<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<div class='tnotes covernote'>
<p class='c000'><b>Transcriber’s Note:</b></p>
<p class='c000'>The cover image was created by the transcriber and is placed in the public domain.</p>
</div>
<div class='section ph2'>
<div class='nf-center-c0'>
<div class='nf-center c001'>
<div><em>By Ellen Key</em></div>
</div></div>
</div>
<div class='lg-container-b c002'>
<div class='linegroup'>
<div class='group'>
<div class='line'>The Century of the Child</div>
<div class='line'>The Education of the Child</div>
<div class='line'>Love and Marriage</div>
<div class='line'>The Woman Movement</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<div class='titlepage'>
<div>
<h1 class='c003'>The Woman Movement</h1></div>
<div class='nf-center-c0'>
<div class='nf-center c002'>
<div>By</div>
<div><span class='xlarge'>Ellen Key</span></div>
<div class='c004'><span class='small'>Author of</span></div>
<div><span class='small'>“The Century of the Child,” “Love and Marriage,” etc.</span></div>
<div class='c004'>Translated by</div>
<div><span class='large'>Mamah Bouton Borthwick, A.M.</span></div>
<div class='c004'>With an Introduction by</div>
<div><span class='large'>Havelock Ellis</span></div>
<div class='c002'>G. P. Putnam’s Sons</div>
<div>New York and London</div>
<div>The Knickerbocker Press</div>
<div>1912</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<div class='nf-center-c0'>
<div class='nf-center c001'>
<div><span class='sc'>Copyright</span>, 1912</div>
<div>BY</div>
<div>G. P. PUTNAM’S SONS</div>
<div class='c002'>The Knickerbocker Press, New York</div>
</div></div>
<div><span class='pageno' id='Page_iii'>iii</span></div>
<div class='c001'></div>
<blockquote>
<p class='c005'><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Es gibt kein Vergangenes das man zurücksehnen dürfte; es
gibt nur ein ewig Neues, das sich aus den erweiterten Elementen
des Vergangenen gestaltet, und die echte Sehnsucht muss stets
productiv sein, ein neues, besseres Erschaffen.—<span class='sc'>Goethe.</span></span></p>
</blockquote>
<p class='c005'>“<em>There is no past that we need long to return to,
there is only the eternally new which is formed out
of enlarged elements of the past; and our genuine
longing must always be productive, for a new and
better creation.</em>”</p>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_v'>v</span>
<h2 class='c006'>PREFACE</h2></div>
<p class='c007'>The literature upon the right and the worth
of woman, beginning as early as the 15th century,
has in recent times increased so enormously that
a complete collection would require a whole library
building. In these writings are represented all
classes, from tables of statistics to comic papers.
Not only both sexes but almost all stages of life
have contributed to it. By immersing oneself in
this literature, especially in its belletristic and
polemic portions, one could find rich material for
the illumination of that sphere to which the publisher
limited my work: the indication of the new
spiritual conditions, transformations, and reciprocal
results which the woman movement has effected.
Historic, scientific, political, economic, juridical,
sociological, and theological points of view must,
therefore, be practically set aside. But even for
my task, limited to the psychological sphere, time,
strength, and inclination are wanting to bury myself
in this literature. I must, therefore, confine
myself to giving chiefly my own observations.</p>
<p class='c005'>It is more than fifty years ago that I read
<cite>Hertha</cite>, Sweden’s first “feministic” (dealing with
<span class='pageno' id='Page_vi'>vi</span>the woman question) novel, and listened to
the numerous contentions concerning it. With
ever keener personal interest I have since followed
the operations of the woman movement—above all,
the new psychic conditions, types, and forms of
activities which the woman movement has evoked;
I have also given consideration to the new possibilities
and new difficulties resulting therefrom for
individuals and for society.</p>
<p class='c005'>The limited compass of this little book prevents
me from substantiating my assertions by means of
parallels with earlier times, comparisons which
might illuminate certain spiritual transformations
and new formations. My comparisons of the
present with the past do not go farther back than
my own memory reaches. And these touch, moreover,
in what concerns the past, principally upon
Swedish conditions; while my impressions of
the present were gathered throughout Europe. I
have considered, however, that I could summarise
both in a comprehensive picture. For although
the women of Sweden a generation ago possessed
rights for which the women in many countries are
still struggling to-day, yet the woman movement
in the last decade has advanced so rapidly that
the conditions have in great measure been equalised.
Indeed, some of the grey-haired champions
of the woman movement have seen one after
another of their demands fulfilled in this new century—demands
which in the fifties and sixties, in
many countries even in the seventies and eighties,
<span class='pageno' id='Page_vii'>vii</span>were publicly and privately derided even in the
very person of these champions. And among
peoples who even ten years ago were unaffected
by the emancipation of women, for example the
Chinese and the Turks, it is already progressing.
It amounts to this, that even if national peculiarities
in character and in laws occasion differences
in the curve which the woman movement describes
in the different countries, yet everywhere the
movement has had the same causes, must follow
the same main direction, and—sooner or later—must
have the same effects.</p>
<hr class='c008' />
<p class='c005'>In <cite>Hertha</cite>, the book containing the tenets of the
Swedish woman movement, the demand is made
for woman’s “freedom and future, and a home for
her spiritual life”; the desire is expressed that
women should “preserve the character of their
own nature, and not be uniformly moulded, not
be led by a string as if they had not a soul of their
own to show them the way.” There must be
“vital air for woman’s soul and a share in life’s
riches.” It is to be lamented that “woman’s
spiritual talent must be a field that lies fallow,”
that the law “denies her free agency in seeking
happiness.” The prerogative is demanded that
“woman in noble self-conscious joy shall succeed
in feeling what she is able to do now and what she
is capable of attaining”; that she shall be free to
“aspire to the heights her youthful strength and
consciousness point out to her”; that she may
<span class='pageno' id='Page_viii'>viii</span>“be fully herself and be able to exercise an uplifting,
ennobling influence upon the man” to whom
she says: “All that is mine shall be thine and
thereby the portion of each shall be doubled.”</p>
<p class='c005'>Even if all fields are made accessible to them,
“God’s law in their nature will always lead the
majority of women to the home, to the intimacy
of the family life, to motherhood and the duties
of rearing children—but with a higher consciousness.”
That women shall be citizens signifies that
they shall become “human beings in whom the
life of the heart predominates.”</p>
<p class='c005'>This picture of the future, which has already
become a reality in many respects, was sketched
at a time when innumerable women were still compelled
to experience that “there is no heavier burden
than life’s emptiness,” and when it was true of
every woman, “dark is her way, gloomy her future,
narrow her lot.”</p>
<p class='c005'>But because that <em>which is</em>, is always considered
by the masses as that which <em>ought to be</em>, “whatever
is, is right,” so the writer who painted the picture
was called “dangerous,” “a disintegrator of
society,” “mad,” “ridiculous”! “Mademoiselle
Bremer’s” name possessed then quite a different
intonation from that of Fredrika Bremer now;
it caused strife between the sexes; it was hated by
some and derided by others.</p>
<p class='c005'>I should like to advise young women of the
present time to read <cite>Hertha</cite>; they will thus obtain
a criterion for the progress which has taken place
<span class='pageno' id='Page_ix'>ix</span>during the last half century and also a clear view
of the character of the opposition which the present
desire for progress encounters.</p>
<div class='lg-container-r'>
<div class='linegroup'>
<div class='group'>
<div class='line'><span class='sc'>Ellen Key.</span></div>
</div></div>
</div>
<div class='lg-container-l'>
<div class='linegroup'>
<div class='group'>
<div class='line'>October 1, 1909.</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_xi'>xi</span>
<h2 class='c006'>INTRODUCTION</h2></div>
<p class='c007'>There can be little doubt that at the present
moment what is called the “Woman’s Movement”
is entering a critical period of its development.
A discussion of its present problems and its present
difficulties by one of the most advanced leaders
in that movement thus appears at the right time
and deserves our most serious attention.</p>
<p class='c005'>The early promulgators of the Woman’s Movement,
a century or more ago, rightly regarded it
as an extremely large and comprehensive movement
affecting the whole of life. They were anxious
to secure for women adequate opportunities
for free human development, to the same extent
that men possess such opportunities, but they laid
no special stress on the abolition of any single disability
or group of disabilities, whether as regards
education, occupation, marriage, property, or
political enfranchisement. They were people of
wide and sound intelligence; they never imagined
that any single isolated reform would prove a cheap
panacea for all the evils they wished to correct;
they looked for a slow reform along the whole line.
They held that such reform would enrich and enlarge
the entire field of human life, not for women
only, but for the human race generally. Such,
indeed, is the spirit which still inspires the wisest
<span class='pageno' id='Page_xii'>xii</span>and most far-seeing champions of that Movement.
It is only necessary to mention Olive Schreiner’s
<cite>Woman and Labour</cite>.</p>
<p class='c005'>When, however, the era of actual practical reform
began, it was obvious that a certain amount
of concentration became necessary. Education
was, reasonably enough, usually the first point
for concentration, and gradually, without any
undue friction, the education of girls was, so far
as possible, raised to a level not so very different
from that of boys. This first great stage in the
Woman’s Movement inevitably led on to the
second stage, which lay in a struggle, not this time
always without a certain amount of friction, to
secure the entry of these now educated women to
avocations and professions previously monopolised
by the men who had alone been trained to fill them.
This second stage is now largely completed, and
at the present time there are very few vocations
and professions in civilised lands, even in so conservative
and slowly moving a land as England,
which women are not entitled to exercise equally
with men. Concomitantly with this movement,
however,—and beginning indeed, very much
earlier, and altogether apart from any conscious
“movement” at all,—there was a tendency to
change the laws in a direction more favourable
to women and their personal rights, especially as
regards marriage and property. These legal reforms
were effected by Parliaments of men, elected
exclusively by men, and for the most part they
<span class='pageno' id='Page_xiii'>xiii</span>were effected without any very strong pressure
from women. It had, however, long been claimed
that women themselves ought to have some part
in making the laws by which they are governed,
and at this stage, towards the middle of the last
century, the demand for women’s parliamentary
suffrage began to be urgently raised. Here, however,
the difficulties naturally proved very much
greater than they were in the introduction of a
higher level of education for women, or even in
the opening up to them of hitherto monopolised
occupations. In new countries, and sometimes
in small old countries, these difficulties could be
overcome. But in large and old countries, of
stable and complex constitution, it was very far
from easy to readjust the ancient machinery in
accordance with the new demands. The difficulty
by no means lay in any unwillingness on the part
of the masculine politicians in possession; on the
contrary, it is a notable fact, often overlooked,
that, in England especially, there have for at least
half a century been a considerable proportion of
eminent statesmen as well as of the ordinary rank
and file of members of Parliament who are in
favour of granting the suffrage to women, a much
larger proportion, probably, than would be found
favourable to this claim in any other section of
the community. That, indeed,—apart from the
delay involved by ancient constitutional methods,—has
been the main difficulty. Neither among
the masculine electors nor among their womenfolk
<span class='pageno' id='Page_xiv'>xiv</span>has there been any consuming desire to achieve
women’s suffrage.</p>
<p class='c005'>The result has been a certain tendency in the
Woman’s Movement to diverge in two different
directions. On the one hand, are those who, recognising
that all evolution is slow, are content
to await patiently the inevitable moment when
the political enfranchisement of women will become
possible, in the meanwhile working towards
women’s causes in other fields equally essential
and sometimes more important. On the other
hand, a small but energetic, sometimes even
violent, section of the women engaged in this
movement concentrated altogether on the suffrage.
The germs of this divergence may be noted even
thirty years back when we find Miss Cobbe declaring
that woman’s suffrage is “the crown and
completion of all progress in woman’s movements,”
while Mrs. Cady Stanton, perhaps more wisely,
stated that it was merely a vestibule to progress.
In recent years the difference has become accentuated,
sometimes even into an acute opposition,
between those who maintain that the one and only
thing essential, and that immediately and at all
costs, even at the cost of arresting and putting
back the progress of women in all other directions,
is the parliamentary suffrage, and on the other
hand, those who hold that the suffrage, however
necessary, is still only a single point, and that the
woman’s movement is far wider and, above all,
far deeper than any mere political reform.</p>
<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_xv'>xv</span>It is at this stage that Ellen Key comes before
us with her book on <cite>The Woman’s Movement</cite>, first
published in Swedish in 1909, and now presented
to the reader in English. As Ellen Key views the
Woman’s Movement, it certainly includes all that
those who struggle for votes for women are fighting
for; she is unable to see, as she puts it, why a
woman’s hands need be more soiled by a ballot
paper than by a cooking recipe. But she is far
indeed from the well-intentioned but ignorant
fanatics who fancy that the vote is the alpha and
the omega of Feminism; and still less is she in
sympathy with those who consider that its importance
is so supreme as to justify violence and robbery,
a sort of sex war on mankind generally, and
the casting in the mud of all those things which
it has been the gradual task of civilisation to
achieve, not for men only but for women. The
Woman’s Movement, as Ellen Key sees it, includes
the demand for the vote, but it looks upon
the vote merely as a reasonable condition for
attaining far wider and more fundamental ends.
She is of opinion that the Woman’s Movement will
progress less by an increased aptitude to claim
rights than by an increased power of self-development,
that it is not by what they can seize, but by
what they are, that women, or for the matter of
that men, finally count. She regards the task of
women as constructive rather than destructive;
they are the architects of the future humanity,
and she holds that this is a task that can only be
<span class='pageno' id='Page_xvi'>xvi</span>carried out side by side with men, not because
man’s work and woman’s work is, or should be,
identical, but because each supplements and aids
the other, and whatever gives greater strength
and freedom to one sex equally fortifies and
liberates the other sex.</p>
<p class='c005'>Certainly we may not all agree with Ellen Key
at every point, nor always accept her interpretation
of the great movement of which she is so
notable a pioneer. The breadth of her sympathies
may sometimes seem to lead to an impracticable
eclecticism, and, in the rejection of narrow and
trivial aims, she may too sanguinely demand an
impossible harmony of opposing ideals. But if
this is an error it is surely an error on the right
side. She has not put forward this book as a manifesto
of the advanced guard of the Woman’s Movement,
but merely as the reflections of an individual
woman who, for nearly half a century, has pondered,
felt, studied, observed this movement in
many parts of the world. But it would not be
easy to find a book in which the claims of Feminism—in
the largest modern sense—are more reasonably
and temperately set forth.</p>
<div class='figright id001'>
<ANTIMG src='images/i_xvi.jpg' alt='_Havelock Ellis._' class='ig001' /></div>
<p class='c005'><span class='sc'>London</span>, May 1, 1912.</p>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_xvii'>xvii</span>
<h2 class='c006'>CONTENTS</h2></div>
<table class='table0' summary='CONTENTS'>
<tr>
<th class='c009'></th>
<th class='c010'> </th>
<th class='c011'><span class='small'>PAGE</span></th>
</tr>
<tr><td> </td></tr>
<tr>
<td class='c012' colspan='2'><span class='sc'>Introduction</span></td>
<td class='c011'><SPAN href='#Page_1'>1</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr><td> </td></tr>
<tr>
<th class='c009'><span class='small'>CHAPTER</span></th>
<th class='c010'> </th>
<th class='c011'> </th>
</tr>
<tr><td> </td></tr>
<tr>
<td class='c009'>I</td>
<td class='c010'><span class='sc'>The External Results of the Woman Movement</span></td>
<td class='c011'><SPAN href='#Page_23'>23</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr><td> </td></tr>
<tr>
<td class='c009'>II</td>
<td class='c010'><span class='sc'>The Inner Results of the Woman Movement</span></td>
<td class='c011'><SPAN href='#Page_58'>58</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr><td> </td></tr>
<tr>
<td class='c009'>III</td>
<td class='c010'><span class='sc'>The Influence of the Woman Question upon Single Women</span></td>
<td class='c011'><SPAN href='#Page_71'>71</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr><td> </td></tr>
<tr>
<td class='c009'>IV</td>
<td class='c010'><span class='sc'>The Influence of the Woman Movement upon the Daughters</span></td>
<td class='c011'><SPAN href='#Page_89'>89</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr><td> </td></tr>
<tr>
<td class='c009'>V</td>
<td class='c010'><span class='sc'>The Influence of the Woman Movement upon Men and Women in General</span></td>
<td class='c011'><SPAN href='#Page_111'>111</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr><td> </td></tr>
<tr>
<td class='c009'>VI</td>
<td class='c010'><span class='sc'>The Influence of the Woman Movement upon Marriage</span></td>
<td class='c011'><SPAN href='#Page_139'>139</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr><td> </td></tr>
<tr>
<td class='c009'>VII</td>
<td class='c010'><span class='sc'>The Influence of the Woman Movement upon Motherhood</span></td>
<td class='c011'><SPAN href='#Page_169'>169</SPAN></td>
</tr>
</table>
<div class='section ph1'>
<div class='nf-center-c0'>
<div class='nf-center c001'>
<div>The Woman Movement</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_1'>1</span>
<h2 class='c006'>INTRODUCTION</h2></div>
<p class='c007'>The first “woman movement” was Eve’s gesture
when she reached for the fruit of the Tree of
Knowledge—a movement symbolic of the entire
subsequent woman’s movement of the world. For
the will to pass beyond established bounds has
constantly been the motive of her conscious as
well as of her subconscious quest. Every generation
has called this transgression, this passing
beyond the bounds, a “fall of man,” the “original
sin,” a crime against God’s express command, a
crime against the nature of woman as prescribed
for her for all time.</p>
<p class='c005'>And yet from the beginning women have
appeared who have passed far beyond the established
boundaries set for their sex by their era and
upheld by their own people. They have demonstrated
that limitations thus prescribed do not
always coincide with what is considered by the
majority to be the “nature” of woman. At one
time a woman has manifested the “masculine”
<span class='pageno' id='Page_2'>2</span>characteristics of a ruler or has performed a “masculine”
deed; at another time she has distinguished
herself in “masculine” learning or art, or again
has dared to love without the permission of
law and custom. In a word the individual woman,
when her head or her heart was strong enough, has
always shown the possibilities of the development
of personal power. But she has had in that effort
only her own strength and her own will upon which
to rely; she has neither been urged on by the spirit
of her time (<em>Zeitgeist</em>) nor been emulated by the
masses. Exceptional women have sometimes been
glorified by their contemporaries and by posterity
as “wonders of nature”; sometimes been cited as
“warning examples.” Seen in connection with
the world’s woman movement all these instances,
where a bond was broken by woman’s power of
mind or creative gift, by a heart or a conscience,
are parts of what can be called the “prehistoric”
woman movement. This movement for personal
freedom formed no step in that phase of the development
which possesses a conscious purpose,
but was merely sporadic. Even so the participation
was long nameless which women took in the great
struggles for freedom where, without consideration
for the “nature” of woman, they dared bleed upon
the arena and scaffold, ascend the pyre, and be
raised upon the gibbet. Very rarely did these
women martyrs alter immediately men’s—or even
women’s—conception of woman’s “being.” But
just as many perfumes are dissipated only after
<span class='pageno' id='Page_3'>3</span>centuries, so there are also deeds whose indirect
results persist through centuries.</p>
<p class='c005'>Most significant, however, upon the whole in
the “prehistoric” woman movement, are innumerable
women whose souls found expression only
in the strong, quiet acts of every day life but yet
remained living and growing. As a reason for the
“enslavement” of woman by man, the primitive
division of labour is still occasionally cited. This
division of labour made war and the chase man’s
task and so developed in him courage, energy, and
daring, while the woman remained the “beast of
burden.” But we forget that, in this labour
arrangement, the handicraft and husbandry which
woman practised at that time made her, to perhaps
a higher degree than man, the conservator of civilisation
and probably developed her psychic power
in more comprehensive manner than his.</p>
<p class='c005'>Even after this division of labour ceased there
remained—and remain still in innumerable country
households—in and through many of the important
and difficult tasks of the mother of the house,
numerous possibilities for spiritual development.
And exactly in this respect industrial work robs
the woman of much.</p>
<p class='c005'>By the side of these innumerable nameless
women who, century after century, in and through
the material work of culture which they performed,
increased their psychic power, we must remember
all the unnamed women who with flower-like
quiet mien turned their souls to the light.</p>
<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_4'>4</span>Antique sepulchres and Tanagra figures tell us
more about the harmonious, refined corporeality
of the Hellenic woman than the famous statues
of Aphrodite or Athena. In like manner it is not
the illustrious but the nameless women who most
clearly reveal the will of the woman soul, in
antiquity, for light and life.</p>
<p class='c005'>Numbers of Greek women were disciples of the
philosophers, some even were their inspiration.
Generally courtesans, these women represented
the “emancipation” of that time from the servile
condition of the legitimate married women and
also showed that women already longed to share
in the interests of men and to acquire their culture.
History has preserved also words and deeds of
wives and mothers of the past which show that
these also at times attained “masculine” greatness
of soul and civic virtue. Pythias and Sibyls,
Vestals and Valas, are other witnesses that the
power of woman’s soul was active and recognised
long before Christianity. Even among the purely
primitive races there were found—and are found—cases
in which woman in power and rights was
placed, not only on an equality with man, but even
above him. And if, on the one hand, the rigid
exactions which men from the earliest time have
fixed upon the wife’s fidelity—while they themselves
had full freedom for promiscuity—show that
the wife was considered as the property of the husband,
so, on the other hand, this very conception
was a means of elevating and refining the soul life
<span class='pageno' id='Page_5'>5</span>of woman. For the self-control which she had to
impose upon herself deepened her feeling for a
devotion which embraced only one, the man to
whom she belonged. Nothing would be more
superficial than to estimate the real position of
woman, among any special people, only by what
we know of their laws. It is as if one, in a few
centuries from now, should judge the actual position
of the modern European wife by referring it
to the wretched marriage laws which now obtain.
They forget the deep gulf between law and
custom who declare that marriage devotion, veneration
for the sanctity of the home, esteem for the
spiritual being of the wife first arose as a result
of Christianity.</p>
<p class='c005'>It is significant enough for the freeing of woman
that Jesus raised the personal worth of <em>all</em> mankind
through His teaching that—whoever or whatever
the person in outer respects may be—every soul
possesses an eternal value comprised, as it were, in
God’s love; significant enough that Jesus Himself,
because of this point of view, treated every woman,
even the sinner, with kindness and respect.
Because of the increasing uncertainty concerning
the real ideals of Jesus, one is compelled to assume
that—just as Veronica’s handkerchief preserved
the imprint of Jesus’ outer image—the manner of
life of the oldest Christian communities has preserved
the imprint of His teaching. It is significant
of their doctrines that in these communities
women and men stood side by side in the same
<span class='pageno' id='Page_6'>6</span>faith, in the same hope, in the same exercise of love,
and in the same martyrdom. Here was “neither
man nor woman,” but all were one in the hope
of the speedy second coming of Jesus to establish
God’s Kingdom.</p>
<p class='c005'>But the more this hope faded, the more the
Pagan-Jewish conception of woman again made
itself felt. It is true the Church sought to place
man and woman on an equality in regard to certain
marriage duties and rights; to uphold on both sides
the sanctity of marriage; to protect women and
children against despotism. It is true the Church
strove to counteract crude sensuality, utilising,
among other things, an emphasis of celibacy as the
expression of the highest spirituality.</p>
<p class='c005'>But, on the other hand, the doctrine of this
Church became the greatest obstacle to the elevation
of woman, because it lessened the reverence
for her mission as a being of sex. Marriage, the
only recognised ends of which were the prevention
of unchastity and the propagation of the race, was
looked upon as an inferior condition in comparison
with pure virginity. And the more this ideal of
chastity was extolled, the more woman was degraded
and considered the most grievous temptation
of man in his striving after higher sanctity.
Before God, so man taught, man and woman were
truly equal; but not in human relationships or qualities;
yes, and man has gone in this direction even to
the point of debating the question in church councils,
as to whether woman really had a soul or not!</p>
<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_7'>7</span>But when the Church revered pure virginity in
the person of the Mother of Jesus, it was woman
in highest form—as happy or suffering mother—that
the Church unconsciously glorified. In the
statues and altar pieces of the cathedral man worships,
in the likeness of Mary, the purest and
noblest womanhood. The virtues especially extolled
by the Church were also those in which Mary
in particular and woman in general had pre-eminence.
By all these impressions a soul condition
was created in which the heart penetrated by
religious ecstasy, must, of psychological necessity,
devote itself to the earthly manifestations of this
same pure womanhood. Generally this devotion
was only an ecstatic cult, an adoration from afar
of an ideal, inspiring deeds or poetry. Sometimes
this ecstasy fused the being of man and woman
in the sensuous-soulful unity of great love. But
when neither was the case, yet the adoration of
knights and minnesingers increased the esteem of
man for woman and the esteem of woman for herself.
It also contributed to the esteem of man for
woman that, as the men were always obliged to
stand in arms, they could rarely acquire the learning
which the priests—and through them the
wives and daughters of the castles—acquired. The
superiority of woman in this respect had a refining
influence upon manners and customs and upon the
general culture of the time. Often through a
number of women auditors the poem of a minnesinger
first became famous. When in Mainz one
<span class='pageno' id='Page_8'>8</span>sees Heinrich Frauenlob’s tombstone, one comprehends,
through the soulful noble lines, how mourning
women bore him to the grave, as the little
bas-relief at the base of the stone represents. Their
sympathy made him their singer and his sympathy
revealed, to their time and to themselves, their
own being. Woman’s ideal of love became
through poetry and courts of love the ideal also
of the most cultured men. We see here a movement
of the time which women already half consciously
effected by their life of feeling and their
culture. The authority which the wife exercised
as lady of the manor during the absence, often of
many years’ duration, of her husband gave her
increased power to disseminate about her that
finer culture which she herself had gained. But
when the lords of the manor returned and again
assumed power, then indeed at times strange
thoughts might have come to their wives, while
they fixed their glance, under the great arched
eyelids, upon the missal or the romance of chivalry
or, with long tapering fingers, moved the chessmen
or played the harp, or while they bent the slender
white neck over the embroidery frame or the lace-pillow
upon which they wrought veritable marvels
of handicraft. Perhaps even then there stirred
under many a brow the presentiment of a time in
which the relationship between man and woman
would be different. Such thoughts must have
arisen also in the manor-houses when the men began
to arrogate to themselves one handicraft after
<span class='pageno' id='Page_9'>9</span>another, occupations which in earlier times the
daughters once learned from their fathers, at whose
side they sometimes even entered the guild. Could
even the nun’s veil prevent such thoughts from
rising between the white temples of some of the
women who—suffering or superfluous outside in
the world—had found refuge in the cloister? Here
was accomplished most peacefully the “emancipation,”
of that time, of the intellectual and artistic
gifts of woman, for whom religion and the life of
the cloister had always employment. And if the
soul of a nun was greater and richer than usual,
then might it indeed have happened that she
devoted herself to meditation, in a quandary as
to whether all of God’s purposes for the gifts of
her soul were truly fulfilled. And this the more
intently since even then many women outside the
cloister—women whose religious inspiration directed
their genius to great ends—outside in the
world, exercised a powerful influence upon the
thought as upon the events of their time and, after
death as saints, retained power over souls.
Our Birgitta, for example, possessed herself of
a great part of “woman’s rights.”</p>
<p class='c005'>So significant had the psychic power of woman
shown itself to be in the Middle Ages that already
in the early Renaissance it brought forth a number
of “feminist” writers, both women and men.
And in the height of the Renaissance there was
quite an “emancipation” literature, about women
and by women. This literature increased during
<span class='pageno' id='Page_10'>10</span>the following centuries. Famous men emphasised
the importance of a higher education of woman;
some, as early as the beginning of the 16th century,
claimed the absolute superiority of woman in all
things. Greater freedom, education, and rights,
in one or another respect, were demanded by men
as well as women “feminists.” This literature
purposed less, however, to alter some given conditions
than, by means of examples of famous women
of antiquity, to demonstrate the personal right
and the social gain of what already obtained without
hindrance, although with the disapproval of
many:—that numbers of women had appeared
who in classic culture, in the practice of learned
professions, in political or religious, intellectual
or æsthetic interests, stood beside the men of Humanism,
the Renaissance, and the Reformation.</p>
<p class='c005'>The ideal of the time, the fully developed human
personality of marked individuality, determined
the conduct of life of women exactly as that of men.
Both sexes cherished the life value which the
original, isolated, individual personality signified
for other such personalities. Both sexes appropriated
to themselves the right to choose that
which was harmonious with their own natures,
that which soul or sense, thought or feeling,
desired. It followed from this conception that
women sought to attain the highest degree of the
beauty and grace of their own sex and at the same
time to cultivate what “manly” courage or genius
nature had given them—attributes which men
<span class='pageno' id='Page_11'>11</span>valued in them next to their purely womanly
qualities.</p>
<p class='c005'>But at this time it was not the <em>work</em> of woman
which had the great cultural significance, but the
human essence of her being reflected in <em>the works of
men</em>. In antiquity woman exhibited the manly
qualities of greatness of soul and civic virtue; in
the Middle Ages she revealed the same faculty as
man for saintliness and exercise of love; in the
Renaissance she manifested the same ability as
man to mould her own personality into a living
work of art. If the spirit of equality between the
sexes, which prevailed in the Renaissance, had
further directed the progress of development, a
“woman movement” would never have arisen,
because its ends, which are to-day still contended
for, would have been attained one after another,
at the appointed time, as natural fruits of the
florescence of the Renaissance.</p>
<p class='c005'>As it is, this florescence acquired only very slight
<em>immediate</em> influence upon the emancipation of
woman—and the farther North one goes the
slighter it becomes. The periods of the Counter-Reformation,
of the Religious Wars and of
the new Orthodoxy, on the contrary, had as result
an enormous retrogression in the position of
woman.</p>
<p class='c005'>The “Deliverance of the Flesh,” which was
accomplished by the verdict of Protestantism upon
the life of the cloister, and by its support of marriage,
had little in common with the deep feeling
<span class='pageno' id='Page_12'>12</span>for the right and beauty of corporeality by which
the Renaissance, intoxicated with life, became the
era of the great renascence of art. Luther’s conception
of the sex life, as “sanctified” by marriage,
was so crassly utilitarian that it again dragged
woman down from that high level upon which the
finest life of feeling and culture of the Middle Ages
and of the Renaissance had placed her.</p>
<p class='c005'>As matron of the household, woman retained her
authority. The rational, common-sense marriage
was the one most conformable to this literal doctrine
of Luther, and the most usual. To the man
who had chosen her, the wife bore children by the
dozen and threescore. The Church gave her soul
nourishment. If a woman occasionally sought to
exercise her spiritual gifts in a “worldly” direction,
she needed powerful protection, else she ran the
danger of being burned as a witch!</p>
<p class='c005'>Yet in spite of all, even this period produced not
a few women who procured for themselves the
learning after which they thirsted, who succeeded
in keeping their souls alive, in finding springs in
the midst of the stony wastes of the desert. The
more, however, the different branches of learning
developed, and especially as Latin became the
language of the learned, the more difficult it
became for women to force their way to these
springs, sealed for the majority of their sex. For
a classical education became more and more infrequently
extended to the daughter, for whom
even the ability to read and write was considered
<span class='pageno' id='Page_13'>13</span>a temptation to deviation from the path
of virtue.<SPAN name='r1' /><SPAN href='#f1' class='c013'><sup>[1]</sup></SPAN></p>
<p class='c005'>That women in time of persecution adhered to
the new doctrine with warm belief and suffered
for it with the whole strength of their souls, that
in time of war they managed house and estate
with power and understanding, altered in no respect,
at the time, woman’s social or marriage
position. Man was woman’s sovereign master and
therefore a good bit nearer God than she. In
marriage woman was considered, according to
the bishop’s word, “man’s chattel,” outside of
marriage as a tool of the devil. But however
deeply the soul of woman was oppressed at this
time, yet it still lived and endowed sons, in whom
the strong but unexercised endowments of the
mother became genius; it endowed daughters, who
secretly procured sustenance for their souls and
who in turn transmitted their rebellious spirit
to a daughter or granddaughter.</p>
<p class='c005'>When at the end of the period of Orthodoxy and
Absolutism, the great fundamental principle of
Protestantism, the principle of personality, once
more made headway, one of the most characteristic
expressions of this reaction is that, in England,
Milton wrote upon the right of divorce and Defoe
<span class='pageno' id='Page_14'>14</span>upon the right of woman to the development and
exercise of her mental powers. Among others
who demanded greater education for women were
Comenius in Germany and Fénelon in France. It
was not in the former country that woman, so long
oppressed, first won her great cultural influence.
That happened in the land where women had never
wholly lost it. In France, in the age of enlightenment,
it was the salons created by women that
determined the European spirit of the time. Letters
and memoirs indicate sufficiently the influence
of woman—in good as well as in bad sense—in
politics and literature, manners, customs, and
taste. Women transform indirectly the political,
philosophic, and scientific style. For they demand
that every subject be treated in a manner easily
comprehensible and agreeable to them. A number
of writings appeared which aimed to make it
easy for “women folk” also “to be freed through
the reason.”</p>
<p class='c005'>Since it was the approval of women which determined
fame, men were only too eager to fulfil their
expressed demands. Women disseminated the
ideas of men in wide circles, partly by buying their
writings in great numbers and distributing them,
partly also by social life. Never has woman more
perfectly accomplished the important task of adjusting
culture values. The art of conversation,
developed to the highest perfection, was, it is true,
often only a game of battledore and shuttlecock
with ideas. But it performed at the same time,
<span class='pageno' id='Page_15'>15</span>and in more elegant and more effective manner, a
great part of the office of to-day’s Press. The
political leader, art and literary criticism, gossip
(<em>causerie</em>), the “portrait gallery” of contemporaries—all
this was gathered from clever discourse.
Through their art of conversation the
women became—next to the philosophers and
statesmen who in this or that salon were the leading
spirits—the intellectual leaders of the time;
they created “enlightened opinion,” they co-operated
finally in the Revolution. The mistresses of
these salons scarcely felt the need of an emancipation
of woman; for they had for themselves as
many possibilities of culture, of development of
their powers, of the exercise of their faculties, as
even they themselves could wish. The intellectual
curiosity, which coveted learning, and the cultural
interest of these women penetrated in wider circles,
and a result of this general awakening was the
Woman’s Lyceum founded in Paris in 1786, among
the students of which were found, some years later,
enthusiastic supporters of the Revolution.</p>
<p class='c005'>Also among the German peoples there appeared,
in the age of enlightenment, women with literary
and scientific interest; some with extraordinary
gifts which they also exercised. But for the most
part women and men under more clumsy social
forms, so-called “Academies” and “Societies,”
engaged in their “learned pastime”; and nowhere,
except in the person of some ruler, did woman
attain in Europe, in the age of enlightenment, an
<span class='pageno' id='Page_16'>16</span>influence which can be compared to that of the
French women.</p>
<p class='c005'>In the midst of the period of rococo elegance
and gallantry, of reason and esprit, came the great
regeneration, the second Renaissance—the Revival
of Feeling. This occurred first in the field
of religion, through the pietistic movement of the
time. Later it was Rousseau who, in connection
with religion, nature, love, motherhood, became
the liberator of feeling, and together with him
were the English “sentimental” poets and the
German poetry, which reached its culminating
point in Goethe. Literature, the Theatre, and
Art came more and more to the front and, by that
means, women acquired greater possibilities of
becoming acquainted with, understanding, and
loving the richest culture of the time.</p>
<p class='c005'>And with this Revival of Feeling, personal freedom,
individual character, became again the great
life value. Women who wish to give expression
to their feeling in their life now become more numerous:
women who are conscious that their being
buries many unsatisfied demands, not only in connection
with the right of culture of their natural
character, but also in connection with the right,
in private life and in society, to give expression to
this natural character. Men are continually in
intellectual interchange with women, giving as
well as receiving; woman nature is esteemed with
ever finer comprehension.</p>
<p class='c005'>Since feelings determine thoughts—for the
<span class='pageno' id='Page_17'>17</span>thought always goes in the direction in which
the feeling says happiness is to be found—so it is
natural that, in the second half of the 18th century,
the idea of freedom is the ideal which kindles the
soul of increasing numbers of women. <em>The emancipation
of the individual</em> is the tale within the
tale, from the Renaissance up to the struggles of
the Reformation for freedom of conscience, freedom
of learning, freedom of investigation, and
freedom of thought. Then finally came the struggle
for constitutionally protected civic freedom.
