I.
The Feminist propaganda which
should not be confounded with the Suffrage agitation rests
upon a revolutionary biological principle. Substantially,
the Feminists argue that there are no men and that
there are no women; there are only sexual majorities.
To put the matter less obscurely, the Feminists base
themselves on Weininger’s theory, according
to which the male principle may be found in woman,
and the female principle in man. It follows that
they recognize no masculine or feminine “spheres”,
and that they propose to identify absolutely the conditions
of the sexes.
Now there are two kinds of people
who labor under illusions as regards the Feminist
movement, its opponents and its supporters: both
sides tend to limit the area of its influence; in
few cases does either realize the movement as revolutionary.
The methods are to have revolutionary results, are
destined to be revolutionary; as a convinced but cautious
Feminist, I do not think it honest or advisable to
conceal this fact. I have myself been charged
by a very well-known English author (whose name I
may not give, as the charge was contained in a private
letter) with having “let the cat out of the
bag” in my little book, Woman and To-morrow.
Well, I do not think it right that the cat should be
kept in the bag. Feminists should not want to
triumph by fraud. As promoters of a sex war,
they should not hesitate to declare it, and I have
little sympathy with the pretenses of those who contend
that one may alter everything while leaving everything
unaltered.
An essential difference between “Feminism”
and “Suffragism” is that the Suffrage
is but part of the greater propaganda; while Suffragism
desires to remove an inequality, Feminism purports
to alter radically the mental attitudes of men and
women. The sexes are to be induced to recognize
each other’s status, and to bring this recognition
to such a point that equality will not even be challenged.
Thus Feminists are interested rather in ideas than
in facts; if, for instance, they wish to make accessible
to women the profession of barrister, it is not because
they wish women to practice as barristers, but because
they want men to view without surprise the fact that
women may be barristers. And they have no use
for knightliness and chivalry.
Therein lies the mental revolution:
while the Suffragists are content to attain immediate
ends, the Feminists are aiming at ultimate ends.
They contend that it is unhealthy for the race that
man should not recognize woman as his equal; that
this makes him intolerant, brutal, selfish, and sentimentally
insincere. They believe likewise that the race
suffers because women do not look upon men as their
peers; that this makes them servile, untruthful, deceitful,
narrow, and in every sense inferior. More particularly
concerned with women, it is naturally upon them and
their problems that they are bringing their first attention
to bear.
The word “inferior” at
once arouses comment, for here the Feminist often
distinguishes himself from the Suffragist. He
frequently accepts woman’s present inferiority,
but he believes this inferiority to be transient,
not permanent. He considers that by removing the
handicaps imposed upon women, they will be able to
win an adequate proportion of races. His case
against the treatment of women covers every form of
human relation: the arts, the home, the trades,
and marriage. In every one of these directions
he proposes to make revolutionary changes.
The question of the arts need not
long detain us. It is perfectly clear that woman
has had in the past neither the necessary artistic
training, nor the necessary atmosphere of encouragement;
that families have been reluctant to spend money on
their daughter’s music, her painting, her literary
education, with the lavishness demanded of them by
their son’s professional or business career.
Feminists believe that when men and women have been
leveled, this state of things will cease to prevail.
In the trades, English Feminists resent
the fact that women are excluded from the law, generally
speaking, the ministry, the higher ranks of business
and of the Civil Service and so forth, and practically
from hospital appointments; also that women are paid
low wages for work similar to that of men.
They complain too that the home demands
of woman too great an expenditure of energy, too much
time, too much labor; that the concentration of her
mind upon the continual purchasing and cooking of
food, on cleaning, on the care of the child, is unnecessarily
developed; they doubt if the home can be maintained
as it is if woman is to develop as a free personality.
