Elizabeth
Cady Stanton
Solitude
of Self
January
18, 1892
This
address was delivered to the Congressional Judiciary Committee in support of an
amendment granting women the right to vote.
Mr.
Chairman and gentlemen of the committee: We have been speaking before
Committees of the Judiciary for the last twenty years, and we have gone over
all the arguments in favor of a sixteenth amendment which are familiar to all
you gentlemen; therefore, it will not be necessary that I should repeat them
again.
The
point I wish plainly to bring before you on this occasion is the individuality
of each human soul; our Protestant idea, the right of individual conscience and
judgment—our republican idea, individual citizenship. In discussing the rights
of woman, we are to consider, first, what belongs to her as an individual, in a
world of her own, the arbiter of her own destiny, an imaginary Robinson Crusoe
with her woman Friday on a solitary island. Her rights under such circumstances
are to use all her faculties for her own safety and happiness.
Secondly,
if we consider her as a citizen, as a member of a great nation, she must have
the same rights as all other members, according to the fundamental principles
of our Government.
Thirdly,
viewed as a woman, an equal factor in civilization, her rights and duties are
still the same—individual happiness and development. Fourthly, it is only the
incidental relations of life, such as mother, wife, sister, daughter, that may
involve some special duties and training. In the usual discussion in regard to
woman’s sphere, such a man as Herbert Spencer, Frederic Harrison, and Grant
Allen uniformly subordinate her rights and duties as an individual, as a
citizen, as a woman, to the necessities of these incidental relations, some of
which a large class of woman may never assume. In discussing the sphere of man,
we do not decide his rights as an individual, as a citizen, as a man by his
duties as a father, a husband, a brother, or a son, relations some of which he
may never fill. Moreover he would be better fitted for these very relations and
whatever special work he might choose to do to earn his bread by the complete
development of all his faculties as an individual.
Just so
with woman. The education that will fit her to discharge the duties in the
largest sphere of human usefulness will best fit her for whatever special work
she may be compelled to do.
The
isolation of every human soul and the necessity of self-dependence must give
each individual the right to choose his own surroundings. The strongest reason
for giving woman all the opportunities for higher education, for the full
development of her faculties, forces of mind and body; for giving her the most
enlarged freedom of thought and action; a complete emancipation from all forms
of bondage, of custom, dependence, superstition; from all the crippling
influences of fear, is the solitude and personal responsibility of her own
individual life. The strongest reason why we ask for woman a voice in the
government under which she lives; in the religion she is asked to believe;
equality in social life, where she is the chief factor; a place in the trades
and professions, where she may earn her bread, is because of her birthright to
self-sovereignty; because, as an individual, she must rely on herself. No
matter how much women prefer to lean, to be protected and supported, nor how
much men desire to have them do so, they must make the voyage of life alone,
and for safety in an emergency they must know something of the laws of
navigation. To guide our own craft, we must be captain, pilot, engineer; with
chart and compass to stand at the wheel; to match the wind and waves and know
when to take in the sail, and to read the signs in the firmament over all. It
matters not whether the solitary voyager is man or woman.
Nature
having endowed them equally, leaves them to their own skill and judgment in the
hour of danger, and, if not equal to the occasion, alike they perish. To
appreciate the importance of fitting every human soul for independent action,
think for a moment of the immeasurable solitude of self. We come into the world
alone, unlike all who have gone before us; we leave it alone under
circumstances peculiar to ourselves. No mortal ever has been, no mortal ever
will be like the soul just launched on the sea of life. There can never again
be just such environments as make up the infancy, youth and manhood of this
one. Nature never repeats herself, and the possibilities of one human soul will
never be found in another. No one has ever found two blades of ribbon grass
alike, and no one will ever find two human beings alike. Seeing, then, what
must be the infinite diversity in human character, we can in a measure
appreciate the loss to a nation when any large class of the people uneducated
and unrepresented in the government. We ask for the complete development of
every individual, first, for his own benefit and happiness. In fitting out an
army we give each soldier his own knapsack, arms, powder, his blanket, cup,
knife, fork and spoon. We provide alike for all their individual necessities,
then each man bears his own burden.
Again
we ask complete individual development for the general good; for the consensus
of the competent on the whole round of human interest; on all questions of
national life, and here each man must bear his share of the general burden. It
is sad to see how soon friendless children are left to bear their own burdens
before they can analyze their feelings; before they can even tell their joys
and sorrows, they are thrown on their own resources. The great lesson that
nature seems to teach us at all ages is self-dependence, self-protection,
self-support. What a touching instance of a child’s solitude; of that hunger of
heart for love and recognition, in the case of the little girl who helped to
dress a christmas tree for the children of the family in which she served. On
finding there was no present for herself she slipped away in the darkness and
spent the night in an open field sitting on a stone, and when found in the
morning was weeping as if her heart would break. No mortal will ever know the
thoughts that passed through the mind of that friendless child in the long
hours of that cold night, with only the silent stars to keep her company. The
mention of her case in the daily papers moved many generous hearts to send her
presents, but in the hours of her keenest sufferings she was thrown wholly on
herself for consolation.
