<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0008" id="link2H_4_0008"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> OF WOMEN. </h2>
<p>Schiller's poem in honor of women, <i>Würde der Frauen</i>, is the result
of much careful thought, and it appeals to the reader by its antithetic
style and its use of contrast; but as an expression of the true praise
which should be accorded to them, it is, I think, inferior to these few
words of Jouy's: <i>Without women, the beginning of our life would be
helpless; the middle, devoid of pleasure; and the end, of consolation</i>.
The same thing is more feelingly expressed by Byron in <i>Sardanapalus</i>:</p>
<p><i>The very first<br/>
Of human life must spring from woman's breast,<br/>
Your first small words are taught you from her lips,<br/>
Your first tears quench'd by her, and your last sighs<br/>
Too often breathed out in a woman's hearing,<br/>
When men have shrunk from the ignoble care<br/>
Of watching the last hour of him who led them</i>.<br/>
<br/>
(Act I Scene 2.)<br/></p>
<p>These two passages indicate the right standpoint for the appreciation of
women.</p>
<p>You need only look at the way in which she is formed, to see that woman is
not meant to undergo great labor, whether of the mind or of the body. She
pays the debt of life not by what she does, but by what she suffers; by
the pains of child-bearing and care for the child, and by submission to
her husband, to whom she should be a patient and cheering companion. The
keenest sorrows and joys are not for her, nor is she called upon to
display a great deal of strength. The current of her life should be more
gentle, peaceful and trivial than man's, without being essentially happier
or unhappier.</p>
<p>Women are directly fitted for acting as the nurses and teachers of our
early childhood by the fact that they are themselves childish, frivolous
and short-sighted; in a word, they are big children all their life long—a
kind of intermediate stage between the child and the full-grown man, who
is man in the strict sense of the word. See how a girl will fondle a child
for days together, dance with it and sing to it; and then think what a
man, with the best will in the world, could do if he were put in her
place.</p>
<p>With young girls Nature seems to have had in view what, in the language of
the drama, is called <i>a striking effect</i>; as for a few years she
dowers them with a wealth of beauty and is lavish in her gift of charm, at
the expense of all the rest of their life; so that during those years they
may capture the fantasy of some man to such a degree that he is hurried
away into undertaking the honorable care of them, in some form or other,
as long as they live—a step for which there would not appear to be
any sufficient warranty if reason only directed his thoughts. Accordingly,
Nature has equipped woman, as she does all her creatures, with the weapons
and implements requisite for the safeguarding of her existence, and for
just as long as it is necessary for her to have them. Here, as elsewhere,
Nature proceeds with her usual economy; for just as the female ant, after
fecundation, loses her wings, which are then superfluous, nay, actually a
danger to the business of breeding; so, after giving birth to one or two
children, a woman generally loses her beauty; probably, indeed, for
similar reasons.</p>
<p>And so we find that young girls, in their hearts, look upon domestic
affairs or work of any kind as of secondary importance, if not actually as
a mere jest. The only business that really claims their earnest attention
is love, making conquests, and everything connected with this—dress,
dancing, and so on.</p>
<p>The nobler and more perfect a thing is, the later and slower it is in
arriving at maturity. A man reaches the maturity of his reasoning powers
and mental faculties hardly before the age of twenty-eight; a woman at
eighteen. And then, too, in the case of woman, it is only reason of a sort—very
niggard in its dimensions. That is why women remain children their whole
life long; never seeing anything but what is quite close to them, cleaving
to the present moment, taking appearance for reality, and preferring
trifles to matters of the first importance. For it is by virtue of his
reasoning faculty that man does not live in the present only, like the
brute, but looks about him and considers the past and the future; and this
is the origin of prudence, as well as of that care and anxiety which so
many people exhibit. Both the advantages and the disadvantages which this
involves, are shared in by the woman to a smaller extent because of her
weaker power of reasoning. She may, in fact, be described as
intellectually short-sighted, because, while she has an intuitive
understanding of what lies quite close to her, her field of vision is
narrow and does not reach to what is remote; so that things which are
absent, or past, or to come, have much less effect upon women than upon
men. This is the reason why women are more often inclined to be
extravagant, and sometimes carry their inclination to a length that
borders upon madness. In their hearts, women think that it is men's
business to earn money and theirs to spend it—- if possible during
their husband's life, but, at any rate, after his death. The very fact
that their husband hands them over his earnings for purposes of
