<SPAN name="To_Mrs_Clarence_St_Claire"></SPAN>
<h2>To Mrs. Clarence St. Claire</h2>
<p class="c3">Concerning Her Husband<br/>
</p>
<p>I am sorry that your matrimonial barque meets so many rough
winds while hardly out of Honeymoon Bay.
</p>
<p>Clarence and you seemed so deeply in love when I last saw you,
six months after your wedding, that I had hoped all might go well
with you.
</p>
<p>I knew the disposition of Clarence to be tainted with jealousy,
but hoped you would be able to eradicate it from his nature.
</p>
<p>You know his poor mother suffered agonies from the infidelities
of his father before Clarence was born. She had married a handsome
foreigner with whom she was desperately enamoured, while he cared
only for the fortune she brought him.
</p>
<p>While still in the full light of the honeymoon he began to
indulge in flirtations and amours, and poor Clarence, during the
important prenatal period of life, received the mark of suspicion
and the tendency to hypersensitiveness which then dominated the
mother.
</p>
<p>By the time Elise was born she had passed through the whole
process, and was passive and indifferent.
</p>
<p>I cannot help a sensation of amusement, even in face of the
condition you describe (which is little short of tragic), as I
recall the letter Clarence wrote begging me to try and prevent, by
fair means or foul, his sister's marriage to old Mr. Volney.
</p>
<p>That was two years before you and Clarence were married.
</p>
<p>Elise, we all know, wedded for the money and position Mr. Volney
gave, in return for her young beauty.
</p>
<p>Clarence and you were ideal lovers, seeing nothing in the world
outside of your own selves.
</p>
<p>Yet Elise is quite contented, and Mr. Volney uses what little
brain he has left to exult over his possession of such a beautiful
young wife.
</p>
<p>Elise upholds his dignity and flatters him into a belief that he
is a great philanthropist and a social power, and in this way she
has the handling of his millions, which is her idea of happiness.
She travels, entertains, and poses for photographs and paintings in
imported gowns, and there is no rumour of discontent or divorce.
</p>
<p>Meanwhile, Clarence, who was so opposed to her marriage because
it was loveless, is making a mess of his own love-match, through
his jealousy.
</p>
<p>You, who knew him to be insanely jealous as a lover, and who
seemed to be flattered with what you thought a proof of his
devotion, appeal to me now to know what to do with the husband who
is destroying your love and your happiness! Surely, if Elise knew
of this she might well say, "He laughs best who laughs last."
</p>
<p>I know that you were absorbed in Clarence for the first year of
your married life, and that you gave no least cause for any
jealousy, and I know, as you say, that even then he was often
morbid and unhappy over nothing at all.
</p>
<p>He was jealous even of girl friends and relatives, and if you
attended a matinée with one of them, he sulked the whole
evening.
</p>
<p>This was little more than he did as a lover, and you should have
begun in those days to reason him out of such moods.
</p>
<p>You imagined then it was his mad love for you which caused his
unreasonable jealousy.
</p>
<p>But jealousy is self-love, and selfishness lies at the root of
such conditions of mind as his.
</p>
<p>A woman should say to a man who sulks or goes into tantrums when
she pays courteous attentions to relatives or acquaintances, "You
are lowering my ideal of you—I cannot love a man who will indulge
such unworthy moods. You insult my womanhood and doubt my
principles by your suspicions; you intimate that I have neither
truth, or judgment, or pride. You must conquer yourself, and learn
to trust me and to believe in me, or I must decide I am no woman
for you to take as a life companion." A man should take the same
course toward a jealous sweetheart or wife.
</p>
<p>A few quiet but firm assertions of this nature, when you were
being wooed, would have given Clarence an idea that he could lose
you, and that he was making himself ridiculous in your eyes.
Instead, you boasted to your friends how wildly infatuated he was,
and Clarence took new pride in his own blemish of character.
</p>
<p>Now that you have to live day, and night, and week, and month,
and year, with this trait, it seems a less romantic phase of
devotion, I fancy. But you are not wise to grow reckless and ignore
the wishes of your husband in all ways, because he is unreasonable.
"Since he is so absolutely impossible to please," you say, "I may
as well please myself. I have decided to take some of the liberties
so many of my acquaintances do, and enjoy life outside my home if I
cannot enjoy it within."
</p>
<p>Then you proceed to tell me how more than half your associates
drive, lunch, and dine with men acquaintances, and how
old-fashioned they consider your scruples. And you tell me that,
despite your rectitude, Clarence insults you almost daily by his
unreasoning jealousy of men, women, and even children.
</p>
<p>"I have about made up my mind to be less prudish and enjoy
myself, as I am sure Clarence cannot be any more jealous than he
is," you say.
</p>
<p>Now since you have asked my advice in the matter, I can only
urge you to reconsider this last determination.
</p>
<p>So long as you are, according to law and in the eyes of the
world, the wife of a man, you cannot escape comment if you are
frequently seen in public places alone with another.
</p>
<p>Were you to look into the hearts of other men who ask you to
dine, drive, or lunch alone with them, you would find a feeling of
increased respect when you decline, although they may show only
disappointment on the surface. I know that many wives of
unblemished reputation accept courtesies of this kind from
masculine friends, and I of course understand that circumstances
may arise which make an occasional acceptance proper.
</p>
<p>But the fewer such occasions, the better and the safer for the
married woman. The man who is perfectly willing his wife should
appear frequently in public with other men does not fully
appreciate the dignity of her position or his own, or else he has
lost his love for her.
</p>
<p>The fact that your husband is jealous without reason is no
excuse for giving him reason. The moment men know that a husband is
inclined to jealousy, he falls in their estimation, and they are
seized with a desire to aggravate him, while they sympathize with
the wife.
</p>
<p>The sympathetic friend of the abused wife is a dangerous
companion for her. He may mean to be platonic and kind, but almost
invariably he becomes sentimental and unsafe.
</p>
<p>Once in a thousand times the absolutely happy wife of a husband
she respects as well as loves can enjoy a platonic friendship with
a man who respects her, and himself, and her husband. But even that
situation is liable to prove insecure, if they are much together,
owing to the selfishness and weakness of human nature when the
barriers of convention are removed.
</p>
<p>But the unhappy wife must take no chances with Fate.
</p>
<p>She must either decide to accept her lot and bear it with
philosophy, or escape from it and begin life over, after the courts
have given her the right to reconstruct her destiny.
</p>
<p>You know all that entails. It is not a pleasant process.
</p>
<p>If your love for your husband is entirely dead, and you feel
that he has forfeited all right to your sympathy, pity, or
patience, then break the fetters and go free. But if you feel that
you are not ready for that ordeal, and that you must still remain
living under the same roof with him, and continue to bear his name,
then do not join the great army of wives who are to be seen in
public restaurants and hotels dining tête-à-tête
with "platonic friends" over emptied glasses.
</p>
<p>You can but make trouble for yourself and add to the misery of
your husband by such a course. In your particular case, I feel that
your knowledge of the jealous disposition of the man you married
renders it your duty to bear and forbear, and to try every method
of reformation before you resort to the very common highway of
divorce as an exit from your unhappiness.
</p>
<p>A woman has no right to complain of the fault in a husband which
she condoned in a lover. And a man has no right to complain of the
fault in a wife he condoned in a sweetheart. Yet both may strive to
correct that fault.
</p>
<p>Insist upon having women and men friends who can be received at
your home in presence of your husband. Make Clarence realize how he
belittles himself in your estimation by unreasoning jealousy. Give
him to understand that you want to love him and respect him, and
that you have no intention of lowering your standard of behaviour,
because he is constantly expecting you to. Tell him it mortifies
you to find greater pleasure away from him than in his presence,
yet when he insults you with his suspicions, and destroys your
comfort with his moods, you can no longer think of him as your
girlhood's ideal.
</p>
<p>Ask him to try, for your sake, to use more common sense and
self-control in this matter, and to help you to restore the
happiness which seems flying from your wedded lives.
</p>
<p>Do nothing to aggravate or irritate him, but do not give up your
friends of either sex; this is but to increase his inclination to
petty tyranny, while it will in no sense lessen his jealousy.
</p>
<p>And when you are alone, endeavour to think of him always as
sensible, reasonable, and kind.
</p>
<p>By your mental picture you can help to cure him of the blight he
received before his birth. It is the task set many a wife, to
counteract the errors and neglect of mothers.
</p>
<p>Look to the Divine source for help in your work, and remember
the lovely qualities Clarence possesses when he is not under the
ban of this prenatal mark.
</p>
<p>Love him out into the light if you can—and I believe you can if
you are not too soon discouraged.
</p>
<p>It is a nobler effort to try and create in your husband the
ideal you have in your mind, than to go seeking him elsewhere.
</p>
<p>Be patient and wait awhile. Such love as you and Clarence felt
in your courtship and early marriage cannot so soon have died. It
is only sleeping, and suffering from a nightmare. Awaken it to life
and reality and happiness.
</p><hr class="c2">
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