Studies in the Psychology of Sex, Volume 6
Part II, Ch. V), while thinking it is best to follow inclination,
9017 words | Chapter 38
remarks that "a beautiful woman looks better by sunlight than by
candlelight." A few authorities, like Burdach, have been content
to accept the custom of night coitus, and Busch (_Das
Geschlechtsleben des Weibes_, vol. i, p. 214) was inclined to
think the darkness of night the most "natural" time, while
Fürbringer (Senator and Kaminer, _Health and Disease in Relation
to Marriage_, vol. i, p. 217) thinks that early morning is
"occasionally" the best time.
To some, on the other hand, the exercise of sexual intercourse in
the sunlight and the open air seems so important that they are
inclined to elevate it to the rank of a religious exercise. I
quote from a communication on this point received from Australia:
"This shameful thing that must not be spoken of or done (except
in the dark) will some day, I believe, become the one religious
ceremony of the human race, in the spring. (Oh, what springs!)
People will have become very sane, well-bred, aristocratic (all
of them aristocrats), and on the whole opposed to rites and
superstitions, for they will have a perfect knowledge of the
past. The coition of lovers in the springtime will be the one
religious ceremony they will allow themselves. I have a vision
sometimes of the holy scene, but I am afraid it is too beautiful
to describe. 'The intercourse of the sexes, I have dreamed, is
ineffably beautiful, too fair to be remembered,' wrote the chaste
Thoreau. Verily human beauty, joy, and love will reach their
divinest height during those inaugural days of springtide
coupling. When the world is one Paradise, the consummation of the
lovers, the youngest and most beautiful, will take place in
certain sacred valleys in sight of thousands assembled to witness
it. For days it will take place in these valleys where the sun
will rise on a dream of passionate voices, of clinging human
forms, of flowers and waters, and the purple and gold of the
sunrise are reflected on hills illumined with pansies. [I know
not if the writer recalled George Chapman's "Enamelled pansies
used at nuptials still"], and repeated on golden human flesh and
human hair. In these sacred valleys the subtle perfume of the
pansies will mingle with the divine fragrance of healthy naked
young women and men in the spring coupling. You and I shall not
see that, but we may help to make it possible." This rhapsody (an
unconscious repetition of Saint-Lambert's at Mlle. Quinault's
table in the eighteenth century) serves to illustrate the revolt
which tends to take place against the unnatural and artificial
degradation of the sexual act.
In some parts of the world it has seemed perfectly natural and
reasonable that so great and significant an act as that of coitus
should be consecrated to the divinity, and hence arose the custom
of prayer before sexual intercourse. Thus Zoroaster ordained that
a married couple should pray before coitus, and after the act
they should say together: "O, Sapondomad, I trust this seed to
thee, preserve it for me, for it is a man." In the Gorong
Archipelago it is customary also for husband and wife to pray
together before the sexual act (Ploss and Bartels, _Das Weib_,
Bd. i, Ch. XVII). The civilized man, however, has come to regard
his stomach as the most important of his organs, and he utters
his conventional grace, not before love, but only before food.
Even the degraded ritual vestiges of the religious recognition of
coitus are difficult to find in Europe. We may perhaps detect it
among the Spaniards, with their tenacious instinct for ritual, in
the solemn etiquette with which, in the seventeenth century, it
was customary, according to Madame d'Aulnoy, for the King to
enter the bedchamber of the Queen: "He has on his slippers, his
black mantle over his shoulder, his shield on one arm, a bottle
hanging by a cord over the other arm (this bottle is not to drink
from, but for a quite opposite purpose, which you will guess).
With all this the King must also have his great sword in one hand
and a dark lantern in the other. In this way he must enter,
alone, the Queen's chamber" (Madame d'Aulnoy, _Relation du Voyage
d'Espagne_, 1692, vol. iii, p. 221).
In discussing the art of love it is necessary to give a primary place to
the central fact of coitus, on account of the ignorance that widely
prevails concerning it, and the unfortunate prejudices which in their
fungous broods flourish in the noisome obscurity around it. The traditions
of the Christian Church, which overspread the whole of Europe, and set up
for worship a Divine Virgin and her Divine Son, both of whom it
elaborately disengaged from personal contact with sexuality effectually
crushed any attempt to find a sacred and avowable ideal in married love.
Even the Church's own efforts to elevate matrimony were negatived by its
own ideals. That influence depresses our civilization even to-day. When
Walt Whitman wrote his "Children of Adam" he was giving imperfect
expression to conceptions of the religious nature of sexual love which
have existed wholesomely and naturally in all parts of the world, but had
not yet penetrated the darkness of Christendom where they still seemed
strange and new, if not terrible. And the refusal to recognize the
solemnity of sex had involved the placing of a pall of blackness and
disrepute on the supreme sexual act itself. It was shut out from the
sunshine and excluded from the sphere of worship.
The sexual act is important from the point of view of erotic art, not only
from the ignorance and prejudices which surround it, but also because it
has a real value even in regard to the psychic side of married life.
"These organs," according to the oft-quoted saying of the old French
physician, Ambrose Paré, "make peace in the household." How this comes
about we see illustrated from time to time in Pepys's Diary. At the same
time, it is scarcely necessary to say, after all that has gone before,
that this ancient source of domestic peace tends to be indefinitely
complicated by the infinite variety in erotic needs, which become ever
more pronounced with the growth of civilization.[408]
The art of love is, indeed, only beginning with the establishment of
sexual intercourse. In the adjustment of that relationship all the forces
of nature are so strongly engaged that under completely favorable
conditions--which indeed very rarely occur in our civilization--the
knowledge of the art and a possible skill in its exercise come almost of
themselves. The real test of the artist in love is in the skill to carry
it beyond the period when the interests of nature, having been really or
seemingly secured, begin to slacken. The whole art of love, it has been
well said, lies in forever finding something new in the same person. The
art of love is even more the art of retaining love than of arousing it.
