登陆注册
4915800000074

第74章

A small population, trained to honor and virtue, to liberality of culture and breadth of view, to self-reliance and self-respect, is a thousand times better than an over-crowded one with everything at loose ends. As with the village, so with the family. There ought to be no more children than can be healthily and thoroughly reared, as regards the moral, physical, and intellectual nature both of themselves and their parents. All beyond this is wrong and disastrous. I know of no greater crime than to give life to souls, and then degrade them, or suffer them to be degraded. Children are the poor man's blessing and Cornelia's jewels, just so long as Cornelia and the poor man can make adequate provision for them. But the ragged, filthy, squalid, unearthly little wretches that wallow before the poor man's shanty-door are the poor man's shame and curse. The sickly, sallow, sorrowful little ones, shadowed too early by life's cares, are something other than a blessing. When Cornelia finds children too many for her, when her step trembles and her cheek fades, when the sparkle dies on her chalice-brim and her salt has lost its savor, her jewels are Tarpeian jewels. One child educated by healthy and happy parents is better than seven dragging their mother into the grave, notwithstanding the unmeasured reprobation of our little book. Of course, if they can stand seven, very well. Seven and seventy times seven, if you like, only let them be buds, not blights. If we obeyed the laws of God, children would be like spring blossoms. They would impart as much freshness and strength as they abstract. They are a natural institution, and Nature is eminently healthy. But when they "come crowding into the home-nest," as our book daintily says, they are unnatural. God never meant the home-nest to be crowded. There is room enough and elbow-room enough in the world for everything that ought to be in it. The moment there is crowding, you may be sure something wrong is going on.

Either a bad thing is happening, or too much of a good thing, which counts up just the same. The parents begin to repair the evil by a greater one. They attempt to patch their own rents by dilapidating their children. They recruit their own exhausted energies by laying hold of the young energies around them, and older children are wearied, and fretted, and deformed in figure and temper by the care of younger children. This is horrible. Some care and task and responsibility are good for a child's own development; but care and toil and labor laid upon children beyond what is best for their own character is intolerable and inexcusable oppression. Parents have no right to lighten their own burdens by imposing them upon the children. The poor things had nothing to do with being born.

They came into the world without any volition of their own.

Their existence began only to serve the pleasure or the pride of others. It was a culpable cruelty, in the first place, to introduce them into a sphere where no adequate provision could be made for their comfort and culture; but to shoulder them, after they get here, with the load which belongs to their parents is outrageous. Earth is not a paradise at best, and at worst it is very near the other place. The least we can do is to make the way as smooth as possible for the new-comers.

There is not the least danger that it will be too smooth. If you stagger under the weight which you have imprudently assumed, stagger. But don't be such an unutterable coward as to illumine your own life by darkening the young lives which sprang from yours. I wonder that children do not open their mouths and curse the father that begat and the mother that bore them. I often wonder that parents do not tremble lest the cry of the children whom they oppress go up into the ears of the Lord of Sabaoth, and bring down wrath upon their guilty heads.

It was well that God planted filial affection and reverence as an instinct in the human breast. If it depended upon reason it would have but a precarious existence.

I wish women would have the sense and courage,--I will not say, to say what they think, for that is not always desirable,--but to think according to the facts. They have a strong desire to please men, which is quite right and natural; but in their eagerness to do this, they sometimes forget what is due to themselves. To think namby-pambyism for the sake of pleasing men is running benevolence into the ground. Not that women consciously do this, but they do it. They don't mean to pander to false masculine notions, but they do. They don't know that they are pandering to them, but they are. Men say silly things, partly because they don't know any better, and partly because they don't want any better. They are strong, and can generally make shift to bear their end of the pole without being crushed. So they are tolerably content. They are not very much to blame. People cannot be expected to start on a crusade against ills of which they have but a vague and cloudy conception. The edge does not cut them, and so they think it is not much of a sword after all. But women have, or ought to have, a more subtle and intimate acquaintance with realities.

They ought to know what is fact and what is fol-de-rol. They ought to distinguish between the really noble and the simply physical, not to say faulty. If men do not, it is women's duty to help them. I think, if women would only not be quite so afraid of being thought unwomanly, they would be a great deal more womanly than they are. To be brave, and single-minded, and discriminating, and judicious, and clear-sighted, and self-reliant, and decisive, that is pure womanly. To be womanish is not to be womanly. To be flabby, and plastic, and weak, and acquiescent, and insipid, is not womanly. And I could wish sometimes that women would not be quite so patient. They often exhibit a degree of long-suffering entirely unwarrantable.

There is no use in suffering, unless you cannot help it; and a good, stout, resolute protest would often be a great deal more wise, and Christian, and beneficial on all sides, than so much patient endurance. A little spirit and "spunk" would go a great way towards setting the world right. It is not necessary to be a termagant. The firmest will and the stoutest heart may be combined with the gentlest delicacy. Tameness is not the stuff that the finest women are made of. Nobody can be more kind, considerate, or sympathizing towards weakness or weariness than men, if they only know it exists; and it is a wrong to them to go on bolstering them up in their bungling opinions, when a few sensible ideas, wisely administered, would do so much to enlighten them, and reveal the path which needs only to be revealed to secure their unhesitating entrance upon it. It is absurd to suppose that unvarying acquiescence is necessary to secure and retain their esteem, and that a frank avowal of differing opinions, even if they were wrong, would work its forfeiture. A respect held on so frail a tenure were little worth. But it is not so. I believe that manhood and womanhood are too truly harmonious to need iron bands, too truly noble to require the props of falsehood. Truth, simple and sincere, without partiality and without hypocrisy, is the best food for both. If any are to be found on either side too weak to administer or digest it, the remedy is not to mix it with folly or falsehood, for they are poisons, but to strengthen the organisms with wholesome tonics,--not undiluted, perhaps, but certainly unadulterated.

O Edmund Sparkler, you builded better than you knew, when you reared eulogiums upon the woman with no nonsense about her.

同类推荐
  • 长爪梵志请问经

    长爪梵志请问经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 大方广佛华严经

    大方广佛华严经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 禅宗直指

    禅宗直指

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 百论

    百论

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 活幼口议

    活幼口议

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 一念成魇

    一念成魇

    村民的一句玩笑话,声称村外有吃人的野兽。从此,谣言四起。整个村庄人心惶惶,夜不外出。不曾想,第一个声称遇到野兽的家伙,真的被野兽活吃了。真的有吃人的野兽?不不不!当谣言出现,无知的人类就会开始恐惧,并且幻想野兽的形状、能力、特性。此念一起,冥冥之中的存在就会有所感应。祂会帮助人类,使得幻想具体化,形成念灵。念灵以念为食。你越惧怕它,它越强大!你认为它会吃人,它就会吃人!想要打败它,不光需要强壮的体魄,更需要坚不可摧的意志!
  • Agnes Grey(III) 艾格妮丝·格雷(英文版)
  • 枯木逢春如我遇你

    枯木逢春如我遇你

    岁月如水,谁能一直伴你左右,情深似海,谁能给予你回应,决心等待,是否能盼到他归来。她生在重男轻女的家庭,他活在私生子的框架之中,隐忍生存只为守护彼此不在意的东西,可是,隐忍真的能够生存吗?……
  • 修习般若波罗蜜菩萨观行念诵仪轨

    修习般若波罗蜜菩萨观行念诵仪轨

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 从仙侠世界开始

    从仙侠世界开始

    这只是一个互联网入侵诸天万界的故事,入坑需谨慎。“其实我只想好好的改造仙侠世界,可现实总是让我暴打,扒光,洗劫,其实我也想低调,可实力他不允许啊。”江小白内心之中,大声的呐喊着。“啊,这该死的江小白,恨啊。”这是来自遮天世界,缺德道士的血泪控诉。“朕的造化之舟,朕的皇天印玺,这该死的江小白,啊,哪里来的大黑狗。”阳神世界,乾帝杨盘不断的咆哮着。——《摘自,那个在诸天万界历史转折之中浪笑的蓝人。》
  • 受益终生的精粹:受益终生的电影精粹

    受益终生的精粹:受益终生的电影精粹

    《受益终生的精粹:受益终生的电影精粹》讲述了电影、诗歌、国学、西学、美术、文学、音乐、处世。从浩如烟海的这些人文艺术作品中,作者用精炼、经典的标准,以青少年的角度,拣选出一篇篇美文、一幅幅名画、一部部佳作、一首首名曲。集成使人终生受益的5个单册,另以代表中华智慧的诸子百家与充满哲理的西方先贤大师名言名篇编辑成《国学精粹》、《西学精粹》,这既是了解学习人类人文艺术的上佳之作,也是必不可少的家藏书籍。
  • 重案刑侦笔记

    重案刑侦笔记

    碎尸、凶杀、灭门……这些正在发生的离奇凶案背后,究竟是为情?为财?为仇?还是隐藏着不为人知的秘密?这是正义与邪恶的对抗!这是警察与罪犯的较量!是魔高一尺,还是道高一丈,《重案刑侦笔记》带你进入一个更为真实的刑侦世界!跟着刑侦的脚步一起追踪谜案的真相。一方是天衣无缝的完美罪恶计划;一方是抽丝拨茧的缜密侦察分析!
  • 外经微言

    外经微言

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 西游之长生仙路

    西游之长生仙路

    长生?世间真的有长生吗?世人皆言,仙人长生不死。仙人皆传,圣人万劫不灭。敢问苍天,世间可有长生?若无长生,那我就用手中长剑,斩出一条长生仙路!…………凡修九境,仙道九阶,至尊九转,混元十二,天境十重,永恒道境……修行路上,谁人敢称不死?谁人敢言不灭?这里是西游,这里亦是洪荒!
  • 流离的萤火爱情

    流离的萤火爱情

    抬头看到的就是他那双孤傲的眼睛,散发着无数的寒气,让人不寒而栗,那张脸简直无懈可击,与哥哥相比似乎更胜一筹,但是他满脸的高傲和不屑,瞬间拒人于千里之外。那个冰山男依旧惜字如金,没有表情,我开始有些怀疑,老哥是不是认错人啦?呼呼,不理他们啦,走咯“答应我一个要求!”说得这么爽快?是早有预谋吗?可是不应该,总不至于他是策划者吧“要求?行,但是你不可以说…”委屈啊,莫名其妙地要答应冰山男一个要求。“不管如何,你都要信我!”那是你对我的乞求吗?一次次的错过,一次次的误会,他们之间是否经得起时间的考验?可爱善良的韩雪柔能够等到幸福钟声响起吗?面对昔日的男友、今时的未婚夫,她该如何抉择?求收藏,求推荐,求订阅,嘻嘻,我会再接再厉的~~~推荐——http://m.pgsk.com/a/450433/《邪魅总裁:女人,乖乖躺着!》推荐新作温馨治愈系列:听说,爱情回来过。http://m.pgsk.com/a/702512/