It got talked around among Marie’s
friends that she didn’t want children.
This was considered very surprising,
in view of all that her father and husband had done
for her.
Here is what they had done for her:
They had removed from her life all
need, and finally all desire, to make efforts and
to accomplish results through struggle in defiance
of difficulty and at the cost of pain.
Work and pain were the two things
Marie was on no account to be exposed to. With
this small but important reservation:
She might work at avoiding pain.
When the cook had a headache she took Getting Breakfast
for it. When
Marie had a headache she worked not at breakfast but
at the headache.
It was a social ceremony of large
proportions, with almost everybody among those present,
from the doctor down through Mother and Auntie to
Little Sister. The decorations, which were very
elaborate, comprised, besides the usual tasteful arrangement
of thermometers, eau-de-Karlsbad, smelling-salts
bottles, cracked ice, and chocolate creams, a perfect
shower of tourmaline roses, the odor of which, alone
among all the vegetable odors in the world, had been
found after long experimentation to be soothing to
Marie on such occasions. It was not thought that
Marie could vanquish a headache except after a plucky
fight of at least one day’s duration.
Actresses go on and do their turns
day after day and night after night with hardly a
miss. Marie’s troubles were no more numerous
than theirs. But they were much larger.
Troubles are like gases. They expand to fill
any void into which they are introduced. Marie’s
spread themselves through a vacuum as large as her
life.
The making of that vacuum and the
inserting of Marie into it cost her father and her
husband prodigious toil and was a great pleasure to
them. Marie belonged to the Leisure Class.
Socially, she was therefore distinctly superior to
her father and her husband.
President Thomas of Bryn Mawr had
Marie in mind when she said:
“By the leisured class we mean
in America the class whose men work harder than any
other men in the excitement of professional and commercial
rivalry, but whose women constitute the only leisured
class we have and the most leisured class in the world.”
Marie’s father wasn’t
so very rich, either. He was engaged in a business
so vividly competitive that Marie’s brother was
hurried through college as fast as possible and brought
into the game at twenty-two with every nerve stretched
taut.
Nothing like that was expected of
Marie. She was brought up to think that leisure
was woman’s natural estate. Work, for any
girl, she regarded as an accident due to the unexpected
and usually reprehensible collapse of the males of
the poor girl’s family.
This view of the matter gave Marie,
unconsciously to herself, what morality she
had. Hard drinking, “illegitimate”
gambling, and excessive dissipations of all sorts
are observed commonly to have a prejudicial effect
on male efficiency and on family prosperity.
Against all “vices,” therefore (although
she didn’t catch the “therefore"), Marie
was a Moral Force of a million angel-power.
Aside from “vices,” however,
all kinds of conduct looked much alike to her.
Ethics is the rules of the game, the decencies of the
struggle for existence. Marie had no part in
the struggle. She violated its decencies without
being at all aware of it.
All the way, for instance, from stealing
a place in the line in front of a box-office window
ahead of ten persons who were there before her, up
the tiny scale of petty aggressions within her narrow
reach to the cool climax of spending three months
every summer in a pine-wood mountain resort (thus
depriving her city-bound husband of the personal companionship
which was the one best thing she had to give him in
return for what he gave her), she was as competent
a little grafter as the town afforded.
But she was a perfectly logical one.
Her family had trained her to deadhead her way through
life and she did it. Finally she went beyond
their expectations. They hadn’t quite anticipated
all of the sweetly undeviating inertia of her mind.
Nevertheless she was a nice girl.
In fact, she was The Nice Girl. She was sweet-tempered,
sweet-mannered, and sweet-spoken a perfect
dear. She never did a “bad” thing
in her life. And she never ceased from her career
of moral forcing. She wrote to her husband from
her mountain fastness, warning him against high-balls
in hot weather. She went twice a month during
the winter to act as librarian for an evening at a
settlement in a district which was inhabited by perfectly
respectable working people but which, while she passed
out the books, she sympathetically alluded to as a
“slum.”
It is hardly fair, however, to lay
the whole explanation of Marie on her father, her
husband, and herself.
A few years ago, in the churchyard
of St. Philip’s Church at Birmingham, they set
up a tombstone which had fallen down, and they reinscribed
it in honor of the long-neglected memory of the man
who had been resting beneath it for a century and
a half. His name was Wyatt. John Wyatt.