With marriage, lastly, they are perhaps
most concerned. Though they are not in the main
prepared to advocate free union, they are emphatically
arrayed against modern marriage, which they look upon
as slave union. The somewhat ridiculous modifications
of the marriage service introduced by a few couples
in America and by one in England, in which the word
“obey” was deleted from the bride’s
pledge, can be taken as indicative of the Feminist
attitude. Their grievances against the home, against
the treatment of women in the trades, are closely
connected with the marriage question, for they believe
that the desire of man to have a housekeeper, of woman
to have a protector, deeply influence the complexion
of unions which they would base exclusively upon love,
and it follows that they do not accept as effective
marriage any union where the attitudes of love do
not exist. For them who favor absolute equality,
partnership, sharing of responsibilities and privileges,
modern marriage represents a condition of sex-slavery
into which woman is frequently compelled to enter
because she needs to live, and in which she must often
remain, however abominable the conditions under which
the union is maintained, because man, master of the
purse, is master of the woman.
Generally, then, the Feminists are
in opposition to most of the world institutions.
For them the universe is based upon the subjection
of woman: subjection by law, and subjection by
convention. Before considering what modifications
the Feminists wish to introduce into the social system,
a few words must be said as to this distinction between
convention and the law.
II.
Convention, which is nothing but petrified
habit, has lain upon woman perhaps more heavily than
any law, for the law can be eluded with comparative
ease, and she who eludes it may very well become a
heroine, merely because we are mostly anarchists and
dislike the law. Every man is in himself a minority,
and is opposed to the law because the law is the expression
of the will of the majority, that is to say, the will
of the vulgar, of the norm. But convention is
far more subtle: it is the result of the common
agreement of wills. Therefore, as it is a product
of unanimity, the penalties which follow on the infractions
of its behests are terrible; she who infringes it
becomes, not a heroine, but an outcast. The law
is, then, nothing by the side of etiquette.
Hence Feminist propaganda. While
the Suffragists wish to alter the law, the Feminists
wish to alter also the conventions. It may not
be too much to say that they would almost be content
with existing laws if they could change the point
of view of man, make him take for granted that women
may smoke, or ride astride, or fight; cease to be surprised
because Madame Dieulafoy chooses to wear trousers;
briefly, renounce the subjective fetich of sex.
Still, as they realize that states become more socialistic
every day, they realize also that through the law only
can they hope to change manners. The mental revolution
which they intend to effect must therefore be prefaced
by a legal revolution.
The first Feminist intention is economic, proceeds
on two lines:
1. They intend
to open every occupation to women.
2. They intend
to level the wages of women and men.
As regards the first point, they are
not as a rule unreasonable. If they demand that
women should practice the law as they do in France,
preach the Gospel as they do in the United States
of America, bear arms, as in Dahomey, it is not because
they attach any great value to these occupations,
but because they consider that any limitation put upon
woman’s activities is intrinsically degrading;
so keenly do they feel this, that some serious Feminists
took part some years ago in the controversy on, “Are
there female angels?”
The second point is more important.
It is a well-established fact that women are paid
less than men for the same work: for instance,
in England, women begin at wages which are less than
those of men as teachers, post-office and other civil
servants. The Feminists are not prepared to agree
that this condition is due to some inherent inferiority
of woman: in their view her inferiority
is transitory, is due to her inferior position.
One Feminist, C. Gascoigne Hartley, in The Truth
About Women, outlines a bold hypothesis: “What,
then, is the real cause of the lowness of remuneration
offered to women for work when compared with men?
Thousands of women and girls receive wages that are
insufficient to support life. They do not die,
they live; but how? The answer is plain.
Woman possesses a marketable value attached to her
personality which man has not got. The woman’s
sex is a saleable thing.” Briefly, if a
woman works less well than a man, less fast, less
continuously, it is because she is inadequately rewarded.
They reverse the common position that woman is not
well paid because woman is not competent, basing themselves
on the parallel that liberty alone fits men for liberty.
