<h3 align="center">CHAPTER XI</h3><br/><br/>
<p>The incidents of the days that followed, relating as
they did peculiarly to Jennie, were of an order
which the morality of our day has agreed to taboo.</p>
<p>Certain processes of the all-mother, the great artificing
wisdom of the power that works and weaves in silence
and in darkness, when viewed in the light of the established
opinion of some of the little individuals created by
it, are considered very vile. We turn our faces away
from the creation of life as if that were the last thing that
man should dare to interest himself in, openly.</p>
<p>It is curious that a feeling of this sort should spring up
in a world whose very essence is generative, the vast
process dual, and where wind, water, soil, and light alike
minister to the fruition of that which is all that we are.
Although the whole earth, not we alone, is moved by
passions hymeneal, and everything terrestrial has come
into being by the one common road, yet there is that
ridiculous tendency to close the eyes and turn away the
head as if there were something unclean in nature itself.
"Conceived in iniquity and born in sin," is the unnatural
interpretation put upon the process by the extreme
religionist, and the world, by its silence, gives assent to a
judgment so marvelously warped.</p>
<p>Surely there is something radically wrong in this
attitude. The teachings of philosophy and the deductions
of biology should find more practical application in
the daily reasoning of man. No process is vile, no condition
is unnatural. The accidental variation from a
given social practice does not necessarily entail sin. No
poor little earthling, caught in the enormous grip of
chance, and so swerved from the established customs of
men, could possibly be guilty of that depth of vileness
which the attitude of the world would seem to predicate
so inevitably.</p>
<p>Jennie was now to witness the unjust interpretation of
that wonder of nature, which, but for Brander's death,
might have been consecrated and hallowed as one of the
ideal functions of life. Although herself unable to distinguish
the separateness of this from every other normal
process of life, yet was she made to feel, by the actions of
all about her, that degradation was her portion and sin the
foundation as well as the condition of her state. Almost,
not quite, it was sought to extinguish the affection, the
consideration, the care which, afterward, the world would
demand of her, for her child. Almost, not quite, was the
budding and essential love looked upon as evil. Although
her punishment was neither the gibbet nor the
jail of a few hundred years before, yet the ignorance and
immobility of the human beings about her made it impossible
for them to see anything in her present condition
but a vile and premeditated infraction of the social code,
the punishment of which was ostracism. All she could
do now was to shun the scornful gaze of men, and to bear
in silence the great change that was coming upon her.
Strangely enough, she felt no useless remorse, no vain
regrets. Her heart was pure, and she was conscious that
it was filled with peace. Sorrow there was, it is true, but
only a mellow phase of it, a vague uncertainty and wonder,
which would sometimes cause her eyes to fill with tears.</p>
<p>You have heard the wood-dove calling in the lone stillness
of the summertime; you have found the unheeded
brooklet singing and babbling where no ear comes to
hear. Under dead leaves and snow-banks the delicate
arbutus unfolds its simple blossom, answering some
heavenly call for color. So, too, this other flower of
womanhood.</p>
<p>Jennie was left alone, but, like the wood-dove, she was a
voice of sweetness in the summer-time. Going about her
household duties, she was content to wait, without a
murmur, the fulfilment of that process for which, after
all, she was but the sacrificial implement. When her
duties were lightest she was content to sit in quiet
meditation, the marvel of life holding her as in a trance.
When she was hardest pressed to aid her mother, she
would sometimes find herself quietly singing, the pleasure
of work lifting her out of herself. Always she was content
to face the future with a serene and unfaltering courage.
