II.
Modesty an Agglomeration of Fears--Children in Relation
to Modesty--Modesty in Animals--The Attitude of the Medicean
Venus--The Sexual Factor of Modesty Based on Sexual Periodicity
and on the Primitive Phenomena of Courtship--The Necessity
of Seclusion in Primitive Sexual Intercourse--The Meaning
of Coquetry--The Sexual Charm of Modesty--Modesty as an
Expression of Feminine Erotic Impulse--The Fear of Causing
Disgust as a Factor of Modesty--The Modesty of Savages
in Regard to Eating in the Presence of Others--The Sacro-Pubic
Region as a Focus of Disgust--The Idea of Ceremonial Uncleanliness--The
Custom of Veiling the Face--Ornaments and Clothing--Modesty
Becomes Concentrated in the Garment--The Economic Factor
in Modesty--The Contribution of Civilization to Modesty--The
Elaboration of Social Ritual.
That modesty--like all the closely-allied emotions--is
based on fear, one of the most primitive of the emotions,
seems to be fairly evident.[4] The association of modesty
and fear is even a very ancient observation, and is found
in the fragments of Epicharmus, while according to one
of the most recent definitions, "modesty is the timidity
of the body." Modesty is, indeed, an agglomeration
of fears, especially, as I hope to show, of two important
and distinct fears: one of much earlier than human origin,
and supplied solely by the female; the other of more distinctly
human character, and of social, rather than sexual, origin.
A child left to itself, though very bashful, is wholly
devoid of modesty.[5] Everyone is familiar with the shocking
_inconvenances_ of children in speech and act, with the
charming ways in which they innocently disregard the conventions
of modesty their elders thrust upon them, or, even when
anxious to carry them out, wholly miss the point at issue:
as when a child thinks that to put a little garment round
the neck satisfies the demands of modesty. Julius Moses
states that modesty in the uncovering of the sexual parts
begins about the age of four. But in cases when this occurs
it is difficult to exclude teaching and example. Under
civilized conditions the convention of modesty long precedes
its real development. Bell has found that in love affairs
before the age of nine the girl is more aggressive than
the boy and that at that age she begins to be modest.[6]
It may fairly be said that complete development of modesty
only takes place at the advent of puberty.[7] We may admit,
with Perez, one of the very few writers who touch on the
evolution of this emotion, that modesty may appear at
a very early age if sexual desire appears early.[8] We
should not, however, be justified in asserting that on
this account modesty is a purely sexual phenomenon. The
social impulses also develop about puberty, and to that
coincidence the compound nature of the emotion of modesty
may well be largely due.
The sexual factor is, however, the simplest and most primitive
element of modesty, and may, therefore, be mentioned first.
Anyone who watches a bitch, not in heat, when approached
by a dog with tail wagging gallantly, may see the beginnings
of modesty. When the dog's attentions become a little
too marked, the bitch squats firmly down on the front
legs and hind quarters though when the period of oestrus
comes her modesty may be flung to the air and she eagerly
turns her hind quarters to her admirer's nose and elevates
her tail high in the air. Her attitude of refusal is equivalent,
that is to say, to that which in the human race is typified
by the classical example of womanly modesty in the Medicean
Venus, who withdraws the pelvis, at the same time holding
one hand to guard the pubes, the other to guard the breasts.[9]
The essential expression in each case is that of defence
of the sexual centers against the undesired advances of
the male.[10]
Stratz, who criticizes the above statement, argues (with
photographs of nude women in illustration) that the normal
type of European surprised modesty is shown by an attitude
in which the arms are crossed over the breast, the most
sexually attractive region, while the thighs are pressed
together, one being placed before the other, the shoulder
raised and the back slightly curved; occasionally, he
adds, the hands may be used to cover the face, and then
the crossed arms conceal the breasts. The Medicean Venus,
he remarks, is only a pretty woman coquetting with her
body. Canova's Venus in the Pitti (who has drapery in
front of her, and presses her arms across her breast)
being a more accurate rendering of the attitude of modesty.
But Stratz admits that when a surprised woman is gazed
at for some time, she turns her head away, sinks or closes
her eyes, and covers her pubes (or any other part she
thinks is being gazed at) with one hand, while with the
other she hides her breast or face. This he terms the
secondary expression of modesty. (Stratz, _Die Frauenkleidung_,
third ed., p. 23.)
It is certainly true that the Medicean Venus merely represents
an artistic convention, a generalized tradition, not founded
on exact and precise observation of the gestures of modesty,
and it is equally true that all the instinctive movements
noted by Stratz are commonly resorted to by a woman whose
nakedness is surprised. But in the absence of any series
of carefully recorded observations, one may doubt whether
the distinction drawn by Stratz between the primary and
the secondary expression of modesty can be upheld as the
general rule, while it is most certainly not true for
every case. When a young woman is surprised in a state
of nakedness by a person of the opposite, or even of the
same, sex, it is her instinct to conceal the primary centers
of sexual function and attractiveness, in the first place,
the pubes, in the second place the breasts. The exact
attitude and the particular gestures of the hands in achieving
the desired end vary with the individual, and with the
circumstances. The hand may not be used at all as a veil,
and, indeed, the instinct of modesty itself may inhibit
the use of the hand for the protection of modesty (to
turn the back towards the beholder is often the chief
impulse of blushing modesty, even when clothed), but the
application of the hand to this end is primitive and natural.
The lowly Fuegian woman, depicted by Hyades and Deniker,
who holds her hand to her pubes while being photographed,
is one at this point with the Roman Venus described by
Ovid (_Ars Amatoria_, Book II):--
"Ipsa Venus pubem, quoties velamnia ponit, Protegitur
laeva semireducta manus."
It may be added that young men of the lower social classes,
at all events in England, when bathing at the seaside
in complete nudity, commonly grasp the sexual organs with
one hand, for concealment, as they walk up from the sea.
