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+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #53763 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/53763)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Intermediate Sex, by Edward Carpenter
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: The Intermediate Sex
- A Study of Some Transitional Types of Men and Women
-
-Author: Edward Carpenter
-
-Release Date: December 18, 2016 [EBook #53763]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE INTERMEDIATE SEX ***
-
-
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-
-Produced by Turgut Dincer and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by The
-Internet Archive)
-
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-
-
-
-The Intermediate Sex
-
-
-
-
-_Works by Edward Carpenter_
-
-
- ANGELS’ WINGS
- ART OF CREATION
- CIVILIZATION: ITS CAUSE AND CURE
- DAYS WITH WALT WHITMAN
- DRAMA OF LOVE AND DEATH
- ENGLAND’S IDEAL
- FROM ADAM’S PEAK TO ELEPHANTA
- HEALING OF NATIONS
- INTERMEDIATE TYPES
- AMONG PRIMITIVE FOLK
- IOLÄUS: AN ANTHOLOGY OF FRIENDSHIP
- LOVE’S COMING OF AGE
- MY DAYS AND DREAMS
- PAGAN AND CHRISTIAN CREEDS
- PROMISED LAND
- TOWARDS DEMOCRACY
- TOWARDS INDUSTRIAL FREEDOM
- VISIT TO A GÑANI
- CHANTS OF LABOUR
-
-
-
-
- The Intermediate
- Sex
-
- _A Study of Some Transitional Types
- of Men and Women_
-
- BY
-
- EDWARD CARPENTER
-
- [Illustration]
-
- LONDON: GEORGE ALLEN & UNWIN LTD.
- RUSKIN HOUSE, 40 MUSEUM STREET, W.C.1
-
- _First published_ _1908_
- _Reprinted_ _1909_
- ” _1912_
- ” _1916_
- ” _1918_
- ” _1921_
-
- [_All rights reserved._]
-
-
-“_There are transitional forms between the metals and non-metals; between
-chemical combinations and simple mixtures, between animals and plants,
-between phanerogams and cryptogams, and between mammals and birds.… The
-improbability may henceforth be taken for granted of finding in Nature a
-sharp cleavage between all that is masculine on the one side and all that
-is feminine on the other; or that any living being is so simple in this
-respect that it can be put wholly on one side, or wholly on the other, of
-the line._”
-
- O. WEININGER.
-
-
-
-
-Prefatory Note
-
-TO FIRST EDITION
-
-
-The following papers, now collected in book-form, have been written--and
-some of them published--on various occasions during the last twelve or
-fourteen years, and in the intervals of other work; and this must be my
-excuse for occasional repetitions or overlapping of matter, which may be
-observable among them. I have thought it best, however, to leave them as
-they stand, as in this way each is more complete in itself. The second
-essay, which gives its title to the book, has already appeared in my
-“Love’s Coming-of-Age” (edition 1906), but is reprinted here as belonging
-more properly to this volume.
-
-A collection of quotations from responsible writers, who touch on various
-sides of the subject, is added at the end, to form an Appendix--which the
-author thinks will prove helpful, though he does not necessarily endorse
-all the opinions presented.
-
- E. C.
-
-
-
-
-Contents
-
-
- _Page_
-
- PREFATORY NOTE 7
-
- I. INTRODUCTORY 9
-
- II. THE INTERMEDIATE SEX 16
-
- III. THE HOMOGENIC ATTACHMENT 39
-
- IV. AFFECTION IN EDUCATION 83
-
- V. THE PLACE OF THE URANIAN IN SOCIETY 107
-
- APPENDIX 131
-
-
-
-
-I
-
-Introductory
-
-
-The subject dealt with in this book is one of great, and one may say
-growing, importance. Whether it is that the present period is one of
-large increase in the numbers of men and women of an intermediate or
-mixed temperament, or whether it merely is that it is a period in which
-more than usual attention happens to be accorded to them, the fact
-certainly remains that the subject has great actuality and is pressing
-upon us from all sides. It is recognised that anyhow the number of
-persons occupying an intermediate position between the two sexes is
-very great, that they play a considerable part in general society, and
-that they necessarily present and embody many problems which, both for
-their own sakes and that of society, demand solution. The literature
-of the question has in consequence already grown to be very extensive,
-especially on the Continent, and includes a great quantity of scientific
-works, medical treatises, literary essays, romances, historical novels,
-poetry, etc. And it is now generally admitted that some knowledge and
-enlightened understanding of the subject is greatly needed for the use
-of certain classes--as, for instance, medical men, teachers, parents,
-magistrates, judges, and the like.
-
-That there are distinctions and gradations of Soul-material in relation
-to Sex--that the inner psychical affections and affinities shade off
-and graduate, in a vast number of instances, most subtly from male to
-female, and not always in obvious correspondence with the outer bodily
-sex--is a thing evident enough to anyone who considers the subject; nor
-could any good purpose well be served by ignoring this fact--even if it
-were possible to do so. It is easy of course (as some do) to classify
-all these mixed or intermediate types as _bad_. It is also easy (as some
-do) to argue that just because they combine opposite qualities they are
-likely to be _good_ and valuable. But the subtleties and complexities
-of Nature cannot be despatched in this off-hand manner. The great
-probability is that, as in any other class of human beings, there will be
-among these too, good and bad, high and low, worthy and unworthy--some
-perhaps exhibiting through their double temperament a rare and beautiful
-flower of humanity, others a perverse and tangled ruin.
-
-Before the facts of Nature we have to preserve a certain humility and
-reverence; nor rush in with our preconceived and obstinate assumptions.
-Though these gradations of human type have always, and among all peoples,
-been more or less known and recognised, yet their frequency to-day, or
-even the concentration of attention on them, may be the indication of
-some important change actually in progress. We do _not_ know, in fact,
-what possible evolutions are to come, or what new forms, of permanent
-place and value, are being already slowly differentiated from the
-surrounding mass of humanity. It may be that, as at some past period of
-evolution the worker-bee was without doubt differentiated from the two
-ordinary bee-sexes, so at the present time certain new types of human
-kind may be emerging, which will have an important part to play in the
-societies of the future--even though for the moment their appearance is
-attended by a good deal of confusion and misapprehension. It may be so;
-or it may not. We do not know; and the best attitude we can adopt is one
-of sincere and dispassionate observation of facts.
-
-Of course wherever this subject touches on the domain of love we may
-expect difficult queries to arise. Yet it is here probably that the
-noblest work of the intermediate sex or sexes will be accomplished,
-as well as the greatest errors committed. It seems almost a law of
-Nature that new and important movements should be misunderstood and
-vilified--even though afterwards they may be widely approved or admitted
-to honour. Such movements are always envisaged first from whatever aspect
-they may possibly present, of ludicrous or contemptible. The early
-Christians, in the eyes of Romans, were chiefly known as the perpetrators
-of obscure rites and crimes in the darkness of the catacombs. Modern
-Socialism was for a long time supposed to be an affair of daggers and
-dynamite; and even now there are thousands of good people ignorant enough
-to believe that it simply means “divide up all round, and each take his
-threepenny bit.” Vegetarians were supposed to be a feeble and brainless
-set of cabbage-eaters. The Women’s movement, so vast in its scope and
-importance, was nothing but an absurd attempt to make women “the apes
-of men.” And so on without end; the accusation in each case being some
-tag or last fag-end of fact, caught up by ignorance, and coloured by
-prejudice. So commonplace is it to misunderstand, so easy to misrepresent.
-
-That the Uranian temperament, especially in regard to its affectional
-side, is not without faults must naturally be allowed; but that it has
-been grossly and absurdly misunderstood is certain. With a good deal of
-experience in the matter, I think one may safely say that the defect
-of the male Uranian, or Urning,[1] is _not_ sensuality--but rather
-_sentimentality_. The lower, more ordinary types of Urning are often
-terribly sentimental; the superior types strangely, almost incredibly
-emotional; but neither _as a rule_ (though of course there must be
-exceptions) are so sensual as the average normal man.
-
-This immense capacity of emotional love represents of course a great
-driving force. Whether in the individual or in society, love is eminently
-creative. It is their great genius for attachment which gives to the best
-Uranian types their penetrating influence and activity, and which often
-makes them beloved and accepted far and wide even by those who know
-nothing of their inner mind. How many so-called philanthropists of the
-best kind (we need not mention names) have been inspired by the Uranian
-temperament, the world will probably never know. And in all walks of
-life the great number and influence of folk of this disposition, and the
-distinguished place they already occupy, is only realised by those who
-are more or less behind the scenes. It is probable also that it is this
-genius for emotional love which gives to the Uranians their remarkable
-_youthfulness_.
-
-Anyhow, with their extraordinary gift for, and experience in, affairs
-of the heart--from the double point of view, both of the man and of the
-woman--it is not difficult to see that these people have a special work
-to do as reconcilers and interpreters of the two sexes to each other.
-Of this I have spoken at more length below (chaps. ii. and v.). It is
-probable that the superior Urnings will become, in affairs of the heart,
-to a large extent the teachers of future society; and if so that their
-influence will tend to the realisation and expression of an attachment
-less exclusively sensual than the average of to-day, and to the diffusion
-of this in all directions.
-
-While at any rate not presuming to speak with authority on so difficult
-a subject, I plead for the necessity of a patient consideration of it,
-for the due recognition of the types of character concerned, and for some
-endeavour to give them their fitting place and sphere of usefulness in
-the general scheme of society.
-
-One thing more by way of introductory explanation. The word Love is
-commonly used in so general and almost indiscriminate a fashion as
-to denote sometimes physical instincts and acts, and sometimes the
-most intimate and profound feelings; and in this way a good deal of
-misunderstanding is caused. In this book (unless there be exceptions in
-the Appendix) the word is used to denote the inner devotion of one person
-to another; and when anything else is meant--as, for instance, sexual
-relations and actions--this is clearly stated and expressed.
-
-
-
-
-II
-
-The Intermediate Sex.
-
- “Urning men and women, on whose book of life Nature has written her
- new word which sounds so strange to us, bear such storm and stress
- within them, such ferment and fluctuation, so much complex material
- having its outlet only towards the future; their individualities
- are so rich and many-sided, and withal so little understood,
- that it is impossible to characterise them adequately in a few
- sentences.”--_Otto de Joux._
-
-
-In late years (and since the arrival of the New Woman amongst us) many
-things in the relation of men and women to each other have altered, or
-at any rate become clearer. The growing sense of equality in habits
-and customs--university studies, art, music, politics, the bicycle,
-etc.--all these things have brought about a _rapprochement_ between the
-sexes. If the modern woman is a little more masculine in some ways than
-her predecessor, the modern man (it is to be hoped), while by no means
-effeminate, is a little more sensitive in temperament and artistic in
-feeling than the original John Bull. It is beginning to be recognised
-that the sexes do not or should not normally form two groups hopelessly
-isolated in habit and feeling from each other, but that they rather
-represent the two poles of _one_ group--which is the human race; so
-that while certainly the extreme specimens at either pole are vastly
-divergent, there are great numbers in the middle region who (though
-differing corporeally as men and women) are by emotion and temperament
-very near to each other.[2] We all know women with a strong dash of
-the masculine temperament, and we all know men whose almost feminine
-sensibility and intuition seem to belie their bodily form. Nature, it
-might appear, in mixing the elements which go to compose each individual,
-does not always keep her two groups of ingredients--which represent
-the two sexes--properly apart, but often throws them crosswise in a
-somewhat baffling manner, now this way and now that; yet wisely, we must
-think--for if a severe distinction of elements were always maintained
-the two sexes would soon drift into far latitudes and absolutely cease
-to understand each other. As it is, there are some remarkable and (we
-think) indispensable types of character in whom there is such a union or
-balance of the feminine and masculine qualities that these people become
-to a great extent the interpreters of men and women to each other.
-
-There is another point which has become clearer of late. For as people
-are beginning to see that the sexes form in a certain sense a continuous
-group, so they are beginning to see that Love and Friendship--which
-have been so often set apart from each other as things distinct--are in
-reality closely related and shade imperceptibly into each other. Women
-are beginning to demand that Marriage shall mean Friendship as well as
-Passion; that a comrade-like Equality shall be included in the word Love;
-and it is recognised that from the one extreme of a ‘Platonic’ friendship
-(generally between persons of the same sex) up to the other extreme of
-passionate love (generally between persons of opposite sex) no hard and
-fast line can at any point be drawn effectively separating the different
-kinds of attachment. We know, in fact, of Friendships so romantic in
-sentiment that they verge into love; we know of Loves so intellectual and
-spiritual that they hardly dwell in the sphere of Passion.
-
-A moment’s thought will show that the general conceptions indicated
-above--if anywhere near the truth--point to an immense diversity of human
-temperament and character in matters relating to sex and love; but though
-such diversity has probably always existed, it has only in comparatively
-recent times become a subject of study.
-
-More than thirty years ago, however, an Austrian writer, K. H. Ulrichs,
-drew attention in a series of pamphlets (_Memnon_, _Ara Spei_, _Inclusa_,
-etc.) to the existence of a class of people who strongly illustrate
-the above remarks, and with whom specially this paper is concerned. He
-pointed out that there were people born in such a position--as it were on
-the dividing line between the sexes--that while belonging distinctly to
-one sex as far as their bodies are concerned they may be said to belong
-_mentally_ and _emotionally_ to the other; that there were men, for
-instance, who might be described as of feminine soul enclosed in a male
-body (_anima muliebris in corpore virili inclusa_), or in other cases,
-women whose definition would be just the reverse. And he maintained that
-this doubleness of nature was to a great extent proved by the special
-direction of their love-sentiment. For in such cases, as indeed might
-be expected, the (apparently) masculine person instead of forming a
-love-union with a female tended to contract romantic friendships with one
-of his own sex; while the apparently feminine would, instead of marrying
-in the usual way, devote herself to the love of another feminine.
-
-People of this kind (_i.e._, having this special variation of the
-love-sentiment) he called Urnings;[3] and though we are not obliged
-to accept his theory about the crosswise connexion between ‘soul’ and
-‘body,’ since at best these words are somewhat vague and indefinite;
-yet his work was important because it was one of the first attempts,
-in modern times, to recognise the existence of what might be called an
-Intermediate sex, and to give at any rate _some_ explanation of it.[4]
-
-Since that time the subject has been widely studied and written about
-by scientific men and others, especially on the Continent (though in
-England it is still comparatively unknown), and by means of an extended
-observation of present-day cases, as well as the indirect testimony
-of the history and literature of past times, quite a body of general
-conclusions has been arrived at--of which I propose in the following
-pages to give some slight account.
-
-Contrary to the general impression, one of the first points that emerges
-from this study is that ‘Urnings,’ or Uranians, are by no means so
-very rare; but that they form, beneath the surface of society, a large
-class. It remains difficult, however, to get an exact statement of their
-numbers; and this for more than one reason: partly because, owing to
-the want of any general understanding of their case, these folk tend to
-conceal their true feelings from all but their own kind, and indeed often
-deliberately act in such a manner as to lead the world astray--(whence it
-arises that a normal man living in a certain society will often refuse to
-believe that there is a single Urning in the circle of his acquaintance,
-while one of the latter, or one that understands the nature, living in
-the same society, can count perhaps a score or more)--and partly because
-it is indubitable that the numbers do vary very greatly, not only in
-different countries but even in different classes in the same country.
-The consequence of all this being that we have estimates differing very
-widely from each other. Dr. Grabowsky, a well-known writer in Germany,
-quotes figures (which we think must be exaggerated) as high as one man
-in every 22, while Dr. Albert Moll (_Die Conträre Sexualempfindung_,
-chap. 3) gives estimates varying from 1 in every 50 to as low as 1 in
-every 500.[5] These figures apply to such as are exclusively of the said
-nature, _i.e._, to those whose deepest feelings of love and friendship
-go out only to persons of their own sex. Of course, if in addition are
-included those double-natured people (of whom there is a great number)
-who experience the normal attachment, with the homogenic tendency in less
-or greater degree superadded, the estimates must be greatly higher.
-
-In the second place it emerges (also contrary to the general impression)
-that men and women of the exclusively Uranian type are by no means
-necessarily morbid in any way--unless, indeed, their peculiar temperament
-be pronounced in itself morbid. Formerly it was assumed as a matter of
-course, that the type was merely a result of disease and degeneration;
-but now with the examination of the actual facts it appears that, on the
-contrary, many are fine, healthy specimens of their sex, muscular and
-well-developed in body, of powerful brain, high standard of conduct, and
-with nothing abnormal or morbid of any kind observable in their physical
-structure or constitution. This is of course not true of all, and there
-still remain a certain number of cases of weakly type to support the
-neuropathic view. Yet it is very noticeable that this view is much less
-insisted on by the later writers than by the earlier. It is also worth
-noticing that it is now acknowledged that even in the most healthy cases
-the special affectional temperament of the ‘Intermediate’ is, as a rule,
-ineradicable; so much so that when (as in not a few instances) such men
-and women, from social or other considerations, have forced themselves to
-marry and even have children, they have still not been able to overcome
-their own bias, or the leaning after all of their life-attachment to some
-friend of their own sex.
-
-This subject, though obviously one of considerable interest and
-importance, has been hitherto, as I have pointed out, but little
-discussed in this country, partly owing to a certain amount of doubt
-and distrust which has, not unnaturally perhaps, surrounded it. And
-certainly if the men and women born with the tendency in question were
-only exceedingly rare, though it would not be fair on that account to
-ignore them, yet it would hardly be necessary to dwell at great length on
-their case. But as the class is really, on any computation, numerous, it
-becomes a duty for society not only to understand them but to help them
-to understand themselves.
-
-For there is no doubt that in many cases people of this kind suffer a
-great deal from their own temperament--and yet, after all, it is possible
-that they may have an important part to play in the evolution of the
-race. Anyone who realises what Love is, the dedication of the heart, so
-profound, so absorbing, so mysterious, so imperative, and always just
-in the noblest natures so strong, cannot fail to see how difficult, how
-tragic even, must often be the fate of those whose deepest feelings are
-destined from the earliest days to be a riddle and a stumbling-block,
-unexplained to themselves, passed over in silence by others.[6] To call
-people of such temperament ‘morbid,’ and so forth, is of no use. Such a
-term is, in fact, absurdly inapplicable to many, who are among the most
-active, the most amiable and accepted members of society; besides, it
-forms no solution of the problem in question, and only amounts to marking
-down for disparagement a fellow-creature who has already considerable
-difficulties to contend with. Says Dr. Moll, “Anyone who has seen many
-Urnings will probably admit that they form a by no means enervated
-human group; on the contrary, one finds powerful, healthy-looking folk
-among them;” but in the very next sentence he says that they “suffer
-severely” from the way they are regarded; and in the manifesto of a
-considerable community of such people in Germany occur these words, “The
-rays of sunshine in the night of our existence are so rare, that we are
-responsive and deeply grateful for the least movement, for every single
-voice that speaks in our favour in the forum of mankind.”[7]
-
-In dealing with this class of folk, then, while I do not deny that they
-present a difficult problem, I think that just for that very reason
-their case needs discussion. It would be a great mistake to suppose
-that their attachments are necessarily sexual, or connected with sexual
-acts. On the contrary (as abundant evidence shows), they are often purely
-emotional in their character; and to confuse Uranians (as is so often
-done) with libertines having no law but curiosity in self-indulgence is
-to do them a great wrong. At the same time, it is evident that their
-special temperament may sometimes cause them difficulty in regard to
-their sexual relations. Into this subject we need not just now enter. But
-we may point out how hard it is, especially for the young among them,
-that a veil of complete silence should be drawn over the subject, leading
-to the most painful misunderstandings, and perversions and confusions of
-mind; and that there should be no hint of guidance; nor any recognition
-of the solitary and really serious inner struggles they may have to face!
-If the problem is a difficult one--as it undoubtedly is--the fate of
-those people is already hard who have to meet it in their own persons,
-without their suffering in addition from the refusal of society to give
-them any help. It is partly for these reasons, and to throw a little
-light where it may be needed, that I have thought it might be advisable
-in this paper simply to give a few general characteristics of the
-Intermediate types.
-
-As indicated then already, in bodily structure there is, as a rule,
-nothing to distinguish the subjects of our discussion from ordinary
-men and women; but if we take the general mental characteristics it
-appears from almost universal testimony that the male tends to be of a
-rather gentle, emotional disposition--with defects, if such exist, in
-the direction of subtlety, evasiveness, timidity, vanity, etc.; while
-the female is just the opposite, fiery, active, bold and truthful, with
-defects running to brusqueness and coarseness. Moreover, the mind of the
-former is generally intuitive and instinctive in its perceptions, with
-more or less of artistic feeling; while the mind of the latter is more
-logical, scientific, and precise than usual with the normal woman. So
-marked indeed are these general characteristics that sometimes by means
-of them (though not an infallible guide) the nature of the boy or girl
-can be detected in childhood, before full development has taken place;
-and needless to say it may often be very important to be able to do this.
-
-It was no doubt in consequence of the observation of these signs that
-K. H. Ulrichs proposed his theory; and though the theory, as we have
-said, does not by any means meet _all_ the facts, still it is perhaps not
-without merit, and may be worth bearing in mind.
-
-In the case, for instance, of a woman of this temperament (defined
-we suppose as “a male soul in a female body”) the theory helps us to
-understand how it might be possible for her to fall _bonâ fide_ in love
-with another woman. Krafft-Ebing gives[8] the case of a lady (A.), 28
-years of age, who fell deeply in love with a younger one (B.). “I loved
-her divinely,” she said. They lived together, and the union lasted
-four years, but was then broken by the marriage of B. A. suffered in
-consequence from frightful depression; but in the end--though without
-real love--got married herself. Her depression however only increased and
-deepened into illness. The doctors, when consulted, said that all would
-be well if she could only have a child. The husband, who loved his wife
-sincerely, could not understand her enigmatic behaviour. She was friendly
-to him, suffered his caresses, but for days afterwards remained “dull,
-exhausted, plagued with irritation of the spine, and nervous.” Presently
-a journey of the married pair led to another meeting with the female
-friend--who had now been wedded (but also unhappily) for three years.
-
-“Both ladies trembled with joy and excitement as they fell into each
-other’s arms, and were thenceforth inseparable. The man found that this
-friendship relation was a singular one, and hastened the departure. When
-the opportunity occurred, he convinced himself from the correspondence
-between his wife and her ‘friend’ that their letters were exactly like
-those of two lovers.”
-
-It appears that the loves of such women are often very intense, and
-(as also in the case of male Urnings) life-long.[9] Both classes feel
-themselves blessed when they love happily. Nevertheless, to many of
-them it is a painful fact that--in consequence of their peculiar
-temperament--they are, though fond of children, not in the position to
-found a family.
-
-We have so far limited ourselves to some very general characteristics
-of the Intermediate race. It may help to clear and fix our ideas if we
-now describe more in detail, first, what may be called the extreme and
-exaggerated types of the race, and then the more normal and perfect
-types. By doing so we shall get a more definite and concrete view of our
-subject.
-
-In the first place, then, the extreme specimens--as in most cases
-of extremes--are not particularly attractive, sometimes quite the
-reverse. In the male of this kind we have a distinctly effeminate type,
-sentimental, lackadaisical, mincing in gait and manners, something of a
-chatterbox, skilful at the needle and in woman’s work, sometimes taking
-pleasure in dressing in woman’s clothes; his figure not unfrequently
-betraying a tendency towards the feminine, large at the hips, supple,
-not muscular, the face wanting in hair, the voice inclining to be
-high-pitched, etc.; while his dwelling-room is orderly in the extreme,
-even natty, and choice of decoration and perfume. His affection, too, is
-often feminine in character, clinging, dependent and jealous, as of one
-desiring to be loved almost more than to love.[10]
-
-On the other hand, as the extreme type of the homogenic female, we have a
-rather markedly aggressive person, of strong passions, masculine manners
-and movements, practical in the conduct of life, sensuous rather than
-sentimental in love, often untidy, and _outré_ in attire;[11] her figure
-muscular, her voice rather low in pitch; her dwelling-room decorated
-with sporting-scenes, pistols, etc., and not without a suspicion of the
-fragrant weed in the atmosphere; while her love (generally to rather soft
-and feminine specimens of her own sex) is often a sort of furor, similar
-to the ordinary masculine love, and at times almost uncontrollable.
-
-These are types which, on account of their salience, everyone will
-recognise more or less. Naturally, when they occur they excite a good
-deal of attention, and it is not an uncommon impression that most persons
-of the homogenic nature belong to either one or other of these classes.
-But in reality, of course, these extreme developments are rare, and for
-the most part the temperament in question is embodied in men and women
-of quite normal and unsensational exterior. Speaking of this subject
-and the connection between effeminateness and the homogenic nature in
-men, Dr. Moll says: “It is, however, as well to point out at the outset
-that effeminacy does not by any means show itself in all Urnings. Though
-one may find this or that indication in a great number of cases, yet
-it cannot be denied that a very large percentage, perhaps by far the
-majority of them, do _not_ exhibit pronounced Effeminacy.” And it may be
-supposed that we may draw the same conclusion with regard to women of
-this class--namely, that the majority of them do not exhibit pronounced
-masculine habits. In fact, while these extreme cases are of the greatest
-value from a scientific point of view as marking tendencies and limits of
-development in certain directions, it would be a serious mistake to look
-upon them as representative cases of the whole phases of human evolution
-concerned.
-
-If now we come to what may be called the more normal type of the
-Uranian man, we find a man who, while possessing thoroughly masculine
-powers of mind and body, combines with them the tenderer and more
-emotional soul-nature of the woman--and sometimes to a remarkable
-degree. Such men, as said, are often muscular and well-built, and not
-distinguishable in exterior structure and the carriage of body from
-others of their own sex; but emotionally they are extremely complex,
-tender, sensitive, pitiful and loving, “full of storm and stress, of
-ferment and fluctuation” of the heart; the logical faculty may or may
-not, in their case, be well-developed, but intuition is always strong;
-like women they read characters at a glance, and know, without knowing
-how, what is passing in the minds of others; for nursing and waiting on
-the needs of others they have often a peculiar gift; at the bottom lies
-the artist-nature, with the artist’s sensibility and perception. Such an
-one is often a dreamer, of brooding, reserved habits, often a musician,
-or a man of culture, courted in society, which nevertheless does not
-understand him--though sometimes a child of the people, without any
-culture, but almost always with a peculiar inborn refinement. De Joux,
-who speaks on the whole favourably of Uranian men and women, says of the
-former: “They are enthusiastic for poetry and music, are often eminently
-skilful in the fine arts, and are overcome with emotion and sympathy at
-the least sad occurrence. Their sensitiveness, their endless tenderness
-for children, their love of flowers, their great pity for beggars and
-crippled folk are truly womanly.” And in another passage he indicates the
-artist-nature, when he says: “The nerve-system of many an Urning is the
-finest and the most complicated musical instrument in the service of the
-interior personality that can be imagined.”
-
-It would seem probable that the attachment of such an one is of a tender
-and profound character; indeed, it is possible that in this class of men
-we have the love sentiment in one of its most perfect forms--a form in
-which from the necessities of the situation the sensuous element, though
-present, is exquisitely subordinated to the spiritual. Says one writer
-on this subject, a Swiss, “Happy indeed is that man who has won a real
-Urning for his friend--he walks on roses, without ever having to fear the
-thorns”; and he adds, “Can there ever be a more perfect sick-nurse than
-an Urning?” And though these are _ex parte_ utterances, we may believe
-that there is an appreciable grain of truth in them. Another writer,
-quoted by De Joux, speaks to somewhat the same effect, and may perhaps be
-received in a similar spirit. “We form,” he says, “a peculiar aristocracy
-of modest spirits, of good and refined habit, and in many masculine
-circles are the representatives of the higher mental and artistic
-element. In us dreamers and enthusiasts lies the continual counterpoise
-to the sheer masculine portion of society--inclining, as it always does,
-to mere restless greed of gain and material sensual pleasures.”
-
-That men of this kind despise women, though a not uncommon belief, is
-one which hardly appears to be justified. Indeed, though naturally not
-inclined to “fall in love” in this direction, such men are by their
-nature drawn rather near to women, and it would seem that they often feel
-a singular appreciation and understanding of the emotional needs and
-destinies of the other sex, leading in many cases to a genuine though
-what is called ‘Platonic’ friendship. There is little doubt that they
-are often instinctively sought after by women, who, without suspecting
-the real cause, are conscious of a sympathetic chord in the homogenic
-which they miss in the normal man. To quote De Joux once more: “It would
-be a mistake to suppose that all Urnings must be woman-haters. Quite the
-contrary. They are not seldom the faithfulest friends, the truest allies,
-and most convinced defenders of women.”
-
-To come now to the more normal and perfect specimens of the homogenic
-_woman_, we find a type in which the body is thoroughly feminine and
-gracious, with the rondure and fulness of the female form, and the
-continence and aptness of its movements, but in which the inner nature is
-to a great extent masculine; a temperament active, brave, originative,
-somewhat decisive, not too emotional; fond of out-door life, of games and
-sports, of science, politics, or even business; good at organisation, and
-well-pleased with positions of responsibility, sometimes indeed making an
-excellent and generous leader. Such a woman, it is easily seen, from her
-special combination of qualities, is often fitted for remarkable work, in
-professional life, or as manageress of institutions, or even as ruler of
-a country. Her love goes out to younger and more feminine natures than
-her own; it is a powerful passion, almost of heroic type, and capable
-of inspiring to great deeds; and when held duly in leash may sometimes
-become an invaluable force in the teaching and training of girlhood, or
-in the creation of a school of thought or action among women. Many a
-Santa Clara, or abbess-founder of religious houses, has probably been a
-woman of this type; and in all times such women--not being bound to men
-by the ordinary ties--have been able to work the more freely for the
-interests of their sex, a cause to which their own temperament impels
-them to devote themselves _con amore_.
-
-I have now sketched--very briefly and inadequately it is true--both the
-extreme types and the more healthy types of the ‘Intermediate’ man and
-woman: types which can be verified from history and literature, though
-more certainly and satisfactorily perhaps from actual life around us.
-And unfamiliar though the subject is, it begins to appear that it is
-one which modern thought and science will have to face. Of the latter
-and more normal types it may be said that they exist, and have always
-existed, in considerable abundance, and from that circumstance alone
-there is a strong probability that they have their place and purpose. As
-pointed out there is no particular indication of morbidity about them,
-unless the special nature of their love-sentiment be itself accounted
-morbid; and in the alienation of the sexes from each other, of which
-complaint is so often made to-day, it must be admitted that they do much
-to fill the gap.
-
-The instinctive artistic nature of the male of this class, his sensitive
-spirit, his wavelike emotional temperament, combined with hardihood
-of intellect and body; and the frank, free nature of the female, her
-masculine independence and strength wedded to thoroughly feminine grace
-of form and manner; may be said to give them both, through their double
-nature, command of life in all its phases, and a certain freemasonry of
-the secrets of the two sexes which may well favour their function as
-reconcilers and interpreters. Certainly it is remarkable that some of the
-world’s greatest leaders and artists have been dowered either wholly or
-in part with the Uranian temperament--as in the cases of Michel Angelo,
-Shakespeare, Marlowe, Alexander the Great, Julius Cæsar, or, among women,
-Christine of Sweden, Sappho the poetess, and others.
-
-
-
-
-III
-
-The Homogenic Attachment
-
-
-In its various forms, so far as we know them, Love seems always to have a
-deep significance and a most practical importance to us little mortals.
-In one form, as the mere semi-conscious Sex-love, which runs through
-creation and is common to the lowest animals and plants, it appears as
-a kind of organic basis for the unity of all creatures; in another, as
-the love of the mother for her offspring--which may also be termed a
-passion--it seems to pledge itself to the care and guardianship of the
-future race; in another, as the marriage of man and woman, it becomes
-the very foundation of human society. And so we can hardly believe that
-in its homogenic form, with which we are here concerned, it has not also
-a deep significance, and social uses and functions which will become
-clearer to us, the more we study it.
-
-To some perhaps it may appear a little strained to place this
-last-mentioned form of attachment on a level of importance with the
-others, and such persons may be inclined to deny to the homogenic[12]
-or homosexual love that intense, that penetrating, and at times
-overmastering character which would entitle it to rank as a great human
-passion. But in truth this view, when entertained, arises from a want of
-acquaintance with the actual facts; and it may not be amiss here, in the
-briefest possible way, to indicate what the world’s History, Literature,
-and Art has to say to us on this aspect of the subject, before going
-on to further considerations. Certainly, if the confronting of danger
-and the endurance of pain and distress for the sake of the loved one,
-if sacrifice, unswerving devotion and life-long union, constitute
-proofs of the reality and intensity (and let us say healthiness) of an
-affection, then these proofs have been given in numberless cases of such
-attachment, not only as existing between men, but as between women, since
-the world began. The records of chivalric love, the feats of enamoured
-knights for their ladies’ sakes, the stories of Hero and Leander,
-etc., are easily paralleled, if not surpassed, by the stories of the
-Greek comrades-in-arms and tyrannicides--of Cratinus and Aristodemus,
-who offered themselves together as a voluntary sacrifice for the
-purification of Athens; of Chariton and Melanippus,[13] who attempted
-to assassinate Phalaris, the tyrant of Agrigentum; or of Cleomachus
-who in like manner, in a battle between the Chalkidians and Eretrians,
-being entreated to charge the latter, “asked the youth he loved, who was
-standing by, whether he would be a spectator of the fight; and when he
-said he would, and affectionately kissed Cleomachus and put his helmet
-on his head, Cleomachus with a proud joy placed himself in the front of
-the bravest of the Thessalians and charged the enemy’s cavalry with such
-impetuosity that he threw them into disorder and routed them; and the
-Eretrian cavalry fleeing in consequence, the Chalkidians won a splendid
-victory.”[14]
-
-The annals of all nations contain similar records--though probably among
-none has the ideal of this love been quite so enthusiastic and heroic
-as among the post-Homeric Greeks. It is well known that among the
-Polynesian Islanders--for the most part a very gentle and affectionate
-people, probably inheriting the traditions of a higher culture than
-they now possess--the most romantic male friendships are (or were) in
-vogue. Says Herman Melville in “Omoo” (chap. 39), “The really curious
-way in which all Polynesians are in the habit of making bosom friends
-is deserving of remark.… In the annals of the island (Tahiti) are
-examples of extravagant friendships, unsurpassed by the story of Damon
-and Pythias--in truth much more wonderful; for notwithstanding the
-devotion--even of life in some cases--to which they led, they were
-frequently entertained at first sight for some stranger from another
-island.” So thoroughly recognised indeed were these unions that Melville
-explains (in “Typee,” chap. 18) that if two men of hostile tribes or
-islands became thus pledged to each other, then each could pass through
-the enemy’s territory without fear of molestation or injury; and the
-passionate nature of these attachments is indicated by the following
-passage from “Omoo” (another book of Melville’s):--“Though little
-inclined to jealousy in ordinary love-matters, the Tahitian will hear of
-no rivals in his _friendship_.”
-
-Even among savage races lower down than these in the scale of evolution,
-and who are generally accused of being governed in their love-relations
-only by the most animal desires, we find a genuine sentiment of
-comradeship beginning to assert itself--as among the Balonda[15] and
-other African tribes, where regular ceremonies of the betrothal of
-comrades take place, by the transfusion of a few drops of blood into each
-other’s drinking-bowls, by the exchange of names,[16] and the mutual
-gift of their most precious possessions; but unfortunately, owing to the
-obtuseness of current European opinion on this subject, these and other
-such customs have been but little investigated and have by no means
-received the attention that they ought.
-
-When we turn to the poetic and literary utterances of the more civilised
-nations on this subject we cannot but be struck by the range and
-intensity of the emotions expressed--from the beautiful threnody of David
-over his friend whose love was passing the love of women, through the
-vast panorama of the Homeric Iliad, of which the heroic friendship of
-Achilles and his dear Patroclus forms really the basic theme, down to
-the works of the great Greek age--the splendid odes of Pindar burning
-with clear fire of passion, the lofty elegies of Theognis, full of wise
-precepts to his beloved Kurnus, the sweet pastorals of Theocritus, the
-passionate lyrics of Sappho, or the more sensual raptures of Anacreon.
-Some of the dramas of Æschylus and Sophocles--as the “Myrmidones” of the
-former and the “Lovers of Achilles” of the latter--appear to have had
-this subject for their motive[17]; and many of the prose-poem dialogues
-of Plato were certainly inspired by it.
-
-Then coming to the literature of the Roman age, whose materialistic
-spirit could only with difficulty seize the finer inspiration of the
-homogenic love, and which in such writers as Catullus and Martial could
-only for the most part give expression to its grosser side, we still find
-in Vergil, a noble and notable instance. His second Eclogue bears the
-marks of a genuine passion; and, according to some,[18] he there under
-the name of Alexis immortalises his own love for the youthful Alexander.
-Nor is it possible to pass over in this connection the great mass of
-Persian literature, and the poets Sadi, Hafiz, Jami, and many others,
-whose names and works are for all time, and whose marvellous love-songs
-(“Bitter and sweet is the parting kiss on the lips of a friend”) are to a
-large extent, if not mostly, addressed to those of their own sex.[19]
-
-Of the mediæval period in Europe we have of course but few literary
-monuments. Towards its close we come upon the interesting story of Amis
-and Amile (thirteenth century), unearthed by Mr. W. Pater from the
-Bibliotheca Elzeviriana.[20] Though there is historic evidence of the
-prevalence of the passion we may say of this period that its _ideal_ was
-undoubtedly rather the chivalric love than the love of comrades. But
-with the Renaissance in Italy and the Elizabethan period in England the
-latter once more comes to evidence in a burst of poetic utterance,[21]
-which culminates perhaps in the magnificent sonnets of Michel Angelo
-and of Shakespeare; of Michel Angelo whose pure beauty of expression
-lifts the enthusiasm into the highest region as the direct perception
-of the divine in mortal form;[22] and of Shakespeare--whose passionate
-words and amorous spirituality of friendship have for long enough been
-a perplexity to hide-bound commentators. Thence through minor writers
-(not overlooking Winckelmann[23] in Germany) we pass to quite modern
-times--in which, notwithstanding the fact that the passion has been
-much misunderstood and misinterpreted, two names stand conspicuously
-forth--those of Tennyson, whose “In Memoriam” is perhaps his finest work,
-and of Walt Whitman, the enthusiasm of whose poems on Comradeship is only
-paralleled by the devotedness of his labors for his wounded brothers in
-the American Civil War.
-
-It will be noticed that here we have some of the very greatest names in
-all literature concerned; and that their utterances on this subject equal
-if they do not surpass, in beauty, intensity and humanity of sentiment,
-whatever has been written in praise of the other more ordinarily
-recognised love.
-
-And when again we turn to the records of Art, and compare the way
-in which man’s sense of Love and Beauty has expressed itself in the
-portrayal of the male form and the female form respectively we find
-exactly the same thing. The whole vista of Greek statuary shows the
-male passion of beauty in high degree. Yet though the statues of men and
-youths (by men sculptors) preponderate probably considerably, both in
-actual number and in devotedness of execution, over the statues of female
-figures, it is, as J. A. Symonds says in his “Life of Michel Angelo,”
-remarkable that in all the range of the former there are hardly two or
-three that show a base or licentious expression, such as is not so very
-uncommon in the female statues. Knowing as we do the strength of the
-male physical passion in the life of the Greeks, this one fact speaks
-strongly for the sense of proportion which must have characterised this
-passion--at any rate in the most productive age of their Art.
-
-In the case of Michel Angelo we have an artist who with brush and chisel
-portrayed literally thousands of human forms; but with this peculiarity,
-that while scores and scores of his male figures are obviously suffused
-and inspired by a romantic sentiment, there is hardly one of his female
-figures that is so,--the latter being mostly representative of woman in
-her part as mother, or sufferer, or prophetess or poetess, or in old age,
-or in any aspect of strength or tenderness, except that which associates
-itself especially with romantic love. Yet the cleanliness and dignity of
-Michel Angelo’s male figures are incontestable, and bear striking witness
-to that nobility of the sentiment in him, which we have already seen
-illustrated in his sonnets.[24]
-
-This brief sketch may suffice to give the reader some idea of the place
-and position in the world of the particular sentiment which we are
-discussing; nor can it fail to impress him--if any reference is made to
-the authorities quoted--with a sense of the dignity and solidity of the
-sentiment, at any rate as handled by some of the world’s greatest men.
-At the same time it would be affectation to ignore the fact that side
-by side with this view of the subject there has been another current of
-opinion leading people--especially in quite modern times in Europe--to
-look upon attachments of the kind in question with much suspicion and
-disfavour.[25] And it may be necessary here to say a few words on this
-latter view.
-
-The origin of it is not far to seek. Those who have no great gift
-themselves for this kind of friendship--who are not in the inner circle
-of it, so to speak, and do not understand or appreciate its deep
-emotional and romantic character, have nevertheless heard of certain
-corruptions and excesses; for these latter leap to publicity. They have
-heard of the debaucheries of a Nero or a Tiberius; they have noted the
-scandals of the Police Courts; they have had some experience perhaps of
-abuses which may be found in Public Schools or Barracks; and they (not
-unnaturally) infer that these things, these excesses and sensualities,
-are the motive of comrade-attachments, and the object for which they
-exist; nor do they easily recognise any more profound and intimate bond.
-To such people physical intimacies of _any_ kind (at any rate between
-males) seem inexcusable. There is no distinction in their minds between
-the simplest or most naive expression of feeling and the gravest abuse
-of human rights and decency; there is no distinction between a genuine
-heart-attachment and a mere carnal curiosity. They see certain evils
-that occur or have occurred, and they think, perfectly candidly, that any
-measures are justifiable to prevent such things recurring. But they do
-not see the interior love-feeling which when it exists does legitimately
-demand _some_ expression. Such folk, in fact, not having the key in
-themselves to the real situation hastily assume that the homogenic
-attachment has no other motive than, or is simply a veil and a cover for,
-sensuality--and suspect or condemn it accordingly.
-
-Thus arises the curious discrepancy of people’s views on this important
-subject--a discrepancy depending on the side from which they approach it.
-
-On the one hand we have anathemas and execrations, on the other we have
-the lofty enthusiasm of a man like Plato--one of the leaders of the
-world’s thought for all time--who puts, for example, into the mouth of
-Phædrus (in the “Symposium”) such a passage as this[26]: “I know not any
-greater blessing to a young man beginning life than a virtuous lover, or
-to the lover than a beloved youth. For the principle which ought to be
-the guide of men who would nobly live--that principle, I say, neither
-kindred, nor honour, nor wealth, nor any other motive is able to implant
-so well as love. Of what am I speaking? Of the sense of honour and
-dishonour, without which neither states nor individuals ever do any good
-or great work.… For what lover would not choose rather to be seen of all
-mankind than by his beloved, either when abandoning his post or throwing
-away his arms? He would be ready to die a thousand deaths rather than
-endure this. Or who would desert his beloved or fail him in the hour of
-danger? The veriest coward would become an inspired hero, equal to the
-bravest, at such a time; love would inspire him. That courage which, as
-Homer says, the god breathes into the soul of heroes, love of his own
-nature inspires into the lover.” Or again in the “Phædrus” Plato makes
-Socrates say[27]: “In like manner the followers of Apollo and of every
-other god, walking in the ways of their god, seek a love who is to be
-like their god, and when they have found him, they themselves imitate
-their god, and persuade their love to do the same, and bring him into
-harmony with the form and ways of the god as far as they can; for they
-have no feelings of envy or jealousy towards their beloved, but they do
-their utmost to create in him the greatest likeness of themselves and the
-god whom they honour. Thus fair and blissful to the beloved when he is
-taken, is the desire of the inspired lover, and the initiation of which I
-speak into the mysteries of true love, if their purpose is effected.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-With these few preliminary remarks we may pass on to consider some recent
-scientific investigations of the matter in hand. In late times--that is,
-during the last thirty years or so--a group of scientific and capable men
-chiefly in Germany, France, and Italy, have made a special and more or
-less impartial study of it. Among these may be mentioned Dr. Albert Moll
-of Berlin; R. von Krafft-Ebing, one of the leading medical authorities
-of Vienna, whose book on “Sexual Psychopathy” has passed into its
-tenth edition; Dr. Paul Moreau (“Des Aberrations du sens génésique”);
-Cesare Lombroso, the author of various works on Anthropology; M. A.
-Raffalovich (“Uranisme et unisexualité”); Auguste Forel (“Die Sexuelle
-Frage”); Mantegazza; K. H. Ulrichs; and last but not least, Dr. Havelock
-Ellis, of whose great work on the Psychology of Sex the second volume
-is dedicated to the subject of “Sexual Inversion.”[28] The result of
-these investigations has been that a very altered complexion has been
-given to the subject. For whereas at first it was easily assumed that
-the phenomena were of morbid character, and that the leaning of the
-love-sentiment towards one of the same sex was always associated with
-degeneracy or disease, it is very noticeable that step by step with the
-accumulation of reliable information this assumption has been abandoned.
-The point of view has changed; and the change has been most marked in the
-latest authors, such as A. Moll and Havelock Ellis.
-
-It is not possible here to go into anything like a detailed account of
-the works of these various authors, their theories, and the immense
-number of interesting cases and observations which they have contributed;
-but some of the general conclusions which flow from their researches may
-be pointed out. In the first place their labors have established the
-fact, known hitherto only to individuals, that _sexual inversion_--that
-is the leaning of desire to one of the same sex--is in a vast number of
-cases quite instinctive and congenital, mentally and physically, and
-therefore twined in the very roots of individual life and practically
-ineradicable. To Men or Women thus affected with an innate homosexual
-bias, Ulrichs gave the name of Urning,[29] since pretty widely accepted
-by scientists. Some details with regard to “Urnings,” I have given in
-the preceding paper, but it should be said here that too much emphasis
-cannot be laid on the distinction between these born lovers of their own
-kind, and that class of persons, with whom they are so often confused,
-who out of mere carnal curiosity or extravagance of desire, or from the
-dearth of opportunities for a more normal satisfaction (as in schools,
-barracks, etc.) adopt some homosexual practices. It is the latter class
-who become chiefly prominent in the public eye, and who excite, naturally
-enough, public reprobation. In their case the attraction is felt, by
-themselves and all concerned, to be merely sensual and morbid. In the
-case of the others, however, the feeling is, as said, so deeply rooted
-and twined with the mental and emotional life that the person concerned
-has difficulty in imagining himself affected otherwise than he is; and to
-him at least his love appears healthy and natural, and indeed a necessary
-part of his individuality.
-
-In the second place it has become clear that the number of individuals
-affected with ‘sexual inversion’ in some degree or other is very
-great--much greater than is generally supposed to be the case. It is
-however very difficult or perhaps impossible to arrive at satisfactory
-figures on the subject,[30] for the simple reasons that the proportions
-vary so greatly among different peoples and even in different sections
-of society and in different localities, and because of course there are
-all possible grades of sexual inversion to deal with, from that in which
-the instinct is _quite exclusively_ directed towards the same sex, to
-the other extreme in which it is normally towards the opposite sex but
-capable, occasionally and under exceptional attractions, of inversion
-towards its own--this last condition being probably among some peoples
-very widespread, if not universal.
-
-In the third place, by the tabulation and comparison of a great number
-of cases and “confessions,” it has become pretty well established that
-the individuals affected with inversion in marked degree do not after all
-differ from the rest of mankind, or womankind, in any other physical or
-mental particular which can be distinctly indicated.[31] No congenital
-association with any particular physical conformation or malformation
-has yet been discovered; nor with any distinct disease of body or mind.
-Nor does it appear that persons of this class are usually of a gross or
-specially low type, but if anything rather the opposite--being mostly
-of refined, sensitive nature and including, as Krafft-Ebing points out
-(“Psychopathia Sexualis,” seventh ed., p. 227) a great number “highly
-gifted in the fine arts, especially music and poetry”; and, as Mantegazza
-says,[32] many persons of high literary and social distinction. It is
-true that Krafft-Ebing insists on the generally strong sexual equipment
-of this class of persons (among men), but he hastens to say that their
-emotional love is also “enthusiastic and exalted,”[33] and that, while
-bodily congress is desired, the special act with which they are vulgarly
-credited is in most cases repugnant to them.[34]
-
-The only distinct characteristic which the scientific writers claim to
-have established is a marked tendency to nervous development in the
-subject, not infrequently associated with nervous maladies; but--as I
-shall presently have occasion to show--there is reason to think that the
-validity even of this characteristic has been exaggerated.
-
-Taking the general case of men with a marked exclusive preference for
-persons of their own sex, Krafft-Ebing says (“P.S.” p. 256): “The sexual
-life of these Homosexuals is _mutatis mutandis_ just the same as in the
-case of normal sex-love.… The Urning loves, deifies his male beloved
-one, exactly as the woman-wooing man does _his_ beloved. For him, he is
-capable of the greatest sacrifice, experiences the torments of unhappy,
-often unrequited, love, of faithlessness on his beloved’s part, of
-jealousy, and so forth. His attention is enchained only by the male form
-… The sight of feminine charms is indifferent to him, if not repugnant.”