In America as early as 1776 the demand for the
enfranchisement of women was raised, because
they had taken part in the struggle for freedom
with such great enthusiasm and constancy. With
the same passion they threw themselves into the
struggle in France for the “Rights of Man.” But
both times they had to learn to their sorrow that
“fellow-citizen” and “man” were terms which as
yet referred only to men. That a woman during
the French Revolution proclaimed “Women’s
Rights,” that women discussed these questions
as well as questions of education and other vital
questions, with ardour, had as little immediate
effect as the attempt at that time to enforce the
right of the fourth estate. These sorely oppressed
movements, of women and of working men, dominate
the 19th century and now at the beginning
of the 20th have every reason for assurance of
victory.</p>
<p class='c005'>In the 17th and 18th centuries men and women
<span class='pageno' id='Page_18'>18</span>writers appeared in different countries to demonstrate
and establish the worth and right of woman
as “man.” Indirectly inspired by the great women
of the earlier centuries, they were immediately
influenced by woman’s political and cultural exercise
of power in the 18th century. Especially
notable are the arguments which were advanced
in the 90’s of the 18th century by writers manifestly
uninfluenced by one another—the Swede,
Thorild, in <cite>The Natural Nobility of Womankind</cite>;
the German, Hippel; the Frenchman, Condorcet;
the English woman, Mary Wollstonecraft. All insist
that difference in sex can form no obstacle
to placing woman on an equality with man in the
family and in society; that she shall have the same
right as man to education and free agency. The
men writers emphasised more her individual
human right, as “man,” and the advantage to
society; the women writers more the mother’s
need of culture and her right to it, in order to be
able to rear and protect her children better. But
all four ideas are, at heart, determined by the same
point of view which the great philosopher of evolution
thus formulated later: <em>the fundamental condition
for social equilibrium is the same as for human
happiness and lies in the law of equal freedom</em>. And
this means that every one—without regard to difference
between sex and sex, man and man—must
have the right and the opportunity to develop and
exercise his own capacities. For no one to-day
can undertake so certain a valuation of talents
<span class='pageno' id='Page_19'>19</span>that this valuation could justify society in restricting,
a priori, the right of a single one of its members
<em>to develop</em> his capacities, even though these
capacities might take such a direction, later, that
society would be compelled to limit their <em>exercise</em>.</p>
<p class='c005'>Spencer arrived by the deductive method at the
same demand Romanticism reached earlier by the
intuitive method. Romanticism recognised that
in the measure in which the individual is unusual
he must be also unintelligible, for he shows to the
majority only his surface; his innermost soul only
to those in harmony with him. Even in the family
circle the individual often remains therefore undiscovered.
How much more then must society,
composed for the most part of Philistines, outrage
the individual if it concedes rights to one category,
to one sex, to one class, and not to the other!</p>
<p class='c005'>And from this point of view the Romanticists
drew for women also the logical conclusion of individualism.
They pointed out that the sex character,
carried <em>to the extreme</em>, furnished neither the
highest masculine nor the highest feminine type;
that each sex must develop in itself both noble
human <em>universality</em> and individual <em>peculiarity</em>.
And this the great woman personalities did who
shared the destiny of the Romanticists. They
were thereby fully and wholly able to share also
the intellectual life of their husbands. Love
became thus a unity of souls. The romantic ideal
of love was expressed in <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">La Nouvelle Héloise</span></cite>, in
Goethe’s letters to Charlotte von Stein, in Rahel,
<span class='pageno' id='Page_20'>20</span>in Mme. de Staël. It was found in the first half
of the 19th century in many great women; for
example, George Sand, Elizabeth Barrett Browning,
Camilla Collett. It appeared in Shelley and
in the Swedish poet Almquist, in Stuart Mill and
Robert Browning, also in certain French and German
poets and thinkers. This ideal has now been
for some centuries the ideal of most women and
of not a few men of feeling.</p>
<p class='c005'>But since a truly psychic unity is possible only
between two beings who are, in outer as in inner
sense, <em>free</em>, exactly for this reason, “romantic love”
has as consequence the demand for the emancipation
of woman.</p>
<p class='c005'>The love of Romanticism, which has been caricatured
to the extent that it signified only moonshine,
ecstasy, sonnets, and wife barter, had its
real essence in the desire for completeness of soul
in love. This was, in a new form, the ideal of the
courts of love. But since completeness of soul
means that all the powers of the soul can freely and
fully penetrate and elevate one another, so the first
requisite for that soulful love was that <em>woman’s</em>
thinking as well as her feeling, her imagination as
well as her will, her desire for power, as well as her
conscience, be freed from the shackles imposed
upon them from without, in order to be strengthened
and purified. The second stipulation was
that <em>man’s</em> inner, spiritual life be freed from the
deteriorating results of the prerogatives and prejudices
accorded to and maintained by his sex.</p>
<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_21'>21</span>A new ideal in the relationship between husband
and wife, between mother and child; the demand
of the feminine individuality for the right to free
cultivation of her powers and to self-direction;
the need of new fields for this exercise of her power
after industrialism began to usurp one branch of
domestic work after another—these are the fundamental
reasons for what is called the middle-class
woman movement. The middle-class woman—because
of the increasing surplus of women,
because of the continually greater variety of economic
conditions and the decrease in marriage for
this and other reasons—was to an ever greater
extent constrained to self-maintenance. Thus the
<em>economic</em> reason for the woman movement, not
only in the labouring class but also in the middle
class, became the most effective influence operating
in the <em>widest</em> circles, although the reasons mentioned
previously were the first and deepest causes.</p>
<p class='c005'>And herewith we stand at the beginning of the
woman movement, become <em>conscious of its purpose</em>.</p>
<p class='c005'>But this movement would be a stream without
sources if the “anonymous” movements indicated
here with the greatest brevity had not preceded,
if in the grey morning of time the endless procession
had not begun in which women now nameless
for us walked at the head, each with an amphoræ
upon her shoulder—amphoræ which they filled
at any fountain of life. Before these nameless
women vanished on the horizon, each, like a water
nymph of antiquity, lowered the brim of her urn
<span class='pageno' id='Page_22'>22</span>to the earth, which thus was traversed by innumerable
interlacing rills. And all these—even if
by the most circuitous route—have augmented
by some drops the mighty stream now called the
woman movement.</p>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_23'>23</span>
<h2 class='c006'>CHAPTER I<br/> <span class='large'>THE EXTERNAL RESULTS OF THE WOMAN MOVEMENT</span></h2></div>
<p class='c007'>The history of the woman movement, conscious
of its purpose, does not fall within the compass
of this book. But as foundation for later
judgments, it is necessary to take a short retrospective
glance over the essential results which
the woman movement has attained in the struggle
for woman’s equality with man in the right to
general culture, professional education, and work,
as well as in the sphere of family and of civil status.
These several demands for equality were voiced, as
early as 1848, in a powerful and man-indicting
plea by the American women in their “Declaration
of Sentiments.” But in 1905 the program for
Germany’s “<span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Allgemein Frauenverein</span>,” as well as
many both conservative and radical resolutions
for women congresses in different countries, show
how far removed Europe and, in many respects,
America also, still are from the desires expressed
in the year 1848.</p>
<p class='c005'>If the humble utterance of women, “We can
with justice demand nothing of life except a work
and a duty,” be conclusive, then life has already
<span class='pageno' id='Page_24'>24</span>conceded to the demands of woman in rich measure.
The woman movement and the self-interest
of the employers have made accessible to her a
number of new fields of labour, without mentioning
those which fifty years ago were the only ones
“proper” for women of the middle class—those of
teacher, lady companion, and “lady’s help.” The
woman movement and man’s increasing recognition
of woman’s need of general education and professional
qualification have created a large number
of educational institutions. But in regard to the
right of work, the acquisitions are but insignificant
if this right be defined as <em>the opportunity for that
work which one prefers and for which one is best fitted</em>.
Women have now, for example, in many countries
the right to pass the same examinations as men,
but in many cases not the right to the offices which
these examinations open to men. The profession
to which women have found a comparatively easy
entrance, that of physician, is widely extended
among women in Europe as well as in America.
That a dwelling was denied to the first woman
physician because her profession was considered
“improper” for a woman, sounds now like a fable.
Everywhere now are women nurses, teachers of
gymnastics, dentists, apothecaries, and midwives.
In America there are even many women ministers
and it sounds likewise wholly fabulous to say that
the first of these was literally stoned. Women
judges also have been appointed in America. In
Europe there are none to my knowledge and no
<span class='pageno' id='Page_25'>25</span>women preachers. And yet the woman pastor
would often be, especially for women and children,
a better minister than the clergyman; for them also
the woman judge might often surpass the man in
penetration and understanding. The profession
of law, open to women in many countries, is as yet
little practised by them in Europe. And yet as
advocate, police officer, and prison attendant, the
female official would be of special service for her own
sex as well as for children and young people of both
sexes. But in every field where the living reality of
flesh and blood has to be compressed into legal paragraphs,
mankind must be more or less mistreated.
And since even masculine jurists of feeling suffer
under this conviction, the reason for the fact that
this career, in which woman could be of infinitely
great service to humanity, has thus far attracted
her little, may be sought in feminine sensitiveness.</p>
<p class='c005'>All the more numerous are the women who have
devoted themselves to the task most akin to
motherhood, the profession of teacher. Unfortunately
not always the inner call but the prestige
of the position has determined the choice. Millions
of women are now employed as teachers in
all possible types of schools, from kindergartens
to training schools, from infant schools to boys’
colleges. Even in universities, although in Europe
very rarely it is true, women occupy chairs of
learning. In the field of popular education, women
are zealously active as lecturers, librarians, leaders
of evening classes, and in similar work.</p>
<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_26'>26</span>With every decade, woman’s powers have
attained their right more fully and in fields where
it now seems incredible that men could, and still
partly do, insist upon getting along without them.
I refer to the associations and institutions connected
with prison supervision and reformatories;
with schools and children’s homes; care of the
poor and the sick; health and factory inspection.
Slowly but surely the woman movement has prepared
a place here for the mother of society beside
the father of society who in these domains is often
very awkward or quite helpless. Alone, or together
with men, women have organised milk distribution
and crèches, housekeeping schools, school
food-kitchens, people’s food-kitchens, people’s
polyclinics, sanitariums and rest-homes, vacation
colonies, homes for sick and neglected children,
etc. Many kinds of homes for working women,
old people’s homes, rescue homes, institutions for
the protection of mothers and children, employment
bureaus, legal redress, and other forms of
social relief are connected, indirectly if not directly,
with the woman movement. Great women agitators
on their part set thousands of women into
action, as for example, Harriet Beecher Stowe,
agitating against negro slavery, Josephine Butler
against prostitution, Frances Willard against intemperance,
and Bertha von Suttner against war.</p>
<p class='c005'>And yet in spite of the fabulous amount of time,
strength, and money which the associations and
organisations thus created have cost in donations
<span class='pageno' id='Page_27'>27</span>of time and money, this social relief work is only
the oil and wine of the Samaritan for the wounds
of society. As long as brigand hands drag mothers
and children into factories; as long as armies cost
much more than schools; as long as dwelling conditions
in the cities are for many people worse
than those for domestic animals in the country; as
long as alcohol and syphilis brand the new generation—so
long woman’s devotion remains powerless.</p>
<p class='c005'>And this conviction has urged women to transform
their social work from an often injudicious
“Christian” compassion into an organised charity
in order to anticipate and prevent need and to
facilitate self-help. But also in this new phase
of their philanthropic work many women of the
middle class are arriving at an understanding of
the necessity of a social reform in accordance with
socialistic demands. A larger number of women
join the suffragist movement, less owing to individual
demands for rights than out of despair over
the hopeless social work to which their feeling of
solidarity still impels them. For without suffrage
(this they experience every day) their work of
relief is like seed sown in a morass.</p>
<p class='c005'>A by-product of the social relief work is that
many single women have found, in voluntary
social work, an occupation and often also, in
remunerative social work, a livelihood; in both
cases through service in which certain feminine
qualities can be of value.</p>
<p class='c005'>Yes, exactly in the above mentioned fields of
<span class='pageno' id='Page_28'>28</span>work, which so often bring the modern woman in
contact with the finest and most delicate as well
as with the coarsest and hardest sides of life; which
place her before conflicts of the most exceptional
as well as of the most universally human kind—there
woman has nothing <em>new</em> to give except her
motherliness. That means protecting tenderness,
gentle patience, glad readiness to help, the interest
embracing each one in particular, the fine and
quick vibration in contact with the feelings of
others which we, in a word, call “tact.” If, however,
a woman has not been endowed with motherliness,
or has none remaining, then she reverts to
impersonal devotion to duty, hard formalism, dry
routine; then all the talk about the <em>social</em> significance
of woman’s entrance into the field of medicine
or jurisprudence or the ministry or social work
remains only empty phrases. In all these spheres
a good man is much more valuable than a hard
woman. And that woman’s hands can be rough,
woman’s eyes cold, woman’s soul base or cruel—this
many suffering and crushed, sorrowing and
sinful, small and defenceless have already experienced.
If woman is to keep her superiority as
the alleviator of the suffering of others, the protector
of others, solicitous for the welfare of others,
then she must not only acquire certain universal
human qualities in which man is often superior to
her; she must also carefully guard and cultivate
the best capacities which her sex gained in and
through the hundred thousand years’ activity as
<span class='pageno' id='Page_29'>29</span>that half of mankind which created the home and
reared the children.</p>
<p class='c005'>Although the woman movement has multiplied
and extended the social relief work of woman in
innumerable directions, still it has not yet opened
to her the field in which formerly deaconesses, and
much earlier still nuns, were engaged. But what
is new as result of the woman movement is that
more and more single <em>cultured</em> women now devote
themselves to the occupations of governess, nurse,
midwife, and kindred callings; as well as that more
special training is demanded for these vocations
to which women turned earlier with downright
criminal carelessness.</p>
<hr class='c008' />
<p class='c005'>Simultaneously with the need of the middle-class
woman for new fields of work, came the
extraordinarily rapid development of commerce
and business, which occasioned the need of new
working forces. Feminine honesty, orderliness,
and devotion to duty—alas, also her modest demands
of compensation—made the state as well as
private employers favourably disposed to employ
women in increasingly greater numbers in the
different branches of commerce: in the post-office,
railroads, telegraph, telephone, as also in
banks, counting houses, agencies or stores, as secretaries,
stenographers, and clerks. In cases where
the wife or daughter was the husband’s or father’s
assistant such work then received a personal interest,
and what woman’s labour in this form can
<span class='pageno' id='Page_30'>30</span>signify for national wealth can be seen in France
especially. But as a rule no real joy in work could
illuminate the days and years of the generation of
women who in all these vocations have grown gray
and at best have been pensioned. Nevertheless,
in these offices one always sees fresh faces bending
over the desk to fade away in their turn.</p>
<p class='c005'>Lack of courage or means often deters the European
woman from more independent business
activity, and this in spite of increasing freedom to
choose her occupation, in spite of brilliant examples
of successful undertakings of women, in photography,
hotel or boarding-house management,
dress-making, etc. In America, on the contrary,
there is no masculine occupation, from that of
butcher and executioner to real estate speculator
and stock-exchange gambler that women have not
practised.</p>
<p class='c005'>But while the women of the older generation
were thankful if only they succeeded in obtaining
“a work and a duty,” however monotonous and
wearing it might be, the will of the younger generation
for a <em>pleasurable</em> labour has fortunately
increased. Partly alone, partly co-operatively,
women began to venture into the applied arts,
handwork, farming, or kindred work. And since
corresponding special training schools quickly
arise to meet the awakening of the desire for a
vocation, we can hope for good results for these,
as yet rare, enterprising spirits. For special education
is, in our time, the essential condition of
<span class='pageno' id='Page_31'>31</span>success, especially in agriculture, where the women
often succeeded without other help than their
personal efficiency and the “farmer’s customary
practice.”</p>
<p class='c005'>Since I know America only at second hand I
have no claim to a final judgment regarding the
influence of business life and modern methods of
production upon the soul life of woman. In the
women who have succeeded in securing affluence
through commercial life one finds probably the
same antichristian effects of this life as among men.
Recently in America a number of men and women
endeavoured to live for fourteen days, as Christ
would have lived. The decision of most of those
who were engaged in business life was that either
they must cease to follow in the footsteps of
Christ—or must resign their positions. And since,
with due consideration for the number of woman
employers in America, many of these experiences
must surely have been made under feminine supervision,
the experiment does not lack a certain
significance for the forming of a judgment in
the direction referred to.</p>
<p class='c005'>The zeal of women’s rights advocates to open to
women all of man’s fields of labour, and not only
this but to prove that these fields are <em>as well adapted</em>
to woman as man—this zeal has unfortunately
had as result that the woman movement has
turned the aptitude of many women in a wrong
direction and has fettered a great amount of
woman’s misused working power to thankless or
<span class='pageno' id='Page_32'>32</span>galling tasks. But, on the other hand, how the
woman movement has elevated woman’s work,
since it has raised the standard of qualification in
many fields and increased the feeling of responsibility
in all! How it has increased the honour of
work and the capacity for organisation, developed
the judgment, stimulated the will power, strengthened
the courage! It has awakened innumerable
slumbering talents, given freedom of action to innumerable
shackled powers. And thus it has transformed
hosts of women of the upper class, formerly
the most useless burden of earth, into productive
members of society, instead of mere consumers;
made them self-supporting instead of dependent,
joyful instead of weary of life.</p>
<hr class='c008' />
<p class='c005'>The woman movement of the lower classes is
socialistic. It has increased in extent and significance
in the same measure in which the working
woman has given up farming, housework, and
domestic service for industry.</p>
<p class='c005'>This woman movement also worked in two directions.
The older program reads: “Full equality
of woman with man.” In the “state of the future”
both sexes shall have the same duty of
work and the same protection of work, while the
children are reared in state institutions.</p>
<p class='c005'>The movement in the other direction purposes
to win back the wife to the husband, the mother
to the children, and, thereby, the home to all.
<span class='pageno' id='Page_33'>33</span>The old or right wing of the middle-class woman
movement, as well as the older direction of socialism
just mentioned, still uphold, with arguments
of the old liberalism, the “individual freedom” of
the working woman against all protecting “exceptional
laws.” Increasing numbers of the more
radical—that means in this connection more social—feminists
of the upper class, however, stand side
by side with the less dogmatic trend of socialism
in its supreme struggle for the protection of the
mother.</p>
<p class='c005'>In the socialistic woman movement, both efforts
for freedom were interwoven—that of the
working men and that of women—checked during
the French Revolution but soon after revived as
the two great forces of the new century. In this
intertwining of the woman question with the
labour question is found the explanation of the
fact that socialists characterise the woman question
as an <em>economic</em> question solely; while in reality
the woman question, <em>historically</em>, manifestly began
as an advocacy of the human right and worth of
woman; and that too before any great industry
appeared on the horizon. As long as the man was
the one who, outside the home, was producer and
provider, and the woman the one who, within the
home, managed and perfected the raw material,
no <em>economic</em> woman question could arise, but on
the other hand exactly a question of <em>woman’s
rights</em>. For, as some writers demonstrated, as
early as the 18th century it was absurd, if woman’s
<span class='pageno' id='Page_34'>34</span>work in the home was so valuable and so faithfully
performed, that it should not secure in consequence
corresponding rights. And exactly because the
middle-class woman movement tried to uphold
and defend the right and the freedom of women in
the compass of the old society, this movement
became, and must still often be, a struggle of
women against men. The socialistic woman
movement is on the other hand merely a factor in
a <em>joint struggle of men and women against the old
society and for a new condition</em>. The struggle here
cannot be sex against sex, but class against class.
Each of these woman movements has been partly
right, each has partly misunderstood the other.
Only in recent times has a convergence between
the middle class and the socialistic woman movements
been accomplished for the attainment of
a number of common ends; for example, the
protection of the mother, mentioned above, and
especially the franchise. This convergence has
dissolved the prejudice on both sides. In both
quarters they begin to understand the power and
aim of the other movement.</p>
<p class='c005'>Socialism and the woman movement are two
mighty streams which drag along with them great
parts of the firm formations which they touch.
But if one wishes to be just toward both, one
must not forget that in this way new lands are
created.</p>
<p class='c005'>The socialistic women on their part, as speakers,
agitators, journalists, members of special associations,
<span class='pageno' id='Page_35'>35</span>have stood in rank and file beside the men
as true comrades, and the middle-class women have
much to learn from the feeling of solidarity of the
women socialists. The masculine comrades have
not always <em>in practice</em> substantiated the principle
of equality, for even the socialist is first man and
then comrade; but <em>in theory</em> he has generally supported
it.</p>
<p class='c005'>Through socialism, feminism has penetrated
to the masses. What the middle-class woman
movement would have needed another century to
effect, socialism has accomplished in a few decades.
Nothing shows better than its fear of socialists
how blindly prejudiced was the right wing of
middle-class feminism. And nothing so clearly
elucidates in what stage of feminism the upper-class
movement was than its obstinate adherence to
“the principle of personal freedom” in face of the
atrocious actual conditions which resulted from the
“freedom of work” of the women factory hands.</p>
<p class='c005'>I will here recall only in brief the progress of the
economic woman movement in the class of factory
workers. When machines transformed the whole
method of production and a host of women no
longer found sufficient occupation in the home,
while at the same time the possibilities of marriage
decreased because of the surplus of women and
also for other reasons, the middle-class women
looked about them for new fields of labour. The
great industries in return looked about them for
more “hands.” And since, with the machine,
<span class='pageno' id='Page_36'>36</span>female hands were quite as serviceable as male—with
a new machine it was possible to replace thirty
men with one woman—and since in addition they
were cheaper, then began that exodus of women
from the home into the factory, the results of
which we are now experiencing.</p>
<p class='c005'>When the mother is absent from the home, then
there is lacking the cohering, supervising, warming
force, and the home deteriorates and falls to pieces;
the children are neglected, the husband suffers;
the street takes possession of the children, the
alehouse of the men. Moreover, the women work
often for starvation wages, whereby less comes into
the home than is lost by the absence and incapacity
of the mother. In the middle classes daughters and
wives, entirely or partly supported in the home,
could be satisfied with smaller wages and have
thus become the competitors of men and women
wholly self-supporting. For the same reason
wives working in these industries have often
become the competitors of men, children again
the competitors of women, and married women
the competitors of unmarried.</p>
<p class='c005'>In woman, so long secluded in the sphere of the
family, the social feeling of solidarity has been
very slowly awakened. Therefore, organisation
which could prevent the competition just mentioned
has only in the last decade made great
progress everywhere among working women. In
the middle-class vocations this is almost entirely
lacking. Among the working women slowness of
<span class='pageno' id='Page_37'>37</span>organisation is natural, for the more wretched
their position was, the more difficult was it for
them to organise. But among middle-class
women the reason was partly their individualism,
partly their anti-socialism, partly the lack of feeling
of solidarity just referred to.</p>
<p class='c005'>Home work for profit and pleasure in one’s own
family or in service of the applied arts has become
a means for the “sweat system,” the facts of which
belong to the darkest side of modern working life.
These facts alone would be sufficient to prove that
<em>working women</em> have little to gain from the luxury
of the rich, an assertion with which luxury often
vindicates itself. There is still for the women
working at home as well as for the women working
in the factory, beside their professional work, also
the duty of caring for the children and managing
the home. However insufficient this may be yet
it still claims a great part of their already meagre
leisure; and the more tender and conscientious the
mothers are, the more they wear themselves out,
and the sooner must society, after night-watching,
lack of light and hunger have ruined them, maintain
them as infirm or paupers. The life of these
women passed in the factory often from childhood
has made them moreover, generation after generation,
more unfitted for household work. What
does it profit to attempt to remedy the evil by
housekeeping schools and instruction in the care of
children? For where time and strength are lacking
the home has lost its right.</p>
<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_38'>38</span>What can be expected of women who three or
four days after confinement must again stand at
the machine, who are compelled to leave their
children behind them, shut in at home, exposed to
all conceivable accidents? What can be expected
of mothers, who have become mothers against their
will,—mothers of children, who because of the
conditions of their parents’ work have become
scrofulous, rickety, idiotic—children who contract
degeneration of the liver because the harassed,
ignorant mother quieted them with brandy, ill-treated
them,—herself a physical and psychic ruin
who spreads destruction about her!</p>
<p class='c005'>The feminists are accustomed to rage over the
custom which formerly condemned the Indian
widows to be burned upon the funeral pyre—a
custom which is only an innocent sport in comparison
with the woman slavery which Europe
has even brought to a system and which the woman
movement long ignored.</p>
<p class='c005'>To these general facts, which apply also to
women employed in hard agricultural labour,
there is also added an entirely new series of evils
associated with occupations dangerous to health—for
example those in which lead, quicksilver, phosphorus
or tobacco poison the workers,<SPAN name='r2' /><SPAN href='#f2' class='c013'><sup>[2]</sup></SPAN> or those
branches of work where inhaling dust at the weaving
loom or in spinning, breathing gas and coal
smoke, exposed to heat, smoke and damp, they
<span class='pageno' id='Page_39'>39</span>contract tuberculosis and other diseases; to say
nothing of the physical and moral misery in which
miners and stevedores live. But the worst begins
only when the women are to become mothers.
Either the embryo is killed by an abortion, intentional
or caused by the occupation; or it comes into
the world dead or sick or crippled; or it dies in the
first weeks or wastes away under artificial nourishment—in
England for example only one out of
eight children is nursed. The mothers either cannot
or will not. Next to the labour conditions,
alcohol plays the greatest part in this indirect
massacre of infants.</p>
<p class='c005'>If one turns from the women engaged in industrial
work to the servant class, then female drudgery
reaches perhaps its height among the girls
employed in bars, cafés, and similar establishments.
What physical and psychic results this work
entails can be divined from the fact that, in England,
half of all women suicides are such waitresses
under 30 years of age. That family servant girls
are allowed to sleep in closets and to work far
beyond the present customary factory time; that
in the class of saleswomen, especially in cigar
shops, the longest working hours together with
the most paltry starvation wages are found—all
this, as every one knows, is the fundamental reason
why the path is so short from all these occupations
to the lowest—to prostitution. The servant girl
corrupted by the master of the house, the half-starved,
overworked shop girl, the night-watching
<span class='pageno' id='Page_40'>40</span>cigar worker, and many, many others are found here
as sacrifices of a shameless exploitation. Herewith
we stand before that “woman question” in which
both elementary instincts have united for that
captivity of woman from which the woman movement
has found no means of emancipation; against
which the means sought in these and other quarters
prove fruitless. For only a radical transformation
of society and sexual ethics can here provide a
remedy.</p>
<hr class='c008' />
<p class='c005'>Every one in face of these facts, touched upon
thus superficially, must be astounded that women
could oppose laws for the protection of women.
Fortunately these progress-impeding emancipation
women had no influence when, in England and
other countries, certain night work began to be
prohibited to women, their working hours limited,
certain employments barred out, and a time of rest
assured to the woman recently confined. Still
very small steps only, but in the right direction.
At the same time the organisation of working
women advances so that by labour unions and
strikes here and there they have succeeded in enforcing
better wages, shorter working hours, and
better labour conditions. And so long as the
woman movement of the upper classes has no
solidarity with that of the lower, the female factory
inspector can accomplish very little, as a result of
the fear of the working women to give facts and
<span class='pageno' id='Page_41'>41</span>the adroitness of the employers in veiling these.
But if women of the upper class begin to compete
with the slave-driving, sweat-system employers
through <em>well-organised co-operative enterprises</em>,
especially for the revival of artistic handwork,
whereby a profitable work is made for mothers
at home under good working conditions; and if
they boycott all shops where the working hours
of the women exceed the due measure, while their
wages are below the standard; then the woman
movement would be able to hasten certain reforms
in the field of industry, just as so many
mistresses of girls’ private schools have hastened
the reform of public schools: they simply availed
themselves of the improvements arising from
feminine initiative.</p>
<hr class='c008' />
<p class='c005'>The married woman as family provider beside
the man, often also in place of the man, but always
however <em>subservient to the man’s dominion</em>—this is
the worst form of woman slavery our time has
created. The woman movement purposes indeed
to make the wife “of age,” in every respect, and
free from the husband’s guardianship. But within
the woman movement all are not yet entirely
agreed that <em>the work of the mother outside the home</em>
in and for itself is an evil. Attempts are indeed
being made to alter the conditions which are most
to blame for the deterioration of mothers and
children. But a large faction in the woman movement
<span class='pageno' id='Page_42'>42</span>wishes still, as was said, to cling to the
<em>immediately</em> remunerative work of the mother and
remedy the resulting lack of home by social institutions
for care of children, housekeeping, etc.</p>
<p class='c005'>On this side, the following arguments are heard:
woman becomes free only when she can wholly support
herself and can devote herself to her work
unhampered by duties toward husband and children;
only through the reciprocal social obligation
of work and the complete individual freedom of
both sexes can the present conflicts between the
labour of man and woman, between individual
happiness and the common weal, finally cease.</p>
<p class='c005'>Like every canalisation or drainage of the
mighty river system of the life of human feeling,
this program is direct and conclusive. One may
easily understand that masculine brains, dominated
by a passion for logic, could devise it; but if
we hear it advocated by multitudes of women,
then we recognise how harassed by the fourfold
burden of family provider, child bearer, child educator,
and housekeeper the poor women must
be who can smilingly assent to the foregoing
picture of the future.</p>
<p class='c005'>And yet there is another possible ideal of the
future which can be realised as soon as production
is determined, no longer by private capitalistic
interests, but by social-political interests. Women
will then be employed in industrial fields of work
where their powers are <em>as productive as possible</em>
with the least possible loss in time and strength;
<span class='pageno' id='Page_43'>43</span>above all in those fields where the work requires
no <em>long</em> preparation and the dexterity does not
suffer by <em>interruptions</em>. Before the years in which
the <em>occupation is motherhood</em>, and after these years,
woman can still be always remunerated by an
economic wage; during the years on the contrary
in which motherhood is the vocation, she can be
remunerated <em>by the state</em>. It is only necessary that
women and men <em>will</em> a new order whereby in the
future we attain the following conditions:</p>
<p class='c005'>A <em>Society</em>, in which the welfare of the new generation
is the centre to which all social-political
plans, at heart, are aiming.</p>
<p class='c005'><em>Children</em> born of parents whose souls and bodies
are qualified and prepared for a worthy parenthood
and who can thus create for their children sound
and beautiful conditions of life.</p>
<p class='c005'><em>Mothers</em> won back to the husbands, the children,
the homes, but under such circumstances that <em>as
free human personalities they perform the most
important work of society</em>: the bearing and rearing
of children.</p>
<p class='c005'><em>Fathers</em> with time and leisure to share with the
mothers the task of education and to share with
them and the children the joys of the home life, as
well as of the remainder of existence.</p>
<p class='c005'>This ideal of the future state takes in my imagination
the form of a varied Italian garden with
a wide outlook upon the great sea. The other
ideal of the future, on the contrary, is to me like
a coal mine wherein all spiritual and social
<span class='pageno' id='Page_44'>44</span>vegetation is petrified so that it now serves only
as motive-power for machines.</p>
<hr class='c008' />
<p class='c005'>Nothing more effectively proves how rife with
reactions—and for that reason how hidden—is
the power of development, than to realise that the
unorganized, inorganic socialistic ideal of the
future, just mentioned, is the logical sequence of
the woman movement if one draws the extreme
conclusion from its fundamental idea—the right
of woman to individual, free development of her
powers. It is consistent historically that in
America, where the movement for the right and
freedom of woman has been most widely successful,
many middle-class women have resolutely drawn
these extreme conclusions of emancipation. Quite
as psychologically logical is it, that at a time when
the uncomplicated soul life and life demands of the
masses still form the most important factors in
the shaping of the ideal of the future, the socialistic
women, from their different point of view,
have arrived at like ideals. But fortunately there
are in women, as in the masses, still great tracts
of “new ground” where new soul conditions will
germinate, and in due time, new ideals will flower.
Groups of men can at times forget mankind in
dwelling upon themselves. But mankind in its
entirety has never yet lost the instinct for the conditions
of self-preservation and the higher development
of the race. I will come back later to the
<span class='pageno' id='Page_45'>45</span>psychological phase of the question. I touch upon
it here only as the social program of the future.</p>
<hr class='c008' />
<p class='c005'>A new field which the woman movement has
opened up to woman is the scientific field. For
the fact that as early as the Renaissance some
Italian women occupied chairs of academic instruction,
that in the 17th and 18th centuries some
women devoted themselves seriously to classic
studies or the exact sciences—all that was only
exceptional. And the women who since the beginning
of the woman movement have distinguished
themselves by great services in science are still
exceptional. But in many places, sometimes as
assistants of their husbands or of other men,
women now perform good scientific work in different
lines. Many women are also active in the
sphere of invention, without a single woman’s
name having been thus far connected with an
<em>epoch-making</em> invention.</p>
<p class='c005'>Especially where constructive ability is necessary,
women have as yet not been eminent; they
have created neither a philosophical system nor a
new religion, neither a great musical work nor a
monumental building, neither a classic drama nor
an epic. On the other hand, the exact sciences,
which would be considered a priori as little
adapted to women, for example mathematics,
astronomy, and physics, are exactly those in
which thus far they have most distinguished
<span class='pageno' id='Page_46'>46</span>themselves. This contains a warning against
too precipitate conclusions about the intellectual
life of woman. Not until several generations of
women—with the same privileges of education
as man, with the same encouragement from home
and society—have exercised their faculty for discovery
and their inventive and creative faculties
can we really know whether the present inferiority
of woman in this respect is a provision of nature
or not; whether her genius was only hampered in
its expression or whether, as I believe, it is ordinarily
of a different kind from that of man.</p>
<p class='c005'>In art there are several fields which the woman
movement did not need to open for the first time
to woman: dramatic art, music, and the dance.
Indirectly, however, the woman movement has
transformed the position of women occupied in
these lines by increasing the respect for all good
work of woman and raising the requirements
for woman’s education in general. The woman
movement has also exercised an immediate influence
upon certain artists of the present time.
Thus Eleanora Duse said to me that her most
cherished desire has been to represent and interpret
the new types of women, although the dramatists
of to-day have rarely given her the material
she desired wherewith to create characters by which
she could reveal the soul of the new woman and
elevate man’s, as well as woman’s own, ideal of
woman.</p>
<p class='c005'>In the dance, women have been, especially in
<span class='pageno' id='Page_47'>47</span>America, creative in connection with its forms and
have been thereby also revelations of the new
spiritual life of woman which has found expression
in these forms. Great women singers, through
Wagner’s operas and ballad-singing, have given
voice to the primeval yearning of the woman soul,
as that yearning now assumes form in the new
woman. And in interpretations at the hands of
great pianists or violinists, not one classic musical
work failed to furnish similar revelations.</p>
<p class='c005'>The very finest effects of the woman movement—mere
shades of feeling which cannot be
enumerated nor discussed—have reached our
present time through lines, movement, rhythm,
cadence, through the timbre of a voice, the gesture
of a hand, the glance of an eye, the tone of
a violin. And these effects have been secured
without any disturbance of the receptivity by
strife over the precedence of woman or of man.
In other spheres, susceptibility to the effects of art
creations by woman is still often dulled by this
strife. In the above named fields, long before the
beginning of the woman movement, conscious of
its purpose, women without arguments have convinced
the world of the complete equality of
woman with man. And all these women, conquering
through beauty in one form or another,
have done more for the woman movement than it
has done for them. Certainly the woman movement
both directly and indirectly has had its share
in opening to women musical as well as other art
<span class='pageno' id='Page_48'>48</span>academies and schools of applied arts, but
academies have a doubtful value and the smaller
the value, the more gifted the student. The new
right has thus become dangerous to the independence
of real gifts and, with all possibilities
of education thus opened wide, there comes a
temptation for fancied talents to pass beyond
their bounds. This danger, as far as the plastic
arts are concerned, has found more and more its
counterpoise in the schools of applied art, by
which many women have been directed to the
decorative professions, from house and garden
architecture to fashion designing and holiday
decorations.</p>
<p class='c005'>But in the field of the applied arts, as well as of
the plastic arts and of music, the facility afforded
by the modern conditions of training and of public
careers has instigated many women, who before
had exercised their little talent only for the pleasure
of the home or society circles, to exhibit and
appear publicly to the detriment both of the home
circles and, alas, also of art!</p>
<p class='c005'>The works of art by women, which humanity
could not lose without really becoming poorer,
have been created, thus far, neither in the sphere
of music nor of plastic art; they all belong to literature.
And this sphere the woman movement
has not opened to woman; ever since the days of
Sappho and of Corinna, women have attained fame
as writers.</p>
<p class='c005'>In letters and memoirs not originally designed
<span class='pageno' id='Page_49'>49</span>for publication, next to that in the field of romance
and the novel, occasionally also in the lyric, the
feminine character has found thus far its fullest
and finest expression. In all these fields women
have produced works which have been placed by
men, not it is true beside the <em>greatest</em> works of
masculine genius in the same domain, yet beside
eminent works of men. As intermediary of the
works of others, woman has not in our time, as in the
period of enlightenment or in the circle of Goethe,
her greatest significance through conversations and
letters but through the printing-press. The modern
woman, however, as essayist and biographer, as
translator and collector, is a valuable intermediary
of culture. She is also unfortunately a menace to
culture, not so much because of the inferior works
which she produces, for these, like the similar works
of men, soon sink into oblivion. The real danger
lies in the fact that women in great multitudes
increase the number of those journalists who lack
intellectual as well as ethical culture, which should
be an imperative condition in that field of work.
