<P> According to Fuller, America has been hindered from reaching equality because it inherited depravity from Europe, hence its treatment of Native and African Americans . Fuller quotes the ancient Medes on how all people are equal and bound to each other; those who infringe on others' rights are condemned, but the biggest sin is hypocrisy . Man needs to practice divine love as well as feel it . Among those who practice it are the abolitionists because they act on their love of humanity; many women are part of this group . </P> <P> Fuller then begins to examine men and women in America . She observes that many people think that in marriage, man is the head of the house and woman the heart . Problems with the law derive from the problem of women being viewed as inferiors, equal to children but not men . The truth is that women need expansion and seek to be like men; they need to be taught self - dependence . The idea that equality between men and women would bring divinity to new heights because it would help fulfill the lives of both men and women is reinforced by looking at historical evidence where men and women were equally divine, including Christianity with its male and female saints . Women, Fuller says, need not poetry or power to be happy, which they now have access to, but rather intellectual and religious freedom equal to men's . </P> <P> The transition of marriage in earlier times as that of convenience into a union of equal souls is discussed in relation to four types of marriage, which Fuller ranks in ascending order . The first type, the household partnership, is merely convenience and mutual dependence . The man provides for the house, the woman tends to it . The second type is mutual idolatry where the man and woman find in the other all perfection to the exclusion of the rest of the world . The intellectual companionship is the next highest form of marriage . In this, man and woman are friends, confidants in thought and feeling with a mutual trust, but rarely love . Above all of these forms is the highest marriage, the religious union . It envelopes the other three to include mutual dependence, idolatry, and respect . The man and woman find themselves as equals on a "pilgrimage towards a common shrine ." Fuller also makes brief mention of the life of "old maids", often looked down upon because they are not married, but she says that they have the opportunity for close communion with the divine which married people do not have to that extent . </P> <P> Fuller then looks at the differences between men and women in order to enforce that women need their intellectual and spiritual resources strengthened . She says that the souls of men and women are the same, even with differences in masculinity and femininity . The differences are not between men and women, though, for both have masculine and feminine energies, but are between individuals: "There is no wholly masculine man, no purely feminine woman ." </P>

Summary of margaret fuller woman in the nineteenth century