They argue that woman is not competent because she
is not well paid; consequently, those Feminists who
are inclined toward Radicalism in politics demand
a minimum wage in all trades, which shall be the same
for women and men.
The economic change will be brought
about by revolutionary methods, by sex strikes and
sex wars. The gaining of the vote is, in the Feminist’s
view, nothing but an affair of outposts. Conscious
propagandists do not intend to allow the female vote
to be split as it might recently have been between
Mr. Roosevelt, Mr. Wilson, and Mr. Taft. They
intend to use the vote to make women vote as women,
and not as citizens; that is to say, they propose
to sell the female vote en bloc to the party
that bids highest for it in the economic field.
To the party that will, as a preliminary, pledge itself
to level male and female wages in government employ,
will be given the Feminist vote; and if no party will
bid, then it is the Feminist intention to run special
candidates for all offices, to split the male parties,
and to involve them in consecutive disasters such
as the one which befell the Republican party in the
last presidential election in the United States.
Side by side with this purely political
action, Feminists intend to use industrial strikes
in exactly the same manner as do the Syndicalist railwaymen,
miners, and postmen of Europe; well aware that they
have captured a number of trades, such as millinery,
domestic service, restaurant attendance, and so forth,
and large portions of other trades, such as cotton-spinning
in Lancashire, they propose to use as a basis the
vote and the political education that follows thereon,
to induce women to group themselves in women’s
trade-unions, by means of which they will hold up
trades, and when they are strong enough, hold up society
itself.
I enunciate these views with full
sympathy, which can hardly be refused when one realizes
that the sweated trades are almost entirely in the
hands of women, laundry, box-making, toys,
artificial flowers, and the like. The fact that
the underpaid trades are women’s trades, and
that the British Government has been compelled to
institute wage-boards to bring up women’s pay
from four cents an hour to the imposing figure of
six cents, and the recent white-slavery investigations
in America, are evidence enough that public opinion
should hesitate before blaming any industrial steps
women may choose to take. For it should not be
forgotten that woman risks more than comfort and health,
and that the underpayment of her sex often forces
her to degradation.
Conscious of the temporary inferiority
of woman, an inferiority traceable to centuries of
neglect and belittling patronage, the Feminists propose
to increase woman’s power by making her fitter
for power. They are well aware that the enormous
majority of women receive but an inferior education,
that in their own homes, especially in the South of
England, they are not encouraged to read the newspaper
(which I believe to be a more powerful instrument
of intellectual development than the average serious
book), and that any attempt on their part to acquire
more information, to attend lectures, to join debating
clubs, tends to lower their “charm value”
in the eyes of men. That point of view they are
determined to alter in the male. They propose
to kill the prejudice by the homoeopathic method:
that is to say, to educate woman more because man
thinks she is already too educated. Briefly, to
kill poison by more poison. For this purpose
they intend to throw open education of all grades
to women as well as to men, to remove such differences
as exist in England, where a woman cannot obtain an
Oxford or Cambridge degree. They propose to raise
the school age of both sexes, and to not less than
sixteen. The object of this, so far as women are
concerned, is to prevent the exploitation of little
girls of fourteen, notably as domestic servants.
Some Feminists favor co-education,
on the plea that it enables the sexes to understand
each other, and these build principally on the success
of American schools. A more violent section,
however, desires to place the education of girls entirely
in the hands of women, partly because they wish to
enhance the sex war, and partly because they consider
that continual intercourse between the sexes tends
to deprive ultimate love of its mystery and its charm.
But both sections fully agree that the broadest possible
education must be given to every woman, so as to fit
her for contest with every man.
III.
So much, then, for the mental revolution
and its eventual effects on the position of women
in the arts, the trades, and the schools. In the
industrial section, especially, we have already had
an indication of the main line of the Feminist attitude,
a claim to a right to choose. This right is indeed
the only one for which the Feminists are struggling,
and they struggle for those obscure reasons which
lie at the root of our wish to live and to perpetuate
the race. It is no wonder, then, that the Feminists
should have designs upon the most fundamental of human
institutions, marriage and motherhood.
