登陆注册
5587000000060

第60章

"WHEN I reached Great Britain, the right of women to medicine was in this condition--a learned lawyer explained it carefully to me. I will give you his words: The unwritten law of every nation admits all mankind, and not the male half only, to the study and practice of medicine and the sale of drugs. In Great Britain this law is called the common law and is deeply respected. Whatever liberty it allows to men or women is held sacred in our courts until _directly_ and _explicitly_ withdrawn by some act of the Legislature. Under this ancient liberty, women have occasionally practiced general medicine and surgery up to the year 1858. But for centuries they _monopolized,_ by custom, one branch of practice, the obstetric; and that, together with the occasional treatment of children, and the nursing of both sexes, which is semi-medical, and is their _monopoly,_ seems, on the whole, to have contented them, till late years, when their views were enlarged by wider education and other causes. But their abstinence from general practice, like their monopoly of obstetrics, lay with women themselves, and not with the law of England.

That law is the same in this respect as the common law of Italy and France; and the constitution of Bologna, where so many doctresses have filled the chairs of medicine and other sciences, makes no more direct provision for female students than does the constitution of any Scotch or English university. --The whole thing lay with the women themselves, and with local civilization. Years ago, Italy was far more civilized than England; so Italian women took a large sphere. Of late the Anglo-Saxon has gone in for civilization with his usual energy, and is eclipsing Italy; therefore his women aspire to larger spheres of intellect and action, beginning in the States, because American women are better educated than English. The advance of _women_ in useful attainments is the most infallible sign in any country of advancing civilization. All this about civilization is my observation, sir, and not the lawyer's. Now for the lawyer again: Such being the law of England, the British Legislature passed an act in 1858, the real object of which was to protect the public against incapable doctors, not against capable doctresses or doctors. The act excludes from medical practice all persons whatever, male or female, unless registered in a certain register; and to get upon that register the person, male or female, must produce a license or diploma, granted by one of the British examining boards specified in a schedule attached to the act.

"Now, these examining boards were all members of the leading medical schools. If the Legislature had taken the usual precaution, and had added a clause _compelling_ those boards to examine worthy applicants, the act would have been a sound public measure; but for want of that foresight--and without foresight a lawgiver is an impostor and a public pest--the State robbed women of their old common-law rights with one hand, and with the other enabled a respectable trades-union to thrust them out of their new statutory rights. Unfortunately, the respectable union, to whom the Legislature delegated an unconstitutional power they did not claim themselves, of excluding qualified persons from examination, and so robbing them of their license and their bread, had an overpowering interest to exclude qualified women from medicine. They had the same interest as the watchmakers' union, the printers', the painters'

on china, the calico-engravers', and others have to exclude qualified women from those branches, though peculiarly fitted for them; but not more so than they are for the practice of medicine, God having made _them,_ and not _men,_ the medical, and unmusical, sex.

"Wherever there's a trades-union, the weakest go to the wall. Those vulgar unions I have mentioned exclude women from skilled labor they excel in, by violence and conspiracy, though the law threatens them with imprisonment for it. Was it in nature, then, that the medical union would be infinitely forbearing, when the Legislature went and patted it on the back, and said, you can conspire with safety against your female rivals.

Of course the clique were tempted more than any clique could bear by the unwariness of the Legislature, and closed the doors of the medical schools to female applicants. Against unqualified female practitioners they never acted with such zeal and consent; and why? The female quack is a public pest, and a good foil to the union; the qualified doctress is a public good, and a blow to the union.

"The British medical union was now in a fine attitude by act of Parliament. It could talk its contempt of medical women, and act its terror of them, and keep both its feigned contempt and its real alarm safe from the test of a public examination--that crucible in which cant, surmise, and mendacity are soon evaporated or precipitated, and only the truth stands firm.

"For all that, two female practitioners got upon the register, and stand out, living landmarks of experience and the truth, in the dead wilderness of surmise and prejudice.

"I will tell you how they got in. The act of Parliament makes two exceptions: first, it lets in, _without examination_-- and that is very unwise--any foreign doctor who shall be practicing in England at the date of the act, although, with equal incapacity, it omits to provide that any future foreign doctor shall be able to _demand examination_ (in with the old foreign fogies, blindfold, right or wrong; out with the rising foreign luminaries of an ever-advancing science, right or wrong); and, secondly, it lets in, without examination, to experiment on the vile body of the public, any person, qualified or unqualified, who may have been made a doctor by a very venerable and equally irrelevant functionary.

