*THE
WORKER*
Brisbane
November 17, 1894.
As to
Women.
The
last forty years have witnessed a remarkable change in our ideas to
the position of women. Many years' ago women were called on, nay, in
some countries are still called on, to do work such as digging on
farms and truck-pulling in mines. This was supposed to have a
brutalising effect on women, and therefore on the coming generations.
Accordingly, legislation and an altered public opinion stopped all
this, and the pendulum swung too rapidly in the opposite direction.
From being a drudge, woman tended to become an inane manufacturer of
antimacassar,
cushions, bead-pictures, and such things, useless from the economic
side, ugly from the aesthetic, and occupying a time unduly
proportioned to the result. Some worse still, read trashy novels, or
idled their time away.
Gentlemen
considered it a point of honour to keep their womankind in ladylike
indolence and helplessness. True, some girls were educated in the
care of a fine house. But, owing to the excess of males over females,
and the improbability of many husbands possessing houses equal to the
wife's old home, most of these girls were forced to face the problem
of keeping a family on a small sum. They were compelled to do all the
drudgery, as they could not afford a servant – nay, they were often
driven to take in outside work to eke out the husband's insufficient
income. For this sort of home and work they were unprepared; and,
instead of being helps to their husband, they became, like David
Copperfield's child – wife, worse than hindrances positive
milestones. Often, in a house where there were many girls, sufficient
housework did not exist to provide work for all, and most of their
time was devoted to useless fancy work and trivial so called
“accomplishments.” These girls, having never given serious
thoughts to one of life's great problems, and trained up on such a
system of fancy work were the despair of sensible men, who saw in
them useless wives and creatures incapable of rational conversation.
When
the father died, these girls were thrown on the world, or on the
charity of friends – the shabby genteel, ladies in reduced
circumstances. (Oh! Expressive word!); or incompetent governesses
meekly submitting to the insults of vulgar, parvenu mistresses. Now,
thank Providence, this cruel system is dying or dead. Fathers see
that is wise for a girl's own character and happiness that she should
know something of work, of life's duties and responsibilities. If so
happy as to be independent, such girls have time and ability to help
and bless others. If suddenly thrown on their own resources they are
not helpless. Such girls make useful wives, and women capable of
rational, sensible conversation. We are at last delivered from the
shallow ladies' boarding – school miss, capable only of chatter and
giggling, the despair of future husbands. Mr. Walter Besant
steadfastly protests against the too forward swing of the pendulum.
He insists that women should be trained for the home alone, and that
women trained for other duties, loses her noblest influence. But,
unless the marrying tendencies and opportunities of young men
improve, there must be an increasing number of girls in excess of
those required for home duties. We may make bold to assert that
coming years will see men driven from clerical work, half the
educational and medical field, light factory work and other work
which could be done by surplus female labour, and a larger percentage
of men will return to those occupations for which their strength fits
them. For it cannot be denied that men at present occupy places which
stamp them as effeminate and wanting in manliness. Parents will do
well in choosing occupations for their sons to consider the relative
risk of female competition in the chosen occupation. Men have been
legislating for ages, and not very successfully, in women's
interests. She is now, with the aid of machinery, going to become a
bigger factor in the industrial world. Consequently it is only right
to place her on an equal footing with men in the political world, so
that she can directly have a voice in the conditions under which both
herself and her children will have to work.
I.THURIEL.
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