It is not so with all women. Nature is unkind in
permitting the minor type to bear a child at all. The
larger natures in their maturity welcome motherhood,
see in it the immense possibilities of racial fulfilment, and
find joy and satisfaction in being the hand-maiden of so
immense a purpose.</p>
<p>Jennie, a child in years, was potentially a woman
physically and mentally, but not yet come into rounded
conclusions as to life and her place in it. The great
situation which had forced her into this anomalous position
was from one point of view a tribute to her individual
capacity. It proved her courage, the largeness of her
sympathy, her willingness to sacrifice for what she considered
a worthy cause. That it resulted in an unexpected
consequence, which placed upon her a larger and
more complicated burden, was due to the fact that her
sense of self-protection had not been commensurate with
her emotions. There were times when the prospective
coming of the child gave her a sense of fear and confusion,
because she did not know but that the child might
eventually reproach her; but there was always that
saving sense of eternal justice in life which would not
permit her to be utterly crushed. To her way of thinking,
people were not intentionally cruel. Vague thoughts
of sympathy and divine goodness permeated her soul.
Life at worst or best was beautiful—had always been so.</p>
<p>These thoughts did not come to her all at once, but
through the months during which she watched and
waited. It was a wonderful thing to be a mother, even
under these untoward conditions. She felt that she
would love this child, would be a good mother to it if life
permitted. That was the problem—what would life
permit?</p>
<p>There were many things to be done—clothes to be
made; certain provisions of hygiene and diet to be
observed. One of her fears was that Gerhardt might
unexpectedly return, but he did not. The old family
doctor who had nursed the various members of the
Gerhardt family through their multitudinous ailments—Doctor
Ellwanger—was taken into consultation, and he
gave sound and practical advice. Despite his Lutheran
upbringing, the practice of medicine in a large and kindly
way had led him to the conclusion that there are more
things in heaven and earth than are dreamed of in our
philosophies and in our small neighborhood relationships.
"So it is," he observed to Mrs. Gerhardt when
she confided to him nervously what the trouble was.
"Well, you mustn't worry. These things happen in
more places than you think. If you knew as much
about life as I do, and about your neighbors, you would
not cry. Your girl will be all right. She is very healthy.
She can go away somewhere afterward, and people
will never know. Why should you worry about what
your neighbors think. It is not so uncommon as you
imagine."</p>
<p>Mrs. Gerhardt marveled. He was such a wise man.
It gave her a little courage. As for Jennie, she listened to
his advice with interest and without fear. She wanted
things not so much for herself as for her child, and she was
anxious to do whatever she was told. The doctor was
curious to know who the father was; when informed
he lifted his eyes. "Indeed," he commented. "That
ought to be a bright baby."</p>
<p>There came the final hour when the child was ushered
into the world. It was Doctor Ellwanger who presided,
assisted by the mother, who, having brought forth six
herself, knew exactly what to do. There was no difficulty,
and at the first cry of the new-born infant there
awakened in Jennie a tremendous yearning toward it.
This was <i>her</i> child! It was weak and feeble—a little
girl, and it needed her care. She took it to her
breast, when it had been bathed and swaddled, with a
tremendous sense of satisfaction and joy. This was her
child, her little girl. She wanted to live to be able to
work for it, and rejoiced, even in her weakness, that she
was so strong. Doctor Ellwanger predicted a quick
recovery. He thought two weeks would be the outside
limit of her need to stay in bed. As a matter of fact, in
ten days she was up and about, as vigorous and healthy
as ever. She had been born with strength and with that
nurturing quality which makes the ideal mother.</p>
<p>The great crisis had passed, and now life went on much
as before. The children, outside of Bass, were too young
to understand fully, and had been deceived by the story
that Jennie was married to Senator Brander, who had
died. They did not know that a child was coming until
it was there. The neighbors were feared by Mrs. Gerhardt,
for they were ever watchful and really knew all.
Jennie would never have braved this local atmosphere
except for the advice of Bass, who, having secured a place
in Cleveland some time before, had written that he
thought when she was well enough it would be advisable
for the whole family to seek a new start in Cleveland.
Things were flourishing there. Once away they would
never hear of their present neighbors and Jennie could
find something to do. So she stayed at home.</p>
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