The sexual modesty of the female animal is rooted in the
sexual periodicity of the female, and is an involuntary
expression of the organic fact that the time for love
is not now. Inasmuch as this fact is true of the greater
part of the lives of all female animals below man, the
expression itself becomes so habitual that it even intrudes
at those moments when it has ceased to be in place. We
may see this again illustrated in the bitch, who, when
in heat, herself runs after the male, and again turns
to flee, perhaps only submitting with much persuasion
to his embrace. Thus, modesty becomes something more than
a mere refusal of the male; it becomes an invitation to
the male, and is mixed up with his ideas of what is sexually
desirable in the female. This would alone serve to account
for the existence of modesty as a psychical secondary
sexual character. In this sense, and in this sense only,
we may say, with Colin Scott, that "the feeling of
shame is made to be overcome," and is thus correlated
with its physical representative, the hymen, in the rupture
of which, as Groos remarks, there is, in some degree,
a disruption also of modesty. The sexual modesty of the
female is thus an inevitable by-product of the naturally
aggressive attitude of the male in sexual relationships,
and the naturally defensive attitude of the female, this
again being founded on the fact that, while--in man and
the species allied to him--the sexual function in the
female is periodic, and during most of life a function
to be guarded from the opposite sex, in the male it rarely
or never needs to be so guarded.[11]
Both male and female, however, need to guard themselves
during the exercise of their sexual activities from jealous
rivals, as well as from enemies who might take advantage
of their position to attack them. It is highly probable
that this is one important sexual factor in the constitution
of modesty, and it helps to explain how the male, not
less than the female, cultivates modesty, and shuns publicity,
in the exercise of sexual functions. Northcote has especially
emphasized this element in modesty, as originating in
the fear of rivals. "That from this seeking after
secrecy from motives of fear should arise an instinctive
feeling that the sexual act must always be hidden, is
a natural enough sequence. And since it is not a long
step between thinking of an act as needing concealment
and thinking of it as wrong, it is easily conceivable
that sexual intercourse comes to be regarded as a stolen
and therefore, in some degree, a sinful pleasure."[12]
Animals in a state of nature usually appear to seek seclusion
for sexual intercourse, although this instinct is lost
under domestication. Even the lowest savages, also, if
uncorrupted by civilized influences, seek the solitude
of the forest or the protection of their huts for the
same purpose; the rare cases in which coitus is public
seem usually to involve a ceremonial or social observance,
rather than mere personal gratification. At Loango, for
instance, it would be highly improper to have intercourse
in an exposed spot; it must only be performed inside the
hut, with closed doors, at night, when no one is present.[13]
It is on the sexual factor of modesty, existing in a well-marked
form even among animals, that coquetry is founded. I am
glad to find myself on this point in agreement with Professor
Groos, who, in his elaborate study of the play-instinct,
has reached the same conclusion. So far from being the
mere heartless play by which a woman shows her power over
a man, Groos points out that coquetry possesses "high
biological and psychological significance," being
rooted in the antagonism between the sexual instinct and
inborn modesty. He refers to the roe, who runs away from
the stag--but in a circle. (Groos, _Die Spiele der Menschen_,
1899, p. 339; also the same author's _Die Spiele der Thiere_,
pp. 288 _et seq._) Another example of coquetry is furnished
by the female kingfisher (_Alcedo ispida_), which will
spend all the morning in teasing and flying away from
the male, but is careful constantly to look back, and
never to let him out of her sight. (Many examples are
given by Buechner, in _Liebe und Liebesleben in der Tierwelt_.)
Robert Mueller (_Sexualbiologie_, p. 302) emphasizes the
importance of coquetry as a lure to the male.
"It is quite true," a lady writes to me in a
private letter, "that 'coquetry is a poor thing,'
and that every milkmaid can assume it, but a woman uses
it principally in self-defence, while she is finding out
what the man himself is like." This is in accordance
with the remark of Marro, that modesty enables a woman
"to put lovers to the test, in order to select him
who is best able to serve the natural ends of love."
It is doubtless the necessity for this probationary period,
as a test of masculine qualities, which usually leads
a woman to repel instinctively a too hasty and impatient
suitor, for, as Arthur Macdonald remarks, "It seems
to be instinctive in young women to reject the impetuous
lover, without the least consideration of his character,
ability, and fitness."
This essential element in courtship, this fundamental
attitude of pursuer and pursued, is clearly to be seen
even in animals and savages; it is equally pronounced
in the most civilized men and women, manifesting itself
in crude and subtle ways alike. Shakespeare's Angelo,
whose virtue had always resisted the temptations of vice,
discovered at last that
"modesty may more betray our sense Than woman's lightness."
"What," asked the wise Montaigne, "is the
object of that virginal shame, that sedate coldness, that
severe countenance, that pretence of not knowing things
which they understand better than we who teach them, except
to increase in us the desire to conquer and curb, to trample
under our appetite, all that ceremony and those obstacles?
For there is not only matter for pleasure, but for pride
also, in ruffling and debauching that soft sweetness and
infantine modesty."[14] The masculine attitude in
the face of feminine coyness may easily pass into a kind
of sadism, but is nevertheless in its origin an innocent
and instinctive impulse. Restif de la Bretonne, describing
his own shame and timidity as a pretty boy whom the girls
would run after and kiss, adds: "It is surprising
that at the same time I would imagine the pleasure I should
have in embracing a girl who resisted, in inspiring her
with timidity, in making her flee and in pursuing her;
that was a part which I burned to play."[15] It is
the instinct of the sophisticated and the unsophisticated
alike. The Arabs have developed an erotic ideal of sensuality,
but they emphasize the importance of feminine modesty,
and declare that the best woman is "she who sees
not men and whom they see not."[16] This deep-rooted
modesty of women towards men in courtship is intimately
interwoven with the marriage customs and magic rites of
even the most primitive peoples, and has survived in many
civilized practices to-day.[17] The prostitute must be
able to simulate the modesty she may often be far from
feeling, and the immense erotic advantage of the innocent
over the vicious woman lies largely in the fact that in
her the exquisite reactions of modesty are fresh and vigorous.
"I cannot imagine anything that is more sexually
exciting," remarks Hans Menjago, "than to observe
a person of the opposite sex, who, by some external or
internal force, is compelled to fight against her physical
modesty. The more modest she is the more sexually exciting
is the picture she presents."[18] It is notable that
even in abnormal, as well as in normal, erotic passion
the desire is for innocent and not for vicious women,
and, in association with this, the desired favor to be
keenly relished must often be gained by sudden surprise
and not by mutual agreement. A foot fetichist writes to
me: "It is the _stolen_ glimpse of a pretty foot
or ankle which produces the greatest effect on me."
A urolagnic symbolist was chiefly excited by the act of
urination when he caught a young woman unawares in the
act. A fetichistic admirer of the nates only desired to
see this region in innocent girls, not in prostitutes.
The exhibitionist, almost invariably, only exposes himself
to apparently respectable girls.
A Russian correspondent, who feels this charm of women
in a particularly strong degree, is inclined to think
that there is an element of perversity in it. "In
the erotic action of the idea of feminine enjoyment,"
he writes, "I think there are traces of a certain
perversity. In fact, owing to the impressions of early
youth, woman (even if we feel contempt for her in theory)
is placed above us, on a certain pedestal, as an almost
sacred being, and the more so because mysterious. Now
sensuality and sexual desire are considered as rather
vulgar, and a little dirty, even ridiculous and degrading,
not to say bestial. The woman who enjoys it, is, therefore,
rather like a profaned altar, or, at least, like a divinity
who has descended on to the earth. To give enjoyment to
a woman is, therefore, like perpetrating a sacrilege,
or at least like taking a liberty with a god. The feelings
bequeathed to us by a long social civilization maintain
themselves in spite of our rational and deliberate opinions.
Reason tells us that there is nothing evil in sexual enjoyment,
whether in man or woman, but an unconscious feeling directs
our emotions, and this feeling (having a germ that was
placed in modern men by Christianity, and perhaps by still
older religions) says that woman _ought_ to be an absolutely
pure being, with ethereal sensations, and that in her
sexual enjoyment is out of place, improper, scandalous.
To arouse sexual emotions in a woman, if not to profane
a sacred host, is, at all events, the staining of an immaculate
peplos; if not sacrilege, it is, at least, irreverence
or impertinence. For all men, the chaster a woman is,
the more agreeable it is to bring her to the orgasm. That
is felt as a triumph of the body over the soul, of sin
over virtue, of earth over heaven. There is something
diabolic in such pleasure, especially when it is felt
by a man intoxicated with love, and full of religious
respect for the virgin of his election. This feeling is,
from a rational point of view, absurd, and in its tendencies,
immoral; but it is delicious in its sacredly voluptuous
subtlety. Defloration thus has its powerful fascination
in the respect consciously or unconsciously felt for woman's
chastity. In marriage, the feeling is yet more complicated:
in deflowering his bride, the Christian (that is, any
man brought up in a Christian civilization) has the feeling
of committing a sort of sin (for the 'flesh' is, for him,
always connected with sin) which, by a special privilege,
has for him become legitimate. He has received a special
permit to corrupt innocence. Hence, the peculiar prestige
for civilized Christians, of the wedding night, sung by
Shelley, in ecstatic verses:--
"'Oh, joy! Oh, fear! What will be done In the absence
of the sun!'"
This feeling has, however, its normal range, and is not,
_per se_, a perversity, though it may doubtless become
so when unduly heightened by Christian sentiment, and
especially if it leads, as to some extent it has led in
my Russian correspondent, to an abnormal feeling of the
sexual attraction of girls who have only or scarcely reached
the age of puberty. The sexual charm of this period of
girlhood is well illustrated in many of the poems of Thomas
Ashe, and it is worthy of note, as perhaps supporting
the contention that this attraction is based on Christian
feeling, that Ashe had been a clergyman. An attentiveness
to the woman's pleasure remains, in itself, very far from
a perversion, but increases, as Colin Scott has pointed
out, with civilization, while its absence--the indifference
to the partner's pleasure--is a perversion of the most
degraded kind.
There is no such instinctive demand on the woman's part
for innocence in the man.[19] In the nature of things
that could not be. Such emotion is required for properly
playing the part of the pursued; it is by no means an
added attraction on the part of the pursuer. There is,
however, an allied and corresponding desire which is very
often clearly or latently present in the woman: a longing
for pleasure that is stolen or forbidden. It is a mistake
to suppose that this is an indication of viciousness or
perversity. It appears to be an impulse that occurs quite
naturally in altogether innocent women. The exciting charm
of the risky and dangerous naturally arises on a background
of feminine shyness and timidity. We may trace its recognition
at a very early stage of history in the story of Eve and
the forbidden fruit that has so often been the symbol
of the masculine organs of sex. It is on this ground that
many have argued the folly of laying external restrictions
on women in matters of love. Thus in quoting the great
Italian writer who afterwards became Pope Pius II, Robert
Burton remarked: "I am of AEneas Sylvius' mind, 'Those
jealous Italians do very ill to lock up their wives; for
women are of such a disposition they will mostly covet
that which is denied most, and offend least when they
have free liberty to trespass.'"[20]
It is the spontaneous and natural instinct of the lover
to desire modesty in his mistress, and by no means any
calculated opinion on his part that modesty is the sign
of sexual emotion. It remains true, however, that modesty
is an expression of feminine erotic impulse. We have here
one of the instances, of which there, are so many, of
that curious and instinctive harmony by which Nature has
sought the more effectively to bring about the ends of
courtship. As to the fact itself there can be little doubt.
It constantly forces itself on the notice of careful observers,
and has long been decided in the affirmative by those
who have discussed the matter. Venette, one of the earliest
writers on the psychology of sex, after discussing the
question at length, decided that the timid woman is a
more ardent lover than the bold woman.[21] "It is
the most pudent girl," remarked Restif de la Bretonne
whose experience of women was so extensive, "the
girl who blushes most, who is most disposed to the pleasures
of love," he adds that, in girls and boys alike,
shyness is a premature consciousness of sex.[22] This
observation has even become embodied in popular proverbs.
"Do as the lasses do--say no, but take it,"
is a Scotch saying, to which corresponds the Welsh saying,
"The more prudish the more unchaste."[23]
It is not, at first, quite clear why an excessively shy
and modest woman should be the most apt for intimate relationships
with a man, and in such a case the woman is often charged
with hypocrisy. There is, however, no hypocrisy in the
matter. The shy and reserved woman holds herself aloof
from intimacy in ordinary friendship, because she is acutely
sensitive to the judgments of others, and fears that any
seemingly immodest action may make an unfavorable opinion.
With a lover, however, in whose eyes she feels assured
that her actions can not be viewed unfavorably, these
barriers of modesty fall down, and the resulting intimacy
becomes all the more fascinating to the woman because
of its contrast with the extreme reserve she is impelled
to maintain in other relationships. It thus happens that
many modest women who, in non-sexual relationships with
their own sex, are not able to act with the physical unreserve
not uncommon with women among themselves, yet feel no
such reserve with a man, when they are once confident
of his good opinion. Much the same is true of modest and
sensitive men in their relations with women.
This fundamental animal factor of modesty, rooted in the
natural facts of the sexual life of the higher mammals,
and especially man, obviously will not explain all the
phenomena of modesty. We must turn to the other great
primary element of modesty, the social factor.
We cannot doubt that one of the most primitive and universal
of the social characteristics of man is an aptitude for
disgust, founded, as it is, on a yet more primitive and
animal aptitude for disgust, which has little or no social
significance. In nearly all races, even the most savage,
we seem to find distinct traces of this aptitude for disgust
in the presence of certain actions of others, an emotion
naturally reflected in the individual's own actions, and
hence a guide to conduct. Notwithstanding our gastric
community of disgust with lower animals, it is only in
man that this disgust seems to become transformed and
developed, to possess a distinctly social character, and
to serve as a guide to social conduct.[24] The objects
of disgust vary infinitely according to the circumstances
and habits of particular races, but the reaction of disgust
is fundamental throughout.
The best study of the phenomena of disgust known to me
is, without doubt, Professor Richet's.[25] Richet concludes
that it is the _dangerous_ and the _useless_ which evoke
disgust. The digestive and sexual excretions and secretions,
being either useless or, in accordance with widespread
primitive ideas, highly dangerous, the genito-anal region
became a concentrated focus of disgust.[26] It is largely
for this reason, no doubt, that savage men exhibit modesty,
not only toward women, but toward their own sex, and that
so many of the lowest savages take great precautions in
obtaining seclusion for the fulfillment of natural functions.
The statement, now so often made, that the primary object
of clothes is to accentuate, rather than to conceal, has
in it--as I shall point out later--a large element of
truth, but it is by no means a complete account of the
matter. It seems difficult not to admit that, alongside
the impulse to accentuate sexual differences, there is
also in both men and women a genuine impulse to concealment
among the most primitive peoples, and the invincible repugnance
often felt by savages to remove the girdle or apron, is
scarcely accounted for by the theory that it is solely
a sexual lure.
