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The subjection of women / by John Stuart Mill
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of noble minds/' even if spoken of as tbeir last infirmity/' and is stimulated by the access which fame gives to all objects of ambition, in­cluding even the favour of women; while to women themselves all these objects are closed, and the desire of fame itself considered daring and unfeminine. Besides, how could it be that a woman's interests should not be all concen­trated upon the impressions made on those who come into her daily life, when society has or­dained that all her duties should be to them, and has contrived that all her comforts should depend on them? The natural desire of consideration from our fellow creatures is as strong in a woman as in a man; but society has so ordered things that public consideration is, in all ordinary cases, only attainable by her through the consideration of her husband or of her male relations, while her private consideration is forfeited by making herself individually prominent, or appearing in any other character than that of an appendage to men. Whoever is in the least capable of estimating the influence on the mind of the entire domestic and social position and the whole * habit of a life, must easily recognise in that in­fluence a complete explanation of nearly all the apparent differences between women and men, including the whole of those which imply any inferiority.