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the story of an african farm-第48部分

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〃'My good woman;' said one; 'I am really exceedingly sorry that your son…

in…law is ill; but there is absolutely no room for you here。'



〃'You had better get down;' said another; 'or the wheel will catch you。'



〃I got up to give her my place。



〃'Oh; no; no!' they cried; 'we will not allow that。'



〃'I will rather kneel;' said one; and he crouched down at my feet; so the

woman came in。



〃There were nine of us in that coach; and only one showed chivalrous

attentionand that was a woman to a woman。



〃I shall be old and ugly; too; one day; and I shall look for men's

chivalrous help; but I shall not find it。



〃The bees are very attentive to the flowers till their honey is done; and

then they fly over them。  I don't know if the flowers feel grateful to the

bees; they are great fools if they do。〃



〃But some women;〃 said Waldo; speaking as though the words forced

themselves from him at that moment; 〃some women have power。〃



She lifted her beautiful eyes to his face。



〃Power!  Did you ever hear of men being asked whether other souls should

have power or not?  It is born in them。  You may dam up the fountain of

water; and make it a stagnant marsh; or you may let it run free and do its

work; but you cannot say whether it shall be there; it is there。  And it

will act; if not openly for good; then covertly for evil; but it will act。

If Goethe had been stolen away a child; and reared in a robber horde in the

depths of a German forest; do you think the world would have had 〃Faust〃

and 〃Iphegenie?〃  But he would have been Goethe stillstronger; wiser than

his fellows。  At night; round their watch…fire; he would have chanted wild

songs of rapine and murder; till the dark faces about him were moved and

trembled。  His songs would have echoed on from father to son; and nerved

the heart and armfor evil。  Do you think if Napoleon had been born a

woman that he would have been contented to give small tea…parties and talk

small scandal?  He would have risen; but the world would not have heard of

him as it hears of him nowa man great and kingly with all his sins; he

would have left one of those names that stain the leaf of every history

the names of women; who; having power; but being denied the right to

exercise it openly; rule in the dark; covertly; and by stealth; through the

men whose passions they feed on and by whom they climb。



〃Power!〃 she said; suddenly; smiting her little hand upon the rail。  〃Yes;

we have power; and since we are not to expend it in tunnelling mountains;

nor healing diseases; nor making laws; nor money; nor on any extraneous

object; we expend it on you。  You are our goods; our merchandise; our

material for operating on; we buy you; we sell you; we make fools of you;

we act the wily old Jew with you; we keep six of you crawling to our little

feet; and praying only for a touch of our little hand; and they say truly;

there was never an ache or pain or broken heart but a woman was at the

bottom of it。  We are not to study law; nor science; nor art; so we study

you。  There is never a nerve or fibre in a man's nature but we know it。  We

keep six of you dancing in the palm of one little hand;〃 she said;

balancing her outstretched arm gracefully; as though tiny beings disported

themselves in its palm。  〃There; we throw you away; and you sink to the

devil;〃 she said; folding her arms composedly。  〃There was never a man who

said one word for woman but he said two for man; and three for the whole

human race。〃



She watched the bird pecking up the last yellow grains; but Waldo looked

only at her。



When she spoke again it was very measuredly。



〃They bring weighty arguments against us when we ask for the perfect

freedom of women;〃 she said; 〃but; when you come to the objections; they

are like pumpkin devils with candles inside; hollow; and can't bite。  They

say that women do not wish for the sphere and freedom we ask for them; and

would not use it!



〃If the bird does like its cage; and does like its sugar and will not leave

it; why keep the door so very carefully shut?  Why not open it; only a

little?  Do they know there is many a bird will not break its wings against

the bars; but would fly if the doors were open?〃  She knit her forehead and

leaned further over the bars。



〃Then they say; 'If the women have the liberty you ask for; they will be

found in positions for which they are not fitted!'  If two men climb one

ladder; did you ever see the weakest anywhere but at the foot?  The surest

sign of fitness is success。  The weakest never wins but where there is

handicapping。  Nature; left to herself; will as beautifully apportion a

man's work to his capacities as long ages ago she graduated the colours on

the bird's breast。  If we are not fit; you give us; to no purpose; the

right to labour; the work will fall out of our hands into those that are

wiser。〃



She talked more rapidly as she went on; as one talks of that over which

they have brooded long; and which lies near their hearts。



Waldo watched her intently。



〃They say women have one great and noble work left them; and they do it

ill。  That is true; they do it execrably。  It is the work that demands the

broadest culture; and they have not even the narrowest。  The lawyer may see

no deeper than his law…books; and the chemist see no further than the

windows of his laboratory; and they may do their work well。  But the woman

who does woman's work needs a many…sided; multiform culture; the heights

and depths of human life must not be beyond the reach of her vision; she

must have knowledge of men and things in many states; a wide catholicity of

sympathy; the strength that springs from knowledge; and the magnanimity

which springs from strength。  We bear the world; and we make it。  The souls

of little children are marvellously delicate and tender things; and keep

forever the shadow that first falls on them; and that is the mother's or at

best a woman's。  There was never a great man who had not a great motherit

is hardly an exaggeration。  The first six years of our life make us; all

that is added later is veneer; and yet some say; if a woman can cook a

dinner or dress herself well she has culture enough。



〃The mightiest and noblest of human work is given to us; and we do it ill。

Send a navvie to work into an artist's studio; and see what you will find

there!  And yet; thank God; we have this work;〃 she added; quickly〃it is

the one window through which we see into the great world of earnest labour。

The meanest girl who dances and dresses becomes something higher when her

children look up into her face and ask her questions。  It is the only

education we have and which they cannot take from us。〃



She smiled slightly。  〃They say that we complain of woman's being compelled

to look upon marriage as a profession; but that she is free to enter upon

it or leave it; as she pleases。



〃Yesand a cat set afloat in a pond is free to sit in the tub till 
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