<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<h2>“OH, WELL, YOU KNOW<br/>HOW WOMEN ARE!”</h2>
<h3>BY<br/><big>IRVIN S. COBB</big></h3>
<p class="firstword">SHE emerges from the shop. She is any
woman, and the shop from which she emerges
is any shop in any town. She has been shopping.
This does not imply that she has been buying anything
or that she has contemplated buying anything,
but merely that she has been shopping—a
very different pursuit from buying. Buying implies
business for the shop; shopping merely implies
business for the clerks.</p>
<p>As stated, she emerges. In the doorway she
runs into a woman of her acquaintance. If she
likes the other woman she is cordial. But if she
does not like her she is very, very cordial. A
woman’s aversion for another woman moving in
the same social stratum in which she herself moves
may readily be appraised. Invariably it is in
inverse ratio to the apparent affection she displays
upon encountering the object of her disfavor.
Why should this be? I cannot answer. It is
not given for us to know.</p>
<p><SPAN name="png.004" id="png.004"></SPAN><span class="pgmark">8</span><span class="ns">]<br/></span>Very well, then, she meets the other woman at
the door. They stop for conversation. Two men
meeting under the same condition would mechanically
draw away a few paces, out of the
route of persons passing in or out of the shop.
No particular play of the mental processes would
actuate them in so doing; an instinctive impulse,
operating mechanically and subconsciously, would
impel them to remove themselves from the main
path of foot travel. But this woman and her
acquaintance take root right there. Persons dodge
round them and glare at them. Other persons
bump into them, and are glared at by the two
traffic blockers. Where they stand they make a
knot of confusion.</p>
<p>But does it occur to either of them to suggest
that they might step aside, five feet or ten, and
save themselves, and the pedestrian classes generally,
a deal of delay and considerable annoyance?
It does not. It never will. If the meeting
took place in a narrow passageway or on a
populous staircase or at the edge of the orbit of
a set of swinging doors or on a fire escape landing
upon the front of a burning building, while one
was going up to aid in the rescue and the other
was coming down to be saved—if it took place
just outside the Pearly Gates on the Last Day
<SPAN name="png.005" id="png.005"></SPAN><span class="pgmark">9</span>when the quick and the dead, called up for judgment,
were streaming in through the portals—still
would they behave thus. Where they met
would be where they stopped to talk, regardless
of the consequences to themselves, regardless of
impediment to the movements of their fellow
beings.</p>
<p>Having had her say with her dear friend or
her dear enemy, as the case may be, our heroine
proceeds to the corner and hails a passing street
car. Because her heels are so high and her skirts
are so snug, she takes about twice the time to
climb aboard that a biped in trousers would take.
Into the car she comes, teetering and swaying.
The car is no more than comfortably filled. True,
all the seats at the back where she has entered
are occupied; but up at the front there still is
room for another sittee or two. Does she look
about her to ascertain whether there is any space
left? I need not pause for reply. I know it already,
and so do you. Midway of the aisle-length
she stops and reaches for a strap. She makes an
appealing picture, compounded of blindness,
helplessness, and discomfort. She has clinging
vine written all over her. She craves to cling,
but there is no trellis. So she swings from her
strap.</p>
<p><SPAN name="png.006" id="png.006"></SPAN><span class="ns">]<br/></span>The passengers nearest her are all men. She
stares at them, accusingly. One of them bends
forward to touch her and tell her that there is
room for her up forward; but now there aren’t
any seats left. Male passengers, swinging aboard
behind her, have already scrouged on by her and
taken the vacant places.</p>
<p>In the mind of one of the men in her immediate
vicinity chivalry triumphs over impatience.
He gives a shrug of petulance, arises and begs
her to have his seat. She is not entitled to it on
any ground, save compassion upon his part. By
refusing to use the eyes in her head she has forfeited
all right to special consideration. But he
surrenders his place to her and she takes it.</p>
<p>The car bumps along. The conductor, making
his rounds, reaches her. She knows he is coming;
at least she should know it. A visit from the
conductor has been a feature of every one of the
thousands of street-car rides that she has taken
in her life. She might have been getting her fare
ready for him. There are a dozen handy spots
where she might have had a receptacle built for
carrying small change—in a pocket in her skirt,
in a fob at her belt, in her sleeve or under her cuff.
Counting fob pockets and change pockets, a man
has from nine to fifteen pockets in his everyday
<SPAN name="png.007" id="png.007"></SPAN>garments. If also he is wearing an overcoat, add
at least three more pockets to the total. It would
seem that she might have had at least one dependable
pocket. But she has none.</p>
<p>The conductor stops, facing her, and meanwhile
wearing on his face that air of pained resignation
which is common to the faces of conductors
on transportation lines that are heavily patronized
by women travelers. In mute demand he extends
toward her a soiled palm. With hands encased
in oversight gloves she fumbles at the catch of a
hand bag. Having wrested the hand bag open,
she paws about among its myriad and mysterious
contents. A card of buttons, a sheaf of samples,
a handkerchief, a powder puff for inducing low
visibility of the human nose, a small parcel of
something, a nail file, and other minor articles
are disclosed before she disinters her purse from
the bottom of her hand bag. Another struggle
with the clasp of the purse ensues; finally, one
by one, five coppers are fished up out of the
depths and presented to the conductor. The
lady has made a difficult, complicated rite of
what might have been a simple and a swift
formality.</p>
<p>The car proceeds upon its course. She sits in
her seat, wearing that look of comfortable self-absorption
<SPAN name="png.008" id="png.008"></SPAN>which a woman invariably wears when
she is among strangers, and when she feels herself
to be well dressed and making a satisfactory public
appearance. She comes out of her trance with
a start on discovering that the car has passed her
corner or is about to pass it. All flurried, she
arises and signals the conductor that she is alighting
here. From her air and her expression, we
may gather that, mentally, she holds him responsible
for the fact that she has been carried on beyond
her proper destination.</p>
<p>The car having stopped, she makes her way to
the rear platform and gets off—gets off the wrong
way. That is to say, she gets off with face toward
the rear. Thus is achieved a twofold result:
She blocks the way of anyone who may be desirous
of getting aboard the car as she gets off
of it, and if the car should start up suddenly, before
her feet have touched the earth, or before
her grip on the hand rail has been relaxed, she
will be flung violently down upon the back of
her head.</p>
<p>From the time he is a small boy until he is in
his dotage, a man swings off a car, facing in the
direction in which the car is headed. Then, a
premature turn of a wheel pitches him forward
with a good chance to alight upon his feet,
<SPAN name="png.009" id="png.009"></SPAN>whereas the same thing happening when he was
facing in the opposite direction would cause him
to tumble over backward, with excellent prospects
of cracking his skull. But in obedience to
an immutable but inexplicable vagary of sex, a
woman follows the patently wrong, the obviously
dangerous, the plainly awkward system.</p>
<p>As the conductor rings the starting bell, he
glances toward a man who is riding on the rear
platform.</p>
<p>“Kin you beat ’um?” says the conductor. “I
ast you—kin you beat ’um?”</p>
<p>The man to whom he has put the question is
a married man. Being in this state of marriage
he appreciates that the longer you live with them
the less able are you to fathom the workings of
their minds with regard to many of the simpler
things of life. Speaking, therefore, from the
heights of his superior understanding, he says in
reply:</p>
<p>“Oh, well, you know how women are!”</p>
<p>We know how women are. But nobody knows
why they are as they are.</p>
<p>Please let me make myself clear on one point:
As an institution, and as individuals, I am for
women. They constitute, and deservedly too, the
most popular sex we have. Since away back
<SPAN name="png.010" id="png.010"></SPAN>yonder I have been in favor of granting them
suffrage. For years I have felt it as a profound
conviction that the franchise should be expanded
at one end and abridged at the other—made
larger to admit some of the women, made smaller
to bar out some of the men. I couldn’t think of
very many reasons why the average woman should
want to mix in politics, but if she did wish so to
mix and mingle, I couldn’t think of a single valid
reason why she should not have full permission,
not as a privilege, not as a boon, but as a common
right. Nor could I bring myself to share,
in any degree, the apprehension of some of the
anti-suffragists who held that giving women votes
would take many of them entirely out of the state
of motherhood. I cannot believe that all the
children of the future are going to be born on
the first Tuesday after the first Monday in November.
Surely some of them will be born on
other dates. Indeed the only valid argument
against woman suffrage that I could think of was
the conduct of some of the women who have been
for it.</p>
<p>To myself I often said:</p>
<p>“Certainly I favor giving them the vote. Seeing
what a mess the members of my own sex so
often make of the job of trying to run the country,
<SPAN name="png.011" id="png.011"></SPAN>I don’t anticipate that the Republic will go
upon the shoals immediately after women begin
voting and campaigning and running for office.
At the helm of the ship of state we’ve put some
pretty sad steersman from time to time. Better
the hand that rocks the cradle than the hand that
rocks the boat. We men have let slip nearly all
of the personal liberties for which our fathers
fought and bled—that is to say, fought the Britishers
and bled the Injuns. Ever since the Civil
War we have been so dummed busy telling the
rest of the world how free we were that we failed
to safeguard that freedom of which we boasted.</p>
<p>“We commiserate the Englishman because he
chooses to live under an hereditary president
called a king, while we are amply content to go
on living under an elected king called a president.
We cannot understand why he, a free
citizen of the free-est country on earth, insists on
calling himself a subject; but we are reconciled
to the fiction of proclaiming ourselves citizens,
while each day, more and more, we are becoming
subjects—the subjects of sumptuary legislation,
the subjects of statutes framed by bigoted or
frightened lawgivers, the subjects of arbitrary
mandates and of arbitrary decrees, the subjects,
the abject, cringing subjects, of the servant classes,
<SPAN name="png.012" id="png.012"></SPAN>the police classes, the labor classes, the capitalistic
classes.”</p>
<p>Naturally, as a Democrat I have felt these
things with enhanced bitterness when the Republicans
were in office; nevertheless, I have felt
them at other times, too. And, continuing along
this line of thought, I have repeatedly said to myself:</p>
<p>“In view of these conditions, let us give ’em
the vote—eventually, but not just yet. While
still we have control of the machinery of the
ballot let us put them on probation, as it were.
They claim to be rational creatures; very well,
then, make ’em prove it. Let us give ’em the
vote just as soon as they have learned the right
way in which to get off of a street car.”</p>
<p>In this, though, I have changed my mind. I
realize now that the demand was impossible, that
it was—oh, well, you know what women are!</p>
<p>We have given woman social superiority;
rather she has acquired it through having earned
it. Shortly she will have been put on a basis of
political equality with men in all the states of the
Union. Now she thinks she wants economic
equality. But she doesn’t; she only thinks she
does. If she should get it she would refuse to
abide by its natural limitations on the one side
<SPAN name="png.013" id="png.013"></SPAN>and its natural expansions for her sphere of
economic development on the other. For, temperamentally,
God so fashioned her that never
can she altogether quit being the clinging vine
and become the sturdy oak. She’ll insist on having
all the prerogatives of the oak, but at the
same time she will strive to retain the special considerations
accorded to the vine which clings. If
I know anything about her dear, wonderful, incomprehensible
self, she belongs to the sex which
would eat its cake and have it, too. Some men
are constructed after this design. But nearly all
women are.</p>
<p>Give her equal opportunities with men in business—put
her on the same footing and pay to her
the same salary that a man holding a similar job
is paid. So far so good. But then, as her employer,
undertake to hand out to her exactly the
same treatment which the man holding a like
position expects and accepts. There’s where Mr.
Boss strikes a snag. The salary she will take—oh,
yes—but she arrogates to herself the sweet
boon of weeping when things distress her, and,
when things harass her, of going off into tantrums
of temper which no man in authority, however
patient, would tolerate on the part of another
man serving under him.</p>
<p><SPAN name="png.014" id="png.014"></SPAN><span class="ns">]<br/></span>Grant to her equal powers, equal responsibilities,
equal favors and a pay envelope on Saturday
night containing as much money as her male co-worker
receives. That is all very well; but seek,
however gently, however tactfully, however
diplomatically, to suggest to her that a simpler,
more businesslike garb than the garb she favors
would be the sane and the sensible thing for business
wear in business hours. And then just see
what happens.</p>
<p>A working woman who, through the working
day, dresses in plain, neat frocks with no jangling
bracelets upon her arms, no foolish furbelows at
her wrists, no vain adornments about her throat,
no exaggerated coiffure, is a delight to the eye
and, better still, she fits the setting of her environment.
Two of the most competent and dependable
human beings I know are both of them
women. One is the assistant editor of a weekly
magazine. The other is the head of an important
department in an important industry. In the evening
you would never find a woman better
groomed or, if the occasion demand, more ornately
rigged-out than either one of these young women
will be. But always, while on duty, they
wear a correct and proper costume for the work
they are doing, and they match the picture. These
<SPAN name="png.015" id="png.015"></SPAN>two, though, are, I think, exceptions to the rule
of their sex.</p>
<p>Trained nurses wear the most becoming uniforms,
and the most suitable, considering their
calling, that were ever devised. To the best of
my knowledge and belief there is no record where
a marriageable male patient on the road to recovery
and in that impressionable mood which accompanies
the convalescence of an ordinarily
healthy man, failed to fall in love with his
nurse. A competent, professional nurse who has
the added advantage on her side of being comely—and
it is powerfully hard for her to avoid being
comely in her spotless blue and starchy white—stands
more chances of getting the right sort of
man for a husband than any billionaire’s daughter
alive.</p>
<p>But I sometimes wonder what weird sartorial
eccentricities some of them would indulge in did
not convention and the standing laws of their profession
require of them that they all dress after
a given pattern. And if the owners and managers
of big city shops once lifted the rule prescribing
certain modes for their female working staffs—if
they should give their women clerks a free hand
in choosing their own wardrobes for store hours—well,
you know how women are!</p>
<p><SPAN name="png.016" id="png.016"></SPAN><span class="ns">]<br/></span>Nevertheless and to the contrary notwithstanding,
I will admit while I am on this phase of my
topic that there likewise is something to be said
in dispraise of my own sex too. In the other—and
better half of this literary double sketch-team
act, my admired and talented friend, Mrs.
Mary Roberts Rinehart, cites chapter and verse to
prove the unaccountable vagaries of some men in
the matter of dress. There she made but one mistake—a
mistake of under-estimation. She mentioned
specifically some men; she should have included
all men.</p>
<p>The only imaginable reason why any rational
he-biped of adult age clings to the habiliments
ordained for him by the custom and the tailors of
this generation, is because he is used to them. A
man can stand anything once he gets used to it
because getting used to a thing commonly means
that the habitee has quit worrying about it. And
yet since the dawn of time when Adam poked fun
at Eve’s way of wearing her fig-leaf and on down
through the centuries until the present day and
date it has ever been the custom of men to gibe at
the garments worn by women. Take our humorous
publications, which I scarcely need point out
are edited by men. Hardly could our comic
weeklies manage to come out if the jokes about
<SPAN name="png.017" id="png.017"></SPAN>the things which women wear were denied to them
as fountain-sources of inspiration. To the vaudeville
monologist his jokes about his wife and his
mother-in-law and to the comic sketch artist his
pictures setting forth the torments of the stock
husband trying to button the stock gown of a stock
wife up her stock back—these are dependable and
inevitable stand-bys.</p>
<p>Women do wear maniacal garments sometimes;
that there is no denying. But on the other hand
styles for women change with such frequency
that no quirk of fashion however foolish and disfiguring
ever endures for long enough to work
any permanent injury in the health of its temporarily
deluded devotees. Nothing I can think
of gets old-fashioned with such rapidity as a
feminine fashion unless it is an egg.</p>
<p>If this season a woman’s skirt is so scantily
fashioned that as she hobbles along she has the
appearance of being leg-shackled, like the lady
called Salammbo, it is as sure as shooting that,
come next season, she will have leapt to the other
extreme and her draperies will be more than
amply voluminous. If this winter her sleeves are
like unto sausage casings for tightness, be prepared
when spring arrives to see her wearing practically
all the sleeves there are. About once in
<SPAN name="png.018" id="png.018"></SPAN>so often she is found wearing a mode which combines
beauty with saneness but that often is not
very often.</p>
<p>But even when they are at apogee of sartorial
ridiculousness I maintain that the garments of
women, from the comfort standpoint, anyhow,
are not any more foolish than the garments to
which the average man is incurably addicted. If
women are vassals to fashion men are slaves to
convention, and fashion has the merit that it alters
overnight, whereas convention is a slow moving
thing that stands still a long time before it
does move. Convention is the wooden Indian
of civilization; but fashion is a merry-go-round.</p>
<p>In the Temperate zone in summertime, Everywoman
looks to be cooler than Everyman—and
by the same token is cooler. In the winter she
wears lighter garments than he would dream of
wearing, and yet stays warmer than he does, can
stand more exposure without outward evidence of
suffering than he can stand, and is less <ins class="TNsilent" title="Transcriber's note:
original reads 'succeptible'">susceptible</ins>
than he to colds and grips and pneumonias. Compare
the thinness of her heaviest outdoor wrap
with the thickness of his lightest ulster, or the heft
of her so-called winter suit with the weight of
the outer garments which he wears to business,
<SPAN name="png.019" id="png.019"></SPAN>and if you are yourself a man you will wonder
why she doesn’t freeze stiff when the thermometer
falls to the twenty-above mark. Observe her in
a ballroom that is overheated in the corners and
draughty near the windows, as all ballrooms are.
Her neck and her throat, her bosom and arms are
bare. Her frock is of the filmiest gossamer stuff;
her slippers are paper thin, her stockings the
sheerest of textures, yet she doesn’t sniff and her
nose doesn’t turn red and the skin upon her exposed
shoulders refuses to goose-flesh. She is the
marvel of the ages. She is neither too warm nor
too cold; she is just right. Consider now her
male companion in his gala attire. One minute
he is wringing wet with perspiration; that is
when he is dancing. The next minute he is visibly
congealing. That is because he has stopped to
catch his breath.</p>
<p>Why this difference between the sexes? The
man is supposed to be the hardier creature of the
two, but he can’t prove it. Of course there may
be something in the theory that when a woman
feels herself to be smartly dressed, an exaltation
of soul lifts her far above realization of bodily
discomfort. But I make so bold as to declare that
the real reason why she is comfortable and he is
not, lies in the fact that despite all eccentricities of
<SPAN name="png.020" id="png.020"></SPAN>costume in which she sometimes indulges, Everywoman
goes about more rationally clad than
Everyman does.</p>
<p>For the sake of comparing two horrible examples,
let us take a woman esteemed to be over-dressed
at all points and angles where she is not
under-dressed, and, mentally, let us place alongside
her a man who by the standards of his times
and his contemporaries is conventionally garbed.
To find the woman we want, we probably must
travel to New York and seek her out in a smart
restaurant at night. Occasionally she is found
elsewhere but it is only in New York, that city
where so many of the young women are prematurely
old and so many of the old women are prematurely
young, that she abounds in sufficient profusion
to become a common type instead of an
infrequent one. This woman is waging that battle
against the mounting birthdays which nobody
ever yet won. Her hair has been dyed in those rich
autumnal tints which are so becoming to a tree
in its Indian summer, but so unbecoming to a
woman in hers. Richard K. Fox might have designed
her jewelry; she glistens with diamonds
until she makes you think of the ice coming out
of the Hudson River in the early spring. But
about her complexion there is no suggestion of a
<SPAN name="png.021" id="png.021"></SPAN>March thaw. For it is a climate-proof shellac.
Her eyebrows are the self-made kind, and her
lips were done by hand. Her skirt is too short for
looks and too tight for comfort; she is tightly
prisoned at the waistline and not sufficiently confined
in the bust. There is nothing natural or
rational anywhere about her. She is as artificial
as a tin minnow and she glitters like one.</p>
<p>Next your attention is invited to the male of
the species. He is assumed to be dressed in accordance
with the dictates of good taste and with
due regard for all the ordinary proprieties. But
is he? Before deciding whether he is or isn’t,
let us look him over, starting from the feet and
working upward. A matter of inches above his insteps
brings us to the bottom of his trouser-legs.
Now these trouser-legs of his are morally certain
to be too long, in which event they billow down
over his feet in slovenly and ungraceful folds, or
they are too short, in which event there is an
awkward, ugly cross-line just above his ankles.
If he is a thin man, his dress waistcoat bulges
away from his breastbone so the passerby can
easily discover what brand of suspenders he
fancies; but if he be stoutish, the waistcoat has
a little way of hitching along up his mid-riff inch
by inch until finally it has accordion-pleated itself
<SPAN name="png.022" id="png.022"></SPAN>in overlapping folds thwartwise of his tummy,
coyly exposing an inch or so of clandestine shirt-front.</p>
<p>It requires great will-power on the part of
the owner and constant watchfulness as well to
keep a fat man’s dress waistcoat from behaving
like a railroad folder. His dinner coat or his
tail coat, if he wears a tail coat, is invariably
too tight in the sleeves; nine times out of ten it
binds across the back between the shoulders, and
bulges out in a pouch effect at the collar. His
shirt front, if hard-boiled, is as cold and clammy
as a morgue slab when first he puts it on; but as
hot and sticky as a priming of fresh glue after
he has worn it for half an hour in an overheated
room—and all public rooms in America are overheated.
Should it be of the pleated or medium
well-done variety, no power on earth can keep it
from appearing rumply and untidy; that is, no
power can if the wearer be a normal man. I am
not speaking of professional he-beauties or models
for the illustrations of haberdashers’ advertisements
in the magazines. His collar, which is a
torturer’s device of stiff linen and yielding starch,
is not a comparatively modern product as some
have imagined. It really dates back to the Spanish
Inquisition where it enjoyed a great vogue.</p>
<p><SPAN name="png.023" id="png.023"></SPAN><span class="ns">]<br/></span>Faring abroad, he encloses his head, let us say in
a derby hat. Some people think the homeliest
thing ever devised by man is Grant’s Tomb.
Others favor the St. Louis Union Depot. But I
am pledged to the derby hat. And the high or
two-quart hat runs second.</p>
<p>This being the case for and against the parties
concerned, I submit to the reader’s impartial judgment
the following question for a decision: Taking
everything into consideration, which of these
two really deserves the booby prize for unbecoming
apparel—the woman who plainly is dressed in
bad form or the man who is supposed to be dressed
in good form? But this I will say for him as
being in his favor. He has sense enough to wear
plenty of pockets. And in his most infatuated
moments he never wears nether garments so tight
that he can’t step in ’em. Can I say as much for
woman? I cannot.</p>
<p>A few pages back I set up the claim that
woman, considered as a sex and not as an exceptional
type, cannot divorce the social relation from
the economic. I think of an illustration to prove
my point: In business two men may be closely
associated. They may be room-mates besides;
chums, perhaps, at the same club; may borrow
money from each other and wear each other’s
<SPAN name="png.024" id="png.024"></SPAN>clothes; and yet, so far as any purely confidential
relation touching on the private sides of their
lives is concerned, may remain as far apart as the
poles.</p>
<p>It is hard to imagine two women, similarly
placed, behaving after the same common-sense
standards. Each insists upon making a confidante
of her partner. Their intimacy becomes a thing
complicated with extraneous issues, with jointly
shared secrets, with disclosures as to personal likes
and dislikes, which should have no part in it if
there is to be continued harmony, free from heart-burnings
or lacerated feelings, or fancied slights
or blighted affections. Sooner or later, too, the
personality of the stronger nature begins to overshadow
the personality of the weaker. Almost
inevitably there is a falling-out.</p>
<p>I do not share the somewhat common opinion
that in their friendships women are less constant
than men are. But the trouble with them is that
they put a heavier burden upon friendship than
so delicate, so sensitive a sentiment as real friendship
is was ever meant to bear. Something has
to give way under the strain. And something
does.</p>
<p>To be sure there is an underlying cause in
extenuation for this temperamental shortcoming
<SPAN name="png.025" id="png.025"></SPAN>which in justice to the ostensibly weaker sex
should be set forth here. Even though I am taking
on the rôle of Devil’s Advocate in the struggle
to keep woman from canonizing herself by main
force I want to be as fair as I can, always reserving
the privilege where things are about even, of
giving my own side a shade the better of it. The
main tap-root reason why women confide over-much
and too much in other women is because
leading more circumscribed lives than men commonly
lead they are driven back upon themselves
and into themselves and their sisters for interests
and for conversational material.</p>
<p>Taking them by and large they have less with
which to concern themselves than their husbands
and their brothers, their fathers and their sons
have. Therefore they concern themselves the
more with what is available, which, at the same
time, oftener than not, means some other woman’s
private affairs.</p>
<p>A woman, becoming thoroughly imbued with
an idea, becomes, ninety-nine times out of a hundred,
a creature of one idea. Everything else on
earth is subordinated to the thing—cabal, reform,
propaganda, crusade, movement or what not—in
which she is interested. Now the average man
may be very sincerely and very enthusiastically
<SPAN name="png.026" id="png.026"></SPAN>devoted to a cause; but it does not necessarily
follow that it will obsess him through every waking
hour. But the ladies, God bless ’em—and curb
’em—are not built that way. A woman wedded
to a cause is divorced from all else. She resents
the bare thought that in the press of matters and
the clash of worlds, mankind should for one moment
turn aside from her pet cause to concern
itself with newer issues and wider motives. From
a devotee she soon is transformed into a habitee.
From being an earnest advocate she advances—or
retrogrades—to the status of a plain bore. To
be a common nuisance is bad enough; to be a common
scold is worse, and presently she turns scold
and goes about railing shrilly at a world that
criminally persists in thinking of other topics than
the one which lies closest to her heart and loosest
on her tongue.</p>
<p>Than a woman who is a scold there is but one
more exasperating shape of a woman and that is
the woman who, not content with being the most
contradictory, the most paradoxical, the most
adorable of the Almighty’s creations—to wit, a
womanly woman—tries, among men, to be a good
fellow, so-called.</p>
<p>But that which is ordinarily a fault may, on
occasion of extraordinary stress, become the most
<SPAN name="png.027" id="png.027"></SPAN>transcendent and the most admirable of virtues.
I think of this last war and of the share our women
and the women of other lands have played in it.
No one caviled nor complained at the one-ideaness
of womankind while the world was in a welter of
woe and slaughter. Of all that they had, worth
having, our women gave and gave and gave and
gave. They gave their sons and their brothers,
their husbands and their fathers, to their country;
they gave of their time and of their energies and
of their talent; they gave of their wonderful
mercy and their wonderful patience, and their yet
more wonderful courage; they gave of the work
of their hands and the salt of their souls and the
very blood of their hearts. For every suspected
woman slacker there were ten known men slackers—yea,
ten times ten and ten to carry.</p>
<p>Each day, during that war, the story of Mary
Magdalene redeemed was somewhere lived over
again. Every great crisis in the war-torn lands
produced its Joan of Arc, its Florence Nightingale,
its Clara Barton. To the women fell the
tasks which for the most part brought no public
recognition, no published acknowledgments of
gratitude. For them, instead of the palms of victory
and the sheaves of glory, there were the
crosses of sacrifice, the thorny diadems of suffering.
<SPAN name="png.028" id="png.028"></SPAN>We cannot conceive of men, thus circumstanced,
going so far and doing so much. But
the women—</p>
<p class="pgbrk">Oh, well, you know how women are!</p>
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