Otherwise it tends to degenerate towards the Shakespearian lust,
"Past reason hunted, and no sooner had,
Past reason hated,"
though it must be remembered that even from the most strictly natural
point of view the transitions of passion are not normally towards
repulsion but towards affection.[409]
The young man and woman who are brought into the complete unrestraint of
marriage after a prolonged and unnatural separation, during which desire
and the satisfactions of desire have been artificially disconnected, are
certainly not under the best conditions for learning the art of love. They
are tempted by reckless and promiscuous indulgence in the intimacies of
marriage to fling carelessly aside all the reasons that make that art
worth learning. "There are married people," as Ellen Key remarks, "who
might have loved each other all their lives if they had not been
compelled, every day and all the year, to direct their habits, wills, and
inclinations towards each other."
All the tendencies of our civilized life are, in personal matters, towards
individualism; they involve the specialization, and they ensure the
sacredness, of personal habits and even peculiarities. This individualism
cannot be broken down suddenly at the arbitrary dictation of a tradition,
or even by the force of passion from which the restraints have been
removed. Out of deference to the conventions and prejudices of their
friends, or out of the reckless abandonment of young love, or merely out
of a fear of hurting each other's feelings, young couples have often
plunged prematurely into an unbroken intimacy which is even more
disastrous to the permanency of marriage than the failure ever to reach a
complete intimacy at all. That is one of the chief reasons why most
writers on the moral hygiene of marriage nowadays recommend separate beds
for the married couple, if possible separate bedrooms, and even sometimes,
with Ellen Key, see no objection to their living in separate houses.
Certainly the happiest marriages have often involved the closest and most
unbroken intimacy, in persons peculiarly fitted for such intimacy. It is
far from true that, as Bloch has affirmed, familiarity is fatal to love.
It is deadly to a love that has no roots, but it is the nourishment of the
deeply-rooted love. Yet it remains true that absence is needed to maintain
the keen freshness and fine idealism of love. "Absence," as Landor said,
"is the invisible and incorporeal mother of ideal beauty." The married
lovers who are only able to meet for comparatively brief periods between
long absences have often experienced in these meetings a life-long
succession of honeymoons.[410]
There can be no question that as presence has its risks for love, so also
has absence. Absence like presence, in the end, if too prolonged, effaces
the memory of love, and absence, further, by the multiplied points of
contact with the world which it frequently involves, introduces the
problem of jealousy, although, it must be added, it is difficult indeed to
secure a degree of association which excludes jealousy or even the
opportunities for motives of jealousy. The problem of jealousy is so
fundamental in the art of love that it is necessary at this point to
devote to it a brief discussion.
Jealousy is based on fundamental instincts which are visible at the
beginning of animal life. Descartes defined jealousy as "a kind of fear
related to a desire to preserve a possession." Every impulse of
acquisition in the animal world is stimulated into greater activity by the
presence of a rival who may snatch beforehand the coveted object. This
seems to be a fundamental fact in the animal world; it has been a
life-conserving tendency, for, it has been said, an animal that stood
aside while its fellows were gorging themselves with food, and experienced
nothing but pure satisfaction in the spectacle, would speedily perish. But
in this fact we have the natural basis of jealousy.[411]
It is in reference to food that this impulse appears first and most
conspicuously among animals. It is a well-known fact that association
with other animals induces an animal to eat much more than when kept by
himself. He ceases to eat from hunger but eats, as it has been put, in
order to preserve his food from rivals in the only strong box he knows.
The same feeling is transferred among animals to the field of sex. And
further in the relations of dogs and other domesticated animals to their
masters the emotion of jealousy is often very keenly marked.[412]
Jealousy is an emotion which is at its maximum among animals, among
savages,[413] among children,[414] in the senile, in the degenerate, and
very specially in chronic alcoholics.[415] It is worthy of note that the
supreme artists and masters of the human heart who have most consummately
represented the tragedy of jealousy clearly recognized that it is either
atavistic or pathological; Shakespeare made his Othello a barbarian, and
Tolstoy made the Pozdnischeff of his _Kreutzer Sonata_ a lunatic. It is an
anti-social emotion, though it has been maintained by some that it has
been the cause of chastity and fidelity. Gesell, for instance, while
admitting its anti-social character and accumulating quotations in
evidence of the torture and disaster it occasions, seems to think that it
still ought to be encouraged in order to foster sexual virtues. Very
decided opinions have been expressed in the opposite sense. Jealousy, like
other shadows, says Ellen Key, belongs only to the dawn and the setting of
love, and a man should feel that it is a miracle, and not his right, if
the sun stands still at the zenith.[416]
Even therefore if jealousy has been a beneficial influence at the
beginning of civilization, as well as among animals,--as may probably be
admitted, though on the whole it seems rather to be the by-product of a
beneficial influence than such an influence itself,--it is still by no
means clear that it therefore becomes a desirable emotion in more advanced
stages of civilization. There are many primitive emotions, like anger and
fear, which we do not think it desirable to encourage in complex civilized
societies but rather seek to restrain and control, and even if we are
inclined to attribute an original value to jealousy, it seems to be among
these emotions that it ought to be placed.
Miss Clapperton, in discussing this problem (_Scientific
Meliorism_, pp. 129-137), follows Darwin (_Descent of Man_, Part
I, Ch. IV) in thinking that jealousy led to "the inculcation of
female virtue," but she adds that it has also been a cause of
woman's subjection, and now needs to be eliminated. "To rid
ourselves as rapidly as may be of jealousy is essential;
otherwise the great movement in favor of equality of sex will
necessarily meet with checks and grave obstruction."
Ribot (_La Logique des Sentiments_, pp. 75 et seq.; _Essai sur
les Passions_, pp. 91, 175), while stating that subjectively the
estimate of jealousy must differ in accordance with the ideal of
life held, considers that objectively we must incline to an
unfavorable estimate "Even a brief passion is a rupture in the
normal life; it is an abnormal, if not a pathological state, an
excrescence, a parasitism."
Forel (_Die Sexuelle Frage_, Ch. V) speaks very strongly in the
same sense, and considers that it is necessary to eliminate
jealousy by non-procreation of the jealous. Jealousy is, he
declares, "the worst and unfortunately the most deeply-rooted of
the 'irradiations,' or, better, the 'contrast-reactions,' of
sexual love inherited from our animal ancestors. An old German
saying, 'Eifersucht ist eine Leidenschaft die mit Eifer sucht was
Leider schafft,' says by no means too much.... Jealousy is a
heritage of animality and barbarism; I would recall this to those
who, under the name of 'injured honor,' attempt to justify it and
place it on a high pedestal. An unfaithful husband is ten times
more to be wished for a woman than a jealous husband.... We often
hear of 'justifiable jealousy.' I believe, however, that there is
no justifiable jealousy; it is always atavistic or else
pathological; at the best it is nothing more than a brutal
animal stupidity. A man who, by nature, that is by his hereditary
constitution, is jealous is certain to poison his own life and
that of his wife. Such men ought on no account to marry. Both
education and selection should work together to eliminate
jealousy as far as possible from the human brain."
Eric Gillard in an article on "Jealousy" (_Free Review_, Sept.,
1896), in opposition to those who believe that jealousy "makes
the home," declares that, on the contrary, it is the chief force
that unmakes the home. "So long as egotism waters it with the
tears of sentiment and shields it from the cold blasts of
scientific inquiry, so long will it thrive. But the time will
come when it will be burned in the Garden of Love as a noxious
weed. Its mephitic influence in society is too palpable to be
overlooked. It turns homes that might be sanctuaries of love into
hells of discord and hate; it causes suicides, and it drives
thousands to drink, reckless excesses, and madness. Makes the
home! One of your married men friends sees a probable seducer in
every man who smiles at his wife; another is jealous of his
wife's women acquaintances; a third is wounded because his wife
shows so much attention to the children. Some of the women you
know display jealousy of every other woman, of their husband's
acquaintances, and some, of his very dog. You must be completely
monopolized or you do not thoroughly love. You must admire no one
but the person with whom you have immured yourself for life. Old
friendships must be dissolved, new friendships must not be
formed, for fear of invoking the beautiful emotion that 'makes
the home.'"
Even if jealousy in matters of sex could be admitted to be an emotion
working on the side of civilized progress, it must still be pointed out
that it merely acts externally; it can have little or no real influence;
the jealous person seldom makes himself more lovable by his jealousy and
frequently much less lovable. The main effect of his jealousy is to
increase, and not seldom to excite, the causes for jealousy, and at the
same time to encourage hypocrisy.
All the circumstances, accompaniments, and results of domestic
jealousy in their completely typical form, are well illustrated
by a very serious episode in the history of the Pepys household,
and have been fully and faithfully set down by the great diarist.
The offence--an embrace of his wife's lady-help, as she might now
be termed--was a slight one, but, as Pepys himself admits, quite
inexcusable. He is writing, being in his thirty-sixth year, on
the 25th of Oct., 1668 (Lord's Day). "After supper, to have my
hair combed by Deb, which occasioned the greatest sorrow to me
that ever I knew in this world, for my wife, coming up suddenly,
did find me embracing the girl.... I was at a wonderful loss upon
it, and the girl also, and I endeavored to put it off, but my
wife was struck mute and grew angry.... Heartily afflicted for
this folly of mine.... So ends this month," he writes a few days
later, "with some quiet to my mind, though not perfect, after the
greatest falling out with my poor wife, and through my folly with
the girl, that ever I had, and I have reason to be sorry and
ashamed of it, and more to be troubled for the poor girl's sake.
Sixth November. Up, and presently my wife up with me, which she
professedly now do every day to dress me, that I may not see
Willet [Deb], and do eye me, whether I cast my eye upon her, or
no, and do keep me from going into the room where she is. Ninth
November. Up, and I did, by a little note which I flung to Deb,
advise her that I did continue to deny that ever I kissed her,
and so she might govern herself. The truth is that I did
adventure upon God's pardoning me this lie, knowing how heavy a
thing it would be for me, to the ruin of the poor girl, and next
knowing that if my wife should know all it would be impossible
for her ever to be at peace with me again, and so our whole lives
would be uncomfortable. The girl read, and as I bid her returned
me the note, flinging it to me in passing by." Next day, however,
he is "mightily troubled," for his wife has obtained a confession
from the girl of the kissing. For some nights Mr. and Mrs. Pepys
are both sleepless, with much weeping on either side. Deb gets
another place, leaving on the 14th of November, and Pepys is
never able to see her before she leaves the house, his wife
keeping him always under her eye. It is evident that Pepys now
feels strongly attracted to Deb, though there is no evidence of
this before she became the subject of the quarrel. On the 13th of
November, hearing she was to leave next day, he writes: "The
truth is I have a good mind to have the maidenhead of this girl."
