SIX HOURS A DAY.

Six hours a day the woman spends on food!

Six mortal hours a day....

With fire and water toiling, heat and cold;

Struggling with laws she does not understand

Of chemistry and physics, and the weight

Of poverty and ignorance besides.

Toiling for those she loves, the added strain

Of tense emotion on her humble skill,

The sensitiveness born of love and fear,

Making it harder to do even work.

Toiling without release, no hope ahead

Of taking up another business soon,

Of varying the task she finds too hard—

This, her career, so closely interknit

With holier demands as deep as life

That to refuse to cook is held the same

As to refuse her wife and motherhood.

Six mortal hours a day to handle food,—

Prepare it, serve it, clean it all away,—

With allied labors of the stove and tub,

The pan, the dishcloth, and the scrubbing-brush.

Developing forever in her brain

The power to do this work in which she lives;

While the slow finger of Heredity

Writes on the forehead of each living man,

Strive as he may, “His mother was a cook!”