<h2><SPAN name="page271"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>ON THE MOTHERLINESS OF MAN</h2>
<p><span class="smcap">It</span> was only a piece of broken
glass. From its shape and colour, I should say it had, in
its happier days, formed portion of a cheap scent-bottle.
Lying isolated on the grass, shone upon by the early morning sun,
it certainly appeared at its best. It attracted him.</p>
<p>He cocked his head, and looked at it with his right eye.
Then he hopped round to the other side, and looked at it with his
left eye. With either optic it seemed equally
desirable.</p>
<p>That he was an inexperienced young rook goes without
saying. An older bird would not have given a second glance
to the thing. Indeed, one would have thought his own
instinct might have told him that broken glass would be a mistake
in a bird’s nest. But its glitter drew him too
strongly for resistance. I am inclined to suspect that at
some time, during the growth of his family tree, there must have
occurred a <i>mésalliance</i>, perhaps worse.
Possibly a strain of magpie blood?—one knows the character
of magpies, or rather their lack of character—and such
things have happened. But I will not pursue further so
painful a train: I throw out the suggestion as a possible
explanation, that is all.</p>
<p>He hopped nearer. Was it a sweet illusion, this flashing
fragment of rainbow; a beautiful vision to fade upon approach,
typical of so much that is un-understandable in rook life?
He made a dart forward and tapped it with his beak. No, it
was real—as fine a lump of jagged green glass as any
newly-married rook could desire, and to be had for the
taking. <i>She</i> would be pleased with it. He was a
well-meaning bird; the mere upward inclination of his tail
suggested earnest though possibly ill-directed endeavour.</p>
<p>He turned it over. It was an awkward thing to carry; it
had so very many corners. But he succeeded at last in
getting it firmly between his beak, and in haste, lest some other
bird should seek to dispute with him its possession, at once flew
off with it.</p>
<p>A second rook who had been watching the proceedings from the
lime tree, called to a third who was passing. Even with my
limited knowledge of the language I found it easy to follow the
conversation: it was so obvious.</p>
<p>“Issachar!”</p>
<p>“Hallo!”</p>
<p>“What do you think? Zebulan’s found a piece
of broken bottle. He’s going to line his nest with
it.”</p>
<p>“No!”</p>
<p>“God’s truth. Look at him. There he
goes, he’s got it in his beak.”</p>
<p>“Well, I’m—!”</p>
<p>And they both burst into a laugh.</p>
<p>But Zebulan heeded them not. If he overheard, he
probably put down the whole dialogue to jealousy. He made
straight for his tree. By standing with my left cheek
pressed close against the window-pane, I was able to follow
him. He is building in what we call the Paddock
elms—a suburb commenced only last season, but rapidly
growing. I wanted to see what his wife would say.</p>
<p>At first she said nothing. He laid it carefully down on
the branch near the half-finished nest, and she stretched up her
head and looked at it.</p>
<p>Then she looked at him. For about a minute neither
spoke. I could see that the situation was becoming
strained. When she did open her beak, it was with a subdued
tone, that had a vein of weariness running through it.</p>
<p>“What is it?” she asked.</p>
<p>He was evidently chilled by her manner. As I have
explained, he is an inexperienced young rook. This is
clearly his first wife, and he stands somewhat in awe of her.</p>
<p>“Well, I don’t exactly know what it’s
<i>called</i>,” he answered.</p>
<p>“Oh.”</p>
<p>“No. But it’s pretty, isn’t it?”
he added. He moved it, trying to get it where the sun might
reach it. It was evident he was admitting to himself that,
seen in the shade, it lost much of its charm.</p>
<p>“Oh, yes; very pretty,” was the rejoinder;
“perhaps you’ll tell me what you’re going to do
with it.”</p>
<p>The question further discomforted him. It was growing
upon him that this thing was not going to be the success he had
anticipated. It would be necessary to proceed warily.</p>
<p>“Of course, it’s not a twig,” he began.</p>
<p>“I see it isn’t.”</p>
<p>“No. You see, the nest is nearly all twigs as it
is, and I thought—”</p>
<p>“Oh, you did think.”</p>
<p>“Yes, my dear. I thought—unless you are of
opinion that it’s too showy—I thought we might work
it in somewhere.”</p>
<p>Then she flared out.</p>
<p>“Oh, did you? You thought that a good idea.
An A1 prize idiot I seem to have married, I do.
