THE
WIFE
Girls marry, in the final analysis,
because love for the male is an innate natural principle
of the female nature. At its best this love is
pure and chaste. The good woman realizes that
its first purpose is not mere carnal pleasure.
It is a special avowal of the wife’s relations
to her husband, and its natural as well as moral end
is the establishment of the family on the basis of
a healthy progeny.
BEFORE
MARRIAGE
The wife-to-be, like her prospective
husband, will be well advised to ask for a medical
health certificate. No man, no matter how good
his reputation may be, should marry (on his own account
as well as that of the girl) without thorough examination
by a physician. The consequences of venereal
infection administered to unborn children by their
parents are too horrible to allow of any risk being
taken. Another bit of advice, which cannot be
too highly commended, is that the prospective husband
and wife, before they marry, have a plain talk with
each other regarding individual sexual peculiarities
and needs. A heart-to-heart talk of this kind
would be apt to prevent great disappointments and
incompatibilities which otherwise may become permanent.
THE WIFE AND
HER POSITION
The natural instinct of a man is to
seek his mate. On her he depends for an orderly
and lawful indulgence of his sex demands. The
greatest longevity and best health are to be found
among happily married fathers and mothers. No
young woman should marry without a full knowledge
of her sex duties to her husband. And she should
never consummate the marriage vow grudgingly.
CHILDBIRTH
HYGIENE
Childbirth is the natural consequence
of marriage. Its processes have already been
explained in Chapter II of this book. There are,
however, some hygienic facts in connection with it
which should be noted. Once pregnancy is established,
as soon as the fact is suspected, the mother-to-be
should look on the little embryo as already a member
of the family. Every act of each parent should
now be performed (at least to some degree) with reference
to the forthcoming infant. The mother’s
thoughts should be directed to it as much as possible.
Mentally she should read literature of a lofty and
ennobling character. The theory is that this
serves a good purpose in producing a more perfect,
healthy and intelligent child. Physically, she
should take plenty of active exercise during gestation.
Active exercise does not, of course, mean violent
exercise. And she should use a “Health Lift.”
During this time she should subsist as far as possible
on a farinaceous diet, fruits and vegetables.
The foods should be plainly cooked, without spices.
If all else is as it should be, the birth of the child
at the end of the customary nine months will be attended
by comparatively little pain and danger.
HOW OFTEN SHOULD CHILDBIRTH
TAKE PLACE?
It is most important that the childbearing
wife and mother have a long period of rest between
births. At least one year should separate a birth
and the conception following it. This means that
about two years should elapse between two births.
If this rule be followed, the wife will retain her
health, and her children will also be healthy.
It is far better to give birth to seven children,
who will live and be healthy, than to bear fourteen,
of whom seven are likely to die, while the numerous
successive births wear out and age the unfortunate
mother.
MATRIMONIAL
ADJUSTMENT
The above paragraph deals with one
detail of what might be called “matrimonial
adjustment.” This adjustment or compromise
is a feature of all successful marriages. The
individual cravings of husband and wife must be reconciled
by mutual good will and forbearance if they are to
be happy. Attention should be paid in particular
to not allowing habit, “the worst foe of married
happiness,” to become too well established in
the home, and to cultivate that love and affection
which survives the decline of the sexual faculties.
THE IDEAL
MARRIAGE
The ideal marriage is the one in which
affection combines to bring happiness to both partners
in a sane union of sex and soul. As one commentator
has rather unhappily expressed it: “When
married the battle for one united and harmonious
life really begins!” It is, indeed, but too
often a battle! Forbearance, consideration
and respect must be the foundation on which the ideal
married state is built. The husband should realize
that his wife’s love for him induces her to
allow privileges of a personal nature which her innate
chastity and timidity might otherwise refuse.
In return, he should accept these privileges with
consideration. He should, in particular, on his
wedding night, take care not to shock his young bride’s
sensibilities. He may easily give her a shock
from which she will not recover for years, and lead
her to form an antipathy against the very act which
is “the bond and seal of a truly happy married
life.”
BIRTH
CONTROL
Material changes have taken place
in the birth-rate of a number of countries during
the past fifteen or twenty years which cannot be attributed
to purely economic causes. They do not seem to
depend on such things as trade, employment and prices;
but on the spread of an idea or influence whose tendency
must be deplored, that of “birth control,”
a phrase much heard in these days.
The fact that a decline in human fertility
and a falling birth rate are most noticeable in the
relatively prosperous countries is a proof that it
does not proceed from economic causes; but is due rather
to the spread of the doctrine that it is permissible
to restrict or control birth. In such countries
as the United States, England and Australasia, where
the standards of human comfort and living are notoriously
high, the decline in the birth rate has been most
noticeable. On the other hand, we find perhaps
the greatest decline in the birth rate in France,
a country where the general well-being probably reaches
a lower depth in the community than in any other part
of Europe. A comparison of the birth rates of
France and of Ireland, for example, offer a valuable
illustration of the point under consideration.
In France, more than half the women who have reached
the age of nubility are married; in Ireland, generally
speaking, less than a third. In both countries
the crude birth rate is far below that in other European
lands. Yet the fertility of the Irish wife exceeded
that of her French compeer by 44 per cent in 1880,
and by no less than 84 per cent in 1900. And
since that time the prolificity of the Irish mother
has so increased that she is now, approximately speaking,
inferior only to the Dutch or Finnish mother in this
respect.
In general, in any country where we
find a diminished prolificity a falling off of childbirth
unaccompanied by a decrease in the number of
marriages occurring at the reproductive ages, we may
attribute this decrease to voluntary restriction
of childbearing on the part of the married, or
in other words, to the prevalence of “birth control.”
This incidentally, is not a theoretical statement,
but one supported by the almost unanimous medical
opinion in all countries. Everywhere and especially
here in our own United States, we find evidence of
the extensive employ of “birth control”
measures to prevent that normal development of family
life which underlies the vigor and racial power of
every nation. These preventive measures which
arbitrarily control human birth had long been in use
in France with results which, especially since the
war, have been frequently and publicly deplored in
the press, and have led the French Government to offer
substantial rewards to encourage the propagation of
large families. From France the preventive practices
of “birth control” had spread, after 1870,
over nearly all the countries of western Europe, to
England and to the United States; though they are
not as much apparent in those countries where the
Roman Church has a strong hold on the people.
As a general thing, the practice of
thus unnaturally limiting families “unnaturally”
since the custom of “birth control” derives
from no natural, physical law prevails,
in the first instance, among the well-to-do, who should
rather be the first to set the example of protest
against it by having the families they are so much
better able to support and educate than those less
favored with the world’s goods. If the
evil of voluntary control of human birth were restricted
to a privileged class, say one of wealth, the harm
done would, perhaps, not be so great. But, unfortunately,
in the course of time it filters down as a “gospel
of comfort” erroneous term! to
those whose resources are less. They accept and
practice this invidious system of prevention and gradually
the entire community is more or less affected.
The whole system of “birth control”
is opposed to natural, human and religious law.
Nature, in none of her manifestations, introduces
anything which may tend to prevent her great reason
for being the propagation of the species.
Birth as the natural sequence of mating is her solemn
and invariable law. It is in birth and rebirth
that nature renews herself and all the life of the
animal and vegetable world, and her primal aim is
to encourage it. Human law recognizes this underlying
law of nature by forbidding man to tamper in a preventive
way with her hallowed and mysterious processes for
perpetuating the human race. Religious law, based
on the divine dispensation of the Scriptures, indorses
the law of nature and that of the state.
We may take it, then, that “birth
control” represents a deliberate and reprehensible
attempt to nullify those innate laws of reproduction
sanctioned by religion, tradition and man’s own
ingrained instinct. To say that the human instinct
for the perpetuation of his race and family has become
atrophied during the flight of time, and that he is
therefore justified in denying it, is merely begging
the question. The instinct may be denied, just
as other higher and nobler instincts are disregarded;
but its validity cannot be questioned. Whether
those who practice “birth control” are
influenced by economic, selfishly personal or other
reasons, they are offending in a threefold manner:
against the inborn wish and desire which is a priceless
possession of even the least of God’s creatures,
that of living anew in its offspring; against the
law of the state, which after all, stands for the
crystallization of the best feeling of the community;
and against the divine injunction handed down to us
in Holy Writ, to “increase and multiply.”
“Birth control” is the
foe to the direct end and aim of marriage, which,
in the last analysis, is childbirth. As an enemy
to the procreation of children it is an enemy of the
family and the family group. As an enemy of the
family, it is an enemy of the state, the community,
a foe to the whole social system. Mankind has
been able to attain its comparatively recent state
of moral and physical advancement without having recourse
to the dangerous principle which “birth control”
represents. Surely that wise provision of our
existing legal code which makes the printing or dissemination
of information regarding the physical facts of “birth
control” illegal and punishable as an offense,
can only be approved by those who respect the Omnipotent
will, and the time-hallowed traditions which date back
to the very inception of the race.