There are many people in every community
who have not felt the “social compunction,”
who do not share the effort toward a higher social
morality, who are even unable to sympathetically interpret
it. Some of these have been shielded from the
inevitable and salutary failures which the trial of
new powers involve, because they are content to attain
standards of virtue demanded by an easy public opinion,
and others of them have exhausted their moral energy
in attaining to the current standard of individual
and family righteousness.
Such people, who form the bulk of
contented society, demand that the radical, the reformer,
shall be without stain or question in his personal
and family relations, and judge most harshly any deviation
from the established standards. There is a certain
justice in this: it expresses the inherent conservatism
of the mass of men, that none of the established virtues
which have been so slowly and hardly acquired shall
be sacrificed for the sake of making problematic advance;
that the individual, in his attempt to develop and
use the new and exalted virtue, shall not fall into
the easy temptation of letting the ordinary ones slip
through his fingers.
This instinct to conserve the old
standards, combined with a distrust of the new standard,
is a constant difficulty in the way of those experiments
and advances depending upon the initiative of women,
both because women are the more sensitive to the individual
and family claims, and because their training has
tended to make them content with the response to these
claims alone.
There is no doubt that, in the effort
to sustain the moral energy necessary to work out
a more satisfactory social relation, the individual
often sacrifices the energy which should legitimately
go into the fulfilment of personal and family claims,
to what he considers the higher claim.
In considering the changes which our
increasing democracy is constantly making upon various
relationships, it is impossible to ignore the filial
relation. This chapter deals with the relation
between parents and their grown-up daughters, as affording
an explicit illustration of the perplexity and mal-adjustment
brought about by the various attempts of young women
to secure a more active share in the community life.
We constantly see parents very much disconcerted and
perplexed in regard to their daughters when these
daughters undertake work lying quite outside of traditional
and family interests. These parents insist that
the girl is carried away by a foolish enthusiasm,
that she is in search of a career, that she is restless
and does not know what she wants. They will give
any reason, almost, rather than the recognition of
a genuine and dignified claim. Possibly all this
is due to the fact that for so many hundreds of years
women have had no larger interests, no participation
in the affairs lying quite outside personal and family
claims. Any attempt that the individual woman
formerly made to subordinate or renounce the family
claim was inevitably construed to mean that she was
setting up her own will against that of her family’s
for selfish ends. It was concluded that she could
have no motive larger than a desire to serve her family,
and her attempt to break away must therefore be wilful
and self-indulgent.
The family logically consented to
give her up at her marriage, when she was enlarging
the family tie by founding another family. It
was easy to understand that they permitted and even
promoted her going to college, travelling in Europe,
or any other means of self-improvement, because these
merely meant the development and cultivation of one
of its own members. When, however, she responded
to her impulse to fulfil the social or democratic
claim, she violated every tradition.
The mind of each one of us reaches
back to our first struggles as we emerged from self-willed
childhood into a recognition of family obligations.
We have all gradually learned to respond to them, and
yet most of us have had at least fleeting glimpses
of what it might be to disregard them and the elemental
claim they make upon us. We have yielded at times
to the temptation of ignoring them for selfish aims,
of considering the individual and not the family convenience,
and we remember with shame the self-pity which inevitably
followed. But just as we have learned to adjust
the personal and family claims, and to find an orderly
development impossible without recognition of both,
so perhaps we are called upon now to make a second
adjustment between the family and the social claim,
in which neither shall lose and both be ennobled.
The attempt to bring about a healing
compromise in which the two shall be adjusted in proper
relation is not an easy one. It is difficult to
distinguish between the outward act of him who in following
one legitimate claim has been led into the temporary
violation of another, and the outward act of him who
deliberately renounces a just claim and throws aside
all obligation for the sake of his own selfish and
individual development. The man, for instance,
who deserts his family that he may cultivate an artistic
sensibility, or acquire what he considers more fulness
of life for himself, must always arouse our contempt.
Breaking the marriage tie as Ibsen’s “Nora”
did, to obtain a larger self-development, or holding
to it as George Eliot’s “Romola”
did, because of the larger claim of the state and society,
must always remain two distinct paths. The collision
of interests, each of which has a real moral basis
and a right to its own place in life, is bound to be
more or less tragic. It is the struggle between
two claims, the destruction of either of which would
bring ruin to the ethical life. Curiously enough,
it is almost exactly this contradiction which is the
tragedy set forth by the Greek dramatist, who asserted
that the gods who watch over the sanctity of the family
bond must yield to the higher claims of the gods of
the state. The failure to recognize the social
claim as legitimate causes the trouble; the suspicion
constantly remains that woman’s public efforts
are merely selfish and captious, and are not directed
to the general good. This suspicion will never
be dissipated until parents, as well as daughters,
feel the democratic impulse and recognize the social
claim.
