It has now done all the damage it can, and might as well be put out
of commission. Yet with comical imbecility it is continued, and the four
remaining estates are put under its crushing ban. Poor old wrecks, they
couldn't disobey if they tried. And think -- because they holily refrain
from adulterating each other, they get praise for it! Which is nonsense;
for even the Bible knows enough to know that if the oldest veteran there
could get his lost heyday back again for an hour he would cast that commandment
to the winds and ruin the first woman he came across, even though she were
an entire stranger.
It is as I have said: every statute in the Bible and in the law-books
is an attempt to defeat a law of God -- in other words an unalterable and
indestructible law of nature. These people's God has shown them by a million
acts that he respects none of the Bible's statutes. He breaks every one
of the himself, adultery and all.
The law of God, as quite plainly expressed in woman's construction is
this: There shall be no limit put upon your intercourse with the other
sex sexually, at any time of life.
The law of God, as quite plainly expressed in man's construction is
this: During your entire life you shall be under inflexible limits and
restrictions, sexually.
During twenty-three days in every month (in absence of pregnancy)
from the time a woman is seven years old till she dies of old age, she
is ready for action, and competent. As competent as the candlestick
is to receive the candle. Competent every day, competent every night. Also
she wants that candle -- yearns for it, longs for it, hankers after
it, as commanded by the law of God in her heart.
But man is only briefly competent; and only then in the moderate measure
applicable to the word in his sex's case. He is competent from the
age of sixteen or seventeen thence-forward for thirty-five years.
After fifty his performance is of poor quality, the intervals between are
wide, and its satisfactions of no great value to either party; whereas
his great-grandmother is as good as new. There is nothing the matter
with her plant. Her candlestick is as firm as ever, whereas his candle
is increasingly softened and weakened by the weather of age, as the years
go by, until at last it can no longer stand, and is mournfully laid to
rest in the hope of a blessed resurrection which is never to come.
By the woman's make, her plant has to be out of service three days in
the month, and during a part of her pregnancy. These are times of discomfort,
often of suffering. For fair and just compensation she has the high privilege
of unlimited adultery all the other days of her life.
That is the law of God, as revealed in her
make. What becomes of this high privilege? Does she live in free enjoyment
of it? No. Nowhere in the whole world. She is robbed of it everywhere.
Who does this? Man. Man's statutes -- if the Bible is the Word of
God.
Now there you have a sample of man's "reasoning powers," as
he calls them. He observes certain facts. For instance, that in all his
life he never sees the day that he can satisfy one woman; also, that no
woman ever sees the day that she can't overwork, and defeat, and put out
of commission any ten masculine plants that can be put to bed to her.[**]
He puts those strikingly suggestive and luminous facts together, and from
them draws this astonishing conclusion: The Creator intended the woman
to be restricted to one man.
So he concretes that singular conclusion into law, for good and
all.
And he does it without consulting the woman, although she has a thousand
times more at stake in the matter than he has. His procreative competency
is limited to an average of a hundred exercises per year for fifty years,
hers is good for three thousand a year for that whole time -- and as many
years longer as she may live.
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