed to, by legislation. When they lay down
their arms and refuse to fight for us, it will then
be time to ask them to give up legislation also.
But until that evil hour arrives let men make the
laws, and let women be content to fill worthily, to
the very best of their abilities, the noble position
which the Heavenly Father has already marked out for
them. There is work to be done in that position
reaching much higher, going much farther, and penetrating
far deeper, than any mere temporary legislation can
do. Of that work we shall speak more fully a moment
later.
SECONDLY. THE INALIENABLE NATURAL RIGHT OF WOMAN TO
VOTE; AND IMPERATIVELY SO IN A COUNTRY WHERE UNIVERSAL SUFFRAGE IS A GREAT
POLITICAL PRINCIPLE
This second proposition of the advocates of female suffrage
is of a general character. It does not point to particular abuses, it
claims the right of woman to vote as one which she should demand, whether
practically needed or not. It is asserted that to disqualify half the race
from voting is an abuse entirely inconsistent with the first principles of
American politics. The answer to this is plain. The elective
franchise is not an end; it is only a means. A good government is indeed
an inalienable right. Just so far as the elective franchise will conduce
to this great end, to that point it becomes also a right, but no farther.
A male suffrage wisely free, including all capable of justly appreciating its
importance, and honestly discharging its responsibilities, becomes a great
advantage to a nation. But universal suffrage, pushed to its extreme
limits, including all men, all women, all minors beyond the years of childhood,
would inevitably be fraught with evil. There have been limits to the
suffrage of the freest nations. Such limits have been found necessary by
all past political experience. In this country, at the present hour, there
are restrictions upon the suffrage in every State. Those restrictions vary
in character. They are either national, relating to color, political,
mental, educational, connected with a property qualification, connected with
sex, connected with minority of years, or they are moral in their nature.
This restriction connected with sex
is, in fact, but one of many other restrictions, considered
more or less necessary even in a democracy. Manhood
suffrage is a very favorite term of the day. But,
taken in the plain meaning of those words, such fullness
of suffrage has at the present hour no actual existence
in any independent nation, or in any extensive province.
It does not exist, as we have just seen, even among
the men of America. And, owing to the conditions
of human life, we may well believe that unrestricted
fullness of manhood suffrage never can exist in any
great nation for any length of time. In those
States of the American Union which approach nearest
to a practical manhood suffrage, unnaturalized foreigners,
minors, and certain classes of criminals, are excluded
from voting. And why so? What is the cause
of this exclusion? Here are men by tens of thousands men
of widely different classes and conditions peremptorily
deprived of a privilege asserted to be a positive
inalienable right universal in its application.
There is manifestly some reason for this apparently
contradictory state of things. We know that reason
to be the good of society. It is for the good
of society that the suffrage is withheld from those
classes of men. A certain fitness for the right
use of the suffrage is therefore deemed necessary
before granting it. A criminal, an unnaturalized
foreigner, a minor, have not that fitness; consequently
the suffrage is withheld from them. The worthy
use of the vote is, then, a qualification not yet
entirely overlooked by our legislators. The State
has had, thus far, no scruples in withholding the
suffrage even from men, whenever it has believed that
the grant would prove injurious to the nation.
Here we have the whole question clearly
defined. The good of society is the true object
of all human government. To this principle suffrage
itself is subordinate. It can never be more than
a means looking to the attainment of good government,
and not necessarily its corner-stone. Just so
far is it wise and right. Move one step beyond
that point, and instead of a benefit the suffrage
may become a cruel injury. The governing power
of our own country the most free of all
great nations practically proclaims that
it has no right to bestow the suffrage wherever its
effects are likely to become injurious to the whole
nation, by allotting different restrictions to the
suffrage in every State of the Union. The right
of suffrage is, therefore, most clearly not an absolutely
inalienable right universal in its application.