He was, however, the "more troubled to see how my wife is by this
means likely forever to have her hand over me, and that I shall
forever be a slave to her--that is to say, only in matters of
pleasure." At the same time his love for his wife was by no means
diminished, nor hers for him. "I must here remark," he says,
"that I have lain with my moher [i.e., _muger_, wife] as a
husband more times since this falling out than in, I believe,
twelve months before. And with more pleasure to her than in all
the time of our marriage before." The next day was Sunday. On
Monday Pepys at once begins to make inquiries which will put him
on the track of Deb. On the 18th he finds her. She gets up into
the coach with him, and he kisses her and takes liberties with
her, at the same time advising her "to have a care of her honor
and to fear God," allowing no one else to do what he has done; he
also tells her how she can find him if she desires. Pepys now
feels that everything is settled satisfactorily, and his heart
is full of joy. But his joy is short-lived, for Mrs. Pepys
discovers this interview with Deb on the following day. Pepys
denies it at first, then confesses, and there is a more furious
scene than ever. Pepys is now really alarmed, for his wife
threatens to leave him; he definitely abandons Deb, and with
prayers to God resolves never to do the like again. Mrs. Pepys is
not satisfied, however, till she makes her husband write a letter
to Deb, telling her that she is little better than a whore, and
that he hates her, though Deb is spared this, not by any
stratagem of Pepys, but by the considerateness of the friend to
whom the letter was entrusted for delivery. Moreover, Mrs. Pepys
arranges with her husband that, in future, whenever he goes
abroad he shall be accompanied everywhere by his clerk. We see
that Mrs. Pepys plays with what appears to be triumphant skill
and success the part of the jealous and avenging wife, and digs
her little French heels remorselessly into her prostrate husband
and her rival. Unfortunately, we do not know what the final
outcome was, for a little later, owing to trouble with his
eyesight, Pepys was compelled to bring his Diary to an end. It is
evident, however, when we survey the whole of this perhaps
typical episode, that neither husband nor wife were in the
slightest degree prepared for the commonplace position into which
they were thrown; that each of them appears in a painful,
undignified, and humiliating light; that as a result of it the
husband acquires almost a genuine and strong affection for the
girl who is the cause of the quarrel; and finally that, even
though he is compelled, for the time at all events, to yield to
his wife, he remains at the end exactly what he was at the
beginning. Nor had husband or wife the very slightest wish to
leave each other; the bond of marriage remained firm, but it had
been degraded by insincerity on one side and the jealous endeavor
on the other to secure fidelity by compulsion.
Apart altogether, however, from the question of its effectiveness, or even
of the misery that it causes to all concerned, it is evident that jealousy
is incompatible with all the tendencies of civilization. We have seen that
a certain degree of variation is involved in the sexual relationship, as
in all other relationships, and unless we are to continue to perpetuate
many evils and injustices, that fact has to be faced and recognized. We
have also seen that the line of our advance involves a constant increase
in moral responsibility and self-government, and that, in its turn,
implies not only a high degree of sincerity but also the recognition that
no person has any right, or indeed any power, to control the emotions and
actions of another person. If our sun of love stands still at midday,
according to Ellen Key's phrase, that is a miracle to be greeted with awe
and gratitude, and by no means a right to be demanded. The claim of
jealousy falls with the claim of conjugal rights.
It is quite possible, Bloch remarks (_The Sexual Life of Our
Time_, Ch. X), to love more than one person at the same time,
with nearly equal tenderness, and to be honestly able to assure
each of the passion felt for her or him. Bloch adds that the vast
psychic differentiation involved by modern civilization increases
the possibility of this double love, for it is difficult for
anyone to find his complement in a single person, and that this
applies to women as well as to men.
Georg Hirth likewise points out (_Wege zur Heimat_, pp. 543-552)
that it is important to remember that women, as well as men, can
love two persons at the same time. Men flatter themselves, he
remarks, with the prejudice that the female heart, or rather
brain, can only hold one man at a time, and that if there is a
second man it is by a kind of prostitution. Nearly all erotic
writers, poets, and novelists, even physicians and psychologists,
belong to this class, he says; they look on a woman as property,
and of course two men cannot "possess" a woman. (Regarding
novelists, however, the remark may be interpolated that there are
many exceptions, and Thomas Hardy, for instance, frequently
represents a woman as more or less in love with two men at the
same time.) As against this desire to depreciate women's psychic
capacity, Hirth maintains that a woman is not necessarily obliged
to be untrue to one man because she has conceived a passion for
another man. "Today," Hirth truly declares, "only love and
justice can count as honorable motives in marriage. The modern
man accords to the beloved wife and life-companion the same
freedom which he himself took before marriage, and perhaps still
takes in marriage. If she makes no use of it, as is to be
hoped--so much the better! But let there be no lies, no
deception; the indispensable foundation of modern marriage is
boundless sincerity and friendship, the deepest trust,
affectionate devotion, and consideration. This is the best
safeguard against adultery.... Let him, however, who is,
nevertheless, overtaken by the outbreak of it console himself
with the undoubted fact that of two real lovers the most
noble-minded and deep-seeing _friend_ will always have the
preference." These wise words cannot be too deeply meditated. The
policy of jealousy is only successful--when it is successful--in
the hands of the man who counts the external husk of love more
precious than the kernel.
It seems to some that the recognition of variations in sexual
relationships, of the tendency of the monogamic to overpass its
self-imposed bounds, is at best a sad necessity, and a lamentable fall
from a high ideal. That, however, is the reverse of the truth. The great
evil of monogamy, and its most seriously weak point, is its tendency to
self-concentration at the expense of the outer world. The devil always
comes to a man in the shape of his wife and children, said Hinton. The
family is a great social influence in so far as it is the best instrument
for creating children who will make the future citizens; but in a certain
sense the family is an anti-social influence, for it tends to absorb
unduly the energy that is needed for the invigoration of society. It is
possible, indeed, that that fact led to the modification of the monogamic
system in early developing periods of human history, when social expansion
and cohesion were the primary necessities. The family too often tends to
resemble, as someone has said, the secluded collection of grubs sometimes
revealed in their narrow home when we casually raise a flat stone in our
gardens. Great as are the problems of love, and great as should be our
attention to them, it must always be remembered that love is not a little
circle that is complete in itself. It is the nature of love to irradiate.
