Is it possible for a person to be
entirely naturalized? that is, to be denationalized,
to cast off the prejudice and traditions of one country
and take up those of another; to give up what may be
called the instinctive tendencies of one race and
take up those of another. It is easy enough to
swear off allegiance to a sovereign or a government,
and to take on in intention new political obligations,
but to separate one’s self from the sympathies
into which he was born is quite another affair.
One is likely to remain in the inmost recesses of his
heart an alien, and as a final expression of his feeling
to hoist the green flag, or the dragon, or the cross
of St. George. Probably no other sentiment is,
so strong in a man as that of attachment to his own
soil and people, a sub-sentiment always remaining,
whatever new and unbreakable attachments he may form.
One can be very proud of his adopted country, and brag
for it, and fight for it; but lying deep in a man’s
nature is something, no doubt, that no oath nor material
interest can change, and that is never naturalized.
We see this experiment in America more than anywhere
else, because here meet more different races than
anywhere else with the serious intention of changing
their nationality. And we have a notion that
there is something in our atmosphere, or opportunities,
or our government, that makes this change more natural
and reasonable than it has been anywhere else in history.
It is always a surprise to us when a born citizen
of the United States changes his allegiance, but it
seems a thing of course that a person of any other
country should, by an oath, become a good American,
and we expect that the act will work a sudden change
in him equal to that wrought in a man by what used
to be called a conviction of sin. We expect that
he will not only come into our family, but that he
will at once assume all its traditions and dislikes,
that whatever may have been his institutions or his
race quarrels, the moving influence of his life hereafter
will be the “Spirit of ’76.”
What is this naturalization, however,
but a sort of parable of human life? Are we not
always trying to adjust ourselves to new relations,
to get naturalized into a new family? Does one
ever do it entirely? And how much of the lonesomeness
of life comes from the failure to do it! It is
a tremendous experiment, we all admit, to separate
a person from his race, from his country, from his
climate, and the habits of his part of the country,
by marriage; it is only an experiment differing in
degree to introduce him by marriage into a new circle
of kinsfolk. Is he ever anything but a sort of
tolerated, criticised, or admired alien? Does
the time ever come when the distinction ceases between
his family and hers? They say love is stronger
than death. It may also be stronger than family while
it lasts; but was there ever a woman yet whose most
ineradicable feeling was not the sentiment of family
and blood, a sort of base-line in life upon which
trouble and disaster always throw her back? Does
she ever lose the instinct of it? We used to say
in jest that a patriotic man was always willing to
sacrifice his wife’s relations in war; but his
wife took a different view of it; and when it becomes
a question of office, is it not the wife’s relations
who get them? To be sure, Ruth said, thy people
shall be my people, and where thou goest I will go,
and all that, and this beautiful sentiment has touched
all time, and man has got the historic notion that
he is the head of things. But is it true that
a woman is ever really naturalized? Is it in her
nature to be? Love will carry her a great way,
and to far countries, and to many endurances,
and her capacity of self-sacrifice is greater than
man’s; but would she ever be entirely happy
torn from her kindred, transplanted from the associations
and interlacings of her family life? Does anything
really take the place of that entire ease and confidence
that one has in kin, or the inborn longing for their
sympathy and society? There are two theories
about life, as about naturalization: one is that
love is enough, that intention is enough; the other
is that the whole circle of human relations and attachments
is to be considered in a marriage, and that in the
long-run the question of family is a preponderating
one. Does the gate of divorce open more frequently
from following the one theory than the other?
If we were to adopt the notion that marriage is really
a tremendous act of naturalization, of absolute surrender
on one side or the other of the deepest sentiments
and hereditary tendencies, would there be so many
hasty marriages slip-knots tied by one justice
to be undone by another? The Drawer did not intend
to start such a deep question as this. Hosts
of people are yearly naturalized in this country,
not from any love of its institutions, but because
they can more easily get a living here, and they really
surrender none of their hereditary ideas, and it is
only human nature that marriages should be made with
like purpose and like reservations. These reservations
do not, however, make the best citizens or the most
happy marriages. Would it be any better if country
lines were obliterated, and the great brotherhood of
peoples were established, and there was no such thing
as patriotism or family, and marriage were as free
to make and unmake as some people think it should
be? Very likely, if we could radically change
human nature. But human nature is the most obstinate
thing that the International Conventions have to deal
with.