<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<h1>The<br/> Spinster<br/> Book</h1>
<h2>By Myrtle Reed</h2>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
<h2 style="color: red;">Notes on Men</h2>
<div class="sidenote" style="display:none">"The
Proper
Study"</div>
<p>If "the proper study of mankind is man,"
it is also the chief delight of woman. It
is not surprising that men are conceited, since
the thought of the entire population is centred
upon them.</p>
<p>Women are wont to consider man in general
as a simple creation. It is not until the
individual comes into the field of the feminine
telescope, and his peculiarities are thrown into
high relief, that he is seen and judged at his
true value.</p>
<p>When a girl once turns her attention from
the species to the individual, her parlour becomes
a sort of psychological laboratory in
which she conducts various experiments;
not, however, without the loss of friends.
For men are impatient of the spirit of inquiry
in woman.</p>
<div class="sidenote" style="display:none">The
Phenomena
of
Affection</div>
<p>How shall a girl acquire her knowledge of
the phenomena of affection, if men are not<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_4" id="Page_4"></SPAN></span>
willing to be questioned upon the subject?
What is more natural than to seek wisdom
from the man a girl has just refused to marry?
Why should she not ask if he has ever loved
before, how long he has loved her, if he were
not surprised when he found it out, and how
he feels in her presence?</p>
<p>Yet a sensitive spinster is repeatedly astonished
at finding her lover transformed into
a fiend, without other provocation than this.
He accuses her of being "a heartless coquette,"
of having "led him on,"—whatever
that may mean,—and he does not care to have
her for his sister, or even for his friend.</p>
<div class="sidenote" style="display:none">Original
Research</div>
<p>Occasionally a charitable man will open his
heart for the benefit of the patient student. If
he is of a scientific turn of mind, with a fondness
for original research, he may even take a
melancholy pleasure in the analysis.</p>
<p>Thus she learns that he thought he had
loved, until he cared for her, but in the light
of the new passion he sees clearly that the
others were mere, idle flirtations. To her
surprise, she also discovers that he has loved
her a long time but has never dared to speak
of it before, and that this feeling, compared<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_5" id="Page_5"></SPAN></span>
with the others, is as wine unto water. In
her presence he is uplifted, exalted, and often
afraid, for very love of her.</p>
<p>Next to a proposal, the most interesting
thing in the world to a woman is this kind of
analysis. If a man is clever at it, he may
change a decided refusal to a timid promise to
"think about it." The man who hesitates
may be lost, but the woman who hesitates is
surely won.</p>
<p>In the beginning, the student is often perplexed
by the magnitude of the task which
lies before her. Later, she comes to know
that men, like cats, need only to be stroked
in the right direction. The problem thus becomes
a question of direction, which is seldom
as simple as it looks.</p>
<div class="sidenote" style="display:none">The
Personal
Equation</div>
<p>Yet men, as a class, are easier to understand
than women, because they are less emotional.
It is emotion which complicates the personal
equation with radicals and quadratics, and life
which proceeds upon predestined lines soon
becomes monotonous and loses its charm.
The involved <i>x</i> in the equation continually
postpones the definite result, which may
often be surmised, but never achieved.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_6" id="Page_6"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>Still, there is little doubt as to the proper
method, for some of the radicals must necessarily
appear in the result. Man's conceit is
his social foundation and when the vulnerable
spot is once found in the armour of Achilles,
the overthrow of the strenuous Greek is near
at hand.</p>
<p>There is nothing in the world as harmless
and as utterly joyous as man's conceit. The
woman who will not pander to it is ungracious
indeed.</p>
<p>Man's interest in himself is purely altruistic
and springs from an unselfish desire to please.
He values physical symmetry because one's
first impression of him is apt to be favourable.
Manly accomplishments and evidences of good
breeding are desirable for the same reason,
and he likes to think his way of doing things
is the best, regardless of actual effectiveness.</p>
<div class="sidenote" style="display:none">Pencils</div>
<p>For instance, there seems to be no good
reason why a man's way of sharpening a pencil
is any better than a woman's. It is difficult
to see just why it is advisable to cover
the thumb with powdered graphite, and expose
that useful member to possible amputation
by a knife directed uncompromisingly<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_7" id="Page_7"></SPAN></span>
toward it, when the pencil might be pointed
the other way, the risk of amputation avoided,
and the shavings and pulverised graphite left
safely to the action of gravitation and centrifugal
force. Yet the entire race of men refuse
to see the true value of the feminine method,
and, indeed, any man would rather sharpen
any woman's pencil than see her do it herself.</p>
<div class="sidenote" style="display:none">The
"Supreme
Conceit"</div>
<p>It pleases a man very much to be told that
he "knows the world," even though his acquaintance
be limited to the flesh and the
devil—a gentleman, by the way, who is
much misunderstood and whose faults are
persistently exaggerated. But man's supreme
conceit is in regard to his personal appearance.
