LOVE LIKE ELECTRICITY
Among all the inherent properties of mankind, none is more
important than that of love; and no one more clearly evinces
the wisdom and benevolence of his Creator. Love, in its
primary sense, to which it will be restricted in this treatise, is
the mutual attraction of the two sexes. It exists in all
persons, either as a sensibility or a passion. It is a
sensibility when in a state of rest, or when exercised
towards the whole of the opposite sex indiscriminately; but
it is a passion when strongly excited and when excercised
towards particular individuals. And it is as truly and
fundamentally a law of human nature as electricity is of
material nature, - to which it bears a curious analogy. We
can scarcely reason with more certainty upon
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the laws of electricity then upon those of love, for we have
the assistance of consciousness in one case which we want in
the other. But note the analogy: it has been demonstrated
that all bodies possess electricity in a greater or less
degree; and that some are positive when compared with others,
and some are negative. They are usually at rest; but when
two bodies of different electrical states approach each
other, they at once become highly excited, and continue so
till brought in contact with each other, when the positive
charges or impregnates the negative. So it is found that
love exists in different states in the two sexes, and in
different degrees of intensity in different individuals of
the same sex. Males are positive, and females negative; and
while the latter differ less from each other than the former
do, being nearly all of them susceptible to the proper
proposals of genuine love, yet they are not so much affected
by spontaneous passion as the former are, who usually
experience it with great intensity, and are impelled to make
the first advances. But there are always some individuals
among them who need a great deal of encouragement before they
will advance
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and propose; and others who are almost destitute of the
common sensibility of love, and who will neither make
proposals nor receive them.
LOVE REFINES AND ENNOBLES
Love sheds on earth something of the beauty and the light of
heaven. Love develops the noblest traits of humanity; and
often brings them out from those persons who had given little
promise of possessing them, until they were brought under the
influence of this master passion. There is nothing so great,
so difficult, or so self-sacrificing that love will not
inspire men to dare and to do. But it is not more in
splendid achievements or wonderful adventures, than it is in
the innumerable little things, which conspire to make up the
happiness of social life, that the greatest victories of love
are won. We cannot love any person, without seeking his or
her benefit; and in endeavoring to benefit and please the
object of our affection, we are impelled to improve and
beautify ourselves, in order to become more worthy of our
beloved one's affection in return. And this leads us not
only to adorn our persons but to polish our manners and
cultivate our minds.
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Hence, we are deeply indebted to this sentiment for those
qualities of mind and person which combine to constitute us
social beings; since it does not more certainly impel us to
the acquisition of what is beautiful and becoming in dress
and deportment, than to the attainment of intelligence and
politeness, and to surround ourselves with all the
embellishments of civilization. Love refines all that it
touches. Under its influence the rough boy becomes the
respectful young gentleman, and the awkward girl assumes the
innate refinement of the lady. Love paints the cheek with
roses, adds new lustre and intelligence to the eye, imparts
strength and elasticity to the step, grace and dignity to the
mien, courage to the heart, eloquence to the tongue, and
poetry to every thought. In fact, love is at once the poetry
of life, and the life of poetry. Love has inspired, in every
age, the brightest dreams of fancy and the noblest
conceptions of literature and of art, constituting the
perpetual theme which animates the writer's pen and tunes the
poet's lyre. Love reposes in the sculptor's marble; love
blushes upon the painter's canvas. And all these various
embodiments of
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love by literature and art are universally appreciated and
admired; for the pen, the chisel, and the pencil have only
given expression to the general sentiment of mankind. The
poet and the artist have only wrought out what every one else
had already thought: and have only given speech, form, and
color to the silent, shadowy images of the common heart of
man.
LOVE INHERENT TO ALL
That the language of love is universally understood, and
that its varied delineations by the inspiration of art are
always and everywhere delightfully recognized, is sufficient
proof that the sentiment is universally experienced. It is
not confined to the gifted, the highborn, or the rich, nor is
it peculiar to any period of the world, or to any condition
of life. All have possessed the sensibility, if they have
not experienced the passion; they have felt the want of love,
if they have not enjoyed its fruition.
It is our birthright. We have no sooner passed the period of
adolescence than we inherit the power and the inclination to
love. We then feel an
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instinctive yearning of the heart for a kindred heart. We
are each of us conscious of being incomplete alone, and
incapable of enjoying alone our fullest happiness, and we
intuitively seek that happiness by linking our destiny in
life with some dear one of the opposite sex. It is there only
that our natural wants can be supplied. One sex is the
complement of the other. Each is imperfect alone, and each
supplies what the other lacks. Self-reliant as man may
suppose himself to be, yet divine wisdom has said, "It is not
good for the man to be alone;" he needs a "helpmeet" in
woman. Still less is it good for the woman to be alone, for
"she was created for the man," and every woman wants a man to
love; for love is her life, and it is only while she loves,
or hopes to love, that she lives to any happy or useful or
honest purpose. It has been said that as woman was taken out
of man in her creation, so it is man's instinctive desire to
seek her and to reclaim her as his own counterpart, or that
portion of himself which is required to complete the symmetry
of his nature and the happiness of his life. For this love
the youthful heart longs and pines until it attains the
object of its desires, or
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until it has become so sordid, so hard, and so profligate,
as to be, at once, unworthy of possessing it, and incapable
of enjoying it. This susceptibility of the youthful heart
has been faithfully portrayed by a youthful poet, in the
following lines, which are at once recognized, as expressing
the common sentiment of humanity:
"It is not that my lot is low,
That bids the silent tear to flow,
It is not grief that bids me moan,
It is that I am all alone.
