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Title: Bondwomen
Author: Dora Marsden
Date: 1911
Language: en
Topics: egoism, feminism, The Freewoman, women
Source: Retrieved 08/08/2022 from https://repository.library.brown.edu/studio/item/bdr:517940/][repository.library.brown.edu]] ([[https://repository.library.brown.edu/studio/item/bdr:517961/)
Notes: Originally published in The Freewoman: No. 1, Vol. 1, November 23, 1911 and No. 2, Vol. 1, November 30, 1911.

Dora Marsden

Bondwomen

Bondwomen

IT is a wholly pertinent matter that the temerarious persons who launch

THE FREEWOMAN should be asked, “Who are the Freewomen?” Where are the

owmen of whom and for whom you write who are free? Can they be pointed

out, or named by name? There must be, say, ten in the British Isles. The

question is pertinent enougn, but it is difficult to answer, because its

answer must of necessity become personal. We might, perhaps, hazard the

name of one Freewoman who has become a sufficiently national figure to

make her mention impersonal—Ellen Terry. There at least is one, and for

the rest the inquisitors must be content with being enabled to arrive at

the conception of Freewomen by way of a description of Bondwomen.

Bondwomen are distinguished from Freewomen by a spiritual distinction.

Bondwomen are the women who are not spiritual entities—who are not

individuals. They are complements merely. By habit of thought, by form

of activity, and largely by preference, they round off the personality

of some other individual, rather than create or cultivate their own.

Most women, as far back as we have any record, have fitted into this

conception, and it has borne itself out in instinctive working practice.

And in the midst of all this there comes a cry that woman is an

individual, and that because she is an individual she must be set free.

It would be nearer the truth to say that if she is an individual, she is

free, and will act like those who are free. The doubtful aspect in the

situation is as to whether women are or can be individuals—that is,

free—and whether there is not danger, under the circumstances, in

labeling them free, thus giving them the liberty of action allowed to

the free. It is this doubt and fear which is behind the opposition which

is being offered the vanguard of those who are “asking for” freedom. It

is the kind of fear which an engineer would have in guaranteeing an arch

equal to a strain above its strength. The opponents of the Freewomen are

not actuated by spleen or stupidity, but by dread. This dread is well

founded upon ages of experience with a being who, however well loved,

has been known to be an inferior, and who has accepted all the

conditions of inferiors. Women, women’s intelligence, and women’s

judgments have always been regarded with more or less secret contempt.

This contempt rests upon quite honest and sound instinct, so honest,

indeed, that it must provide all the charm of an unaccustomed sensation

for fine gentlemen like the Curzons and Cromers and Asquiths to feel

anything quite so instinctive and primitive. With the women opponents,

it is another matter. These latter apart, however, it is for would-be

Freewomen to realize that for them this contempt is the healthiest thing

in the world, and that those who express it honestly feel it; that these

opponents have argues quite soundly that women have allowed themselves

to be used, ever since there has been any record of them; and that if

women had had higher uses of their own they would not have foregone

them. They have never known women [to] formulate imperious wants, this

in itself implying lack of wants, and this in turn implying lack of

ideals. Women as whole have shown nothing but “servant” attributes. All

those activities is which presuppose the master qualities, the

standard-making, the law-giving, the moral0framing, belong to men, while

women have been the “followers”, “believers”, the “law-abiding”, the

“moral”, the conventionally admiring. They have been the administrators,

the servants, living by borrowed precept, receiving orders, doing

hodmen’s work. For note, though some men must be servants, all women are

servants, and all the masters are men. That is the difference and

distinction. The servile condition is common to all women. Consider, for

instance, the wife of the politician. She plays around irresponsively,

helping out the politician’s work; the parson’s wife—she is the

hard-working, unpaid assistant of her husband; the working-man’s wife

eke’s out a straightened existence for herself by allocating the modest

wages which the workman, and not she, has earned. Women’s very virtues

are those of a subordinate class. Women are long-suffering, adaptable,

dutiful, faithful, and with an unlimited capacity for sacrifice. Even if

in such matters as sex, where women are considered more “moral” than

men, because women recognize intuitively that men think more, they pay

their homage as from a lower to a higher authority, by allowing men to

frame their standards even in morals. It is because woman is thus, and

not otherwise, that she is so useful to man—his “comforter”. For man,

woman has become a kind of human poultice, or, more poetically, the

illusion softening reality. This, coupled with the fact that she is also

man’s “female”, accounts for all the poetic adulation which men have

offered to women. But it is not to poetry, but to blunt prose, that one

must turn to get at man’s real estimate of woman’s place in the scheme

of things. Hear what he says in plain prose, when woman presumes to

speak of equality and “freedom”. Out of his own experience of her, he

knows her to be a follower, one who has always been ready to sacrifice

herself to him and his interests. He would have sacrificed himself for

nothing, save his own ideas; but she has always reveled sombrely in

sacrificing herself for anything and anybody, for duty, for peace,

husbands, parents, children. And this, after all, is what speaks far

more eloquently than a tome of arguments to the ordinary man. It tells

him that nothing has ever crossed her mind regarding herself which has

appeared to her too good to be sacrificed to anything on earth, itself

excepting. He therefore quite naturally argues that she has acted like a

second because she felt herself a second.

How women have fallen into this position is a moot point. It is yet to

be decided whether they ever did fall—where man and women have not been,

from their creation, master and servant. If otherwise, and if woman did

“fall”, the reason why is yet to be assigned. It is quite beside the

point to say women were “crushed” down. If they were not “down” in

themselves—i.e., weaker in mind—no equal force could have crushed them

“down”. There can be no over-reaching in the long run with mind. In the

long run, mind plays on its own merits. It can neither receive nor give

quarter. Those who are “down” are inferior. When change takes place in

the thing itself—i.e., when it becomes equal or superior—by the nature

of its own being it rises. So woman, if ever equal, must have sunk on

the ground of inferiority. Whether this inferiority arose through the

disabilities arising out of child-bearing, or whether it arose through

women giving up the game—i.e., bartering themselves for the sake of the

protection of men—it is difficult to say. Probably in her desire for

love continued, for protection, for keeping the man near her, she

slipped into the rĂ´le of making herself useful to him, serving him,

giving him always more love and more, more service and more, until, on

the one hand, she acquired the complete “servant” mind, and he, on the

other, gained the realization that her “usefulness” was of greater

moment to him than the fret of the tie which retained him. At the

present time, when man’s adventurousness and experimental mind has made

much of her “usefulness” useless, woman finds herself cut off from her

importantly useful sphere, equipped with the mind of a servant, and the

reputation of one. She thus finds herself in a position in which she is

compelled to do one of two things—i.e., remain solely as the man’s

protected female, or, making what may or may not be a successful effort,

endeavor to take her place as a master. It is this effort to find her

place among the masters which is behind the feminist movement; and such

a statement of the feminist case is a refutation of all those who

maintain that there is no duality of interest between men and women.

At the present time, there is duality, and duality in this connection

will cease to exist only when women sink back into the position of

females with nothing beyond, or when they stand recognized as “masters”

among other “masters:”, considering their sex just as much incidental

concern as men consider theirs.

But to return to the Bondwomen. It seems difficult to realize how the

females of a virile race could have been content to remain a permanently

subordinate position. It can only be accounted for upon and

understanding of the stupefying influence of security with

irresponsibility. And this is what “protection” always means for the

“protected”. To begin with, by securing the “protection” of a man, a

woman rids herself of the responsibility of earning her own living.

Following upon this beginning, so many pleasures accrue that under their

influence women are soothed into such a willing acceptance of their

position that they are unable to se the unspiritedness of it. Moreover,

besides having “protection” and maintenance, they achieve physical

maturity; they have the great adventure of having children; they secure

companions and avoid the loneliness of existence; they have flattery

which smooths it, and they live easily under a ready-made code and under

the sanction of the communal blessing.

For this protected position women give up all first-hand power. Really,

the power to work and to think. All the power to achieve is merely

derivative. They allow to slide pas them those powerful incentives which

keep up the strain of effort—that is, individual public honor, wealth,

titles, decorations, bits of ribbon. These go to men. To women are

offered the great soporifics—comfort and protection. How difficult and

hard is a woman’s choice made! It is almost too hard. Nothing but one

thing—the sense of quality, the sense that a woman has gifts, the sense

that she is a superior, a master—can give her the strength to slip the

comfort and protection and to be content to seize the “love” in passing,

to suffer the long strain of effort, and to bear the agony of producing

creative work. Having this sense, they will learn that freedom is born

in the individual soul, and that no outer force can either give it or

take it away; that only Freewomen can be free; or lead the way to

freedom. They will learn that their freedom will consist in appraising

their own worth, in setting up their own standards and living up to

them, and putting behind them for ever their rĂ´le of complacent

self-sacrifice. For none can judge of another soul’s value. The

individual has to record its own. A morality begotten in a community

where one-half are born servants may glibly say that it is woman’s

highest rĂ´le to be the comforter of men and children; but it is the

truth, and men and women must both learn it, that while to be a human

poultice is to have great utility, it does not offer the conditions

under which vivid new life-manifestations are likely to show themselves,

either in the “comforter” or the “Comforted”.