In this connection it seems to me instructive to consider
a special form of modesty very strongly marked among savages
in some parts of the world. I refer to the feeling of
immodesty in eating. Where this feeling exists, modesty
is offended when one eats in public; the modest man retires
to eat. Indecency, said Cook, was utterly unknown among
the Tahitians; but they would not eat together; even brothers
and sisters had their separate baskets of provisions,
and generally sat some yards apart, with their backs to
each other, when they ate.[27] The Warrua of Central Africa,
Cameron found, when offered a drink, put up a cloth before
their faces while they swallowed it, and would not allow
anyone to see them eat or drink; so that every man or
woman must have his own fire and cook for himself.[28]
Karl von den Steinen remarks, in his interesting book
on Brazil, that though the Bakairi of Central Brazil have
no feeling of shame about nakedness, they are ashamed
to eat in public; they retire to eat, and hung their heads
in shame-faced confusion when they saw him innocently
eat in public. Hrolf Vaughan Stevens found that, when
he gave an Orang Laut (Malay) woman anything to eat, she
not only would not eat it if her husband were present,
but if any man were present she would go outside before
eating or giving her children to eat.[29] Thus among these
peoples the act of eating in public produces the same
feelings as among ourselves the indecent exposure of the
body in public.[30]
It is quite easy to understand how this arises. Whenever
there is any pressure on the means of subsistence, as
among savages at some time or another there nearly always
is, it must necessarily arouse a profound and mixed emotion
of desire and disgust to see another person putting into
his stomach what one might just as well have put into
one's own.[31] The special secrecy sometimes observed
by women is probably due to the fact that women would
be less able to resist the emotions that the act of eating
would arouse in onlookers. As social feeling develops,
a man desires not only to eat in safety, but also to avoid
being an object of disgust, and to spare his friends all
unpleasant emotions. Hence it becomes a requirement of
ordinary decency to eat in private. A man who eats in
public becomes--like the man who in our cities exposes
his person in public--an object of disgust and contempt.
Long ago, when a hospital student on midwifery duty in
London slums, I had occasion to observe that among the
women of the poor, and more especially in those who had
lost the first bloom of youth, modesty consisted chiefly
in the fear of being disgusting. There was an almost pathetic
anxiety, in the face of pain and discomfort, not to be
disgusting in the doctor's eyes. This anxiety expressed
itself in the ordinary symptoms of modesty. But, as soon
as the woman realized that I found nothing disgusting
in whatever was proper and necessary to be done under
the circumstances, it almost invariably happened that
every sign of modesty at once disappeared.[32] In the
special and elementary conditions of parturition, modesty
is reduced to this one fear of causing disgust; so that,
when that is negated, the emotion is non-existent, and
the subject becomes, without effort, as direct and natural
as a little child. A fellow-student on similar duty, who
also discovered for himself the same character of modesty--that
if he was careful to guard her modesty the woman was careful
also, and that if he was not the woman was not--remarked
on it to me with sadness; it seemed to him derogatory
to womanhood that what he had been accustomed to consider
its supreme grace should be so superficial that he could
at will set limits to it.[33] I thought then, as I think
still, that that was rather a perversion of the matter,
and that nothing becomes degrading because we happen to
have learned something about its operations. But I am
more convinced than ever that the fear of causing disgust--a
fear quite distinct from that of losing a sexual lure
or breaking a rule of social etiquette--plays a very large
part in the modesty of the more modest sex, and in modesty
generally. Our Venuses, as Lucretius long since remarked
and Montaigne after him, are careful to conceal from their
lovers the _vita postscenia_, and that fantastic fate
which placed so near together the supreme foci of physical
attraction and physical repugnance, has immensely contributed
to build up all the subtlest coquetries of courtship.
Whatever stimulates self-confidence and lulls the fear
of evoking disgust--whether it is the presence of a beloved
person in whose good opinion complete confidence is felt,
or whether it is merely the grosser narcotizing influence
of a slight degree of intoxication--always automatically
lulls the emotion of modesty.[34] Together with the animal
factor of sexual refusal, this social fear of evoking
disgust seems to me the most fundamental element in modesty.
It is, of course, impossible to argue that the fact of
the sacro-pubic region of the body being the chief focus
of concealment proves the importance of this factor of
modesty. But it may fairly be argued that it owes this
position not merely to being the sexual centre, but also
as being the excretory centre. Even among many lower mammals,
as well as among birds and insects, there is a well-marked
horror of dirt, somewhat disguised by the varying ways
in which an animal may be said to define "dirt."
Many animals spend more time and energy in the duties
of cleanliness than human beings, and they often show
well-marked anxiety to remove their own excrement, or
to keep away from it.[35] Thus this element of modesty
also may be said to have an animal basis.
It is on this animal basis that the human and social fear
of arousing disgust has developed. Its probably wide extension
is indicated not only by the strong feeling attached to
the constant presence of clothing on this part of the
body,--such constant presence being quite uncalled for
if the garment or ornament is merely a sort of sexual
war-paint,--but by the repugnance felt by many savages
very low down in the scale to the public satisfaction
of natural needs, and to their more than civilized cleanliness
in this connection;[36] it is further of interest to note
that in some parts of the world the covering is not in
front, but behind; though of this fact there are probably
other explanations. Among civilized people, also, it may
be added, the final and invincible seat of modesty is
sometimes not around the pubes, but the anus; that is
to say, that in such cases the fear of arousing disgust
is the ultimate and most fundamental element of modesty.[37]
The concentration of modesty around the anus is sometimes
very marked. Many women feel so high a degree of shame
and reserve with regard to this region, that they are
comparatively indifferent to an anterior examination of
the sexual organs. A similar feeling is not seldom found
in men. "I would permit of an examination of my genitals
by a medical man, without any feeling of discomfort,"
a correspondent writes, "but I think I would rather
die than submit to any rectal examination." Even
physicians have been known to endure painful rectal disorders
for years, rather than undergo examination.
"Among ordinary English girls," a medical correspondent
writes, "I have often noticed that the dislike and
shame of allowing a man to have sexual intercourse with
them, when newly married, is simply due to the fact that
the sexual aperture is so closely apposed to the anus
and bladder. If the vulva and vagina were situated between
a woman's shoulder blades, and a man had a separate instrument
for coitus, not used for any excretory purpose, I do not
think women would feel about intercourse as they sometimes
do. Again, in their ignorance of anatomy, women often
look upon the vagina and womb as part of the bowel and
its exit of discharge, and sometimes say, for instance,
'inflammation of the _bowel_', when they mean _womb_.
Again, many, perhaps most, women believe that they pass
water through the vagina, and are ignorant of the existence
of the separate urethral orifice. Again, women associate
the vulva with the anus, and so feel ashamed of it; even
when speaking to their husbands, or to a doctor, or among
themselves; they have absolutely no name for the vulva
(I mean among the upper classes, and people of gentle
birth), but speak of it as 'down below,' 'low down,' etc."
Even though this feeling is largely based on wrong and
ignorant ideas, it must still be recognized that it is
to some extent natural and inevitable. "How much
is risked," exclaims Dugas, "in the privacies
of love! The results may be disillusion, disgust, the
consciousness of physical imperfection, of brutality or
coldness, of aesthetic disenchantment, of a sentimental
shock, seen or divined. To be without modesty, that is
to say, to have no fear of the ordeals of love, one must
be sure of one's self, of one's grace, of one's physical
emotions, of one's feelings, and be sure, moreover, of
the effect of all these on the nerves, the imagination,
and the heart of another person. Let us suppose modesty
reduced to aesthetic discomfort, to a woman's fear of
displeasing, or of not seeming beautiful enough. Even
thus defined, how can modesty avoid being always awake
and restless? What woman could repeat, without risk, the
tranquil action of Phryne? And even in that action, who
knows how much may not have been due to mere professional
insolence!" (Dugas, "La Pudeur," _Revue
Philosophique_, November, 1903.) "Men and Women,"
Schurtz points out (_Altersklassen und Maennerbuende_,
pp. 41-51), "have certainly the capacity mutually
to supplement and enrich each other; but when this completion
fails, or is not sought, the difference may easily become
a strong antipathy;" and he proceeds to develop the
wide-reaching significance of this psychic fact.