In the woods and glens I love to roam,
When the tired hedger hies him home;
Or by the woodland pool to rest,
When pale the star looks on its breast.
Yet when the silent evening sighs,
With hallowed airs and symphonies,
My spirit takes another tone,
And sighs that it is all alone.
The woods and winds with sudden wail
Tell all the same unvaried tale;
I've none to smile when I am free,
And when I sigh, to sigh with me.
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Yet in my dreams a form I view,
That thinks on me and loves me too;
I start! and when the vision's flown,
I weep that I am all alone."
H. K. WHITE
Another poet has expressed the same sentiment in the
following impassioned lines: -
"Give me but
Something whereunto I may bind my heart;
Something to love, to cherish, and to clasp
Affection's tendrils round."
Now, if any one should be inclined to call all this but
love-sick sentimentality, unworthy our serious consideration,
I shall only answer him in the words of Dr. Johnson, the
English moralist: "We must not ridicule the passion of love,
which he who never felt, never was happy; and he who laughs
at never deserves to feel, - a passion which has inspired
heroism, and subdued avarice; a passion which has caused the
change of empires, and the loss of worlds."
Shall these heaven-born impulses of nature be regarded, or
must they be repressed? Shall we
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permit these tendrils of our love to bind themselves around
some kindred heart, or shall we suffer them to be rudely torn
asunder, and cast aside to wither and decay? Implanted for
the noblest purposes within our breasts, interwoven with the
very fibres of our being, the laws of God and of nature
unquestionably demand their indulgence.
LOVE IS THE RIGHT OF ALL
In plainer terms, the laws of God and of nature clearly
indicate that every man and every woman, possessing
sufficient health and vitality to experience the passion of
love, is benefited by its proper gratification; and those
laws both allow and invite every one to enjoy it in its full
fruition. A man is not wholly a man, nor a woman wholly a
woman, who has never experienced the ecstasies of gratified
love. And those men and women who are spending their most
vigorous period of life in cold and barren celibacy, without
ever having yielded to the warm desires or reproduction, are
living, every moment, in debt to their Creator and to the
commonwealth of mankind. They have never fulfilled some of
the most important purposes of their being.
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"Torches are made to light, jewels to wear,
Dainties to taste, fresh beauty for the use,
Herbs for their smell, and sappy plants to bear;
Things growing to themselves are growth's abuse:
Seeds spring from seeds, and beauty breedeth beauty,
Thou wast begot - to get it is thy duty.
Upon the earth's increase why shouldst thou feed,
Unless the earth with thy increase be fed?
By law of Nature thou art bound to breed,
That thine may live, when thou thyself art dead;
And so in spite of death thou dost survive,
In that thy likeness still is left alive."
SHAKESPEARE (Venus and Adonis)
LOVE MUST BE RESTRICTED WITHIN THE LIMITS OF CHASTITY
Yet men and women must not rush into sensual pleasure like
brutes, for we are moral beings, as well as corporeal beings,
and, as such, the subjects of moral law, which requires us to
govern our passions, and circumscribe them within the limits
of purity. But, even in this respect, there is no real
disagreement between the laws of morality and those of
Nature: when they are properly understood, they are each
equally explicit in forbidding every form of licentious
impurity. The most
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loathsome and incurable diseases are the penalties imposed by
natural law, and the severest retributions of eternity, the
penalties imposed by divine law, upon the promiscuous and
unrestrained indulgence of the amorous propensity. Nor are
these penalties unnecessary. No passion of our nature is
more vehement, and no one more liable to be tempted and led
astray from the path of rectitude; and we should, therefore,
attend the more carefully to those laws and limitations which
God and Nature have imposed upon its indulgence. And I
cannot doubt that they have limited its indulgence strictly
to the marriage relation. Some well-defined limit there must
be between chastity and unchastity, and vice and virtue, or
else the laws which define them and which punish transgressors
must be unjust and oppressive.
MARRIAGE CONSTITUTES THAT LIMIT
Here there is no oppression and no injustice. Everybody is
born with a propensity to love, and everybody that is
willing to marry may marry, and indulge that propensity in
innocence and purity. Within this limit the gratification of
love affords
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us the most exquisite pleasure, promotes health, conduces to
longevity, and is entirely consistent with the rules of
morality and religion. But when it oversteps this limit
prescribed by our Creator, and bursts the barriers of
chastity, it then assumes the form of unprincipled lust, and
inflicts upon its miserable votaries the utmost torture of
body, degradation of mind, and remorse of conscience.
"Marriage is honorable in all, and the bed undefiled; but
whoremongers and adulterers God will judge." - Heb. xiii. 4.
"Hail wedded love, mysterious law, true source
Of human offspring, sole propriety,
In Paradise, of all things common else.
By these adulterous lust was driven from man,
Among the bestial herd to range; by thee
Founded in reason, loyal, just, and pure
Relations dear and all the charities
Of father, son, and brother first were known.
Far be it, that I should write thee sin or blame;
Or think thee unbefitting holiest place;
Perpetual fountain of domestic sweets,
Whose bed is undefiled and chaste pronounced,
Present or past, as saints and patriarchs used.
Here Love his golden shafts employs, here lights
His constant lamp, and waves his purple wings."
PARADISE LOST, BOOK iv.
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