He had a good deal to do with making Marie what she
was.
What toil, what tossing nights, what
sweating days, what agonized wrenching of the imagination
toward a still unreached idea, have gone into the
making of leisure for other people!
Wyatt strained toward, and touched,
the idea which was the real start of modern leisure.
In the year 1733, coming from the
cathedral town of Lichfield, where the Middle Ages
still lingered, he set up, in a small building near
Sutton Coldfields, a certain machine. That machine
inaugurated, and forever symbolizes, the long and
glorious series of mechanical triumphs which has made
a large degree of leisure possible, not for a few
thousand women, as was previously the case, but for
millions and millions of them.
It was only about two feet square.
But it accomplished a thing never before accomplished.
It spun the first thread ever spun in the history
of the world without the intervention of human fingers.
On that night woman lost her oldest
and most significant title and function. The
Spinster ceased to be.
The mistress and her maid, spinning
together in the Hall, their fingers drawing the roving
from the distaff and stretching it out as the spindle
twisted it, were finally on the point of separating
forever.
We all see what Wyatt’s machine
did to the maids. We all understand that when
he started his mill at Birmingham and hired his working
force of ten girls, he prophesied the factory
“slum.”
We do not yet realize what he did
to the mistresses, how he utterly changed their character
and how he marvelously increased their number.
But look! His machine, with the
countless machines which followed it, in the spinning
industry and in all other industries, made it possible
to organize masses of individuals into industrial regiments
which required captains and majors and colonels and
generals. It created the need of leadership,
of multitudinous leadership. And with leadership
came the rewards of leadership. And the wives
and daughters of the leaders (a race of men previously,
by comparison, nonexistent) arose in thousands and
hundreds of thousands and millions to live in leisure
and semi-leisure on the fruits of the new system.
While the maids went to the “slums,”
the mistresses went to the suburbs.
What did Wyatt get out of it?
Imprisonment for debt and the buzz of antiquarians
above his rotted corpse.
Wyatt and his equally humble successors
in genius, Hargreaves and Crompton, artisans!
Where in history shall we find men the world took
more from, gave less to?
To Hargreaves, inventing the spinning-jenny,
a mob and a flight from Lancashire, a wrecked machine
and a sacked house! To Crompton, inventing the
spinning-mule (which, in simulating, surpassed the
delicate pulling motion of the spinster’s arm) to
Crompton, poverty so complete that the mule, patient
bearer of innumerable fortunes to investors, was surrendered
to them unpatented, while its maker retired to his
“Hall-in-the-Wood” and his workman wages!
Little did Wyatt and Hargreaves and
Crompton eat of the bread of idleness they built the
oven for.
But Arkwright! There was the
man who foreshadowed, in his own career, the new aristocracy
about to be evoked by the new machinery. He made
spinning devices of his own. He used everybody
else’s devices. He patented them all.
He lied in the patents. He sued infringers of
them. He overlooked his defeats in the courts.
He bit and gouged and endured and invented and organized
till, from being a barber and dealing in hair-dyes
and bargaining for the curls of pretty girls at country
fairs, he ended up Sir Richard Arkwright and last
perfect touch in a fighting career was
building a church when he died.
And his son was England’s richest commoner.
It was the dawn of the day of common richness.
The new aristocracy was as hospitably
large as the old aristocracy had been sternly small.
Before Wyatt, leisure had been the thinnest of exhalations
along the very top of society. Since Wyatt, it
has got diffused in greater and greater density through
at least the upper third of it. And for all that
magical extension of free time, wrested from the ceaseless
toil with which God cursed Adam, we stand indebted
(and so recently!) to the machinery set going
by that spontaneous explosion of artisan genius in
England only a hundred and fifty years ago, kept
going (and faster and faster) by the labor of men,
women, and children behind factory windows, the world
over, to-day.
Marie’s view of the situation,
however, is the usual one. We are billions of
miles from really realizing that leisure is produced
by somebody’s work, that just “Being a
Good Woman” or “Being a Decent Fellow”
is so far from being an adequate return for the toil
of other people that it is just exactly no return
at all. We are billions of miles from admitting
that the virtuous parasite is just as much a parasite
as the vicious parasite: that the former
differs from the latter in the use of the money but
not at all in the matter of getting it in return for
nothing.