Commentary on Bondwomen

IT turns out that the editorial attitude for this week will have to take

the form of a commentary on that of last. According to correspondence,

it would appear that in Bondwomen we gave the idea that we consider that

only those women who are gifted to the extent of genius can be

Freewomen, and all the rest, according to our version, must be

Bondwomen, i.e., followers, servants. What, asks a very reasonable

correspondent, who wishes to remain anonymous—what is to become of the

“ordinary women”? Is not your championing of the strong, of the masters,

as unnecessary as it is easy, and your postulating the existence of

servants as an established fact, as unhelpful as it is cynical? Cannot

the gifted take care of themselves? To use your own instance, has not

Ellen Terry made herself free by the simple right of her genius? Are you

not treating as negligible considerations the only ones where help such

as you can give would count? Are you not engendering a revolt against a

sphere wherein most “ordinary women” must of necessity spend their

lives? Are you not, by depreciating the value of housework, supporting

the view that housework is of little worth, and making it less likely

that it should be recognised as a properly-paid profession? A sheaf of

questions and objections! Let us see. Returning to the first, that we

put forward the view that women’s freedom is bound up with genius—well,

that is a view we are prepared to uphold. To be a freewoman one must

have the essential attribute of genius. Last week we implied it, and

this week we state it, and, having more space, we take this opportunity

of defining genius. Genius is an individual revelation of

life-manifestation, made realisable to others in some outward form. So

we hold that anyone who has an individual and personal vision of life in

any sphere has the essential attribute of genius, and those who have not

this individual realisation are without genius. They are therefore

followers— servants, if so preferred. We called them Bondwomen. We

maintain that to accept the fact that great numbers of individuals are

born without creative power in regard to any sphere of life whatever,

argues no more cynicism than it would to accept the fact, and the

statement of it, that coal is black and snow is white. It is a fact to

be proved by simple observation. Our contention is that life should

supply the conditions which would enable this native endowment of vision

to make itself communicable to others, and we consider that so many

women appear ordinary, not because they are born ordinary, but because

they are bundled pell-mell into a sphere in which they can show no

special gift ; and because they are expected to be so bundled, they are

deprived of that training which would enable them to make their

individual revelation communicable, that is, of their chance to become

artists. Nor for one moment do we wish to support the view that all

women will be free, any more than all men are free. It will be difficult

enough for freewomen to be free, and to force women, who neither are nor

wish to be free, into the responsibilities of freedom is as futile as

endeavouring to make two and two into five. It cannot be done. This

explains why a feminist must make her appeal to freewomen, and not to

“ordinary” women. The doctrine of feminism is one so hard on women that,

at the outset, we can only appeal to those who have already shown signs

of individuality and strength, and it is just here that the cult of the

freewoman becomes plainly distinguishable from that of the Suffragist.

If it is the work of the Suffragist women to guard the rear, it is that

of the Freewomen to cheer the van.

The cult of the Suffragist takes its stand upon the weakness and

dejectedness of the conditions of women. The cult of the Suffragist

would say, “Are women not weak? Are women not crushed down? Are women

not in need of protection? Therefore, give them the means wherewith they

may be protected”. Those of the cult of the Freewoman, however, while

granting this in part, would go on to say, “In spite of our position, we

feel within us the stirrings of new powers and growing strength. If we

can secure scope, opportunity, and responsibility, we feel we can make

realizable to the world a new revelation of spiritual consciousness. We

feel we can produce new evidence of creative force, which, when allowed

its course, will encompass developments sufficiently great to constitute

a higher development in the evolution of the human race and of human

achievement”. We believe that it is to the Freewomen we have to look for

the conscious setting toward a higher race, for which their achievements

will help to make ready, and their strivings and aspirations help to

mould. For this they do not require protection; they need liberty. They

do not require ease; they require strenuous effort. They do not wish, by

law or any other means, to fasten their responsibilities on others. They

themselves are prepared to shoulder their own. They bear no grudge and

claim no exception because of the greater burdens Nature has made

theirs. They accept them willingly, because of their added opportunity

and power.

In the attainment of all these things the vote will lend its small

quota—small because it is of the letter and not of the spirit. The

spirit comes from within: It can be fostered, but it cannot be created

before its time, and when its time has come it cannot be unduly

repressed, oh Suffragists!

It is not so long as it seems, but from these hopes and dreams of the

future it appears a long cry back to the problems of the domestic

questions of to-day. If the Freewoman is not going to be the protected

woman, but is to carve out an independence for herself, she must produce

within herself strength sufficient to provide for herself and for those

whom Nature has made her the natural guardian, her children.

To this end she must open up resources of wealth for herself. She must

work, earn money. She must seize upon the incentives which have spurred

on men to strenuous effort—wealth, power, titles, and public honor. To

this end she will have to strive, and that she should so strive will be

well for her children. Many will say that this responsibility on the

mother is too hard. What are the responsibilities of the father? Well,

that is his business. Perhaps the State will have something to say to

him, but the Freewoman’s concern is to see to it that she shall be in a

position to bear children if she wants them without soliciting

maintenance from any man, whoever he may be; and this she can only do if

she is earning money for herself, or is provided for out of some common

fund for a limited time. Some women and men here suggest a compromise.

They suggest, in order that the women shall at once retain dignity and

receive maintenance, that they shall act as housekeepers to the men who

provide this maintenance, and receive money for their domestic services.

There are endless objections to this, even as a voluntary arrangement.

In the first place, a growing number of women, while hoping to have

children, refuse to sacrifice their career to domestic work, much as

they like it. In the second place, many women detest domestic work,

which is wholly alien to their natural capabilities. Many of them think

that they have capabilities of an order which make them regard domestic

work as inferior work. To surmount this difficulty, well-intentioned

people have been trying, by artificial adjuncts, to raise the status of

domestic work. To these we would point out that the distaste felt is not

due to social estimation in which it is held, high or low as this may

be, but is due to a temperamental distaste for it. The well-intentioned

people, now utterly bewildered, are pretending that housework has fallen

into disrepute because it is unpaid work, forgetting that the best of

the worker’s work is always unpaid. In their bewilderment they have gone

so far as to set up a monstrous theory that wives should become the paid

employees of their husbands! Beyond this, folly can no further go!

And yet Suffragists, and advanced persons among women generally, make

use of this theory. Imagine the circumstances! The man would be

compelled by law to pay a portion of his salary to a person whom he is

prevented by law from dismissing, and who is prevented by law from

securing release. The paid person may be satisfactory or not. If

unsatisfactory, what redress is there for the employer? No redress! but

a possible remedy in corporal punishment, such as is administered to

soldiers in barracks in similar circumstances. And the employee against

a tyrannical employer? No power to refuse to sell her labor! power only

to form a trade union of paid wives! The entire theory is ludicrous in

its absurdity. No! Personal relationships between equals must be entered

into on terms of equality. And this brings us to the real feeling, which

is expressed in the animus against domestic occupation for so large a

proportion of women. The feeling has its roots in the elementary fact

that, in order to attend to a house, a woman has to give up the work

which represents to her, at most, independence and self-expression, and,

at least, self-support. In giving up her work the woman gives up the

obvious means of support over which she has control, and she becomes

dependent upon the energy and work of some other individual. Feminism

would hold that it is neither desirable nor necessary for women, when

they are mothers, to leave their chosen, money-earning work for any

length of time. The fact that they so often do so largely rests on

tradition which has to be worn down. In wearing it down vast changes

must take place in social conditions, in housing, nursing, kindergarten,

education, cooking, cleaning, in the industrial world, and in the

professions. These changes will have for their motive the accommodation

of such conditions as will enable women to choose and follow a

life-work, apart from, and in addition to, their natural function of

reproduction.

So it is from a full recognition of the fact that feminist doctrine is a

hard one for women, that the pat of the Freewoman will be beset with

difficulties, with temptations both from within and without, that we are

led to the further recognition of the futility of preaching it to the

women who are essentially ordinary women, who do not already bear in

themselves the stamp of the individual.

We are convinced that, at the present time, our interpretation of the

doctrine has merely to be stated clearly to be frankly rejected by, at

least, three women in every four.

Probably these replies will raise more objections than those they were

put forward to meet, but if such is the case it will be not merely what

was expected, but what is hoped.