You’ve been gone twenty minutes, and you bring me back an
eight-cornered piece of broken glass, which you think we might
‘work into’ the nest. You’d like to see
me sitting on it for a month, you would. You think it would
make a nice bed for the children to lie on. You don’t
think you could manage to find a packet of mixed pins if you went
down again, I suppose. They’d look pretty
‘worked in’ somewhere, don’t you
think?—Here, get out of my way. I’ll finish
this nest by myself.” She always had been short with
him.</p>
<p>She caught up the offending object—it was a fairly heavy
lump of glass—and flung it out of the tree with all her
force. I heard it crash through the cucumber frame.
That makes the seventh pane of glass broken in that cucumber
frame this week. The couple in the branch above are the
worst. Their plan of building is the most extravagant, the
most absurd I ever heard of. They hoist up ten times as
much material as they can possibly use; you might think they were
going to build a block, and let it out in flats to the other
rooks. Then what they don’t want they fling down
again. Suppose we built on such a principle? Suppose
a human husband and wife were to start erecting their house in
Piccadilly Circus, let us say; and suppose the man spent all the
day steadily carrying bricks up the ladder while his wife laid
them, never asking her how many she wanted, whether she
didn’t think he had brought up sufficient, but just
accumulating bricks in a senseless fashion, bringing up every
brick he could find. And then suppose, when evening came,
and looking round, they found they had some twenty cart-loads of
bricks lying unused upon the scaffold, they were to commence
flinging them down into Waterloo Place. They would get
themselves into trouble; somebody would be sure to speak to them
about it. Yet that is precisely what those birds do, and
nobody says a word to them. They are supposed to have a
President. He lives by himself in the yew tree outside the
morning-room window. What I want to know is what he is
supposed to be good for. This is the sort of thing I want
him to look into. I would like him to be worming underneath
one evening when those two birds are tidying up: perhaps he would
do something then. I have done all I can. I have
thrown stones at them, that, in the course of nature, have
returned to earth again, breaking more glass. I have blazed
at them with a revolver; but they have come to regard this
proceeding as a mere expression of light-heartedness on my part,
possibly confusing me with the Arab of the Desert, who, I am
given to understand, expresses himself thus in moments of deep
emotion. They merely retire to a safe distance to watch me;
no doubt regarding me as a poor performer, inasmuch as I do not
also dance and shout between each shot. I have no objection
to their building there, if they only would build sensibly.
I want somebody to speak to them to whom they will pay
attention.</p>
<p>You can hear them in the evening, discussing the matter of
this surplus stock.</p>
<p>“Don’t you work any more,” he says, as he
comes up with the last load, “you’ll tire
yourself.”</p>
<p>“Well, I am feeling a bit done up,” she answers,
as she hops out of the nest and straightens her back.</p>
<p>“You’re a bit peckish, too, I expect,” he
adds sympathetically. “I know I am. We will
have a scratch down, and be off.”</p>
<p>“What about all this stuff?” she asks, while
titivating herself; “we’d better not leave it about,
it looks so untidy.”</p>
<p>“Oh, we’ll soon get rid of that,” he
answers. “I’ll have that down in a
jiffy.”</p>
<p>To help him, she seizes a stick and is about to drop it.
He darts forward and snatches it from her.</p>
<p>“Don’t you waste that one,” he cries,
“that’s a rare one, that is. You see me hit the
old man with it.”</p>
<p>And he does. What the gardener says, I will leave you to
imagine.</p>
<p>Judged from its structure, the rook family is supposed to come
next in intelligence to man himself. Judging from the
intelligence displayed by members of certain human families with
whom I have come in contact, I can quite believe it. That
rooks talk I am positive. No one can spend half-an-hour
watching a rookery without being convinced of this. Whether
the talk be always wise and witty, I am not prepared to maintain;
but that there is a good deal of it is certain. A young
French gentleman of my acquaintance, who visited England to study
the language, told me that the impression made upon him by his
first social evening in London was that of a parrot-house.
Later on, when he came to comprehend, he, of course, recognized
the brilliancy and depth of the average London drawing-room talk;
but that is how, not comprehending, it impressed him at
first. Listening to the riot of a rookery is much the same
experience. The conversation to us sounds meaningless; the
rooks themselves would probably describe it as sparkling.</p>
<p>There is a Misanthrope I know who hardly ever goes into
Society. I argued the question with him one day.
“Why should I?” he replied; “I know, say, a
dozen men and women with whom intercourse is a pleasure; they
have ideas of their own which they are not afraid to voice.
