Page:The Future of the Women's Movement.djvu/77

 and by the linking up of public and private duties and aims. "Since she's been a suffragist," I have heard a man say, "my wife has seemed to take more interest in the home. It hasn't taken her thoughts off; it has only made her think more." And I have heard a middle-aged woman use the pathetic phrase, "Since I began to think," meaning, "Since I joined the suffrage movement."

Is it all unmixed good, then? Is the women's movement singular in this, that it is perfect? Will women make no mistakes? By no means. Who could be so foolish as to think so? But by mistakes we learn. If you wish to learn a new language you must blunder in it first. One of the reasons of women's slow development is that men are so afraid women will make fools of themselves. We all have a divine right to make fools of ourselves, because the force that created us decreed that only so could we learn, and the convention by which a woman is never allowed to be a fool all to herself, as an individual, but is made to sin for her whole sex, is an anti-progressive convention which must go. A woman fires a building and we are told "Woman" has disgraced herself, "She" is unfit for the vote. But men sack empires and burn cities to the ground and no one says "Man" has disgraced himself, "He" is unfit for the vote.

I think I hear the horror-stricken Anti declare, "A right to make a fool of yourself? But it is our Empire that you are asking for,—to play with! Our Empire which we made ourselves and which is