It has its limits. These limits are marked out
by plain justice and common-sense. Women have
thus far been excluded from the suffrage precisely
on the same principles from the conviction
that to grant them this particular privilege would,
in different ways, and especially by withdrawing them
from higher and more urgent duties, and allotting
to them other duties for which they are not so well
fitted, become injurious to the nation, and, we add,
ultimately injurious to themselves, also, as part
of the nation. If it can be proved that this
conviction is sound and just, founded on truth, the
assumed inalienable right of suffrage, of which we
have been hearing so much lately, vanishes into the
“baseless fabric of a vision.” If
the right were indeed inalienable, it should be granted,
without regard to consequences, as an act of abstract
justice. But, happily for us, none but the very
wildest theorists are prepared to take this view of
the question of suffrage. The advocates of female
suffrage must, therefore, abandon the claim of inalienable
right. Such a claim can not logically be maintained
for one moment in the face of existing facts.
We proceed to the third point.
THIRDLY. THE ELEVATION OF THE ENTIRE SEX, THE GENERAL
PURIFICATION OF POLITICS THROUGH THE INFLUENCE OF WOMEN, AND THE CONSEQUENT
ADVANCE OF THE WHOLE RACE.
Such, we are told, must
be the inevitable results of what is called the emancipation
of woman, the entire independence of woman through
the suffrage.
Here we find ourselves in a peculiar
position. While considering the previous points
of this question we have been guided by positive facts,
clearly indisputable in their character. Actual,
practical experience, with the manifold teachings
at her command, has come to our aid. But we are
now called upon, by the advocates of this novel doctrine,
to change our course entirely. We are under orders
to sail out into unknown seas, beneath skies unfamiliar,
with small light from the stars, without chart, without
pilot, the port to which we are bound being one as
yet unvisited by mortal man or woman!
Heavy mist, and dark cloud, and threatening storm
appear to us brooding over that doubtful sea.
But something of prophetic vision is required of us.
We are told that all perils which seem to threaten
the first stages of our course are entirely illusive that
they will vanish as we approach that we
shall soon arrive in halcyon waters, and regions where
wisdom, peace, and purity reign supreme. If we
cautiously inquire after some assurance of such results,
we are told that to those sailing under the flag of
progress triumph is inevitable, failure is impossible;
and that many of the direst evils hitherto known on
earth must vanish at the touch of the talisman in
the hand of woman and that talisman is the
vote.
Now, to speak frankly and
being as yet untrammeled by political aspirations,
we fearlessly do so as regards this flag
of progress, we know it to be a very popular bit of
bunting; but to the eye of common-sense it is grievously
lacking in consistency. The flag of our country
means something positive. We all love it; we all
honor it. It represents to us the grand ideas
by which the nation lives. It is the symbol of
constitutional government, of law and order, of union,
of a liberty which is not license. It is to us
the symbol of all that may be great and good and noble
in the Christian republic. But this vaunted flag
of progress, so alluring to many restless minds, is
vague in its colors, unstable, too often illusive,
in web and woof. Many of its most prominent standard-bearers
are clad in the motley garb of theorists. Their
flag may be seen wandering to and fro, hither and thither,
up and down, swayed by every breath of popular caprice;
so it move to the mere cry of “Progress!”
its followers are content. To-day, in the hands
of the skeptical philosopher, it assaults the heavens.
Tomorrow it may: float over the mire of Mormonism,
or depths still more vile. It was under the flag
of progress that, in the legislative halls of France,
the name of the Holy Lord God of Hosts, “who
inhabiteth eternity,” was legally blasphemed.
It was under the flag of progress that, on the 10th
of November, 1793, Therese Momoro, Goddess of Reason,
and wife of the printer Momoro, was borne in triumph,
by throngs of worshipers, through the streets of Paris,
and enthroned in the house of God.
Beyond all doubt, there is now, as
there ever has been, an onward progress toward truth
on earth. But that true progress is seldom rapid,
excepting perhaps in the final stages of some particular
movement. It is, indeed, often so slow, so gradual,
as to be imperceptible at the moment to common observation.
It is often silent, wonderful, mysterious, sublime.
It is the grand movement toward the Divine Will, working
out all things for eventual good. In looking back,
there are for every generation way-marks by which
the course of that progress may be traced. In
looking forward no mortal eye can foresee its immediate
course. The ultimate end we know, but the next
step we can not foretell. The mere temporary
cry of progress from human lips has often been raised
in direct opposition to the true course of that grand,
mysterious movement. It is like the roar of the
rapids in the midst of the majestic stream, which,
in the end, shall yield their own foaming waters to
the calm current moving onward to the sea. We
ask, then, for something higher, safer, more sure,
to guide us than the mere popular cry of “Progress!”