I have emphasized the proximity of the excretory centres
to the sexual focus in discussing this important factor
of modesty, because, in analyzing so complex and elusive
an emotion as modesty it is desirable to keep as near
as possible to the essential and fundamental facts on
which it is based. It is scarcely necessary to point out
that, in ordinary civilized society, these fundamental
facts are not usually present at the surface of consciousness
and may even be absent altogether; on the foundation of
them may arise all sorts of idealized fears, of delicate
reserves, of aesthetic refinements, as the emotions of
love become more complex and more subtle, and the crude
simplicity of the basis on which they finally rest becomes
inevitably concealed.
Another factor of modesty, which reaches a high development
in savagery, is the ritual element, especially the idea
of ceremonial uncleanness, based on a dread of the supernatural
influences which the sexual organs and functions are supposed
to exert. It may be to some extent rooted in the elements
already referred to, and it leads us into a much wider
field than that of modesty, so that it is only necessary
to touch slightly on it here; it has been exhaustively
studied by Frazer and by Crawley. Offences against the
ritual rendered necessary by this mysterious dread, though
more serious than offences against sexual reticence or
the fear of causing disgust, are so obviously allied that
they all reinforce one another and cannot easily be disentangled.
Nearly everywhere all over the world at a primitive stage
of thought, and even to some extent in the highest civilization,
the sight of the sexual organs or of the sexual act, the
image or even the names of the sexual parts of either
man or woman, are believed to have a curiously potent
influence, sometimes beneficent, but quite as often maleficent.
The two kinds of influence may even be combined, and Riedel,
quoted by Ploss and Bartels,[38] states that the Ambon
islanders carve a schematic representation of the vulva
on their fruit trees, in part to promote the productiveness
of the trees, and in part to scare any unauthorized person
who might be tempted to steal the fruit. The precautions
prescribed as regards coitus at Loango[39] are evidently
associated with religious fears. In Ceylon, again (as
a medical correspondent there informs me), where the penis
is worshipped and held sacred, a native never allows it
to be seen, except under compulsion, by a doctor, and
even a wife must neither see it nor touch it nor ask for
coitus, though she must grant as much as the husband desires.
All savage and barbarous peoples who have attained any
high degree of ceremonialism have included the functions
not only of sex, but also of excretion, more or less stringently
within the bounds of that ceremonialism.[40] It is only
necessary to refer to the Jewish ritual books of the Old
Testament, to Hesiod, and to the customs prevalent among
Mohammedan peoples. Modesty in eating, also, has its roots
by no means only in the fear of causing disgust, but very
largely in this kind of ritual, and Crawley has shown
how numerous and frequent among primitive peoples are
the religious implications of eating and drinking.[41]
So profound is this dread of the sacred mystery of sex,
and so widespread is the ritual based upon it, that some
have imagined that here alone we may find the complete
explanation of modesty, and Salomon Reinach declares that
"at the origin of the emotion of modesty lies a taboo."[42]
Durkheim ("La Prohibition de l'Inceste," _L'Annee
Sociologique_, 1898, p. 50), arguing that whatever sense
of repugnance women may inspire must necessarily reach
the highest point around the womb, which is hence subjected
to the most stringent taboo, incidentally suggests that
here is an origin of modesty. "The sexual organs
must be veiled at an early period, to prevent the dangerous
effluvia which they give off from reaching the environment.
The veil is often a method of intercepting magic action.
Once constituted, the practice would be maintained and
transformed."
It was doubtless as a secondary and derived significance
that the veil became, as Reinach ("Le Voile de l'Oblation,"
op. cit., pp. 299-311) shows it was, alike among the Romans
and in the Catholic Church, the sign of consecration to
the gods.
At an early stage of culture, again, menstruation is regarded
as a process of purification, a dangerous expulsion of
vitiated humors. Hence the term _katharsis_ applied to
it by the Greeks. Hence also the mediaeval view of women:
"_Mulier speciosa templum aedificatum super cloacam_,"
said Boethius. The sacro-pubic region in women, because
it includes the source of menstruation, thus becomes a
specially heightened seat of taboo. According to the Mosiac
law (Leviticus, Chapter XX, v. 18), if a man uncovered
a menstruating woman, both were to be cut off.
It is probable that the Mohammedan custom of veiling the
face and head really has its source solely in another
aspect of this ritual factor of modesty. It must be remembered
that this custom is not Mohammedan in its origin, since
it existed long previously among the Arabians, and is
described by Tertullian.[43] In early Arabia very handsome
men also veiled their faces, in order to preserve themselves
from the evil eye, and it has been conjectured with much
probability that the origin of the custom of women veiling
their faces may be traced to this magico-religious precaution.[44]
Among the Jews of the same period, according to Buechler,[45]
the women had their heads covered and never cut their
hair; to appear in the streets without such covering would
be like a prostitute and was adequate ground for divorce;
adulterous women were punished by uncovering their heads
and cutting their hair. It is possible, though not certain,
that St. Paul's obscure injunction to women to cover their
heads "because of the angels," may really be
based on the ancient reason, that when uncovered they
would be exposed to the wanton assaults of spirits (1
Corinthians, Ch. XI, vv. 5-6),[46] exactly as Singhalese
women believe that they must keep the vulva covered lest
demons should have intercourse with them. Even at the
present day St. Paul's injunction is still observed by
Christendom, which is, however, far from accepting, or
even perhaps understanding, the folk-lore ground on which
are based such injunctions.
Crawley thus summarizes some of the evidence concerning
the significance of the veil:--
"Sexual shyness, not only in woman, but in man, is
intensified at marriage, and forms a chief feature of
the dangerous sexual properties mutually feared. When
fully ceremonial, the idea takes on the meaning that satisfaction
of these feelings will lead to their neutralization, as,
in fact, it does. The bridegroom in ancient Sparta supped
on the wedding night at the men's mess, and then visited
his bride, leaving her before daybreak. This practice
was continued, and sometimes children were born before
the pair had ever seen each other's faces by day. At weddings
in the Babar Islands, the bridegroom has to hunt for his
bride in a darkened room. This lasts a good while if she
is shy. In South Africa, the bridegroom may not see his
bride till the whole of the marriage ceremonies have been
performed. In Persia, a husband never sees his wife till
he has consummated the marriage. At marriages in South
Arabia, the bride and bridegroom have to sit immovable
in the same position from noon till midnight, fasting,
in separate rooms. The bride is attended by ladies, and
the groom by men. They may not see each other till the
night of the fourth day. In Egypt, the groom cannot see
the face of his bride, even by a surreptitious glance,
till she is in his absolute possession. Then comes the
ceremony, which he performs, of uncovering her face. In
Egypt, of course, this has been accentuated by the seclusion
and veiling of women. In Morocco, at the feast before
the marriage, the bride and groom sit together on a sort
of throne; all the time, the poor bride's eyes are firmly
closed, and she sits amidst the revelry as immovable as
a statue. On the next day is the marriage. She is conducted
after dark to her future home, accompanied by a crowd
with lanterns and candles. She is led with closed eyes
along the street by two relatives, each holding one of
her hands. The bride's head is held in its proper position
by a female relative, who walks behind her. She wears
a veil, and is not allowed to open her eyes until she
is set on the bridal bed, with a girl friend beside her.
