The Malingerer Poem by Charlotte Perkins Stetson Gilman

The Malingerer



Exempt! She 'does not have to work!'
So might one talk
Defending long, bedridden ease,
Weak yielding ankles, flaccid knees,
With 'I don't have to walk!'

Not have to work. Why not? Who gave
Free pass to you?
You're housed and fed and taught and dressed
By age-long labor of the rest–
Work other people do!

What do you give in honest pay
For clothes and food?–
Then as a shield, defence, excuse,
She offers her exclusive use–
Her function–Motherhood!

Is motherhood a trade you make
A living by?
And does the wealth you so may use,
Squander, accumulate, abuse,
Show motherhood as high?

Or does the motherhood of those
Whose toil endures,
The farmers' and mechanics' wives,
Hard working servants all their lives–
Deserve less price than yours?

We're not exempt! Man's world runs on,
Motherless, wild;
Our servitude and long duress,
Our shameless, harem idleness,
Both fail to serve the child.

COMMENTS OF THE POEM
READ THIS POEM IN OTHER LANGUAGES
Close
Error Success