-Then he goes on to say that many such men, notwithstanding their actual
-aversion to intercourse with the female, do ultimately marry--either
-from ethical, as sometimes happens, or from social considerations. But
-very remarkable--as illustrating the depth and tenacity of the homogenic
-instinct[35]--and pathetic too, are the records that he gives of these
-cases; for in many of them a real friendship and regard between the
-married pair was still of no avail to overcome the distaste on the part
-of one to sexual intercourse with the other, or to prevent the experience
-of actual physical distress after such intercourse, or to check the
-continual flow of affection to some third person of the same sex; and
-thus unwillingly, so to speak, this bias remained a cause of suffering to
-the end.
-
-I have said that at the outset it was assumed that the Homogenic
-emotion was morbid in itself, and probably always associated with
-distinct disease, either physical or mental, but that the progress of
-the inquiry has served more and more to dissipate this view; and that
-it is noticeable that the latest of the purely scientific authorities
-are the least disposed to insist upon the theory of morbidity. It is
-true that Krafft-Ebing clings to the opinion that there is generally
-some _neurosis_, or degeneration of a nerve-centre, or _inherited
-tendency in that direction_, associated with the instinct; see p. 190
-(seventh ed.), also p. 227, where he speaks, rather vaguely, of “an
-hereditary neuropathic or psychopathic tendency”--_neuro(psycho)pathische
-Belastung_. But it is an obvious criticism on this that there are few
-people in modern life, perhaps none, who could be pronounced absolutely
-free from such a _Belastung_! And whether the Dorian Greeks or the
-Polynesian Islanders or the Albanian mountaineers, or any of the other
-notably hardy races among whom this affection has been developed, were
-particularly troubled by nervous degeneration we may well doubt!
-
-As to Moll, though he speaks[36] of the instinct as morbid (feeling
-perhaps in duty bound to do so), it is very noticeable that he abandons
-the ground of its association with other morbid symptoms--as this
-association, he says, is by no means always to be observed; and is fain
-to rest his judgment on the _dictum_ that the mere failure of the sexual
-instinct to propagate the species is itself pathological--a _dictum_
-which in its turn obviously springs from that pre-judgment of scientists
-that generation is the sole object of love,[37] and which if pressed
-would involve the good doctor in awkward dilemmas, as for instance that
-every worker-bee is a pathological specimen.
-
-Finally we find that Havelock Ellis, one of the latest writers of weight
-on this subject, in chapter vi. of his “Sexual Inversion,” combats the
-idea that this temperament is necessarily morbid; and suggests that the
-tendency should rather be called an anomaly than a disease. He says (2nd
-edition, p. 186)[38] “Thus in sexual inversion we have what may fairly be
-called a ‘sport’ or variation, one of those organic aberrations which we
-see throughout living nature in plants and in animals.”[39]
-
-With regard to the nerve-degeneration theory, while it may be allowed
-that sexual inversion is not uncommonly found in connection with the
-specially nervous temperament, it must be remembered that its occasional
-association with nervous troubles or disease is quite another matter;
-since such troubles ought perhaps to be looked upon as the results rather
-than the causes of the inversion. It is difficult of course for outsiders
-not personally experienced in the matter to realise the great strain
-and tension of nerves under which those persons grow up from boyhood to
-manhood--or from girl to womanhood--who find their deepest and strongest
-instincts under the ban of the society around them; who before they
-clearly understand the drift of their own natures discover that they are
-somehow cut off from the sympathy and understanding of those nearest to
-them; and who know that they can never give expression to their tenderest
-yearnings of affection without exposing themselves to the possible charge
-of actions stigmatised as odious crimes.[40] That such a strain, acting
-on one who is perhaps already of a nervous temperament, should tend
-to cause nervous prostration or even mental disturbance is of course
-obvious; and if such disturbances are really found to be commoner among
-homogenic lovers than among ordinary folk we have in these social causes
-probably a sufficient explanation of the fact.
-
-Then again in this connexion it must never be forgotten that the
-medico-scientific enquirer is bound on the whole to meet with those cases
-that _are_ of a morbid character, rather than with those that are healthy
-in their manifestation, since indeed it is the former that he lays
-himself out for. And since the field of his research is usually a great
-modern city, there is little wonder if disease colours his conclusions.
-In the case of Dr. Moll, who carried out his researches largely under the
-guidance of the Berlin police (whose acquaintance with the subject would
-naturally be limited to its least satisfactory sides), the only marvel
-is that his verdict is so markedly favorable as it is. As Krafft-Ebing
-says in his own preface, “It is the sad privilege of Medicine, and
-especially of Psychiatry, to look always on the reverse side of life, on
-the weakness and wretchedness of man.”
-
-Having regard then to the direction in which science has been steadily
-moving in this matter, it is not difficult to see that the epithet
-“morbid” will probably before long be abandoned as descriptive of the
-homogenic bias--that is, of the general sentiment of love towards a
-person of the same sex. That there are excesses of the passion--cases,
-as in ordinary sex-love, where mere physical desire becomes a mania--we
-may freely admit; but as it would be unfair to judge of the purity of
-marriage by the evidence of the Divorce courts, so it would be monstrous
-to measure the truth and beauty of the attachment in question by those
-instances which stand most prominently perhaps in the eye of the modern
-public; and after all deductions there remains, we contend, the vast
-body of cases in which the manifestation of the instinct has on the
-whole the character of normality and healthfulness--sufficiently so in
-fact to constitute this _a distinct variety of the sexual passion_. The
-question, of course, not being whether the instinct is _capable_ of
-morbid and extravagant manifestation--for that can easily be proved of
-any instinct--but whether it is capable of a healthy and sane expression.
-And this, we think, it has abundantly shown itself to be.
-
-Anyhow the work that Science has practically done has been to destroy
-the dogmatic attitude of the former current opinion from which itself
-started, and to leave the whole subject freed from a great deal of
-misunderstanding, and much more open than before. If on the one hand its
-results have been chiefly of a negative character, and it admits that it
-does not understand the exact place and foundation of this attachment; on
-the other hand since it recognises the deeply beneficial influences of
-an intimate love-relation of the usual kind on those concerned, it also
-allows that there are some persons for whom these necessary reactions can
-only come from one of the same sex as themselves.
-
-“Successful love,” says Moll (p. 125) “exercises a helpful influence on
-the Urning. His mental and bodily condition improves, and capacity of
-work increases--just as it happens in the case of a normal youth with
-_his_ love.” And further on (p. 173) in a letter from a man of this kind
-occur these words:--“The passion is I suppose so powerful, just because
-one looks for everything in the loved man--Love, Friendship, Ideal, and
-Sense-satisfaction.… As it is at present I suffer the agonies of a deep
-unresponded passion, which wake me like a nightmare from sleep. And I am
-conscious of physical pain in the region of the heart.” In such cases the
-love, in some degree physically expressed, of another person of the same
-sex, is allowed to be as much a necessity and a condition of healthy life
-and activity, as in more ordinary cases is the love of a person of the
-opposite sex.
-
-If then the physical element which is sometimes present in the love of
-which we are speaking is a difficulty and a stumbling-block, it must
-be allowed that it is a difficulty that Nature confronts us with, and
-which cannot be disposed of by mere anathema and execration. The only
-theory--from K. H. Ulrichs to Havelock Ellis--which has at all held its
-ground in this matter, is that in congenital cases of sex-inversion
-there is a mixture of male and female elements in the same person; so
-that for instance in the same embryo the emotional and nervous regions
-may develop along feminine lines while the outer body and functions
-may determine themselves as distinctly masculine, or _vice versa_.
-Such cross-development may take place obviously in a great variety of
-ways, and thus possibly explain the remarkable varieties of the Uranian
-temperament; but in all such cases, strange as may be the problems thus
-arising, these problems are of Nature’s own producing and can hardly
-be laid to the door of the individual who has literally to bear their
-cross. For such individuals expressions of feeling become natural, which
-to others seem out of place and uncalled for; and not only natural,
-but needful and inevitable. To deny to such people _all_ expression of
-their emotion, is probably in the end to cause it to burst forth with
-the greater violence; and it may be suggested that our British code of
-manners, by forbidding the lighter marks of affection between youths and
-men, acts just contrary to its own purpose, and drives intimacies down
-into less open and unexceptionable channels.
-
-With regard to this physical element it must also be remembered that
-since the homogenic love--whether between man and man, or between woman
-and woman--can from the nature of the case never find expression on
-the physical side so freely and completely as is the case with the
-ordinary love, it must tend rather more than the latter to run along
-_emotional_ channels, and to find its vent in sympathies of social life
-and companionship. If one studies carefully the expression of the Greek
-statues (see p. 9, supra) and the lesson of the Greek literature, one
-sees clearly that the _ideal_ of Greek life was a very continent one: the
-trained male, the athlete, the man temperate and restrained, even chaste,
-for the sake of bettering his powers. It was round this conception that
-the Greeks kindled their finer emotions. And so of their love: a base and
-licentious indulgence was not in line with it. They may not have always
-kept to their ideal, but there it was. And I am inclined to think that
-the homogenic instinct (for the reasons given above) would in the long
-run tend to work itself out in this direction. And consonant with this is
-the fact that this passion in the past (as pointed out by J. Addington
-Symonds in his paper on “Dantesque and Platonic Ideals of Love”[41])
-has, as a matter of fact, inspired such a vast amount of heroism and
-romance--only paralleled indeed by the loves of Chivalry, which of
-course, owing to their special character, were subject to a similar
-Transmutation.
-
-In all these matters the popular opinion has probably been largely
-influenced by the arbitrary notion that the function of love is limited
-to child-breeding; and that any love not concerned in the propagation
-of the race must necessarily be of dubious character. And in enforcing
-this view, no doubt the Hebraic and Christian tradition has exercised a
-powerful influence--dating, as it almost certainly does, from far-back
-times when the multiplication of the tribe was one of the first duties
-of its members, and one of the first necessities of corporate life.[42]
-But nowadays when the need has swung round all the other way it is not
-unreasonable to suppose that a similar revolution will take place in
-people’s views of the place and purpose of the non-child-bearing love.[43]
-
- * * * * *
-
-I have now said enough I think to show that though much in relation to
-the homogenic attachment is obscure, and though it may have its special
-pitfalls and temptations--making it quite necessary to guard against a
-too great latitude on the physical side; yet on its ethical and social
-sides it is pregnant with meaning and has received at various times in
-history abundant justification. It certainly does not seem impossible
-to suppose that as the ordinary love has a special function in the
-propagation of the race, so the other has its special function in social
-and heroic work, and in the generation--not of bodily children--but of
-those children of the mind, the philosophical conceptions and ideals
-which transform our lives and those of society. J. Addington Symonds,
-in his privately printed pamphlet, “A Problem in Greek Ethics” (now
-published in a German translation),[44] endeavours to reconstruct as
-it were the genesis of comrade-love among the Dorians in early Greek
-times. Thus:--“Without sufficiency of women, without the sanctities of
-established domestic life, inspired by the memories of Achilles and
-venerating their ancestor Herakles, the Dorian warriors had special
-opportunity for elevating comradeship to the rank of an enthusiasm.
-The incidents of emigration into a foreign country--perils of the sea,
-passages of rivers and mountains, assaults of fortresses and cities,
-landings on a hostile shore, night-vigils by the side of blazing
-beacons, foragings for food, picquet service in the front of watchful
-foes--involved adventures capable of shedding the lustre of romance on
-friendship. These circumstances, by bringing the virtues of sympathy
-with the weak, tenderness for the beautiful, protection for the young,
-together with corresponding qualities of gratitude, self-devotion, and
-admiring attachment into play, may have tended to cement unions between
-man and man no less firm than that of marriage. On such connections a
-wise captain would have relied for giving strength to his battalions, and
-for keeping alive the flames of enterprise and daring.” The author then
-goes on to suggest that though in such relations as those indicated the
-physical probably had some share, yet it did not at that time overbalance
-the emotional and spiritual elements, or lead to the corruption and
-effeminacy of a later age.
-
-At Sparta the lover was called _Eispnêlos_, the inspirer, and the younger
-beloved _Aïtes_, the hearer. This alone would show the partly educational
-aspects in which comradeship was conceived; and a hundred passages from
-classic literature might be quoted to prove how deeply it had entered
-into the Greek mind that this love was the cradle of social chivalry and
-heroic life. Finally it seems to have been Plato’s favorite doctrine
-that the relation if properly conducted led up to the disclosure of
-true philosophy in the mind, to the divine vision or mania, and to the
-remembrance or rekindling within the soul of all the forms of celestial
-beauty. He speaks of this kind of love as causing a “generation in the
-beautiful”[45] within the souls of the lovers. The image of the beloved
-one passing into the mind of the lover and upward through its deepest
-recesses reaches and unites itself to the essential forms of divine
-beauty there long hidden--the originals as it were of all creation--and
-stirring them to life excites a kind of generative descent of noble
-thoughts and impulses, which henceforward modify the whole cast of
-thought and life of the one so affected.
-
-If there is any truth--even only a grain or two--in these speculations,
-it is easy to see that the love with which we are specially dealing
-is a very important factor in society, and that its neglect, or its
-repression, or its vulgar misapprehension, may be matters of considerable
-danger or damage to the common-weal. It is easy to see that while
-on the one hand marriage is of indispensable importance to the State
-as providing the workshop as it were for the breeding and rearing of
-children, another form of union is almost equally indispensable to
-supply the basis for social activities of other kinds. Every one is
-conscious that without a close affectional tie of some kind his life is
-not complete, his powers are crippled, and his energies are inadequately
-spent. Yet it is not to be expected (though it may of course happen)
-that the man or woman who have dedicated themselves to each other and
-to family life should leave the care of their children and the work
-they have to do at home in order to perform social duties of a remote
-and less obvious, though may be more arduous, character. Nor is it to
-be expected that a man or woman single-handed, without the counsel of a
-helpmate in the hour of difficulty, or his or her love in the hour of
-need, should feel equal to these wider activities. If--to refer once more
-to classic story--the love of Harmodius had been for a wife and children
-at home, he would probably not have cared, and it would hardly have been
-his business, to slay the tyrant. And unless on the other hand each of
-the friends had had the love of his comrade to support him, the two
-could hardly have nerved themselves to this audacious and ever-memorable
-exploit. So it is difficult to believe that anything can supply the force
-and liberate the energies required for social and mental activities of
-the most necessary kind so well as a comrade-union which yet leaves the
-two lovers free from the responsibilities and impedimenta of family life.
-
-For if the slaughter of tyrants is not the chief social duty nowadays,
-we have with us hydra-headed monsters at least as numerous as the
-tyrants of old, and more difficult to deal with, and requiring no little
-courage to encounter. And beyond the extirpation of evils we have solid
-work waiting to be done in the patient and life-long building up of new
-forms of society, new orders of thought, and new institutions of human
-solidarity--all of which in their genesis must meet with opposition,
-ridicule, hatred, and even violence. Such campaigns as these--though
-different in kind from those of the Dorian mountaineers described
-above--will call for equal hardihood and courage, and will stand in
-need of a comradeship as true and valiant. And it may indeed be doubted
-whether the higher heroic and spiritual life of a nation is ever quite
-possible without the sanction of this attachment in its institutions,
-adding a new range and scope to the possibilities of love.[46]
-
-Walt Whitman, the inaugurator, it may almost be said, of a new world
-of democratic ideals and literature, and--as one of the best of our
-critics has remarked--the most Greek in spirit and in performance of
-modern writers, insists continually on this social function of “intense
-and loving comradeship, the personal and passionate attachment of man
-to man.” “I will make,” he says, “the most splendid race the sun ever
-shone upon, I will make divine magnetic lands.… I will make inseparable
-cities with their arms about each others’ necks, by the love of
-comrades.” And again, in “Democratic Vistas,” “It is to the development,
-identification, and general prevalence of that fervid comradeship (the
-adhesive love at least rivaling the amative love hitherto possessing
-imaginative literature, if not going beyond it), that I look for the
-counterbalance and offset of materialistic and vulgar American Democracy,
-and for the spiritualisation thereof.… I say Democracy infers such loving
-comradeship, as its most inevitable twin or counterpart, without which it
-will be incomplete, in vain, and incapable of perpetuating itself.”
-
-Yet Whitman could not have spoken, as he did, with a kind of authority
-on this subject, if he had not been fully aware that through the masses
-of the people this attachment was already alive and working--though
-doubtless in a somewhat suppressed and un-self-conscious form--and if
-he had not had ample knowledge of its effects and influence in himself
-and others around him. Like all great artists he could but give form
-and light to that which already existed dim and inchoate in the heart
-of the people. To those who have dived at all below the surface in this
-direction it will be familiar enough that the homogenic passion ramifies
-widely through all modern society, and that among the masses of the
-people as among the classes, even below the stolid surface and reserve
-of British manners, letters pass and enduring attachments are formed,
-differing in no very obvious respect from those correspondences which
-persons of opposite sex knit with each other under similar circumstances;
-but that hitherto while this relation has occasionally, in its grosser
-forms and abuses, come into public notice through the police reports,
-etc., its more sane and spiritual manifestations--though really a moving
-force in the body politic--have remained unrecognised.
-
-It is hardly needful in these days when social questions loom so
-large upon us to emphasise the importance of a bond which by the most
-passionate and lasting compulsion may draw members of the different
-classes together, and (as it often seems to do) none the less strongly
-because they are members of different classes. A moment’s consideration
-must convince us that such a comradeship may, as Whitman says, have
-“deepest relations to general politics.” It is noticeable, too, in this
-deepest relation to politics that the movement among women towards
-their own liberation and emancipation, which is taking place all over
-the civilised world, has been accompanied by a marked development of
-the homogenic passion among the female sex. It may be said that a
-certain strain in the relations between the opposite sexes which has
-come about owing to a growing consciousness among women that they have
-been oppressed and unfairly treated by men, and a growing unwillingness
-to ally themselves unequally in marriage--that this strain has caused
-the womenkind to draw more closely together and to cement alliances of
-their own. But whatever the cause may be it is pretty certain that such
-comrade-alliances--and of quite devoted kind--are becoming increasingly
-common, and especially perhaps among the more cultured classes of women,
-who are working out the great cause of their sex’s liberation; nor is it
-difficult to see the importance of such alliances in such a campaign. In
-the United States where the battle of women’s independence is also being
-fought, the tendency mentioned is as strongly marked.
-
-A few words may here be said about the legal aspect of this important
-question. It has to be remarked that the present state of the Law,
-both in Germany and Britain--arising as it does partly out of some of
-the misapprehensions above alluded to, and partly out of the sheer
-unwillingness of legislators to discuss the question--is really
-impracticable. While the Law rightly seeks to prevent acts of violence
-or public scandal, it may be argued that it is going beyond its province
-when it attempts to regulate the private and voluntary relations of
-adult persons to each other. The homogenic affection is a valuable
-social force, and in some cases a necessary element of noble human
-character--yet the Act of 1885 makes almost any familiarity in such
-cases the possible basis of a criminal charge. The Law has no doubt had
-substantial ground for previous statutes on this subject--dealing with a
-certain gross act; but in so severely condemning the least familiarity
-between male persons[47] we think it has gone too far. It has undertaken
-a censorship over private morals (entirely apart from social results)
-which is beyond its province, and which--even if it were its province--it
-could not possibly fulfil;[48] it has opened wider than ever before the
-door to a real, most serious social evil and crime--that of blackmailing;
-and it has thrown a shadow over even the simplest and most ordinary
-expressions of an attachment which may, as we have seen, be of great
-value in the national life.
-
-That the homosexual feeling, like the heterosexual, may lead to public
-abuses of liberty and decency; that it needs a strict self-control;
-and that much teaching and instruction on the subject is needed; we of
-course do not deny. But as, in the case of persons of opposite sex, the
-law limits itself on the whole to a maintenance of public order, the
-protection of the weak from violence and insult,[49] and of the young
-from their inexperience; so we think it should be here. The much-needed
-teaching and the true morality on the subject must be given--as it can
-only be given--by the spread of proper education and ideas, and not by
-the clumsy bludgeon of the statute-book.[50]
-
-Having thus shown the importance of the homogenic or comrade-attachment,
-in some form, in national life, it would seem high time now that the
-modern peoples should recognise this in their institutions, and endeavour
-at least in their public opinion and systems of education to understand
-this factor and give it its proper place. The undoubted evils which exist
-in relation to it, for instance in our public schools as well as in our
-public life, owe their existence largely to the fact that the whole
-subject is left in the gutter so to speak--in darkness and concealment.
-No one offers a clue of better things, nor to point a way out of the
-wilderness; and by this very non-recognition the passion is perverted
-into its least satisfactory channels. All love, one would say, must have
-its responsibilities, else it is liable to degenerate, and to dissipate
-itself in mere sentiment or sensuality. The normal marriage between man
-and woman leads up to the foundation of the household and the family;
-the love between parents and children implies duties and cares on both
-sides. The homogenic attachment left unrecognised, easily loses some
-of its best quality and becomes an ephemeral or corrupt thing. Yet,
-as we have seen, and as I am pointing out in the following chapter,
-it may, when occurring between an elder and younger, prove to be an
-immense educational force; while, as between equals, it may be turned
-to social and heroic uses, such as can hardly be demanded or expected
-from the ordinary marriage. It would seem high time, I say, that public
-opinion should recognise these facts; and so give to this attachment the
-sanction and dignity which arise from public recognition, as well as
-the definite form and outline which would flow from the existence of an
-accepted ideal or standard in the matter. It is often said how necessary
-for the morality of the ordinary marriage is some public recognition of
-the relation, and some accepted standard of conduct in it. May not, to
-a lesser degree, something of the same kind (as suggested in the next
-chapter) be true of the homogenic attachment? It has had its place as
-a recognised and guarded institution in the elder and more primitive
-societies; and it seems quite probable that a similar place will be
-accorded to it in the societies of the future.
-
-
-
-
-IV
-
-Affection in Education
-
-
-The place of Affection, and the need of it, as an educative force in
-school-life, is a subject which is beginning to attract a good deal of
-attention. Hitherto Education has been concentred on intellectual (and
-physical) development; but the affections have been left to take care of
-themselves. Now it is beginning to be seen that the affections have an
-immense deal to say in the building up of the brain and the body. Their
-evolution and organisation in some degree is probably going to become an
-important part of school management.
-
-School friendships of course exist; and almost every one remembers that
-they filled a large place in the outlook of his early years; but he
-remembers, too, that they were not recognised in any way, and that in
-consequence the main part of their force and value was wasted. Yet it is
-evident that the first unfolding of a strong attachment in boyhood or
-girlhood must have a profound influence; while if it occurs between an
-elder and a younger school-mate, or--as sometimes happens--between the
-young thing and its teacher, its importance in the educational sense can
-hardly be overrated.
-
-That such feelings sometimes take quite intense and romantic forms few
-will deny. I have before me a letter, in which the author, speaking of
-an attachment he experienced when a boy of sixteen for a youth somewhat
-older than himself, says:--
-
- “I would have died for him ten times over. My devices and plannings
- to meet him (to come across him casually, as it were) were those
- of a lad for his sweetheart, and when I saw him my heart beat so
- violently that it caught my breath, and I could not speak. We met
- in----, and for the weeks that he stayed there I thought of nothing
- else--thought of him night and day--and when he returned to London
- I used to write him weekly letters, veritable love-letters of many
- sheets in length. Yet I never felt one particle of jealousy, though
- our friendship lasted for some years. The passion, violent and
- extravagant as it was, I believe to have been perfectly free from
- sex-feeling and perfectly wholesome and good for me. It distinctly
- contributed to my growth. Looking back upon it and analysing it as
- well as I can, I seem to see as the chief element in it an escape
- from the extremely narrow Puritanism in which I was reared, into
- a large sunny ingenuous nature which knew nothing at all of the
- bondage of which I was beginning to be acutely conscious.”
-
-Shelley in his fragmentary “Essay on Friendship” speaks in the most
-glowing terms of an attachment he formed at school, and so does Leigh
-Hunt in his “Autobiography.” Says the latter:--
-
- “If I had reaped no other benefit from Christ Hospital, the school
- would be ever dear to me from the recollection of the friendships
- I formed in it, and of the first heavenly taste it gave me of
- that most spiritual of the affections.… I shall never forget the
- impression it made on me. I loved my friend for his gentleness, his
- candour, his truth, his good repute, his freedom even from my own
- livelier manner, his calm and reasonable kindness.… I doubt whether
- he ever had a conception of a tithe of the regard and respect
- I entertained for him, and I smile to think of the perplexity
- (though he never showed it) which he probably felt sometimes at my
- enthusiastic expressions; for I thought him a kind of angel.”
-
-It is not necessary, however, to quote authorities on such a subject as
-this.[51] Any one who has had experience of schoolboys knows well enough
-that they are capable of forming these romantic and devoted attachments,
-and that their alliances are often of the kind especially referred to as
-having a bearing on education--_i.e._, between an elder and a younger.
-They are genuine attractions, free as a rule, and at their inception,
-from secondary motives. They are not formed by the elder one for any
-personal ends. More often, indeed, I think they are begun by the younger,
-who naively allows his admiration of the elder one to become visible. But
-they are absorbing and intense, and on either side their influence is
-deeply felt and long remembered.
-
-That such attachments _may_ be of the very greatest value is
-self-evident. The younger boy looks on the other as a hero, loves to
-be with him, thrills with pleasure at his words of praise or kindness,
-imitates, and makes him his pattern and standard, learns exercises and
-games, contracts habits, or picks up information from him. The elder one,
-touched, becomes protector and helper; the unselfish side of his nature
-is drawn out, and he develops a real affection and tenderness towards
-the younger. He takes all sorts of trouble to initiate his _protégé_ in
-field sports or studies; is proud of the latter’s success; and leads him
-on perhaps later to share his own ideals of life and thought and work.
-
-Sometimes the alliance will begin, in a corresponding way, from the side
-of the elder boy. Sometimes, as said, between a boy and a master such an
-attachment, or the germ of it, is found; and indeed it is difficult to
-say what gulf, or difference of age, or culture, or class in society, is
-so great that affection of this kind will not on occasion overpass it.
-I have by me a letter which was written by a boy of eleven or twelve to
-a young man of twenty-four or twenty-five. The boy was rather a wild,
-“naughty” boy, and had given his parents (working-class folk) a good deal
-of trouble. He attended, however, some sort of night-school or evening
-class and there conceived the strongest affection (evidenced by this
-letter) for his teacher, the young man in question, quite spontaneously,
-and without any attempt on the part of the latter to elicit it; and
-(which was equally important) without any attempt on his part to _deny_
-it. The result was most favorable; the one force which could really reach
-the boy had, as it were, been found; and he developed rapidly and well.
-
-The following extract is from a letter written by an elderly man who has
-had large experience as a teacher. He says--
-
- “It has always seemed to me that the _rapport_ that exists between
- two human beings, whether of the same or of different sexes, is
- a force not sufficiently recognised, and capable of producing
- great results. Plato fully understood its importance, and aimed
- at giving what to his countrymen was more or less sensual, a
- noble and exalted direction.… As one who has had much to do in
- instructing boys and starting them in life, I am convinced that the
- great secret of being a good teacher consists in the possibility
- of that _rapport_; not only of a merely intellectual nature, but
- involving a certain physical element, a personal affection, almost
- indescribable, that grows up between pupil and teacher, and through
- which thoughts are shared and an influence created that could exist
- in no other way.”
-
-And it must be evident to every one that to the expanding mind of a small
-boy to have a relation of real affection with some sensible and helpful
-elder of his own sex must be a priceless boon. At that age love to the
-other sex has hardly declared itself, and indeed is not exactly what
-is wanted. The unformed mind requires an ideal of itself, as it were,
-to which it can cling or towards which it can grow. Yet it is equally
-evident that the relation and the success of it, will depend immensely on
-the character of the elder one, on the self-restraint and tenderness of
-which he is capable, and on the ideal of life which he has in his mind.
-That, possibly, is the reason why Greek custom, at least in the early
-days of Hellas, not only recognised friendships between elder and younger
-youths as a national institution of great importance, but laid down very
-distinct laws or rules concerning the conduct of them, so as to be a
-guide and a help to the elder in what was acknowledged to be a position
-of responsibility.
-
-In Crete, for instance,[52] the friendship was entered into in quite a
-formal and public way, with the understanding and consent of relatives;
-the position of the elder was clearly defined, and it became his business
-to train and exercise the younger in skill of arms, the chase, etc.;
-while the latter could obtain redress at law if the elder subjected
-him to insult or injury of any kind. At the end of a certain period
-of probation, if the younger desired it he could leave his comrade; if
-not, he became his squire or henchman--the elder being bound to furnish
-his military equipments--and they fought thenceforward side by side in
-battle, “inspired with double valor, according to the notions of the
-Cretans, by the gods of war and love.”[53] Similar customs prevailed in
-Sparta, and, in a less defined way, in other Greek states; as, indeed,
-they have prevailed among many semi-barbaric races on the threshold of
-civilisation.
-
-When, however, we turn to modern life and the actual situation, as for
-instance in the public schools of to-day, it may well be objected that
-we find very little of the suggested ideal, but rather an appalling
-descent into the most uninspiring conditions. So far from friendship
-being an institution whose value is recognised and understood, it is at
-best scantily acknowledged, and is often actually discountenanced and
-misunderstood. And though attachments such as we have portrayed exist,
-they exist underground, as it were, at their peril, and half-stifled in
-an atmosphere which can only be described as that of the gutter. Somehow
-the disease of premature sexuality seems to have got possession of our
-centres of education; wretched practices and habits abound, and (what is
-perhaps their worst feature) cloud and degrade the boys’ conception of
-what true love or friendship may be.
-
-To those who are familiar with large public schools the state of affairs
-does not need describing. A friend (who has placed some notes at my
-disposal) says that in his time a certain well-known public school was a
-mass of uncleanness, incontinence, and dirty conversation, while at the
-same time a great deal of genuine affection, even to heroism, was shown
-among the boys in their relations with one another. But “all these things
-were treated by masters and boys alike as more or less unholy, with
-the result that they were either sought after or flung aside according
-to the sexual or emotional instinct of the boy. No attempt was made
-at discrimination. A kiss was by comparison as unclean as the act of
-_fellatio_, and no one had any gauge or principle whatever on which to
-guide the cravings of boyhood.” The writer then goes into details which
-it is not necessary to reproduce here. He (and others) were initiated
-in the mysteries of sex by the dormitory servant; and the boys thus
-corrupted mishandled each other.
-
-Naturally in any such atmosphere as this the chances _against_ the
-formation of a decent and healthy attachment are very large. If the elder
-youth happen to be given to sensuality he has here his opportunity; if on
-the other hand he is _not_ given to it, the ideas current around probably
-have the effect of making him suspect his own affection, and he ends by
-smothering and disowning the best part of his nature. In both ways harm
-is done. The big boys in such places become either coarse and licentious
-or hard and self-righteous; the small boys, instead of being educated and
-strengthened by the elder ones, become effeminate little wretches, the
-favorites, the petted boys, and the “spoons” of the school. As time goes
-on the public opinion of the school ceases to believe in the possibility
-of a healthy friendship; the masters begin to presume (and not without
-reason) that all affection means sensual practices, and end by doing
-their best to discourage it.
-
-Now this state of affairs is really desperate. There is no need to be
-puritanical, or to look upon the lapses of boyhood as unpardonable sins;
-indeed, it may be allowed, as far as that goes, that a little frivolity
-is better than hardness and self-righteousness; yet every one feels, and
-must feel, who knows anything about the matter, that the state of our
-schools is bad.
-
-And it is so because, after all, purity (in the sense of continence) _is_
-of the first importance to boyhood. To prolong the period of continence
-in a boy’s life is to prolong the period of _growth_. This is a simple
-physiological law, and a very obvious one; and whatever other things
-may be said in favour of purity, it remains perhaps the most weighty.
-To introduce sensual and sexual habits--and one of the worst of these
-is self-abuse--at an early age, is to arrest growth, both physical and
-mental.
-
-And what is even more, it means to arrest the capacity for affection.
-I believe affection, attachment--whether to the one sex or the
-other--springs up normally in the youthful mind in a quite diffused,
-ideal, emotional form--a kind of longing and amazement as at something
-divine--with no definite thought or distinct consciousness of sex in it.
-The sentiment expands and fills, as it were like a rising tide, every
-cranny of the emotional and moral nature; and the longer (of course
-within reasonable limits) its definite outlet towards sex is deferred,
-the longer does this period of emotional growth and development continue,
-and the greater is the refinement and breadth and strength of character
-resulting. All experience shows that a too early outlet towards sex
-cheapens and weakens affectional capacity.
-
-Yet this early outlet it is which is the great trouble of our public
-schools. And it really does not seem unlikely that the peculiar character
-of the middle-class man of to-day, his undeveloped affectional nature and
-something of brutishness and woodenness, is largely due to the prevalent
-condition of the places of his education. The Greeks, with their
-wonderful instinct of fitness, seem to have perceived the right path in
-all this matter; and, while encouraging friendship, as we have seen,
-made a great point of modesty in early life--the guardians and teachers
-of every well-born boy being especially called upon to watch over the
-sobriety of his habits and manners.[54]
-
-We have then in education generally, it seems to me (and whether of boys
-or of girls), two great currents to deal with, which cannot be ignored,
-and which certainly ought to be candidly recognized and given their right
-direction. One of these currents is that of friendship. The other is
-that of the young thing’s natural curiosity about sex. The latter is of
-course, or should be, a perfectly legitimate interest. A boy at puberty
-naturally wants to know--and ought to know--what is taking place, and
-what the uses and functions of his body are. He does not go very deep
-into things; a small amount of information will probably satisfy him; but
-the curiosity is there, and it is pretty certain that the boy, if he is
-a boy of any sense or character, _will_ in some shape or another get to
-satisfy it.
-
-The process is really a _mental_ one. Desire--except in some abnormal
-cases--has not manifested itself strongly; and there is often perhaps
-generally, an actual repugnance at first to anything like sexual
-practices; but the wish for information exists and is, I say, legitimate
-enough.[55] In almost all human societies except, curiously, the modern
-nations, there have been institutions for the initiation of the youth of
-either sex into these matters, and these initiations have generally been
-associated, in the opening blossom of the young mind, with inculcation of
-the ideals of manhood and womanhood, courage, hardihood, and the duties
-of the citizen or the soldier.[56]
-
-But what does the modern school do? It shuts a trap-door down on the
-whole matter. There is a hush; a grim silence. Legitimate curiosity soon
-becomes illegitimate of its kind; and a furtive desire creeps in, where
-there was no desire before. The method of the gutter prevails. In the
-absence of any recognition of schoolboy needs, contraband information is
-smuggled from one to another; chaff and ‘smut’ take the place of sensible
-and decent explanations; unhealthy practices follow; the sacredness
-of sex goes its way, never to return, and the school is filled with
-premature and morbid talk and thought about a subject which should, by
-rights, only just be rising over the mental horizon.
-
-The meeting of these two currents, of ideal attachment and sexual desire,
-constitutes a rather critical period, even when it takes place in the
-normal way--_i.e._, later on, and at the matrimonial age. Under the most
-favorable conditions a certain conflict occurs in the mind at their
-first encounter. But in the modern school this conflict, precipitated
-far too soon, and accompanied by an artificial suppression of the nobler
-current and a premature hastening of the baser one, ends in simple
-disaster to the former. Masters wage war against incontinence, and are
-right to do so. But how do they wage it? As said, by grim silence and
-fury, by driving the abscess deeper, by covering the drain over, _and_ by
-confusing when it comes before them--both in their own minds and those of
-the boys--a real attachment with that which they condemn.
-
-Not long ago the headmaster of a large public school coming suddenly out
-of his study chanced upon two boys embracing each other in the corridor.
-Possibly, and even probably, it was the simple and natural expression of
-an unsophisticated attachment. Certainly, it was nothing that in itself
-could be said to be either right or wrong. What did he do? He haled the
-two boys into his study, gave them a long lecture on the nefariousness of
-their conduct, with copious hints that he knew _what such things meant_,
-and _what they led to_, and ended by punishing both condignly. Could
-anything be more foolish? If their friendship was clean and natural,
-the master was only trying to make them feel that it was unclean and
-unnatural, and that a lovely and honorable thing was disgraceful; if the
-act was--which at least is improbable--a mere signal of lust--even then
-the best thing would have been to assume that it was honorable, and by
-talking to the boys, either together or separately, to try and inspire
-them with a better ideal; while if, between these positions, the master
-really thought the affection though honorable would lead to things
-undesirable, then, plainly, to punish the two was only to cement their
-love for each other, to give them a strong reason for concealing it, and
-to hasten its onward course. Yet every one knows that this is the _kind_
-of way in which the subject is treated in schools. It is the method of
-despair. And masters (perhaps not unnaturally) finding that they have
-not the time which would be needed for personal dealing with each boy,
-nor the forces at their command by which they might hope to introduce
-new ideals of life and conduct into their little community, and feeling
-thus utterly unable to cope with the situation, allow themselves to drift
-into a policy of mere silence with regard to it, tempered by outbreaks of
-ungoverned and unreasoning severity.
-
-I venture to think that school-masters will never successfully solve the
-difficulty until they boldly recognize the two needs in question, and
-proceed candidly to give them their proper satisfaction.
-
-The need of information--the legitimate curiosity--of boys (and girls)
-must be met, (1) partly by classes on physiology, (2) partly by private
-talks and confidences between elder and younger, based on friendship.
-With regard to (1) classes of this kind are already, happily, being
-carried on at a few advanced schools, and with good results. And though
-such classes can only go rather generally into the facts of motherhood
-and generation they cannot fail, if well managed, to impress the young
-minds, and give them a far grander and more reverent conception of the
-matter than they usually gain.
-
-But (2) although some rudimentary teaching on sex and lessons in
-physiology may be given in classes, it is obvious that further
-instruction and indeed any real help in the conduct of life and morals
-can only come through very close and tender confidences between the
-elder and the younger, such as exist where there is a strong friendship
-to begin with. It is obvious that effective help _can_ only come in
-this way, and that this is the only way in which it is desirable that
-it should come. The elder friend in this case would, one might say,
-naturally be, and in many instances may be, the parent, mother or
-father--who ought certainly to be able to impress on the clinging child
-the sacredness of the relation. And it is much to be hoped that parents
-will see their way to take this part more freely in the future. But
-for some unexplained reason there is certainly often a gulf of reserve
-between the (British) parent and child; and the boy who is much at school
-comes more under the influence of his elder companions than his parents.
-If, therefore, boys and youths cannot be trusted and encouraged to form
-decent and loving friendships with each other, and with their elders
-or juniors--in which many delicate questions could be discussed and
-the tradition of sensible and manly conduct with regard to sex handed
-down--we are indeed in a bad plight and involved in a vicious circle from
-which escape seems difficult.
-
-And so (we think) the need of attachment must also be met by full
-recognition of it, and the granting of it expression within all
-reasonable limits; by the dissemination of a good ideal of friendship
-and the enlistment of it on the side of manliness and temperance. Is it
-too much to hope that schools will in time recognise comradeship as a
-regular institution--considerably more important, say, than “fagging”--an
-institution having its definite place in the school life, in the games
-and in the studies, with its own duties, responsibilities, privileges,
-etc., and serving to ramify through the little community, hold it
-together, and inspire its members with the two qualities of heroism and
-tenderness, which together form the basis of all great character?
-
-But here it must be said that if we are hoping for any great change in
-the conduct of our large boys’ schools, the so-called public schools are
-not the places in which to look for it--or at any rate for its inception.
-In the first place these institutions are hampered by powerful traditions
-which naturally make them conservative; and in the second place their
-mere size and the number of boys make them difficult to deal with or
-to modify. The masters are overwhelmed with work; and the (necessary)
-division of so many boys into separate ‘houses’ has this effect that a
-master who introduces a better tradition into his own house has always
-the prospect before him that his work will be effaced by the continual
-and perhaps contaminating contact with the boys from the other houses.
-No, it will be in smaller schools, say of from 50 to 100 boys, where
-the personal influence of the headmaster will be a real force reaching
-each boy, and where he will be really able to mould the tradition of the
-school, that we shall alone be able to look for an improved state of
-affairs.[57]
-
-No doubt the first steps in any reform of this kind are difficult; but
-masters are greatly hampered by the confusion in the public mind, to
-which we have already alluded--which so often persists in setting down
-any attachment between two boys, or between a boy and his teacher, to
-nothing but sensuality. Many masters quite understand the situation,
-but feel themselves helpless in the face of public opinion. Who so fit
-(they sometimes feel) to enlighten a young boy and guide his growing mind
-as one of themselves, when the bond of attachment exists between the
-two? Like the writer of a letter quoted in the early part of this paper
-they believe that “a personal affection, almost indescribable, grows
-up between pupil and teacher, through which thoughts are shared and an
-influence created that could exist in no other way.” Yet when the pupil
-comes along of whom all this might be true, who shows by his pleading
-looks the sentiment which animates him, and the profound impression which
-he is longing, as it were, to receive from his teacher, the latter belies
-himself, denies his own instinct and the boy’s great need, and treats
-him distantly and with coldness. And why? Simply because he dreads,
-even while he desires it, the boy’s confidence. He fears the ingenuous
-and perfectly natural expression of the boy’s affection in caress or
-embrace, because he knows how a bastard public opinion will interpret,
-or misinterpret it; and rather than run such a risk as this he seals the
-fountains of the heart, withholds the help which love alone can give, and
-deliberately nips the tender bud which is turning to him for light and
-warmth.[58]
-
-The panic terror which prevails in England with regard to the expression
-of affection of this kind has its comic aspect. The affection exists,
-and is known to exist, on all sides; but we must bury our heads in the
-sand and pretend not to see it. And if by any chance we are compelled
-to recognize it, we must show our vast discernment by _suspecting_ it.
-And thus we fling on the dust-heap one of the noblest and most precious
-elements in human nature. Certainly, if the denial and suspicion of
-all natural affection were beneficial, we should find this out in our
-schools; but seeing how complete is its failure there to clarify their
-tone it is sufficiently evident that the method itself is wrong.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The remarks in this paper have chiefly had reference to boys’ schools;
-but they apply in the main to girls’ schools, where much the same
-troubles prevail--with this difference, that in girls’ schools
-friendships instead of being repressed are rather encouraged by public
-opinion; only unfortunately they are for the most part friendships of
-a weak and sentimental turn, and not very healthy either in themselves
-or in the habits they lead to. Here too, in girls’ schools, the whole
-subject wants facing out; friendship wants setting on a more solid
-and less sentimental basis; and on the subject of sex, so infinitely
-important to women, there needs to be sensible and consistent teaching,
-both public and private. Possibly the co-education of boys and girls may
-be of use in making boys less ashamed of their feelings, and girls more
-healthy in the expression of them.
-
-At any rate the more the matter is thought of, the clearer I believe
-will it appear that a healthy affection must in the end be the basis of
-education, and that the recognition of this will form the only way out
-of the modern school-difficulty. It is true that such a change would
-revolutionise our school-life; but it will have to come, all the same,
-and no doubt will come _pari passu_ with other changes that are taking
-place in society at large.
-
-
-
-
-V
-
-The Place of the Uranian in Society
-
-
-Whatever differing views there may be on the many problems which the
-Intermediate sexes present--and however difficult of solution some of the
-questions involved--there is one thing which appears to me incontestable:
-namely that a vast number of intermediates do actually perform most
-valuable social work, and that they do so partly on account and by reason
-of their special temperament.
-
-This fact is not generally recognised as it ought to be, for the simple
-reason that the Uranian himself is not recognised, and indeed (as we have
-already said) tends to conceal his temperament from the public. There is
-no doubt that if it became widely known _who are_ the Uranians, the world
-would be astonished to find so many of its great or leading men among
-them.
-
-I have thought it might be useful to indicate some of the lines along
-which valuable work is being performed, or has been performed, by people
-of this disposition; and in doing this I do not of course mean to
-disguise or conceal the fact that there are numbers of merely frivolous,
-or feeble or even vicious homosexuals, who practically do no useful work
-for society at all--_just as there are of normal people_. The existence
-of those who do no valuable work does not alter the fact of the existence
-of others whose work is of great importance. And I wish also to make
-it clearly understood that I use the word Uranians to indicate simply
-those whose lives and activities are inspired by a genuine friendship or
-love for their own sex, without venturing to specify their individual
-and particular habits or relations towards those whom they love (which
-relations in most cases we have no means of knowing). Some Intermediates
-of light and leading--doubtless not a few--are physically very reserved
-and continent; others are sensual in some degree or other. The point
-is that they are all men, or women, whose most powerful motive comes
-from the dedication to their own kind, and is bound up with it in some
-way. And if it seems strange and anomalous that in such cases work
-of considerable importance to society is being done by people whose
-affections and dispositions society itself would blame, this is after all
-no more than has happened a thousand times before in the history of the
-world.
-
-As I have already hinted, the Uranian temperament (probably from the
-very fact of its dual nature and the swift and constant interaction
-between its masculine and feminine elements) is exceedingly sensitive and
-emotional; and there is no doubt that, going with this, a large number
-of the artist class, musical, literary or pictorial, belong to this
-description. That delicate and subtle sympathy with every wave and phase
-of feeling which makes the artist possible is also very characteristic of
-the Uranian (the male type), and makes it easy or natural for the Uranian
-man to become an artist. In the ‘confessions’ and ‘cases’ collected by
-Krafft-Ebing, Havelock Ellis and others, it is remarkable what a large
-percentage of men of this temperament belong to the artist class. In his
-volume on “Sexual Inversion,”[59] speaking of the cases collected by
-himself, Ellis says:--“An examination of my cases reveals the interesting
-fact that thirty-two of them, or sixty-eight per cent., possess artistic
-aptitude in varying degree. Galton found, from the investigation of
-nearly one thousand persons, that the general average showing artistic
-taste in England is only about thirty per cent. It must also be said that
-my figures are probably below the truth, as no special point was made of
-investigating the matter, and also that in many of my cases the artistic
-aptitudes are of high order. With regard to the special avocations of
-my cases, it must of course be said that no occupation furnishes a
-safeguard against inversion. There are, however, certain occupations to
-which inverts are specially attracted. Acting is certainly one of the
-chief of these. Three of my cases belong to the dramatic profession,
-and others have marked dramatic ability. Art, again, in its various
-forms, and music, exercise much attraction. In my experience, however,
-literature is the avocation to which inverts seem to feel chiefly called,
-and that moreover in which they may find the highest degree of success
-and reputation. At least half-a-dozen of my cases are successful men of
-letters.”
-
-Of Literature in this connection, and of the great writers of the world
-whose work has been partly inspired by the Uranian love, I have myself
-already spoken.[60] It may further be said that those of the modern
-artist-writers and poets who have done the greatest service in the way
-of interpreting and reconstructing _Greek_ life and ideals--men like
-Winckelmann, Goethe, Addington Symonds, Walter Pater--have had a marked
-strain of this temperament in them. And this has been a service of great
-value, and one which the world could ill have afforded to lose.
-
-The painters and sculptors, especially of the renaissance period in
-Italy, yield not a few examples of men whose work has been similarly
-inspired--as in the cases of Michel Angelo, Lionardo, Bazzi, Cellini,
-and others. As to music, this is certainly the art which in its subtlety
-and tenderness--and perhaps in a certain inclination to _indulge_ in
-emotion--lies nearest to the Urning nature. There are few in fact of this
-nature who have not some gift in the direction of music--though, unless
-we cite Tschaikowsky, it does not appear that any thorough-going Uranian
-has attained to the highest eminence in this art.
-
-Another direction along which the temperament very naturally finds an
-outlet is the important social work of Education. The capacity that a
-man has, in cases, of devoting himself to the welfare of boys or youths,
-is clearly a thing which ought not to go wasted--and which may be most
-precious and valuable. It is incontestable that a great number of men
-(and women) are drawn into the teaching profession by this sentiment--and
-the work they do is, in many cases, beyond estimation. Fortunate the boy
-who meets with such a helper in early life! I know a man--a rising and
-vigorous thinker and writer--who tells me that he owes almost everything
-mentally to such a friend of his boyhood, who took the greatest interest
-in him, saw him almost every day for many years, and indeed cleared up
-for him not only things mental but things moral, giving him the affection
-and guidance his young heart needed. And I have myself known and watched
-not a few such teachers, in public schools and in private schools, and
-seen something of the work and of the real inspiration they have been to
-boys under them. Hampered as they have been by the readiness of the world
-to misinterpret, they still have been able to do most precious service.
-Of course here and there a case occurs in which privilege is abused; but
-even then the judgment of the world is often unreasonably severe. A poor
-boy once told me with tears in his eyes of the work a man had done for
-him. This man had saved the boy from drunken parents, taken him from the
-slums, and by means of a club helped him out into the world. Many other
-boys he had rescued, it appeared, in the same way--scores and scores of
-them. But on some occasion or other he got into trouble, and was accused
-of improper familiarities. No excuse, or record of a useful life, was of
-the least avail. Every trumpery slander was believed, every mean motive
-imputed, and he had to throw up his position and settle elsewhere, his
-life-work shattered, never to be resumed.
-
-The capacity for sincere affection which causes an elder man to care so
-deeply for the welfare of a youth or boy, is met and responded to by a
-similar capacity in the young thing of devotion to an elder man. This
-fact is not always recognised; but I have known cases of boys and even
-young men who would feel the most romantic attachments to quite mature
-men, sometimes as much as forty or fifty years of age, and only for
-them--passing by their own contemporaries of either sex, and caring only
-to win a return affection from these others. This may seem strange, but
-it is true. And the fact not only makes one understand what riddles there
-are slumbering in the breasts of our children, but how greatly important
-it is that we should try to read them--since here, in such cases as
-these, the finding of an answering heart in an elder man would probably
-be the younger one’s salvation.