Just as family life exists mainly for the social end of breeding the
future race, so family love has its social ends in the extension of
sympathy and affection to those outside it, and even in ends that go
beyond love altogether.[417]
The question is debated from time to time as to how far it is possible for
men and women to have intimate friendships with each other outside the
erotic sphere.[418] There can be no doubt whatever that it is perfectly
possible for a man and a woman to experience for each other a friendship
which never intrudes into the sexual sphere. As a rule, however, this only
happens under special conditions, and those are generally conditions which
exclude the closest and most intimate friendship. If, as we have seen,
love may be defined as a synthesis of lust and friendship, friendship
inevitably enters into the erotic sphere. Just as sexual emotion tends to
merge into friendship, so friendship between persons of opposite sex, if
young, healthy, and attractive, tends to involve sexual emotion. The two
feelings are too closely allied for an artificial barrier to be
permanently placed between them without protest. Men who offer a woman
friendship usually find that it is not received with much satisfaction
except as the first installment of a warmer emotion, and women who offer
friendship to a man usually find that he responds with an offer of love;
very often the "friendship" is from the first simply love or flirtation
masquerading under another name.
"In the long run," a woman writes (in a letter published in
_Geschlecht und Gesellschaft_, Bd. i, Heft 7), "the senses become
discontented at their complete exclusion. And I believe that a
man can only come into the closest mutual association with a
woman by whom, consciously or unconsciously, he is physically
attracted. He cannot enter into the closest psychic intercourse
with a woman with whom he could not imagine himself in physical
intercourse. His prevailing wish is for the possession of a
woman, of the whole woman, her soul as well as her body. And a
woman also cannot imagine an intimate relation to a man in which
the heart and the body, as well as the mind, are not involved.
(Naturally I am thinking of people with sound nerves and healthy
blood.) Can a woman carry on a Platonic relation with a man from
year to year without the thought sometimes coming to her: 'Why
does he never kiss me? Have I no charm for him?' And in the most
concealed corner of her heart will it not happen that she uses
that word 'kiss' in the more comprehensive sense in which the
French sometimes employ it?" There is undoubtedly an element of
truth in this statement. The frontier between erotic love and
friendship is vague, and an intimate psychic intercourse that is
sternly debarred from ever manifesting itself in a caress, or
other physical manifestation of tender intimacy, tends to be
constrained, and arouses unspoken and unspeakable thoughts and
desires which are fatal to any complete friendship.
Undoubtedly the only perfect "Platonic friendships" are those which have
been reached through the portal of a preliminary erotic intimacy. In such
a case bad lovers, when they have resolutely traversed the erotic stage,
may become exceedingly good friends. A satisfactory friendship is
possible between brother and sister because they have been physically
intimate in childhood, and all erotic curiosities are absent. The most
admirable "Platonic friendship" may often be attained by husband and wife
in whom sympathy and affection and common interests have outlived passion.
In nearly all the most famous friendships of distinguished men and
women--as we know in some cases and divine in others--an hour's passion,
in Sainte-Beuve's words, has served as the golden key to unlock the most
precious and intimate secrets of friendship.[419]
The friendships that have been entered through the erotic portal possess
an intimacy and retain a spiritually erotic character which could not be
attained on the basis of a normal friendship between persons of the same
sex. This is true in a far higher degree of the ultimate relationship,
under fortunate circumstances, of husband and wife in the years after
passion has become impossible. They have ceased to be passionate lovers
but they have not become mere friends and comrades. More especially their
relationship takes on elements borrowed from the attitude of child to
parent, of parent to child. Everyone from his first years retains
something of the child which cannot be revealed to all the world; everyone
acquires something of the guardian paternal or maternal spirit. Husband
and wife are each child to the other, and are indeed parent and child by
turn. And here still the woman retains a certain erotic supremacy, for she
is to the last more of a child than it is ever easy for the man to be, and
much more essentially a mother than he is a father.
Groos (_Der Æsthetische Genuss_, p. 249) has pointed out that
"love" is really made up of both sexual instinct and parental
instinct.
"So-called happy marriages," says Professor W. Thomas (_Sex and
Society_, p. 246), "represent an equilibrium reached through an
extension of the maternal interest of the woman to the man,
whereby she looks after his personal needs as she does after
those of the children--cherishing him, in fact, as a child--or
in an extension to woman on the part of man of the nurture and
affection which is in his nature to give to pets and all helpless
(and preferably dumb) creatures."
"When the devotion in the tie between mother and son," a woman
writes, "is added to the relation of husband and wife, the union
of marriage is raised to the high and beautiful dignity it
deserves, and can attain in this world. It comprehends sympathy,
love, and perfect understanding, even of the faults and
weaknesses of both sides." "The foundation of every true woman's
love," another woman writes, "is a mother's tenderness. He whom
she loves is a child of larger growth, although she may at the
same time have a deep respect for him." (See also, for similar
opinion of another woman of distinguished intellectual ability,
footnote at beginning of "The Psychic State in Pregnancy" in
volume v of these _Studies_.)
It is on the basis of these elemental human facts that the
permanently seductive and inspiring relationships of sex are
developed, and not by the emergence of personalities who combine
impossibly exalted characteristics. "The task is extremely
difficult," says Kisch in his _Sexual Life of Woman_, "but a
clever and virtuous modern wife must endeavor to combine in her
single personality the sensuous attractiveness of an Aspasia, the
chastity of a Lucrece, and the intellectual greatness of a
Cornelia." And in an earlier century we are told in the novel of
_La Tia Fingida_, which has sometimes been attributed to
Cervantes, that "a woman should be an angel in the street, a
saint in church, beautiful at the window, honest in the house,
and a demon in bed." The demands made of men by women, on the
other hand, have been almost too lofty to bear definite
formulation at all. "Ninety-nine out of a hundred loving women,"
says Helene Stöcker, "certainly believe that if a thousand other
men have behaved ignobly, and forsaken, ill-used, and deceived
the woman they love, the man they love is an exception, marked
out from all other men; that is the reason they love him." It may
be doubted, however, if the great lovers have ever stood very far
above the ordinary level of humanity by their possession of
perfection. They have been human, and their art of love has not
always excluded the possession of human frailties; perfection,
indeed, even if it could be found, would furnish a bad soil for
love to strike deep roots in.
It is only when we realize the highly complex nature of the elements which
make up erotic love that we can understand how it is that that love can
constitute so tremendous a revelation and exert so profound an influence
even in men of the greatest genius and intellect and in the sphere of
their most spiritual activity. It is not merely passion, nor any conscious
skill in the erotic art,--important as these may be,--that would serve to
account for Goethe's relationship to Frau von Stein, or Wagner's to
Mathilde Wesendonck, or that of Robert and Elizabeth Browning to each
other.[420]
It may now be clear to the reader why it has been necessary in a
discussion of the sexual impulse in its relationship to society to deal
with the art of love. It is true that there is nothing so intimately
private and personal as the erotic affairs of the individual. Yet it is
equally true that these affairs lie at the basis of the social life, and
furnish the conditions--good or bad as the case may be--of that
procreative act which is a supreme concern of the State. It is because the
question of love is of such purely private interest that it tends to be
submerged in the question of breed. We have to realize, not only that the
question of love subserves the question of breed, but also that love has a
proper, a necessary, even a socially wholesome claim, to stand by itself
and to be regarded for its own worth.
In the profoundly suggestive study of love which the
distinguished sociologist Tarde left behind at his death
(_Archives d'Anthropologie Criminelle_, loc. cit.), there are
some interesting remarks on this point: "Society," he says, "has
been far more, and more intelligently, preoccupied with the
problem of answering the 'question of breed' than the 'question
of love.' The first problem fills all our civil and commercial
codes. The second problem has never been clearly stated, or
looked in the face, not even in antiquity, still less since the
coming of Christianity, for merely to offer the solutions of
marriage and prostitution is manifestly inadequate. Statesmen
have only seen the side on which it touches population. Hence
the marriage laws. Sterile love they profess to disdain. Yet it
is evident that, though born as the serf of generation, love
tends by civilization to be freed from it. In place of a simple
method of procreation it has become an end, it has created itself
a title, a royal title. Our gardens cultivate flowers that are
all the more charming because they are sterile; why is the double
corolla of love held more infamous than the sterilized flowers of
our gardens?" Tarde replies that the reason is that our
politicians are merely ambitious persons thirsting for power and
wealth, and even when they are lovers they are Don Juans rather
than Virgils. "The future," he continues, "is to the Virgilians,
because if the ambition of power, the regal wealth of American or
European millionarism, once seemed nobler, love now more and more
attracts to itself the best and highest parts of the soul, where
lies the hidden ferment of all that is greatest in science and
art, and more and more those studious and artist souls multiply
who, intent on their peaceful activities, hold in horror the
business men and the politicians, and will one day succeed in
driving them back. That assuredly will be the great and capital
revolution of humanity, an active psychological revolution: the
recognized preponderance of the meditative and contemplative, the
lover's side of the human soul, over the feverish, expansive,
rapacious, and ambitious side. And then it will be understood
that one of the greatest of social problems, perhaps the most
arduous of all, has been the problem of love."
FOOTNOTES:
[375] _Quæstionum Convivalium_, lib. iii, quæstio 6.
[376] E.D. Cope, "The Marriage Problem," _Open Court_, Nov. 1888.
[377] Columbus meeting of the American Medical Association, 1900.
[378] Ellen Key, _Ueber Liebe und Ehe_, p. 24.
[379] In an admirable article on Friedrich Schlegel's _Lucinde_
(_Mutterschutz_, 1906, Heft 5), Heinrich Meyer-Benfey, in pointing out
that the Catholic sacramental conception of marriage licensed love, but
failed to elevate it, regards _Lucinde_, with all its defects, as the
first expression of the unity of the senses and the soul, and, as such,
the basis of the new ethics of love. It must, however, be said that four
hundred years earlier Pontano had expressed this same erotic unity far
more robustly and wholesomely than Schlegel, though the Latin verse in
which he wrote, fresh and vital as it is, remained without influence.
Pontano's _Carmina_, including the "De Amore Conjugali," have at length
been reprinted in a scholarly edition by Soldati.
[380] From the thirteenth to the seventeenth centuries Ovid was, in
reality, the most popular and influential classic poet. His works played a
large part in moulding Renaissance literature, not least in England, where
Marlowe translated his _Amores_, and Shakespeare, during the early years
of his literary activity, was greatly indebted to him (see, e.g., Sidney
Lee, "Ovid and Shakespeare's Sonnets," _Quarterly Review_, Ap., 1909).
[381] This has already been discussed in Chapter II.
[382] By the age of twenty-five, as G. Hirth remarks (_Wege zur Heimat_,
p. 541), an energetic and sexually disposed man in a large city has, for
the most part, already had relations with some twenty-five women, perhaps
even as many as fifty, while a well-bred and cultivated woman at that age
is still only beginning to realize the slowly summating excitations of
sex.