Getting something for nothing is the
fundamental immorality of the world. But we don’t
believe it. There will be a revolution before
we get it into our heads that trying to trade a sweet
disposition or an intelligent appreciation of opera
or a proficiency at amateur tennis for three meals
a day is a fraud.
Marie didn’t mean to commit
a fraud. She just dropped a sentimental, non-negotiable
plugged nickel into the slot-machine of life and drew
out a motor-car and a country place, and was innocently
pleased. Such a wonderful slot-machine!
She never saw the laboring multitudes behind it, past
and present multitudes, dead fingers, living fingers,
big men’s fingers, little children’s fingers,
pulling the strings, delivering the prizes, laying
aside the plugged nickel in the treasury of a remote
revenge.
Perhaps the reason why she didn’t
catch on to the fact that, instead of being the world’s
creditor, she was really inhabiting an almshouse was
that she was so busy.
You see, she not only did things all
the time but she had to find and invent them to do.
Her life, even before she was married, was much more
difficult than her brother’s, who simply got
up in the morning and took the same old 7.42 to the
same old office.
When he wanted clothes he went to
the nearest decent tailor.
No such cinch for Marie. Her
tailor lived in Sutherton, on the directly opposite
side of the city from the suburb in which Marie lived.
Just to get to that tailor’s cost Marie an hour
and a half of effort. She had got up early, but
by the time the tailor had stuck the world’s
visible supply of pins into the lines of her new coat,
most of the forenoon had been arduously occupied.
Of course many forenoons had to be
thus occupied. Never forget it! The modish
adaptation of woven fabrics to the female contour becomes
increasingly complex and minute and exacting and time-occupying
in precise proportion as the amount of time increases
for which occupation must be devised.
Besides, it gives employment to the tailors.
This is the really meritorious function
of the leisure class. It gives employment.
And every extension of its tastes and needs gives
more employment. Marie and her friends greatly
increased the number and prosperity of tailors and
milliners and candy-dippers and perfume-manufacturers
and manicurists and hairdressers and plumed-bird hunters
and florists and cab-drivers and Irish lace-makers
and Chinese silkworm tenders and violet-and-orris
sachet-powder makers and matinee heroes and French
nuns who embroider underwear and fur-traders and pearl-divers
and other deserving persons, not forgetting the multitudes
of Turks who must make nougat or perish.
In fact, Marie and her friends, in
the course of a year, gave as much employment as a
fair-sized earthquake. That is, in the course
of a year, they destroyed, without return, a large
amount of wealth and set many people to work replacing
it. If we had a large enough leisure class we
should have no need of fires and railroad wrecks and
the other valuable events which increase our prosperity
by consuming it.
Marie belonged to the real Consumers’
League. And she consumed prettily and virtuously.
It wasn’t bad air that suffocated her soul.
It was no air.
She thought she was breathing, however,
and breathing fast. Why, it was half past eleven
before she got back downtown from her tailor, and
she bought a wedding present till one, and she was
just famished and ran to a tea room, but she had hardly
touched a mouthful when she remembered there was a
girl from out of town who had come in to spend a month
doing nothing and had to be helped, but though she
rushed to the ’phone she couldn’t get
her friend before it was time to catch her suburban
train home; in order to do which she jumped into the
station ’bus, only to remember she had forgotten
to buy a ribbon for her Siamese costume for the Benefit
Ball; but it was too late now and she spent her time,
going out on the train, trying to think of some way
of getting along without it, and her head began to
ache; but luckily she met some of the girls on her
way from the station to her high-school sorority alumnae
reunion and they began to tell her how to do it; but
she had to hurry away because she had promised to go
to the house of one of the girls and do stencil patterns,
which started to be beautiful, but before she could
get any of them really done she recollected that Chunk
Brown had sent over a bunch of new songs and was coming
to call to-night and she had to scoot home and practice
“June time is moon time and tune time and spoon
time,” as well as “The grass is blue o’er
little Sue,” till there was just one hour left
before dinner and she was perfectly crazy over the
new “do” which one of the girls had showed
her and she rushed upstairs and went at that “do”
and by dinner time she had got it almost right, so
that her father told her always to do her hair like
that and brother wished he had it down at the factory
to replace a broken dynamo brush, while as for Chunk,
he was nicer than ever till he learned he had to take
her to a rehearsal of the Siamese Group for the Benefit
Ball: so that, what with having to coax him to
go and what with changing into her costume, she got
to the rehearsal so tired she couldn’t stand
up to go through the figures till she caught sight
of the celebrated aesthete, the Swami Ram Chandra
Gunga Din, who was there to hand out the right slants
about oriental effects and who had persuaded Marie
there was great consolation to be found in realizing
that life is a spiral and that therefore you can’t
make progress straight up but must go round and round
through rhythmic alternations of joy and sorrow, which
caused Chunk to relapse again from his attentiveness
but which pleased Marie greatly because she was always
unhappy in between two periods of happiness and therefore
felt she was getting along the spiral and into Culture
pretty well, till it was eleven o’clock and
she waked Chunk up out of a chair in the hall and made
him take her home; and he said the Swami was a very
clever man and she said American men had no culture
and didn’t understand women, and Chunk didn’t
even say good night to her, and she went to sleep crying,
and remembering she hadn’t after all learned
from the girls how to get along without that ribbon
in her costume and she must get up early and buy it,
which made her utter one final little plaintive sniffle
of vexation.
It was a nice child’s life,
full of small things which looked big, uncorrected
in its view of love, culture, charity, or anything
else by any carrying of the burdens, enduring of the
shocks, or thrilling to the triumphs, of a really
adult life. Her brother, when he went to work,
was her junior. In five years he was much her
senior. (You may verify this by observation among
your own acquaintances.) Marie was not a minute older
now than when she left school. Talking to her
at twenty-six was exactly the same experience as talking
to her at twenty-one. That was what the world,
from John Wyatt to her father, had done for her.
From such a life there are necessarily
revulsions. The empty leisure of the Nice
Girl is quite successfully total waste. But it
becomes intolerable to that waster who, though not
desiring genuine occupation, desires genuine sensation.
Hence smart sets.
Every social group in which there
is much leisure has its own smart set. There
may be a million dollars a year to spend. There
may be only a few thousands. But there is always
a smart set.
How suddenly its smartness may follow
its leisure, how accurately its plunge into luxury
may duplicate the suddenness of modern luxury itself,
you may observe with your own eyes almost anywhere.
You see a little crowd of women come
into the Mandarin Tea Room of the St. DuBarry in Novellapolis
in the fresh West. When they remove their automobile
veils you see that they were once, and very recently,
the nicest sort of members of the sewing circle and
the W. C. T. U. of Lone Tree Crossing.
When the waiter comes along with their
cocktails and they begin to sip them out of their
tea cups, you wake up with a jerk to realize that
it’s half past three in the afternoon and the
evening has begun.
How rapid it all is!
There’s Margaret Simpson.
A few years ago you might have seen her pumping the
water for Jim’s breakfast, cleaning the lamps,
and picking bugs off the potato vines.
Jim came to town. He struck it
poor. Then he struck it rich. He owns a
bunch of moving-picture places. He manufactures
a patented bottle-stopper. He’s a pavement
contractor. His wife has just as much leisure
as any duchess.
The duchess has her individual estate
and resources, which make it possible for her to lead
an almost complete social life within her own walls.
But never mind! Margaret has the Downtown District,
cooeperatively owned, cooeperatively maintained, magnificently
equipped with bright boudoirs in the rest rooms
of the department stores, with wonderful conservatories
where one may enter and gaze and pay no more attention
to the florist than to one’s own gardener, with
sumptuous drawing-rooms, like the Purple Parlor of
the St. DuBarry, with body-servants in the beauty
shops, with coachmen on the taxicabs, with seclusion
in the Ladies’ Department of the Novellapolis
Athletic Club an infinitely resourceful
estate, which Margaret knows as intimately as the
duchess knows hers.
This morning she hunted down a new
reduction plant on the eighteenth floor of the Beauty
Block and weighed in at 185 on the white enamel scales.
After an hour of Thermo-Vibro-Magneto-Magenta-Edison-Company
light therapy, she weighed out at 182-6.
At luncheon she ate only puree of
tomatoes, creamed chicken and sweetbreads, Boston
bread and butter, orange punch and Lady Baltimore
cake, severely cutting out the potatoes.
After luncheon she spent an hour in
a tiny room which had mirrors all around it and a
maid (as trim and French-accented as any maid any
duchess could have) and a couple of fitters and a head
fitter. It ended up with: “Do you
mean to tell me that after all the reducing and dieting
I’ve been doing I can’t wear under a twenty-seven?
It’s ridiculous. I tell you what.
Measure me for a made-to-order. These stock sizes
all run large. If it’s made to order I can
wear a twenty-six as easy as anybody.”
Then she met up with her friends at the St. DuBarry.
You watch the waiter bring another
round of drinks and you perceive that the evening
is well under way and that the peak of the twenty-four
hours is being disputatiously approached.
It appears that Perinique’s
is a swell place to dine, but that the cheese is bad.
The cheese is good right here at the St. DuBarry, but
they don’t know how to toast the biscuits.
At the Gruenewurst the waiters are poor. At Max’s
the soup is always cold. The mural decorations
at the Prince Eitel are so gloomy they give you a chill.
Despair settles down on the scene.
There seems to be no likelihood that there will be
any dinner at all anywhere. In the absence, however,
of that kind of good cheer, another kind is spread
on the table when the inquiry is flung down whether
or not the way in which Jim looked at Dora last night
has been generally observed.
You conclude that poor, dear, innocent
Dora ought not to have been looked at in that way.
You were hasty. Nobody is innocent in the Mandarin
Tea Room of the St. DuBarry, when not there. Dora,
you soon learn, deserves to be looked at in any and
all ways. It’s not for her that we’re
worried. It’s for Jim.
At the name of Jim, Margaret begins
to look uncomfortable and helpless. She sinks
lower and lower into her chair; and says nothing;
and keeps on saying nothing; and seems likely to drown
in silence; but her friends start in to rescue her.
You can’t help seeing some of the life-lines
as they are thrown out.
“If I were you, Margaret,
and my husband behaved to me as Jim is
behaving to you, I’d ”
“When you married Jim, Margaret,
you were the prettiest ”
“No wonder Dora’s husband divorced her.”
“It’s a wonder she wouldn’t
confine herself to making trouble for her own husbands
without ”
“The trouble with you, Margaret,
is that you’re too good to Jim, letting him
run around with Dora and not doing anything yourself.
If you had any sense you’d make him so jealous
he’d walk on his hands and hold a loaf of sugar
on his nose for you.”
“Say, Fannie, why don’t
you tell your friend Ned to cut in here and pay a
little attention to Marge?”
“Oh, Ned’s no good.”
“Well, then, I’ll tell my husband to ”
“Don’t you do it!
I started my husband once on a thing like that and
he went at it so strong Choose a bachelor.”
“That’s right. Ned’s not married.
Let him do it.”
“Somebody ought to.”
“Say, Fannie, call Ned on the ’phone.”
“All right. I’ll be back in a minute.”
“Say, Marge, we’ll eat
at the Royal Gorge and I’ll put you and Ned
side by side.”
“And I’ll sit next
to your husband and tell him how strong Ned is with
the ladies. He’ll take a good look all right.”
“Now buck up, Marge, and encourage Ned a little.
Don’t be a fool.”
“I tell you, Marge, you’ll
do a lot more with Jim by cutting up a little bit
than by all this dieting you’re trying to do.”
“Say, Marge, it’s a good
thing you’ve got on your white broadcloth and
your willow plumes.”
“You can get ’em at Delatour’s
now for twenty-five dollars.”
“Hello, Fannie, did you get Ned?”
“I got him all right, but what
do you think? He’s got another date for
to-night, so he can’t come.”
“Oh, flam!”
“Well, well, here’s Dora
now, as usual. I suppose she’ll try to butt
in.”
But she doesn’t. She just
hesitates beside the table long enough to say:
“Got to sweep right along, girlies. Going
to buzz out to the Inland Inn for dinner with Ned.
Yep. What’s the matter? You know Ned.
Our old friend Ned. The same. He’s
waiting for me now. G’bye.”
Talk of nerve! You have to hand it to that Dora
girl!
Exit Dora. Enter Jim and five
or six other men, mostly husbands to the women already
present.
Jim begins by asking if anybody has
seen Dora. The ensemble tells him not only that
but everything else about Dora. Harry orders a
round of drinks. So does Charlie. Somebody
praises the drawn-butter sauce at the Suddington.
This is met with the merits of the pineapple parfait
at the La Fontaine. Jim orders a round of drinks.
