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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Birth Control, by Halliday G. Sutherland
+
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+*****These eBooks Were Prepared By Thousands of Volunteers!*****
+
+
+Title: Birth Control
+
+Author: Halliday G. Sutherland
+
+Release Date: August, 2005 [EBook #8773]
+[This file was first posted on August 12, 2003]
+
+Edition: 10
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK, BIRTH CONTROL ***
+
+
+
+
+E-text prepared by Project Gutenberg Distributed Proofreaders
+
+
+
+BIRTH CONTROL
+
+A Statement of Christian Doctrine against the Neo-Malthusians
+
+BY
+
+HALLIDAY G. SUTHERLAND, M.D. (Edin.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+THE ESSENTIAL FALLACIES OF MALTHUSIAN TEACHING
+
+Section 1. MALTHUS AND THE NEO-MALTHUSIANS.
+ (a) Malthus
+ (b) The Neo-Malthusians
+
+Section 2. TEACHING BASED ON FALSE PREMISES.
+ (a) That Population progresses geometrically
+ (b) That Food Supply progresses arithmetically
+ (c) That Overpopulation is the cause of Poverty and Disease
+
+Section 3. THE ROOT FALLACY
+
+Section 4. WHAT OVERPOPULATION MEANS
+
+Section 5. NO EVIDENCE OF OVERPOPULATION
+ (a) In the Suez Canal Zone
+ (b) In "Closed Countries" like Japan
+
+Section 6. A NATURAL LAW CHECKING FERTILITY
+
+Section 7. OVERPOPULATION IN THE FUTURE
+
+Section 8. HOW NATIONS HAVE PERISHED
+
+Section 9. PHYSICAL CATASTROPHES
+ (a) Disease
+ (b) War
+
+Section 10. MORAL CATASTROPHES
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+THE FALSE DEDUCTIONS CONCERNING POVERTY
+
+Section 1. BIRTH-RATE AND POVERTY
+ (a) Famines
+ (b) Abundance
+ (c) Wages
+
+Section 2. POVERTY IN GREAT BRITAIN DUE TO OTHER CAUSES
+ (a) Under-development
+ (b) Severance of the Inhabitants from the Soil
+
+Section 3. CAUSES OF POVERTY IN INDIA
+
+Section 4. POVERTY IN FACT CAUSES A HIGH BIRTHRATE
+ (a) Malthusianism is an attack on the Poor
+ (b) A Hindrance to Reform
+ (c) A Quack Remedy for Poverty
+
+Section 5. POVERTY AND CIVILISATION
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+HIGH BIRTH-RATES NOT THE CAUSE OF HIGH DEATH-RATES
+
+Section 1. POVERTY AS NOW EXISTING
+
+Section 2. HIGH BIRTH-RATE NOT THE CAUSE OF HIGH DEATH-RATE:
+ PROVED FROM STATISTICS
+ (a) Canada
+ (b) Connaught
+
+Section 3. A LOW BIRTH-RATE NO GUARANTEE OF A LOW DEATH-RATE
+
+Section 4. VITAL STATISTICS OF FRANCE
+
+Section 5. COEFFICIENTS OF CORRELATION
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+HOW RELIGION AFFECTS THE BIRTHRATE
+
+Section 1. FRENCH STATISTICS MISINTERPRETED BY MALTHUSIANS
+
+Section 2. EVIDENCE FROM HOLLAND
+
+Section 3. THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
+
+Section 4. THE SAME RESULTS IN ENGLAND
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+IS THERE A NATURAL LAW REGULATING THE PROPORTION OF BIRTHS AND DEATHS?
+
+Section 1. THE THEORY OF THOMAS DOUBLEDAY REVIVED
+
+Section 2. MR. PELL'S GENERALISATIONS CRITICISED
+
+Section 3. THE LAW OF DECLINE
+
+Section 4. ILLUSTRATED FROM GREEK HISTORY
+ (a) Moral Catastrophe in Ancient Greece
+ (b) The Physical Catastrophe induced by Selfishness
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+THE FALLING BIRTH-RATE IN ENGLAND: ITS CAUSES
+
+Section 1. NOT, AS MALTHUSIANS ASSERT, DUE MAINLY TO CONTRACEPTIVES
+
+Section 2. DECLINE IN FERTILITY DUE TO SOME NATURAL LAW
+
+Section 3. AND TO CHARACTER OF OCCUPATION.
+
+Section 4. AGGRAVATED DOUBTLESS BY MALTHUSIANISM
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+THE EVILS OF ARTIFICIAL BIRTH CONTROL
+
+Section 1. NOT A PHYSICAL BENEFIT
+ (a) A Cause of Sterility
+ (b) Neuroses
+ (c) Fibroid Tumours
+
+Section 2. A SCANDALOUS SUGGESTION
+
+Section 3. A CAUSE OF UNHAPPINESS IN MARRIAGE
+
+Section 4. AN INSULT TO TRUE WOMANHOOD
+
+Section 5. A DEGRADATION OF THE FEMALE SEX
+
+Section 6. SPECIALLY HURTFUL TO THE POOR
+ (a) Affecting the Young
+ (b) Exposing the Poor to Experiment
+ (c) Tending towards the Servile State
+
+Section 7. A MENACE TO THE NATION
+ (a) There is a Limit to lowering the Death-rate
+ (b) Birth Control tends to extinguish the Birth-rate
+ (c) A Danger to the Empire
+ (d) The Dangers of Small Families
+
+Section 8. THE PLOT AGAINST CHRISTENDOM
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+THE RELIGIOUS ARGUMENT AGAINST BIRTH CONTROL
+
+Section 1. AN OFFENCE AGAINST THE LAW OF NATURE
+
+Section 2. REFLECTED IN THE NORMAL CONSCIENCE
+
+Section 3. EXPRESSED IN THE SCIENCE OF ETHICS
+
+Section 4. BIRTH CONTROL CONDEMNED BY PROTESTANT CHURCHES
+
+APPENDIX TO CHAPTER VIII
+
+A NEO-MALTHUSIAN ATTACK ON THE CHURCH OF ENGLAND
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+THE TEACHING OF THE CATHOLIC CHURCH ON BIRTH CONTROL
+
+Section 1. A FALSE VIEW OF HER DOCTRINE
+
+Section 2. THE ESSENCE AND PURPOSE OF MARRIAGE
+
+Section 3. ARTIFICIAL STERILITY WHOLLY CONDEMNED
+
+Section 4. THE ONLY LAWFUL METHOD OF BIRTH CONTROL
+
+Section 5. CONCLUSION
+
+BIBLIOGRAPHY
+
+
+
+
+BIRTH CONTROL
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+
+THE ESSENTIAL FALLACIES OF MALTHUSIAN TEACHING
+
+Section 1. MALTHUS AND THE NEO-MALTHUSIANS
+
+Birth control, in the sense of the prevention of pregnancy by chemical,
+mechanical, or other artificial means, is being widely advocated as a sure
+method of lessening poverty and of increasing the physical and mental
+health of the nation. It is, therefore, advisable to examine these claims
+and the grounds on which they are based. The following investigation will
+prove that the propaganda throughout Western Europe and America in favour
+of artificial birth control is based on a mere assumption, bolstered up by
+economic and statistical fallacies; that Malthusian teaching is contrary to
+reason and to fact; that Neo-Malthusian practices are disastrous alike to
+nations and to individuals; and that those practices are in themselves an
+offence against the Law of Nature, whereby the Divine Will is expressed in
+creation.
+
+(a) _Malthus_
+
+The Rev. Thomas Malthus, M.A., in 1798 published his _Essay on the
+Principle of Population_. His pamphlet was an answer to Condorcet
+and Godwin, who held that vice and poverty were the result of human
+institutions and could be remedied by an even distribution of property.
+Malthus, on the other hand, believed that population increased more rapidly
+than the means of subsistence, and consequently that vice and poverty were
+always due to overpopulation and not to any particular form of society or
+of government. He stated that owing to the relatively slow rate at
+which the food supply of countries was increased, a high birth-rate [1]
+inevitably led to all the evils of poverty, war, and high death-rates.
+In an infamous passage he wrote that there was no vacant place for the
+superfluous child at Nature's mighty feast; that Nature told the child to
+be gone; and that she quickly executed her own order. This passage was
+modified in the second, and deleted from the third edition of the Essay. In
+later editions he maintained that vice and misery had checked population,
+that the progress of society might have diminished rather than increased
+the "evils resulting from the principle of population," and that by "moral
+restraint" overpopulation could be prevented. As Cannan has pointed out,
+[2] this last suggestion destroyed the force of the argument against
+Godwin, who could have replied that in order to make "moral restraint"
+universal a socialist State was necessary. In order to avoid the evils of
+overpopulation, Malthus advised people not to marry, or, if they did,
+to marry late in life and to limit the number of their children by the
+exercise of self-restraint. He reprobated all artificial and unnatural
+methods of birth control as immoral, and as removing the necessary stimulus
+to industry; but he failed to grasp the whole truth that an increase of
+population is necessary as a stimulus not only to industry, but also as
+essential to man's moral and intellectual progress.
+
+(b) _The Neo-Malthusians_
+
+The Malthusian League accept the theory of their revered teacher, but,
+curiously enough, they reject his advice "as being impracticable and
+productive of the greatest possible evils to health and morality." [3]
+On the contrary, they advise universal early marriage, combined with
+artificial birth control. Although their policy is thus in flat
+contradiction to the policy of Malthus, there are two things common to
+both. Each is based on the same fallacy, and the aim of both is wide of the
+mark. Indeed, the Neo-Malthusian, like Malthus, has "a mist of speculation
+over his facts, and a vapour of fact over his ideas." [4] Moreover, as will
+be shown here, the path of the Malthusian League, although at first glance
+an easy way out of many human difficulties, is in reality the broad road
+along which a man or a nation travels to destruction; and as guides the
+Neo-Malthusians are utterly unsafe, since they argue from (a) false
+premises to (b) false deductions. We shall deal with the former in this
+chapter.
+
+
+Section 2. TEACHING BASED ON FALSE PREMISES
+
+The theory of Malthus is based on three errors, namely (a) that the
+population increases in geometrical progression, a progression of 1, 2,
+4, 8, 16, and so on upwards; (b) that the food supply increases in
+arithmetical progression, a progression of 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, and so on
+upwards; and (c) that overpopulation is the cause of poverty and disease.
+If we show that _de facto_ there _is_ no overpopulation it obviously cannot
+be a cause of anything, nor be itself caused by the joint operation of the
+first two causes. However, each of the errors can be severally refuted.
+
+(a) In the first place, it is true that a population _might_ increase in
+geometrical progression, and that a woman _might_ bear thirty children
+in her lifetime; but it is wrong to assume that because a thing _might_
+happen, it therefore does happen. The population, as a matter of fact, does
+not increase in geometrical progression, because Nature [5] places her own
+checks on the birth-rate, and no woman bears all the children she might
+theoretically bear, apart altogether from artificial birth control.
+
+(b) Secondly, the food supply does not of necessity increase in
+arithmetical progression, because food is produced by human hands, and is
+therefore increased in proportion to the increase of workers, unless the
+food supply of a country or of the world has reached its limit. The food
+supply of the world _might_ reach a limit beyond which it could not
+be increased; but as yet this event has not happened, and there is no
+indication whatsoever that it is likely to happen.
+
+Human life is immediately sustained by food, clothing, shelter, and fuel.
+Food and clothing are principally derived from fish, fowl, sheep,
+cattle, and grain, all of which _tend_, more so than man, to increase in
+_geometrical_ ratio, although actually their increase in this progression
+is checked by man or by Nature. As regards shelter there can be no increase
+at all, either arithmetical or geometrical, apart from the work of human
+hands. Again, the stock of fuel in or on the earth cannot increase of
+itself, and is gradually becoming exhausted. On the other hand, within
+living memory, new sources of fuel, such as petroleum, have been made
+available, and old varieties of fuel have been used to better advantage,
+as witness the internal-combustion engine driven by smoke from sawdust.
+Moreover, in the ocean tides is a vast energy that one day may take the
+place of fuel.
+
+(c) Thirdly, before anyone can reasonably maintain that overpopulation
+is the cause of poverty and disease, it is necessary to prove that
+overpopulation actually exists or is likely to occur in the future. By
+overpopulation we mean the condition of a country in which there are so
+many inhabitants that the production of necessaries of livelihood is
+insufficient for the support of all, with the result that many people are
+overworked or ill-fed. Under these circumstances the population can be said
+to _press on the soil_: and unless their methods of production could be
+improved, or resources secured from outside, the only possible remedy
+against the principle of diminishing returns would be a reduction of
+population; otherwise, the death-rate from want and starvation would
+gradually rise until it equalled the birth-rate in order to maintain an
+unhappy equilibrium.
+
+
+Section 3. THE ROOT FALLACY
+
+According to Malthusian doctrine overpopulation is the cause of poverty,
+disease, and war: and consequently, unless the growth of population is
+artificially restrained, all attempts to remedy social evils are futile.
+Malthusians claim that "if only the devastating torrent of children could
+be arrested for a few years, it would bring untold relief." They hold that
+overpopulation is the root of all social evil, and the truth or falsehood
+of that proposition is therefore the basis of all their teaching. Now, when
+Malthusians are asked to prove that this their basic proposition is true,
+they adopt one of two methods, not of proof, but of evasion. Their first
+method of evading the question is by asserting that the truth of their
+proposition is self-evident and needs no proof. To that we reply that the
+falsity of the proposition can and will be proved. Their second device is
+to put up a barrage of facts which merely show that all countries, and
+indeed the earth itself, would have been overpopulated long ago if the
+increase of population had not been limited by certain factors, ranging
+from celibacy and late marriages to famines, diseases, wars, and
+infanticide. The truth of these facts is indisputable, but it is
+nevertheless a manifest breach of logic to argue from the fact of poverty,
+disease, and war having checked an increase of population, that therefore
+poverty, disease, and war are due to an increase of population. It would be
+as reasonable to argue that, because an unlimited increase of insects
+is prevented by birds and by climatic changes, therefore an increase of
+insects accounts for the existence of birds, and for variations of climate.
+Nor is it of any use for Malthusians to say that overpopulation _might_ be
+the cause of poverty. They cannot prove that it _is_ the cause of poverty,
+and, as will be shown in the following chapter, more obvious and probable
+causes are staring them in the face. For our present purpose it will
+suffice if we are able to prove that overpopulation has not occurred in the
+past and is unlikely to occur in the future.
+
+
+Section 4. WHAT OVERPOPULATION MEANS
+
+In the first place, the meaning of the word "overpopulation" should
+be clearly understood. The word does not mean a very large number of
+inhabitants in a country. If that were its meaning the Malthusian fallacy
+could be disproved by merely pointing out that poverty exists both in
+thinly populated and in thickly populated countries. Now, in reality,
+overpopulation would occur whenever the production of the necessities of
+life in a country was insufficient for the support of all the inhabitants.
+For example, a barren rock in the ocean would be overpopulated, even if it
+contained only one inhabitant. It follows that the term "overpopulation"
+should be applied only to an economic situation in which the population
+presses on the soil. The point may be illustrated by a simple example.
+
+Let us assume that a fertile island of 100 acres is divided into 10 farms,
+each of 10 acres, and each capable of supporting a family of ten. Under
+these conditions the island could support a population of 1,000 people
+without being overpopulated. If, however, the numbers in each family
+increased to 20 the population would _press on the soil_, and the island,
+with 2,000 inhabitants, would be an example of overpopulation, and of
+poverty due to overpopulation.
+
+On the other hand, let us assume that there are only 1,000 people on
+the island, but that one family of ten individuals has managed to gain
+possession of eight farms, in addition to their own, and that the other
+nine families are forced to live on one farm. Obviously, 900 people would
+be attempting to live under conditions of dire poverty, and the island,
+with its population of 1,000, would now offer an excellent example, not of
+overpopulation, but of human selfishness.
+
+My contentions are that poverty is neither solely nor indeed generally
+related to economic pressure on the soil; that there are many causes
+of poverty apart altogether from overpopulation; and that in reality
+overpopulation does not exist in those countries where Malthusians claim to
+find proofs of social misery due to a high birthrate.
+
+If overpopulation in the economic sense occurred in a closed country, whose
+inhabitants were either unable or unwilling to send out colonies, it is
+obvious that general poverty and misery would result. This _might_ happen
+in small islands, but it is of greater interest to know what does happen.
+
+
+Section 5. NO EVIDENCE OF OVERPOPULATION
+
+In a closed country, producing all its own necessities of life and
+incapable of expansion, a high birth-rate would eventually increase the
+struggle for existence and would lead to overpopulation, always provided
+that, firstly, the high birth-rate is accompanied by a low death-rate, and
+secondly, that the high birth-rate is maintained. For example, although
+a birth-rate was high, a population would not increase in numbers if the
+death-rate was equally high. Therefore, a high birth-rate does not of
+necessity imply that population will be increased or that overpopulation
+will occur. Again, if the birth-rate fell as the population increased,
+the danger of overpopulation would be avoided without the aid of a high
+death-rate. For a moment, however, let us assume that the Malthusian
+premise is correct, that a high birth-rate has led to overpopulation, and
+that the struggle for existence has therefore increased. Then obviously
+the death-rate would rise; the effect of the high birth-rate would be
+neutralised; and beyond a certain point neither the population nor the
+struggle for existence could be further increased. On these grounds
+Neo-Malthusians argue that birth-control is necessary precisely to obviate
+that cruel device whereby Nature strives to restore the balance upset by a
+reckless increase of births; and that the only alternative to frequent and
+premature deaths is regulation of the source of life. As a corollary to
+this proposition they claim that, if the death-rate be reduced, a country
+is bound to become overpopulated unless the births are artificially
+controlled. Fortunately it is possible to test the truth of this corollary,
+because certain definite observations on this very point have been
+recorded. These observations do not support the argument of birth
+controllers.
+
+(a) _In the Suez Canal Zone_
+
+In the Suez Canal Zone there was a high death-rate chiefly owing to fever.
+According to Malthus it would have been a great mistake to lower this
+death-rate, because, if social conditions were improved, the population
+would rapidly increase and exceed the resources of the country. Now, in
+fact, the social conditions were improved, the death-rate was lowered, and
+the subsequent events, utterly refuting the above contention, are thus
+noted by Dr. Halford Ross, who was medical officer in that region:
+
+ "During the years 1901 to 1910, health measures in this zone produced a
+ very considerable fall in the death-rate, from 30.2 per thousand to
+ 19.6 per thousand; the infant mortality was also reduced very greatly,
+ and it was expected that, after a lapse of time, the reduction of the
+ death-rate would result in a rise of the birth-rate, and a
+ corresponding increase of the population. _But such was not the case_.
+ When the death-rate fell, the birthrate fell too, and the number of the
+ population remained the same as before, even after nearly a decade had
+ passed, and notwithstanding the fact that the whole district had become
+ much healthier, and one town, Port Said, was converted from an
+ unhealthy, fever-stricken place into a seaside health resort." [6]
+
+Moreover, Dr. Halford Ross has told me that artificial birth control
+was not practised in this region, and played no part in maintaining a
+stationary population. The majority of the people were strict Mohammedans,
+amongst whom the practice of birth control is forbidden by the Koran.
+
+(b) _In "Closed Countries" like Japan_
+
+But a much more striking example of the population in a closed country
+remaining stationary without the practice of birth control, thus refuting
+the contention of our birth controllers, is to be found in their own
+periodical, _The Malthusian_. [7] It would appear that in Japan from 1723
+to 1846 the population remained almost stationary, only increasing from
+26,065,422 to 26,907,625. In 1867 the Shogunate was abolished, the Emperor
+was restored, and Japan began to be a civilised power. Now from 1872 the
+population increased by 10,649,990 in twenty-seven years, and "during the
+period between 1897 and 1907 the population received an increment of 11.6
+per cent., whereas the food-producing area increased by only 4.4 per
+cent.... According to Professor Morimoro, the cost of living is now so high
+in Japan that 98 per cent, of the people do not get enough to eat." From
+these facts certain obvious deductions may be made. So long as Japan was
+a closed country her population remained stationary. When she became a
+civilised industrial power the mass of her people became poorer, the
+birth-rate rose, and the population increased, this last result being the
+real problem to-day in the Far East. In face of these facts it is sheer
+comedy to learn that our Malthusians are sending a woman to preach birth
+control amongst the Japanese! Do they really believe that for over a
+hundred years Japan, unlike most semi-barbaric countries, practised birth
+control, and that when she became civilised she refused, unlike most
+civilised countries, to continue this practice? There is surely a limit to
+human credulity.
+
+The truth appears to be that in closed countries the population remains
+more or less stationary, that Nature herself checks the birth-rate without
+the aid of artificial birth control, and that birthrates and death-rates
+are independently related to the means of subsistence.
+
+
+Section 6. A NATURAL LAW CHECKING FERTILITY
+
+During the past century the population of Europe increased by about
+160,000,000, but it is utterly unreasonable to assume that this rate of
+increase will be maintained during the present century. It would be as
+sensible to argue that because a child is four feet high at the age of
+ten he will be eight feet high at the age of twenty. Moreover, there is
+evidence that, apart altogether from vice, the fertility of a nation is
+reduced at every step in civilisation. The cause of this reduction in
+fertility is unknown. It is probably a reaction to many complex influences,
+and possibly associated with the vast growth of great cities. This decline
+in the fertility of a community is a natural protection against the
+possibility of overpopulation; but, on the other hand, there is a point
+beyond which any further decline in fertility will bring a community within
+sight of depopulation and of extinction.
+
+
+Section 7. OVERPOPULATION IN THE FUTURE
+
+It is a fallacy to say that overpopulation is the cause of poverty and
+disease, and that for the simple reason that overpopulation has not yet
+occurred. For the growth of a nation we assume that the birth-rate should
+exceed the death-rate by from 10 to 20 per thousand, and it is obvious
+that in a _closed_ country the evil of overpopulation might appear in
+a comparatively short time. The natural remedies in the past have been
+emigration and colonisation. According to the birth controllers these
+remedies are only temporary, because sooner or later all colonies and
+eventually the earth itself will be overpopulated. At the British
+Association Meeting in 1890 the population of the earth was said to be
+1,500 millions, and it was calculated that only 6,000 millions could live
+on the earth. This means that if the birth-rate throughout the world
+exceeded the death-rate by only 8 per thousand, the earth would be
+overpopulated within 200 years. It is probable that in these calculations
+the capacity of the earth to sustain human life has been underestimated;
+that the earth could support not four times but sixteen times its present
+population; and that the latter figure could be still further increased
+by the progress of inventions. But, apart altogether from the accuracy of
+these figures, the danger of overpopulation is nothing more or less than a
+myth. Indeed, the end of the world, a philosophic and scientific certitude,
+is a more imminent event than its overpopulation.
+
+
+Section 8. HOW NATIONS HAVE PERISHED
+
+Before speculating on what might happen in the future, it is well to
+recollect what has happened in the past. The earth has been inhabited for
+thousands of years, and modern research has revealed the remains of many
+ancient civilisations that have perished. For example, there were the great
+nations of Cambodia and of Guatemala. In Crete, about 2000 B.C., there
+existed a civilisation where women were dressed as are this evening the
+women of London and Paris. That civilisation perished, and even its
+language cannot now be deciphered. Why did these civilisations perish?
+Surely this momentous question should take precedence over barren
+discussions as to whether there will be sufficient food on the land or in
+the sea for the inhabitants of the world in 200 years' time. How came it
+about that these ancient nations did not double their numbers every fifty
+years and fill up the earth long ago?
+
+The answer is that they were overcome and annihilated by the incidence of
+one or other of two dangers that threaten every civilisation, including our
+own. These dangers are certain physical and moral catastrophes, against
+which there is only one form of natural insurance, namely, a birth-rate
+that adequately exceeds the death-rate. They help to illustrate further the
+fallacy of the overpopulation scare.
+
+The following is a general outline of these dangers, and in a later chapter
+(p. 70)(see [Reference: Dangers]) I shall quote an example of how
+they have operated in the past.
+
+
+Section 9. PHYSICAL CATASTROPHES
+
+Deaths from famine, floods, earthquakes, and volcanic eruptions are
+confined to comparatively small areas, and the two physical catastrophes
+that may seriously threaten a civilisation may be reduced to endemic
+disease and war.
+
+(a) _Disease_
+
+Disease, in the form of malaria, contributed to the fall of ancient Greece
+and Rome. In the fourteenth century 25,000,000 people, one-quarter of the
+population of Europe, were exterminated by plague, the "Black Death," and
+in the sixteenth century smallpox depopulated Spanish America. Although
+these particular diseases have lost much of their power owing to the
+progress of medical science, we have no right to assume that disease in
+general has been conquered by our civilisation, or that a new pestilence
+may not appear. On the contrary, in 1805, a new disease, spotted fever,
+appeared in Geneva, and within half a century had become endemic throughout
+Europe and America. Of this fever during the Great War the late Sir William
+Osler wrote: "In cerebro-spinal fever we may be witnessing the struggle of
+a new disease to win a place among the great epidemics of the world." There
+was a mystery about this disease, because, although unknown in the Arctic
+Circle, it appeared in temperate climates during the coldest months of the
+year. As I was able to prove in 1915, [8] it is a disease of civilisation.
+I found that the causal organism was killed in thirty minutes by a
+temperature of 62°F. It was thus obvious that infection could never be
+carried by cold air. But in overcrowded rooms where windows are closed, and
+the temperature of warm, impure, saturated air was raised by the natural
+heat of the body to 80°F or over, the life of the microorganism, expelled
+from the mouths of infected people during the act of coughing, was
+prolonged. Infection is thus carried from one person to another by warm
+currents of moving air, and at the same time resistance against the disease
+is lowered. Cold air kills the organism, but cold weather favours the
+disease. In that paradox the aetiology of cerebro-spinal fever became as
+clear as the means of prevention. The story of spotted fever reveals the
+forces of nature fighting against the disease at every turn, and implacably
+opposed to its existence, while man alone, of his own will and folly,
+harbours infection and creates the only conditions under which the malady
+can appear. For example, during two consecutive winters cerebro-spinal
+fever had appeared in barracks capable of housing 2,000 men. A simple and
+effective method of ventilation was then introduced. From that day to this
+not a single case of cerebro-spinal fever has occurred in these barracks,
+although there have been outbreaks of this disease in the town in which the
+barracks are situated.
+
+There are many other diseases peculiar to civilisation, and concerning
+the wherefore and the why an apposite passage occurs in the works of Sir
+William Gull.
+
+ "Causes affecting health and shortening life may be inappreciable in
+ the individual, but sufficiently obvious when their effect is
+ multiplied a thousandfold. If the conditions of society render us
+ liable to many diseases, they in return enable us to establish the
+ general laws of life and health, a knowledge of which soon becomes a
+ distributive blessing. The cure of individual diseases, whilst we leave
+ open the dark fountains from which they spring, is to labour like
+ Sisyphus, and have our work continually returning upon our hands. And,
+ again, there are diseases over which, directly, we have little or no
+ control, as if Providence had set them as signs to direct us to wider
+ fields of inquiry and exertion. Even partial success is often denied,
+ lest we should rest satisfied with it, and forget the _truer and better
+ means_ of prevention." [9]
+
+Medical and sanitary science have made great progress in the conquest of
+enteric fever, diphtheria, scarlet fever, measles, and whooping cough. The
+mortality from bronchitis and from pulmonary tuberculosis has also been
+reduced, but nevertheless tuberculosis still claims more victims in the
+prime of life than any other malady. It is a disease of civilisation and is
+intimately associated with economic conditions. The history of tuberculosis
+has yet to be written. On the other hand, deaths from certain other
+diseases are actually increasing, as witness the following figures from the
+Reports of the Registrar-General for England and Wales:
+
+
+ Disease. Number of Number of
+ deaths in Deaths in
+ 1898. 1919.
