Part 7 (1/2)
_K._ 'It must have been a painful experience, but one gets accustomed to these tragedies, one hears of so many. There is always one who wants to be free, and one to remain bound.'
_M._ 'Yes; and the unwritten tradition that it is a matter of honour never to seek to hold an unwilling partner quite negatives the law that a marriage can only terminate when both parties desire it.'
_K._ 'I'm sure the tragedies of parting one hears of nowadays are far worse than the occasional tragedies in the old days, caused by being bound, and ever so much more frequent.'
_M._ 'It wouldn't be such an irony if _anyone_ were benefited, but as far as I can see the men suffer nearly as much as the women, especially when they are old. According to our early century newspapers, an old bachelor or widower could always get a young and charming wife, but now n.o.body will marry an elderly man, except the old ladies, and the men don't want them.'
_K._ 'It's a pity they don't, that would solve a lot of the unhappiness one sees around. It must be awful to be deserted in one's old age.'
_M._ 'Talking about the old newspapers, it's very amusing to read them in the British Museum, and see what wonderful things were expected of the leasehold marriage system when it was first legalised. All the abuses of the old system were to disappear: divorce, adultery, prost.i.tution, and seduction--all the social evils were to go in one clean sweep.'
_K._ 'How absurdly shortsighted people were then. Divorce is abolished, it's true, but the scandals and misery, broken hearts and broken homes that it caused are now multiplied a thousand times. Infidelity may be less frequent, but if people have the wish and the opportunity for it they're not likely to wait for a certain number of years, until it ceases to be technically a sin. The same with the other evils. There will always be a large number of men who postpone marriage for financial or other reasons, and a large number of women who can only earn a living in one way--the oldest profession in the world will always be kept going! Seduction, too, is not likely to cease as long as the law is so lenient to it. There will always be ignorant, silly, unprotected girls and always men to take advantage of them.'
_M._ 'There seem to be just as many elderly spinsters, too, as before; the women who don't attract men remain the same under any system, and often they are the best women.'
_K._ 'How strange it must be _never to have had a husband!_'
_M._ 'It must be peaceful, at anyrate; but spinsters don't look any happier than married women.'
_K._ 'I can only see one good result of the leasehold system--that women are as anxious for motherhood now as in the early century they were anxious to avoid it. We grow old with the fear of almost certain desertion and loneliness before us, and the one hope for our old age is our children----Oh! I am sorry, I forgot you had none.'
_M._ 'Never mind, I often think of it, and whenever Jack admires or pays attention to another woman, I am in terror for fear he has found a fresh attraction and may want to leave me. What stuff they used to write formerly about the necessity for love being free. As if freedom were such a glorious thing! Why, we are all slaves to some convention or pa.s.sion or theory; none of us are free, really free, and we wouldn't like it if we were. It may be all very well for the fantastic love of novels to be free, but that strange _need of each other_, which we call ”love” in real life, for want of a better term--_that_ must be forged into a bond, or what help is it to us poor vacillating mortals? Love must be an Anchor in real life--nothing else is any use!'
III
THE FIASCO OF FREE LOVE
'The ultimate standards by which all men judge of behaviour is the resulting happiness or misery.'
'Conduct whose total results, immediate and remote, are injurious is bad conduct.' --HERBERT SPENCER.
Free love has been called the most dangerous and delusive of all marriage schemes. It is based on a wholly impossible standard of ethics.
Theoretically, it is the ideal union between the s.e.xes, but it will only become practical when men and women have morally advanced out of all recognition. When people are all faithful, constant, pure-minded, and utterly unselfish, free marriage may be worth considering. Even then, there would be no chance for the ill-favoured and unattractive.
Under present conditions no couple living _openly_ in free love is known to have made a success of it--a solid, permanent success, that is.
I believe there are couples who live happily together without any more durable bond than their mutual affection, but they wisely a.s.sume the respectable shelter of the wedding ring, and call themselves Mr and Mrs.
Thus their little fledgling of free love is not required to battle against the overwhelming force of social ostracism. And moreover one has no means of knowing how long these unions stand the supreme test of time. The two notable modern instances of free love that naturally rise to the mind are George Eliot and Mary G.o.dwin. But both the men with whom they mated were already married. As soon as Harriet was dead, Mary G.o.dwin married Sh.e.l.ley, and when George Lewes had pa.s.sed away, George Eliot married another man--an act which most people consider far less pardonable in the circ.u.mstances than her irregular union with Lewes.
Even the famous Perfectionists of Oneida relapsed into ordinary marriage on the death of their leader, Noyes, and by his own wish.
As an inst.i.tution, free love seems widely practised in the East End of London, but judging by the evidence of the police courts its results are certainly not encouraging. I am told that the practice is common among the cotton operatives of Lancas.h.i.+re. The _collage_ system is also very prevalent in France among the working cla.s.ses, and seems to answer well enough. But only when women have the ability and the opportunity to support themselves is free marriage at all feasible from the economic standpoint, and even then there remains the serious question of illegitimacy. All right-minded persons must acknowledge that the att.i.tude of society towards the illegitimate is unjust and cruel in the extreme, resulting as it does in punis.h.i.+ng the perfectly innocent. But every grown man and woman is aware of this att.i.tude, and those who act in defiance of it, to please themselves or to satisfy some whim of experiment, do so in the full knowledge that on their child will fall a certain burden of lifelong disadvantage. Many perhaps are deterred from breaking the moral law by this knowledge, but the number of illegitimates born in England and Wales in 1905 was 37,300; and, in the interests of these unfortunate victims of others' selfishness, I think it is high time a more kindly and broad-minded att.i.tude towards their social disability was adopted.
I remember as a young girl going to see a play called _A Bunch of Violets_. The heroine discovers that her husband's previous wife is alive and that her child is therefore illegitimate. She tells her daughter to choose between the parents, explaining the worldly advantages of staying with her rich, influential father. The harangue concludes with words to the effect: 'With me you will be poor and shamed, and _you can never marry_.' Doubtless this ridiculous point of view was adopted solely for the benefit of the young girls in the audience, but its unreasonableness disgusted me for one. Even to the limited intelligence of seventeen it is obvious that, since a name is of so much importance in life, an illegitimate girl had better marry as quickly as she possibly can, in order to obtain one!
Free love has recently been much discussed in connection with socialism, and, thanks no doubt to the misrepresentations of certain newspapers, the idea seems to have gained ground that the abolition of marriage and the subst.i.tution of free love was part of the socialist programme.