But this profession is now, on the contrary, the one
into which the amateur may most easily force
an entrance without special training and without
professional reputation. The result is that men
and women who lack both can pull down, in their
journals, the real work and essential character of
serious people, without the remotest conception
or the faintest comprehension of either. On the
other hand these cliques of coffee-house people
<span class='pageno' id='Page_50'>50</span>crown one another as kings and queens—for a day!
The press-breed carries on in leaflets its flirtation as
well as its vengeance. The knife which the child
of nature thrusts into a rival’s breast is now transformed
into the pen with which the reviewer stabs
a competitor’s latest work. In a word women
now furnish to the Press work, occasionally excellent,
frequently mediocre, all too often worthless.
Their womanly characteristics make it feasible
more frequently for them than for men to adopt
more completely the rituals of the temple service
of the deity of the Press—the Public. This
“womanliness” evinces itself, especially, in the
ability “to grip the fleeting moment by its fluttering
locks” and also to anticipate when that
moment’s locks are false and so the grasp prove
profitless.</p>
<p class='c005'>While hosts of women have turned to journalism,
they are seldom found in the fields to which
the woman movement should have directed them:
in the field of sociological and psychological
research. Nearly all significant works upon the
normal, the abnormal, the criminal psychic life
of children, young people and women have been
written by men. They have unfortunately treated
the feminine spiritual life in “scientific” works
also, in which the author dares speak of “woman”
even though he knows nothing of her except what
his own happy or unhappy experiences in a mother
or sister, wife or sweetheart, have taught him.</p>
<p class='c005'>The slight title of men to their “scientific
<span class='pageno' id='Page_51'>51</span>method” when they venture upon the terra incognita
which the soul of woman still is for them,
explains why they extol, as “scientific,” works of
women about women which are quite as superficial
as those of men themselves. With a few exceptions,
it is not the physiological-psychological
books written by women about women which have
really taught the present something new about
womankind in general and the new woman in
particular. No, in the form of romances, of lyrics
or in voluntary confessions, woman has contributed
the most valuable documents about her sex:
on the one hand those which indicate the transformations
which the woman movement has occasioned
in woman’s nature, on the other hand those
which demonstrate the extent to which her fundamental
nature has remained unchanged, even
though this elementary material exhibits many
more facets in the modern woman than in the
woman of any previous time; facets resulting from
the manifold contacts and frictions with life to
which woman now exposes herself or is exposed.</p>
<p class='c005'>From a literary point of view, these books of
confession have seldom a value which could be
compared with that of the, in outer sense, objective,
classic works which talented women writers
of the present have produced. Often, however, one
of these confessions, in which the writer has candidly
given her own history, has been of real literary
value. But even when the works contain
mendacities and self-extenuations, crass injustice
<span class='pageno' id='Page_52'>52</span>toward men or toward other women, as revelations
of the modern woman soul they are more valuable
for the future than the clarified, artistically perfect
works of women, mentioned above. For the truth
about woman in the century of the woman is found
only in the impassioned books in which the hard
struggles for freedom, work, right, or fame are
recited; or in those works impassioned in another
way, in which the soul or the blood or both cry out
their yearning, ever unappeased, in spite of freedom
and work, right and fame. What we may
<em>to-day</em> rightly protest against in these books is
their recklessness which may <em>in the future</em> be regarded
as their greatest value.</p>
<p class='c005'>Because, up to the present time, the most exquisite
as well as the most horrifying women characters
in literature have been created by men, many
men think that they understand women better
than women do themselves. And to this extent
men are right—that women attain their most sublime
heights and reach their deepest degradation
in and through love. But aside from that, women
have a much clearer insight and, for that reason,
a much more intelligent idea of one another than
man has of woman. When accordingly a woman
speaks not only of herself but also of another woman—sometimes
also of children—we feel already
that “the eternal feminine” (<i><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">das Ewig-Weibliche</span></i>)
in literature can create a feminine art, in
the best meaning of the word. For the present
we hope, and with good reason, that art as well as
<span class='pageno' id='Page_53'>53</span>science will not appear as either masculine or feminine
but reveal a complete human personality.
But this does not mean that this personality has
fused the masculine and feminine qualities into a
common humanity and thus enervated it. No, it
means that, in such a being, masculine and feminine
traits exist side by side and assert themselves
alternately or harmoniously in all their strength.
In the rank of talent, one may find feminine men
and masculine women; in that of genius, never.
There each one guards fully and completely the
character of his own sex in addition to the finest
attributes of the other sex. The distinctively
masculine or distinctively feminine attributes
characterising an <em>earlier</em> culture epoch are on the
contrary often lacking in these greatest men and
women of their time. In other words they lack
exactly those attributes, hyper-masculine or hyper-feminine,
by which men and women, not abreast
of the times in their development, please each
other and the masses, in literature as well as in
life.</p>
<p class='c005'>In the woman-literature, directly evoked by the
woman movement, we can read the whole gamut
of the feminine nature, from the feminine in the
highest sense to the feminine in the worst sense.
This literature shows how unthinkingly and defenceless
certain women have plunged into the
struggle, how rationally and well equipped other
women have fought it out. The impartiality
of this judgment can be proven by the admission
<span class='pageno' id='Page_54'>54</span>that in the first-named class I have not infrequently
found adherents; in the latter class, opponents.</p>
<p class='c005'>The woman movement itself, partly in lectures
and in literary activity, partly by means of office-routine
and work of organisation, has become a
new <em>field of labour</em> for women. Even in this field
it is found that many are called but few are chosen.
But when—except after defeat—was an army
ever seen without baggage?</p>
<hr class='c008' />
<p class='c005'>In the field of <em>family right</em>, the woman movement
has achieved, directly and indirectly, great improvements
in the legal position of the <em>unmarried</em>
woman. The nearest proof is my own country.
This has, within a period of from seventy to
eighty years, granted to the sister the same right of
inheritance as to the brother; declared the unmarried
woman at her majority at the same age as
man, a majority which was also expanded later
through the suspension of the right of guardianship
on the part of the husband, existing for
married women. The marriageable age of woman
was postponed to 17 years. Gradually woman
has been placed on an equality with man to carry
on trade and industry; she has acquired the right
to hold certain public offices, although many still
remain closed to her. The married woman on the
contrary is still always a minor; if no marriage
settlement is made the husband has the right to
dispose of the wife’s property; he has control of
<span class='pageno' id='Page_55'>55</span>their common possessions; he can restrict her
freedom of work; he has authority over the children.
A few small progressive steps may nevertheless
be pointed out: certain reinforcements of
the effectiveness of the marriage contract; the
right to her wages accorded to the wife; certain
reforms in regard to the division of property and
divorce; some improvements in the position of
children born out of wedlock. In other countries
also like reforms have been accomplished, directly,
through masculine initiative; indirectly, through
the influence of the woman movement. But
everywhere family right is still founded upon the
principles of paternal right, supremacy of the
husband over the wife, indissolubility of marriage
or solubility under greater or less difficulties.</p>
<p class='c005'>In regard to citizenship I draw my examples also
from the land I know best. In Sweden, women
have long since participated in the choice of pastor;
for about fifty years they have possessed municipal
franchise; later in certain cases they have attained
also municipal eligibility, for example, to the
school board, board of charities, and now finally
to the town council. Still others could be cited.
In other countries women have sometimes more
sometimes less civic right; only in a few countries
have they won <em>political</em> franchise; in a single one,
Finland, also political eligibility.</p>
<p class='c005'>In the sphere of family right, as well as civic
right, the woman movement has then much more
remaining to conquer than it has thus far won.
<span class='pageno' id='Page_56'>56</span>But I am convinced that the little girls I see down
below in the garden playing “mother and child”
will possess all the rights due the wife, the mother,
and the citizen.</p>
<p class='c005'>The woman movement, in its present form, has
accomplished its task if it has procured for every
woman the <em>legal</em> right to develop and practise her
individual characteristics unhindered because of
her sex. But after this emancipation of the
woman as a <em>human being</em> and a citizen, there
remains her emancipation as a <em>woman</em>. And here
no transformation of forms of thought and feeling,
of manners and customs, attainable by any legal
provisions or paragraphs, avail. The present
woman movement has created and still continues
to create the social <em>conditions</em> for this last emancipation.
But it will not approve such far extending
results of its own work. It desires the same
<em>rights</em> but also the same duties for all women. If a
single woman uses the freedom, which the woman
movement has procured for her as a member of
society, to fashion her individual life according to
the deepest demands of her being, then the old
guard trembles before the outcome of the battle
for freedom in which it fought so valiantly.</p>
<p class='c005'>But nothing is more certain than that the feminine
personality, whether her innermost desire be
spiritual creative instinct, erotic happiness, maternal
bliss, or universal human goodness, will acquire
ever new forms of expression: forms of expression
which the once liberal, now more conservative feminists
<span class='pageno' id='Page_57'>57</span>and the modern socialistic feminists partly
do not divine and partly—divining—deplore! For
the present even the “emancipated” woman follows
as a rule the paths which social custom has
marked out for her sex, as well as the cultural ideas
which have been, thus far, those of man. But if,
in the coming thousand years, a <em>feminine</em> culture
shall really supplement the masculine, then this
will be exactly in the measure in which women
have the courage to create and to act as most
feminists now do not even dare think. Then it
will be evident that <em>all</em> social movements of the
present time, especially the woman movement and
socialism, are only the work of the path finder for
the masculine and feminine superman or, if you
prefer the older expression, <em>complete man</em>.</p>
<p class='c005'>Like other “old guards,” the veterans of feminism
will not surrender but will fall upon the field
of battle. The little girls there below will one day
celebrate their memory. For through their struggles
the way became free for youth, the way which
leads out to the wide sea where perhaps shipwreck
awaits the one who ventures out into the darkness
with her fragile skiff. But many will brave the
voyage and bide their fate, strong, proud, and
composed as the maiden in Schwind’s <cite><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Wasserfahrt</span></cite>—that
splendid symbol of the woman of the future.</p>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_58'>58</span>
<h2 class='c006'>CHAPTER II<br/> <span class='large'>THE INNER RESULTS OF THE WOMAN MOVEMENT</span></h2></div>
<p class='c007'>If I now start out to consider the woman soul
as it has developed itself under the influence of all
the circumstances mentioned above, perhaps many
will expect a theory about the character of the
feminine soul life. But, at present, when the
greatest problems of psychology are in revolution
and undecided, such a theory would be as scientifically
impossible as aphorisms are unanswerable.
Likewise, conclusions, based upon experience,
concerning the psychic peculiarity of woman would
be in this chaotic transition period, superficial, if
they attempted to be absolute. Only <em>one</em> decided
opinion about the spiritual life of woman I cannot—in
consequence of my monistic-evolutionary
conception of the spiritual and physical life—refrain
from expressing. This opinion is that, in
the one hundred thousand years at least in which
woman has practised the physical maternal functions,
the spiritual attributes <em>essential</em> for motherhood
must have been so strongly developed by
her that this development has had, and still has
always, as a result a pronounced difference between
<span class='pageno' id='Page_59'>59</span>the feminine and masculine soul—that
is to say, everywhere where the soul, as well as
the body of a woman, is adapted and desirous of
motherhood—a fitness and readiness which can
still be called the <em>normal</em> condition. The spiritual
qualities which maternity required have become
the attributes of “womanliness,” the qualities
which paternity required, have become the attributes
of “manliness.” This difference has become
quite as significant for the functional fitness of
both sexes for the perpetuation and development
of the race, as for the wealth of life of each new
generation. The obliteration or retention of this
difference is therefore a vital question for mankind.</p>
<p class='c005'>Figuratively expressed, this seems to me the
process: from a common root of universal human
spiritual life issue two stems which can again unite
in their blossoming. The ramification has necessarily
involved a division of labour in two equally
important spheres. From this point of view I
give, in the following, my opinion of the value of
the influence of the woman movement upon the
spiritual life of woman.</p>
<p class='c005'>We all know that life expresses itself as movement,
that movement brings with it change,
transformation; that this can mean quite as well
disintegration as higher organisation.</p>
<p class='c005'>The woman movement is the most significant of
all movements for freedom in the world’s history.
The question whether this movement leads mankind
in a higher or lower direction is the most
<span class='pageno' id='Page_60'>60</span>serious question of the time. Those who assert
unconditionally the former or the latter have
uttered a premature judgment. The question
must be formulated thus:</p>
<p class='c005'>(<em>a</em>) Has the woman movement brought to mankind
a higher degree of vital force, a greater faculty
for self-preservation, a more complete organisation,
by which the more simple forms have become
more finely complex, the more uniform have
become richer, more diverse; the incoherent have
attained a more perfect unity? Or has the woman
movement called forth an activity which represses
life? degrades, scatters, and reduces the powers to
uniformity, in society and in mankind?</p>
<p class='c005'>(<em>b</em>) Is woman’s spiritual life now in general above
the level at which it was in the beginning of the
woman movement? Have modern women finer
perceptions, deeper feelings, clearer ideas, a firmer
will, richer association of ideas? Do their spiritual
faculties so work together that they mutually
enhance instead of hinder one another? In a
word is the modern woman more soulful than the
woman of any other time?</p>
<p class='c005'>(<em>c</em>) Is the body of the modern woman, at all
stages of life, stronger, more healthy, and more
beautiful than that of the woman of the previous
century, when the woman movement began in
real earnest in Europe?</p>
<p class='c005'>(<em>d</em>) Does the modern woman perform in more
perfect manner than the woman of that time, the
physical and psychic functions of motherhood?</p>
<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_61'>61</span>If the question be put thus then the <em>objective</em>
investigator must answer to all—“<em>Yes and
No</em>.”</p>
<p class='c005'>But if this investigator is an evolutionist, then
he knows that the progress of every social evolution
is like that which womankind is now experiencing.
We see first, how, in any given sphere of society,
where those engaged therein have attained a pure,
instinctive certainty in their actions through laws
and customs, the individuals oppressed by these
laws and customs must rebel against the limits,
drawn from without, for the development and
exercise of their powers. This revolt occasions at
first a stage of anarchy in which everything seems
to collapse—while in the previous conserving epoch
“crystallisation” furnished the vital danger! But
after such an anarchistic stage there comes infallibly
the constructive stage, where <em>a part of the old
is organised, incorporated, into the new</em>. But this
acts no longer as instinctive impulse. No, mankind
has become conscious anew of these values
of law and custom; they have been recognised by
the thought, encompassed by feeling, sanctioned
by the will as still always indispensable, in another
and higher form it is true than that against which
the individuals rebelled. But just as the leaves
which once grew green above in the summer light,
gradually become one with the earth, so the motives
of the new customs sink gradually down into the
unknown; man acts again with instinctive certainty
and uniformity—until the new period of
<span class='pageno' id='Page_62'>62</span>stagnation evokes a new rebellion and achievement
of individualism.</p>
<p class='c005'>The woman movement finds itself now at a
point where it is about to pass from the dynamic
stage to a static stage. Exactly at this point a
survey begins to be possible; and it is also necessary
for every one who believes that the ideal, as well as
the practical direction of the woman movement,
in future, must be influenced by the knowledge
gained about the effect of the movement, thus far,
upon the uplifting of the life of mankind.</p>
<p class='c005'>Every great achievement of individualism is as
inconsiderate as the spring tide and must be, in
order to have strength for its task. The woman
movement was so also. But it encountered two
other great ideas of the time, Socialism and Evolutionism,
and in consequence the woman movement
was obliged to modify gradually its conception of
the feminine individual and of her position in
existence.</p>
<p class='c005'>On the one hand, as has been already shown,
man has had to understand that “open competition”
and “individual initiative” are not absolute
political-economic truths. On the other
hand, the defender of women’s rights has been
forced to understand more and more that woman’s
soul is no unchangeable value which must remain
the same however much the spheres have changed
toward which this spiritual life directed itself and
from which it received its impression. While
feminists fifty years ago scorned the objection
<span class='pageno' id='Page_63'>63</span>that “womanliness” would be lost in business life
or in politics, now the evolutionist mind in thinking
women understands that all human soul life
is subject to the law of change; that just as indisputably
as the soul life of man is changed by
different vocations and surroundings, so that of
woman also must be changed. The feminists
founded their dogma that the woman movement
can <em>only benefit</em> woman, man, the child, the family,
society, mankind upon the conviction of the
<em>stability</em> of “true womanliness.”</p>
<p class='c005'>And if the woman movement had not had this
religious certainty of belief, how could it have
withstood the mass of prejudice and stupidity
which it encountered in its own, as well as in the
other sex? The woman movement has conquered
because it was self-intoxicated.</p>
<p class='c005'>And quite naturally! After a stability of centuries,
during which the position of woman was
altered only in and with the general progress of
culture, women finally recognised that they could
accelerate their own progress and with it also the
somewhat snail-like course of universal human
culture. And so woman asserted herself and
increased her motion. The faster this movement
became, the more was she seized by the
intoxication which always accompanies every
vigorous physical or psychic movement. And
when has a movement of the time advanced more
rapidly?</p>
<p class='c005'>Folk-migrations, crusades, slave rebellions, revolutions
<span class='pageno' id='Page_64'>64</span>have led a race, a class, a group, beyond
certain geographical or social boundaries. The
emancipation of women has shifted and extended
the limits of the freedom of movement of <em>half
mankind</em>. No wonder that the extent of the movement
<em>in and for itself</em> was advanced as proof of the
infallibility of its direction. All points of departure,
the natural right of man, individual freedom,
social necessity—all led out into the sun, which,
in society as in nature, should radiate over woman
as well as over man; they led up onto the summit
where man and woman both should breathe the
air of the heights. All obstacles which were raised
with the help of arguments such as, “the nature
of woman,” “the welfare of the family,” “the idea
of society,” “the purpose of God”—all proved
temporary. And of necessity—for the innermost
law of life, the law of development, of life enhancement,
carried the movement forward. When it
began, the Biblical expression about the wind was
quoted, “Man knows not whence it comes nor
whither it goes.” Now all know it. Now the
spirit of the time speaks with “feminist” voice.
The ideas of emancipation “are in the air,” like
bacilli, by which only savages are thus far wholly
untouched.</p>
<p class='c005'>There are now no great movements of the time
whose path does not run parallel with or cut across
the woman movement. Every new generation is
involuntarily and unconsciously drawn along with
it. The ends already attained seem to the present
<span class='pageno' id='Page_65'>65</span>age obvious; the ends, for which man is still struggling
to-day, will appear equally obvious to the
future. The woman movement is now a power
with which even its most bitter adversaries must
reckon. And this force has so quickly attained
prominence exactly as a result of fanaticism. Just
as the White and the Blue Nile mingle their waters
in the main stream, so in every great current of
time enthusiasm is mingled with fanaticism. And
it is the latter which bears the most fruit, for
it gives power of growth to the passions of the
majority, good as well as bad.</p>
<p class='c005'>Every great idea begins with great promulgators.
The promulgator who has the spirit does not hold
to the letter. And the woman movement which
was spirit began also with women and men who did
not follow the call of the spirit of the time; no, who
from lonely heights sent out their awakening call
<em>to</em> the time. Men who give their age new ideals
have always religious natures. This means, according
to a good definition, that they are “individualists
in their being, social in their action.”</p>
<p class='c005'>Such natures burn, above all, with the passion
to find themselves. Then they burn with the
passion to sacrifice themselves in order to help
others, whose suffering or wrongs they feel as
deeply as if they were their own. No one who
passively endures an injustice against himself has
the material in him to struggle for the rights of
others. The one who patiently forbears becomes
an accessory to the injustice done to others. He
<span class='pageno' id='Page_66'>66</span>who resists the injustice which he himself meets
can open up the way to a higher right for others.
Such path-finders were the first apostles of the
emancipation of women. They consecrated to
this task a faith which required no proof, a faith
which saw visions and heard melodies of the glorious
future that their victory would prepare for
mankind. They emanated neither from scientific
investigations, nor from systems of political economy,
nor from philosophic evidence, nor theories
of political science. They flung themselves into
the struggle with inadequate weapons, without
plan of campaign, just as do all impelled by the
spirit. But such a method always evokes later
dissension among the disciples. Sects are formed,
gradually a church is crystallised, an orthodoxy, a
papacy, and an inquisition. This course is physically
necessary as long as mankind is still in
greatest part a mass. A Paul more “Christian”
than Christ and a Luther more “Paulist” than
Paul are met also in the woman movement.</p>
<p class='c005'>This has now, among most people of culture,
passed beyond the stage of the great apostles and
martyrs and heralds. The movement has reached
the point where certain typical manifestations,
certain conventional forms testify that the masses—which
stoned the prophets—have now, since the
ideas of the woman movement have become
truisms, banalities, the fashion, appropriated them
to themselves and endeavour to transform them to
their image and adapt them to their needs.</p>
<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_67'>67</span>Again and again the old tale repeats itself: the
trolls steal the weapons of the gods but they cannot
use them. Again and again there is occasion
to deplore the fact that the autocrat of genius,
whether he rule over a people or a kingdom of
ideas, has heirs, heirs who diminish his work.
Again and again it must be recognised that no
spiritual formation vanishes at one blow. The
servile mind, intrigue, pettiness, delusion—all
that, from which the great spirits of the woman
movement hoped to “emancipate” woman—could
not suddenly vanish out of the world. And since
all this must go somewhere it finally finds room
in the woman movement itself!</p>
<p class='c005'>But on the other side—since after all everything
has another side—it must be admitted that the
levelling and conserving tendency of the average
person is of real value at the stage <em>when an idea
begins to be transformed into law and custom</em>.</p>
<p class='c005'>Those who can work only in crowds receive
their significance <em>exactly because of their collective
work</em>. They push aside the “individual emancipation”
which they do not need for their own part,
since they have no individuality to emancipate.
But by diligent and efficient work they succeed in
securing certain results, which are the common
cause of all. So the Philistines make for themselves
a footstool of that which was a stumbling-block
for their congenial souls in the previous
generation. From this height they look down
upon the new truth of <em>their</em> time. And those who
<span class='pageno' id='Page_68'>68</span>perceive and uphold this new truth turn aside from
the great uniformed army which now advances
safely where the little vanguard has previously
and laboriously opened up the way. Those who
turn aside will form the new vanguard when it
comes to achieving, in the spirit of the first apostle,
the emancipation not only of <em>women in the mass</em>,
but of <em>each individual woman</em>. When the present
work of the woman movement for joint, common
ends shall no longer be necessary, because one end
after another has been attained, then comes the
task of the present “radical” feminism: the accomplishment
of “emancipation” by leading it up to
those free heights which already the path-finders
are endeavouring to attain, the heights where every
feminine individuality can choose her own path of
life, perhaps at variance with all others; can choose
it in freedom, answerable only to her own conscience.
Although this summary grouping historically
as well as psychologically corresponds
approximately to the past, present, and future of
the woman movement, yet there are so many
ramifications of the three groups into one another,
that the woman movement now exhibits a tangled
confusion in which every exact demarcation is
impossible.</p>
<p class='c005'>Whoever lives to witness it will see the course
of progress just described—for which the modern
labour movement offers quite as good material
for observation as the woman movement—repeat
itself in the next great emancipation movement.
<span class='pageno' id='Page_69'>69</span>I mean the movement for the right and freedom of
the <em>child</em>, which will be the unconditional result
of the victory of the woman and labour movements.
This idea is still in the morning-clear
hour of inspiration. But from the cry, “Away
with the child destroying home training,” we can
hear that the troop of Philistines will appear by
afternoon upon the scene, to adopt the idea into
their midst!</p>
<p class='c005'>By means of the comparison with socialism, I
have endeavoured to emphasise that the woman
movement’s formation of dogmas and its doctrinary
fanaticism are not effects of the peculiarity of
the <em>feminine</em> mind. These phenomena are typical
of every movement of the time thus far observed.
They are essential above all because a new belief
without dogma and without ritual is for the masses
a sword without a hilt: it offers nothing tangible,
nothing whereby the masses can come into relation
with the idea.</p>
<p class='c005'>That certain feminists still believe that the
woman movement has advanced just as the exodus
of the Children of Israel out of the land of bondage,
that is to say, under God’s special protection
against wandering astray; that they stigmatise as
“treason” and “defection” the assertion that this
movement was determined by the same psychological
and sociological laws as every other movement
for freedom—this shows to how high a degree
many leaders of the woman movement lack
elementary psychological and sociological conceptions.
<span class='pageno' id='Page_70'>70</span>This deficiency is, however, being continually
remedied. And in the generation which
now advances, dogmatic fanaticism has well nigh
vanished, but pure enthusiasm is preserved.</p>
<p class='c005'>We can thus expect from this generation a
clearer understanding of the necessary <em>social</em>
repressions which the woman movement has now
sufficient strength to impose upon itself without
forfeiting thereby its character of a <em>movement for
freedom</em>. As such it cannot and dare not cease
until it has attained <em>all</em> its ends. As long as the
law treats women as one race, men as another,
<em>there is a woman question</em>. Not until man and
woman, equal and united, work together for
mankind will the woman movement belong to
the past.</p>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_71'>71</span>
<h2 class='c006'>CHAPTER III<br/> <span class='large'>THE INFLUENCE OF THE WOMAN QUESTION UPON SINGLE WOMEN</span></h2></div>
<p class='c007'>The following comparisons between the life of
women, especially their spiritual life of about
fifty years ago and their life as it has shaped itself
under the influence of the woman movement, have
been arranged in <em>descending</em> scale. They begin
with that phase of women’s life in which this
influence was most favourable from the point of
view of life enhancement, namely with the life
of <em>unmarried</em> women.</p>
<p class='c005'>You will find to-day, among women seventy
or eighty years of age, one or another type of
that fine culture which the gifted single woman,
in comfortable circumstances, could attain in the
previous century. Her home, especially if it was
an estate in the country, became a cultural fireside
which radiated light and heat for relatives and
friends. The lesser gifted disseminated, each
according to her nature, comfort or discomfort,
yet could in extremity at least be sure of the
homage of their future heirs. Toward those
dependent upon them, these women were sometimes
<span class='pageno' id='Page_72'>72</span>kind, sometimes indifferent, sometimes hard:
the feeling of social responsibility was an unknown
idea to them. The <em>penniless</em> single women, on the
contrary, were found either in one of the “respectable”
positions which, however, brought with
them a multitude of humiliations: as governess,
companion, housekeeper—in Germany also as
maid of honour at one of the numerous small
courts—or in some charitable institution for gentle
folks, an asylum for <em>pauvres honteuses</em>; but
most frequently in the corner of the home of a
relative. This corner was at times the warmest
and most confidential in the whole house, that
corner which the children sought for stories and
sweetmeats; the youth, to find an embrace in
which he could pour forth his grief, an ear which
listened to his most beautiful dreams. But it
happened more frequently that the “aunt” looked
upon as a “necessary evil” was in reality that very
thing. Humiliated and embittered, she became
ingenious in making those about her suffer for her
afflictions. Before they became hopelessly old,
the “aunts” were the laughing stock of the young
through their efforts, in the eleventh hour, to
reach the “peaceful haven of matrimony”; and
they themselves looked with envious eyes upon
the good fortune of the young. We meet the
unmarried woman of that time at her best as
trusty servant who shared the cares, the joys, and
the sorrows of the family and, in her garret chamber,
of which she could be certain to the day of
<span class='pageno' id='Page_73'>73</span>her death, she looked back upon a rich life lived
vicariously. Not infrequently, she rejected a
marriage proposal in order to stay with her beloved
master and mistress to whom she knew she was
indispensable. The superfluous women previously
mentioned would have thrown themselves into
the arms of Beelzebub had he come as suitor.
When the years passed, when neither their desire
for activity nor the thirst of the heart nor of the
senses was quenched, then not infrequently insanity
conjured up for these lonely women a life-content
for which they had longed in vain. To-day,
however, we have for the position which the
expression, “a forsaken old maid,” betokens an
entirely new type: “the glorified spinster,” as the
joyous, active, independent unmarried woman is
called by the people among whom she first became
a reality. Among these women, independent
through their work, useful to society, that older
type is still occasionally found perhaps, a survival
of the time when emancipation was rather generally
interpreted as freedom for masculinity.
The “man-woman” in masculine attire, with
weapons of defence against man in one hand and
a cigarette in the other, her soul filled with mad
ambition for her own sex and, as representative of
her entire sex, with hatred toward the other, was
however always rare. Now, she has almost
entirely vanished, except alas, the cigarette.
But she smokes it now often with—masculine
friends! She follows in her mode of life, as in her
<span class='pageno' id='Page_74'>74</span>dress, the law of good taste—not to offend; she
endeavours, if only with a flower or two, to give a
glimmer of cosy comfort to her place of work.
This comfort, which often comes into the public
life with woman is perhaps the reason why many
men, who first looked with indignation upon feminine
fellow-workmen, would now miss them. The
more personal the culture of these women becomes,
the more they endeavour, according to their time
and means, to express their personality in the
lines and colours of their dress and in the arrangement
of their room. Those best situated often
succeed, toward the end of their working days,
in winning their own little home which they perhaps
share with a friend, or they join a co-operative
enterprise and can thus raise their standard of
living. The same women who, at twenty-five,
scornfully declared that they “would never bury
their head in a sauce-pan,” are now, at fifty, consciously
aware of the significance of the table for
the activity of the brain; indeed they are now
quite as proud if they have prepared a good dish
as they were in their youth when they passed a
fine examination!</p>
<p class='c005'>It is not to be wondered at that the emancipated
women, exactly as all recently emancipated
masculine classes and races, at first groped insecurely
after a new form. The astonishing thing,
on the contrary, is that women adapted themselves
so quickly to the new circumstances; that the
transition period furnished so few grotesque types;
<span class='pageno' id='Page_75'>75</span>that the present shows so many harmonious types,
each in her own way. This harmony of single
women is no mere form. It has its inner counterpart
in the satisfaction with their existence, an
existence in accord with their desires. The psychology
was not exhaustive which saw in feminism
only a “spinster question,” a question of the
unmarried woman, springing from the surplus of
women and the increasing difficulty or disinclination
of men to contract marriage—a question
therefore for the ugly, not for the beautiful; for
the unmarried, not for the married; for the poor,
not for the rich. For a great number of beautiful
women prefer to remain unmarried; a great number
of rich desire to work; a great number of
married women are zealous suffragists. Fifty
years ago, we saw the most clever women idealise
an ape into a god; now, the modern, intelligent
working girl, when she looks about her for her
ideal, exercises a lively criticism. She often flirts
with one who exhibits some phase of the ideal,
but she has too clear an understanding and too
much to do to <em>imagine</em> a great feeling for one who
is unworthy. So it often happens that youth has
passed without such a feeling having stirred her.
And she enters without deep regret the age when
ambition and desire for power become her life
stimulants. From these women of predominating
mind and will is formed more and more what
Ferrero calls “The third sex,” Maudsley, “The
sexless ant”: energetic, clever, happy in their
<span class='pageno' id='Page_76'>76</span>work, cool, but sound; in private life, in the zeal
of everyday work, often egoistic but willing to
make sacrifices in face of social exigencies.</p>
<p class='c005'>So a great part of the fifty-year-old women form
an exception since they with true instinct have
remained unmarried. For in the same degree
that their metallic being is well adapted to the
machinery of society, it is little qualified to make
a home for husband and children. They do not
depreciate however the value of this task, unless
they be fanatic feminists. In that event they
reproach the women who wish to marry with
“betraying the woman cause”; they demand at
times, as imperative loyalty toward this cause,
that their friends shall protest against the present
marriage laws at least by the form of their marriage
alliance if not even by not marrying at all. Their
theory of equality has at times been carried so far
that—as recently happened in France—they advocate
women’s performing also masculine military
service.</p>
<p class='c005'>But in spite of their aridity and inflexibility of
principle how much more human are even these
feminists than the “ill-natured” aunts of earlier
times who became ill-natured exactly because their
temperament was of the kind mentioned above,
but who could find no sphere of operation for their
passionate longing for activity. One or another
was perhaps burning with ambition. For there
are women as well as men who can live only as
pagan gods, in the blaze and perfume of sacrificial
<span class='pageno' id='Page_77'>77</span>fires. In their youth these ambitious natures
could be satisfied by triumphs in social life. But
later the passion became a fire in a powder cask and
occasioned incessant explosions. Now it is the
electric motive power for an activity of general
utility. The “aunts” of the earlier time who felt
themselves always overlooked and injured are most
easily recognised again in the literary and artistic
field to which daily bread or ambition now urges
many women, who endeavour to compensate by
energetic work for the talent which nature denied
them. Since these women are ordinarily not
people of understanding but of feeling, they must
in a double sense be dissatisfied with a life which in
addition is, in most cases, still filled with economic
cares and the humiliations arising therefrom. And
yet in spite of all, how much richer is their life
to-day than it would have been fifty years ago
when they would have been obliged to sit and
draw their needles through interminable pieces
of handwork, after ugly patterns and for unnecessary
uses, or to compose sentimental birthday
verses for persons whom they abominated.</p>
<p class='c005'>Yet there are always those women natures who,
in the past, had the qualifications for a real “dear
aunt,” who gently calmed the conflicts and filled
the gaps in the home of which they had become
members. The most tender and sensitive of these
modern women, who, rain or shine, year in year
out, hasten to and from a work indifferent to them
at heart, not infrequently breathe a sigh of longing
<span class='pageno' id='Page_78'>78</span>for those times when, as “aunts,” they could have
received and imparted warmth in a home. But
then again there come moments when they know
how to value the independence which puts them
in a position to give help where otherwise there
would be none; when for example they can send
a nephew to college, or a friend to a sanatarium, or
provide their mother with a nurse, which they
themselves can not be.</p>
<p class='c005'>This kind of single woman fulfills more or less
the office of family provider just as she also is
always ready with word and deed in circles of
friends and comrades. These women are so
engrossed that the time of love, sometimes love
itself, passes them by without their observing it.
Their youth flees and they feel with sadness that
their woman’s life is unlived. But they persuade
themselves that they have had enough in their
work, that many little joys can take the place of
great happiness. And they believe this as truly
as the infant believes he is satisfied when he sucks
his own thumb. But some of these women
acknowledge perhaps, when they have passed the
fifties, that they were often tempted to call out
to the first best man, “Give me a child.” Sometimes
it happens that in their last youth they
appease their mother longing by adopting a foster
child; sometimes they still this longing by a child
of their own, from a love relation or a marriage.
This late and uncertain happiness is often made
possible exactly through their work. And then,
<span class='pageno' id='Page_79'>79</span>if not earlier, they bless this work which gives
them the economic possibility, and thereby also
the courage, for this hazardous adventure.</p>
<p class='c005'>More frequent than these are the cases however
where single women, who have passed their first
youth, find in friendship for another woman a
valve for their, in great part, unused feelings. In
some natures this friendship will be jealous and
exacting, in others true and devoted. I wish to
emphasise that I speak here of entirely <em>natural
spiritual conditions</em>. There is to-day much talk
about “Sapphic” women; and it is even possible
that they exist in that impure form which men
imagine. I have never met them, presumably
because we rarely meet in life those with whom no
fibre of our being has any affinity. But I have
often observed that the spiritually refined women
of our time, just as formerly the spiritually refined
men of Hellas, find most easily in their own sex
the qualities which set their spiritual life in the
finest vibration of admiration, inspiration, sympathy
and adoration.</p>
<hr class='c008' />
<p class='c005'>The fundamental types of single women depicted
here—the person of intellect and the person of
feeling—are found everywhere. The former
according to current opinion already predominate
in America; in Europe, it seems to me, the latter
still prevail. That the main classes include innumerable
varieties, it is needless to say. There
are for example the numerous, quite ordinary,
<span class='pageno' id='Page_80'>80</span>family girls who would be happy if they could give
up their independence in order to enjoy the protection
of their parents’ or their own home. And
the same obtains also with the quite as ancient
type of woman, Undine, who—soulless and cold—enslaves
all men. If she is in any civic vocation,
she knows how to get the smallest amount of work
for herself and, in case she is engaged in the artistic
field, the best possible criticism. Conscience is
an acquaintance which she has never made and she
is also of the opinion that everything agreeable is
permitted to her; she simply slides past anything
disagreeable. Although work belongs to these
disagreeable things, she continues it until she has
found means to place her “qualities” in the most
advantageous manner upon the matrimonial
market.</p>
<p class='c005'>The diametrical antithesis of this curvilinear
type is the rectilinear. It has, just as the preceding
type, existed at all times. It is the woman
who really never demanded anything of life but
“a work and a duty” and finds both in abundance
in all positions of life. She is found year in year
out at her desk, in appropriate working garb, free
from all æsthetics; proud “if she never has
needed to miss a day”; proud that she never has
come late. On the contrary she never <em>goes</em> on
time. For she has so grown into the business or
the office that she takes everything upon herself
that is required without murmuring, as a well-disciplined
soldier in the ranks of the grey working
<span class='pageno' id='Page_81'>81</span>army; thankful, in addition, if her long working
cares yield her a little life annuity or pension for
her old age. This type is found principally among
women over fifty—fortunately. For this class of
women which the pre-feministic circumstances
created, have, by their “frugality” carried almost
to the verge of criminality, by their humble, conscientious
servitude, lowered the wages of their
colleagues who are more full of life. These latter
have begun work in the hope that it finally will
“free” them; that is, will give them something of
that for which their innermost being longs, not
only their daily bread—a bread which sickness or
a turn of affairs moreover can take from them at
any time. And perhaps they never succeed even
in having their own room where they at least could
have repose! Underpaid, overworked, tired to
death, who can wonder if these women have lost,
if they ever possessed them, the essential characteristics
of “womanhood”—active kindness, repose
even in movement, charming gentleness? The
Icelandic poet of yore already knew that “Few
become fair through wounds.” These women
must put all their strength into their work and into
the effort to conceal their underpayment by
“respectable” clothing, or else lose their positions.
In everything else they must economise to the
utmost and perhaps in addition be laughed at
because of their economy. They succeed, often
admirably, in maintaining themselves in proud
fair struggle, in rejecting “erotic” perquisites to
<span class='pageno' id='Page_82'>82</span>add to their income and in fulfilling conscientiously
the requirements of their work. Yet to do this
with lively interest, with preserved spiritual elasticity,
with quiet amiability—for this their strength
does not suffice, exhausted by insufficient nourishment,
insufficient sleep, still more insufficient recreation,
and strained daily to the utmost. Their
nervousness finds vent in either hard or hysterical
expression and the public, annoyed by their ill-humour,
divines little of the tragedies enacted in
offices, business houses, cafés or similar places.
If a suicide concludes the tragedy, the public
shudders for a moment and—all goes on as before.</p>
<p class='c005'>Thus “emancipation” presents itself in reality
for millions of women. To what extent the middle-class
woman movement is indirectly to blame for
this fact has already been emphasised.</p>
<p class='c005'>The essential reason is however the prevailing
economic condition of society. By the uninterrupted
fever of competition and the accumulation
of riches, it dries up the soul and robs it of goodness
as well as of joy. When the great, beautiful,
eternal sources of joy are exhausted, the life
stimulus is sought in exclusively physical pleasures,
which are always made more exciting in order to
be able to arouse still, in the languid nervous system,
feelings of desire. Moreover, there is the
neurosis and weariness of life of the overworked,
of those continually quaking about their material
safety, of those who <em>could</em> be revived by the noble
and simple joys of life, to which those jaded with
<span class='pageno' id='Page_83'>83</span>riches are already not susceptible; but for all these
millions and millions such joys are not accessible
because hunger for profit depresses wages. If in
addition to that we take into account the increasing
suffering of the best because of the ever developing
feeling of solidarity; and if finally we consider
that women, who through the protection of
the home could preserve something of warmth-irradiating
energy, are now in increasing numbers
driven out of the home, then we have some of the
reasons which—in higher degree than the religious
and philosophic reasons which <em>also</em> exist—contribute
to the joylessness of our time.</p>
<hr class='c008' />
<p class='c005'>A contribution to the meagre stock of good fortune
of the present time is furnished however by
the joy of life among young girls working under
favourable conditions. Among them we meet a
new soul condition, which could be designated, as
briefly as possible, as <em>covetousness</em> of everything
which can promote their personal development and
a beautiful <em>liberality</em> with what is thus won.
They can gratify their energetic desire for
self-development by sport, travel, books, art and
other means of culture; their freedom of action
between working hours is not restricted by private
duties. They can utilise their leisure time and
their income as they please: for recreation, pleasure,
social intercourse, social work or private,
charitable activity. No father nor husband
encroaches upon their free agency. And so dear
<span class='pageno' id='Page_84'>84</span>does this liberty become to them through the manifold
joys which it furnishes, that these young girls,
in constantly increasing numbers, refuse to relinquish
their individual independence for the sake
of a marriage which, even presupposing the happiest
love, always means a restriction of the freedom
of movement that they enjoyed while single.
And since the modern woman knows that, in the
sphere of spiritual values, nothing can be attained
without sacrifice, she prefers to keep free agency
and to sacrifice love. If she chooses in the opposite
direction, the task of adaptation will be the
more difficult, the longer and the more intensely
she has enjoyed freedom. The modern young
girl, if she deigns to bestow her hand upon a man,
not infrequently has her pretty head so crammed
full of principles of equality that she sometimes
(frequently in America), by written contract establishes
her independence to the smallest detail,
which sometimes includes separate apartments
and the prohibition that either of the contracting
parties shall have the key to the apartment of the
other.</p>
<p class='c005'>There are many varieties of the new type of
woman. There is for instance the tom-boy, the
“gamin,” who for her life cannot give up the
right to mad pranks and mischievous jokes. There
is the girl consumed with ambition, who sacrifices
all other values in order to attain the goal of her
ambition in art or science. There is the fanatically
altruistic girl, who considers the work for
<span class='pageno' id='Page_85'>85</span>mankind so important that she feels she has not the
right to an “egoistic” love happiness. There is
the ascetic ethereal girl, who looks upon marriage
and child-bearing as animal functions, unworthy
of a spiritual being, but above all as <em>unbeautiful</em>.
And for many of these modern, æsthetically
refined, nervously sensitive young girls the æsthetic
point of view is decisive. All love the work
which permits them to live according to their
ideals. Still it often happens that Ovidian metamorphoses
take place: that the young girl sees the
cloud or the swan transformed into a god, upon
whose altar she sacrifices, with joy, her free agency
and everything else which only a few weeks
earlier she cherished as her holy of holies. The men
who view this process with a smile, think that the
anti-erotic ideals were only a new weapon of
defence in the eternal war between the sexes. But
these men often learn how mistaken they were
when they themselves become participators in the
war. They meet women so proud, so sensitive
regarding their independence, so merciless in their
strength, so easily wounded in their instincts, so
zealous to devote themselves to their personal
task, so determined to preserve their freedom, that
erotic harmony seldom can be realised. Yes, these
women often repudiate love only because it
becomes a bond to their freedom, a hindrance to
their work, a force for the bending of their will to
another’s will.</p>
<p class='c005'>The women, womanly in their innermost depths,
<span class='pageno' id='Page_86'>86</span>who really feel free only when they give themselves
wholly, are becoming continually more rare. But
where such a wholly devoted woman still exists,
she is the highest type of woman which any period
has produced. Especially if she springs from a
family of old culture. She has then, combined in
her personality, the best of tradition and the best of
the revolution evoked by the woman movement.
The fibres of her being absorb their nourishment
with instinctive certainty out of the fruitful soil
which pride, devotion to duty, family love, requirements
of culture and refinement of form, for many
generations, have created. But her conscious soul-life
flowers in the sun of the present; she thinks
new thoughts and has new aims. Just as little as
she disavows her desire for love, so little does she
desire love under other conditions than those of
spiritual unity and human equality. If she meets
the man who can give her this and if she loves him,
then he can be more certain than the man of any
other time that he is really loved, that no ulterior
motive obscures the devotion of this free woman.
He has seen her susceptible to all the riches of life;
has seen her assist in social tasks, perform the duty
of every day joyful in her work, proud of her
independence attained through her work. He
knows that just as she is she would have continued
to be if he had not entered into her life. How
different is this girl from the one of earlier times,
who was driven by the emptiness of her life into
continual love affairs, which could not lead to a
<span class='pageno' id='Page_87'>87</span>marriage nor exist in a marriage that possessed
nothing of love!</p>
<p class='c005'>This most beautiful new type of woman approaches
spiritually the aforementioned type of
single, aged women, who because of their economic
independence found time for a fine personal
culture. These followed not infrequently in
their youth, from a distance it is true, but with
joyous sympathy, the progress of the woman
movement. They shook their heads later over
its extremes. With new joy they regard the
young girls just described, in whom they find a
more universal development than in themselves,
because these young girls have been developed
through active consumption of power which was
spared to the older women, although they must
have summoned much <em>passive</em> energy in order
to maintain their personality against convention.
The young girls find often in these older
women a fine understanding, which they richly
reciprocate. Such terms of friendship are the
most beautiful which the present has to offer:
they resemble the meeting of the morning and
evening red in the bright midsummer nights of
the North.</p>
<p class='c005'>No time could have been so rich in exquisite feminine
personalities, at all ages and in all stages of
life, as ours. We must not draw our conclusions
regarding the abundance of such women, in the
older culture epochs, from the illustrious names of
women which incessantly recur in the pictures of
<span class='pageno' id='Page_88'>88</span>the earlier times—like stage soldiers—until they
give the illusion of a great host.</p>
<p class='c005'>But exquisite women are even to-day exceptional.
The Martha type rather than the Mary
type predominates. This is due on one hand to
decreasing piety, on the other hand to the kind of
working and society life. Fifty years ago single
women were often spiritually petrified, now more
often they cannot succeed in settling into any
form. Their existence, turned outwardly, widens
their sphere of interest but makes their soul-life
shallow. Restlessness is most unfavourable to
the “development of the personality,” which was
however the goal of the emancipation of woman.
This development is delayed most of all perhaps by
the lack of personal contact with other personalities,
of immediate, intimate human connections.
This can, from no point of view, be supplied by
the society or club life in which single women are
to-day absorbed.</p>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_89'>89</span>
<h2 class='c006'>CHAPTER IV<br/> <span class='large'>THE INFLUENCE OF THE WOMAN MOVEMENT UPON THE DAUGHTERS</span></h2></div>
<p class='c007'>As late as sixty or seventy years ago, the daughters
of good families had still few points of contact
with life outside the four walls of the home. From
the hands of nurse-maids they went into those of
the governess, and after confirmation, studies were
at an end. If it was a cultured home then reading
aloud or music was often practised, whereby it is
true no “specific education” qualifying them for
examinations was attained, but frequently a fine
universal human culture. There was always
employment in the house for the zeal for work.
The great presses were filled with linen which was
not infrequently spun and woven by the daughters;
in the autumn they assembled for sausage-making
and candle dipping; later, for Christmas baking
and roasting; in summer endless rows of glasses of
preserves were set in the store-room. Before
Christmas, night after night, Christmas presents
were made; after Christmas, night after night, they
danced. At these balls those in outer respects
uncomely, received a foretaste of that waiting
which must fill their life for many long years:
<span class='pageno' id='Page_90'>90</span>would the invitation to the dance—or the wooing
respectively—come or not? Every man whose
shadow merely fell upon the scene, was immediately
considered from the point of view of a suitor.
As the years went by the girl, who before twenty-five
years of age was considered an “old maid,”
saw how the glance of the father and the brothers
became gloomy, yes, she could even hear how
“unfortunate” she was. If such a daughter lived
in a home poor in books—and most of them were—then
she could not even procure a book she wished.
For the daughters worked year in year out without
wages, in case they did not receive meagrely doled
out pin-money which only through great ingenuity
sufficed for their toilette. All year long there were
christenings and birthday celebrations; in summer
games were played, where it was possible riding
parties arranged, in winter sleighing parties were
organised. Other physical exercise was considered
superfluous. The young girls were averse to going
to a neighbouring estate if it lay a mile away; and
during the week to take a long walk for pleasure
or sit down with a book, which had been borrowed,
would be considered simply as idling away one’s
time. In summer a cold bath was permissible—a
warm bath was used only in cases of sickness—but
swimming was considered so unwomanly, that
whoever had learned it must keep it secret. Rowing,
tobogganing and skating were, even if permitted
in the country, yet half in discredit as
“masculine.”</p>
<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_91'>91</span>When grandfather related an heroic deed of some
ancestress whose proud countenance shone out
among the family portraits, then the daughter of
such a family must have asked herself why this
deed was lauded while everything “manly” was
forbidden her.</p>
<p class='c005'>The days and years went by at the embroidery
frame or netting needles, amid continuous chatter
about the family and neighbours, amid eternal
friction and in disputing back and forth over mere
trifles. The confined nervous force sought an
outlet, and in an existence where each one—according
to the first paragraph of family rights—interfered
in the greatest as in the smallest concerns
of all the others, there was always plenty of
material about which to become irritated and
excited.</p>
<p class='c005'>In the country, life was, however, fuller and
fresher than in the city where the young girl had
less to do and never dared go out alone; yes, where
a walk was considered so superfluous, that the
mother of the great Swedish feminist Fredrika
Bremer advised her daughters to jump up and
down behind a chair when they insisted that they
needed exercise!</p>
<hr class='c008' />
<p class='c005'>The relation to the parents, even if the principle
of unswerving and mute obedience was not wholly
carried out, was ordinarily a reverential alienation.
Neither side knew the inner life of the other. The
temperament of the mother determined the everyday
<span class='pageno' id='Page_92'>92</span>domestic comforts, the will of the father the
external occurrences of life, from the trip to the ball
to marriage. The daughter whose inclination corresponded
with the will of the father considered
herself fortunate. The one married against her
will wept, but obeyed. As an almost fabulous
occurrence it was related of one or another girl
that she dared to say “No” before the marriage
altar; cases were not unusual in which daughters
received a box on the ear and were confined to their
room until they accepted the bridegroom whom
the father had chosen. Even if a mother, moved
by the recollections of her own youth, attempted
to support a daughter it rarely succeeded. For the
power of the father rested quite as heavily upon
the wife. But the worst however was to water
myrtle year after year, without ever being able to
cut it for a bridal wreath. Even she, who in her
heart loved another, found it therefore often wisest
to give her consent to an acceptable suitor. Only
the one whose dowry was valued at a “ton of gold”—or
who also was a celebrated beauty—could run
the risk of declining a courtship; yes, she could permit
herself to occasion it only to decline it. The
more suitors she could recount, the prouder she
was; such a beauty even embroidered around her
bridal gown the monograms of all her earlier wooers.</p>
<p class='c005'>The unmarried remained behind in an environment
where the idea prevailed that “woman’s
politics are her toilettes, her republic is her household
and literature belongs to her trinkets.” The
<span class='pageno' id='Page_93'>93</span>talented daughter sewed the fine starched shirts in
which her stupid brother went to the academy and
sighed therewith: “Ah, if one only were a man.”</p>
<p class='c005'>When the income of the house was small, she
increased it perhaps by embroidery, sold in deepest
secrecy; for it was a disgrace for a girl of good
family to work for money. For her rebellious
thoughts she had perhaps a girl friend to whom
she could pour out her heart—or a sister. But it
often fared with sisters growing old together, just
as it must fare with North-pole explorers wintering
together, that those holding together of necessity
finally loathe one another from the bottom of their
hearts. And yet the sisters were most fortunate
who could grow old and die in their childhood
home and were not compelled to become old household
fixtures in the home of relatives.</p>
<p class='c005'>Not infrequently this last fate was their portion
because a father, a brother or a guardian out of
personal, economical self-interest prevented their
marriage, or a brother through debt or studies had
defrauded them of their inheritance.</p>
<p class='c005'>It was not the woman movement but the religious
movement, beginning among the Northern
peoples almost simultaneously with it, called in
Sweden “<span lang="sv" xml:lang="sv">Läseri</span>” (“Reading”) that was the first
spiritual emancipation for the old or young unmarried
girls—likewise for wives who longed for a
deeper content. Because they took seriously the
Bible doctrine that one should disregard the commands
of the family in order to follow Christ, the
<span class='pageno' id='Page_94'>94</span>home gradually became accustomed to one of the
feminine members’ going her own way. Often
amid great struggles. For the “Reader” was
more or less considered as insane; the father was
ashamed of her, the mother mourned over her,
the brothers laughed at her. But nothing could
hinder those strong in their faith from following
the inner voice. And so these women, without
knowing it themselves, were a bridge to that emancipation
of women to which they themselves later—Bible
in hand—were often an obstacle.</p>
<hr class='c008' />
<p class='c005'>The movement <em>could</em> not however be prevented.
And now—how is it now in the family? Already
the ten-year-old talks about what she is sometime
going to be. Now, the sisters go with the brothers
to school or to the academy and share their intellectual
interests as well as their life of sport. Now,
the fathers and mothers sit at home often alone,
for the daughters belong to that host of self-supporting
girls who can gratify the parents by short
visits only. Alas, these visits are not always an
unclouded joy. There are collisions between the
old and the young often over seeming bagatelles.
But a feather shows which way the wind blows
and the parents observe that, in the spiritual being
of the daughter, the wind blows from an entirely
different direction from theirs. The daughter, on
the other hand, thinks that perfect calm prevails
in the being of her parents; she wishes to raise the
dust. The mother pleads her cause in dry and
<span class='pageno' id='Page_95'>95</span>offended manner, the daughter in superior and
impetuous words. Accustomed to her freedom,
she encounters again at home control over her
commissions and omissions, attempts upon her
privacy from which she had been freed by leaving
home. And they separate again each with a sigh
that they “have had so little of one another.” In
other cases—when the parents have followed the
times and the daughters understand that not only
children but also parents must be educated with
tenderness—then the visits to the parents’ home
become on both sides elevating episodes in their
lives. The daughters repose in the parental tenderness,
which they have only now learned to value
when they compare it with their customary loneliness.
The parents confide to the daughter their
cares which she sometimes can effectively lighten,
and they revive with her spiritual interests which
they themselves had to lay aside. Through her
own working life the daughter has gained an
entirely new respect for her parents. Through
her independence of parental authority she has
now gained a frankness, which makes a real interchange
of ideas possible. They discover that they
can have something reciprocal for one another.
The father, who perhaps at first sighed when the
young faces vanished out of the home, now admits
that it would have been foolish if the whole troop
of girls had continued here at home and so had
stood there at his demise, empty-handed, without
professional training. The mother, who had
<span class='pageno' id='Page_96'>96</span>helped them persuade the father, smiles, when he
insists that he “would not exchange his capable
girls for boys.” And he is not at all afraid that
the daughters could not marry if they would; he
remembered indeed how his contemporaries declared
that they “would never look at a girl student,
a Blue stocking,” and yet so many of these were
now happily married to—girl students.</p>
<p class='c005'>Beside these results of the independence of the
daughters which elevate life for all sides, there are
opposite cases; when, for example, a single daughter
<em>without</em> outer economic compulsion or inner
personal necessity, impelled only by the current of
the time, leaves a home where her contribution of
work could be significant, in order to follow a vocation
outside. The results are often of doubtful
value, not only from a social point of view but also
from that of the family and herself, when the
daughter remains at home but carries on a work
outside. This comes partly because they are contented
with less pay and thus lower the wages of
those who support themselves entirely; partly
because they over-exert themselves. In those
cases where several daughters can share with one
another the domestic duties, no over-exertion
results perhaps. But when a single daughter combines
an exacting professional work with quite as
exacting household duties, then she is exhausted
by her double task; then she feels the burden, not
the joy, of work. For all professional working
girls who remain at home, have moreover in addition,
<span class='pageno' id='Page_97'>97</span>even under the most favorable circumstances,
the spiritual strain of turning from work back again
to the gregarious demands of the home, as well as
to the many different attractions and repulsions,
antipathies and sympathies which determine the
deviations in temperature of the home; the strain
of respecting the sensibilities which must be spared
or of paying attention to the domestic demands
which must be refused, if the work is not to suffer
from lack of rest and time for preparation. All
this can be so nerve racking that the young girl is
seized with an irresistible longing for a little home
of her own, where she would be mistress of her
leisure time, and could see her own friends—not
alone those of her family,—where she could join
those who held the same views, where she, in a
word, would live her life according to the dictates
of her personal demands. If she can, she often
does this. For to-day young girls <em>live to apply</em> the
principle of the woman movement—individualism.
The older women’s rights advocates desired, it is
true, that woman should be allowed to “develop
her gifts,” but she should “administer” them for
the benefit of others; they desired that she should
receive <em>new rights</em> from law and custom, but that
she should seek always in <em>law and custom support and
security for her action</em>. The young women’s rights
advocates, on the other hand, believe that their own
growth, just as that of animals and trees, is intended
above all for self-development, that in their
own character the direction for their growth is
<span class='pageno' id='Page_98'>98</span>specified, and that they have not the right to confine
themselves by circumstances or subject themselves
to influences by which they know they
hinder the development of their powers, according
to their individual natures. The more refined the
feeling of personality becomes, the more exactly
these young people understand how to choose
what is essential for them and to repudiate what
is a hindrance. But before they attain this certainty
they evince often an unnecessary lack of
consideration, and the family is often right when
it speaks of the egoism of youth. They find no
opportunity for helping father or mother nor for
participation in the elders’ interests. The whole
family is rarely assembled even at meal-time; the
daughters as well as the sons rush off to lectures,
work, sport, clubs. The mother who sees how
occupied the daughters are has not the heart to add
to their work or to thwart them in their pleasures;
thus she allows the selfishness of the young creatures
to increase to the point where she herself
in indignation begins—seasonably and unseasonably—to
react against it. The young girl answers
her mother’s reproof then with the complaint that,
“Mamma does not understand” her and that
she is “behind her time.” Especially the young
examination-champions distinguish themselves by
their arrogance in the family as in the club,
where they look down upon the older ladies who
have not passed examinations just as they do upon
their own mother.</p>
<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_99'>99</span>It fares best in the families, and they are even
now numerous, where the mother herself has
studied or worked outside the home and therefore
knows what domestic services she may or may not
require; where she herself personally understands
the intellectual occupation of the young people
and has preserved her own youthfulness, so that
she becomes not infrequently the real friend of her
daughters and sons. If the mother, on the contrary,
was one of the many who, at the beginning
of the woman movement, sacrificed her own talent
to the wishes of her family or the demands of the
home, in spite of the possibilities for its development
made accessible to her at that time, then
she has often absolutely no comprehension of the
egoism of her daughter. She herself had acted
so entirely differently! Or she understands fully
that in her daughters as well as in her sons she
views the attainment of a new conception of life,
with all its Storm and Stress, which the spring-times
in the life of mankind bring with them—an
attainment in which, to her sorrow, she could not
take part in her youth.</p>
<p class='c005'>At such spring-times youth is not, as the parents
hoped, sunlight and the twittering of birds in the
home; but March storms and April clouds. The
parents feel themselves at first swept out, superfluous,
disillusioned. They are angered but rejuvenated,
thanks to all the new points of view that
youth makes valid. Yes, father and mother sometimes
could live through a second youth if their
<span class='pageno' id='Page_100'>100</span>own contemporaries did not depress their buoyancy
by their disapproving astonishment and the
children by their cool rejection of the comradeship
of their parents. But in spite of this twofold
opposition, there are now fathers and mothers
who are able to enjoy the riches of life quite as
youthfully as and more deeply than their children;
while the parents of earlier times, especially the
mother, forever stagnated as early as forty. More
and more frequently we find mothers who, like
their daughters, lead a spiritually rich and emotional
life, who have so preserved their physical
youthfulness and who possess moreover through
experience and self-culture so refined a soul-life,
that, in regard to the impression they make, they
are not infrequently the rivals of their daughters.
They are already revelations of that type of woman
which, in token of emancipation, has found the
equilibrium between the old devoted ideal and the
new self-assertive ideal. They view life from a
height which gives them a survey also over the
essential, in questions concerning their own children.
Even if these become something other than
the mothers wish, these mothers are so penetrated
with the idea of individualism that they let the
children follow their own course.</p>
<p class='c005'>Modern fathers rarely find so happy a home as
it once could be with a bevy of daughters always
at hand. But they find the home richer in content,
often also freer from petty dissensions. For
in the measure in which <em>each</em> member of the family
<span class='pageno' id='Page_101'>101</span>desires his right and his freedom, do all gradually
learn to respect those of others. If the parents
consider with dignity <em>their</em> right and <em>their</em> freedom,
then a reciprocal consideration results after the
boldness which youth evinces under the first
influence of the intoxication of freedom. Youth,
at first so proud and strong in their assurance of
bringing new ideal values to life, begin themselves
to experience how the world treats these; and
what they once called their parents’ prejudice
appears to them now often in a new light. Their
self-assertion becomes a product of culture, out of
a raw material. The manifestations of their individualism
become continually more discreet, more
controlled, but at the same time more essential
and more effective. When then the young people
have found <em>their</em> way and the parents endeavour
to turn them aside to the main road—which they
call the way of wisdom or of duty—then certainly
and with right the young people put themselves
on the defensive.</p>
<p class='c005'>Even a devoted daughter cannot bring to the
home to-day as undivided a heart as formerly.
But this gift was earlier a matter of course, so to
speak, a natural result of the conditions. But if
to-day a girl sacrifices a talent to filial duty, then
it is an infinitely greater personal sacrifice; a real
choice. And if she does not make the sacrifice,
it is not in the least always on the ground of egoism.
It happens often in conviction that the unconditional
demand of Christianity that the strong must
<span class='pageno' id='Page_102'>102</span>have consideration for the weak, makes these
latter often egoists and tyrants; that the strong,
who are more significant for the whole, are thus
rendered inefficient.</p>
<p class='c005'>If a troop of athletic boys continually conformed
to the level of the weakest, then all
would remain upon a lower plane, and the weak
find no incentive to seek <em>their</em> triumphs in another
sphere.</p>
<p class='c005'>On the other hand it is fine and eminently sane
and in harmony with the laws of spiritual growth,
when the strong shall help the weak to reach a goal
which is thus, in his own peculiar direction, really
attainable by him. Neither paganism nor Christianity
has created the most <em>beautiful</em> strength; it
is a union of both. It has found its most perfect
expression in art in Donatello’s St. George, in
Michelangelo’s David: youths, whose victorious
power conceals compassion and whose compassion
embraces even the conquered: symbols of strength
which has become kind, of kindness which has
become strong. If a mother has seen this expression
upon the face of her son or her daughter then
she can address to life the words of Simeon: “Now
let thy servant depart in peace for mine eyes have
seen thy glory.” For the glory of life is the harmony
between its two fundamental powers—conquest
and devotion: self-assertion and self-sacrifice.
In every new phase of the ethical development
of mankind the cultural problem is this
harmony and the cultural profit is not the per-dominance
<span class='pageno' id='Page_103'>103</span>of one of the two but the perfected
synthesis of both.</p>
<p class='c005'>This problem has now become actual, through
the woman movement, for the feminine half of
mankind, after the <em>unconditional</em> spirit of sacrifice
has obtained for centuries as the indispensable
attribute of womanliness. In the first stage of the
woman movement the majority of the “emancipated”
were still determined by their spirit of
sacrifice, which they aspired to combine with their
outside professional work. This generation lived
<em>beyond its strength</em>. The younger generation of
to-day does not believe that God gives unlimited
strength. For they have seen that those who live
unceasingly beyond their strength finally have
no strength left, either for others or for themselves.
And they know that in the long run one can live
only upon his own resources and these must be
conserved and renewed in order to suffice. But
this knowledge makes the problem, which in the
course of days and years appears in manifold different
forms, only more difficult of solution: the
problem to find the right choice in the collision
between family duties, duties toward oneself and
duties toward society; the choice which shall bring
with it the essential enhancement of life.</p>
<p class='c005'>The conflict is thus solved by some feminists:
everything called family ties and family feeling is
referred to the “impersonal” instinctive life, while
our “personality” expresses itself in intellectual
activity, in study, in creation, in universally
<span class='pageno' id='Page_104'>104</span>human ends, in social activity, etc. And since the
principle of emancipation is certainly the freeing of
the “personality,” it follows from this idea, in
connection with <em>this definition of the personality</em>,
that the liberated personality must place the
obligations of the intellectual life absolutely above
those of the family life; the outside professional
work above the work in the home. In a word,
the earlier definition of <em>womanliness</em> ignored the
<em>universal human</em> element, the present definition
of <em>personality</em> ignores the <em>womanly</em> element in
woman’s being. The last solution of the problem
is quite as one-sided as the first.</p>
<p class='c005'>The “principle of personality,” as it has just
been described is entertained especially in America.
In Europe there are still women who reflect deeply
upon their own being and—who have a depth over
which they may meditate! These women have
not yet succeeded in simplifying the problem which
is the central one of their life. They know that not
only do instincts, impulses of the will, feelings,
form the strongest part of the individual character
which nature has given them, but also that this
part determines their thinking and creating power—their
whole conscious existence. They know
that their character receives its peculiarities
through the development which they themselves
accord to one or another side of their individual
temperament. In one personality the intellectual
life will predominate, in another the emotional:
in one the ethical, in another the æsthetic motive.
<span class='pageno' id='Page_105'>105</span>The personality becomes harmonious only when
no essential motive is lacking, when all attain a
certain degree of development, a harmony which
is as yet only so won that no motive receives its
<em>greatest possible development</em>. Such a harmony has
long been the especial characteristic of the most
beautiful womanhood, while the most significant
men have ordinarily achieved their superior
strength in <em>one</em> direction, at the cost of harmony in
the whole. If now women believe that they can
achieve the strength of men without, for that reason,
being obliged to sacrifice something of their
harmony, then they believe their sex capable of
possibilities which thus far have been granted
rarely and then only to the exceptional in both
sexes. What experience shows is: the greater harmony
of single women in a <em>limited</em> existence as compared
with the lack of harmony in the lives of
daughters, owing to the irreconcilable problems
which their <em>richer</em> existence brings with it. For
these problems must be solved, at one time, by
sacrifice of intellectual, at another, by sacrifice
of emotional values. In every case, the sacrifice
leaves behind it, not the joyful peace of fulfilled
duty, but the gnawing unrest of a duty still ever unfulfilled.
Every woman who has a heart knows
it is at least quite as important a part of her personality
as her passion for science perhaps. If
for example she is obliged to surrender to another
the loving service of a sick father in order to pursue
scientific researches, then her heart is quite as
<span class='pageno' id='Page_106'>106</span>certainly in the sick-room as, in case of the opposite
choice, her thoughts would have been in the laboratory.
By calling one factor “instinct” and the
other “personality,” nothing is in reality gained.
Theorising ladies can easily write—the paper is
forbearing. But human nature is of flesh and
blood. And therefore thousands of women grapple
to-day with tormenting questions:—When we
women shall belong entirely to industrial work and
to the social life, who then is left for the work of
love? Only paid hands. What becomes then of
the warmth in human life when such a division of
labour is established that kindness becomes a profession,
and the rest of us shall be exempt from its
practice because our “Personality” has more
important fields for the exercise of its strength?
What does it signify to live for society when we
come to the service of society with chilled hearts?
If the warmth is to be preserved then we must
have leisure for love in private life, a right to love,
peace and means for love. Only thus can our
hearts remain warm for the social life. Can the
whole really profit if we sacrifice unconditionally
that part of the whole which is nearest us? Can
our feeling of solidarity increase toward mankind
when we pass by exactly those people to whom we
could, by our deeds, really show our sympathetic
fellow-feeling?</p>
<p class='c005'>The woman whose instinct life is still strong
and sound, whose personality has its roots deep in
life—which means not social life alone—she also
<span class='pageno' id='Page_107'>107</span>understands how to determine what life in its
deepest import purposes with her; she knows how
she serves it best, whether by remaining in a position
where she fulfils her personal obligations as
part of a family or by seeking another position
where she fulfils this obligation as a member of
society.</p>
<p class='c005'>It is true the erroneous idea still prevails in
many homes that the daughter must willingly sacrifice
her social task for the family, a sacrifice which
the family would never even wish on the part of
a son. But the assurance that the daughter <em>could</em>
have made another choice instils in the family,
unconsciously, a new conception of her sacrifice,
and gives to herself the courage to assume a position
in the home other than that she held at the
time when no choice remained to her. If the total
of efficacious daughterly love of to-day and earlier
times be estimated, this total would not prove less
now. But it is now given rather in a great sum;
earlier, on the contrary, in many small coins.
Because of the professional work of the daughter,
there are now often lacking in the home the ready
obliging young hands whose help father and
brother so willingly engrossed; the cheerful comforter,
the admiring listener. But in a great hour
the daughter or sister gives now often a hundred
times more in deep, personal understanding. One
draws a false conclusion when one thinks that the
more closely a family holds together the more
it signifies a corresponding unity and devotion.
<span class='pageno' id='Page_108'>108</span>The young act in submission because they permit
themselves to be cowed by the family authority
which like a steam-roller passed over their wills
and their hearts. But the indignation that they
experienced in their innermost hearts, the criticism
which they exercised among one another, were not
less bitter than that which they to-day openly
utter.</p>
<p class='c005'>The home life of fifty years ago was a school of
diplomacy; it especially served to oppose cunning
to the father’s authority, and the mother often
taught the children to use this weapon of weakness.
Now the father does not wish to make himself
ridiculous by saying: “I forbid you,” for the
daughter answers: “Well, then, I will wait until
I am twenty-one.” The threat, “I disinherit you,”
recoils from the determination of the daughter, “I
can work.” Only in a distant province, in a little
town, or among the “upper ten thousand” of a
large city, where the daughters still often receive
a “general education,” which does not fit them to
earn their living, are they occupied all day without
the feeling of having worked. They serve at five
o’clock teas, embroider for charity bazaars, etc.
But they also experience the power of the spirit of
the time strongly enough to know that they lead
a selfish life but not a life of self. The lower the
scale of riches the more housework do the daughters
have to perform. But as a result of the patriarchal
organisation of labour they still perform
this without their own responsibility, without the
<span class='pageno' id='Page_109'>109</span>joy of independence, without regular unoccupied
time and without one penny at their disposal!</p>
<p class='c005'>Even in these circles however the spirit of the
time is active; such a daughter leads now in every
case a life of much richer content than some
decades ago, when even though middle-aged she
was still treated as ignorant innocence and must
allow herself to be extolled to every possible
marriage candidate. She suffers when she sees her
mother as the submissive wife, whose continual
according smile has graven lines of humility about
her mouth, whose continually pacifying tone has
made her voice whining. She suffers when the
father cuts short a diversity of opinion with the
words, “You have heard what I said—That will
do.” She suffers when her brothers find her
“insufferably important” or declare her new ideas
“crazy.” But exactly these new ideas about the
right and freedom of woman, which she encounters
everywhere, have given a dignity to her
own being which has its influence even without
words. On the other hand, the fact that the
fathers lose one legal right after another over the
feminine members of the family has its effect,
so that they gradually change their tone, the
clenched fist falls less and less frequently upon the
table, the disdain is silenced, and even in the
provinces the family life is changing more and
more from the despotic political constitution to
the democratic, where each one maintains his
position by virtue of his own personality. There
<span class='pageno' id='Page_110'>110</span>are still men it is true, who wish to confine “woman’s
sphere” to the four “C’s”—“Cooking, clothing,
children, church.” But there is no one who
now insists that “a girl <em>cannot</em> learn Mathematics,”
or that it is “unwomanly to pore over books”—sayings
which were still often heard fifty years
ago. Certainly there are still men who accept
the cherishing thoughtful care on the part of the
women members of the family as obvious homage.
But the men are becoming more and more numerous
who receive these womanly acts of tenderness
with waking joy. Daughters and sisters of
earlier times have pardoned the vices of their
fathers and brothers seven and seventy times;
those of the present throw away the fragments
of trust and love which have been irrevocably
shattered. The assurance that the daughters
and sisters could do nothing else except pardon,
since they were dependent upon their tormentors,
often made the fathers and brothers of earlier
times grossly inconsiderate. The men of to-day
will be refined by the necessity of showing consideration
and justice to their daughters and sisters
if they wish to enjoy their presence in the home.
Fathers and brothers have, in a word, gained quite
as much spiritually through the loss of their power
to oppress as the daughters and sisters have gained
in being no longer oppressed. And this experience
will be repeated in marriage when man and wife
shall be absolutely free and equal.</p>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_111'>111</span>
<h2 class='c006'>CHAPTER V<br/> <span class='large'>THE INFLUENCE OF THE WOMAN MOVEMENT UPON MEN AND WOMEN IN GENERAL</span></h2></div>
<p class='c007'>In their struggle for freedom for the same opportunities
of study, for the same fields of work, the
same citizenship as man, women have encountered
all possible opposition, from that of the Pope, who
recently pronounced the most positive condemnation
of the whole movement for the emancipation
of woman, and that of Parliament, to the rough
pranks of students. Man’s attempt to define the
boundaries of “woman’s natural sphere” continues
always. The woman physician, for example, had
to struggle, in her student years, against prejudice
in the dissecting room, and, in her practice, against
the professional jealousy of men. The history of
emancipation has much shameful conduct on the
part of man toward woman to record. Great
reluctance to recognise the results of woman’s
work is still common. When this work, in literature
and art for instance, is compared with man’s,
the comparison is made not for the purpose of
getting a finer understanding of woman’s peculiar
characteristics, but only to disparage it. The
<span class='pageno' id='Page_112'>112</span>energy which men of the present time not infrequently
lack they cannot endure to recognise in
women, who often possess it in high degree. In
the Romance countries, self-supporting working
women are always looked upon as a special caste—a
caste into which a man does not marry however
high respect he pays, theoretically, to “<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">les vierges
fortes</span>.”</p>
<p class='c005'>And yet how different—and more beautiful—are
the present relations between men and women
in general, especially among the Germanic peoples.
A friendly comradeship prevails among the young
men and women studying at the university, in
art academies, music schools, business colleges, etc.
In the North, this comradeship often continues
from the primary schools, through the grades to
the university, with results advantageous to both
sexes. Especially in the years under twenty, this
comradeship has a significance which cannot be
overestimated. Girls, who were, earlier, confined
to a narrow, uninteresting, joyless family circle,
now often find in the circle of masculine and feminine
comrades their share of the joy of youth without
which life has no springtime. Youths who
formerly had known no other young women than
those with whom they should never have come in
contact, now learn to know soulful, pure-minded
girls, and this gives them a new conception of
woman. Both sexes now experience together the
joys of youth in such fresh and significant forms
as folk-dancing, sport, etc. They have opportunity
<span class='pageno' id='Page_113'>113</span>for stimulating interchange of ideas in a great
circle, and quiet discussion with a few congenial
friends. During the last twenty or thirty years,
young men and young women have again begun to
discover one another spiritually, discoveries which
since the days of romanticism have been made
only through the stained glass of literature. In the
romantic period, men and women exercised reciprocally
upon one another a humanising influence.
A like influence again obtains at the present time,
but upon a much broader basis. The men and
women of romanticism formed a group bound
together only by spiritual relationship, in which
the women aspired to the culture of the men and
shared their intellectual interests, while the men
promoted the women’s “desire for men’s culture,
art, knowledge, and distinction” (<cite><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Geluste nach der
Männer Bildung, Kunst, Weisheit und Ehre.</span></cite>—Schleiermacher).
Now, young people studying
in different fields exert a mutual humanising influence
and thereby learn to know one another
from the side of intelligence as well as from
that of character and disposition. Thus are
dispelled certain illusions and conceptions almost
forced upon them through which both sexes in the
years of adolescence once regarded each other.
Men as well as women obtain a finer criterion for
the conception of “womanliness” and of “manliness”;
both discover the innumerable shadings
which these conceptions conceal; both recognise
that the sexes can meet not only upon the erotic
<span class='pageno' id='Page_114'>114</span>plane, but upon a plane that is universally human;
finally, both learn that the more perfect and complete
human beings they become, the more they
have to thank one another for it.</p>
<p class='c005'>Comprehension in erotic relations is most difficult
because, there, women are far in advance of
men. Woman’s ideal of love, however, is becoming
more and more the ideal of young men. Young
girls, on their side, are beginning to understand
better the sexual nature of men. The whole
world in which man received his culture, won his
victories, suffered his defeats, is no longer <em>terra
incognita</em> to women; they have lost the blind
reverence or the blind hostility with which they
formerly regarded the doings and dealings of men.
Men, on the other hand, are learning that the domestic
labours for the comfort of the family, which
they have thus far regarded as the sole duty of
woman, cannot engross her whole soul, that domesticity
leaves many wishes unfulfilled. So both
sexes have begun, each on its own side, to build
a bridge across the chasm which law and custom
had dug between them. The young still ponder
over the enigmatical antitheses in their natures,
yet they find they have very much that is human
in common with one another. In comradeship,
however, that “chivalry” vanishes, which among
other things consisted in the ideal that the young
men had always to bear all the burdens and duties.
Now as a rule, the girl carries her own knapsack
on excursions and pays her share of the expenses.
<span class='pageno' id='Page_115'>115</span>But if she really needs help, the youth is quite as
ready as before to grant it to her, just as she also
on her part is ready to assist according to her
strength: honest friendship has replaced rapturous
chivalry. This friendly comradeship often
satisfies the young man’s need of feminine kindness
and enjoyment in those dangerous years when,
as a young man said, “Three fourths of the life
of a youth, conscious and unconscious, is sex life.”
And nothing can more effectually prevent him
from degrading himself than access to a circle
where in quiet and freedom he meets young girls,
without an indelicate, intruding family surveillance,
interfering and asking him about his “intentions.”
If between two such comrades an erotic
feeling finally develops, even if the wooing takes
place in a laboratory instead of a romantic arbour,
the possibilities always exist, in the golden haze
of love, of making mistakes. But both have,
however, had opportunities of seeing each other
in many character-illuminating situations; they
have observed each other, not only with their own
eyes, but also through the more critical glasses of
the comrade circle. On the other hand, it often
happens that discussions and interchange of letters
conjure up a congeniality which exists only in
opinions and temperament, not in nature. It is
fortunate when this is discovered in time. Otherwise
bitter conflicts may be the result, should a
strong individual nature wish to mould the other
after himself or after his ideal of man or woman.
<span class='pageno' id='Page_116'>116</span>For that anyone loves the individuality of another
without illusions is still very rarely the case. It
now happens somewhat more frequently, since
young people in comradeship learn to know mutually
their ideals and dreams, as well in erotic as in
universally human aspects. But if these ideals
and dreams do give a hint of character, comradeship
brings a true knowledge of character only
when it also offers an opportunity of seeing others
<em>act</em>; not only of <em>hearing</em> them speak of themselves.
Such analyses of one’s own soul or the soul of
others in the atmosphere of tea and cigarettes,
music and poetry, give the “interesting” masculine
or feminine parasites opportunity to ensnare
a victim, who is then intellectually or erotically,
often even economically, sucked dry.</p>
<p class='c005'>But even if such an interchange of ideas really
enriched all, it can be carried to excess and become
deleterious to energy for work, directness, and
idealism. However beneficial may be the honesty
of to-day in sexual questions, the discussion of
the instincts of life which has now become a commonplace
is also dangerous. These discussions
are fraught with the same danger to the roots of
human life as is a continual digging up of the roots
of a plant to see how it is growing.</p>
<p class='c005'>The earlier a marriage can be consummated,
the less is the danger of freshness being lost in this
way; the greater the prospect that man and wife
will grow close together, just as do the man and
wife of the people, through the difficulty of the
<span class='pageno' id='Page_117'>117</span>common struggle for existence. But if this
struggle becomes easier before youth has entirely
passed, then there enters often into the life of the
man a crisis which the practised French call “<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">La
maladie de quarante ans</span>”: the need of the man for
a new erotic experience. While those on a lower
erotic plane, to-day as at all times, seek this in
transient secret alliances, it leads those on a higher
level in our time to the most tragic of all separations,
where the man—after decades of the most
intimate life together, of the most faithful work
together, of mutual understanding—drives the
wife out of the home in order to bring in a young
wife who has never been to him, perhaps never
can be to him, a fellow fighter and helper, as the
repudiated wife was, but who has for him the
charm of the mystery which the maiden had for
the man before the days of coëducation, sexual
discussions, comradeship, and dress-reform!</p>
<p class='c005'>Women students now escape the earlier danger
of the daughter of the family, falling in love out
of lack of occupation. They have not the time,
often also not the means to permit themselves
erotic dreams. There are among them many
poor girls who dare lose no single semester, for
they must hasten to earn their livelihood. Moreover,
such a girl knows that if she should yield to
the need for tenderness, for support, that is so
strong in her, the same fate could happen to her
as to this or that fellow student who after a short
happiness was left alone when the lover found a
<span class='pageno' id='Page_118'>118</span>good match. And she was left behind not only in
her sorrow but also in her work. And the more a
yearning girl buries herself in her studies, the more
science or art unlock their riches to her, the happier,
more full of life she feels herself in spite of loneliness,
scanty means, and shabby dress.</p>
<p class='c005'>Among women students there are also many of
the cerebral type, mentioned above, women who
need tenderness neither in the form of friendship
nor of love; yes, who fear in both a bond for their
“free individuality.” These take part in sports,
discuss, jest, with their fellow men students, openhearted
and unconcerned, without thinking whether
they please or not. All these young girls now go
about with perfect freedom; even in the Romance
countries, a young woman can now go alone with
her bag of books or her racquet. For in circles
where study has not yet exercised its freeing influence,
sport has brought this about.</p>
<p class='c005'>In America, student life, because of the early
entrance of the men into the professions, becomes
more a one-sided, feminine comrade life. There,
the women have to develop their arts of the toilet
for each other, whom they find more interesting,
more worthy of pleasing than the masculine sex.
Even in Europe, feminine comradeship in the
student years is at times most intimate. For a
friendship between a young girl and a young man
often ends with love—on one side. Or in an intimate
circle A has fallen in love with B, but B with
C, etc. Such eventualities the wise girl will avoid
<span class='pageno' id='Page_119'>119</span>for they can bring both suffering and obstruction
to her work. With women comrades, she has, without
this risk, an interchange of ideas which promotes
study, deepens culture, opens up new views,
and gives to all new impulses. There exists, at
least at the present time, a difference between the
masculine and feminine method of inquiry, of
solving problems, of apprehending ideas, which
results in the fact that comradeship between women
cannot take the place of comradeship between
men and women. It is, however, for deep and
beautiful natures often impossible at the beginning
of life to be capable, in a spiritual sense, of
more than a single friendship with their own sex;
for each new spiritual contact becomes a new and
difficult problem. For such men or women a
friendship with a comrade of their own sex is often
the richest advantage of their student time. Often
a student in good circumstances finds her joy in
taking care of some lonely comrades. They find
at her apartments, in a friendly welcome, a few
flowers and pictures, a teakettle, a fireplace, that
feeling of homely warmth for which the shivering
students have longed,—a longing which has often
driven a lonely, impressionable youth from the
dreary students’ room to “rough pleasures.”
Now when he leaves the little comrade circle, his
sweetest memories of home, his finest dreams,
vibrate in him. And the timid girl goes in the
certainty that there is another girl who is concerned
about her wretched fate.</p>
<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_120'>120</span>In such a quiet as also in a more lively comrade life
both sexes learn to know not only each other
but also different classes and, in certain European
universities, the several nations. It is not unusual
for nine or ten races to be found represented
in one small group of comrades. Life thus becomes
everywhere enriched by strong manifestations or
fine shades of congeniality; spiritual attractions
and repulsions cross one another; inspiring or
restraining impressions radiate in all directions.
It would be quite as impossible to estimate the
fructifying influence of such a friendly intercourse
as to measure the life which comes into existence
on a spring day filled with the sigh of the wind,
the fluttering of butterflies, and humming of bees.</p>
<p class='c005'>In such a circle of comrades, devotion and capacity
for sacrifice are past belief, especially in
the nation where “the girls wear short hair and the
young men long hair,” as a wag characterised the
young Russians studying abroad. That a couple
of Russian girls, for a whole winter, possessed together
but a single pair of shoes and so could never
go out at the same time, is one of the innumerable
small and great expressions of the feeling of solidarity
among the poorest students of the university.</p>
<p class='c005'>When the comrade life assumed the form exclusively
of coffee-house visits, then the women had
to revolt against it. But they often, alas, allowed
themselves to be carried with the stream. Because
the coffee-house life at first really gave a
certain polish to the intelligence, it could for a short
<span class='pageno' id='Page_121'>121</span>time have its justification. But when a blade is
worn out, the artist of life should cease grinding;
if on the contrary he allows the grindstone to go
on continually, then at last he has only the haft
in his hand. Formerly, it was only the young men
but now even the girls wear out thus their weapons
or tools before they ever use them seriously.</p>
<hr class='c008' />
<p class='c005'>The darkest side of coëducational life has been
that women could demonstrate their equal capability
with men in no other way than by the same
courses and examinations as those of the men.
The eagerness of women to prove their like proficiency
with men in study and in sport has often
had disastrous physical results. These are continually
becoming more infrequent, thanks to
the decreasing prudery in regard to the sexual
functions and to the increasing hygienic conscience.
The intellectual results, however, continue to
exist and are disastrous alike for both sexes; but
because of the ambition and conscientiousness of
girls, perhaps still more disastrous for them. The
examinations which they pass are often dearly
bought. This was not noticed in the beginning,
when a woman doctor was still looked at with
wonder as a noteworthy product of culture, and
regarded herself also with wonder. Truly she had
sacrificed to grinding and cramming for examinations
a multitude of youthful joys, but she had, as
was thought, won in this way much greater values.
This, however, is not always really the case.
<span class='pageno' id='Page_122'>122</span>Ethically, the conscientious girl is certainly above
the boy who, not infrequently in the unconscious
instinct of self-preservation, idles away his time.
But the mental strength of the latter may frequently
be better preserved in any determined
direction. Girls, conscientious and zealous in
their work, have filled their heads full of lessons to
which the coming examination and not their own
choice has urged them. What is thus crammed in
is not assimilated and consequently has not promoted
spiritual or mental growth. But it has
taken up room and has thereby impaired the
intellectual freedom of motion and compelled the
natural individuality to compress itself so that
it is long before the space conditions in the brain
permit it to extend again—in case it is not simply
choked by all the chaotic mass that has been absorbed.
How many young girls have come to the
university or to the art academy full of thirst for
knowledge and energy for work! But after a few
years they feel the disgust of surfeit, unless they
have found a teacher who has been to them a
leader to the essentials in science or in art. Then
their joy in study could really be as rich as they
had once dreamed it—yes, as perhaps even their
grandmothers had dreamed it when they had to
content themselves with their little text-books
written for “girls.” Many young girls maintain
to-day, through some teacher or some masculine
comrade, that spiritual development which only
an exceptional relationship between a father and
<span class='pageno' id='Page_123'>123</span>daughter, a brother and sister, could give in earlier
times.</p>
<hr class='c008' />
<p class='c005'>When men and women can study together,
then the relationship later between masculine and
feminine fellow-workmen will, as a rule, be better
than when the sexes work independently in the
student days. It is true masculine competitors still
have recourse to the weapon of spreading reports
of the incapacity of their feminine competitors—at
times honestly convinced of it themselves.
The same weapon is of course turned also against
masculine competitors. Yet there it is a question
of the <em>individual</em>, while in regard to women, the
<em>sex</em> is often the only proof the man thinks he need
assign for the inferiority of their work. It can
be said, however, upon the whole, that the relationship
between men and women professional
colleagues exhibits the same good side as the common
student life, although naturally to a lesser
degree. The joint work does not often leave much
time for significant interchange of ideas, and after
working hours each usually longs for new faces.
The influence of joint labour is often limited to
the refining effect that the presence of one sex
exercises upon the other. Small services are
mutually rendered and each worker learns also
to respect the achievements of the other; or one
is provoked because the work which should have
been dispatched by the other now falls to his share!</p>
<p class='c005'>If the woman performs the same work as the
<span class='pageno' id='Page_124'>124</span>man, then she is often indignant because she must
do it for smaller compensation than he. All too
easily, the feminists forget that this injustice is
equalised if a man who wishes to establish a family
cannot obtain a post which he seeks because a
woman retains it who can be satisfied with a smaller
wage since she remains in her parents’ home.
For this disparity, raising bitterness on both sides,
there is no remedy under the present economic
system. Feminists can <em>demand</em> the same compensation,
but working women will not obtain it so
long as the supply of workers is to the demand as
one hundred to one in the professional occupations
to which women flock. In vain underpaid women
will call to the agitators of the woman movement,
“Help us to obtain endurable conditions of life.”
The only honest answer is, “Help one another,
just as the working men have helped one another,
by union and solidarity!”</p>
<p class='c005'>The competition of the sexes in the labour field
is only indirectly connected with the woman movement;
it is a part of the social question and will
therefore only be touched upon here.</p>
<p class='c005'>The hostility which the competition between
the sexes has evoked is a factor in the social war;
and if—<em>by reason of this competition</em>—marriage
decreases, then such competition is a form of social
danger. If the cause is sought in the woman
movement, then the question is begged completely,
because the women with sufficient income <em>to be
able</em> to live at home without industrial work, after
<span class='pageno' id='Page_125'>125</span>the loss of a husband or a father, are constantly
becoming more rare. There is the additional fact
that in many positions where man and woman have
equal salary, the woman is preferred because of
her greater honesty and faithfulness to duty.
Further it must be emphasised that, even in
middle-class vocations, women with increasing
frequency earn their <em>whole</em> livelihood, not merely
a supplementary remuneration, when if they did
not thus work they would be a burden to some
man and so perhaps prevent him from marrying.
Many of these women would wish nothing better
than to enjoy the warmth of “the domestic hearth”
to which men in theory relegate them; but since
no man offers this warmth, they must at least be
allowed to procure fuel for their lonely hearth fire.</p>
<p class='c005'>When men declare that “the only duty which
has life value for a woman is to be man’s helpmeet,”
then they ought not to forget that this task is more
and more rarely assigned to a woman, because men
prefer to do without her aid, and even find a richer
life in bachelorhood than in marriage. They should
not dare to forget also that a great number of men
disinclined or disqualified for work compel their
sisters, daughters, wives, to undertake the task of
family provider, and these women also must forego
being, “in the quiet of the home, man’s helpmeet.”</p>
<p class='c005'>However weak the feminist logic often may be,
it is not so weak as the anti-feminist logic of man.
Masculine vacuity has found there an arena where
it performs the most incredible gymnastics. The
<span class='pageno' id='Page_126'>126</span>hysteria of literary fanatics, the crude lordly instincts
of the mediocre man, the irritation of the
masculine good-for-nothing at the increasing
ability of women, the rage, confounding cause and
effect, over the competition of women—these are
some of the reasons for the present antagonism
between men and women. The deepest reason is
this: the more woman is compelled to maintain
the struggle for existence under the same social
conditions as those under which men have been
thus far compelled to struggle, the more she loses
that character by which she gives happiness to
man and receives it from him. A diminished
erotic attraction is frequently the result, not of
the work of women, but of their work under such
conditions that the drudging, worn-out women
comrades finally appear to their masculine colleagues
only as “sexless ants.” Sometimes they
really exhibit that obliteration of all characteristic
marks of sex which Meunier has indicated to us
in his <cite>Woman Miner</cite>, a great thought-inspiring
work of art.</p>
<p class='c005'>Many a woman of the present time, deeply
feminine, suffers under this compulsory neutralising
of her womanly being. Others again consider
this a path to complete humanity.</p>
<p class='c005'>But the complete personality is only that man
or woman who has cultivated and exercised the
strength which he or she as a human being possessed
without having neutralised thereby the
characteristic of sex. It is tragic when nature
<span class='pageno' id='Page_127'>127</span>herself creates deviations from normal sexuality,
but criminal when the ideas of the time weaken
sound instincts and inculcate unsound ones. It
is not woman nature but the denatured woman
who is beginning to grow through the ultra-feminism
which looks down upon woman’s normal
sexual duty as only a low, animal function.</p>
<p class='c005'>That sound men abominate this tendency is
justifiable. On the other hand, it is unwarrantable
to confuse a variation of feminism with the
woman movement in its entirety, a movement
which includes in itself a great earnest desire to
work for the welfare of both mothers and children.
As a manifestation of womanliness in its most
complete, perfect form, many men still elect the
woman whose entire life-content consists in the
cult of her own beauty, a cult whose attendant
phenomenon is the æsthetic culture which raises
the temple about the altar. Under this perfect
and apparently inspired form there is, however,
rarely anything to be found of that which the man
seeks: the longing and the power of true womanhood
to give happiness by erotic and motherly
devotion. Such women, like those cerebral women
engrossed by their studies and their work, allow
a real love to pass them by; men are only sacrificial
servants of the cult, and the high priest is chosen
not upon the ground of motives of feeling. This
type is said to be more common in America than
in Europe. But it existed thousands of years
ago on the Tiber as well as on the Nile. That
<span class='pageno' id='Page_128'>128</span>Cleopatra in the language of feminism now speaks
of the “right of the personality,” and means
thereby her right to represent no other value in
life than that of the white peacock and the black
orchid—the value of rarity—that does not make
her a “product of the woman movement.”</p>
<p class='c005'>But certain men characterise a woman thus,
if they have been deceived in her: a psychology
which equals in value that of the feminist when
she speaks of man as the “oppressor,” the “corrupter,”—without
noting that the world is full
of poor men corrupted or tormented by women!
Amid such mutual accusations, just or unjust—whereby
<em>gifted</em> men maintain generalisations about
“woman’s” being which are quite as ingenuous
as those which <em>silly</em> women propose about “man’s”
being—the sexes, in the days of the woman movement,
have been almost as much alienated from
each other as drawn together. The estrangement
has taken place in the erotic field and through
labour competition; the reconciliation has been
effected—leaving out coëducation—by common
industry and the social activity of both sexes.</p>
<p class='c005'>The middle-class women of Europe have still
so little share in the control of production that
one cannot determine whether or not they have
even awakened to the understanding that the
fundamental condition of a universal life-enhancing
issue of the woman movement must be new
social conditions. One cannot yet predicate
anything at all in regard to their desires to promote
<span class='pageno' id='Page_129'>129</span>more humane labour conditions and a more
just distribution of profit. Under the system
now prevailing they must, like men, either conform
to it or be destroyed economically. It is even so
in public offices and similar fields of labour. Just
as so many young men do, at the beginning of
their career, a great number of women attempt
to abolish the abuses and mitigate the formalism.
But they meet such obstacles that, like the young
men, they are obliged to abandon the effort; or
they are compelled to give up the position whereby
they win their scanty bread.</p>
<p class='c005'>In this way, principally, the work of women in
the sphere of charitable activity has given to men
the opportunity for a correct valuation of the social
working power of woman. Men have then in a
wider sphere than that of the family circle, so
often overlooked by them, learned to appreciate
feminine enthusiasm and capacity for organisation,
energy and devotion, initiative and endurance.
Innumerable men—from the soldiers up,
who in the hospitals of the Crimea literally kissed
Florence Nightingale’s shadow on the floor of the
hospital ward—have learned in the last half
century that life has become more kindly for them
since social motherliness has obtained for itself a
certain elbow-room. The more women lose their
present fear of appearing, in coöperation with
men, “womanly” impulsive, savage in face of injustice
and cruelty, the more will they signify in
that joint work where, at least to-day, they still
<span class='pageno' id='Page_130'>130</span>have a more fortunate hand—the hand of the
mother.</p>
<p class='c005'>And since a single fact is more convincing than
a thousand words, so the facts gained in the social
activity of woman have won, in later years,
many men supporters of woman suffrage. The
arguments derived from abstract right—however
obvious they may be for every tax-paying, law-abiding
woman—go to the rear to make way for
the argument of “social utility.”</p>
<p class='c005'>Not only women themselves but men also refer
now to what women have accomplished when they
are allowed to work in the service of society;
they point to the reforms which were retarded or
bungled because women had no immediate influence
there where appropriations were granted and
laws were enacted.</p>
<p class='c005'>Especially significant for the reconciliation of
the sexes is the joint social work of young people.
The temperance cause or the education of the
masses or socialism now brings together a host of
young men and girls, who learn thereby that the
social as well as the private life of labour gains in
strength and wealth if men and women participate
in it together.</p>
<hr class='c008' />
<p class='c005'>The men who fear political life for woman are,
however, right. Just as this life has injured the
best qualities in the manhood of many men, so
will it impair the womanhood of many women.
Neither the spiritual personality of woman nor
<span class='pageno' id='Page_131'>131</span>of man, nor even their secondary physical sex
characteristics can withstand the influences of
their private <em>milieu</em>, of their private labour conditions.
Why should women better resist the
influences of the public life? When the man is
compelled, in political work for the state, to neglect
in the highest degree the foundation of the state—the
home—how should women be able to do
otherwise than the same thing? The political
work of both can benefit the home <em>in general</em> but
<em>their own</em> home must always suffer for it, for a time
at least. Women will learn, as so many men have
already learned, that the fresh enthusiasm, the
unexhausted optimism with which they entered
the political life soon vanish before party pressure,
general prejudice, opportunism, and the demands
of compromise. And just as now so many
men for these reasons withdraw from Parliament,
many women will do likewise when they learn
that what they can accomplish there with the
characteristics peculiar to them, is so insignificant
that it does not compensate for the injury which
ensues because these characteristics are missing
in the home.</p>
<p class='c005'>If the eligibility of woman is really to benefit
society, then the right of resignation must be unconditioned
for mothers, and they themselves must
understand that the parliamentary mandate is incompatible
with motherhood so long as the children
are still in the home; in like manner during
the same period, the franchise of the mother of a
<span class='pageno' id='Page_132'>132</span>family must not result in rushing into electioneering.
The ballot in and of itself does not injure
the fineness of a woman’s hand any more than a
cooking receipt.</p>
<hr class='c008' />
<p class='c005'>Because woman’s motherhood must be preserved,
if she is to bring to the social organism
a really <em>new</em> factor, so she must always continue
to be found and to work in private life, in
order to be, meanwhile, useful in public life.
The genius of social reform which women will
develop can complement that of man only if this
genius is of a new order; if it originates thoughts
which bring new points of view to the social
problems, wills which seek new means, souls which
aspire to new ends. Women could, if they received
their full civic right before they lost their
intuitive and instinctive power through masculinisation,
effect the progress of culture as, for
example, the entrance of the Germans influenced
the antique world.</p>
<p class='c005'>The sooner woman receives her political franchise,
the more, on the whole, can be expected
from it. The generation which has now fought
the fight for suffrage is wholly conscious of the
reforms that await woman for their final realisation.
And this generation of women would introduce
into the political life a new, fresh current.
In any event, we can hope to secure from women
new impulses and better organisation in political
life, as has already been the case in social life.
<span class='pageno' id='Page_133'>133</span>But every new generation of parliamentary women,
who together with the men have been “politically
trained,” would have—as long as the present
economic conditions obtain—continually greater
economic interests to advocate “parliamentarily,”
and would also for other reasons evince the same
parliamentary maladies as the men evince now.
And as little as evil men lose their evil characteristics
because of the franchise, quite as little will
bad women lose theirs. The entrance of women
into politics cannot therefore—as certain feminists
maintain—signify the victory of the noble
over the ignoble. But it signifies a great increase
in noble as well as ignoble powers hitherto inactive
in political life, which in the wider sphere that they
there maintain oppose one another, now conquering,
now yielding. Men and women <em>together</em>,
however, will be able to enact more humane laws
than men alone can enact. Questions concerning
women and children can be treated with deeper
seriousness by men and women <em>together</em> than is
now the case. Men and women <em>together</em> will
consider the social life from more significant
points of view than can one sex alone. Government
consisting of men and women <em>together</em> will
be more profound than heretofore. No one who
has observed the effects of masculine and feminine
coöperation in fields already mentioned can doubt
this. Who can deny that with the civic right of
woman her feeling of social responsibility will
increase and that her horizon will widen? And
<span class='pageno' id='Page_134'>134</span>therewith her value as wife and mother of men will
also increase? But she will increase in value for
the men closely connected with her as well as in
social respects. The woman of earlier times, for
all of whom society might go to pieces if only <em>her</em>
home and family prospered, was only in a restricted
sense man’s help. In certain great crises she
usually betrayed him simply because she wholly
lacked the social feeling.</p>
<p class='c005'>Obviously, the female member of Parliament
cannot confine herself solely to questions which
concern the protection of the weaker and the education
of the new race. The more women concentrate
upon the cause of justice against power,
and of public spirit against self-interest, the more
advantageous it will be for her herself and for the
public life. But concentration is, unfortunately,
exactly what modern parliamentarism does not
promote; what it does promote is disintegration.</p>
<p class='c005'>Woman has, however, where she has entered
into parliamentary life as elector and eligible,
shown thus far exactly this tendency toward concentration.
She has worked for moral, temperance,
and hygienic questions; for questions
concerning schools and education of the masses;
for mother and child protection; reform of marriage
laws, and kindred subjects. What thinking man
can maintain that all this does not belong to
“woman’s sphere” or can say that these and
similar social interests have been sufficiently
attended to by an exclusively masculine government?
<span class='pageno' id='Page_135'>135</span>Already the opposite danger appears in
certain social spheres: an exclusively “feminine
government.”</p>
<p class='c005'>In the present forms of public life, however,
much feminine power will without doubt be
wasted. Only when man, upon a higher plane, has
created a new kind of representation “of the
people,” where professional interests in every
sphere are represented, can the highest vocation of
woman—motherhood—come into its rights.</p>
<p class='c005'>It belongs to the necessary course of historical
development that women also go through the
stage of party-power politics in order together
with man to reach the stage of social politics and
finally that of culture politics.</p>
<p class='c005'>But women cannot wait until this development
has been attained; they must accomplish it together
with man. Just as the best masculine
powers sooner or later must be concentrated to
transform increasingly untenable parliamentary
conditions, so the best feminine powers will also
work in the same direction, especially if the will
becomes intense in mothers not only to awaken
in their children the social spirit, but also to create
for them better social conditions.</p>
<p class='c005'>In later years, the movement for the suffrage
of woman has not only filled the world with suffrage
societies but the agitation has even achieved
popular representation in eighteen European
countries, in the legislative assemblies of a
number of American States, in Australasia, in
<span class='pageno' id='Page_136'>136</span>legislative assemblies in Canada and in the Philippines.
In Iceland as well as in Italy, in Japan as
in South Africa, the movement is in progress, and
whoever thinks it will not attain its goal is politically
blind.</p>
<p class='c005'>When anti-feminist men prophesy that men will
love their mothers, sisters, wives, and daughters less
when pitted against them as political opponents
or competitors, they prophesy certainly in many
cases the truth. Politics have already estranged
fathers from sons, brothers from brothers. But
this demonstrates only either that the personal
feelings were weaker than the political passions
or that these latter have destroyed the attributes
which made the personality lovable. But if men
are really able to love and women remain lovable,
even as political personalities, then a man will not
cease to love a woman, even if she votes for a
different congressional candidate! Such prophecies
have not been verified in other spheres from
which men sought to intimidate women by similar
warnings. For woman retains her power over
man. if she retains her womanly charm, created
out of peace, harmony, and kindness. Not that
<em>of which</em> a woman speaks, not that <em>for which</em> she
works, determines man’s feeling and conduct;
but <em>how</em> she does it. A woman may charm a man
by a political speech, and drive him away by her
table talk. A poor working woman can, without
a word, induce the same man to give her his seat
in a street car who the next minute can be brutal
<span class='pageno' id='Page_137'>137</span>to an assuming and incapable fellow workwoman.
In a word, what a woman makes of her rights and
what they make of her—that alone determines
the measure of veneration, sympathy, love, which
she may expect from a man.</p>
<p class='c005'>That women have lost their equilibrium cannot
be denied. How could it be otherwise? Not
only have they in the last half century experienced,
together with man, Naturalism and the
New Romantic movement, Neo-Kantianism, the
Higher Criticism, Bismarck and Bebel, Darwin
and Spencer, Wagner and Nietzsche, Ibsen and
Tolstoi, Haeckel and von Hartmann, and still
many, many more, but they themselves in dizzy
haste have been hurled out of their position in society,
protected by the family, which they had occupied
for centuries. It is obvious that at the present
moment the spiritual mobility of women must be
greater than their harmony; that the raw culture
material which they possess must be richer than
that which they can utilise; their life experiences
more significant than their art of life. The modern
woman must appear for the present less symmetrical,
more uncertain, than man’s ideal woman
in earlier times. But enduring cultural progress
cannot be measured by comparison with the ideal
figures of the poetry or of the life of earlier times.
It must be estimated according to the <em>average
type</em> in a certain period. And the average woman
of our time is, in the fullest significance of the word,
more full of vitality and adaptability, more individually
<span class='pageno' id='Page_138'>138</span>developed, more beneficial socially, than
the average woman of fifty years ago. With the
freedom of movement the social feeling has increased;
with the participation in universal human
culture, the richness of content: the spiritual life
has become more complex, and the possibilities
of expression of this new soul-life, more numerous.</p>
<p class='c005'>But since the average man, in the meantime,
has undergone no comparable development, he is
estranged, has lost his bearings, and consequently
repudiates a movement which, directly and indirectly,
makes such great demands for the development
of his own higher spiritual qualities.
Heretofore men could force women to endure undue
interference, and so have deprived them of the
education wherein the possible consequences of
action are considered at the same time with the
thought of the action. But the woman movement
has now raised a partition between the sexes such
as is found in the aquarium where it becomes
necessary to teach the pike to allow the carp, also,
to live: every time the pike makes a dash at the
carp he strikes his head against the obstruction,
until the motive of repression becomes so strong
that the glass wall can be taken away and both
carp and pike live together in peace.</p>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_139'>139</span>
<h2 class='c006'>CHAPTER VI<br/> <span class='large'>THE INFLUENCE OF THE WOMAN MOVEMENT UPON MARRIAGE</span></h2></div>
<p class='c007'>Certain feminists believe that the woman movement
has accomplished such meagre results in
regard to the reorganisation of family right for
the sole reason that men, who once created the
right for their own advantage, still cling to the
injustice out of egoism. These feminists forget
that the family is the social form of life in which
tradition has the greatest power. It speaks here
with the voice of the blood; it works through our
deepest instincts, our strongest needs of life, our
innermost feelings, as these have developed
through many thousands of years under the influences
which were exercised in and through the
family. To accomplish in this sphere not only
reforms upon paper but also vigorous modifications—that
is, new laws and customs which are
rooted in new spiritual conditions of the people
as a whole—is more necessary than that man grant
women a share in legislation. Innumerable individual
human vicissitudes must be experienced and
repeated in new forms, entering finally into the
<span class='pageno' id='Page_140'>140</span>universal consciousness, before such spiritual soil
can be formed. The man became and remained
the head of the family because all experiences and
social factors once made this arrangement most
advantageous for father, mother, and children.
Woman will be able to realise her new ideas in regard
to love-life and mother-right to the degree
in which she demonstrates, not only in speech
and writing but also in vigorous daily living, that
these ideals surpass in vital effect those which
now obtain.</p>
<hr class='c008' />
<p class='c005'>In the last half century, among the Germanic
peoples, however, the family life has already undergone
essential transformations, while the Romantic
world still continues to exhibit features which in
the first half of the 19th century were typical even
among these peoples. Marriages are arranged by
the father, divorce is considered either a sin or a
shame, the paternal power is still absolute, the
homogeneous relationship among all the members
of the family—in joy and sorrow—is inviolable.
The feeling of the son for the mother, bordering
almost upon Madonna worship, and the passion
of the father for their little children, must, however,
always have been more characteristic of the
Romance peoples than of the Germans.</p>
<p class='c005'>Among the latter the attainment of individualism,
first in the sphere of legislation, still more in
that of customs, most of all in that of mode of
thought and feeling, has altered the position of
<span class='pageno' id='Page_141'>141</span>the individual in the family. While the family
exhibited fifty years ago a tightly closed unity,
in which women had only slight significance, now
the wife as well as the husband, mother as well as
father, daughter as well as son, assert their personality,
not only <em>in</em> the family, but often even
<em>against</em> the family. Wives draw the arguments
for their self assertion most frequently from the
principles of the woman movement.</p>
<p class='c005'>Truly, in the course of the century, many married
women have succeeded in finding expression
for their significant universal human or feminine
attributes in marriage, and thus have ennobled it.
But the self-conscious effort to elevate the position
of the wife began simultaneously with the
demand that no human right could be denied to a
woman upon the ground of her sex, whether within
or without marriage.</p>
<p class='c005'>Individualism has already made personal love,
instead of family interest, decisive for the consummation
of a marriage. In the name of her personality
as of her work, woman desires with ever
greater right full majority and legal equality with
man in marriage. Against individualism, the
doctrine of evolution now advocates certain
limitations of the personal erotic freedom to consummate
marriage, but advocates at the same time,
contrary to the Christian sexual ethics, new freedom
for the sake of the higher development of the
race. Here comes into effect, the new conception
of life by which the possibilities of development
<span class='pageno' id='Page_142'>142</span>and of happiness in the earthly life have acquired
a new value and force.</p>
<p class='c005'>The ultimate heights of the modern conception
of sex life are indicated by erotic idealism, which
since “La Nouvelle Héloise” has by poets and
dreamers been continually elevated, while world-renowned
lovers showed the possibility of this
wonderful love. In addition to all these influences
of the spirit of the time upon the transformation
of marriage, come the <em>indirect</em> effects of the woman
movement. Thanks to the vibrations in which
this movement has set the “spirit of the time,”
many an ordinary man now accords to his wife
that power and authority in the family which the
law still denies her; yes, many commonplace
people of both sexes now desire from their marriage
things of which their equals fifty years ago did not
even dream. If one adds also the decisive influences
which the political-economic conditions
of the present exercise upon the family life, one
has found some of the threads which form the woof
of the unalterable warp, a woof which makes the
marriage of the present a variegated and unquiet
fabric, whose pattern exhibits primeval oriental
motives beside those in newest “modern style.”</p>
<p class='c005'>Here it is of the greatest importance to indicate
the zigzag line which denotes the alternate repulsion
and attraction that under the influence of
the woman movement marriage has had for woman.</p>
<p class='c005'>First came the little crowd of “masculine women”
with their hatred of marriage and man.
<span class='pageno' id='Page_143'>143</span>Then the great working army that forgot, over
the human rights of woman, that to these also
must belong the right to fulfil her duty as a being
of sex, and not alone the right to be “independent
of marriage” through her work. Then came the
reaction against this incompleteness. At this
time, the nature of woman was called an “empty
capsule,” which received its content only from man:
a “cry of the blood,” which finds its answer in the
child. There was no other “woman question”
than the possibility of living erotically a complete
life. One woman wished this in love without
marriage, another in love without children, a third
in children without marriage, a fourth in children
without love—“A work and a child” was the life
cry—a fifth woman wished the man only for the
sake of the child, a sixth the child only for the sake
of the man, and the seventh wished both only for
her own sake!</p>
<p class='c005'>The conviction of some women that the common
erotic life of man and woman must have also a
spiritual life value for two human souls, filling
out and developing each other, was called “Ibsenism.”
And after the ideal demands which Ibsen
pressed upon the consciousness of the time, many
men—and not a few women—found relaxation
after their spiritual over-exertion, if they desired
nothing more from one another than “the sound
happiness of the senses.” Woman’s “personality,”
“equality,” and “human right” were old playthings,
relegated to the rubbish heap.</p>
<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_144'>144</span>The reaction against this reaction is now in
progress. Just now—and equally one-sided as
will be shown later—woman’s universal humanity
is emphasised at the expense of the instinct life;
her social labour-duty, at the expense of the
domestic life; her personality, at the expense of
the family.</p>
<p class='c005'>Among all these zigzag movements, more deeply
thoughtful women continually sought to recall
that neither the universal human nor the sexual
being of woman must be over-developed at the
expense of the other qualities of her being; that
perfect humanity signifies for neither sex that the
spiritual life has suppressed the sex life or sex,
the soul-life, but that both find in a third higher
condition their full redemption and harmony.
Through great love, exceptional natures already
create this condition; but what to-day only exceptional
natures attain, culture can gradually
make attainable for many.</p>
<p class='c005'>This great love demands fidelity. But often
only one—ordinarily the woman—experiences this
great feeling. And then not even the deepest
devotion on her part suffices to preserve the community
of life. To preserve the form for the purpose
of guarding the inner emptiness, as was done
earlier, is repugnant to the erotic consciousness
of the modern woman. This is the deepest reason
why the modern woman—even also the modern
developed man—becomes continually more undecided
about contracting marriage. They both
<span class='pageno' id='Page_145'>145</span>know that the passion which attracts two beings
is not synonymous with a sympathy which arises
through the harmony of their natures, which must
not be so complete that nothing remains of the
unexpected and mysterious that is so essential
an element of love. The modern woman asks
herself, “What can prove to me that an erotic
sympathy is profound, real, decreed by nature,
life-long?” And she asks with good reason. If
two lovers who know that they make each other
happy with all the senses, constrained themselves,
each in a corner of a room fettered to a stool,
blindfolded, to entertain each other three hours
daily for three months, this test would probably
prevent a great number of marriages void of
sympathy. But it would furnish no guaranty
that those who consummated the marriage after
such a concentrated soul interchange, would hold
out. For souls which in a certain stage of development
seem inexhaustible can be so transformed
that they experience only satiety for each other.
The young wife of to-day is deeply conscious of
what a new problem for each newly married woman
marriage is. She knows how impossible it is to
foresee what difficulties will be encountered and
whether good intentions and tactful adaptation
will succeed in overcoming these difficulties. She
knows that, even if the written law made her
wholly equal to man, even if she made herself
that equal by entering only into a marriage of
the higher, newer conscience, yet all the inner,
<span class='pageno' id='Page_146'>146</span>most difficult, deepest problems still remain.
This certainly induces many women to become
only the beloved, the mistress, of the man who
wishes no community of life, but only happy
hours. Many more women still strike the possibilities
of erotic happiness out of their plan of
life, because they have not experienced the ideal
love of which they dreamed, or else could not
realise it.<SPAN name='r3' /><SPAN href='#f3' class='c013'><sup>[3]</sup></SPAN></p>
<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_147'>147</span>Sometimes their doubt, in regard to the duration
of love and the unity of souls, decides them, another
time the longing for a personal life-work is
the reason for their determination—a life-work
for which these women have suffered so keenly,
been deprived of so much, and have so struggled,
that it has become passionately dear to them, and
they feel that a complete renunciation of the erotic
life is easier than the torment of being “drawn and
quartered,” as the death penalty of the Middle
Ages was called—a quartering between profession,
husband, home, and children. And the result
<span class='pageno' id='Page_148'>148</span>usually demonstrates that celibacy is wiser than
the compromise. It is most frequently the case,—in
Europe at least,—if the work of the unmarried
woman had no personal character, and if
the home is not dependent upon the earnings of
the wife, that she gives up her professional work
after her marriage.</p>
<p class='c005'>Against this sacrifice, however, the higher erotic
idealism has begun to rebel and has, thereby, come
into conflict with the conservative direction of
feminism, which while planning to make the wife
equal to the husband, adheres firmly to the present
marriage as protection for wife and children.</p>
<p class='c005'>It is this point of view that is condemned by the
new idealism. For it “protection” signifies, in its
innermost meaning, that the man buys love and
the woman sells it, which is considered “moral,”
while it is considered immoral for a man to sell
love and for a woman to buy it. The “protection”
in this relationship has as result that
the “virtue” of the maid is synonymous with
untouched sexual nature, and that of the wife,
with physical fidelity; while the “virtue” of the
youth and the man is judged from an entirely
different point of view.</p>
<p class='c005'>The relationship affording “protection” has
also brought with it the idea that a woman could
not show her love as openly as a man, except when
he was proud and poor and she was rich. Only
when the duty of support on the part of the man
ceases, will woman be able to demand the same
<span class='pageno' id='Page_149'>149</span>chastity and fidelity from him as he demands
from her; she will then be able, quite as proudly
and naturally as he, to show the flowering of her
being—her love—instead of as now increasing
her demand in the marriage market by artful
dissimulation. As long as maintenance, within
or outside of marriage, is the price for “possession”
of the woman, the man will consider the woman
as “his,” and the more submissive she is the more
fully she satisfies his feeling of ownership. Now
marriage has become only an affair of custom, a
common death or comatose condition, because
neither party needs trouble himself to keep the
love of the other. Only when woman, through her
work, can lead an existence worthy of a human
being, when no woman will sell her love but every
woman can freely give it, will man experience
what perfect womanly devotion is. And when no
man can “possess” love but must remain worthy
of love in order to be loved then only will women,
on their side, experience what tenderness and fine
feeling masculine devotion can attain.</p>
<p class='c005'>This, the purest and warmest erotic idealism,
is the morality of the future. But the way to its
realisation is not, as many women believe to-day,
that mothers, even, should continue their work of
earning a livelihood, but that way whose direction
I have elsewhere pointed out.<SPAN name='r4' /><SPAN href='#f4' class='c013'><sup>[4]</sup></SPAN></p>
<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_150'>150</span>Here we have to do, however, only with the
spiritual conditions which arise in the marriage of
to-day, whether the wife has retained her work
or has given it up.</p>
<hr class='c008' />
<p class='c005'>Even the cultivated modern man, who brings
<span class='pageno' id='Page_151'>151</span>to the human personality of his wife admiration
and sympathy, seeks in her always that “womanliness”
to which Goethe has given the classic
expression: the finely reserved, quiet, strong, self-contained
woman, reposing harmoniously in the
fulness of her own nature, a maternally lovely
being, wholly “natural,” a “beautiful soul,”
observing, creative, but using these gifts only to
create a home. These creative offices the modern
man who loves desires to assure, when he wishes
to “maintain” his wife, and begs her to abandon
the outside commercial work in which he foresees
a danger to the beautiful life together of which
both dream. The woman who along with her
new self-conscious individuality and her profound
culture has guarded the “old” devotion, understands
ordinarily this desire of the man. She
chooses, in spite of her idealism, as he wishes, in
cases where her work has not been very personal.
If she has worked in the same field as the man,
then she converts her gifts into comprehension of
him, into personal interest for all his interests;
and these marriages in which the wife has enjoyed
the same education as the man, but later has devoted
herself entirely to the home, are, as a rule,
the happiest marriages of the present time. But
in the proportion in which her work was creative,
is the difficulty of the choice. In the case where
the productive power has the strength of genius,
the modern man will scarcely utter such a wish and
in those circumstances the modern woman will
<span class='pageno' id='Page_152'>152</span>not grant it. And because the woman of genius
is generally a complete human being, with strong
erotic as well as universal human demands, she
chooses often compromise. She finds in love,
in motherhood, new revelations; and in the mysterious
depths of her nature, the productive element
of the maternal function has an elevating influence
upon her gift of creative power. Thus the energy
temporarily diminished by motherhood is restored.
And her uneasy conscience, because she must entrust
to others much of the care and education
of the children, is appeased by the consciousness
that she has often given to mankind richer natures,
and so more significant children, than more devoted
mothers, and that her own nature, because of the
double creative activity, has attained a ripeness
and richness which make her personality more
significant for husband and children than if she
had given up her calling to please them. These
thoughts cannot, however, prevent the daily conflict
between her feelings of love and the impossibility,
in times of strong spiritual production,
of giving expression to it. The very proximity
of the children consumes at such times too much
nervous energy. And since all creation requires
selfishness—in the sense of concentration upon
one’s <em>own needs</em> in order to be able to work creatively
and to sink oneself in the work—while all
love’s solicitude requires active <em>attention</em> to the
<em>needs of the loved ones</em>, the conflict must remain
permanent and <em>insoluble</em>.</p>
<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_153'>153</span>In this conviction, many women of genius choose
the lesser conflict: marriage without children.
Such a relationship occurs not infrequently in
our time in this way: a man of feeling through the
work of a woman is first moved by her being.
The man is in that case often the younger or the
less developed. At first, marriage brings both a
rich happiness. But later comes a time when the
power of the personality of the woman of genius
becomes too strong for the man; when he feels
himself exhausted by all the sensitiveness and
impatience which charge the air about a creative
personality with electricity. He has now had
enough of the rich spiritual exchange and longs
for a woman who is only fresh richness, sunny
quiet, easy docility; the now vanished “ingénue”
would be the type of woman who most of all
could entrance him.</p>
<p class='c005'>In another case, it is the wife who becomes
wearied, when the man can no longer keep pace
with her development nor afford her new inspiration.
The erotic life of the woman as well as of
the man of genius exhibits two phases: in one
they are attracted by their opposite, in the other
by a congeniality of souls; in one phase they have
sought sentiment, intimacy, nature; in the other,
soul, passion, culture. The order changes in
different cases, but the phenomenon repeats
itself. What both consciously or unconsciously
desire of love is not another individuality to love
but only a means of inspiration.</p>
<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_154'>154</span>Yet one thing may be emphasised: the richer
the nature of a woman is and the greater her talents,
the more life-determining love will be for her; at
one time making her existence desolate, at another
time making it fruitful. For the woman of genius
is less able than the man to renounce her own fate.
This the man is capable of doing, in the midst of
passion, without his work suffering thereby in
vigour and strength; the woman on the contrary—even
the genius—loses more easily her creative
impulse in happiness, her creative power in unhappiness.</p>
<p class='c005'>In this connection it may be recalled that many
of the most gifted, most highly developed woman
personalities of to-day have produced nothing,
but have been what a Frenchman has called “<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">les
grandes inspiratrices</span>.” These have not, indeed,
like the “Ladies” of the Middle Ages, been worshipped
at a distance by knights and poets; but
they have had an influence similar to that of
Beatrice, through the power of communication
of their rich personality in a relationship which
had now the character of an “<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">amitié amoureuse</span>,”
now that of a love imbued with sympathy, which
in some cases, infrequently however, led to marriage.
I need only mention the name Richard
Wagner for the forms of two such women to appear,
one of whom, who was his wife, surpassed
in personal greatness all independently creative
women of her time. But there have always been
less unusual women who had significance as propagandists
<span class='pageno' id='Page_155'>155</span>of the ideas of a great man through
their specifically feminine gifts of convincing, of
diffusing ideas, of modifying views, etc. If the
future, because of the wife’s zeal for production
on her own part, should lose this element of culture,
it would be deplorable.</p>
<p class='c005'>One of the favourite arguments of the woman
movement has been that two married people
working in the same profession had the best opportunities
for understanding each other and
consequently also for being happy. And truly
they can best talk shop with each other. But
that is what the working man needs least of all
in his home; there he seeks rather relaxation from
his calling, or at least a quite disinterested, immediate
sympathy with its annoyances or joys.
When one of the married fellow-workmen needs
exactly this sympathy, the other is perhaps busy
or too tired to be capable of such lively interest
as the other expects. Or one has experienced
disappointments, the other joys, and then a real
sympathy is still more difficult. To these crossings
of mood is added also the unintentional, involuntary
competition, which the similarity of
vocation brings with it. The wife gains patients,
the husband does not; his picture is praised, hers
is pulled to pieces; she comes home from the
theatre victorious, he after a defeat. During
work, the criticism of one often disturbs the other;
after the work, the criticism of the press disturbs
the harmony of both. Love wishes to fuse them
<span class='pageno' id='Page_156'>156</span>into one being, the outer world compels them
always to feel themselves separate. In the beginning
they think: “Nothing can come between
us.” But if both do not possess a rare tenderness
as well as rare fineness of soul, soon needles of ice
fly through the air between them. Only when the
wife, as is the case so often in France, puts her
ability into her husband’s affairs does this common
interest prevent rivalry.</p>
<p class='c005'>Whether the province of the husband and wife
is the same or not, difficulty always results from
the wife’s commercial or professional work in that
she rarely finds a good substitute for the domestic
and maternal duties. And when the husband
sees the house badly managed and the children
ill-bred, he tries according to his strength to
render assistance or, as more frequently happens,
seeks his comfort outside the home. But even
if these stumbling-blocks may be cleared away by
other feminine hands, the fact still remains that
the wife because of her work must demand sacrifices
on the part of the man such as his work has
required at all times from the wife. She is often
compelled to forego much of the society of her
husband, of his solicitude and tenderness because
he has no available time. Now each of the married
people has consideration for the leisure of the
other and for all other severe conditions of the
work. But beside these favourable results stands
also the detrimental fact that each suppresses his
claims upon the sympathy of the other, as well
<span class='pageno' id='Page_157'>157</span>as the wish to express his own, whenever this
receiving and giving would interfere with the
work. If this has become for one or for both a
real passion, then the passion blinds him to everything
that does not concern the work, and causes
alternately joy or suffering. Each of the married
couple then disturbs the other by moods, and
each needs to be cherished by the other. The
tenderness which neither can give to the other,
they find perhaps in a third.</p>
<p class='c005'>But in those cases where the work is not passionately
absorbing or where both husband and wife
are persons of understanding, rather than of feeling,
marriages of colleagues turn out well. Each has
in the other an intelligent, appreciative friend;
the common work together is rich, and neither
gives nor requires more than the other is able to
reciprocate. The education of the wife makes her
a good organiser in the home, which is comfortable
without the work’s suffering thereby. When
this is not too strenuous for either, but after the
close of a reasonable working time, the two meet
spiritually free in the home, the duties of which
they often share—then the domestic life is happy
and the work progresses easily, as long as there
are no children. When children arrive, then there
begins for the wife, even in such marriages, a life
beyond her strength.</p>
<p class='c005'>But since nature, in the interest of the race,
often makes opposites attractive to each other,
one may find a husband, full of feeling, who loves
<span class='pageno' id='Page_158'>158</span>children, united to a wife for whom science is the
greatest value of life, while she relegates feeling
to a lower plane and considers motherhood an
animal function. In place of the tenderness and
of the children for which the husband longed, he
has to participate in the victories and defeats of
a woman of science. Or we see a wife who dreamed
of an intimate life with her husband and who
sacrificed her work to it; but the life together
was wrecked upon the husband’s artist concentration,
and the wife had to suffer under a twofold
emptiness: the lack of her work and the lack of
happiness. Then one sees instances where the
wife retained her work because it was economically
necessary and because she hoped out of the richness
of her young strength to be able to fulfil all
duties. And all this she was able to do except
one thing—to preserve under the excessive strain
her beauty, her power of charm, the elasticity of
her nature. Perhaps she belonged to the very
highest among the new women who are so undivided,
so proud, who think so highly of themselves,
of man, of love, that they are beyond a wholly
justified coquetry and rest blindly upon the uniting
power of spiritual congeniality. But the day
comes perhaps when these strong and, in all other
respects, wise women have nothing other than
freedom to give to the man whose senses, whose
fancy, need that charm which the wife no longer
possesses. In case, however, the man’s nature is
not of those for whom the silken threads of daily
<span class='pageno' id='Page_159'>159</span>domestic comfort form the strong band, but on
the contrary is of the sort which needs renewal,
then the very absence of the wife, occasioned temporarily
by the work, can keep the relationship
long fresh. This is upon the assumption that she
understands what some of these women do not
understand: to give, but in such a way that the
man always longs for more; to remain sweetheart,
not only friend; to be able to jest, not only to
talk seriously. The modern wife of to-day,
tested upon so many subjects, is often deeply
mistaken in regard to the <em>kind</em> of “ministry” the
man needs. The simple wisdom of their grandmothers
consisted in this: to give much and to
require nothing, always to subordinate themselves
to the man with gentleness and humility, never
to assert themselves before him as a free, self-determining
personality. The wives of to-day,
sacredly convinced of the right and freedom of
women, succeed better in asserting their personality
than in pleasing their husbands, and the
quantity of their demands is often more noteworthy
than the quality of their gifts. That many
modern marriages turn out well shows that the
adaptability of the modern husband is beginning
to be even as great as that of the wife in former
times!</p>
<p class='c005'>The marriage is absolutely wrecked when the
wife brings to it all the new demands of woman,
but the husband all the primeval instincts of his
sex. What in each sex relationship most intimately
<span class='pageno' id='Page_160'>160</span>unites or most deeply sunders is and remains
the erotic depth of nature in each. And the
difference in this respect between the men and
women of the present ever more widely separates
them, and this division becomes fatal to innumerable
individual lovers of to-day, as well as for the
attitude of the sexes toward marriage in general.
The erotically symmetrical woman views with
hostility the dualism in the erotic nature of the
modern man. This dualism evinces itself, with
innumerable nuances it is true, in three typical
ways: infinite erotic discussion, but inability to be
stirred by it either with the soul or with the senses;
ability to love only with the senses, not with the
soul; and finally looking down upon the senses
and desiring “spiritual love” only. For the
modern completely developed woman the chattering
vacuity, the animal instinct, the ascetic
spirituality, are equally repellent. And yet it
happens that the rosy mist of love can bring such
a woman to a point where she creates for herself
an illusion out of one of the above mentioned types.
Most frequently this occurs in the case of the
vigorous man who divines nothing of the spiritual
content of the woman whose outer appearance
has charmed him. The tragedy of the modern
woman is then like that which Hebbel has revealed
in <cite>Judith</cite>, that the sex being in her is attracted
by the muscular masculinity, which her human
personality hates as her mortal enemy. For as a
personality she admires in man only the spiritual
<span class='pageno' id='Page_161'>161</span>strength of the man. The man on his part regrets
his mistake that he did not choose a pretty amiable
girl “of the old sort,” who would punctually lay
his table and willingly share his bed; a woman
“into whose head Ibsen had put no fancies,” who
“had not allowed herself to be talked into some
folly by feminism.”</p>
<hr class='c008' />
<p class='c005'>Among such “follies,” similar men, and many
others as well, include the demand advanced by
the woman movement for the married woman’s
property right, as well as a specified income for
the wife working in the home, who however has
to contribute from her property or her “remuneration”
as housekeeper to the common household—a
corollary which is always forgotten by the
anti-feminist writers who assert that “the man
becomes a slave when he has to work for the whole,
but the wife may retain everything of hers.”
(<em>Strindberg.</em>)</p>
<p class='c005'>The modern woman who before her marriage
was independent, owing to her work, abhors the
thought of a request for money—this most painful
moment even in the happiest marriages—to so
great a degree that this aversion determines the
wife in some cases to keep up her own work. If
on the contrary she has given this up, the consciousness
of her earlier independence makes her
often so sensitive that she feels herself injured by
a protest however delicate in regard to the expenditure
of money. More than one man has
<span class='pageno' id='Page_162'>162</span>regretted, in consequence of the unreasonable
demands of his wife, that he ever begged her to
give up her own work. There are women, on the
other hand, who continue their work and thereby
only increase the incapability of a good-for-nothing
man. In such cases, it avails little that
in many countries the law now allows the wife
free disposal of the income from her labour. Notwithstanding
this, the assertion is ridiculous that
“if the man drinks up the money of his wife it
is with her consent,” and “it is therefore of no
avail to alter the law.” For it makes a significant
difference in the relative position of the man and
wife whether the law gives him the <em>right</em> to it, or
whether he takes it by force. But in this as in
other cases, the woman movement obviously
cannot free women so long as they are impelled
by unconscious forces from within to actions and
sacrifices at variance with their conscious personality.
The one thing which the woman movement
has already achieved and can continue to achieve,
is that the undue encroachment of the men ceases
to have legal protection.</p>
<p class='c005'>It is undeniable, on the other hand, that the
unmarried woman’s personal and economic independence
fashions wives who in marriage show
themselves in a high degree egotistic, but who yet
incessantly scold about man’s egotism, wives who
themselves exhibit very little devotion and fine
feeling, but place very great importance upon
consideration. These wives were the ones whom
<span class='pageno' id='Page_163'>163</span>fifty years ago men called “graters.” But the
lack of amiability, which in certain women was
usually due to childbirth, has nevertheless in
modern woman, at least during the freedom of her
girlhood, been unrestrained habit. Her firm—and
just—decision not to be “subservient” to
her husband has resulted in, first, an armed peace,
later, a war, in which the wife’s work is one of the
projectiles. “I have my work, why should I stay
here to be used up and tormented?” she asks
herself. And when such questions begin, there
is usually but one answer.</p>
<p class='c005'>There is one decided advantage in giving to the
woman the opportunity to earn her living: she has
again acquired thereby significance in the home,
while the generation of women, who neither co-operated
<em>productively</em> in the home nor assumed all
the duties of the mother, were regarded by man
with less respect than, on the one side, their
grandmothers who <em>produced</em> all of the household
requisites, on the other side, their now independent
self-supporting granddaughters. Only when society
<em>recompenses the vocation of mother</em>, can woman
find in this a full equivalent for self-supporting
labour.</p>
<p class='c005'>Another typical group of our time is formed by
the numerous women for whom no choice remains
in regard to their work, since it is of a kind that
they must give up because of the removal to another
place, or more frequently because they
find so much work in the new home that every
<span class='pageno' id='Page_164'>164</span>thought of anything further outside must cease.
Those who think that industry has made the work
of the wife in the home to-day superfluous, speak
only of the <em>great cities</em>, and usually only of <em>opulent
families in the great cities</em>, where they are in a position
to buy cheaper everything that the labour of
the wife could produce. But in the country,
among all classes, the mother must be the director
of the work; and in all country homes in moderate
circumstances—as in countless poor or not very
well-to-do city families—the work of the mother is
still frequently indispensable, and in addition is
more economical than her earnings out of the
house could be, especially since the developed
modern woman is usually capable of a more
rational housekeeping than the woman of earlier
times.</p>
<p class='c005'>But while the mothers of that time knew nothing
except housework, those of to-day have often, as
unmarried and self-supporting women, enjoyed a
freedom of movement and opportunities of development
which, now that they are over-burdened
with household cares, they may seriously miss.
The work of the mother is now still further increased
by the difficulty of getting servants—at
least capable ones—and also by the demands of
luxury. The result of this again is that hospitality
in the home decreases, that the watchword of the
time, “the windows of the house wide open to
the world, fresh air in the home, no creeping into
the chimney corner,” is so interpreted that warmth
<span class='pageno' id='Page_165'>165</span>and intimacy vanish. Yes, the overworked
mother often herself insists that the family leave
the house and seek some place of recreation for
the annual festivals, which were once the children’s
happiest and brightest recollections of home.</p>
<p class='c005'>The fact that most modern women of culture
devote themselves to some branch of social work,
often to several, contributes still further to the
over-exertion of the mother. Even when this
occurs from pure altruism, the motive cannot
prevent such altruism from becoming sometimes
a disease of which one may die quite as surely
as of other diseases. This death is quite as
immoral as any other resulting from neglected
hygiene. No one has the right to perish from
altruism, except when destruction is the <em>condition</em>
of his fulfilling his duty. But in many cases
the occasion is the widely ramified social activity
of the woman for whom the home now often falls
short; not a result of altruism, but a manifestation
of that desire for power which once
was satisfied in the family. Or it may be a
form of the hysteria characteristic of the present
time. In the sixteenth century, the hysterical
were burned as witches; now they “sacrifice”
themselves to an activity which offers them in
reality the variety, the intoxication of publicity—in
a word, the life stimulus they need. But
even sound, sincere, and conscientious women are
driven by the woman movement and by social
work to assume pseudo duties, for which the real
<span class='pageno' id='Page_166'>166</span>duties are pushed aside. If instead of instituting
official inquiries among wives and mothers as to
what they can accomplish, one should direct the
same questions to their husbands and children,
these would, if they dared be honest, testify that
<em>they</em> must pay the price for the altruistic activity.</p>
<p class='c005'>Since the work of married women outside the
home, the woman movement, and the social work
began, one seldom finds a wholly sound, joyous,
harmonious wife and mother. The constant
complaint of the modern woman is that she
“never has time.” The minority who live a
life of luxury, wholly free from work, while the
husband works feverishly to provide the luxury
which neither will forego, telephone away a quarter
of the day making appointments concerning the
toilette, visits, and amusements, which take up
the remaining three quarters of the day. And
others, loaded down with household work or
divided between this and work for their livelihood,
how shall they find time!</p>
<p class='c005'>Least of all have they the time necessary for
the countless little tokens of tenderness which
intensify all relationships between people. A
French mother who became a widow and brought
up her children by means of her own work received
from her son, grown to a youth, the judgment:
“Thou hast never loved us.” Too late, it became
clear to her that “it requires time to love,” that
it is not enough to feel love, and, looked at as a
whole, to act with love—no, love must be expressed.
<span class='pageno' id='Page_167'>167</span>And for this the harassed mother of
to-day lacks time and quiet.</p>
<p class='c005'>Formerly, it was only the husband and father
who had no time; the wife and mother had it and
could thus preserve the warmth of the home.
But now?</p>
<p class='c005'>There are now, it is true, many women with so
few claims that they think they have fulfilled
the fourfold task. In reality, they have fulfilled
all their duties imperfectly, or eliminated one task
for a time in order to be able to accomplish the
others. <em>No woman has ever been at the same time
all</em> that a wife can be to her husband, a mother to
her children, a housewife to her house, a working
woman to her work. In the last capacity the
difficulty of the married woman is still further
increased by the present competition, as also by
the fact that the better a person works the more
work falls to her, so that an exact and reasonable
division of time between work and home is often
rendered quite impossible.</p>
<p class='c005'>In addition to all these difficulties arising
through actualities, there are finally also those
evoked by the “spirit of the time.” A wife has,
for example, decided to give up a vocation which
she saw was not compatible with her home. But
she stills finds no rest. She is harassed by the
demand of the “spirit of the time” that a married
woman should be able to take care of the house
as well as to accomplish outside personal work.
The husband, also influenced by the “spirit of
<span class='pageno' id='Page_168'>168</span>the time,” thinks the same or feels painfully the
fact that his wife, for love of him, has sacrificed
the exercise of a talent, in which he perhaps has
felt a personal interest; the longing for the vocation
awakens in her, and she resumes her work,
with the result that, if she has energetically resisted
the lassitude that comes with beginning motherhood,
she and the child must suffer later. Or
she lives in a permanent state of over-exertion
which finally culminates in nervous conditions
under which the whole family must share her
suffering. Had she been able to follow in peace
her instinct to strike deep root in the home soil
and to enlarge and enrich her being by the annual
growth of ring after ring of her production of love,
then the essential values would have been increased
for all. Now, she is led astray by a biased
opinion of the time, which owes its effectiveness
to the single fact that the opinionated resolutely
turn their back upon all facts.</p>
<p class='c005'>Thanks to these ideas of the time propagated
by certain feminists, we see increasing numbers
of women who perform their “social duty” as the
telegraph poles perform their function; while
such duty could have been fulfilled as the tree
grows in a garden: blooming, fruit-bearing, joyful,
joy-bringing.</p>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_169'>169</span>
<h2 class='c006'>CHAPTER VII<br/> <span class='large'>THE INFLUENCE OF THE WOMAN MOVEMENT UPON MOTHERHOOD</span></h2></div>
<p class='c007'>Because it has increased the culture of woman
and her feeling of personal responsibility, the
woman movement has had its influence, both
directly and indirectly, upon the postponement
of the legal and customary marriage age. Since
young girls have exercised their brains as much
as the boys have, they are no longer so far in
advance of the boys in physical development.
But when modern girls finish their studies they
are physically as well as psychically more universally
developed than their grandmothers were.
They know much more of the difficulties and
realities of life, not least of the sexual life. And
this knowledge has instilled in them a reluctance
to undertake too early the serious and difficult
task of motherhood. They have greater need of
truth and culture, and less tendency to erotic
visionary dreaming than girls of their age in the
middle of the previous century; their desire for
work and their social feeling fix goals, and they
work with all their might to attain them. And
<span class='pageno' id='Page_170'>170</span>because, as already explained, both sexes have for
each other a more many-sided attraction than the
merely erotic, young people are more careful, more
choice, in their erotic decisions. The finest young
girls of to-day are penetrated by the Nietzschean
idea, that marriage is the combined will of two
people to create a new being greater than themselves.
But their joy does <em>not</em> consist in the fact
“that the man wills”; they are themselves “will,”
and above all they have the will to choose the right
father for their children, not only for their own
sake but for the sake of the children.</p>
<p class='c005'>If it be true that immediate, “blind,” erotic
attraction is most instinctively correct in choice,
then the present comrade life of young people and
the increased clear-sightedness which it gives, as
well as the increasing erotic idealism of young
girls, are not unconditionally advantageous to the
new race. The question is, however, still undecided.
Here it may only be emphasised that the young
girl of to-day, in spite of all intellectual development,
is still won always by powerful spiritual-sensual
love, which the woman movement has too
long considered as a negligible quantity. Under
the influence of the doctrine of evolution, young
girls begin to understand that their value as members
of society depends essentially upon their value
for the propagation of mankind; all the more they
realise the duty of physical culture which will
enable them to fulfil this function better; they no
longer consider their erotic longing as impure and
<span class='pageno' id='Page_171'>171</span>ugly but as pure and beautiful. It is out of this
soul condition that the different movements for
the protection of mothers and children, theoretically
considered, have proceeded. These are
at present the most important “woman movements,”
although unrecognised by the older woman
movement. And this older movement has not yet
recognised the fact that, because of present marriage
conditions, the degenerate, uneducated, decrepit,
have greater opportunity for propagating
the race, both within and outside of marriage, than
the young, sound, pure-minded, and loving; that
it can therefore <em>be no sin</em>, from the point of view of
the race, if the latter become parents without
marriage, nor should it be a subject of shame from
the social point of view. All women’s rights have
little value, until this one thing is attained: that
a woman who through her illegitimate motherhood
has lost nothing of her personal worth, but on the
contrary has proved it, does not forfeit social
esteem.</p>
<p class='c005'>Our time can point to women who have been
typical of the reform tendencies of the century
in this respect. Some of these women, if they
really accomplished the unprecedented task of “a
child and a work,” have drawn their strength
for the task out of precisely the commonplace,
homely qualities and sterling virtues, contrary
to which they believed they were acting when
they became mothers, driven by a power greater
than their <em>conscious</em> personality. Others again
<span class='pageno' id='Page_172'>172</span>became mothers with the consent of their whole
personality. They were clear that they thus
made use of the masculine rights and freedom
which feminism first brought home to women.
And although many advocates of women’s rights
refrain from such consequences of their ideas, the
women who in other respects determine their
conduct of life by their own free personal choice
recognise that this, their <em>real</em> “emancipation,” is
a fruit of the woman movement.</p>
<p class='c005'>In Europe, however, most women under thirty
still dare to dream of motherhood in a love marriage
as the greatest happiness and the highest
duty of life.<SPAN name='r5' /><SPAN href='#f5' class='c013'><sup>[5]</sup></SPAN></p>
<p class='c005'>But, as direct and indirect result of the woman
movement, the fact none the less remains that
there is found <em>among women an increasing disinclination
<span class='pageno' id='Page_173'>173</span>for maternity</em>, a reluctance which deprives
mankind of many superior mothers, while
at the same time woman’s commercial work for
self-support in all classes increases her sterility or
makes her incapable of the suckling so vitally
important for the children.</p>
<p class='c005'>That the modern woman, because of individual
fate or her own choice, often remains unmarried is
no danger in and for itself. This fact, as I have
emphasised above, is connected with a number of
cultural and material conditions, which sometime
will be altered, and then woman’s desire for marriage
will again increase. The real danger has appeared
only since women have begun to strengthen
the tendency to celibacy by the amaternal theory,
which now confuses the feminine brain and leads
the feminine instinct astray.</p>
<p class='c005'>The woman movement in and with this influence
upon maternity sinks to the lowest point of the
scale according to the criterion of worth employed
here: the elevation of the life of the individual and
of the race. In this we stand in our time before
a twofold mystery, which lies in the circumstance
that not only women—women “with breasts made
right to suckle babes”—emphasise this stultifying
influence, but that there are men, each the son
of a mother, who also propagate it. These men
have allowed themselves to be blinded by the false
logic concerning women, which declares that since
rich mothers do not wish to fulfil the duties of a
mother and the poor cannot fulfil them, superior
<span class='pageno' id='Page_174'>174</span>social organisations must be created for that purpose;
in other words, instigated by a mere temporary
unpleasant discrepancy, we will create a
new, a different order of things. But, if this
obtained universally, it would inflict incomparably
greater injury upon mankind than do present
unhappy conditions.</p>
<p class='c005'>Upon the whole, however, it is precisely as a
result of this tendency that the deepest hostility
of men against feminism has developed. The fact
that the idea of evolution is now beginning to enter
into the flesh and blood of man also contributes
its share to this feeling. Just as formerly a man
wished heirs for his personal and real estate and
for his name, he now desires inheritors of his
being; he desires an eternal life, which becomes a
certainty only by means of parenthood, whereby
the individual as father or mother lives on physically
and spiritually, in body and soul, in his children
and grandchildren down to the last of his
descendants. This conception has made the sex
instinct again holy, as it was for the pagans. This
new reverence for their duty as beings of sex now
induces many young men to guard their sexual
health and strength by an asceticism the motive of
which is the exact opposite of that which determined
the asceticism called forth by Christianity,
the asceticism which was fear of the sex instinct
as impure and as a temptation to sin. Now the
innermost aim of young men’s creative desire is
the higher development of mankind. Love becomes
<span class='pageno' id='Page_175'>175</span>for them the condition by which they can
most perfectly redeem their religious certainty of
being part of a great design, their religious longing
for harmony with life’s creative desire, with the
infinite.</p>
<p class='c005'>There are now men who work most zealously
for the ennoblement of the race—“eugenics,” as
this effort is called in England—as well as for the
protection of mother and child—“puericulture,”
as this endeavour is called in France. There are
men who write excellent works upon the psychology
of the child, and upon sexual instruction; men,
who, in art and poetry, give expression to the
new veneration for the sanctity of generation, for
motherhood, for the child. The finest thing written
about the child as a cultural power is written
by an American.<SPAN name='r6' /><SPAN href='#f6' class='c013'><sup>[6]</sup></SPAN> Painting has now new devotional
pictures of the Mother with her Child,
especially those conceived by a Frenchman and an
Italian.<SPAN name='r7' /><SPAN href='#f7' class='c013'><sup>[7]</sup></SPAN> The most beautiful representation of
youth’s new desire for love is by a German sculptor.<SPAN name='r8' /><SPAN href='#f8' class='c013'><sup>[8]</sup></SPAN>
Likewise a German, Nietzsche, has the
most profound conception of parenthood and
education as the means whereby humanity will
cross over the bridge of the men of to-day to the
superman.</p>
<p class='c005'>Only when all this is realised can one conceive
what the feelings of these new men must be when
they meet those new women “who are no longer
<span class='pageno' id='Page_176'>176</span>willing to be slaves of the instinct for the propagation
of the race;” who see in motherhood “a loss
of time from their work;” “an attack upon their
beauty;” an obstacle to the refined conduct of
life;—a conduct of life certain to debase woman’s
worth as a child-bearing being, but to elevate her
to that exquisite, perfect product of culture, a
“woman of the world;” an obstacle also for
woman as creator of other objective cultural
values. If a man with a father’s desires finds
himself united with such a woman, he finds himself
in marriage quite as much a prostitute as
innumerable wives have felt themselves to be
when they were mere tools of a man’s desire. On
the contrary the desire for the elevation of mankind
on the part of the new woman and the new
man, is evinced in the idea that not the quantity
but the quality of the children they give to humanity
is most significant; that a land of fewer but
more perfect men is a higher culture ideal than the
principle still always maintained from the point of
view of national competition, that the inhabitants
of a country must only be numerous however
inferior they may be.</p>
<p class='c005'>To this wholly new evolutionary conception of
life the amaternal women oppose the following
train of thought which greatly influences the feeling
and desire of women to-day<SPAN name='r9' /><SPAN href='#f9' class='c013'><sup>[9]</sup></SPAN>:</p>
<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_177'>177</span>Culture now sets new duties for woman, more
significant than exclusively natural ones. The
more the individual life increases in value, the
more the interest for the mere functions of sex
declines, and with it also the value of woman <em>as
woman</em> for a society where, because of motherhood,
she has become a being of secondary rank. It
evinces lack of ideality if one censures this tendency
of the modern woman to renounce maternity
for the sake of more spiritual interests. While
the mother concentrates herself upon her own
child only, the woman who renounces motherhood
can extend her being to embrace children as
children in general. As a mother, woman is only
a being of nature. But the personality, with its
multiplicity of feelings and endeavours, demands
an independent activity as well as maternity.</p>
<p class='c005'>To put her entire personality into the education
of her children is a twofold error. First and foremost,
most mothers are <em>bad</em> educators and serve
their children better if they entrust them to a born
teacher; in the second place, <em>gifted</em> children educate
<span class='pageno' id='Page_178'>178</span>themselves best and should be spared all educational
arts. The mediocre child, who is more susceptible
to education, has ordinarily also only
mediocre parents, who likewise benefit the children
most if they put them in the care of excellent
teachers. Children who are <em>below</em> mediocrity can
also be best educated by specialists. So there
remains for the mother, after the first years’ care
and training, no especial task as educator, at least
none in which she can really put her personality.
To talk to a mother about the possibilities of a
richer office of mother, as educator of her children,
she calls lulling her into an illusion under which
she must labour only to suffer. A woman who can
exercise her personality in another way should
not therefore put it into the education of her
children.</p>
<p class='c005'>The amaternal advocates deny that motherliness
is the criterion of womanliness; they find this
criterion in the form, the external being of woman,
in her manner and physical appearance—in a word,
in the <em>outer</em> expression of the inner disposition,
which they deny as typical of womanliness!
“Womanliness” is thus reduced to an “æsthetic
principle,” while woman’s spiritual attributes are
considered as “universally human”; and the right
is granted to the feminine sex to emancipate herself
from the result of the heresy that <em>motherliness</em>
should be the ethical norm for the “being” or
“essence” of womanhood. The suitability of
woman’s <em>psychic</em> constitution for her work as
<span class='pageno' id='Page_179'>179</span>mother is not acknowledged as proof that motherliness
is the distinguishing characteristic of womanliness.
For this constitution is less conspicuous
in the higher stages of differentiation. Its suitability
was then a phenomenon of adaptation and
changed with the conditions of life. Thus this
constitution cannot be cited as a reason for limiting
woman’s personal exercise of her powers.
Motherliness is no social instinct. How can
motherliness, which we have in common with
beasts and savages, be considered as higher than,
for example, justice, truth, and other gradually
won spiritual values, which woman can promote
by her personal activity? The higher the forms
of life woman attains, the less will her personality
be determined by motherliness. Why then should
women bring to the domestic life the sacrifice of
their personality, while no one demands this of
men? Why shall not woman, just as man, satisfy
her demands as a sex being in marriage and, as for
the rest, follow her profession, attend to her
spiritual development, her social tasks? Why condemn
woman to remain a half-being—that is, with
unexercised brain—only because certain of her
instincts attract her to man, while he is not constrained
to suppress his personality because he
in like manner felt himself attracted to woman?
It is the old superstition of the family life as
“woman’s sphere,” which still confuses the conception.
By the present form of family life
woman is “oversexed.” Her higher development,
<span class='pageno' id='Page_180'>180</span>as well as that of her husband and children, will
be promoted if woman guards her independence
by earning her own living, in commercial work
conducted beyond the portal of the home; if
housekeeping becomes co-operative; if the education
of the children is carried on outside the home,
in which now the motherly tenderness emasculates
the children and fosters in them family sentiment
of an egoistic nature and not social feelings. Thus
are solved the difficulties which are entailed when
the wife’s work is carried on outside the home;
equipoise between her intellectual and emotional,
her sexual and social nature follows, and her worth,
as that of a man, will be measured by her human
personality, not by her womanliness, her efficacy
in the family, for the exercise of which she is now
constrained to renounce her personality.</p>
<p class='c005'>So runs in brief the programme of the amaternals.</p>
<hr class='c008' />
<p class='c005'>It has already been indicated that the woman
movement, in its <em>inception</em>, could gather strength
only by combating with all its power the prejudice
that <em>woman is incapable of the same kind of activity
as man</em>. But now the whole woman movement
has for a long time been emphasising the fact that
woman is entitled, not only on her own behalf but
more especially in her capacity as home-keeper,
wife, and mother, to the full development of her
powers and to equality with man in the family and
in society. In the amaternal programme sketched
above, however, the fanaticism, which characterised
<span class='pageno' id='Page_181'>181</span>the entire woman movement a generation ago,
now evinces itself in the error that <em>equal rights</em> for
the sexes must mean also <em>equal functions</em>; that the
development of women’s powers involves also their
application in the same spheres of activity in
which man is engaged; that <em>equality</em> of the sexes
implies <em>sameness</em> of the sexes. While moderate
feminism begins to see that, if man and wife compete,
this rivalry can benefit<SPAN name='r10' /><SPAN href='#f10' class='c013'><sup>[10]</sup></SPAN> neither the woman,
the man, nor the children, amaternal feminism
urges the keenest competition. And if this is
once accepted as advantageous to woman’s personality
and to society, then it is obvious that she
must, with all the energy of the attacked, defend
herself from the duties of maternity, because of
which she would obviously come off second-best
in the competition.</p>
<p class='c005'>From the point of view of individualism it is
obvious that the <em>law</em> must set no limitations to
woman’s practice of a vocation, unless evident
hygienic dangers menace either her or the coming
generation. Women must, for their own sake as
well as for that of society, have free <em>choice of work</em>,
for life and nature possess innumerable unforeseen
possibilities. Nevertheless, it does happen that
a woman who gives superior children to humanity
may, nevertheless, feel herself incapable of educating
<span class='pageno' id='Page_182'>182</span>them; likewise it sometimes happens that a
husband and wife who have exceptional children,
cannot endure to live together. In neither case
has law or custom a right to force upon a mother
or a father a yoke that is intolerable or to demand
of a mother or a father unreasonable sacrifices.</p>
<p class='c005'>But the right to limit the choice of work, the
law does not possess; nature assumes that right
herself: first of all from the axiom that no one can
be in two places at the same time, and in the second
place because no one can respond simultaneously
and with full energy to two different spiritual
activities. One cannot, for example, count even
to one hundred and at a certain number give a
simple grasp of the hand without suspending the
counting momentarily. Although no one has
ever been denied the privilege of solving a mathematical
problem and of following carefully at the
same time a piece of music, yet it is certain that
the effectiveness of both intellectual activities
would be thereby diminished. These extremely
simple observations can be continued until the
most complex are reached. If the observation be
directed to the sphere of domestic life, every wife
and mother who <em>is willing to institute impartial
observations of self</em>, will affirm the difficulty of
working with a divided mind.</p>
<p class='c005'>If a mother carries on her work at home and
must put it away in order to be beside the sick-bed
of her child, or to make those arrangements which
assure domestic comfort, or to help her husband,
<span class='pageno' id='Page_183'>183</span>then she feels that her book or her picture suffers,
that the activity which binds her more intimately
to the home relaxes for a time the intimacy of her
connection with her work. One can by day carry
on a dull industrial task, and by night produce an
achievement of the soul; but one cannot let one’s
soul radiate in one direction without impairing
its energy in another. A work needs exclusive
devotion. And this is, viewed externally, difficult
to attain in joint action; viewed from within, it
requires a renunciation that in the case of a loving
soul evokes a continual inner struggle. For that
reason, also, literature with woman as its subject
has for some decades been filled with the great
conflict of modern woman’s life: the conflict between
vocation and parents, between vocation
and husband, between vocation and child. Certainly
the family has often been a torture chamber
for individuality, as a consequence of laws and
customs, which the future will regard as we now
do the rack and the thumbscrew. But nature is
more severe than law and custom when she confronts
us with a choice which, however it may
turn out, tears a piece from our heart.</p>
<p class='c005'>And now neither custom nor man demands of
woman the “sacrifice of the personality.” This
sacrifice is required only by the law of limitations
which rules over us all.</p>
<p class='c005'>The creative man or the man working objectively
must often condemn the emotional side of his personality
to a partial development; he must for the
<span class='pageno' id='Page_184'>184</span>sake of his work renounce many family values important
for this emotional side of his being. Even
if shorter working hours could partially diminish
this cultural offering, the <em>inner</em> conflict, for the
man or the woman, is not settled thereby.</p>
<p class='c005'>Even if a man, in the consciousness of his wife’s
endowment of talent, assumed a number of domestic
duties, especially those pertaining to the
children, the inner conflict would still continue.
And this conflict is in no way solved by the amaternal
theory that the personal life must be placed
above the instinct life. For, as has been emphasised,
the choice is not between the personal and the
instinct life, but between the intellectual and
the emotional side of woman’s personality. And
the solution of this choice has not been discovered
by the amaternals, who would combine commercial
work with marriage and maternity. Women who
remain unmarried or who give up commercial activity
which they cannot carry on in the home,
have not <em>settled the conflict</em> either, but have only
reduced its difficulties.</p>
<p class='c005'>The fundamental error of the amaternal solution
of the problem is that it characterises motherliness
as a <em>non-social</em> instinct, but, on the other hand,
defines the “personal” activity of woman as an
expression of the social instinct. <em>For all social
instincts have been developed by culture out of
primitive instincts.</em> All cultural development lies
between the sex impulse of the Australian negress
and the erotic sentiment of Elizabeth Barrett
<span class='pageno' id='Page_185'>185</span>Browning’s sonnets. And when the amaternals
assert that motherliness, which “we have in common
with beasts and savages,” cannot be an
expression of the personality, their argument has
the same validity as that which would deny to the
Sistine Chapel the quality of an expression of
personality because beasts and savages also exhibit
the decorative instinct.</p>
<p class='c005'>The development of the mother instinct into
motherliness is one of the greatest achievements
in the progress of culture, a development by which
the maternal functions have continually become
more complex and differentiated. Already in the
case of the higher animals maternity involves much
more than the mere act of giving birth; an animal
not only faces death for her young, she gives them
also a training which often indicates power of
judgment. A cat, for instance, which sought in
vain to prevent her kitten from entering the water
and which finally threw the kitten in and then
pulled it out, thus obtaining the desired result of
her pedagogy, had not, as have so many modern
mothers, read Spencer, but could, nevertheless,
put many of these mothers to shame. Even the
initial maternal functions, nursing and physical
care, involve a culture of the spiritual life of the
mother, not only through an increase in tenderness,
but also in observation, discrimination, judgment,
self-control; a woman’s character often develops
more in a month during which she is occupied with
the care of children, than in years of professional
<span class='pageno' id='Page_186'>186</span>work. Mother love and the reciprocal love which
it awakens in the child, not only exercise the first
deep influence upon the individual’s life of feeling,
but this love is <em>the first form of the law of mutual
help—it is the root of altruism, the cotyledon</em> of a now
widely ramified tree of “social instincts.”</p>
<p class='c005'>Although woman through the mere <em>physical</em>
functions of motherhood makes a great social
contribution, the importance of her contribution
is greatly enhanced if one also takes into consideration
her <em>spiritual</em> nature. And notwithstanding
the fact that fatherhood has also, to a certain
degree, developed in man the qualities of tenderness,
watchfulness, patience, yet the enormous
predominance of woman’s <em>physical</em> share in parenthood,
in comparison with man’s, is in itself enough
to create, in course of time, the intimate connection
which still exists to-day between mother
and child, as well as the difference between the
personality of woman and man. The physical
functions of motherhood were the fundamental
reasons for the earliest division of labour. And
this division of labour, the aim of which, next to
self-preservation, was for both sexes the protection
of posterity, augmented and strengthened the
qualities which each sex employed for its special
functions. All human qualities lie latent in each.
But they have been so specialised by this division
of labour, or, on the other hand, suppressed by it,
that they now appear in varying proportions: in
woman, a careful, managing, supervising, lifeguarding,
<span class='pageno' id='Page_187'>187</span>inward-directed sense of love; in man,
courage, desire for action, force of will, power of
thought, an activity subduing nature and life,
became the distinguishing characteristics; and
fatherhood became psychologically, as it is physiologically,
something different from motherhood.
Even if culture continues to efface the sharp lines
of demarcation, so that it becomes more and more
impossible to generalise about “woman” and
“man,” and increasingly more necessary for each
and every woman to solve the “woman question”
individually, yet from the point of view of the race,
the <em>division of labour must on the whole remain the
same as that which hitherto existed</em>, if the higher
development of mankind shall continue in uninterrupted
advance to more perfect forms. It is
necessary for <em>these higher ends of culture</em> that woman
<em>in an ever more perfect manner shall fulfil what has
hitherto been her most exalted task</em>: the bearing and
rearing of the new generation.</p>
<p class='c005'>The amaternal assertion, that motherliness can
be no higher than justice and truth, is an infuriating
antithesis. It is as if one should assert that “air
is better than water, or both better than bread.”
Both assertions place the fundamental condition
of life counter to other needs of life! Who shall
exercise justice and truth when no new men are
born? And, moreover, how shall justice and truth
increase in mankind if children are not trained to
a greater reverence for justice and a deeper love
of truth? In order to fulfil this one office <em>of
<span class='pageno' id='Page_188'>188</span>education</em> well, mothers need their <em>universal human
culture in its entirety</em>. But even if this were not
so, if motherhood did not require the concentration
of woman’s personality; even if motherliness
remained only “primitive instinct,” yet this
instinct, in the women who have guarded it, is
more valuable for mankind than the universal
human development of power of the women who
have lost this instinct. No social nor individual
activity of women could compensate for the extinction
of this “instinct,” which only recently in
Messina drove hundreds of mothers to shield their
children with their own bodies; this “instinct,”
which recently impelled a mother, who learned
before she gave birth to her child that her own
life must be the price for the saving of that of the
child, to cry: “I have lived, but the life of my
child belongs now to mankind—save the child!”
So the mother died without even having seen the
beautiful being for whom she gave her life. In
the world of “personally” developed women,
however, after a new Messina catastrophe the
mothers would be found with their manuscripts
and their pictures in their arms. And confronted
with a choice like that related above, the mother
would answer: “Let the child die, I will live my
personal life to the end.”</p>
<p class='c005'>The amaternal type must persist for the present.
There are in reality in our time many women who
with unresponsive eyes can pass by a lovely child,
among them even mothers who do not feel the
<span class='pageno' id='Page_189'>189</span>pure sensuousness, the wise madness, the intoxicating
delight which such a child awakens in every
motherly woman; mothers who have no conception
what a fascinating subject for study the soul of a
child can offer. Jean Paul, who scourged worthless
mothers and tried to awaken the repressed
maternal instinct of his time with the charge that
a woman who is bored when she has children, is a
contemptible creature, would find to-day many
mothers who are bored only if they have their
children about them.</p>
<p class='c005'>And 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 <em>falsify life values</em>
in their own favour so that they themselves shall
represent the highest form of life, the “human
personality” in comparison with which the “instinctively
feminine” signifies a lower stage of
development, a poorer type of life.</p>
<p class='c005'>Women who have produced books and works
of art, to be compared, as respects permanence of
value, to confetti at a carnival, have, according
to this viewpoint, proved themselves human
individualities, while a mother who has contributed
an endless amount of clear thought, rich
understanding, warm feeling, and strong will to
the education of a fine group of children, requires
<span class='pageno' id='Page_190'>190</span>a public office in order to prove herself a “human
personality”! The brain work which a woman
employs in a commercial concern bears witness
to her individuality, but the brain work which a
large, well-managed household demands, does not.
The woman physician who delivers a mother
expresses her “personality,” but the mother has
put no “personality” into the feelings with which
she has borne the child, the dreams with which she
has consecrated it, the ideas in accordance with
which she has educated it! The girl who has
passed her examinations has proved herself a
developed human being; but her grandmother,
who is now filled with the kindness and wisdom
which she has won in a life dedicated to domestic
duties, a life in which the restricted sphere of her
duties did not prevent the comprehensiveness of
her cultural interests, nor her all-embracing sympathy
with humanity—such a woman is not a
personality!</p>
<p class='c005'>When men advance as an argument against
women’s rights the fear that women will lose their
womanliness in public life, the older feminists
answer that womanliness, especially motherliness,
is rooted too firmly in nature to make it possible
for this danger to exist. Nothing has, however,
become more clear in this amaternalistic time than
that motherliness is <em>not</em> an indestructible instinct.
Just as our time produces in increasing numbers
sterile women and women incapable of nursing
their children, so it produces more and more
<span class='pageno' id='Page_191'>191</span>psychically amaternal women. We can pass in
silence the cases of children martyred in families
or in children’s homes, for sexual perversity and
religious fanaticism often play a rôle in such
connections; we can also pass by the millions of
mothers who bring about the abortion of their
offspring, for the poor are driven to such practices
largely by necessity, the rich mostly by love of
pleasure. There still remain a sufficient number
of women in whom the mother instinct has faded
away because of a course of thought like that just
described. Our time furnishes manifold proofs
of the fact that the mother instinct can easily be
weakened, or even entirely disappear, although
the erotic impulse continues to live; that motherliness
is not a spontaneous natural instinct, but
the product of thousands of years not merely of
<em>child-bearing</em>, but also of <em>child-rearing</em>; and that it
must be strengthened in each new generation by
the personal care which mothers bestow upon their
children. A woman learns to love the strange
child whom she nurses as if it were her own; a
father who can devote himself to the care of his
little children is possessed by an almost “motherly
tenderness” for them, as are also older brothers
and sisters for the little ones whom they care for.
But while those who advocate the cause of the
amaternal women draw from such facts the conclusion
that motherliness cannot be used as a
criterion of womanliness, yet an entirely different
conclusion forces itself upon everyone who sees
<span class='pageno' id='Page_192'>192</span>in the united uplift of the individual and of mankind
the criterion of the life-enhancing effect of
the woman movement, the conclusion that the
amaternal soul not only confirms the worst apprehensions
of men in regard to the results of the
woman movement, but also constitutes the greatest
danger to the woman movement itself. For the
amaternal ideas will evoke a violent reaction <em>on the
part of men</em>, in case such a reaction does not appear
at an early stage on the part of women.</p>
<p class='c005'>This latter reaction might also include a rebellion
against the methods of industrial production,
which exhaust the strength of mothers and children.
For the objection of industrialism, that “it cannot
exist without women,” falls to the ground in face
of the fact that a race cannot exist without sound
and moral mothers. And “moral” means, here,
mothers capable and willing to bear sound children
and to train children along moral lines. If, on
the contrary, Europe and America adhere to the
economic and ethical principles which prevent a
number of able and willing women of this type from
becoming mothers, and if numbers of other women
who could be mothers continue unwilling to assume
the burden of motherhood, then this problem
will finally become the problem of <em>a future for the
European-American people</em>.</p>
<p class='c005'>The woman movement must now with resolute
determination abandon the narrow, biased attitude,
psychologically natural a generation ago when
the zealots of feminism had no other standard of
<span class='pageno' id='Page_193'>193</span>value for an idea, an investigation, or a book, than
whether they <em>advanced or did not advance</em> the cause
of woman; whether they <em>proved or did not prove</em>
woman’s equality with man. For woman’s work,
studies, and other accomplishments, no other
standard was applied than that of equality with
man’s work, man’s studies, and the accomplishments
of man. In a word, the proposition was
that woman should be enabled to perform at the
same time the life-work of a woman and of a man!</p>
<p class='c005'>It is through these hybrids that the feminine sex
transgresses against the masculine. And this is
one reason why our time is so filled with the tragic
vicissitudes of women. Truly, every progressive
person must agree with Goethe’s aphorism, “I
love him whom the impossible lures.” For, thus
allured, man has elevated his particular generation
above the generation preceding. But <em>in action</em>
every one must go down who is not imbued with
the consciousness that whoever exceeds his limits
is liable to tragic consequences, in the modern
psychological view of the guilt attaching to one
who undertakes more than his strength will
allow.</p>
<hr class='c008' />
<p class='c005'>But our time exhibits also other less convulsively
strained conditions of the feminine soul and therefore
also brighter fates for woman. It shows not
infrequently wives united with their husbands,
not only by the sympathy which the human personality
of each inspires, but also by the erotic
<span class='pageno' id='Page_194'>194</span>attraction which the sex character of each exercises.
And they have both won thereby that unity
through which all the best and highest powers of
their being are liberated and elevated as by
religion. And their parenthood will then be the
highest expression of this religion.</p>
<p class='c005'>Only religious natures are—in the deepest
meaning of the word—loving or faithful or creative.
It is the same soul which in one person
reveals itself in ecstasy of belief, in a second
in ardour of creation, in a third in a great erotic
passion, in the fourth as parental love, in others
again as love of country, as enthusiasm for freedom,
desire for reform. At times one and the same soul,
a woman’s or a man’s, is kindled by all these
passions. But never has the same soul been able
<em>at the same time</em> to feed all these passions in their
highest potency. Whether it be God, a work, or
a human being that the soul embraces with its
entire devotion, the religious character of this
devotion always evinces itself in increasing longing,
an endless susceptibility, a more persistent search
after means of expression, a continual service, an
inexhaustible patience in waiting for reciprocal
activity from the object of love. The religious
strength of a feeling consists in this, that the soul
in every work, every sorrow, every joy,—in a word,
in every spiritual condition, every experience,—is,
consciously as well as unconsciously, more closely
united with God, with the work, with the beloved,
until every finest fibre of one’s being reaches down
<span class='pageno' id='Page_195'>195</span>to the profound depths which the object of love
represents for the lover.</p>
<p class='c005'>In this necessary condition of concentration of
the spiritual life is found the truth of woman’s
complaint that the man, absorbed by his work,
“no longer loves her”; the truth of the experience
that earthly love indisputably detracts from the
love of God; the truth of the frequent experience
of husband and wife that with children the wealth
of their spiritual life together is in certain respects
inevitably diminished; the truth of man’s fear
that woman’s absorption in a life-work personally
dear to her must to a certain degree detract from
her devotion to the home; the truth of the experience
that the office of mother often interferes with
the development of woman’s intellectual power.</p>
<p class='c005'>Only persons who distinguish themselves by
what Heine called “exuberance of mental poverty,”
or what I might call analogously an “abyss of
superficiality,” have not experienced the severe
and beautiful psychic truth of Jesus’ glorification
of <em>simplicity</em>. The quiet harkening to the voice of
God or to the inspiration of work or to the delicate
vibrations of another soul, which daily, hourly,
momentarily, are the conditions that enable the
soul to live wholly in its belief, its work, its love,
so that these feelings may grow stronger and the
soul grow greater through these feelings—all this
has “simplicity” as a condition; in a word, symmetrical
unity, longing for completeness, inner
poise, the swift emotion. Fidelity—to a belief,
<span class='pageno' id='Page_196'>196</span>a work, a love—is no product of duty. It is a
process of growth.</p>
<p class='c005'>These are the conditions to which many modern
women, womanly at heart but divided, restless,
groping, attempting much, will not submit. They
could even learn to reverence these conditions in
the child for whom play is such sacred seriousness;
but instead they transform the most sacred earnest
into play.</p>
<p class='c005'>Other women, on the contrary, are beginning
to understand these conditions of growth and to
comprehend that it was exactly the protected
position of woman in the home, which has made it
possible for her family feeling to acquire that depth
which is to be attained only by concentration.
But if this is no longer possible, then woman will
love those that belong to her with less religious
warmth. Nothing can better illustrate the difference
still existing between man and woman in this
respect, than the fact that most men would consider
themselves unfortunate if their entire exercise
of power were concentrated upon the family, while
most women still feel themselves fortunate when
they have been given the opportunity to exercise
to the uttermost the tendency inherent in them.
For most women love best <em>personally</em> and <em>in propinquity</em>,
while the potency of love in man often seeks
distant goals. Woman is happy in the degree to
which she can bestow her love upon a person
closely connected with her; if she cannot do that,
then she may be useful, resigned, content, but
<span class='pageno' id='Page_197'>197</span>never happy.<SPAN name='r11' /><SPAN href='#f11' class='c013'><sup>[11]</sup></SPAN> The very fact that woman’s
strongest <em>primitive instinct</em> coincided with her
<em>greatest</em> cultural <em>office</em> has been an essential factor
in the harmony of her being.</p>
<p class='c005'>The modern developed mother feels with every
breath a grateful joy in that she lives the most
perfect life when she can contribute her developed
human powers, her liberated human personality,
to the establishment of a home and to the vocation
of motherhood. These functions conceived and
understood as social, in the embracing sense in
which the word is now used, give the new mother
a richer opportunity to exercise her entire personality
than she could find in modern commercial
work. In one such occupation she must suppress
either the intellectual or the emotional side of her
nature; in another, the life either of the imagination
or of the will. In domestic duties, on the
contrary, these powers of the soul can work in
unison. This is undoubtedly the deepest reason
why, taken as a whole, women have become more
harmonious, and men stronger in any special
crisis, women more soulful, men more gifted. On
this account men offer their great sacrifice more
readily for an idea, or for the accomplishment of
a work; women, for persons closely connected
<span class='pageno' id='Page_198'>198</span>with them. And yet this co-operation of woman’s
spiritual powers was in earlier times partly repressed
by man’s demand for passivity on the part
of woman as a thinking and willing personality,
but for her unceasing activity as promoter of his
comfort and that of the entire home. The mother
of to-day can, on the contrary, exercise, as distributer,
her culture, her thought, her supervision,
her judgment, and her criticism, in order to make
fully effective the faculty of her sex for foresight
and organisation. She applies a great amount of
spiritual energy to the selection of the essentials
and the subordination of secondary things, to the
creation of such facilities in the material work
that time and means are left for the spiritual
values, which, alas, are still neglected in the
domestic economy of small, private households,
as well as in national housekeeping. And as
mother, modern woman is offered the first fitting
opportunity to assert herself as a thinking and
willing personality.</p>
<p class='c005'>The significance of the vocation of mother has
been underrated in its significance even by
moderate feminists. But these were right when
they demonstrated that the “sanctity” of this
office had become a mere phrase, so badly or
amateurishly was this vocation fulfilled—an indictment
in which Nietzsche and feminism for
one rare moment are on common ground. Mothers
needed the spur of this contempt; it was necessary
that their feeling of responsibility, their universal
<span class='pageno' id='Page_199'>199</span>human culture, their personal self-reliance, should
be aroused by the woman movement. Only so
could the new generation acquire the new type of
women who for the present seek to qualify themselves
by self-culture for the office of mother, in
the expectation that for all women an obligatory
education for motherhood will be realised. So
long as this vocation <em>can</em> be practised without any
training, nothing can be known of the possibilities
whereby ordinary mothers may become good
educators—unless they place the mother love and
the intuitive understanding of the nature of the
child that it affords above even the best outside
teachers. Just as a glorious voice makes a country
girl a “natural singer,” so nature has at all
times made certain mothers—and not least the
women of the people—natural educators of
children.</p>
<p class='c005'>The biography of nearly every great man shows
the place the mother through her personality
occupied in the life of her son, the atmosphere
which she diffused about her in the home, her
direct and indirect influence. But only the
culture of their natural gifts with conscious purpose
will make of mothers artists.</p>
<p class='c005'>When Nietzsche wrote: “<em>There will come a time
when we shall have no other thought than education</em>,”
and when he placed this education specifically in
the hands of mothers, least of all did he mean
those “arts of education,” from which amaternals
believe they “guard” children by rejecting an
<span class='pageno' id='Page_200'>200</span>“artistically creative” home training by the
mother, as a violence to the peculiar characteristic
of the child!</p>
<p class='c005'>The <em>new mother</em>, as the doctrine of evolution and
the true woman movement have created her,
stands with deep veneration before the mystic
depths she calls her child, a being in whom the
whole life of mankind is garnered. The richer
the nature of the child is, the more zealously she
endeavours to preserve for him that simplicity
which he needs, and at the same time to provide
for him the material that will enable him to work
for himself. She insures to the child the pleasures
adapted to his age, pleasures which at no later
time can be enjoyed so intensely. The effect upon
him of his playfellows and books, of nature, art,
music, conversation, of the entire home <em>milieu</em>
which the child receives, above all the influence
of the personality and interests of the father and
mother—all these the mother who is an artist in
education observes in order to learn the natural
proclivity of the child and then <em>directly to strengthen
and encourage</em> it. At the same time she endeavours
to find out what <em>restraints</em> are necessary <em>in order
that the natural bent be not impeded in its growth by
secondary qualities</em>. But the new type of mother
does not seek to <em>eradicate</em>; she recognises the likeness
between wheat and tares. The Christian
education, which has thus far prevailed, has
exercised a restraining oppression or has done
violence to the “sinful nature,” which must be
<span class='pageno' id='Page_201'>201</span>broken and bent; this education was dermatological,
not psychological, in method.</p>
<p class='c005'>The new mother is especially characterised by
the fact that she has rejected this earlier method.
She allows her child, within certain bounds, full
freedom, and demands, beyond those bounds,
unconditional obedience. She helps the child to
find for himself ever nobler motives for repression.
This she can do because from the very beginning
she has taken care of him; year by year she has
persevered in the effort to establish good habits;
she has tried to enlist as aids, food, bath, bed,
dress, air, and play in the effort to keep him strong,
sound, sexually pure—conditions fundamental to
the whole later conduct of life. Such a methodical
physical care <em>can</em> be performed by the mother
herself, while, on the other hand, in the first years
of childhood paid hands might, through carelessness,
stupidity, cruelty, laxity, or over-indulgence,
destroy the glorious possibilities. If the prevention
of <em>the possibilities of nature being warped or
destroyed</em> constituted all that a mother could give,
this one task would, nevertheless, be more important
than any social relief work.</p>
<p class='c005'>What characterises the new mother is that she
understands the enormous significance of the <em>first
years</em>, when the indispensable “training” takes
place, in which the future life of the child is
determined by the methods employed—whether
they be those of torture or of culture, irrational or
rational. Then the great problem must be solved
<span class='pageno' id='Page_202'>202</span>of establishing willing obedience from within in
place of the hitherto <em>enforced</em> obedience from
without; of maintaining self-control, won by self,
in place of self-control <em>imposed</em> from without;
of evoking voluntary renunciation in place of
enforcing renunciation. For the capacity for
obedience, for self-control, for renunciation, is
one of the qualities fundamental to the whole
later conduct of life. The new mother knows this
as well as the mother of former times. But she
endeavours to create this capacity by slow and
sure means. The same thing obtains in regard to
physical and psychical courage, which in the early
years can often be so demoralised by fright that
it can never emerge again. The training which
hitherto was customary—based on <em>compelling</em> and
<em>forbidding</em>—had its effect only upon the surface
and <em>prevented</em> the child from experiencing <em>the
results of his own choice</em>.</p>
<p class='c005'>It is this <em>indirect</em> education by results which is
the new mother’s method. Her unceasing vigilance
and consistency are required in order that
the child shall actually bear the results of his
actions. What she needs for this is first and foremost,
<em>time, time</em>, and again <em>time</em>. Apparently
good effects can be obtained much quicker by
intervening, preventing, punishing, but thus are
turned aside the <em>real</em> results. By this method the
child is deprived of the <em>inner</em> growth, which only
the fully experienced reality with its components
of bitter and sweet can give; and this growth the
<span class='pageno' id='Page_203'>203</span>new mother endeavours to advance. Much more
time still is necessary to play the psychological
game of chess, which consists in the checkmating
of black by white; in other words, the conquest of
negative characteristics by positive, through the
child’s own activity—a task in which the child at
first must be guided, just as in the assimilation of
the elements of every other accomplishment, but
in which he can later perfect himself. Modern investigation
in the realm of the soul enables us to
see the dangers which sometime will demand quite
as new methods in spiritual hygiene as bacteriology
has created in the hygiene of the body. But
we still leave unexercised powers of the soul, still
misunderstand spiritual laws which sometime will
radically transform the means of education. At
some future day the new mothers will institute
legal protection for children to an extent incomprehensible
to us and therefore provocative only of
smiles. For example, legal prohibition of corporal
punishment by parents as well as teachers; legal
prohibition of child labour, of certain tenement
conditions, certain “amusements,” certain improper
uses of the press. For the present every
individual educator must <em>set these laws over himself</em>;
must sedulously create counter influences to
cope with the destructive influences which great
cities, especially, exert upon children.<SPAN name='r12' /><SPAN href='#f12' class='c013'><sup>[12]</sup></SPAN> The new
<span class='pageno' id='Page_204'>204</span>mothers lead children out into nature and endeavour
to satisfy their zeal for activity by
appropriate tasks as well as to encourage by suitable
means their love of invention and their impulse
for play. In the country children provide
much for themselves. But what both city and
country children need is a mother familiar with
nature, who can answer the questions which the
child is by his own observations prompted to ask;
and the number of such mothers is continually
increasing. Both city and country children need
also a mother who can tell stories. Just as the
settlement gardens most clearly demonstrate how
sundered the working people of the great cities
are from nature, so the “story evenings,” which
are now established for children, show how far
children have been permitted to stray from the
mother, who formerly gathered them about her
for the hour of story, play, and song. What,
finally, children need is the mother’s delicate
revelation of the sexual “mystery,” which often
early exercises the thoughts of the child and in
which he should be initiated quietly and gradually
by the mother.</p>
<p class='c005'>All the educational influences here outlined
emanate not only from the enlightened, exceptional
mother; they are exercised by the average
mother of to-day to better advantage than by the
spiritually significant mother of fifty years ago.
And they are <em>quite as essential</em>, in order that the
highest possibility within the reach of each may
<span class='pageno' id='Page_205'>205</span>be attained, in the education of the genius as in
that of the ordinary child. Such influences in
like degree strengthen the innate bent of the
genius and raise the average, from generation to
generation, to a level where man can live according
to higher standards than those of the present
time. The new mothers understand that for the
utilisation of all these opportunities that make
their appearance in the first seven years of the
child’s life, their motherly tenderness, gentleness,
and patience do not suffice; that they need in
addition all the intelligence, imagination, fine
feeling, scientific methods of observation, ethical
and æsthetic culture and other spiritual acquisitions
they possess, as direct and indirect fruits of
the woman movement.</p>
<p class='c005'>When student and comrade life begin to claim
the children, when the influence of the mother—that
is of the new mother who has respect for the
peculiar characteristic, the human worth, and the
right of the child to live his own life—becomes
more indirect, she nevertheless bears in mind that
it is of the utmost importance that the son and
the daughter should <em>find the mother</em>, when they
return to the parental roof; that they should be
able to breathe there an atmosphere of peace and
warmth; that they should find the attentive eye,
the listening ear, the helpful hand; that the mother
should have the repose, the fine feeling, the observation
requisite for following, without interfering
with, the conflicts of youth; that she should not
<span class='pageno' id='Page_206'>206</span>demand confidences but be always at hand to
receive them; that she should show vital sympathy
for the plans of work, the disappointments, the
joys, of the young people; that she should always
have time for caresses, tears, smiles, comfort, and
care; that she should divine their moods, and
anticipate their desires. By all these means the
mother perpetuates in the soul of the child,
unknown to him and to herself, her own personality.
The talent which she has not redeemed by
a productive work of her own, perhaps often for
that very reason, benefits mankind in a son or a
daughter, in whose soul the mother has implanted
the social ideas, the dreams, the rebellion, which
later become in them social deeds or works of art.
Above all, in the restless, sensitive, life-deciding
years when the boy is becoming a youth and the
little girl a maiden, the mother needs quiet and
leisure to be able to give the ineffably needy
children “the hoarded, secret treasure of her
heart,” as the beautiful saying of Dürer runs.</p>
<p class='c005'>When such a mother is found, and such mothers
are already found, she is the most splendid fruit of
the woman movement’s sowing upon the field of
woman’s nature.</p>
<p class='c005'>Because the new mother created for herself an
open space about her own personality, she understands
her son or her daughter when they in their
turn push her aside in order to create that same
open space about themselves. For in every generation
the young renounce the ideals and the aims
<span class='pageno' id='Page_207'>207</span>of their parents. The knowledge of this does not
prevent the new mother, any more than it did the
mother of earlier times, from feeling the pain
incident to being set aside. But the former looks
forward to a day when the son and daughter will
freely choose her as a friend, having discovered
what a significant pleasure the mother’s personality
can afford them.</p>
<p class='c005'>As the bird’s nest is made of nothing but bits of
straw and down, so the feeling of home is fashioned
out of soft, simple things; out of little activities that
are neither ponderable nor measurable as political
or as economic factors. When Segantini painted
the two nuns looking wistfully into the bird’s
nest, he gave expression to the deepest pain that
many modern women experience, the pain resulting
from the consciousness that their life, notwithstanding
its freedom, is lonely, because it has
denied them the privilege of making a home and
as a consequence has failed to afford them the
joy of creation, which nature intended they should
have, and of continuity of life in children to whom
they gave birth.</p>
<p class='c005'>Here we stand at a point where the woman
movement parallels the other social revolutions,
undeviatingly as the rails of a track, and leads to
the same objective. Modern men and women, and
especially women, have forfeited an opportunity for
happiness in the loss of the feeling of homogeneity
and security. Just as formerly the property-holding
family felt a secure sense of proprietorship in
<span class='pageno' id='Page_208'>208</span>the ancestral estate, so every member of the home
group felt himself safe in the family. Now the
children cannot depend with certainty upon the
parents, nor the parents upon the children; the
wife upon the husband, nor the husband upon the
wife. Each in extremity relies only upon himself.
The character of man is thus altered quite
as much as trees are changed when they are left
standing alone in the denuded forest of which
they once formed a part. If they can withstand
the storms, they have produced more “character”
than they had when they stood close together, under
a mutual protection that nevertheless enforced
uniformity.</p>
<p class='c005'>From their earliest youth innumerable women
must now care for themselves, as well as decide
for themselves. Thus the feeling of independence
of modern woman has increased through the sacrifice
of her peace; her individual characteristics, at
the expense of her harmony. Her feeling of loneliness
is mitigated to a certain degree by the growing
feeling of community with the whole. But this
feeling cannot compensate certain natures for the
forfeiture of the advantages which women of
earlier times possessed, when they sat secure and
protected within the four walls of the home,
sucked the juice from family chronicles, guarded
family traditions, maintained the old holiday
customs, lived at the same time in the past and
in the present.</p>
<p class='c005'>The new woman lives in the present, sometimes
<span class='pageno' id='Page_209'>209</span>even in the future—her land of romance! The
enthusiasm of the old romanticism about a “hut
and a heart” has little charm for her. For she
knows reality and that prevents her from giving
credence to the feminine illusion that twice
two can be five. What she does know, on the
contrary, is that out of fours she can gradually
work out sixteen. While the women of former
times could only save, the new woman can acquire.
Woman’s beautiful, foolish superstition regarding
life has vanished, but her eagerness to achieve can
still remove mountains, her daring has still often
the splendour of a dream. Intellectual values are
for her no longer pastimes but necessities of life;
with her culture has developed her feeling for
truth and justice. This does not secure the new
woman immunity at all times from new illusions
and errors of feeling, nor does it prevent her
developing passions whose value, to say the least,
is questionable. But in and through her determination
“to be some one,” to have a characteristic
personality, she has acquired a love of life, in
its diverse manifestations, both good and evil; a
new capacity to enjoy her own and others’ individuality,
as well as a new joy—sometimes an
unblushing, insolent joy—in expressing her own
being. In place of the earlier resignation toward
society, the expression of rebellion is found even
in the sparkling eye of the school-girl, with red
cap upon her curly hair.</p>
<p class='c005'>The young women of to-day, married or single,
<span class='pageno' id='Page_210'>210</span>mothers as well as those who are childless, are
still more vigorous in soul, more courageous, more
eager for life than are men. Because all that which
for men has so long been a matter of course, is for
women new, rich, enchanting, comprising, as it does,
free life in nature, scientific studies, serious artistic
work economic independence. Even in a fine and
soulful woman there is found something of the
inevitable hardness toward herself and others of
which an observer is instinctively conscious when
he speaks of some woman as one who “will go far”
upon the course she has chosen. The modern
young woman desires above all else the elevation
of her own personality. She experiences the same
feeling of joy a man is conscious of when she realises
that her strength of will is augmented, her
ability becoming more certain, her depth of
thought greater, her association of ideas richer.
She stands ready to choose <em>her</em> work and follow
<em>her</em> fate; in sorrow as in joy she experiences the
blessedness of growth, and she loves her view of
life and the work to which she has dedicated
herself, often as devotedly as man loves his.</p>
<p class='c005'>If we compare the seventeen-year-old girl of
to-day with her progenitor living in the middle
of the foregoing century, we find that the girl of
earlier times was to a larger extent swayed by
feeling, and that the modern girl is to a larger
extent determined by ideas. The former was
directed more to the centre of life, the latter remains
often nearer the periphery; the former was warmer,
<span class='pageno' id='Page_211'>211</span>the latter is more intelligent; the former was
better balanced, the latter is more interesting.</p>
<p class='c005'>The restlessness, the uncertainty, the feeling of
emptiness, the suffering, that is sometimes experienced
by the young woman of to-day, is primarily
traceable to the disintegration of religious belief,
which gave to the older generation of emancipated
women an inner stability, resignation, and self-discipline.
Scientific study has deprived many
modern women of their belief and those who can
create a new one, suited to their needs, are still
very few. Thus to the outer homelessness an
inner estrangement is added. The woman movement
has, it is true, contributed indirectly to this
spiritual distress by making the road to man’s
culture accessible to woman. For men also
suffer in like manner, and suffer above all perhaps
because our culture is unstable, aimless, and lacks
style, owing to the very fact that it is at present
without a religious centre. And even the future
can give to mankind no such new centre as the
Middle Ages had, for example, in Catholicism.
The attainment of individualism has shut out
that possibility forever.</p>
<p class='c005'>But <em>one</em> factor in the religion of the past, the
adoration of motherhood as divine mystery; <em>one</em>
factor in the religion of the Middle Ages, the worship
of the Madonna, has meanwhile been given
back to the present by the doctrine of evolution,
with that universal validity which the thought
must possess which seeks to give again to culture
<span class='pageno' id='Page_212'>212</span>a centre. Great, solitary individuals—prophets
more often than sibyls—have proclaimed the
religion of this generation. But the word will
become flesh only when fathers and mothers instil
into the blood and soul of children their devout
hope for a higher humanity. When women are
permeated by this hope, this new devout feeling,
then they will recover the piety, the peace, and
the harmony which for the present, and partly
owing to feminism, have been lost.</p>
<p class='c005'>The innumerable new relations which the
woman movement has established between woman
and the home, between woman and society, and
all of the interchanges of new spiritual forces
which have been put in operation because of these
relations, cannot possibly take fixed form, at
least not so long as the woman movement remains
“a movement”; in other words, as long as everything
is in a condition of flux, in a state of becoming,
all spiritual relationships between individuals
must change their form. Continual new, fine
shades of feeling, not to be expressed in words,
determine every woman’s soul and every woman’s
fate. And even ancient feelings receive continually
different nuances, different intonations. I am,
therefore, laying down no laws but merely recapitulating
certain suggestions based on what has
previously been said in regard to the soul of the
modern woman, as seen in that portion of the
present generation whose age ranges between
twenty and thirty years—that is to say, that
<span class='pageno' id='Page_213'>213</span>part of the generation which is decisive for the
immediate future.</p>
<p class='c005'>Since co-education is becoming more and
more general, each sex is beginning to have more
esteem for the other, and woman, as well as man,
is beginning to found self-respect upon work.
When all women by culture and capacity for work
have finally become strong-willed, self-supporting
co-workers in society, then no woman will give
or receive love for any extraneous benefit whatsoever.
No outward tie and no outward gain
through love—this is the ultimate aim of the new
sex morale as the most highly developed modern
young woman sees it.</p>
<p class='c005'>The new woman is deeply convinced that the
relation between the sexes attains its true beauty
and sanctity only when every external privilege
disappears on both sides, when man and woman
stand wholly equal in what concerns their legal
right and their personal freedom.</p>
<p class='c005'>She demands that the contrasts between legal
and illegal, rich and poor, boy and girl, shall disappear,
and that society shall show the same
interest in the complete human development of
all children. She knows that when both sexes
awake to a feeling of responsibility toward the
future generation, then the real concern of sexual
morale becomes the endeavor to give the race an
ever more perfect progeny. And in order to
feel in its fulness this command, maidens as well
as youths must henceforth demand scientific
<span class='pageno' id='Page_214'>214</span>instruction in sexual duties toward themselves and
their possible children.</p>
<p class='c005'>The new woman is also deeply convinced that
only when she feels happy—and happiness signifies
the development of the powers inherent in the
personality—can she properly fulfil her duties
as daughter, wife, and mother. She can consciously
sacrifice a part of her personality, for example
forego the development of a talent, but she
can never subjugate nor surrender her whole personality
and at the same time remain a strong-willed
member of the family or of society, in the
broadest meaning of the word. She must assert
her conception of life, her feeling of right, her
ideals. And no social considerations for children,
husband, or family life are, for her, above the consideration
which, in this respect, she owes to her
own personality. When conflicts arise, she seeks,
wherever possible, a solution that will permit her
to fulfil her duty without annihilating herself.
But if this is not possible, then she feels that it is
her first duty not to fall below her ideal, either
physically or spiritually. For this would prevent
her from fulfilling precisely those duties for which
she has so sacrificed herself; duties which she can
perhaps perform later under other conditions,
provided she has saved herself from being extinguished
by brutality or despotism.</p>
<p class='c005'>But along with this individualism there exists
in the new woman a feeling for the unity of existence,
the unity in which all things are parts and
<span class='pageno' id='Page_215'>215</span>in which nothing is lost. She does not, then,
look upon husband and children as continually
demanding sacrifice and upon herself as being
always sacrificed; she sees herself and them, as in
the antiquity of the race, always existing <em>by means
of one another</em>. She is not consumed by her love,
for she knows that under such circumstances
she would deprive her loved ones of the wealth
of her personality. But although she will not,
like the women of earlier times, abandon her ego
<em>absolutely</em>, she will not, on the other hand, like
certain modern feminists, keep it <em>unreservedly</em>.
She will preserve upon a higher plane the old
division of labour which made man the one who
felled the game, fought the battles, made conquests,
achieved advancement through victories;
and which made woman the one who rendered
the new domains habitable, who utilised the booty
for herself and hers, who transmitted what was
won to the new generation—all that of which
woman’s ancient tasks as guardian of the fire and
cultivator of the fields are beautiful symbols.
She feels that when each sex pursues its course for
the happiness of the individual and of mankind,
but at the same time and as an equal helps the
other in the different tasks, then each is most
capable, then society is most benefited.</p>
<p class='c005'>The fact that there is still so much masculine
brutality and despotism, and that there are so
many legal means at man’s disposal whereby he
may put into practice with impunity this brutality
<span class='pageno' id='Page_216'>216</span>and despotism, is the reason why the new woman
is still always a “feminist,” why she still maintains
the fundamental tenets of the woman movement.
But she is not a feminist in the sense that she
turns <em>against</em> man. Her solution is always that
of Mary Wollstonecraft: “We do not desire to
rule over men but to rule over ourselves.” She
often exhibits now in deliberation and in determination
the characteristics which were formerly
called “masculine”: practical knowledge, love of
truth, courage of conviction; she desists more and
more from unjust imputations and empty words;
she proposes a greater number of well-considered
suggestions for improvements. The woman movement
has now in a word a more universally
human, a less one-sidedly feminine character. It
emphasises more and more the fact that the right
of woman is a necessity in order that she may fulfil
her duties in the small, individual family, and
exercise her powers in the great, universal human
family for the general good. The new woman
does not wish to displace man nor to abolish
society. She wishes to be able to exercise <em>everywhere</em>
her most beautiful prerogative to help, to
support, to comfort. But this she cannot do so
long as she is not free as a citizen and has not
fully developed as a human personality. She
knows that this is the condition not only of her
own happiness, but also, in quite as high a degree,
of the happiness of man. For every man who
works, struggles, and suffers there is a mother, a
<span class='pageno' id='Page_217'>217</span>wife, a sister, a daughter, who suffers with him.
For every woman who in her way works and struggles,
there is a father, a husband, a brother, or a
son for whom her contribution directly or indirectly
has significance. Above all, the modern woman
understands that in every marriage wherein a
wife still suffers under man’s misuse of his legal
authority, it is in the last analysis <em>the man who
sustains the greatest injury</em>, for under present
conditions he needs exercise neither kindness nor
justice nor intelligence to be ruler in the family.
These humane characteristics he must, therefore,
begin to develop when the wife is legally his equal.</p>
<p class='c005'>The sacred conviction of the new woman is
that man and woman <em>rise together</em>, just as they
<em>sink together</em>.</p>
<p class='c005'>The antique sepulchres, on which man and wife
stand hand in hand before the eternal farewell,
could quite as well be the symbol of the entrance
of modern man and modern woman into the new
life, where they work together in order that the
highest ideals of both—the ideals of justice and of
human kindness—may assume form in reality.
The motherly qualities of women are applied
for the good of children as well as of the weak and
the suffering. The arrival of the day when woman
shall be given opportunity to exercise social
motherliness in its full and popularly representative
extent, can be only a question of time. In a
century they will smile at our time, in which it
was still the practice to debate about such obvious
<span class='pageno' id='Page_218'>218</span>matters. And those who to-day ridicule the
woman movement will be ridiculed most of all.</p>
<hr class='c008' />
<p class='c005'>Then we shall attain such an outlook on the great
forces of the time,—the emancipation movements
of labouring men and of women,—that we shall
see how necessary both were in order that society
should come to understand that not the mass of
material production, but the higher cultivation of
the race is the social-political end, and that for
this end the <em>service of mother</em> must receive the
honour and oblation that the state now gives to
<em>military service</em>.</p>
<p class='c005'>And women themselves, whom nature has
made creators and protectors of the tender life—the
task for which nature even in the plant
world has made such wonderful provision—will
no longer resist being more intimately associated
with nature, nearer to earth, more like plants,
more restrained in outer sense and therefore, in
inner respects, less active than man, who always
had more of the freedom of movement of the forest
animal. The woman of the future will not, as do
many women of the present time, <em>wish to be freed
from her sex</em>; but she will be freed from sexual
hypertrophy, freed to <em>complete humanity</em>. For
the universal, human characteristics, forced to
<em>remain latent</em> in the primitive division of labour,
because the father was obliged to exert all his
strength in one direction and the mother in another,
can now, through the facilities for culture in the
<span class='pageno' id='Page_219'>219</span>struggle for existence, be developed on both sides:
woman can develop the latent quality which
became active in man as “manliness”; man can
develop the latent quality which became active
in woman as “womanliness.” But the <em>proportional
ratio</em> of these characteristics, which development
has already strengthened, will <em>on the whole</em>
remain fixed—the proportional ratio which, in
the progress of evolution, gave to woman the
ascendency in regard to inward creative powers,
and to man the ascendency in regard to outward
creative powers—a proportional ratio which for
the present has made woman more gifted in the
sphere of feeling, man more potent in the sphere
of ideas; which has made her the listener and
yearner in the sphere of the spiritual life, and him
the pioneer investigator and founder of systems,
that has given her more of the Christian, and him
more of the pagan virtues. The improvement of
the universal, human characteristics of both sexes
elevates also the plane upon which they exercise
their especial functions, valuable alike for culture.
With increasing frequency the one sex may, when
so desired, assume the culture function of the
other.</p>
<p class='c005'>A perfect fusion of the two spiritual sex-characters
would, on the contrary, have the same
result as physical hermaphroditism—sterility.
Genius—and in using the term we limit its meaning
to poetic genius, for real feminine genius has
thus far appeared only in that domain—embraces,
<span class='pageno' id='Page_220'>220</span>as emphasised above, both man and woman, but
not harmoniously blended. For such a genius
would be unproductive, as we imagine those
celestial forms to be which are neither “man
nor woman.” The masculine and the feminine
characteristics, which exist side by side in the
poet soul, produce work in co-operation. Alternately,
however, they seek to usurp the entire
power, whereby is occasioned the disharmony
which enters into the life of those who endeavour
to fulfil at one and the same time the universal,
human duties as well as those of sex. Indeed it
may be that one of the reasons why great poetic
geniuses, masculine as well as feminine, have often
had no progeny at all, and in other cases one of
little significance, is that their nature was not
capable of a double production, that poetic
creation received the richest part of their physical
and psychical power.</p>
<p class='c005'>Whether the opinion of genius expressed here
is correct or not, does not, however, affect the
general situation. For the genius will always go
his own way, which is never that of the average
man. From the point of view of the ordinary
individual an effacement of the spiritual sex character
would be in still higher degree a misfortune
for culture and nature. For it is the
difference in the spiritual as well as in the physical
sex-characteristics that makes love a fusion of two
beings in a higher unity, where each finds the full
deliverance and harmony of his being. With the
<span class='pageno' id='Page_221'>221</span>elimination of the <em>spiritual</em> difference <em>psychical</em>
love would vanish. There would be left, then,
upon the one side, only the mating instinct, in
which the same points of view as in animal breeding
must obtain; on the other, only the same kind
of sympathy which is expressed in the friendship
between persons of the same sex, the sympathy
in which the human, individual difference instead
of sexual difference forms the attraction. In love,
on the other hand, sympathy grows in intensity,
the more universally human and at the same time
sexually attractive the individual is: the “manly”
in man is charmed by the “womanly” in woman,
while the “womanly” in man is likewise captivated
by the “manly” in woman, and <em>vice versa</em>. But
when neither needs the <em>spiritual sex</em> of the other
as his complement, then man, in erotic respects,
returns to the antique conception of the sex
relationship, of which Plato has drawn the final
logical conclusion.</p>
<p class='c005'>The “humanity” in the soul of man was strengthened
when he felt himself necessary to mother
and child. When woman by sweetness and
tenderness taught man to love, not only to
desire, then his humanity increased immeasurably.</p>
<p class='c005'>In our time the average man is beginning to
learn that woman does not desire him as man,
that she looks down upon him as a lower kind of
being, that she does not need him as supporter.
He does not at all grasp what it is the woman of
<span class='pageno' id='Page_222'>222</span>highest culture seeks, demands, and awaits from
his sex. But he learns that even the mediocre
woman rejects the best he has to give her erotically;
that imbued as she is with ideals of “universal
humanity,” she no longer needs him as the supplement
to her sexual being. Then brutality awakes
in him anew; then his erotic life loses what humanity
it had won; then he begins to hate woman. And
not with the imaginative, theoretical hatred of
thinkers and poets; but with the blind rage which
the contempt of the weaker for the stronger
arouses in him. And here we encounter what
is, perhaps, the deepest reason for the present
war between the sexes, appearing already in
the literary world as well as in the labour
market.</p>
<p class='c005'>Here the extreme feminists play unconsciously
about an abyss,—the depths in the nature of man
out of which the elementary, hundred-thousand-year-old
impulses arise, the impulses which all
cultural acquisitions and influences cannot eradicate,
so long as the human race continues
to subsist and multiply under present conditions.</p>
<p class='c005'>The feminism which has driven individualism to
the point where the individual asserts her personality
in opposition to, instead of within, the
race; the individualism which becomes self-concentration,
anti-social egoism, although the
watchword inscribed upon its banner is “Society
instead of the family,”—this feminism will bear
<span class='pageno' id='Page_223'>223</span>the blame should the hatred referred to lead to
war.</p>
<hr class='c008' />
<p class='c005'>It would be a pity to conclude a survey of
the influence of the woman movement with an
expression of fear lest this extreme feminism
should be victorious. I believe not; no more than
I believe that the sun will for the present be
extinguished or streams flow back to their sources.</p>
<p class='c005'>No “culture” can annul the great fundamental
laws of nature; it can only ennoble them; and
motherhood is one of these fundamental laws.
I hope that the future will furnish a new and a
more secure protection for motherhood than the
present family and social organisation affords.
I place my trust in a new society, with a new
morality, which will be a synthesis of the being of
man and that of woman, of the demands of the
individual and those of society, of the pagan and
Christian conceptions of life, of the will of the
future and reverence for the past.</p>
<p class='c005'>When the earth blooms with this beautiful and
vigorous flower of morality, there will no longer
be a woman movement. But there will always
be a woman question, not put by women to society
but by society to women: the question whether
they will continue in a higher degree to prove
themselves worthy of the great privilege of being
the mothers of the new generation.</p>
<p class='c005'>In the degree in which this new ethics permeates
mankind, women will answer this question in
<span class='pageno' id='Page_224'>224</span>life-affirmation. And the result of their life-affirmation
will be an enormous enhancement of
life, not only for women themselves but for all
mankind.</p>
<div class='nf-center-c0'>
<div class='nf-center c002'>
<div>THE END</div>
</div></div>
<hr class='c014' />
<div class='footnote' id='f1'>
<p class='c005'><SPAN href='#r1'>1</SPAN>. In the summer of 1909 I sat in a Swedish home where the
grandmother, for this reason, had never learned to write but
where the granddaughter read aloud the thesis for her bachelor’s
examination. One hears even to-day of customs and points of
view in certain farms and manses which faithfully imitate those
of the time of the Reformation.</p>
</div>
<div class='footnote' id='f2'>
<p class='c005'><SPAN href='#r2'>2</SPAN>. Next to the textile industry, the tobacco industry employs
the most women.</p>
</div>
<div class='footnote' id='f3'>
<p class='c005'><SPAN href='#r3'>3</SPAN>. This idealism has naturally part also in the fact that, for
example, two-thirds of the women who have gone through college
in America do not marry, and find in club life a compensation
for domestic life. But other motives also must often play a part
here, from the desire to devote herself entirely to one of the lifeworks
serviceable to mankind, to the egoism of spiritually barren
young girls with its distaste for burdens and restraint.</p>
<p class='c005'>A keen-sighted observer who recently spent a half year in
North America corroborated what many have already stated:
that the student and working young American girls devote
themselves with true passion to the cultivation of their beauty,
their toilette, their flirtations. All this belongs for her to the
“Fine Arts” and as such is an end sufficient in itself, while for
European women these arts, as a rule, are still means for alluring
men to marriage. While study or work often makes European
women in outer sense less “womanly,” although her soul always
guards its full power to love, in America the reverse is the case:
the outer appearance is bewitchingly womanly, but the soul no
longer vibrates for love. The sexual sterility which Maudsley
already prophesied thirty years ago, when he spoke about the
“sexless ants,” has been partly realised, partly chosen voluntarily.
In Europe it still frequently happens that a young woman who
has put love aside for the sake of study or work is suddenly seized
by an irresistible passion; in America, on the contrary, this
is extremely rare. Women students look down upon the less
cultured men, who ordinarily finish their studies earlier in order
to earn a livelihood. The sympathy which they need, women
find more easily in their own sex. The unmarried have quite
the same social position as the married and do not desire children.
If they finally marry, it is ordinarily because a more brilliant
position is offered them than the one which they could create
themselves, and the man is then considered and treated as a
money-getter.</p>
<p class='c005'>My authority emphasises also that the young students or
working girls are ordinarily less original, of less personal significance,
less individually developed, than the older women, especially
women’s rights women, who often have not studied but
have grown grey in marriage and motherhood, in self-development
and in social work. The interesting significant American
feminists were women between the ages of fifty and ninety; the
woman of the present generation, however, which now enjoys the
fruits of the work of the older generation, is, in spite of excellent
scholarship and great working proficiency, less a woman and
less a human being, less a personality.</p>
<p class='c005'>These wholly fresh observations, which were communicated
to me during the printing of my book, seem to me to confirm
so strongly my point of view that I wish to repeat them here.</p>
<p class='c005'>But in France and elsewhere mothers tell us how clear, intelligent,
and universally interested their daughters are, and at the
same time how critical, how free from ardour and enthusiasm.
It is not the hasty love marriage that many mothers now fear for
their daughters, but a worldly-wise marriage without love.</p>
</div>
<div class='footnote' id='f4'>
<p class='c005'><SPAN href='#r4'>4</SPAN>. See <cite>Love and Ethics</cite>, Ralph Fletcher Seymour, Chicago, and
also <cite><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Mutter und Kind</span></cite>, published in Germany only, Pan-Verlag.
My plan is a paternity assessment upon society as a contribution
to the maintenance of children and a compensation of motherhood
by the state.</p>
<p class='c005'>Society has already shown by a series of institutions, maternity
assurance, infants’ milk distribution, clothing and feeding
of children, and many kindred social efforts, that the maintenance
afforded by the father is not sufficient for the young generation;
quite as little is the mother’s care, which is supplemented
by other means, crèches, etc. But when the <em>child</em> finally becomes
the unconscious “head of the family,” then it will be the affair of
society to requite maternity. Marriage will then signify only
the living together of two people upon the ground of love and
the common parenthood of children. <em>Maternal right</em> will <em>in law</em>
take the place of <em>paternal right</em>, but <em>in reality</em> the father will continue
to retain all the influence upon the children which he <em>personally</em>
is able to exert, just as has been hitherto the case with
the mother.</p>
<p class='c005'>In such circumstances there will be no more illegitimate children;
no mothers driven out from the care of tender children to
earn their daily bread; no fathers who avoid their economic duties
toward their children, and who cannot be compelled by society
to perform at least that paternal duty which animals perform
now better than men: that of contributing their part to the maintenance
of their progeny. There will be no mothers who for
the sake of their own and their children’s maintenance need to
stay with a brutal man; no mothers who, in case of a separation,
can be deprived of their children on any ground except that of
their own unworthiness. In a word, society must—upon a higher
plane—restore the arrangement which is already found in the
lower stages of civilisation, the arrangement which nature herself
created: that mother and child are most closely bound together,
that they together, above all, form the family, in which the
father enters through the mother’s or his own free will.</p>
</div>
<div class='footnote' id='f5'>
<p class='c005'><SPAN href='#r5'>5</SPAN>. An inquiry instituted among English women as to whether
they would prefer to be men or women gave as a result the fact
that, out of about 7000 who answered, two-thirds wished to
remain women and this above all in order to be mothers, while a
third wished to be men. This indicated probably the highest
figure of the disinclination for maternity which such a <em>European</em>
inquiry could elicit. But even these women who wish to marry
and to become mothers feel the pressure of the idea created by
the zealots of the woman movement which finds expression often
in the following conversation between two former schoolmates
about a third: “And A—— what is she doing now?”—“Nothing—she
is married and has children.”</p>
<p class='c005'>The old folk legend about the girl who trampled on the bread
she was carrying to her mother because she wished to go dry-shod,
can serve as symbol of many modern women zealots: life’s great,
sound values are offered for the meal; vanity sits down alone to
partake of them.</p>
</div>
<div class='footnote' id='f6'>
<p class='c005'><SPAN href='#r6'>6</SPAN>. Bret Harte, <cite>The Luck of Roaring Camp</cite>.</p>
</div>
<div class='footnote' id='f7'>
<p class='c005'><SPAN href='#r7'>7</SPAN>. E. Carrière and Segantini.</p>
</div>
<div class='footnote' id='f8'>
<p class='c005'><SPAN href='#r8'>8</SPAN>. Max Kruse, <cite><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Liebesgruppe</span></cite>.</p>
</div>
<div class='footnote' id='f9'>
<p class='c005'><SPAN href='#r9'>9</SPAN>. This amaternal idea is advanced with great ability in some
works of Charlotte Perkins Stetson and Rosa Mayreder. The
word amaternal coined by me is used to characterise the theory
subsequently advanced, because the word unmaternal (unmotherly)
signifies a <em>spiritual condition</em>, the antithesis to “motherliness.”
The maternal as opposed to the amaternal theory is
this: that a woman’s life is lived most intensively and most
extensively, most individually and most socially; she is for her
own part most free, and for others most fruitful, most egoistic
and most altruistic, most receptive and most generous, in and
with the <em>physical and psychic exercise of the function of maternity,
because of the conscious desire, by means of this function, to uplift
the life of the race as well as her own life</em>.</p>
</div>
<div class='footnote' id='f10'>
<p class='c005'><SPAN href='#r10'>10</SPAN>. It can even be shown that, if man invades the so-called
woman’s spheres (for example the art of cooking or of dress-making),
it is most frequently he who makes new discoveries and
attains great success!</p>
</div>
<div class='footnote' id='f11'>
<p class='c005'><SPAN href='#r11'>11</SPAN>. The best proof of this is that many women who, in a life free
from care in an outward sense, were comparable only to geese or
peacocks, nevertheless, when hard times came and gave them
opportunity to develop their power of love, not only proved themselves
heroines, but asserted that their “happy” years were
those in which they had so “sacrificed” themselves.</p>
</div>
<div class='footnote' id='f12'>
<p class='c005'><SPAN href='#r12'>12</SPAN>. How many children have had their idea of right debased by
the manner in which the “Captain of Köpernick” was received
at his liberation—to cite only one example.</p>
</div>
<div class='pbb'>
<hr class='pb c004' /></div>
<div class='nf-center-c0'>
<div class='nf-center c001'>
<div><em>A Selection from the</em></div>
<div><em>Catalogue of</em></div>
<div class='c004'>G. P. PUTNAM’S SONS</div>
<div class='c004'>❧</div>
<div class='c004'>Complete Catalogue sent</div>
<div>on application</div>
</div></div>
<hr class='c008' />
<div class='section ph2'>
<div class='nf-center-c0'>
<div class='nf-center c001'>
<div><span class='xlarge'><em>By Ellen Key</em></span></div>
</div></div>
</div>
<div class='section ph3'>
<div class='nf-center-c0'>
<div class='nf-center c002'>
<div><span class='large'>The Century of the Child</span></div>
<div class='c004'><em>Cr. 8vo. With Frontispiece. Net, $1.50. By mail, $1.65</em></div>
</div></div>
</div>
<p class='c005'><span class='sc'>Contents</span>: The Right of the Child to Choose His Parents,
The Unborn Race and Woman’s Work, Education,
Homelessness, Soul Murder in the Schools, The School of
the Future, Religious Instruction, Child Labor and the
Crimes of Children. This book has gone through more than
twenty German Editions and has been published in several
European countries.</p>
<blockquote>
<p class='c005'>“A powerful book.”—<cite>N. Y. Times.</cite></p>
</blockquote>
<div class='section ph3'>
<div class='nf-center-c0'>
<div class='nf-center c002'>
<div>The Education of the Child</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<p class='c005'>Reprinted from the Authorized American Edition of
“The Century of the Child.” With Introductory Note by
<span class='sc'>Edward Bok</span>.</p>
<div class='nf-center-c0'>
<div class='nf-center'>
<div><em>Cr. 8vo. Net, 75 cents. By mail, 85 cents</em></div>
</div></div>
<p class='c005'>“Nothing finer on the wise education of the child has
ever been brought into print. To me this chapter is a perfect
classic; it points the way straight for every parent, and it
should find a place in every home in America where there
is a child.”—<span class='sc'>Edward Bok</span>, Editor of the <cite>Ladies’ Home
Journal</cite>.</p>
<div class='section ph3'>
<div class='nf-center-c0'>
<div class='nf-center c002'>
<div>Love and Marriage</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<div class='nf-center-c0'>
<div class='nf-center'>
<div><em>Cr. 8vo. Net, $1.50. By mail, $1.65</em></div>
</div></div>
<p class='c005'>Ellen Key is gradually taking a hold upon the reading
public of this country commensurate with the enlightenment of
her views. In Europe and particularly in her own native
Sweden her name holds an honored place as a representative
of progressive thought.</p>
<hr class='c008' />
<div class='section ph2'>
<div class='nf-center-c0'>
<div class='nf-center c001'>
<div>Ellen Key</div>
<div>Her Life and Her Work</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<div class='nf-center-c0'>
<div class='nf-center c002'>
<div>A Critical Study</div>
<div class='c004'><span class='large'>By Louise Nystrom Hamilton</span></div>
<div class='c004'>Translated by Anna E. B. Fries</div>
<div class='c004'>12º. <em>With Portrait</em></div>
</div></div>
<p class='c007'>The name of Ellen Key has for years been
a target for attacks of various kinds. Friends
have in connection with the issues that have
arisen in regard to the influence of her work
become enemies and friction has been caused
in many homes. Her ideals and her purposes
have been misquoted and misinterpreted until
the very convictions for which she stood have
been twisted so as to appear to be the evils that
she was attempting to combat. Her critics, not
content with decrying and distorting the message
that she had to give to the world, have
even attacked her personal character; and as
the majority of these had no direct knowledge
in the matter, strange rumors and fancies have
been spread abroad about her life. The
readers of her books, who are now to be
counted throughout the world by the hundreds
of thousands, who desire to know the truth
about this much discussed Swedish author,
will be interested in this critical study by
Louise Hamilton. The author is one who has
been intimate with Ellen Key since her youth.
She is herself the wife of the founder of the
People’s Hospital in Stockholm, where for over
twenty years Ellen Key taught and lectured.</p>
<p class='c005'>The volume gives an admirable survey of
the purpose and character of Ellen Key’s
teachings and of her books.</p>
<div class='pbb'>
<hr class='pb c004' /></div>
<p class='c015'>“Packed with information about actual
present-day business conditions and methods.”—<span class='sc'>Review
of Reviews.</span></p>
<hr class='c008' />
<div class='section ph2'>
<div class='nf-center-c0'>
<div class='nf-center c001'>
<div>The American Business Woman</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<p class='c016'>A Guide for the Investment, Preservation
and Accumulation of Property,
Containing Full Explanations and Illustrations
of all Necessary Methods
of Business</p>
<div class='nf-center-c0'>
<div class='nf-center'>
<div>By</div>
<div><span class='large'>John Howard Cromwell, Ph.B., LL.B.</span></div>
<div>Counsellor-at-Law</div>
<div class='c004'><em>Second Revised Edition. Octavo. 392 pages.</em></div>
<div><em>$2.00 net. By mail, $2.20</em></div>
</div></div>
<p class='c005'>“Mr. Cromwell’s book is without doubt one of the
valuable publications of the year ... thoroughly
well written and carefully thought out.... Fascinating
as is the subject of mortgages, it is necessarily but
one phase of the book.... The book, as before
stated, is extremely valuable, and will be found a good
investment, not only for women for whom it was primarily
intended, but for many men.”—<cite>New York Times.</cite></p>
<div class='pbb'>
<hr class='pb c004' /></div>
<p class='c015'>“The most complete and compact study that
Has yet been made of the evolution of women’s
rights.”—<cite>N. Y. Evening Globe.</cite></p>
<hr class='c008' />
<div class='section ph2'>
<div class='nf-center-c0'>
<div class='nf-center c001'>
<div>A Short History of Women’s Rights</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<div class='section ph3'>
<div class='nf-center-c0'>
<div class='nf-center c002'>
<div>From the days of Augustus to the Present Time</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<div class='nf-center-c0'>
<div class='nf-center'>
<div>With Special Reference to England and the United States</div>
<div class='c004'><span class='large'>By Eugene A. Hecker</span></div>
<div class='c004'>Master in the Roxbury Latin School, Author of “The Teaching of Latin in Secondary Schools”</div>
<div class='c004'><em>Crown 8vo. $1.50 net. (By mail, $1.65)</em></div>
</div></div>
<p class='c005'>Mr. Hecker, an authoritative scholar, has set himself
the task of telling the story of women’s progress, and
has done it with much painstaking and thoroughness,
and with a manifestation of a high order of talent for
discriminating as to materials and presenting them
convincingly and interestingly.... One feels the
studiousness of the author in every page. The matter
presented is not only carefully arranged, but it is in a
manner digested too; and thus the work becomes
literature in a true sense, and not an unenlightened
assembly of details and facts from the pages of the past.</p>
<div class='lg-container-r'>
<div class='linegroup'>
<div class='group'>
<div class='line'><cite>St. Louis Times.</cite></div>
</div></div>
</div>
<div class='nf-center-c0'>
<div class='nf-center'>
<div>G. P. Putnam’s Sons</div>
<div>New York       London</div>
</div></div>
<div class='pbb'>
<hr class='pb c004' /></div>
<div class='tnotes'>
<div class='chapter'>
<h2 class='c006'>TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES</h2></div>
<ol class='ol_1 c002'>
<li>P. <SPAN href='#r8'>175</SPAN>, added an anchor for the third footnote.
</li>
<li>Silently corrected typographical errors and variations in spelling.
</li>
<li>Anachronistic, non-standard, and uncertain spellings retained as printed.
</li>
<li>Footnotes have been re-indexed using numbers and collected together at the end of the
last chapter.
</li>
</ol></div>
<SPAN name="endofbook"></SPAN>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />