<h2><SPAN name="page238"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>WHY DIDN’T HE MARRY THE GIRL?</h2>
<p><span class="smcap">What</span> is wrong with marriage,
anyhow? I find myself pondering this question so often,
when reading high-class literature. I put it to myself
again the other evening, during a performance of Faust. Why
could not Faust have married the girl? I would not have
married her myself for any consideration whatsoever; but that is
not the argument. Faust, apparently, could not see anything
amiss with her. Both of them were mad about each
other. Yet the idea of a quiet, unostentatious marriage
with a week’s honeymoon, say, in Vienna, followed by a neat
little cottage <i>orné</i>, not too far from
Nürnberg, so that their friends could have come out to them,
never seems to have occurred to either of them.</p>
<p>There could have been a garden. Marguerite might have
kept chickens and a cow. That sort of girl, brought up to
hard work and by no means too well educated, is all the better
for having something to do. Later, with the gradual arrival
of the family, a good, all-round woman might have been hired in
to assist. Faust, of course, would have had his study and
got to work again; that would have kept him out of further
mischief. The idea that a brainy man, his age, was going to
be happy with nothing to do all day but fool round a petticoat
was ridiculous from the beginning. Valentine—a good
fellow, Valentine, with nice ideas—would have spent his
Saturdays to Monday with them. Over a pipe and a glass of
wine, he and Faust would have discussed the local politics.</p>
<p>He would have danced the children on his knee, have told them
tales about the war—taught the eldest boy to shoot.
Faust, with a practical man like Valentine to help him, would
probably have invented a new gun. Valentine would have got
it taken up.</p>
<p>Things might have come of it. Sybil, in course of time,
would have married and settled down—perhaps have taken a
little house near to them. He and Marguerite would have
joked—when Mrs. Sybil was not around—about his early
infatuation. The old mother would have toddled over from
Nürnberg—not too often, just for the day.</p>
<p>The picture grows upon one the more one thinks of it.
Why did it never occur to them? There would have been a bit
of a bother with the Old Man. I can imagine Mephistopheles
being upset about it, thinking himself swindled. Of course,
if that was the reason—if Faust said to himself:</p>
<p>“I should like to marry the girl, but I won’t do
it; it would not be fair to the Old Man; he has been to a lot of
trouble working this thing up; in common gratitude I cannot turn
round now and behave like a decent, sensible man; it would not be
playing the game”—if this was the way Faust looked at
the matter there is nothing more to be said. Indeed, it
shows him in rather a fine light—noble, if quixotic.</p>
<p>If, on the other hand, he looked at the question from the
point of view of himself and the girl, I think the thing might
have been managed. All one had to do in those days when one
wanted to get rid of the Devil was to show him a sword
hilt. Faust and Marguerite could have slipped into a church
one morning, and have kept him out of the way with a sword hilt
till the ceremony was through. They might have hired a
small boy:</p>
<p>“You see the gentleman in red? Well, he wants us
and we don’t want him. That is the only difference
between us. Now, you take this sword, and when you see him
coming show him the hilt. Don’t hurt him; just show
him the sword and shake your head. He will
understand.”</p>
<p>The old gentleman’s expression, when subsequently Faust
presented him to Marguerite, would have been interesting:</p>
<p>“Allow me, my wife. My dear, a—a friend of
mine. You may remember meeting him that night at your
aunt’s.”</p>
<p>As I have said, there would have been ructions; but I do not
myself see what could have been done. There was nothing in
the bond to the effect that Faust should not marry, so far as we
are told. The Old Man had a sense of humour. My own
opinion is that, after getting over the first annoyance, he
himself would have seen the joke. I can even picture him
looking in now and again on Mr. and Mrs. Faust. The
children would be hurried off to bed. There would be, for a
while, an atmosphere of constraint.</p>
<p>But the Old Man had a way with him. He would have told
one or two stories at which Marguerite would have blushed, at
which Faust would have grinned. I can see the old fellow
occasionally joining the homely social board. The children,
awed at first, would have sat silent, with staring eyes.
But, as I have said, the Old Man had a way with him. Why
should he not have reformed? The good woman’s
unconsciously exerted influence—the sweet childish
prattle! One hears of such things. Might he not have
come to be known as “Nunkie”?</p>
<p>Myself—I believe I have already mentioned it—I
would not have married Marguerite. She is not my ideal of a
good girl. I never liked the way she deceived her
mother. And that aunt of hers! Well, a nice girl
would not have been friends with such a woman. She did not
behave at all too well to Sybil, either. It is clear to me
that she led the boy on. And what was she doing with that
box of jewels, anyhow? She was not a fool. She could
not have gone every day to that fountain, chatted with those girl
friends of hers, and learnt nothing. She must have known
that people don’t go leaving twenty thousand pounds’
worth of jewels about on doorsteps as part of a round game.
Her own instinct, if she had been a good girl, would have told
her to leave the thing alone.</p>
<p>I don’t believe in these innocent people who do not know
what they are doing half their time. Ask any London
magistrate what he thinks of the lady who explains that she
picked up the diamond brooch:—</p>
<p>“Not meaning, of course, your Worship, to take it.
I would not do such a thing. It just happened this way,
your Worship. I was standing as you might say here, and not
seeing anyone about in the shop I opened the case and took it
out, thinking as perhaps it might belong to someone; and then
this gentleman here, as I had not noticed before, comes up quite
suddenly and says; ‘You come along with me,’ he
says. ‘What for,’ I says, ‘when I
don’t even know you?’ I says. ‘For
stealing,’ he says. ‘Well, that’s a hard
word to use to a lady,’ I says; ‘I don’t know
what you mean, I’m sure.’”</p>
<p>And if she had put them all on, not thinking, what would a
really nice girl have done when the gentleman came up and assured
her they were hers? She would have been thirty seconds
taking them off and flinging them back into the box.</p>
<p>“Thank you,” she would have said,
“I’ll trouble you to leave this garden as quickly as
you entered it and take them with you. I’m not that
sort of girl.”</p>
<p>Marguerite clings to the jewels, and accepts the young
man’s arm for a moonlight promenade. And when it does
enter into her innocent head that he and she have walked that
shady garden long enough, what does she do when she has said
good-bye and shut the door? She opens the ground-floor
window and begins to sing!</p>
<p>Maybe I am not poetical, but I do like justice. When
other girls do these sort of things they get called names.
I cannot see why this particular girl should be held up as an
ideal. She kills her mother. According to her own
account this was an accident. It is not an original line of
defence, and we are not allowed to hear the evidence for the
prosecution. She also kills her baby. You are not to
blame her for that, because at the time she was feeling
poorly. I don’t see why this girl should have a
special line of angels to take her up to heaven. There must
have been decent, hard-working women in Nürnburg more
entitled to the ticket.</p>
<p>Why is it that all these years we have been content to accept
Marguerite as a type of innocence and virtue? The
explanation is, I suppose, that Goethe wrote at a time when it
was the convention to regard all women as good. Anything in
petticoats was virtuous. If she did wrong it was always
somebody else’s fault. <i>Cherchez la femme</i> was a
later notion. In the days of Goethe it was always
<i>Cherchez l’homme</i>. It was the man’s
fault. It was the devil’s fault. It was
anybody’s fault you liked, but not her’s.</p>
<p>The convention has not yet died out. I was reading the
other day a most interesting book by a brilliant American
authoress. Seeing I live far away from the lady’s
haunts, I venture to mention names. I am speaking of
“Patience Sparhawk,” by Gertrude Atherton. I
take this book because it is typical of a large body of
fiction. Miss Sparhawk lives a troubled life: it puzzles
her. She asks herself what is wrong. Her own idea is
that it is civilisation.</p>
<p>If it is not civilisation, then it is the American man or
Nature—or Democracy. Miss Sparhawk marries the wrong
man. Later on she gets engaged to another wrong man.
In the end we are left to believe she is about to be married to
the right man. I should be better satisfied if I could hear
Miss Sparhawk talking six months after that last marriage.
But if a mistake has again been made I am confident that, in Miss
Sparhawk’s opinion, the fault will not be Miss
Sparhawk’s. The argument is always the same: Miss
Sparhawk, being a lady, can do no wrong.</p>
<p>If Miss Sparhawk cared to listen to me for five minutes, I
feel I could put her right on this point.</p>
<p>“It is quite true, my dear girl,” I should say to
her, “something is wrong—very wrong. But it is
not the American man. Never you mind the American man: you
leave him to worry out his own salvation. You are not the
girl to put him right, even where he is wrong. And it is
not civilisation. Civilisation has a deal to answer for, I
admit: don’t you load it up with this additional
trouble. The thing that is wrong in this case of
yours—if you will forgive my saying so—is you.
You make a fool of yourself; you marry a man who is a mere animal
because he appeals to your animal instincts. Then, like the
lady who cried out ‘Alack, I’ve married a
black,’ you appeal to heaven against the injustice of being
mated with a clown. You are not a nice girl, either in your
ideas or in your behaviour. I don’t blame you for it;
you did not make yourself. But when you set to work to
attract all that is lowest in man, why be so astonished at your
own success? There are plenty of shocking American men, I
agree. One meets the class even outside America. But
nice American girls will tell you that there are also nice
American men. There is an old proverb about birds of a
feather. Next time you find yourself in the company of a
shocking American man, you just ask yourself how he got there,
and how it is he seems to be feeling at home. You learn
self-control. Get it out of your head that you are the
centre of the universe, and grasp the idea that a petticoat is
not a halo, and you will find civilisation not half as wrong as
you thought it.”</p>
<p>I know what Miss Sparhawk’s reply would be.</p>
<p>“You say all this to me—to me, a lady? Great
Heavens! What has become of chivalry?”</p>
<p>A Frenchman was once put on trial for murdering his father and
mother. He confessed his guilt, but begged for mercy on the
plea that he was an orphan. Chivalry was founded on the
assumption that woman was worthy to be worshipped. The
modern woman’s notion is that when she does wrong she ought
to be excused by chivalrous man because she is a lady.</p>
<p>I like the naughty heroine; we all of us do. The early
Victorian heroine—the angel in a white frock, was a
bore. We knew exactly what she was going to do—the
right thing. We did not even have to ask ourselves,
“What will she think is the right thing to do under the
circumstances?” It was always the conventional right
thing. You could have put it to a Sunday school and have
got the answer every time. The heroine with passions,
instincts, emotions, is to be welcomed. But I want her to
grasp the fact that after all she is only one of us. I
should like her better if, instead of demanding:</p>
<p>“What is wrong in civilisation? What is the world
coming to?” and so forth, she would occasionally say to
herself:</p>
<p>“Guess I’ve made a fool of myself this time.
I do feel that ’shamed of myself.”</p>
<p>She would not lose by it. We should respect her all the
more.</p>
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