Dokument 
The subjection of women / by John Stuart Mill
Entstehung
Seite
140
Einzelbild herunterladen

140

degree on which depend the great productions which immortalize a name. To the attainment of the former, there are adequate motives in the case of all who follow the pursuit professionally: the other is hardly ever attained where there is not, or where there has not been at some period of life, an ardent desire of celebrity. Nothing less is commonly a sufficient stimulus to undergo the long and patient drudgery, which, in the case even of the greatest natural gifts, is absolutely required for great eminence in pursuits in which we already possess so many splendid memorials of the highest genius. Now, whether the cause be natural or artificial, women seldom have this eagerness for fame. Their ambition is generally confined within narrower bounds. The influence they seek is over those who immediately surround them. Their desire is to be liked, loved, or ad­mired, by those whom they see with their eyes: and the proficiency in knowledge, arts, and ac­complishments, which is sufficient for that, almost always contents them. This is a trait of cha­racter which cannot be left out of the account in judging of women as they are. I do not at all believe that it is inherent in women. It is only the natural result of their circumstances. The love of fame in men is encouraged by edu­cation and opinion : to scorn delights and live laborious days for its sake, is accounted the part