housekeeping, strengthens them in this belief.</p>
<p>However many disadvantages all this may involve, there is at least this to
be said in its favor; that the woman lives more in the present than the
man, and that, if the present is at all tolerable, she enjoys it more
eagerly. This is the source of that cheerfulness which is peculiar to
women, fitting her to amuse man in his hours of recreation, and, in case
of need, to console him when he is borne down by the weight of his cares.</p>
<p>It is by no means a bad plan to consult women in matters of difficulty, as
the Germans used to do in ancient times; for their way of looking at
things is quite different from ours, chiefly in the fact that they like to
take the shortest way to their goal, and, in general, manage to fix their
eyes upon what lies before them; while we, as a rule, see far beyond it,
just because it is in front of our noses. In cases like this, we need to
be brought back to the right standpoint, so as to recover the near and
simple view.</p>
<p>Then, again, women are decidedly more sober in their judgment than we are,
so that they do not see more in things than is really there; whilst, if
our passions are aroused, we are apt to see things in an exaggerated way,
or imagine what does not exist.</p>
<p>The weakness of their reasoning faculty also explains why it is that women
show more sympathy for the unfortunate than men do, and so treat them with
more kindness and interest; and why it is that, on the contrary, they are
inferior to men in point of justice, and less honorable and conscientious.
For it is just because their reasoning power is weak that present
circumstances have such a hold over them, and those concrete things, which
lie directly before their eyes, exercise a power which is seldom
counteracted to any extent by abstract principles of thought, by fixed
rules of conduct, firm resolutions, or, in general, by consideration for
the past and the future, or regard for what is absent and remote.
Accordingly, they possess the first and main elements that go to make a
virtuous character, but they are deficient in those secondary qualities
which are often a necessary instrument in the formation of it.<SPAN href="#linknote-29" name="linknoteref-29" id="linknoteref-29">29</SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN name="linknote-29" id="linknote-29"> </SPAN></p>
<p class="foot">
29 (<SPAN href="#linknoteref-29">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ In this respect they may
be compared to an animal organism which contains a liver but no
gall-bladder. Here let me refer to what I have said in my treatise on <i>The
Foundation of Morals</i>, § 17.]</p>
<p>Hence, it will be found that the fundamental fault of the female character
is that it has <i>no sense of justice</i>. This is mainly due to the fact,
already mentioned, that women are defective in the powers of reasoning and
deliberation; but it is also traceable to the position which Nature has
assigned to them as the weaker sex. They are dependent, not upon strength,
but upon craft; and hence their instinctive capacity for cunning, and
their ineradicable tendency to say what is not true. For as lions are
provided with claws and teeth, and elephants and boars with tusks, bulls
with horns, and cuttle fish with its clouds of inky fluid, so Nature has
equipped woman, for her defence and protection, with the arts of
dissimulation; and all the power which Nature has conferred upon man in
the shape of physical strength and reason, has been bestowed upon women in
this form. Hence, dissimulation is innate in woman, and almost as much a
quality of the stupid as of the clever. It is as natural for them to make
use of it on every occasion as it is for those animals to employ their
means of defence when they are attacked; they have a feeling that in doing
so they are only within their rights. Therefore a woman who is perfectly
truthful and not given to dissimulation is perhaps an impossibility, and
for this very reason they are so quick at seeing through dissimulation in
others that it is not a wise thing to attempt it with them. But this
fundamental defect which I have stated, with all that it entails, gives
rise to falsity, faithlessness, treachery, ingratitude, and so on. Perjury
in a court of justice is more often committed by women than by men. It
may, indeed, be generally questioned whether women ought to be sworn in at
all. From time to time one finds repeated cases everywhere of ladies, who
want for nothing, taking things from shop-counters when no one is looking,
and making off with them.</p>
<p>Nature has appointed that the propagation of the species shall be the
business of men who are young, strong and handsome; so that the race may
not degenerate. This is the firm will and purpose of Nature in regard to
the species, and it finds its expression in the passions of women. There
is no law that is older or more powerful than this. Woe, then, to the man
who sets up claims and interests that will conflict with it; whatever he
may say and do, they will be unmercifully crushed at the first serious
encounter. For the innate rule that governs women's conduct, though it is
secret and unformulated, nay, unconscious in its working, is this: <i>We
are justified in deceiving those who think they have acquired rights over
the species by paying little attention to the individual, that is, to us.
