<h2 style="color: red;">The Lost Art of Courtship</h2>
<div class="sidenote" style="display:none">Liberty of
Choice</div>
<p>Civilisation is so acutely developed at
present that the old meaning of courtship
is completely lost. None of the phenomena
which precede a proposal would be
deemed singular or out of place in a platonic
friendship. This state of affairs gives a man
every advantage and all possible liberty of
choice.</p>
<p>Our grandparents are scandalised at modern
methods. "Girls never did so," in the
distant years when those dear people were
young. If a young man called on grandmother
once a week, and she approved of
him and his prospects, she began on her household
linen, without waiting for the momentous
question.</p>
<p>Judging by the fiction of the period and
by the delightful tales of old New England,
which read like fairy stories to this generation,
the courtships of those days were too leisurely<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_72" id="Page_72"></SPAN></span>
to be very interesting. Ten-year engagements
did not seem to be unusual, and it was
not considered a social mistake if a man
suddenly disappeared for four or five years,
without the formality of mentioning his
destination to the young woman who expected
to marry him.</p>
<div class="sidenote" style="display:none">Faithful
Maidens</div>
<p>We have all read of the faithful maidens
who kept on weaving stores of fine linen
and making regular pilgrimages for the letter
which did not come. Years afterward, when
the man finally appeared, it was all right, and
the wedding went on just the same, even
though in the meantime the recreant knight
had married and been bereaved.</p>
<p>Two or three homeless children were sometimes
brought cheerfully into the story, and
assisted materially in the continuation of the
interrupted courtship. The tears which the
modern spinster sheds over such a tale are
not at the pathos of the situation, but because
it is possible, even in fiction, for a woman
to be so destitute of spirit.</p>
<div class="sidenote" style="display:none">Without
Saying a
Word</div>
<p>"In dem days," as Uncle Remus would
say, any attention whatever meant business.
Small courtesies which are without signifi<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_73" id="Page_73"></SPAN></span>cance
now were fraught with momentous
import then. In this year of grace, among
all races except our own, there are ways in
which a man may definitely commit himself
without saying a word.</p>
<p>A flower or a serenade is almost equivalent
to a proposal in sunny Spain. A "walking-out"
period of six months is much in vogue
in other parts of Europe, but the daughter
of the Anglo-Saxon has no such guide to a
man's intentions.</p>
<p>Among certain savage tribes, if a man is
in love with a girl and wishes to marry her,
he drags her around his tent by the hair or
administers a severe beating. It may be surmised
that these attentions are not altogether
pleasant, but she has the advantage of knowing
what the man means.</p>
<p>Flowers are a pretty courtesy and nothing
more. The kindly thought which prompts
them may be as transient as their bloom.
Three or four men serenade girls on summer
nights because they love to hear themselves
sing. Books, and music, and sweets, which
convention decrees are the only proper gifts
for the unattached, may be sent to any girl,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_74" id="Page_74"></SPAN></span>
without affecting her indifference to furniture
advertisements and January sales of linen.</p>
<p>If there is any actual courtship at the present
time, the girl does just as much of it as
the man. Her dainty remembrances at holiday
time have little more meaning than the
trifles a man bestows upon her, though the
gift latitude accorded her is much wider in
scope.</p>
<div class="sidenote" style="display:none">Furniture</div>
<p>When a girl gives a man furniture, she
usually intends to marry him, but often
merely succeeds in making things interesting
for the girl who does it in spite of her. The
newly-married woman attends to the personal
belongings of her happy possessor with
the celerity which is taught in classes for
"First Aid to the Injured."</p>
<p>One by one, the cherished souvenirs of his
bachelor days disappear. Pictures painted by
rival fair ones go to adorn the servant's room,
through gradual retirement backward. Rare
china is mysteriously broken. Sofa cushions
never "harmonise with the tone of the room,"
and the covers have to be changed. It takes
time, but usually by the first anniversary of a
man's marriage, his penates have been nobly<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_75" id="Page_75"></SPAN></span>
weeded out, and the things he has left are of
his wife's choosing, generously purchased
with his own money.</p>
<p>Woe to the girl who gives a man a scarf-pin!