In
youth our most bitter disappointments, our brightest hopes and ambitions are known
only to otherwise, even our friendship and love we never fully share with
another; there is something of every passion in every situation we conceal.
Even so in our triumphs and our defeats.
The
successful candidate for Presidency and his opponent each have a solitude
peculiarly his own, and good form forbid either in speak of his pleasure or
regret. The solitude of the king on his throne and the prisoner in his cell
differs in character and degree, but it is solitude nevertheless. We ask no
sympathy from others in the anxiety and agony of a broken friendship or
shattered love. When death sunders our nearest ties, alone we sit in the
shadows of our affliction. Alike mid the greatest triumphs and darkest
tragedies of life we walk alone. On the divine heights of human attainments,
eulogized and worshiped as a hero or saint, we stand alone. In ignorance,
poverty, and vice, as a pauper or criminal, alone we starve or steal; alone we
suffer the sneers and rebuffs of our fellows; alone we are hunted and hounded
thro dark courts and alleys, in by-ways and highways; alone we stand in the
judgment seat; alone in the prison cell we lament our crimes and misfortunes;
alone we expiate them on the gallows. In hours like these we realize the awful
solitude of individual life, its pains, its penalties, its responsibilities;
hours in which the youngest and most helpless are thrown on their own resources
for guidance and consolation. Seeing then that life must ever be a march and a
battle, that each soldier must be equipped for his own protection, it is the
height of cruelty to rob the individual of a single natural right.
To
throw obstacle in the way of a complete education is like putting out the eyes;
to deny the rights of property, like cutting off the hands. To deny political
equality is to rob the ostracized of all self-respect; of credit in the market
place; of recompense in the world of work; of a voice among those who make and
administer the law; a choice in the jury before whom they are tried, and in the
judge who decides their punishment. Shakespeare’s play of Titus and Andronicus
contains a terrible satire on woman’s position in the nineteenth century-“Rude
men” (the play tells us) “seized the king’s daughter, cut out her tongue, out
off her hands, and then bade her go call for water and wash her hands.” What a
picture of woman’s position. Robbed of her natural rights, handicapped by law
and custom at every turn, yet compelled to fight her own battles, and in the
emergencies of life to fall back on herself for protection.
The
girl of sixteen, thrown on the world to support herself, to make her own place
in society, to resist the temptations that surround her and maintain a spotless
integrity, must do all this by native force or superior education. She does not
acquire this power by being trained to trust others and distrust herself. If
she wearies of the struggle, finding it hard work to swim upstream, and allow
herself to drift with the current, she will find plenty of company, but not one
to share her misery in the hour of her deepest humiliation. If she tried to
retrieve her position, to conceal the past, her life is hedged about with fears
lest willing hands should tear the veil from what she fain would hide. Young
and friendless, she knows the bitter solitude of self. How the little
courtesies of life on the surface of society, deemed so important from man
towards woman, fade into utter insignificance in view of the deeper tragedies
in which she must play her part alone, where no human aid is possible.
The
young wife and mother, at the head of some establishment with a kind husband to
shield her from the adverse winds of life, with wealth, fortune and position,
has a certain harbor of safety, occurs against the ordinary ills of life. But
to manage a household, have a deatrable influence in society, keep her friends
and the affections of her husband, train her children and servants well, she
must have rare common sense, wisdom, diplomacy, and a knowledge of human
nature. To do all this she needs the cardinal virtues and the strong points of
character that the most successful state man possesses.
An
uneducated woman, trained to dependence, with no resources in herself must make
a failure of any position in life. But society says women do not need a knowledge
of the world, the liberal training that experience in public life must give,
all the advantages of collegiate education; but when for the lack of all this,
the woman’s happiness is wrecked, alone she bears her humiliation; and the
attitude of the weak and the ignorant is indeed pitiful in the wild chase for
the price of life they are ground to powder.
In age,
when the pleasures of youth are passed, children grown up, married and gone,
the hurry and hustle of life in a measure over, when the hands are weary of
active service, when the old armchair and the fireside are the chosen resorts,
then men and women alike must fall back on their own resources. If they cannot
find companionship in books, if they have no interest in the vital questions of
the hour, no interest in watching the consummation of reforms, with which they
might have been identified, they soon pass into their dotage. The more fully
the faculties of the mind are developed and kept in use, the longer the period
of vigor and active interest in all around us continues. If from a lifelong
participation in public affairs a woman feels responsible for the laws
regulating our system of education, the discipline of our jails and prisons,
the sanitary conditions of our private homes, public buildings, and
thoroughfares, an interest in commerce, finance, our foreign relations, in any
or all of these questions, here solitude will at least be respectable, and she
will not be driven to gossip or scandal for entertainment.