Our democracy is making inroads upon
the family, the oldest of human institutions, and
a claim is being advanced which in a certain sense
is larger than the family claim. The claim of
the state in time of war has long been recognized,
so that in its name the family has given up sons and
husbands and even the fathers of little children.
If we can once see the claims of society in any such
light, if its misery and need can be made clear and
urged as an explicit claim, as the state urges its
claims in the time of danger, then for the first time
the daughter who desires to minister to that need
will be recognized as acting conscientiously.
This recognition may easily come first through the
emotions, and may be admitted as a response to pity
and mercy long before it is formulated and perceived
by the intellect.
The family as well as the state we
are all called upon to maintain as the highest institutions
which the race has evolved for its safeguard and protection.
But merely to preserve these institutions is not enough.
There come periods of reconstruction, during which
the task is laid upon a passing generation, to enlarge
the function and carry forward the ideal of a long-established
institution. There is no doubt that many women,
consciously and unconsciously, are struggling with
this task. The family, like every other element
of human life, is susceptible of progress, and from
epoch to epoch its tendencies and aspirations are
enlarged, although its duties can never be abrogated
and its obligations can never be cancelled. It
is impossible to bring about the higher development
by any self-assertion or breaking away of the individual
will. The new growth in the plant swelling against
the sheath, which at the same time imprisons and protects
it, must still be the truest type of progress.
The family in its entirety must be carried out into
the larger life. Its various members together
must recognize and acknowledge the validity of the
social obligation. When this does not occur we
have a most flagrant example of the ill-adjustment
and misery arising when an ethical code is applied
too rigorously and too conscientiously to conditions
which are no longer the same as when the code was instituted,
and for which it was never designed. We have all
seen parental control and the family claim assert
their authority in fields of effort which belong to
the adult judgment of the child and pertain to activity
quite outside the family life. Probably the distinctively
family tragedy of which we all catch glimpses now
and then, is the assertion of this authority through
all the entanglements of wounded affection and misunderstanding.
We see parents and children acting from conscientious
motives and with the tenderest affection, yet bringing
about a misery which can scarcely be hidden.
Such glimpses remind us of that tragedy
enacted centuries ago in Assisi, when the eager young
noble cast his very clothing at his father’s
feet, dramatically renouncing his filial allegiance,
and formally subjecting the narrow family claim to
the wider and more universal duty. All the conflict
of tragedy ensued which might have been averted, had
the father recognized the higher claim, and had he
been willing to subordinate and adjust his own claim
to it. The father considered his son disrespectful
and hard-hearted, yet we know St. Francis to have been
the most tender and loving of men, responsive to all
possible ties, even to those of inanimate nature.
We know that by his affections he freed the frozen
life of his time. The elements of tragedy lay
in the narrowness of the father’s mind; in his
lack of comprehension and his lack of sympathy with
the power which was moving his son, and which was but
part of the religious revival which swept Europe from
end to end in the early part of the thirteenth century;
the same power which built the cathedrals of the North,
and produced the saints and sages of the South.
But the father’s situation was nevertheless
genuine; he felt his heart sore and angry, and his
dignity covered with disrespect. He could not,
indeed, have felt otherwise, unless he had been touched
by the fire of the same revival, and lifted out of
and away from the contemplation of himself and his
narrower claim. It is another proof that the notion
of a larger obligation can only come through the response
to an enlarged interest in life and in the social
movements around us.
The grown-up son has so long been
considered a citizen with well-defined duties and
a need of “making his way in the world,”
that the family claim is urged much less strenuously
in his case, and as a matter of authority, it ceases
gradually to be made at all. In the case of the
grown-up daughter, however, who is under no necessity
of earning a living, and who has no strong artistic
bent, taking her to Paris to study painting or to
Germany to study music, the years immediately following
her graduation from college are too often filled with
a restlessness and unhappiness which might be avoided
by a little clear thinking, and by an adaptation of
our code of family ethics to modern conditions.
It is always difficult for the family
to regard the daughter otherwise than as a family
possession. From her babyhood she has been the
charm and grace of the household, and it is hard to
think of her as an integral part of the social order,
hard to believe that she has duties outside of the
family, to the state and to society in the larger sense.