同类推荐
  • The Hunchback

    The Hunchback

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 莲华面经

    莲华面经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • Female Suffrage

    Female Suffrage

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 佛说大悲空智金刚大教王仪轨经

    佛说大悲空智金刚大教王仪轨经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 百丈清规

    百丈清规

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 冰心焰

    冰心焰

    广袤的星辰大海有着无数的大陆群,每一片大陆群都可能衍生出文明——玄妙的魔法文明、可怕的巫师文明、强大的修真文明、精密的机械文明,而我们的故事则是从地球华夏区洞庭湖域岳阳城开始!你以为这是穿越?不,我们只是弃族之人回归故里,夺回属于自己的荣耀!
  • 与妖怪谈恋爱的日常

    与妖怪谈恋爱的日常

    这是一个凶残无比鬼见鬼嚎的妖界祸害遇到真爱后收起爪子乖乖洗手作羹汤的故事。森麒:“昭昭!看我!”江昭雪皱眉:“别挡光。”……森麒:“昭昭……”江昭雪头也不抬:“嗯?”“今日份的亲亲呢?”江昭雪放下鼠标,对他招了招手,少年屁颠屁颠跑过去。然后被赏了一个爆栗。“别说得好像每天都有亲亲似的,做饭去。”……森麒:“昭昭昭昭昭昭昭昭……”“闭嘴。”“我好无聊啊,我要发霉了,啊,我变成蘑菇了。”江昭雪无奈抬头,对他勾了勾手,少年谨慎的挪了过去,忽然被拉住衣领在唇上“啾”了一口。“乖,安静点。”少年坐在江昭雪身旁开始傻乐,这一乐,半天就过去了。
  • 我是主神的接班人

    我是主神的接班人

    “知道吗,你失败的理由只有一个……那就是站在了我这个欧皇的对立面!”作为一个欧皇中的欧皇,郝运来坚信,只要我足够欧,哪怕变成莽夫也无所谓!然后他就被人用Ea捅了……被制裁了?欧吃矛?不,这只是张走上成为主神道路的邀请函罢了!ps:第一次写作,有点紧张,全书尽量以轻松搞笑的风格写。如果喜欢的话,不妨收藏一下。哦,对了,可能会有部分ooc……原作党慎入~
  • 老子不想当和尚

    老子不想当和尚

    “你当不当”系统。“不当”林真心“我再问你一遍当不当”林春望(林真心他爹)“不当”林真心“你自找的。”系统轰轰轰一道道神雷劈来林真心看着满天神雷,不经悲从心来,仰天大叫:“老子不当和尚!”欢迎加入老子不想当和尚粉丝群,群聊号码:群号371839517
  • 道德经

    道德经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 幸福正能量

    幸福正能量

    在《幸福正能量》这本书里,罗素不依靠任何高深的学说,而是把一些经由他自己的经验和观察证实过的通情达理的意见归纳起来,制作出一张治愈不幸的良方,希望那些对生活感到困惑和郁闷的男男女女,能够在此找到医治他们病案的方子,在以后的生活中努力获得幸福。
  • 时空秘闻录

    时空秘闻录

    时空之城致力于维护时空间的和平,她含辛茹苦的保护无数时空了两千年,而她也在一次又一次的危机中逐渐成长,变强。人们敢说,如果没有时空之城,那么这世间定将陷入一片混乱。话是这么说的。时空历两千年,外部世界一片和平,危机逐渐浮出水面,国家的分裂,敌人的卷土重来......“创始者”的子女们还能保护世界吗?(本书绝不弃坑,但苦于学生党,更新龟速。请谅解,谢谢。)
  • 初恋记忆

    初恋记忆

    钟跃民:“陕北这块地方很奇特,从表面上看,这是块贫瘠的土地,可你仔细观察就会发现,这种表象后面隐藏着一种很深奥的东西。
  • 修仙联盟

    修仙联盟

    因此书过于真实,已被修仙界诸位道友封杀!
  • 草莓派

    草莓派

    【令人脸红心跳的短篇小甜饼】【龟兔赛跑的追妻之路】【一场数学公式式初恋】*小慕斯喜欢吃草莓,所以她是小草莓,江安澜喜欢吃蓝莓,但更喜欢给小草莓种草莓,但他不缺草莓种子,缺的是……那块垂涎已久的草莓地儿……于是为了那块地儿,展开了一场“龟兔赛跑的追妻之路”一场“数学公式式初恋”*大灰狼的话句句令人“脸红耳烧心跳加速”撩心撩人撩小白兔,原来这是心动的感觉~*【慕江吟】吟的是恋爱中人的小甜蜜,诵的是单身狗与狗粮之战。恋爱的酸臭味愈发浓郁,甜得牙疼,臭得心酸。【慎入,此坑尚未填满,暂停更新,抱歉!】