+
+ Diseases of the heart and
+ circulatory system 50,492 69,637
+ Cancer 25,196 42,144
+ Pneumonia 35,462 38,949
+ Influenza 10,405 44,801
+
+
+In view of these figures it is folly to suppose that the final conquest of
+disease is imminent.
+
+(b) War
+
+War, foreign or civil, is another sword hanging over civilisations, whereby
+the fruits of a long period of growth may be destroyed in a few years.
+After the Thirty Years War the recovery of Germany occupied a century and
+a half. During the fourteen years of the Taiping rebellion in China whole
+provinces were devastated and millions upon millions of people were killed
+or died. In spite of the Great War during the past decade, there are some
+who would delude themselves and others into the vain belief that, without
+a radical change in international relations and a determined effort to
+neutralise its causes, there will be no more war; but unless the nations
+learn through Christianity that justice is higher than self-interest the
+following brilliant passage by Devas is as true to-day as when it was
+written in 1901:
+
+ "True that the spread of humanitarianism and cosmopolitanism made many
+ people think, towards the end of the nineteenth century, that bloodshed
+ was at an end. But their hopes were dreams: the visible growth of
+ national rivalry and gigantic armaments can only issue in desperate
+ struggles; while not a few among the nations are troubled with the
+ growth of internal dissensions and accumulations of social hatred that
+ point to bloody catastrophes in the future; and the tremendous means of
+ destruction that modern science puts in our hands offer frightful
+ possibilities of slaughter, murderous anarchical outrages, and rivers
+ of blood shed in pitiless repression." [10]
+
+Malthusians may inveigh against wars waged to achieve the expansion of a
+nation, but so long as international rivalry disregards the moral law their
+words will neither stop war nor prevent a Malthusian country from falling
+an easy prey to a stronger people. On the contrary, a low birthrate,
+by reducing the potential force available for defence, is actually an
+incentive to a declaration of war from an envious neighbour, because it
+means that he will not hesitate so long when attempting to count the
+cost beforehand. In 1850 the population of France and Germany numbered
+practically the same, 35,500,000; in 1913 that of France was 39,600,000,
+that of Germany 67,000,000. [11] The bearing of these facts on the
+Great War is obvious. In 1919 the new Germany, including Silesia, had a
+population of just over 60,000,000; whereas, in 1921, France, including
+Alsace-Lorraine, had a population of 39,200,000. Thus, despite her victory
+in the war, the population of France is less to-day than it was seven years
+ago.
+
+
+Section 10. MORAL CATASTROPHES
+
+In view of past history only an ostrich with its head in the sand can
+profess to believe that there will be no calamities in the future to reduce
+the population of the earth. And apart from cataclysms of disease or of
+war, empires have perished by moral catastrophe. A disbelief in God results
+in selfishness, and in various moral catastrophes. In the terse phrase of
+Mr. Bernard Shaw, "Voluptuaries prosper and perish." [12] For example,
+during the second century B.C. the disease of rationalism, [13] spread over
+Greece, and a rapid depopulation of the country began.
+
+The facts were recorded by Polybius, [14] who expressly states that at the
+time of which he is writing serious pestilences did not occur, and that
+depopulation was caused by the selfishness of the Greeks, who, being
+addicted to pleasure, either did not marry at all or refused to rear more
+than one or two children, lest it should be impossible to bring them up in
+extravagant luxury. This ancient historian also noted that the death of a
+son in war or by pestilence is a serious matter when there are only one or
+two sons in a family. Greece fell to the conquering Romans, and they also
+in course of time were infected with this evil canker. There came a day
+when over the battlements of Constantinople the blood-red Crescent was
+unfurled. Later on all Christendom was threatened, and the King of France
+appealed to the Pope for men and arms to resist the challenge to Europe
+of the Mohammedan world. The Empire of the Turk spread over the whole of
+South-Eastern Europe. But once more the evil poison spread, this time into
+the homes in many parts of Islam, and to-day the once triumphant foes of
+Christianity are decaying nations whose dominions are the appanage of
+Europe. In face of these facts it is sheer madness to assume that all the
+Great Powers now existing will maintain their population and prove immune
+from decay. Indeed, the very propaganda against which this Essay is
+directed is in itself positive proof that the seeds of decay have already
+been sown within the British Empire. Yet, in an age in which thought and
+reason are suppressed by systematised confusion and spiritless perplexity,
+the very simplicity of a truth will operate against its general acceptance.
+
+From the theological point of view, the myth of overpopulation is
+definitely of anti-Christian growth, because it assumes that, owing to the
+operation of natural instincts implanted in mankind by the Creator, the
+only alternative offered to the race is a choice between misery and vice,
+an alternative utterly incompatible with Divine goodness in the government
+of the world.
+
+[Footnote 1: The birth-rate is the number of births per 1,000 of the whole
+population. In order to make a fair comparison between one community and
+another, the birth-rate is often calculated as the number of births per
+1,000 married women between 15 and 45 years of age, as these constitute
+the great majority of child-bearing mothers. This is called the _corrected
+birth-rate_.]
+
+[Footnote 2: _Economic Review_, January 1892.]
+
+[Footnote 3: So says the Secretary of the Malthusian League. Vide _The
+Declining Birth-rate_, 1916, p. 88.]
+
+[Footnote 4: Bagehot, _Economic Studies_, p. 193.]
+
+[Footnote 5: To assign a personality to "Nature" is, of course, a mere
+_façon de parler_; the believer holds that the "course of Nature" is an
+expression of the Mind and Will of the Creator.]
+
+[Footnote 6: _Problems of Population_, p. 382.]
+
+[Footnote 7: _The Malthusian_, July 15, 1921.]
+
+[Footnote 8: _Lancet_, 1915, vol. ii, p. 862.]
+
+[Footnote 9: The New Sydenham Society, vol. clvi, section viii, p. 12.]
+
+[Footnote 10: Charles S. Devas, _Political Economy_, 1901, p. 191.]
+
+[Footnote 11: _Revue Pratique d'Apologétique_, September 15, 1914.]
+
+[Footnote 12: _Man and Superman_, p. 195.]
+
+[Footnote 13: By rationalism we mean a denial of God and of responsibility
+for conduct to a Higher Being.]
+
+[Footnote 14: Quoted by W.H.S. Jones, _Malaria and Greek History_ 1909,
+p95.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+
+THE FALSE DEDUCTIONS CONCERNING POVERTY
+
+From the original root-fallacy Malthus argued that poverty, prostitution,
+war, disease, and a high death-rate are necessary in order to keep down
+the population: and from the same false premises birth controllers are
+now arguing that a high birth-rate causes (1) poverty, and (2) a high
+death-rate. The steps in the argument whereby these amazing conclusions are
+reached are as follows. Before the death-rate can be lowered the social
+conditions of the people must be improved; if social conditions are
+improved there will be an enormous increase of population in geometrical
+progression; the food supply of the country and even of the world cannot be
+increased at the same rate; and therefore there will be greater poverty
+and a higher death-rate unless the birth-rate is lowered. Thus Malthusians
+argue. In view of the false premises on which their argument is based, it
+is not surprising to find that their deductions are erroneous and contain
+many economic and statistical fallacies, to the consideration of which we
+may now devote our attention.
+
+
+Section 1. BIRTH-RATE AND POVERTY
+
+The first false deduction of birth controllers is that a high birth-rate,
+by intensifying the struggle for existence, increases poverty. In order to
+bolster up this contention, Malthusians quote three arguments concerning
+(a) famines, (b) abundance, and (c) wages, and each of these arguments is
+fallacious.
+
+(a) _Famines_
+
+The prevalence of famines is quoted as a proof of reckless overpopulation.
+Now a famine may occur from several different causes, some within and
+others beyond the control of man, but a failure of crops has never yet been
+caused by pressure on the soil. On the contrary, famine is less likely to
+arise in a country whose soil is intensively cultivated, because intensive
+cultivation means a variety of crops, and therefore less risk of all the
+crops failing. Moreover, during the past century famine has occurred
+in Bengal, where population is dense; in Ireland, where population is
+moderate, and in Eastern Russia, where population is scanty. The existence
+of famine is therefore no proof that a country is overpopulated, although
+it may indicate that a country is badly governed or under-developed.
+
+
+(b) _Abundance_
+
+Malthusians also claim that by means of artificial birth control we could
+live in a land of abundance. They point out that, as the population of
+a new colony increases, the colonists, by applying the methods of
+civilisation to the rich soil, become more and more prosperous. Eventually
+there comes a time when capital or labour applied to the soil gives a
+_maximum_ return _per head_ of population. Once that point has been reached
+any further capital or labour applied to the soil will produce a smaller
+return per head of population. This "law of diminishing returns" may be
+illustrated by a simpler example. Let us suppose that during one year a
+market garden worked by one man has produced vegetables to the value of
+£10. During the second year the garden is worked by ten men and produces
+vegetables to the value of £200. It is obvious that the work of ten men has
+produced twice as much per head as the work of one man, because each man
+has produced not £10 but £20. During the third year the garden is worked by
+twenty men and yields vegetables to the value of £300. The total yield is
+greater, but the yield per head is less, because each man has produced not
+£20 but £15. The point of maximum production per head has been passed, and
+the law of diminishing returns is operating.
+
+By restricting the birth-rate Malthusians would limit the population to the
+number necessary for maximum production per head. Now, in the first place,
+it would be very difficult, if not impossible, in the case of a country
+with various industries, to decide when the line of maximum production had
+been passed at any given time. Moreover, it would be utterly impossible
+to fix this line permanently. In the case of our market garden the
+introduction of intensive horticulture might mean that maximum production
+per head required the work of forty men. Again, the very phrase "maximum
+production per head" implies sterling moral qualities in the workers,
+and an absence of drones; and sterling moral qualities have never been
+prominent in any nation, once the practice of artificial birth control has
+been adopted. Lastly, the Christian ideal requires for its realisation, not
+a maximum, but an adequate supply of food, clothing, shelter, and fuel.
+Christianity teaches that to seek after the maximum enjoyment of material
+things is not the chief end of man, because the life of a man in this world
+is very short compared with his life in eternity.
+
+
+(c) _Wages_
+
+The Wages Fund Theory is an economic reflection of the Malthusian myth.
+This theory assumes that a definite fixed sum is available every year for
+distribution as wages amongst labourers, so that the more numerous
+the labourers the less wages will each one receive. From this theory
+Malthusians argue that the only remedy for low wages is artificial birth
+control. They carefully refrain from telling the working classes the other
+aspect of this Wages Fund theory--namely, that if the workers in one trade
+receive a rise in wages, a corresponding reduction must be made in the
+wages of others, so that a rise in wages here and there confers no
+real benefit on the labouring classes as a whole. That is merely one
+illustration of capitalist bias in the Malthusian propaganda. In any case,
+economic science has discarded the Wages Fund Theory as a pure fiction.
+No fixed or definite sum is available for wages, because the wages of a
+labourer are derived from the produce of his work. Even in the case of
+making a railway, where wages are paid before the work is completed, the
+money is advanced by shareholders on the security of the proceeds that will
+eventually accrue from the produce of the labourers.
+
+
+Section 2. POVERTY IN GREAT BRITAIN DUE TO OTHER CAUSES
+
+(a) _Under-development_
+
+Even if the theory of birth controllers, that a high birth-rate increases
+poverty, were as true as it is false, it could not possibly apply to Great
+Britain or to any other country open to commercial intercourse with the
+world; because there is no evidence that the supply of food in the world
+either cannot or will not be increased to meet any actual or possible
+demand. Within the British Empire alone there was an increase of 75 per
+cent. in the production of wheat between 1901 and 1911. [15] In Great
+Britain there has been not only an increase of population but also an
+increased consumption of various foods per head of the population.
+Moreover, if Britain were as well cultivated as is Flanders we could
+produce all or nearly all our own food. [16]
+
+The truth is that in countries such as England, Belgium, and Bengal,
+usually cited by Malthusians, as illustrating the misery that results
+from overpopulation, there is no evidence whatsoever to prove that the
+population is pressing on the soil. On the contrary, we find ample physical
+resources sufficient to support the entire population, and we also find
+evidence of human injustice, incapacity, and corruption sufficient to
+account for the poverty and misery that exist in these countries. This was
+especially so in Ireland during the first half of the nineteenth century.
+[17] Moreover, so far from high birth-rates being the cause of poverty, we
+shall find that poverty is one of the causes of a high birth-rate (p. 69).
+
+(b) _Severance of the Inhabitants from the Soil_
+
+It was not a high birth-rate that established organised poverty in England.
+In the sixteenth century the greater part of the land, including common
+land belonging to the poor, was seized by the rich. They began by robbing
+the Catholic Church, and they ended by robbing the people. [18] Once
+machinery was introduced in the eighteenth century, the total wealth of
+England was enormously increased; but the vast majority of the people
+had little share in this increase of wealth that accrued from machinery,
+because only a small portion of the people possessed capital. More children
+came, but they came to conditions of poverty and of child-labour in the
+mills. In countries where more natural and stable social conditions exist,
+and where there are many small owners of land, large families, so far from
+being a cause of poverty, are of the greatest assistance to their parents
+and to themselves. There are means whereby poverty could be reduced, but
+artificial birth control would only increase the total poverty of the
+State, and therefore of the individual.
+
+From early down to Tudor times, the majority of the inhabitants of England
+lived on small holdings. For example, in the fifteenth century there were
+twenty-one small holdings on a particular area measuring 160 acres. During
+the sixteenth century the number of holdings on this area had fallen to
+six, and in the seventeenth century the 160 acres became _one_ farm.
+Occasionally an effort was made to check this process, and by a statute of
+Elizabeth penalties were enacted against building any cottages "without
+laying four acres of land thereto." On the other hand, acres upon acres
+were given to the larger landowners by a series of Acts for the enclosure
+of common land, whereby many labourers were deprived of their land. From
+the reign of George I to that of George III _nearly four thousand enclosure
+bills_ were passed. These wrongs have not been righted.
+
+ "To urge," wrote Professor Bain, "that there is sufficient poverty and
+ toil in the world without bringing in more to share it than can be
+ provided for, implies either begging the question at issue--a direct
+ imputation that the world is at present very badly managed--or that all
+ persons should take it upon themselves to say how much poverty and toil
+ will exist in any part of the world in the future, or limit the
+ productiveness of any race, because inadequate means of feeding,
+ clothing, or employing them may be adopted in that part of time
+ sometimes called unborn eternity. As a rule, the result usually has
+ been: limit the increase of population without adequate cause, and the
+ reaction causes deterioration or annihilation." [19]
+
+Lastly, there is evidence that poverty has existed in thinly populated
+countries. Richard Cobden, writing in 1836, of Russia, states: "The mass of
+the people are sunk in poverty, ignorance, and barbarism, scarcely rising
+above a state of nature, and yet it has been estimated that this country
+contains more than 750,000 square miles of land, of a quality not inferior
+to the best portions of Germany, and upon which a population of 200,000,000
+might find subsistence." [20]
+
+
+Section 3. CAUSES OF POVERTY IN INDIA
+
+In reality chronic poverty exists both in the thickly-peopled and in the
+thinly-peopled regions of India, and therefore the overpopulation theory is
+an inadequate explanation. Moreover, there are certain obvious and admitted
+evils, sufficient in themselves to account for the chronic poverty of
+India, and of these four are quoted by Devas. [21]
+
+ "(1) The grave discouragement to all rural improvement and in
+ particular to the sinking of deep wells, by the absence outside Bengal
+ of fixity of tenure, the landholder having the prospect of his
+ assessment being raised every fifteen or thirty years. (2) Through most
+ of India the unchecked oppression of usurers, in whose toils many
+ millions of landholders are so bound as to lack means or motive for the
+ proper cultivation of the soil. (3) A system of law and police totally
+ unfit for small cultivators--witness the plague of litigation, appeals
+ as 250 to 1 in England, habitual perjury, manufactured crime, and
+ blackmailing by corrupt native police, all destructive of rural amity,
+ co-operation, and industry. (4) Taxation oppressive both in quantity
+ and quality: demanded, on pain of eviction and imprisonment, to be paid
+ punctually and rigidly in cash, instead of optionally or occasionally
+ in kind, or flexible, according to the variations of the seasons;
+ moreover, levied on salt, raising the price of this necessity of life
+ at least ten times, often much more; when precisely an abundant supply
+ of salt, with the climate and diet of India, is a prime need for men
+ and cattle."
+
+
+Section 4. POVERTY IN FACT CAUSES A HIGH BIRTH-RATE
+
+As will be shown in Chapter V, poverty is generally the cause and not the
+result of a high birth-rate. The Malthusian doctrine has been and is to-day
+a barrier to social reform, because it implies that humane legislation,
+by encouraging population, will of necessity defeat the aim of those who
+desire to improve the conditions of the poor by methods other than the
+practice of artificial birth control. To a very great extent Malthusian
+teaching was responsible for the Poor Law of 1834, the most severe in
+Europe, the demoralising laxity of the old Poor Law being replaced by
+degrading severity. Again, as recently as 1899, a Secretary of State
+reiterated the Malthusian doctrine by explaining that great poverty
+throughout India was due to the increase of population under the _pax
+Britannica_. Now the truth is that if the social conditions of the poor
+were improved, we have every reason to believe that their birth-rate would
+be reduced, because as civilisation in a community progresses there is a
+natural decline in fertility. Hence:
+
+(a) _Malthusianism is an Attack on the Poor_
+
+Both the supporters and the opponents of Malthus are often mistaken in
+considering his greatest achievement to be a policy of birth control.
+Malthus did a greater and a more evil thing. He forged a law of nature,
+namely, _that there is always a limited and insufficient supply of the
+necessities of life in the world_. From this false law he argued that,
+as population increases too rapidly, the newcomers cannot hope to find a
+sufficiency of good things; that the poverty of the masses is not due to
+conditions created by man, but to a natural law; and that consequently this
+law cannot be altered by any change in political institutions. This new
+doctrine was eagerly adopted by the rich, who were thus enabled to argue
+that Nature intended that the masses should find no room at her feast; and
+that therefore our system of industrial capitalism was in harmony with the
+Will of God. Most comforting dogma! Most excellent anodyne for conscience
+against acceptance of those rights of man that, being ignored, found
+terrible expression in the French Revolution! Without discussion,
+without investigation, and without proof, our professors, politicians,
+leader-writers, and even our well-meaning socialists, have accepted as
+true the bare falsehood that there is always an insufficient supply of the
+necessities of life; and to-day this heresy permeates all our practical
+politics. In giving this forged law of nature to the rich, Malthus robbed
+the poor of hope. Such was his crime against humanity. In the words of
+Thorold Rogers, Malthusianism was part and parcel of "a conspiracy,
+conceived by the law and carried out by parties interested in its success,
+to cheat the English workman of his wages, to tie him to the soil, to
+deprive him of hope, and to degrade him into immediate poverty." When
+Malthusians enter a slum for the purpose of preaching birth control, it is
+right that the people should be told what is written on the passports of
+these strangers.
+
+(b) _A Hindrance to Reform_
+
+The teaching of birth control amongst the poor is in itself a crime,
+because, apart from the evil practice, the people are asked to believe a
+lie, namely, that a high birth-rate is the cause of poverty and that
+by means of birth-control their circumstances will be improved. By
+one advocate of birth control this weak reasoning and inconsequential
+sentimentality have actually been crowded into the compass of a single
+sentence: "We must no longer be content to remain indifferent and idle
+witnesses of the senseless and unthinking procreating of countless wretched
+children, whose parents are diseased and vicious." [22] It is true that
+disease, vice, and wretched children are the saddest products of our
+industrial system; it is also true that a helpless baby never yet was
+guilty of expropriating land, of building slums, of under-paying the
+workers, or of rigging the market. Therefore instead of preventing the
+birth of children we should set about to rectify the evil conditions which
+make the lives of children and adults unhappy. Like many other policies
+advocated on behalf of the poor, birth control is immoral if only on this
+account, that it distracts attention from the real causes of poverty. In
+Spain birth control is not practised. I do not say there is no poverty in
+that country, but there is no poverty that resembles the hopeless grinding
+poverty of the English poor. For that strange disease, artificial birth
+control is a worthless remedy; and it were far better that we should turn
+our attention to the simple words of Cardinal Manning: "There is a natural
+and divine law, anterior and superior to all human and civil law, by which
+men have the right to live of the fruits of the soil on which they are
+born, and in which they are buried." [23]
+
+(c) _A Quack Remedy for Poverty_
+
+Artificial birth control is one of the many quack remedies advertised for
+the cure of poverty, and G.K. Chesterton has given the final answer to the
+Malthusian assertion that some form of birth control is essential _because
+houses are scarce_:
+
+ "Consider that simple sentence, and you will see what is the matter
+ with the modern mind. I do not mean the growth of immorality; I mean
+ the genesis of gibbering idiocy. There are ten little boys whom you
+ wish to provide with ten top-hats; and you find there are only eight
+ top-hats. To a simple mind it would seem not impossible to make two
+ more hats; to find out whose business it is to make hats, and induce
+ him to make hats; to agitate against an absurd delay in delivering
+ hats; to punish anybody who has promised hats and failed to provide
+ hats. The modern mind is that which says that if we only cut off the
+ heads of two of the little boys, they will not want hats; and then the
+ hats will exactly go round. The suggestion that heads are rather more
+ important than hats is dismissed as a piece of mystical metaphysics.
+ The assertion that hats were made for heads, and not heads for hats
+ savours of antiquated dogma. The musty text which says that the body is
+ more than raiment; the popular prejudice which would prefer the lives
+ of boys to the mathematical arrangement of hats,--all these things are
+ alike to be ignored. The logic of enlightenment is merciless; and we
+ duly summon the headsman to disguise the deficiencies of the hatter.
+ For it makes very little difference to the logic of the thing, that we
+ are talking of houses and not of hats.... The fundamental fallacy
+ remains the same; that we are beginning at the wrong end, because we
+ have never troubled to consider at what end to begin." [24]
+
+
+Section 5. POVERTY AND CIVILISATION
+
+A modern writer is burdened by many words that carry an erroneous meaning,
+and one of these is the word "civilisation." Intended to mean "The Art
+of Living," this word, by wrong usage, now implies that our method of
+combining mental culture and bodily comfort is the highest, noblest, and
+best way to live. Yet this implication is by no means certain. On the
+contrary, the spectacle of our social life would bring tears to eyes
+undimmed by the industrial traditions of the past hundred years. This I
+know to be true, having once travelled to London in the company of a young
+girl who came from the Thirteenth Century. She had lived some twelve years
+on the Low Sierra of Andalusia, where in a small sunlit village she may
+have vainly imagined our capital to be a city with walls of amethyst and
+streets of gold, for when the train passed through that district which
+lies to the south of Waterloo, the child wept. "Look at these houses," she
+sobbed; "_Dios mio_, they have no view."
+
+[Footnote 15: Memorandum issued by the Dominions Royal Commission, December
+3, 1915 (p. 2).]
+
+[Footnote 16: Prince Kropotkin, _Fields, Factories, and Workshops_, 1899,
+chapter iii.]
+
+[Footnote 17: Vide _The Economic History of Ireland from the Union to the
+Famine_, by S. O'Brien (Longmans, 1921).]
+
+[Footnote 18: William Cobbett, _Social Effects of the Reformation_.
+Catholic Truth Society (H. 132), price 2_d_.]
+
+[Footnote 19: Quoted by F.P. Atkinson, M.D., in _Edinburgh Medical
+Journal_, September 1880, p. 229.]
+
+[Footnote 20: Ibid., p. 234.]
+
+[Footnote 21: Charles S. Devas, _Political Economy_, 1901, p. 199.]
+
+[Footnote 22: _British Medical Journal_, July 23, 1921, p. 131.]
+
+[Footnote 23: Quoted in _Tablet_, November 5, 1921, p. 598.]
+
+[Footnote 24: Quoted from _America_, October 29, 1921, p. 31.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+
+HIGH BIRTH-RATES NOT THE CAUSE OF HIGH DEATH-RATES
+
+
+Section 1. POVERTY AS NOW EXISTING
+
+The second contention of birth controllers is that a high birth-rate, by
+increasing poverty, causes a high death-rate. In the first place, there is
+no doubt that poverty, necessary features of which are mal-nutrition or
+insufficient food and bad housing, is directly associated with a high
+death-rate, although this view was once shown by the _Lancet_ to need
+important qualifications.
+
+ "With respect to the greater mortality amongst the poor than the rich,
+ we have yet to learn that the only hope of lessening the death-rate
+ lies in diminishing the birth-rate. We have no _proof_ as yet that the
+ majority of the evils at present surrounding the poor are necessarily
+ attendant upon poverty. We have yet to see a poor population living in
+ dry, well-drained, well-ventilated houses, properly supplied with pure
+ water and the means of disposal of refuse. And we have yet to become
+ acquainted with a poor population spending their scant earnings
+ entirely, or in a very large proportion, upon the necessities of life;
+ for such is not the case when half the earnings of a family are thrown
+ away to provide adulterated alcoholic drinks for one member of it.
+ Until reforms such as these and others have been carried out, and the
+ poor are able and willing to conform to known physiological laws, it is
+ premature to speak of taking measures to lessen the birth-rate--a
+ proposal, be it said, which makes the humiliating confession of man's
+ defeat in the battle of life." [25]
+
+It will be seen that the qualifications practically remove the question
+from dispute. [26] If the conditions of the poor were thus altered,
+poverty, as it exists to-day, would of course disappear. As things are,
+we find that a high death-rate is related to poverty, as is proved, for
+example, by the death-rate from tuberculosis being four times greater in
+slums than in the best residential quarters of a city.
+
+The correct answer to the birth controllers is that a high birth-rate is
+not the cause of a high death-rate, because high birth-rates, as shown
+in the previous chapter, are not the cause of poverty, but vice versa.
+Moreover, all the statistical evidence goes to prove that in this matter we
+are right and that Malthusians are wrong.
+
+
+Section 2. HIGH BIRTH-RATE NOT THE CAUSE OF HIGH DEATH-RATE: PROVED FROM
+STATISTICS
+
+In China, where there is said to be a birth-rate of over 50 per 1,000, and
+where over 70 per cent. of infants are helped to die, the high death-rate
+is due clearly to degraded social customs. In the slums of Great Britain
+the high death-rate is also due to degraded social conditions. It is not
+due to the birth-rate. Of this the proof is simple, (a) Among the French
+Canadians, where the average family numbers about nine, this high
+birth-rate is not associated with a high death-rate, but with the increase
+of a thrifty, hard-working race. In Ontario the birth-rate went up from
+21.10 in 1910 to 24.7 in 1911, and the death-rate _fell_ from 14 to 12.6.
+(b) Again, in 1911 the corrected birth-rate for Connaught was 45.3 as
+against a crude rate of 24.7 for England and Wales; and in Connaught, where
+there is no need for Societies for preventing Parents being Cruel to
+their Children, the infant mortality rate [27] is very much lower than
+in England, although the birth-rate is much higher and the poverty much
+greater. In Bradford, a prosperous English town which pays particular
+attention to its mothers and children, the infant mortality in 1917 was
+132 per 1,000 and the birth-rate 13.2. In Connaught, where there are no
+maternity centres or other aids to survival, but on the contrary a great
+dearth of the means of well-being, the infant mortality was only 50, whilst
+the birth-rate was actually 45! [28] So untrue is it to say that a high
+death-rate is due to a high birth-rate.
+
+
+Section 3. A LOW BIRTH-RATE NO GUARANTEE OF A LOW DEATH-RATE
+
+Again, birth controllers claim that a low birthrate leads to a low infant
+mortality rate. Now, it is really a very extraordinary thing that, whatever
+be the statement made by a Malthusian on the subject of birth-control, the
+very opposite is found to be the truth. During the last quarter of last
+century a _falling_ birth-rate in England was actually accompanied by a
+_rising_ infant mortality rate! During 1918 in Ireland [29] the crude
+birthrate was 19.9, with an infant mortality rate of 86, whereas in England
+and Wales [30] the crude birthrate was 17.7 with an infant mortality rate
+of 97, and in the northern boroughs the appalling rate of 120. In England
+and Wales the lowest infant mortality rate was found to be in the southern
+rural districts, where the rate was 63, but in Connaught the rate was 50.5.
+This means that in England a low birth-rate is associated with a high
+infant mortality rate, whereas in Ireland a high birth-rate is associated
+with a low infant mortality rate. [31] These cold figures prove that in
+this matter at least the poorest Irish peasants are richer than the people
+of England.
+
+
+Section 4. VITAL STATISTICS OF FRANCE
+
+The Malthusian claim that a low birth-rate leads to a low death-rate is
+also disproved by the vital statistics of France.
+
+ "The death-rate of France has not declined at the same rate as the
+ birth-rate has, and, while the incidence of mortality in France was
+ equal to that of England in the middle of the seventies, the English
+ mortality is now only five-sevenths of the French. England thus
+ maintains a fair natural increase, although the birth-rate has declined
+ at an even faster pace than has been the case in France....
+
+ "The French death-rate is higher than is the case with most of her
+ neighbours, and it can quite well be reduced. The reasons for her
+ fairly high mortality are not to be found in climatic conditions,
+ racial characteristics, or other unchangeable elements of nature, nor
+ even in her occupations, since some of the most industrial regions have
+ a low mortality." [32]
+
+I have tabulated certain vital statistics of twenty Departments of France.
+
+The following table, covering two periods of five years in twenty
+Departments, proves that _the death-rate was lower_ in the ten Departments
+having the highest birth-rate in France than in the ten Departments having
+the lowest birth-rate.
+
+TABLE I
+
+ THE TEN DEPARTMENTS HAVING THE HIGHEST BIRTH-RATE FRANCE
+ 1909-1913 1915-1919
+ Rates per 1,000 population Still- Rates per 1,000
+ births population
+Departments. Living Deaths Natural per 1000 Births deaths
+ births increase births
+
+Moselle 27.6 16.5 +11.1 - 14.7 15.4
+Finistère 27.2 18.1 +9.1 4.0 15.9 18.2
+Pas-de-Calais 26.8 17.4 +9.4 4.2 - -
+Morbihan 25.7 17.8 +7.9 4.4 15.0 19.0
+Côtes-du-Nord 24.5 20.6 +3.9 4.2 14.4 20.0
+Bas-Rhin. 24.3 16.2 +8.0 - 13.3 16.1
+Meurthe-et-
+Moselle 23.2 19.2 +4.0 4.3 - -
+Lozère 22.6 17.3 +5.2 4.2 12.4 17.5
+Haut-Rhin. 22.4 16.0 +6.4 - 10.3 15.4
+Vosges 22.0 18.7 +3.3 4.7 - -
+
+_Total Averages 24.6 17.7 +6.8 4.2 13.7 17.3_
+
+
+ THE TEN DEPARTMENTS HAVING THE LOWEST BIRTH-RATE IN FRANCE
+
+Côte-d'Or. 15.4 18.2 -2.8 3.1 9.9 20.5
+Allier. 15.1 15.7 -0.6 3.3 8.4 18.8
+Gironde 15.1 17.3 -2.2 4.5 10.1 21.2
+Haute-Garonne. 15.1 20.4 -5.3 4.0 9.0 22.5
+Lot 15.0 21.0 -6.0 4.5 7.5 20.6
+Nièvre 14.9 17.4 -2.5 3.2 8.8 20.0
+Tarn-et-Garonne 14.9 20.1 -5.1 4.7 7.9 20.7
+Yonne 14.4 19.1 -4.7 3.8 8.9 22.0
+Lot-et-Garonne 13.7 19.1 -5.4 4.4 7.4 20.1
+Gers 13.2 19.2 -6.0 4.1 6.8 19.8
+
+_Total Averages 14.6 18.7 -4.0 3.9 8.4 20.6_
+
+Moreover, the figures show that, prior to 1914, the Departments with the
+lowest birth-rate were becoming _depopulated_. On the other hand, the
+enormous fall in the birth-rate throughout the country from 1915 to 1919 is
+a memorial, very noble, to the heroism of France in the Great War, and to
+her 1,175,000 dead. Certain other facts should also be noted. In France the
+regulations permit that, when a child has died before registration of the
+birth, this may be recorded as a still-birth; and for that reason the
+proportion of still-births _appears_ higher than in most other countries.
+
+Malthusian claims are thus refuted by the vital statistics of France; but
+it should be clearly understood that these figures do _not_ prove that the
+reverse of the Malthusian theory is true, namely, that a high birth-rate
+is the cause of a low death-rate. There is no true correlation between
+birthrates and death-rates.
+
+
+Section 5. COEFFICIENTS OF CORRELATION
+
+As birth controllers rely very much upon statistics, and as figures may
+very easily mislead the unwary, it is necessary to point out that the
+Malthusian contention that a high birth-rate is the cause of a high
+death-rate is not only contrary to reason and to facts, but is also
+contrary to the very figures which they quote. A high birth-rate is often
+associated with a high death-rate, but a general or uniform correspondence
+between birth-rates and death-rates has never been established by modern
+statistical methods. To these methods brief reference may be made. A
+coefficient of correlation is a number intended to indicate the degree of
+similarity between two things, or the extent to which one moves with the
+other. If this coefficient is unity, or 1, it indicates that the two things
+are similar in all respects, while if it be zero, or 0, it indicates that
+there is no resemblance between them. The study of correlation is a first
+step to the study of causation, because, until we know to what extent two
+things move together, it is useless to consider whether one causes the
+movement of the other; but in itself a coefficient of correlation does not
+necessarily indicate cause or result. Now in this country, between 1838 and
+1912 the birth-rate and the death-rate show a correlation of .84; but if
+that period be split into two, the correlation from 1838 to 1876, when the
+birth-rate was fluctuating, is _minus_ .12, and in the period after 1876
+the correlation is _plus_ .92. This means that the whole of the positive
+correlation is due to the falling of the death-rate, and that birthrates
+and death-rates do not of necessity move together. [33]
+
+After a careful examination of the vital statistics for France, Knud
+Stouman concludes as follows:
+
+ "In France no clear correlation exists between the birth-rate and the
+ death-rate in the various Departments. The coefficient of correlation
+ between the birth-rate and the general death-rate by Departments
+ (1909-1913) was 0.0692±0.1067, and including Alsace and
+ Lorraine--0.0212±0.1054, indicating no correlation whatsoever. A
+ somewhat different and more interesting table is obtained when the
+ correlation is made with the mortality at each age class:
+
+ TABLE II
+
+ Under 1 year 0.3647 ± 0.0986
+ 1-19 years 0.4884 ± 0.0816
+ 20-39 years 0.6228 ± 0.0656
+ 40-59 years 0.5028 ± 0.0801
+ 60 years and over 0.2577 ± 0.1001
+
+ "A peculiar configuration is observed in these coefficients in that a
+ quite pronounced positive correlation exists at the central age
+ group, but disappears with some regularity towards both extremities
+ of life. If the mortality has any influence upon the natality this
+ cannot be in the form of replacement of lost infants and deceased old
+ people, therefore, as has frequently been suggested. That a high
+ death-rate at the child-bearing age should be conducive to increased
+ fertility is absurd, neither does it seem likely that a large number
+ of children should make the parents more liable to diseases which are
+ prevalent at this period of life. The reasons must, then, be looked
+ for in a common factor.
+
+ "Now the only disease of importance representing the same age-curve as
+ do the correlation coefficients is tuberculosis. This disease causes in
+ France 2 per cent. of the deaths under one year, 24 per cent. of the
+ deaths from 1 to 19 years of age, not less than 45 per cent. from 20 to
+ 39, 18 per cent. at ages 40 to 59, and less than 2 per cent. at the
+ ages over 60. Will a high tuberculosis mortality, then, be conducive to
+ great fertility, or do we have to fear that a decrease of the natality
+ will be the result of energetic measures against tuberculosis? Hardly.
+ The death-rate may be reduced, then, without detrimental effects upon
+ the birth-rate.
+
+ "What can the factor be which influences both the tuberculosis
+ incidence and the birth-rate? We know that the prevalence of
+ tuberculosis is conditioned principally by poverty and ignorance of
+ hygiene. The Parisian statistics, as compiled by Dr. Bertillon and
+ recently by Professor L. Hersch, show a much higher birth-rate in the
+ poor wards than in the richer districts, and the high birth-rates may
+ be furnished largely by the poorer elements of the population. A
+ comfortable degree of wealth does not imply a low birth-rate, as is
+ abundantly shown elsewhere, and one of the important questions which
+ suggest themselves to the French statistician and sociologist is
+ evidently the following: How can the intellectual and economic standard
+ of the masses be raised without detriment to the natality?
+
+ "We believe that the time is opportune for solving this question. The
+ past half-century has been lived under the shadow of defeat and with a
+ sense of limitations, and of impotence against fate. This nightmare is
+ now thrown off, and, the doors to the world being open and development
+ free, the French people will learn that new initiative has its full
+ recompense and that a living and a useful activity can be found for all
+ the sons and daughters they may get. The habit of home-staying is
+ broken by the war, and new and great undertakings are developing in the
+ ruined north-east as well as in the sunny south." [34]
+
+[Footnote 25: _The Lancet_, 1879, vol. ii, p. 703.]
+
+[Footnote 26: Poverty is a term of wide import admitting many degrees
+according as the victim is deprived more or less completely of the ordinary
+necessities in the matters of food, clothing, housing, education, and
+recreation. As used by Malthusians and spoken of here it means persistent
+lack of one or more of these necessary requisites for decent living. Vide
+Parkinson, _Primer of Social Science_ (1918), pp. 225 sqq.]
+
+[Footnote 27: The infant mortality rate is the number of deaths of infants
+under one year old per 1,000 births in the same year.]
+
+[Footnote 28: See Saleeby, _The Factors of Infant Mortality_, edited by
+Cory Bigger. _Report on the Physical Welfare of Mothers and Children_, vol.
+iv, Ireland (Carnegie U.K. Trust), 1918.]
+
+[Footnote 29: _Fifty-fifth Annual Report of the Registrar-General for
+Ireland, containing a General Abstract of the Numbers of Marriages, Births,
+and Deaths_, 1918, pp. x, xxix, and 24.]
+
+[Footnote 30: _Eighty-first Annual Report of the Registrar-General of
+Births, Deaths, and Marriages in England and Wales_, 1918, pp. xxiv, xxxii,
+and xxxv.]
+
+[Footnote 31: This is also the emphatic testimony of Sir Arthur Newsholme,
+in his _Report of Child Mortality_, issued in connection with the
+_Forty-fifth Annual Report of the Local Government Board_ (dated 191?), PP.
+77-8.]
+
+[Footnote 32: Knud Stouman, "The Repopulation of France," _International
+Journal of Public Health_, vol. ii, no. 4, p. 421.]
+
+[Footnote 33: Dr. Major Greenwood. Vide _The Declining Birth-rate_, 1916,
+p. 130.]
+
+[Footnote 34: _International Journal of Public Health_, vol. ii, no. 4, p.
+423.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+
+HOW RELIGION AFFECTS THE BIRTHRATE
+
+
+Section 1. FRENCH STATISTICS MISINTERPRETED BY MALTHUSIANS
+
+The fact that Malthusians are in the habit of citing the birth-rate in
+certain Catholic countries as a point in favour of their propaganda is
+only another instance of their maladroit use of figures: because for that
+argument there is not the slightest justification. The following paragraph
+from a recent speech [35] in the Anglican Church Congress by Lord Dawson,
+Physician to the King, is a good example of their methods in controversy:
+
+ "Despite the influence and condemnations of the Church, it (artificial
+ birth control) has been practised in France for well over half a
+ century, and in Belgium and other Catholic countries is extending. And
+ if the Roman Catholic Church, with its compact organisation, its power
+ of authority, and its discipline, cannot check this procedure, is it
+ likely that Protestant Churches will be able to do so? For Protestant
+ religions depend for their strength on _the conviction and esteem they
+ establish in the heads and hearts of their people_."
+
+I have italicised the closing words because it would be interesting to
+know, in passing, whether anyone denies that these human influences also
+contribute to the strength of the Catholic Church. Among recent converts to
+the Faith in this country are many Protestant clergymen who may be presumed
+to have known what claims "on their conviction and esteem" their communion
+had. Moreover, in France, amongst recent converts are some of the great
+intellects of that country. If it be not "conviction and esteem" in their
+"heads and hearts," what other motive, I ask, has induced Huysmans, Barrés,
+and others to make submission to Rome?
+
+Secondly, it is true that for over half a century the birth-rate of France
+has been falling, and that to some extent this decline is due to the use of
+contraceptives; but it is also true that during the past fifty years the
+Government of France has made a determined but unsuccessful effort to
+overthrow the Catholic Church; and that it is in so far as the Government
+has weakened Catholic influence and impeded Catholic teaching that the
+birth-rate has fallen. The belief of a nation will not influence its
+destiny unless that belief is reflected in the actions of the citizens.
+Father Herbert Thurston, S.J., [36] thus deals with the argument implied:
+
+ "Catholicism which is merely Catholicism in name, and which amounts to
+ no more in the supposed believer than a vague purpose of sending for a
+ priest when he is dying, is not likely to have any restraining effect
+ upon the decline of the birth-rate. Further, it is precisely because a
+ really practical Catholicism lays such restrictions upon freedom in
+ this and in other matters, that members of the educated and comfortable
+ classes, the men especially, are prone to emancipate themselves from
+ all religious control with an anti-clerical rancour hardly known in
+ Protestant lands. Had it not been for these defections from her
+ teaching, the Catholic Church, in most countries of mixed religion,
+ would soon become predominant by the mere force of natural fertility.
+ Even as it is, we believe that a country like France owes such small
+ measure of natural increase as she still retains almost entirely to the
+ religious principle of the faithful few. Where the Catholic Church
+ preserves her sway over the hearts of men the maintenance of a vigorous
+ stock is assured."
+
+In the first place, it is noteworthy that the birth-rate varies with
+practical Catholicism in France, being much higher in those Departments
+where the Church is more flourishing. As was shown by Professor Meyrick
+Booth in 1914, there are certain districts of France where the birth-rate
+is _higher_ than in the usual English country districts. For example, the
+birth-rate in Finistère was 27.1, in Pas-de-Calais 26.6, and in Morbihan
+25.8. On the other hand, in many Departments the birth-rate was lower
+than the death-rate. This occurred, for example, in Lot, Haute Garonne,
+Tarn-et-Garonne, Lot-et-Garonne, and in Gers. In the two last-named
+Departments the birth-rates were 13.6 and 13.0 respectively.
+
+In the following table I have tabulated more recent figures concerning the
+vital statistics in these two groups of Departments, and rates for the
+two periods of five years, 1909-1913, and 1915-1919, in each group are
+compared.
+
+It will be noted that in the three Departments, where practical Catholicism
+is most flourishing,
+
+TABLE III
+
+ 1909-1913. 1915-1919.
+
+Departments. Rates per 1000 Still- Deaths Rates per 1000
+ population Births under population
+ per 1 year
+ Living Deaths National 1000 per Births Deaths
+ Births Increase Births 1000
+ living
+ births
+
+Finistère. 27.2 18.1 +9.1 4.0 116.7 15.9 18.2
+Pas-de-Calais 26.8 17.4 +9.4 4.2 135.3 -- --
+Morbihan. 25.7 17.8 +7.9 4.4 113.7 15.0 19.0
+
+_Total Averages. 26.5 17.7 +8.8 4.2 121.9 15.4 18.6_
+
+Lot. 15.0 21.0 -6.0 4.5 148.0 7.5 20.6
+Haute Garonne. 15.1 20.4 -5.3 4.0 121.3 9.0 22.5
+Tarn-et-Garonne 14.9 20.1 -5.1 4.7 134.7 7.9 20.7
+Lot-et-Garonne. 13.7 19.1 -5.4 4.4 112.0 7.4 20.1
+Gers. 13.2 19.2 -6.0 4.1 102.4 6.8 19.8
+
+_Total Averages. 14.3 19.9 -5.5 4.3 123.6 7.7 20.7_
+
+
+there is a high birth-rate, and moreover that in these Departments both
+the death-rate and the infant mortality rate is _lower_ than in the five
+Departments with the lowest birth-rate.
+
+Professor Meyrick Booth's comments are as follows:
+
+ "The above five departments (in which the decline of population has
+ been most marked) are adjacent to one another in the fertile valley of
+ the Garonne, one of the wealthiest parts of France; and we may well
+ ask: Why should the birth-rate under such favourable conditions be less
+ than half that which is noted for the bleak district of Finistère? The
+ noted statistician, M. Leroy-Beaulieu, has some interesting
+ observations to offer upon this paradoxical state of things.
+ Considering the country in general, and these districts in particular,
+ he notes that the most prolific parts of France are those in which the
+ people have retained their allegiance to the traditional Church (in the
+ case of the Pas-de-Calais we have a certain degree of adherence to the
+ orthodox faith combined with the presence of a large mining
+ population). M. Leroy-Beaulieu expresses the opinion that the Catholic
+ Church tends, by means of its whole atmosphere, to promote a general
+ increase of population; for, more than other types of Christianity, it
+ condemns egoism, materialism, and inordinate ambition for self or
+ family; and, moreover, it works in the same direction through its
+ uncompromising condemnation of modern Malthusian practices. He draws
+ our attention, further, to the new wave of religious life which has
+ swept over the _haute-bourgeoisie_ of France during the last few
+ decades; and he does not hesitate to connect this with the fact that
+ this class is now one of the most prolific (perhaps the most prolific)
+ in the nation. Space forbids my taking up this subject in detail, but
+ it appears from a considerable body of figures which have been
+ collected that, while the average number of children born to each
+ marriage in the English Protestant upper middle class is not more than
+ about 2.0 to 2.5, the number born to each marriage in the corresponding
+ class in France is between 3.0 and 4.0. Taking the foregoing facts into
+ consideration, it would appear that Roman Catholicism--even in
+ France--is very considerably more prolific (where the belief of the
+ people is at all deep) than English Protestantism. This applies both to
+ the upper and lower classes." [37]
+
+In all probability Lord Dawson was unaware of the foregoing, but there is
+one fact which, as a Neo-Malthusian, he ought to have known, because the
+omission of this fact in his address is a serious matter. When referring to
+France as a country where birth control had come to stay, _Lord Dawson did
+not tell his audience that the Government of France has now suppressed the
+only Malthusian periodical in that country, and has proposed a law, whereby
+those who engage in birth control propaganda shall be imprisoned_.
+
+
+Section 2. EVIDENCE FROM HOLLAND
+
+As regards other countries, Holland is usually described as the Mecca of
+Malthusians, being "the only country where Neo-Malthusianism has been given
+the opportunity of diminishing the excessive birth-rate on eugenic lines,
+i.e. in the reduction of the fertility of the poorest classes," [38] and
+where a "considerable rise in the wages and general prosperity appears
+to have taken place side by side with an unprecedented increase of
+population." When we come to investigate this claim we find that, of the
+eleven provinces of Holland, two are almost entirely Catholic, these
+being North Brabant, with 649,000 inhabitants, and Limburg, with 358,000
+inhabitants. On the other hand, in Friesland, with 366,000 inhabitants,
+not more than 8 per cent, are Catholics. The vital statistics for 1913 are
+quoted by Father Thurston, S.J.:
+
+ "... We find that in Limburg the crude birth-rate is 33.4, in North
+ Brabant it is 32.5, but in Friesland it is 24.3. Of course, this is not
+ the beginning and end of the matter. In North Brabant the death-rate is
+ 16.36, in Limburg it is 15.28, in Friesland it is only 11.21, but the
+ fact remains that in the two Catholic provinces the natural increase is
+ 16.17 and 18.15, while in the non-Catholic province of Friesland it is
+ 13.15. Further, no one can doubt that in such densely populated
+ districts as North and South Holland and Gelderland the Catholics, who
+ number more than 25 per cent, of the inhabitants, exercise a
+ perceptible influence in raising the birth figures for the whole
+ kingdom. The results would be very different if the entire country
+ adopted Neo-Malthusian principles." [39]
+
+
+Section 3. THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
+
+As was proved by the census of religions in 1906, the United States of
+America is becoming a great stronghold of the Faith. In Massachusetts the
+Catholic Church numbered 1,100,000 members, whereas the total membership
+of all the Protestant Churches was 450,000. In Illinois there were about
+300,000 Methodists and 1,000,000 Catholics. There were 2,300,000 Catholics
+in the State of New York, and about 300,000 Methodists, while no other
+Protestant Church numbered more than 200,000. The New England States, once
+the home of American Puritanism, are now great centres of Catholicism.
+
+Professor Meyrick Booth [40] explains this remarkable change as being due
+to two causes: (1) The influx of large numbers of European Catholics, who
+cling tenaciously to their religion; (2) the greater fertility of these
+stocks as compared with the native population. Moreover, he has tabulated
+the following statistics:
+
+TABLE IV
+
+State. Population Chief Religious Bodies Births & Birth
+ (1906) Deaths rate per
+ (b. and d.) 1,000
+
+Indiana 2,700,000 Methodist 233,000 b. 36,000 13.0
+ Prot. Episcopalian 102,000 d. 36,500
+ Disciples 118,000
+ R.C. 175,000
+Iowa. 2,224,000 Methodist 164,000 b. 36,000 16.0
+ Lutheran 117,000 d. 20,000
+ Presbyterian 60,000
+ R.C. 207,000
+Maryland. 1,295,000 Methodist 137,000 b. 19,000 15.0
+ Prot. Episcopalian 35,000 d. 20,000
+ Baptist & smaller,
+ about 100,000
+ R.C. 167,000
+California. 2,377,000 R.C. 354,000 b. 32,100 14.0
+ Prot. bodies about d. 32,400
+ (All Churches weak) 250,000
+Kentucky 2,290,000 Baptist 312,000 b. 35,000 15.0
+ Methodist 156,000 d. 18,000
+ R.C. 166,000
+
+In these States the birth-rate is low; in three there are actually more
+deaths than births; and in all five the proportion of Catholics is
+comparatively small. These States may be compared with five others, in
+which the Catholic and the foreign elements are well represented:
+
+TABLE V
+
+State. Population Chief Religious Birth and Birthrate
+ (1910) Bodies Deaths per 1000
+
+New York. 9,113,000 R.C. 2,280,000 b. 213,000 22.0
+ Jews (?) 1,000,000 d. 147,000
+ Methodist 300,000
+ Presbyterian 200,000
+
+Rhode Island 540,000 R.C. 160,000 b. 13,000 24.0
+ Baptist 20,000 d. 8,000
+ Prot.
+ Episcopalian 15,000
+
+Massachusetts 3,336,000 R.C. 1,080,000 b. 84,000 25.0
+ Congregational 120,000 d. 51,000
+ Baptist 80,000
+ All Protestants
+ together 450,000
+
+Michigan 2,800,000 R.C. 490,000 b. 64,000 23.0
+ Methodist 128,000 d. 36,000
+ Lutheran 105,000
+
+Connecticut 1,114,000 R.C. 300,000 b. 27,000 24.0
+ Congregational 66,000 d. 17,000
+ Prot.
+ Episcopalian 37,000
+
+In these States the birth-rate is very much higher than in the former.
+Furthermore, a New York paper [40] investigated the birth-rate in that
+city with special reference to religious belief, and concluded that the
+different bodies could be graded as follows with respect to the number of
+children per marriage: (1) Jews, (2) Catholics, (3) Protestants (Orthodox),
+(4) Protestants (Liberal), and (5) Agnostic. Professor Meyrick Booth, who
+is himself a Protestant, concludes his survey of the evidence as follows:
+
+ "looking at the situation as a whole, there is good reason to think
+ that the Protestant Anglo-Saxons are not only losing ground
+ _relatively_, but must, at any rate in the East and middle East, be
+ suffering an actual decrease on a large scale. For it has been shown by
+ more than one sociologist (see, for example, the statement in _The
+ Family and the Nation_) that no stock can maintain itself with an
+ average of less than about four children per marriage, and from all
+ available data (it has not been found possible to obtain definite
+ figures for most of the Western and Southern States) we must see that
+ the average fertility of each marriage in this section of the American
+ people falls far short of the requisite four children. Judging by all
+ the figures at hand, the modern Anglo-Saxon American, with his high
+ standard of comfort, his intensely individualistic outlook on life, and
+ his intellectual and emancipated but child-refusing wife, is being
+ gradually thrust aside by the upgrowth of new masses of people of
+ simpler tastes and hardier and more natural habits. And, what is of
+ peculiar interest to us, this new population will carry into ascendancy
+ those religious and moral beliefs which have moulded its type of life.
+
+ "The victory will be, not to those religious beliefs which most closely
+ correspond to certain requirements of the abstract intellect, but to
+ those which give rise, in practice, to a mode of life that is simple,
+ natural, unselfish, and adequately prolific--in other words, to a mode
+ of life that _works_, that is _Lebensfähig_." [41]
+
+As things are, the original Protestant stock of America is being swamped by
+the growth of the Catholic, the Jewish, and the Negro population. Moreover,
+the United States is faced by the grave problem of a rapidly increasing
+coloured race. Despite this fact the American Malthusians are now demanding
+that a National Bureau should be established to disseminate information
+regarding contraceptives throughout their country! And what of the other
+reformers? They also are very busy. They have already abolished those
+cheering beverages from grapes and grain, or rather they have made alcohol
+one of the surreptitious privileges of the rich. They are seeking to
+enforce the Sabbath as a day of absolute rest, not for the glory of God but
+in order that tired wage-slaves may have their strength renewed for another
+week of toil in the factories and the mills. Again, they would uproot
+from the homely earth that pleasant weed whose leaves have made slaves of
+millions since the days of Sir Walter Raleigh. All these things would they
+do. There are some things the reformers have not done, and these things are
+recounted by an American writer, Dr. Anthony M. Benedik:
+
+ "The divorce peril, the race-suicide evil, the greed for ill-gotten
+ gold, things like these the reformers touch not. And these things it is
+ which harm the soul. Abolishing the use of alcoholic drinks and of
+ tobacco, putting the blue laws into effect, suppressing all rough
+ sports, may make a cleaner, more sanitary, more hygienic, a quieter
+ world. And yet there keep recurring to mind those words of the Master
+ of mankind, 'What doth it profit a man if he gain the world and suffer
+ the loss of his soul?' What worthy exchange can a man make for his
+ soul?" [42]
+
+On the other hand, it is good to read that the Governor of New York has
+recently signed a bill making it a misdemeanour for landlords to refuse
+to rent apartments to families in which there are children. In that State
+children thus regain equal rights with dogs, cats, and canaries. Is it too
+much to ask of the House of Commons that they should pass a similar law? We
+shall see.
+
+The dangers of birth control were apparent to that great American, Theodore
+Roosevelt, when he said:
+
+ "The greatest of all curses is the curse of sterility, and the severest
+ of all condemnations should be that visited upon wilful sterility. The
+ first essential in any civilisation is that the man and the woman shall
+ be the father and the mother of healthy children, so that the race
+ shall increase and not decrease." [43]
+
+
+Section 4. THE SAME RESULTS IN ENGLAND
+
+On a smaller scale the position is the same in England and Wales, where
+Catholicism has probably checked to some extent the general decline of
+the birth-rate. In 1919 there were only six towns in England [44] with a
+birth-rate of over 25 per 1,000, these being St. Helens (25.6), Gateshead
+(25.9), South Shields (26.9), Sunderland (27.1), Tynemouth (25.9), and
+Middlesbrough (26.7). Now in these towns the Catholic element is very
+strong. During the same year in the four registration counties in which
+these towns are situated, a larger proportion of marriages were celebrated
+according to the rites of the Church of Rome than in the other counties of
+England and Wales. [45] The actual proportion of Catholic marriages per
+1,000 of all marriages in these four counties was: Lancashire 116, Durham
+99, Northumberland 92, and the North Riding of Yorkshire 92. That gives a
+fair index of the strength of the Catholic population. Again in 1919 we
+find that Preston, a textile town, has a birth-rate of 17.1, whereas two
+other textile towns, Bradford and Halifax, have rates of 13.4 and 13.1
+respectively: and there can be little doubt that the relative superiority
+of Preston is mainly owing to her large Catholic population.
+
+The actual birth-rate amongst Catholics in England may be estimated from
+information contained in _The Catholic Directory_ for 1914. As that work
+gives the Catholic population and the number of infant baptisms during the
+previous year in each diocese of Great Britain, and as Catholic children
+are always baptized soon after birth, it is possible to estimate the
+birth-rate of the Catholic population. Working on these figures Professor
+Meyrick Booth [46] has published the following table:
+
+TABLE VI
+
+Diocese. Birth-rate per 1,000 of the
+ Roman Catholic population.
+
+Menevia (Wales) 45.2
+Middlesbrough 38.0
+Leeds 42.0
+Liverpool 40.0
+Newport 53.0
+Northampton 33.0
+Plymouth 26.0
+Shrewsbury 38.0
+Southwark 39.O
+Westminster 36.0
+ ----
+Average 38.6
+ ----
+
+During the same period the general birth-rate amongst the whole population
+of England and Wales was about 24 per 1,000. And figures that are even more
+remarkable have been published by Mr. W.C.D. Whetham and Mrs. Whetham. [47]
+These writers, having investigated the number of children in the families
+of the landed gentry, show that the birth-rate amongst the aristocracy has
+declined.
+
+ "A hundred fertile marriages for each decade from 1831 to 1890 have
+ been taken consecutively from those families who have held their title
+ to nobility for at least two preceding generations, thus excluding the
+ more modern commercial middle-class element in the present Peerage,
+ which can be better dealt with elsewhere. We then get the full effect
+ of hereditary stability and a secure position, and do away with any
+ disturbing influence that might occur from a sudden rise to
+ prosperity." [48]
+
+The results were as follows: [Reference: Population]
+
+ Year. Number of children to each
+ fertile marriage.
+
+ 1831-40 7.1
+ 1841-60 6.1
+ 1871-80 4.36
+ 1881-90 3.13
+
+The birth-rate amongst thirty families of the landed gentry, who were
+known to be definitely Catholic, was also investigated, with the following
+results:
+
+ Years. Number of children to each
+ fertile marriage.
+
+ 1871-90 6.6
+
+ (as compared with 3.74 for the landed families as a whole during the
+ same period.)
+
+The interpretation of these figures is not a matter of faith, but of
+reason. I submit that the facts are _prima facie_ evidence that by
+observance of the moral law, as taught by the Catholic Church, even
+a highly cultured community is enabled to escape those dangers of
+over-civilisation that lead to diminished fertility and consequently to
+national decline.
+
+The truth of this statement has been freely acknowledged by many Anglicans.
+According to Canon Edward Lyttelton: "The discipline of the Roman Communion
+prohibits the artificial prevention of conception, hence Ireland is the
+only part of the United Kingdom in which the birth-rate has not declined,
+and the decline is least in places like Liverpool and those districts where
+Roman Catholics are most numerous." As we have already seen, there are also
+other reasons why Catholicism preserves the fertility of a nation.
+
+Without wishing to hurt the feelings of the most sensitive materialist, it
+is necessary to point out that, apart altogether from the question as to
+whether the chief or immediate cause of a declining birth-rate is the
+practice of artificial birth control, or, as seems to be possible, a
+general lowering of fertility, birth-rates are more dependent on morals
+and religion than on race and country. During the past century irreligion
+spread throughout France, and the birth-rate fell from 32.2, during the
+first decade of the nineteenth century, to 20.6, during the first ten years
+of the twentieth century. In America, amongst the descendants of the New
+England Puritans a decay of religion and morals has also been accompanied
+by a dwindling birth-rate. The decline of the original New England stock in
+America has been masked to some extent by the high birth-rate amongst the
+immigrant population; but nevertheless it is apparent in the Census Returns
+for 1890, when a population of 65,000,000 was expected and only 62,500,000
+was returned. Moreover, there is ample evidence in history that, wherever
+the Christian ideal of a family has been abandoned, a race is neither able
+to return to the family life of healthy pagan civilisations nor to escape
+decay. During the past fifty years in England family life has been
+definitely weakened by increased facilities for divorce amongst the rich,
+by the discouragement of parental authority amongst the poor, and by the
+neglect of all religious teaching in the schools. And thus, in the words
+of Charles Devas, "We have of late years, with perverse ingenuity, been
+preparing the way for the low birth-rate of irreligion and the high
+death-rate of civil disorder." [49] The birth-rate in England and Wales
+reached its highest point, 36.3, in 1876, and has gradually fallen to 18.5
+in 1919. During the first two quarters of that year the rate was the lowest
+yet recorded. During the pre-war year, 1913, the rate was 24.1.
+
+In conclusion, the following statements by a Protestant writer are of
+interest:
+
+ "Judging from a number of figures which cannot be quoted here, owing to
+ considerations of space, it would seem that the English middle-class
+ birth-rate has fallen to the extent of _over 50 per cent_. during the
+ last forty years; and we have actual figures showing that the
+ well-to-do artisan birth-rate has declined, _in the last thirty years,
+ by 52 per cent.!_ Seeing that the Protestant Churches draw their
+ members mainly from these very classes, we have not far to seek for an
+ explanation of the empty Sunday Schools...."
+
+ "Under these circumstances it is not in the least necessary for
+ Protestant ministers and clergymen to cast about them for evidence of
+ Jesuit machinations wherewith to explain the decline of the Protestant
+ Churches in this country! Let them rather look at the empty cradles in
+ the homes of their own congregations!" [50]
+
+The author of the above-quoted paragraphs thus attributes the decline both
+of the birth-rate and of the Protestant Churches to the general adoption of
+artificial birth control. With that explanation I disagree, because it
+puts the horse behind the cart. When the Protestant faith was strong the
+birth-rate of this country was as high as that of Catholic lands. The
+Protestant Churches have now been overshadowed by a rebirth of Rationalism,
+a growth for which they themselves prepared the soil: and diminished
+fertility is the natural product of a civilisation tending towards
+materialism. Although the practice of artificial birth control must
+obviously contribute towards a falling birth-rate, it is neither the only
+nor the ultimate cause of the decline. The ultimate causes of a falling
+birth-rate are more complex, and the decline of a community is but the
+physical expression of a moral change. That is my thesis.
+
+[Footnote 35: _Evening Standard_, October 12, 1921.]
+
+[Footnote 36: "The Declining Birth-rate" in _The Month_, August 1916, p.
+157, reprinted by C.T.S. Price 2_d_.]
+
+[Footnote 37: "Religious Belief as affecting the Growth of Population,"
+_The Hibbert Journal_, October, 1914, p. 144.]
+
+[Footnote 38: The Secretary of the Malthusian League. Vide _The Declining
+Birth-rate_, 1916, p. 99.]
+
+[Footnote 39: _The Month_, August 1916, p. 157, C.T.S.: 2_d_.]
+
+[Footnote 40: _The Hibbert Journal_, October 1914, p. 147.]
+
+[Footnote 41: _The Hibbert Journal_, October 1914, p. 150.]
+
+[Footnote 42: "Race-suicide and Dr. Bell," _America_, October 29, 1921, p.
+31.]
+
+[Footnote 43: _Daily Chronicle_, April 25, 1910.]
+
+[Footnote 44: _Eighty-second Annual Report of the Registrar-General of
+Births, Deaths, and Marriages in England and Wales_, 1919, p. 89.]
+
+[Footnote 45: Ibid., p. xxvi.]
+
+[Footnote 46: _The Hibbert Journal_, October 1914, p. 141.]
+
+[Footnote 47: _The Family and the Nation_, 1909, pp. 139, 142.]
+
+[Footnote 48: Quoted in _Universe_, October 22, 1921.]
+
+[Footnote 49: Charles S. Devas, _Political Economy_, 2nd edition, 1901, p.
+193.]
+
+[Footnote 50: Meyrick Booth, B. Sc., Ph.D., _The Hibbert Journal_, October
+1914, pp. 142 and 152.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+
+IS THERE A NATURAL LAW REGULATING THE PROPORTION OF BIRTHS AND DEATHS?
+
+
+Section 1. THE THEORY OF THOMAS DOUBLEDAY REVIVED
+
+In 1837 Thomas Doubleday [51] maintained that the rising birth-rate of his
+own time was closely connected with the fall in the standard of living, and
+his argument implied that, in order to check the excessive birth-rate, it
+was necessary to improve the condition of the mass of the people. Four
+years later he published _The True Law of Population_, wherein he stated
+that when the existence of a species is endangered--
+
+ "A corresponding effort is invariably made by Nature for its
+ preservation and continuance by an increase of fertility, and that this
+ especially takes place whenever such danger arises from a diminution of
+ proper nourishment or food, so that consequently the state of depletion
+ or the deplethoric state is favourable to fertility, and that, on the
+ other hand, the plethoric state, or state of repletion, is unfavourable
+ to fertility in the ratio of the intensity of each state."
+
+By a series of experiments on plants Doubleday discovered that "whatever
+might be the principle of manure, _an overdose_ of it invariably induced
+sterility in the plant." Although his formula is deficient in that food is
+selected as the one factor in environment which influences fertility, and
+although it may be an overstatement to claim that fertility varies in exact
+proportion to abundance or to scarcity, nevertheless his formula contains
+an important truth which literally knocks the bottom out of the whole
+Malthusian case.
+
+It is a sad reflection that, while the falsehoods of Malthus have been
+blindly accepted for the greater part of a century, the work of Doubleday
+was almost lost in oblivion. His shade has now been recalled to the full
+centre of the stage, and for this the credit is due to Mr. C.E. Pell. His
+recent book [52] is a stimulating essay on the declining birth-rate, and
+contains much evidence that supports the main contention of Doubleday.
+Although it is impossible to agree with all the deductions made by Mr.
+Pell, he has nevertheless done a public service by restating the problem of
+the birth-rate in a new way, by effectively bursting the Malthusian bubble,
+and by tabulating fresh evidence against the birth-controllers.
+
+
+Section 2. MR. PELL'S GENERALISATIONS CRITICISED
+
+Mr. Pell defines the law of births and deaths in two generalisations. The
+first is: "We have seen that it is a necessary condition of the success
+of the evolutionary scheme that the variation of the inherited potential
+degree of fertility between species and species must bear an inverse
+proportion to their capacity for survival." [53] At first glance this
+statement appears hard to be understood; but it is obviously true--because
+it means that a species that is well adapted to its environment can survive
+with a low degree of fertility, whereas a species that is not well adapted
+to its environment requires a high degree of fertility in order to survive.
+Mr. Pell considers that a "capacity for survival" is synonymous with
+"nervous energy"; but, as our total knowledge of nervous energy is limited
+to the fact that it is neither matter nor any known force, the change in
+words does not mark a real advance in knowledge.
+
+The second generalisation is that "the variation of the degree of animal
+fertility in response to the direct action of the environment shall bear
+an inverse proportion to the variation of the survival capacity under
+that environment." [54] Here Mr. Pell and I part company. I have already
+(Chapter III) disputed the causal connection between birth-rate and
+death-rate which Mr. Pell here asserts. His generalisation is made by
+assuming that birth-rates and death-rates rise and fall together: that
+conditions which produce a high death-rate will also produce a high
+birth-rate and that conditions which cause a low death-rate will also cause
+a low birth-rate; that the increase or decline of a population is due to
+the direct action of the environment; and finally that "the _actual_ degree
+of fertility is decided by the direct action of the environment." [55] On
+that last rock Mr. Pell's barque sinks. The mistake here is analogous to
+the old Darwinian fallacy, abandoned by Huxley and by Romanes, that natural
+selection is a creative cause of new species. Even if the hypothesis of
+evolution--and it is merely a hypothesis--be accepted, the only view
+warranted by reason is that variation of species and their actual degree of
+fertility may be produced, not by the direct action of environment, but by
+the _reaction_ of species to their environment--a very different story.
+
+There is no statistical evidence to prove a uniform correspondence between
+birth-rates and death-rates, and it is improbable that there should be
+a physical law of nature whose operations cannot be demonstrated by
+mathematical proof. Moreover, we know that the same conditions which cause
+a high birth-rate may cause a low death-rate. In the case of the first
+settlers in a new country the death-rate is low because the diseases of
+civilisation are absent and the settlers are usually young, whereas the
+birth-rate is high. If fifty young married couples settle on the virgin
+soil of a new country it is probable that for many years an enormous
+birth-rate, of over 100, will coexist with a low death-rate.
+
+In reality a high birth-rate may coexist with a low death-rate, or with a
+high death-rate. For example, there is a difference between natural and
+artificial poverty, the first being brought about by God, or, if any reader
+prefers to have it so, by Nature, and the second being made by man. Under
+conditions of natural poverty small groups of people in an open country are
+surrounded by land not yet cultivated: whereas artificial poverty means
+a population overcrowded and underfed, living in dark tenements or in
+back-to-back houses, breathing foul air in ill-ventilated rooms seldom lit
+by the sun, working long hours in gas-lit workshops for a sweated wage,
+buying the cheapest food in the dearest market, and drugged by bad liquor.
+In either case their existence is threatened, although for very different
+reasons, and the birth-rate rises; but under conditions of natural poverty
+the death-rate is low, whereas in slums the death-rate is high.
+
+
+Section 3. THE LAW OF DECLINE
+
+It would appear, then, that under conditions of hardship the birth-rate
+tends to rise, and that in circumstances of ease the birth-rate tends to
+fall. If the existence of the inhabitants in a closed country is threatened
+by scarcity, the birth-rate tends to rise. For example, "In some of the
+remote parts of the country, Orkney and Shetland, the population remained
+practically stationary between the years 1801 and 1811, and in the next ten
+years, still years of great scarcity, it increased 15 per cent." [56]
+
+The governing principle may be expressed in the following generalisation.
+When the existence of a community is threatened by adversity the birth-rate
+tends to rise; but when the existence of a community is threatened by
+prosperity the birth-rate tends to fall. By adversity I mean war, famine,
+scarcity, poverty, oppression, an untilled soil, and disease: and by
+prosperity I mean wealth, luxury, idleness, a diet too rich--especially in
+flesh meat--and over-civilisation, whereby the physical laws of nature
+are defied. Now the danger of national decline owing to prosperity can
+be avoided by a nation that observes the moral law, and this is the most
+probable explanation of the fact that in Ireland, although the general
+prosperity of the people has rapidly increased since George Wyndham
+displaced landlordism over a large area by small ownership, the birth-rate
+has continued to rise. Moreover, the danger to national existence, as we
+have already indicated (Chapter I, Section. 10) is greater from moral than
+from physical catastrophes, and when both catastrophes are threatened the
+ultimate issue depends upon which of the two is the greater. Furthermore,
+it would appear that moral catastrophes inevitably lead to physical
+catastrophes. This is best illustrated by the fate of ancient Greece.
+
+
+Section 4. ILLUSTRATED FROM GREEK HISTORY [Reference: Dangers]
+
+The appositeness of this illustration arises from the fact that ancient
+Greece reached a very high level of material and intellectual civilisation,
+yet perished owing to moral and physical disasters.
+
+(a) _Moral Catastrophe in Ancient Greece_
+
+The evidence of the moral catastrophe is to be found in the change that
+occurred in the Greek character most definitely after the fourth century
+before Christ. Of this Mr. W.H.S. Jones has given the following account:
+
+ "Gradually the Greeks lost their brilliance, which had been as the
+ bright freshness of early youth. This is painfully obvious in their
+ literature, if not in other forms of art. Their initiative vanished;
+ they ceased to create and began to comment. Patriotism, with rare
+ exceptions, became an empty name, for few had the high spirit and
+ energy to translate into action man's duty to the State. Vacillation,
+ indecision, fitful outbursts of unhealthy activity followed by cowardly
+ depression, selfish cruelty, and criminal weakness are characteristic
+ of the public life of Greece from the struggle with Macedonia to the
+ final conquest by the arms of Rome. No one can fail to be struck by the
+ marked difference between the period from Marathon to the Peloponnesian
+ War and the period from Alexander to Mummius. Philosophy also suffered,
+ and became deeply pessimistic even in the hands of its best and noblest
+ exponents. 'Absence of feeling,' 'absence of care'--such were the
+ highest goals of human endeavour.
+
+ "How far this change was due to other causes is a complicated question.
+ The population may have suffered from foreign admixture during the
+ troubled times that followed the death of Alexander. There were,
+ however, many reasons against the view that these disturbances produced
+ any appreciable difference of race. The presence of vast numbers of
+ slaves, not members of households, but the gangs of toilers whom the
+ increase of commerce brought into the country, pandered to a foolish
+ pride that looked upon many kinds of honourable labour as being
+ shameful and unbecoming to a free man. The very institution that made
+ Greek civilisation possible encouraged idleness, luxury, and still
+ worse vices. Unnatural vice, which in some States seems to have been
+ positively encouraged, was prevalent among the Greeks to an almost
+ incredible extent. It is hard not to believe that much physical harm
+ was caused thereby; of the loss to moral strength and vigour there is
+ no need to speak. The city-state, again, however favourable to the
+ development of public spirit and a sense of responsibility, was doomed
+ to fail in a struggle against the stronger Powers of Macedon and Rome.
+ The growth of the scientific spirit destroyed the old religion. The
+ more intellectual tried to find principles of conduct in philosophy;
+ the ignorant or half-educated, deprived of the strong moral support
+ that always comes from sharing the convictions of those abler and wiser
+ than oneself, fell back upon degrading superstitions. In either case
+ there was a serious loss of that spirit of self-sacrifice and devotion
+ which a vigorous religious faith alone can bestow. Without such a
+ spirit, as history proves conclusively, no nation or people can
+ survive." [57]
+
+(b) _The Physical Catastrophe induced by Selfishness_
+
+One of the physical catastrophes that probably most accelerated the fall
+of Greek civilisation was malarial fever. The parasite of this disease is
+carried from man to man by Anopheline mosquitoes. These insects, during
+the stage of egg, larva, and nympha, live in water, and afterwards, as
+developed insects, in the air. The breeding-grounds, where the eggs are
+laid, are shallow pools of stagnant water. For that reason the disease is
+most common in marshy country, and tends to disappear when the land is
+properly drained. Of this we have an example in England, whence malaria
+disappeared as the marshes were drained.
+
+In Homer there is a disputed reference to malaria, but it is not possible
+to ascertain whether the disease was present during the rise of Greek
+civilisation, and there are no references to this disease in the literature
+from 700 B.C. to 550 B.C. [58] From this date references to malaria
+gradually become more frequent, and Hippocrates stated that "those who live
+in low, moist, hot districts, and drink the stagnant water, of necessity
+suffer from enlarged spleen. They are stunted and ill-shaped, fleshy and
+dark, bilious rather than phlegmatic. Their nature is to be cowardly and
+adverse from hardship; but good discipline can improve their character in
+this respect." [59] After an exhaustive study of the literature, Mr. Jones
+concludes "that malaria was endemic throughout the greater part of the
+Greek world by 400 B.C."
+
+Concerning the causes of a malarial epidemic, Sir Ronald Ross writes: [60]
+"Suppose that the Anophelines have been present from the first, but that
+the number of infected immigrants has been few. Then, possibly, some of
+these people have happened to take up their abode in places where the
+mosquitoes are rare; others may have recovered quickly; others may not have
+chanced to possess parasites in suitable stages when they have been bitten.
+Thus, the probability of their spreading infection would be very small. Or,
+supposing even that some few new infections have been caused, yet, by our
+rough calculations in section 12, _unless the mosquitoes are sufficiently
+numerous_ in the locality, the little epidemic may die out after a
+while--for instance, during the cool season." The italics are mine, because
+some writers have suggested that the decline of Greece was _due_ to
+malaria, whereas I submit, as the more logical interpretation of the facts,
+that a moral catastrophe led to the neglect of agriculture, whereby the
+area of marshy land became more extensive, mosquitoes more numerous, and
+the fever more prevalent.
+
+In view of the foregoing facts, the following Malthusian statement,
+although groundless, is nevertheless an amusing example of the errors that
+arise from lack of a little knowledge:
+
+ "The difficulty of providing for a high birth-rate in a settled
+ community was appreciated by the ancient Greeks, notably by Plato and
+ Aristotle; but their conclusions were swept aside by the warlike spirit
+ of Rome, and the sentimentality of Christianity, so that only a few
+ isolated thinkers showed any appreciation of them." [61]
+
+[Footnote 51: Quoted in _The Law of Births and Deaths_, by Charles Edward
+Pell, 1921, chap. xii.]
+
+[Footnote 52: _The Law of Births and Deaths_, 1921.]
+
+[Footnote 53: Ibid., p. 40.]
+
+[Footnote 54: _The Law of Births and Deaths_, 1921, p. 41.]
+
+[Footnote 55: Ibid., p. 40.]
+
+[Footnote 56: Dr. John Brownlee, _The Declining Birth-rate_, p. 156.]
+
+[Footnote 57: _Malaria and Greek History_, 1909, pp. 102 et seq.]
+
+[Footnote 58: Ibid., p. 26.]
+
+[Footnote 59: Ibid., p. 85.]
+
+[Footnote 60: _Report on the Prevention of Malaria in Mauritius_, p. 51.]
+
+[Footnote 61: C.V. Drysdale, O.B.E., D. Sc., _The Malthusian Doctrine and
+its Modern Aspects_, p. 3.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+
+THE FALLING BIRTH-RATE IN ENGLAND: ITS CAUSES
+
+Birth controllers claim that the fall in the English birth-rate, which
+began to decline in 1876, is mostly due to the use of contraceptives: but
+the very fact that this claim is made by these reckless propagandists makes
+it imperative that we should scrutinise the evidence very carefully.
+
+
+Section 1. NOT, AS MALTHUSIANS ASSERT, DUE MAINLY TO CONTRACEPTIVES
+
+In support of the Malthusian contention, Dr. C.V. Drysdale, who is not a
+doctor of medicine but a doctor of science, has published the following
+statements:
+
+ "... We might note that a recent investigation of the records of the
+ Quakers (the Society of Friends) reveals the fact that family
+ limitation has been adopted by them to a most astonishing extent. Their
+ birthrate [_sic_] stood at 20 per thousand in 1876, and has now
+ actually fallen to about 8 per thousand. The longevity of Quakers is
+ well known, and the returns of deaths given by their Society show that
+ the great majority live to between seventy and ninety years. Infantile
+ mortality is practically unknown among them, although none of the
+ special steps so dear to most social reformers have been taken for the
+ protection of infant life. The Quakers are well known to be very
+ earnest Christians, and to give the best example of religious morality.
+ Their probity in business and their self-sacrifice in humanitarian work
+ of all kinds are renowned. Yet it would seem that they have adopted
+ family restriction to a greater extent than any other body of people,
+ and, since the decline of their birth-rate only began in 1876, that it
+ is due to adoption of preventive methods." [62]
+
+Again, he translates the following quotation from a Swiss author:
+
+ "In France a national committee has been formed which has as its object
+ an agitation for the increase of the population. Upon this committee
+ these [? there] sit, besides President Poincaré, who, although married,
+ has no children, twenty-four senators and littérateurs. These
+ twenty-five persons, who preach to their fellow citizens by word and
+ pen, have between them nineteen children, or not one child on the
+ average per married couple. Similarly, a Paris journal
+ (_Intransigeant_, August and September, 1908) had the good idea of
+ publishing four hundred and forty-five names of the chief Parisian
+ personalities who are never tired of lending their names in support of
+ opposition to the artificial restriction of families. I give these
+ figures briefly without the names, which have no special interest for
+ us. Anyone interested in the names can consult the paper well known in
+ upper circles. Among them:
+
+ 176 married couples had 0 children = 0 children
+ 106 " " " 1 child = 106 "
+ 88 " " " 2 children = 176 "
+ 40 " " " 3 " = 120 "
+ 19 " " " 4 " = 76 "
+ 7 " " " 5 " = 35 "
+ 4 " " " 6 " = 24 "
+ 3 " " " 7 " = 21 "
+ 1 " " " 9 " = 9 "
+ 1 " " " 11 " = 11 "
+
+ Total 445 with 578
+
+ That is, an average one and a third children per couple, while each
+ single one of these families could much more easily have supported
+ twenty children than a working-class family a single child."
+
+"Comment on the above is superfluous," adds Dr. C.V. Drysdale, and with
+that remark most people will cordially disagree. The obvious interpretation
+of the foregoing figures is that there has been a decline in natural
+fertility amongst highly educated and civilised people. But that
+interpretation does not suit Dr. Drysdale's book, and hence we have the
+disgraceful spectacle of a writer who, in order to bolster up an argument
+which is rotten from beginning to end, does not hesitate to launch without
+a particle of evidence a charge of gross hypocrisy against the Quakers of
+England, a body of men and women who in peace and in war have proved the
+sincerity of their faith, and against four hundred and seventy respected
+citizens of Paris. Further comment on _that_ is superfluous. At the same
+time it is obvious that, in so far as their pernicious propaganda spreads
+and is adopted, Malthusians may claim to contribute to the fall of the
+birth-rate, and towards the decline of the Empire.
+
+
+Section 2. DECLINE IN FERTILITY DUE TO SOME NATURAL LAW
+
+In the course of an inquiry on the fertility of women who had received a
+college education, the National Birth Rate Commission [63] attempted to
+discover to what extent birth control was practised amongst the middle and
+professional classes. Of those amongst whom the inquiry was made 477 gave
+definite answers, from which it was ascertained that 289, or 60 per cent.,
+consciously limited their families, or attempted to do so; and that 188,
+or 40 per cent. made no attempt to limit their families. Amongst those who
+limited their families 183 stated the means employed, and of these, 105,
+or 57 per cent., practised continence, whilst 78, or 43 per cent., used
+artificial or unnatural methods.
+
+Now comes a most extraordinary fact. Dr. Major Greenwood, [64] a
+statistician whose methods are beyond question, discovered that there was
+no real mathematical difference between the number of children in the
+"limited" families and the number in the unlimited families. In both groups
+of families the number of children was smaller than the average family in
+the general population, and in both groups there were fewer children than
+in the families of the preceding generation to which the parents belonged.
+Dr. Greenwood states that this is _prima facie_ evidence that deliberate
+birth control has produced little effect, and that the lowered fertility is
+the expression of a natural change. Nevertheless, he holds that the latter
+explanation cannot be accepted as wholly proved on the evidence, owing to
+certain defects in the data on which his calculations were based.
+
+ "I am of opinion that we should hesitate before adopting that
+ interpretation in view of the cogent indirect evidence afforded by
+ other data that the fall of the birth-rate is differential, and that
+ the differentiation is largely economic. There are at least two
+ considerations which must be borne in mind in connection with these
+ schedules. The first is, that all the marriages described as unlimited
+ may not have been so. I do not suggest that the answers are
+ intentionally false, but it is possible that many may have considered
+ that limitation implied the use of mechanical means; that marriages in
+ which the parties merely abstained from, _or limited the occasions of_,
+ sexual intercourse may have frequently entered as of unrestricted
+ fertility."
+
+The above italics are mine, because, if that surmise be correct, it goes
+to prove that the restriction of intercourse to certain periods, which
+restriction the married may lawfully practise, is as efficacious in
+limiting the size of a family as are those artificial methods of birth
+control contrary both to natural and to Christian morality. Dr. Major
+Greenwood continues as follows:
+
+ "In the second place, the schedules do not provide us with information
+ as to when limitation was introduced. We are told, for instance, that
+ the size of the family was five and that its number was limited. This
+ may mean _either_ that throughout the duration of the marriage
+ preventive measures were adopted from time to time, _or_ that _after_
+ five children had been born fertile intercourse was stopped. In the
+ absence of detailed information on this point it is plainly impossible
+ to form an accurate judgment as to the effect of limitation."
+
+There are, therefore, no accurate figures to indicate the extent to which
+birth control has contributed to the decline in the birth-rate.