This assumption that the daughter is solely an inspiration
and refinement to the family itself and its own immediate
circle, that her delicacy and polish are but outward
symbols of her father’s protection and prosperity,
worked very smoothly for the most part so long as her
education was in line with it. When there was
absolutely no recognition of the entity of woman’s
life beyond the family, when the outside claims upon
her were still wholly unrecognized, the situation was
simple, and the finishing school harmoniously and
elegantly answered all requirements. She was
fitted to grace the fireside and to add lustre to
that social circle which her parents selected for her.
But this family assumption has been notably broken
into, and educational ideas no longer fit it.
Modern education recognizes woman quite apart from
family or society claims, and gives her the training
which for many years has been deemed successful for
highly developing a man’s individuality and
freeing his powers for independent action. Perplexities
often occur when the daughter returns from college
and finds that this recognition has been but partially
accomplished. When she attempts to act upon the
assumption of its accomplishment, she finds herself
jarring upon ideals which are so entwined with filial
piety, so rooted in the tenderest affections of which
the human heart is capable, that both daughter and
parents are shocked and startled when they discover
what is happening, and they scarcely venture to analyze
the situation. The ideal for the education of
woman has changed under the pressure of a new claim.
The family has responded to the extent of granting
the education, but they are jealous of the new claim
and assert the family claim as over against it.
The modern woman finds herself educated
to recognize a stress of social obligation which her
family did not in the least anticipate when they sent
her to college. She finds herself, in addition,
under an impulse to act her part as a citizen of the
world. She accepts her family inheritance with
loyalty and affection, but she has entered into a wider
inheritance as well, which, for lack of a better phrase,
we call the social claim. This claim has been
recognized for four years in her training, but after
her return from college the family claim is again
exclusively and strenuously asserted. The situation
has all the discomfort of transition and compromise.
The daughter finds a constant and totally unnecessary
conflict between the social and the family claims.
In most cases the former is repressed and gives way
to the family claim, because the latter is concrete
and definitely asserted, while the social demand is
vague and unformulated. In such instances the
girl quietly submits, but she feels wronged whenever
she allows her mind to dwell upon the situation.
She either hides her hurt, and splendid reserves of
enthusiasm and capacity go to waste, or her zeal and
emotions are turned inward, and the result is an unhappy
woman, whose heart is consumed by vain regrets and
desires.
If the college woman is not thus quietly
reabsorbed, she is even reproached for her discontent.
She is told to be devoted to her family, inspiring
and responsive to her social circle, and to give the
rest of her time to further self-improvement and enjoyment.
She expects to do this, and responds to these claims
to the best of her ability, even heroically sometimes.
But where is the larger life of which she has dreamed
so long? That life which surrounds and completes
the individual and family life? She has been
taught that it is her duty to share this life, and
her highest privilege to extend it. This divergence
between her self-centred existence and her best convictions
becomes constantly more apparent. But the situation
is not even so simple as a conflict between her affections
and her intellectual convictions, although even that
is tumultuous enough, also the emotional nature is
divided against itself. The social claim is a
demand upon the emotions as well as upon the intellect,
and in ignoring it she represses not only her convictions
but lowers her springs of vitality. Her life is
full of contradictions. She looks out into the
world, longing that some demand be made upon her powers,
for they are too untrained to furnish an initiative.
When her health gives way under this strain, as it
often does, her physician invariably advises a rest.
But to be put to bed and fed on milk is not what she
requires. What she needs is simple, health-giving
activity, which, involving the use of all her faculties,
shall be a response to all the claims which she so
keenly feels.
It is quite true that the family often
resents her first attempts to be part of a life quite
outside their own, because the college woman frequently
makes these first attempts most awkwardly; her faculties
have not been trained in the line of action.
She lacks the ability to apply her knowledge and theories
to life itself and to its complicated situations.
This is largely the fault of her training and of the
one-sidedness of educational methods. The colleges
have long been full of the best ethical teaching,
insisting that the good of the whole must ultimately
be the measure of effort, and that the individual can
only secure his own rights as he labors to secure
those of others. But while the teaching has included
an ever-broadening range of obligation and has insisted
upon the recognition of the claims of human brotherhood,
the training has been singularly individualistic;
it has fostered ambitions for personal distinction,
and has trained the faculties almost exclusively in
the direction of intellectual accumulation. Doubtless,
woman’s education is at fault, in that it has
failed to recognize certain needs, and has failed
to cultivate and guide the larger desires of which
all generous young hearts are full.
During the most formative years of
life, it gives the young girl no contact with the
feebleness of childhood, the pathos of suffering, or
the needs of old age. It gathers together crude
youth in contact only with each other and with mature
men and women who are there for the purpose of their
mental direction. The tenderest promptings are
bidden to bide their time. This could only be
justifiable if a definite outlet were provided when
they leave college. Doubtless the need does not
differ widely in men and women, but women not absorbed
in professional or business life, in the years immediately
following college, are baldly brought face to face
with the deficiencies of their training. Apparently
every obstacle is removed, and the college woman is
at last free to begin the active life, for which,
during so many years, she has been preparing.
But during this so-called preparation, her faculties
have been trained solely for accumulation, and she
has learned to utterly distrust the finer impulses
of her nature, which would naturally have connected
her with human interests outside of her family and
her own immediate social circle. All through
school and college the young soul dreamed of self-sacrifice,
of succor to the helpless and of tenderness to the
unfortunate. We persistently distrust these desires,
and, unless they follow well-defined lines, we repress
them with every device of convention and caution.
One summer the writer went from a
two weeks’ residence in East London, where she
had become sick and bewildered by the sights and sounds
encountered there, directly to Switzerland. She
found the beaten routes of travel filled with young
English men and women who could walk many miles a
day, and who could climb peaks so inaccessible that
the feats received honorable mention in Alpine journals,a
result which filled their families with joy and pride.
These young people knew to a nicety the proper diet
and clothing which would best contribute toward endurance.
Everything was very fine about them save their motive
power. The writer does not refer to the hard-worked
men and women who were taking a vacation, but to the
leisured young people, to whom this period was the
most serious of the year, and filled with the most
strenuous exertion. They did not, of course,
thoroughly enjoy it, for we are too complicated to
be content with mere exercise. Civilization has
bound us too closely with our brethren for any one
of us to be long happy in the cultivation of mere
individual force or in the accumulation of mere muscular
energy.
With Whitechapel constantly in mind,
it was difficult not to advise these young people
to use some of this muscular energy of which they
were so proud, in cleaning neglected alleys and paving
soggy streets. Their stores of enthusiasm might
stir to energy the listless men and women of East
London and utilize latent social forces. The exercise
would be quite as good, the need of endurance as great,
the care for proper dress and food as important; but
the motives for action would be turned from selfish
ones into social ones. Such an appeal would doubtless
be met with a certain response from the young people,
but would never be countenanced by their families
for an instant.
Fortunately a beginning has been made
in another direction, and a few parents have already
begun to consider even their little children in relation
to society as well as to the family. The young
mothers who attend “Child Study” classes
have a larger notion of parenthood and expect given
characteristics from their children, at certain ages
and under certain conditions. They quite calmly
watch the various attempts of a child to assert his
individuality, which so often takes the form of opposition
to the wishes of the family and to the rule of the
household. They recognize as acting under the
same law of development the little child of three
who persistently runs away and pretends not to hear
his mother’s voice, the boy of ten who violently,
although temporarily, resents control of any sort,
and the grown-up son who, by an individualized and
trained personality, is drawn into pursuits and interests
quite alien to those of his family.
This attempt to take the parental
relation somewhat away from mere personal experience,
as well as the increasing tendency of parents to share
their children’s pursuits and interests, will
doubtless finally result in a better understanding
of the social obligation. The understanding,
which results from identity of interests, would seem
to confirm the conviction that in the complicated
life of to-day there is no education so admirable
as that education which comes from participation in
the constant trend of events. There is no doubt
that most of the misunderstandings of life are due
to partial intelligence, because our experiences have
been so unlike that we cannot comprehend each other.
The old difficulties incident to the clash of two codes
of morals must drop away, as the experiences of various
members of the family become larger and more identical.
At the present moment, however, many
of those difficulties still exist and may be seen
all about us. In order to illustrate the situation
baldly, and at the same time to put it dramatically,
it may be well to take an instance concerning which
we have no personal feeling. The tragedy of King
Lear has been selected, although we have been accustomed
so long to give him our sympathy as the victim of the
ingratitude of his two older daughters, and of the
apparent coldness of Cordelia, that we have not sufficiently
considered the weakness of his fatherhood, revealed
by the fact that he should get himself into so entangled
and unhappy a relation to all of his children.
In our pity for Lear, we fail to analyze his character.
The King on his throne exhibits utter lack of self-control.
The King in the storm gives way to the same emotion,
in repining over the wickedness of his children, which
he formerly exhibited in his indulgent treatment of
them.
It might be illuminating to discover
wherein he had failed, and why his old age found him
roofless in spite of the fact that he strenuously
urged the family claim with his whole conscience.
At the opening of the drama he sat upon his throne,
ready for the enjoyment which an indulgent parent
expects when he has given gifts to his children.
From the two elder, the responses for the division
of his lands were graceful and fitting, but he longed
to hear what Cordelia, his youngest and best beloved
child, would say. He looked toward her expectantly,
but instead of delight and gratitude there was the
first dawn of character. Cordelia made the awkward
attempt of an untrained soul to be honest and scrupulously
to express her inmost feeling. The king was baffled
and distressed by this attempt at self-expression.
It was new to him that his daughter should be moved
by a principle obtained outside himself, which even
his imagination could not follow; that she had caught
the notion of an existence in which her relation as
a daughter played but a part. She was transformed
by a dignity which recast her speech and made it self-contained.
She found herself in the sweep of a feeling so large
that the immediate loss of a kingdom seemed of little
consequence to her. Even an act which might be
construed as disrespect to her father was justified
in her eyes, because she was vainly striving to fill
out this larger conception of duty. The test
which comes sooner or later to many parents had come
to Lear, to maintain the tenderness of the relation
between father and child, after that relation had become
one between adults, to be content with the responses
made by the adult child to the family claim, while
at the same time she responded to the claims of the
rest of life. The mind of Lear was not big enough
for this test; he failed to see anything but the personal
slight involved, and the ingratitude alone reached
him. It was impossible for him to calmly watch
his child developing beyond the stretch of his own
mind and sympathy.
That a man should be so absorbed in
his own indignation as to fail to apprehend his child’s
thought, that he should lose his affection in his
anger, simply reveals the fact that his own emotions
are dearer to him than his sense of paternal obligation.
Lear apparently also ignored the common ancestry of
Cordelia and himself, and forgot her royal inheritance
of magnanimity. He had thought of himself so long
as a noble and indulgent father that he had lost the
faculty by which he might perceive himself in the
wrong. Even in the midst of the storm he declared
himself more sinned against than sinning. He could
believe any amount of kindness and goodness of himself,
but could imagine no fidelity on the part of Cordelia
unless she gave him the sign he demanded.
At length he suffered many hardships;
his spirit was buffeted and broken; he lost his reason
as well as his kingdom; but for the first time his
experience was identical with the experience of the
men around him, and he came to a larger conception
of life. He put himself in the place of “the
poor naked wretches,” and unexpectedly found
healing and comfort. He took poor Tim in his
arms from a sheer desire for human contact and animal
warmth, a primitive and genuine need, through which
he suddenly had a view of the world which he had never
had from his throne, and from this moment his heart
began to turn toward Cordelia.
In reading the tragedy of King Lear,
Cordelia receives a full share of our censure.
Her first words are cold, and we are shocked by her
lack of tenderness. Why should she ignore her
father’s need for indulgence, and be unwilling
to give him what he so obviously craved? We see
in the old king “the over-mastering desire of
being beloved, selfish, and yet characteristic of
the selfishness of a loving and kindly nature alone.”
His eagerness produces in us a strange pity for him,
and we are impatient that his youngest and best-beloved
child cannot feel this, even in the midst of her search
for truth and her newly acquired sense of a higher
duty. It seems to us a narrow conception that
would break thus abruptly with the past and would
assume that her father had no part in the new life.
We want to remind her “that pity, memory, and
faithfulness are natural ties,” and surely as
much to be prized as is the development of her own
soul. We do not admire the Cordelia who through
her self-absorption deserts her father, as we later
admire the same woman who comes back from France that
she may include her father in her happiness and freer
life. The first had selfishly taken her salvation
for herself alone, and it was not until her conscience
had developed in her new life that she was driven
back to her father, where she perished, drawn into
the cruelty and wrath which had now become objective
and tragic.
Historically considered, the relation
of Lear to his children was archaic and barbaric,
indicating merely the beginning of a family life since
developed. His paternal expression was one of
domination and indulgence, without the perception
of the needs of his children, without any anticipation
of their entrance into a wider life, or any belief
that they could have a worthy life apart from him.
If that rudimentary conception of family life ended
in such violent disaster, the fact that we have learned
to be more decorous in our conduct does not demonstrate
that by following the same line of theory we may not
reach a like misery.
Wounded affection there is sure to
be, but this could be reduced to a modicum if we could
preserve a sense of the relation of the individual
to the family, and of the latter to society, and if
we had been given a code of ethics dealing with these
larger relationships, instead of a code designed to
apply so exclusively to relationships obtaining only
between individuals.
Doubtless the clashes and jars which
we all feel most keenly are those which occur when
two standards of morals, both honestly held and believed
in, are brought sharply together. The awkwardness
and constraint we experience when two standards of
conventions and manners clash but feebly prefigure
this deeper difference.