The Man | Page 5

Bram Stoker

whole range of a man's work.' There was distinct defiance in the girl's
eyes as she asked:
'A man's work! Why a man's work? Isn't it a woman's work also?'
'Well, I suppose it ought to be, theoretically; practically it isn't.'
'And why not, pray?' The mere suggestion of any disability of woman
as such aroused immediate antagonism. Her companion suppressed a
smile as he answered deliberately:
'Because, my dear Stephen, the Almighty has ordained that justice is
not a virtue women can practise. Mind, I do not say women are unjust.
Far from it, where there are no interests of those dear to them they can
be of a sincerity of justice that can make a man's blood run cold. But
justice in the abstract is not an ordinary virtue: it has to be considerate
as well as stern, and above all interest of all kinds and of every one--'
The girl interrupted hotly:
'I don't agree with you at all. You can't give an instance where women
are unjust. I don't mean of course individual instances, but classes of
cases where injustice is habitual.' The suppressed smile cropped out
now unconsciously round the man's lips in a way which was intensely
aggravating to the girl.
'I'll give you a few,' he said. 'Did you ever know a mother just to a boy
who beat her own boy at school?' The girl replied quietly:
'Ill-treatment and bullying are subjects for punishment, not justice.'
'Oh, I don't mean that kind of beating. I mean getting the prizes their
own boys contended for; getting above them in class; showing superior
powers in running or cricket or swimming, or in any of the forms of
effort in which boys vie with each other.' The girl reflected, then she
spoke:

'Well, you may be right. I don't altogether admit it, but I accept it as not
on my side. But this is only one case.'
'A pretty common one. Do you think that Sheriff of Galway, who in
default of a hangman hanged his son with his own hands, would have
done so if he had been a woman?' The girl answered at once:
'Frankly, no. I don't suppose the mother was ever born who would do
such a thing. But that is not a common case, is it? Have you any other?'
The young man paused before he spoke:
'There is another, but I don't think I can go into it fairly with you.'
'Why not?'
'Well, because after all you know, Stephen, you are only a girl and you
can't be expected to know.' The girl laughed:
'Well, if it's anything about women surely a girl, even of my tender age,
must know something more of it, or be able to guess at, than any young
man can. However, say what you think and I'll tell you frankly if I
agree--that is if a woman can be just, in such a matter.'
'Shortly the point is this: Can a woman be just to another woman, or to
a man for the matter of that, where either her own affection or a fault of
the other is concerned?'
'I don't see any reason to the contrary. Surely pride alone should ensure
justice in the former case, and the consciousness of superiority in the
other.' The young man shook his head:
'Pride and the consciousness of superiority! Are they not much the
same thing. But whether or no, if either of them has to be relied on, I'm
afraid the scales of Justice would want regulating, and her sword
should be blunted in case its edge should be turned back on herself. I
have an idea that although pride might be a guiding principle with you
individually, it would be a failure with the average. However, as it
would be in any case a rule subject to many exceptions I must let it go.'

Harold looked at his watch and rose. Stephen followed him;
transferring her whip into the hand which held up the skirt, she took his
arm with her right hand in the pretty way in which a young girl clings
to her elders. Together they went out at the lich-gate. The groom drew
over with the horses. Stephen patted hers and gave her a lump of sugar.
Then putting her foot into Harold's ready hand she sprang lightly into
the saddle. Harold swung himself into his saddle with the dexterity of
an accomplished rider.
As the two rode up the road, keeping on the shady side under the trees,
Stephen said quietly, half to herself, as if the sentence had impressed
itself on her mind:
'To be God and able to do things!'
Harold rode on in silence. The chill of some vague fear was upon him.
CHAPTER I
--STEPHEN

Stephen
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