-
-How much of the enormous amount of philanthropic work done in the
-present day--by women among needy or destitute girls of all sorts, or
-by men among like classes of boys--is inspired by the same feeling, it
-would be hard to say; but it must be a very considerable proportion.
-I think myself that the best philanthropic work--just because it is
-the most personal, the most loving, and the least merely formal and
-self-righteous--has a strong fibre of the Uranian heart running through
-it; and if it should be said that work of this very personal kind is more
-liable to dangers and difficulties on that account, it is only what is
-true of the best in almost all departments.
-
-Eros is a great leveler. Perhaps the true Democracy rests, more firmly
-than anywhere else, on a sentiment which easily passes the bounds
-of class and caste, and unites in the closest affection the most
-estranged ranks of society. It is noticeable how often Uranians of good
-position and breeding are drawn to rougher types, as of manual workers,
-and frequently very permanent alliances grow up in this way, which
-although not publicly acknowledged have a decided influence on social
-institutions, customs and political tendencies--and which would have a
-good deal more influence could they be given a little more scope and
-recognition. There are cases that I have known (although the ordinary
-commercial world might hardly believe it) of employers who have managed
-to attach their workmen, or many of them, very personally to themselves,
-and whose object in running their businesses was at least as much to
-provide their employees with a living as themselves; while the latter,
-feeling this, have responded with their best output. It is possible that
-something like the guilds and fraternities of the middle ages might thus
-be reconstructed, but on a more intimate and personal basis than in those
-days; and indeed there are not wanting signs that such a reconstruction
-is actually taking place.
-
-The “Letters of Love and Labour” written by Samuel M. Jones of
-Toledo, Ohio, to his workmen in the engineering firm of which he was
-master, are very interesting in this connection. They breathe a spirit
-of extraordinary personal affection towards, and confidence in, the
-employees, which was heartily responded to by the latter; and the whole
-business was carried on, with considerable success, on the principle of a
-close and friendly co-operation all round.[61]
-
-These things indeed suggest to one that it is possible that the Uranian
-spirit may lead to something like a general enthusiasm of Humanity,
-and that the Uranian people may be destined to form the advance guard
-of that great movement which will one day transform the common life
-by substituting the bond of personal affection and compassion for the
-monetary, legal and other external ties which now control and confine
-society. Such a part of course we cannot expect the Uranians to play
-unless the capacity for their kind of attachment also exists--though in
-a germinal and undeveloped state--in the breast of mankind at large.
-And modern thought and investigation are clearly tending that way--to
-confirm that it does so exist.
-
-Dr. E. Bertz in his late study of Whitman as a person of strongly
-homogenic temperament[62] brings forward the objection that Whitman’s
-gospel of Comradeship as a means of social regeneration is founded on
-a false basis--because (so Dr. Bertz says) the gospel derives from an
-abnormality in himself, and therefore cannot possibly have a universal
-application or create a general enthusiasm. But this is rather a case of
-assuming the point which has to be proved. Whitman constantly maintains
-that his own disposition at any rate is normal, and that he represents
-the average man. And it _may_ be true, even as far as his Uranian
-temperament is concerned, that while this was specially developed in him
-the germs of it _are_ almost, if not quite, universal. If so, then the
-Comradeship on which Whitman founds a large portion of his message may
-in course of time become a general enthusiasm, and the nobler Uranians
-of to-day may be destined, as suggested, to be its pioneers and advance
-guard. As one of them himself has sung:--
-
- These things shall be! A loftier race,
- Than e’er the world hath known, shall rise
- With flame of freedom in their souls,
- And light of science in their eyes.
- Nation with nation, land with land,
- In-armed shall live as comrades free;
- In every heart and brain shall throb
- The pulse of one fraternity.[63]
-
-To proceed. The Uranian, though generally high-strung and sensitive,
-is by no means always dreamy. He is sometimes extraordinarily
-and unexpectedly practical; and such a man may, and often does,
-command a positive enthusiasm among his subordinates in a business
-organisation. The same is true of military organisation. As a rule
-the Uranian temperament (in the male) is not militant. War with its
-horrors and savagery is somewhat alien to the type. But here again
-there are exceptions; and in all times there have been great generals
-(like Alexander, Cæsar, Charles XII. of Sweden, or Frederick II. of
-Prussia--not to speak of more modern examples) with a powerful strain in
-them of the homogenic nature, and a wonderful capacity for organisation
-and command, which combined with their personal interest in, or
-attachment to, their troops, and the answering enthusiasm so elicited,
-have made their armies well-nigh invincible.
-
-The existence of this great practical ability in some Uranians cannot be
-denied; and it points to the important work they may some day have to do
-in social reconstruction. At the same time I think it is noticeable that
-_politics_ (at any rate in the modern sense of the word, as concerned
-mainly with party questions and party government) is not as a rule
-congenial to them. The personal and affectional element is perhaps too
-remote or absent. Mere ‘views’ and ‘questions’ and party strife are alien
-to the Uranian man, as they are on the whole to the ordinary woman.
-
-If politics, however, are not particularly congenial, it is yet
-remarkable how many royal personages have been decidedly homogenic in
-temperament. Taking the Kings of England from the Norman Conquest to
-the present day, we may count about thirty. And three of these, namely,
-William Rufus, Edward II., and James I. were homosexual in a marked
-degree--might fairly be classed as Urnings--while some others, like
-William III., had a strong admixture of the same temperament. Three
-out of thirty yields a high ratio--ten per cent--and considering that
-sovereigns do not generally choose themselves, but come into their
-position by accident of birth, the ratio is certainly remarkable. Does
-it suggest that the general percentage in the world at large is equally
-high, but that it remains unnoticed, except in the fierce light that
-beats upon thrones? or is there some other explanation with regard to
-the special liability of royalty to inversion? Hereditary degeneracy
-has sometimes been suggested. But it is difficult to explain the matter
-even on this theory; for though the epithet ‘degenerate’ might possibly
-apply to James I., it would certainly not be applicable to William Rufus
-and William III., who, in their different ways, were both men of great
-courage and personal force--while Edward II. was by no means wanting in
-ability.
-
-But while the Uranian temperament has, in cases, specially fitted
-its possessors to become distinguished in art or education or war or
-administration, and enabled them to do valuable work in these fields; it
-remains perhaps true that above all it has fitted them, and fits them,
-for distinction and service in affairs of the heart.
-
-It is hard to imagine human beings more skilled in these matters than
-are the Intermediates. For indeed no one else can possibly respond to
-and understand, as they do, all the fluctuations and interactions of
-the masculine and feminine in human life. The pretensive coyness and
-passivity of women, the rude invasiveness of men; lust, brutality, secret
-tears, the bleeding heart; renunciation, motherhood, finesse, romance,
-angelic devotion--all these things lie slumbering in the Uranian soul,
-ready on occasion for expression; and if they are not always expressed
-are always there for purposes of divination or interpretation. There
-are few situations, in fact, in courtship or marriage which the Uranian
-does not instinctively understand; and it is strange to see how even an
-unlettered person of this type will often read Love’s manuscript easily
-in cases where the normal man or woman is groping over it like a child
-in the dark. [Not of course that this means to imply any superiority of
-_character_ in the former; but merely that with his double outlook he
-necessarily discerns things which the other misses.]
-
-That the Uranians do stand out as helpers and guides, not only in matters
-of Education, but in affairs of love and marriage, is tolerably patent to
-all who know them. It is a common experience for them to be consulted
-now by the man, now by the woman, whose matrimonial conditions are
-uncongenial or disastrous--not generally because the consultants in the
-least perceive the Uranian nature, but because they instinctively feel
-that here is a strong sympathy with and understanding of their side of
-the question. In this way it is often the fate of the Uranian, himself
-unrecognised, to bring about happier times and a better comprehension
-of each other among those with whom he may have to deal. Also he often
-becomes the confidant of young things of either sex, who are caught in
-the tangles of love or passion, and know not where to turn for assistance.
-
-I say that I think perhaps of all the services the Uranian may render to
-society it will be found some day that in this direction of solving the
-problems of affection and of the heart he will do the greatest service.
-If the day is coming as we have suggested--when Love is at last to take
-its rightful place as the binding and directing force of society (instead
-of the Cash-nexus), and society is to be transmuted in consequence to a
-higher form, then undoubtedly the superior types of Uranians--prepared
-for this service by long experience and devotion, as well as by much
-suffering--will have an important part to play in the transformation.
-For that the Urnings in their own lives put Love before everything
-else--postponing to it the other motives like money-making, business
-success, fame, which occupy so much space in most people’s careers--is
-a fact which is patent to everyone who knows them. This may be saying
-little or nothing in favor of those of this class whose conception of
-love is only of a poor and frivolous sort; but in the case of those
-others who see the god in his true light, the fact that they serve him
-in singleness of heart and so unremittingly raises them at once into the
-position of the natural leaders of mankind.
-
-From this fact--_i.e._, that these folk think so much of affairs of the
-heart--and from the fact that their alliances and friendships are formed
-and carried on beneath the surface of society, as it were, and therefore
-to some extent beyond the inquisitions and supervisions of Mrs. Grundy,
-some interesting conclusions flow.
-
-For one thing, the question is constantly arising as to how Society would
-shape itself if _free_: what form, in matters of Love and Marriage, it
-would take, if the present restrictions and sanctions were removed or
-greatly altered. At present in these matters, the Law, the Church, and
-a strong pressure of public opinion interfere, compelling the observance
-of certain forms; and it becomes difficult to say how much of the
-existing order is due to the spontaneous instinct and common sense of
-human nature, and how much to mere outside compulsion and interference:
-how far, for instance, Monogamy is natural or artificial; to what degree
-marriages would be permanent if the Law did not make them so; what is the
-rational view of Divorce; whether jealousy is a necessary accompaniment
-of Love; and so forth. These are questions which are being constantly
-discussed, without finality; or not infrequently with quite pessimistic
-conclusions.
-
-Now in the Urning societies a certain freedom (though not complete,
-of course) exists. Underneath the surface of general Society, and
-consequently unaffected to any great degree by its laws and customs,
-alliances are formed and maintained, or modified or broken, more in
-accord with inner need than with outer pressure. Thus it happens that in
-these societies there are such opportunities to note and observe human
-grouping under conditions of freedom, as do not occur in the ordinary
-world. And the results are both interesting and encouraging. As a rule I
-think it may be said that the alliances are remarkably permanent. Instead
-of the wild “general post” which so many good people seem to expect in
-the event of law being relaxed, one finds (except of course in a few
-individual cases) that common sense and fidelity and a strong tendency to
-permanence prevail. In the ordinary world so far has doubt gone that many
-to-day disbelieve in a life-long free marriage. Yet among the Uranians
-such a thing is, one may almost say, common and well known; and there are
-certainly few among them who do not believe in its possibility.
-
-Great have been the debates, in all times and places, concerning
-Jealousy; and as to how far jealousy is natural and instinctive and
-universal, and how far it is the product of social opinion and the
-property sense, and so on. In ordinary marriage what may be called social
-and proprietary jealousy is undoubtedly a very great factor. But this
-kind of jealousy hardly appears or operates in the Urning societies. Thus
-we have an opportunity in these latter of observing conditions where only
-the natural and instinctive jealousy exists. This of course is present
-among the Urnings--sometimes rampant and violent, sometimes quiescent
-and vanishing almost to _nil_. It seems to depend almost entirely upon
-the individual; and we certainly learn that jealousy though frequent and
-widespread, is not an absolutely necessary accompaniment of love. There
-are cases of Uranians (whether men or women) who, though permanently
-allied, do not object to lesser friendships on either side--and there
-are cases of very decided objection. And we may conclude that something
-the same would be true (is true) of the ordinary Marriage, the property
-considerations and the property jealousy being once removed. The tendency
-anyhow to establish a dual relation more or less fixed, is seen to be
-very strong among the Intermediates, and may be concluded to be equally
-strong among the more normal folk.
-
-Again with regard to Prostitution. That there are a few natural-born
-prostitutes is seen in the Urning-societies; but prostitution in that
-world does not take the important place which it does in the normal
-world, partly because the law-bound compulsory marriage does not exist
-there, and partly because prostitution naturally has little chance and
-cannot compete in a world where alliances are free and there is an open
-field for friendship. Hence we may see that freedom of alliance and of
-marriage in the ordinary world will probably lead to the great diminution
-or even disappearance of Prostitution.
-
-In these and other ways the experience of the Uranian world forming
-itself freely and not subject to outside laws and institutions comes as
-a guide--and really a hopeful guide--towards the future. I would say
-however that in making these remarks about certain conclusions which we
-are able to gather from some spontaneous and comparatively unrestricted
-associations, I do not at all mean to argue _against_ institutions and
-forms. I think that the Uranian love undoubtedly suffers from want of a
-recognition and a standard. And though it may at present be better off
-than if subject to a foolish and meddlesome regulation; yet in the future
-it will have its more or less fixed standards and ideals, like the normal
-love. If one considers for a moment how the ordinary relations of the
-sexes would suffer were there no generally acknowledged codes of honor
-and conduct with regard to them, one then indeed sees that reasonable
-forms and institutions are a help, and one may almost wonder that the
-Urning circles are so well-conducted on the whole as they are.
-
-I have said that the Urning men in their own lives put love before
-money-making, business success, fame, and other motives which rule the
-normal man. I am sure that it is also true of them as a whole that
-they put love before lust. I do not feel _sure_ that this can be said
-of the normal man, at any rate in the present stage of evolution. It
-is doubtful whether on the whole the merely physical attraction is not
-the stronger motive with the latter type. Unwilling as the world at
-large is to credit what I am about to say, and great as are the current
-misunderstandings on the subject, I believe it is true that the Uranian
-men are superior to the normal men in this respect--in respect of their
-love-feeling--which is gentler, more sympathetic, more considerate, more
-a matter of the heart and less one of mere physical satisfaction than
-that of ordinary men.[64] All this flows naturally from the presence of
-the feminine element in them, and its blending with the rest of their
-nature. It should be expected _a priori_, and it can be noticed at once
-by those who have any acquaintance with the Urning world. Much of the
-current misunderstanding with regard to the character and habits of the
-Urning arises from his confusion with the ordinary _roué_ who, though
-of normal temperament, contracts homosexual habits out of curiosity
-and so forth--but this is a point which I have touched on before, and
-which ought now to be sufficiently clear. If it be once allowed that
-the love-nature of the Uranian is of a sincere and essentially humane
-and kindly type then the importance of the Uranian’s place in Society,
-and of the social work he may be able to do, must certainly also be
-acknowledged.
-
-
-
-
-FOOTNOTES
-
-
-[1] For the derivation of these terms see ch. ii., p. 20, _infra_.
-
-[2] See Appendix, pp. 139 and 140.
-
-[3] From _Uranos_, heaven; his idea being that the Uranian love was of a
-higher order than the ordinary attachment. For further about Ulrichs and
-his theories see Appendix, pp. 157-159.
-
-[4] Charles G. Leland (“Hans Breitmann”) in his book “The Alternate
-Sex” (Wellby, 1904), insists much on the frequent combination of the
-characteristics of both sexes in remarkable men and women, and has a
-chapter on “The Female Mind in Man,” and another on “The Male Intellect
-in Woman.”
-
-[5] Some late statistical inquiries (see “Statistische Untersuchungen,”
-von Dr. M. Hirschfeld, Leipzig, 1904) yield 1.5 to 2.0 per cent. as a
-probable ratio. See also Appendix, pp. 134-136.
-
-[6] For instances, see Appendix, pp. 149-153.
-
-[7] See De Joux, “Die Enterbten des Liebesglückes” (Leipzig, 1893), p. 21.
-
-[8] “Psychopathia Sexualis,” 7th ed., p. 276.
-
-[9] See Appendix, pp. 153-156.
-
-[10] A good deal in this description may remind readers of history of the
-habits and character of Henry III. of France.
-
-[11] Perhaps, like Queen Christine of Sweden, who rode across Europe, on
-her visit to Italy, in jack-boots and sitting astride of her horse. It is
-said that she shook the Pope’s hand, on seeing him, so heartily that the
-doctor had to attend to it afterwards!
-
-[12] “Homosexual,” generally used in scientific works, is of course a
-bastard word. “Homogenic” has been suggested, as being from two roots,
-both Greek, _i.e._, “homos,” same, and “genos,” sex.
-
-[13] “Athenæus” xiii., ch. 78.
-
-[14] See Plutarch’s “Eroticus,” §xvii.
-
-[15] See “Natural History of Man,” by J. G. Wood. Vol: “Africa,” p. 419.
-
-[16] See also Livingstone’s “Expedition to the Zambesi” (Murray, 1865) p.
-148.
-
-[17] Though these two plays, except for some quotations, are lost.
-
-[18] Mantegazza and Lombroso. See Albert Moll, “Conträre
-Sexualempfindung,” 2nd ed., p. 36.
-
-[19] Though in translation this fact is often by pious fraudulence
-disguised.
-
-[20] W. Pater’s “Renaissance,” pp. 8-16.
-
-[21] Among _prose_ writers of this period, Montaigne, whose treatment of
-the subject is enthusiastic and unequivocal, should not be overlooked.
-See Hazlitt’s “Montaigne,” ch. xxvii.
-
-[22] I may be excused for quoting here the sonnet No. 54, from J. A.
-Symonds’ translation of the sonnets of Michel Angelo:--
-
- “From thy fair face I learn, O my loved lord,
- That which no mortal tongue can rightly say:
- The soul, imprisoned in her house of clay,
- Holpen by thee to God hath often soared:
- And though the vulgar, vain, malignant horde
- Attribute what their grosser wills obey,
- Yet shall this fervent homage that I pay,
- This love, this faith, pure joys for us afford,
- Lo, all the lovely things we find on earth,
- Resemble for the soul that rightly sees,
- That source of bliss divine which gave us birth:
- Nor have we first-fruits or remembrances
- Of heaven elsewhere. Thus, loving loyally,
- I rise to God, and make death sweet by thee.”
-
-The labours of von Scheffler, followed by J. A. Symonds, have now pretty
-conclusively established the pious frauds of the nephew, and the fact
-that the love-poems of the elder Michel Angelo were, for the most part,
-written to male friends.
-
-[23] See an interesting paper in W. Pater’s “Renaissance.”
-
-[24] For a fuller collection of instances of this Friendship-love in the
-history of the world, see “Ioläus: an Anthology,” by E. Carpenter (George
-Allen, London. 3/- net). Also “Liebling-minne und Freundesliebe in der
-Welt-literatur,” von Elisar von Kupffer (Adolf Brand, Berlin, 1900).
-
-[25] As in the case, for instance, of Tennyson’s “In Memoriam,” for which
-the poet was soundly rated by the _Times_ at the time of its publication.
-
-[26] Jowett’s “Plato,” 2nd ed., vol. ii., p. 30.
-
-[27] Jowett, vol. ii., p. 130.
-
-[28] One ought also to mention some later writers, like Dr. Magnus
-Hirschfeld and Dr. von Römer, whose work though avowedly favourable to
-the Urning-movement, is in a high degree scientific and reliable in
-character.
-
-[29] From _Uranos_--see, for derivation, p. 20, _supra_--also Plato’s
-“Symposium,” speech of Pausanias.
-
-[30] See, for estimates, Appendix, pp. 134-136.
-
-[31] Though there is no doubt a general _tendency_ towards femininity of
-type in the male Urning, and towards masculinity in the female.
-
-[32] “Gli amori degli uomini.”
-
-[33] “Psychopathia Sexualis,” 7th ed., p. 227.
-
-[34] _Ibid_, pp. 229 and 258. See Appendix, p. 160.
-
-[35] “How deep congenital sex-inversion roots may be gathered from the
-fact that the pleasure-dream of the male Urning has to do with male
-persons, and of the female with females.”--Krafft-Ebing, “P.S.,” 7th ed.,
-p. 228.
-
-[36] “Conträre Sexualempfindung,” 2nd ed., p. 269.
-
-[37] See “Love’s Coming-of-Age,” p. 22.
-
-[38] Pub.: F. A. Davis, Philadelphia, 1901.
-
-[39] Otto Weininger even goes further, and regards the temperament as
-a natural intermediate form (“Sex and Character,” ch. iv.) See also
-Appendix, _infra_, p. 169.
-
-[40] “Though then before my own conscience I cannot reproach myself, and
-though I must certainly reject the judgment of the world about us, yet I
-suffer greatly. In very truth I have injured no one, and I hold my love
-in its nobler activity for just as holy as that of normally disposed
-men, but under the unhappy fate that allows us neither sufferance nor
-recognition I suffer often more than my life can bear.”--Extract from a
-letter given by Krafft-Ebing.
-
-[41] See “In the Key of Blue,” by J. A. Symonds (Elkin Mathews, 1893).
-
-[42] See Appendix, pp. 162 and 163.
-
-[43] See also “Love’s Coming-of-Age,” 5th ed., pp. 173, 174.
-
-[44] See “Das Conträre Geschlechtsgefühl,” von Havelock Ellis und J. A.
-Symonds (Leipzig, 1896).
-
-[45] “Symposium,” Speech of Socrates.
-
-[46] It is interesting in this connection to notice the extreme fervour,
-almost of romance, of the bond which often unites lovers of like sex
-over a long period of years, in an unfailing tenderness of treatment
-and consideration towards each other, equal to that shown in the most
-successful marriages. The love of many such men, says Moll (p. 119),
-“developed in youth lasts at times the whole life through. I know of
-such men, who had not seen their first love for years, even decades, and
-who yet on meeting showed the old fire of their first passion. In other
-cases, a close love-intimacy will last unbroken for many years.”
-
-[47] Though, inconsistently enough, making no mention of females.
-
-[48] Dr. Moll maintains (2nd ed., pp. 314, 315) that if familiarities
-between those of the same sex are made illegal, as immoral, self-abuse
-ought much more to be so made.
-
-[49] Though it is doubtful whether the marriage-laws even do this.
-
-[50] In France, since the adoption of the Code Napoleon, sexual inversion
-is tolerated under the same restrictions as normal sexuality; and
-according to Carlier, formerly Chief of the French Police, Paris is not
-more depraved in this matter than London. Italy in 1889 also adopted the
-principles of the Code Napoleon on this point. For further considerations
-with regard to the Law, see Appendix, pp. 164 and 165.
-
-[51] For further instances, see Appendix, pp. 143-148.
-
-[52] See Müller’s “History and Antiquities of the Doric Race.”
-
-[53] Müller.
-
-[54] Cf. the incident at the end of Plato’s “Lysis,” when the tutors of
-Lysis and Menexenus come in and send the youths home.
-
-[55] For a useful little manual on this subject, see “How We are Born,”
-by Mrs. N. J. (Daniel, London, price 2/-). For a general argument in
-favour of sex-teaching see “The Training of the Young in Laws of Sex,” by
-Canon Lyttelton, Headmaster of Eton College (Longmans, 2/6).
-
-[56] See J. G. Wood’s “Natural History of Man,” vol. “Africa,” p. 324
-(the Bechuanas); also vol. “Australia,” p. 75.
-
-[57] With the rapid rise which is taking place, in scope and social
-status, of the state day-schools, it is probable that some change of
-opinion will take place with regard to the wisdom of sending young
-boys of ten to fourteen to upper-class boarding-schools. For a boy of
-fifteen or sixteen and upwards the boarding-school system may have
-its advantages. By that time a boy is old enough to understand some
-questions; he is old enough to have some rational ideal of conduct, and
-to hold his own in the pursuit of it; and he may learn in the life away
-from home a lot in the way of discipline, organization, self-reliance,
-etc. But to send a young thing, ignorant of life, and quite unformed of
-character, to take his chance by day and night in the public school as it
-at present exists, is--to say the least--a rash thing to do.
-
-[58] It should be also said, in fairness, that the fear of showing undue
-partiality, often comes in as a paralysing influence.
-
-[59] “Studies in the Psychology of Sex,” vol. ii., p. 173.
-
-[60] See ch. ii. _supra_, also _Ioläus_, an Anthology of Friendship, by
-E. Carpenter.
-
-[61] Mr. Jones became Mayor of Toledo; but died at the early age of 53.
-See also “Workshop Reconstruction,” by C. R. Ashbee, Appendix, _infra_,
-p. 146.
-
-[62] “Whitman: ein Charakterbild,” by Edward Bertz (Leipzig, Max Spohr).
-
-[63] John Addington Symonds.
-
-[64] See Appendix, pp. 172-174.
-
-
-
-
-APPENDIX
-
-
-“In this country [Britain] we have too long, from a sense of mock
-modesty, neglected the science relating to sex. In Germany this is not
-so. There we find workers who have elaborated for themselves a new
-science, and who have given to the world knowledge which is of the very
-utmost importance. We now know that there are females with strong male
-characteristics, and _vice-versa_. Anatomically and mentally we find all
-shades existing from the pure genus man to the pure genus woman. Thus
-there has been constituted what is well named by an illustrious exponent
-of the science ‘The Third Sex’.”--Dr. JAMES BURNET, _The Medical Times
-and Hospital Gazette_, vol. xxxiv., No. 1497, 10th November, 1906. London.
-
-“Every citizen of age to fulfil his duties as a citizen, whether he be
-a father or husband, teacher or pupil, master or servant, official or
-subordinate, has the right, and owes it as a duty, to know the facts of
-sexual inversion, to combat and to prevent debauchery, crime and vice,
-to learn and to teach others the place of inversion in Society, and its
-morals, the duties of the invert towards himself, and towards other
-inverts, towards the normal man, and towards women and children. And
-the duties of the normal man towards the invert are no less--no less
-difficult, no less indispensable.”--M. A. RAFFALOVICH, “Uranisme et
-Unisexualité.” Paris, 1896.
-
-“That sex inversion is not a chance phenomenon … appears from the
-fact that it has been observed at all times and in all places, and
-among peoples quite separate from each other.”--A. MOLL, “Die Conträre
-Sexualempfindung,” 2nd Edition, p. 15. Berlin, 1893.
-
-“Concerning the wide prevalence of sexual inversion, and of homosexual
-phenomena generally, there can be no manner of doubt. In Berlin, Moll
-states that he has himself seen between six hundred and seven hundred
-homosexual persons, and heard of some two hundred and fifty to three
-hundred others. I have much evidence as to its frequency both in England
-and the United States. In England, concerning which I can naturally speak
-with most assurance, its manifestations are well-marked for those whose
-eyes have been opened.… Among the professional and most cultured element
-of the middle class in England there must be a distinct percentage of
-inverts, which may sometimes be as much as five per cent., though such
-estimates must always be hazardous. Among women of the same class the
-percentage seems to be at least double--though here the phenomena are
-less definite and deepseated.”--HAVELOCK ELLIS, “Psychology of Sex,”
-vol. _Sexual Inversion_, pp. 29, 30. Philadelphia, 1901.
-
-“According to the information of De Joux in ‘The Disinherited of Love,’
-the number of Urnings in all Europe is about five millions; about 4.5
-per cent. of all males in Europe are Urnings, while only 0.1 per cent.
-of females are Urningins. A malady therefore--if malady it should be
-called--which is so widespread certainly demands our deepest interest;
-and it is strange that it is only since the ’70’s that this subject has
-been discussed in scientific literature.
-
-“It is owing to this ignorance that the public mind has been
-dominated, and still is dominated, by the prejudice, that psychical
-hermaphroditism and sex-inversion are nothing but crimes, wilful crimes,
-whereas they proceed necessarily out of the inborn nature of such
-individuals.”--NORBERT GRABOWSKY, “Die verkehrte Geschlechtsempfindung,”
-p. 16. Leipzig, 1894.
-
-Dr. HIRSCHFELD, in his “Statistischen Untersuchunge über den
-Prozentensatz der Homosexuellen,” gives the result of various statistical
-investigations on this subject; and their remarkable agreement enables
-him to speak with some confidence. He says (p. 41), “Now we _know_
-that we must reckon the numbers of those who vary from the normal,
-not by fractions of thousands but by fractions of hundreds. The fact
-that, as a result of these circular enquiries and commissions about the
-same figure has emerged (for the proportion of exclusively homosexual
-persons), namely, a figure in the neighbourhood of 1½ per cent.--this
-extraordinary agreement cannot possibly be a chance, but must rest on a
-law--a law of nature--namely, that only 90 to 95 per cent. of mankind
-are normally sexual by birth; that about 1½ to 2 per cent. are born pure
-homosexuals (say about 1,000,000 in Germany); and that between the two
-classes there remain some 4 per cent. who are bisexual by nature.”
-
-And again (p. 60), “But what do these figures show? They show that of
-100,000 inhabitants on the average only 94,600 are sexually normal,
-while 5,400 vary from the normal. Of these latter 1,500 are exclusively
-homosexual, and 3,900 bisexual. While of these last again 700 are
-_predominantly_ homosexual; so that of 100,000 Germans, 2,200 (or 2.2
-per cent.) are either exclusively or predominantly homosexual--making
-1,200,000 for the whole German Fatherland.”
-
-“Sexual inversion has usually been regarded as psycho-pathological, as a
-symptom of degeneration; and those who exhibit it have been considered
-as physically unfit. This view, however, is falling into disrepute,
-especially as Krafft-Ebing, its principal champion, abandoned it in the
-later editions of his work. None the less, it is not generally recognised
-that sexual inverts may be otherwise perfectly healthy, and with regard
-to other social matters quite normal. When they have been asked if they
-would have wished matters to be different with them in this respect,
-they almost invariably answer in the negative.”--O. WEININGER, “Sex and
-Character,” ch. iv. Heinemann, London, 1906.
-
-“It is a common belief that a male who experiences love for his own
-sex must be despicable, degraded, depraved, vicious, and incapable of
-humane or generous sentiments. If Greek history did not contradict this
-supposition, a little patient enquiry into contemporary manners would
-suffice to remove it.”--J. ADDINGTON SYMONDS, “A Problem in Modern
-Ethics,” p. 10.
-
-“Mantegazza rightly insists that Urnings are found by no means only among
-the dregs of the people, but that they are rather to be noted in circles
-which in respect of culture, wealth, and social position rank among
-the first. Thus, among the aristocracy without doubt a great number of
-Urnings are to be found.”--A. MOLL, _op. cit._ p. 76.
-
-“In no rank are there so many Urnings as among servants. One may say that
-every third male domestic is an Urning.”--DE JOUX, “Die Enterbten des
-Liebesglückes,” p. 193. Leipzig, 1893.
-
-“It is therefore certain, as we have seen, that many Urnings come from
-nervous or pathologically disposed families.… All the same, I must say
-that there is no proof to hand in _all_ cases of sex-inversion among
-men, that the individuals concerned are thus hereditarily weighted. And
-besides, there is the consideration that the extension, according to some
-authors, of hereditary trouble is at present so great that one may prove
-a tendency to nervous or mental maladies in almost everybody.”--A. MOLL,
-_op. cit._, p. 221.
-
-“The truth is that we can no more explain the inverted sex-feeling than
-we can the normal impulse; all the attempts at explanation of these
-things, and of Love, are defective.”--_Ibid_, p. 253.
-
-“Among the _penchants_ of Urnings one finds not infrequently a great
-partiality for Art and Music--and indeed, for active interest in the
-same as well as passive enjoyment … the Actor’s talent is especially
-noticeable among some.… But it must not be thought that Urnings are only
-capable of a special activity of the imagination. On the contrary, there
-are undoubted cases in which they contribute something in the scientific
-direction.… Also in Poetry do Urnings occasionally show exceptional
-talent; especially in love-verses addressed to men.”--_Ibid_, p. 80.
-
-“An examination of my cases [of Inverts] reveals the interesting fact
-that 68 per cent. possess artistic aptitude in varying degree. Galton
-found, from the investigation of nearly 1,000 persons that the average
-showing artistic tastes in England is only about 30 per cent.”--HAVELOCK
-ELLIS, “Sexual Inversion,” p. 173.
-
-“In Antiquity, especially among the Greeks, there seem to have been
-numbers of men who in their emotional natures were hermaphrodites. I
-think that the study of psychical hermaphrodisy is most important,
-and will throw yet greater light on the psychology of Love itself.
-Observation so far already shows that the same individual at differing
-times can experience quite different sexual feelings.”--A. MOLL, _op.
-cit._, p. 200.
-
-“The Urning is capable, through the force of his love, of making the
-greatest sacrifices for his beloved, and on that account the love of the
-Urning has been often compared with Woman’s love. Just as the Woman’s
-love is stronger and more devoted than that of the normal man, just
-as it exceeds that of the Man in inwardness, so, according to Ulrichs
-should the Urning’s love in this respect stand higher than that of the
-woman-loving Man.”--_Ibid_, p. 118.
-
-“Womanish men often know how to treat women better than manly men do.
-Manly men, except in most rare cases, learn how to deal with women only
-after long experience, and even then most imperfectly.”--O. WEININGER,
-“Sex and Character,” ch. v.
-
-“Is it really the case that all women and men are marked off sharply from
-each other, the women on the one hand alike in all points, the men on the
-other?… There are transitional forms between the metals and non-metals,
-between chemical combinations and simple mixtures, between animals and
-plants, between phanerogams and cryptogams, and between mammals and
-birds.… The improbability may henceforth be taken for granted of finding
-in Nature a sharp cleavage between all that is masculine on the one side
-and all that is feminine on the other; or that any living being is so
-simple in this respect that it can be put wholly on one side, or wholly
-on the other, of the line.”--WEININGER, _Ibid_, introduction, p. 2.
-
-“Upon this, Chéron made a rather strange observation. ‘We have,’ she
-said, ‘with regard to sexual distinctions, notions that were not dreamed
-of by the primitive simplicity of the people of the age now gone by. From
-the fact that there are two sexes, and only two, they for a long time
-drew false inferences. They concluded that a woman is simply a woman,
-and a man simply a man. In reality this is not so; there are women who
-are very much women, and women who are very little so. Such differences,
-concealed in former times by costume and mode of life, and masked by
-prejudice, stand out clearly in our society. And not only so, but they
-become more accentuated and apparent in each generation.’”--ANATOLE
-FRANCE, “Sur la Pierre Blanche,” p. 301.
-
-“In _every_ human being there are present both male and female elements,
-only in normal persons (according to their sex) the one set of elements
-is more greatly developed than the other. The chief difference in the
-case of homosexual persons is that in them the male and female elements
-are more equalized; so that when, in addition, the general development
-is of a high grade, we find among this class the most perfect types of
-humanity.”--Dr. ARDUIN, “Die Frauenfrage,” in _Jahrbuch der Sexuellen
-Zwischenstufen_, vol. ii., p. 217. Leipzig, 1900.
-
-“The notion that human beings were originally hermaphroditic is both
-ancient and widespread. We find it in the book of Genesis, unless indeed
-there be a confusion here between two separate theories of creation. God
-is said to have first made man in His image, male and female in one body,
-and to have bidden them multiply. Later on He created the woman out of
-part of this primitive man.” (See also the myth related by Aristophanes
-in Plato’s Symposium.)--HAVELOCK ELLIS, “Sexual Inversion,” p. 229.
-
-“When the sexual instinct first appears in early youth, it seems to be
-much less specialised than normally it becomes later. Not only is it, at
-the outset, less definitely directed to a specific sexual end, but even
-the sex of its object is sometimes uncertain.”--_Ibid_, p. 44.
-
-“In me the homosexual nature is singularly complete, and is undoubtedly
-congenital. The most intense delight of my childhood (even when a tiny
-boy in my nurse’s charge) was to watch acrobats and riders at the circus.
-This was not so much for the skilful feats as on account of the beauty of
-their persons. Even then I cared chiefly for the more lithe and graceful
-fellows. People told me that circus actors were wicked and would steal
-little boys, and so I came to look on my favorites as half-devil and
-half-angel. When I was older and could go about alone, I would often
-hang around the tents of travelling shows in hope of catching a glimpse
-of the actors. I longed to see them naked, without their tights, and used
-to lie awake at night, thinking of them and longing to be embraced and
-loved by them.”--_Ibid_, “case” ix., p. 62.
-
-“I was fifteen years and ten-and-a-half months old when the first erotic
-dream announced the arrival of puberty. I had had no previous experience
-of sex-satisfaction, either in the Urning direction or in any other.
-This occurrence therefore came about quite normally. From a much earlier
-time, however, I had been subject partly to tender yearnings and partly
-to sensual longing without definite form and purpose--the two emotions
-being always separate from each other and never experienced for one and
-the same young man. These aimless sensual longings plagued me often in
-hours of solitude; and I could not overcome them. They showed themselves
-first, during my fifteenth year, when I was at school at Detmold, in the
-following two ways:--First, they were awakened by a drawing in Normand’s
-“Saülen-ordnungen,” of the figure of a Greek god or hero, standing there
-in naked beauty. This image, a hundred times put away, came again a
-hundred times before my mind. (I need not say it did not _cause_ the
-Urning temperament in me; it merely awoke what was slumbering there
-already--a thing that any other circumstance might have done.) Secondly,
-when studying in my little room, or when I lay upon my bed before going
-to sleep, the thought used suddenly and irresistibly to rise up in my
-mind--“If only a soldier would clamber through the window and come into
-my room!” Then my imagination painted me a splendid soldier-figure of
-twenty to twenty-two years old; and I was, as it were, all on fire.
-And yet my thoughts were quite vague, and undirected to any definite
-satisfaction; nor had I ever spoken a word with a real soldier.”--K. H.
-ULRICHS, “Memnon,” §77. Leipzig, 1898. See also “A Problem in Modern
-Ethics,” p. 73.
-
-“The friendships of this kind which I formed at School were two in
-number--I shall never forget the absorbing depth and intensity of them.
-I never talked about them to anyone else, they were much too sacred and
-serious for that, nor--strange as it may seem--did I ever speak of them
-to the boys themselves, or indeed, show any signs of affection towards
-them. If they had been told that I was devoted to their welfare, and
-willing to sacrifice myself and all I had to it (which was indeed the
-fact) they would have been simply astonished; more especially as they
-were both young boys not yet arrived at puberty.
-
-“I am at present somewhat bitterly conscious that in these cases one
-of the strongest influences for good that ever came into my life was
-nine-tenths wasted. How much better it all might have been under more
-favourable surroundings it is impossible to imagine. Still, it was
-not without its good influence on me, though (owing to their complete
-ignorance of my feelings) it could have had none whatever on the boys.
-I was conscious of a bracing and inspiring effect on my whole nature,
-a confirmed health of body, and most of all, of a greatly increased
-capacity for work. And doubtless all this might have been intensified
-a thousand fold if I had been ever so little guided and encouraged by
-public opinion sanctioning these friendships.
-
-“The Public School boy has after all strong feelings of honour and
-fairness: and I am sure much might be done by cultivating the Public
-Opinion of the school: making devoted and disinterested friendships
-highly thought of and praised, and condemning as base and mean the least
-attempt to befoul a young boy’s purity through a gross and selfish desire
-for personal gratification. School public opinion would, I am sure, tend
-quite readily to flow in such channels. But this would demand an openness
-of treatment of the whole question such as does not at present exist.
-That the greatest force the schoolmaster has at his command should be so
-ignored (and so needlessly) is more than absurd: it is monstrous. And it
-concerns him as a teacher quite as much as the boys themselves in their
-relations with each other. I believe that gaining a boy’s affection is
-the necessary preliminary to really _teaching_ him anything. Otherwise
-you do not really teach him at all.”--_Private letter._
-
-“I could tell you a good deal of another equally strong friendship I
-formed (myself twenty-five, boy fourteen) which was one of the happiest
-events of my life. It was acknowledged on both sides, but perfectly
-restrained and pure: and we saw a great deal of each other during most
-of the school holidays for about a year. I could have done anything with
-that boy, my influence over him was for the time being I should say
-unlimited: and undoubtedly _immense_ good accrued to us both.”--_Ibid_.
-
-“In my own school-life--as a day scholar--I had two such friendships,
-though of course in a day school there was not the same possibility of
-their development. One was with an elder boy some five years my senior,
-and the other with a master some twelve years older than myself. I was
-a shy, timid youngster, and not having a robust physique did not enter
-much into the ordinary athletics of the school. My elder friend was a
-very delicate, gentle, refined boy with a purity and loftiness of mind in
-striking contrast to the filthy moral atmosphere of the school at that
-time, but he was never censorious or self-righteous. I feel that this
-friendship was the most powerful influence in my early life in keeping a
-high ideal of conduct before me--much more powerful than the influence of
-home, which I do not think I was at all conscious of.
-
-“After he left school, for Cambridge, we used to write regularly to one
-another--long letters, hardly ever less than three sheets in length. I
-remember I used to think him the most handsome man I knew, but looking
-now at his photo, taken about that time and comparing it with others, I
-see that his features were inferior to many others of my school-fellows.
-At the end of his second year he died of consumption. It was during the
-Long Vacation, and I was abroad at the time. I remember I used to sit
-up late into the night writing very long letters to him about all I had
-seen, to interest him during his illness. I did not know how ill he
-really was, but I had a terrible fear that I should not see him again.
-When I got back and found he had just died the shock was awful. For weeks
-I felt as if I had not a friend in the whole world. I have never felt any
-loss so keenly either before or since.…
-
-“The other friendship with my mathematical master, though not so
-intimate, was still of a very affectionate character. I feel I owe a
-great deal to it--he laid the foundation of my ideal of a teacher’s duty
-to his pupils.”--_Private letter._
-
-“It is not new in itself; this, the feeling that drew Jesus to John, or
-Shakespeare to the youth of the sonnets, or that inspired the friendships
-of Greece, has been with us before, and in the new citizenship we shall
-need it again. The Whitmanic love of comrades is its modern expression;
-Democracy--as socially, not politically conceived--its basis. The thought
-as to how much of the solidarity of labour and the modern Trade-Union
-movement may be due to an unconscious faith in this principle of
-comradeship, is no idle one. The freer, more direct, and more genuine
-relationship between men, which is implied by it, must be the ultimate
-basis of the reconstructed Workshop.”--C. R. ASHBEE, “Workshop
-Reconstruction and Citizenship,” p. 160.
-
-A case of passionate attachment between two Indian boys was told to
-the author of the present book by a master at a school in India. The
-boys--who were about sixteen years of age--were both at the same school,
-and were devoted friends; but the day came when they had to part. One was
-taken away by his parents to go to a distant part of the country. The
-other was inconsolable at the prospect. When the day arrived, and his
-companion was removed, he soon after went quietly to a well in the school
-precincts, jumped in, and was drowned. The news, sent on by wire, reached
-the departing friend while still on his journey. He said little, but at
-one of the stations left the train and disappeared. The train went on,
-but at a little distance out, the boy ran out of the bushes by the line,
-threw himself on the rails, and was killed.
-
-The following is taken from one of the “cases” recorded by Havelock
-Ellis in his “Sexual Inversion”; “The earliest sex-impression that I am
-conscious of is at the age of nine or ten falling in love with a handsome
-boy who must have been about two years my senior. I do not recollect ever
-having spoken to him, but my desire, as far as I can recall, was that
-he should seize hold of and handle me. I have a distinct impression yet
-of how pleasurable even physical pain or cruelty would have been at his
-hands.”--HAVELOCK ELLIS, _op. cit._, “case” xiii., p. 71.
-
-“When I was about sixteen-and-a-half years old, there came into the house
-a boy about two years younger than myself, who became the absorbing
-thought of my school-days. I do not remember a moment, from the time I
-first saw him to the time I left school, that I was not in love with him,
-and the affection was reciprocated, if somewhat reservedly. He was always
-a little ahead of me in books and scholarship, but as our affection
-ripened we spent most of our spare time together, and he received my
-advances much as a girl who is being wooed, a little mockingly perhaps,
-but with real pleasure. He allowed me to fondle and caress him, but our
-intimacy never went further than a kiss, and about that even was the slur
-of shame; there was always a barrier between us, and we never so much as
-whispered to one another concerning those things of which all the school
-obscenely talked.”--_Same case_, p. 73.
-
-“At the age of twenty-one I began gradually to remark that I was not
-somehow like my comrades, that I had no pleasure in male occupations,
-that smoking, drinking, and card-playing gave me little satisfaction, and
-that I had a real death-horror of a brothel. And, as a matter of fact, I
-had never been in one, as on every occasion under some pretext or other
-I have succeeded in stealing off. I now began to think about myself; I
-felt myself frightfully desolate, miserable and unfortunate, and longed
-for a friend of the same nature as myself--yet without dreaming that
-there could be other such men. At the age of twenty-two I came to know a
-young man who at last cleared up my mind about sexual inversion and those
-affected with it, since he--an Urning, like myself--had fallen in love
-with me. The scales fell from my eyes, and I bless the day which brought
-light to me.… Towards woman in her sexual relation I feel a real horror,
-which the exercise of all my strongest powers of imagination would not
-avail to overcome; and indeed, I have never attempted to overcome it,
-since I am quite persuaded of the fruitlessness of such an attempt,
-which to me appears sinful and unnatural.”--KRAFFT-EBING, “Psychopathia
-Sexualis,” 7th edition, “case” No. 122, p. 291. Stuttgart, 1892.
-
-“I can no longer exist without men’s love; without such I must ever
-remain at strife with myself.… If marriage between men existed I believe
-I should not be afraid of a life-long union--a thing which with a woman
-seems to be something impossible.… Since, however, this kind of love is
-reckoned criminal, by its satisfaction I can be at harmony with myself
-but never with the world, and necessarily in consequence must ever be
-somewhat out of tune; and all the more so because my character is open,
-and I hate lies of all kinds. This torment, to have always to conceal
-everything, has forced me to confess my anomaly to a few friends,
-of whose understanding and reticence I am sure. Although oftentimes
-my condition seems to me sad enough, by reason of the difficulty of
-satisfaction and the general contempt of manly love, yet I am often just
-a little proud on account of having these anomalous feelings. Naturally,
-I shall never marry--but this seems to me by no means a misfortune,
-although I am fond of family life, and up to now have passed my time only
-among my own relations. I live in the hope that later I shall have a
-permanent loved one; such indeed I must have, else would the future seem
-gray and drear, and every object which folk usually pursue--honour, high
-position, etc.--only vain and unattractive.
-
-“Should this hope not be fulfilled, I know that I should be unable,
-permanently and with pleasure, to give myself to my calling, and that I
-should be capable of setting aside everything in order to gain the love
-of a man. I feel no longer any moral scruples on account of my anomalous
-leaning, and generally have never been troubled because I felt myself
-drawn to youths.… Up to now it has only seemed to me bad and immoral to
-do that which is injurious to another, or which I would not wish done to
-myself, and in this respect I can say that I try as much as possible not
-to infringe on the rights of others, and am capable of being violently
-roused by any injustice done to others.”--_Ibid_, p. 249, “case” No. 110
-(official in a factory, age 31).
-
-“My thoughts are by no means exclusively of the body or morbidly sensual.
-How often at the sight of a handsome youth does a deeply enthusiastic
-mood come upon me, and I offer a prayer, so to speak, in the glorious
-words of Heine--”Du bist wie eine Blume, so hold, so schön, so rein“.…
-Never has a young man yet guessed my love for him, I have never corrupted
-or damaged the morals of one, but for many have I here and there smoothed
-their pathway; and then I stick at no trouble and make sacrifices such as
-I can only make for them.
-
-“When thus I have a chance to have a loved friend near me, to teach, to
-support and help, when my unconfest love finds a loving response (though
-naturally not sexual), then all the unclean images fade more and more
-from my mind. Then does my love become almost platonic, and lifts itself
-up--only to sink again in the mire, when it is deprived of its proper
-activity.
-
-“For the rest, I am--and I can say it without boasting--not one of the
-worst of men. Mentally more sensitive than most average folk, I take
-interest in everything that moves mankind. I am kindly-disposed, tender,
-and easily moved to pity, can do no injury to any animal, certainly not
-to a human being, but on the contrary am active in a human-friendly way,
-where and however I can.
-
-“Though then before my own conscience I cannot reproach myself, and
-though I must certainly reject the judgment of the world about us, yet I
-suffer greatly. In very truth I have injured no one; and I hold my love
-in its nobler activity for just as holy as that of normally disposed
-men, but under the unhappy fate that allows us neither sufferance nor
-recognition, I suffer often more than my life can bear.”--_Ibid_, p. 268,
-“case” No. 114.
-
-“To depict all the misery, all the unfortunate situations, the constant
-dread of being found out in one’s peculiarity and of becoming impossible
-in society--to give an idea of all this is truly more than pen or words
-can compass. The very thought, so soon as it arises, of losing one’s
-social existence and of being rejected by everybody is more torment
-than can be imagined. In such a case, everything, everything would be
-forgotten that one had ever done in the way of good; in the consciousness
-of his lofty morality every normally disposed man would puff himself up,
-however frivolously he might really have acted in the matter of his love.
-I know many such normal folk whose unworthy conception of their love is
-indeed hard for me to understand.”--_Ibid_, p. 269.
-
-“The torturing images of betrayed love prevent my sleeping, so that I
-am forced, now and again, to have recourse to chloral. My dreams are
-only a continuation of actual life, and just as painful. How all this
-will end I really know not; but I suppose these root-emotions must take
-their own course.… The only reasonable end of the struggle is Death.”--A.
-MOLL, “Conträre Sexualempfindung,” 2nd edition, p. 123 (quotation from a
-letter).