We dare not blindly follow that cry, nor yield thoughtless
allegiance to every flag it upholds.
Then, again, as regards that talisman,
the vote, we have but one answer to make. We
do not believe in magic. We have a very firm and
unchangeable faith in free institutions, founded on
just principles. We entirely believe that a republican
form of government in a Christian country may be the
highest, the noblest, and the happiest that the world
has yet seen. Still, we do not believe in magic.
And we do not believe in idolatry. We Americans
are just as much given to idolatry as any other people.
Our idols may differ from those of other nations; but
they are, none the less, still idols. And it strikes
the writer that the ballot-box is rapidly becoming
an object of idolatry with us. Is it not so?
From the vote alone we expect all things good.
From the vote alone we expect protection against all
things evil. Of the vote Americans can never
have too much of the vote they can never
have enough. The vote is expected by its very
touch, suddenly and instantaneously, to produce miraculous
changes; it is expected to make the foolish wise,
the ignorant knowing, the weak strong, the fraudulent
honest. It is expected to turn dross into gold.
It is held to be the great educator, not only as regards
races, and under the influence of time, which is in
a measure true, but as regards individuals and classes
of men, and that in the twinkling of an eye, with magical
rapidity. Were this theory practically sound,
the vote would really prove a talisman. In that
case we should give ourselves no rest until the vote
were instantly placed in the hands of every Chinaman
landing in California, and of every Indian roving
over the plains. But, in opposition to this theory,
what is the testimony of positive facts known to us
all? Are all voters wise? Are all voters
honest? Are all voters enlightened? Are
all voters true to their high responsibilities?
Are all voters faithful servants of their country?
Is it entirely true that the vote has necessarily
and really these inherent magical powers of rapid
education for individuals and for classes of men, fitting
them, in default of other qualifications, for the high
responsibilities of suffrage? Alas! we know only
too well that when a man is not already honest and
just and wise and enlightened, the vote he holds can
not make him so. We know that if he is dishonest,
he will sell his vote; if he is dull and ignorant,
he is misled, for selfish purposes of their own, by
designing men. As regards man, at least, the vote
can be too easily proved to be no talisman. It
is very clear that for man the ballot-box needs to
be closely guarded on one side by common-sense, on
the other by honesty. A man must be endowed with
a certain amount of education and of principle, before
he receives the vote, to fit him for a worthy use
of it. And if the vote be really no infallible
talisman for man, why should we expect it to work
magical wonders in the hands of woman?
But let us drop the play of metaphor,
appropriate though it be when facing the visions of
political theorists. Let us look earnestly and
clearly at the positive facts before us. We are
gravely told that to grant the suffrage to woman would
be a step inevitably beneficial and elevating to the
whole sex, and, through their influence, to the entire
race, and that, on this ground alone, the proposed
change in the constitution should be made. Here,
so far at least as the concluding proposition goes,
we must all agree. If it can be clearly proved
that this particular change in our institutions is
one so fraught with blessings, we are bound to make
it at every cost. The true elevation of the whole
race: that is what we are all longing for, praying
for. And is it indeed true that this grand work
can effectually be brought about by the one step we
are now urged to take? What says actual experience
on this point? The whole history of mankind shows
clearly that, as yet, no one legislative act has ever
accomplished half of what is claimed by the advocates
of woman’s suffrage as the inevitable result
of the change they propose. No one legislative
act has ever been so widely comprehensive in its results
for good as they declare that this act shall be.
No one legislative act has ever raised the entire race
even within sight of the point of elevation predicted
by the champions of what is called the emancipation
of woman. Hear them speak for themselves:
“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” the removal of the principle
of the subordination of the wife to the husband, and
the establishment of the entire independence of women,
to be obtained by female suffrage. These are
not the words of some excited woman making a speech
at a public meeting. The quotation is from the
writings of Mr. Stuart Mill. The subordination
of the wife to the husband is declared by Mr. Mill
to be “the citadel of the enemy.”
Storm the citadel, proclaim the entire independence
of the wife, and our feeble imaginations, we are told,
are utterly incapable of conceiving the glorious future
of the race consequent upon this one step. This
is a very daring assertion. It is so bold, indeed,
as to require something of positive proof ere we can
yield to it our implicit belief. The citadel we
are urged to storm was built by the hand of God.
The flag waving over that citadel is the flag of the
Cross. When the Creator made one entire sex so
much more feeble in physical powers than the other,
a degree of subordination on the part of the weaker
sex became inevitable, unless it were counteracted
by increase of mental ability, strengthened by special
precept. But the mental ability, so far as there
is a difference, and the precept, are both on the
side of the stronger sex. The whole past history
of the race coincides so clearly with these facts
that we should suppose that even those who are little
under the influence of Christian faith might pause
era they attacked that citadel. Common-sense might
teach them something of caution, something of humility,
when running counter to the whole past experience
of the race. As for those who have a living belief
in the doctrines of Christianity, when they find that
revealed religion, from the first of the Prophets
to the last of the Apostles, allots a subordinate
position to the wife, they are compelled to believe
Moses and St. Paul in the right, and the philosophers
of the present day, whether male or female, in the
wrong. To speak frankly, the excessive boldness
of these new theories, the incalculable and inconceivable
benefits promised us from this revolution from the
natural condition of things in Christendom and
throughout the world indeed would lead
us to suspicion. Guides who appeal to the imagination
when discussing practical questions are not generally
considered the safest. And the champions of female
suffrage are necessarily compelled to take this course.
They have no positive foundation to rest on.
Mr. Stuart Mill has said in Parliament, in connection
with this subject, that “the tyranny of established
custom has entirely passed away.” Nothing
can be more true than this assertion. As a rule,
the past is now looked upon with doubt, with suspicion,
often with a certain sort of contempt, very far from
being always consistent with sound reason. The
tyranny of the present day and it may be
just as much a tyranny as the other is radically
opposite in character. It is the tyranny of novelty
to which we are most exposed at present. The
dangers lie chiefly in that direction. There
will be little to fear from the old until the hour
of reaction arrives, as it inevitably must, if the
human mind be strained too far in a new direction.
At present the more startling an assertion, the farther
it wanders from all past experience, the greater are
its chances of attracting attention, of gaining adherents,
of achieving at least a partial and temporary success.
In the age and in the country which has seen the development
of Mormonism as a successful religious, social, and
political system, nothing should surprise us.
Such is the restlessness of human nature that it will
often, from mere weak hankering after change, hug
to its bosom the wildest theories, and yield them
a temporary allegiance.
Let us suppose that to-day the proposed
revolution were effected; all women, without restriction,
even the most vile, would be summoned to vote in accordance
with their favorite theory of inalienable right.
That class of women, and other degraded classes of
the ignorant and unprincipled, will always be ready
to sell their votes many times over to
either party, to both parties, to the highest bidder,
in short. They will sell their vote much more
readily than the lowest classes of men now do.
They will hold it with greater levity. They will
trifle with it. They will sell their vote any
day for a yard of ribbon or a tinsel brooch unless
they are offered two yards of ribbon or two brooches.
They will vote over again every hour of every election
day, by cunning disguises and trickery. And thus,
so far as women are concerned, the most degraded element
in society will, in fact, represent the whole sex.
Nay, they will probably not unfrequently command the
elections, as three colored women are said once to
have done in New Jersey. A hundred honest and
intelligent women can have but one vote each, and
at least fifty of these will generally stay at home.
