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<h2> CHAPTER XII. </h2>
<h3> "Strange theory!" cried I. </h3>
<p>"Strange in what? According to all the doctrines of the Church, the world
will have an end. Science teaches the same fatal conclusions. Why, then,
is it strange that the same thing should result from moral Doctrine? 'Let
those who can, contain,' said Christ. And I take this passage literally,
as it is written. That morality may exist between people in their worldly
relations, they must make complete chastity their object. In tending
toward this end, man humiliates himself. When he shall reach the last
degree of humiliation, we shall have moral marriage.</p>
<p>"But if man, as in our society, tends only toward physical love, though he
may clothe it with pretexts and the false forms of marriage, he will have
only permissible debauchery, he will know only the same immoral life in
which I fell and caused my wife to fall, a life which we call the honest
life of the family. Think what a perversion of ideas must arise when the
happiest situation of man, liberty, chastity, is looked upon as something
wretched and ridiculous. The highest ideal, the best situation of woman,
to be pure, to be a vestal, a virgin, excites fear and laughter in our
society. How many, how many young girls sacrifice their purity to this
Moloch of opinion by marrying rascals that they may not remain virgins,—that
is, superiors! Through fear of finding themselves in that ideal state,
they ruin themselves.</p>
<p>"But I did not understand formerly, I did not understand that the words of
the Gospel, that 'he who looks upon a woman to lust after her has already
committed adultery,' do not apply to the wives of others, but notably and
especially to our own wives. I did not understand this, and I thought that
the honeymoon and all of my acts during that period were virtuous, and
that to satisfy one's desires with his wife is an eminently chaste thing.
Know, then, that I consider these departures, these isolations, which
young married couples arrange with the permission of their parents, as
nothing else than a license to engage in debauchery.</p>
<p>"I saw, then, in this nothing bad or shameful, and, hoping for great joys,
I began to live the honeymoon. And very certainly none of these joys
followed. But I had faith, and was determined to have them, cost what they
might. But the more I tried to secure them, the less I succeeded. All this
time I felt anxious, ashamed, and weary. Soon I began to suffer. I believe
that on the third or fourth day I found my wife sad and asked her the
reason. I began to embrace her, which in my opinion was all that she could
desire. She put me away with her hand, and began to weep.</p>
<p>"At what? She could not tell me. She was filled with sorrow, with anguish.
Probably her tortured nerves had suggested to her the truth about the
baseness of our relations, but she found no words in which to say it. I
began to question her; she answered that she missed her absent mother. It
seemed to me that she was not telling the truth. I sought to console her
by maintaining silence in regard to her parents. I did not imagine that
she felt herself simply overwhelmed, and that her parents had nothing to
do with her sorrow. She did not listen to me, and I accused her of
caprice. I began to laugh at her gently. She dried her tears, and began to
reproach me, in hard and wounding terms, for my selfishness and cruelty.</p>
<p>"I looked at her. Her whole face expressed hatred, and hatred of me. I
cannot describe to you the fright which this sight gave me. 'How? What?'
thought I, 'love is the unity of souls, and here she hates me? Me? Why?
But it is impossible! It is no longer she!'</p>
<p>"I tried to calm her. I came in conflict with an immovable and cold
hostility, so that, having no time to reflect, I was seized with keen
irritation. We exchanged disagreeable remarks. The impression of this
first quarrel was terrible. I say quarrel, but the term is inexact. It was
the sudden discovery of the abyss that had been dug between us. Love was
exhausted with the satisfaction of sensuality. We stood face to face in
our true light, like two egoists trying to procure the greatest possible
enjoyment, like two individuals trying to mutually exploit each other.</p>
<p>"So what I called our quarrel was our actual situation as it appeared
after the satisfaction of sensual desire. I did not realize that this cold
hostility was our normal state, and that this first quarrel would soon be
drowned under a new flood of the intensest sensuality. I thought that we
had disputed with each other, and had become reconciled, and that it would
not happen again. But in this same honeymoon there came a period of
satiety, in which we ceased to be necessary to each other, and a new
quarrel broke out.</p>
<p>"It became evident that the first was not a matter of chance. 'It was
inevitable,' I thought. This second quarrel stupefied me the more, because
it was based on an extremely unjust cause. It was something like a
question of money,—and never had I haggled on that score; it was
even impossible that I should do so in relation to her. I only remember
that, in answer to some remark that I made, she insinuated that it was my
intention to rule her by means of money, and that it was upon money that I
based my sole right over her. In short, something extraordinarily stupid
and base, which was neither in my character nor in hers.</p>
<p>"I was beside myself. I accused her of indelicacy. She made the same
accusation against me, and the dispute broke out. In her words, in the
expression of her face, of her eyes, I noticed again the hatred that had
so astonished me before. With a brother, friends, my father, I had
occasionally quarrelled, but never had there been between us this fierce
spite. Some time passed. Our mutual hatred was again concealed beneath an
access of sensual desire, and I again consoled myself with the reflection
that these scenes were reparable faults.</p>
<p>"But when they were repeated a third and a fourth time, I understood that
they were not simply faults, but a fatality that must happen again. I was
no longer frightened, I was simply astonished that I should be precisely
the one to live so uncomfortably with my wife, and that the same thing did
not happen in other households. I did not know that in all households the
same sudden changes take place, but that all, like myself, imagine that it
is a misfortune exclusively reserved for themselves alone, which they
carefully conceal as shameful, not only to others, but to themselves, like
a bad disease.</p>
<p>"That was what happened to me. Begun in the early days, it continued and
increased with characteristics of fury that were ever more pronounced. At
the bottom of my soul, from the first weeks, I felt that I was in a trap,
that I had what I did not expect, and that marriage is not a joy, but a
painful trial. Like everybody else, I refused to confess it (I should not
have confessed it even now but for the outcome). Now I am astonished to
think that I did not see my real situation. It was so easy to perceive it,
in view of those quarrels, begun for reasons so trivial that afterwards
one could not recall them.</p>
<p>"Just as it often happens among gay young people that, in the absence of
jokes, they laugh at their own laughter, so we found no reasons for our
hatred, and we hated each other because hatred was naturally boiling up in
us. More extraordinary still was the absence of causes for reconciliation.</p>
<p>"Sometimes words, explanations, or even tears, but sometimes, I remember,
after insulting words, there tacitly followed embraces and declarations.
Abomination! Why is it that I did not then perceive this baseness?"</p>
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