Let a single entry in a laboratory note-book
suffice for proof.</p>
<p><i>Time, evening. <span class="smcap">Man</span> is reading a story in
a current magazine to the <span class="smcap">Girl</span> he is calling
upon.</i></p>
<p><span class="smcap">Man</span>. "Are you interested in this?"</p>
<p><span class="smcap">Girl</span>. "Certainly, but I can think of other
things too, can't I?"</p>
<p><span class="smcap">Man</span>. "That depends on the 'other things.'
What are they?"</p>
<p><span class="smcap">Girl</span>. (<i>Calmly.</i>) "I was just thinking that<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_8" id="Page_8"></SPAN></span>
you are an extremely handsome man, but of
course you know that."</p>
<p><span class="smcap">Man</span>. (<i>Crimsoning to his temples.</i>) "You
flatter me!" (<i>Resumes reading.</i>)</p>
<p>Girl. (<i>Awaits developments.</i>)</p>
<p><span class="smcap">Man</span>. (<i>After a little.</i>) "I didn't know
you thought I was good-looking."</p>
<p><span class="smcap">Girl</span>. (<i>Demurely.</i>) "Didn't you?"</p>
<p><span class="smcap">Man</span>. (<i>Clears his throat and continues the
story.</i>)</p>
<p><span class="smcap">Man</span>. (<i>After a few minutes.</i>) "Did you
ever hear anybody else say that?"</p>
<p><span class="smcap">Girl</span>. "Say what?"</p>
<p><span class="smcap">Man</span>. "Why, that I was—that I was—well,
good-looking, you know?"</p>
<p><span class="smcap">Girl</span>. "Oh, yes! Lots of people!"</p>
<p><span class="smcap">Man</span>. (<i>After reading half a page.</i>) "I
don't think this is so very interesting, do you?"</p>
<p><span class="smcap">Girl</span>. "No, it isn't. It doesn't carry out
the promise of its beginning."</p>
<p><span class="smcap">Man</span>. (<i>Closes magazine and wanders aimlessly
toward the mirror in the mantel.</i>)</p>
<p><span class="smcap">Man</span>. "Which way do you like my hair;
this way, or parted in the middle?"</p>
<p><span class="smcap">Girl</span>. "I don't know—this way, I guess.
I've never seen it parted in the middle."<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_9" id="Page_9"></SPAN></span></p>
<p><span class="smcap">Man</span>. (<i>Taking out pocket comb and rapidly
parting his hair in the middle.</i>) "There!
Which way do you like it?"</p>
<p><span class="smcap">Girl</span>. (<i>Judicially.</i>) "I don't know. It's
really a very hard question to decide."</p>
<p><span class="smcap">Man</span>. (<i>Reminiscently.</i>) "I've gone off my
looks a good deal lately. I used to be a lot
better looking than I am now."</p>
<p><span class="smcap">Girl</span>. (<i>Softly.</i>) "I'm glad I didn't know
you then."</p>
<p><span class="smcap">Man</span>. (<i>In apparent astonishment.</i>) "Why?"</p>
<p><span class="smcap">Girl</span>. "Because I might not have been
heart whole, as I am now."</p>
<p>(<i>Long silence.</i>)</p>
<p><span class="smcap">Man</span>. (<i>With sudden enthusiasm.</i>) "I'll
tell you, though, I really do look well in evening
dress."</p>
<p><span class="smcap">Girl</span>. "I haven't a doubt of it, even
though I've never seen you wear it."</p>
<p><span class="smcap">Man</span>. (<i>After brief meditation.</i>) "Let's
go and hear Melba next week, will you? I
meant to ask you when I first came in, but
we got to reading."</p>
<p><span class="smcap">Girl</span>. "I shall be charmed."</p>
<p><i>Next day, <span class="smcap">Girl</span> gets a box of chocolates and a
dozen American Beauties—in February at that.</i><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_10" id="Page_10"></SPAN></span></p>
<div class="sidenote" style="display:none">Dimples
and Dress
Clothes</div>
<p>Tell a man he has a dimple and he will say
"where?" in pleased surprise, meanwhile
putting his finger straight into it. He has
studied that dimple in the mirror too many
times to be unmindful of its geography.</p>
<p>Let the woman dearest to a man say, tenderly:
"You were so handsome to-night,
dear—I was proud of you." See his face
light up with noble, unselfish joy, because he
has given such pleasure to others!</p>
<p>All the married men at evening receptions
have gone because they "look so well in
evening dress," and because "so few men
can wear dress clothes really well." In truth,
it does require distinction and grace of bearing,
if a man would not be mistaken for a
waiter.</p>
<p>Man's conceit is not love of himself but of
his fellow-men. The man who is in love with
himself need not fear that any woman will
ever become a serious rival. Not unfrequently,
when a man asks a woman to marry
him, he means that he wants her to help him
love himself, and if, blinded by her own feeling,
she takes him for her captain, her pleasure
craft becomes a pirate ship, the colours change<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_11" id="Page_11"></SPAN></span>
to a black flag with a sinister sign, and her
inevitable destiny is the coral reef.</p>
<div class="sidenote" style="display:none">Palmistry</div>
<p>Palmistry does very well for a beginning
if a man is inclined to be shy. It leads by
gentle and almost imperceptible degrees to
that most interesting of all subjects, himself,
and to that tactful comment, dearest of all to
the masculine heart; "You are not like other
men!"</p>
<p>A man will spend an entire evening, utterly
oblivious of the lapse of time, while a woman
subjects him to careful analysis. But sympathy,
rather than sarcasm, must be her guide—if
she wants him to come again. A man
will make a comrade of the woman who stimulates
him to higher achievement, but he will
love the one who makes herself a mirror for
his conceit.</p>
<p>Men claim that women cannot keep a secret,
but it is a common failing. A man will always
tell some one person the thing which is told
him in confidence. If he is married, he tells
his wife. Then the exclusive bit of news is
rapidly syndicated, and by gentle degrees, the
secret is diffused through the community.
This is the most pathetic thing in matrimony<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_12" id="Page_12"></SPAN></span>—the
regularity with which husbands relate the
irregularities of their friends. Very little of
the world's woe is caused by silence, however
it may be in fiction and the drama.</p>
<div class="sidenote" style="display:none">Exchange
of
Confidence</div>
<p>In return for the generous confidence regarding
other people's doings, the married
man is made conversant with those things
which his wife deems it right and proper for
him to know. And he is not unhappy, for it
isn't what he doesn't know that troubles a
man, but what he knows he doesn't know.</p>
<p>The masculine nature is less capable of concealment
than the feminine. Where men are
frankly selfish, women are secretly so. Man's
vices are few and comprehensive; woman's
petty and innumerable. Any man who is not
in the penitentiary has at most but three or
four, while a woman will hide a dozen under
her social mask and defy detection.</p>
<p>Women are said to be fickle, but are they
more so than men? A man's ideal is as variable
as the wind. What he thinks is his ideal
of woman is usually a glorified image of the
last girl he happened to admire. The man
who has had a decided preference for blondes
all his life, finally installs a brown-eyed deity<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_13" id="Page_13"></SPAN></span>
at his hearthstone. If he has been fond of
petite and coquettish damsels, he marries some
Diana moulded on large lines and unconcerned
as to mice.</p>
<p>A man will ride, row, and swim with one
girl and marry another who is afraid of
horses, turns pale at the mention of a boat,
and who would look forward to an interview
with His Satanic Majesty with more
ease and confidence than to a dip in the summer
sea.</p>
<div class="sidenote" style="display:none">Portia
and
Carmen</div>
<p>Theoretically, men admire "reasonable
women," with the uncommon quality which
is called "common sense," but it is the
woman of caprice, the sweet, illogical despot
of a thousand moods, who is most often
and most tenderly loved. Man is by nature a
discoverer. It is not beauty which holds
him, but rather mystery and charm. To see
the one woman through all the changing
moods—to discern Portia through Carmen's
witchery—is the thing above all others
which captivates a man.</p>
<div class="sidenote" style="display:none">The
Dorcas
Ideal</div>
<p>Deep in his heart, man cherishes the Dorcas
ideal. The old, lingering notions of womanliness
are not quite dispelled, but in this, as in<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_14" id="Page_14"></SPAN></span>
other things, nothing sickens a man of his
pet theory like seeing it in operation.</p>
<p>It may be a charming sight to behold a girl
stirring cheese in the chafing-dish, wearing
an air of deep concern when it "bunnies" at
the sides and requires still more skill. It may
also be attractive to see white fingers weave
wonders with fine linen and delicate silks,
with pretty eagerness as to shade and
stitch.</p>
<p>But in the after-years, when his divinity,
redolent of the kitchen, meets him at the door,
with hair dishevelled and fingers bandaged,
it is subtly different from the chafing-dish
days, and the crisp chops, generously black
with charcoal, are not as good as her rarebits
used to be. The memory of the silk and fine
linen also fades somewhat, in the presence of
darning which contains hard lumps and
patches which immediately come off.</p>
<p>It has become the fashion to speak of woman
as the eager hunter, and man as the
timid, reluctant prey. The comic papers may
have started it, but modern society certainly
lends colour to the pretty theory. It is frequently
attributed to Mr. Darwin, but he is at<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_15" id="Page_15"></SPAN></span>
times unjustly blamed by those who do not
read his pleasing works.</p>
<p>The complexities in man's personal equation
are caused by variants of three emotions;
a mutable fondness for women, according
to temperament and opportunity, a more uniform
feeling toward money, and the universal,
devastating desire—the old, old passion for
food.</p>
<div class="sidenote" style="display:none">The
Key of
Happiness</div>
<p>The first variant is but partially under the
control of any particular woman, and the less
she concerns herself with the second, the better
it is for both, but she who stimulates and
satisfies the third variant holds in her hands
the golden key of happiness. No woman
need envy the Sphinx her wisdom if she has
learned the uses of silence and never asks a
favour of a hungry man.</p>
<p>A woman makes her chief mistake when
she judges a man by herself and attributes to
him indirection and complexity of motive.
When she wishes to attract a particular man,
she goes at it indirectly. She makes friends
of "his sisters, his cousins, and his aunts," and
assumes an interest in his chum. She ignores
him at first and thus arouses his curiosity.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_16" id="Page_16"></SPAN></span>
Later, she condescends to smile upon him and
he is mildly pleased, because he thinks he has
been working for that very smile and has
finally won it. In this manner he is lured
toward the net.</p>
<div class="sidenote" style="display:none">The
Wise
Virgin</div>
<p>When a girl systematically and effectively
feeds a man, she is leading trumps. He insensibly
associates her with his comfort and
thus she becomes his necessity. When a
man seeks a woman's society it is because he
has need of her, not because he thinks she
has need of him; and the parlour of the girl
who realises it, is the envy of every unattached
damsel on the street. If the wise one is an
expert with the chafing-dish, she may frequently
bag desirable game, while the foolish
virgins who have no alcohol in their lamps
are hunting eagerly for the trail.</p>
<p>Because she herself works indirectly, she
thinks he intends a tender look at another girl
for a carom shot, and frequently a far-sighted
maiden can see the evidences of a consuming
passion for herself in a man's devotion to
someone else.</p>
<p>Men are not sufficiently diplomatic to bother
with finesse of this kind. Other things being<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_17" id="Page_17"></SPAN></span>
equal, a man goes to see the girl he wants to
see. It does not often occur to her that he
may not want to see her, may be interested in
someone else, or that he may have forgotten
all about her.</p>
<div class="sidenote" style="display:none">"Encouragement"</div>
<p>There is a common feminine delusion to
the effect that men need "encouragement"
and there is no term which is more misused.