-
-“Weary and worn, I have passed through every tempest of anguish and
-despair. Years of the most racking mental agony have gone over my head
-without killing me. Through the long night watches I have heard the
-unceasing hours toll. Sleep has never been thought of by me, but I have
-lain on my bed trying to read some book, or have knelt by my bedside
-and endeavoured to raise my heart and spirit in prayer for succour
-or forgiveness. At last, unable to hold out any longer, with mouth
-tight-closed and knitted brow the Charmer has deadened my senses for one
-or two brief hours; but only that I may wake to a stronger and clearer
-perception of my hopeless condition.
-
-“How the days have got on I know not. How I can have lived so long
-through such misery I know not. But torture like this is cruelly slow,
-whilst it is sure. It is the nature of youth to be long-enduring where
-Love is put to the test and a kind of occasional flicker--a kind of
-mocking semblance of hope, as like to hope as the rushing meteor is to
-the enduring sun--helps to support the load of misery, and so to prolong
-it. I am hundreds of years old in this my wretchedness of every moment.
-I cannot battle against Love and crush it out--never! God has implanted
-the necessity of the sentiment in my heart; it is scarce possible not to
-ask oneself why has He implanted so divine an element in my nature, which
-is doomed to die unsatisfied, which is destined in the end to be my very
-death?”--_From a manuscript left to the Author by an Urning._
-
-H. ELLIS, in Appendix D. of his book on “Sexual Inversion,” speaks at
-some length on the School-friendships of girls: what they call “Flames”
-and “Raves”; of love at first sight; romance; courtship; meetings despite
-all obstacles; long letters; jealousy; the writing the beloved’s name
-everywhere, etc. These alliances are sometimes sexual, but oftener not
-so--though full of “psychic erethism.”
-
-In the same Appendix he quotes a woman of thirty-three, who writes, “At
-fourteen I had my first case of love, but it was with a girl. It was
-insane, intense love, but had the same quality and sensations as my first
-love with a man at eighteen. In neither case was the object idealized:
-I was perfectly aware of their faults; nevertheless, my whole being was
-lost, immersed, in their existence. The first lasted two years, the
-second seven years. No love has since been so intense, but now these two
-persons, though living, are no more to me than the veriest stranger.”
-
-Another woman of thirty-five writes, “Girls between the ages of fourteen
-and eighteen at college or girls’ schools often fall in love with the
-same sex. This is not friendship. The loved one is older, more advanced,
-more charming or beautiful. When I was a freshman in college I knew
-at least thirty girls who were in love with a senior. Some sought her
-because it was the fashion, but I knew that my own homage and that of
-many others was sincere and passionate. I loved her because she was
-brilliant and utterly indifferent to the love shown her. She was not
-pretty, though at the time we thought her beautiful. One of her adorers,
-on being slighted, was ill for two weeks. On her return she was speaking
-to me when the object of our admiration came into the room. The shock was
-too great, and she fainted. When I reached the senior year I was the
-recipient of languishing glances, original verses, roses, and passionate
-letters written at midnight and three in the morning.”
-
-“Passionate friendships among girls, from the most innocent to the most
-elaborate excursions in the direction of Lesbos, are extremely common
-in theatres, both among actresses, and even more among chorus and
-ballet-girls.”--HAVELOCK ELLIS, “Sexual Inversion,” p. 130.
-
-“The love of homosexual women is often very passionate, as is that of
-Urnings. Just like these, the former often feel themselves blessed when
-they love happily. Nevertheless, to many of them, as to the Urning, is
-the circumstance very painful that in consequence of their antipathy to
-the touch of the male they are not in the position to found a family.
-Sometimes, when the love of a homosexual woman is not responded to,
-serious disturbances of the nerve-system may ensue, leading even to
-paroxysms of fury.”--A. MOLL, _op. cit._, p. 338.
-
-“It is noteworthy how many inverted women have, with more or less fraud,
-been married to the woman of their choice, the couple living happily
-together for long periods. I know of one case, probably unique, in
-which the ceremony was gone through without any deception on any side;
-a congenitally inverted English woman of distinguished intellectual
-ability, now dead, was attached to the wife of a clergyman, who, in full
-cognisance of all the facts of the case, privately married the two ladies
-in his own church.”--HAVELOCK ELLIS, _op. cit._, p. 146, footnote.
-
-“Seven or eight girls, we are told (in Montaigne’s ‘Journal du Voyage
-en Italie,’ 1350), belonging to Chaumont, resolved to dress and to work
-as men; one of these came to Vitry to work as a weaver, and was looked
-upon as a well-conditioned young man, and liked by everyone. At Vitry
-she became betrothed to a woman, but, a quarrel arising, no marriage
-took place. Afterwards, ‘she fell in love with a woman whom she married,
-and with whom she lived for four or five months, to the wife’s great
-contentment, it is said; but having been recognised by some one from
-Chaumont, and brought to justice, she was condemned to be hanged. She
-said she would even prefer this to living again as a girl, and was hanged
-for using illicit inventions to supply the defects of her sex’.”--_Ibid_,
-p. 119.
-
-“It is evident that there must be some radical causes for the frequency
-of homosexuality among prostitutes. One such cause doubtless lies in
-the character of the prostitute’s relations with men; these relations
-are of a professional character, and, as the business element becomes
-emphasized, the possibility of sexual satisfaction diminishes; at
-the best also there lacks the sense of social equality, the feeling
-of possession, and scope for the exercise of feminine affection and
-devotion.”--_Ibid_, p. 149.
-
-“Among the inscribed prostitutes of Berlin there are without doubt a
-great number who honour the love of women. I am told from well-informed
-sources, that about twenty-five per cent. of the prostitutes of Berlin
-have relations with other women.”--A. MOLL, _op. cit._, p. 331.
-
-“Karl Heinrich Ulrichs (born in 1825 near Aurich), who for many years
-expounded and defended homosexual love, and whose views are said to have
-had some influence in drawing Westphal’s attention to the matter, was a
-Hanoverian legal official (Amts-assessor), himself sexually inverted.
-From 1864 onward, at first under the name of ‘Numa Numantius,’ and
-subsequently under his own name, Ulrichs published in various parts of
-Germany a long series of works dealing with this question, and made
-various attempts to obtain a revision of the legal position of the sexual
-invert in Germany.
-
-“Although not a writer whose psychological views can carry much
-scientific weight, Ulrichs appears to have been a man of most brilliant
-ability, and his knowledge is said to have been of almost universal
-extent; he was not only well-versed in his own special subjects of
-jurisprudence and theology, but in many branches of natural science,
-as well as in archæology; he was also regarded by many as the best
-Latinist of his time. In 1880 he left Germany and settled in Naples, and
-afterwards at Aquila in the Abruzzi, whence he issued a Latin periodical.
-He died in 1895.”--HAVELOCK ELLIS, _op. cit._, p. 33.
-
-Ulrichs enters into an elaborate classification of human types, with a
-corresponding nomenclature, which, though somewhat ponderous, has been of
-use. Among males, for instance, he distinguishes the quite normal man,
-whom he calls “Dioning,” from the invert, whom he calls “Urning.” Among
-Urnings, again, he distinguishes (1) those who are thoroughly manly in
-appearance and in mental habit and character (“Mannlings”), and who tend
-to love softer and younger specimens of their own sex; (2) those who are
-effeminate in appearance and cast of mind (“Weiblings”), and who love
-rougher and older men; and (3) those who are of a medium type (“Zwischen
-Urnings”) and love young men. Then again there is the “Urano-dioning,”
-who is born with a capacity of love in both directions, _i.e._, for
-women and for men. He is generally of the manly type. And besides these,
-some sub-species, like the “Uraniaster,” who is a normal man who has
-contracted the Urning habit, and the “Virilised Urning,” who is an Urning
-who has contracted the normal habit, though this is not really natural to
-him! The whole may be set out in a table as follows:--
-
- { (_a_) Normal Man or Dioning--called Uraniaster when
- { he acquires Urning tendencies.
- {
- The { {1. Mannling.
- Human { {2. Zwischen-Urning.
- Male { (_b_) Urning {3. Weibling.
- { {4. Also called Virilised Urning when he
- { { acquires the normal habit.
- {
- { (_c_) Urano-dioning.
-
-If we add to this a corresponding table for the female we shall have an
-idea of the complication of Ulrichs’ system! Yet, complex as it is, and
-whatever criticisms we may make upon it, we must allow that it does not
-exceed the complexity of the real facts of Nature. (See K. H. ULRICHS’
-“Memnon,” ch. iii.-v.)
-
-Krafft-Ebing’s analysis of the subject is fully as elaborate as that
-of Ulrichs. It is given by J. A. SYMONDS in the form of a table, as
-follows:--
-
- { { Persistent.
- { Acquired { Episodical.
- {
- Sexual { { Psychic Hermaphrodites.
- Inversion { {
- { { { Male Habitus (Mannlings).
- { Congenital { Urnings { Female Habitus (Weiblings).
- { {
- { { Androgyni.
-
-And Symonds continues:--“What is the rational explanation of the facts
-presented to us by the analysis which I have formulated in this table,
-cannot as yet be thoroughly determined. We do not know enough about the
-law of sex in human beings to advance a theory. Krafft-Ebing and writers
-of his school are at present inclined to refer them all to diseases of
-the nervous centres, inherited, congenital, excited by early habits of
-self-abuse. The inadequacy of this method I have already attempted to
-set forth; and I have also called attention to the fact that it does not
-sufficiently account for the phenomena known to us through history and
-through every-day experience.” [It should be noted that in later editions
-of his book Krafft-Ebing considerably modifies the view that these
-sex-variations all indicate disease.]--“A Problem in Modern Ethics,” p.
-46.
-
-Moll, speaking of the act so commonly credited to Urnings (sodomy),
-says:--“The common assumption is that the intercourse of Urnings consists
-in this. But it is a great error to suppose that this act is so frequent
-among them.”--A. MOLL, _op. cit._, p. 139.
-
-And Krafft-Ebing also speaks of it as rare among true Urnings,
-though not uncommon among old roués and debauchees of more normal
-temperament.--“Psychopathia Sexualis,” 7th edition, p. 258.
-
-“The Urning denies not only the ‘unnaturalness’ of his leanings, but also
-their pathological character; he protests against comparison with the
-lame and the deaf. The occasional coincidence of sexual inversion with
-other really morbid conditions settles nothing, nor is the reminder that
-it is antagonistic to the purpose of race-propagation a proof; for who
-can assure us that Nature has intended all people for race-propagation?
-Even to the worker-bee Nature has not granted this function, although in
-her stunted female sex-organs there exists an undeniable indication or
-suggestion of sex-feeling.”--A. MOLL, _op. cit._, p. 271. (From a letter
-by a sixty year old Urning.)
-
-“Homosexuality, therefore, might be described as an abnormal variety
-of the sex-impulse, but hardly as a morbid variety. If you like, it
-might be termed an arrest of development or a kind of reversion. And
-this is quite in accord with the fact that the best experts in the
-subject have so far not discovered more psychic abnormalities among
-homosexuals than among heterosexuals--nor more degeneracy or signs of
-degeneracy.”--Consulting-Physician Dr. PAUL NAECKE, in _Der Tag_, 26th
-Oct., 1907.
-
-“As a result of these considerations Ulrichs concludes that there is no
-real ground for the persecution of Urnings except such as may be found in
-the repugnance felt by the vast numerical majority for an insignificant
-minority. The majority encourages matrimony, condones seduction,
-sanctions prostitution, legalises divorce, in the interest of its own
-sexual proclivities. It makes temporary or permanent unions illegal for
-the minority whose inversion of instinct it abhors. And this persecution,
-in the popular mind at any rate, is justified, like many other
-inequitable acts of prejudice or ignorance, by theological assumptions
-and the so-called mandates of revelation.”--“A Problem in Modern Ethics,”
-p. 83.
-
-“We understand by ‘homosexual’ a person who feels himself drawn to
-individuals of the same sex by feelings of real love. Whether or not he
-acts in accordance with this homosexual feeling is, from the scientific
-standpoint, beside the question. Just as there are normal folk who live
-chastely, so there are homosexual persons whose love bears a distinctly
-psychic, ideal and ‘platonic’ character.…
-
-“The feminine impress, in the case of homosexual men, is in general best
-indicated by the presence of greater sensitiveness and receptivity,
-also by the dominance of the emotional life, by a strong artistic
-sense, especially in the direction of music, often too by a tendency to
-mysticism, and by various inclinations and habits feminine in the good or
-less good sense of the word. This blending of temperament, however, does
-not make the homosexual as such a less worthy person. He is indeed not of
-the same nature as the heterosexual, but he is of equal worth.”--Dr M.
-HIRSCHFELD’S evidence as medical specialist in the Moltké-Harden trial.
-
-“One serious objection to recognising and tolerating sexual inversion
-has always been that it tends to check the population. This was a sound
-political and social argument in the time of Moses, when a small militant
-tribe needed to multiply to the full extent of its procreative capacity.
-It is by no means so valid in our age, when the habitable portions of
-the globe are rapidly becoming overcrowded. Moreover, we must bear in
-mind that society under the existing order sanctions female prostitution,
-whereby men and women, though normally procreative, are sterilized to an
-indefinite extent.”--J. A. SYMONDS, “A Problem in Modern Ethics,” p. 82.
-
-“Before Justinian, both Constantine and Theodosius passed laws against
-sexual inversion, committing the offenders to ‘avenging flames.’ But
-these statutes were not rigidly enforced, and modern opinion on the
-subject may be said to flow from Justinian’s legislation. Opinion, in
-matters of custom and manners, always follows law. Though Imperial
-edicts could not eradicate a passion which is inherent in human
-nature, they had the effect of stereotyping extreme punishments in all
-the codes of Christian nations, and of creating a permanent social
-antipathy.”--_Ibid_, p. 13.
-
-“Our modern attitude is sometimes traced back to the Jewish Law and
-its survival in St. Paul’s opinion on this matter. But the Jewish Law
-itself had a foundation. Wherever the enlargement of the population
-becomes a strongly-felt social need--as it was among the Jews in their
-exaltation of family life, and as it was when the European populations
-were constituted--there homosexuality has been regarded as a crime, even
-punishable with death.… It was in the fourth century at Rome that the
-strong modern opposition to it was formulated in law. The Roman race
-had long been decaying; sexual perversions of all kinds flourished;
-the population was dwindling. At the same time Christianity with its
-Judaic-Pauline antagonism to homosexuality was rapidly spreading. The
-statesmen of the day, anxious to quicken the failing pulses of national
-life, utilised this powerful Christian feeling. Constantine, Theodosius,
-Valentinian, all passed laws against homosexuality--the last, at all
-events, ordaining as a penalty the _vindices flammæ_.” HAVELOCK ELLIS,
-_op. cit._, p. 206.
-
-“At the present time, shoemakers, who make shoes to measure, deal more
-rationally with individuals than our teachers and school-masters do, in
-their application to moral principles. The sexually intermediate forms
-of individuals are treated exactly as if they were good examples of the
-ideal male or female types. There is wanted an ‘orthopædic’ treatment of
-the soul, instead of the torture caused by the application of ready-made
-conventional shapes. The present system stamps out much that is original,
-uproots much that is truly natural, and distorts much into artificial and
-unnatural forms.”--O. WEININGER, “Sex and Character,” ch. v.
-
-“What is new in my view is that according to it homosexuality cannot be
-regarded as an atavism or as due to arrested embryonic development, or to
-incomplete differentiation of sex; it cannot be regarded as an anomaly
-of rare occurrence interpolating itself in customary complete separation
-of the sexes. Homosexuality is merely the sexual condition of those
-intermediate sexual forms that stretch from one ideal sexual condition
-to the other ideal sexual condition. In my view, all actual organisms
-have both homosexuality and heterosexuality.”--O. WEININGER, “Sex and
-Character,” ch. iv.
-
-“How is it then that in our age reputed so philanthropic, whole classes
-of men, on account of inborn mental abnormalities, are marked down and
-banned, frantically persecuted, publicly branded, and threatened with the
-severest legal penalties? Any one would hardly believe what gross cases
-of justiciary murder, morally speaking, still take place in this matter
-even at the end of the nineteenth century. To the pitiful ignorance of
-the judges, to the thousand inherited prejudices of public opinion, as
-well as to the mental slavery of legislative bodies, must it be ascribed
-that the penal code of most civilised states is still in great measure
-formulated in the gloomy spirit of the Middle Ages.”--O. de JOUX, “Die
-Enterbten des Liebesglückes,” p. 16.
-
-“Up till now homosexual humanity has found itself in a peculiar
-position. Its mouth was closed, it could not speak. It was bound hand
-and foot and could not move. But now there has come an important change.
-Science has taken the part of these folk and defended their honour …
-I protest therefore earnestly that these men, whether by means of the
-Law or any other means, should no longer be branded in the name of
-Christianity.”--From a letter written by a Catholic priest in reply to a
-circular sent by the Humane-Science Committee of Berlin. (See “Jahrbuch
-der Sexuellen Zwischenstufen,” vol. ii., p. 177.)
-
-“Thus the very basest of all trades, that of _chantage_ [blackmailing]
-is encouraged by the law.… The miserable persecuted wretch, placed
-between the alternative of paying money down or of becoming socially
-impossible, losing a valued position, and seeing dishonour burst upon
-himself and family, pays; and still the more he pays the greedier becomes
-the vampire who sucks his life-blood, until at last there lies nothing
-else before him except total financial ruin or disgrace. Who will be
-astonished if the nerves of an individual in this position are not equal
-to the horrid strain? In some cases the nerves give way altogether.…
-Alter the law and instead of increasing vice you will diminish it. The
-temptation to ply a disgraceful profession with the object of extorting
-money would be removed.”--“A Problem in Modern Ethics,” pp. 56 and 86.
-
-“You will rightly infer that it is difficult for me to say exactly how
-I regard (morally) the homosexual tendency. Of this much, however,
-I am certain that even if it were possible I would not exchange my
-inverted nature for a normal one. I suspect that the sexual emotions
-and even inverted ones have a more subtle significance than is
-generally attributed to them; but modern moralists either fight shy of
-transcendental interpretations or see none, and I am ignorant and unable
-to solve the mystery these feelings seem to imply.”--HAVELOCK ELLIS, _op.
-cit._, p. 65, “case” ix.
-
-“I cannot regard my sexual feelings as unnatural or abnormal, since
-they have disclosed themselves so perfectly naturally and spontaneously
-within me. All that I have read in books or heard spoken about the
-ordinary sexual love, its intensity and passion, life-long devotion,
-love at first sight, etc., seems to me to be easily matched by my own
-experiences in homosexual form; and with regard to the morality of this
-complex subject, my feeling is that it is the same as should prevail in
-love between man and woman, namely: that no bodily satisfaction should
-be sought at the cost of another person’s distress or degradation. I am
-sure that this kind of love is, notwithstanding the physical difficulties
-that attend it, as deeply stirring and ennobling as the other kind, if
-not more so; and I think that for a perfect relationship the actual
-sex-gratifications (whatever they may be) probably hold a less important
-place in this love than in the other.”--_Ibid_, “case” vii., p. 58.
-
-“I grew older, I entered my professional studies, and I was very diligent
-with them. I lived in a great capital, I moved much in general society.
-I had a large and lively group of friends. But always, over and over,
-I realised that, in the kernel, at the very root and fibre of myself,
-there was the throb and glow, the ebb and the surge, the seeking as in
-a vain dream to realise again that passion of friendship which could so
-far transcend the cold modern idea of the tie; the Over-Friendship, the
-Love-Friendship of Hellas, which meant that between man and man could
-exist--the sexual-psychic love. That was still possible! I knew that
-now. I had read it in the verses or the prose of the Greek or Latin
-or Oriental authors who have written out every shade of its beauty or
-unloveliness, its worth or debasement--from Theokritos to Martial, or
-Abu-Nuwas, to Platen, Michel-Angelo, Shakespeare. I had learned it from
-the statues of sculptors--in those lines so often vivid with a merely
-physical male beauty--works which beget, which sprang from, the sense
-of it in a race. I had half-divined it in the music of a Beethoven and
-a Tschaikowsky before knowing facts in the life-stories of either of
-them--or of an hundred other tone-autobiographists. And I had recognised
-what it all meant to most people to-day--from the disgust, scorn, and
-laughter of my fellow-men when such an emotion was hinted at.”--_Imre: a
-memorandum_, by XAVIER MAYNE, p. 110. Naples, R. Rispoli, 1906.
-
-“Presently, during that same winter, accident opened my eyes wider to
-myself. Since then, I have needed no further knowledge from the Tree of
-my Good and Evil. I met with a mass of serious studies, German, Italian,
-French, English, from the chief European specialists and theorists on the
-similisexual topic; many of them with quite other views than those of my
-well-meaning but far too conclusive Yankee doctor (who had recommended
-marriage as a cure). I learned of the much-discussed theories of
-‘secondary sexes’ and ‘intersexes.’ I learned of the theories and facts
-of homosexualism, of the Uranian Love, of the Uranian race, of the ‘Sex
-within a Sex.’ … I came to know their enormous distribution all over the
-world to-day; and of the grave attention that European scientists and
-jurists have been devoting to problems concerned with homosexualism. I
-could pursue intelligently the growing efforts to set right the public
-mind as to so ineradicable and misunderstood a phase of humanity. I
-realised that I had always been a member of that hidden brotherhood
-and Sub-Sex, or Super-Sex. In wonder too I informed myself of its deep
-instinctive freemasonries--even to organised ones--in every social class,
-every land, and every civilisation.”--_Ibid_, pp. 134, 135.
-
-“Thus in sexual inversion we have what may be fairly called a ‘sport’
-or variation, one of those organic aberrations which we see throughout
-living nature, in plants and in animals.”… “All these organic variations
-which I have here mentioned to illustrate sexual inversion, are
-abnormalities. It is important that we should have a clear idea as
-to what abnormality is. Many people imagine that what is abnormal is
-necessarily diseased. That is not the case, unless we give the word
-disease an inconveniently and illegitimately wide extension. It is both
-inconvenient and inexact to speak of colour-blindness, criminality and
-genius as diseases in the same sense as we speak of scarlet fever,
-tuberculosis, or general paralysis as diseases.”--HAVELOCK ELLIS, _op.
-cit._, p. 186.
-
-“I have had for some time past a theory about this ‘Homogenic’
-business--I do not suppose it is new--but it is that when man reaches a
-certain stage of development and approaches the totality of Human Nature,
-there gets to exist in him, though subordinately at first, a female
-element as well as a male. That is to say that as he passes the various
-barriers, he passes the barrier of sex too, on his way to become the
-complete Human--the Universal.”--_From a private letter._
-
-“Great geniuses, men like Goethe, Shakespeare, Shelley, Byron, Darwin,
-all had the feminine soul very strongly developed in them.… As we are
-continually meeting in cities women who are one-quarter, or one-eighth,
-or so on, _male_ … so there are in the Inner Self similar half-breeds,
-all adapting themselves to circumstances with perfect ease. The Greeks
-recognised that such a being could exist even in harmony with Nature,
-and so beautified and idealised it as Sappho.”--CHARLES G. LELAND, “The
-Alternate Sex,” pp. 41, and 57. London, 1904.
-
-“I have considered and inquired into this question for many years; and
-it has long been my settled conviction that no breach of morality is
-involved in homosexual love; that, like every other passion, it tends,
-when duly understood and controlled by spiritual feeling, to the physical
-and moral health of the individual and the race, and that it is only its
-brutal perversions which are immoral. I have known many persons more or
-less the subjects of this passion, and I have found them a particularly
-high-minded, upright, refined, and (I must add) pure-minded class of
-men.”--_Communicated by Professor ---- in Appendix to_ HAVELOCK ELLIS’S
-“Sexual Inversion,” p. 240.
-
-“What from the beginning struck me most, but now appears perfectly
-clear and indeed necessary is that among the homosexuals there is
-found the _most_ remarkable class of men, namely, those whom I call
-_supervirile_. These men stand by virtue of the special variation of
-their soul-material, just as much above Man, as the normal sex man does
-above Woman. Such an individual is able to bewitch men by his soul-aroma,
-as they--though passively--bewitch him. But as he always lives in men’s
-society, and men, so to speak, sit at his feet, it comes about that such
-a supervirile often climbs the very highest steps of spiritual evolution,
-of social position, and of manly capacity. Hence it arises that the
-most famous names of the world and the history of culture stand rightly
-or wrongly on the list of homosexuals. Names like Alexander the Great,
-Socrates, Plato, Julius Cæsar, Michel Angelo, Charles XII. of Sweden,
-William of Orange, and so forth. Not only is this so, but it must be so.
-As certainly as a woman’s hero remains a spiritually inferior man, must a
-man’s hero--well _be_ a man’s hero, if in any way he has the stuff for it.
-
-“Consequently the German penal code, in stamping homosexuality as
-a crime, puts the highest blossoms of humanity on the proscription
-list.”--Professor Dr. JAEGER, “Die Entdeckung der Seele,” pp. 268, 269.
-
-“The licentious or garrulous or morbid types of inverts have been so
-honoured with publicity that the other types are even yet little known.
-The latter, in the maturity of their intellectual and moral nature,
-cease to look upon sex as the pivot of the universe. They cease to repine
-about their lot. They have their mission to fulfil here below, and they
-try to fulfil it as best they can. In the same way we find there are
-heterosexual (or normal) folk who at a certain stage of their growth
-free themselves from the sexual life.--M. A. RAFFALOVICH, “Uranisme et
-Unisexualité,” p. 74.
-
-“The well-bred, highly-cultured Urning is a complete Idealist;
-matter is for him only a symbol of thought, and the actual only the
-living expression of the Invisible.”--DE JOUX, “Die Enterbten des
-Liebesglückes,” p. 46.
-
-“As nature and social law are so cruel as to impose a severe celibacy on
-him his whole being is consequently of astonishing freshness and superb
-purity, and his manners of life modest as those of a saint--a thing
-which, in the case of a man in blooming health and moving about in the
-world, is certainly very unusual.”--_Ibid_, p. 41.
-
-“If the soul of woman in its usual form represents a secret closed with
-seven seals, it is--when prisoned in the sturdy body of a man and fused
-with some of the motives of manhood, a far more enigmatic scripture of
-whose sibylline meaning one can never be really sure. Only the Urning can
-understand the Urning.”--_Ibid_, p. 63.
-
-“Because they (Urnings) themselves are of a very complex nature and put
-together of opposing elements, they seek out and love the simple, plain,
-and straightforward natures. Because they continually suffer from the
-rebellion of their desires against good taste and morals, they often long
-for a barbaric freedom. And because their every emotion is cut short,
-distracted, and worn out by the thousand doubts and suspicions of their
-Urning-minds, they gather to themselves men who are wont to live straight
-from feeling to action, and who work from untamed masterly instincts, as
-sure as the animals.”--_Ibid_, p. 97.
-
-“It is true that we are often inferior to normal men in force of will,
-worldly wisdom, and sense of duty; but on the other hand, in depth and
-delicacy of feeling and every virtue of the heart, we are far superior.
-We cannot _love_ women, but we lament with them, and help them on the
-hearth and by the cradle, in need and loneliness, as their most unselfish
-friends.… We do not despise women because they are weak, for we are
-much clearer-sighted, much less prejudiced than the so-called lords
-of creation, much nobler, more helpful, and just-minded than they.…
-Anyhow, if either of the sexes has cause to withhold its respect in
-any degree from the other--which has the most cause? Say what you will
-of them, the second and third sexes--women and Urnings--are ever so
-much better than the brutal egotistical Men, who to-day are plunged in
-grossest materialism; for, with whatever corruption, both the former
-are still of purer heart, easier kindled towards whatever is good, and
-more capable of genuine enthusiasm and love of their fellows, than the
-latter.”--_Ibid_, p. 204.
-
-“Embodying as he does Love, Patience, Renunciation, Humility and
-Mildness, the Urning should seek to soothe with his gentle hand all
-hurts, and to heal all wounds, which are the results of weak Man’s
-original sinfulness. The tender emotions in his breast, his all too soft
-and easily troubled heart, his delicate sensitiveness and receptiveness
-of all that is lofty and pure, his mildness, goodness and inexhaustible
-patience--all these divine gifts of his soul point clearly to the
-conclusion that the great framer of the world meant to create in Urnings
-a noble priesthood, a race of Samaritans, a severely pure order of men,
-in order to offer a strong counterpoise to the immoral tendencies of the
-human race, which increase with its increasing culture.”--_Ibid_, p. 253.
-
-“When I review the cases I have brought forward and the mental history
-of the inverted I have known, I am inclined to say that if we can enable
-an invert to be healthy, self-restrained and self-respecting, we have
-often done better than to convert him to the mere feeble simulacrum of
-a normal man. An appeal to the _paiderastia_ of the best Greek days,
-and the dignity, temperance, even chastity, which it involved, will
-sometimes find a ready response in the emotional enthusiastic nature
-of the congenital invert. The ‘manly’ love celebrated by Walt Whitman
-in ‘Leaves of Grass,’ although it may be of more doubtful value for
-general use, furnishes a wholesome and robust ideal to the invert who is
-insensitive to normal ideals. It is by some such method of self-treatment
-as this that most of the more highly intelligent men and women whose
-histories I have already briefly recorded have at last slowly and
-instinctively reached a condition of relative health and peace, physical
-and moral.”--HAVELOCK ELLIS, “Sexual Inversion,” p. 202.
-
-“From America a lady writes:--‘Inverts should have the courage and
-independence to be themselves, and to demand an investigation. If one
-strives to live honourably, and considers the greatest good to the
-greatest number, it is not a crime nor a disgrace to be an invert.
-I do not need the law to defend me, neither do I desire to have any
-concessions made for me, nor do I ask my friends to sacrifice their
-ideals for me. I too have ideals which I shall always hold. All that
-I desire--and I claim it as my right--is the freedom to exercise this
-divine gift of loving, which is not a menace to society nor a disgrace
-to me. Let it once be understood that the average invert is not a moral
-degenerate nor a mental degenerate, but simply a man or a woman who is
-less highly specialised, less completely differentiated, than other men
-and women, and I believe the prejudice against them will disappear, and
-if they live uprightly they will surely win the esteem and consideration
-of all thoughtful people. I know what it is to be an invert--who feels
-himself set apart from the rest of mankind--to find one human heart who
-trusts him and understands him, and I know how almost impossible this is,
-and will be, until the world is made aware of these facts.”--_Ibid_, p.
-213.
-
- THE END.
-
- _Printed in Great Britain by_
- UNWIN BROTHERS, LIMITED, THE GRESHAM PRESS, WOKING AND LONDON
-
-
-
-
-
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-<pre>
-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Intermediate Sex, by Edward Carpenter
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: The Intermediate Sex
- A Study of Some Transitional Types of Men and Women
-
-Author: Edward Carpenter
-
-Release Date: December 18, 2016 [EBook #53763]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
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-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE INTERMEDIATE SEX ***
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-</pre>
-
-
-
-<p class="center"><big><big>The Intermediate Sex</big></big></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-<p class="center larger"><i>Works by Edward Carpenter</i></p>
-
-<div class="container">
-
-<ul>
-<li>ANGELS’ WINGS</li>
-<li>ART OF CREATION</li>
-<li>CIVILIZATION: ITS CAUSE AND CURE</li>
-<li>DAYS WITH WALT WHITMAN</li>
-<li>DRAMA OF LOVE AND DEATH</li>
-<li>ENGLAND’S IDEAL</li>
-<li>FROM ADAM’S PEAK TO ELEPHANTA</li>
-<li>HEALING OF NATIONS</li>
-<li>INTERMEDIATE TYPES</li>
-<li>AMONG PRIMITIVE FOLK</li>
-<li>IOLÄUS: AN ANTHOLOGY OF FRIENDSHIP</li>
-<li>LOVE’S COMING OF AGE</li>
-<li>MY DAYS AND DREAMS</li>
-<li>PAGAN AND CHRISTIAN CREEDS</li>
-<li>PROMISED LAND</li>
-<li>TOWARDS DEMOCRACY</li>
-<li>TOWARDS INDUSTRIAL FREEDOM</li>
-<li>VISIT TO A GÑANI</li>
-<li>CHANTS OF LABOUR</li>
-</ul>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-<h1>The Intermediate<br />
-Sex</h1>
-
-<p class="center"><i>A Study of Some Transitional Types<br />
-of Men and Women</i></p>
-
-<p class="titlepage"><span class="smaller">BY</span><br />
-EDWARD CARPENTER</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 150px;">
-<img src="images/publisher.jpg" width="150" height="150" alt="Publisher’s device" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="titlepage">LONDON: GEORGE ALLEN &amp; UNWIN LTD.<br />
-RUSKIN HOUSE, 40 MUSEUM STREET, W.C.1</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<table summary="Editions">
- <tr>
- <td><i>First published</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><i>1908</i></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><i>Reprinted</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><i>1909</i></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdr"><i>1912</i></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdr"><i>1916</i></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdr"><i>1918</i></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdr"><i>1921</i></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p>“<i>There are transitional forms between the metals
-and non-metals; between chemical combinations and
-simple mixtures, between animals and plants, between
-phanerogams and cryptogams, and between mammals
-and birds.… The improbability may henceforth be
-taken for granted of finding in Nature a sharp cleavage
-between all that is masculine on the one side and
-all that is feminine on the other; or that any living
-being is so simple in this respect that it can be put
-wholly on one side, or wholly on the other, of the line.</i>”</p>
-
-<p class="right padr1"><span class="smcap">O. Weininger.</span></p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="Pr" id="Pr">Prefatory Note<br />
-<small><small><small>TO FIRST EDITION</small></small></small></a></h2>
-
-<p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">The</span> following papers, now collected in book-form,
-have been written&mdash;and some of them
-published&mdash;on various occasions during the last
-twelve or fourteen years, and in the intervals of
-other work; and this must be my excuse for
-occasional repetitions or overlapping of matter,
-which may be observable among them. I have
-thought it best, however, to leave them as they
-stand, as in this way each is more complete in
-itself. The second essay, which gives its title to
-the book, has already appeared in my “Love’s
-Coming-of-Age” (edition 1906), but is reprinted
-here as belonging more properly to this volume.</p>
-
-<p>A collection of quotations from responsible
-writers, who touch on various sides of the subject,
-is added at the end, to form an Appendix&mdash;which
-the author thinks will prove helpful, though he
-does not necessarily endorse all the opinions
-presented.</p>
-
-<p class="right">E. C.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">&nbsp;</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>Contents</h2>
-
-<table summary="Contents">
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"></td>
- <td></td>
- <td class="right"><i>Page</i></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"></td>
- <td><span class="smcap">Prefatory Note</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Pr">7</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">I.</td>
- <td><span class="smcap">Introductory</span></td>
- <td class="right"><a href="#I">9</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">II.</td>
- <td><span class="smcap">The Intermediate Sex</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#II">16</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">III.</td>
- <td><span class="smcap">The Homogenic Attachment</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#III">39</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">IV.</td>
- <td><span class="smcap">Affection in Education</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#IV">83</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">V.</td>
- <td><span class="smcap">The Place of the Uranian in Society</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#V">107</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="right"></td>
- <td><span class="smcap">Appendix</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Appendix">131</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">9</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="I">Introductory</h2>
-
-<p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">The</span> subject dealt with in this book is one of
-great, and one may say growing, importance.
-Whether it is that the present period is one of
-large increase in the numbers of men and women
-of an intermediate or mixed temperament, or
-whether it merely is that it is a period in which
-more than usual attention happens to be accorded
-to them, the fact certainly remains that the subject
-has great actuality and is pressing upon us from
-all sides. It is recognised that anyhow the number
-of persons occupying an intermediate position
-between the two sexes is very great, that
-they play a considerable part in general society,
-and that they necessarily present and embody
-many problems which, both for their own sakes
-and that of society, demand solution. The literature
-of the question has in consequence already
-grown to be very extensive, especially on the
-Continent, and includes a great quantity of scientific<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">10</a></span>
-works, medical treatises, literary essays,
-romances, historical novels, poetry, etc. And it
-is now generally admitted that some knowledge
-and enlightened understanding of the subject is
-greatly needed for the use of certain classes&mdash;as,
-for instance, medical men, teachers, parents,
-magistrates, judges, and the like.</p>
-
-<p>That there are distinctions and gradations of
-Soul-material in relation to Sex&mdash;that the inner
-psychical affections and affinities shade off and
-graduate, in a vast number of instances, most
-subtly from male to female, and not always in
-obvious correspondence with the outer bodily
-sex&mdash;is a thing evident enough to anyone who
-considers the subject; nor could any good purpose
-well be served by ignoring this fact&mdash;even
-if it were possible to do so. It is easy of course
-(as some do) to classify all these mixed or intermediate
-types as <em>bad</em>. It is also easy (as some
-do) to argue that just because they combine
-opposite qualities they are likely to be <em>good</em> and
-valuable. But the subtleties and complexities of
-Nature cannot be despatched in this off-hand
-manner. The great probability is that, as in any
-other class of human beings, there will be among
-these too, good and bad, high and low, worthy<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">11</a></span>
-and unworthy&mdash;some perhaps exhibiting through
-their double temperament a rare and beautiful
-flower of humanity, others a perverse and tangled
-ruin.</p>
-
-<p>Before the facts of Nature we have to preserve
-a certain humility and reverence; nor rush in
-with our preconceived and obstinate assumptions.
-Though these gradations of human type
-have always, and among all peoples, been more
-or less known and recognised, yet their frequency
-to-day, or even the concentration of attention on
-them, may be the indication of some important
-change actually in progress. We do <em>not</em> know,
-in fact, what possible evolutions are to come, or
-what new forms, of permanent place and value,
-are being already slowly differentiated from the
-surrounding mass of humanity. It may be that,
-as at some past period of evolution the worker-bee
-was without doubt differentiated from the two
-ordinary bee-sexes, so at the present time certain
-new types of human kind may be emerging,
-which will have an important part to play in the
-societies of the future&mdash;even though for the
-moment their appearance is attended by a good
-deal of confusion and misapprehension. It may
-be so; or it may not. We do not know; and the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">12</a></span>
-best attitude we can adopt is one of sincere and
-dispassionate observation of facts.</p>
-
-<p>Of course wherever this subject touches on
-the domain of love we may expect difficult queries
-to arise. Yet it is here probably that the noblest
-work of the intermediate sex or sexes will be accomplished,
-as well as the greatest errors committed.
-It seems almost a law of Nature that new
-and important movements should be misunderstood
-and vilified&mdash;even though afterwards they
-may be widely approved or admitted to honour.
-Such movements are always envisaged first from
-whatever aspect they may possibly present, of
-ludicrous or contemptible. The early Christians,
-in the eyes of Romans, were chiefly known as the
-perpetrators of obscure rites and crimes in the
-darkness of the catacombs. Modern Socialism
-was for a long time supposed to be an affair of
-daggers and dynamite; and even now there are
-thousands of good people ignorant enough to
-believe that it simply means “divide up all round,
-and each take his threepenny bit.” Vegetarians
-were supposed to be a feeble and brainless set of
-cabbage-eaters. The Women’s movement, so vast
-in its scope and importance, was nothing but an
-absurd attempt to make women “the apes of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">13</a></span>
-men.” And so on without end; the accusation in
-each case being some tag or last fag-end of fact,
-caught up by ignorance, and coloured by prejudice.
-So commonplace is it to misunderstand,
-so easy to misrepresent.</p>
-
-<p>That the Uranian temperament, especially in
-regard to its affectional side, is not without faults
-must naturally be allowed; but that it has been
-grossly and absurdly misunderstood is certain.
-With a good deal of experience in the matter,
-I think one may safely say that the defect of the
-male Uranian, or Urning,<a name="FNanchor_1" id="FNanchor_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_1" class="fnanchor">1</a> is <em>not</em> sensuality&mdash;but
-rather <em>sentimentality</em>. The lower, more ordinary
-types of Urning are often terribly sentimental;
-the superior types strangely, almost incredibly
-emotional; but neither <em>as a rule</em> (though of
-course there must be exceptions) are so sensual
-as the average normal man.</p>
-
-<p>This immense capacity of emotional love represents
-of course a great driving force. Whether in
-the individual or in society, love is eminently creative.
-It is their great genius for attachment which
-gives to the best Uranian types their penetrating
-influence and activity, and which often makes<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">14</a></span>
-them beloved and accepted far and wide even by
-those who know nothing of their inner mind. How
-many so-called philanthropists of the best kind
-(we need not mention names) have been inspired
-by the Uranian temperament, the world will probably
-never know. And in all walks of life the
-great number and influence of folk of this disposition,
-and the distinguished place they already
-occupy, is only realised by those who are more or
-less behind the scenes. It is probable also that it
-is this genius for emotional love which gives to
-the Uranians their remarkable <em>youthfulness</em>.</p>
-
-<p>Anyhow, with their extraordinary gift for, and
-experience in, affairs of the heart&mdash;from the double
-point of view, both of the man and of the woman&mdash;it
-is not difficult to see that these people have
-a special work to do as reconcilers and interpreters
-of the two sexes to each other. Of this
-I have spoken at more length below (chaps. <a href="#II">ii.</a>
-and <a href="#V">v.</a>). It is probable that the superior Urnings
-will become, in affairs of the heart, to a large
-extent the teachers of future society; and if so
-that their influence will tend to the realisation and
-expression of an attachment less exclusively sensual
-than the average of to-day, and to the diffusion
-of this in all directions.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">15</a></span></p>
-
-<p>While at any rate not presuming to speak with
-authority on so difficult a subject, I plead for the
-necessity of a patient consideration of it, for the
-due recognition of the types of character concerned,
-and for some endeavour to give them
-their fitting place and sphere of usefulness in the
-general scheme of society.</p>
-
-<p>One thing more by way of introductory explanation.
-The word Love is commonly used in so
-general and almost indiscriminate a fashion as
-to denote sometimes physical instincts and acts,
-and sometimes the most intimate and profound
-feelings; and in this way a good deal of misunderstanding
-is caused. In this book (unless there
-be exceptions in the <a href="#Appendix">Appendix</a>) the word is used
-to denote the inner devotion of one person to
-another; and when anything else is meant&mdash;as,
-for instance, sexual relations and actions&mdash;this is
-clearly stated and expressed.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">16</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="II"><small>II</small><br />
-The Intermediate Sex.</h2>
-
-<p><small>“Urning men and women, on whose book of life
-Nature has written her new word which sounds so
-strange to us, bear such storm and stress within them,
-such ferment and fluctuation, so much complex material
-having its outlet only towards the future; their
-individualities are so rich and many-sided, and withal
-so little understood, that it is impossible to characterise
-them adequately in a few sentences.”&mdash;<cite>Otto de Joux.</cite></small></p>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">In</span> late years (and since the arrival of the New
-Woman amongst us) many things in the relation
-of men and women to each other have altered,
-or at any rate become clearer. The growing sense
-of equality in habits and customs&mdash;university studies,
-art, music, politics, the bicycle, etc.&mdash;all these
-things have brought about a <em lang="fr">rapprochement</em> between
-the sexes. If the modern woman is a little
-more masculine in some ways than her predecessor,
-the modern man (it is to be hoped), while
-by no means effeminate, is a little more sensitive
-in temperament and artistic in feeling than the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">17</a></span>
-original John Bull. It is beginning to be recognised
-that the sexes do not or should not normally
-form two groups hopelessly isolated in habit and
-feeling from each other, but that they rather represent
-the two poles of <em>one</em> group&mdash;which is the
-human race; so that while certainly the extreme
-specimens at either pole are vastly divergent,
-there are great numbers in the middle region who
-(though differing corporeally as men and women)
-are by emotion and temperament very near to
-each other.<a name="FNanchor_2" id="FNanchor_2"></a><a href="#Footnote_2" class="fnanchor">2</a> We all know women with a strong
-dash of the masculine temperament, and we all
-know men whose almost feminine sensibility and
-intuition seem to belie their bodily form. Nature,
-it might appear, in mixing the elements which go
-to compose each individual, does not always keep
-her two groups of ingredients&mdash;which represent
-the two sexes&mdash;properly apart, but often throws
-them crosswise in a somewhat baffling manner,
-now this way and now that; yet wisely, we must
-think&mdash;for if a severe distinction of elements were
-always maintained the two sexes would soon drift
-into far latitudes and absolutely cease to understand
-each other. As it is, there are some remarkable
-and (we think) indispensable types of character<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">18</a></span>
-in whom there is such a union or balance of
-the feminine and masculine qualities that these
-people become to a great extent the interpreters
-of men and women to each other.</p>
-
-<p>There is another point which has become clearer
-of late. For as people are beginning to see that
-the sexes form in a certain sense a continuous
-group, so they are beginning to see that Love and
-Friendship&mdash;which have been so often set apart
-from each other as things distinct&mdash;are in reality
-closely related and shade imperceptibly into each
-other. Women are beginning to demand that
-Marriage shall mean Friendship as well as Passion;
-that a comrade-like Equality shall be included
-in the word Love; and it is recognised that
-from the one extreme of a ‘Platonic’ friendship
-(generally between persons of the same sex) up
-to the other extreme of passionate love (generally
-between persons of opposite sex) no hard and fast
-line can at any point be drawn effectively separating
-the different kinds of attachment. We know, in
-fact, of Friendships so romantic in sentiment that
-they verge into love; we know of Loves so intellectual
-and spiritual that they hardly dwell in the
-sphere of Passion.</p>
-
-<p>A moment’s thought will show that the general<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">19</a></span>
-conceptions indicated above&mdash;if anywhere near
-the truth&mdash;point to an immense diversity of human
-temperament and character in matters relating
-to sex and love; but though such diversity has
-probably always existed, it has only in comparatively
-recent times become a subject of study.</p>
-
-<p>More than thirty years ago, however, an Austrian
-writer, K. H. Ulrichs, drew attention in a
-series of pamphlets (<cite>Memnon</cite>, <cite>Ara Spei</cite>, <cite>Inclusa</cite>,
-etc.) to the existence of a class of people who
-strongly illustrate the above remarks, and with
-whom specially this paper is concerned. He
-pointed out that there were people born in such
-a position&mdash;as it were on the dividing line between
-the sexes&mdash;that while belonging distinctly to one
-sex as far as their bodies are concerned they may
-be said to belong <em>mentally</em> and <em>emotionally</em> to
-the other; that there were men, for instance, who
-might be described as of feminine soul enclosed
-in a male body (<i lang="la">anima muliebris in corpore
-virili inclusa</i>), or in other cases, women whose
-definition would be just the reverse. And he
-maintained that this doubleness of nature was to
-a great extent proved by the special direction of
-their love-sentiment. For in such cases, as indeed
-might be expected, the (apparently) masculine person<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">20</a></span>
-instead of forming a love-union with a female
-tended to contract romantic friendships with one
-of his own sex; while the apparently feminine
-would, instead of marrying in the usual way, devote
-herself to the love of another feminine.</p>
-
-<p>People of this kind (<i>i.e.</i>, having this special
-variation of the love-sentiment) he called Urnings;<a name="FNanchor_3" id="FNanchor_3"></a><a href="#Footnote_3" class="fnanchor">3</a>
-and though we are not obliged to accept
-his theory about the crosswise connexion between
-‘soul’ and ‘body,’ since at best these words are
-somewhat vague and indefinite; yet his work was
-important because it was one of the first attempts,
-in modern times, to recognise the existence of
-what might be called an Intermediate sex, and
-to give at any rate <em>some</em> explanation of it.<a name="FNanchor_4" id="FNanchor_4"></a><a href="#Footnote_4" class="fnanchor">4</a></p>
-
-<p>Since that time the subject has been widely
-studied and written about by scientific men and
-others, especially on the Continent (though in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">21</a></span>
-England it is still comparatively unknown), and
-by means of an extended observation of present-day
-cases, as well as the indirect testimony of the
-history and literature of past times, quite a body
-of general conclusions has been arrived at&mdash;of
-which I propose in the following pages to give
-some slight account.</p>
-
-<p>Contrary to the general impression, one of the
-first points that emerges from this study is that
-‘Urnings,’ or Uranians, are by no means so very
-rare; but that they form, beneath the surface of
-society, a large class. It remains difficult, however,
-to get an exact statement of their numbers;
-and this for more than one reason: partly because,
-owing to the want of any general understanding of
-their case, these folk tend to conceal their true
-feelings from all but their own kind, and indeed
-often deliberately act in such a manner as to lead
-the world astray&mdash;(whence it arises that a normal
-man living in a certain society will often refuse to
-believe that there is a single Urning in the circle
-of his acquaintance, while one of the latter, or one
-that understands the nature, living in the same
-society, can count perhaps a score or more)&mdash;and
-partly because it is indubitable that the numbers
-do vary very greatly, not only in different countries<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">22</a></span>
-but even in different classes in the same
-country. The consequence of all this being that
-we have estimates differing very widely from each
-other. Dr. Grabowsky, a well-known writer in
-Germany, quotes figures (which we think must be
-exaggerated) as high as one man in every 22,
-while Dr. Albert Moll (<cite>Die Conträre Sexualempfindung</cite>,
-chap. 3) gives estimates varying
-from 1 in every 50 to as low as 1 in every 500.<a name="FNanchor_5" id="FNanchor_5"></a><a href="#Footnote_5" class="fnanchor">5</a>
-These figures apply to such as are exclusively of
-the said nature, <i>i.e.</i>, to those whose deepest feelings
-of love and friendship go out only to persons
-of their own sex. Of course, if in addition are
-included those double-natured people (of whom
-there is a great number) who experience the normal
-attachment, with the homogenic tendency in
-less or greater degree superadded, the estimates
-must be greatly higher.</p>
-
-<p>In the second place it emerges (also contrary
-to the general impression) that men and women
-of the exclusively Uranian type are by no means
-necessarily morbid in any way&mdash;unless, indeed,
-their peculiar temperament be pronounced in itself<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">23</a></span>
-morbid. Formerly it was assumed as a matter of
-course, that the type was merely a result of disease
-and degeneration; but now with the examination
-of the actual facts it appears that, on
-the contrary, many are fine, healthy specimens of
-their sex, muscular and well-developed in body, of
-powerful brain, high standard of conduct, and with
-nothing abnormal or morbid of any kind observable
-in their physical structure or constitution.
-This is of course not true of all, and there still remain
-a certain number of cases of weakly type to
-support the neuropathic view. Yet it is very noticeable
-that this view is much less insisted on by the
-later writers than by the earlier. It is also worth
-noticing that it is now acknowledged that even
-in the most healthy cases the special affectional
-temperament of the ‘Intermediate’ is, as a rule,
-ineradicable; so much so that when (as in not
-a few instances) such men and women, from social
-or other considerations, have forced themselves to
-marry and even have children, they have still not
-been able to overcome their own bias, or the leaning
-after all of their life-attachment to some friend
-of their own sex.</p>
-
-<p>This subject, though obviously one of considerable
-interest and importance, has been hitherto,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">24</a></span>
-as I have pointed out, but little discussed in this
-country, partly owing to a certain amount of
-doubt and distrust which has, not unnaturally perhaps,
-surrounded it. And certainly if the men
-and women born with the tendency in question
-were only exceedingly rare, though it would not
-be fair on that account to ignore them, yet it
-would hardly be necessary to dwell at great length
-on their case. But as the class is really, on any
-computation, numerous, it becomes a duty for
-society not only to understand them but to help
-them to understand themselves.</p>
-
-<p>For there is no doubt that in many cases people
-of this kind suffer a great deal from their own
-temperament&mdash;and yet, after all, it is possible that
-they may have an important part to play in the
-evolution of the race. Anyone who realises what
-Love is, the dedication of the heart, so profound,
-so absorbing, so mysterious, so imperative, and
-always just in the noblest natures so strong, cannot
-fail to see how difficult, how tragic even, must
-often be the fate of those whose deepest feelings
-are destined from the earliest days to be a riddle
-and a stumbling-block, unexplained to themselves,
-passed over in silence by others.<a name="FNanchor_6" id="FNanchor_6"></a><a href="#Footnote_6" class="fnanchor">6</a> To call people<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">25</a></span>
-of such temperament ‘morbid,’ and so forth, is
-of no use. Such a term is, in fact, absurdly inapplicable
-to many, who are among the most active,
-the most amiable and accepted members of society;
-besides, it forms no solution of the problem
-in question, and only amounts to marking
-down for disparagement a fellow-creature who
-has already considerable difficulties to contend
-with. Says Dr. Moll, “Anyone who has seen many
-Urnings will probably admit that they form a by
-no means enervated human group; on the contrary,
-one finds powerful, healthy-looking folk
-among them;” but in the very next sentence he
-says that they “suffer severely” from the way
-they are regarded; and in the manifesto of a
-considerable community of such people in Germany
-occur these words, “The rays of sunshine
-in the night of our existence are so rare, that we
-are responsive and deeply grateful for the least
-movement, for every single voice that speaks in
-our favour in the forum of mankind.”<a name="FNanchor_7" id="FNanchor_7"></a><a href="#Footnote_7" class="fnanchor">7</a></p>
-
-<p>In dealing with this class of folk, then, while
-I do not deny that they present a difficult problem,
-I think that just for that very reason their<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">26</a></span>
-case needs discussion. It would be a great mistake
-to suppose that their attachments are necessarily
-sexual, or connected with sexual acts. On
-the contrary (as abundant evidence shows), they
-are often purely emotional in their character; and
-to confuse Uranians (as is so often done) with
-libertines having no law but curiosity in self-indulgence
-is to do them a great wrong. At the
-same time, it is evident that their special temperament
-may sometimes cause them difficulty in regard
-to their sexual relations. Into this subject we
-need not just now enter. But we may point out how
-hard it is, especially for the young among them,
-that a veil of complete silence should be drawn
-over the subject, leading to the most painful misunderstandings,
-and perversions and confusions
-of mind; and that there should be no hint of
-guidance; nor any recognition of the solitary
-and really serious inner struggles they may have
-to face! If the problem is a difficult one&mdash;as it
-undoubtedly is&mdash;the fate of those people is already
-hard who have to meet it in their own persons,
-without their suffering in addition from the refusal
-of society to give them any help. It is partly for
-these reasons, and to throw a little light where it
-may be needed, that I have thought it might be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">27</a></span>
-advisable in this paper simply to give a few
-general characteristics of the Intermediate types.</p>
-
-<p>As indicated then already, in bodily structure
-there is, as a rule, nothing to distinguish the subjects
-of our discussion from ordinary men and
-women; but if we take the general mental characteristics
-it appears from almost universal testimony
-that the male tends to be of a rather gentle,
-emotional disposition&mdash;with defects, if such exist,
-in the direction of subtlety, evasiveness, timidity,
-vanity, etc.; while the female is just the opposite,
-fiery, active, bold and truthful, with defects running
-to brusqueness and coarseness. Moreover,
-the mind of the former is generally intuitive and
-instinctive in its perceptions, with more or less
-of artistic feeling; while the mind of the latter
-is more logical, scientific, and precise than usual
-with the normal woman. So marked indeed are
-these general characteristics that sometimes by
-means of them (though not an infallible guide)
-the nature of the boy or girl can be detected in
-childhood, before full development has taken
-place; and needless to say it may often be very
-important to be able to do this.</p>
-
-<p>It was no doubt in consequence of the observation
-of these signs that K. H. Ulrichs proposed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">28</a></span>
-his theory; and though the theory, as we have
-said, does not by any means meet <em>all</em> the facts,
-still it is perhaps not without merit, and may be
-worth bearing in mind.</p>
-
-<p>In the case, for instance, of a woman of this
-temperament (defined we suppose as “a male
-soul in a female body”) the theory helps us to
-understand how it might be possible for her to
-fall <i lang="la">bonâ fide</i> in love with another woman. Krafft-Ebing
-gives<a name="FNanchor_8" id="FNanchor_8"></a><a href="#Footnote_8" class="fnanchor">8</a> the case of a lady (A.), 28 years
-of age, who fell deeply in love with a younger
-one (B.). “I loved her divinely,” she said. They
-lived together, and the union lasted four years,
-but was then broken by the marriage of B.
-A. suffered in consequence from frightful depression;
-but in the end&mdash;though without real love&mdash;got
-married herself. Her depression however
-only increased and deepened into illness. The
-doctors, when consulted, said that all would be
-well if she could only have a child. The husband,
-who loved his wife sincerely, could not understand
-her enigmatic behaviour. She was friendly to
-him, suffered his caresses, but for days afterwards
-remained “dull, exhausted, plagued with
-irritation of the spine, and nervous.” Presently<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">29</a></span>
-a journey of the married pair led to another
-meeting with the female friend&mdash;who had now
-been wedded (but also unhappily) for three years.</p>
-
-<p>“Both ladies trembled with joy and excitement
-as they fell into each other’s arms, and were
-thenceforth inseparable. The man found that
-this friendship relation was a singular one, and
-hastened the departure. When the opportunity
-occurred, he convinced himself from the correspondence
-between his wife and her ‘friend’ that
-their letters were exactly like those of two lovers.”</p>
-
-<p>It appears that the loves of such women are
-often very intense, and (as also in the case of male
-Urnings) life-long.<a name="FNanchor_9" id="FNanchor_9"></a><a href="#Footnote_9" class="fnanchor">9</a> Both classes feel themselves
-blessed when they love happily. Nevertheless, to
-many of them it is a painful fact that&mdash;in consequence
-of their peculiar temperament&mdash;they are,
-though fond of children, not in the position to
-found a family.</p>
-
-<p>We have so far limited ourselves to some very
-general characteristics of the Intermediate race.
-It may help to clear and fix our ideas if we now
-describe more in detail, first, what may be called
-the extreme and exaggerated types of the race,
-and then the more normal and perfect types. By<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">30</a></span>
-doing so we shall get a more definite and concrete
-view of our subject.</p>
-
-<p>In the first place, then, the extreme specimens&mdash;as
-in most cases of extremes&mdash;are not particularly
-attractive, sometimes quite the reverse. In the
-male of this kind we have a distinctly effeminate
-type, sentimental, lackadaisical, mincing in gait
-and manners, something of a chatterbox, skilful
-at the needle and in woman’s work, sometimes
-taking pleasure in dressing in woman’s clothes;
-his figure not unfrequently betraying a tendency
-towards the feminine, large at the hips, supple,
-not muscular, the face wanting in hair, the voice
-inclining to be high-pitched, etc.; while his dwelling-room
-is orderly in the extreme, even natty,
-and choice of decoration and perfume. His affection,
-too, is often feminine in character, clinging,
-dependent and jealous, as of one desiring to be
-loved almost more than to love.<a name="FNanchor_10" id="FNanchor_10"></a><a href="#Footnote_10" class="fnanchor">10</a></p>
-
-<p>On the other hand, as the extreme type of the
-homogenic female, we have a rather markedly
-aggressive person, of strong passions, masculine
-manners and movements, practical in the conduct<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">31</a></span>
-of life, sensuous rather than sentimental in love,
-often untidy, and <i lang="fr">outré</i> in attire;<a name="FNanchor_11" id="FNanchor_11"></a><a href="#Footnote_11" class="fnanchor">11</a> her figure muscular,
-her voice rather low in pitch; her dwelling-room
-decorated with sporting-scenes, pistols, etc.,
-and not without a suspicion of the fragrant weed
-in the atmosphere; while her love (generally to
-rather soft and feminine specimens of her own
-sex) is often a sort of furor, similar to the ordinary
-masculine love, and at times almost uncontrollable.</p>
-
-<p>These are types which, on account of their
-salience, everyone will recognise more or less.
-Naturally, when they occur they excite a good deal
-of attention, and it is not an uncommon impression
-that most persons of the homogenic nature belong
-to either one or other of these classes. But
-in reality, of course, these extreme developments
-are rare, and for the most part the temperament in
-question is embodied in men and women of quite
-normal and unsensational exterior. Speaking of
-this subject and the connection between effeminateness
-and the homogenic nature in men, Dr.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">32</a></span>
-Moll says: “It is, however, as well to point out
-at the outset that effeminacy does not by any
-means show itself in all Urnings. Though one
-may find this or that indication in a great number
-of cases, yet it cannot be denied that a very large
-percentage, perhaps by far the majority of them,
-do <em>not</em> exhibit pronounced Effeminacy.” And it
-may be supposed that we may draw the same conclusion
-with regard to women of this class&mdash;namely,
-that the majority of them do not exhibit
-pronounced masculine habits. In fact, while these
-extreme cases are of the greatest value from a
-scientific point of view as marking tendencies and
-limits of development in certain directions, it
-would be a serious mistake to look upon them as
-representative cases of the whole phases of human
-evolution concerned.</p>
-
-<p>If now we come to what may be called the more
-normal type of the Uranian man, we find a man
-who, while possessing thoroughly masculine powers
-of mind and body, combines with them the
-tenderer and more emotional soul-nature of the
-woman&mdash;and sometimes to a remarkable degree.
-Such men, as said, are often muscular and well-built,
-and not distinguishable in exterior structure
-and the carriage of body from others of their own<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">33</a></span>
-sex; but emotionally they are extremely complex,
-tender, sensitive, pitiful and loving, “full of storm
-and stress, of ferment and fluctuation” of the
-heart; the logical faculty may or may not, in their
-case, be well-developed, but intuition is always
-strong; like women they read characters at a
-glance, and know, without knowing how, what
-is passing in the minds of others; for nursing and
-waiting on the needs of others they have often a
-peculiar gift; at the bottom lies the artist-nature,
-with the artist’s sensibility and perception. Such
-an one is often a dreamer, of brooding, reserved
-habits, often a musician, or a man of culture,
-courted in society, which nevertheless does not
-understand him&mdash;though sometimes a child of
-the people, without any culture, but almost always
-with a peculiar inborn refinement. De Joux, who
-speaks on the whole favourably of Uranian men
-and women, says of the former: “They are enthusiastic
-for poetry and music, are often eminently
-skilful in the fine arts, and are overcome with
-emotion and sympathy at the least sad occurrence.
-Their sensitiveness, their endless tenderness for
-children, their love of flowers, their great pity
-for beggars and crippled folk are truly womanly.”
-And in another passage he indicates the artist-nature,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">34</a></span>
-when he says: “The nerve-system of
-many an Urning is the finest and the most complicated
-musical instrument in the service of the
-interior personality that can be imagined.”</p>
-
-<p>It would seem probable that the attachment of
-such an one is of a tender and profound character;
-indeed, it is possible that in this class of
-men we have the love sentiment in one of its most
-perfect forms&mdash;a form in which from the necessities
-of the situation the sensuous element, though
-present, is exquisitely subordinated to the spiritual.
-Says one writer on this subject, a Swiss,
-“Happy indeed is that man who has won a real
-Urning for his friend&mdash;he walks on roses, without
-ever having to fear the thorns”; and he adds,
-“Can there ever be a more perfect sick-nurse
-than an Urning?” And though these are <i lang="la">ex
-parte</i> utterances, we may believe that there is an
-appreciable grain of truth in them. Another writer,
-quoted by De Joux, speaks to somewhat the same
-effect, and may perhaps be received in a similar
-spirit. “We form,” he says, “a peculiar aristocracy
-of modest spirits, of good and refined
-habit, and in many masculine circles are the representatives
-of the higher mental and artistic
-element. In us dreamers and enthusiasts lies the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">35</a></span>
-continual counterpoise to the sheer masculine
-portion of society&mdash;inclining, as it always does, to
-mere restless greed of gain and material sensual
-pleasures.”</p>
-
-<p>That men of this kind despise women, though
-a not uncommon belief, is one which hardly appears
-to be justified. Indeed, though naturally
-not inclined to “fall in love” in this direction,
-such men are by their nature drawn rather near
-to women, and it would seem that they often feel
-a singular appreciation and understanding of the
-emotional needs and destinies of the other sex,
-leading in many cases to a genuine though what
-is called ‘Platonic’ friendship. There is little
-doubt that they are often instinctively sought after
-by women, who, without suspecting the real cause,
-are conscious of a sympathetic chord in the homogenic
-which they miss in the normal man. To
-quote De Joux once more: “It would be a mistake
-to suppose that all Urnings must be woman-haters.
-Quite the contrary. They are not seldom
-the faithfulest friends, the truest allies, and most
-convinced defenders of women.”</p>
-
-<p>To come now to the more normal and perfect
-specimens of the homogenic <em>woman</em>, we find a
-type in which the body is thoroughly feminine and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">36</a></span>
-gracious, with the rondure and fulness of the
-female form, and the continence and aptness of its
-movements, but in which the inner nature is to
-a great extent masculine; a temperament active,
-brave, originative, somewhat decisive, not too
-emotional; fond of out-door life, of games and
-sports, of science, politics, or even business;
-good at organisation, and well-pleased with positions
-of responsibility, sometimes indeed making
-an excellent and generous leader. Such a woman,
-it is easily seen, from her special combination of
-qualities, is often fitted for remarkable work, in
-professional life, or as manageress of institutions,
-or even as ruler of a country. Her love goes out
-to younger and more feminine natures than her
-own; it is a powerful passion, almost of heroic
-type, and capable of inspiring to great deeds;
-and when held duly in leash may sometimes become
-an invaluable force in the teaching and
-training of girlhood, or in the creation of a school
-of thought or action among women. Many a
-Santa Clara, or abbess-founder of religious houses,
-has probably been a woman of this type; and in
-all times such women&mdash;not being bound to men
-by the ordinary ties&mdash;have been able to work the
-more freely for the interests of their sex, a cause<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">37</a></span>
-to which their own temperament impels them to
-devote themselves <i lang="it">con amore</i>.</p>
-
-<p>I have now sketched&mdash;very briefly and inadequately
-it is true&mdash;both the extreme types and
-the more healthy types of the ‘Intermediate’ man
-and woman: types which can be verified from
-history and literature, though more certainly and
-satisfactorily perhaps from actual life around us.
-And unfamiliar though the subject is, it begins
-to appear that it is one which modern thought and
-science will have to face. Of the latter and more
-normal types it may be said that they exist, and
-have always existed, in considerable abundance,
-and from that circumstance alone there is a strong
-probability that they have their place and purpose.
-As pointed out there is no particular indication
-of morbidity about them, unless the special nature
-of their love-sentiment be itself accounted morbid;
-and in the alienation of the sexes from each other,
-of which complaint is so often made to-day, it
-must be admitted that they do much to fill the gap.</p>
-
-<p>The instinctive artistic nature of the male of this
-class, his sensitive spirit, his wavelike emotional
-temperament, combined with hardihood of intellect
-and body; and the frank, free nature of the
-female, her masculine independence and strength<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">38</a></span>
-wedded to thoroughly feminine grace of form and
-manner; may be said to give them both, through
-their double nature, command of life in all its
-phases, and a certain freemasonry of the secrets
-of the two sexes which may well favour their
-function as reconcilers and interpreters. Certainly
-it is remarkable that some of the world’s
-greatest leaders and artists have been dowered
-either wholly or in part with the Uranian temperament&mdash;as
-in the cases of Michel Angelo, Shakespeare,
-Marlowe, Alexander the Great, Julius
-Cæsar, or, among women, Christine of Sweden,
-Sappho the poetess, and others.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">39</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="III"><small><small>III</small></small><br />
-The Homogenic Attachment</h2>
-
-<p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">In</span> its various forms, so far as we know them,
-Love seems always to have a deep significance
-and a most practical importance to us little mortals.
-In one form, as the mere semi-conscious
-Sex-love, which runs through creation and is
-common to the lowest animals and plants, it appears
-as a kind of organic basis for the unity of
-all creatures; in another, as the love of the mother
-for her offspring&mdash;which may also be termed a
-passion&mdash;it seems to pledge itself to the care and
-guardianship of the future race; in another, as
-the marriage of man and woman, it becomes the
-very foundation of human society. And so we
-can hardly believe that in its homogenic form,
-with which we are here concerned, it has not also
-a deep significance, and social uses and functions
-which will become clearer to us, the more we
-study it.</p>
-
-<p>To some perhaps it may appear a little strained<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">40</a></span>
-to place this last-mentioned form of attachment on
-a level of importance with the others, and such
-persons may be inclined to deny to the homogenic<a name="FNanchor_12" id="FNanchor_12"></a><a href="#Footnote_12" class="fnanchor">12</a>
-or homosexual love that intense, that
-penetrating, and at times overmastering character
-which would entitle it to rank as a great human
-passion. But in truth this view, when entertained,
-arises from a want of acquaintance with the actual
-facts; and it may not be amiss here, in the briefest
-possible way, to indicate what the world’s
-History, Literature, and Art has to say to us on
-this aspect of the subject, before going on to
-further considerations. Certainly, if the confronting
-of danger and the endurance of pain and
-distress for the sake of the loved one, if sacrifice,
-unswerving devotion and life-long union, constitute
-proofs of the reality and intensity (and let
-us say healthiness) of an affection, then these
-proofs have been given in numberless cases of
-such attachment, not only as existing between
-men, but as between women, since the world
-began. The records of chivalric love, the feats of
-enamoured knights for their ladies’ sakes, the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">41</a></span>
-stories of Hero and Leander, etc., are easily
-paralleled, if not surpassed, by the stories of the
-Greek comrades-in-arms and tyrannicides&mdash;of
-Cratinus and Aristodemus, who offered themselves
-together as a voluntary sacrifice for the purification
-of Athens; of Chariton and Melanippus,<a name="FNanchor_13" id="FNanchor_13"></a><a href="#Footnote_13" class="fnanchor">13</a>
-who attempted to assassinate Phalaris, the tyrant
-of Agrigentum; or of Cleomachus who in like manner,
-in a battle between the Chalkidians and
-Eretrians, being entreated to charge the latter,
-“asked the youth he loved, who was standing
-by, whether he would be a spectator of the fight;
-and when he said he would, and affectionately
-kissed Cleomachus and put his helmet on his head,
-Cleomachus with a proud joy placed himself in the
-front of the bravest of the Thessalians and charged
-the enemy’s cavalry with such impetuosity that
-he threw them into disorder and routed them;
-and the Eretrian cavalry fleeing in consequence,
-the Chalkidians won a splendid victory.”<a name="FNanchor_14" id="FNanchor_14"></a><a href="#Footnote_14" class="fnanchor">14</a></p>
-
-<p>The annals of all nations contain similar records&mdash;though
-probably among none has the ideal of
-this love been quite so enthusiastic and heroic
-as among the post-Homeric Greeks. It is well<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">42</a></span>
-known that among the Polynesian Islanders&mdash;for
-the most part a very gentle and affectionate
-people, probably inheriting the traditions of a
-higher culture than they now possess&mdash;the most
-romantic male friendships are (or were) in vogue.
-Says Herman Melville in “Omoo” (chap. 39),
-“The really curious way in which all Polynesians
-are in the habit of making bosom friends is deserving
-of remark.… In the annals of the
-island (Tahiti) are examples of extravagant friendships,
-unsurpassed by the story of Damon and
-Pythias&mdash;in truth much more wonderful; for notwithstanding
-the devotion&mdash;even of life in some
-cases&mdash;to which they led, they were frequently
-entertained at first sight for some stranger from
-another island.” So thoroughly recognised indeed
-were these unions that Melville explains (in
-“Typee,” chap. 18) that if two men of hostile
-tribes or islands became thus pledged to each
-other, then each could pass through the enemy’s
-territory without fear of molestation or injury; and
-the passionate nature of these attachments is indicated
-by the following passage from “Omoo”
-(another book of Melville’s):&mdash;“Though little
-inclined to jealousy in ordinary love-matters, the
-Tahitian will hear of no rivals in his <em>friendship</em>.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">43</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Even among savage races lower down than
-these in the scale of evolution, and who are generally
-accused of being governed in their love-relations
-only by the most animal desires, we find a
-genuine sentiment of comradeship beginning to
-assert itself&mdash;as among the Balonda<a name="FNanchor_15" id="FNanchor_15"></a><a href="#Footnote_15" class="fnanchor">15</a> and other
-African tribes, where regular ceremonies of the
-betrothal of comrades take place, by the transfusion
-of a few drops of blood into each other’s
-drinking-bowls, by the exchange of names,<a name="FNanchor_16" id="FNanchor_16"></a><a href="#Footnote_16" class="fnanchor">16</a> and
-the mutual gift of their most precious possessions;
-but unfortunately, owing to the obtuseness of
-current European opinion on this subject, these
-and other such customs have been but little investigated
-and have by no means received the
-attention that they ought.</p>
-
-<p>When we turn to the poetic and literary utterances
-of the more civilised nations on this subject
-we cannot but be struck by the range and intensity
-of the emotions expressed&mdash;from the beautiful
-threnody of David over his friend whose love
-was passing the love of women, through the vast
-panorama of the Homeric Iliad, of which the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">44</a></span>
-heroic friendship of Achilles and his dear Patroclus
-forms really the basic theme, down to the
-works of the great Greek age&mdash;the splendid odes
-of Pindar burning with clear fire of passion, the
-lofty elegies of Theognis, full of wise precepts to
-his beloved Kurnus, the sweet pastorals of Theocritus,
-the passionate lyrics of Sappho, or the
-more sensual raptures of Anacreon. Some of
-the dramas of Æschylus and Sophocles&mdash;as the
-“Myrmidones” of the former and the “Lovers of
-Achilles” of the latter&mdash;appear to have had this
-subject for their motive<a name="FNanchor_17" id="FNanchor_17"></a><a href="#Footnote_17" class="fnanchor">17</a>; and many of the prose-poem
-dialogues of Plato were certainly inspired
-by it.</p>
-
-<p>Then coming to the literature of the Roman
-age, whose materialistic spirit could only with
-difficulty seize the finer inspiration of the homogenic
-love, and which in such writers as Catullus
-and Martial could only for the most part give
-expression to its grosser side, we still find in
-Vergil, a noble and notable instance. His second
-Eclogue bears the marks of a genuine passion;
-and, according to some,<a name="FNanchor_18" id="FNanchor_18"></a><a href="#Footnote_18" class="fnanchor">18</a> he there under the name<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">45</a></span>
-of Alexis immortalises his own love for the youthful
-Alexander. Nor is it possible to pass over in
-this connection the great mass of Persian literature,
-and the poets Sadi, Hafiz, Jami, and many
-others, whose names and works are for all time,
-and whose marvellous love-songs (“Bitter and
-sweet is the parting kiss on the lips of a friend”)
-are to a large extent, if not mostly, addressed to
-those of their own sex.<a name="FNanchor_19" id="FNanchor_19"></a><a href="#Footnote_19" class="fnanchor">19</a></p>
-
-<p>Of the mediæval period in Europe we have of
-course but few literary monuments. Towards its
-close we come upon the interesting story of Amis
-and Amile (thirteenth century), unearthed by
-Mr. W. Pater from the Bibliotheca Elzeviriana.<a name="FNanchor_20" id="FNanchor_20"></a><a href="#Footnote_20" class="fnanchor">20</a>
-Though there is historic evidence of the prevalence
-of the passion we may say of this period
-that its <em>ideal</em> was undoubtedly rather the chivalric
-love than the love of comrades. But with the
-Renaissance in Italy and the Elizabethan period
-in England the latter once more comes to evidence
-in a burst of poetic utterance,<a name="FNanchor_21" id="FNanchor_21"></a><a href="#Footnote_21" class="fnanchor">21</a> which culminates<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">46</a></span>
-perhaps in the magnificent sonnets of Michel
-Angelo and of Shakespeare; of Michel Angelo
-whose pure beauty of expression lifts the enthusiasm
-into the highest region as the direct perception
-of the divine in mortal form;<a name="FNanchor_22" id="FNanchor_22"></a><a href="#Footnote_22" class="fnanchor">22</a> and of Shakespeare&mdash;whose
-passionate words and amorous spirituality
-of friendship have for long enough been<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">47</a></span>
-a perplexity to hide-bound commentators. Thence
-through minor writers (not overlooking Winckelmann<a name="FNanchor_23" id="FNanchor_23"></a><a href="#Footnote_23" class="fnanchor">23</a>
-in Germany) we pass to quite modern times&mdash;in
-which, notwithstanding the fact that the passion
-has been much misunderstood and misinterpreted,
-two names stand conspicuously forth&mdash;those
-of Tennyson, whose “In Memoriam” is
-perhaps his finest work, and of Walt Whitman,
-the enthusiasm of whose poems on Comradeship
-is only paralleled by the devotedness of his labors
-for his wounded brothers in the American Civil
-War.</p>
-
-<p>It will be noticed that here we have some of the
-very greatest names in all literature concerned;
-and that their utterances on this subject equal
-if they do not surpass, in beauty, intensity and
-humanity of sentiment, whatever has been written
-in praise of the other more ordinarily recognised
-love.</p>
-
-<p>And when again we turn to the records of Art,
-and compare the way in which man’s sense of
-Love and Beauty has expressed itself in the portrayal
-of the male form and the female form
-respectively we find exactly the same thing. The<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">48</a></span>
-whole vista of Greek statuary shows the male passion
-of beauty in high degree. Yet though the
-statues of men and youths (by men sculptors)
-preponderate probably considerably, both in actual
-number and in devotedness of execution, over
-the statues of female figures, it is, as J. A.
-Symonds says in his “Life of Michel Angelo,”
-remarkable that in all the range of the former
-there are hardly two or three that show a base
-or licentious expression, such as is not so very
-uncommon in the female statues. Knowing as
-we do the strength of the male physical passion
-in the life of the Greeks, this one fact speaks
-strongly for the sense of proportion which must
-have characterised this passion&mdash;at any rate in
-the most productive age of their Art.</p>
-
-<p>In the case of Michel Angelo we have an artist
-who with brush and chisel portrayed literally
-thousands of human forms; but with this peculiarity,
-that while scores and scores of his male
-figures are obviously suffused and inspired by
-a romantic sentiment, there is hardly one of his
-female figures that is so,&mdash;the latter being mostly
-representative of woman in her part as mother,
-or sufferer, or prophetess or poetess, or in old
-age, or in any aspect of strength or tenderness,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">49</a></span>
-except that which associates itself especially with
-romantic love. Yet the cleanliness and dignity
-of Michel Angelo’s male figures are incontestable,
-and bear striking witness to that nobility
-of the sentiment in him, which we have already
-seen illustrated in his sonnets.<a name="FNanchor_24" id="FNanchor_24"></a><a href="#Footnote_24" class="fnanchor">24</a></p>
-
-<p>This brief sketch may suffice to give the reader
-some idea of the place and position in the world
-of the particular sentiment which we are discussing;
-nor can it fail to impress him&mdash;if any
-reference is made to the authorities quoted&mdash;with
-a sense of the dignity and solidity of the sentiment,
-at any rate as handled by some of the world’s
-greatest men. At the same time it would be
-affectation to ignore the fact that side by side with
-this view of the subject there has been another
-current of opinion leading people&mdash;especially in
-quite modern times in Europe&mdash;to look upon
-attachments of the kind in question with much
-suspicion and disfavour.<a name="FNanchor_25" id="FNanchor_25"></a><a href="#Footnote_25" class="fnanchor">25</a> And it may be necessary
-here to say a few words on this latter view.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">50</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The origin of it is not far to seek. Those
-who have no great gift themselves for this
-kind of friendship&mdash;who are not in the inner
-circle of it, so to speak, and do not understand
-or appreciate its deep emotional and romantic
-character, have nevertheless heard of certain corruptions
-and excesses; for these latter leap to
-publicity. They have heard of the debaucheries
-of a Nero or a Tiberius; they have noted the
-scandals of the Police Courts; they have had
-some experience perhaps of abuses which may be
-found in Public Schools or Barracks; and they
-(not unnaturally) infer that these things, these
-excesses and sensualities, are the motive of comrade-attachments,
-and the object for which they
-exist; nor do they easily recognise any more
-profound and intimate bond. To such people
-physical intimacies of <em>any</em> kind (at any rate between
-males) seem inexcusable. There is no
-distinction in their minds between the simplest or
-most naive expression of feeling and the gravest
-abuse of human rights and decency; there is no
-distinction between a genuine heart-attachment
-and a mere carnal curiosity. They see certain<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">51</a></span>
-evils that occur or have occurred, and they think,
-perfectly candidly, that any measures are justifiable
-to prevent such things recurring. But they
-do not see the interior love-feeling which when it
-exists does legitimately demand <em>some</em> expression.
-Such folk, in fact, not having the key in themselves
-to the real situation hastily assume that the
-homogenic attachment has no other motive than,
-or is simply a veil and a cover for, sensuality&mdash;and
-suspect or condemn it accordingly.</p>
-
-<p>Thus arises the curious discrepancy of people’s
-views on this important subject&mdash;a discrepancy
-depending on the side from which they approach
-it.</p>
-
-<p>On the one hand we have anathemas and execrations,
-on the other we have the lofty enthusiasm
-of a man like Plato&mdash;one of the leaders of
-the world’s thought for all time&mdash;who puts, for
-example, into the mouth of Phædrus (in the
-“Symposium”) such a passage as this<a name="FNanchor_26" id="FNanchor_26"></a><a href="#Footnote_26" class="fnanchor">26</a>: “I know
-not any greater blessing to a young man beginning
-life than a virtuous lover, or to the lover
-than a beloved youth. For the principle which
-ought to be the guide of men who would nobly
-live&mdash;that principle, I say, neither kindred, nor<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">52</a></span>
-honour, nor wealth, nor any other motive is able
-to implant so well as love. Of what am I speaking?
-Of the sense of honour and dishonour,
-without which neither states nor individuals ever
-do any good or great work.… For what lover
-would not choose rather to be seen of all mankind
-than by his beloved, either when abandoning his
-post or throwing away his arms? He would
-be ready to die a thousand deaths rather than
-endure this. Or who would desert his beloved
-or fail him in the hour of danger? The veriest
-coward would become an inspired hero, equal
-to the bravest, at such a time; love would inspire
-him. That courage which, as Homer says, the
-god breathes into the soul of heroes, love of his
-own nature inspires into the lover.” Or again
-in the “Phædrus” Plato makes Socrates say<a name="FNanchor_27" id="FNanchor_27"></a><a href="#Footnote_27" class="fnanchor">27</a>:
-“In like manner the followers of Apollo and of
-every other god, walking in the ways of their
-god, seek a love who is to be like their god, and
-when they have found him, they themselves imitate
-their god, and persuade their love to do the
-same, and bring him into harmony with the form
-and ways of the god as far as they can; for
-they have no feelings of envy or jealousy towards<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">53</a></span>
-their beloved, but they do their utmost to create
-in him the greatest likeness of themselves and
-the god whom they honour. Thus fair and
-blissful to the beloved when he is taken, is the
-desire of the inspired lover, and the initiation of
-which I speak into the mysteries of true love, if
-their purpose is effected.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>With these few preliminary remarks we may
-pass on to consider some recent scientific investigations
-of the matter in hand. In late times&mdash;that
-is, during the last thirty years or so&mdash;a group
-of scientific and capable men chiefly in Germany,
-France, and Italy, have made a special and more
-or less impartial study of it. Among these may
-be mentioned Dr. Albert Moll of Berlin; R. von
-Krafft-Ebing, one of the leading medical authorities
-of Vienna, whose book on “Sexual Psychopathy”
-has passed into its tenth edition; Dr.
-Paul Moreau (“Des Aberrations du sens génésique”);
-Cesare Lombroso, the author of various
-works on Anthropology; M. A. Raffalovich
-(“Uranisme et unisexualité”); Auguste Forel
-(“Die Sexuelle Frage”); Mantegazza; K. H.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">54</a></span>
-Ulrichs; and last but not least, Dr. Havelock
-Ellis, of whose great work on the Psychology of
-Sex the second volume is dedicated to the subject
-of “Sexual Inversion.”<a name="FNanchor_28" id="FNanchor_28"></a><a href="#Footnote_28" class="fnanchor">28</a> The result of these investigations
-has been that a very altered complexion
-has been given to the subject. For
-whereas at first it was easily assumed that the
-phenomena were of morbid character, and that
-the leaning of the love-sentiment towards one of
-the same sex was always associated with degeneracy
-or disease, it is very noticeable that step
-by step with the accumulation of reliable information
-this assumption has been abandoned. The
-point of view has changed; and the change has
-been most marked in the latest authors, such as
-A. Moll and Havelock Ellis.</p>
-
-<p>It is not possible here to go into anything like
-a detailed account of the works of these various
-authors, their theories, and the immense number
-of interesting cases and observations which they
-have contributed; but some of the general conclusions
-which flow from their researches may be
-pointed out. In the first place their labors have<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">55</a></span>
-established the fact, known hitherto only to individuals,
-that <em>sexual inversion</em>&mdash;that is the leaning
-of desire to one of the same sex&mdash;is in a vast
-number of cases quite instinctive and congenital,
-mentally and physically, and therefore twined
-in the very roots of individual life and practically
-ineradicable. To Men or Women thus affected
-with an innate homosexual bias, Ulrichs gave
-the name of Urning,<a name="FNanchor_29" id="FNanchor_29"></a><a href="#Footnote_29" class="fnanchor">29</a> since pretty widely accepted
-by scientists. Some details with regard to
-“Urnings,” I have given in the preceding paper,
-but it should be said here that too much emphasis
-cannot be laid on the distinction between these
-born lovers of their own kind, and that class of
-persons, with whom they are so often confused,
-who out of mere carnal curiosity or extravagance
-of desire, or from the dearth of opportunities
-for a more normal satisfaction (as in schools,
-barracks, etc.) adopt some homosexual practices.
-It is the latter class who become chiefly prominent
-in the public eye, and who excite, naturally
-enough, public reprobation. In their case the
-attraction is felt, by themselves and all concerned,
-to be merely sensual and morbid. In the case of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">56</a></span>
-the others, however, the feeling is, as said, so
-deeply rooted and twined with the mental and
-emotional life that the person concerned has
-difficulty in imagining himself affected otherwise
-than he is; and to him at least his love appears
-healthy and natural, and indeed a necessary part
-of his individuality.</p>
-
-<p>In the second place it has become clear that
-the number of individuals affected with ‘sexual
-inversion’ in some degree or other is very great&mdash;much
-greater than is generally supposed to be the
-case. It is however very difficult or perhaps impossible
-to arrive at satisfactory figures on the
-subject,<a name="FNanchor_30" id="FNanchor_30"></a><a href="#Footnote_30" class="fnanchor">30</a> for the simple reasons that the proportions
-vary so greatly among different peoples and
-even in different sections of society and in different
-localities, and because of course there are
-all possible grades of sexual inversion to deal
-with, from that in which the instinct is <em>quite
-exclusively</em> directed towards the same sex, to the
-other extreme in which it is normally towards the
-opposite sex but capable, occasionally and under
-exceptional attractions, of inversion towards its
-own&mdash;this last condition being probably among
-some peoples very widespread, if not universal.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">57</a></span></p>
-
-<p>In the third place, by the tabulation and comparison
-of a great number of cases and “confessions,”
-it has become pretty well established
-that the individuals affected with inversion in
-marked degree do not after all differ from the rest
-of mankind, or womankind, in any other physical
-or mental particular which can be distinctly indicated.<a name="FNanchor_31" id="FNanchor_31"></a><a href="#Footnote_31" class="fnanchor">31</a>
-No congenital association with any
-particular physical conformation or malformation
-has yet been discovered; nor with any distinct
-disease of body or mind. Nor does it appear that
-persons of this class are usually of a gross or
-specially low type, but if anything rather the
-opposite&mdash;being mostly of refined, sensitive nature
-and including, as Krafft-Ebing points out (“Psychopathia
-Sexualis,” seventh ed., p. 227) a great
-number “highly gifted in the fine arts, especially
-music and poetry”; and, as Mantegazza
-says,<a name="FNanchor_32" id="FNanchor_32"></a><a href="#Footnote_32" class="fnanchor">32</a> many persons of high literary and social
-distinction. It is true that Krafft-Ebing insists on
-the generally strong sexual equipment of this
-class of persons (among men), but he hastens to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">58</a></span>
-say that their emotional love is also “enthusiastic
-and exalted,”<a name="FNanchor_33" id="FNanchor_33"></a><a href="#Footnote_33" class="fnanchor">33</a> and that, while bodily congress
-is desired, the special act with which they
-are vulgarly credited is in most cases repugnant
-to them.<a name="FNanchor_34" id="FNanchor_34"></a><a href="#Footnote_34" class="fnanchor">34</a></p>
-
-<p>The only distinct characteristic which the scientific
-writers claim to have established is a marked
-tendency to nervous development in the subject,
-not infrequently associated with nervous maladies;
-but&mdash;as I shall presently have occasion to show&mdash;there
-is reason to think that the validity even of
-this characteristic has been exaggerated.</p>
-
-<p>Taking the general case of men with a marked
-exclusive preference for persons of their own
-sex, Krafft-Ebing says (“P.S.” p. 256): “The
-sexual life of these Homosexuals is <i lang="la">mutatis mutandis</i>
-just the same as in the case of normal sex-love.… The
-Urning loves, deifies his male beloved
-one, exactly as the woman-wooing man does
-<em>his</em> beloved. For him, he is capable of the greatest
-sacrifice, experiences the torments of unhappy,
-often unrequited, love, of faithlessness on his
-beloved’s part, of jealousy, and so forth. His
-attention is enchained only by the male form<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">59</a></span>
-… The sight of feminine charms is indifferent
-to him, if not repugnant.” Then he goes on to
-say that many such men, notwithstanding their
-actual aversion to intercourse with the female, do
-ultimately marry&mdash;either from ethical, as sometimes
-happens, or from social considerations. But
-very remarkable&mdash;as illustrating the depth and
-tenacity of the homogenic instinct<a name="FNanchor_35" id="FNanchor_35"></a><a href="#Footnote_35" class="fnanchor">35</a>&mdash;and pathetic
-too, are the records that he gives of these cases;
-for in many of them a real friendship and regard
-between the married pair was still of no avail
-to overcome the distaste on the part of one to
-sexual intercourse with the other, or to prevent
-the experience of actual physical distress after
-such intercourse, or to check the continual flow
-of affection to some third person of the same sex;
-and thus unwillingly, so to speak, this bias remained
-a cause of suffering to the end.</p>
-
-<p>I have said that at the outset it was assumed
-that the Homogenic emotion was morbid in itself,
-and probably always associated with distinct disease,
-either physical or mental, but that the progress<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">60</a></span>
-of the inquiry has served more and more to
-dissipate this view; and that it is noticeable that
-the latest of the purely scientific authorities are
-the least disposed to insist upon the theory of
-morbidity. It is true that Krafft-Ebing clings to
-the opinion that there is generally some <em>neurosis</em>,
-or degeneration of a nerve-centre, or <em>inherited
-tendency in that direction</em>, associated with the
-instinct; see p. 190 (seventh ed.), also p. 227,
-where he speaks, rather vaguely, of “an hereditary
-neuropathic or psychopathic tendency”&mdash;<i lang="de">neuro(psycho)pathische
-Belastung</i>. But it is an
-obvious criticism on this that there are few people
-in modern life, perhaps none, who could be pronounced
-absolutely free from such a <i lang="de">Belastung</i>!
-And whether the Dorian Greeks or the Polynesian
-Islanders or the Albanian mountaineers, or any
-of the other notably hardy races among whom
-this affection has been developed, were particularly
-troubled by nervous degeneration we may
-well doubt!</p>
-
-<p>As to Moll, though he speaks<a name="FNanchor_36" id="FNanchor_36"></a><a href="#Footnote_36" class="fnanchor">36</a> of the instinct as
-morbid (feeling perhaps in duty bound to do so),
-it is very noticeable that he abandons the ground
-of its association with other morbid symptoms&mdash;as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">61</a></span>
-this association, he says, is by no means always
-to be observed; and is fain to rest his judgment
-on the <i lang="la">dictum</i> that the mere failure of the sexual
-instinct to propagate the species is itself pathological&mdash;a
-<i lang="la">dictum</i> which in its turn obviously
-springs from that pre-judgment of scientists that
-generation is the sole object of love,<a name="FNanchor_37" id="FNanchor_37"></a><a href="#Footnote_37" class="fnanchor">37</a> and which
-if pressed would involve the good doctor in
-awkward dilemmas, as for instance that every
-worker-bee is a pathological specimen.</p>
-
-<p>Finally we find that Havelock Ellis, one of the
-latest writers of weight on this subject, in chapter
-vi. of his “Sexual Inversion,” combats the idea
-that this temperament is necessarily morbid; and
-suggests that the tendency should rather be called
-an anomaly than a disease. He says (2nd edition,
-p. 186)<a name="FNanchor_38" id="FNanchor_38"></a><a href="#Footnote_38" class="fnanchor">38</a> “Thus in sexual inversion we have
-what may fairly be called a ‘sport’ or variation,
-one of those organic aberrations which we see
-throughout living nature in plants and in
-animals.”<a name="FNanchor_39" id="FNanchor_39"></a><a href="#Footnote_39" class="fnanchor">39</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">62</a></span></p>
-
-<p>With regard to the nerve-degeneration theory,
-while it may be allowed that sexual inversion is
-not uncommonly found in connection with the
-specially nervous temperament, it must be remembered
-that its occasional association with nervous
-troubles or disease is quite another matter; since
-such troubles ought perhaps to be looked upon as
-the results rather than the causes of the inversion.
-It is difficult of course for outsiders not personally
-experienced in the matter to realise the great
-strain and tension of nerves under which those
-persons grow up from boyhood to manhood&mdash;or
-from girl to womanhood&mdash;who find their deepest
-and strongest instincts under the ban of the
-society around them; who before they clearly
-understand the drift of their own natures discover
-that they are somehow cut off from the sympathy
-and understanding of those nearest to them; and
-who know that they can never give expression to
-their tenderest yearnings of affection without exposing
-themselves to the possible charge of actions
-stigmatised as odious crimes.<a name="FNanchor_40" id="FNanchor_40"></a><a href="#Footnote_40" class="fnanchor">40</a> That such a strain,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">63</a></span>
-acting on one who is perhaps already of a nervous
-temperament, should tend to cause nervous prostration
-or even mental disturbance is of course
-obvious; and if such disturbances are really found
-to be commoner among homogenic lovers than
-among ordinary folk we have in these social
-causes probably a sufficient explanation of the
-fact.</p>
-
-<p>Then again in this connexion it must never be
-forgotten that the medico-scientific enquirer is
-bound on the whole to meet with those cases that
-<em>are</em> of a morbid character, rather than with those
-that are healthy in their manifestation, since indeed
-it is the former that he lays himself out for.
-And since the field of his research is usually a
-great modern city, there is little wonder if disease
-colours his conclusions. In the case of Dr. Moll,
-who carried out his researches largely under the
-guidance of the Berlin police (whose acquaintance
-with the subject would naturally be limited to its
-least satisfactory sides), the only marvel is that
-his verdict is so markedly favorable as it is. As
-Krafft-Ebing says in his own preface, “It is the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">64</a></span>
-sad privilege of Medicine, and especially of Psychiatry,
-to look always on the reverse side of life,
-on the weakness and wretchedness of man.”</p>
-
-<p>Having regard then to the direction in which
-science has been steadily moving in this matter, it
-is not difficult to see that the epithet “morbid”
-will probably before long be abandoned as descriptive
-of the homogenic bias&mdash;that is, of the
-general sentiment of love towards a person of the
-same sex. That there are excesses of the passion&mdash;cases,
-as in ordinary sex-love, where mere physical
-desire becomes a mania&mdash;we may freely admit;
-but as it would be unfair to judge of the
-purity of marriage by the evidence of the Divorce
-courts, so it would be monstrous to measure the
-truth and beauty of the attachment in question by
-those instances which stand most prominently perhaps
-in the eye of the modern public; and after
-all deductions there remains, we contend, the vast
-body of cases in which the manifestation of the
-instinct has on the whole the character of normality
-and healthfulness&mdash;sufficiently so in fact to
-constitute this <em>a distinct variety of the sexual
-passion</em>. The question, of course, not being
-whether the instinct is <em>capable</em> of morbid and
-extravagant manifestation&mdash;for that can easily be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">65</a></span>
-proved of any instinct&mdash;but whether it is capable
-of a healthy and sane expression. And this, we
-think, it has abundantly shown itself to be.</p>
-
-<p>Anyhow the work that Science has practically
-done has been to destroy the dogmatic attitude
-of the former current opinion from which itself
-started, and to leave the whole subject freed from
-a great deal of misunderstanding, and much more
-open than before. If on the one hand its results
-have been chiefly of a negative character, and it
-admits that it does not understand the exact place
-and foundation of this attachment; on the other
-hand since it recognises the deeply beneficial influences
-of an intimate love-relation of the usual
-kind on those concerned, it also allows that there
-are some persons for whom these necessary reactions
-can only come from one of the same sex
-as themselves.</p>
-
-<p>“Successful love,” says Moll (p. 125) “exercises
-a helpful influence on the Urning. His mental
-and bodily condition improves, and capacity of
-work increases&mdash;just as it happens in the case of
-a normal youth with <em>his</em> love.” And further on
-(p. 173) in a letter from a man of this kind
-occur these words:&mdash;“The passion is I suppose
-so powerful, just because one looks for everything<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">66</a></span>
-in the loved man&mdash;Love, Friendship, Ideal, and
-Sense-satisfaction.… As it is at present I suffer
-the agonies of a deep unresponded passion,
-which wake me like a nightmare from sleep. And
-I am conscious of physical pain in the region of
-the heart.” In such cases the love, in some degree
-physically expressed, of another person of the
-same sex, is allowed to be as much a necessity
-and a condition of healthy life and activity, as in
-more ordinary cases is the love of a person of the
-opposite sex.</p>
-
-<p>If then the physical element which is sometimes
-present in the love of which we are speaking is
-a difficulty and a stumbling-block, it must be
-allowed that it is a difficulty that Nature confronts
-us with, and which cannot be disposed of by mere
-anathema and execration. The only theory&mdash;from
-K. H. Ulrichs to Havelock Ellis&mdash;which has at all
-held its ground in this matter, is that in congenital
-cases of sex-inversion there is a mixture of male
-and female elements in the same person; so that
-for instance in the same embryo the emotional and
-nervous regions may develop along feminine lines
-while the outer body and functions may determine
-themselves as distinctly masculine, or <i lang="la">vice versa</i>.