When the bride returns the initial call,
that scarf-pin adds conspicuously to her adornment.
The calm appropriation makes the
giver grind her teeth—- and the bride knows it.</p>
<p>In the man's presence, the keeper of his
heart and conscience will say, sweetly: "Oh,
my dear, such a dreadful thing has happened!
That exquisitely embroidered scarf you made
for Tom's chiffonier is utterly ruined! The
colours ran the first time it was washed.
You have no idea how I feel about it—it was
such a beautiful thing!"</p>
<p>The wretched donor of the scarf attempts
consolation by saying that it doesn't matter.
It never was intended for Tom, but as every
stitch in it was taken while he was with her,
he insisted that he must have it as a souvenir
of that happy summer. She adds that it was
carefully washed before it was given to him,
that she has never known that kind of silk to
fade, and that something must have been done
to it to make the colours run.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_76" id="Page_76"></SPAN></span></p>
<div class="sidenote" style="display:none">A Pitched Battle</div>
<p>The short-sighted man at this juncture felicitates
himself because the two are getting on
so well together. He never realises that a
pitched battle has occurred under his very
nose, and that the honours are about even.</p>
<p>If Tom possesses a particularly unfortunate
flash-light photograph of the girl, the bride
joyfully frames it and puts it on the mantel
where all may see. If the original of the caricature
remonstrates, the happy wife sweetly
temporises and insists that it remain, because
"Tom is so fond of it," and says, "it looks
just like her."</p>
<p>Devious indeed are the paths of woman.
She far excels the "Heathen Chinee" in his
famous specialty of "ways that are dark and
tricks that are vain."</p>
<p>Courtship is a game that a girl has to play
without knowing the trump. The only way
she ever succeeds at it is by playing to an
imaginary trump of her own, which may be
either open, disarming friendliness, or simple
indifference.</p>
<p>When a man finds the way to a woman's
heart a boulevard, he has taken the wrong
road. When his path is easy and his burden<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_77" id="Page_77"></SPAN></span>
light, it is time for him to doubt. When his
progress seems like making a new way to
the Klondike, he needs only to keep his
courage and go on.</p>
<p>For, after all, it is woman who decides. A
clever girl may usually marry any man she
sees fit to honour with the responsibility of
her bills. The ardent lover counts for considerably
less than he is wont to suppose.</p>
<div class="sidenote" style="display:none">The Only
One They
Know</div>
<p>There is a good old scheme which the
world of lovers has unanimously adopted,
in order to find out where they stand. It is
so simple as to make one weep, but it is the
only one they know. This consists of an intentional
absence, judiciously timed.</p>
<p>Suppose a man has been spending three or
four evenings a week with the same girl, for
a period of two or three months. Flowers,
books, and chocolates have occasionally appeared,
as well as invitations to the theatre.