The
chief reason for opening to every soul the doors to the whole round of human
duties and pleasures is the individual development thus attained, the resources
thus provided under all circumstances to mitigate the solitude that at times
must come to everyone. I once asked Prince Krapotkin, the Russian nihilist, how
he endured his long years in prison, deprived of books, pen, ink, and paper.
“Ah,” he said, “I thought out many questions in which I had a deep interest. In
the pursuit of an idea I took no note of time. When tired of solving knotty
problems I recited all the beautiful passages in prose or verse I have ever
learned. I became acquainted with myself and my own resources. I had a world of
my own, a vast empire, that no Russian jailor or Czar could invade.” Such is
the value of liberal thought and broad culture when shut off from all human
companionship, bringing comfort and sunshine within even the four walls of a
prison cell.
As
women of times share a similar fate, should they not have all the consolation
that the most liberal education can give? Their suffering in the prisons of St.
Petersburg; in the long, weary marches to Siberia, and in the mines, working
side by side with men, surely call for all the self-support that the most
exalted sentiments of heroism can give. When suddenly roused at midnight, with
the startling cry of “fire! fire!” to find the house over their heads in
flames, do women wait for men to point the way to safety? And are the men,
equally bewildered and half suffocated with smoke, in a position to more than
try to save themselves?
At such
times the most timid women have shown a courage and heroism in saving their
husbands and children that has surprised everybody. Inasmuch, then, as woman
shares equally the joys and sorrows of time and eternity, is it not the height
of presumption in man to propose to represent her at the ballot box and the
throne of grace, do her voting in the state, her praying in the church, and to
assume the position of priest at the family altar.
Nothing
strengthens the judgment and quickens the conscience like individual
responsibility. Nothing adds such dignity to character as the recognition of
one’s self-sovereignty; the right to an equal place, every where conceded; a
place earned by personal merit, not an artificial attainment, by inheritance,
wealth, family, and position. Seeing, then that the responsibilities of life
rest equally on man and woman, that their destiny is the same, they need the
same preparation for time and eternity. The talk of sheltering woman from the
fierce sterns of life is the sheerest mockery, for they beat on her from every
point of the compass, just as they do on man, and with more fatal results, for
he has been trained to protect himself, to resist, to conquer. Such are the
facts in human experience, the responsibilities of individual. Rich and poor,
intelligent and ignorant, wise and foolish, virtuous and vicious, man and
woman, it is ever the same, each soul must depend wholly on itself.
Whatever
the theories may be of woman’s dependence on man, in the supreme moments of her
life he can not bear her burdens. Alone she goes to the gates of death to give
life to every man that is born into the world. No one can share her fears, no
one mitigate her pangs; and if her sorrow is greater than she can bear, alone
she passes beyond the gates into the vast unknown. From the mountain tops of
Judea, long ago, a heavenly voice bade His disciples, “Bear ye one another’s
burdens,” but humanity has not yet risen to that point of self-sacrifice, and if
ever so willing, how few the burdens are that one soul can bear for another. In
the highways of Palestine; in prayer and fasting on the solitary mountain top;
in the Garden of Gethsemane; before the judgment seat of Pilate; betrayed by
one of His trusted disciples at His last supper; in His agonies on the cross,
even Jesus of Nazareth, in these last sad days on earth, felt the awful
solitude of self. Deserted by man, in agony he cries, “My God! My God! why hast
Thou forsaken me?” And so it ever must be in the conflicting scenes of life, on
the long weary march, each one walks alone. We may have many friends, love,
kindness, sympathy and charity to smooth our pathway in everyday life, but in
the tragedies and triumphs of human experience each moral stands alone.
But
when all artificial trammels are removed, and women are recognized as
individuals, responsible for their own environments, thoroughly educated for
all the positions in life they may be called to fill; with all the resources in
themselves that liberal thought and broad culture can give; guided by their own
conscience and judgment; trained to self-protection by a healthy development of
the muscular system and skill in the use of weapons of defense, and stimulated
to self-support by the knowledge of the business world and the pleasure that
pecuniary independence must ever give; when women are trained in this way they
will, in a measure, be fitted for those hours of solitude that come alike to
all, whether prepared or otherwise. As in our extremity we must depend on
ourselves, the dictates of wisdom point of complete individual development. In
talking of education how shallow the argument that each class must be educated
for the special work it proposed to do, and all those faculties not needed in this
special walk must lie dormant and utterly wither for want of use, when,
perhaps, these will be the very faculties needed in life’s greatest emerges.
Some say, Where is the use of drilling serie in the languages, the Sciences, in
law, medicine, theology? As wives, mothers, housekeepers, cooks, they need a
different curriculum from boys who are to fill all positions. The chief cooks
in our great hotels and ocean steamers are men. In large cities men run the
bakeries; they make our bread, cake and pies. They manage the laundries; they
are now considered our best milliners and dressmakers. Because some men fill
these departments of usefulness, shall we regulate the curriculum in Harvard
and Yale to their present necessities? If not why this talk in our best colleges
of a curriculum for girls who are crowding into the trades and professions;
teachers in all our public schools rapidly hiring many lucrative and honorable
positions in life? They are showing too, their calmness and courage in the most
trying hours of human experience. You have probably all read in the daily
papers of the terrible storm in the Bay of Biscay when a tidal wave such havoc
on the shore, wrecking vessels, unroofing houses and carrying destruction
everywhere. Among other buildings the woman’s prison was demolished. Those who
escaped saw men struggling to reach the shore. They promptly by clasping hands
made a chain of themselves and pushed out into the sea, again and again, at the
risk of their lives until they had brought six men to shore, carried them to a
shelter, and did all in their power for their comfort and protection.
What
especial school of training could have prepared these women for this sublime
moment of their lives. In times like this humanity rises above all college
curriculums and recognizes Nature as the greatest of all teachers in the hour
of danger and death. Women are already the equals of men in the whole of dream
of thought, in art, science, literature, and government. With telescope vision
they explore the starry firmament, and bring back the history of the planetary
world. With chart and compass they pilot ships across the mighty deep, and with
skillful finger send electric messages around the globe. In galleries of art
the beauties of nature and the virtues of humanity are immortalized by them on
their canvas and by their inspired touch dull blocks of marble are transformed
into angels of light.
In
music they speak again the language of Mendelssohn, Beethoven, Chopin,
Schumann, and are worthy interpreters of their great thoughts. The poetry and
novels of the century are theirs, and they have touched the keynote of reform
in religion, politics, and social life. They fill the editor’s and professor’s
chair, and plead at the bar of justice, walk the wards of the hospital, and
speak from the pulpit and the platform; such is the type of womanhood that an
enlightened public sentiment welcomes today, and such the triumph of the facts
of life over the false theories of the past.
Is it,
then, consistent to hold the developed woman of this day within the same narrow
political limits as the dame with the spinning wheel and knitting needle
occupied in the past? No! no! Machinery has taken the labors of woman as well
as man on its tireless shoulders; the loom and the spinning wheel are but
dreams of the past; the pen, the brush, the easel, the chisel, have taken their
places, while the hopes and ambitions of women are essentially changed. We see
reason sufficient in the outer conditions of human being for individual liberty
and development, but when we consider the self dependence of every human soul
we see the need of courage, judgment, and the exercise of every faculty of mind
and body, strengthened and developed by use, in woman as well as man.
Whatever
may be said of man’s protecting power in ordinary conditions, mid all the
terrible disasters by land and sea, in the supreme moments of danger, alone,
woman must ever meet the horrors of the situation; the Angel of Death even
makes no royal pathway for her. Man’s love and sympathy enter only into the
sunshine of our lives. In that solemn solitude of self, that links us with the
immeasurable and the eternal, each soul lives alone forever. A recent writer
says:
I
remember once, in crossing the Atlantic, to have gone upon the deck of the ship
at midnight, when a dense black cloud enveloped the sky, and the great deep was
roaring madly under the lashes of demoniac winds. My feeling was not of danger
or fear (which is a base surrender of the immortal soul), but of utter desolation
and loneliness; a little speck of life shut in by a tremendous darkness. Again
I remember to have climbed the slopes of the Swiss Alps, up beyond the point
where vegetation ceases, and the stunted conifers no longer struggle against
the unfeeling blasts. Around me lay a huge confusion of rocks, out of which the
gigantic ice peaks shot into the measureless blue of the heavens, and again my
only feeling was the awful solitude.
And
yet, there is a solitude, which each and every one of us has always carried
with him, more inaccessible than the ice-cold mountains, more profound than the
midnight sea; the solitude of self. Our inner being, which we call ourself, no
eye nor touch of man or angel has ever pierced. It is more hidden than the
caves of the gnome; the sacred adytum of the oracle; the hidden chamber of
eleusinian mystery, for to it only omniscience is permitted to enter. Such is
individual life. Who, I ask you, can take, dare take, on himself the rights,
the duties, the responsibilities of another human soul?