Jump to content

Page:The Feminist Movement - Snowden - 1912.djvu/49

From Wikisource
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
THE FEMINIST MOVEMENT
41

local and national government. If she may not have children of her own, she would have the power to look after the motherless, suffering, outcast children.

It is as necessary to the modern thinking woman as the sunlight is to the flower that she should find her place in the scheme of things, and be able by her deeds to develop her own character and justify her existence to herself and to the world. The busy working wife, with her limited means, her large brood, her vision frequently limited by the harassing cares and worries of her life, feels little sympathy with the feminist, whose gospel she has never understood. But she too will be a better and a happier woman when the worth of her work is acknowledged and her life has room left for some joy.

CHAPTER III

ORIENTAL AND SLAVONIC WOMEN

Wherever feminism has appeared as an organised force, it has concentrated upon some particular item of its programme and has not proclaimed the full gospel of feminism. There has been no dishonesty in this. It simply points to the fact that few people have