respect must be the foundation on which the ideal married state is

built. The husband should realize that his wife's love for him induces

her to allow privileges of a personal nature which her innate chastity

and timidity might otherwise refuse. In return, he should accept these

privileges with consideration. He should, in particular, on his

wedding night, take care not to shock his young bride's sensibilities.

He may easily give her a shock from which she will not recover for

years, and lead her to form an antipathy against the very act which is

"the bond and seal of a truly happy married life."

BIRTH CONTROL

Material changes have taken place in the birth-rate of a number of

countries during the past fifteen or twenty years which cannot be

attributed to purely economic causes. They do not seem to depend on

such things as trade, employment and prices; but on the spread of an

idea or influence whose tendency must be deplored, that of "birth

control," a phrase much heard in these days.

The fact that a decline in human fertility and a falling birth rate

are most noticeable in the relatively prosperous countries is a proof

that it does not proceed from economic causes; but is due rather to

the spread of the doctrine that it is permissible to restrict or

control birth. In such countries as the United States, England and

Australasia, where the standards of human comfort and living are

notoriously high, the decline in the birth rate has been most

noticeable. On the other hand, we find perhaps the greatest decline in

the birth rate in France, a country where the general well-being

probably reaches a lower depth in the community than in any other part

of Europe. A comparison of the birth rates of France and of Ireland,

for example, offer a valuable illustration of the point under

consideration. In France, more than half the women who have reached

the age of nubility are married; in Ireland, generally speaking, less

than a third. In both countries the crude birth rate is far below that

in other European lands. Yet the fertility of the Irish wife exceeded

that of her French compeer by 44 per cent in 1880, and by no less than

84 per cent in 1900. And since that time the prolificity of the Irish

mother has so increased that she is now, approximately speaking,

inferior only to the Dutch or Finnish mother in this respect.




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