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<h2> CHAPTER 7. Our Growing Modesty </h2>
<p>Being at last considered sufficiently tamed and trained to be trusted with
scissors, we barbered ourselves as best we could. A close-trimmed beard is
certainly more comfortable than a full one. Razors, naturally, they could
not supply.</p>
<p>"With so many old women you'd think there'd be some razors," sneered
Terry. Whereat Jeff pointed out that he never before had seen such
complete absence of facial hair on women.</p>
<p>"Looks to me as if the absence of men made them more feminine in that
regard, anyhow," he suggested.</p>
<p>"Well, it's the only one then," Terry reluctantly agreed. "A less feminine
lot I never saw. A child apiece doesn't seem to be enough to develop what
I call motherliness."</p>
<p>Terry's idea of motherliness was the usual one, involving a baby in arms,
or "a little flock about her knees," and the complete absorption of the
mother in said baby or flock. A motherliness which dominated society,
which influenced every art and industry, which absolutely protected all
childhood, and gave to it the most perfect care and training, did not seem
motherly—to Terry.</p>
<p>We had become well used to the clothes. They were quite as comfortable as
our own—in some ways more so—and undeniably better looking. As
to pockets, they left nothing to be desired. That second garment was
fairly quilted with pockets. They were most ingeniously arranged, so as to
be convenient to the hand and not inconvenient to the body, and were so
placed as at once to strengthen the garment and add decorative lines of
stitching.</p>
<p>In this, as in so many other points we had now to observe, there was shown
the action of a practical intelligence, coupled with fine artistic
feeling, and, apparently, untrammeled by any injurious influences.</p>
<p>Our first step of comparative freedom was a personally conducted tour of
the country. No pentagonal bodyguard now! Only our special tutors, and we
got on famously with them. Jeff said he loved Zava like an aunt—"only
jollier than any aunt I ever saw"; Somel and I were as chummy as could be—the
best of friends; but it was funny to watch Terry and Moadine. She was
patient with him, and courteous, but it was like the patience and courtesy
of some great man, say a skilled, experienced diplomat, with a schoolgirl.
Her grave acquiescence with his most preposterous expression of feeling;
her genial laughter, not only with, but, I often felt, at him—though
impeccably polite; her innocent questions, which almost invariably led him
to say more than he intended—Jeff and I found it all amusing to
watch.</p>
<p>He never seemed to recognize that quiet background of superiority. When
she dropped an argument he always thought he had silenced her; when she
laughed he thought it tribute to his wit.</p>
<p>I hated to admit to myself how much Terry had sunk in my esteem. Jeff felt
it too, I am sure; but neither of us admitted it to the other. At home we
had measured him with other men, and, though we knew his failings, he was
by no means an unusual type. We knew his virtues too, and they had always
seemed more prominent than the faults. Measured among women—our
women at home, I mean—he had always stood high. He was visibly
popular. Even where his habits were known, there was no discrimination
against him; in some cases his reputation for what was felicitously termed
"gaiety" seemed a special charm.</p>
<p>But here, against the calm wisdom and quiet restrained humor of these
women, with only that blessed Jeff and my inconspicuous self to compare
with, Terry did stand out rather strong.</p>
<p>As "a man among men," he didn't; as a man among—I shall have to say,
"females," he didn't; his intense masculinity seemed only fit complement
to their intense femininity. But here he was all out of drawing.</p>
<p>Moadine was a big woman, with a balanced strength that seldom showed. Her
eye was as quietly watchful as a fencer's. She maintained a pleasant
relation with her charge, but I doubt if many, even in that country, could
have done as well.</p>
<p>He called her "Maud," amongst ourselves, and said she was "a good old
soul, but a little slow"; wherein he was quite wrong. Needless to say, he
called Jeff's teacher "Java," and sometimes "Mocha," or plain "Coffee";
when specially mischievous, "Chicory," and even "Postum." But Somel rather
escaped this form of humor, save for a rather forced "Some 'ell."</p>
<p>"Don't you people have but one name?" he asked one day, after we had been
introduced to a whole group of them, all with pleasant, few-syllabled
strange names, like the ones we knew.</p>
<p>"Oh yes," Moadine told him. "A good many of us have another, as we get on
in life—a descriptive one. That is the name we earn. Sometimes even
that is changed, or added to, in an unusually rich life. Such as our
