rather than culprits, coarse against their nature,
hard, material, grasping, the saddest sight humanity
can see. Such a woman can accept coarse men.
They may come courting on all fours, and she will
not be shocked. But women in the natural state
want men to stand god-like erect, to tread majestically,
and live delicately, Women do not often make an ado
about this. They talk it over among themselves,
and take men as they are. They quietly soften
them down, and smooth them out, and polish them up,
and make the best of them, and simply and sedulously
shut their eyes and make believe there isn’t
any worst, or reason it away,—a great deal
more than I should think they would. But if you
want to see the qualities that a woman, spontaneously
loves, the expression, the tone, the bearing that thoroughly
satisfies her self-respect, that not only secures
her acquiescence, but arouses her enthusiasm and commands
her abdication, crucify the flesh, and read Coventry
Patmore. Not that he is the world’s great
poet, nor Arthur Vaughan the ideal man; but this I
do mean: that the delicacy, the spirituality
of his love, the scrupulous respectfulness of his demeanor,
his unfeigned inward humility, as far removed from
servility on the one side as from assumption on the
other, and less the opponent than the offspring of
self-respect, his thorough gentleness, guilelessness,
deference, his manly, unselfish homage, are such qualities,
and such alone, as lead womanhood captive. Listen
to me, you rattling, roaring, rollicking Ralph Roister
Doisters, you calm, inevitable Gradgrinds, as smooth,
as sharp, as bright as steel, and as soulless, and
you men, whoever, whatever, and wherever you are,
with fibres of rope and nerves of wire, there is many
and many a woman who tolerates you because she finds
you, but there is nothing in her that ever goes out
to seek you. Be not deceived by her placability.
“Here he is,” she says to herself, “and
something must be done about it. Buried under
Ossa and Pelion somewhere he must be supposed to have
a soul, and the sooner he is dug into, the sooner
it will be exhumed.” So she digs. She
would never have made you, nor of her own free-will
elected you; but being made, such as you are, and
on her hands in one way or another, she carves and
chisels, and strives to evoke from the block a breathing
statue. She may succeed so far as that you shall
become her Frankenstein, a great, sad, monstrous,
incessant, inevitable caricature of her ideal, the
monument at once of her success and her failure, the
object of her compassion, the intimate sorrow of her
soul, a vast and dreadful form into which her creative
power can breathe the breath of life, but not of sympathy.
Perhaps she loves you with a remorseful, pitying, protesting
love, and carries you on her shuddering shoulders
to the grave. Probably, as she is good and wise,
you will never find it out. A limpid brook ripples
in beauty and bloom by the side of your muddy, stagnant
self-complacence, and you discern no essential difference.