A fool may need "encouragement," but the
man who wants a girl will go after her, regardless
of obstacles. As for him, if he is fed
at her house, even irregularly, he may know
that she looks with favour upon his suit.</p>
<div class="sidenote" style="display:none">"Platonic
Friendship"</div>
<p>The parents of both, the neighbours, and
even the girl herself, usually know that a
man is in love before he finds it out. Sometimes
he has to be told. He has approached a
stage of acute and immediate peril when he
recognises what he calls "a platonic friendship."</p>
<p>Young men believe platonic friendship possible;
old men know better—but when one
man learns to profit by the experience of another,
we may look for mosquitoes at Christmas
and holly in June.</p>
<p>There is an exquisite danger attached to<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_18" id="Page_18"></SPAN></span>
friendships of this kind, and is it not danger,
rather than variety, which is "the spice of
life?" Relieved of the presence of that social
pace-maker, the chaperone, the disciples of
Plato are wont to take long walks, and
further on, they spend whole days in the
country with book and wheel.</p>
<p>A book is a mysterious bond of union, and
by their taste in books do a man and woman
unerringly know each other. Two people
who unite in admiration of Browning are apt
to admire each other, and those who habitually
seek Emerson for new courage may easily
find the world more kindly if they face it
hand in hand.</p>
<p>A latter-day philosopher has remarked upon
the subtle sympathy produced by marked
passages. "The method is so easy and so
unsuspect. You have only to put faint pencil
marks against the tenderest passages in your
favourite new poet, and lend the volume to
Her, and She has only to leave here and there
the dropped violet of a timid, confirmatory
initial, for you to know your fate."</p>
<div class="sidenote" style="display:none">The
High-Priest</div>
<p>A man never has a platonic friendship with
a woman it is impossible for him to love.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_19" id="Page_19"></SPAN></span>
Cupid is the high-priest at these rites of reading
aloud and discussing everything under the
sun. The two become so closely bound that
one arrow strikes both, and often the happiest
marriages are those whose love has so begun,
for when the Great Passion dies, as it sometimes
does, sympathy and mutual understanding
may yield a generous measure of content.</p>
<p>The present happy era of fiction closes a
story abruptly at the altar or else begins it
immediately after the ceremony. Thence the
enthralled reader is conducted through rapture,
doubt, misunderstanding, indifference, complications,
recrimination, and estrangement to the
logical end in cynicism and the divorce court.</p>
<p>In the books which women write, the hero
of the story shoulders the blame, and often
has to bear his creator's vituperation in addition
to his other troubles. When a man
essays this theme in fiction, he shows clearly
that it is the woman's fault. When the situation
is presented outside of books, the happily
married critics distribute condemnation
in the same way, it being customary for each
partner in a happy marriage to claim the entire
credit for the mutual content.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_20" id="Page_20"></SPAN></span></p>
<div class="sidenote" style="display:none">Pursuit
and Possession</div>
<p>Over the afternoon tea cups it has been
decided with unusual and refreshing accord,
that "it is pursuit and not possession with a
man." True—but is it less true with women?</p>
<p>When Her Ladyship finally acquires the
sealskin coat on which she has long set her
heart, does she continue to scan the advertisements?
Does she still coddle him who hath
all power as to sealskin coats, with tempting
dishes and unusual smiles? Not unless she
wants something else.</p>
<p>Still, it is woman's tendency to make the
best of what she has, and man's to reach out
for what he has not. Man spends his life in
the effort to realise the ideals which, like will-o'-the-wisps,
hover just beyond him. Woman,
on the contrary, brings into her life what
grace she may, by idealising her reals.</p>
<p>In her secret heart, woman holds her unchanging
ideal of her own possible perfection.
Sometimes a man suspects this, and loves her
all the more for the sweet guardian angel
which is thus enthroned. Other men, less
fine, consider an ideal a sort of disease—and
they are usually a certain specific.</p>
<p>But, after all, men are as women make them.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_21" id="Page_21"></SPAN></span>
Cleopatra and Helen of Troy swayed empires
and rocked thrones. There is no woman who
does not hold within her little hands some
man's achievement, some man's future, and
his belief in woman and God.</p>
<p>She may fire him with high ambition, exalt
him with noble striving, or make him a
coward and a thief. She may show him the
way to the gold of the world, or blind him
with tinsel which he may not keep. It is she
who leads him to the door of glory and so
thrills him with majestic purpose, that nothing
this side Heaven seems beyond his eager
reach.</p>
<div class="sidenote" style="display:none">The
Potter's
Hand</div>
<p>Upon his heart she may write ecstasy or
black despair. Through the long night she
may ever beckon, whispering courage, and
by her magic making victory of defeat. It is
for her to say whether his face shall be world-scarred
and weary, hiding tragedy behind its
piteous lines; whether there shall be light or
darkness in his soul. He cannot escape those
soft, compelling fingers; she is the arbiter of
his destiny—for like clay in the potter's hands,
she moulds him as she will.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_23" id="Page_23"></SPAN></span><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</SPAN></span></p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />