登陆注册
5161900000018

第18章

"Please don't misunderstand me," pleaded the Philosopher, with a nervous glance towards the lowering eyebrows of the Girton Girl."Iam not saying for a moment woman is not the equal of man; indeed, it is my belief that she is.I am merely maintaining she is not his superior.The wise man honours woman as his friend, his fellow-labourer, his complement.It is the fool who imagines her unhuman.""But are we not better," persisted the Old Maid, "for our ideals? Idon't say we women are perfect--please don't think that.You are not more alive to our faults than we are.Read the women novelists from George Eliot downwards.But for your own sake--is it not well man should have something to look up to, and failing anything better--?""I draw a very wide line," answered the Philosopher, "between ideals and delusions.The ideal has always helped man; but that belongs to the land of his dreams, his most important kingdom, the kingdom of his future.Delusions are earthly structures, that sooner or later fall about his ears, blinding him with dust and dirt.The petticoat-governed country has always paid dearly for its folly.""Elizabeth!" cried the Girton Girl."Queen Victoria!""Were ideal sovereigns," returned the Philosopher, "leaving the government of the country to its ablest men.France under its Pompadours, the Byzantine Empire under its Theodoras, are truer examples of my argument.I am speaking of the unwisdom of assuming all women to be perfect.Belisarius ruined himself and his people by believing his own wife to be an honest woman.""But chivalry," I argued, "has surely been of service to mankind?""To an immense extent," agreed the Philosopher."It seized a natural human passion and turned it to good uses.Then it was a reality.So once was the divine right of kings, the infallibility of the Church, for cumbering the ground with the lifeless bodies of which mankind has paid somewhat dearly.Not its upstanding lies--they can be faced and defeated--but its dead truths are the world's stumbling-blocks.To the man of war and rapine, trained in cruelty and injustice, the woman was the one thing that spoke of the joy of yielding.Woman, as compared with man, was then an angel: it was no mere form of words.All the tender offices of life were in her hands.To the warrior, his life divided between fighting and debauchery, his womenfolk tending the sick, helping the weak, comforting the sorrowing, must have moved with white feet across a world his vices had made dark.Her mere subjection to the priesthood, her inborn feminine delight in form and ceremony--now an influence narrowing her charity--must then, to his dim eyes, trained to look upon dogma as the living soul of his religion, have seemed a halo, deifying her.Woman was then the servant.It was naturally to her advantage to excite tenderness and mercy in man.Since she has become the mistress of the world.It is no longer her interested mission to soften his savage instincts.Nowadays, it is the women who make war, the women who exalt brute force.Today, it is the woman who, happy herself, turns a deaf ear to the world's low cry of pain; holding that man honoured who would ignore the good of the species to augment the comforts of his own particular family;holding in despite as a bad husband and father the man whose sense of duty extends beyond the circle of the home.One recalls Lady Nelson's reproach to her lord after the battle of the Nile.'I have married a wife, and therefore cannot come,' is the answer to his God that many a woman has prompted to her lover's tongue.I was speaking to a woman only the other day about the cruelty of skinning seals alive.'I feel so sorry for the poor creatures,' she murmured; 'but they say it gives so much more depth of colour to the fur.' Her own jacket was certainly a very beautiful specimen.""When I was editing a paper," I said, "I opened my columns to a correspondence on this very subject.Many letters were sent to me--most of them trite, many of them foolish.One, a genuine document, I remember.It came from a girl who for six years had been assistant to a fashionable dressmaker.She was rather tired of the axiom that all women, at all times, are perfection.She suggested that poets and novelists should take service for a year in any large drapery or millinery establishment where they would have an opportunity of studying woman in her natural state, so to speak.""It is unfair to judge us by what, I confess, is our chief weakness," argued the Woman of the World."Woman in pursuit of clothes ceases to be human--she reverts to the original brute.

Besides, dressmakers can be very trying.The fault is not entirely on one side.""I still fail to be convinced," remarked the Girton Girl, "that woman is over-praised.Not even the present conversation, so far as it has gone, altogether proves your point.""I am not saying it is the case among intelligent thinkers,"explained the Philosopher, "but in popular literature the convention still lingers.To woman's face no man cares to protest against it;and woman, to her harm, has come to accept it as a truism.'What are little girls made of? Sugar and spice and all that's nice.' In more or less varied form the idea has entered into her blood, shutting out from her hope of improvement.The girl is discouraged from asking herself the occasionally needful question: Am I on the way to becoming a sound, useful member of society? Or am I in danger of degenerating into a vain, selfish, lazy piece of good-for-nothing rubbish? She is quite content so long as she can detect in herself no tendency to male vices, forgetful that there are also feminine vices.Woman is the spoilt child of the age.No one tells her of her faults.The World with its thousand voices flatters her.

同类推荐
  • 周生烈子

    周生烈子

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • Good Indian

    Good Indian

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 止学

    止学

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 百愚禅师语录

    百愚禅师语录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 郡务稍简因得整比旧

    郡务稍简因得整比旧

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 吕祖全传

    吕祖全传

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 古词:词苑文学奇葩

    古词:词苑文学奇葩

    词是一种配合新兴音乐的诗体,又称“曲子词”、“琴趣”、“乐府”、“诗余”等,因为词的句式长短不一,因此又有“长短句”之名。词按调填写而成,调有调名,又称“词牌名”。每种词调一般都分为上下两章,称“上片”、“下片”,或“上阕”、“下阕”,还有分为三片、四片的长调。词的形成经历了由民间到文人创作的长期过程,一般认为,词孕育于南北朝后期,产生于隋唐之际,中唐以后文人创作渐多,晚唐五代日趋繁荣。
  • 娇妻驾到之世子倾城

