Beyond the City | Page 5

Arthur Conan Doyle
old a traveler to feel anything but at home
wherever I go. I've just come back from a few months in the Marquesas
Islands, where I had a very pleasant visit. That was where I got Eliza.

In many respects the Marquesas Islands now lead the world."
"Dear me!" ejaculated Miss Williams. "In what respect?"
"In the relation of the sexes. They have worked out the great problem
upon their own lines, and their isolated geographical position has
helped them to come to a conclusion of their own. The woman there is,
as she should be, in every way the absolute equal of the male. Come in,
Charles, and sit down. Is Eliza all right?"
"All right, aunt."
"These are our neighbors, the Misses Williams. Perhaps they will have
some stout. You might bring in a couple of bottles, Charles."
"No, no, thank you! None for us!" cried her two visitors, earnestly.
"No? I am sorry that I have no tea to offer you. I look upon the
subserviency of woman as largely due to her abandoning nutritious
drinks and invigorating exercises to the male. I do neither." She picked
up a pair of fifteen-pound dumb-bells from beside the fireplace and
swung them lightly about her head. "You see what may be done on
stout," said she.
"But don't you think," the elder Miss Williams suggested timidly,
"don't you think, Mrs. Westmascott, that woman has a mission of her
own?"
The lady of the house dropped her dumb-bells with a crash upon the
floor.
"The old cant!" she cried. "The old shibboleth! What is this mission
which is reserved for woman? All that is humble, that is mean, that is
soul-killing, that is so contemptible and so ill-paid that none other will
touch it. All that is woman's mission. And who imposed these
limitations upon her? Who cooped her up within this narrow sphere?
Was it Providence? Was it nature? No, it was the arch enemy. It was
man."

"Oh, I say, auntie!" drawled her nephew.
"It was man, Charles. It was you and your fellows I say that woman is a
colossal monument to the selfishness of man. What is all this boasted
chivalry--these fine words and vague phrases? Where is it when we
wish to put it to the test? Man in the abstract will do anything to help a
woman. Of course. How does it work when his pocket is touched?
Where is his chivalry then? Will the doctors help her to qualify? will
the lawyers help her to be called to the bar? will the clergy tolerate her
in the Church? Oh, it is close your ranks then and refer poor woman to
her mission! Her mission! To be thankful for coppers and not to
interfere with the men while they grabble for gold, like swine round a
trough, that is man's reading of the mission of women. You may sit
there and sneer, Charles, while you look upon your victim, but you
know that it is truth, every word of it."
Terrified as they were by this sudden torrent of words, the two
gentlewomen could not but smile at the sight of the fiery, domineering
victim and the big apologetic representative of mankind who sat
meekly bearing all the sins of his sex. The lady struck a match,
whipped a cigarette from a case upon the mantelpiece, and began to
draw the smoke into her lungs.
"I find it very soothing when my nerves are at all ruffled," she
explained. "You don't smoke? Ah, you miss one of the purest of
pleasures--one of the few pleasures which are without a reaction."
Miss Williams smoothed out her silken lap.
"It is a pleasure," she said, with some approach to self-assertion,
"which Bertha and I are rather too old-fashioned to enjoy."
"No doubt, It would probably make you very ill if you attempted it. By
the way, I hope that you will come to some of our Guild meetings. I
shall see that tickets are sent you."
"Your Guild?"

"It is not yet formed, but I shall lose no time in forming a committee. It
is my habit to establish a branch of the Emancipation Guild wherever I
go. There is a Mrs. Sanderson in Anerley who is already one of the
emancipated, so that I have a nucleus. It is only by organized resistance,
Miss Williams, that we can hope to hold our own against the selfish sex.
Must you go, then?"
"Yes, we have one or two other visits to pay," said the elder sister.
"You will, I am sure, excuse us. I hope that you will find Norwood a
pleasant residence."
"All places are to me simply a battle-field," she answered, gripping first
one and then the other with a grip which crumpled up their little thin
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