<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_X" id="CHAPTER_X"></SPAN>CHAPTER X<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_57" id="Page_57"></SPAN></span></h2>
<h3>LOVE AND SEX</h3>
<p class="newchapter"><span class="firstword"><span class="dropcap">W</span>hen</span> we take under consideration the higher,
truer love of one sex for the other, that is,
an affection which is not simply a friendship, but
has a sex basis, we realize that it may be a very
noble emotion. There is no manner of doubt but
that the normal human being feels a great need for
love. Sex in love and its manifestation in the life
of the soul is one of the first conditions of human
happiness, and a main aim of human existence.</p>
<p>All know the tale of Cupid's arrow. A man falls
in love with a face, a pair of eyes, the sound of a
voice, and his affection is developed from this trifling
beginning until it takes complete possession of
him. This love is usually made up of two components:
a sex instinct, and feelings of sympathy and
interest which hark back to primal times. And this
love, in its true sense, should stand for an affection
purified from egoism.</p>
<p>When, among the lower animal forms we find
individuals without a determined sex, egoism develops
free from all restraint. Each individual
creature devours as much as it can and feeding,
together with propagation by division, “budding”
or conjunction, makes up the total of its vital activities.
It need do no more to accomplish the<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_58" id="Page_58"></SPAN></span>
purpose of its existence. Even when propagation
commences to take place by means of individual
male and female parents, the same principle of egoism
largely obtains. The spiders are typical instances
of this: in their case the carrying out of the
natural functions of the male spider is attended
with much danger for him, owing to the fact that
if he does not exercise the greatest care, he is apt
to be devoured immediately afterward by his female
partner, in order that no useful food matter may be
lost. Yet even in the case of the spiders, the female
spider already gives proof of a certain capacity for
sacrifice where her young are concerned, at any
rate for a short time after they have crept from
the egg.</p>
<p>In animals somewhat higher in the creative scale,
more or less powerful feelings of affection may develop
out of their sex association. There is affection
on the part of the male for his mate, and on the
part of the female for her young. Often these
feelings develop into a strong, lasting affection between
the sexes, and years of what might be called
faithful matrimonial union have been observed in
the case of birds. This in itself is sufficient to
establish the intimate relationship between love in
a sex sense and love in a general sense. And even in
the animal creation we find the same analogy existing
between these feelings of sympathy and their
opposites which occur in the case of human beings.
Every feeling of attachment or sympathy existing
between two individuals has a counterpart in an
opposite feeling of discontent when the object of<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_59" id="Page_59"></SPAN></span>
the love or attachment in question dies, falls sick,
or runs away. This feeling of discontent may assume
the form of a sorrow ending in lasting melancholy.
In the case of apes and of certain parrots,
it has been noticed that the death of a mate has frequently
led the survivor to refuse nourishment, and
die in turn from increasing grief and depression.
If, on the other hand, an animal discovers the cause
of the grief or loss which threatens it; if some
enemy creature tries to rob it of its mate or little
ones, the mixed reactive feeling of rage or anger
is born in it, anger against the originator of its
discontent. Jealousy is only a definite special form
of this anger reaction.</p>
<p>A further development of the feeling of sympathy
is that of duty. Every feeling of love or sympathy
urges those who feel it to do certain things which
will benefit the object of that love. A mother will
feed her young, bed them down comfortably, caress
them; a father will bring nourishment to the mother
and her brood, and protect them against foes. All
these actions, not performed to benefit the creature
itself, but to help its beloved mate, represent exertion,
trouble, the overcoming of danger, and lead to
a struggle between egoism and the feeling of sympathy.
Out of this struggle is born a third feeling,
that of responsibility and conscience. Thus the elements
of the human social feelings are already
quite pronounced in the case of many animals, including
those of love as well as sex.</p>
<p>In the human animal, speaking in general, these
feelings of sympathy (love) and duty are strongly<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_60" id="Page_60"></SPAN></span>
developed in the family connection; that is, they are
developed with special strength in those who are
most intimately united in sex life, in husband and
wife and in children. Consequently the feelings of
sympathy or love which extend to larger communal
groups, such as more distant family connections, the
tribe, the community, those speaking the same
tongue, the nation, are relatively far weaker.
Weakest of all, in all probability, is that general
human feeling which sees a brother in every other
human being and is conscious of the social duties
owed him.</p>
<p>As regards man and wife, the relation of the actual
sex instinct to love is often a very complicated
one. In the case of man the sex feeling may, and
frequently does exist independent of love in the
higher sense; in the case of woman it is quite certain
that love occurs far less seldom unaccompanied by
the sex inclination. It is also quite possible for love
to develop before the development of the sex feeling,
and this often, in married life, leads to the happiest
relationships.</p>
<p>The mutual adoration of two individuals, husband
and wife, often degenerates into a species of egoistic
enmity toward the remainder of the world. And
this, in turn, in many cases reacts unfavorably upon
the love the two feel for each other. Human solidarity,
especially in this day, is already too great
not to revenge itself upon the egotistical character
of so exclusive a love. The real ideal of sex in love
might be expressed as follows: A man and a
woman should be induced to unite in marriage<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_61" id="Page_61"></SPAN></span>
through genuine sex attraction and harmony of
character and disposition. In this union they should
mutually encourage each other to labor socially for
the common good of mankind, in such wise that
<i>they further their own mutual education and that of
their children</i>, the beings nearest and dearest to
them, <i>as the natural point of departure for helping
general human betterment</i>.</p>
<p>If love in its relation to sex be conceived in this
manner, it will purify it by doing away with its
pettinesses and it is just into these pettinesses that
the most honest and upright of matrimonial loves
too often degenerate. The constructive work done
in common by two human beings who, while they
care lovingly for each other, at the same time encourage
each other to strive and endure in carrying
out the principles of right living and high thinking,
will last. Love and marriage looked at from this
point of view, are relatively immune from the small
jealousies and other evil little developments of a
one-sided, purely physical affection. It will work
for an ever more ideal realization of love in its
higher and nobler dispensations.</p>
<p>Real and true love is lasting. The suddenly
awakened storm of sex affection for a hitherto
totally unknown person can never be accepted as a
true measure for love. This sudden surge of the
sex feeling warps the judgment, makes it possible to
overlook the grossest defects, colors all and everything
with heavenly hues. It makes a man who is
“in love,” or two beings who are in love, mutually
blind, and causes each to carefully conceal his or her<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_62" id="Page_62"></SPAN></span>
real inward self from the other. This may be the
case even when the feelings of both are absolutely
honest, especially if the sex feeling is not paired
with cool egoistic calculation. Not until the first
storm of the sex feeling has subsided, when honeymoon
weeks are over, is a more normal point of
view regained. And then love, indifference, or
hatred, as the case may be develops. It is for this
reason that love at first sight is always dangerous,
and that only a longer and more intimate acquaintance
with the object of one's affection is
calculated to give a lasting union a relatively good
chance of turning out happily. One thing is worth
bearing in mind. Woman invariably represents
the conservative element in the family. Her emotional
qualities, combined with wonderful endurance,
always control her intellect more powerfully
than is the case with man; and the feelings
and emotions form the conservative element in
the human soul.</p>
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