Part 2 (1/2)
Also would come in well here that oft-told story of a pauper named ”Margaret,” who was once ”set adrift in a village of the county ...
and left to grow up as best she could, and from whom have descended two hundred criminals. The, whole number of this girl's descendants, through six generations, is nine hundred; and besides the 'two hundred' a large number have been idiots, imbeciles, drunkards, lunatics, and paupers.”
Friends, to say nothing of higher motives, would it not be good policy to educate wisely every girl in the country? Are not mothers, as child-trainers, in absolute need of true culture? In cases where families depend on the labor of their girls, perhaps the State would make a saving even by compensating these families for the loss of such labor. Perhaps it would be cheaper, even in a pecuniary sense, for the State to do this, than to support reformatory establishments, prisons, almshouses, and insane-asylums, with their necessary retinues of officials. Inst.i.tutions in which these girls were educated might be made self-supporting, and the course of instruction might include different kinds of handicraft.
It was poor economy for the State to let that pauper ”grow up as best she could.” It would probably have been money in the State's pocket had it surrounded ”Margaret” in her early childhood with the choicest productions of art, engaged competent teachers to instruct her in the solid branches, in the accomplishments, in hygiene, in the principles and practice of integrity, and then have given her particular instruction in all matters connected with the training of children.
And had she developed a remarkable taste for painting, for modelling, or for music, the State could better have afforded even sending her to Italy, than to have taken care of those ”two hundred criminals,”
besides ”a large number” of ”idiots, imbeciles, drunkards, lunatics, and paupers.”
CHAPTER IV.
THE OTHER PART OF ”WOMAN'S MISSION.”--RUFFLES VERSUS READING.--THE CULTIVATION OF THE FINGERS.
Let us leave for a while this matter of child-training, and consider the other part of woman's mission,--namely, ”making home happy.” It would seem that even for this the wife should be at least the equal of her husband in culture, in order that the two may be in sympathy. When a loving couple marry, they unite their interests, and it is in this union of interests that they find happiness. We often hear from a wife or a husband remarks like these: ”I only half enjoyed it, because he (or she) wasn't there;” ”It will be no pleasure to me unless he (or she) is there too;” ”The company were charming, but still I felt lonesome there without him (or her).” The phrase ”half enjoy” gives the idea; for a sympathetic couple are to such a degree one that a pleasure which comes to either singly can only be half enjoyed, and even this half-joy is lessened by the consciousness of what the other is losing. In a rather sarcastic article, taken from an English magazine, occur a few sentences which ill.u.s.trate this point very well.
The writer is describing a honeymoon:--
”The real difficulty is to be entertaining. The one thirst of the young bride is for amus.e.m.e.nt, and she has no idea of amusing herself.
It is diverting to see the spouse of this ideal creature wend his way to the lending library, after a week of idealism, and the relief with which he carries home a novel. How often, in expectation, has he framed to himself imaginary talks,--talk brighter and wittier than that of the friends he forsakes! But conversation is difficult in the case of a refined creature who is as ignorant as a Hottentot. He begins with the new Miltonic poem, and finds she has never looked into 'Paradise Lost.' He plunges into the Reform Bill; but she knows nothing of politics, and has never read a leading article in her life.
Then she tries him, in her turn, and floods him with the dead chat of the town and an ocean of family tattle. He finds himself shut up for weeks with a creature who takes an interest in nothing but Uncle Crosspatch's temper and the scandal about Lady X. Little by little the absolute pettiness, the dense dulness, of woman's life, breaks on the disenchanted devotee. His deity is without occupation, without thought, without resources. He has a faint faith in her finer sensibility, in her poetic nature: he fetches his Tennyson from his carpet-bag, and wastes 'In Memoriam' on a critic who p.r.o.nounces it pretty!”
In cases of this kind, the half-joy is strikingly apparent. We see that a husband possessing culture is likely to be lonesome among his poets and his poetry, his works of reform, and his lofty ideas, unless--she is there too.
If it be said that learned women are p.r.o.ne to think lightly of home comforts and home duties, to despise physical labor, to look down on the ignorant, let us hasten to reply that learning is not culture, and that we want not learned mothers, but enlightened mothers, wisely educated mothers. And let us steadfastly and perseveringly a.s.sert that enlightenment and a wise education are essential to the accomplishment of the mother's mission. When the housefather feels the truth of this, then shall we see him bringing home every publication he can lay his hands on which treats intelligently of mental, moral, or physical training. Then shall we hear him saying to the house-mother, ”Cease, I pray you, this ever-lasting toil. Read, study, rest. With your solemn responsibilities, it is madness thus to spend yourself, thus to waste yourself.” In his home shall the true essentials a.s.sume that position which is theirs by right, and certain occupations connected with that clamorous square inch of surface in the upper part of the mouth shall receive only their due share of attention. For in one way or another, either by lessening the work or by hiring workers, the mother shall have her leisure.
And what will women, what will the house-mothers, do when they feel this truth? Certainly not as they now do. Now it is their custom to fill in every c.h.i.n.k and crevice of leisure time with sewing. ”Look,”
said a young mother to me: ”I made all these myself, when holding the baby, or by sitting up nights.” They were children's clothes, beautifully made, and literally covered with ruffles and embroidery.
Oh the thousands of st.i.tches! The ruffles ran up and down, and over and across, and three times round. Being white, the garments were of course changed daily. In the intervals of baby-tending, the mother s.n.a.t.c.hed a few minutes here and a few minutes there to starch, iron, flute, or crimp a ruffle, or to finish off a dress of her own. This ”finis.h.i.+ng off” was carried on for weeks. When her baby was asleep, or was good, or had its little ruffles all fluted, and its little sister's little ruffles were all fluted, then would she seize the opportunity to st.i.tch, to plait, to flounce, to pucker, and to braid.
Wherever a hand's breadth of the original material was left visible, some bow, or band, or queer device, was fas.h.i.+oned and sewed on. This zealous individual, by improving every moment, by sitting up nights, by working with the baby across her lap, accomplished her task. The dress was finished, and worn with unutterable complacency. It is this last part which is the worst part. They have no misgivings, these mothers. They expect your warm approval. ”I can't get a minute's time to read,” said this industrious person; and, on another occasion, ”I'll own up, I don't know any thing about taking care of children.”
Swift, speaking of women, said that they ”employ more thought, memory, and application to become fools than would serve to make them wise and useful;” and perhaps he spoke truly. For suppose this young mother had been as eager to gain ideas as she was to accomplish a bias band, a French fold, or a flounce. Suppose that, in the intervals of baby-tending, instead of fluting her little girls' ruffles and embroidering their garments, she had tried to s.n.a.t.c.h some information which would help her in the bringing up of those little girls. The truth is, mothers take their leisure time for what seems to them to be first in importance. It is easy to see what they consider essentials, and what, from them, children are learning to consider essentials. The ”knowingness” of some of our children on subjects connected with dress is simply appalling. A girl of eight or ten summers will take you in at a glance, from topmost plume to boot-tap, by items and collectively, a.n.a.lytically and synthetically. She discourses, in technical terms, of the fall of your drapery,--the propriety of your tr.i.m.m.i.n.gs, and the effect of this, that, or the other. She has a proper appreciation of what is French in your attire, and a proper scorn of what is not. She recognizes ”real lace” in a twinkle of her eye, and ”all wool” with a touch of her finger-tips. Plainly clad school-children are often made to suffer keenly by the cutting remarks of other school-children sumptuously arrayed. A little girl aged six, returning from a child's party, exclaimed, ”O mamma! What do you think? Bessie had her dress trimmed with lace, and it wasn't real!”
The law, ”No child shall walk the street in a plain dress,” is just as practically a law as if it had been enacted by the legal authorities.
Mothers obey its high behests, and dare not rebel against it. Look at our little girls going to school, each with her tucks and ruffles. Who ”gets time” to do all that sewing? where do they get it, and at what sacrifices? A goodly number of st.i.tches and moments go to the making and putting on of even one ruffle on one skirt. Think of all the st.i.tches and moments necessary for the making and putting of all the ruffles on all the skirts of the several little girls often belonging to one family! What a prospect before her has a mother of little girls! And there is no escape, not even in common sense. A woman considered sensible in the very highest degree will dress her little girl like other little girls, or perish in the attempt. How many do thus perish, or are helped to perish, we shall never know. A frail, delicate woman said to me one day, ”Oh, I do hope the fas.h.i.+ons will change before Sissy grows up, for I don't see how it will be possible for me to make her clothes.” You observe her submissive, law-abiding spirit. The possibility of evading the law never even suggests itself.
There is many a feeble mother of grown and growing ”Sissys” to whom the spring or fall dressmaking appears like an avalanche coming to overwhelm her, or a Juggernaut coming to roll over her. She asks not, ”How shall I escape?” but, ”How shall I endure?” Let her console herself. These semi-annual experiences are all ”mission.” All sewing is ”mission;” all cooking is ”mission.” It matters not what she cooks, nor what she sews. ”Domestic,” and worthy all praise, does the community consider that woman who keeps her hands employed, and is bodily present with her children inside the house.
But her bodily presence, even with mother love and longing to do her best, is not enough. There should be added two things,--knowledge and wisdom. These, however, she does not have, because to obtain them are needed what she does not get,--leisure, tranquillity, and the various resources and appliances of culture; also because their importance is not felt even by herself; also because the community does not yet see that she has need of them. And this brings us round to the point we started from,--namely, that the present unsatisfactory state of things is owing largely to the want of insight, or _unenlightenment_, which prevails concerning what woman needs and must have in order rightly to fulfil her mission.
CHAPTER V.
OTHER CAUSES CONSIDERED.--MASCULINE IDEA OF WOMAN'S WORK.
Another supporting cause, as we may call it, of the existing state of things is the ignorance of mankind concerning the cost of carrying on the family,--not the cost to themselves in money, but the cost to woman in endurance. Of its power to exhaust her vital forces they have not the remotest idea. Each of its little ten-minute duties seems so trifling that to call it work appears absurd. They do not reflect that often a dozen of these ten-minute duties must be crowded into an hour which holds but just six ten-minutes; that her day is crowded with these crowded hours; that consequently she can never be free from hurry, and that constant hurry is a constant strain upon her in every way. They themselves, they think, could do up the work in half the time, and not feel it a bit. Scarcely a man of them but thinks the dishes might be just rinsed off under the faucet, and stood up to dry.
Scarcely a man of them who, if this were tried, would not cast more than inquiring glances at his trencher; for it is always what is not done that a man sees. If one chair-round escapes dusting, it is that chair-round which he particularly notices. In his mind then are two ideas: one is of the whole long day, the other of that infinitesimal undone duty. The remark visible on his countenance is this: ”The whole day, and no time to dust a chair-round!”