Jim is willing to eat his hat if Dora’s divorce
wasn’t her husband’s fault. Must have
been. Never saw the husband. But Dora’s
character! Jim drinks off one of the cocktails
standing in front of his right-hand neighbor Frank,
and returns to Dora’s character. No straighter
little girl ever came to this town. On hearing
this from her husband, Margaret gets up and leaves
the Tea Room and goes to the Purple Parlor and cries.
Fannie takes her opportunity and begins to tell Jim
how attentive Ned has been lately to Margaret.
This is so helpful that Jim drinks off another of
Frank’s cocktails and runs to the Purple Parlor
to find Margaret. She’s still crying.
He thinks she’s crying because Ned is away with
Dora. He rebukes her. In King Arthur’s
vein. Is he not her husband? Woman, tell
him that. But dignity soon tapers off with him
into the “Now I warn you to cut it out”
of the tyrannical manikin with a cinder in the eye
of his self-conceit. Their friends hear them
quarreling and follow them into the Purple Parlor.
There’s a terrible row in the Purple Parlor.
The Purple Parlor is full of persons explaining.
Fannie explains. Charlie explains. Each person
explains, individually, to each other person, individually.
Each couple reaches a satisfactory explanation.
But, somehow, when they start to explain that explanation
to the next couple, it vanishes. Everybody runs
about trying to find it. The waiter runs about
trying to find the gen’l’man to pay for
the undrunk drinks back in the Tea Room. Frank,
being the only member of the party who hasn’t
been drinking, can’t help seeing what the waiter
means. He pays the bill. Then he exerts himself
like a sheep-dog and runs the whole crowd down the
corridor and out into a couple of taxicabs. The
air reminds them of unsatisfied appetites. Conjugal
problems are things of the past. As the taxicabs
jump out from the curb to the street-center everybody’s
head is out of window and everybody’s voice
is saying “The Suddington,” “The
Gruenewurst,” “Max’s,” “The
Royal Gorge,” “Perinique’s.”
The revulsion from empty leisure in
the direction of full-every-night leisure is balanced
to some extent by a revulsion toward activity of a
useful sort. This latter revulsion has two phases:
Economic Independence, which has been spoken of in
former chapters; Social Service and Citizenship, which
will be spoken of in the next chapter.
Which one of these two revulsions
will be the stronger? If it is the one toward
useful activity, we shall see a dam erected against
the current which, in carrying women out of the struggle
for existence, carries them out of the world’s
mental life. If it is the one toward frivolity,
we shall see simply an acceleration of that current
and a quicker and larger departure from all those
habits of toil and of service which produce power
and character.
With marriage, of course, Marie had
a certain opportunity to get back into life.
She had before her at least fifteen years of real work.
And it would have been work of the realest sort.
Effort to and beyond all other effort!
The carrying of new life in fear, the delivery of it
in torture, the nourishing of it in relinquishment
of all the world’s worldliness, the watching
over it in sleeplessness, the healing of its sickness
in heart-sickness, the bringing of it, with its body
strong, its mind matured, up into the world of adults,
up into the struggle for existence! What a work!
But what a preparation for it had Marie!
She flinched from it. The inertia
of her mind carried her to the ultimate logic of her
life. Along about the time of her marriage she
began to cease to be the typical normal girl of her
type.
She became a woman of the future of
her type.
From the facts of modern leisure the
positive character reacts toward novel activity.
It may be a reaction toward Civic Service. Or
toward Self-Support. Or toward an enormous never-before-witnessed
expenditure of intelligent care on the physical and
mental education of children. The positive character,
fighting modern facts, creates new ideals. The
character which is neither positive nor negative runs
along as a neutral mixture of the old ideals and of
the modern facts, of child-rearing made amateurish
by idling and of idling made irritable by child-rearing.
The negative character like Marie’s just
yields to the modern facts and is swept along by them
into final irresponsibility and inutility.
But Marie wasn’t negative enough she
wasn’t emotional enough in her negativeness to
plunge into dissipation. It wasn’t
in her nature to do any plunging of any kind.
Good, safe, motionless sponging was her instinct.
And she will die in the odor of tubbed and scrubbed
respectability. And if you knew her you would
like her very much. She is charming.
When she and Chunk were married, they
went to live in an apartment appropriate to a rising
young man, and Marie’s job was on all occasions
to look as appropriate as the apartment.
No shallow cynicism, this! Just
plain, bald truth without any wig on it. The
only thing that you could put your finger on that Marie
really did was so to wear clothes and so to give parties
as to be the barometer of her husband’s prosperity.