If, which God forbid, it actually comes to female voting,
a very small proportion of the sex will, at common
elections, appear at the polls. Avocations more
urgent, more natural to them, and in which they are
more deeply interested, will keep them away. The
degraded women will be there by the scores, as tools
of men, enjoying both the importance of the hour,
the fun, and the Pay. Fifty women, known
to be thieves and prostitutes, will hold, at a moderate
calculation, say two hundred votes. And, as women
form the majority of the resident population in some
States, that wretched element of society will, in fact,
govern those States, or those who bribe them will
do so. Massachusetts, very favorable to female
suffrage now, will probably come round to the opinion
of New Jersey in former days. Great will be the
consumption of cheap ribbons, and laces, and artificial
flowers, and feathers, and tinsel jewelry, in every
town and village about election time, after emancipation
is achieved. We are compelled to believe so, judging
from our knowledge of human nature, and of the use
already made of bribery at many elections. The
demagogues will be more powerful than ever. Their
work will be made easy for them. It seems, indeed,
probable that under the new era our great elections
shall become a sort of grand national gift concerns,
of which the most active demagogues of all parties
will be the managers. Not that women are more
mercenary, or more unprincipled than men. God
forbid! That would be saying too much. We
entirely believe the reverse to be true. But the
great mass of women can never be made to take a deep,
a sincere, a discriminating, a lasting interest in
the thousand political questions ever arising to be
settled by the vote. They very soon weary of such
questions. On great occasions they can work themselves
up to a state of frenzied excitement over some one
political question. At such times they can parade
a degree of unreasoning prejudice, of passionate hatred,
of blind fury, even beyond what man can boast of.
But, in their natural condition, in everyday life,
they do not take instinctively to politics as men do.
Men are born politicians; just as they are born masons,
and carpenters, and soldiers, and sailors. Not
so women. Their thoughts and feelings are given
to other matters. The current of their chosen
avocations runs in another channel than that of politics a
channel generally quite out of sight of politics;
it is an effort for them to turn from one to the other.
With men, on the contrary, politics, either directly
or indirectly, are closely, palpably, inevitably blended
with their regular work in life. They give their
attention unconsciously, spontaneously; to politics.
Look at a family of children, half boys, half girls;
the boys take instinctively to whips and guns and balls
and bats and horses, to fighting and wrestling and
riding; the girls fondle their dolls, beg for a needle
and thread, play at housekeeping, at giving tea-parties,
at nursing the sick baby, at teaching school.
That difference lasts through life. Give your
son, as he grows up, a gun and a vote; he will delight
in both. Give your daughter, as she grows up,
a gun and a vote, and, unless she be an exceptional
woman, she will make a really good use of neither.
Your son may be dull; but he will make a good soldier,
and a very tolerable voter. Your daughter may
be very clever; but she would certainly run away on
the battle-held, and very probably draw a caricature
on the election ticket. There is the making of
an admirable wife and mother, and a valuable member
of society, in that clever young woman. She is
highly intelligent, thoroughly well educated, reads
Greek and Latin, and has a wider range of knowledge
and thought than ninety-nine in a hundred of the voters
in the same district; but there is nothing of the
politician in her nature. She would rather any
day read a fine poem than the best political speech
of the hour. What she does know of politics reaches
her through that dull but worthy brother of hers.
It is only occasionally that we meet women with an
inherent bias for politics; and those are not, as a
rule, the highest type of the sex it is
only occasionally that they are so. The interest
most women feel in politics is secondary, factitious,
engrafted on them by the men nearest to them.
Women are not abortive men; they are a distinct creation.
The eye and the ear, though both belonging to the
same body, are each, in a certain sense, a distinct
creation. A body endowed with four ears might
hear remarkably well; but without eyes it would be
of little use in the world. A body with four
eyes would have a fourfold power of vision, and would
consequently become nearly as sharp-sighted as a spider;
but without hearing its powers of sight would avail
little. In both cases, half the functions of
the human being, whether physical or mental, would
be very imperfectly performed. Thus it is with
men and women; each has a distinct position to fill
in the great social body, and is especially qualified
for it. These distinct positions are each highly
important. And it is reasonable to believe that,
by filling their own peculiar position thoroughly
well, women can best serve their Creator, their fellow-creatures,
and themselves. No doubt you may, if you choose,
by especial education from childhood upward, make
your girls very respectable politicians, as much so
as the majority of your sons. But in that case
you must give up your womanly daughters you
must be content with manly daughters. This essential
difference between the sexes is a very striking fact;
yet the advocates of female suffrage constantly lose
sight of it; they talk and write as if it had no existence.
It is not lack of intellect on the part of women, but
difference of intellect, or rather a difference of
organization and affinities giving a different bias
to the intellect, which is the cause of their distinct
mental character as a sex. And, owing to this
essential difference, the great majority of women are
naturally disinclined to politics, and partially unfitted
for action in that field.