The constitution and, therefore, the welfare of the species have been
placed in our hands and committed to our care, through the control we
obtain over the next generation, which proceeds from us; let us discharge
our duties conscientiously</i>. But women have no abstract knowledge of
this leading principle; they are conscious of it only as a concrete fact;
and they have no other method of giving expression to it than the way in
which they act when the opportunity arrives. And then their conscience
does not trouble them so much as we fancy; for in the darkest recesses of
their heart, they are aware that in committing a breach of their duty
towards the individual, they have all the better fulfilled their duty
towards the species, which is infinitely greater.<SPAN href="#linknote-30"
name="linknoteref-30" id="linknoteref-30">30</SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN name="linknote-30" id="linknote-30"> </SPAN></p>
<p class="foot">
30 (<SPAN href="#linknoteref-30">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ A more detailed
discussion of the matter in question may be found in my chief work, <i>Die
Welt als Wille und Vorstellung</i>, vol. ii, ch. 44.]</p>
<p>And since women exist in the main solely for the propagation of the
species, and are not destined for anything else, they live, as a rule,
more for the species than for the individual, and in their hearts take the
affairs of the species more seriously than those of the individual. This
gives their whole life and being a certain levity; the general bent of
their character is in a direction fundamentally different from that of
man; and it is this to which produces that discord in married life which
is so frequent, and almost the normal state.</p>
<p>The natural feeling between men is mere indifference, but between women it
is actual enmity. The reason of this is that trade-jealousy—<i>odium
figulinum</i>—which, in the case of men does not go beyond the
confines of their own particular pursuit; but, with women, embraces the
whole sex; since they have only one kind of business. Even when they meet
in the street, women look at one another like Guelphs and Ghibellines. And
it is a patent fact that when two women make first acquaintance with each
other, they behave with more constraint and dissimulation than two men
would show in a like case; and hence it is that an exchange of compliments
between two women is a much more ridiculous proceeding than between two
men. Further, whilst a man will, as a general rule, always preserve a
certain amount of consideration and humanity in speaking to others, even
to those who are in a very inferior position, it is intolerable to see how
proudly and disdainfully a fine lady will generally behave towards one who
is in a lower social rank (I do not mean a woman who is in her service),
whenever she speaks to her. The reason of this may be that, with women,
differences of rank are much more precarious than with us; because, while
a hundred considerations carry weight in our case, in theirs there is only
one, namely, with which man they have found favor; as also that they stand
in much nearer relations with one another than men do, in consequence of
the one-sided nature of their calling. This makes them endeavor to lay
stress upon differences of rank.</p>
<p>It is only the man whose intellect is clouded by his sexual impulses that
could give the name of <i>the fair sex</i> to that under-sized,
narrow-shouldered, broad-hipped, and short-legged race; for the whole
beauty of the sex is bound up with this impulse. Instead of calling them
beautiful, there would be more warrant for describing women as the
un-aesthetic sex. Neither for music, nor for poetry, nor for fine art,
have they really and truly any sense or susceptibility; it is a mere
mockery if they make a pretence of it in order to assist their endeavor to
please. Hence, as a result of this, they are incapable of taking a <i>purely
objective interest</i> in anything; and the reason of it seems to me to be
as follows. A man tries to acquire <i>direct</i> mastery over things,
either by understanding them, or by forcing them to do his will. But a
woman is always and everywhere reduced to obtaining this mastery <i>indirectly</i>,
namely, through a man; and whatever direct mastery she may have is
entirely confined to him. And so it lies in woman's nature to look upon
everything only as a means for conquering man; and if she takes an
interest in anything else, it is simulated—a mere roundabout way of
gaining her ends by coquetry, and feigning what she does not feel. Hence,
even Rousseau declared: <i>Women have, in general, no love for any art;
they have no proper knowledge of any; and they have no genius</i>.<SPAN href="#linknote-31" name="linknoteref-31" id="linknoteref-31">31</SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN name="linknote-31" id="linknote-31"> </SPAN></p>
<p class="foot">
31 (<SPAN href="#linknoteref-31">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ Lettre à d'Alembert, Note
xx.]</p>
<p>No one who sees at all below the surface can have failed to remark the
same thing. You need only observe the kind of attention women bestow upon
a concert, an opera, or a play—the childish simplicity, for example,
with which they keep on chattering during the finest passages in the
greatest masterpieces. If it is true that the Greeks excluded women from
their theatres they were quite right in what they did; at any rate you
would have been able to hear what was said upon the stage. In our day,
besides, or in lieu of saying, <i>Let a woman keep silence in the church</i>,
it would be much to the point to say <i>Let a woman keep silence in the
theatre</i>. This might, perhaps, be put up in big letters on the curtain.</p>
<p>And you cannot expect anything else of women if you consider that the most
distinguished intellects among the whole sex have never managed to produce
a single achievement in the fine arts that is really great, genuine, and
original; or given to the world any work of permanent value in any sphere.
This is most strikingly shown in regard to painting, where mastery of
technique is at least as much within their power as within ours—and
hence they are diligent in cultivating it; but still, they have not a
single great painting to boast of, just because they are deficient in that
objectivity of mind which is so directly indispensable in painting. They
never get beyond a subjective point of view. It is quite in keeping with
this that ordinary women have no real susceptibility for art at all; for
Nature proceeds in strict sequence—<i>non facit saltum</i>. And
Huarte<SPAN href="#linknote-32" name="linknoteref-32" id="linknoteref-32">32</SPAN>
in his <i>Examen de ingenios para las scienzias</i>—a book which has
been famous for three hundred years—denies women the possession of
all the higher faculties. The case is not altered by particular and
partial exceptions; taken as a whole, women are, and remain,
thorough-going Philistines, and quite incurable. Hence, with that absurd
arrangement which allows them to share the rank and title of their
husbands they are a constant stimulus to his ignoble ambitions. And,
further, it is just because they are Philistines that modern society,
where they take the lead and set the tone, is in such a bad way.
Napoleon's saying—that <i>women have no rank</i>—should be
adopted as the right standpoint in determining their position in society;
and as regards their other qualities Chamfort<SPAN href="#linknote-33"
name="linknoteref-33" id="linknoteref-33">33</SPAN> makes the very true
remark: <i>They are made to trade with our own weaknesses and our follies,
but not with our reason. The sympathies that exist between them and men
are skin-deep only, and do not touch the mind or the feelings or the
character</i>. They form the <i>sexus sequior</i>—the second sex,
inferior in every respect to the first; their infirmities should be
treated with consideration; but to show them great reverence is extremely
ridiculous, and lowers us in their eyes. When Nature made two divisions of
the human race, she did not draw the line exactly through the middle.
These divisions are polar and opposed to each other, it is true; but the
difference between them is not qualitative merely, it is also
quantitative.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linknote-32" id="linknote-32"> </SPAN></p>
<p class="foot">
32 (<SPAN href="#linknoteref-32">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ <i>Translator's Note</i>.—-
Juan Huarte (1520?-1590) practised as a physician at Madrid. The work
cited by Schopenhauer is known, and has been translated into many
languages.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="linknote-33" id="linknote-33"> </SPAN></p>
<p class="foot">
33 (<SPAN href="#linknoteref-33">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ <i>Translator's Note</i>.—See
<i>Counsels and Maxims</i>, p. 12, Note.]</p>
<p>This is just the view which the ancients took of woman, and the view which
people in the East take now; and their judgment as to her proper position
is much more correct than ours, with our old French notions of gallantry
and our preposterous system of reverence—that highest product of
Teutonico-Christian stupidity. These notions have served only to make
women more arrogant and overbearing; so that one is occasionally reminded
of the holy apes in Benares, who in the consciousness of their sanctity
and inviolable position, think they can do exactly as they please.</p>
<p>But in the West, the woman, and especially the <i>lady</i>, finds herself
in a false position; for woman, rightly called by the ancients, <i>sexus
sequior</i>, is by no means fit to be the object of our honor and
veneration, or to hold her head higher than man and be on equal terms with
him. The consequences of this false position are sufficiently obvious.
Accordingly, it would be a very desirable thing if this Number-Two of the
human race were in Europe also relegated to her natural place, and an end
put to that lady nuisance, which not only moves all Asia to laughter, but
would have been ridiculed by Greece and Rome as well. It is impossible to
calculate the good effects which such a change would bring about in our
social, civil and political arrangements. There would be no necessity for
the Salic law: it would be a superfluous truism. In Europe the <i>lady</i>,
strictly so-called, is a being who should not exist at all; she should be
either a housewife or a girl who hopes to become one; and she should be
brought up, not to be arrogant, but to be thrifty and submissive. It is
just because there are such people as <i>ladies</i> in Europe that the
women of the lower classes, that is to say, the great majority of the sex,
are much more unhappy than they are in the East. And even Lord Byron says:
<i>Thought of the state of women under the ancient Greeks—convenient
enough. Present state, a remnant of the barbarism of the chivalric and the
feudal ages—artificial and unnatural. They ought to mind home—and
be well fed and clothed—but not mixed in society. Well educated,
too, in religion—but to read neither poetry nor politics—
nothing but books of piety and cookery. Music—drawing—dancing—also
a little gardening and ploughing now and then. I have seen them mending
the roads in Epirus with good success. Why not, as well as hay-making and
milking</i>?</p>
<p>The laws of marriage prevailing in Europe consider the woman as the
equivalent of the man—start, that is to say, from a wrong position.
In our part of the world where monogamy is the rule, to marry means to
halve one's rights and double one's duties. Now, when the laws gave women
equal rights with man, they ought to have also endowed her with a
masculine intellect. But the fact is, that just in proportion as the
honors and privileges which the laws accord to women, exceed the amount
which nature gives, is there a diminution in the number of women who
really participate in these privileges; and all the remainder are deprived
of their natural rights by just so much as is given to the others over and
above their share. For the institution of monogamy, and the laws of
marriage which it entails, bestow upon the woman an unnatural position of
privilege, by considering her throughout as the full equivalent of the
man, which is by no means the case; and seeing this, men who are shrewd
and prudent very often scruple to make so great a sacrifice and to
acquiesce in so unfair an arrangement.</p>
<p>Consequently, whilst among polygamous nations every woman is provided for,
where monogamy prevails the number of married women is limited; and there
remains over a large number of women without stay or support, who, in the
upper classes, vegetate as useless old maids, and in the lower succumb to
hard work for which they are not suited; or else become <i>filles de joie</i>,
whose life is as destitute of joy as it is of honor. But under the
circumstances they become a necessity; and their position is openly
recognized as serving the special end of warding off temptation from those
women favored by fate, who have found, or may hope to find, husbands. In
London alone there are 80,000 prostitutes. What are they but the women,
who, under the institution of monogamy have come off worse? Theirs is a
dreadful fate: they are human sacrifices offered up on the altar of
monogamy. The women whose wretched position is here described are the
inevitable set-off to the European lady with her arrogance and pretension.
Polygamy is therefore a real benefit to the female sex if it is taken as a
whole. And, from another point of view, there is no true reason why a man
whose wife suffers from chronic illness, or remains barren, or has
gradually become too old for him, should not take a second. The motives
which induce so many people to become converts to Mormonism<SPAN href="#linknote-34" name="linknoteref-34" id="linknoteref-34">34</SPAN>
appear to be just those which militate against the unnatural institution
of monogamy.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linknote-34" id="linknote-34"> </SPAN></p>
<p class="foot">
34 (<SPAN href="#linknoteref-34">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ <i>Translator's Note</i>.—The
Mormons have recently given up polygamy, and received the American
franchise in its stead.]</p>
<p>Moreover, the bestowal of unnatural rights upon women has imposed upon
them unnatural duties, and, nevertheless, a breach of these duties makes
them unhappy. Let me explain. A man may often think that his social or
financial position will suffer if he marries, unless he makes some
brilliant alliance. His desire will then be to win a woman of his own
choice under conditions other than those of marriage, such as will secure
her position and that of the children. However fair, reasonable, fit and
proper these conditions may be, and the woman consents by foregoing that
undue amount of privilege which marriage alone can bestow, she to some
extent loses her honor, because marriage is the basis of civic society;
and she will lead an unhappy life, since human nature is so constituted
that we pay an attention to the opinion of other people which is out of
all proportion to its value. On the other hand, if she does not consent,
she runs the risk either of having to be given in marriage to a man whom
she does not like, or of being landed high and dry as an old maid; for the
period during which she has a chance of being settled for life is very
short. And in view of this aspect of the institution of monogamy,
Thomasius' profoundly learned treatise, <i>de Concubinatu</i>, is well
worth reading; for it shows that, amongst all nations and in all ages,
down to the Lutheran Reformation, concubinage was permitted; nay, that it
was an institution which was to a certain extent actually recognized by
law, and attended with no dishonor. It was only the Lutheran Reformation
that degraded it from this position. It was seen to be a further
justification for the marriage of the clergy; and then, after that, the
Catholic Church did not dare to remain behind-hand in the matter.</p>
<p>There is no use arguing about polygamy; it must be taken as <i>de facto</i>
existing everywhere, and the only question is as to how it shall be
regulated. Where are there, then, any real monogamists? We all live, at
any rate, for a time, and most of us, always, in polygamy. And so, since
every man needs many women, there is nothing fairer than to allow him,
nay, to make it incumbent upon him, to provide for many women. This will
reduce woman to her true and natural position as a subordinate being; and
the <i>lady</i>—that monster of European civilization and
Teutonico-Christian stupidity—will disappear from the world, leaving
only <i>women</i>, but no more <i>unhappy women</i>, of whom Europe is now
full.</p>
<p>In India, no woman is ever independent, but in accordance with the law of
Mamu,<SPAN href="#linknote-35" name="linknoteref-35" id="linknoteref-35">35</SPAN>
she stands under the control of her father, her husband, her brother or
her son. It is, to be sure, a revolting thing that a widow should immolate
herself upon her husband's funeral pyre; but it is also revolting that she
should spend her husband's money with her paramours—the money for
which he toiled his whole life long, in the consoling belief that he was
providing for his children. Happy are those who have kept the middle
course—<i>medium tenuere beati</i>.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linknote-35" id="linknote-35"> </SPAN></p>
<p class="foot">
35 (<SPAN href="#linknoteref-35">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ Ch. V., v. 148.]</p>
<p>The first love of a mother for her child is, with the lower animals as
with men, of a purely <i>instinctive</i> character, and so it ceases when
the child is no longer in a physically helpless condition. After that, the
first love should give way to one that is based on habit and reason; but
this often fails to make its appearance, especially where the mother did
not love the father. The love of a father for his child is of a different
order, and more likely to last; because it has its foundation in the fact
that in the child he recognizes his own inner self; that is to say, his
love for it is metaphysical in its origin.</p>
<p>In almost all nations, whether of the ancient or the modern world, even
amongst the Hottentots,<SPAN href="#linknote-36" name="linknoteref-36" id="linknoteref-36">36</SPAN> property is inherited by the male descendants
alone; it is only in Europe that a departure has taken place; but not
amongst the nobility, however. That the property which has cost men long
years of toil and effort, and been won with so much difficulty, should
afterwards come into the hands of women, who then, in their lack of
reason, squander it in a short time, or otherwise fool it away, is a
grievance and a wrong as serious as it is common, which should be
prevented by limiting the right of women to inherit. In my opinion, the
best arrangement would be that by which women, whether widows or
daughters, should never receive anything beyond the interest for life on
property secured by mortgage, and in no case the property itself, or the
capital, except where all male descendants fail. The people who make money
are men, not women; and it follows from this that women are neither
justified in having unconditional possession of it, nor fit persons to be
entrusted with its administration. <SPAN href="#linknote-37"
name="linknoteref-37" id="linknoteref-37">37</SPAN>When wealth, in any true
sense of the word, that is to say, funds, houses or land, is to go to them
as an inheritance they should never be allowed the free disposition of it.
In their case a guardian should always be appointed; and hence they should
never be given the free control of their own children, wherever it can be
avoided. The vanity of women, even though it should not prove to be
greater than that of men, has this much danger in it, that it takes an
entirely material direction. They are vain, I mean, of their personal
beauty, and then of finery, show and magnificence. That is just why they
are so much in their element in society. It is this, too, which makes them
so inclined to be extravagant, all the more as their reasoning power is
low. Accordingly we find an ancient writer describing woman as in general
of an extravagant nature—[Greek: Gynae to synolon esti dapanaeron
Physei][2] But with men vanity often takes the direction of non-material
advantages, such as intellect, learning, courage.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linknote-36" id="linknote-36"> </SPAN></p>
<p class="foot">
36 (<SPAN href="#linknoteref-36">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ Leroy, <i>Lettres
philosophiques sur l'intelligence et la perfectibilité des animaux, avec
quelques lettres sur l'homme</i>, p. 298, Paris, 1802.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="linknote-37" id="linknote-37"> </SPAN></p>
<p class="foot">
37 (<SPAN href="#linknoteref-37">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ Brunck's <i>Gnomici
poetae graeci</i>, v. 115.]</p>
<p>In the <i>Politics</i><SPAN href="#linknote-38" name="linknoteref-38" id="linknoteref-38">38</SPAN> Aristotle explains the great disadvantage which
accrued to the Spartans from the fact that they conceded too much to their
women, by giving them the right of inheritance and dower, and a great
amount of independence; and he shows how much this contributed to Sparta's
fall. May it not be the case in France that the influence of women, which
went on increasing steadily from the time of Louis XIII., was to blame for
that gradual corruption of the Court and the Government, which brought
about the Revolution of 1789, of which all subsequent disturbances have
been the fruit? However that may be, the false position which women
occupy, demonstrated as it is, in the most glaring way, by the institution
of the <i>lady</i>, is a fundamental defect in our social scheme, and this
defect, proceeding from the very heart of it, must spread its baneful
influence in all directions.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linknote-38" id="linknote-38"> </SPAN></p>
<p class="foot">
38 (<SPAN href="#linknoteref-38">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ Bk. I, ch. 9.]</p>
<hr />
<p>That woman is by nature meant to obey may be seen by the fact that every
woman who is placed in the unnatural position of complete independence,
immediately attaches herself to some man, by whom she allows herself to be
guided and ruled. It is because she needs a lord and master. If she is
young, it will be a lover; if she is old, a priest.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
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