And in every city you can see lots of such barometers
giving themselves an artificially high reading in
order to create that “atmosphere” of success
which is a recognized commercial asset.
Chunk was hugely pleased with Marie.
She looked good at the dinner table in the cafe of
their apartment building. She knew how to order
the right dishes when they entertained and dined down
town. She made it possible for him to return
deftly and engagingly the social attentions of older
people. She completed the “front”
of his life, and he not only supported her but, as
Miss Salmon, of Vassar, flippantly and seriously says,
he “sported” her as he might a diamond
shirt stud.
No struggle in Marie’s life
so far! No having to swim in the cold
water of daily enforced duty or else sink. No being
accustomed to the disagreeable feel of that water.
She had missed work. That was
nothing. She had missed being hardened
to work. That was everything.
The first demand ever made on her
for really disagreeable effort came when Chunk, in
order to get a new factory going, had to move for a
while to Junction City. When Marie bitterly and
furiously objected, Chunk was severely astonished.
Why, he had to go! It was necessary. But
there had been no necessity in Marie’s experience.
They became quarrelsome about it. Then stubborn.
Marie talked about her mother and her friends and
how she loved them (which was true) and stayed.
For two years she inhabited Chunk’s
flat in the city and lived on Chunk’s monthly
check.
She and Chunk were married. Chunk
was to support her. He was the man nearest to
her. Her father had once supported her. Her
job then had been Being Nice. Her father had
supported her for that, even after she had grown up.
Well, she still was nice. And she still was, and
deserved to be, supported. Perfectly logical.
For two years, neither really daughter
now nor really wife, not being obliged any longer
even to make suggestions to her mother about what
to have for dinner, not being obliged any longer even
to think out the parties for Chunk’s business
friends, she did nothing but become more and more
firmly fixed in her inertia, in her incapacity for
hardship, in her horror of pain.
When Chunk came back from Junction
City and was really convinced that she didn’t
want children he was not merely astonished. He
thought the world had capsized.
In a way he was right. The world
is turning round and over and back to that one previous
historical era when the aversion to childbearing was
widespread.
Once, just once, before our time,
there was a modern world. Once, just once, though
not on the scale we know it, there was, before us,
a diffusion of leisure.
The causes were similar.
The Romans conquered the world by
military force, just as we have conquered it by mechanical
invention. They lived on the plunder of despoiled
peoples, just as we live on the products of exploited
continents. They had slaves in multitudes, just
as we have machines in masses. Because of the
slaves, there were hundreds of thousands of their
women, in the times of the Empire, who had only denatured
housekeeping to do, just as to-day there are millions
of our women who, because of machines, have only that
kind of housekeeping to do. Along with leisure
and semi-leisure, they acquired its consequences,
just as we have acquired them. And the sermons
of Augustus Cæsar, first hero of their completed
modernity, against childlessness are perfect precedents
for those of Theodore Roosevelt, first hero of ours.
Augustus, however, addressed himself
mainly to the men, who entered into marriage late,
or did not enter into it at all, for reasons identical
with ours the increased competitiveness
of the modern life and the decreased usefulness of
the modern wife. It was the satirists who addressed
themselves particularly to the women. And their
tirades against idleness, frivolity, luxury, dissipation,
divorce, and aversion to childbearing leave nothing
to be desired, in comparison with modern efforts,
for effectiveness in rhetoric or for ineffectiveness
in result.
Now it could not have been the woman
who desires economic independence through self-support
who was responsible for the ultimate aversion to child-bearing
in the Roman world for she did not exist.
It could not have been the woman who desires full
citizenship for she did not exist.
What economic power and what political power the Roman
Empire woman desired and achieved was parasitic the
economic power which comes from the inheritance of
estates, the political power which comes from the
exercise of sexual charm.
The one essential difference between
the women of that ancient modern world and the women
of this contemporary modern world is in the emergence,
along with really democratic ideals, of the agitation
for equal economic and political opportunity.
The other kind of New Woman, the woman
brought up throughout her girlhood in a home in which
there is no adequate employment for her; trained to
no tasks, or, at any rate, to tasks (like dusting the
dining-room and counting the laundry) so petty, so
ridiculously irrelevant that her great-grandmother
did them in the intervals of her real work, going
then into marriage with none of the discipline of
habitual encounter with inescapable toil; taken by
her husband not to share his struggle but his prosperity that
sort of New Woman they had, just as we have her, in
smaller number, it is true, but in identical character.
They tell us it was “luxury”
that ruined the Romans. But was luxury the start?
Wasn’t it only the means to the finish?
Eating a grouse destroys, in itself,
no more moral fiber than eating a ham sandwich.
Bismarck, whether he slept on eider down or on straw,
arose Bismarck.
The person who has a job and who does
it is very considerably immunized against the consequences
of luxury. First, because he is giving a return
for it. Second, because he hasn’t much time
for it.
On the other hand, we see the hobo
who won’t work ruining himself on the luxury
of stable floors and of free-lunch counters, just as
thoroughly as any nobleman who won’t work can
ever ruin himself on the luxury of castles and of
game preserves.
It is clearly the habitual enjoyment
of either grouse or ham sandwiches, of either eider
down or straw, without service rendered and without
fatigue endured, that ultimately desiccates the
moral character and drains it of all capacity for
effort.
Marie was enervated not by her luxury
but by her failure to pay for her luxury.
She wouldn’t have had to pay much. Her luxury
was petty. But she paid nothing. And her
failure to pay was just as big as if her luxury had
been bigger. Getting three thousand a year in
return for nothing leaves you morally just as bankrupt
as if you had got three million.
Marie came to her abdication of life’s
greatest effort not by wearing too many clothes
or by eating too many foods but by becoming accustomed
to getting clothes and foods and all other things without
the smallest effort.
She had given her early, plastic,
formative years to acquiring the habit of effortless
enjoyment, and when the time for making an effort
came, the effort just wasn’t in her.
Her complete withdrawal from the struggle
for existence had at last, in her negative, non-resistive
mind, atrophied all the instincts of that struggle,
including finally the instinct for reproduction.
The instinct for reproduction is intricately
involved in the struggle for existence. The individual
struggles for perpetuation, for perpetuation in person,
for perpetuation in posterity. Work, the perpetuation
of one’s own life in strain and pain; work, the
clinging to existence in spite of its blows; work,
the inuring of the individual to the penalties of
existence, is linked psychologically to the power
and desire for continued racial life. The individual,
the class, which struggles no more will in the end
reproduce itself no more. In not having had to
conquer life, it has lost its will to live.
The detailed daily reasons for this
social law stand clear in Marie’s life.
It is a strong law. Its triumph in Marie could
have been thwarted only by the presence in her of
a certain other social law. Authority!
The woman who is coerced by Authority,
the woman who is operated by ideals introduced into
her from without, will bear children even when she
does not feel the active wish to bear them. She
will bear them just because the authoritative expectation
is that she shall bear them.
But Marie was free!
She was free from the requirement
of an heir for the family estate. The modern
form of property, requiring no male warrior for its
defense in the next generation, had done that for her.
She was free from the dictates of
historic Christianity about conjugal duty and unrestricted
reproduction. Modern Protestantism had done that
for her.
She was free from the old uncomplaining
compliance with a husband’s will. Modern
individualism had done that for her.
She was free! Uncoerced by family
authority, uncoerced by ecclesiastical authority,
uncoerced by marital authority, she was almost limitlessly
free!
There being no external force
compelling her to bear children, she had to follow
internal instinct.
That instinct, if it had existed in
her, would have been a sufficient guide. It would
have been a commanding guide. It would have been
the best possible guide. Rising in her from the
original eternal life-power it would have driven her
to child-bearing more surely than she could have been
driven to it by any external agency whatsoever.
But the instinct toward child-bearing
could not now be revived in Marie. With the cessation
from struggle and from effort and from fatigue and
from discipline and from the sorrow of pain that brings
the joy of accomplishment, with that cessation the
instinct toward child-bearing had reached cessation,
too. With the petrifaction of its soil it had
withered away.
Nobody had ever tried to bring Marie
back to the soil of struggle. Nobody, not
her father, not her mother, not her husband, not one
of her friends, not one of her teachers had ever taught
her to return to life by returning to labor.
The greatest wrong possible to a woman
had been wrought upon her.
She had been sedulously trained out
of the life of the race into race-death.
Yet when it got talked around among
her friends that she didn’t want children, people
blamed her and said it was very surprising, in view
of all that had been done for her.