[The Business of Being a Woman by Ida M. Tarbell]@TWC D-Link book
The Business of Being a Woman

CHAPTER VI
14/23

The difficulty of this is apparent; but the failure to accomplish it has been due less to its difficulty than to the fact that not one woman in a thousand has recognized that she has an obligation to make a fit citizen of the girl who comes into her home.
Generally speaking, the foreign servant girl has been exploited in this country almost if not quite as ruthlessly and unintelligently as the foreign factory girl and the foreign steel mill worker.

Domestic service, which ought to be the best school for the newcomer, has become the worst; exploited, she learns to exploit; suspected, she learns to suspect.

The result has been that the girl has soon acquired a confused and grotesque notion of her place.

She soon becomes insolent and dissatisfied, grows more and more indifferent to the quality of her work and to the cultivation of right relations.
What we have lost in our treatment of the immigrant women can never be regained.

We forget that almost invariably these girls have the habit of thrift.


<<Back  Index  Next>>

D-Link book Top

TWC mobile books