-Such cross-development may take place obviously<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">67</a></span>
-in a great variety of ways, and thus possibly explain
-the remarkable varieties of the Uranian
-temperament; but in all such cases, strange as
-may be the problems thus arising, these problems
-are of Nature’s own producing and can hardly be
-laid to the door of the individual who has literally
-to bear their cross. For such individuals expressions
-of feeling become natural, which to others
-seem out of place and uncalled for; and not only
-natural, but needful and inevitable. To deny to
-such people <em>all</em> expression of their emotion, is
-probably in the end to cause it to burst forth with
-the greater violence; and it may be suggested
-that our British code of manners, by forbidding
-the lighter marks of affection between youths and
-men, acts just contrary to its own purpose, and
-drives intimacies down into less open and unexceptionable
-channels.</p>
-
-<p>With regard to this physical element it must
-also be remembered that since the homogenic
-love&mdash;whether between man and man, or between
-woman and woman&mdash;can from the nature of the
-case never find expression on the physical side
-so freely and completely as is the case with
-the ordinary love, it must tend rather more than
-the latter to run along <em>emotional</em> channels, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">68</a></span>
-to find its vent in sympathies of social life and
-companionship. If one studies carefully the expression
-of the Greek statues (see <a href="#Page_9">p. 9</a>, supra) and
-the lesson of the Greek literature, one sees clearly
-that the <em>ideal</em> of Greek life was a very continent
-one: the trained male, the athlete, the man temperate
-and restrained, even chaste, for the sake of
-bettering his powers. It was round this conception
-that the Greeks kindled their finer emotions.
-And so of their love: a base and licentious indulgence
-was not in line with it. They may not have
-always kept to their ideal, but there it was. And
-I am inclined to think that the homogenic instinct
-(for the reasons given above) would in the long
-run tend to work itself out in this direction. And
-consonant with this is the fact that this passion in
-the past (as pointed out by J. Addington Symonds
-in his paper on “Dantesque and Platonic Ideals of
-Love”<a name="FNanchor_41" id="FNanchor_41"></a><a href="#Footnote_41" class="fnanchor">41</a>) has, as a matter of fact, inspired such
-a vast amount of heroism and romance&mdash;only
-paralleled indeed by the loves of Chivalry, which
-of course, owing to their special character, were
-subject to a similar Transmutation.</p>
-
-<p>In all these matters the popular opinion has<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">69</a></span>
-probably been largely influenced by the arbitrary
-notion that the function of love is limited to child-breeding;
-and that any love not concerned in the
-propagation of the race must necessarily be of
-dubious character. And in enforcing this view, no
-doubt the Hebraic and Christian tradition has exercised
-a powerful influence&mdash;dating, as it almost
-certainly does, from far-back times when the multiplication
-of the tribe was one of the first duties of
-its members, and one of the first necessities of
-corporate life.<a name="FNanchor_42" id="FNanchor_42"></a><a href="#Footnote_42" class="fnanchor">42</a> But nowadays when the need has
-swung round all the other way it is not unreasonable
-to suppose that a similar revolution will take
-place in people’s views of the place and purpose
-of the non-child-bearing love.<a name="FNanchor_43" id="FNanchor_43"></a><a href="#Footnote_43" class="fnanchor">43</a></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>I have now said enough I think to show that
-though much in relation to the homogenic attachment
-is obscure, and though it may have its
-special pitfalls and temptations&mdash;making it quite
-necessary to guard against a too great latitude<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">70</a></span>
-on the physical side; yet on its ethical and social
-sides it is pregnant with meaning and has received
-at various times in history abundant justification.
-It certainly does not seem impossible to suppose
-that as the ordinary love has a special function
-in the propagation of the race, so the other has
-its special function in social and heroic work, and
-in the generation&mdash;not of bodily children&mdash;but of
-those children of the mind, the philosophical conceptions
-and ideals which transform our lives and
-those of society. J. Addington Symonds, in his
-privately printed pamphlet, “A Problem in Greek
-Ethics” (now published in a German translation),<a name="FNanchor_44" id="FNanchor_44"></a><a href="#Footnote_44" class="fnanchor">44</a>
-endeavours to reconstruct as it were the genesis
-of comrade-love among the Dorians in early Greek
-times. Thus:&mdash;“Without sufficiency of women,
-without the sanctities of established domestic life,
-inspired by the memories of Achilles and venerating
-their ancestor Herakles, the Dorian warriors
-had special opportunity for elevating comradeship
-to the rank of an enthusiasm. The incidents
-of emigration into a foreign country&mdash;perils of
-the sea, passages of rivers and mountains, assaults
-of fortresses and cities, landings on a hostile<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">71</a></span>
-shore, night-vigils by the side of blazing beacons,
-foragings for food, picquet service in the front
-of watchful foes&mdash;involved adventures capable of
-shedding the lustre of romance on friendship.
-These circumstances, by bringing the virtues of
-sympathy with the weak, tenderness for the beautiful,
-protection for the young, together with corresponding
-qualities of gratitude, self-devotion,
-and admiring attachment into play, may have
-tended to cement unions between man and man
-no less firm than that of marriage. On such
-connections a wise captain would have relied for
-giving strength to his battalions, and for keeping
-alive the flames of enterprise and daring.” The
-author then goes on to suggest that though in such
-relations as those indicated the physical probably
-had some share, yet it did not at that time overbalance
-the emotional and spiritual elements, or
-lead to the corruption and effeminacy of a later
-age.</p>
-
-<p>At Sparta the lover was called <i lang="el">Eispnêlos</i>, the
-inspirer, and the younger beloved <i lang="el">Aïtes</i>, the
-hearer. This alone would show the partly educational
-aspects in which comradeship was conceived;
-and a hundred passages from classic
-literature might be quoted to prove how deeply<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">72</a></span>
-it had entered into the Greek mind that this love
-was the cradle of social chivalry and heroic life.
-Finally it seems to have been Plato’s favorite
-doctrine that the relation if properly conducted
-led up to the disclosure of true philosophy in the
-mind, to the divine vision or mania, and to the
-remembrance or rekindling within the soul of all
-the forms of celestial beauty. He speaks of this
-kind of love as causing a “generation in the
-beautiful”<a name="FNanchor_45" id="FNanchor_45"></a><a href="#Footnote_45" class="fnanchor">45</a> within the souls of the lovers. The
-image of the beloved one passing into the mind of
-the lover and upward through its deepest recesses
-reaches and unites itself to the essential forms of
-divine beauty there long hidden&mdash;the originals as
-it were of all creation&mdash;and stirring them to life
-excites a kind of generative descent of noble
-thoughts and impulses, which henceforward modify
-the whole cast of thought and life of the one
-so affected.</p>
-
-<p>If there is any truth&mdash;even only a grain or two&mdash;in
-these speculations, it is easy to see that the
-love with which we are specially dealing is a very
-important factor in society, and that its neglect, or
-its repression, or its vulgar misapprehension, may
-be matters of considerable danger or damage to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">73</a></span>
-the common-weal. It is easy to see that while on
-the one hand marriage is of indispensable importance
-to the State as providing the workshop
-as it were for the breeding and rearing of children,
-another form of union is almost equally indispensable
-to supply the basis for social activities of
-other kinds. Every one is conscious that without a
-close affectional tie of some kind his life is not
-complete, his powers are crippled, and his energies
-are inadequately spent. Yet it is not to be expected
-(though it may of course happen) that the man
-or woman who have dedicated themselves to each
-other and to family life should leave the care of
-their children and the work they have to do at
-home in order to perform social duties of a remote
-and less obvious, though may be more arduous,
-character. Nor is it to be expected that a man
-or woman single-handed, without the counsel of
-a helpmate in the hour of difficulty, or his or her
-love in the hour of need, should feel equal to
-these wider activities. If&mdash;to refer once more to
-classic story&mdash;the love of Harmodius had been
-for a wife and children at home, he would probably
-not have cared, and it would hardly have
-been his business, to slay the tyrant. And unless
-on the other hand each of the friends had had the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">74</a></span>
-love of his comrade to support him, the two could
-hardly have nerved themselves to this audacious
-and ever-memorable exploit. So it is difficult to
-believe that anything can supply the force and
-liberate the energies required for social and mental
-activities of the most necessary kind so well
-as a comrade-union which yet leaves the two
-lovers free from the responsibilities and impedimenta
-of family life.</p>
-
-<p>For if the slaughter of tyrants is not the chief
-social duty nowadays, we have with us hydra-headed
-monsters at least as numerous as the
-tyrants of old, and more difficult to deal with,
-and requiring no little courage to encounter.
-And beyond the extirpation of evils we have solid
-work waiting to be done in the patient and life-long
-building up of new forms of society, new
-orders of thought, and new institutions of human
-solidarity&mdash;all of which in their genesis must meet
-with opposition, ridicule, hatred, and even violence.
-Such campaigns as these&mdash;though different
-in kind from those of the Dorian mountaineers
-described above&mdash;will call for equal hardihood and
-courage, and will stand in need of a comradeship
-as true and valiant. And it may indeed be
-doubted whether the higher heroic and spiritual<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">75</a></span>
-life of a nation is ever quite possible without the
-sanction of this attachment in its institutions,
-adding a new range and scope to the possibilities
-of love.<a name="FNanchor_46" id="FNanchor_46"></a><a href="#Footnote_46" class="fnanchor">46</a></p>
-
-<p>Walt Whitman, the inaugurator, it may almost
-be said, of a new world of democratic ideals and
-literature, and&mdash;as one of the best of our critics has
-remarked&mdash;the most Greek in spirit and in performance
-of modern writers, insists continually on
-this social function of “intense and loving comradeship,
-the personal and passionate attachment
-of man to man.” “I will make,” he says, “the most
-splendid race the sun ever shone upon, I will make
-divine magnetic lands.… I will make inseparable
-cities with their arms about each others’
-necks, by the love of comrades.” And again, in
-“Democratic Vistas,” “It is to the development,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">76</a></span>
-identification, and general prevalence of that fervid
-comradeship (the adhesive love at least
-rivaling the amative love hitherto possessing imaginative
-literature, if not going beyond it), that
-I look for the counterbalance and offset of materialistic
-and vulgar American Democracy, and for
-the spiritualisation thereof.… I say Democracy
-infers such loving comradeship, as its most inevitable
-twin or counterpart, without which it will
-be incomplete, in vain, and incapable of perpetuating
-itself.”</p>
-
-<p>Yet Whitman could not have spoken, as he did,
-with a kind of authority on this subject, if he had
-not been fully aware that through the masses of
-the people this attachment was already alive and
-working&mdash;though doubtless in a somewhat suppressed
-and un-self-conscious form&mdash;and if he had
-not had ample knowledge of its effects and influence
-in himself and others around him. Like
-all great artists he could but give form and light
-to that which already existed dim and inchoate in
-the heart of the people. To those who have dived
-at all below the surface in this direction it will be
-familiar enough that the homogenic passion ramifies
-widely through all modern society, and that
-among the masses of the people as among the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">77</a></span>
-classes, even below the stolid surface and reserve
-of British manners, letters pass and enduring
-attachments are formed, differing in no very
-obvious respect from those correspondences which
-persons of opposite sex knit with each other under
-similar circumstances; but that hitherto while
-this relation has occasionally, in its grosser forms
-and abuses, come into public notice through the
-police reports, etc., its more sane and spiritual
-manifestations&mdash;though really a moving force in
-the body politic&mdash;have remained unrecognised.</p>
-
-<p>It is hardly needful in these days when social
-questions loom so large upon us to emphasise
-the importance of a bond which by the most
-passionate and lasting compulsion may draw members
-of the different classes together, and (as it
-often seems to do) none the less strongly because
-they are members of different classes. A moment’s
-consideration must convince us that such a comradeship
-may, as Whitman says, have “deepest
-relations to general politics.” It is noticeable,
-too, in this deepest relation to politics that the
-movement among women towards their own liberation
-and emancipation, which is taking place all
-over the civilised world, has been accompanied
-by a marked development of the homogenic passion<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">78</a></span>
-among the female sex. It may be said that
-a certain strain in the relations between the opposite
-sexes which has come about owing to a
-growing consciousness among women that they
-have been oppressed and unfairly treated by men,
-and a growing unwillingness to ally themselves
-unequally in marriage&mdash;that this strain has caused
-the womenkind to draw more closely together and
-to cement alliances of their own. But whatever the
-cause may be it is pretty certain that such comrade-alliances&mdash;and
-of quite devoted kind&mdash;are
-becoming increasingly common, and especially
-perhaps among the more cultured classes of
-women, who are working out the great cause of
-their sex’s liberation; nor is it difficult to see the
-importance of such alliances in such a campaign.
-In the United States where the battle of women’s
-independence is also being fought, the tendency
-mentioned is as strongly marked.</p>
-
-<p>A few words may here be said about the legal
-aspect of this important question. It has to be
-remarked that the present state of the Law, both
-in Germany and Britain&mdash;arising as it does partly
-out of some of the misapprehensions above alluded
-to, and partly out of the sheer unwillingness of
-legislators to discuss the question&mdash;is really<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">79</a></span>
-impracticable. While the Law rightly seeks to prevent
-acts of violence or public scandal, it may
-be argued that it is going beyond its province
-when it attempts to regulate the private and
-voluntary relations of adult persons to each other.
-The homogenic affection is a valuable social
-force, and in some cases a necessary element
-of noble human character&mdash;yet the Act of 1885
-makes almost any familiarity in such cases the
-possible basis of a criminal charge. The Law
-has no doubt had substantial ground for previous
-statutes on this subject&mdash;dealing with a certain
-gross act; but in so severely condemning the
-least familiarity between male persons<a name="FNanchor_47" id="FNanchor_47"></a><a href="#Footnote_47" class="fnanchor">47</a> we
-think it has gone too far. It has undertaken a
-censorship over private morals (entirely apart
-from social results) which is beyond its province,
-and which&mdash;even if it were its province&mdash;it could
-not possibly fulfil;<a name="FNanchor_48" id="FNanchor_48"></a><a href="#Footnote_48" class="fnanchor">48</a> it has opened wider than
-ever before the door to a real, most serious social
-evil and crime&mdash;that of blackmailing; and it<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">80</a></span>
-has thrown a shadow over even the simplest and
-most ordinary expressions of an attachment which
-may, as we have seen, be of great value in the
-national life.</p>
-
-<p>That the homosexual feeling, like the heterosexual,
-may lead to public abuses of liberty and
-decency; that it needs a strict self-control;
-and that much teaching and instruction on the
-subject is needed; we of course do not deny. But
-as, in the case of persons of opposite sex, the law
-limits itself on the whole to a maintenance of
-public order, the protection of the weak from
-violence and insult,<a name="FNanchor_49" id="FNanchor_49"></a><a href="#Footnote_49" class="fnanchor">49</a> and of the young from their
-inexperience; so we think it should be here. The
-much-needed teaching and the true morality on
-the subject must be given&mdash;as it can only be
-given&mdash;by the spread of proper education and
-ideas, and not by the clumsy bludgeon of the
-statute-book.<a name="FNanchor_50" id="FNanchor_50"></a><a href="#Footnote_50" class="fnanchor">50</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">81</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Having thus shown the importance of the homogenic
-or comrade-attachment, in some form, in
-national life, it would seem high time now that
-the modern peoples should recognise this in their
-institutions, and endeavour at least in their public
-opinion and systems of education to understand
-this factor and give it its proper place. The undoubted
-evils which exist in relation to it, for
-instance in our public schools as well as in our
-public life, owe their existence largely to the fact
-that the whole subject is left in the gutter so to
-speak&mdash;in darkness and concealment. No one
-offers a clue of better things, nor to point a way
-out of the wilderness; and by this very non-recognition
-the passion is perverted into its least
-satisfactory channels. All love, one would say,
-must have its responsibilities, else it is liable to
-degenerate, and to dissipate itself in mere sentiment
-or sensuality. The normal marriage between
-man and woman leads up to the foundation of
-the household and the family; the love between
-parents and children implies duties and cares on
-both sides. The homogenic attachment left unrecognised,
-easily loses some of its best quality
-and becomes an ephemeral or corrupt thing. Yet,
-as we have seen, and as I am pointing out in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">82</a></span>
-<a href="#IV">following chapter</a>, it may, when occurring between
-an elder and younger, prove to be an immense
-educational force; while, as between equals, it
-may be turned to social and heroic uses, such as
-can hardly be demanded or expected from the
-ordinary marriage. It would seem high time,
-I say, that public opinion should recognise these
-facts; and so give to this attachment the sanction
-and dignity which arise from public recognition,
-as well as the definite form and outline which
-would flow from the existence of an accepted
-ideal or standard in the matter. It is often said
-how necessary for the morality of the ordinary
-marriage is some public recognition of the relation,
-and some accepted standard of conduct in it.
-May not, to a lesser degree, something of the
-same kind (as suggested in the next chapter) be
-true of the homogenic attachment? It has had its
-place as a recognised and guarded institution in
-the elder and more primitive societies; and it
-seems quite probable that a similar place will be
-accorded to it in the societies of the future.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">83</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="IV"><small><small>IV</small></small><br />
-Affection in Education</h2>
-
-<p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">The</span> place of Affection, and the need of it, as an
-educative force in school-life, is a subject which
-is beginning to attract a good deal of attention.
-Hitherto Education has been concentred on
-intellectual (and physical) development; but the
-affections have been left to take care of themselves.
-Now it is beginning to be seen that the
-affections have an immense deal to say in the
-building up of the brain and the body. Their
-evolution and organisation in some degree is
-probably going to become an important part of
-school management.</p>
-
-<p>School friendships of course exist; and almost
-every one remembers that they filled a large place
-in the outlook of his early years; but he remembers,
-too, that they were not recognised in any
-way, and that in consequence the main part of
-their force and value was wasted. Yet it is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">84</a></span>
-evident that the first unfolding of a strong attachment
-in boyhood or girlhood must have a profound
-influence; while if it occurs between an
-elder and a younger school-mate, or&mdash;as sometimes
-happens&mdash;between the young thing and its
-teacher, its importance in the educational sense
-can hardly be overrated.</p>
-
-<p>That such feelings sometimes take quite intense
-and romantic forms few will deny. I have before
-me a letter, in which the author, speaking of an
-attachment he experienced when a boy of sixteen
-for a youth somewhat older than himself, says:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p class="quote">“I would have died for him ten times over.
-My devices and plannings to meet him (to come
-across him casually, as it were) were those of
-a lad for his sweetheart, and when I saw him my
-heart beat so violently that it caught my breath,
-and I could not speak. We met in&mdash;&mdash;, and for
-the weeks that he stayed there I thought of
-nothing else&mdash;thought of him night and day&mdash;and
-when he returned to London I used to write
-him weekly letters, veritable love-letters of many
-sheets in length. Yet I never felt one particle
-of jealousy, though our friendship lasted for some
-years. The passion, violent and extravagant as it
-was, I believe to have been perfectly free from
-sex-feeling and perfectly wholesome and good
-for me. It distinctly contributed to my growth.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">85</a></span>
-Looking back upon it and analysing it as well
-as I can, I seem to see as the chief element in it
-an escape from the extremely narrow Puritanism
-in which I was reared, into a large sunny ingenuous
-nature which knew nothing at all of the
-bondage of which I was beginning to be acutely
-conscious.”</p>
-
-<p>Shelley in his fragmentary “Essay on Friendship”
-speaks in the most glowing terms of an
-attachment he formed at school, and so does
-Leigh Hunt in his “Autobiography.” Says the
-latter:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p class="quote">“If I had reaped no other benefit from Christ
-Hospital, the school would be ever dear to me
-from the recollection of the friendships I formed
-in it, and of the first heavenly taste it gave me of
-that most spiritual of the affections.… I shall
-never forget the impression it made on me.
-I loved my friend for his gentleness, his candour,
-his truth, his good repute, his freedom even from
-my own livelier manner, his calm and reasonable
-kindness.… I doubt whether he ever had a
-conception of a tithe of the regard and respect
-I entertained for him, and I smile to think of
-the perplexity (though he never showed it) which
-he probably felt sometimes at my enthusiastic
-expressions; for I thought him a kind of angel.”</p>
-
-
-<p>It is not necessary, however, to quote authorities<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">86</a></span>
-on such a subject as this.<a name="FNanchor_51" id="FNanchor_51"></a><a href="#Footnote_51" class="fnanchor">51</a> Any one who has
-had experience of schoolboys knows well enough
-that they are capable of forming these romantic
-and devoted attachments, and that their alliances
-are often of the kind especially referred to as
-having a bearing on education&mdash;<i>i.e.</i>, between an
-elder and a younger. They are genuine attractions,
-free as a rule, and at their inception, from
-secondary motives. They are not formed by the
-elder one for any personal ends. More often,
-indeed, I think they are begun by the younger,
-who naively allows his admiration of the elder one
-to become visible. But they are absorbing and
-intense, and on either side their influence is deeply
-felt and long remembered.</p>
-
-<p>That such attachments <em>may</em> be of the very
-greatest value is self-evident. The younger boy
-looks on the other as a hero, loves to be with him,
-thrills with pleasure at his words of praise or kindness,
-imitates, and makes him his pattern and
-standard, learns exercises and games, contracts
-habits, or picks up information from him. The
-elder one, touched, becomes protector and helper;
-the unselfish side of his nature is drawn out, and
-he develops a real affection and tenderness towards<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">87</a></span>
-the younger. He takes all sorts of trouble
-to initiate his <i lang="fr">protégé</i> in field sports or studies; is
-proud of the latter’s success; and leads him on
-perhaps later to share his own ideals of life and
-thought and work.</p>
-
-<p>Sometimes the alliance will begin, in a corresponding
-way, from the side of the elder boy.
-Sometimes, as said, between a boy and a master
-such an attachment, or the germ of it, is found;
-and indeed it is difficult to say what gulf, or
-difference of age, or culture, or class in society,
-is so great that affection of this kind will not on
-occasion overpass it. I have by me a letter which
-was written by a boy of eleven or twelve to a
-young man of twenty-four or twenty-five. The
-boy was rather a wild, “naughty” boy, and had
-given his parents (working-class folk) a good deal
-of trouble. He attended, however, some sort of
-night-school or evening class and there conceived
-the strongest affection (evidenced by this letter)
-for his teacher, the young man in question, quite
-spontaneously, and without any attempt on the
-part of the latter to elicit it; and (which was
-equally important) without any attempt on his
-part to <em>deny</em> it. The result was most favorable;
-the one force which could really reach the boy<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">88</a></span>
-had, as it were, been found; and he developed
-rapidly and well.</p>
-
-<p>The following extract is from a letter written by
-an elderly man who has had large experience as
-a teacher. He says&mdash;</p>
-
-<p class="quote">“It has always seemed to me that the <i lang="fr">rapport</i>
-that exists between two human beings, whether
-of the same or of different sexes, is a force not
-sufficiently recognised, and capable of producing
-great results. Plato fully understood its importance,
-and aimed at giving what to his countrymen
-was more or less sensual, a noble and exalted
-direction.… As one who has had much to do
-in instructing boys and starting them in life, I am
-convinced that the great secret of being a good
-teacher consists in the possibility of that <i lang="fr">rapport</i>;
-not only of a merely intellectual nature, but involving
-a certain physical element, a personal
-affection, almost indescribable, that grows up
-between pupil and teacher, and through which
-thoughts are shared and an influence created that
-could exist in no other way.”</p>
-
-<p>And it must be evident to every one that to the
-expanding mind of a small boy to have a relation
-of real affection with some sensible and helpful
-elder of his own sex must be a priceless boon.
-At that age love to the other sex has hardly declared<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">89</a></span>
-itself, and indeed is not exactly what is
-wanted. The unformed mind requires an ideal
-of itself, as it were, to which it can cling or towards
-which it can grow. Yet it is equally evident
-that the relation and the success of it, will depend
-immensely on the character of the elder one, on
-the self-restraint and tenderness of which he is
-capable, and on the ideal of life which he has in
-his mind. That, possibly, is the reason why
-Greek custom, at least in the early days of Hellas,
-not only recognised friendships between elder
-and younger youths as a national institution of
-great importance, but laid down very distinct laws
-or rules concerning the conduct of them, so as to
-be a guide and a help to the elder in what was
-acknowledged to be a position of responsibility.</p>
-
-<p>In Crete, for instance,<a name="FNanchor_52" id="FNanchor_52"></a><a href="#Footnote_52" class="fnanchor">52</a> the friendship was
-entered into in quite a formal and public way,
-with the understanding and consent of relatives;
-the position of the elder was clearly defined, and
-it became his business to train and exercise the
-younger in skill of arms, the chase, etc.; while
-the latter could obtain redress at law if the elder
-subjected him to insult or injury of any kind. At<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">90</a></span>
-the end of a certain period of probation, if the
-younger desired it he could leave his comrade;
-if not, he became his squire or henchman&mdash;the
-elder being bound to furnish his military equipments&mdash;and
-they fought thenceforward side by
-side in battle, “inspired with double valor, according
-to the notions of the Cretans, by the gods of
-war and love.”<a name="FNanchor_53" id="FNanchor_53"></a><a href="#Footnote_53" class="fnanchor">53</a> Similar customs prevailed in
-Sparta, and, in a less defined way, in other Greek
-states; as, indeed, they have prevailed among
-many semi-barbaric races on the threshold of
-civilisation.</p>
-
-<p>When, however, we turn to modern life and the
-actual situation, as for instance in the public
-schools of to-day, it may well be objected that we
-find very little of the suggested ideal, but rather
-an appalling descent into the most uninspiring
-conditions. So far from friendship being an
-institution whose value is recognised and understood,
-it is at best scantily acknowledged, and
-is often actually discountenanced and misunderstood.
-And though attachments such as we have
-portrayed exist, they exist underground, as it
-were, at their peril, and half-stifled in an atmosphere
-which can only be described as that of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">91</a></span>
-gutter. Somehow the disease of premature sexuality
-seems to have got possession of our centres
-of education; wretched practices and habits
-abound, and (what is perhaps their worst feature)
-cloud and degrade the boys’ conception of what
-true love or friendship may be.</p>
-
-<p>To those who are familiar with large public
-schools the state of affairs does not need describing.
-A friend (who has placed some notes at
-my disposal) says that in his time a certain well-known
-public school was a mass of uncleanness, incontinence,
-and dirty conversation, while at the
-same time a great deal of genuine affection, even
-to heroism, was shown among the boys in their
-relations with one another. But “all these things
-were treated by masters and boys alike as more
-or less unholy, with the result that they were
-either sought after or flung aside according to the
-sexual or emotional instinct of the boy. No
-attempt was made at discrimination. A kiss was
-by comparison as unclean as the act of <i lang="la">fellatio</i>,
-and no one had any gauge or principle whatever
-on which to guide the cravings of boyhood.” The
-writer then goes into details which it is not necessary
-to reproduce here. He (and others) were
-initiated in the mysteries of sex by the dormitory<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">92</a></span>
-servant; and the boys thus corrupted mishandled
-each other.</p>
-
-<p>Naturally in any such atmosphere as this the
-chances <em>against</em> the formation of a decent and
-healthy attachment are very large. If the elder
-youth happen to be given to sensuality he has
-here his opportunity; if on the other hand he is
-<em>not</em> given to it, the ideas current around probably
-have the effect of making him suspect his own
-affection, and he ends by smothering and disowning
-the best part of his nature. In both ways
-harm is done. The big boys in such places become
-either coarse and licentious or hard and
-self-righteous; the small boys, instead of being
-educated and strengthened by the elder ones,
-become effeminate little wretches, the favorites,
-the petted boys, and the “spoons” of the school.
-As time goes on the public opinion of the school
-ceases to believe in the possibility of a healthy
-friendship; the masters begin to presume (and
-not without reason) that all affection means sensual
-practices, and end by doing their best to
-discourage it.</p>
-
-<p>Now this state of affairs is really desperate.
-There is no need to be puritanical, or to look
-upon the lapses of boyhood as unpardonable<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">93</a></span>
-sins; indeed, it may be allowed, as far as that
-goes, that a little frivolity is better than hardness
-and self-righteousness; yet every one feels, and
-must feel, who knows anything about the matter,
-that the state of our schools is bad.</p>
-
-<p>And it is so because, after all, purity (in the
-sense of continence) <em>is</em> of the first importance to
-boyhood. To prolong the period of continence
-in a boy’s life is to prolong the period of <em>growth</em>.
-This is a simple physiological law, and a
-very obvious one; and whatever other things may
-be said in favour of purity, it remains perhaps
-the most weighty. To introduce sensual and
-sexual habits&mdash;and one of the worst of these is
-self-abuse&mdash;at an early age, is to arrest growth,
-both physical and mental.</p>
-
-<p>And what is even more, it means to arrest the
-capacity for affection. I believe affection, attachment&mdash;whether
-to the one sex or the other&mdash;springs
-up normally in the youthful mind in
-a quite diffused, ideal, emotional form&mdash;a kind
-of longing and amazement as at something divine&mdash;with
-no definite thought or distinct consciousness
-of sex in it. The sentiment expands and
-fills, as it were like a rising tide, every cranny
-of the emotional and moral nature; and the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">94</a></span>
-longer (of course within reasonable limits) its
-definite outlet towards sex is deferred, the longer
-does this period of emotional growth and development
-continue, and the greater is the refinement
-and breadth and strength of character resulting.
-All experience shows that a too early outlet towards
-sex cheapens and weakens affectional
-capacity.</p>
-
-<p>Yet this early outlet it is which is the great
-trouble of our public schools. And it really does
-not seem unlikely that the peculiar character of
-the middle-class man of to-day, his undeveloped
-affectional nature and something of brutishness
-and woodenness, is largely due to the prevalent
-condition of the places of his education. The
-Greeks, with their wonderful instinct of fitness,
-seem to have perceived the right path in all
-this matter; and, while encouraging friendship,
-as we have seen, made a great point of modesty
-in early life&mdash;the guardians and teachers of every
-well-born boy being especially called upon to
-watch over the sobriety of his habits and
-manners.<a name="FNanchor_54" id="FNanchor_54"></a><a href="#Footnote_54" class="fnanchor">54</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">95</a></span></p>
-
-<p>We have then in education generally, it seems
-to me (and whether of boys or of girls), two great
-currents to deal with, which cannot be ignored,
-and which certainly ought to be candidly recognized
-and given their right direction. One of
-these currents is that of friendship. The other
-is that of the young thing’s natural curiosity about
-sex. The latter is of course, or should be,
-a perfectly legitimate interest. A boy at puberty
-naturally wants to know&mdash;and ought to know&mdash;what
-is taking place, and what the uses and
-functions of his body are. He does not go very
-deep into things; a small amount of information
-will probably satisfy him; but the curiosity is
-there, and it is pretty certain that the boy, if he
-is a boy of any sense or character, <em>will</em> in some
-shape or another get to satisfy it.</p>
-
-<p>The process is really a <em>mental</em> one. Desire&mdash;except
-in some abnormal cases&mdash;has not manifested
-itself strongly; and there is often perhaps
-generally, an actual repugnance at first to anything
-like sexual practices; but the wish for
-information exists and is, I say, legitimate
-enough.<a name="FNanchor_55" id="FNanchor_55"></a><a href="#Footnote_55" class="fnanchor">55</a> In almost all human societies except,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">96</a></span>
-curiously, the modern nations, there have been
-institutions for the initiation of the youth of
-either sex into these matters, and these initiations
-have generally been associated, in the opening
-blossom of the young mind, with inculcation of
-the ideals of manhood and womanhood, courage,
-hardihood, and the duties of the citizen or the
-soldier.<a name="FNanchor_56" id="FNanchor_56"></a><a href="#Footnote_56" class="fnanchor">56</a></p>
-
-<p>But what does the modern school do? It shuts
-a trap-door down on the whole matter. There is
-a hush; a grim silence. Legitimate curiosity
-soon becomes illegitimate of its kind; and a
-furtive desire creeps in, where there was no desire
-before. The method of the gutter prevails. In
-the absence of any recognition of schoolboy
-needs, contraband information is smuggled from
-one to another; chaff and ‘smut’ take the place
-of sensible and decent explanations; unhealthy
-practices follow; the sacredness of sex goes its
-way, never to return, and the school is filled with
-premature and morbid talk and thought about<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">97</a></span>
-a subject which should, by rights, only just be
-rising over the mental horizon.</p>
-
-<p>The meeting of these two currents, of ideal
-attachment and sexual desire, constitutes a rather
-critical period, even when it takes place in the
-normal way&mdash;<i>i.e.</i>, later on, and at the matrimonial
-age. Under the most favorable conditions a certain
-conflict occurs in the mind at their first
-encounter. But in the modern school this conflict,
-precipitated far too soon, and accompanied by
-an artificial suppression of the nobler current and
-a premature hastening of the baser one, ends in
-simple disaster to the former. Masters wage
-war against incontinence, and are right to do so.
-But how do they wage it? As said, by grim
-silence and fury, by driving the abscess deeper,
-by covering the drain over, <em>and</em> by confusing
-when it comes before them&mdash;both in their own
-minds and those of the boys&mdash;a real attachment
-with that which they condemn.</p>
-
-<p>Not long ago the headmaster of a large public
-school coming suddenly out of his study chanced
-upon two boys embracing each other in the
-corridor. Possibly, and even probably, it was the
-simple and natural expression of an unsophisticated
-attachment. Certainly, it was nothing that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">98</a></span>
-in itself could be said to be either right or wrong.
-What did he do? He haled the two boys into his
-study, gave them a long lecture on the nefariousness
-of their conduct, with copious hints that he
-knew <em>what such things meant</em>, and <em>what they
-led to</em>, and ended by punishing both condignly.
-Could anything be more foolish? If their friendship
-was clean and natural, the master was only
-trying to make them feel that it was unclean and
-unnatural, and that a lovely and honorable thing
-was disgraceful; if the act was&mdash;which at least is
-improbable&mdash;a mere signal of lust&mdash;even then the
-best thing would have been to assume that it was
-honorable, and by talking to the boys, either
-together or separately, to try and inspire them
-with a better ideal; while if, between these positions,
-the master really thought the affection
-though honorable would lead to things undesirable,
-then, plainly, to punish the two was only to
-cement their love for each other, to give them
-a strong reason for concealing it, and to hasten
-its onward course. Yet every one knows that
-this is the <em>kind</em> of way in which the subject is
-treated in schools. It is the method of despair.
-And masters (perhaps not unnaturally) finding
-that they have not the time which would be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">99</a></span>
-needed for personal dealing with each boy, nor
-the forces at their command by which they might
-hope to introduce new ideals of life and conduct
-into their little community, and feeling thus utterly
-unable to cope with the situation, allow themselves
-to drift into a policy of mere silence with
-regard to it, tempered by outbreaks of ungoverned
-and unreasoning severity.</p>
-
-<p>I venture to think that school-masters will never
-successfully solve the difficulty until they boldly
-recognize the two needs in question, and proceed
-candidly to give them their proper satisfaction.</p>
-
-<p>The need of information&mdash;the legitimate curiosity&mdash;of
-boys (and girls) must be met, (1) partly
-by classes on physiology, (2) partly by private
-talks and confidences between elder and younger,
-based on friendship. With regard to (1) classes
-of this kind are already, happily, being carried
-on at a few advanced schools, and with good
-results. And though such classes can only go
-rather generally into the facts of motherhood
-and generation they cannot fail, if well managed,
-to impress the young minds, and give them a far
-grander and more reverent conception of the
-matter than they usually gain.</p>
-
-<p>But (2) although some rudimentary teaching<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">100</a></span>
-on sex and lessons in physiology may be given
-in classes, it is obvious that further instruction
-and indeed any real help in the conduct of life
-and morals can only come through very close and
-tender confidences between the elder and the
-younger, such as exist where there is a strong
-friendship to begin with. It is obvious that
-effective help <em>can</em> only come in this way, and
-that this is the only way in which it is desirable
-that it should come. The elder friend in this
-case would, one might say, naturally be, and in
-many instances may be, the parent, mother or
-father&mdash;who ought certainly to be able to impress
-on the clinging child the sacredness of the relation.
-And it is much to be hoped that parents
-will see their way to take this part more freely in
-the future. But for some unexplained reason
-there is certainly often a gulf of reserve between
-the (British) parent and child; and the boy who
-is much at school comes more under the influence
-of his elder companions than his parents. If,
-therefore, boys and youths cannot be trusted and
-encouraged to form decent and loving friendships
-with each other, and with their elders or juniors&mdash;in
-which many delicate questions could be discussed
-and the tradition of sensible and manly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">101</a></span>
-conduct with regard to sex handed down&mdash;we
-are indeed in a bad plight and involved in a
-vicious circle from which escape seems difficult.</p>
-
-<p>And so (we think) the need of attachment must
-also be met by full recognition of it, and the granting
-of it expression within all reasonable limits;
-by the dissemination of a good ideal of friendship
-and the enlistment of it on the side of manliness
-and temperance. Is it too much to hope that
-schools will in time recognise comradeship as
-a regular institution&mdash;considerably more important,
-say, than “fagging”&mdash;an institution having
-its definite place in the school life, in the games
-and in the studies, with its own duties, responsibilities,
-privileges, etc., and serving to ramify
-through the little community, hold it together,
-and inspire its members with the two qualities of
-heroism and tenderness, which together form the
-basis of all great character?</p>
-
-<p>But here it must be said that if we are hoping
-for any great change in the conduct of our large
-boys’ schools, the so-called public schools are not
-the places in which to look for it&mdash;or at any rate
-for its inception. In the first place these institutions
-are hampered by powerful traditions which
-naturally make them conservative; and in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">102</a></span>
-second place their mere size and the number of
-boys make them difficult to deal with or to modify.
-The masters are overwhelmed with work; and
-the (necessary) division of so many boys into
-separate ‘houses’ has this effect that a master
-who introduces a better tradition into his own
-house has always the prospect before him that
-his work will be effaced by the continual and
-perhaps contaminating contact with the boys from
-the other houses. No, it will be in smaller schools,
-say of from 50 to 100 boys, where the personal
-influence of the headmaster will be a real force
-reaching each boy, and where he will be really
-able to mould the tradition of the school, that we
-shall alone be able to look for an improved state
-of affairs.<a name="FNanchor_57" id="FNanchor_57"></a><a href="#Footnote_57" class="fnanchor">57</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">103</a></span></p>
-
-<p>No doubt the first steps in any reform of this
-kind are difficult; but masters are greatly hampered
-by the confusion in the public mind, to
-which we have already alluded&mdash;which so often
-persists in setting down any attachment between
-two boys, or between a boy and his teacher, to
-nothing but sensuality. Many masters quite understand
-the situation, but feel themselves helpless
-in the face of public opinion. Who so fit (they
-sometimes feel) to enlighten a young boy and
-guide his growing mind as one of themselves,
-when the bond of attachment exists between
-the two? Like the writer of a letter quoted in
-the early part of this paper they believe that
-“a personal affection, almost indescribable, grows
-up between pupil and teacher, through which
-thoughts are shared and an influence created that
-could exist in no other way.” Yet when the pupil
-comes along of whom all this might be true, who
-shows by his pleading looks the sentiment which
-animates him, and the profound impression which
-he is longing, as it were, to receive from his
-teacher, the latter belies himself, denies his own<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">104</a></span>
-instinct and the boy’s great need, and treats him
-distantly and with coldness. And why? Simply
-because he dreads, even while he desires it, the
-boy’s confidence. He fears the ingenuous and
-perfectly natural expression of the boy’s affection
-in caress or embrace, because he knows how a
-bastard public opinion will interpret, or misinterpret
-it; and rather than run such a risk as this
-he seals the fountains of the heart, withholds the
-help which love alone can give, and deliberately
-nips the tender bud which is turning to him for
-light and warmth.<a name="FNanchor_58" id="FNanchor_58"></a><a href="#Footnote_58" class="fnanchor">58</a></p>
-
-<p>The panic terror which prevails in England with
-regard to the expression of affection of this kind
-has its comic aspect. The affection exists, and
-is known to exist, on all sides; but we must bury
-our heads in the sand and pretend not to see it.
-And if by any chance we are compelled to recognize
-it, we must show our vast discernment by
-<em>suspecting</em> it. And thus we fling on the dust-heap
-one of the noblest and most precious elements in
-human nature. Certainly, if the denial and suspicion
-of all natural affection were beneficial, we<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">105</a></span>
-should find this out in our schools; but seeing
-how complete is its failure there to clarify their
-tone it is sufficiently evident that the method itself
-is wrong.</p>
-
-
-<p class="tb">The remarks in this paper have chiefly had
-reference to boys’ schools; but they apply in the
-main to girls’ schools, where much the same
-troubles prevail&mdash;with this difference, that in girls’
-schools friendships instead of being repressed
-are rather encouraged by public opinion; only
-unfortunately they are for the most part friendships
-of a weak and sentimental turn, and not
-very healthy either in themselves or in the habits
-they lead to. Here too, in girls’ schools, the
-whole subject wants facing out; friendship wants
-setting on a more solid and less sentimental basis;
-and on the subject of sex, so infinitely important
-to women, there needs to be sensible and consistent
-teaching, both public and private. Possibly
-the co-education of boys and girls may be of use
-in making boys less ashamed of their feelings,
-and girls more healthy in the expression of them.</p>
-
-<p>At any rate the more the matter is thought of,
-the clearer I believe will it appear that a healthy
-affection must in the end be the basis of education,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">106</a></span>
-and that the recognition of this will form the only
-way out of the modern school-difficulty. It is
-true that such a change would revolutionise our
-school-life; but it will have to come, all the same,
-and no doubt will come <i lang="la">pari passu</i> with other
-changes that are taking place in society at large.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">107</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="V"><small><small>V</small></small><br />
-The Place of the Uranian
-in Society</h2>
-
-<p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">Whatever</span> differing views there may be on the
-many problems which the Intermediate sexes present&mdash;and
-however difficult of solution some of
-the questions involved&mdash;there is one thing which
-appears to me incontestable: namely that a vast
-number of intermediates do actually perform most
-valuable social work, and that they do so partly
-on account and by reason of their special temperament.</p>
-
-<p>This fact is not generally recognised as it ought
-to be, for the simple reason that the Uranian
-himself is not recognised, and indeed (as we have
-already said) tends to conceal his temperament
-from the public. There is no doubt that if it became
-widely known <em>who are</em> the Uranians, the
-world would be astonished to find so many of its
-great or leading men among them.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">108</a></span></p>
-
-<p>I have thought it might be useful to indicate
-some of the lines along which valuable work is
-being performed, or has been performed, by
-people of this disposition; and in doing this I do
-not of course mean to disguise or conceal the
-fact that there are numbers of merely frivolous,
-or feeble or even vicious homosexuals, who practically
-do no useful work for society at all&mdash;<em>just
-as there are of normal people</em>. The existence of
-those who do no valuable work does not alter the
-fact of the existence of others whose work is of
-great importance. And I wish also to make it
-clearly understood that I use the word Uranians
-to indicate simply those whose lives and activities
-are inspired by a genuine friendship or love
-for their own sex, without venturing to specify
-their individual and particular habits or relations
-towards those whom they love (which relations in
-most cases we have no means of knowing). Some
-Intermediates of light and leading&mdash;doubtless not
-a few&mdash;are physically very reserved and continent;
-others are sensual in some degree or other. The
-point is that they are all men, or women, whose
-most powerful motive comes from the dedication
-to their own kind, and is bound up with it in some
-way. And if it seems strange and anomalous that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">109</a></span>
-in such cases work of considerable importance to
-society is being done by people whose affections
-and dispositions society itself would blame, this
-is after all no more than has happened a thousand
-times before in the history of the world.</p>
-
-<p>As I have already hinted, the Uranian temperament
-(probably from the very fact of its dual nature
-and the swift and constant interaction between
-its masculine and feminine elements) is exceedingly
-sensitive and emotional; and there is no doubt
-that, going with this, a large number of the artist
-class, musical, literary or pictorial, belong to this
-description. That delicate and subtle sympathy
-with every wave and phase of feeling which makes
-the artist possible is also very characteristic of
-the Uranian (the male type), and makes it easy
-or natural for the Uranian man to become an
-artist. In the ‘confessions’ and ‘cases’ collected
-by Krafft-Ebing, Havelock Ellis and others,
-it is remarkable what a large percentage of men
-of this temperament belong to the artist class.
-In his volume on “Sexual Inversion,”<a name="FNanchor_59" id="FNanchor_59"></a><a href="#Footnote_59" class="fnanchor">59</a> speaking
-of the cases collected by himself, Ellis says:&mdash;“An
-examination of my cases reveals the interesting
-fact that thirty-two of them, or sixty-eight per<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">110</a></span>
-cent., possess artistic aptitude in varying degree.
-Galton found, from the investigation of nearly one
-thousand persons, that the general average showing
-artistic taste in England is only about thirty
-per cent. It must also be said that my figures are
-probably below the truth, as no special point was
-made of investigating the matter, and also that in
-many of my cases the artistic aptitudes are of high
-order. With regard to the special avocations of
-my cases, it must of course be said that no occupation
-furnishes a safeguard against inversion.
-There are, however, certain occupations to which
-inverts are specially attracted. Acting is certainly
-one of the chief of these. Three of my cases
-belong to the dramatic profession, and others
-have marked dramatic ability. Art, again, in its
-various forms, and music, exercise much attraction.
-In my experience, however, literature is the
-avocation to which inverts seem to feel chiefly
-called, and that moreover in which they may find
-the highest degree of success and reputation. At
-least half-a-dozen of my cases are successful men
-of letters.”</p>
-
-<p>Of Literature in this connection, and of the
-great writers of the world whose work has been
-partly inspired by the Uranian love, I have myself<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">111</a></span>
-already spoken.<a name="FNanchor_60" id="FNanchor_60"></a><a href="#Footnote_60" class="fnanchor">60</a> It may further be said that
-those of the modern artist-writers and poets who
-have done the greatest service in the way of interpreting
-and reconstructing <em>Greek</em> life and ideals&mdash;men
-like Winckelmann, Goethe, Addington
-Symonds, Walter Pater&mdash;have had a marked
-strain of this temperament in them. And this has
-been a service of great value, and one which
-the world could ill have afforded to lose.</p>
-
-<p>The painters and sculptors, especially of the
-renaissance period in Italy, yield not a few examples
-of men whose work has been similarly inspired&mdash;as
-in the cases of Michel Angelo, Lionardo,
-Bazzi, Cellini, and others. As to music,
-this is certainly the art which in its subtlety and
-tenderness&mdash;and perhaps in a certain inclination
-to <em>indulge</em> in emotion&mdash;lies nearest to the Urning
-nature. There are few in fact of this nature who
-have not some gift in the direction of music&mdash;though,
-unless we cite Tschaikowsky, it does not
-appear that any thorough-going Uranian has
-attained to the highest eminence in this art.</p>
-
-<p>Another direction along which the temperament
-very naturally finds an outlet is the important<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">112</a></span>
-social work of Education. The capacity that
-a man has, in cases, of devoting himself to the
-welfare of boys or youths, is clearly a thing
-which ought not to go wasted&mdash;and which may
-be most precious and valuable. It is incontestable
-that a great number of men (and women) are
-drawn into the teaching profession by this sentiment&mdash;and
-the work they do is, in many cases,
-beyond estimation. Fortunate the boy who meets
-with such a helper in early life! I know a man&mdash;a
-rising and vigorous thinker and writer&mdash;who
-tells me that he owes almost everything mentally
-to such a friend of his boyhood, who took the
-greatest interest in him, saw him almost every
-day for many years, and indeed cleared up for
-him not only things mental but things moral,
-giving him the affection and guidance his young
-heart needed. And I have myself known and
-watched not a few such teachers, in public
-schools and in private schools, and seen something
-of the work and of the real inspiration
-they have been to boys under them. Hampered
-as they have been by the readiness of the world
-to misinterpret, they still have been able to do
-most precious service. Of course here and there
-a case occurs in which privilege is abused; but<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">113</a></span>
-even then the judgment of the world is often unreasonably
-severe. A poor boy once told me with
-tears in his eyes of the work a man had done for
-him. This man had saved the boy from drunken
-parents, taken him from the slums, and by means
-of a club helped him out into the world. Many
-other boys he had rescued, it appeared, in the
-same way&mdash;scores and scores of them. But on
-some occasion or other he got into trouble,
-and was accused of improper familiarities. No
-excuse, or record of a useful life, was of the least
-avail. Every trumpery slander was believed,
-every mean motive imputed, and he had to throw
-up his position and settle elsewhere, his life-work
-shattered, never to be resumed.</p>
-
-<p>The capacity for sincere affection which causes
-an elder man to care so deeply for the welfare
-of a youth or boy, is met and responded to by
-a similar capacity in the young thing of devotion
-to an elder man. This fact is not always recognised;
-but I have known cases of boys and even
-young men who would feel the most romantic
-attachments to quite mature men, sometimes as
-much as forty or fifty years of age, and only for
-them&mdash;passing by their own contemporaries of
-either sex, and caring only to win a return affection<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">114</a></span>
-from these others. This may seem strange,
-but it is true. And the fact not only makes one
-understand what riddles there are slumbering in
-the breasts of our children, but how greatly important
-it is that we should try to read them&mdash;since
-here, in such cases as these, the finding of
-an answering heart in an elder man would probably
-be the younger one’s salvation.</p>
-
-<p>How much of the enormous amount of philanthropic
-work done in the present day&mdash;by women
-among needy or destitute girls of all sorts, or by
-men among like classes of boys&mdash;is inspired by
-the same feeling, it would be hard to say; but
-it must be a very considerable proportion.
-I think myself that the best philanthropic work&mdash;just
-because it is the most personal, the most
-loving, and the least merely formal and self-righteous&mdash;has
-a strong fibre of the Uranian
-heart running through it; and if it should be said
-that work of this very personal kind is more liable
-to dangers and difficulties on that account, it is
-only what is true of the best in almost all departments.</p>
-
-<p>Eros is a great leveler. Perhaps the true
-Democracy rests, more firmly than anywhere else,
-on a sentiment which easily passes the bounds<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">115</a></span>
-of class and caste, and unites in the closest affection
-the most estranged ranks of society. It is
-noticeable how often Uranians of good position
-and breeding are drawn to rougher types, as of
-manual workers, and frequently very permanent
-alliances grow up in this way, which although not
-publicly acknowledged have a decided influence on
-social institutions, customs and political tendencies&mdash;and
-which would have a good deal more influence
-could they be given a little more scope
-and recognition. There are cases that I have
-known (although the ordinary commercial world
-might hardly believe it) of employers who have
-managed to attach their workmen, or many of
-them, very personally to themselves, and whose
-object in running their businesses was at least as
-much to provide their employees with a living
-as themselves; while the latter, feeling this, have
-responded with their best output. It is possible
-that something like the guilds and fraternities
-of the middle ages might thus be reconstructed,
-but on a more intimate and personal basis than
-in those days; and indeed there are not wanting
-signs that such a reconstruction is actually taking
-place.</p>
-
-<p>The “Letters of Love and Labour” written by<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">116</a></span>
-Samuel M. Jones of Toledo, Ohio, to his workmen
-in the engineering firm of which he was master,
-are very interesting in this connection. They
-breathe a spirit of extraordinary personal affection
-towards, and confidence in, the employees,
-which was heartily responded to by the latter; and
-the whole business was carried on, with considerable
-success, on the principle of a close and
-friendly co-operation all round.<a name="FNanchor_61" id="FNanchor_61"></a><a href="#Footnote_61" class="fnanchor">61</a></p>
-
-<p>These things indeed suggest to one that it is
-possible that the Uranian spirit may lead to something
-like a general enthusiasm of Humanity,
-and that the Uranian people may be destined to
-form the advance guard of that great movement
-which will one day transform the common life
-by substituting the bond of personal affection and
-compassion for the monetary, legal and other
-external ties which now control and confine society.
-Such a part of course we cannot expect
-the Uranians to play unless the capacity for their
-kind of attachment also exists&mdash;though in a germinal
-and undeveloped state&mdash;in the breast of
-mankind at large. And modern thought and investigation<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">117</a></span>
-are clearly tending that way&mdash;to confirm
-that it does so exist.</p>
-
-<p>Dr. E. Bertz in his late study of Whitman as
-a person of strongly homogenic temperament<a name="FNanchor_62" id="FNanchor_62"></a><a href="#Footnote_62" class="fnanchor">62</a>
-brings forward the objection that Whitman’s gospel
-of Comradeship as a means of social regeneration
-is founded on a false basis&mdash;because (so Dr.
-Bertz says) the gospel derives from an abnormality
-in himself, and therefore cannot possibly have
-a universal application or create a general enthusiasm.
-But this is rather a case of assuming
-the point which has to be proved. Whitman constantly
-maintains that his own disposition at any
-rate is normal, and that he represents the average
-man. And it <em>may</em> be true, even as far as his
-Uranian temperament is concerned, that while this
-was specially developed in him the germs of it
-<em>are</em> almost, if not quite, universal. If so, then the
-Comradeship on which Whitman founds a large
-portion of his message may in course of time
-become a general enthusiasm, and the nobler
-Uranians of to-day may be destined, as suggested,
-to be its pioneers and advance guard. As one of
-them himself has sung:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">118</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="line">These things shall be! A loftier race,</div>
-<div class="line i1">Than e’er the world hath known, shall rise</div>
-<div class="line">With flame of freedom in their souls,</div>
-<div class="line i1">And light of science in their eyes.</div>
-<div class="line">Nation with nation, land with land,</div>
-<div class="line i1">In-armed shall live as comrades free;</div>
-<div class="line">In every heart and brain shall throb</div>
-<div class="line i1">The pulse of one fraternity.<a name="FNanchor_63" id="FNanchor_63"></a><a href="#Footnote_63" class="fnanchor">63</a></div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>To proceed. The Uranian, though generally
-high-strung and sensitive, is by no means always
-dreamy. He is sometimes extraordinarily and
-unexpectedly practical; and such a man may,
-and often does, command a positive enthusiasm
-among his subordinates in a business organisation.
-The same is true of military organisation.
-As a rule the Uranian temperament (in the male)
-is not militant. War with its horrors and savagery
-is somewhat alien to the type. But here again
-there are exceptions; and in all times there have
-been great generals (like Alexander, Cæsar,
-Charles XII. of Sweden, or Frederick II. of
-Prussia&mdash;not to speak of more modern examples)
-with a powerful strain in them of the homogenic
-nature, and a wonderful capacity for organisation
-and command, which combined with their personal
-interest in, or attachment to, their troops,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">119</a></span>
-and the answering enthusiasm so elicited, have
-made their armies well-nigh invincible.</p>
-
-<p>The existence of this great practical ability in
-some Uranians cannot be denied; and it points
-to the important work they may some day have
-to do in social reconstruction. At the same time
-I think it is noticeable that <em>politics</em> (at any rate
-in the modern sense of the word, as concerned
-mainly with party questions and party government)
-is not as a rule congenial to them. The
-personal and affectional element is perhaps too
-remote or absent. Mere ‘views’ and ‘questions’
-and party strife are alien to the Uranian man,
-as they are on the whole to the ordinary woman.</p>
-
-<p>If politics, however, are not particularly congenial,
-it is yet remarkable how many royal
-personages have been decidedly homogenic in
-temperament. Taking the Kings of England from
-the Norman Conquest to the present day, we may
-count about thirty. And three of these, namely,
-William Rufus, Edward II., and James I. were
-homosexual in a marked degree&mdash;might fairly be
-classed as Urnings&mdash;while some others, like
-William III., had a strong admixture of the same
-temperament. Three out of thirty yields a high
-ratio&mdash;ten per cent&mdash;and considering that sovereigns<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">120</a></span>
-do not generally choose themselves, but
-come into their position by accident of birth, the
-ratio is certainly remarkable. Does it suggest
-that the general percentage in the world at large
-is equally high, but that it remains unnoticed,
-except in the fierce light that beats upon thrones?
-or is there some other explanation with regard
-to the special liability of royalty to inversion?
-Hereditary degeneracy has sometimes been suggested.
-But it is difficult to explain the matter
-even on this theory; for though the epithet
-‘degenerate’ might possibly apply to James I.,
-it would certainly not be applicable to William
-Rufus and William III., who, in their different
-ways, were both men of great courage and personal
-force&mdash;while Edward II. was by no means
-wanting in ability.</p>
-
-<p>But while the Uranian temperament has, in
-cases, specially fitted its possessors to become
-distinguished in art or education or war or administration,
-and enabled them to do valuable
-work in these fields; it remains perhaps true that
-above all it has fitted them, and fits them, for
-distinction and service in affairs of the heart.</p>
-
-<p>It is hard to imagine human beings more skilled
-in these matters than are the Intermediates. For<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">121</a></span>
-indeed no one else can possibly respond to and
-understand, as they do, all the fluctuations and
-interactions of the masculine and feminine in
-human life. The pretensive coyness and passivity
-of women, the rude invasiveness of men;
-lust, brutality, secret tears, the bleeding heart;
-renunciation, motherhood, finesse, romance, angelic
-devotion&mdash;all these things lie slumbering
-in the Uranian soul, ready on occasion for expression;
-and if they are not always expressed are
-always there for purposes of divination or interpretation.
-There are few situations, in fact, in
-courtship or marriage which the Uranian does
-not instinctively understand; and it is strange to
-see how even an unlettered person of this type will
-often read Love’s manuscript easily in cases where
-the normal man or woman is groping over it
-like a child in the dark. [Not of course that this
-means to imply any superiority of <em>character</em> in
-the former; but merely that with his double outlook
-he necessarily discerns things which the
-other misses.]</p>
-
-<p>That the Uranians do stand out as helpers and
-guides, not only in matters of Education, but in
-affairs of love and marriage, is tolerably patent
-to all who know them. It is a common experience<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">122</a></span>
-for them to be consulted now by the man, now
-by the woman, whose matrimonial conditions are
-uncongenial or disastrous&mdash;not generally because
-the consultants in the least perceive the Uranian
-nature, but because they instinctively feel that
-here is a strong sympathy with and understanding
-of their side of the question. In this way it
-is often the fate of the Uranian, himself unrecognised,
-to bring about happier times and a better
-comprehension of each other among those with
-whom he may have to deal. Also he often becomes
-the confidant of young things of either sex,
-who are caught in the tangles of love or passion,
-and know not where to turn for assistance.</p>
-
-<p>I say that I think perhaps of all the services
-the Uranian may render to society it will be
-found some day that in this direction of solving
-the problems of affection and of the heart he
-will do the greatest service. If the day is coming
-as we have suggested&mdash;when Love is at last to
-take its rightful place as the binding and directing
-force of society (instead of the Cash-nexus),
-and society is to be transmuted in consequence to
-a higher form, then undoubtedly the superior
-types of Uranians&mdash;prepared for this service by
-long experience and devotion, as well as by much<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">123</a></span>
-suffering&mdash;will have an important part to play in
-the transformation. For that the Urnings in
-their own lives put Love before everything else&mdash;postponing
-to it the other motives like money-making,
-business success, fame, which occupy so much
-space in most people’s careers&mdash;is a fact which
-is patent to everyone who knows them. This may
-be saying little or nothing in favor of those of this
-class whose conception of love is only of a poor
-and frivolous sort; but in the case of those others
-who see the god in his true light, the fact that they
-serve him in singleness of heart and so unremittingly
-raises them at once into the position of the
-natural leaders of mankind.</p>
-
-<p>From this fact&mdash;<i>i.e.</i>, that these folk think so
-much of affairs of the heart&mdash;and from the fact
-that their alliances and friendships are formed
-and carried on beneath the surface of society, as
-it were, and therefore to some extent beyond the
-inquisitions and supervisions of Mrs. Grundy,
-some interesting conclusions flow.</p>
-
-<p>For one thing, the question is constantly arising
-as to how Society would shape itself if <em>free</em>: what
-form, in matters of Love and Marriage, it would
-take, if the present restrictions and sanctions
-were removed or greatly altered. At present in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">124</a></span>
-these matters, the Law, the Church, and a strong
-pressure of public opinion interfere, compelling
-the observance of certain forms; and it becomes
-difficult to say how much of the existing order is
-due to the spontaneous instinct and common sense
-of human nature, and how much to mere outside
-compulsion and interference: how far, for instance,
-Monogamy is natural or artificial; to what
-degree marriages would be permanent if the Law
-did not make them so; what is the rational view
-of Divorce; whether jealousy is a necessary accompaniment
-of Love; and so forth. These are
-questions which are being constantly discussed,
-without finality; or not infrequently with quite
-pessimistic conclusions.</p>
-
-<p>Now in the Urning societies a certain freedom
-(though not complete, of course) exists. Underneath
-the surface of general Society, and consequently
-unaffected to any great degree by its laws
-and customs, alliances are formed and maintained,
-or modified or broken, more in accord with inner
-need than with outer pressure. Thus it happens
-that in these societies there are such opportunities
-to note and observe human grouping under conditions
-of freedom, as do not occur in the ordinary
-world. And the results are both interesting and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">125</a></span>
-encouraging. As a rule I think it may be said
-that the alliances are remarkably permanent. Instead
-of the wild “general post” which so many
-good people seem to expect in the event of law
-being relaxed, one finds (except of course in
-a few individual cases) that common sense and
-fidelity and a strong tendency to permanence prevail.
-In the ordinary world so far has doubt gone
-that many to-day disbelieve in a life-long free
-marriage. Yet among the Uranians such a thing
-is, one may almost say, common and well known;
-and there are certainly few among them who do
-not believe in its possibility.</p>
-
-<p>Great have been the debates, in all times and
-places, concerning Jealousy; and as to how far
-jealousy is natural and instinctive and universal,
-and how far it is the product of social opinion
-and the property sense, and so on. In ordinary
-marriage what may be called social and proprietary
-jealousy is undoubtedly a very great
-factor. But this kind of jealousy hardly appears
-or operates in the Urning societies. Thus we
-have an opportunity in these latter of observing
-conditions where only the natural and instinctive
-jealousy exists. This of course is present among
-the Urnings&mdash;sometimes rampant and violent,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">126</a></span>
-sometimes quiescent and vanishing almost to <em>nil</em>.
-It seems to depend almost entirely upon the individual;
-and we certainly learn that jealousy though
-frequent and widespread, is not an absolutely
-necessary accompaniment of love. There are
-cases of Uranians (whether men or women) who,
-though permanently allied, do not object to lesser
-friendships on either side&mdash;and there are cases of
-very decided objection. And we may conclude
-that something the same would be true (is true)
-of the ordinary Marriage, the property considerations
-and the property jealousy being once removed.
-The tendency anyhow to establish a
-dual relation more or less fixed, is seen to be very
-strong among the Intermediates, and may be
-concluded to be equally strong among the more
-normal folk.</p>
-
-<p>Again with regard to Prostitution. That there
-are a few natural-born prostitutes is seen in the
-Urning-societies; but prostitution in that world
-does not take the important place which it does
-in the normal world, partly because the law-bound
-compulsory marriage does not exist there, and
-partly because prostitution naturally has little
-chance and cannot compete in a world where
-alliances are free and there is an open field for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">127</a></span>
-friendship. Hence we may see that freedom of
-alliance and of marriage in the ordinary world will
-probably lead to the great diminution or even
-disappearance of Prostitution.</p>
-
-<p>In these and other ways the experience of the
-Uranian world forming itself freely and not subject
-to outside laws and institutions comes as a
-guide&mdash;and really a hopeful guide&mdash;towards the
-future. I would say however that in making these
-remarks about certain conclusions which we are
-able to gather from some spontaneous and comparatively
-unrestricted associations, I do not at
-all mean to argue <em>against</em> institutions and forms.
-I think that the Uranian love undoubtedly suffers
-from want of a recognition and a standard. And
-though it may at present be better off than if
-subject to a foolish and meddlesome regulation;
-yet in the future it will have its more or less fixed
-standards and ideals, like the normal love. If
-one considers for a moment how the ordinary
-relations of the sexes would suffer were there no
-generally acknowledged codes of honor and conduct
-with regard to them, one then indeed sees
-that reasonable forms and institutions are a help,
-and one may almost wonder that the Urning<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">128</a></span>
-circles are so well-conducted on the whole as
-they are.</p>
-
-<p>I have said that the Urning men in their own
-lives put love before money-making, business success,
-fame, and other motives which rule the
-normal man. I am sure that it is also true of
-them as a whole that they put love before lust.
-I do not feel <em>sure</em> that this can be said of the
-normal man, at any rate in the present stage of
-evolution. It is doubtful whether on the whole the
-merely physical attraction is not the stronger
-motive with the latter type. Unwilling as the
-world at large is to credit what I am about to
-say, and great as are the current misunderstandings
-on the subject, I believe it is true that the
-Uranian men are superior to the normal men in
-this respect&mdash;in respect of their love-feeling&mdash;which
-is gentler, more sympathetic, more considerate,
-more a matter of the heart and less one
-of mere physical satisfaction than that of ordinary
-men.<a name="FNanchor_64" id="FNanchor_64"></a><a href="#Footnote_64" class="fnanchor">64</a> All this flows naturally from the presence
-of the feminine element in them, and its blending
-with the rest of their nature. It should be expected
-<i lang="la">a priori</i>, and it can be noticed at once by
-those who have any acquaintance with the Urning<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">129</a></span>
-world. Much of the current misunderstanding
-with regard to the character and habits of the
-Urning arises from his confusion with the ordinary
-<i lang="fr">roué</i> who, though of normal temperament,
-contracts homosexual habits out of curiosity and
-so forth&mdash;but this is a point which I have touched
-on before, and which ought now to be sufficiently
-clear. If it be once allowed that the love-nature
-of the Uranian is of a sincere and essentially
-humane and kindly type then the importance of
-the Uranian’s place in Society, and of the social
-work he may be able to do, must certainly also
-be acknowledged.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-<h2 id="FOOTNOTES">FOOTNOTES</h2>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="noindent"><a name="Footnote_1" id="Footnote_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1"><span class="label">1</span></a> For the derivation of these terms see ch. ii., <a href="#Page_20">p. 20</a>,
-<i lang="la">infra</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="noindent"><a name="Footnote_2" id="Footnote_2"></a><a href="#FNanchor_2"><span class="label">2</span></a> See Appendix, <a href="#Page_139">pp. 139 and 140</a>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="noindent"><a name="Footnote_3" id="Footnote_3"></a><a href="#FNanchor_3"><span class="label">3</span></a> From <i lang="el">Uranos</i>, heaven; his idea being that the
-Uranian love was of a higher order than the ordinary
-attachment. For further about Ulrichs and his theories
-see Appendix, <a href="#Page_157">pp. 157-159</a>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="noindent"><a name="Footnote_4" id="Footnote_4"></a><a href="#FNanchor_4"><span class="label">4</span></a> Charles G. Leland (“Hans Breitmann”) in his
-book “The Alternate Sex” (Wellby, 1904), insists
-much on the frequent combination of the characteristics
-of both sexes in remarkable men and women, and
-has a chapter on “The Female Mind in Man,” and
-another on “The Male Intellect in Woman.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="noindent"><a name="Footnote_5" id="Footnote_5"></a><a href="#FNanchor_5"><span class="label">5</span></a> Some late statistical inquiries (see “Statistische
-Untersuchungen,” von Dr. M. Hirschfeld, Leipzig,
-1904) yield 1.5 to 2.0 per cent. as a probable ratio.
-See also Appendix, <a href="#Page_134">pp. 134-136</a>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="noindent"><a name="Footnote_6" id="Footnote_6"></a><a href="#FNanchor_6"><span class="label">6</span></a> For instances, see Appendix, <a href="#Page_149">pp. 149-153</a>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="noindent"><a name="Footnote_7" id="Footnote_7"></a><a href="#FNanchor_7"><span class="label">7</span></a> See De Joux, “Die Enterbten des Liebesglückes”
-(Leipzig, 1893), p. 21.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="noindent"><a name="Footnote_8" id="Footnote_8"></a><a href="#FNanchor_8"><span class="label">8</span></a> “Psychopathia Sexualis,” 7th ed., p. 276.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="noindent"><a name="Footnote_9" id="Footnote_9"></a><a href="#FNanchor_9"><span class="label">9</span></a> See Appendix, <a href="#Page_153">pp. 153-156</a>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="noindent"><a name="Footnote_10" id="Footnote_10"></a><a href="#FNanchor_10"><span class="label">10</span></a> A good deal in this description may remind readers
-of history of the habits and character of Henry III. of
-France.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="noindent"><a name="Footnote_11" id="Footnote_11"></a><a href="#FNanchor_11"><span class="label">11</span></a> Perhaps, like Queen Christine of Sweden, who rode
-across Europe, on her visit to Italy, in jack-boots and
-sitting astride of her horse. It is said that she shook
-the Pope’s hand, on seeing him, so heartily that the
-doctor had to attend to it afterwards!</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="noindent"><a name="Footnote_12" id="Footnote_12"></a><a href="#FNanchor_12"><span class="label">12</span></a> “Homosexual,” generally used in scientific works,
-is of course a bastard word. “Homogenic” has been
-suggested, as being from two roots, both Greek, <i>i.e.</i>,
-“homos,” same, and “genos,” sex.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="noindent"><a name="Footnote_13" id="Footnote_13"></a><a href="#FNanchor_13"><span class="label">13</span></a> “Athenæus” xiii., ch. 78.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="noindent"><a name="Footnote_14" id="Footnote_14"></a><a href="#FNanchor_14"><span class="label">14</span></a> See Plutarch’s “Eroticus,” §xvii.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="noindent"><a name="Footnote_15" id="Footnote_15"></a><a href="#FNanchor_15"><span class="label">15</span></a> See “Natural History of Man,” by J. G. Wood.
-Vol: “Africa,” p. 419.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="noindent"><a name="Footnote_16" id="Footnote_16"></a><a href="#FNanchor_16"><span class="label">16</span></a> See also Livingstone’s “Expedition to the Zambesi”
-(Murray, 1865) p. 148.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="noindent"><a name="Footnote_17" id="Footnote_17"></a><a href="#FNanchor_17"><span class="label">17</span></a> Though these two plays, except for some quotations,
-are lost.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="noindent"><a name="Footnote_18" id="Footnote_18"></a><a href="#FNanchor_18"><span class="label">18</span></a> Mantegazza and Lombroso. See Albert Moll, “Conträre
-Sexualempfindung,” 2nd ed., p. 36.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="noindent"><a name="Footnote_19" id="Footnote_19"></a><a href="#FNanchor_19"><span class="label">19</span></a> Though in translation this fact is often by pious
-fraudulence disguised.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="noindent"><a name="Footnote_20" id="Footnote_20"></a><a href="#FNanchor_20"><span class="label">20</span></a> W. Pater’s “Renaissance,” pp. 8-16.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="noindent"><a name="Footnote_21" id="Footnote_21"></a><a href="#FNanchor_21"><span class="label">21</span></a> Among <em>prose</em> writers of this period, Montaigne,
-whose treatment of the subject is enthusiastic and
-unequivocal, should not be overlooked. See Hazlitt’s
-“Montaigne,” ch. xxvii.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="noindent"><a name="Footnote_22" id="Footnote_22"></a><a href="#FNanchor_22"><span class="label">22</span></a> I may be excused for quoting here the sonnet No.
-54, from J. A. Symonds’ translation of the sonnets of
-Michel Angelo:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="line i05">“From thy fair face I learn, O my loved lord,</div>
-<div class="line i1">That which no mortal tongue can rightly say:</div>
-<div class="line i1">The soul, imprisoned in her house of clay,</div>
-<div class="line i1">Holpen by thee to God hath often soared:</div>
-<div class="line">And though the vulgar, vain, malignant horde</div>
-<div class="line i1">Attribute what their grosser wills obey,</div>
-<div class="line i1">Yet shall this fervent homage that I pay,</div>
-<div class="line i1">This love, this faith, pure joys for us afford,</div>
-<div class="line">Lo, all the lovely things we find on earth,</div>
-<div class="line i1">Resemble for the soul that rightly sees,</div>
-<div class="line i1">That source of bliss divine which gave us birth:</div>
-<div class="line">Nor have we first-fruits or remembrances</div>
-<div class="line i1">Of heaven elsewhere. Thus, loving loyally,</div>
-<div class="line i1">I rise to God, and make death sweet by thee.”</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>The labours of von Scheffler, followed by J. A.
-Symonds, have now pretty conclusively established the
-pious frauds of the nephew, and the fact that the love-poems
-of the elder Michel Angelo were, for the most
-part, written to male friends.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="noindent"><a name="Footnote_23" id="Footnote_23"></a><a href="#FNanchor_23"><span class="label">23</span></a> See an interesting paper in W. Pater’s “Renaissance.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="noindent"><a name="Footnote_24" id="Footnote_24"></a><a href="#FNanchor_24"><span class="label">24</span></a> For a fuller collection of instances of this Friendship-love
-in the history of the world, see “Ioläus: an
-Anthology,” by E. Carpenter (George Allen, London.
-3/- net). Also “Liebling-minne und Freundesliebe
-in der Welt-literatur,” von Elisar von Kupffer (Adolf
-Brand, Berlin, 1900).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="noindent"><a name="Footnote_25" id="Footnote_25"></a><a href="#FNanchor_25"><span class="label">25</span></a> As in the case, for instance, of Tennyson’s “In
-Memoriam,” for which the poet was soundly rated by
-the <cite>Times</cite> at the time of its publication.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="noindent"><a name="Footnote_26" id="Footnote_26"></a><a href="#FNanchor_26"><span class="label">26</span></a> Jowett’s “Plato,” 2nd ed., vol. ii., p. 30.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="noindent"><a name="Footnote_27" id="Footnote_27"></a><a href="#FNanchor_27"><span class="label">27</span></a> Jowett, vol. ii., p. 130.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="noindent"><a name="Footnote_28" id="Footnote_28"></a><a href="#FNanchor_28"><span class="label">28</span></a> One ought also to mention some later writers, like
-Dr. Magnus Hirschfeld and Dr. von Römer, whose work
-though avowedly favourable to the Urning-movement,
-is in a high degree scientific and reliable in character.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="noindent"><a name="Footnote_29" id="Footnote_29"></a><a href="#FNanchor_29"><span class="label">29</span></a> From <i lang="el">Uranos</i>&mdash;see, for derivation, <a href="#Page_20">p. 20</a>, <i lang="la">supra</i>&mdash;also
-Plato’s “Symposium,” speech of Pausanias.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="noindent"><a name="Footnote_30" id="Footnote_30"></a><a href="#FNanchor_30"><span class="label">30</span></a> See, for estimates, Appendix, <a href="#Page_134">pp. 134-136</a>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="noindent"><a name="Footnote_31" id="Footnote_31"></a><a href="#FNanchor_31"><span class="label">31</span></a> Though there is no doubt a general <em>tendency</em>
-towards femininity of type in the male Urning, and
-towards masculinity in the female.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="noindent"><a name="Footnote_32" id="Footnote_32"></a><a href="#FNanchor_32"><span class="label">32</span></a> “Gli amori degli uomini.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="noindent"><a name="Footnote_33" id="Footnote_33"></a><a href="#FNanchor_33"><span class="label">33</span></a> “Psychopathia Sexualis,” 7th ed., p. 227.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="noindent"><a name="Footnote_34" id="Footnote_34"></a><a href="#FNanchor_34"><span class="label">34</span></a> <cite>Ibid</cite>, pp. 229 and 258. See Appendix, <a href="#Page_160">p. 160</a>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="noindent"><a name="Footnote_35" id="Footnote_35"></a><a href="#FNanchor_35"><span class="label">35</span></a> “How deep congenital sex-inversion roots may be
-gathered from the fact that the pleasure-dream of the
-male Urning has to do with male persons, and of the
-female with females.”&mdash;Krafft-Ebing, “P.S.,” 7th ed.,
-p. 228.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="noindent"><a name="Footnote_36" id="Footnote_36"></a><a href="#FNanchor_36"><span class="label">36</span></a> “Conträre Sexualempfindung,” 2nd ed., p. 269.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="noindent"><a name="Footnote_37" id="Footnote_37"></a><a href="#FNanchor_37"><span class="label">37</span></a> See “Love’s Coming-of-Age,” p. 22.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="noindent"><a name="Footnote_38" id="Footnote_38"></a><a href="#FNanchor_38"><span class="label">38</span></a> Pub.: F. A. Davis, Philadelphia, 1901.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="noindent"><a name="Footnote_39" id="Footnote_39"></a><a href="#FNanchor_39"><span class="label">39</span></a> Otto Weininger even goes further, and regards the
-temperament as a natural intermediate form (“Sex
-and Character,” ch. iv.) See also Appendix, <i lang="la">infra</i>,
-<a href="#Page_169">p. 169</a>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="noindent"><a name="Footnote_40" id="Footnote_40"></a><a href="#FNanchor_40"><span class="label">40</span></a> “Though then before my own conscience I cannot
-reproach myself, and though I must certainly reject
-the judgment of the world about us, yet I suffer
-greatly. In very truth I have injured no one, and
-I hold my love in its nobler activity for just as holy as
-that of normally disposed men, but under the unhappy
-fate that allows us neither sufferance nor recognition
-I suffer often more than my life can bear.”&mdash;Extract
-from a letter given by Krafft-Ebing.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="noindent"><a name="Footnote_41" id="Footnote_41"></a><a href="#FNanchor_41"><span class="label">41</span></a> See “In the Key of Blue,” by J. A. Symonds
-(Elkin Mathews, 1893).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="noindent"><a name="Footnote_42" id="Footnote_42"></a><a href="#FNanchor_42"><span class="label">42</span></a> See Appendix, <a href="#Page_162">pp. 162 and 163</a>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="noindent"><a name="Footnote_43" id="Footnote_43"></a><a href="#FNanchor_43"><span class="label">43</span></a> See also “Love’s Coming-of-Age,” 5th ed., pp. 173,
-174.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="noindent"><a name="Footnote_44" id="Footnote_44"></a><a href="#FNanchor_44"><span class="label">44</span></a> See “Das Conträre Geschlechtsgefühl,” von Havelock
-Ellis und J. A. Symonds (Leipzig, 1896).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="noindent"><a name="Footnote_45" id="Footnote_45"></a><a href="#FNanchor_45"><span class="label">45</span></a> “Symposium,” Speech of Socrates.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="noindent"><a name="Footnote_46" id="Footnote_46"></a><a href="#FNanchor_46"><span class="label">46</span></a> It is interesting in this connection to notice the
-extreme fervour, almost of romance, of the bond which
-often unites lovers of like sex over a long period of
-years, in an unfailing tenderness of treatment and
-consideration towards each other, equal to that shown
-in the most successful marriages. The love of many
-such men, says Moll (p. 119), “developed in youth
-lasts at times the whole life through. I know of such
-men, who had not seen their first love for years, even
-decades, and who yet on meeting showed the old fire
-of their first passion. In other cases, a close love-intimacy
-will last unbroken for many years.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="noindent"><a name="Footnote_47" id="Footnote_47"></a><a href="#FNanchor_47"><span class="label">47</span></a> Though, inconsistently enough, making no mention
-of females.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="noindent"><a name="Footnote_48" id="Footnote_48"></a><a href="#FNanchor_48"><span class="label">48</span></a> Dr. Moll maintains (2nd ed., pp. 314, 315) that if
-familiarities between those of the same sex are made
-illegal, as immoral, self-abuse ought much more to
-be so made.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="noindent"><a name="Footnote_49" id="Footnote_49"></a><a href="#FNanchor_49"><span class="label">49</span></a> Though it is doubtful whether the marriage-laws
-even do this.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="noindent"><a name="Footnote_50" id="Footnote_50"></a><a href="#FNanchor_50"><span class="label">50</span></a> In France, since the adoption of the Code Napoleon,
-sexual inversion is tolerated under the same
-restrictions as normal sexuality; and according to
-Carlier, formerly Chief of the French Police, Paris is
-not more depraved in this matter than London. Italy
-in 1889 also adopted the principles of the Code Napoleon
-on this point. For further considerations with
-regard to the Law, see Appendix, <a href="#Page_164">pp. 164 and 165</a>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="noindent"><a name="Footnote_51" id="Footnote_51"></a><a href="#FNanchor_51"><span class="label">51</span></a> For further instances, see Appendix, <a href="#Page_143">pp. 143-148</a>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="noindent"><a name="Footnote_52" id="Footnote_52"></a><a href="#FNanchor_52"><span class="label">52</span></a> See Müller’s “History and Antiquities of the Doric
-Race.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="noindent"><a name="Footnote_53" id="Footnote_53"></a><a href="#FNanchor_53"><span class="label">53</span></a> Müller.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="noindent"><a name="Footnote_54" id="Footnote_54"></a><a href="#FNanchor_54"><span class="label">54</span></a> Cf. the incident at the end of Plato’s “Lysis,” when
-the tutors of Lysis and Menexenus come in and send
-the youths home.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="noindent"><a name="Footnote_55" id="Footnote_55"></a><a href="#FNanchor_55"><span class="label">55</span></a> For a useful little manual on this subject, see “How
-We are Born,” by Mrs. N. J. (Daniel, London, price
-2/-). For a general argument in favour of sex-teaching
-see “The Training of the Young in Laws of Sex,”
-by Canon Lyttelton, Headmaster of Eton College
-(Longmans, 2/6).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="noindent"><a name="Footnote_56" id="Footnote_56"></a><a href="#FNanchor_56"><span class="label">56</span></a> See J. G. Wood’s “Natural History of Man,” vol.
-“Africa,” p. 324 (the Bechuanas); also vol. “Australia,”
-p. 75.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="noindent"><a name="Footnote_57" id="Footnote_57"></a><a href="#FNanchor_57"><span class="label">57</span></a> With the rapid rise which is taking place, in scope
-and social status, of the state day-schools, it is probable
-that some change of opinion will take place with
-regard to the wisdom of sending young boys of ten to
-fourteen to upper-class boarding-schools. For a boy
-of fifteen or sixteen and upwards the boarding-school
-system may have its advantages. By that time a boy
-is old enough to understand some questions; he is
-old enough to have some rational ideal of conduct, and
-to hold his own in the pursuit of it; and he may learn
-in the life away from home a lot in the way of discipline,
-organization, self-reliance, etc. But to send a young
-thing, ignorant of life, and quite unformed of character,
-to take his chance by day and night in the public
-school as it at present exists, is&mdash;to say the least&mdash;a
-rash thing to do.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="noindent"><a name="Footnote_58" id="Footnote_58"></a><a href="#FNanchor_58"><span class="label">58</span></a> It should be also said, in fairness, that the fear of
-showing undue partiality, often comes in as a paralysing
-influence.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="noindent"><a name="Footnote_59" id="Footnote_59"></a><a href="#FNanchor_59"><span class="label">59</span></a> “Studies in the Psychology of Sex,” vol. ii., p. 173.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="noindent"><a name="Footnote_60" id="Footnote_60"></a><a href="#FNanchor_60"><span class="label">60</span></a> See <a href="#II">ch. ii.</a> <i lang="la">supra</i>, also <cite>Ioläus</cite>, an Anthology of
-Friendship, by E. Carpenter.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="noindent"><a name="Footnote_61" id="Footnote_61"></a><a href="#FNanchor_61"><span class="label">61</span></a> Mr. Jones became Mayor of Toledo; but died at
-the early age of 53. See also “Workshop Reconstruction,”
-by C. R. Ashbee, Appendix, <i lang="la">infra</i>, <a href="#Page_146">p. 146</a>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="noindent"><a name="Footnote_62" id="Footnote_62"></a><a href="#FNanchor_62"><span class="label">62</span></a> “Whitman: ein Charakterbild,” by Edward Bertz
-(Leipzig, Max Spohr).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="noindent"><a name="Footnote_63" id="Footnote_63"></a><a href="#FNanchor_63"><span class="label">63</span></a> John Addington Symonds.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="noindent"><a name="Footnote_64" id="Footnote_64"></a><a href="#FNanchor_64"><span class="label">64</span></a> See Appendix, <a href="#Page_172">pp. 172-174</a>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">133</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="Appendix"><span class="smcap">Appendix</span></h2>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="tb">“In this country [Britain] we have too long, from
-a sense of mock modesty, neglected the science relating
-to sex. In Germany this is not so. There we find
-workers who have elaborated for themselves a new
-science, and who have given to the world knowledge
-which is of the very utmost importance. We now know
-that there are females with strong male characteristics,
-and <i lang="la">vice-versa</i>. Anatomically and mentally we find
-all shades existing from the pure genus man to the pure
-genus woman. Thus there has been constituted what
-is well named by an illustrious exponent of the science
-‘The Third Sex’.”&mdash;Dr. <span class="smcap">James Burnet</span>, <cite>The Medical
-Times and Hospital Gazette</cite>, vol. xxxiv., No. 1497,
-10th November, 1906. London.</p>
-
-<p class="tb">“Every citizen of age to fulfil his duties as a citizen,
-whether he be a father or husband, teacher or pupil,
-master or servant, official or subordinate, has the right,
-and owes it as a duty, to know the facts of sexual inversion,
-to combat and to prevent debauchery, crime
-and vice, to learn and to teach others the place of
-inversion in Society, and its morals, the duties of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">134</a></span>
-invert towards himself, and towards other inverts, towards
-the normal man, and towards women and children.
-And the duties of the normal man towards the
-invert are no less&mdash;no less difficult, no less indispensable.”&mdash;<span class="smcap">M.
-A. Raffalovich</span>, “Uranisme et Unisexualité.” Paris, 1896.</p>
-
-<p class="tb">“That sex inversion is not a chance phenomenon …
-appears from the fact that it has been observed at all
-times and in all places, and among peoples quite separate
-from each other.”&mdash;<span class="smcap">A. Moll</span>, “Die Conträre
-Sexualempfindung,” 2nd Edition, p. 15. Berlin, 1893.</p>
-
-<p class="tb">“Concerning the wide prevalence of sexual inversion,
-and of homosexual phenomena generally, there
-can be no manner of doubt. In Berlin, Moll states that
-he has himself seen between six hundred and seven
-hundred homosexual persons, and heard of some two
-hundred and fifty to three hundred others. I have
-much evidence as to its frequency both in England and
-the United States. In England, concerning which I
-can naturally speak with most assurance, its manifestations
-are well-marked for those whose eyes have been
-opened.… Among the professional and most cultured
-element of the middle class in England there
-must be a distinct percentage of inverts, which may
-sometimes be as much as five per cent., though such
-estimates must always be hazardous. Among women
-of the same class the percentage seems to be at least
-double&mdash;though here the phenomena are less definite
-and deepseated.”&mdash;<span class="smcap">Havelock Ellis</span>, “Psychology of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">135</a></span>
-Sex,” vol. <cite>Sexual Inversion</cite>, pp. 29, 30. Philadelphia,
-1901.</p>
-
-<p class="tb">“According to the information of De Joux in ‘The
-Disinherited of Love,’ the number of Urnings in all
-Europe is about five millions; about 4.5 per cent. of
-all males in Europe are Urnings, while only 0.1 per
-cent. of females are Urningins. A malady therefore&mdash;if
-malady it should be called&mdash;which is so widespread
-certainly demands our deepest interest; and it is
-strange that it is only since the ’70’s that this subject
-has been discussed in scientific literature.</p>
-
-<p>“It is owing to this ignorance that the public mind has
-been dominated, and still is dominated, by the prejudice,
-that psychical hermaphroditism and sex-inversion
-are nothing but crimes, wilful crimes, whereas they
-proceed necessarily out of the inborn nature of such
-individuals.”&mdash;<span class="smcap">Norbert Grabowsky</span>, “Die verkehrte
-Geschlechtsempfindung,” p. 16. Leipzig, 1894.</p>
-
-<p class="tb">Dr. <span class="smcap">Hirschfeld</span>, in his “Statistischen Untersuchunge
-über den Prozentensatz der Homosexuellen,”
-gives the result of various statistical investigations on
-this subject; and their remarkable agreement enables
-him to speak with some confidence. He says (p. 41),
-“Now we <em>know</em> that we must reckon the numbers of
-those who vary from the normal, not by fractions of
-thousands but by fractions of hundreds. The fact
-that, as a result of these circular enquiries and commissions
-about the same figure has emerged (for the
-proportion of exclusively homosexual persons), namely,
-a figure in the neighbourhood of 1½ per cent.&mdash;this<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">136</a></span>
-extraordinary agreement cannot possibly be a chance,
-but must rest on a law&mdash;a law of nature&mdash;namely, that
-only 90 to 95 per cent. of mankind are normally sexual
-by birth; that about 1½ to 2 per cent. are born pure
-homosexuals (say about 1,000,000 in Germany); and
-that between the two classes there remain some 4 per
-cent. who are bisexual by nature.”</p>
-
-<p>And again (p. 60), “But what do these figures show?
-They show that of 100,000 inhabitants on the average
-only 94,600 are sexually normal, while 5,400 vary from
-the normal. Of these latter 1,500 are exclusively homosexual,
-and 3,900 bisexual. While of these last again
-700 are <em>predominantly</em> homosexual; so that of 100,000
-Germans, 2,200 (or 2.2 per cent.) are either exclusively
-or predominantly homosexual&mdash;making 1,200,000 for
-the whole German Fatherland.”</p>
-
-<p class="tb">“Sexual inversion has usually been regarded as
-psycho-pathological, as a symptom of degeneration;
-and those who exhibit it have been considered as physically
-unfit. This view, however, is falling into disrepute,
-especially as Krafft-Ebing, its principal champion,
-abandoned it in the later editions of his work. None
-the less, it is not generally recognised that sexual inverts
-may be otherwise perfectly healthy, and with
-regard to other social matters quite normal. When
-they have been asked if they would have wished
-matters to be different with them in this respect, they
-almost invariably answer in the negative.”&mdash;<span class="smcap">O. Weininger</span>,
-“Sex and Character,” ch. iv. Heinemann,
-London, 1906.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">137</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="tb">“It is a common belief that a male who experiences
-love for his own sex must be despicable, degraded,
-depraved, vicious, and incapable of humane or generous
-sentiments. If Greek history did not contradict this
-supposition, a little patient enquiry into contemporary
-manners would suffice to remove it.”&mdash;<span class="smcap">J. Addington
-Symonds</span>, “A Problem in Modern Ethics,” p. 10.</p>
-
-<p class="tb">“Mantegazza rightly insists that Urnings are found
-by no means only among the dregs of the people, but
-that they are rather to be noted in circles which in
-respect of culture, wealth, and social position rank
-among the first. Thus, among the aristocracy without
-doubt a great number of Urnings are to be found.”&mdash;<span class="smcap">A. Moll</span>,
-<cite>op. cit.</cite> p. 76.</p>
-
-<p class="tb">“In no rank are there so many Urnings as among
-servants. One may say that every third male domestic
-is an Urning.”&mdash;<span class="smcap">De Joux</span>, “Die Enterbten des Liebesglückes,”
-p. 193. Leipzig, 1893.</p>
-
-<p class="tb">“It is therefore certain, as we have seen, that many
-Urnings come from nervous or pathologically disposed
-families.… All the same, I must say that there is
-no proof to hand in <em>all</em> cases of sex-inversion among
-men, that the individuals concerned are thus hereditarily
-weighted. And besides, there is the consideration
-that the extension, according to some authors, of hereditary
-trouble is at present so great that one may<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">138</a></span>
-prove a tendency to nervous or mental maladies in
-almost everybody.”&mdash;<span class="smcap">A. Moll</span>, <cite>op. cit.</cite>, p. 221.</p>
-
-<p class="tb">“The truth is that we can no more explain the inverted
-sex-feeling than we can the normal impulse;
-all the attempts at explanation of these things, and
-of Love, are defective.”&mdash;<cite>Ibid</cite>, p. 253.</p>
-
-<p class="tb">“Among the <i lang="fr">penchants</i> of Urnings one finds not
-infrequently a great partiality for Art and Music&mdash;and
-indeed, for active interest in the same as well as passive
-enjoyment … the Actor’s talent is especially noticeable
-among some.… But it must not be thought that
-Urnings are only capable of a special activity of the
-imagination. On the contrary, there are undoubted
-cases in which they contribute something in the scientific
-direction.… Also in Poetry do Urnings occasionally
-show exceptional talent; especially in love-verses
-addressed to men.”&mdash;<cite>Ibid</cite>, p. 80.</p>
-
-<p class="tb">“An examination of my cases [of Inverts] reveals the
-interesting fact that 68 per cent. possess artistic aptitude
-in varying degree. Galton found, from the investigation
-of nearly 1,000 persons that the average showing artistic
-tastes in England is only about 30 per cent.”&mdash;<span class="smcap">Havelock
-Ellis</span>, “Sexual Inversion,” p. 173.</p>
-
-<p class="tb">“In Antiquity, especially among the Greeks, there
-seem to have been numbers of men who in their
-emotional natures were hermaphrodites. I think that
-the study of psychical hermaphrodisy is most important,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">139</a></span>
-and will throw yet greater light on the psychology
-of Love itself. Observation so far already shows that
-the same individual at differing times can experience
-quite different sexual feelings.”&mdash;<span class="smcap">A. Moll</span>, <cite>op. cit.</cite>,
-p. 200.</p>
-
-<p class="tb">“The Urning is capable, through the force of his
-love, of making the greatest sacrifices for his beloved,
-and on that account the love of the Urning has been
-often compared with Woman’s love. Just as the
-Woman’s love is stronger and more devoted than that
-of the normal man, just as it exceeds that of the Man
-in inwardness, so, according to Ulrichs should the
-Urning’s love in this respect stand higher than that
-of the woman-loving Man.”&mdash;<cite>Ibid</cite>, p. 118.</p>
-
-<p class="tb">“Womanish men often know how to treat women
-better than manly men do. Manly men, except in most
-rare cases, learn how to deal with women only after
-long experience, and even then most imperfectly.”&mdash;<span class="smcap">O.
-Weininger</span>, “Sex and Character,” ch. v.</p>
-
-<p class="tb">“Is it really the case that all women and men are
-marked off sharply from each other, the women on the
-one hand alike in all points, the men on the other?…
-There are transitional forms between the metals
-and non-metals, between chemical combinations and
-simple mixtures, between animals and plants, between
-phanerogams and cryptogams, and between mammals
-and birds.… The improbability may henceforth be
-taken for granted of finding in Nature a sharp cleavage<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">140</a></span>
-between all that is masculine on the one side and
-all that is feminine on the other; or that any living
-being is so simple in this respect that it can be put
-wholly on one side, or wholly on the other, of the line.”&mdash;<span class="smcap">Weininger</span>,
-<cite>Ibid</cite>, introduction, p. 2.</p>
-
-<p class="tb">“Upon this, Chéron made a rather strange observation.
-‘We have,’ she said, ‘with regard to sexual
-distinctions, notions that were not dreamed of by the
-primitive simplicity of the people of the age now gone
-by. From the fact that there are two sexes, and only
-two, they for a long time drew false inferences. They
-concluded that a woman is simply a woman, and a
-man simply a man. In reality this is not so; there
-are women who are very much women, and women
-who are very little so. Such differences, concealed in
-former times by costume and mode of life, and masked
-by prejudice, stand out clearly in our society. And
-not only so, but they become more accentuated and
-apparent in each generation.’”&mdash;<span class="smcap">Anatole France</span>,
-“Sur la Pierre Blanche,” p. 301.</p>
-
-<p class="tb">“In <em>every</em> human being there are present both male
-and female elements, only in normal persons (according
-to their sex) the one set of elements is more
-greatly developed than the other. The chief difference
-in the case of homosexual persons is that in them the
-male and female elements are more equalized; so that
-when, in addition, the general development is of a
-high grade, we find among this class the most perfect
-types of humanity.”&mdash;Dr. <span class="smcap">Arduin</span>, “Die Frauenfrage,”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">141</a></span>
-in <cite lang="de">Jahrbuch der Sexuellen Zwischenstufen</cite>, vol. ii.,
-p. 217. Leipzig, 1900.</p>
-
-<p class="tb">“The notion that human beings were originally
-hermaphroditic is both ancient and widespread. We
-find it in the book of Genesis, unless indeed there be
-a confusion here between two separate theories of
-creation. God is said to have first made man in His
-image, male and female in one body, and to have
-bidden them multiply. Later on He created the woman
-out of part of this primitive man.” (See also the myth
-related by Aristophanes in Plato’s Symposium.)&mdash;<span class="smcap">Havelock
-Ellis</span>, “Sexual Inversion,” p. 229.</p>
-
-<p class="tb">“When the sexual instinct first appears in early
-youth, it seems to be much less specialised than normally
-it becomes later. Not only is it, at the outset,
-less definitely directed to a specific sexual end, but
-even the sex of its object is sometimes uncertain.”&mdash;<cite>Ibid</cite>,
-p. 44.</p>
-
-<p class="tb">“In me the homosexual nature is singularly complete,
-and is undoubtedly congenital. The most intense
-delight of my childhood (even when a tiny boy in my
-nurse’s charge) was to watch acrobats and riders at
-the circus. This was not so much for the skilful feats
-as on account of the beauty of their persons. Even
-then I cared chiefly for the more lithe and graceful
-fellows. People told me that circus actors were wicked
-and would steal little boys, and so I came to look on
-my favorites as half-devil and half-angel. When I was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">142</a></span>
-older and could go about alone, I would often hang
-around the tents of travelling shows in hope of catching
-a glimpse of the actors. I longed to see them
-naked, without their tights, and used to lie awake at
-night, thinking of them and longing to be embraced
-and loved by them.”&mdash;<cite>Ibid</cite>, “case” ix., p. 62.</p>
-
-<p class="tb">“I was fifteen years and ten-and-a-half months old
-when the first erotic dream announced the arrival of
-puberty. I had had no previous experience of sex-satisfaction,
-either in the Urning direction or in any
-other. This occurrence therefore came about quite
-normally. From a much earlier time, however, I had
-been subject partly to tender yearnings and partly to
-sensual longing without definite form and purpose&mdash;the
-two emotions being always separate from each
-other and never experienced for one and the same
-young man. These aimless sensual longings plagued
-me often in hours of solitude; and I could not overcome
-them. They showed themselves first, during my
-fifteenth year, when I was at school at Detmold, in
-the following two ways:&mdash;First, they were awakened
-by a drawing in Normand’s “Saülen-ordnungen,” of
-the figure of a Greek god or hero, standing there in
-naked beauty. This image, a hundred times put
-away, came again a hundred times before my mind.
-(I need not say it did not <em>cause</em> the Urning temperament
-in me; it merely awoke what was slumbering
-there already&mdash;a thing that any other circumstance
-might have done.) Secondly, when studying in my
-little room, or when I lay upon my bed before going<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">143</a></span>
-to sleep, the thought used suddenly and irresistibly
-to rise up in my mind&mdash;“If only a soldier would
-clamber through the window and come into my room!”
-Then my imagination painted me a splendid soldier-figure
-of twenty to twenty-two years old; and I was,
-as it were, all on fire. And yet my thoughts were
-quite vague, and undirected to any definite satisfaction;
-nor had I ever spoken a word with a real soldier.”&mdash;<span class="smcap">K.
