登陆注册
15317100000030

第30章

That the Woman's Movement of our day has not taken its origin from any mere process of theoretic argument; that it breaks out, now here and now there, in forms divergent and at times superficially almost irreconcilable; that the majority of those taking part in it are driven into action as the result of the immediate pressure of the conditions of life, and are not always able logically to state the nature of all causes which propel them, or to paint clearly all results of their action; so far from removing it from the category of the vast reorganising movements of humanity, places it in a line with them, showing how vital, spontaneous, and wholly organic and unartificial is its nature.

The fact that, at one point, it manifests itself in a passionate, and at times almost incoherent, cry for an accredited share in public and social duties; while at another it makes itself felt as a determined endeavour after self-culture; that in one land it embodies itself mainly in a resolute endeavour to enlarge the sphere of remunerative labour for women;while in another it manifests itself chiefly as an effort to reco-ordinate the personal relation of the sexes; that in one individual it manifests itself as a passionate and sometimes noisy struggle for liberty of personal action; while in another it is being fought out silently in the depth of the individual consciousness--that primal battle-ground, in which all questions of reform and human advance must ultimately be fought and decided;--all this diversity, and the fact that the average woman is entirely concerned in labour in her own little field, shows, not the weakness, but the strength of the movement; which, taken as a whole, is a movement steady and persistent in one direction, the direction of increased activity and culture, and towards the negation of all possibility of parasitism in the human female.Slowly, and unconsciously, as the child is shaped in the womb, this movement shapes itself in the bosom of our time, taking its place beside those vast human developments, of which men, noting their spontaneity and the co-ordination of their parts, have said, in the phraseology of old days, "This thing is not of man, but of God."He who today looks at some great Gothic cathedral in its final form, seems to be looking at that which might have been the incarnation of the dream of some single soul of genius.But in truth, its origin was far otherwise.

Ages elapsed from the time the first rough stone was laid as a foundation till the last spire and pinnacle were shaped, and the hand which laid the foundation-stone was never the same as that which set the last stone upon the coping.Generations often succeeded one another, labouring at gargoyle, rose-window, and shaft, and died, leaving the work to others; the master-builder who drew up the first rough outline passed away, and was succeeded by others, and the details of the work as completed bore sometimes but faint resemblance to the work as he devised it; no man fully understood all that others had done or were doing, but each laboured in his place; and the work as completed had unity; it expressed not the desire and necessity of one mind, but of the human spirit of that age; and not less essential to the existence of the building was the labour of the workman who passed a life of devotion in carving gargoyles or shaping rose-windows, than that of the greatest master who drew general outlines: perhaps it was yet more heroic; for, for the master-builder, who, even if it were but vaguely, had an image of what the work would be when the last stone was laid and the last spire raised, it was easy to labour with devotion and zeal, though well he might know that the placing of that last stone and the raising of that last spire would not be his, and that the building in its full beauty and strength he should never see; but for the journeyman labourer who carried on his duties and month by month toiled at carving his own little gargoyle or shaping the traceries in his own little oriel window, without any complete vision, it was not so easy; nevertheless, it was through the conscientious labours of such alone, through their heaps of chipped and spoiled stones, which may have lain thick about them, that at the last the pile was reared in its strength and beauty.

For a Moses who could climb Pisgah, and, though it were through a mist of bitter tears, could see stretching before him the land of the inheritance, a land which his feet should never tread and whose fruit his hand should never touch, it was yet, perhaps, not so hard to turn round and die; for, as in a dream, he had seen the land: but for the thousands who could climb no Pisgah, who were to leave their bones whitening in the desert, having even from afar never seen the true outline of the land; those who, on that long march, had not even borne the Ark nor struck the timbrel, but carried only their small household vessels and possessions, for these it was perhaps not so easy to lie down and perish in the desert, knowing only that far ahead somewhere, lay a Land of Promise.Nevertheless, it was by the slow and sometimes wavering march of such as these, that the land was reached by the people at last.

同类推荐
  • 建炎复辟记

    建炎复辟记

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 根本说一切有部百一羯磨

    根本说一切有部百一羯磨

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 华严原人论解

    华严原人论解

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 吹剑录外集

    吹剑录外集

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 海道经

    海道经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 涅磐重生之毒后

    涅磐重生之毒后

    她爱他,他恨她;她为了他,背弃了家族,助他登上皇位;他登基第一天,白家满门抄斩,却唯独留下了她;德妃欺她,将铁钉钉入她的膝盖骨,挖去她的双眼,她等着他来救....最后只等来了妖孽必死一道圣旨....上天对她不薄,她重生归来,他的冷,他的恨,他的无情,他的一旨圣意!若他要她死,她便要他万劫不复!
  • 总裁追婚还不迟

    总裁追婚还不迟

    男朋友被白富美勾走,她上酒吧买醉,一出门差点被他的车撞上,他好心想送她回家,她却好死不死地吐在他车上,他一气之下将她带回家,发生了些不该发生的事情。“我对你负责。”她渐渐沉沦,噩耗却及时地出现,她的外婆知晓了此事,用她母亲的下半生来威胁她离开他。为了母亲,她带着母亲毅然决然地离开他,不论他是死是活。两年后,她因为外婆的请求回国入主公司,当她想起他时,她却带着自己的表姐出现在眼前,原来,当年他因为自己的离开差点死去,表姐是个替身。
  • 踏风破浪

    踏风破浪

    长风破浪会有时,直挂云帆济沧海。一个平凡的大学生意外身亡却发现穿越到另一个修真的世界,神秘的大龙,破碎的牢笼,还有诡异的星空,究竟在这里会发生什么样的传奇……
  • 沙坡头

    沙坡头

    本书主要介绍了宁夏沙坡头风景区的由来,沙坡鸣钟、桂王园、古代拦河堤坝——白马拉缰,香山与明长城,享誉世界的治沙工程等许多景点的历史由来和景观特色。
  • 灵魂分裂

    灵魂分裂

    患有精神分裂症的少年百凌,从病院成功毕业后,遭遇一段段的奇妙经历,一步步迈向自己的成功之路。精神病也要泡美女……啊,不对,是精神病也要当仙侠!
  • 鬼墓迷灯

    鬼墓迷灯

    一张无意中得到的人皮美人图,让我当上搬山道人,引出最疯狂的盗墓迷局,蛰伏多年的四大盗墓门派倾巢而出,人间地狱再现江湖……纵横八千里,盗尽五千年。
  • 神一般的男朋友

    神一般的男朋友

    我去,什么情况?做了个春梦,门外居然跪着一位霸气的男神?干什么干什么干什么啊!居然在大家面前,拔刀说一些肉麻然后又莫名其妙的话,我也是醉了!等等!我是这个奇怪的美男的妻子?疯子!这绝对是疯子!“喂?120吗?我不知道精神院的电话号码,可是我这里有一个疯子,你能带他去精神院吗?真是麻烦你了!”【全本免费作品,让你从头到尾看过瘾!】
  • 天局:半子凛冬

    天局:半子凛冬

    在既定的天局当中,即使是细如半粒棋子移动上的舛误,也足以使局中人陷入绝境。从千年未解之谜尼斯湖水怪,到古老神秘的北极冰窟,再到被称为魔鬼海域的百慕大三角。一轮又一轮困境不断扼杀着最后的希望,是生,是死,只在一步之间。
  • 看透这一生一起回忆青春

    看透这一生一起回忆青春

    即使看透了这一世,也不忍想到我们的青春七彩缤纷,花花绿绿,伤痕累累,再一次回想,像一个梦一样……
  • 滇游记

    滇游记

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。