present Land Mother—what you call president or king, I believe. She
was called Mera, even as a child; that means 'thinker.' Later there was
added Du—Du-Mera—the wise thinker, and now we all know her as
O-du-mera—great and wise thinker. You shall meet her."</p>
<p>"No surnames at all then?" pursued Terry, with his somewhat patronizing
air. "No family name?"</p>
<p>"Why no," she said. "Why should we? We are all descended from a common
source—all one 'family' in reality. You see, our comparatively brief
and limited history gives us that advantage at least."</p>
<p>"But does not each mother want her own child to bear her name?" I asked.</p>
<p>"No—why should she? The child has its own."</p>
<p>"Why for—for identification—so people will know whose child
she is."</p>
<p>"We keep the most careful records," said Somel. "Each one of us has our
exact line of descent all the way back to our dear First Mother. There are
many reasons for doing that. But as to everyone knowing which child
belongs to which mother—why should she?"</p>
<p>Here, as in so many other instances, we were led to feel the difference
between the purely maternal and the paternal attitude of mind. The element
of personal pride seemed strangely lacking.</p>
<p>"How about your other works?" asked Jeff. "Don't you sign your names to
them—books and statues and so on?"</p>
<p>"Yes, surely, we are all glad and proud to. Not only books and statues,
but all kinds of work. You will find little names on the houses, on the
furniture, on the dishes sometimes. Because otherwise one is likely to
forget, and we want to know to whom to be grateful."</p>
<p>"You speak as if it were done for the convenience of the consumer—not
the pride of the producer," I suggested.</p>
<p>"It's both," said Somel. "We have pride enough in our work."</p>
<p>"Then why not in your children?" urged Jeff.</p>
<p>"But we have! We're magnificently proud of them," she insisted.</p>
<p>"Then why not sign 'em?" said Terry triumphantly.</p>
<p>Moadine turned to him with her slightly quizzical smile. "Because the
finished product is not a private one. When they are babies, we do speak
of them, at times, as 'Essa's Lato,' or 'Novine's Amel'; but that is
merely descriptive and conversational. In the records, of course, the
child stands in her own line of mothers; but in dealing with it personally
it is Lato, or Amel, without dragging in its ancestors."</p>
<p>"But have you names enough to give a new one to each child?"</p>
<p>"Assuredly we have, for each living generation."</p>
<p>Then they asked about our methods, and found first that "we" did so and
so, and then that other nations did differently. Upon which they wanted to
know which method has been proved best—and we had to admit that so
far as we knew there had been no attempt at comparison, each people
pursuing its own custom in the fond conviction of superiority, and either
despising or quite ignoring the others.</p>
<p>With these women the most salient quality in all their institutions was
reasonableness. When I dug into the records to follow out any line of
development, that was the most astonishing thing—the conscious
effort to make it better.</p>
<p>They had early observed the value of certain improvements, had easily
inferred that there was room for more, and took the greatest pains to
develop two kinds of minds—the critic and inventor. Those who showed
an early tendency to observe, to discriminate, to suggest, were given
special training for that function; and some of their highest officials
spent their time in the most careful study of one or another branch of
work, with a view to its further improvement.</p>
<p>In each generation there was sure to arrive some new mind to detect faults
and show need of alterations; and the whole corps of inventors was at hand
to apply their special faculty at the point criticized, and offer
suggestions.</p>
<p>We had learned by this time not to open a discussion on any of their
characteristics without first priming ourselves to answer questions about
our own methods; so I kept rather quiet on this matter of conscious
improvement. We were not prepared to show our way was better.</p>
<p>There was growing in our minds, at least in Jeff's and mine, a keen
appreciation of the advantages of this strange country and its management.
Terry remained critical. We laid most of it to his nerves. He certainly
was irritable.</p>
<p>The most conspicuous feature of the whole land was the perfection of its
food supply. We had begun to notice from that very first walk in the
forest, the first partial view from our 'plane. Now we were taken to see
this mighty garden, and shown its methods of culture.</p>
<p>The country was about the size of Holland, some ten or twelve thousand
square miles. One could lose a good many Hollands along the
forest-smothered flanks of those mighty mountains. They had a population
of about three million—not a large one, but quality is something.
