[Woman and Labour by Olive Schreiner]@TWC D-Link bookWoman and Labour CHAPTER II 2/23
Is intellectual labour to take ever and increasingly the place of crude muscular exertion in the labour of life ?--then we demand for ourselves that culture and the freedom of action which alone can yield us the knowledge of life and the intellectual vigour and strength which will enable us to undertake the same share of mental which we have borne in the past in physical labours of life.
Are the rulers of the race to be no more its kings and queens, but the mass of the peoples ?--then we, one-half of the nations, demand our full queens' share in the duties and labours of government and legislation.
Slowly but determinately, as the old fields of labour close up and are submerged behind us, we demand entrance into the new. We make this demand, not for our own sakes alone, but for the succour of the race. A horseman, riding along on a dark night in an unknown land, may chance to feel his horse start beneath him; rearing, it may almost hurl him to the earth: in the darkness he may curse his beast, and believe its aim is simply to cast him off, and free itself for ever of its burden. But when the morning dawns and lights the hills and valleys he has travelled, looking backward, he may perceive that the spot where his beast reared, planting its feet into the earth, and where it refused to move farther on the old road, was indeed the edge of a mighty precipice, down which one step more would have precipitated both horse and rider. And he may then see that it was an instinct wiser than his own which lead his creature, though in the dark, to leap backward, seeking a new path along which both might travel.
(Is it not recorded that even Balaam's ass on which he rode saw the angel with flaming sword, but Balaam saw it not ?) In the confusion and darkness of the present, it may well seem to some, that woman, in her desire to seek for new paths of labour and employment, is guided only by an irresponsible impulse; or that she seeks selfishly only her own good, at the cost of that of the race, which she has so long and faithfully borne onward.
But, when a clearer future shall have arisen and the obscuring mists of the present have been dissipated, may it not then be clearly manifest that not for herself alone, but for her entire race, has woman sought her new paths? For let it be noted exactly what our position is, who today, as women, are demanding new fields of labour and a reconstruction of our relationship with life. It is often said that the labour problem before the modern woman and that before the unemployed or partially or almost uselessly employed male, are absolutely identical; and that therefore, when the male labour problem of our age solves itself, that of the woman will of necessity have met its solution also. This statement, with a certain specious semblance of truth, is yet, we believe, radically and fundamentally false.
<<Back Index Next>> D-Link book Top TWC mobile books
|