[383] In his study of "Conjugal Aversion" (_Journal Nervous and Mental
Disease_, Sept., 1892) Smith Baker points out the value of adequate sexual
knowledge before marriage in lessening the risks of such aversion.
[384] "It may be said to the honor of men," Adler truly remarks (op. cit.,
p. 182), "that it is perhaps not often their conscious brutality that is
at fault in this matter, but merely lack of skill and lack of
understanding. The husband who is not specially endowed by nature and
experience for psychic intercourse with women, is not likely, through his
earlier intercourse with Venus vulgivaga, to bring into marriage any
useful knowledge, psychic or physical."
[385] "The first night," writes a correspondent concerning his marriage,
"she found the act very painful and was frightened and surprised at the
size of my penis, and at my suddenly getting on her. We had talked very
openly about sex things before marriage, and it never occurred to me that
she was ignorant of the details of the act. I imagined it would disgust
her to talk about these things; but I now see I should have explained
things to her. Before marrying I had come to the conclusion that the
respect owed to one's wife was incompatible with any talk that might seem
indecent, and also I had made a resolve not to subject her to what I
thought then were dirty tricks, even to be naked and to have her naked. In
fact, I was the victim of mock modesty; it was an artificial reaction from
the life I had been living before marriage. Now it seems to me to be
natural, if you love a woman, to do whatever occurs to you and to her. If
I had not felt it wrong to encourage such acts between us, there might
have been established a sexual sympathy which would have bound me more
closely to her."
[386] Montaigne, _Essais_, Bk. iii, Ch. V. It is a significant fact that,
even in the matter of information, women, notwithstanding much ignorance
and inexperience, are often better equipped for marriage than men. As
Fürbringer remarks (Senator and Kaminer, _Health and Disease in Relation
to Marriage_, vol. i, p. 212), although the wife is usually more chaste at
marriage than the husband, yet "she is generally the better informed
partner in matters pertaining to the married state, in spite of occasional
astonishing confessions."
[387] "She never loses her self-respect nor my respect for her," a man
writes in a letter, "simply because we are desperately in love with one
another, and everything we do--some of which the lowest prostitute might
refuse to do--seems but one attempt after another to translate our passion
into action. I never realized before, not that to the pure all things are
pure, indeed, but that to the lover nothing is indecent. Yes, I have
always felt it, to love her is a liberal education." It is obviously only
the existence of such an attitude as this that can enable a pure woman to
be passionate.
[388] "To be really understood," as Rafford Pyke well says, "to say what
she likes, to utter her innermost thoughts in her own way, to cast aside
the traditional conventions that gall her and repress her, to have someone
near her with whom she can be quite frank, and yet to know that not a
syllable of what she says will be misinterpreted or mistaken, but rather
felt just as she feels it all--how wonderfully sweet is this to every
woman, and how few men are there who can give it to her!"
[389] In more recent times it has been discussed in relation to the
frequency of spontaneous nocturnal emissions. See "The Phenomena of Sexual
Periodicity," Sect. II, in volume i of these _Studies_, and cf. Mr.
Perry-Coste's remarks on "The Annual Rhythm," in Appendix B of the same
volume.
[390] See "The Sexual Impulse in Women," vol. iii of these _Studies_.
[391] Zenobia's practice is referred to by Gibbon, _Decline and Fall_, ed.
Bury, vol. i, p. 302. The Queen of Aragon's decision is recorded by the
Montpellier jurist, Nicolas Bohier (Boerius) in his _Decisiones_, etc.,
ed. of 1579, p. 563; it is referred to by Montaigne, _Essais_, Bk. iii,
Ch. V.
[392] Haller, _Elementa Physiologiæ_, 1778, vol. vii, p. 57.
[393] Hammond, _Sexual Impotence_, p. 129.
[394] Fürbringer, Senator and Kaminer, _Health and Disease in Relation to
Marriage_, vol. i, p. 221.
[395] Forel, _Die Sexuelle Frage_, p. 80.
[396] Guyot, _Bréviaire de l'Amour Expérimental_, p. 144.
[397] Erb, Ziemssen's _Handbuch_, Bd. xi, ii, p. 148. Guttceit also
considered that the very wide variations found are congenital and natural.
It may be added that some believe that there are racial variations. Thus
it has been stated that the genital force of the Englishman is low, and
that of the Frenchman (especially Provençal, Languedocian, and Gascon)
high, while Löwenfeld believes that the Germanic race excels the French in
aptitude to repeat the sex act frequently. It is probable that little
weight attaches to these opinions, and that the chief differences are
individual rather than racial.
[398] Ribbing, _L'Hygiène Sexualle_, p. 75. Kisch, in his _Sexual Life of
Woman_, expresses the same opinion.
[399] Mohammed, who often displayed a consideration for women very rare in
the founders of religions, is an exception. His prescription of once a
week represented the right of the wife, quite independently of the number
of wives a man might possess.
[400] How fragile the claim of "conjugal rights" is, may be sufficiently
proved by the fact that it is now considered by many that the very term
"conjugal rights" arose merely by a mistake for "conjugal rites." Before
1733, when legal proceedings were in Latin, the term used was _obsequies_,
and "rights," instead of "rites," seems to have been merely a typesetter's
error (see _Notes and Queries_, May 16, 1891; May 6, 1899). This
explanation, it should be added, only applies to the consecrated term, for
there can be no doubt that the underlying idea has an existence quite
independent of the term.
[401] "In most marriages that are not happy," it is said in Rafford Pyke's
thoughtful paper on "Husbands and Wives" (_Cosmopolitan_, 1902), "it is
the wife rather than the husband who is oftenest disappointed."