To rub brains with such is a rare and goodly thing, and I thank
Heaven for their friendship; but they are sufficient for my
leisure. What more do I require? What is this
‘Society’ of which you all make so much ado? I
have sampled it, and I find it unsatisfying. Analyze it
into its elements, what is it? Some person I know very
slightly, who knows me very slightly, asks me to what you call an
‘At Home.’ The evening comes, I have done my
day’s work and I have dined. I have been to a theatre
or concert, or I have spent a pleasant hour or so with a
friend. I am more inclined for bed than anything else, but
I pull myself together, dress, and drive to the house.
While I am taking off my hat and coat in the hall, a man enters I
met a few hours ago at the Club. He is a man I have very
little opinion of, and he, probably, takes a similar view of
me. Our minds have no thought in common, but as it is
necessary to talk, I tell him it is a warm evening. Perhaps
it is a warm evening, perhaps it isn’t; in either case he
agrees with me. I ask him if he is going to Ascot. I
do not care a straw whether he is going to Ascot or not. He
says he is not quite sure, but asks me what chance Passion Flower
has for the Thousand Guineas. I know he doesn’t value
my opinion on the subject at a brass farthing—he would be a
fool if he did, but I cudgel my brains to reply to him, as though
he were going to stake his shirt on my advice. We reach the
first floor, and are mutually glad to get rid of one
another. I catch my hostess’ eye. She looks
tired and worried; she would be happier in bed, only she
doesn’t know it. She smiles sweetly, but it is clear
she has not the slightest idea who I am, and is waiting to catch
my name from the butler. I whisper it to him. Perhaps
he will get it right, perhaps he won’t; it is quite
immaterial. They have asked two hundred and forty guests,
some seventy-five of whom they know by sight, for the rest, any
chance passer-by, able, as the theatrical advertisements say,
‘to dress and behave as a gentleman,’ would do every
bit as well. Indeed, I sometimes wonder why people go to
the trouble and expense of invitation cards at all. A
sandwich-man outside the door would answer the purpose.
‘Lady Tompkins, At Home, this afternoon from three to
seven; Tea and Music. Ladies and Gentlemen admitted on
presentation of visiting card. Afternoon dress
indispensable.’ The crowd is the thing wanted; as for
the items, well, tell me, what is the difference, from the
Society point of view, between one man in a black frock-coat and
another?</p>
<p>“I remember being once invited to a party at a house in
Lancaster Gate. I had met the woman at a picnic. In
the same green frock and parasol I might have recognized her the
next time I saw her. In any other clothes I did not expect
to. My cabman took me to the house opposite, where they
were also giving a party. It made no difference to any of
us. The hostess—I never learnt her name—said it
was very good of me to come, and then shunted me off on to a
Colonial Premier (I did not catch his name, and he did not catch
mine, which was not extraordinary, seeing that my hostess did not
know it) who, she whispered to me, had come over, from wherever
it was (she did not seem to be very sure) principally to make my
acquaintance. Half through the evening, and by accident, I
discovered my mistake, but judged it too late to say anything
then. I met a couple of people I knew, had a little supper
with them, and came away. The next afternoon I met my right
hostess—the lady who should have been my hostess. She
thanked me effusively for having sacrificed the previous evening
to her and her friends; she said she knew how seldom I went out:
that made her feel my kindness all the more. She told me
that the Brazilian Minister’s wife had told her that I was
the cleverest man she had ever met. I often think I should
like to meet that man, whoever he may be, and thank him.</p>
<p>“But perhaps the butler does pronounce my name rightly,
and perhaps my hostess actually does recognize me. She
smiles, and says she was so afraid I was not coming. She
implies that all the other guests are but as a feather in her
scales of joy compared with myself. I smile in return,
wondering to myself how I look when I do smile. I have
never had the courage to face my own smile in the
looking-glass. I notice the Society smile of other men, and
it is not reassuring. I murmur something about my not
having been likely to forget this evening; in my turn, seeking to
imply that I have been looking forward to it for weeks. A
few men shine at this sort of thing, but they are a small
percentage, and without conceit I regard myself as no bigger a
fool than the average male. Not knowing what else to say, I
tell her also that it is a warm evening. She smiles archly
as though there were some hidden witticism in the remark, and I
drift away, feeling ashamed of myself. To talk as an idiot
when you <i>are</i> an idiot brings no discomfort; to behave as
an idiot when you have sufficient sense to know it, is
painful. I hide myself in the crowd, and perhaps I’ll
meet a woman I was introduced to three weeks ago at a picture
gallery. We don’t know each other’s names, but,
both of us feeling lonesome, we converse, as it is called.
If she be the ordinary type of woman, she asks me if I am going
on to the Johnsons’. I tell her no. We stand
silent for a moment, both thinking what next to say. She
asks me if I was at the Thompsons’ the day before
yesterday. I again tell her no. I begin to feel
dissatisfied with myself that I was not at the
Thompsons’. Trying to get even with her, I ask her if
she is going to the Browns’ next Monday. (There are
no Browns, she will have to say, No.) She is not, and her
tone suggests that a social stigma rests upon the Browns. I
ask her if she has been to Barnum’s Circus; she
hasn’t, but is going. I give her my impressions of
Barnum’s Circus, which are precisely the impressions of
everybody else who has seen the show.</p>
<p>“Or if luck be against me, she is possibly a smart
woman, that is to say, her conversation is a running fire of
spiteful remarks at the expense of every one she knows, and of
sneers at the expense of every one she doesn’t. I
always feel I could make a better woman myself, out of a bottle
of vinegar and a penn’orth of mixed pins. Yet it
usually takes one about ten minutes to get away from her.</p>
<p>“Even when, by chance, one meets a flesh-and-blood man
or woman at such gatherings, it is not the time or place for real
conversation; and as for the shadows, what person in their senses
would exhaust a single brain cell upon such? I remember a
discussion once concerning Tennyson, considered as a social
item. The dullest and most densely-stupid bore I ever came
across was telling how he had sat next to Tennyson at
dinner. ‘I found him a most uninteresting man,’
so he confided to us; ‘he had nothing to say for
himself—absolutely nothing.’ I should like to
resuscitate Dr. Samuel Johnson for an evening, and throw him into
one of these ‘At Homes’ of yours.”</p>
<p>My friend is an admitted misanthrope, as I have explained; but
one cannot dismiss him as altogether unjust. That there is
a certain mystery about Society’s craving for Society must
be admitted. I stood one evening trying to force my way
into the supper room of a house in Berkeley Square. A lady,
hot and weary, a few yards in front of me was struggling to the
same goal.</p>
<p>“Why,” remarked she to her companion, “why
do we come to these places, and fight like a Bank Holiday crowd
for eighteenpenny-worth of food?”</p>
<p>“We come here,” replied the man, whom I judged to
be a philosopher, “to say we’ve been here.”</p>
<p>I met A— the other evening, and asked him to dine with
me on Monday. I don’t know why I ask A— to dine
with me, but about once a month I do. He is an
uninteresting man.</p>
<p>“I can’t,” he said, “I’ve got to
go to the B—s’; confounded nuisance, it will be
infernally dull.”</p>
<p>“Why go?” I asked.</p>
<p>“I really don’t know,” he replied.</p>
<p>A little later B— met me, and asked me to dine with him
on Monday.</p>
<p>“I can’t,” I answered, “some friends
are coming to us that evening. It’s a duty dinner,
you know the sort of thing.”</p>
<p>“I wish you could have managed it,” he said,
“I shall have no one to talk to. The A—s are
coming, and they bore me to death.”</p>
<p>“Why do you ask him?” I suggested.</p>
<p>“Upon my word, I really don’t know,” he
replied.</p>
<p>But to return to our rooks. We were speaking of their
social instincts. Some dozen of them—the
“scallywags” and bachelors of the community, I judge
them to be—have started a Club. For a month past I
have been trying to understand what the affair was. Now I
know: it is a Club.</p>
<p>And for their Club House they have chosen, of course, the tree
nearest my bedroom window. I can guess how that came about;
it was my own fault, I never thought of it. About two
months ago, a single rook—suffering from indigestion or an
unhappy marriage, I know not—chose this tree one night for
purposes of reflection. He woke me up: I felt angry.
I opened the window, and threw an empty soda-water bottle at
him. Of course it did not hit him, and finding nothing else
to throw, I shouted at him, thinking to frighten him away.
He took no notice, but went on talking to himself. I
shouted louder, and woke up my own dog. The dog barked
furiously, and woke up most things within a quarter of a
mile. I had to go down with a boot-jack—the only
thing I could find handy—to soothe the dog. Two hours
later I fell asleep from exhaustion. I left the rook still
cawing.</p>
<p>The next night he came again. I should say he was a bird
with a sense of humour. Thinking this might happen, I had,
however, taken the precaution to have a few stones ready. I
opened the window wide, and fired them one after another into the
tree. After I had closed the window, he hopped down nearer,
and cawed louder than ever. I think he wanted me to throw
more stones at him: he appeared to regard the whole proceeding as
a game. On the third night, as I heard nothing of him, I
flattered myself that, in spite of his bravado, I had discouraged
him. I might have known rooks better.</p>
<p>What happened when the Club was being formed, I take it, was
this:</p>
<p>“Where shall we fix upon for our Club House?” said
the secretary, all other points having been disposed of.
One suggested this tree, another suggested that. Then up
spoke this particular rook:</p>
<p>“I’ll tell you where,” said he, “in
the yew tree opposite the porch. And I’ll tell you
for why. Just about an hour before dawn a man comes to the
window over the porch, dressed in the most comical costume you
ever set eyes upon. I’ll tell you what he reminds me
of—those little statues that men use for decorating
fields. He opens the window, and throws a lot of things out
upon the lawn, and then he dances and sings. It’s
awfully interesting, and you can see it all from the yew
tree.”</p>
<p>That, I am convinced, is how the Club came to fix upon the
tree next my window. I have had the satisfaction of denying
them the exhibition they anticipated, and I cheer myself with the
hope that they have visited their disappointment upon their
misleader.</p>
<p>There is a difference between Rook Clubs and ours. In
our clubs the respectable members arrive early, and leave at a
reasonable hour; in Rook Clubs, it would appear, this principle
is reversed. The Mad Hatter would have liked this
Club—it would have been a club after his own heart.
It opens at half-past two in the morning, and the first to arrive
are the most disreputable members. In Rook-land the
rowdy-dowdy, randy-dandy, rollicky-ranky boys get up very early
in the morning and go to bed in the afternoon. Towards
dawn, the older, more orderly members drop in for reasonable
talk, and the Club becomes more respectable. The tree
closes about six. For the first two hours, however, the
goings-on are disgraceful. The proceedings, as often as
not, open with a fight. If no two gentlemen can be found to
oblige with a fight, the next noisiest thing to fall back upon is
held to be a song. It is no satisfaction to me to be told
that rooks cannot sing. <i>I</i> know that, without the
trouble of referring to the natural history book. It is the
rook who does not know it; <i>he</i> thinks he can; and as a
matter of fact, he does. You can criticize his singing, you
can call it what you like, but you can’t stop it—at
least, that is my experience. The song selected is sure to
be one with a chorus. Towards the end it becomes mainly
chorus, unless the soloist be an extra powerful bird, determined
to insist upon his rights.</p>
<p>The President knows nothing of this Club. He gets up
himself about seven—three hours after all the others have
finished breakfast—and then fusses round under the
impression that he is waking up the colony, the fat-headed old
fool. He is the poorest thing in Presidents I have ever
heard of. A South American Republic would supply a better
article. The rooks themselves, the married majority,
fathers of families, respectable nestholders, are as indignant as
I am. I hear complaints from all quarters.</p>
<p>Reflection comes to one as, towards the close of these chill
afternoons in early spring, one leans upon the paddock gate
watching the noisy bustling in the bare elms.</p>
<p>So the earth is growing green again, and love is come again
unto the hearts of us old sober-coated fellows. Oh, Madam,
your feathers gleam wondrous black, and your bonnie bright eye
stabs deep. Come, sit by our side, and we’ll tell you
a tale such as rook never told before. It’s the tale
of a nest in a topmost bough, that sways in the good west
wind. It’s strong without, but it’s soft
within, where the little green eggs lie safe. And there
sits in that nest a lady sweet, and she caws with joy, for, afar,
she sees the rook she loves the best. Oh, he has been east,
and he has been west, and his crop it is full of worms and slugs,
and they are all for her.</p>
<p>We are old, old rooks, so many of us. The white is
mingling with the purple black upon our breasts. We have
seen these tall elms grow from saplings; we have seen the old
trees fall and die. Yet each season come to us again the
young thoughts. So we mate and build and gather that again
our old, old hearts may quiver to the thin cry of our
newborn.</p>
<p>Mother Nature has but one care, the children. We talk of
Love as the Lord of Life: it is but the Minister. Our
novels end where Nature’s tale begins. The drama that
our curtain falls upon, is but the prologue to her play.
How the ancient Dame must laugh as she listens to the prattle of
her children. “Is Marriage a Failure?”
“Is Life worth Living?” “The New Woman
<i>versus</i> the Old.” So, perhaps, the waves of the
Atlantic discuss vehemently whether they shall flow east or
west.</p>
<p>Motherhood is the law of the Universe. The whole duty of
man is to be a mother. We labour: to what end? the
children—the woman in the home, the man in the
community. The nation takes thought for its future:
why? In a few years its statesmen, its soldiers, its
merchants, its toilers, will be gathered unto their
fathers. Why trouble we ourselves about the future?
The country pours its blood and treasure into the earth that the
children may reap. Foolish Jacques Bonhomie, his addled
brain full of dreams, rushes with bloody hands to give his blood
for Liberty, Equality, Fraternity. He will not live to see,
except in vision, the new world he gives his bones to
build—even his spinning word-whipped head knows that.
But the children! they shall live sweeter lives. The
peasant leaves his fireside to die upon the battle-field.
What is it to him, a grain in the human sand, that Russia should
conquer the East, that Germany should be united, that the English
flag should wave above new lands? the heritage his fathers left
him shall be greater for his sons. Patriotism! what is it
but the mother instinct of a people?</p>
<p>Take it that the decree has gone forth from Heaven: There
shall be no more generations, with this life the world shall
die. Think you we should move another hand? The ships
would rot in the harbours, the grain would rot in the
ground. Should we paint pictures, write books, make music?
hemmed in by that onward creeping sea of silence. Think you
with what eyes husband and wife would look on one another.
Think you of the wooing—the spring of Love dried up; love
only a pool of stagnant water.</p>
<p>How little we seem to realize this foundation of our
life. Herein, if nowhere else, lies our eternity.
This Ego shall never die—unless the human race from
beginning to end be but a passing jest of the Gods, to be swept
aside when wearied of, leaving room for new experiments.
These features of mine—we will not discuss their
æsthetic value—shall never disappear; modified,
varied, but in essential the same, they shall continue in ever
increasing circles to the end of Time. This temperament of
mine—this good and evil that is in me, it shall grow with
every age, spreading ever wider, combining, amalgamating. I
go into my children and my children’s children, I am
eternal. I am they, they are I. The tree withers and
you clear the ground, thankful if out of its dead limbs you can
make good firewood; but its spirit, its life, is in fifty
saplings. The tree dies not, it changes.</p>
<p>These men and women that pass me in the street, this one
hurrying to his office, this one to his club, another to his
love, they are the mothers of the world to come.</p>
<p>This greedy trickster in stocks and shares, he cheats, he
lies, he wrongs all men—for what? Follow him to his
luxurious home in the suburbs: what do you find? A man with
children on his knee, telling them stories, promising them
toys. His anxious, sordid life, for what object is it
lived? That these children may possess the things that he
thinks good for them. Our very vices, side by side with our
virtues, spring from this one root, Motherhood. It is the
one seed of the Universe. The planets are but children of
the sun, the moon but an offspring of the earth, stone of her
stone, iron of her iron. What is the Great Centre of us
all, life animate and inanimate—if any life <i>be</i>
inanimate? Is the eternal universe one dim figure,
Motherhood, filling all space?</p>
<p>This scheming Mother of Mayfair, angling for a rich
son-in-law! Not a pleasing portrait to look upon, from one
point of view. Let us look at it, for a moment, from
another. How weary she must be! This is her third
“function” to-night; the paint is running off her
poor face. She has been snubbed a dozen times by her social
superiors, openly insulted by a Duchess; yet she bears it with a
patient smile. It is a pitiful ambition, hers: it is that
her child shall marry money, shall have carriages and many
servants, live in Park Lane, wear diamonds, see her name in the
Society Papers. At whatever cost to herself, her daughter
shall, if possible, enjoy these things. She could so much
more comfortably go to bed, and leave the child to marry some
well-to-do commercial traveller. Justice, Reader, even for
such. Her sordid scheming is but the deformed child of
Motherhood.</p>
<p>Motherhood! it is the gamut of God’s orchestra,
savageness and cruelty at the one end, tenderness and
self-sacrifice at the other.</p>
<p>The sparrow-hawk fights the hen: he seeking food for his
brood, she defending hers with her life. The spider sucks
the fly to feed its myriad young; the cat tortures the mouse to
give its still throbbing carcase to her kittens, and man wrongs
man for children’s sake. Perhaps when the riot of the
world reaches us whole, not broken, we shall learn it is a
harmony, each jangling discord fallen into its place around the
central theme, Motherhood.</p>
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