A Woman's Thoughts About Women Author:Dinah Maria Mulock Craik Purchase of this book includes free trial access to www.million-books.com where you can read more than a million books for free. This is an OCR edition with typos. Excerpt from book: CHAPTER ILL FEMALE PROFESSIONS. Granted the necessity of something to do, and the self-dependence required for its achievement, we may go on to the very ob... more »vious question—what is a woman to do ? A question more easily asked than answered; and the numerous replies to which, now current in book, pamphlet, newspaper, and review, suggesting everything possible and impossible, from compulsory wife- hood in Australia to voluntary watchmaking at home, do at present rather confuse the matter than otherwise. No doubt, out of these "many words," which "darken speech," some plain word or two will one day take shape in action, so as to evolve a practical good. In the meantime, it does no harm to have the muddy pond stirred up a little; any disturbance ia better than stagnation. These Thoughts—however desultory and unsatisfactory, seeing the great need there is for deeds rather than words—are those of a " working " woman, who lias been sujh all her life, having opportunities of comparing the experience of other working women with her own: she, therefore, at least escapes the folly of talking of what she knows nothing about. Female professions, as distinct from what may be termed female handicrafts, which merit separate classification and discussion, may, I think, be thus divided; the instruction of youth; painting or art; literature; and the vocation of public entertainment—including actresses, singers, musicians, and the like. The first of these, being a calling universally wanted, and the easiest in which to win, at all events, daily bread, is the great chasm into which the helpless and penniless of our sex generally plunge; and this indiscriminate Quintus Curtiusism, so far from rilling up the gulf, widens it every hour. It must be so, while young women of all classes and ...« less