Three million is quite enough to allow for considerable variation, and
these people varied more widely than we could at first account for.</p>
<p>Terry had insisted that if they were parthenogenetic they'd be as alike as
so many ants or aphids; he urged their visible differences as proof that
there must be men—somewhere.</p>
<p>But when we asked them, in our later, more intimate conversations, how
they accounted for so much divergence without cross-fertilization, they
attributed it partly to the careful education, which followed each slight
tendency to differ, and partly to the law of mutation. This they had found
in their work with plants, and fully proven in their own case.</p>
<p>Physically they were more alike than we, as they lacked all morbid or
excessive types. They were tall, strong, healthy, and beautiful as a race,
but differed individually in a wide range of feature, coloring, and
expression.</p>
<p>"But surely the most important growth is in mind—and in the things
we make," urged Somel. "Do you find your physical variation accompanied by
a proportionate variation in ideas, feelings, and products? Or, among
people who look more alike, do you find their internal life and their work
as similar?"</p>
<p>We were rather doubtful on this point, and inclined to hold that there was
more chance of improvement in greater physical variation.</p>
<p>"It certainly should be," Zava admitted. "We have always thought it a
grave initial misfortune to have lost half our little world. Perhaps that
is one reason why we have so striven for conscious improvement."</p>
<p>"But acquired traits are not transmissible," Terry declared. "Weissman has
proved that."</p>
<p>They never disputed our absolute statements, only made notes of them.</p>
<p>"If that is so, then our improvement must be due either to mutation, or
solely to education," she gravely pursued. "We certainly have improved. It
may be that all these higher qualities were latent in the original mother,
that careful education is bringing them out, and that our personal
differences depend on slight variations in prenatal condition."</p>
<p>"I think it is more in your accumulated culture," Jeff suggested. "And in
the amazing psychic growth you have made. We know very little about
methods of real soul culture—and you seem to know a great deal."</p>
<p>Be that as it might, they certainly presented a higher level of active
intelligence, and of behavior, than we had so far really grasped. Having
known in our lives several people who showed the same delicate courtesy
and were equally pleasant to live with, at least when they wore their
"company manners," we had assumed that our companions were a carefully
chosen few. Later we were more and more impressed that all this gentle
breeding was breeding; that they were born to it, reared in it, that it
was as natural and universal with them as the gentleness of doves or the
alleged wisdom of serpents.</p>
<p>As for the intelligence, I confess that this was the most impressive and,
to me, most mortifying, of any single feature of Herland. We soon ceased
to comment on this or other matters which to them were such obvious
commonplaces as to call forth embarrassing questions about our own
conditions.</p>
<p>This was nowhere better shown than in that matter of food supply, which I
will now attempt to describe.</p>
<p>Having improved their agriculture to the highest point, and carefully
estimated the number of persons who could comfortably live on their square
miles; having then limited their population to that number, one would
think that was all there was to be done. But they had not thought so. To
them the country was a unit—it was theirs. They themselves were a
unit, a conscious group; they thought in terms of the community. As such,
their time-sense was not limited to the hopes and ambitions of an
individual life. Therefore, they habitually considered and carried out
plans for improvement which might cover centuries.</p>
<p>I had never seen, had scarcely imagined, human beings undertaking such a
work as the deliberate replanting of an entire forest area with different
kinds of trees. Yet this seemed to them the simplest common sense, like a
man's plowing up an inferior lawn and reseeding it. Now every tree bore
fruit—edible fruit, that is. In the case of one tree, in which they
took especial pride, it had originally no fruit at all—that is, none
humanly edible—yet was so beautiful that they wished to keep it. For
nine hundred years they had experimented, and now showed us this
particularly lovely graceful tree, with a profuse crop of nutritious
seeds.</p>
<p>They had early decided that trees were the best food plants, requiring far
less labor in tilling the soil, and bearing a larger amount of food for
the same ground space; also doing much to preserve and enrich the soil.</p>
<p>Due regard had been paid to seasonable crops, and their fruit and nuts,
grains and berries, kept on almost the year through.</p>
<p>On the higher part of the country, near the backing wall of mountains,
they had a real winter with snow. Toward the south-eastern point, where
there was a large valley with a lake whose outlet was subterranean, the
climate was like that of California, and citrus fruits, figs, and olives
grew abundantly.</p>
<p>What impressed me particularly was their scheme of fertilization. Here was
this little shut-in piece of land where one would have thought an ordinary
people would have been starved out long ago or reduced to an annual
struggle for life. These careful culturists had worked out a perfect
scheme of refeeding the soil with all that came out of it. All the scraps
and leavings of their food, plant waste from lumber work or textile
industry, all the solid matter from the sewage, properly treated and
combined—everything which came from the earth went back to it.</p>
<p>The practical result was like that in any healthy forest; an increasingly
valuable soil was being built, instead of the progressive impoverishment
so often seen in the rest of the world.</p>
<p>When this first burst upon us we made such approving comments that they
were surprised that such obvious common sense should be praised; asked
what our methods were; and we had some difficulty in—well, in
diverting them, by referring to the extent of our own land, and the—admitted—carelessness
with which we had skimmed the cream of it.</p>
<p>At least we thought we had diverted them. Later I found that besides
keeping a careful and accurate account of all we told them, they had a
sort of skeleton chart, on which the things we said and the things we
palpably avoided saying were all set down and studied. It really was
child's play for those profound educators to work out a painfully accurate
estimate of our conditions—in some lines. When a given line of
observation seemed to lead to some very dreadful inference they always
gave us the benefit of the doubt, leaving it open to further knowledge.
Some of the things we had grown to accept as perfectly natural, or as
belonging to our human limitations, they literally could not have
believed; and, as I have said, we had all of us joined in a tacit endeavor
to conceal much of the social status at home.</p>
<p>"Confound their grandmotherly minds!" Terry said. "Of course they can't
understand a Man's World! They aren't human—they're just a pack of
Fe-Fe-Females!" This was after he had to admit their parthenogenesis.</p>
<p>"I wish our grandfatherly minds had managed as well," said Jeff. "Do you
really think it's to our credit that we have muddled along with all our
poverty and disease and the like? They have peace and plenty, wealth and
beauty, goodness and intellect. Pretty good people, I think!"</p>
<p>"You'll find they have their faults too," Terry insisted; and partly in
self-defense, we all three began to look for those faults of theirs. We
had been very strong on this subject before we got there—in those
baseless speculations of ours.</p>
<p>"Suppose there is a country of women only," Jeff had put it, over and
over. "What'll they be like?"</p>
<p>And we had been cocksure as to the inevitable limitations, the faults and
vices, of a lot of women. We had expected them to be given over to what we
called "feminine vanity"—"frills and furbelows," and we found they
had evolved a costume more perfect than the Chinese dress, richly
beautiful when so desired, always useful, of unfailing dignity and good
taste.</p>
<p>We had expected a dull submissive monotony, and found a daring social
inventiveness far beyond our own, and a mechanical and scientific
development fully equal to ours.</p>
<p>We had expected pettiness, and found a social consciousness besides which
our nations looked like quarreling children—feebleminded ones at
that.</p>
<p>We had expected jealousy, and found a broad sisterly affection, a
fair-minded intelligence, to which we could produce no parallel.</p>
<p>We had expected hysteria, and found a standard of health and vigor, a
calmness of temper, to which the habit of profanity, for instance, was
impossible to explain—we tried it.</p>
<p>All these things even Terry had to admit, but he still insisted that we
should find out the other side pretty soon.</p>
<p>"It stands to reason, doesn't it?" he argued. "The whole thing's deuced
unnatural—I'd say impossible if we weren't in it. And an unnatural
condition's sure to have unnatural results. You'll find some awful
characteristics—see if you don't! For instance—we don't know
yet what they do with their criminals—their defectives—their
aged. You notice we haven't seen any! There's got to be something!"</p>
<p>I was inclined to believe that there had to be something, so I took the
bull by the horns—the cow, I should say!—and asked Somel.</p>
<p>"I want to find some flaw in all this perfection," I told her flatly. "It
simply isn't possible that three million people have no faults. We are
trying our best to understand and learn—would you mind helping us by
saying what, to your minds, are the worst qualities of this unique
civilization of yours?"</p>
<p>We were sitting together in a shaded arbor, in one of those eating-gardens
of theirs. The delicious food had been eaten, a plate of fruit still
before us. We could look out on one side over a stretch of open country,
quietly rich and lovely; on the other, the garden, with tables here and
there, far apart enough for privacy. Let me say right here that with all
their careful "balance of population" there was no crowding in this
country. There was room, space, a sunny breezy freedom everywhere.</p>
<p>Somel set her chin upon her hand, her elbow on the low wall beside her,
and looked off over the fair land.</p>
<p>"Of course we have faults—all of us," she said. "In one way you
might say that we have more than we used to—that is, our standard of
perfection seems to get farther and farther away. But we are not
discouraged, because our records do show gain—considerable gain.</p>
<p>"When we began—even with the start of one particularly noble mother—we
inherited the characteristics of a long race-record behind her. And they
cropped out from time to time—alarmingly. But it is—yes, quite
six hundred years since we have had what you call a 'criminal.'</p>
<p>"We have, of course, made it our first business to train out, to breed
out, when possible, the lowest types."</p>
<p>"Breed out?" I asked. "How could you—with parthenogenesis?"</p>
<p>"If the girl showing the bad qualities had still the power to appreciate
social duty, we appealed to her, by that, to renounce motherhood. Some of
the few worst types were, fortunately, unable to reproduce. But if the
fault was in a disproportionate egotism—then the girl was sure she
had the right to have children, even that hers would be better than
others."</p>
<p>"I can see that," I said. "And then she would be likely to rear them in
the same spirit."</p>
<p>"That we never allowed," answered Somel quietly.</p>
<p>"Allowed?" I queried. "Allowed a mother to rear her own children?"</p>
<p>"Certainly not," said Somel, "unless she was fit for that supreme task."</p>
<p>This was rather a blow to my previous convictions.</p>
<p>"But I thought motherhood was for each of you—"</p>
<p>"Motherhood—yes, that is, maternity, to bear a child. But education
is our highest art, only allowed to our highest artists."</p>
<p>"Education?" I was puzzled again. "I don't mean education. I mean by
motherhood not only child-bearing, but the care of babies."</p>
<p>"The care of babies involves education, and is entrusted only to the most
fit," she repeated.</p>
<p>"Then you separate mother and child!" I cried in cold horror, something of
Terry's feeling creeping over me, that there must be something wrong among
these many virtues.</p>
<p>"Not usually," she patiently explained. "You see, almost every woman
values her maternity above everything else. Each girl holds it close and
dear, an exquisite joy, a crowning honor, the most intimate, most
personal, most precious thing. That is, the child-rearing has come to be
with us a culture so profoundly studied, practiced with such subtlety and
skill, that the more we love our children the less we are willing to trust
that process to unskilled hands—even our own."</p>
<p>"But a mother's love—" I ventured.</p>
<p>She studied my face, trying to work out a means of clear explanation.</p>
<p>"You told us about your dentists," she said, at length, "those quaintly
specialized persons who spend their lives filling little holes in other
persons' teeth—even in children's teeth sometimes."</p>
<p>"Yes?" I said, not getting her drift.</p>
<p>"Does mother-love urge mothers—with you—to fill their own
children's teeth? Or to wish to?"</p>
<p>"Why no—of course not," I protested. "But that is a highly
specialized craft. Surely the care of babies is open to any woman—any
mother!"</p>
<p>"We do not think so," she gently replied. "Those of us who are the most
highly competent fulfill that office; and a majority of our girls eagerly
try for it—I assure you we have the very best."</p>
<p>"But the poor mother—bereaved of her baby—"</p>
<p>"Oh no!" she earnestly assured me. "Not in the least bereaved. It is her
baby still—it is with her—she has not lost it. But she is not
the only one to care for it. There are others whom she knows to be wiser.
She knows it because she has studied as they did, practiced as they did,
and honors their real superiority. For the child's sake, she is glad to
have for it this highest care."</p>
<p>I was unconvinced. Besides, this was only hearsay; I had yet to see the
motherhood of Herland.</p>
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