The man has been fed out of the chafing-dish,
and also with accidental cake, for men are as
fond of sugar as women, though they are
ashamed to admit it.</p>
<p>Suddenly, without warning, the man misses
an evening, then another, then another. Two<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_78" id="Page_78"></SPAN></span>
weeks go by, and still no man. The neighbours
and the family begin to ask questions
of a personal nature.</p>
<p>It is at this stage that the immature and
childish woman will write the man a note,
expressing regret for his long absence, and
trusting that nothing may interfere with their
"pleasant friendship." Sometimes the note
brings the man back immediately and sometimes
it doesn't. He very seldom condescends
to make an explanation. If he does, it is
merely a casual allusion to "business." This is
the only excuse even a bright man can think of.</p>
<div class="sidenote" style="display:none">"Climbing
a
Tree"</div>
<p>This act is technically known among girls
as "climbing a tree." When a man does it,
he wants a girl to bring a ladder and a lunch
and plead with him to come down and be
happy, but doing as he wishes is no way
to attract a man up a tree.</p>
<p>Men are as impervious to tears and pleadings
as a good mackintosh to mist, but at the
touch of indifference, they melt like wax. So
when her quondam lover attempts metaphorical
athletics, the wise girl smiles and withdraws
into her shell.</p>
<p>She takes care that he shall not see her<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_79" id="Page_79"></SPAN></span>
unless he comes to her. She draws the
shades the moment the lamps are lighted. If
he happens to pass the house in the evening,
he may think she is out, or that she has company—it
is all the same to her. She arranges
various evenings with girl friends and gets
books from the library. This is known as
"provisioning the citadel for a siege."</p>
<div class="sidenote" style="display:none">Pride and
Pride</div>
<p>It is a contest between pride and pride
which occurs in every courtship, and the girl
usually wins. True lovers are as certain to
return as Bo-Peep's flock or a systematically
deported cat. Shame-faced, but surely, the
man comes back.</p>
<p>Various laboratory note-books yield the
same result. A single entry indicates the
general trend of the affair.</p>
<p><i><span class="smcap">Man</span> calls on <span class="smcap">Girl</span> after five weeks of unexplained
absence. She asks no questions, but
keeps the conversation impersonal, even after
he shows symptoms of wishing to change its
character.</i></p>
<p><span class="smcap">Man.</span> (<i>Finally.</i>) "I haven't seen you for
an awfully long time."</p>
<p><span class="smcap">Girl.</span> "Haven't you? Now that I think
of it, it has been some time."<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_80" id="Page_80"></SPAN></span></p>
<p><span class="smcap">Man.</span> "How long has it been, I wonder?"</p>
<p><span class="smcap">Girl.</span> "I haven't the least idea. Ten
days or two weeks, I guess."</p>
<p><span class="smcap">Man.</span> (<i>Hastily.</i>) "Oh no, it's been much
longer than that. Let's see, it's"—(<i>makes
great effort with memory</i>)—"why, it's five
weeks! Five weeks and three days! Don't
you remember?"</p>
<p><span class="smcap">Girl.</span> "I hadn't thought of it. It doesn't
seem that long. How time does fly, doesn't
it!" (<i>Long silence.</i>)</p>
<p><span class="smcap">Man.</span> "I've been awfully busy. I wanted
to come over, but I just couldn't."</p>
<p><span class="smcap">Girl.</span> "I've been very busy, too." (<i>Voluminous
detail of her affairs follows, entirely
pleasant in character.</i>)</p>
<p><span class="smcap">Man.</span> (<i>Tenderly.</i>) "Were you so busy you
didn't miss me?"</p>
<p><span class="smcap">Girl.</span> "Why, I can't say I missed you, exactly,
but I always thought of you pleasantly."</p>
<p><span class="smcap">Man.</span> "Did you think of me often?"</p>
<p><span class="smcap">Girl.</span> (<i>Laughing.</i>) "I didn't keep any
record of it. Do you want me to cut a notch
in the handle of my parasol every time I think
of you? If all my friends were so exacting,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_81" id="Page_81"></SPAN></span>
I'd have time for nothing else. I'd need a
new one every week and the house would be
full of shavings. All my fingers would be
cut, too."</p>
<p><span class="smcap">Man.</span> (<i>Unconsciously showing his hand.</i>)
"I thought you'd write me a note."</p>
<div class="sidenote" style="display:none">His Short
Suit</div>
<p><span class="smcap">Girl.</span> (<i>Leading his short suit.</i>) "You
could have waited on your front steps till the
garbage man took you away, and I wouldn't
have written you any note."</p>
<p><span class="smcap">Man.</span> (<i>With evident sincerity.</i>) "That's
no dream! I could do just that!" (<i>Proposal
follows in due course, <span class="smcap">Man</span> making full and
complete confession.</i>)</p>
<p>If he is foolish enough to complicate his
game with another girl, he loses much more
than he gains, for he lowers the whole affair
to the level of a flirtation, and destroys any
belief the girl may have had in him. He also
forces her to do the same thing, in self-defence.
