When a man marries a girl he expects
her to be chaste, that is, a virgin, without any sexual
experiences. Of men, the same chastity is not
expected as a general thing. As long as a man
is healthy, free from venereal disease, his previous
sexual experiences do not constitute a barrier to
his marriage. This is what is known as the double
or duplex standard of sex morality.
During the past few years a number
of high-minded and well-meaning men and women have
been trying to abolish this double standard and to
introduce a single standard of morality. That
is, they are demanding that the man going to the marriage
bed should be just as chaste, just as virginal as
his wife is. Whether or no the efforts of these
good men and women will ever be crowned with success
we will leave open. Whether or no it is even
desirable that their efforts should be crowned
with success we will also leave open. A complete
discussion of these questions belongs to a more advanced
book on sexual ethics. Here I will merely say
that, taking into consideration the fact that the
sexual instinct in boys awakens fully at the age of
fifteen or sixteen, and that marriage at the present
time, particularly among the professional classes,
is an impossibility before the age of twenty-eight,
thirty, or thirty-five, it seems to be impossible and
undesirable to expect that men should live a perfectly
chaste life until they enter matrimony, no matter
how late that event may take place.
Those who have made a study of the
sex instinct in the male seem to think that chastity
in normal, healthy men up to the age of thirty or
thereabouts is an impossibility, and where it is accomplished
it is accomplished at the expense of the physical,
mental, and sexual health of the individual.
But be it as it may, and leaving disputed questions
out of discussion, the fact remains that the vast majority
of men of the present day do indulge in sex relations
before marriage. And people that are urging upon
our young women to refuse to marry men who have not
been perfectly chaste are doing our womanhood a very
poor service. As it is now, with all mandom to
choose from, there are many, too many, old maids.
With only ten per cent. to choose from (because it
is admitted that at least 90 per cent. of all men have
ante-matrimonial relations), what would our women do?
They would practically all have to give up any hopes
of being married and becoming mothers. And if
these ten per cent., who have remained chaste to their
married day, were at least a superior class of men
in every instance, there would be some compensation
in that. Unfortunately, this is far from being
the case, because, as all advanced sexologists will
tell you, there is generally something wrong with a
man who remains absolutely chaste until the age of
thirty, thirty-five or forty. It isn’t
moral principles in all cases; it is mostly cowardice,
or sexual weakness. And sad as it may be to state,
these perfectly good, chaste men do not generally
make satisfactory husbands, and their wives are not
apt to be the happiest ones. I fully agree with
Professor Freud in his statement “that sexual
abstinence does not help to build up energetic, independent
men of action, original thinkers, bold advocates of
freedom and reform, but rather goody-goody weaklings.”
And still more to the purpose is the statement of
Professor Michels, who says:
“The desire that one’s
daughter may marry a man who, like herself, and on
an equal footing, will gain in marriage his first experience
of the most sacred mysteries of the sexual life, is
one which may lead to profound disillusionments.
Even if to-day the demand for chaste young men is
extremely restricted, the supply is yet more so, and
the article is of such an inferior quality
that in actual practice the attempt to satisfy this
desire is likely to lead to results which will fail
altogether to correspond to the hopes inspired by a
contemplation of the abstract idea of purity.
Many physically intact individuals of both sexes are
far more contaminated than those who have had actual
sexual experience. Others again, superior in the
abstract, and from the physically sexual aspect, are
ethically inferior to the unchaste, so that
the union with these latter would be more likely to
prove happy than a union with those who are nominally
pure.” And further, “Careful fathers
of marriageable daughters, who seek this virginity
in their sons-in-law, will, if they find it, seldom
find it a guarantee for the simultaneous possession
of solid moral qualities.”
All a girl has a right to demand is
that her future husband be in good health, physically
and sexually, and that he be free from venereal disease.
His previous sexual life, provided he is a man of fine
moral character in general, is no concern of hers.
Even if the man was unfortunate enough to have contracted
gonorrhea, that fact should constitute no bar to marriage,
provided he is completely cured of it. The only
exception is that of syphilis. The girl has a
right to refuse absolutely to enter into union with
any man who has been infected with syphilis unless
she is willing, and does it with her eyes open, to
live her life without any children. In syphilis
we can never give an absolute guarantee of
cure and we have no right to subject a woman to any
danger of infection with syphilis, be the danger ever
so slight, without her knowledge and consent.
Disastrous Effects of Wrong Teachings=
What disastrous effects wrong teaching
which inoculates the minds of our women with wrong
ideas may have, the following three cases reported
briefly in The Critic and Guide, will show:
Case One= was a girl of twenty-four,
of well-to-do parents, a college graduate. She
was engaged to a really very nice, sympathetic young
man, who undoubtedly would have made her an excellent
husband. But during her last two years in college
she became imbued with the single standard stupidity,
and “chastity for men, votes for women”
became her slogan. She asked her fiance if he
had been absolutely chaste before he met her.
He did not want to play the hypocrite, and he told
her the truth that he had not. But he assured
her that he had never been infected and that his general
and sexual health was in excellent condition.
Being then in an exalted mood, she impulsively broke
the engagement, declaring that her husband will have
to be as “pure” as she was. She soon
regretted her step, because she loved the man; but
pride did not let her take the initiative towards a
reconciliation, and in the meantime her former fiance
fell in love with and married another girl. After
four years had passed, and she was in danger of becoming
an old maid, she married a man considerably beneath
her socially and intellectually, and in every way
inferior to her former fiance. Her marriage is
not a happy one.
Case two= is similar to case one,
except that the young lady in question now
not so very young is still living in single
blessedness, and the chances of her ever being a wife
or even somebody’s sweetheart are rapidly vanishing.
I might add that her fiance whom she discarded because
of his lack of virginity was a very bright young physician,
who is now very successful and very happily married.
She I hear is a very unhappy person, in danger of sinking
into a permanent state of melancholia. And she
had been of a very jolly disposition.
Case three= is peculiar in that the
fiance was absolutely chaste. She asked
him, and he told her that he had never had any relations
with anybody and he never had a trace or suspicion
of any venereal disease. The young lady was not
satisfied. She wanted her fiance to bring her
a certificate from a specialist testifying to that
effect. The young man told her that it was foolish,
that he would not subject himself to the expense and
annoyance of a number of tests when he knew
that not only did he not have any venereal disease,
but that there was no possibility of his getting any.
No, that did not satisfy her. She became suspicious.
“If you have nothing to fear, why do you object
to bringing a certificate?” “I have nothing
to fear, but I demand that you respect me and trust
me sufficiently to believe that I am telling the truth
when I declare a thing with such positiveness.
If you do not have that much confidence in me now,
our future life does not hold much promise of success.”
One word led to another, and then he broke the engagement,
as any self-respecting man under the circumstances
would. He is married, and she is not and probably
never will be. Three young lives ruined by perverse
teachings.