A Vindication of the Rights of Woman
Let men take their choice, man and woman were made for
each other, though not to become one being; and if they
will not improve women, they will deprave them!
I speak of the improvement and emancipation of the whole
sex, for I know that the behaviour of a few women, who,
by accident, or following a strong bent of nature, have
acquired a portion of knowledge superiour to that of
the rest of their sex, has often been overbearing; but
there have been instances of women who, attaining knowledge,
have not discarded modesty, nor have they always pedantically
appeared to despise the ignorance which they laboured
to disperse in their own minds. The exclamations then
which any advice respecting female learning, commonly
produces, especially from pretty women, often arise
from envy. When they chance to see that even the lustre
of their eyes, and the flippant sportiveness of refined
coquetry will not always secure them attention, during
a whole evening, should a woman of a more cultivated
understanding endeavour to give a rational turn to the
conversation, the common source of consolation is, that
such women seldom get husbands. What arts have I not
seen silly women use to interrupt by flirtation, a very
significant word to describe such a manoeuvre, a rational
conversation, which made the men forget that they were
pretty women.
But, allowing what is very natural to man, that the
possession of rare abilities is really calculated to
excite over-weening pride, disgusting in both men and
women-in what a state of inferiority must the female
faculties have rusted when such a small portion of knowledge
as those women attained, who have sneeringly been termed
learned women, could be singular?-Sufficiently so to
puff up the possessor, and excite envy in her contemporaries,
and some of the other sex. Nay, has not a little rationality
exposed many women to the severest censure? I advert
to well known facts, for I have frequently heard women
ridiculed, and every little weakness exposed, only because
they adopted the advice of some medical men, and deviated
from the beaten track in their mode of treating their
infants. I have actually heard this barbarous aversion
to innovation carried still further, and a sensible
woman stigmatized as an unnatural mother, who has thus
been wisely solicitous to preserve the health of her
children, when in the midst of her care she has lost
one by some of the casualties of infancy, which no prudence
can ward off. Her acquaintance have observed, that this
was the consequence of new-fangled notions-the new-fangled
notions of ease and cleanliness. And those who pretending
to experience, though they have long adhered to prejudices
that have, according to the opinion of the most sagacious
physicians, thinned the human race, almost rejoiced
at the disaster that gave a kind of sanction to prescription.
Indeed, if it were only on this account, the national
education of women is of the utmost consequence, for
what a number of human sacrifices are made to that moloch
prejudice! And in how many ways are children destroyed
by the lasciviousness of man? The want of natural affection,
in many women, who are drawn from their duty by the
admiration of men, and the ignorance of others, render
the infancy of man a much more perilous state than that
of brutes; yet men are unwilling to place women in situations
proper to enable them to acquire sufficient understanding
to know how even to nurse their babes.
So forcibly does this truth strike me, that I would
rest the whole tendency of my reasoning upon it, for
whatever tends to incapacitate the maternal character,
takes woman out of her sphere.
But it is vain to expect the present race of weak mothers
either to take that reasonable care of a child's body,
which is necessary to lay the foundation of a good constitution,
supposing that it do not suffer for the sins of its
fathers; or, to manage its temper so judiciously that
the child will not have, as it grows up, to throw off
all that its mother, its first instructor, directly
or indirectly taught; and unless the mind have uncommon
vigour, womanish follies will stick to the character
throughout life. The weakness of the mother will be
visited on the children! And whilst women are educated
to rely on their husbands for judgment, this must ever
be the consequence, for there is no improving an understanding
by halves, nor can any being act wisely from imitation,
because in every circumstance of life there is a kind
of individuality, which requires an exertion of judgment
to modify general rules. The being who can think justly
in one track, will soon extend its intellectual empire;
and she who has sufficient judgment to manage her children,
will not submit, right or wrong, to her husband, or
patiently to the social laws which make a nonentity
of a wife.
A man has been termed a microcosm, and every family
might also be called a state. States, it is true, have
mostly been governed by arts that disgrace the character
of man; and the want of a just constitution, and equal
laws, have so perplexed the notions of the worldly wise,
that they more than question the reasonableness of contending
for the rights of humanity. Thus morality, polluted
in the national reservoir, sends off streams of vice
to corrupt the constituent parts of the body politic;
but should more noble, or rather, more just principles
regulate the laws, which ought to be the government
of society, and not those who execute them, duty might
become the rule of private conduct.
A Vindication of the Rights of Woman
by Mary Wollstonecraft (1759-1797)
also author of Frankenstein