From The Congress of Women; Mary Kavanaugh Oldham Engle, ed. (Chicago: American Publishing House, 1893): 668-69
When the theory of popular government
finds its full development and perfect realization in the
American system, woman will hold her natural place in politics.
That she may serve her country today, though disfranchised. and
when she has the ballot in her hand I serve better, I earnestly
advocate her present participation in politics.
First, what can she do, second, what does she do; third, what will be the result of her doing?
At the basis of all influence and action is knowledge. Woman's first duty is to know the system of government under which she lives. United States history, political as well as geographical and social, should be familiar to every intelligent woman. Like a romance reads some portions of it. Woman's conscientious nature can not fail to find warrant for present obligation and effort in the record of what was done in America's heroic years.
American biography is another fruitful source of information. Not the biography of women alone, but of men who have fought our social, industrial and political battles.
Every contest for better conditions
of living bears directly upon the home and the woman in it. Ignorance
of what security costs lessens appreciation and weakens effort.
Every crisis in the state, and even the ordinary conduct of political
affairs, is the culmination of causes always operative among men.
Man is the subject of government. Man
is the factor in politics. The continuity of woman's political
influence is proportioned to her knowledge of man in history and
man in the world of today. The woman who is thus equipped as counselor,
friend and servant in political affairs possesses unmeasured influence
for good.
Not only should she know what has been,
but what is. Her brain and heart should be in touch with the tide
of human life which flows by her own hearthstone. She feels
for the poor, for the helpless, for the suffering; she gives of
her love and her labor for their relief; she should do more, she
should follow these interests to the point of society's comprehensive
action in law.
It is well to visit and build hospitals;
it is better to know what lack of sanitary conditions breeds disease,
and by public sentiment coerce political and legislative action
which shall substitute conditions of health for such as breed
disease.
She should not only weep over the drunkard
and his family, but should study the problem of temperance legislation,
so that the state shall, up to the full measure of public conviction
and consequent power, destroy the traffic in intoxicating beverages.
At the point where philanthropic effort seeks the aid of political
action and the defense of legislation there is the danger line
in woman's political work. If her pulses are not guided by knowledge
she will miss her opportunity of usefulness, lure the cause she
loves, and incidentally lose prestige as a political factor.
What does she do? Woman's present activity
is usually applied to furthering her personal interests or the
philanthropic and industrial schemes where her sympathies lie,
and in securing the ballot for the disfranchised half of American
citizens.
These aims are good. Is not a wife a
real helpmate if she honorably aids her husband to get to Congress?
No patriotic citizen need blush for the desire to sit in greatest
council chamber of the world.
Neither need Iowa women apologize for
their part in the political action which drove the saloon out
of Iowa, nor for their present determined opposition to its urn.
They still declare "the saloon shall never again have legal
existence in Iowa." The pathos of their cry is pitiful while
their hands are ballotless; but their political power to a limited
degree is admitted by friend and foe.
What does woman do? I dare assert that
woman's political influence has been a necessary factor
in the progressive legislation which distinguishes our time; and
with even more emphasis I declare that if she were more studious
of political conditions, more persistent in behalf of her convictions
on political questions, she might remedy many existing defects
in the conduct of public affairs. The men in politics , love darkness
rather than light, because their deeds are evil, have occasion
to d the light which women's tongues let in on their devious ways.
I repudiate the sentiment which declares
that a woman need have no political convictions and need give
no political service until she is enfranchised; while I can understand
how any selfrespecting patriotic woman can be content without
the ter of freedom in this republic, I still remember how much
women owe to the em of government under the flag, and remember
those to whom much is given, of them much is required; and that
he who is faithful in a few things shall be made ruler over many
things.
What will the result be? This enlargement
of woman's activities will make her stronger and purer in her
home. Stagnant waters are foul, the swiftest, deepest current
is the purest.
Woman is most to her home when she contains
the most in herself. She will be a defense to her home against
the world, the flesh and the devil, just in proportion as she
is able to meet the world on its many sided attacks.
![]()