-H. Ulrichs</span>, “Memnon,” §77. Leipzig, 1898.
-See also “A Problem in Modern Ethics,” p. 73.</p>
-
-<p class="tb">“The friendships of this kind which I formed at
-School were two in number&mdash;I shall never forget the
-absorbing depth and intensity of them. I never talked
-about them to anyone else, they were much too sacred
-and serious for that, nor&mdash;strange as it may seem&mdash;did
-I ever speak of them to the boys themselves, or
-indeed, show any signs of affection towards them. If
-they had been told that I was devoted to their welfare,
-and willing to sacrifice myself and all I had to it
-(which was indeed the fact) they would have been
-simply astonished; more especially as they were both
-young boys not yet arrived at puberty.</p>
-
-<p>“I am at present somewhat bitterly conscious that
-in these cases one of the strongest influences for good
-that ever came into my life was nine-tenths wasted.
-How much better it all might have been under more
-favourable surroundings it is impossible to imagine.
-Still, it was not without its good influence on me,
-though (owing to their complete ignorance of my
-feelings) it could have had none whatever on the boys.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">144</a></span>
-I was conscious of a bracing and inspiring effect on my
-whole nature, a confirmed health of body, and most of
-all, of a greatly increased capacity for work. And
-doubtless all this might have been intensified a thousand
-fold if I had been ever so little guided and
-encouraged by public opinion sanctioning these friendships.</p>
-
-<p>“The Public School boy has after all strong feelings
-of honour and fairness: and I am sure much might be
-done by cultivating the Public Opinion of the school:
-making devoted and disinterested friendships highly
-thought of and praised, and condemning as base and
-mean the least attempt to befoul a young boy’s purity
-through a gross and selfish desire for personal gratification.
-School public opinion would, I am sure, tend
-quite readily to flow in such channels. But this would
-demand an openness of treatment of the whole question
-such as does not at present exist. That the
-greatest force the schoolmaster has at his command
-should be so ignored (and so needlessly) is more than
-absurd: it is monstrous. And it concerns him as a
-teacher quite as much as the boys themselves in their
-relations with each other. I believe that gaining a
-boy’s affection is the necessary preliminary to really
-<em>teaching</em> him anything. Otherwise you do not really
-teach him at all.”&mdash;<cite>Private letter.</cite></p>
-
-<p class="tb">“I could tell you a good deal of another equally
-strong friendship I formed (myself twenty-five, boy
-fourteen) which was one of the happiest events of my
-life. It was acknowledged on both sides, but perfectly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">145</a></span>
-restrained and pure: and we saw a great deal of each
-other during most of the school holidays for about
-a year. I could have done anything with that boy,
-my influence over him was for the time being I should
-say unlimited: and undoubtedly <em>immense</em> good accrued
-to us both.”&mdash;<cite>Ibid</cite>.</p>
-
-<p class="tb">“In my own school-life&mdash;as a day scholar&mdash;I had
-two such friendships, though of course in a day
-school there was not the same possibility of their
-development. One was with an elder boy some five
-years my senior, and the other with a master some
-twelve years older than myself. I was a shy, timid
-youngster, and not having a robust physique did not
-enter much into the ordinary athletics of the school.
-My elder friend was a very delicate, gentle, refined
-boy with a purity and loftiness of mind in striking
-contrast to the filthy moral atmosphere of the school
-at that time, but he was never censorious or self-righteous.
-I feel that this friendship was the most
-powerful influence in my early life in keeping a high
-ideal of conduct before me&mdash;much more powerful than
-the influence of home, which I do not think I was
-at all conscious of.</p>
-
-<p>“After he left school, for Cambridge, we used to
-write regularly to one another&mdash;long letters, hardly
-ever less than three sheets in length. I remember
-I used to think him the most handsome man I knew,
-but looking now at his photo, taken about that time
-and comparing it with others, I see that his features
-were inferior to many others of my school-fellows.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">146</a></span>
-At the end of his second year he died of consumption.
-It was during the Long Vacation, and I was abroad at
-the time. I remember I used to sit up late into the
-night writing very long letters to him about all I had
-seen, to interest him during his illness. I did not
-know how ill he really was, but I had a terrible fear
-that I should not see him again. When I got back
-and found he had just died the shock was awful. For
-weeks I felt as if I had not a friend in the whole
-world. I have never felt any loss so keenly either
-before or since.…</p>
-
-<p>“The other friendship with my mathematical master,
-though not so intimate, was still of a very affectionate
-character. I feel I owe a great deal to it&mdash;he
-laid the foundation of my ideal of a teacher’s duty to
-his pupils.”&mdash;<cite>Private letter.</cite></p>
-
-<p class="tb">“It is not new in itself; this, the feeling that drew
-Jesus to John, or Shakespeare to the youth of the sonnets,
-or that inspired the friendships of Greece, has
-been with us before, and in the new citizenship we shall
-need it again. The Whitmanic love of comrades is its
-modern expression; Democracy&mdash;as socially, not politically
-conceived&mdash;its basis. The thought as to how
-much of the solidarity of labour and the modern Trade-Union
-movement may be due to an unconscious faith
-in this principle of comradeship, is no idle one. The
-freer, more direct, and more genuine relationship
-between men, which is implied by it, must be the ultimate
-basis of the reconstructed Workshop.”&mdash;C. R.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">147</a></span>
-<span class="smcap">Ashbee</span>, “Workshop Reconstruction and Citizenship,”
-p. 160.</p>
-
-<p class="tb">A case of passionate attachment between two Indian
-boys was told to the author of the present book
-by a master at a school in India. The boys&mdash;who
-were about sixteen years of age&mdash;were both at the
-same school, and were devoted friends; but the day
-came when they had to part. One was taken away
-by his parents to go to a distant part of the country.
-The other was inconsolable at the prospect. When
-the day arrived, and his companion was removed, he
-soon after went quietly to a well in the school precincts,
-jumped in, and was drowned. The news, sent on by
-wire, reached the departing friend while still on his
-journey. He said little, but at one of the stations left
-the train and disappeared. The train went on, but
-at a little distance out, the boy ran out of the bushes
-by the line, threw himself on the rails, and was killed.</p>
-
-<p class="tb">The following is taken from one of the “cases”
-recorded by Havelock Ellis in his “Sexual Inversion”;
-“The earliest sex-impression that I am conscious of
-is at the age of nine or ten falling in love with a
-handsome boy who must have been about two years
-my senior. I do not recollect ever having spoken to
-him, but my desire, as far as I can recall, was that he
-should seize hold of and handle me. I have a distinct
-impression yet of how pleasurable even physical pain
-or cruelty would have been at his hands.”&mdash;<span class="smcap">Havelock
-Ellis</span>, <cite>op. cit.</cite>, “case” xiii., p. 71.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">148</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="tb">“When I was about sixteen-and-a-half years old,
-there came into the house a boy about two years
-younger than myself, who became the absorbing
-thought of my school-days. I do not remember a
-moment, from the time I first saw him to the time
-I left school, that I was not in love with him, and the
-affection was reciprocated, if somewhat reservedly.
-He was always a little ahead of me in books and
-scholarship, but as our affection ripened we spent most
-of our spare time together, and he received my advances
-much as a girl who is being wooed, a little
-mockingly perhaps, but with real pleasure. He allowed
-me to fondle and caress him, but our intimacy never
-went further than a kiss, and about that even was the
-slur of shame; there was always a barrier between
-us, and we never so much as whispered to one another
-concerning those things of which all the school obscenely
-talked.”&mdash;<cite>Same case</cite>, p. 73.</p>
-
-<p class="tb">“At the age of twenty-one I began gradually to
-remark that I was not somehow like my comrades, that
-I had no pleasure in male occupations, that smoking,
-drinking, and card-playing gave me little satisfaction,
-and that I had a real death-horror of a brothel. And,
-as a matter of fact, I had never been in one, as on
-every occasion under some pretext or other I have succeeded
-in stealing off. I now began to think about
-myself; I felt myself frightfully desolate, miserable
-and unfortunate, and longed for a friend of the same
-nature as myself&mdash;yet without dreaming that there
-could be other such men. At the age of twenty-two<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">149</a></span>
-I came to know a young man who at last cleared up
-my mind about sexual inversion and those affected
-with it, since he&mdash;an Urning, like myself&mdash;had fallen
-in love with me. The scales fell from my eyes, and
-I bless the day which brought light to me.… Towards
-woman in her sexual relation I feel a real
-horror, which the exercise of all my strongest powers
-of imagination would not avail to overcome; and
-indeed, I have never attempted to overcome it, since
-I am quite persuaded of the fruitlessness of such an
-attempt, which to me appears sinful and unnatural.”&mdash;<span class="smcap">Krafft-Ebing</span>,
-“Psychopathia Sexualis,” 7th edition,
-“case” No. 122, p. 291. Stuttgart, 1892.</p>
-
-<p class="tb">“I can no longer exist without men’s love; without
-such I must ever remain at strife with myself.… If
-marriage between men existed I believe I should not
-be afraid of a life-long union&mdash;a thing which with a
-woman seems to be something impossible.…
-Since, however, this kind of love is reckoned criminal,
-by its satisfaction I can be at harmony with myself
-but never with the world, and necessarily in consequence
-must ever be somewhat out of tune; and all
-the more so because my character is open, and I hate
-lies of all kinds. This torment, to have always to conceal
-everything, has forced me to confess my anomaly
-to a few friends, of whose understanding and reticence
-I am sure. Although oftentimes my condition seems
-to me sad enough, by reason of the difficulty of satisfaction
-and the general contempt of manly love, yet
-I am often just a little proud on account of having<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">150</a></span>
-these anomalous feelings. Naturally, I shall never
-marry&mdash;but this seems to me by no means a misfortune,
-although I am fond of family life, and up to now
-have passed my time only among my own relations.
-I live in the hope that later I shall have a permanent
-loved one; such indeed I must have, else would the
-future seem gray and drear, and every object which
-folk usually pursue&mdash;honour, high position, etc.&mdash;only
-vain and unattractive.</p>
-
-<p>“Should this hope not be fulfilled, I know that
-I should be unable, permanently and with pleasure,
-to give myself to my calling, and that I should be
-capable of setting aside everything in order to gain
-the love of a man. I feel no longer any moral scruples
-on account of my anomalous leaning, and generally
-have never been troubled because I felt myself drawn
-to youths.… Up to now it has only seemed to me
-bad and immoral to do that which is injurious to
-another, or which I would not wish done to myself,
-and in this respect I can say that I try as much as
-possible not to infringe on the rights of others, and
-am capable of being violently roused by any injustice
-done to others.”&mdash;<cite>Ibid</cite>, p. 249, “case” No. 110 (official
-in a factory, age 31).</p>
-
-<p class="tb">“My thoughts are by no means exclusively of the
-body or morbidly sensual. How often at the sight of
-a handsome youth does a deeply enthusiastic mood
-come upon me, and I offer a prayer, so to speak, in
-the glorious words of Heine&mdash;”Du bist wie eine<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">151</a></span>
-Blume, so hold, so schön, so rein“.… Never has
-a young man yet guessed my love for him, I have
-never corrupted or damaged the morals of one, but
-for many have I here and there smoothed their pathway;
-and then I stick at no trouble and make sacrifices
-such as I can only make for them.</p>
-
-<p>“When thus I have a chance to have a loved friend
-near me, to teach, to support and help, when my
-unconfest love finds a loving response (though naturally
-not sexual), then all the unclean images fade more
-and more from my mind. Then does my love become
-almost platonic, and lifts itself up&mdash;only to sink again
-in the mire, when it is deprived of its proper activity.</p>
-
-<p>“For the rest, I am&mdash;and I can say it without boasting&mdash;not
-one of the worst of men. Mentally more
-sensitive than most average folk, I take interest in
-everything that moves mankind. I am kindly-disposed,
-tender, and easily moved to pity, can do no injury to
-any animal, certainly not to a human being, but on the
-contrary am active in a human-friendly way, where
-and however I can.</p>
-
-<p>“Though then before my own conscience I cannot
-reproach myself, and though I must certainly reject
-the judgment of the world about us, yet I suffer
-greatly. In very truth I have injured no one; and
-I hold my love in its nobler activity for just as holy
-as that of normally disposed men, but under the unhappy
-fate that allows us neither sufferance nor recognition,
-I suffer often more than my life can bear.”&mdash;<cite>Ibid</cite>,
-p. 268, “case” No. 114.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">152</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="tb">“To depict all the misery, all the unfortunate situations,
-the constant dread of being found out in one’s
-peculiarity and of becoming impossible in society&mdash;to
-give an idea of all this is truly more than pen or
-words can compass. The very thought, so soon as it
-arises, of losing one’s social existence and of being
-rejected by everybody is more torment than can be
-imagined. In such a case, everything, everything would
-be forgotten that one had ever done in the way of
-good; in the consciousness of his lofty morality every
-normally disposed man would puff himself up, however
-frivolously he might really have acted in the matter of
-his love. I know many such normal folk whose unworthy
-conception of their love is indeed hard for me
-to understand.”&mdash;<cite>Ibid</cite>, p. 269.</p>
-
-<p class="tb">“The torturing images of betrayed love prevent
-my sleeping, so that I am forced, now and again, to
-have recourse to chloral. My dreams are only a continuation
-of actual life, and just as painful. How all
-this will end I really know not; but I suppose these
-root-emotions must take their own course.… The
-only reasonable end of the struggle is Death.”&mdash;<span class="smcap">A.
-Moll</span>, “Conträre Sexualempfindung,” 2nd edition,
-p. 123 (quotation from a letter).</p>
-
-<p class="tb">“Weary and worn, I have passed through every
-tempest of anguish and despair. Years of the most
-racking mental agony have gone over my head without
-killing me. Through the long night watches I have
-heard the unceasing hours toll. Sleep has never been<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">153</a></span>
-thought of by me, but I have lain on my bed trying
-to read some book, or have knelt by my bedside and
-endeavoured to raise my heart and spirit in prayer
-for succour or forgiveness. At last, unable to hold out
-any longer, with mouth tight-closed and knitted brow
-the Charmer has deadened my senses for one or two
-brief hours; but only that I may wake to a stronger
-and clearer perception of my hopeless condition.</p>
-
-<p>“How the days have got on I know not. How I can
-have lived so long through such misery I know not.
-But torture like this is cruelly slow, whilst it is sure.
-It is the nature of youth to be long-enduring where
-Love is put to the test and a kind of occasional flicker&mdash;a
-kind of mocking semblance of hope, as like to
-hope as the rushing meteor is to the enduring sun&mdash;helps
-to support the load of misery, and so to prolong
-it. I am hundreds of years old in this my wretchedness
-of every moment. I cannot battle against Love
-and crush it out&mdash;never! God has implanted the
-necessity of the sentiment in my heart; it is scarce
-possible not to ask oneself why has He implanted so
-divine an element in my nature, which is doomed to
-die unsatisfied, which is destined in the end to be
-my very death?”&mdash;<cite>From a manuscript left to the
-Author by an Urning.</cite></p>
-
-<p class="tb"><span class="smcap">H. Ellis</span>, in Appendix D. of his book on “Sexual
-Inversion,” speaks at some length on the School-friendships
-of girls: what they call “Flames” and
-“Raves”; of love at first sight; romance; courtship;
-meetings despite all obstacles; long letters; jealousy;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">154</a></span>
-the writing the beloved’s name everywhere, etc. These
-alliances are sometimes sexual, but oftener not so&mdash;though
-full of “psychic erethism.”</p>
-
-<p class="tb">In the same Appendix he quotes a woman of thirty-three,
-who writes, “At fourteen I had my first case
-of love, but it was with a girl. It was insane, intense
-love, but had the same quality and sensations as my
-first love with a man at eighteen. In neither case was
-the object idealized: I was perfectly aware of their
-faults; nevertheless, my whole being was lost, immersed,
-in their existence. The first lasted two years,
-the second seven years. No love has since been so
-intense, but now these two persons, though living, are
-no more to me than the veriest stranger.”</p>
-
-<p class="tb">Another woman of thirty-five writes, “Girls between
-the ages of fourteen and eighteen at college or girls’
-schools often fall in love with the same sex. This is
-not friendship. The loved one is older, more advanced,
-more charming or beautiful. When I was a freshman
-in college I knew at least thirty girls who were in love
-with a senior. Some sought her because it was the
-fashion, but I knew that my own homage and that of
-many others was sincere and passionate. I loved her
-because she was brilliant and utterly indifferent to
-the love shown her. She was not pretty, though at the
-time we thought her beautiful. One of her adorers,
-on being slighted, was ill for two weeks. On her return
-she was speaking to me when the object of our admiration
-came into the room. The shock was too great,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">155</a></span>
-and she fainted. When I reached the senior year
-I was the recipient of languishing glances, original
-verses, roses, and passionate letters written at midnight
-and three in the morning.”</p>
-
-<p class="tb">“Passionate friendships among girls, from the most
-innocent to the most elaborate excursions in the direction
-of Lesbos, are extremely common in theatres, both
-among actresses, and even more among chorus and
-ballet-girls.”&mdash;<span class="smcap">Havelock Ellis</span>, “Sexual Inversion,”
-p. 130.</p>
-
-<p class="tb">“The love of homosexual women is often very
-passionate, as is that of Urnings. Just like these, the
-former often feel themselves blessed when they love
-happily. Nevertheless, to many of them, as to the
-Urning, is the circumstance very painful that in consequence
-of their antipathy to the touch of the male
-they are not in the position to found a family. Sometimes,
-when the love of a homosexual woman is not
-responded to, serious disturbances of the nerve-system
-may ensue, leading even to paroxysms of fury.”&mdash;<span class="smcap">A.
-Moll</span>, <cite>op. cit.</cite>, p. 338.</p>
-
-<p class="tb">“It is noteworthy how many inverted women have,
-with more or less fraud, been married to the woman
-of their choice, the couple living happily together for
-long periods. I know of one case, probably unique,
-in which the ceremony was gone through without any
-deception on any side; a congenitally inverted English
-woman of distinguished intellectual ability, now dead,
-was attached to the wife of a clergyman, who, in full<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">156</a></span>
-cognisance of all the facts of the case, privately married
-the two ladies in his own church.”&mdash;<span class="smcap">Havelock
-Ellis</span>, <cite>op. cit.</cite>, p. 146, footnote.</p>
-
-<p class="tb">“Seven or eight girls, we are told (in Montaigne’s
-‘Journal du Voyage en Italie,’ 1350), belonging to
-Chaumont, resolved to dress and to work as men; one
-of these came to Vitry to work as a weaver, and was
-looked upon as a well-conditioned young man, and
-liked by everyone. At Vitry she became betrothed
-to a woman, but, a quarrel arising, no marriage took
-place. Afterwards, ‘she fell in love with a woman
-whom she married, and with whom she lived for four or
-five months, to the wife’s great contentment, it is said;
-but having been recognised by some one from Chaumont,
-and brought to justice, she was condemned to
-be hanged. She said she would even prefer this to
-living again as a girl, and was hanged for using illicit
-inventions to supply the defects of her sex’.”&mdash;<cite>Ibid</cite>,
-p. 119.</p>
-
-<p class="tb">“It is evident that there must be some radical causes
-for the frequency of homosexuality among prostitutes.
-One such cause doubtless lies in the character of the
-prostitute’s relations with men; these relations are
-of a professional character, and, as the business element
-becomes emphasized, the possibility of sexual
-satisfaction diminishes; at the best also there lacks
-the sense of social equality, the feeling of possession,
-and scope for the exercise of feminine affection and
-devotion.”&mdash;<cite>Ibid</cite>, p. 149.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">157</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="tb">“Among the inscribed prostitutes of Berlin there
-are without doubt a great number who honour the love
-of women. I am told from well-informed sources, that
-about twenty-five per cent. of the prostitutes of Berlin
-have relations with other women.”&mdash;<span class="smcap">A. Moll</span>, <cite>op. cit.</cite>,
-p. 331.</p>
-
-<p class="tb">“Karl Heinrich Ulrichs (born in 1825 near Aurich),
-who for many years expounded and defended homosexual
-love, and whose views are said to have had some
-influence in drawing Westphal’s attention to the matter,
-was a Hanoverian legal official (Amts-assessor), himself
-sexually inverted. From 1864 onward, at first
-under the name of ‘Numa Numantius,’ and subsequently
-under his own name, Ulrichs published in
-various parts of Germany a long series of works dealing
-with this question, and made various attempts to
-obtain a revision of the legal position of the sexual
-invert in Germany.</p>
-
-<p>“Although not a writer whose psychological views
-can carry much scientific weight, Ulrichs appears to
-have been a man of most brilliant ability, and his
-knowledge is said to have been of almost universal
-extent; he was not only well-versed in his own special
-subjects of jurisprudence and theology, but in many
-branches of natural science, as well as in archæology;
-he was also regarded by many as the best Latinist of
-his time. In 1880 he left Germany and settled in
-Naples, and afterwards at Aquila in the Abruzzi,
-whence he issued a Latin periodical. He died in
-1895.”&mdash;<span class="smcap">Havelock Ellis</span>, <cite>op. cit.</cite>, p. 33.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">158</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="tb">Ulrichs enters into an elaborate classification of
-human types, with a corresponding nomenclature,
-which, though somewhat ponderous, has been of use.
-Among males, for instance, he distinguishes the quite
-normal man, whom he calls “Dioning,” from the invert,
-whom he calls “Urning.” Among Urnings, again,
-he distinguishes (1) those who are thoroughly manly
-in appearance and in mental habit and character
-(“Mannlings”), and who tend to love softer and
-younger specimens of their own sex; (2) those who
-are effeminate in appearance and cast of mind (“Weiblings”),
-and who love rougher and older men; and
-(3) those who are of a medium type (“Zwischen
-Urnings”) and love young men. Then again there is
-the “Urano-dioning,” who is born with a capacity
-of love in both directions, <i>i.e.</i>, for women and for men.
-He is generally of the manly type. And besides these,
-some sub-species, like the “Uraniaster,” who is a normal
-man who has contracted the Urning habit, and
-the “Virilised Urning,” who is an Urning who has
-contracted the normal habit, though this is not really
-natural to him! The whole may be set out in a table
-as follows:&mdash;<br /><br /></p>
-
-<table summary="Men according to Ulrichs" style="border-collapse: collapse; line-height:.95em;" border="0">
- <tr>
- <td rowspan="6">The Human Male</td>
- <td rowspan="6"><b>⎛<br />⎢<br />⎢<br />⎢<br />⎢<br />⎢<br />⎢<br />⎝</b></td>
- <td class="tdl" colspan="3"><p class="indent">(<i>a</i>) Normal Man or Dioning&mdash;called
- Uraniaster when he acquires Urning tendencies.</p></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td rowspan="4">(<i>b</i>)&nbsp;Urning</td>
- <td rowspan="4"><b>⎛<br />⎢<br />⎢<br />⎢<br />⎝</b></td>
- <td>1. Mannling.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>2. Zwischen-Urning.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>3. Weibling.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><p class="indent">4. Also called Virilised Urning when he acquires the normal habit.</p></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">(<i>c</i>) Urano-dioning.</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p><br /><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">159</a></span></p>
-
-<p>If we add to this a corresponding table for the
-female we shall have an idea of the complication of
-Ulrichs’ system! Yet, complex as it is, and whatever
-criticisms we may make upon it, we must allow that
-it does not exceed the complexity of the real facts of
-Nature. (See <span class="smcap">K. H. Ulrichs</span>’ “Memnon,” ch. iii.-v.)</p>
-
-<p class="tb">Krafft-Ebing’s analysis of the subject is fully as
-elaborate as that of Ulrichs. It is given by <span class="smcap">J. A.
-Symonds</span> in the form of a table, as follows:&mdash;<br /><br /></p>
-
-<table summary="Symonds' table of Krafft-Ebing’s classifications" style="border-collapse: collapse; line-height:.95em;" border="0">
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" rowspan="7">Sexual Inversion</td>
- <td rowspan="7"><b>⎛<br />⎢<br />⎢<br />⎢<br />⎢<br />⎝</b></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td rowspan="2">Acquired</td>
- <td rowspan="2"><b>⎛<br />⎢<br />⎝</b></td>
- <td colspan="4">Persistent.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="4">Episodical.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td rowspan="4">Congenital</td>
- <td rowspan="4"><b>⎛<br />⎢<br />⎢<br />⎢<br />⎝</b></td>
- <td colspan="3">Psychic Hermaphrodites.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td rowspan="2">Urnings</td>
- <td rowspan="2"><b>⎛<br />⎝</b></td>
- <td>Male Habitus (Mannlings).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Female Habitus (Weiblings).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="2">Androgyni.</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p><br />And Symonds continues:&mdash;“What is the rational
-explanation of the facts presented to us by the analysis
-which I have formulated in this table, cannot as yet be
-thoroughly determined. We do not know enough
-about the law of sex in human beings to advance a
-theory. Krafft-Ebing and writers of his school are
-at present inclined to refer them all to diseases of the
-nervous centres, inherited, congenital, excited by
-early habits of self-abuse. The inadequacy of this
-method I have already attempted to set forth; and
-I have also called attention to the fact that it does not
-sufficiently account for the phenomena known to us
-through history and through every-day experience.”
-[It should be noted that in later editions of his book
-Krafft-Ebing considerably modifies the view that these<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">160</a></span>
-sex-variations all indicate disease.]&mdash;“A Problem in
-Modern Ethics,” p. 46.</p>
-
-<p class="tb">Moll, speaking of the act so commonly credited to
-Urnings (sodomy), says:&mdash;“The common assumption
-is that the intercourse of Urnings consists in this. But
-it is a great error to suppose that this act is so frequent
-among them.”&mdash;<span class="smcap">A. Moll</span>, <cite>op. cit.</cite>, p. 139.</p>
-
-<p class="tb">And Krafft-Ebing also speaks of it as rare among
-true Urnings, though not uncommon among old roués
-and debauchees of more normal temperament.&mdash;“Psychopathia
-Sexualis,” 7th edition, p. 258.</p>
-
-<p class="tb">“The Urning denies not only the ‘unnaturalness’
-of his leanings, but also their pathological character;
-he protests against comparison with the lame and the
-deaf. The occasional coincidence of sexual inversion
-with other really morbid conditions settles nothing,
-nor is the reminder that it is antagonistic to the purpose
-of race-propagation a proof; for who can assure
-us that Nature has intended all people for race-propagation?
-Even to the worker-bee Nature has not granted
-this function, although in her stunted female sex-organs
-there exists an undeniable indication or suggestion
-of sex-feeling.”&mdash;<span class="smcap">A. Moll</span>, <cite>op. cit.</cite>, p. 271. (From
-a letter by a sixty year old Urning.)</p>
-
-<p class="tb">“Homosexuality, therefore, might be described as
-an abnormal variety of the sex-impulse, but hardly as
-a morbid variety. If you like, it might be termed an<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">161</a></span>
-arrest of development or a kind of reversion. And
-this is quite in accord with the fact that the best experts
-in the subject have so far not discovered more psychic
-abnormalities among homosexuals than among heterosexuals&mdash;nor
-more degeneracy or signs of degeneracy.”&mdash;Consulting-Physician
-Dr. <span class="smcap">Paul Naecke</span>, in <cite lang="de">Der
-Tag</cite>, 26th Oct., 1907.</p>
-
-<p class="tb">“As a result of these considerations Ulrichs concludes
-that there is no real ground for the persecution
-of Urnings except such as may be found in the repugnance
-felt by the vast numerical majority for an insignificant
-minority. The majority encourages matrimony,
-condones seduction, sanctions prostitution, legalises
-divorce, in the interest of its own sexual proclivities.
-It makes temporary or permanent unions illegal for the
-minority whose inversion of instinct it abhors. And
-this persecution, in the popular mind at any rate, is
-justified, like many other inequitable acts of prejudice
-or ignorance, by theological assumptions and the so-called
-mandates of revelation.”&mdash;“A Problem in
-Modern Ethics,” p. 83.</p>
-
-<p class="tb">“We understand by ‘homosexual’ a person who
-feels himself drawn to individuals of the same sex by
-feelings of real love. Whether or not he acts in accordance
-with this homosexual feeling is, from the scientific
-standpoint, beside the question. Just as there are
-normal folk who live chastely, so there are homosexual
-persons whose love bears a distinctly psychic, ideal
-and ‘platonic’ character.…</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">162</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“The feminine impress, in the case of homosexual
-men, is in general best indicated by the presence of
-greater sensitiveness and receptivity, also by the dominance
-of the emotional life, by a strong artistic sense,
-especially in the direction of music, often too by a
-tendency to mysticism, and by various inclinations and
-habits feminine in the good or less good sense of the
-word. This blending of temperament, however, does
-not make the homosexual as such a less worthy person.
-He is indeed not of the same nature as the heterosexual,
-but he is of equal worth.”&mdash;Dr <span class="smcap">M. Hirschfeld’s</span>
-evidence as medical specialist in the Moltké-Harden
-trial.</p>
-
-<p class="tb">“One serious objection to recognising and tolerating
-sexual inversion has always been that it tends to
-check the population. This was a sound political and
-social argument in the time of Moses, when a small
-militant tribe needed to multiply to the full extent of
-its procreative capacity. It is by no means so valid
-in our age, when the habitable portions of the globe
-are rapidly becoming overcrowded. Moreover, we must
-bear in mind that society under the existing order sanctions
-female prostitution, whereby men and women,
-though normally procreative, are sterilized to an indefinite
-extent.”&mdash;<span class="smcap">J. A. Symonds</span>, “A Problem in
-Modern Ethics,” p. 82.</p>
-
-<p class="tb">“Before Justinian, both Constantine and Theodosius
-passed laws against sexual inversion, committing the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">163</a></span>
-offenders to ‘avenging flames.’ But these statutes
-were not rigidly enforced, and modern opinion on the
-subject may be said to flow from Justinian’s legislation.
-Opinion, in matters of custom and manners, always
-follows law. Though Imperial edicts could not eradicate
-a passion which is inherent in human nature, they
-had the effect of stereotyping extreme punishments in
-all the codes of Christian nations, and of creating
-a permanent social antipathy.”&mdash;<cite>Ibid</cite>, p. 13.</p>
-
-<p class="tb">“Our modern attitude is sometimes traced back to
-the Jewish Law and its survival in St. Paul’s opinion on
-this matter. But the Jewish Law itself had a foundation.
-Wherever the enlargement of the population
-becomes a strongly-felt social need&mdash;as it was among
-the Jews in their exaltation of family life, and as it was
-when the European populations were constituted&mdash;there
-homosexuality has been regarded as a crime,
-even punishable with death.… It was in the fourth
-century at Rome that the strong modern opposition
-to it was formulated in law. The Roman race had
-long been decaying; sexual perversions of all kinds
-flourished; the population was dwindling. At the
-same time Christianity with its Judaic-Pauline antagonism
-to homosexuality was rapidly spreading. The
-statesmen of the day, anxious to quicken the failing
-pulses of national life, utilised this powerful Christian
-feeling. Constantine, Theodosius, Valentinian, all
-passed laws against homosexuality&mdash;the last, at all
-events, ordaining as a penalty the <i lang="la">vindices flammæ</i>.”
-<span class="smcap">Havelock Ellis</span>, <cite>op. cit.</cite>, p. 206.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">164</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="tb">“At the present time, shoemakers, who make shoes
-to measure, deal more rationally with individuals than
-our teachers and school-masters do, in their application
-to moral principles. The sexually intermediate forms
-of individuals are treated exactly as if they were good
-examples of the ideal male or female types. There is
-wanted an ‘orthopædic’ treatment of the soul, instead
-of the torture caused by the application of ready-made
-conventional shapes. The present system stamps out
-much that is original, uproots much that is truly natural,
-and distorts much into artificial and unnatural
-forms.”&mdash;<span class="smcap">O. Weininger</span>, “Sex and Character,” ch. v.</p>
-
-<p class="tb">“What is new in my view is that according to it
-homosexuality cannot be regarded as an atavism or as
-due to arrested embryonic development, or to incomplete
-differentiation of sex; it cannot be regarded as an
-anomaly of rare occurrence interpolating itself in
-customary complete separation of the sexes. Homosexuality
-is merely the sexual condition of those intermediate
-sexual forms that stretch from one ideal sexual
-condition to the other ideal sexual condition. In my
-view, all actual organisms have both homosexuality and
-heterosexuality.”&mdash;<span class="smcap">O. Weininger</span>, “Sex and Character,”
-ch. iv.</p>
-
-<p class="tb">“How is it then that in our age reputed so philanthropic,
-whole classes of men, on account of inborn
-mental abnormalities, are marked down and banned,
-frantically persecuted, publicly branded, and threatened
-with the severest legal penalties? Any one would<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">165</a></span>
-hardly believe what gross cases of justiciary murder,
-morally speaking, still take place in this matter even
-at the end of the nineteenth century. To the pitiful
-ignorance of the judges, to the thousand inherited
-prejudices of public opinion, as well as to the mental
-slavery of legislative bodies, must it be ascribed that
-the penal code of most civilised states is still in great
-measure formulated in the gloomy spirit of the Middle
-Ages.”&mdash;O. de <span class="smcap">Joux</span>, “Die Enterbten des Liebesglückes,”
-p. 16.</p>
-
-<p class="tb">“Up till now homosexual humanity has found itself
-in a peculiar position. Its mouth was closed, it could
-not speak. It was bound hand and foot and could not
-move. But now there has come an important change.
-Science has taken the part of these folk and defended
-their honour … I protest therefore earnestly that
-these men, whether by means of the Law or any other
-means, should no longer be branded in the name of
-Christianity.”&mdash;From a letter written by a Catholic
-priest in reply to a circular sent by the Humane-Science
-Committee of Berlin. (See “Jahrbuch der
-Sexuellen Zwischenstufen,” vol. ii., p. 177.)</p>
-
-<p class="tb">“Thus the very basest of all trades, that of <em>chantage</em>
-[blackmailing] is encouraged by the law.… The
-miserable persecuted wretch, placed between the alternative
-of paying money down or of becoming socially
-impossible, losing a valued position, and seeing dishonour
-burst upon himself and family, pays; and still
-the more he pays the greedier becomes the vampire<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">166</a></span>
-who sucks his life-blood, until at last there lies nothing
-else before him except total financial ruin or disgrace.
-Who will be astonished if the nerves of an individual
-in this position are not equal to the horrid strain?
-In some cases the nerves give way altogether.… Alter
-the law and instead of increasing vice you will
-diminish it. The temptation to ply a disgraceful profession
-with the object of extorting money would be
-removed.”&mdash;“A Problem in Modern Ethics,” pp. 56
-and 86.</p>
-
-<p class="tb">“You will rightly infer that it is difficult for me to
-say exactly how I regard (morally) the homosexual
-tendency. Of this much, however, I am certain that
-even if it were possible I would not exchange my
-inverted nature for a normal one. I suspect that the
-sexual emotions and even inverted ones have a more
-subtle significance than is generally attributed to them;
-but modern moralists either fight shy of transcendental
-interpretations or see none, and I am ignorant and
-unable to solve the mystery these feelings seem to
-imply.”&mdash;<span class="smcap">Havelock Ellis</span>, <cite>op. cit.</cite>, p. 65, “case” ix.</p>
-
-<p class="tb">“I cannot regard my sexual feelings as unnatural
-or abnormal, since they have disclosed themselves so
-perfectly naturally and spontaneously within me. All
-that I have read in books or heard spoken about the
-ordinary sexual love, its intensity and passion, life-long
-devotion, love at first sight, etc., seems to me to be
-easily matched by my own experiences in homosexual<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">167</a></span>
-form; and with regard to the morality of this complex
-subject, my feeling is that it is the same as should prevail
-in love between man and woman, namely: that no
-bodily satisfaction should be sought at the cost of
-another person’s distress or degradation. I am sure that
-this kind of love is, notwithstanding the physical difficulties
-that attend it, as deeply stirring and ennobling as
-the other kind, if not more so; and I think that for a
-perfect relationship the actual sex-gratifications (whatever
-they may be) probably hold a less important place
-in this love than in the other.”&mdash;<cite>Ibid</cite>, “case” vii.,
-p. 58.</p>
-
-<p class="tb">“I grew older, I entered my professional studies,
-and I was very diligent with them. I lived in a great
-capital, I moved much in general society. I had a
-large and lively group of friends. But always, over
-and over, I realised that, in the kernel, at the very
-root and fibre of myself, there was the throb and glow,
-the ebb and the surge, the seeking as in a vain dream
-to realise again that passion of friendship which could
-so far transcend the cold modern idea of the tie; the
-Over-Friendship, the Love-Friendship of Hellas, which
-meant that between man and man could exist&mdash;the
-sexual-psychic love. That was still possible! I knew
-that now. I had read it in the verses or the prose of
-the Greek or Latin or Oriental authors who have
-written out every shade of its beauty or unloveliness,
-its worth or debasement&mdash;from Theokritos to Martial,
-or Abu-Nuwas, to Platen, Michel-Angelo, Shakespeare.
-I had learned it from the statues of sculptors&mdash;in those<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">168</a></span>
-lines so often vivid with a merely physical male beauty&mdash;works
-which beget, which sprang from, the sense of
-it in a race. I had half-divined it in the music of a
-Beethoven and a Tschaikowsky before knowing facts
-in the life-stories of either of them&mdash;or of an hundred
-other tone-autobiographists. And I had recognised
-what it all meant to most people to-day&mdash;from the
-disgust, scorn, and laughter of my fellow-men when
-such an emotion was hinted at.”&mdash;<cite>Imre: a memorandum</cite>,
-by <span class="smcap">Xavier Mayne</span>, p. 110. Naples, R. Rispoli,
-1906.</p>
-
-<p class="tb">“Presently, during that same winter, accident opened
-my eyes wider to myself. Since then, I have needed
-no further knowledge from the Tree of my Good and
-Evil. I met with a mass of serious studies, German,
-Italian, French, English, from the chief European
-specialists and theorists on the similisexual topic; many
-of them with quite other views than those of my well-meaning
-but far too conclusive Yankee doctor (who
-had recommended marriage as a cure). I learned of
-the much-discussed theories of ‘secondary sexes’ and
-‘intersexes.’ I learned of the theories and facts of
-homosexualism, of the Uranian Love, of the Uranian
-race, of the ‘Sex within a Sex.’ … I came to know
-their enormous distribution all over the world to-day;
-and of the grave attention that European scientists and
-jurists have been devoting to problems concerned with
-homosexualism. I could pursue intelligently the growing
-efforts to set right the public mind as to so ineradicable
-and misunderstood a phase of humanity.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">169</a></span>
-I realised that I had always been a member of that
-hidden brotherhood and Sub-Sex, or Super-Sex. In
-wonder too I informed myself of its deep instinctive
-freemasonries&mdash;even to organised ones&mdash;in every social
-class, every land, and every civilisation.”&mdash;<cite>Ibid</cite>, pp.
-134, 135.</p>
-
-<p class="tb">“Thus in sexual inversion we have what may be
-fairly called a ‘sport’ or variation, one of those organic
-aberrations which we see throughout living nature, in
-plants and in animals.”… “All these organic variations
-which I have here mentioned to illustrate sexual
-inversion, are abnormalities. It is important that we
-should have a clear idea as to what abnormality is.
-Many people imagine that what is abnormal is necessarily
-diseased. That is not the case, unless we give
-the word disease an inconveniently and illegitimately
-wide extension. It is both inconvenient and inexact to
-speak of colour-blindness, criminality and genius as
-diseases in the same sense as we speak of scarlet fever,
-tuberculosis, or general paralysis as diseases.”&mdash;<span class="smcap">Havelock
-Ellis</span>, <cite>op. cit.</cite>, p. 186.</p>
-
-<p class="tb">“I have had for some time past a theory about this
-‘Homogenic’ business&mdash;I do not suppose it is new&mdash;but
-it is that when man reaches a certain stage of
-development and approaches the totality of Human
-Nature, there gets to exist in him, though subordinately
-at first, a female element as well as a male. That is to
-say that as he passes the various barriers, he passes the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">170</a></span>
-barrier of sex too, on his way to become the complete
-Human&mdash;the Universal.”&mdash;<cite>From a private letter.</cite></p>
-
-<p class="tb">“Great geniuses, men like Goethe, Shakespeare,
-Shelley, Byron, Darwin, all had the feminine soul very
-strongly developed in them.… As we are continually
-meeting in cities women who are one-quarter, or one-eighth,
-or so on, <em>male</em> … so there are in the Inner
-Self similar half-breeds, all adapting themselves to
-circumstances with perfect ease. The Greeks recognised
-that such a being could exist even in harmony
-with Nature, and so beautified and idealised it as
-Sappho.”&mdash;<span class="smcap">Charles G. Leland</span>, “The Alternate
-Sex,” pp. 41, and 57. London, 1904.</p>
-
-<p class="tb">“I have considered and inquired into this question
-for many years; and it has long been my settled
-conviction that no breach of morality is involved in
-homosexual love; that, like every other passion, it
-tends, when duly understood and controlled by spiritual
-feeling, to the physical and moral health of the
-individual and the race, and that it is only its brutal
-perversions which are immoral. I have known many
-persons more or less the subjects of this passion,
-and I have found them a particularly high-minded,
-upright, refined, and (I must add) pure-minded class
-of men.”&mdash;<i>Communicated by <span class="antiqua">Professor &mdash;&mdash;</span> in Appendix
-to</i> <span class="smcap">Havelock Ellis’s</span> “Sexual Inversion,”
-p. 240.</p>
-
-<p class="tb">“What from the beginning struck me most, but<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">171</a></span>
-now appears perfectly clear and indeed necessary is
-that among the homosexuals there is found the <em>most</em>
-remarkable class of men, namely, those whom I call
-<em>supervirile</em>. These men stand by virtue of the special
-variation of their soul-material, just as much above
-Man, as the normal sex man does above Woman.
-Such an individual is able to bewitch men by his soul-aroma,
-as they&mdash;though passively&mdash;bewitch him. But
-as he always lives in men’s society, and men, so to
-speak, sit at his feet, it comes about that such a supervirile
-often climbs the very highest steps of spiritual
-evolution, of social position, and of manly capacity.
-Hence it arises that the most famous names of the
-world and the history of culture stand rightly or
-wrongly on the list of homosexuals. Names like Alexander
-the Great, Socrates, Plato, Julius Cæsar, Michel
-Angelo, Charles XII. of Sweden, William of Orange,
-and so forth. Not only is this so, but it must be so.
-As certainly as a woman’s hero remains a spiritually
-inferior man, must a man’s hero&mdash;well <em>be</em> a man’s
-hero, if in any way he has the stuff for it.</p>
-
-<p>“Consequently the German penal code, in stamping
-homosexuality as a crime, puts the highest blossoms
-of humanity on the proscription list.”&mdash;Professor
-Dr. <span class="smcap">Jaeger</span>, “Die Entdeckung der Seele,” pp. 268,
-269.</p>
-
-<p class="tb">“The licentious or garrulous or morbid types of
-inverts have been so honoured with publicity that the
-other types are even yet little known. The latter,
-in the maturity of their intellectual and moral nature,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">172</a></span>
-cease to look upon sex as the pivot of the universe.
-They cease to repine about their lot. They have their
-mission to fulfil here below, and they try to fulfil it as
-best they can. In the same way we find there are
-heterosexual (or normal) folk who at a certain stage of
-their growth free themselves from the sexual life.&mdash;<span class="smcap">M.
-A. Raffalovich</span>, “Uranisme et Unisexualité,”
-p. 74.</p>
-
-<p class="tb">“The well-bred, highly-cultured Urning is a complete
-Idealist; matter is for him only a symbol of
-thought, and the actual only the living expression of
-the Invisible.”&mdash;<span class="smcap">De Joux</span>, “Die Enterbten des Liebesglückes,”
-p. 46.</p>
-
-<p class="tb">“As nature and social law are so cruel as to impose
-a severe celibacy on him his whole being is consequently
-of astonishing freshness and superb purity,
-and his manners of life modest as those of a saint&mdash;a
-thing which, in the case of a man in blooming health
-and moving about in the world, is certainly very
-unusual.”&mdash;<cite>Ibid</cite>, p. 41.</p>
-
-<p class="tb">“If the soul of woman in its usual form represents
-a secret closed with seven seals, it is&mdash;when prisoned
-in the sturdy body of a man and fused with some of
-the motives of manhood, a far more enigmatic scripture
-of whose sibylline meaning one can never be
-really sure. Only the Urning can understand the
-Urning.”&mdash;<cite>Ibid</cite>, p. 63.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">173</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="tb">“Because they (Urnings) themselves are of a very
-complex nature and put together of opposing elements,
-they seek out and love the simple, plain, and straightforward
-natures. Because they continually suffer from
-the rebellion of their desires against good taste and
-morals, they often long for a barbaric freedom. And
-because their every emotion is cut short, distracted,
-and worn out by the thousand doubts and suspicions
-of their Urning-minds, they gather to themselves men
-who are wont to live straight from feeling to action,
-and who work from untamed masterly instincts, as
-sure as the animals.”&mdash;<cite>Ibid</cite>, p. 97.</p>
-
-<p class="tb">“It is true that we are often inferior to normal men
-in force of will, worldly wisdom, and sense of duty;
-but on the other hand, in depth and delicacy of feeling
-and every virtue of the heart, we are far superior.
-We cannot <em>love</em> women, but we lament with them, and
-help them on the hearth and by the cradle, in need and
-loneliness, as their most unselfish friends.… We do
-not despise women because they are weak, for we are
-much clearer-sighted, much less prejudiced than the so-called
-lords of creation, much nobler, more helpful,
-and just-minded than they.… Anyhow, if either of
-the sexes has cause to withhold its respect in any
-degree from the other&mdash;which has the most cause?
-Say what you will of them, the second and third sexes&mdash;women
-and Urnings&mdash;are ever so much better than
-the brutal egotistical Men, who to-day are plunged in
-grossest materialism; for, with whatever corruption,
-both the former are still of purer heart, easier kindled<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">174</a></span>
-towards whatever is good, and more capable of genuine
-enthusiasm and love of their fellows, than the
-latter.”&mdash;<cite>Ibid</cite>, p. 204.</p>
-
-<p class="tb">“Embodying as he does Love, Patience, Renunciation,
-Humility and Mildness, the Urning should seek
-to soothe with his gentle hand all hurts, and to heal
-all wounds, which are the results of weak Man’s
-original sinfulness. The tender emotions in his breast,
-his all too soft and easily troubled heart, his delicate
-sensitiveness and receptiveness of all that is lofty and
-pure, his mildness, goodness and inexhaustible patience&mdash;all
-these divine gifts of his soul point clearly to the
-conclusion that the great framer of the world meant
-to create in Urnings a noble priesthood, a race of
-Samaritans, a severely pure order of men, in order to
-offer a strong counterpoise to the immoral tendencies
-of the human race, which increase with its increasing
-culture.”&mdash;<cite>Ibid</cite>, p. 253.</p>
-
-<p class="tb">“When I review the cases I have brought forward
-and the mental history of the inverted I have known,
-I am inclined to say that if we can enable an invert to
-be healthy, self-restrained and self-respecting, we have
-often done better than to convert him to the mere
-feeble simulacrum of a normal man. An appeal to
-the <i lang="el">paiderastia</i> of the best Greek days, and the dignity,
-temperance, even chastity, which it involved,
-will sometimes find a ready response in the emotional
-enthusiastic nature of the congenital invert. The<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">175</a></span>
-‘manly’ love celebrated by Walt Whitman in ‘Leaves
-of Grass,’ although it may be of more doubtful value
-for general use, furnishes a wholesome and robust
-ideal to the invert who is insensitive to normal ideals.
-It is by some such method of self-treatment as this
-that most of the more highly intelligent men and
-women whose histories I have already briefly recorded
-have at last slowly and instinctively reached a condition
-of relative health and peace, physical and moral.”&mdash;<span class="smcap">Havelock
-Ellis</span>, “Sexual Inversion,” p. 202.</p>
-
-<p class="tb">“From America a lady writes:&mdash;‘Inverts should
-have the courage and independence to be themselves,
-and to demand an investigation. If one strives to live
-honourably, and considers the greatest good to the
-greatest number, it is not a crime nor a disgrace to
-be an invert. I do not need the law to defend me,
-neither do I desire to have any concessions made for
-me, nor do I ask my friends to sacrifice their ideals
-for me. I too have ideals which I shall always hold.
-All that I desire&mdash;and I claim it as my right&mdash;is the
-freedom to exercise this divine gift of loving, which is
-not a menace to society nor a disgrace to me. Let it
-once be understood that the average invert is not a
-moral degenerate nor a mental degenerate, but simply
-a man or a woman who is less highly specialised, less
-completely differentiated, than other men and women,
-and I believe the prejudice against them will disappear,
-and if they live uprightly they will surely win the
-esteem and consideration of all thoughtful people.
-I know what it is to be an invert&mdash;who feels himself<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">176</a></span>
-set apart from the rest of mankind&mdash;to find one human
-heart who trusts him and understands him, and I know
-how almost impossible this is, and will be, until the
-world is made aware of these facts.”&mdash;<cite>Ibid</cite>, p. 213.</p>
-
-<p class="titlepage">THE END.</p>
-
-<p class="titlepage smaller"><i>Printed in Great Britain by</i><br />
-UNWIN BROTHERS, LIMITED, THE GRESHAM PRESS, WOKING AND LONDON</p>
-
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
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