    娇妻驾到之世子倾城

    苏曼卿一时好心,从街上捡回来个小乞丐。洗干净后,发现这乞丐颜色好的不像话,就跟画里走出来似的。不仅如此,还学什么会什么,对她有求必应。美人娘亲慧眼识珠。我家宝贝闺女还缺个疼人的未来夫君,这个孩子好啊!于是乎,自己还是个奶娃娃的苏曼卿,走上了养成夫君之路。————夫君养成第一则:自己的夫君,只有自己能欺负。别人欺负怎么办?让夫君去揍她!————夫君养成第二则:要对他好、对他好、对他好!好吃的,好玩的,好穿的,她有他就有!————夫君养成第三则:……【宠文,日常温馨向,不喜慎入】
  • 第七个夜

    第七个夜

    《第7个夜》是一个故事集,收录了一百多个非常精短的离奇故事。每个故事都非常有特色,在形式上,用尽量少的语言讲述一个故事;在内容上,构思精巧匪夷所思。故事里面涉及我们普通生活中的方方面面,亲情,友情,爱情等等。这么短,这么精,这么离奇的故事,可以说这是以前很少见的,是区别于以前所有出版过的悬疑小说的独有特色。
  • 我的爹地大人是大叔

    我的爹地大人是大叔

    本文纯属虚构,不喜勿喷(这里有可爱腹黑的萌宝,欢迎跳坑)一直以来柒夏都以为自己的儿子只是一个乖巧可爱,智商比同龄人高一些的’正常’孩子,可是,就是这个自己以为很是’正常’的儿子,却给了自己一个大大的惊吓柒夏不仅仅发现了儿子是天才,还是一个级别比自己高的黑客,这心情怎么就让人这么的郁闷呢!果然,没有对比就没有伤害,这对象还是自己几岁的的儿子,这打击,太深了好吧,只能时刻告诉自己,儿子是亲生的!发现儿子似乎一直都不喜欢自己的爹地,柒夏耐心的一问:“宝贝,你为什么不喜欢爹地啊,爹地难道对不不够好吗?”“妈咪,爹地年纪太大了,他是在老牛吃嫩草”结果儿子很是认真的回了自己一句……小剧场~某一天“妈咪妈咪,我给你准备了一份礼物,希望你会喜欢”云星浩来到了柒夏的跟前,对着她一说“什么礼物?”柒夏笑着一问“给你妈咪,这是浩浩赚钱给妈咪买的”云星浩从身后献宝似的那出了一叠房产证递给她“儿子,这是不是你在某宝上十块钱一个买的?”柒夏拿起来笑着一问,结果一打开,发现是真的以后,她惊呆了妈妈咪,儿子也太有钱了吧……这让她这个妈咪鸭梨很大啊
  • 凡尘仙缘

    凡尘仙缘

    堪笑荣华枕中客,对莲余做世外仙。入了侧殿,方坐定,那嬷嬷便问:“皇后娘娘差我来瞧瞧,十三公主的膝上可好了?”
  • 仙侠奇缘之千年之恋

    仙侠奇缘之千年之恋

    万年长情,唯花不灭,情至深处,花开如海。钟离,霸气冲天,救生挤世,却应情劫而生;一颗侠女之心却深限情丝不可自拔。乾胤先尊,看淡红尘,一头白发,一袭蓝衣,一身仙气,看尽人间四海茫茫。可相遇不期而至,情咒应劫而醒,纵使五百年静身修行又怎敌人间真情。原本清静的心却再也不平静了,纵使背负天下骂名,他也要护她一生周全,不是为一段情咒,而是因为心乱了。而鬼魅,这个世上最不该有心的魔王,却也架不住一个情字的牵扯,动了凡心,一场情劫,三个人纠葛,或许只有等到花开如海的那天,才能知道心归何处……
  • 哈怂王爷捣蛋妃

    哈怂王爷捣蛋妃

    “衠王爷!自重……”“本王爷调戏自己的王妃,还用自重……”“如果没错我应该还叫你一声皇叔吧,衠王爷”“反正本王爷跟那皇帝老儿又没有什么关系,只是个挂名的王爷罢了!”说完就把阿九压在了身下。“衠椠,你这样欺负我真的好吗?”“娘子难道不是拿来‘欺负’的吗?”“……”“问你个问题你说不说?”“不说,你又能把我怎么滴!”“信不信老子当场把你上了!”“有种你就来呀!谁怕谁?谁人不知你有龙阳之癖,TM的不举!”“……”就这样本姑娘手撕了当朝宰相一家,顺道捉了位夫君在家养着!
  • 格外情深,贺少的闲妻

    格外情深,贺少的闲妻

    一纸婚书,捆住两个毫无瓜葛的人。新婚之夜,他一把火烧了结婚证书,眉眼冷凝:“舒梓乔,贺太太这个位置,迟早让你如坐针毡!”她淡然而笑,他不愿娶,她就想嫁吗?***婚后生活,如履薄冰。他的刻意刁难,威逼利诱,只是为了离婚二字。她遭遇山体滑坡,他忙碌在美女的首映礼上;她险遭侮辱,他抱着心爱的女人步入房间……一切的一切,她本该漠然,只是贺一格,为何你我明明陌生如许,偏偏却早有瓜葛?***不知何时开始的以后,她爱上了他。他不知爱否,却屡屡如神祗般解救她于危难之中。她自知沉沦,无力自拔.“舒梓乔,你知道,你的人生有污点,跟一格无法匹配。更何况,他根本不爱你,你又何必死守着这样的婚姻让世人嘲笑呢?”终有一天,他心爱的女人傲然出现,无名指上的钻戒刺得耀眼。她微笑抬眼:“要我离婚吗?你让他亲自谈。”***
  • 汉皋诗话

    汉皋诗话

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。