[402] See "Analysis of the Sexual Impulse," in vol. iii of these
_Studies_.
[403] It is well recognized by erotic writers, however, that women may
sometimes take a comparatively active part. Thus Vatsyayana says that
sometimes the woman may take the man's position, and with flowers in her
hair and smiles mixed with sighs and bent head, caressing him and pressing
her breasts against him, say: "You have been my conqueror; it is my turn
to make you cry for mercy."
[404] Thus among the Swahili it is on the third day after marriage that
the bridegroom is allowed, by custom, to complete defloration, according
to Zache, _Zeitschrift für Ethnologie_, 1899, II-III, p. 84.
[405] _De l'Amour_, vol. ii, p. 57.
[406] Robert Michels, "Brautstandsmoral," _Geschlecht und Gesellschaft_,
Jahrgang I, Heft 12.
[407] I may refer once more to the facts brought together in volume iii of
these _Studies_, "The Analysis of the Sexual Impulse."
[408] This has been pointed out, for instance, by Rutgers, "Sexuelle
Differenzierung," _Die Neue Generation_, Dec., 1908.
[409] Thus, among the Eskimo, who practice temporary wife-exchange,
Rasmussen states that "a man generally discovers that his own wife is, in
spite of all, the best."
[410] "I have always held with the late Professor Laycock," remarks
Clouston (_Hygiene of Mind_, p. 214), "who was a very subtle student of
human nature, that a married couple need not be always together to be
happy, and that in fact reasonable absences and partings tend towards
ultimate and closer union." That the prolongation of passion is only
compatible with absence scarcely needs pointing out; as Mary
Wollstonecraft long since said (_Rights of Woman_, original ed., p. 61),
it is only in absence or in misfortune that passion is durable. It may be
added, however, that in her love-letters to Imlay she wrote: "I have ever
declared that two people who mean to live together ought not to be long
separated."
[411] "Viewed broadly," says Arnold L. Gesell, in his interesting study of
"Jealousy" (_American Journal of Psychology_, Oct., 1906), "jealousy seems
such a necessary psychological accompaniment to biological behavior,
amidst competitive struggle, that one is tempted to consider it
genetically among the oldest of the emotions, synonymous almost with the
will to live, and to make it scarcely less fundamental than fear or anger.
In fact, jealousy readily passes into anger, and is itself a brand of
fear.... In sociability and mutual aid we see the other side of the
shield; but jealousy, however anti-social it may be, retains a function in
zoölogical economy: viz., to conserve the individual as against the group.
It is Nature's great corrective for the purely social emotions."
[412] Many illustrations are brought together in Gesell's study of
"Jealousy."
[413] Jealousy among lower races may be disguised or modified by tribal
customs. Thus Rasmussen (_People of the Polar North_, p. 65) says in
reference to the Eskimo custom of wife-exchange: "A man once told me that
he only beat his wife when she would not receive other men. She would have
nothing to do with anyone but him--and that was her only failing!"
Rasmussen elsewhere shows that the Eskimo are capable of extreme jealousy.
[414] See, e.g., Moll, _Sexualleben des Kindes_, p. 158; cf., Gesell's
"Study of Jealousy."
[415] Jealousy is notoriously common among drunkards. As K. Birnbaum
points out ("Das Sexualleben der Alkokolisten," _Sexual-Probleme_, Jan.,
1909), this jealousy is, in most cases, more or less well-founded, for the
wife, disgusted with her husband, naturally seeks sympathy and
companionship elsewhere. Alcoholic jealousy, however, goes far beyond its
basis of support in fact, and is entangled with delusions and
hallucinations. (See e.g., G. Dumas, "La Logique d'un Dément," _Revue
Philosophique_, Feb., 1908; also Stefanowski, "Morbid Jealousy," _Alienist
and Neurologist_, July, 1893.)
[416] Ellen Key, _Ueber Liebe und Ehe_, p. 335.
[417] Schrempf points out ("Von Stella zu Klärchen," _Mutterschutz_, 1906,
Heft 7, p. 264) that Goethe strove to show in _Egmont_ that a woman is
repelled by the love of a man who knows nothing beyond his love to her,
and that it is easy for her to devote herself to the man whose aims lie in
the larger world beyond herself. There is profound truth in this view.
[418] A discussion on "Platonic friendship" of this kind by several
writers, mostly women, whose opinions were nearly equally divided, may be
found, for instance, in the _Lady's Realm_, March, 1900.
[419] There are no doubt important exceptions. Thus Mérimée's famous
friendship with Mlle. Jenny Dacquin, enshrined in the _Lettres à une
Inconnue_, was perhaps Platonic throughout on Mérimée's side, Mlle.
Dacquin adapting herself to his attitude. Cf. A. Lefebvre, _La Célèbre
Inconnue de Mérimée_, 1908.
[420] The love-letters of all these distinguished persons have been
published. Rosa Mayreder (_Zur Kritik der Weiblichkeit_, pp. 229 _et
seq._) discusses the question of the humble and absolute manner in which
even men of the most masculine and impetuous genius abandon themselves to
the inspiration of the beloved woman. The case of the Brownings, who have
been termed "the hero and heroine of the most wonderful love-story that
the world knows of," is specially notable; (Ellen Key has written of the
Brownings from this point of view in _Menschen_, and reference may be made
to an article on the Brownings' love-letters in the _Edinburgh Review_,
April, 1899). It is scarcely necessary to add that an erotic relationship
may mean very much to persons of high intellectual ability, even when its
issue is not happy; of Mary Wollstonecraft, one of the most intellectually
distinguished of women, it may be said that the letters which enshrine her
love to the worthless Imlay are among the most passionate and pathetic
love-letters in English.
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