Flirtation is the only game in which it
is advisable and popular to trump one's partner's
ace.</p>
<p>He who would win a woman must challenge
her admiration, prove himself worthy
of her regard, appeal to her sympathy—and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_82" id="Page_82"></SPAN></span>
then wound her. She is never wholly his
until she realises that he has the power to
make her miserable as well as to make her
happy, and that love is an infinite capacity for
suffering.</p>
<p>A man who does it consciously is apt to
overdo it, out of sheer enthusiasm, and if a
girl suspects that it is done intentionally, the
hurt loses its sting and changes her love to
bitterness. A succession of attempts is also
useless, for a man never hurts a woman twice
in exactly the same way. When he has run
the range of possible stabs, she is out of his
reach—unless she is his wife.</p>
<div class="sidenote" style="display:none">A State
Secret</div>
<p>The intentional absence scheme is too transparent
to succeed, and temporary devotion to
another girl is definite damage to his cause,
for it indicates fickleness and instability.
There is only one way by which a man may
discover his true position without asking any
questions, and that is—a state secret. Now
and then a man strikes it by accident, but nobody
ever tells—even brothers or platonic
friends.</p>
<p>Some men select a wife as they would a
horse, paying due attention to appearance, gait,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_83" id="Page_83"></SPAN></span>
disposition, age, teeth, and grooming. High
spirits and a little wildness are rather desirable
than otherwise, if both are young. Men who
have had many horses or many wives and have
grown old with both, have a slight inclination
toward sedate ways and domestic traits.</p>
<div class="sidenote" style="display:none">The "Woman's
Column"</div>
<p>Modern society makes it fully as easy to
choose the one as the other. In communities
where the chaperone idea is at its prosperous
zenith, a man may see a girl under nearly all
circumstances. The men who conduct the
"Woman's Column" in many pleasing
journals are still writing of the effect it has
on a man to catch a girl in curl papers of a
morning, though curl papers have been obsolete
for many and many a moon.</p>
<p>Cycling, golf, and kindred out-door amusements
have been the death of careless morning
attire. Uncorseted woman is unhappy
woman, and the girl of whom the versatile
journalist writes died long ago. Perhaps it is
because a newspaper man can write anything
at four minutes' notice and do it well, that the
press fairly reeks with "advice to women."</p>
<p>The question, propounded in a newspaper
column, "What Kind of a Girl Does a Man<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_84" id="Page_84"></SPAN></span>
Like Best," will bring out a voluminous symposium
which adds materially to the gaiety
of the nation. It would be only fair to have
this sort of thing temporarily reversed—to tell
men how to make home happy for their
wives and how to keep a woman's love, after
it has once been given.</p>
<p>Some clever newspaper woman might win
everlasting laurels for herself if she would
contribute to this much neglected branch of
human knowledge. How is a man to know
that a shirt-front which looks like a railroad
map diverts one's mind from his instructive
remarks? How is he to know that a cane is
a nuisance when he fares forth with a girl?
It is true that sisters might possibly attempt
this, but the modern sister is heavily overworked
at present and it is not kind to
suggest an addition to her cares.</p>
<div class="sidenote" style="display:none">Neglected
By His
Kind</div>
<p>There is no advice of any sort given to men
except on the single subject of choosing a
wife. This is to be found only in the books
in the Sabbath-School library, or in occasional
columns of the limited number of saffron
dailies which illuminate the age. Surely, man
has been neglected by his kind!<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_85" id="Page_85"></SPAN></span></p>
<div class="sidenote" style="display:none">Indecision</div>
<p>The general masculine attitude indicates
widespread belief in the promise, "Ask, and
ye shall receive." A man will tell his best
friend that he doesn't know whether to marry
a certain girl. If she hears of his indecision
there is trouble ahead, if he finally decides in
the affirmative, and it is quite possible that he
may not marry her.</p>
<p>After the door of a woman's heart has once
swung on its silent hinges, a man thinks he
can prop it open with a brick and go away
and leave it. A storm is apt to displace the
brick, however—and there is a heavy spring
on the door. Woe to the masculine finger
that is in the way!</p>
<p>A man often hesitates between two young
women and asks his friends which he shall
marry. Custom has permitted the courtship
of both and neither has the right to feel aggrieved,
because it is exceedingly bad form
for a girl to love a man before he has asked
her to.</p>
<p>Now and then a third girl is a man's confidante
at this trying period. Nothing so
bores a person as to be a man's "guide, philosopher
and friend" in his perplexities with<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_86" id="Page_86"></SPAN></span>
other girls. To one distinct class of women
men tell their troubles and the other class
sees that they have plenty to tell. It is better
to be in the second category than in the first.</p>
<p>Sooner or later, the confidante explains the
whole affair to the subjects of the confidence
and strange, new kinds of trouble immediately
come to the rash man. It is a common
failing to expect another person to keep a
secret which we have just proved is beyond
our own capability.</p>
<div class="sidenote" style="display:none">The Adamantine
Fortress</div>
<p>When a man has once deeply wounded a
woman's pride, he may just as well give up
his hope of winning her. At that barrier, the
little blind god may plead in vain. Love's
face may be sad, his big, sightless eyes soft
with tears, and his helpless hands outstretched
in pleading and prayer, but that
stern sentinel will never yield. Wounded
love is easily forgiven, wounded belief sometimes
forgotten, but wounded pride—never.