In the main, Feminists are opposed
to indissoluble Christian marriage. Some satisfaction
has been given to them in a great many states by the
extension of divorce facilities, but they are not content
with piecemeal reform such as has been carried out
in the United States, for they realize quite well
that divorce cuts both ways, and that it is not satisfactory
for a wife to be married in one state, and divorced
under a slack law in another. Indeed I believe
that one of the first Feminist demands in America
would be for a federal marriage law.
But alterations in the law are minor
points by the side of the emotional revolution that
is to be engineered. Roughly speaking, we have
to-day reasonable men and instinctive women.
Such notably was Ibsen’s view: “Woman
cannot escape her primitive emotions.” But
he thought she should control these inevitables
so far as possible: “As soon as woman no
longer dominates her passions, she fails to achieve
her objects." The distinction between reason and
instinct, however, is not so wide as it seems; for
reason is merely the conscious use of observation,
while instinct is the unconscious use of the same
faculty; but as the trend of Feminism is to make woman
self-conscious and sex-conscious, the Feminists can
be said broadly to be warring against instinct, and
on the side of reason. They look upon instinct
as indicative of a low mentality. For instance,
the horse is less instinctive than the zebra, and
a curious instance of this was yielded by certain horses
in the South African war, which were unable to crop
the grass because they had always eaten from mangers.
Civilization, we may say, had caused the horses to
degenerate, but nobody will contend that the horse
is not more intelligent than the zebra, more capable
of love, even of thought. Briefly, the horse
approximates more closely to a reasonable being than
does the instinctive wild beast.
The Feminists therefore propose, by
training woman’s reason, to place her beyond
the scope of mere emotion and mere prejudice, to enable
her to judge, to select a mate for herself and a father
for her children, a double and necessary
process.
There is a flavor of eugenics about
these ideas: the right to choose means that women
wish to be placed in such a position that, being economically
independent to the extent of having equal opportunities,
they will not be compelled to sell themselves in marriage
as they now very often do. I do not refer to
entirely loveless marriages, for these are not very
common in Anglo-Saxon states, but to marriages dictated
by the desire of woman to escape the authority of
her parents, and to gain the dignity of a wife, the
possession of a home and of money to spend. In
the Feminist view, these are bad unions because love
does not play the major part in them, and often plays
hardly any part at all. The Feminists believe
that the educated woman, informed on the subject of
sex-relations, able to earn her own living, to maintain
a political argument, will not fall an easy prey to
the offer held out to her by a man who will be her
master, because he will have bought her on a truck
system.
Under Feminist rule, women will be
able to select, because they will be able to sweep
out of their minds the monetary consideration; therefore
they will love better, and unless they love, they will
not marry at all. It is therefore probable that
they will raise the standard of masculine attractiveness
by demanding physical and mental beauty in those whom
they choose; that they will apply personal eugenics.
The men whom they do not choose will find themselves
in exactly the same position as the old maids of modern
times: that is to say, these men, if they are
unwed, will be unwed because they have chosen to remain
so, or because they were not sought in marriage.
The eugenic characteristic appears, in that women
will no longer consent to accept as husbands the old,
the vicious, the unpleasant. They will tend to
choose the finest of the species, and those likely
to improve the race. As the Feminist revolution
implies a social revolution, notably “proper
work for proper pay”, it follows that marriage
will be easy, and that those women who wish to mate
will not be compelled to wait indefinitely for the
consummation of their loves. Incidentally, also,
the Feminists point out that their proposals hold
forth to men a far greater chance of happiness than
they have had hitherto, for they will be sure that
the women who select them do so because they love
them, and not because they need to be supported.
This does not mean that Feminism is
entirely a creed of reason; indeed a number of militant
Feminists who collected round the English paper, The
Freewoman, have as an article of their faith that
one of the chief natural needs of woman and society
is not less passion, but more. If they wish to
raise women’s wages, to give them security, education,
opportunity, it is because they want to place them
beyond material temptations, to make them independent
of a protector, so that nothing may stand in the way
of the passionate development of their faculties.
To this effect, of course, they propose to introduce
profound changes in the conception of marriage itself.
Without committing themselves to free
union, the Feminists wish to loosen the marriage tie,
and they might not be averse to making marriage less
easy, to raising, for instance, the marriage age for
both sexes; but as they are well aware that, in the
present state of human passions, impediments to marriage
would lead merely to an increase in irregular alliances,
they lay no stress upon that point. Moreover,
as they are not prepared to admit that any moral damage
ensues when woman contracts more than one alliance
in the course of her life, which view is
accepted very largely in the United States, and in
all countries with regard to widows, they
incline rather to repair the effects of bad marriages,
than to prevent their occurrence.
Plainly speaking, the Feminists desire
simpler divorce. They are to a certain extent
ready to surround divorce with safeguards, so as to
prevent the young from rushing into matrimony; indeed
they might “steep up” the law of the “Divorce
States.” On the other hand, they would
introduce new causes for divorce where they do not
already exist, and they would make them the same for
women and men. For instance, in Great Britain
a divorce can be granted to a man on account of the
infidelity of his wife, while it can be granted to
a woman only if to infidelity the husband adds cruelty
or desertion. Such a difference the Feminists
would sweep away, and they would probably add to the
existing causes certain others, such as infectious
and incurable diseases, chronic drunkenness, insanity,
habitual cruelty, and lengthy desertion. It should
be observed that the campaign is thus as favorable
to men as it is to women, for many men who have now
no relief would gain it under the new laws. As
Feminism is international, the programme of course
includes the introduction of divorce where it does
not exist, in Austria, Spain, South American
states, and so forth.
What exact form the new divorce laws
would take, I cannot at present say, for Feminism
is as evolutionary as it is revolutionary, and Feminists
are prepared to accept transitory measures of reform.
Thus, in the existing circumstances, they would accept
a partial extension of divorce facilities, subject
to an adequate provision for all children. In
the ultimate condition, to which I refer later on,
this might not be necessary, but as a temporary expedient,
Feminists desire to protect woman while she is developing
from the chattel condition to the free-woman condition.
Until she is fit for her new liberty, it is necessary
that she should be enabled to use this liberty without
paying too heavy a price therefor. Indeed this
clash between the transitory and the ultimate is one
of the difficulties of Feminism. The rebels must
accept situations such as the financial responsibility
of man, while they struggle to make woman financially
independent of man, and it is for this reason that
different proposals appear in the works of Ellen Key,
Rosa Mayreder, Charlotte Gilman, Olive Schreiner, and
others, but these divergences need not trouble us,
for Feminism is an inspiration rather than a gospel,
and if it lays down a programme, it is a temporary
programme.
Personally, I am inclined to believe
that the ultimate aim of Feminism with regard to marriage
is the practical suppression of marriage and the institution
of free alliance. It may be that thus only can
woman develop her own personality, but society itself
must so greatly alter, do so very much more than equalize
wages and provide work for all, that these ultimate
ends seem very distant. They lie beyond the decease
of Capitalism itself, for they imply a change in the
nature of the human being which is not impossible
when we consider that man has changed a great deal
since the Stone Age, but is still inconceivably radical.
Ultimate ends of Feminism will be
attained only when socialization shall have been so
complete that the human being will no longer require
the law, but will be able to obey some obscure but
noble categorical imperative; when men and women can
associate voluntarily, without thrall of the State,
for the production and enjoyment of the goods of life.
How this will be achieved, by what propaganda, by
what struggles and by what battles, is difficult to
say; but in common with many Feminists I incline to
place a good deal of reliance on the ennobling of the
nature of the male. That there is a sex war,
and will be a sex war, I do not deny, but the entry
of women into the modern world of art and business
shows that an immense enlightenment has come over the
male, that he no longer wishes to crush as much as
he did, and therefore that he is loving better and
more sanely. Therein lies a profound lesson:
if men do not make war upon women, women will not
make war upon men. I have spoken of sex war,
but it takes two sides to make a war, and I do not
see that in the event of conflict the Feminists can
alone be guilty.
One feature manifests itself, and
that is a change of attitude in woman with regard
to the child. Indications in modern novels and
modern conversation are not wanting to show that a
type of woman is arising who believes in a new kind
of matriarchate, that is to say, in a state of society
where man will not figure in the life of woman except
as the father of her child. Two cases have come
to my knowledge where English women have been prepared
to contract alliances with men with whom they did
not intend to pass their lives, this because
they desired a child. They consider that the
child is the expression of the feminine personality,
while after the child’s birth, the husband becomes
a mere excrescence. They believe that the “Wife”
should die in childbirth, and the “Mother”
rise from her ashes. There is nothing utopian
about this point of view, if we agree that Feminists
can so rearrange society as to provide every woman
with an independent living; and I do not say that
this is the prevalent view. It is merely one view,
and I do not believe it will be carried to the extreme,
for the association of human beings in couples appears
to respond to some deep need; still, it should be
taken into account as an indication of sex revolt.
That part of the programme belongs
to the ultimates. Among the transitory ideas,
that is, the ideas which are to fit Feminism into the
modern State, are the endowment of motherhood and the
lien on wages. The Feminists do not commit themselves
to a view on the broad social question whether it
is desirable to encourage or discourage births.
Taking births as they happen, they lay down that a
woman being incapacitated from work for a period of
weeks or months while she is giving birth to a child,
her liberty can be secured only if the fact of the
birth gives her a call upon the State. Failing
this, she must have a male protector in whose favor
she must abdicate her rights because he is her protector.
As man is not handicapped in his work by becoming a
father, they propose to remove the disability that
lies upon woman by supplying her with the means of
livelihood for a period surrounding the birth, of
not less than six weeks, which some place at three
months. There is nothing wild in this scheme,
for the British Insurance Act (1912) gives a maternity
endowment of seven dollars and fifty cents whether
a mother be married or single. The justice of
the proposal may be doubted by some, but I do not
think its expediency will be questioned. On mere
grounds of humanity, it is barbarous to compel a woman
to labor while she is with child; on social grounds
it is not advantageous for the race to allow her to
do so: premature births, child-murder, child-neglect
by working mothers, all these facts point to the social
value of the endowment.
IV.
The last of the transitory measures
is the lien on wages. In the present state of
things, women who work in the home depend for money
on husbands or fathers. The fact of having to
ask is, in the Feminists’ view, a degradation.
They suggest that the housekeeper should be entitled
to a proportion of the man’s income or salary,
and one of them, Mrs. M. H. Wood, picturesquely illustrates
her case by saying that she hopes to do away with
“pocket-searching” while the man is asleep.
Mrs. Wood’s ideas certainly deserve sympathy;
though many men pay their wives a great deal more
than they are worth and are shamefully exploited a
common modern position it is also quite
true that many others expect their wives to run their
household on inadequate allowances, and to come to
them for clothes or pleasure in a manner which establishes
the man as a pasha. When women have grown economically
independent, no lien on wages will be required, but
meanwhile it is interesting to observe that there has
recently been formed in England a society called “The
Home-makers’ Trade Union”, one of whose
specific objects is, “To insist as a right on
a proper proportion of men’s earnings being
paid to wives for the support of the home.”
Generally speaking, then, it is clear
that women are greatly concerned with the race, for
all these demands support of the mother,
support of the child, rights of the household are
definitely directed toward the benevolent control
by the woman of her home and her child. I have
alluded above to these Feminist intentions: they
affect the immediate conditions as well as the ultimate.
Among the ultimates is a logical consequence
of the right of woman to be represented by women.
So long as Parliamentary Government endures, or any
form of authority endures, the Feminists will demand
a share in this authority. It has been the custom
during the Suffrage campaign to pretend that women
demand merely the vote. The object of this is
to avoid frightening the men, and it may well be that
a number of Suffragists honestly believe that they
are asking for no more than the vote, while a few,
who confess that they want more, add that it is not
advisable to say so; they are afraid to “let
the cat out of the bag”, but they will not rest
until all Parliaments, all Cabinets, all Boards are
open to women, until the Presidential chair is as accessible
to them as is the English throne. Already in
Norway women have entered the National Assembly:
they propose to do so everywhere. They will not
hesitate to claim women’s votes for women candidates
until they have secured the representation which they
think is their right, that is, one half.
These are the bases, roughly outlined,
on which can be established a lasting peace.
I do not want to exaggerate the difficulties
and perils which are bound up in this revolutionary
movement, but it is abundantly clear that it presupposes
profound changes in the nature of women and of men.
While man will be asked for more liberalism and be
expected to develop his sense of justice (which has
too long lain at the mercy of his erratic and sentimental
generosity), woman will have to modify her outlook.
She is now too often vain, untruthful, disloyal, avaricious,
vampiric; briefly she has the characteristics of the
slave. She will have to slough off these characteristics
while she is becoming free, she will have to justify
by her mental ascent the increase in her power.
Feminists are not blind to this, and that is why they
lay such stress upon education and propaganda.
One of the most profound changes will,
I think, appear in sex relations. The “New
Woman”, as we know her to-day, a woman who is
not so new as the woman who will be born of her, is
a very unpleasant product; armed with a little knowledge,
she tends to be dogmatic in her views and offensive
in argument. She tends to hate men, and to look
upon Feminism as a revenge; she adopts mannish ways,
tends to shout, to contradict, to flout principles
because they are principles; also she affects a contempt
for marriage which is the natural result of her hatred
of man. The New Woman has not the support of
the saner Feminists. Says Ellen Key, in The
Woman Movement, “These cerebral, amaternal
women must obviously be accorded the freedom of finding
the domestic life, with its limited but intensive
exercise of power, meagre beside the feeling of power
which they enjoy as public personalities, as consummate
women of the world, as talented professionals.
But they have not the right to falsify life values
in their own favor so that they themselves shall represent
the highest form of life, the ‘human personality’,
in comparison with which the ‘instinctive feminine’
signifies a lower stage of development, a poorer type
of life.” If this were the ultimate type,
very few men would be found in the Feminist camp, for
the coming of the New Woman would mean the death of
love. If the death of love had to be the price
of woman’s emancipation, I, for one, would support
the institution of the zenana and the repression of
woman by brute force; but I do not think we need be
anxious.
If the New Woman is so aggressive,
it is because she must be aggressive if she is to
win her battle. We cannot expect people who are
laboring under a sense of intolerable injury to set
politely about the righting of that injury: when
woman has entered her kingdom she will no longer have
to resort to political nagging; her true nature will
affirm itself for the first time, for it is difficult
to believe that it has been able to affirm itself
under the entirely artificial conditions of androcracy.
Already some women to whom a profession or mental eminence
has given exceptional freedom show us in society that
women can be free and yet be sweet. Indeed they
almost demonstrate the Feminist contention that women
must be free before they are sweet, for are not these
women of whom all of us can name a few the
noblest and most desirable of their kind? The
New Woman is like a freshly painted railing: whoever
touches it will stain his hands, but the railing will
dry in time.
There is one type of woman, however,
whom I venture to call “Old Woman”, who
is probably a bitterer foe of Feminism than any man,
and that is the super-feminine type, the woman for
whom nothing exists except her sex, who has no interests
except the decking of her body and the quest of men.
This woman, who once dominated her own species, still
represents the majority of her sex. It is still
true that the majority of women are concerned with
little save the fashions, novels, plays, and vaudeville
turns. These women want to have “a good
time” and want nothing more; they are ready
to prey upon men by flattering them; they encourage
their own weakness, which they call “charm”,
and generally aim at being pampered slaves, because,
from their point of view, it pays better than being
working partners. Evidence of this is to be found
in women’s shops, in the continual change in
fashions, each of which is a signal to the male, and
in the continual increase in the sums spent on adornment:
it is not uncommon for a rich woman to spend five hundred
dollars on a frock; two hundred and fifty dollars
has been given for a hat; and twenty-five thousand
dollars for a set of furs.
As Miss Beatrice Tina very well says,
“Woman is woman’s worst enemy”,
though she is not referring to this type. So long
as woman maintains this attitude, compels men to forget
her soul in the contemplation of her body, so long
will she remain a slave, for this preoccupation goes
further than clothes.
In a book recently published, an
account is given of the late Empress of Austria, who
was evidently one of the lowest of the slave type.
It is noteworthy that she had no love for her children
because their coming had impaired her beauty.
Now I do not suggest that Feminists are arrayed against
the care of the body; far from it, for the campaign
has many associates among those who support physical
culture, the fresh-air movement, ancient costume revival,
and the like; but Feminists are well aware that concentration
on adornment diverts woman from the development of
her brain and her soul, and enhances in her the characteristics
of the harem favorite. One tentative suggestion
is being made, and that is a uniform for women.
The interested parties point out that men practically
wear uniform, that there is hardly any change from
year to year in their costume, and that any undue
adornment of the male is looked upon as bad form.
Thus, while few men can with impunity spend more than
five hundred dollars a year on their clothes, many
women do not consider themselves happy unless they
can dispose of anything between five and twenty times
that amount. This, while involving the household
in difficulties, lowers the status of woman by lowering
her mentality.
Feminists do not ask for sumptuary
laws, having very little respect for the law, but
for a new vision, which is this: Man, intellectually
developed, decks himself in no finery, because it is
not essential to his success; woman must likewise
abandon frippery if she is to have energy enough to
reach his plane. They propose to attain their
object by the force of their example, and I have received
several letters on the subject, which show that the
idea of fixing the fashions is not entirely wild,
for fashion consists after all in wearing what everybody
wears, and if an influential movement is started to
maintain the costume of women on a very simple basis,
it may very well prevail and kill much of their purely
imitative vanity by showing them that undue devotion
to self-adornment is very much worse than immoral:
in other words, that it is in bad taste.
Incidentally the Feminists believe
that the downfall of many women is procured by the
offer of fine clothes. They hope, therefore, to
derive some side-profits from the simplification of
woman’s dress.
The question also arises as to whether
woman can become intellectually independent, whether
she does not naturally depend upon the opinion of
man. It is suggested that not even rich women
are actually independent, that women place marriage
above their art, their work; but I do not think this
is a very solid objection, for the vaunted independence
of men is not so very common; they currently take
many of their opinions from their reading in newspapers
and books, and must often subordinate their views
and their conduct to the will of their employer.
The main answer to this suggestion is that we must
not consider woman as she was, but woman “as
she is becoming”, as a creature of infinite
potentialities, as virgin ground.
It may be petitio principii
to say that, as woman has produced so much that is
fine, she would have produced very much more if she
had not been hampered by law and custom, derided by
the male, but bad logic is often good sense.
This should commend itself to men who are no longer
willing to support the idea that women are inherently
inferior to them, but who are willing to give them
an opportunity to develop in every field of human
activity. Thus and thus only, if man will readjust
his views, expel vir and enthrone homo,
can woman cease to appear before him as a rival and
a foe, realize herself in her natural and predestined
rôle, that of partner and mate.