+
+
+Section 3. AND TO CHARACTER OF OCCUPATION
+
+Moreover the claim of birth controllers, that the decline in the English
+birth-rate is mainly due to the use of contraceptives, is rendered highly
+improbable by the fact that the Registrar-General [65] has shown that in
+1911 the birth-rate in different classes varied according to the occupation
+of the fathers. The figures are these:
+
+ Births per 1,000 married
+ Social Class. males aged under 55, including
+ retired.
+
+ 1. Unskilled workmen 213
+ 2. Intermediate class 158
+ 3. Skilled workmen 153
+ 4. Intermediate 132
+ 5. Upper and middle class 119
+
+Thus, ascending the social scale, we find, in class upon class, that as the
+annual income increases the number of children in the family diminishes,
+until we come to the old English nobility of whom, according to Darwin, 19
+per cent. are childless. These last have every reason to wish for heirs to
+inherit their titles and what land and wealth they possess, and, as their
+record in war proves them to be no cowards' breed, it would be a monstrous
+indictment to maintain that their childlessness is mostly due to the use
+of contraceptives. If _all_ these results arose from the practice of
+birth control, it would imply a crescendo of general national selfishness
+unparalleled in the history of humanity. No, it is not possible to give
+Neo-Malthusians credit, even for all the evil they claim to have achieved.
+
+
+Section 4. AGGRAVATED DOUBTLESS BY MALTHUSIANISM
+
+Nevertheless, artificial birth control is an evil and too prevalent thing.
+My contention is that the primary cause of our falling birth-rate is
+over-civilisation; one of the most evil products of this over-civilisation,
+whereby simple, natural, and unselfish ideals, based on the assumption that
+national security depends on the moral and economic strength of family
+life, have been replaced largely by a complicated, artificial, and
+luxurious individualism; and that diminished fertility, apart from
+the practice of artificial birth control, is a result of luxurious
+individualism. Even if it be so, one of the most evil products of
+over-civilisation is the use of contraceptives, because this practice, more
+than any other factor in social life, hastens, directly and indirectly, the
+fall of a declining birth-rate; and artificial birth control, to the extent
+to which it is practised, therefore aggravates the consequences of a law of
+decline already apparent in our midst. I have already said that restriction
+of intercourse, as held lawful by the Catholic Church, is possibly as
+efficacious in limiting the size of a family as are artificial methods.
+If any man shall say that therefore there is no difference between these
+methods, let him read the fuller explanation given in another connection on
+p. 153. (See [Reference: Explanation]) The method which reason and morality
+alike permit is devoid of all those evils, moral, psychological, and
+physiological, that follow the use of contraceptives.
+
+[Footnote 62: _The Small Family System_, pp. 195 and 160, New York, 1917.]
+
+[Footnote 63: _The Declining Birth-rate_, p. 323.]
+
+[Footnote 64: _The Declining Birth-rate_, p. 324.]
+
+[Footnote 65: _The Declining Birth-rate_, p. 9.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+
+THE EVILS OF ARTIFICIAL BIRTH CONTROL
+
+
+Section 1. NOT A PHYSICAL BENEFIT
+
+
+Birth control is alleged to be beneficial for men and women, and these
+"benefits" are no less amazing than the fallacies on which this practice
+is advocated. At the Obstetric Section of the Royal Society of Medicine
+in 1921 the leading physicians on diseases of women condemned the use of
+contraceptives. [66]
+
+ _A Cause of Sterility_
+
+ Dr. R.A. Gibbons, Physician to the Grosvenor Hospital for Women, said
+ that nowadays it was common for a young married woman to ask her
+ medical man for advice as to the best method of preventing conception.
+ The test of relative sterility was the rapidity with which conception
+ takes place. He had made confidential inquiries in 120 marriages. In
+ 100 cases preventive measures had been used at one time or another, and
+ the number of children was well under 2 per marriage. In Paris some
+ time ago the birth-rate was 104 per 1,000 in the poorer quarters and
+ only 34 in a rich quarter of the city; in London comparative figures
+ had been given as 195 and 63 in poor and in rich quarters. These and
+ similar figures showed that women living in comfort and luxury did not
+ want to be bothered with confinements. It had been said that the degree
+ of sterility could be regarded as an index to the morals of a race.
+ Congenital sterility was rare, but the number of children born in
+ England was decreasing. It had been estimated that one-third of the
+ pregnancies in several great cities abroad aborted. Dr. Gibbons then
+ quoted figures given by Douglas Wight and Amand Routh to show the high
+ percentage of abortions and stillbirths. In his opinion it was the duty
+ of medical men to point out to the public that physiological laws could
+ not be broken with impunity. It had been observed that if the doe were
+ withheld from the buck at oestral periods atrophy of the ovary took
+ place. In this connection Dr. Gibbons recalled a large number of
+ patients who had used contraceptives in early married life, and
+ subsequently had longed in vain for a child. This applied also to those
+ who had decided, after the first baby, to have no more children, and
+ had subsequently regretted their decision.
+
+ _Neuroses_
+
+ Professor McIlroy, of the London School of Medicine for Women, deplored
+ the amount of time spent on attempting to cure sterility when
+ contraceptives were so largely used. The fact that neuroses were
+ largely the result of the use of contraceptives should be made widely
+ known, and also that in women the maternal passion was even stronger,
+ though it might develop later, than sexual passion, and would
+ ultimately demand satisfaction.
+
+ _Fibroid Tumours_
+
+ Dr. Arthur E. Giles, Senior Surgeon to the Chelsea Hospital for Women,
+ endorsed Dr. Gibbons's remarks as to the great unhappiness resulting
+ from deliberately childless marriages, and he added that he had always
+ warned patients of this. He believed that quinine had a permanently bad
+ effect. Those who waited for a convenient season to have a child often
+ laid up trouble for themselves. On the question of fibroid tumours he
+ had come to the conclusion that these were not a cause but in a sense a
+ consequence of sterility. Women who were subjected to sexual excitement
+ with no physiological outlet appear to have a tendency to develop
+ fibroids. He would like the opinion to go forth from the section that
+ the use of contraceptives was a bad thing.
+
+All these authorities are agreed that the practice of artificial sterility
+during early married life is the cause of many women remaining childless,
+although later on these women wish in vain for children. To meet this
+difficulty one of the advocates of birth control advises all young couples
+to make sure of some children before adopting these practices; thus
+demanding of young parents, at the very time when it is most irksome, that
+very sacrifice of personal comfort and prosperity to prevent which is the
+precise object of the vicious practice. Nor is sterility the only penalty.
+The disease known as neurasthenia arises both in women _and in men_ in
+consequence of these methods. Dr. Mary Sharlieb, [67] after forty years'
+experience of diseases of women, writes as follows:
+
+ "Now, on the surface of things, it would seem as if a knowledge of how
+ to prevent the too rapid increase of a family would be a boon to
+ over-prolific and heavily burdened mothers. There are, however, certain
+ reasons which probably convert the supposed advantage into a very real
+ disadvantage. An experience of well over forty years convinces me that
+ the artificial limitation of the family causes damage to a woman's
+ nervous system. The damage done is likely to show itself in inability
+ to conceive when the restriction voluntarily used is abandoned because
+ the couple desire offspring.
+
+ "I have for many years asked women who came to me desiring children
+ whether they have ever practised prevention, and they very frequently
+ tell me that they did so during the early days of their married life
+ because they thought that their means were not adequate to the support
+ of a family. Subsequently they found that conception, thwarted at the
+ time that desire was present, fails to occur when it becomes
+ convenient. In such cases, even although examination of the pelvic
+ organ shows nothing abnormal, all one's endeavours to secure conception
+ frequently go unrewarded. Sometimes such a woman is not only sterile,
+ but nervous, and in generally poor health; but the more common
+ occurrence is that she remains fairly well until the time of the change
+ of life, when she frequently suffers more, on the nervous side, than
+ does the woman who has lived a natural married life."
+
+The late Dr. F.W. Taylor, President of the British Gynaecological Society,
+wrote as follows in 1904:
+
+ "Artificial prevention is an evil and a disgrace. The immorality of it,
+ the degradation of succeeding generations by it, their domination or
+ subjection by strangers who are stronger because they have not given
+ way to it, the curses that must assuredly follow the parents of
+ decadence who started it,--all of this needs to be brought home to the
+ minds of those who have thoughtlessly or ignorantly accepted it, for it
+ is to this undoubtedly that we have to attribute not only the
+ diminishing birth-rate, but the diminishing value of our population.
+
+ "It would be strange indeed if so unnatural a practice, one so
+ destructive of the best life of the nation, should bring no danger or
+ disease in its wake, and I am convinced, after many years of
+ observation, that both sudden danger and chronic disease may be
+ produced by the methods of prevention very generally employed.... The
+ natural deduction is that the artificial production of modern times,
+ the relatively sterile marriage, is an evil thing, even to the
+ individuals primarily concerned, injurious not only to the race, but to
+ those who accept it."
+
+That was the opinion of a distinguished gynaecologist, who also happened
+to be a Christian. The reader may protest that the latter fact is entirely
+irrelevant to my argument, and that the value of a man's observations
+concerning disease is to be judged by his skill and experience as a
+physician, and not by his religious beliefs. A most reasonable statement.
+Unhappily, the Neo-Malthusians think otherwise. They would have us believe
+that because this man was a Christian his opinion, as a gynaecologist, is
+worthless. C.V. Drysdale, O.B.E., D. Sc., after quoting Dr. Taylor's views,
+adds the following foot-note:
+
+ "I have since learnt that Dr. Taylor was a very earnest Christian, and
+ the author of several sacred hymns and of a pious work, _The Coming of
+ the Saints_." [68]
+
+Furthermore, in 1905, the South-Western Branch of the British Medical
+Association passed the following resolution:
+
+ "That this Branch is of opinion that the growing use of contraceptives
+ and ecbolics is fraught with great danger both to the individual and to
+ the race. That this Branch is of opinion that the advertisements and
+ sale of such appliances and substances, as well as the publication and
+ dissemination of literature relating thereto, should be made a penal
+ offence." [69]
+
+
+Section 2. A SCANDALOUS SUGGESTION
+
+The foregoing opinions are very distasteful to Neo-Malthusians, and these
+people, being unable apparently to give a reasoned answer, do not hesitate
+to suggest that medical opposition, when not due to religious bias, is
+certainly due to mercenary motives.
+
+ "As the Church has a vested interest in souls, so the medical
+ profession has a vested interest in bodies. Birth is a source of
+ revenue, direct and indirect. It means maternity fees first; it
+ generally presupposes preliminary medical treatment of the expectant
+ mother; and it provides a new human being to be a patient to some
+ member of the profession, humanly certain to have its share of
+ infantile diseases, and likely, if it survives them, to produce
+ children of its own before the final death-bed attendance is
+ reached." [70]
+
+That scandalous suggestion has recently been repeated by the President of
+the Society for Constructive Birth Control and Racial Progress under the
+following circumstances. On October 31, 1921, the _Sussex Daily News_
+published the following paragraph from its London correspondent.
+
+ "BIRTH CONTROL
+
+ "Reverberations of Lord Dawson's recent sensational address to the
+ Church Congress on birth control are still being felt as well in
+ medical as in clerical circles. Indeed, the subject has been discussed
+ by the lawyers at Gray's Inn. The London Association of the Medical
+ Women's Federation had so animated a discussion on it that it was
+ decided to continue it at the next meeting. It is quite evident that
+ Lord Dawson did not speak for a united medical profession. Indeed,
+ quite a number of doctors of all creeds are attacking the new Birth
+ Control Society. A London physician has a pamphlet on the subject in
+ the Press, and the controversy rages fiercely in the neighbourhood of
+ 'birth-control' clinics. Much is likely to be made of the example of
+ France, where the revolt against the practices advocated is now in full
+ swing, and strong legal measures have been taken and are in
+ contemplation. French medical opinion is said to be very pronounced on
+ the subject, and it has, of course, a great deal of clinical experience
+ to back it."
+
+On November 8, a second paragraph appeared:
+
+ "BIRTH CONTROL
+
+ "My remark recently that 'a number of doctors of all creeds are
+ attacking the new Birth-Control Society' has been challenged by the
+ hon. secretary of the body in question, who observes that I am
+ misinformed. I must adhere to my statement, which was a record of
+ personal observation. Many doctors have spoken to me on the subject,
+ and their opinions on the ethics of birth control differ widely; but I
+ can only remember one who did not attack this particular society. The
+ secretary suggests that I am confusing what his society advocates with
+ something else. As a matter of fact, the whole question of birth
+ control has been discussed more than once by medical bodies. A doctor
+ who attended one such discussion shortly after the opening of the
+ clinic in Holloway told me that, while there was division of opinion on
+ the general subject, the feeling of the meeting was overwhelming
+ against the particular teaching given at the clinic, as undesirable and
+ actively mischievous. The subject is controversial, and I profess to do
+ no more than record such opinions as are current."
+
+On November 17 the _Sussex Daily News_ published the following letter:
+
+ "CONSTRUCTIVE BIRTH CONTROL
+
+ "Sir,--Your recent paragraph of 'opinions' about the Mothers' Clinic
+ and the Society for Constructive Birth Control and Racial Progress is
+ not only extremely unrepresentative, but grossly misleading. Your
+ writer says that he can only remember one doctor who did not attack
+ this particular society. This implies that the medical profession is
+ against it, which is absolutely untrue, as is quite evident from the
+ fact that we have three of the most distinguished medical men in Great
+ Britain on our list of Vice-Presidents; four others, also very
+ distinguished, on our Research Committee; and that Dr. E.B. Turner, in
+ a Press interview after the recent Church Congress, singled out
+ Constructive Birth Control as the only 'Control' which was not
+ mischievous.
+
+ "_That there may be medical men who do not approve of birth control is
+ natural, when one remembers that a doctor has to make his living, and
+ can do so more easily when women are ailing with incessant pregnancies
+ than when they maintain themselves in good health by only having
+ children when fitted to do so. Opinions of medicals, therefore, must be
+ sifted. The best doctors are with us; the self-seeking and the biassed
+ may be against us_.
+
+ "Details about the society, including the manifesto signed by a series
+ of the most distinguished persons, can be obtained on application to
+ the Honorary Secretary, at ... London, N.19.--Yours, etc.
+
+ "MARIE C. STOPES,
+ "President Society for Constructive and Racial Progress."
+
+The italics are mine, and they draw attention to a disgraceful statement
+concerning the medical profession. As the reader is aware, certain members
+of our profession approve of artificial birth control. What, I ask, would
+be the opinion of the general public, and of my friends, if I were so
+distraught as to suggest that these men approved of birth control because
+they had a financial interest in the sale of contraceptives? That
+suggestion would be as reckless and as wicked as the statement made by Dr.
+Marie C. Stopes. In the _British Medical Journal_ of November 26 I quoted,
+without comment, the above italicised paragraph as her opinion of the
+medical profession, and on December 10 the following reply from the lady
+appeared:
+
+ "Your two correspondents, Dr. Halliday Sutherland and Dr. Binnie
+ Dunlop, by quoting paragraphs without their full context, appear to
+ lend support to views which by implication are, to some extent,
+ detrimental to my own. This method of controversy has never appealed to
+ me, but in the interests of the society with which I am associated, I
+ must be allowed to answer the implications. The paragraph quoted by Dr.
+ Sutherland is not, as would appear from his letter, a simple opinion of
+ mine on the medical profession, but was written in reply to a rather
+ scurrilous paragraph so worded as to lead the public to believe that
+ the medical profession as a whole was against the Society for
+ Constructive Birth Control and Racial Progress. My answer, which
+ appeared not only in the papers quoted but in others, contained the
+ following statement: 'We have three of the most distinguished medical
+ men in Great Britain on our list of Vice-Presidents; four others, also
+ very distinguished, on our Research Committee.' Reading these words
+ before the paragraph your correspondent quotes, and taking all in
+ conjunction with an attack implying that the entire medical profession
+ was against us, it is obvious that the position is rather different
+ from what readers of Dr. Sutherland's letter in your issue of November
+ 26 might suppose."
+
+It will be noted that Dr. Stopes does not withdraw but attempts to justify
+her scandalous suggestion by stating, firstly, that the full context of her
+letter was not quoted by me, and secondly, that her original letter was
+written "in reply to a rather scurrilous paragraph."
+
+As I have now quoted in full her original letter, excepting the address
+of her society, and the two paragraphs from the _Sussex Daily News_, my
+readers may form their own judgment on the following points: Is it possible
+to maintain that the whole context of her original letter puts a different
+complexion on her remarks concerning the medical profession? Can either
+of the paragraphs from the _Sussex Daily News_ be truthfully described
+as "rather scurrilous," or are they fair comment on a matter of public
+interest? Moreover, even if a daily paper _had_ published a misleading
+paragraph about this society, surely that is not a valid reason why its
+President should make a malignant attack, not on journalists, but on the
+medical profession?
+
+
+Section 3. A CAUSE OF UNHAPPINESS IN MARRIAGE
+
+Nor does birth control lead to happiness in marriage. On the contrary,
+experience shows that the practice is injurious not only to the bodies
+but also to the minds of men and women. As no method of contraception is
+infallible, the wife who allows or adopts it may find herself in the truly
+horrible position of being secretly or openly suspected of infidelity.
+Again, when a family has been limited to one or two children and these die,
+the parents may find themselves solitary and childless in old age; and
+mothers thus bereaved are often the victims of profound and lasting
+melancholy. The mother of a large family has her worries, many of them not
+due to her children, but to the social evils of our time: and yet she is
+less to be pitied than the woman who is losing her beauty after a fevered
+life of, vanity and self-indulgence, and who has no one to love her, not
+even a child.
+
+Moreover, these practices have an influence on the relation between husband
+and wife, on their emotions towards each other and towards the whole sexual
+nisus. Mr. Bernard Shaw recently stated [71] that when people adopt methods
+of birth control they are engaging, not in sexual intercourse, but in
+reciprocal masturbation.
+
+That is the plain truth of the matter. Or, from another point of view, it
+may be said that the man who adopts these practices is simply using his
+wife as he would use a prostitute, as indeed was said long ago by St.
+Thomas Aquinas. [72] The excuse offered for illicit sexual intercourse is
+not usually pleasure, but that the sex impulse is irresistible: and the
+same argument is used for conjugal union with prevention. In both cases the
+natural result of union is not desired, and positive means are taken to
+prevent it.
+
+And what of the results on the mutual love, if an old-fashioned word be
+not now out of place, and on the self-respect of two people so associated?
+Birth control cannot make for happiness, because it means that mutual love
+is at the mercy of an animal instinct, neither satisfied nor denied. It is
+an old truth that those who seek happiness for itself never find it. And
+yet the advocates of birth control have the temerity to claim that these
+practices lead to happiness. I presume that of the bliss following marriage
+with contraceptives the crowded lists of our divorce courts are an index.
+The marriage bond is weakened when a common lasting interest in the care
+of children is replaced by transient sexual excitement. Once pregnancy is
+abolished there is no natural check on the sexual passions of husband or
+wife, for they have learnt how sexual desire may be gratified without the
+pain, publicity, and responsibility of having children. In the experience
+of the world marriages based merely on passion are seldom happy, and
+artificial birth control means passion uncontrolled by nature. These
+methods are not practised by nations such as Ireland and Spain, who accept
+the moral rule of the natural law expressed in God's commandments and
+sanctioned by His judgments; and no man who has ever lived in these
+countries could truthfully maintain that the people there, on whom the
+burdens of marriage press as elsewhere, are in reality anxious to obtain
+facilities for divorce. On the other hand, there are many who allege that
+the people of England are shouting out for greater facilities for divorce
+than they now possess. At any rate, it is obvious enough that there are
+those amongst us who are straining every nerve to force such facilities
+upon them.
+
+
+Section 4. AN INSULT TO TRUE WOMANHOOD
+
+It has been said that patriotism is the last refuge of a scoundrel; and
+apparently chivalry is the last refuge of a fool. Some of the advocates of
+birth control who have never thought the matter out, either passionately or
+dispassionately, claim to speak on behalf of women. They protest that "many
+women of the educated classes revolt against the drudgery, anxieties,
+inconveniences, disease, and disfigurements which attend the yearly
+child-bearing advocated by the moralist." [73]
+
+What moralist? Who ever said it? Again, they plead for women who "revolt"
+from the "disfigurement" of the gestation period. The great artist
+Botticelli did not think this was disfigurement. What true women do? Are
+they not those of whom Kipling writes, "as pale and as stale as a bone"?
+And, if so, are these unworthy specimens of their sex worth tears? The vast
+majority of women bear the discomforts of gestation and the actual perils
+and pangs of birth with exemplary fortitude: and it is a gross slander for
+anyone to maintain that a few cowardly and degenerate individuals really
+represent that devoted sex. But these writers are indeed well out of the
+ruck of ordinary humanity, because they tell us that "whatever the means
+employed, and whether righteous or not, the propensity to limit the highest
+form of life operates silently and steadily amongst the more thoughtful
+members of all civilized countries," and yet add that "it is not perhaps
+good taste to consider the means employed to this end." While they thus
+approve and commend the practice of birth control as natural to "the
+more thoughtful members," they nevertheless question the "good taste" of
+discussing the very methods of which they approve, even in the columns of a
+medical journal! Again, they tell us that "assuredly continence is not, and
+never will be, the principal" method. That may be possibly true, so long as
+Christianity is more professed than practised; God knows we are all lacking
+enough in self-control. And yet throughout the ages moralists have preached
+the advantages of self-control, and we ordinary men and women know that we
+could do better, and that others who have gone before us have done better;
+but it is the self-styled "thoughtful members" who proclaim to the world
+that self-control in matters of sex is an impossibility, and therefore not
+to be even attempted. They are no common people--these epicureans, selfish
+even in their refinement. In addition to losing their morals, they have
+certainly lost their wits.
+
+
+Section 5. A DEGRADATION OF THE FEMALE SEX
+
+In the Neo-Malthusian propaganda there is yet another fact which--should
+be seized by every married woman, because it is a clear indication of a
+tendency to reduce women to degrading subjection. No recommendations of
+limited intercourse or of self-restraint according to the dictates
+of reason or of affection are to be found in the writings of birth
+controllers. Unrestrained indulgence, without the risk of consequences, is
+their motto. To this end they advocate certain contraceptive methods, and
+the reader should note that these methods require precautions to be taken
+solely by the woman. If she fails to take these precautions, or if the
+precautions themselves fail, all responsibility for the occurrence of
+conception rests on her alone; because her Malthusian masters have decided
+that she alone is to be, made responsible for preventing the natural or
+possible consequences of intercourse. Why? That is a very interesting
+question, and one to which a leading Neo-Malthusian has given the answer.
+
+In 1854 there was published, _Physical, Sexual and Natural Religion: by a
+Graduate of Medicine_. In the third edition the title was altered to _The
+Elements of Social Science_, and the author's pseudonym to _A Doctor of
+Medicine_. This book, which contains over 600 pages of small type, may be
+truthfully described as the Bible of Neo-Malthusians, and includes, under
+the curious heading _Sexual Religion_, a popular account of all venereal
+and other diseases of sex. In the Preface to the first edition, [74] the
+anonymous author states: "Had it not been the fear of causing pain to a
+relation, I should have felt it my duty to put my name to this work; in
+order that any censure passed upon it should fall upon myself alone." The
+relation appears to have had a long life, because anonymity was preserved
+for fifty years, presumably out of respect for his, or her, feelings: and
+he, or she, must have lived as long as the author, who died in 1904 at the
+age of seventy-eight; because the author's name was not revealed until a
+posthumous edition, the thirty-fifth, appeared in 1905, from which we learn
+that the book was written by the late Dr. George Drysdale, brother of
+the first President of the Malthusian League, and uncle of the present
+incumbent. The last edition, in recompense for its smudgy type, contains a
+most welcome announcement by the publisher:
+
+ "PUBLISHER'S NOTE.--... It is due alike to the reader and the publisher
+ to explain why the present edition is printed (in the main) from
+ stereotypes that have seen fifty years' service. The cost of resetting
+ the work would be prohibitive on the basis of present (and probable
+ future) sales. To some extent the plates have been repaired; but such
+ an expedient can do no more than remove the worse causes of offence."
+
+But the fact with which I am at present concerned is that in every edition
+all contraceptive methods that apply to the male are _condemned_ for the
+following reasons:
+
+ "The first of these modes [_coitus interruptus_] is physically
+ injurious, and is apt to produce nervous disorder and sexual
+ enfeeblement and congestion, from the sudden interruption it gives to
+ the venereal act, whose _pleasure_ moreover it interferes with. The
+ second, namely the sheath, _dulls the enjoyment_, and frequently
+ produces impotence in the man and disgust in both parties; so that it
+ also is injurious" (p. 349).... "Any preventive means, to be
+ satisfactory, must be used by the woman, as _it spoils the passion and
+ the impulsiveness_ of the venereal act _if the man have to think of
+ them_" (p. 350).
+
+The italics are mine, but the following comments are by a woman, who was
+moreover the first woman to qualify in medicine--the late Dr. Elizabeth
+Blackwell.
+
+ "Here, in this chief teacher of the Neo-Malthusians, the cloven foot is
+ fully revealed. This popular author, who in many parts of his book
+ denounces marriage as the enslavement of men and women, who sneers at
+ continence, and rages at Christianity as a vanishing superstition--all
+ under a special pretence of benevolence and desire for the advancement
+ of the human race, here clearly, shows what he is aiming at, and what
+ his doctrines lead to. Male sexual pleasure must not be interfered
+ with, male lust may be indulged in to any extent that pleasure demands,
+ but woman must take the entire responsibility, that male indulgence be
+ not disturbed by any inconvenient claims from paternity. Whatever
+ consequences ensue the woman is to blame, and must bear the whole
+ responsibility.
+
+ "A doctrine more diabolical in its theory and more destructive in its
+ practical consequences has never been invented. This is the doctrine of
+ Neo-Malthusianism." [75]
+
+
+Section 6. SPECIALLY HURTFUL TO THE POOR
+
+(a) _Affecting the Young_
+
+There are three special and peculiar evils that attend the teaching of
+birth control amongst the poor. Of the first a doctor has written as
+follows:
+
+ "Morally, the doctrine is indefensible--it follows the line of least
+ resistance, and sacrifices the spirit to the flesh. Materially, it is
+ fraught with grave danger to the home and to our national existence. It
+ is proposed to disseminate a knowledge of contraceptive methods
+ throughout the overcrowded homes of the ill-fed, ill-clad poor. Now it
+ is in these homes that the moral sense has already but little chance of
+ development, where the child of eight or ten already knows far more
+ than is good for the health of either body or mind, and, though we may
+ succeed in reducing the size of the family, yet the means we employ
+ will militate against the raising of the moral tone of the household,
+ and the children will not be any less precocious than before." [76]
+
+That danger is ignored by the advocates of birth-control. "But he that
+shall scandalise one of these little ones that believe in Me, it were
+better for, him that a mill-stone were hanged about his neck, and that he
+were drowned in the depth, of the sea." [77]
+
+(b) _Exposing the Poor to Experiment_
+
+Secondly, the ordinary decent instincts of the poor are against these
+practices, and indeed they have used them less than any other class. But,
+owing to their poverty, lack of learning, and helplessness, the poor are
+the natural victims of those who seek to make experiments on their fellows.
+In the midst of a London slum a woman, who is a doctor of German philosophy
+(Munich), has opened a Birth Control Clinic, where working women are
+instructed in a method of contraception described by Professor McIlroy as
+"the most harmful method of which I have had experience." [78] When we
+remember that millions are being spent by the Ministry of Health and by
+Local Authorities--on pure milk for necessitous expectant and nursing
+mothers, on Maternity Clinics to guard the health of mothers before and
+after childbirth, for the provision of skilled midwives, and on Infant
+Welfare Centres--all for the single purpose of bringing healthy children
+into our midst, it is truly amazing that this monstrous campaign of birth
+control should be tolerated by the Home Secretary. Charles Bradlaugh was
+condemned to jail for a less serious crime.
+
+(c) _Tending towards the Servile State_
+
+Thirdly, the policy of birth control opens the way to an extension of the
+Servile State, [79] because women as well as men could then be placed under
+conditions of economic slavery. Hitherto, the rule has been that during
+child-bearing age a woman must be supported by her husband, and the general
+feeling of the community has been opposed to any conditions likely to force
+married women on to the industrial market. In her own home a woman works
+hard, but she is working for the benefit of _her_ family and not directly
+for the benefit of a stranger. If, instead of bearing children, women
+practise birth control, and if children are to be denied to the poor as a
+privilege of the rich, then it would be very easy to exploit the women of
+the poorer classes. If women have no young children why should they be
+exempt from the economic pressure that is applied to men? And indeed,
+where birth control is practised women tend more and more to supplant men,
+especially in ill-paid grades of work. One of the birth controllers has
+suggested that young couples, who otherwise could not afford to marry,
+should marry but have no children, and thus continue to work at their
+respective employments during the day. As the girl would have little time
+for cooking and other domestic duties, this immoralist is practically
+subverting the very idea of a home! The English poor have already lost even
+the meaning of the word "property," and if the birth controllers had their
+way the meaning of the word "home" would soon follow. The aim of birth
+control is generally masked by falsehood, but the urging of this policy
+on the poor points unmistakably to the Servile State. When a nation, or
+a section of a nation, is oppressed, their birth-rate rises. That is the
+immutable law of nature as witnessed in history. Thus, the Israelites
+increased under the oppression of the Pharaohs. Thus, the Irish, from the
+Union to the Famine, multiplied prodigiously under the oppression of an
+iniquitous political and land system. By the operation of this law the
+oppressed grow in numbers, and break their chains.
+
+
+Section 7. A MENACE TO THE NATION
+
+(a) _There is a Limit to lowering the Death-rate_
+
+Birth controllers believe that a high birth-rate is the cause of a high
+death-rate, and that over-population is the cause of poverty. Yet, in spite
+of their beliefs, they make the following statement: "Neo-Malthusians have
+not aimed at reducing population, but only at reducing unnecessary death,
+which injures the community without adding to its numbers." [80] In defence
+of this statement they argue that if the death-rate falls people will
+live longer, and therefore the population will not decrease, although the
+birth-rate is lowered. There are two fallacies in their argument. They
+overlook the fact that every one of us must die, and that therefore there
+is a limit beyond which a death-rate cannot possibly fall, whereas there
+is no limit, except zero, to the possible fall in a birth-rate. If a
+birth-rate fell to nothing and no children were born, it is obvious that
+the population would eventually vanish. The second fallacy is that a low
+birth-rate will permanently lower the death-rate. At first a falling
+birth-rate increases the proportion of young adults in the population, and,
+as the death-rate during early adult life is relatively low, the total
+death-rate tends to fall for a time. Sooner or later there is an increase
+in the proportion of old people in the population, and, as the death-rate
+during old age is high, the total death-rate tends to rise. That is now
+happening in England, and these are the _actual facts_ as recorded by the
+Registrar-General:
+
+ "It may be pointed out that, though the effect of the fall in the
+ birth-rate has hitherto been an a sense advantageous in that it has
+ increased the proportions living at the working ages, a tendency to the
+ reversal of this fact has already set in, and may be expected to
+ develop as time goes on....
+
+ "The general characteristics of the figures indicate very clearly the
+ effects of the long-continued decline in the birth-rate of this
+ country, and show, by the example of France, the type of
+ age-distribution which a further continuance of the decline is likely
+ to produce. The present age-distribution of the English population is
+ still favourable to low death-rates, but is becoming less so than it
+ was in 1901. The movements along the curve of the point of maximum
+ heaping up population, referred to on page 61 (See [Reference:
+ Population]), has shifted this from age 20-25 to a period ten years
+ later, when mortality is appreciably higher."--Census of England and
+ Wales, 1911. General Report, with Appendices, pp. 62 and 65.
+
+Of these facts the birth controllers, would appear to be ignorant. That
+is a charitable assumption; but, in view of the vital importance of this
+question their ignorance is culpable.
+
+(b) _Birth Control tends to extinguish the Birth-rate_
+
+Whatever may be the nebulous aim of birth controllers, the actual results
+of birth control are quite definite. We have no accurate information
+regarding the extent to which, birth control is practised, for, needless to
+say, the Malthusians can provide us with no exact figures bearing on this
+question; but we do know that birth control, when adopted, is mostly
+practised amongst the better paid artisans and wealthier classes. After
+full examination of the evidence; the National Birth-rate Commission were
+unanimously agreed "That the greater incidence of infant mortality upon the
+less prosperous classes does not reduce their effective fertility to the
+level of that of the wealthier classes." [81] It is probable that this
+Commission overestimated the extent to which birth control has contributed
+to the declining birth-rate; but, even so, this does not alter the obvious
+fact that artificial birth control, when adopted, reduces fertility to
+a lower level than Nature intended. If language has any meaning, birth
+control means a falling birth-rate, and a falling birth-rate means
+depopulation. Here and there this evil practice may increase the material
+prosperity of an individual, but it lowers the prosperity of the nation
+by reducing the number of citizens. Moreover, as birth control is not
+a prevailing vice amongst semi-civilised peoples, the adoption of this
+practice by civilised nations means that the proportion of civilised to
+uncivilised inhabitants of the world will be reduced. If birth control had
+been extensively practised in the past the colonisation of the British
+Empire would have been a physical impossibility; and to-day, in our
+vast overseas dominions, are great empty spaces whose untilled soil and
+excellent climate await a population. Is that population to be white, or
+yellow? A question which to-day fills the Australian with apprehension.
+
+(c) _A Danger to the Empire_
+
+Many people are honestly perplexed by Neo-Malthusian propaganda, and are
+honestly ignorant of the truth concerning the population and the food
+supply of the British Empire. They think that _if_ the population is
+increasing faster than the food supply, there is at least one argument in
+favour of artificial birth control from a practical, although possibly not
+from an ethical, point of view. They apply to that propaganda the ordinary
+test of the world, namely, 'Will it work?' rather than that other test
+which asks, 'Is it right?' The question I would put to people who reason in
+that way, and they are many, is a very simple one. If it can be proved that
+Neo-Malthusian propaganda is based on an absolute falsehood, will it not
+follow that the chief argument in favour of artificial birth control has
+been destroyed? Let us put this matter to the proof. Neo-Malthusians state
+that the population of the Empire is increasing more rapidly than the
+food supply. That is a definite statement. It is either true or false.
+To discover the truth, it is necessary to refer to the Memorandum of the
+Dominions Royal Commission, and it may be noted that publications of that
+sort are not usually read by the general public to whom the Neo-Malthusians
+appeal. The public are aware that the staff of life is made from wheat, but
+they are not aware of the following facts, which prove that in this matter,
+at any rate, Neo-Malthusian statements are absolutely false. In foreign
+countries the increase of the wheat area is proceeding at practically the
+same rate as the increase of population. Within the British Empire _the
+wheat area is increasing more rabidly than the population_.
+
+Between 1901 and 1911 the percentage increase of the wheat area _was nearly
+seven times greater_ than the increase of population; and the percentage
+increase in the actual production of wheat _was nearly twelve times
+greater_ than the increase of population. As these facts alone completely
+refute the Neo-Malthusian argument, it is advisable to reproduce here the
+official statistics. [82]
+
+ "The requirements of wheat [83] for the United Kingdom and the extent
+ to which Home and overseas supplies contributed towards these
+ requirements during the period under review can be briefly summarised
+ by the following table, viz.:
+
+ Normal Supplies Proportion of supply
+ Annual requirements
+ average Home Overseas Home Overseas
+
+ Million Million Million Per Per
+ cwts cwts cwts cent cent
+ 1901-5 138.8 28.7 110.1 20.7 79.3
+ 1906-10 143.2 31.9 111.3 22.3 77.7
+ 1911-13 149.2 32.9 116.3 22.1 77.9
+
+ "The main sources of overseas supply are too well known to require
+ recapitulation here. The imports from the Dominions and India and their
+ proportionate contribution to the United Kingdom's total imports and
+ wheat requirements since 1901 have been as follows:
+
+ 1901-5
+ Percentage
+ From Annual Total Total
+ average imports requirements
+
+ Million Per Per
+ cwts cent cent
+
+ Canada 10.3 9.2 7.4
+ Australia 6.6 5.9 4.8
+ New Zealand .4 .4 .3
+ India 15.5 13.9 11.2
+
+ 32.8 29.4 23.7
+
+
+ 1906-10
+ Percentage
+ From Annual Total Total
+ average imports requirements
+
+ Million Per Per
+ cwts cent cent
+
+ Canada 17.2 15.1 12.0
+ Australia 9.4 8.2 6.6
+ New Zealand .3 .3 .2
+ India 13.3 11.7 9.3
+
+ 32.8 29.4 23.7
+
+
+ 1911-13
+ Percentage
+ From Annual Total Total
+ average imports requirements
+
+ Million Per Per
+ cwts cent cent
+
+ Canada 24.5 20.5 16.4
+ Australia 12.6 10.6 8.4
+ New Zealand .4 .3 .3
+ India 21.5 18.0 14.4
+
+ 59.0 49.4 39.5
+
+ "The large increase in the proportion received from the Dominions is,
+ of course, mainly due to the great extension of wheat cultivation in
+ Western Canada since the beginning of the century." [84]
+
+ _Future Supplies_
+
+ "As the United Kingdom is dependent for so large a proportion of its
+ wheat supplies on the surplus of oversea countries, it is of material
+ interest to examine whether this surplus is increasing, or whether the
+ growth of population is proceeding more rapidly than the extension of
+ the wheat-growing area.
+
+ "The Board of Agriculture and Fisheries in 1912 estimated [85] that the
+ extension of the wheat area and the growth of population during the
+ period 1901-1911 was as follows:
+
+ Wheat area Percent Population. Percent
+ Wheat-growing age in age in
+ countries. 1901. 1911. crease 1901. 1911. crease
+
+ British Empire Thousand Thousand Thousands Thousands
+ (United Kingdom, acres. acres.
+ Canada,
+ Australia,
+ New Zealand,
+ and India). 34,696 50,490 +45.5 283,385 302,154 + 6.6
+ European
+ countries. 98,326 115,105 +17.1 291,685 337,181 +15.6
+ Others 67,908 81,408 +19.9 139,927 168,818 +20.6
+
+ "_It is important to find that, while in foreign countries, both
+ European and extra-European, the increase of wheat area is proceeding
+ at practically the same rate as the increase of population, in the
+ British Empire the wheat area is developing far more rapidly, so that
+ the Empire as a whole is becoming more self-supporting.
+
+ "The total production of wheat within the British Empire, which was
+ 227,500,000 cwts. in 1901, had risen to 399,700,000 cwts. in 1911, an
+ increase of 75 per cent_.
+
+ "The relative yield per acre in 1911 was as follows:"
+
+ Yield per acre.
+
+ Average for five
+ years, 1906-10. 1911.
+ Bushels. Bushels.
+
+ United Kingdom 32.88 32.96
+ Canada 17.56[86] 20.80[87]
+ Australia 11.74 9.65[88]
+ New Zealand 28.72 36.73
+ India
+ (including Native States) 11.44 12.02
+
+The foregoing facts destroy the chief Neo-Malthusian argument, and, as
+birth control tends to extinguish the birth-rate, this Neo-Malthusian
+propaganda is a menace to the Empire. In fact, the danger is very great for
+the simple reason that the proportion of white people within the Empire is
+very small.
+
+ "The British Empire's share of the world's people is very large, but it
+ mainly consists, it should be remembered, of Asiatics and African
+ natives. The Empire as a whole contains about 450 millions of the
+ world's 1,800 millions, made up roundly as follows:
+
+ United Kingdom 47,000,000
+ Self-governing Dominions 22,000,000
+ Rest of the Empire (chiefly India,
+ 319 millions) 378,000,000
+ Total 447,000,000
+
+ "Of the great aggregate Empire population of 447 millions, the white
+ people account for no more than 65 millions. That is to say, outside
+ the United Kingdom itself the Empire has only 18 million white people,
+ or less than four million families. That figure, of course, includes
+ Boers, French-Canadians, and others of foreign extraction. This fact is
+ clearly not realized by those present-day Malthusians who assure us
+ that too many Britons are being born." [89]
+
+It is also well to remember that depopulation in Italy preceded the
+disintegration of the Roman Empire. Historians have estimated that, while
+under the Republic, Italy could raise an army of 800,000 men, under Titus
+that number was halved.
+
+Unfortunately there are some to whom this argument will not appeal, and
+wandering about in our midst are a few lost souls, so bemused by the
+doctrines of international finance that they see no virtue in patriotism
+or, in other words, in the love that a man has for his own home. They are
+unmoved by the story of sacrifice, of thrift, and of patient trust in
+God that is told for instance in the history of the Protestant manses of
+Scotland, where ministers on slender stipends brought up families of ten
+and twelve, where the boys won scholarships at the universities, and where
+women were the mothers of men.
+
+These days have been recalled by Norman Macleod:
+
+ "The minister, like most of his brethren, soon took to himself a wife,
+ the daughter of a neighbouring 'gentleman tacksman,' and the
+ grand-daughter of a minister, well born and well bred; and never did
+ man find a help more meet for him. In that manse they lived for nearly
+ fifty years, and there were born to them sixteen children; yet neither
+ father nor mother could ever lay hand on a child and say, 'We wish this
+ one had not been.' They were all a source of unmingled joy...." [90]
+
+ "A 'wise' neighbour once remarked, 'That minister with his large family
+ will ruin himself, and if he dies they will be beggars.' Yet there has
+ never been a beggar among then to the fourth generation." [91]
+
+How did they manage to provide for their children? In this pagan, spoon-fed
+age, many people will laugh when they read the answer--in a family letter,
+written more than a hundred years ago by a man who was poor:
+
+ "But the thought--I cannot provide for these! Take care, minister, the
+ anxiety of your affection does not unhinge that confidence with which
+ the Christian ought to repose upon the wise and good providence of
+ God! What though you are to leave your children poor and friendless?
+ Is the arm of the Lord shortened, that He cannot help? Is His ear
+ heavy, that He cannot hear? You yourself have been no more than an
+ instrument in the hand of His goodness; and is His goodness, pray,
+ bound up in your feeble arm? Do you what you can; leave the rest to
+ God. Let them be good, and fear the Lord, and keep His commandments,
+ and He will provide for them in His own way and in His own time. Why,
+ then, wilt thou be cast down, O my soul; why disquieted within me?
+ Trust thou in the Lord! Under all the changes and the cares and the
+ troubles of this life, may the consolations of religion support our
+ spirits. In the multitude of thoughts within me, Thy comforts O my
+ God, delight my soul! But no more of this preaching-like harangue, of
+ which, I doubt not, you wish to be relieved. Let me rather reply to
+ your letter, and tell you my news." [92]
+
+That letter was written by Norman Macleod, ordained in 1774, and minister
+of the Church of Scotland in Morven for some forty years. His stipend was
+£40, afterwards raised to £80. He had a family of sixteen. One of his sons
+was minister in Campbelltown, and later in Glasgow. He had a family of
+eleven. His eldest son was Chaplain to Queen Victoria, and wrote the
+_Reminiscences of a Highland Parish_.
+
+The birth controllers ask why we should bring up children at great cost and
+trouble to ourselves, and they have been well answered by a non-Catholic
+writer, Dr. W.E. Home. [93]
+
+ "One of my acquaintances refuses to have a second child because he
+ could not then play golf. Is there, then, no pleasure in children which
+ shall compensate for the troubles and expenses they bring upon you? I
+ notice that the penurious Roman Catholic French Canadian farmers are
+ spreading out of Quebec and occupying more and more of Ontario. I fancy
+ these hard-living parents would think their struggles to bring up their
+ large (ten to twenty) families worth while when they see how their
+ group is strengthening its position. If a race comes to find no
+ instinctive pleasure in children it will probably be swept away by
+ others more virile. One man will live where another will starve;
+ prudence and selfishness are not identical.
+
+ "In her book, _The Strength of a People_, Mrs. Bosanquet, who signed
+ the Majority Report of the Poor Law Commission, tells the story of two
+ girls in domestic service who became engaged. One was imprudent,
+ married at once, lived in lodgings, trusted to the Church and the
+ parish doctor to see her through her first confinement, had no
+ foresight or management, every succeeding child only added to her
+ worries, and her marriage was a failure. The other was prudent, did not
+ marry till, after six months, she and her fiancé had chosen a house and
+ its furniture. Then she married, and their house was their own careful
+ choice; every table and chair reminded them of the afternoon they had
+ had together when it was chosen; they were amusement enough to
+ themselves, and they saved their money for the expenses of her
+ confinement. He had not to seek amusement outside his home, did his
+ work with a high sanction and got promoted, and each child was only an
+ added pleasure. Idyllic; yes, but sometimes true. One of the happiest
+ men I have known was a Marine sergeant with ten children, and a bed in
+ his house for stray boys he thought he should help.
+
+ "One of my friends married young and had five children; this required
+ management. He certainly could not go trips, take courses and extra
+ qualifications, but he did his work all right, and his sons were there
+ to help in the war, and one of them has won a position of Imperial
+ usefulness far above that of his father or me. Is that no compensation
+ to his parents for old-time difficulties they have by now almost
+ forgotten? A bad tree cannot bring forth good fruit."
+
+Dr. W.E. Home is right, and the Neo-Malthusian golfer is wrong. Moreover,
+he is wrong as a golfer. Golf requires skill, a fine co-ordination of sight
+and touch, much patience and self-control: and many unfortunate people lack
+these qualities of mind and body, and are therefore unable to play this
+game with pleasure to themselves or to others. Consequently every golfer,
+no matter whether he accepts the hypothesis of Spencer or that of Weismann
+concerning the inheritance of acquired characteristics, should rejoice to
+see his large family in the links as a good omen for the future of this
+game, although there be some other reasons that also justify the existence
+of children.
+
+_(d) The Dangers of Small Families_
+
+In a Malthusian leaflet, written for the poor Dr. Binnie Dunlop states:
+
+ "You must at least admit that there would be nothing like the usual
+ poverty if married couples had only one child for every 20s. or so, a
+ week of wages. Yet the population would continue to increase rapidly,
+ because very few of the children of small families die or grow up
+ weakly; and it would become stronger, richer, and of course much
+ happier." [94]
+
+The false suggestion contained in his first sentence, namely that a high
+birth-rate is the cause of poverty, has already been exposed (Chap. II),
+and apparently Dr. Binnie Dunlop has never considered _why_ so many of the
+English people should be so poor as to enable him to make use of their very
+poverty in order to tempt them to adopt an evil method of birth control.
+Moreover, his second contention, that a small family produces a higher type
+of child, better fed, better trained, and healthier, than is found amongst
+the children of large families is contrary to the following facts, as
+stated by Professor Meyrick Booth:
+
+ "1. A civilisation cannot be maintained with an average of less than
+ about four children per marriage; a smaller number will lead to actual
+ extinction.
+
+ "2. Much information exists tending to show that heredity strongly
+ favours the third, fourth, fifth, and subsequent children born to a
+ given couple, rather than the _first two_, who are peculiarly apt to
+ inherit some of the commonest physical and mental defects (upon this
+ important point the records of the University of London Eugenics
+ Laboratory should be consulted). A population with a low birth-rate
+ thus naturally tends to degenerate. _It is the normal, and not the
+ small family, that gives the best children_.
+
+ "3. The present differential birth-rate--high amongst the less
+ intelligent classes and low amongst the most capable families--so far
+ from leading upwards, is causing the race to breed to a lower type.
+
+ "4. The small family encourages the growth of luxury and the
+ development of what M. Leroy-Beaulieu calls _l'esprit arriviste_.
+
+ "5. The popular idea that _childbirth is injurious_ to a woman's health
+ is probably _quite erroneous_. Where the _birth-rate is high the health
+ of the woman is apparently better_ than where it is artificially low.
+
+ "6. A study of history does not show that nations with low birth-rates
+ have been able to attain to a higher level of civilisation. Such
+ nations have been thrust into the background by their hardier
+ neighbours." [95]
+
+Moreover, M. Leroy-Beaulieu, in _La Question de la Population_ [96] states
+that those districts of France which show an exceptionally low birthrate
+are distinguished by a peculiar atmosphere of materialism, and that their
+inhabitants exhibit, in a high degree, an attitude of mind well named
+_l'esprit arriviste_--the desire to concentrate on outward success, to push
+on, to be climbers, to advance themselves and their children in fashionable
+society. This spirit means the willing sacrifice of all ideals of ethics
+or of patriotism to family egoism. To this mental attitude, and to the
+corresponding absence of religion, he attributes the decline of population.
+In conclusion the following evidence is quoted by Professor Meyrick Booth:
+
+ "The _Revue des Deux Mondes_ for July 1911 contains a valuable account,
+ by a doctor resident in Gascony, of the state of things in that part of
+ France (where, it will be remembered, the birth-rate is especially
+ low). He expresses with the utmost emphasis the conviction that the
+ Gascons are deteriorating, physically and mentally, and points out, at
+ the same time, that the decline of population has had an injurious
+ effect upon the economic condition of the country. 'L'hyponatalité est
+ une cause précise et directe de la dégénérescence de la race,' he
+ writes. And, dealing with the belief that a low birthrate will result
+ in the development of a superior type of child, he says: 'C'est une
+ illusion qui ne résiste pas à la lumière des faits tels que les montre
+ l'étude démographique de nos villages gascons. Depuis que beaucoup de
+ bancs restent vides à la petite école, les écoliers ne sont ni mieux
+ doués, ni plus travailleurs, et ils sont certainement moins vigoureux.'
+ And again, 'La quantité est en général la condition première et
+ souveraine de la qualité.'" [97]
+
+
+Section 8. THE PLOT AGAINST CHRISTENDOM
+
+All purposive actions are ultimately based on philosophy of one sort or
+another. If, for example, we find a rich man founding hospitals for the
+poor, we may assume that he believes in the principle of Charity. It
+is, therefore, of prime importance to determine what kind of philosophy
+underlies Neo-Malthusian propaganda. The birth controllers profess to
+be actuated solely by feelings of compassion and of benevolence towards
+suffering humanity; and it is on these grounds that they are appealing to
+the Church of England to bless their work, or at least to lend to
+their propaganda a cloak of respectability. Now, the very fact that
+Neo-Malthusians are sincere in their mistaken and dangerous convictions
+makes it all the more necessary that we should discover the doctrines
+on which their propaganda was originally based; because, although their
+economic fallacies were borrowed from Malthus, their philosophy came from a
+different source.
+
+This philosophy is to be found, naked and unashamed, in a book entitled
+_The Elements of Social Science_. I have already referred to this work
+as the Bible of Neo-Malthusians, and its teaching has been endorsed as
+recently as 1905 by the official journal of the Malthusian League, as
+witness the following eulogy, whose last lines recall the happy days of
+Bret Harte in the Far West, and the eloquent periods of our old and valued
+friend Colonel Starbottle:
+
+ "This work should be read by all followers of J.S. Mill, Garnier, and
+ the Neo-Malthusian school of economists. We could give a long criticism
+ of the many important chapters in this book; but, as we might be
+ considered as prejudiced in its favour because of our agreement with
+ its aims, we prefer to cite the opinion given by the editor of that
+ widely circulated and most enlightened paper _The Weekly Times and
+ Echo_, which appears in its issue of October 8." [98]
+
+Before quoting from the book an explanation is due to my readers. I do not
+suggest that all of those who are to-day supporting the propaganda for
+artificial birth control would agree with its foolish blasphemies and
+drivelling imbecilities; but it is nevertheless necessary to quote these
+things, because our birth controllers are too wise in their day and
+generation to reveal to the public, still less to the Church of England,
+_the philosophy on which Neo-Malthusianism was originally based, and from
+which it has grown_. Moreover, the Malthusians claim that it was the author
+of the _Elements of Social Science_ "who interested Mr. Charles Bradlaugh
+and Mrs. Annie Besant in the question." [99] Four quotations from the last
+edition of the book will suffice:
+
+ "But this is a certain truth, that any human being, any one of us,
+ no matter how fallen and degraded, is an infinitely more glorious
+ and adorable being than any God that ever was or will be
+ conceived" (p. 413).
+
+In justice to the memory of John Stuart Mill, whom Malthusians are ever
+quoting, it should be noted that the foregoing blasphemy is nothing more
+nor less than a burlesque of Positivism or of Agnosticism. The teaching of
+Mill, Bain, and of Herbert Spencer was that the knowledge of God and of
+His nature is impossible, because our senses are the _only_ source of
+knowledge. Their reasoning was wrong--because a primary condition of all
+knowledge is memory, in itself an intuition, because primary mathematical
+axioms are intellectual intuitions, and because mind has the power of
+abstraction; but, even so, not one of these men was capable of having
+written the above-quoted passage. The next quotation refers to marriage.
+
+ "Marriage is based upon the idea that constant and unvarying love is
+ the only one which is pure and honourable, and which should be
+ recognised as morally good. But there could not be a greater error than
+ this. Love is, like all other human passions and appetites, subject to
+ change, deriving a great part of its force and continuance from variety
+ in its objects; and to attempt to fix it to an invariable channel is to
+ try to alter the laws of its nature"(p. 353).
+
+That quotation is an example of how evil ideas may arise from muddled
+thinking: because if the word "lust" be substituted for the word "love" in
+the third sentence, the remaining forty-five words would merely convey a
+simple truth, expressed by Kipling in two lines:
+
+ "For the more you 'ave known o' the others
+ The less will you settle to one."
+
+Very few people, I suppose, are so foolish as to believe that man is by
+nature either a chaste or a constant animal, and indeed in this respect he
+appears to his disadvantage when compared with certain varieties of birds,
+which are _by nature_ constant to each other. On the other hand, millions
+of people believe that man is able to overcome his animal nature; and for
+the past two thousand years the civilised races of the world have held
+that this is a goal towards which mankind should strive. In the opinion of
+Christendom chastity and marriage are both morally good, but, according to
+the philosophy of our Neo-Malthusian author, they are morally evil.
+
+ "Chastity, or complete sexual abstinence, so far from being a virtue,
+ is invariably a great natural sin" (p. 162).
+
+Is it not obvious that to the writers of such passages love is synonymous
+with animalism, with lust? It is by no means necessary to go to saints or
+to moralists for a refutation of this Neo-Malthusian philosophy. Does any
+decent ordinary man or woman agree with it? Ask the man in the street. Turn
+the pages of our literature. Refer to Chaucer or Spenser, to Shakespeare or
+Milton, refer to Fielding or Burns or Scott or Tennyson. Some of these men
+were very imperfect; but they all knew the difference between lust and
+love; and it is because they can tell us at least something of that which
+is precious, enduring, ethereal, and divine in love that we read their
+pages and honour their names. Not one of these men could have written the
+following sentence:
+
+ "Marriage distracts our attention from the real sexual
+ duties, and this is one of its worst effects" (p. 366).
+
+Now it is certain that if "the real sexual duties" are represented by
+promiscuous fornication, then both marriage and chastity are evil things.
+That philosophy is very old. From time immemorial--it has been advocated by
+one of the most powerful intelligences in the universe. Such is the soil
+on which the Neo-Malthusian fungus has grown--a soil that would rot the
+foundations of Europe.
+
+[Footnote 66: _The Lancet_, May 14, 1921, p. 1024]
+
+[Footnote 67: _British Medical Journal_, 1921, vol. ii, p. 93.]
+
+[Footnote 68: _The Small Family System_, 2nd edit., p. 2.]
+
+[Footnote 69: _Supplement to The British Medical Journal_, March 18, 1905,
+p. 110.]
+
+[Footnote 70: _Common Sense on the Population Question_, by Teresa
+Billington-Greig, p. 4. Published by the Malthusian League.]
+
+[Footnote 71: _Medico-Legal Society_, July 7, 1921.]
+
+[Footnote 72: _Suppl. Qu_. 49, Art. 6: "_Voluptates meretricias vir in
+uxore quoerit quando nihil aliud in ea attendit quam quod in meretrice
+attenderet_" (A husband seeks from his wife harlot pleasures when he asks
+from her only what he might ask from a harlot). Quoted by the Rev. Vincent
+McNabb, O.P., _The Catholic Gazette_, September 1921, p. 195.]
+
+[Footnote 73: _British Medical Journal_, 1921, vol. ii, p. 169.]
+
+[Footnote 74: Reproduced in fourth edition, 1861.]
+
+[Footnote 75: _Essays in Medical Sociology_, 1899. Revised and printed
+for private circulation, p. 95, (Copy in Library of Royal Society of
+Medicine).]
+
+[Footnote 76: _British Medical Journal_, August 20, 1921, p. 302.]
+
+[Footnote 77: St. Matt. xviii. 6.]
+
+[Footnote 78: _Proceedings of the Medico-Legal Society_, July 7, 1921]
+
+[Footnote 79: "That arrangement of society in which so considerable a
+number of the families and individuals are constrained by positive law to
+labour for the advantage of other families and individuals as to stamp
+the whole community with the mark of such labour we call The Servile
+State."--Hilaire Belloc, _The Servile State_, 1912, p. 16.]
+
+[Footnote 80: The Secretary of the Malthusian League. Vide _The Declining
+Birth-rate_, 1916, p. 89.]
+
+[Footnote 81: _The Declining Birth-rate_, 1916, p. 37.]
+
+[Footnote 82: Dominions Royal Commission, Memorandum and Tables relating to
+the Food and Raw Material Requirements of the United Kingdom: prepared by
+the Royal Commission on the Natural Resources, Trade, and Legislation of
+Certain Portions of His Majesty's Dominions. November, 1915, pp. 1 and 2.
+My italics--H.G.S.]
+
+[Footnote 83: i.e. grain, wheatmeal, and flour]
+
+[Footnote 84: For particulars of this increase see Canada Year Book 1913,
+p. 144.]
+
+[Footnote 85: See pp. 387-8 of [Cd. 6588].]
+
+[Footnote 86: Average for period 1907-1910 and excluding British Columbia,
+where the yield per acre in 1911, the only year for which figures are
+available, averaged 29-37 bushels.]
+
+[Footnote 87: Including British Columbia.]
+
+[Footnote 88: Below the average. The yield per acre in 1912 was 12.53
+bushels, and in 1913 11.18.]
+
+[Footnote 89: The Observer, Nov. 11, 1921.]
+
+[Footnote 90: _Reminiscences of a Highland Parish_, by Norman Macleod,
+D.D., 1876, p. 27.]
+
+[Footnote 91: Ibid., p. 34.]
+
+[Footnote 92: Ibid., p. 91.]
+
+[Footnote 93: British Medical Journal, August 13, 1921, p. 261.]
+
+[Footnote 94: Leaflet of the Malthusian League.]
+
+[Footnote 95: _The Hibbert Journal_, October 1914, p. 153. My
+italics.--H.G.S.]
+
+[Footnote 96: Quoted by Professor Meyrick Booth, _The Hibbert Journal_,
+October 1914, p. 153.]
+
+[Footnote 97: _The Hibbert Journal_, October 1914.]
+
+[Footnote 98: _The Malthusian_, November 1905, p. 84]
+
+[Footnote 99: C.V. Drysdale, O.B.E., D. Sc., _The Small Family System_,
+1918, p. 150.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+
+THE RELIGIOUS ARGUMENT AGAINST BIRTH CONTROL
+
+
+Section 1. AN OFFENCE AGAINST THE LAW OF NATURE
+
+Birth control is against the law of nature, which Christians believe to be
+the reflection of the divine law in human affairs, and any violation of
+this law was held to be vicious even by the ancient pagan world. To this
+argument an advocate of birth control has made answer:
+
+ "We interfere with nature at every point--we shave, cut our hair, cook
+ our food, fill cavities in our teeth (or wear artificial teeth), clothe
+ ourselves, wear boots, hats, and wash our faces, so why should birth
+ alone be sacred from the touch and play of human moulding?" [100]
+
+Why? For a very simple reason. Birth control belongs to the moral sphere;
+it essentially affects man's progress in good, whereas all the other things
+that he mentions have no more moral significance than has the practice of
+agriculture. Regarded in the light of the law of nature they are neutral
+actions, neither good nor bad in themselves, raising no question of right
+or wrong, and having no real bearing on the accomplishment of human
+destiny. To make no distinction between the merely physical law of nature
+(expressed in the invariable tendency of everything to act according to
+its kind) and the natural moral law which governs human conduct, is to
+pronounce oneself a materialist. Yet even a materialist ought to denounce
+the practice of birth control, as it violates the laws of nature which
+regulate physical well-being. "But," says the materialist, "it is not
+possible for anyone to act against nature, because all actions take place
+_in_ nature, and therefore every act is a natural act." Quite so: in that
+sense murder is a natural act; even unnatural vice is a natural act. Will
+any one defend them? There is a natural law in the physical world, and
+there is a natural law in conscience--a law of right conduct. Certain
+actions are under the control of the human will, which is able to rebel
+against the moral law of nature, and the pagan poet Aeschylus traces all
+human sorrow to "the perverse human will omnipresent."
+
+As birth control means the deliberate frustration of a natural act
+which might have issued in a new life, it is an unnatural crime, and is
+stigmatised by theologians as a sin akin to murder. To this charge birth
+controllers further reply that millions of the elements of procreation are
+destroyed by Nature herself, and that "to add one more to these millions
+sacrificed by Nature is surely no crime." This attempt at argument is
+pathetic. If these people knew even the A.B.C. of biology, they would know
+that millions of those elements are allowed to perish by Nature for a
+definite purpose--namely, _to make procreation more certain_. It is in
+order that the one may achieve the desired end that it is reinforced by
+millions of others. Moreover, although millions of deaths in the world
+occur every year from natural causes, it would nevertheless, I fear, be a
+crime if I were to cause one more death by murdering a birth controller.
+
+
+Section 2. REFLECTED IN THE NORMAL CONSCIENCE
+
+In common with irrational animals we have instincts, appetites, and
+passions; but, unlike the animals, we have the power to reflect whether an
+action is right or wrong in itself apart from its consequences. This power
+of moral judgment is called conscience; and it is conscience which reflects
+the natural law (the Divine Nature expressed in creation). As conscience,
+when violated, can and does give rise to an unpleasant feeling of shame in
+the mind, we have good reason to believe that it exists for the purpose of
+preventing us from doing shameful actions, just as our eyes are intended,
+amongst other things, to prevent us from walking over precipices. Moreover,
+if the conscience is active, instructed, and unbiassed, it will invariably
+give the correct answer to any question of right or wrong.
+
+It is possible to assert, without fear of contradiction, that no ordinary
+decent man or woman approaches or begins the practice of artificial birth
+control without experiencing at first unpleasant feelings of uneasiness,
+hesitation, repugnance, shame, and remorse. Later on these feelings may be
+overcome by habit, for the voice of conscience will cease when it has been
+frequently ignored. This does not alter the fact that at first the natural
+moral instincts of both men and women do revolt against these practices. To
+the conscience of mankind birth control is a shameful action.
+
+
+Section 3. EXPRESSED IN THE SCIENCE OF ETHICS
+
+The dictates of conscience go to form the science of ethics. According to
+ethics, the practice of birth control means the doing of an act whilst at
+the same time frustrating the object for which the act is intended. It is
+like using language to conceal the truth, or using appetite so as to injure
+rather than to promote health. During the decline of the Roman Empire men
+gorged themselves with food, took an emetic, vomited, and then sat down to
+eat again. They satiated their appetite and frustrated the object for which
+appetite is intended. The practice of birth control is parallel to this
+piggishness. No one can deny that the sexual impulse has for aim the
+procreation of children. The birth controllers seek to gratify the impulse,
+yet to defeat the aim; and they are so honest in their mistaken convictions
+that, when faced with this argument, they boldly adopt an attitude which
+spells intellectual and moral anarchy. They say that it is simply a waste
+of time to discuss the moral aspect of this practice. Without being able
+to dispute the truth that birth control is against nature, conscience, and
+ethics, they attempt to prove that at any rate the results of this practice
+are beneficial, or in other words that a good end justifies the use of evil
+means. This is a doctrine that has been universally repudiated by mankind.
+[101] Nevertheless, if birth control, in spite of its being an offence
+against moral and natural law, was really beneficial to humanity, then
+birth controllers would be able to claim pragmatic justification for the
+practices, and to argue that what actually and universally tends to the
+good of mankind cannot be bad in itself. Birth control, as I have already
+shown, does not conform to these conditions; therefore that argument also
+fails.
+
+
+Section 4. BIRTH CONTROL CONDEMNED BY PROTESTANT CHURCHES
+
+The Protestants, at the time of the Reformation, retained and even
+exaggerated certain beliefs of the undivided Catholic Church. None of them
+doubted, for instance, that the Bible was the Word of God and therefore
+a guide to moral conduct. They knew that artificial birth control is
+forbidden by the Bible, and that in the Old Testament the punishment for
+that sin was death. [102] In 1876, when Charles Bradlaugh advocated in a
+notorious pamphlet the practice of birth control, his views were denounced
+from every Protestant pulpit in the land, and were widely repudiated by
+the upper and middle classes of England. But it would seem that Protestant
+morality is now disappearing with the spread of indifferentism, and the
+Protestant Churches have no longer the same influence on the public and
+private life of the nation. Protestantism has lasted for 400 years, but
+though it has lasted longer than any other form of belief which took rise
+in the sixteenth century, it is now also dying.
+
+In 1919 the number of people over seven years of age in England who
+professed belief in _any_ church was 10,833,795 (out of 40,000,000), and
+the church attendance equalled 7,000,000, or about 1 out of every 5 people.
+[103]
+
+Again, a Commission appointed by the Protestant Churches to inquire into
+the religious beliefs held in the British armies of the Great War has
+endorsed the following statements:
+
+ "Everyone must be struck with the appalling ignorance of the simplest
+ religious truths. Probably 80 per cent, of these men from the Midlands
+ had never heard of the sacraments.... It is not only that the men do
+ not know the meaning of 'Church of England'; they are ignorant of the
+ historical facts of the life of our Lord. Nor must it be assumed that
+ this ignorance is confined to men who have passed through the
+ elementary schools. The same verdict is recorded upon those who have
+ been educated in our public schools.... The men are hopelessly
+ perplexed by the lack of Christian unity." [104]
+
+In my opinion these statements are exaggerations, but that was not the view
+of the Commission. As regards Scotland, it has recently been stated at the
+Lothian Synod of the United Free Church that in 1911 at least 37 per cent.
+of the men and women of Scotland were without church connection. [105]
+
+In 1870, of every 1,000 marriages, 760 were according to the rites of the
+Established Church, but in 1919 the proportion had fallen to 597. During
+the same period civil marriages without religious ceremonial increased from
+98 to 231 per 1,000. [106] These figures are an index of the religious
+complexion of the country. The Protestant Churches are being strangled by
+the development of a germ that was inherent in them from the beginning, and
+that growth is Rationalism. The majority of the upper, professional, and
+artisan class can no longer be claimed as staunch Protestants, but as
+vague theists; and amongst these educated people, misled by false ideas of
+pleasure and by pernicious nonsense written about self-realisation, the
+practice of birth control has spread most alarmingly. This is an evil
+against which all religious bodies who retain a belief in the fundamental
+facts of Christianity might surely unite in action.
+
+In a Catholic country there would be no need, in the furtherance of public
+welfare, to write on the evils of birth control. The teaching of the
+Catholic Church would be generally accepted, and a moral law generally
+accepted by the inhabitants of a country gives strength to the State. But
+Great Britain, no longer Catholic, is now in some danger of ceasing to
+be even a Christian country. In 1885 it was asserted, "England alone is
+reported to contain some seven hundred sects, each of whom proves a whole
+system of theology and morals from the Bible." [107] Each of these that now
+survives gives its own particular explanation of the law of God, which it
+honestly tries to follow, but at one point or another each and every sect
+differs from its neighbours. On account of these differences of opinion
+many people say: "The Churches cannot agree amongst themselves as to what
+is truth; they cannot all be right; it is, therefore, impossible for me to
+know with certainty what to believe; and, to be quite honest, it may save
+me a lot of bother just at present to have no very firm belief at all."
+This means that in Great Britain _there is no uniform moral law covering
+all human conduct and generally accepted by the mass of the people_. As the
+practice of artificial birth-rate control is not only contrary to Christian
+morality, but is also a menace to the prosperity and well-being of the
+nation, the absence of a uniform moral law, common to all the people and
+forbidding this practice, is a source of grave weakness in the State.
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX TO CHAPTER VIII
+
+
+A NEO-MALTHUSIAN ATTACK ON THE CHURCH OF ENGLAND
+
+As was proved in a previous chapter (p. 120) artificial birth control was
+originally based on Atheism, and on a philosophy of moral anarchy. Further
+proof of this fact is to be found in the course of a most edifying dispute
+between two rival Neo-Malthusians. This quarrel is between Dr. Marie C.
+Stopes, President of the Society for Constructive Birth Control and Racial
+Progress, who is not a Doctor of Medicine but of Philosophy, and Dr. Binnie
+Dunlop, who is a Bachelor of Medicine: and when birth controllers fall
+out we may humbly hope that truth will prevail. Dr. Stopes maintains that
+artificial birth control was not an atheistic movement, whereas Dr. Binnie
+Dunlop contends that the pioneers of the movement were Atheists. The
+beginning of the trouble was a letter written by Dr. Stopes to the _British
+Medical Journal_, in which she made the following statement:
+
+ "Dr. Martindale is reported in your pages to have given an address to
+ medical women in which she pointed out that the birth control movement
+ in England dated from the Bradlaugh trial in 1877. Had she attended the
+ presidential address of the Society for Constructive Birth Control she
+ would have learned that there was a very flourishing movement, centring
+ round Dr. Trall in 1866, years before Bradlaugh touched the subject,
+ and also a considerable movement earlier than that. This point is
+ important, as 'birth control' has hitherto (erroneously) been much
+ prejudiced in popular opinion by being supposed to be an atheistical
+ movement originated by Bradlaugh." [108]
+
+Dr. Stopes, who has been working overtime in the attempt to obtain some
+religious sanction for her propaganda, is ready not only to throw the
+Atheists overboard, but also to assert that a flourishing movement for
+artificial birth control centred round the late Dr. Trall, who was a
+Christian. Her letter was answered by Dr. Binnie Dunlop as follows:
+
+ "Dr. Marie C. Stopes, whose valuable books I constantly recommend,
+ protests (page 872) against the statement that the birth control
+ movement in England dated from the trial of Charles Bradlaugh in
+ 1877--for re-publishing Dr. Knowlton's pamphlet, _The Fruits of
+ Philosophy_ because the Government had interdicted it. She must admit,
+ however, that there was no _organised_ movement anywhere until
+ Bradlaugh and the Doctors Drysdale, immediately after the trial,
+ founded the Malthusian League, and that the decline of Europe's
+ birthrate began in that year. It may now seem unfortunate that the
+ pioneers of the contraceptives idea, from 1818 onwards (James Mill,
+ Francis Place, Richard Carlile, Robert Dale Owen, John Stuart Mill, Dr.
+ Knowlton, Dr. George Drysdale, Dr. C.R. Drysdale, and Charles
+ Bradlaugh), were all Free-thinkers; and Dr. Stopes harps on the
+ religious and praiseworthy Dr. Trall, an American, who published
+ _Sexual Physiology_ in 1866. But Dr. Trall was not at all a strong
+ advocate of contraceptive methods. After a brief but helpful reference
+ to the idea of placing a mechanical obstruction, such as a sponge,
+ against the _os uteri_, he said:
+
+ "Let it be distinctly understood that I do not approve any method for
+ preventing pregnancy except that of abstinence, nor any means for
+ producing abortion, on the ground that it is or can be in any sense
+ physiological. It is only the least of two evils. When people will live
+ physiologically there will be no need of preventive measures, nor will
+ there be any need for works of this kind." [109]
+
+That is a most informative letter. In simple language Dr. Binnie Dunlop
+tells the remarkable story of how in 1876 three Atheists, merely by forming
+a little Society in London, were able to cause an immediate fall in the
+birth-rate of Europe. When you come to think of it, that was a stupendous
+thing for any three men to have achieved. I am very glad that Dr. Binnie
+Dunlop has defended the Atheists and has painted the late Dr. Trail,
+despite that "brief but helpful reference," in his true colours as a
+Christian. Nevertheless, Dr. Stopes had the last word:
+
+ "As regards Dr. Dunlop, he now shifts the Atheists' position by adding
+ the word 'organised.' The Atheists never tire of repeating certain
+ definite misstatements, examples of which are: 'If it were not for the
+ fact that the despised Atheists, Charles Bradlaugh and Annie Besant,
+ faced imprisonment, misrepresentation, insult, and ostracism for this
+ cause forty-four years ago, she [Dr. Stopes] would not be able to
+ conduct her campaign to-day' (_Literary Guide_, November, 1921); and
+ 'Before the Knowlton trial, neither rich nor poor knew anything worth
+ counting about contraceptive devices' (_Malthusian_, November 15,
+ 1921). Variations of these statements have been incessantly made, and I
+ dealt with their contentions in the presidential address for the C.B.C.
+ Meanwhile to them I reply that: 'There has never been in this country
+ any law against the dissemination of properly presented birth control
+ information, and _before, during, and after_ the Bradlaugh trial
+ properly presented information on birth control was extending its range
+ with full liberty.' My address is now in the press, and when published
+ will make public not only new matter from manuscript letters of very
+ early date in my possession, but other overlooked historical facts. I
+ have already told Dr. Dunlop I refuse to be drawn into a discussion on
+ facts an account of which is still in the press." [110]
+
+The lady, by her dissertation on the Laws of England, makes a clumsy effort
+to evade the point at issue, which is quite simple, namely, whether it was
+Atheists or Christians who initiated the Neo-Malthusian movement, organised
+or unorganised. Dr. Binnie Dunlop has here proved his case. I also do
+maintain that in this matter all credit must be given to the Atheists; and
+that it would be truly contemptible to deny this fact merely in order to
+pander to a popular prejudice against Atheism. Nor am I shaken in this
+opinion when Dr. Stopes points out that there was a Neo-Malthusian movement
+prior to 1876. Of course there was a movement, but it was always an
+atheistic movement. In the past no Christian doctor, and indeed no
+Christian man or woman, advocated artificial birth control. Let us give the
+Neo-Malthusian his due.
+
+Until recently both the Church of England and the medical profession
+presented practically a united front against Neo-Malthusian teaching; and,
+as late as 1914, the Malthusian League did not hesitate to make use of the
+following calumnies, very mean, very spiteful, very imbecile:
+
+ "Take the clergy. They are the officers of a Church that has made
+ marriage a source of revenue and of social control; they preach from a
+ sacred book that bids the chosen people of God 'multiply and replenish
+ the earth'; they know that large families generally tend to preserve
+ clerical influence and authority; and they claim that every baby is a
+ new soul presented to God and, therefore, for His honour and glory, the
+ greatest possible number of souls should be produced." [111]
+
+That feeble attempt to poison the atmosphere was naturally ignored by
+intelligent people; and more than once Lambeth has ruled that artificial
+birth control is sin. Unfortunately, within the Church of England, in spite
+of the Lambeth ruling, there is still discussion as to whether artificial
+birth control is or is not sin, the Bishops, as a whole, making a loyal
+effort to uphold Christian teaching against a campaign waged by Malthusians
+in order to obtain religious sanction for their evil propaganda. Although
+many Malthusians are rationalists, they are well aware that without some
+religious sanction their policy could never emerge from the dim underworld
+of unmentioned and unrespected things, and could never be advocated
+openly in the light of day. To this end birth control is camouflaged by
+pseudo-poetic and pseudo-religious phraseology, and the Anglican Church is
+asked to alter her teaching. Birth controllers realise that it is useless
+to ask this of the Catholic Church, a Rock in their path, but "as regards
+the Church of England, which makes no claim to infallibility, the case is
+different, and discussion is possible." [112]
+
+Let us consider, firstly, the teaching of the Church of England on this
+matter. At the Lambeth Conference of 1908 the Bishops affirmed "that
+deliberate tampering with nascent life is repugnant to Christian morality."
+In 1914 a Committee of Bishops issued a Memorandum [113] in which
+artificial birth control is condemned as "dangerous, demoralising, and
+sinful." The memorandum was approved by a large majority of the Diocesan
+Bishops, although in the opinion of Dean Inge "this is emphatically a
+matter in which every man and woman must judge for themselves, and must
+refrain from judging others." [114] The Bishops also held that in some
+marriages it may be desirable, on grounds of prudence or of health, to
+limit the number of children. In these circumstances they advised the
+practice of self-restraint; and, as regards a limited use of marriage, they
+added the following statement:
+
+ "It seems to most of us only a legitimate application of such
+ self-restraint that in certain cases (which only the parties' own
+ judgment and conscience can settle) intercourse should be restricted by
+ consent to certain times at which it is less likely to lead to
+ conception. This is only to use natural conditions; it is approved by
+ good medical authority; it means self-denial and not self-indulgence.
+ And we believe it to be quite legitimate, or at least not to be
+ condemned."
+
+A _small_ minority of Bishops held that prolonged or even perpetual
+abstinence from intercourse is the only legitimate method of limiting a
+family. Finally, in Resolution 68 of the Lambeth Conference in 1920, the
+Bishops stated that:
+
+ "We utter an emphatic warning against the use of unnatural means for
+ the avoidance of conception, together with the grave
+ dangers--physical, moral, and religious--thereby incurred, and against
+ the evils with which the extension of such use threatens the race. In
+ opposition to the teaching which, under the name of science and
+ religion, encourages married people in the deliberate cultivation of
+ sexual union as an end in itself, we steadfastly uphold what must
+ always be regarded as the governing consideration of Christian
+ marriage. One is the primary purpose for which marriage
+ exists--namely, the continuation of the race through the gift and
+ heritage of children; the other is the paramount importance in married
+ life of deliberate and thoughtful self-control." [115]
+
+And the Committee on "Problems of Marriage and Sexual Morality" felt called
+upon "to utter an earnest warning against the use of any unnatural means by
+which conception is frustrated." [116]
+
+If Resolution 68 be read in conjunction with the Memorandum of 1914, the
+teaching of the Church of England is plain to any sane man or woman; it is
+one with the teaching of the Church Catholic. Artificial birth control is
+condemned as sin, but, under certain circumstances, the limitation of a
+family by continence or by _restricted intercourse_ is permitted. As this
+teaching forbids Neo-Malthusian practices, birth controllers have tried to
+make the Church alter her teaching to suit their opinions. Although their
+methods in controversy against the Church must be condemned by everyone who
+values intellectual honesty, the reader, of his charity, should remember
+that Malthusians are unable to defend their policy, either on logical or on
+moral grounds. Without attempting to prove that the teaching of the
+Church is wrong, birth controllers began the attack by _a complete
+misrepresentation_ of what that teaching actually is. This unenviable task
+was undertaken by Lord Dawson of Penn, at the Birmingham Church Congress of
+1921.
+
+After quoting Resolution 68, Lord Dawson said:
+
+ "Now the plain meaning of this statement is that sexual union should
+ take place for the sole purpose of procreation, that sexual union as
+ _an_ end in itself--not, mind you, _the_ only end--(there we should all
+ agree), but sexual union as _an_ end in itself is to be condemned.
+
+ "That means that sexual intercourse should rightly take place _only_
+ for the purpose of procreation.
+
+ "Quite a large family could easily result from quite a few sexual
+ unions. For the rest the couple should be celibate. Any intercourse not
+ having procreation as its intention is 'sexual union as an end in
+ itself,' and therefore by inference condemned by the Lambeth
+ Conference.
+
+ "Think of the facts of life. Let us recall our own love--our marriage,
+ our honeymoon. Has not sexual union over and over again been the
+ physical expression of our love without thought or intention of
+ procreation? Have we all been wrong? Or is it that the Church lacks
+ that vital contact with the realities of life which accounts for the
+ gulf between her and the people?
+
+ "The love envisaged by the Lambeth Conference is an invertebrate,
+ joyless thing--not worth the having. Fortunately it is in contrast to
+ the real thing as practised by clergy and laity.
+
+ "Fancy an ardent lover (and what respect have you for a lover who is
+ not ardent?)--the type you would like your daughter to marry--virile,
+ ambitious, chivalrous--a man who means to work hard and love hard.
+ Fancy putting before these lovers--eager and expectant of the joys
+ before them--the Lambeth picture of marriage. Do you expect to gain
+ their confidence?" [117]
+
+That sort of appeal is not very effective, even as rhetoric; but it is very
+easy to give an exact parallel. Fancy a fond father (and what respect have
+you for a father who is not fond?) being told by his daughter's suitor that
+he, his prospective son-in-law, looked forward to the physical joys of
+marriage, but intended to insist on his wife using contraceptives. Would
+any father regard such a one as the type he would like his daughter to
+marry?
+
+There is, unfortunately, another answer to Lord Dawson, and I put it in the
+form of a question. Can any intelligent man or woman, Catholic, Protestant,
+or rationalist, maintain that Lord Dawson has given a fair, a true, or an
+honest statement of the teaching of the Church of England? Moreover, it
+is past all understanding how a gross libel on Anglican doctrine has been
+overlooked by those most concerned. The address is actually hailed
+as "wise, bold, and humane in the highest sense of the word" by _The
+Spectator_, [118] and that amazing journal, "expert as ever in making the
+worse appear the better cause in a way that appeals to clergymen," goes on
+to say: "Lord Dawson fearlessly and plainly opposed the teachings of the
+Roman Church and the alleged teachings of the Anglican."
+
+Having by a travesty of truth created a false theological bogey, bearing
+little resemblance either to Catholic or to Anglican teaching, Lord Dawson
+proceeds to demolish his own creation by a somewhat boisterous eulogy of
+sex-love. Now sex-love is an instinct and involves no question of good
+or evil apart from the circumstances in which it is either gratified or
+denied; but, in view of the freedom with which Lord Dawson discussed this
+topic, it is only right to note that it was left to the Rev. R.J. Campbell
+to add to the gaiety of nations by his subsequent protest that the
+_Marriage Service_ "contains expressions which are offensive to modern
+delicacy of feeling."
+
+That protest is also a first-rate example of the anarchical state of the
+modern mind. The Rev. R.J. Campbell is a modern mind, so is Mr. George
+Bernard Shaw; but the latter refers to "the sober decency, earnestness, and
+authority" [119] of those very passages to which the former objects.
+
+Lord Dawson's eulogy of sexual intercourse was but a prelude to his plea
+for the use of contraceptives:
+
+ "I will next consider Artificial Control. The forces in modern life
+ which make for birth control are so strong that only convincing reasons
+ will make people desist from it. It is said to be unnatural and
+ intrinsically immoral. This word 'unnatural' perplexes me. Why?
+ Civilisation involves the chaining of natural forces and their
+ conversion to man's will and uses. Much of medicine and surgery
+ consists of means to overcome nature."
+
+That paragraph illustrates precisely the confused use of the word
+"natural," which I have already criticised (p. 124). Lord Dawson says he
+is perplexed, and I agree with him. Civilisation, he says, involves the
+conversion of natural forces to man's will. So does every crime. Is that
+any defence of crime? Even if physical nature be described as non-moral,
+that description cannot be applied to the inward nature of will and
+conscience. That I will an act may show it is in accordance with nature
+in a certain sense, but the fact of its being in accordance with physical
+nature does not justify my act. Does Lord Dawson agree? Or does he think
+that any action in accordance with the physical laws of nature, which means
+any action whatsoever, is justified; and does he approve therefore of mere
+moral anarchy? His confusion of thought concerning the use of the word
+"natural" is followed by the inevitable sequence of false analogies:
+
+ "When anaesthetics were first used at child-birth there was an outcry
+ on the part of many worthy and religious people that their use under
+ such circumstances was unnatural and wicked, because God meant woman to
+ suffer the struggles and pains of child-birth. Now we all admit it is
+ right to control the process of child-birth, and to save the mother as
+ much pain as possible. It is no more unnatural to control conception by
+ artificial means than to control child-birth by artificial means.
+ Surely the whole question turns on whether these artificial means are
+ for the good or harm of the individual and the community.
+
+ "Generally speaking, birth control before the first child is
+ inadvisable. On the other hand, the justifiable use of birth control
+ would seem to be to limit the number of children when such is
+ desirable, and to spread out their arrival in such a way as to serve
+ their true interests and those of their home.
+
+ "Once more, careful distinction needs to be made between the use and
+ the bad effects of the abuse of birth control. That its abuse produces
+ grave harm I fully agree--harm to parents, to families, and to the
+ nation. But abuse is not a just condemnation of legitimate use.
+ Over-eating, over-drinking, over-smoking, over-sleeping, over-work do
+ not carry condemnation of eating, drinking, smoking, sleeping, work."
+
+These long extracts are here quoted because, as _The Spectator_ has
+remarked, "an attempt at a detailed summary might destroy the careful
+balance which is essential to Lord Dawson's purpose." It might indeed; and
+many a true word is written inadvertently and despite the wisdom of the
+serpent. As Lord Dawson believes that Malthusian practice is not of
+necessity sinful, and as he is urging the Church to remove a ban on that
+practice, it is necessary for him to prove in the first place that his
+opinion is right and that the teaching of the Church is wrong. Elsewhere in
+these pages I have stated _the reasons why_ Christian morality brands the
+_act_ of artificial birth control as intrinsically a sin, a _malum in se_,
+and those reasons have never been disproved by Lord Dawson or by anyone.
+His comparison between the use of contraceptives and eating or drinking is
+a false analogy. Eating is a natural act, not in itself sinful, whereas the
+use of contraceptives is an unnatural act, in itself a sin. The extent
+to which artificial birth control is practised neither increases nor
+diminishes the sinful nature of the act, but merely indicates the number
+of times the same sin is committed. Lord Dawson admits the danger of
+Neo-Malthusian methods being carried to excess, and counsels that these
+practices be used in moderation; but is it likely that those who have
+discarded the teaching of a Church and the dictates of the moral law will
+be seriously influenced by what he calls "an appeal to patriotism"?
+
+Now there is one appeal to patriotism which Lord Dawson could have made but
+did not make. He might have pleaded that for the sake of the nation all
+attempts at unnatural birth control amongst the wealthier and more leisured
+citizens should be abandoned forthwith, and that the lawful form should be
+confined to those few cases where limitation of the family is justified on
+genuine medical grounds. But he refrained from making that appeal, and
+his plea for the use of contraceptives in moderation is more likely to be
+quoted with approval in the boudoirs of Mayfair than in humbler homes.
+
+Lord Dawson's grave error in failing to anticipate the inevitable
+consequences of his deplorable speech is becoming more and more apparent.
+In the columns of _The Daily Herald_, cheek by jowl with advertisements
+concerning "Herbalists," "Safe and Sure Treatment for Anaemia,
+Irregularities, etc.," "Knowledge for Young Wives," and "Surgical Goods and
+Appliances," there appears the following notice:
+
+ "Lord Dawson, the King's Physician, says, 'Birth control has come to
+ stay.' Following up this honest and daring declaration, the Liberator
+ League have decided to distribute 10,000 copies of its publications
+ free to applicants sending stamped addressed envelopes to J.W. Gott,
+ Secretary ... London, N.W.5."
+
+A stamped addressed envelope brought in return sample copies of two undated
+newsprints, entitled _The Rib Tickler_ and _The Liberator_, and, to the
+honour of newsvendors, we learn that these papers are "not supplied by
+newsagents." The first print is devoted to Blasphemy, and the second to
+Birth Control. Both papers are edited by J.W. Gott, "of London, Leeds,
+Liverpool, and other prisons," who, when he is not in jail for selling
+blasphemous or obscene literature, earns a livelihood by a propaganda of
+"Secularism, Socialism, and Neo-Malthusianism," combined with the sale of
+contraceptives. At Birmingham in 1921 this individual, according to his own
+statement, was charged, on eleven summonses, with having sent "an obscene
+book" and "obscene literature" through the post, and with "publishing a
+blasphemous libel of and concerning the Holy Scriptures and the Christian
+Religion." "The Malthusian League (at their own expense, for which I here
+wish to thank them) sent their Hon. Secretary, Dr. Binnie Dunlop, who gave
+evidence" ... that the Council of the Malthusian League ... "most strongly
+protests against the description of G. Hardy's book, _How to prevent
+Pregnancy_, as obscene, for that book gives in a perfectly refined and
+scientific way this urgently needed information." This opinion was not
+shared by the jury, who brought in a verdict of guilty, and Gott was
+sentenced to six months' imprisonment. From the _Liberator_ we learn that
+the Treasurer of the Liberator League was fined £20, having been found
+guilty on the following summons--"for that you on the eleventh day of
+September 1920, at the Parish of Consett, in the County aforesaid,
+unlawfully, wickedly, maliciously, and scandalously did sell to divers
+persons, whose names are unknown, in a public street, there situate, a
+certain lewd, wicked, scandalous, and obscene print entitled 'Large or
+Small Families,' against the Peace of our Sovereign Lord the King, His
+Crown and Dignity."
+
+Lord Dawson's advice was indeed perilous because "the British Empire and
+all its traditions will decline and fall if the Motherland is faithless
+to motherhood"; [120] and the nation would do better to pay heed to the
+following words of His Majesty the King: "The foundations of national glory
+are in the homes of the people. They will only remain unshaken while the
+family life of our race and nation is strong, simple, and pure."
+
+All Lord Dawson's arguments are hoary fallacies. "Once more, careful
+distinction needs to be made between"--anaesthetics and contraceptives.
+Anaesthetics assist the birth of a child, whereas contraceptives frustrate
+the act of procreation. The old explanation that man's progress has
+been achieved by harnessing and not by opposing the forces of nature is
+dismissed with ignominy. The age-long teaching of Hippocrates that the
+healing art was based on the _Vis Medicatrix Naturae_ is overthrown by
+Lord Dawson of Penn, in a single sentence; and in place of the Father of
+Medicine as a guide to health of body and mind, there comes the King's
+Physician:
+
+ "To pestle a poison'd poison behind his crimson lights."
+
+When a great leader announces the birth of a new epoch, it is meet that the
+rank and file remain silent; and at this Congress of the Church of
+England no jarring interruptions marred the solemnity of the moment. No
+old-fashioned doctor was there to utter a futile protest, and there was no
+simple-minded clergyman to rise in the name of Christ and give Lord Dawson
+the lie. Without dissent, on a public platform of the Established Church,
+presided over by a Bishop, and in full view of the nation, "the moth-eaten
+mantle of Malthus, the godless robe of Bradlaugh, and the discarded
+garments of Mrs. Besant," [121] were donned--by the successor of Lister.
+It was a proud moment for the birth controllers, but for that national
+institution called "Ecclesia Anglicana" a moment full of shame.
+
+[Footnote 100: _British Medical Journal_, August 6, 1921, p. 219.]
+
+[Footnote 101: There is, or perhaps we should say there was, a legacy of
+1,000 Rhenish guilders awaiting anyone who, in the judgment of the faculty
+of law in the University of Heidelberg or of Bonn, is able to establish the
+fact that any Jesuit ever taught this doctrine or anything equivalent to
+it. Vide _The Antidote_, vol. iii, p. 125, C.T.S., London.]
+
+[Footnote 102: Gen. xxxviii. 9-10]
+
+[Footnote 103: Vide _Catholic Times_, August 27, 1921, p. 7.]
+
+[Footnote 104: _The Army and Religion_, 1919, p. 448.]
+
+[Footnote 105: _Universe_, November 4, 1921, p. 3.]
+
+[Footnote 106: _Eighty-second Annual Report of the Registrar-General of
+England and Wales_, 1919, p. xiv.]
+
+[Footnote 107: _The Times_, January 13, 1885.]
+
+[Footnote 108: _British Medical Journal_, November 19, 1921, p. 872.]
+
+[Footnote 109: _British Medical Journal_, November 26, 1921, p. 924]
+
+[Footnote 110: _British Medical Journal_, December 10, 1921, p. 1016.]
+
+[Footnote 111: _Common Sense on the Population Question_, p. 4]
+
+[Footnote 112: Dr. C.K. Millard, in _The Modern Churchman_, May 1919.]
+
+[Footnote 113: Reproduced in _The Declining Birth-rate_, 1916, p. 386.]
+
+[Footnote 114: _Outspoken Essays_, 1919, p. 75.]
+
+[Footnote 115: _Report_, p. 44.]
+
+[Footnote 116: Ibid., p. 112.]
+
+[Footnote 117: _Evening Standard_, October 12, 1921.]
+
+[Footnote 118: October 15, 1921.]
+
+[Footnote 119: _Man and Superman_, Act III, p. 125.]
+
+[Footnote 120: _Sunday Express_, October 16, 1921.]
+
+[Footnote 121: On becoming a Theosophist, Mrs. Besant retracted her
+approval of Neo-Malthusianism.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+
+THE TEACHING OF THE CATHOLIC CHURCH ON BIRTH CONTROL
+
+
+Section 1. A FALSE VIEW OF HER DOCTRINE
+
+One of the marks of the Catholic Church, whereby she may be distinguished
+from all other Churches, is that her teaching is always clear and above all
+logical. Yet this fact has not saved her teaching from misrepresentation
+in the hands of Malthusians. For example, Dr. C. Killick Millard writes as
+follows:
+
+ "The Churches have taught that it was the divine wish that human beings
+ should multiply and population increase--the more rapidly the better;
+ the traditional authority for this being the instruction given to Noah
+ and his family, after the Deluge, to 'be fruitful and multiply and
+ replenish the earth.' The Churches have continued to teach that the
+ duty of man was _to obey the divine command_ and still _to increase and
+ multiply_, and until recently any attempt by married couples to
+ restrict or regulate the birth-rate was denounced as sinful.
+
+ "This is still the orthodox attitude, I believe, of the Roman Catholic
+ Church, with its celibate priesthood; but, as it is clearly useless to
+ reason with those who claim infallibility, it is unnecessary to discuss
+ the question further so far as Roman Catholicism is concerned." [122]
+
+Now, although it may be unnecessary for Dr. Millard to discuss the question
+further, he will, I am sure, regret having inadvertently misstated the
+truth. The Catholic Church has never denounced as sinful "_any_ attempt by
+married couples to restrict or regulate the birth-rate." On the contrary,
+the Catholic Church has taught, by her greatest doctor, St. Thomas Aquinas,
+"that the essence of marriage is not primarily in the begetting of
+offspring, but in the indissoluble union between husband and wife." [123]
+
+
+Section 2. THE ESSENCE AND PURPOSE OF MARRIAGE
+
+There is an obvious distinction between the _essence_ of a thing and the
+_ends_ or purposes for which the thing exists. For example, in a business
+partnership the _essence_ of the partnership is a legal instrument,
+whereas the _purposes_ or _ends_ of the partnership are various commercial
+projects. The following is a clear statement, by Father Vincent McNabb,
+O.P., [124] of Catholic teaching concerning the nature and end of marriage:
+
+ "Marriage is an indissoluble state of life wherein a man and a woman
+ agree to give each other power over their bodies for the begetting,
+ birth, and upbringing of offspring. The natural and primary end of
+ marriage is this duty towards offspring. But, as sin has despoiled the
+ human will and disturbed human relations, marriage has now the
+ secondary end of allaying sexual lust.
+
+ "But it is a principle of ethics that what is primary cannot be set
+ aside as if it were secondary, nor can the secondary be sought as if it
+ were primary. To invert the ethical order is to bring in that disorder
+ which is called sin. If the human act brings in a slight disorder, it
+ is venial sin; if the human act brings in a grievous disorder it is a
+ grievous or mortal sin.
+
+ "It is a grievous disorder, and, therefore, a grievous sin, to desire
+ satisfaction in such sexual intercourse as could not result in the
+ begetting of offspring.
+
+ "As the wedded pair have given each other power over their bodies it
+ would be a grave sin for one to refuse either altogether or for a
+ considerable time the fulfilment of the marriage debt. But it is not a
+ sin if by mutual agreement the wedded pair refrain from the marriage
+ debt for a time, or for ever. As a rule, and speaking objectively, it
+ would be heroic virtue for a wedded pair to abstain for a long time,
+ and still more for ever, from the marriage debt. To counsel such a
+ practice indiscriminately would be a sinful want of prudence, and, in a
+ confessor, of professional knowledge.
+
+ "It is quite clear that by mutual consent, even without any further
+ motive, the wedded pair can abstain from marital intercourse. Still
+ more may they abstain for a time or for ever, for a good motive, e.g.
+ in order to have time for prayer, for good works, for bringing up such
+ family as they already have to support."
+
+
+Section 3. ARTIFICIAL STERILITY WHOLLY CONDEMNED
+
+Artificial birth control is an offence against the law of God, and is
+therefore forbidden by the Catholic Church. Any Catholic who wilfully
+adopts this practice violates the law of God in a serious matter, and is
+therefore guilty of mortal sin, an outrageous and deliberate insult offered
+by a human creature to the Infinite Majesty.
+
+The Catholic Church teaches that men and women should control the sex
+impulse just as they should control their appetite for food or drink.
+The principal end of marriage, as we have seen, is the purpose of its
+institution, the procreation and bringing up of children. The secondary end
+of marriage is mutual assistance and companionship, and a remedy against
+concupiscence. Where it is advisable, owing to the health of the mother or
+owing to reasons of prudence as distinct from selfishness, to limit the
+number of children, the Catholic Church points out that this should be done
+by the exercise of self-control, or by restricted use. As those who deny
+the possibility or even the wisdom of self-restraint are not likely to pay
+the slightest attention to the teaching of the Church, I will quote the
+opinions of two clear-thinking, non-Catholic writers.
+
+Mr. George Bernard Shaw has said:
+
+ "I have no prejudices. The superstitious view of the Catholic Church is
+ that a priest is something entirely different from an ordinary man. I
+ know a great many Catholic priests, and they are men who have had a
+ great deal of experience. They have at the back a Church which has had
+ for many years to consider the giving of domestic advice to people. If
+ you go to a Catholic priest and tell him that a life of sexual
+ abstinence means a life of utter misery, he laughs. And obviously for a
+ very good reason. If you go to Westminster Cathedral you will hear
+ voices which sound extremely well, and very differently from the voices
+ of the gentlemen who sing at music-halls, and who would not be able to
+ sing in that way if they did not lead a life extremely different from
+ the Catholic priest....
+
+ "I may say that I am in favour of birth control. I am in favour of it
+ for its own sake. I do not like to see any human being absolutely the
+ slave of what we used to call 'Nature.' Every human action ought to be
+ controlled, and you make a step in civilisation with something which
+ has been uncontrollable. I am therefore in favour of control for its
+ own sake. But when you go from that to the methods of control, that is
+ a very different thing. As Dr. Routh said, we have to find out methods
+ which will not induce people to declare that they cannot exist without
+ sexual intercourse." [125]
+
+Of course the use of contraceptives is the very negation of self-control.
+
+The late Sir William Osier, speaking of venereal disease, says:
+
+ "Personal purity is the prophylaxis which we as physicians are
+ especially bound to advocate. Continence may be a hard condition ...
+ but it can be borne, and it is our duty to urge this lesson upon young
+ and old who seek our advice on matters sexual."
+
+
+Section 4. THE ONLY LAWFUL METHOD OF BIRTH CONTROL
+
+There _are_ methods of control whereby people are enabled to exist, and to
+exist happily, without being slaves to the sex impulse. These methods are
+those of the Catholic Church. Her people are encouraged to take a higher
+and a nobler view of marriage, to overcome their egoism and selfishness,
+and to practise moderation and self-restraint in the lawful use of marital
+rights. The Church urges her people to strengthen their self-restraint
+by observing the penitential seasons, especially Lent; by fasting or by
+abstaining from flesh meat at other times, if necessary by abstaining from
+alcohol; and by seeking that supernatural help which comes to those who
+receive the Sacraments worthily. When all other deterrents fail, it is
+lawful, according to the teaching of the Church, for married people to
+limit intercourse to the mid-menstrual period, when, although conception
+may occur, it is less likely to occur than at other times.
+
+All other methods are absolutely and without exception forbidden. This
+limited use of marriage, which, as we have seen, is within the rights of
+the married, differs from all methods of artificial birth-control as day
+differs from night, because: [Reference: Explanation]
+
+(1) No positive or direct obstacle is used against procreation.
+
+(2) The intercourse is natural, in contradistinction to what is equivalent
+to self-abuse.
+
+(3) Self-restraint is practised in that the intercourse is limited to
+certain times.
+
+(4) There is no risk to mental or physical health.
+
+(5) There is no evil will to _defeat_ the course of nature; at worst there
+is merely an absence of heroism.
+
+Even if the question be considered solely as a matter of physiology
+the difference between these methods is apparent. Physiologists and
+gynaecologists believe that in natural intercourse there is, apart from
+fertilisation, an absorption of certain substances into the system of the
+woman. The rôle of this absorption is at present obscure, but it obviously
+exists for a purpose; and it is permissible to speculate whether, under
+natural conditions of intercourse, there is not a mutual biological
+reaction that makes, amongst other things, for physical compatibility.
+Whatever be its purpose or explanation in the marvellous mechanism of
+nature, this absorption of vital substances is either hindered or is
+absolutely prevented by artificial methods of birth control; whereas, in
+the method permitted by the teaching of the Catholic Church there is no
+interference with a physiological process. Even those who fail, from their
+lack of training, to comprehend moral distinctions in this matter should be
+able to appreciate the difference between a method that is physiological
+and one that is unphysiological.
+
+There are thousands who know little of the Catholic or of any other faith,
+and thousands who believe the Catholic Church to be everything except what
+it is. These people have no infallible rule of faith and morals, and when
+confronted, as they now are, by a dangerous, insidious campaign in favour
+of birth control, they do not react consistently or at all. It was
+therefore thought advisable to issue this statement in defence of the
+position of the Catholic Church; but the reader should remember that the
+teaching of the Church on this matter is held by her members to be true,
+not merely because it agrees with the notions of all right-thinking men and
+women, not because it is in harmony with economic, statistical, social, and
+biological truth, but principally because they know this teaching to be
+an authoritative declaration of the law of God. The Ten Commandments have
+their pragmatic justification; they make for the good of the race; but the
+Christian obeys them as expressions of the Divine Will.
+
+
+Section 5. CONCLUSION
+
+Our declining birth-rate is a fact of the utmost gravity, and a more
+serious position has never confronted the British people. Here in the midst
+of a great nation, at the end of a victorious war, the law of decline is
+working, and by that law the greatest empires in the world have perished.
+In comparison with that single fact all other dangers, be they of war, of
+politics, or of disease, are of little moment. Attempts have already been
+made to avert the consequences by the partial endowment of motherhood
+and by a saving of infant life. Physiologists are now seeking among the
+endocrinous glands and the vitamines for a substance to assist procreation.
+"Where are my children?" was the question shouted yesterday from the
+cinemas. "Let us have children, children at any price," will be the cry
+of to-morrow. And all these thoughts were once in the mind of Augustus,
+Emperor of the world from the Atlantic to the Euphrates, from Mount Atlas
+to the Danube and the Rhine.
+
+The Catholic Church has never taught that "an avalanche of children" should
+be brought into the world regardless of consequences. God is not mocked; as
+men sow, so shall they reap, and against a law of nature both the transient
+amelioration wrought by philanthropists and the subtle expediences of
+scientific politicians are alike futile. If our civilisation is to survive
+we must abandon those ideals that lead to decline. There is only one
+civilisation immune from decay, and that civilisation endures on the
+practical eugenics once taught by a united Christendom and now expounded
+almost solely by the Catholic Church.
+
+[Footnote 122: _The Modern Churchman_, May 1919.]
+
+[Footnote 123: Rev. Vincent McNabb, O.P., _The Catholic Gazette_, September
+1921, p. 194]
+
+[Footnote 124: Ibid]
+
+[Footnote 125: Speech at the Medico-Legal Society, July 7, 1921.]
+
+
+
+
+BIBLIOGRAPHY
+
+
+A.--GENERAL PUBLICATIONS
+
+_Marriage and the Sex Problem_. By Dr. F.W. Foerster. Translated by
+Margaret Booth, B. Sc., Ph.D. London, 1912.
+
+_The Menace of the Empty Cradle_. By Bernard Vaughan, S.J. London, 1917.
+
+_Coffins or Cradles_. By Sir James Marchant. 1916.
+
+_Moral Principles and Medical Practice_. By C. Coppens, S.J., and H.
+Spalding, S.J.
+
+_The Family and the Nation_. By W.C.D. Whetham and Mrs. Whetham. London,
+1909.
+
+_The Law of Births and Deaths_. By Charles Edward Pell. London, 1921.
+
+_The Declining Birth-rate_. Report of the National Birthrate Commission.
+London, 1916.
+
+_The Church and Labour (A Compendium of Official Utterances)_. Edited by
+John A. Ryan, LL.D., and Joseph Husslein, Ph.D. London, 1921.
+
+
+B.--CATHOLIC TRUTH SOCIETY PUBLICATIONS
+
+(_Obtainable from 69, Southwark Bridge Road, S.E.1_.)
+
+_The Condition of the Working Classes_. (The Encyclical _Rerum Novarum_.)
+By Pope Leo XIII. Edited by Mgr. Canon Parkinson, D.D. 6d.
+
+_Social Questions and the Duty of Catholics_. By C.S. Devas, M.A. 6d.
+
+(_The Following are Twopence each_.)
+
+_Birth-rate, The Declining_. By H. Thurston, S.J.
+
+_Christian Democracy before the Reformation_. By Cardinal Gasquet, O.S.B.
+
+_Christian Democracy: Its Meaning and Aim_. By C.S. Devas.
+
+_Christian Womanhood_.
+
+_Church and Social Reformers, The_. By the Bishop of Northampton.
+
+_Conjugal Life, The Duties of_. By Cardinal Mercier.
+
+_Divorce_. By the Bishop of Northampton.
+
+_English Economics and Catholic Ethics_. By M. Maher.
+
+_Labour, The Church and_. By Abbot Snow, O.S.B.
+
+_Landlords, A Dialogue on_. By R.P. Garrold, S.J.
+
+_The Catholic Church and the Principle of Private Property_. By Hilaire
+Belloc.
+
+_Rome and the Social Question_.
+
+_Social Reform, Pope Pius X on_.
+
+_Social Sense, The: Its Decay and its Revival_. By A.P. Mooney, M.D.
+
+_Socialism, The Catholic Church and_. By Hilaire Belloc.
+
+_Socialism, An Examination of_. By the same.
+
+_Socialism, Some Ethical Criticisms of_. By A.P. Mooney, M.D.
+
+_Trade Unionism_. By Henry Somerville.
+
+_Woman in the Catholic Church_. By H.F. Hall.
+
+_The Church and Science_. By Sir Bertram Windle, M.D., F.R.S., K.S.G. 7_s_.
+6_d_.
+
+_Twelve Catholic Men of Science_. Edited by Sir Bertram Windle,
+M.D., F.R.S. Sir Dominic Corrigan--Thomas Dwight--Galvani--Lapparent
+--Laennec--Linacre--Mendel--Johannes Müller--Pasteur--Secchi--Nicolaus
+Stenson--Vesalius. 2_s_. 6_d_.
+
+_Facts and Theories_. A Consideration of Some Biological Conceptions of
+To-day. By Sir Bertram Windle, M.D., F.R.S., K.S.G. 2_s_.
+
+_The Modernist_. By Joseph Rickaby, S.J. 1_s_.
+
+_The World and Its Maker_. By J. Gerard, S.J. 4_d_.
+
+(_The Following are Twopence each_.)
+
+_Anti-Catholic History: How it is written_. By Hilaire Belloc.
+
+_Darwinism, The Decline of_. By Walter Sweetman.
+
+_Evolution and Exact Thought_. By J. Gerard, S.J.
+
+_Freedom of Thought_. By. J. Vance, M.A., Ph.D.
+
+_Freethought, Modern_. By J. Gerard, S.J., F.L.S.
+
+_Haeckel and his Philosophy_. By J. Gerard, S.J.
+
+_Life, The Origin of_. By J. Gerard, S.J., F.L.S.
+
+_Positivism_. By Joseph Rickaby, S.J.
+
+_Rationalist Propaganda, The, and How it must be met_. By J. Gerard, S.J.
+
+_Rationalist, The (Joseph M'Cabe), as Prophet_. By J. Keating, S.J.
+
+_Science and Its Counterfeit_. By J. Gerard, S.J.
+
+_Science or Romance: The Game of Speculation_. By J. Gerard, S.J.
+
+_Scientific Facts and Scientific Hypotheses_. By Sir Bertram Windle, M.D.,
+F.R.S.
+
+_Scientific Opinion, The Ebb and Flow of_. By Sir Bertram Windle, M.D.,
+F.R.S.
+
+_Babylonia and Assyria_. By A. Condamin, S.J.
+
+_The Catholic Church_. By Canon Gildea.
+
+_France, Plain Words on Church and State in_.
+
+_France, The Real Authors of the Separation in_. By O. Kellet, S.J.
+
+_"Good Queen Bess," The Days of_. By William Cobbett.
+
+_Kulturkampf, The_. By Humphrey Johnson, B.A.
+
+_Luther, Four Centuries of_. By Canon William Barry, D.D.
+
+_Mediaeval England, Catholic Faith and Practice in_. By H.J. Kilduff.
+
+_Monasteries, The Suppression of the English_. By William Cobbett.
+
+_The Pilgrim Fathers_. By H. Thurston, S.J.
+
+_Reformation, Social Effects of the_. By William Cobbett.
+
+
+(_Leaflets 3s. per 100_.)
+
+_Do Babies build Slums?_ By Halliday Sutherland, M.D.
+
+
+C.--CATHOLIC SOCIAL GUILD PUBLICATIONS
+
+(_Obtainable from Catholic Social Guild, Oxford_.)
+
+_A Primer of Social Science_. By Mgr. Parkinson. 3s. 6d.
+
+_Prostitution: The Moral Bearings of the Problem_. By M.F. and J.F.
+Foreword by the late Archbishop of Liverpool. 2s. 6d.
+
+_The Church and Eugenics_. (New and revised edition, 1921.) By T. Gerrard.
+1s. 6d.
+
+_The Christian Family_. By Margaret Fletcher. 1s. 6d.
+
+_Sweated Labour and the Trade Boards Act_. Edited by T. Wright. 8d.
+
+_Guild Socialism_. A Criticism of the National Guild Theory. By Francis
+Goldwell. 6d.
+
+_Elements of Housing_. By C. Tigar, S.J. 6d.
+
+_The Gospel and the Citizen_. By C.C. Martindale, S.J. 4d.
+
+_The Church and the Worker_. By V.M. Crawford. 4d.
+
+_Questions of the Day_. By J. Keating, S.J., and S.A. Parker, O.S.B. 4d.
+
+_Elements of Economics_. By Lewis Watt, S.J. 4d.
+
+_The Nation's Crisis_. By Cardinal Bourne. 3d.
+
+_The Catholic Attitude to the Ministry of Health_. By J.B. McLaughlin,
+O.S.B., and A.P. Mooney, M.D. 2d.
+
+
+D.--FRENCH PUBLICATIONS
+
+_La Dépopulation de la France_. Jacques Bertillon. 1911.
+
+_La Population française_. Levasseur. 1891.
+
+_La Question de la Population_. Leroy-Beaulieu.
+
+_Dépopulation et Civilisation_. 1890. Arsène Dumont.
+
+_Natalie_. Dr. Bertillon Père.
+
+
+
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK, BIRTH CONTROL ***
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