It is the adamantine fortress. There is only
one path which leads to the house of forgiveness—that
of understanding, and it is impassable
if woman's pride has come between.</p>
<p>A girl never knows whether a courtship<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_87" id="Page_87"></SPAN></span>
is in progress or not, unless a man tells her.
He may be interested and amused, but not
in love. It is only in the comic papers that
a stern parent waits upon the continuous
caller and demands to know his "intentions,"
so a girl must, perforce, be her own guide.</p>
<div class="sidenote" style="display:none">The Continuous
Caller</div>
<p>A man may call upon a girl so constantly
and so regularly that the neighbours daily
expect wedding invitations, and the family
inquire why he does not have his trunk sent
to the house. Later, quite casually, he will
announce his engagement to a girl who is
somewhere else. This fiancée is always a
peculiarly broad-minded girl who knows all
about her lover's attentions to the other and
does not in the least object. She wants him
to "have a good time" when he is away
from her, and he is naturally anxious to please
her. He wants the other girl to know his
wife—he is sure they will be good friends.</p>
<p>Lasting feminine friendships are not built
upon foundations of that kind. It is very
unfortunate, for the world would be gladdened
by many more than now exist.</p>
<p>According to geometry, "things which are
equal to the same thing are equal to each<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_88" id="Page_88"></SPAN></span>
other," and it would seem, from the standpoint
of pure reason, that people who are
fond of the same people would naturally be
congenial and take pleasure in being together.</p>
<p>But a sensitive spinster is often grieved
when she discovers that her men friends do
not readily assimilate. If she leaves two of
them to entertain each other, the conversation
does not flow with desirable spontaneity.
There is no lack of courtesy between them,
however, even of that finer sort which keeps
them both there, lest one, by leaving, should
seem to remind his companion that it was
late.</p>
<p>On the contrary, if a man is fond of two
different girls, they are seldom to be seen
apart. They exchange long visits regularly
and this thoughtfulness often saves him from
making an extra call.</p>
<div class="sidenote" style="display:none">A Happy
Triumvirate</div>
<p>A happy triumvirate is thus formed and
the claws of it do not show. Sometimes
it is hard to decide between them, and he
cuts the Gordian knot by marrying someone
else, but the friendship is never the same
afterward. The girls are no longer boon
companions and when the man crosses their<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_89" id="Page_89"></SPAN></span>
paths, they manage to convey the impression
of great distance.</p>
<div class="sidenote" style="display:none">Narrowed
Down to
Two</div>
<p>In the beginning, almost any number may
join in the game, but the inevitable process
of selection eventually narrows it down to
two. Society has given men a little the best
of it, but perhaps woman's finer sight compensates
her for the apparent disadvantages—and
even Love, who deals the cards, is
too blind to see the fatal consequences of his
mistakes.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_91" id="Page_91"></SPAN></span><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[Pg 90]</SPAN></span></p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />