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on ne vit les mœurs plus corrompues que nos Chevaliers, et jamais le règne de la débauche ne fut plus universel." For a medieval knight the chief object of life was love. He who did not understand how to win. a lady was but half a man; and the difference between a lover and a seducer was apparently slight. The character of the seducer, as Mr. Lecky remarks, and especially of the passionless seducer who pursues his career simply as a kind of sport, and under the influence of no stronger motive than vanity or a spirit of adventure, has for many centuries been glorified and idealised in the popular literature of Christendom in a manner to which there is no parallel in antiquity.2

The Reformation brought about some change for the better, if in no other respect at least by making marriage lawful for a large class of people to whom illicit love had previously been the only means of gratifying a natural desire, and by abolishing the monasteries. In fits of religious enthusiasm even the secular legislators busied themselves with acts of incontinence in which two unmarried adults of different sex were consenting parties. In the days of the Commonwealth, according to an act of 1650, in cases of less serious breach of chastity than adultery and incest, each man or woman was for each offence to be committed to the common gaol for three months, and to find sureties for good behaviour during a whole year afterwards. In Scotland, after the Reformation, fornication was punished with a severity nearly equal to that which attended the infraction of the marriage vow.1 But the fate of these and similar laws has been either to be repealed or to become inactive. For ordinary acts of incontinence public opinion is, practically at least, the only judge. In the case of female unchastity its sentence is

1 Sainte-Palaye, op. cit. ii. 19. Cf. Walter Scott, Essay on Chivalry,' in Miscellaneous Prose Works, vi.

48 sq.
Delécluze, Roland ou la Chevalerie, i.

Lecky, op. cit. ii. 346. Cf.

356.

VOL. II

3 Pike, History of Crime in England, ii. 182.

Rogers, Social Life in Scotland, ii. 242.

5 See Pike, op. cit. ii. 582; Hume, Commentaries on the Law of Scotland, ii. 333.

F F

severe enough among the upper ranks of society, walist, so far as the lower classes is concerned, it varies considerably even in different parts of the same country, and is in many cases regarded as venial. As to similar acts committed br unmarried men, the words which Cicero uttered on behalf of Cœltus might be repeated by any modern advocate who, in defending his client, ventured frankly to express the popular opinion on the subject. It seems to me that with regard to sexual relations between unmarried men and women Christianity has done little more than establish a standard which, though accepted perhaps in theory, is hardly recognised by the feelings of the large majority of people-or at least of men-in Christian communities, and has introduced the vice of hypocrisy, which apparently was little known in sexual matters by pagan antiquity.

Why has sexual intercourse between unmarried people, if both parties consent, come to be regarded as wrong? Why are the moral opinions relating to it subject to so great variations? Why is the standard commonly so different for man and woman? We shall now try to find an answer to these questions.

If marriage, as I am inclined to suppose, is based on an instinct derived from some ape-like progenitor, it would from the beginning be regarded as the natural form of sexual intercourse in the human race, whilst other more transitory connections would appear abnormal and consequently be disapproved of. I am not certain whether some feeling of this sort, however vague, is not still very general in the race. But it has been more or less or almost totally suppressed by social conditions which make it in most cases impossible for men to marry at the first outbreak of the sexual passion. We have thus to seek for some other explanation of the severe censure passed on pre-nuptial connections.

It seems to me obvious that this censure is chiefly due to the preference which a man gives to a virgin bride. As I have shown in another place, such a preference is a

fact of very common occurrence.' It partly springs from a feeling akin to jealousy towards women who have had previous connections with other men, partly from the warm response a man expects from a woman whose appetites he is the first to gratify, and largely from an instinctive appreciation of female coyness. Each sex is

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attracted by the distinctive characteristics of the opposite sex, and coyness is a female quality. In mankind, as among other mammals, the female requires to be courted, often endeavouring for a long time to escape from the male. Not only in civilised countries may courtship mean a prolonged making of love to the woman. Mariner's words with reference to the women of Tonga hold true of a great many, if not all, savage and barbarous races of men. "It must not be supposed," he says, “that these women are always easily won; the greatest attentions and most fervent solicitations are sometimes requisite, even though there be no other lover in the way.' The marriage ceremonies of many peoples bear testimony to the same fact. One origin of the form of capture is the resistance of the pursued woman, due to coyness, partly real and partly assumed. On the East Coast of Greenland, for instance, the only method of contracting a marriage is for a man to go to the girl's tent, catch her by her hair or anything else which offers a hold, and drag her off to his dwelling without further ado; violent scenes are often the result, as single women always affect the utmost bashfulness and aversion to any proposal of marriage, lest they should lose their reputation for modesty. It is certainly not the woman who most readily yields to the desires of a man that is most attractive to him; as an ancient writer puts it, all men love seasoned dishes, not plain meats, or plainly dressed

1 Westermarck, op. cit. p. 123 sq. 2 Mariner, op. cit. ii. 174. Cf. Fritsch, Die Eingeborenen Afrika's, p. 445 (Bushmans).

3

Sud

Cf. Spencer, Principles of Sociology, i. 623 sq.; idem, in Fortnightly

Review, xxi. 897 sq.; Westermarck, op. cit. p. 388; Grosse, Die Formen der Familie, p. 107; Crawley, The Mystic Rose, p. 305 sq.

4 Nansen, First Crossing of Greenland, i. 316 sqq.

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wronding to me dowry of virgins." But the gir is not Whilst the disgrace of incontinence fav on persons, the offence against her relatives is Aluded Yen ween, her and the seducer. Speaking of the prosents wn on, among the Thlinkets, a man is bound to give to the parents of the girl whom he has seduced, Or James Douglas observes, "The offender is simply regarded as a robber, who has committed depredation on their merchandise, their only anxiety being to make the

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damages exacted as heavy as possible." Marriage by purchase has thus raised the standard of female chastity, and also, to some extent, checked the incontinence of the men. But it can certainly not be regarded as the sole cause of the duty of chastity, where such a duty is recognised by savages. Among the Veddahs, who do not make their daughters objects of traffic, the unmarried girls are nevertheless protected by their natural guardians with the keenest sense of honour." In many of the instances quoted above where a seduction is followed by more or less serious consequences for the seducer, the penalty he has to pay is evidently something else than the mere market value of the girl.

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Thus the men, by demanding that the women whom they marry shall be virgins, indirectly give rise to the demand that they themselves shall abstain from certain forms of incontinence. From my collection of facts relating to savages I find that in the majority of cases where chastity is required of unmarried girls the seducer also is considered guilty of a crime. But, as was just pointed out, his act is judged from a more limited point of view. It is chiefly, if not exclusively, regarded as an offence against the parents or family of the girl; chastity per se is hardly required of savage men. Where prostitution exists they may without censure gratify their passions among its victims. Now, to anybody who duly reflects upon the matter it is clear that the seducer does a wrong to the woman also; but I find no indication that this idea occurs at all to the savage mind. Where the seducer is censured the girl also is censured, being regarded not as the injured as the injured party but as an injurer. Even in the case of rape the harm done to the girl herself is little thought of. Among the Tonga

Islanders "rape, providing it be not upon a married woman or one to whom respect is due on the score of superior

Douglas, quoted by Petroff, op. cit.

p. 177.

2 Le Mesurier, Veddas of Ceylon,' in Jour. Roy. Asiatic Soc. Ceylon

Branch, ix. 340. Hartshorne, 'Weddas, in Indian Antiquary, viii. 320.

3 Nevill, Vaeddas of Ceylon,' in Taprobanian, i. 178.

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