Woman: Man's Equal eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 165 pages of information about Woman.

Woman: Man's Equal eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 165 pages of information about Woman.

It requires as much good judgment and tact to manage a house properly as it does to conduct a farm, make out a legal form, carry on an extensive commercial business, or attend to a banking establishment as it ought to be attended to; and quite as much wisdom and prudence are needed to rear up successfully and govern a family with discretion, as is needed in the government of a province or state.  Indeed more practical good sense is shown in the government of the majority of those homes where the wife and mother is allowed to govern without interference, than is usually exhibited in the exclusively masculine government of states and empires.

It “is the mind that makes the man,” sings one of Britain’s most honored poets; the mind, not the social position he occupies.  And so with woman; it is the mind, and not her local habitation or employment, that entitles her to consideration—­that entitles her to equality, to justice.  With equal advantages, women are no whit behind men in any thing except physical strength.  Are men deprived of civil rights because some of them are puny?

It is an established fact that, where girls have had the same advantages, and often when they have had not nearly such good ones, they have maintained equally honorable positions in their classes, frequently outstripping their masculine competitors in the literary contest.

Should any doubt that this can be done, all that is necessary, to prove the truth or falsity of the assertion, is to select any given number of boys and girls of average intellect, of the same or nearly the same ages, and afford precisely the same advantages to them all, for a given length of time, and then subject boys and girls to a like critical examination.  Even with the disadvantages under which they labor in our ordinary and even higher schools, girls have surmounted the difficulties of their position, and without favor—­indeed, in spite of ridicule, partiality, and opposition—­have come out first in their examinations.  Send such a class of young women as this to a university that will honestly admit them to all its advantages, and allow them to compete with the most studious young men admitted to the same university; let both enjoy precisely similar facilities throughout the entire course; and see if there will not be as many brilliant scholars who will graduate with honors among the women as among the men.  It is said there are more talented men, more men eminent in science or in history, than there are women.  Certainly.  The advantage has all been on the side of the man, the disadvantage on the side of the woman; besides which, the doctrine that it is unwomanly to emerge from the retirement befitting her sex into public notice has been preached so persistently, that many women truly great have shrunk from the ribald criticism—­to use no stronger term—­with which insolent men assailed them.  Consequently, learned women have frequently given their works to the world anonymously, or allowed them to be attributed to their male relatives.  An instance in point is Miss Herschel.  It is well known, not only that she gave her brother valuable assistance in his astronomical pursuits, but that some of the discoveries attributed to him were actually made by her; not because he wished to defraud her of the honor of her achievement, but because she shrank from public notice.

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Project Gutenberg
Woman: Man's Equal from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.