Amongst the Zulus, the bridal party proceeds to the house
of the groom, having the bride hidden amongst them. They
stand facing the groom, while the bride sings a song.
Her companions then suddenly break away, and she is discovered
standing in the middle, with a fringe of beads covering
her face. Amongst the people of Kumaun, the husband sees
his wife first after the joining of hands. Amongst the
Bedui of North East Africa, the bride is brought on the
evening of the wedding-day by her girl friends, to the
groom's house. She is closely muffled up. Amongst the
Jews of Jerusalem, the bride, at the marriage ceremony,
stands under the nuptial canopy, her eyes being closed,
that she may not behold the face of her future husband
before she reaches the bridal chamber. In Melanesia, the
bride is carried to her new home on some one's back, wrapped
in many mats, with palm-fans held about her face, because
she is supposed to be modest and shy. Among the Damaras,
the groom cannot see his bride for four days after marriage.
When a Damara woman is asked in marriage, she covers her
face for a time with the flap of a headdress made for
this purpose. At the Thlinkeet marriage ceremony, the
bride must look down, and keep her head bowed all the
time; during the wedding-day, she remains hiding in a
corner of the house, and the groom is forbidden to enter.
At a Yezedee marriage, the bride is covered from head
to foot with a thick veil, and when arrived at her new
home, she retires behind a curtain in the corner of a
darkened room, where she remains for three days before
her husband is permitted to see her. In Corea, the bride
has to cover her face with her long sleeves, when meeting
the bridegroom at the wedding. The Manchurian bride uncovers
her face for the first time when she descends from the
nuptial couch. It is dangerous even to see dangerous persons.
Sight is a method of contagion in primitive science, and
the idea coincides with the psychological aversion to
see dangerous things, and with sexual shyness and timidity.
In the customs noticed, we can distinguish the feeling
that it is dangerous to the bride for her husband's eyes
to be upon her, and the feeling of bashfulness in her
which induces her neither to see him nor to be seen by
him. These ideas explain the origin of the bridal veil
and similar concealments. The bridal veil is used, to
take a few instances, in China, Burmah, Corea, Russia,
Bulgaria, Manchuria, and Persia, and in all these cases
it conceals the face entirely." (E. Crawley, _The
Mystic Rose_, pp. 328 et seq.)
Alexander Walker, writing in 1846, remarks: "Among
old-fashioned people, of whom a good example may be found
in old country people of the middle class in England,
it is indecent to be seen with the head unclothed; such
a woman is terrified at the chance of being seen In that
condition, and if intruded on at that time, she shrieks
with terror, and flies to conceal herself." (A. Walker,
_Beauty_, p. 15.) This fear of being seen with the head
uncovered exists still, M. Van Gennep informs me, in some
regions of France, as in Brittany.
So far it has only been necessary to refer incidentally
to the connection of modesty with clothing. I have sought
to emphasize the unquestionable, but often forgotten,
fact that modesty is in its origin independent of clothing,
that physiological modesty takes precedence of anatomical
modesty, and that the primary factors of modesty were
certainly developed long before the discovery of either
ornament or garments. The rise of clothing probably had
its first psychical basis on an emotion of modesty already
compositely formed of the elements we have traced. Both
the main elementary factors, it must be noted, must naturally
tend to develop and unite in a more complex, though--it
may well be--much less intense, emotion. The impulse which
leads the female animal, as it leads some African women
when found without their girdles, to squat firmly down
on the earth, becomes a more refined and extended play
of gesture and ornament and garment. A very notable advance,
I may remark, is made when this primary attitude of defence
against the action of the male becomes a defence against
his eyes. We may thus explain the spread of modesty to
various parts of the body, even when we exclude the more
special influence of the evil eye. The breasts very early
become a focus of modesty in women; this may be observed
among many naked, or nearly naked, negro races; the tendency
of the nates to become the chief seat of modesty in many
parts of Africa may probably be, in large part, thus explained,
since the full development of the gluteal regions is often
the greatest attraction an African woman can possess.[47]
The same cause contributes, doubtless, to the face becoming,
in some races, the centre of modesty. We see the influence
of this defence against strange eyes in the special precautions
in gesture or clothing taken by the women in various parts
of the world, against the more offensive eyes of civilized
Europeans.
But in thus becoming directed only against sight, and
not against action, the gestures of modesty are at once
free to become merely those of coquetry. When there is
no real danger of offensive action, there is no need for
more than playful defence, and no serious anxiety should
that defence be taken as a disguised invitation. Thus
the road is at once fully open toward the most civilized
manifestations of the comedy of courtship.
In the same way the social fear of arousing disgust combines
easily and perfectly with any new development in the invention
of ornament or clothing as sexual lures. Even among the
most civilized races it has often been noted that the
fashion of feminine garments (as also sometimes the use
of scents) has the double object of concealing and attracting.
It is so with the little apron of the young savage belle.
The heightening of the attraction is, indeed, a logical
outcome of the fear of evoking disgust.
It is possible, as some ethnographists have observed,[48]
that intercrural cords and other primitive garments have
a physical ground, inasmuch as they protect the most sensitive
and unprotected part of the body, especially in women.
We may note in this connection the significant remarks
of K. von den Steinen, who argues that among Brazilian
tribes the object of the _uluri_, etc., is to obtain a
maximum of protection for the mucous membrane with a minimum
of concealment. Among the Eskimo, as Nansen noted, the
corresponding intercrural cord is so thin as to be often
practically invisible; this may be noted, I may add, in
the excellent photographs of Eskimo women given by Holm.
But it is evident that, in the beginning, protection is
to little or no extent the motive for attaching foreign
substances to the body. Thus the tribes of Central Australia
wear no clothes, although they often suffer from the cold.
But, in addition to armlets, neck-bands and head-bands,
they have string or hair girdles, with, for the women,
a very small apron and, for the men, a pubic tassel. The
latter does not conceal the organs, being no larger than
a coin, and often brilliantly coated with white pipeclay,
especially during the progress of _corrobborees_, when
a large number of men and women meet together; it serves
the purpose of drawing attention to the organs.[49] When
Forster visited the unspoilt islanders of the Pacific
early in the eighteenth century, he tells us that, though
they wore no clothes, they found it necessary to cover
themselves with various ornaments, especially on, the
sexual parts. "But though their males," he remarks,
"were to all appearances equally anxious in this
respect with their females, this part of their dress served
only to make that more conspicuous which it intended to
hide."[50] He adds the significant remark that "these
ideas of decency and modesty are only observed at the
age of sexual maturity," just as in Central Australia
women may only wear aprons after the initiation of puberty.
"There are certain things," said Montaigne,
"which are hidden in order to be shown;" and
there can be no doubt that the contention of Westermarck
and others, that ornament and clothing were, in the first
place, intended, not to conceal or even to protect the
body, but, in large part, to render it sexually attractive,
is fully proved.[51] We cannot, in the light of all that
has gone before, regard ornaments and clothing as the
sole cause of modesty, but the feelings that are thus
gathered around the garment constitute a highly important
factor of modesty.
Among some Australian tribes it is said that the sexual
organs are only covered during their erotic dances; and
it is further said that in some parts of the world only
prostitutes are clothed. "The scanty covering,"
as Westermarck observes, "was found to act as the
most powerful obtainable sexual stimulus." It is
undoubtedly true that this statement may be made not merely
of the savage, but of the most civilized world. All observers
agree that the complete nudity of savages, unlike the
civilized _decollete_ or _detrousse_, has no suggestion
of sexual allurement. (Westermarck quotes numerous testimonies
on this point, op. cit., pp. 192 et seq.) Dr. R.W. Felkin
remarks concerning Central Africa, that he has never met
more indecency than in Uganda, where the penalty of death
is inflicted on an adult found naked in the street. (_Edinburgh
Medical Journal_, April, 1884.) A study of pictures or
statuary will alone serve to demonstrate that nakedness
is always chaster in its effects than partial clothing.
As a well-known artist, Du Maurier, has remarked (in _Trilby_),
it is "a fact well known to all painters and sculptors
who have used the nude model (except a few shady pretenders,
whose purity, not being of the right sort, has gone rank
from too much watching) that nothing is so chaste as nudity.
Venus herself, as she drops her garments and steps on
to the model-throne, leaves behind her on the floor every
weapon in her armory by which she can pierce to the grosser
passions of men." Burton, in the _Anatomy of Melancholy_
(Part III, Sect. II, Subsect. 3), deals at length with
the "Allurements of Love," and concludes that
"the greatest provocations of lust are from our apparel."
The artist's model, as one informs me, is much less exposed
to liberties from men when nude than when she is partially
clothed, and it may be noted that in Paris studios the
model who poses naked undresses behind a screen.
An admirable poetic rendering of this element in the philosophy
of clothing has been given by Herrick, that master of
erotic psychology, in "A Lily in Crystal," where
he argues that a lily in crystal, and amber in a stream,
and strawberries in cream, gain an added delight from
semi-concealment; and so, he concludes, we obtain
"A rule, how far, to teach, Your nakedness must reach."
In this connection, also, it is worth noting that Stanley
Hall, in a report based on returns from nearly a thousand
persons, mostly teachers, ("The Early Sense of Self,"
_American Journal of Psychology_, 1898, p. 366), finds
that of the three functions of clothes--protection, ornament,
and Lotzean "self-feeling"--the second is by
far the most conspicuous in childhood. The attitude of
children is testimony to the primitive attitude toward
clothing.
It cannot, however, be said that the use of clothing for
the sake of showing the natural forms of the body has
everywhere been developed. In Japan, where nakedness is
accepted without shame, clothes are worn to cover and
conceal, and not to reveal, the body. It is so, also,
in China. A distinguished Chinese gentleman, who had long
resided in Europe, once told Baelz that he had gradually
learnt to grasp the European point of view, but that it
would be impossible to persuade his fellow-countrymen
that a woman who used her clothes to show off her figure
could possibly possess the least trace of modesty. (Baelz,
_Zeitschrift fuer Ethnologie_, 1901, Heft 2, p. 179.)
The great artistic elaboration often displayed by articles
of ornament or clothing, even when very small, and the
fact--as shown by Karl von den Steinen regarding the Brazilian
_uluri_--that they may serve as common motives in general
decoration, sufficiently prove that such objects attract
rather than avoid attention. And while there is an invincible
repugnance among some peoples to remove these articles,
such repugnance being often strongest when the adornment
is most minute, others have no such repugnance or are
quite indifferent whether or not their aprons are accurately
adjusted. The mere presence or possession of the article
gives the required sense of self-respect, of human dignity,
of sexual desirability. Thus it is that to unclothe a
person, is to humiliate him; this was so even in Homeric
times, for we may recall the threat of Ulysses to strip
Thyestes.[52]
When clothing is once established, another element, this
time a social-economic element, often comes in to emphasize
its importance and increase the anatomical modesty of
women. I mean the growth of the conception of women as
property. Waitz, followed by Schurtz and Letourneau, has
insisted that the jealousy of husbands is the primary
origin of clothing, and, indirectly, of modesty. Diderot
in the eighteenth century had already given clear expression
to the same view. It is undoubtedly true that only married
women are among some peoples clothed, the unmarried women,
though full grown, remaining naked. In many parts of the
world, also, as Mantegazza and others have shown, where
the men are naked and the women covered, clothing is regarded
as a sort of disgrace, and men can only with difficulty
be persuaded to adopt it. Before marriage a woman was
often free, and not bound to chastity, and at the same
time was often naked; after marriage she was clothed,
and no longer free. To the husband's mind, the garment
appears--illogically, though naturally--a moral and physical
protection against any attack on his property.[53] Thus
a new motive was furnished, this time somewhat artificially,
for making nakedness, in women at all events, disgraceful.
As the conception of property also extended to the father's
right over his daughters, and the appreciation of female
chastity developed, this motive spread to unmarried as
well as married women. A woman on the west coast of Africa
must always be chaste because she is first the property
of her parents and afterwards of her husband,[54] and
even in the seventeenth century of Christendom so able
a thinker as Bishop Burnet furnished precisely the same
reason for feminine chastity.[55] This conception probably
constituted the chief and most persistent element furnished
to the complex emotion of modesty by the barbarous stages
of human civilization.
This economic factor necessarily involved the introduction
of a new moral element into modesty. If a woman's chastity
is the property of another person, it is essential that
she shall be modest in order that men may not be tempted
to incur the penalties involved by the infringement of
property rights. Thus modesty is strictly inculcated on
women in order that men may be safeguarded from temptation.
The fact was overlooked that modesty is itself a temptation.
Immodesty being, on this ground, disapproved by men, a
new motive for modesty is furnished to women. In the book
which the Knight of the Tower, Landry, wrote in the fourteenth
century, for the instruction of his daughters, this factor
of modesty is naively revealed. He tells his daughters
of the trouble that David got into through the thoughtlessness
of Bathsheba, and warns them that "every woman ought
religiously to conceal herself when dressing and washing,
and neither out of vanity nor yet to attract attention
show either her hair, or her neck, or her breast, or any
part which ought to be covered." Hinton went so far
as to regard what he termed "body modesty,"
as entirely a custom imposed upon women by men with the
object of preserving their own virtue. While this motive
is far from being the sole source of modesty, it must
certainly be borne in mind as an inevitable outcome of
the economic factor of modesty.
In Europe it seems probable that the generally accepted
conceptions of mediaeval chivalry were not without influence
in constituting the forms in which modesty shows itself
among us. In the early middle ages there seems to have
been a much greater degree of physical familiarity between
the sexes than is commonly found among barbarians elsewhere.
There was certainly considerable promiscuity in bathing
and indifference to nakedness. It seems probable, as Durkheim
points out,[56] that this state of things was modified
in part by the growing force of the dictates of Christian
morality, which regarded all intimate approaches between
the sexes as sinful, and in part by the influence of chivalry
with its aesthetic and moral ideals of women, as the representative
of all the delicacies and elegancies of civilization.
This ideal was regarded as incompatible with the familiarities
of the existing social relationships between the sexes,
and thus a separation, which at first existed only in
art and literature, began by a curious reaction to exert
an influence on real life.
The chief new feature--it is scarcely a new element--added
to modesty when an advanced civilization slowly emerges
from barbarism is the elaboration of its social ritual.[57]
Civilization expands the range of modesty, and renders
it, at the same time, more changeable. The French seventeenth
century, and the English eighteenth, represent early stages
of modern European civilization, and they both devoted
special attention to the elaboration of the minute details
of modesty. The frequenters of the Hotel Rambouillet,
the _precieuses_ satirized by Moliere, were not only engaged
in refining the language; they were refining feelings
and ideas and enlarging the boundaries of modesty.[58]
In England such famous and popular authors as Swift and
Sterne bear witness to a new ardor of modesty in the sudden
reticences, the dashes, and the asterisks, which are found
throughout their works. The altogether new quality of
literary prurience, of which Sterne is still the classical
example, could only have arisen on the basis of the new
modesty which was then overspreading society and literature.
Idle people, mostly, no doubt, the women in _salons_ and
drawing-rooms, people more familiar with books than with
the realities of life, now laid down the rules of modesty,
and were ever enlarging it, ever inventing new subtleties
of gesture and speech, which it would be immodest to neglect,
and which are ever being rendered vulgar by use and ever
changing.
It was at this time, probably, that the custom of inventing
an arbitrary private vocabulary of words and phrases for
the purpose of disguising references to functions and
parts of the body regarded as immodest and indecent, first
began to become common. Such private slang, growing up
independently in families, and especially among women,
as well as between lovers, is now almost universal. It
is not confined to any European country, and has been
studied in Italy by Niceforo (_Il Gergo_, 1897, cap. 1
and 2), who regards it as a weapon of social defence against
an inquisitive or hostile environment, since it enables
things to be said with a meaning which is unintelligible
to all but the initiated person. While it is quite true
that the custom is supported by the consciousness of its
practical advantages, it has another source in a desire
to avoid what is felt to be the vulgar immodesty of direct
speech. This is sufficiently shown by the fact that such
slang is mostly concerned with the sacro-pubic sphere.
It is one of the chief contributions to the phenomena
of modesty furnished by civilization. The claims of modesty
having effected the clothing of the body, the impulse
of modesty finds a further sphere of activity--half-playful,
yet wholly imperative--in the clothing of language.
Modesty of speech has, however, a deep and primitive basis,
although in modern Europe it only became conspicuous at
the beginning of the eighteenth century. "All over
the world," as Dufour put it, "to do is good,
to say is bad." Reticences of speech are not adequately
accounted for by the statement that modesty tends to irradiate
from the action to the words describing the action, for
there is a tendency for modesty to be more deeply rooted
in the words than in the actions. "Modest women,"
as Kleinpaul truly remarks, "have a much greater
horror of saying immodest things than of doing them; they
believe that fig-leaves were especially made for the mouth."
(Kleinpaul, _Sprache ohne Worte_, p. 309.) It is a tendency
which is linked on to the religious and ritual feeling
which we have already found to be a factor of modesty,
and which, even when applied to language, appears to have
an almost or quite instinctive basis, for it is found
among the most primitive savages, who very frequently
regard a name as too sacred or dangerous to utter. Among
the tribes of Central Australia, in addition to his ordinary
name, each individual has his sacred or secret name, only
known to the older and fully initiated members of his
own totemic group; among the Warramunga, it is not permitted
to women to utter even a man's ordinary name, though she
knows it. (Spencer and Gillen, _Northern Tribes of Central
Australia_, p. 581.) In the mysterious region of sex,
this feeling easily takes root. In many parts of the world,
men use among themselves, and women use among themselves,
words and even languages which they may not use without
impropriety in speaking to persons of the opposite sex,
and it has been shown that exogamy, or the fact that the
wife belongs to a different tribe, will not always account
for this phenomenon. (Crawley, _The Mystic Rose_, p. 46.)
A special vocabulary for the generative organs and functions
is very widespread. Thus, in northwest Central Queensland,
there is both a decent and an indecent vocabulary for
the sexual parts; in Mitakoodi language, for instance,
_me-ne_ may be used for the vulva in the best aboriginal
society, but _koon-ja_ and _pukkil_, which are names for
the same parts, are the most blackguardly words known
to the natives. (W. Roth, _Ethnological Studies Among
the Queensland Aborigines_, p. 184.) Among the Malays,
_puki_ is also a name for the vulva which it is very indecent
to utter, and it is only used in public by people under
the influence of an obsessive nervous disorder. (W. Gilman
Ellis, "Latah," _Journal of Mental Science_,
Jan., 1897.) The Swahili women of Africa have a private
metaphorical language of their own, referring to sexual
matters (Zache, _Zeitschrift fuer Ethnologie_, 1899, Heft
2-3, pp. 70 et seq.), and in Samoa, again, young girls
have a euphemistic name for the penis, _aualuma_, which
is not that in common use (_Zeitschrift fuer Ethnologie_,
1899, Heft 1, p. 31); exactly the same thing is found
in Europe, to-day, and is sometimes more marked among
young peasant women than among those of better social
class, who often avoid, under all circumstances, the necessity
for using any definite name.
Singular as it may seem, the Romans, who in their literature
impress us by their vigorous and naked grip of the most
private facts of life, showed in familiar intercourse
a dread of obscene language--a dread ultimately founded,
it is evident, on religious grounds--far exceeding that
which prevails among ourselves to-day in civilization.
"It is remarkable," Dufour observes, "that
the prostitutes of ancient Rome would have blushed to
say an indecent word in public. The little tender words
used between lovers and their mistresses were not less
correct and innocent when the mistress was a courtesan
and the lover an erotic poet. He called her his rose,
his queen, his goddess, his dove, his light, his star,
and she replied by calling him her jewel, her honey, her
bird, her ambrosia, the apple of her eye, and never with
any licentious interjection, but only 'I will love!' (_Amabo_),
a frequent exclamation, summing up a whole life and vocation.
When intimate relations began, they treated each other
as 'brother' and 'sister.' These appellations were common
among the humblest and the proudest courtesans alike."
(Dufour, _Histoire de la Prostitution_, vol. ii, p. 78.)
So excessive was the Roman horror of obscenity that even
physicians were compelled to use a euphemism for _urina_,
and though the _urinal_ or _vas urinarium_ was openly
used at the dining-table (following a custom introduced
by the Sybarites, according to Athenaeus, Book XII, cap.
17), the decorous guest could not ask for it by name,
but only by a snap of the fingers (Dufour, op. cit., vol.
ii, p. 174).
In modern Europe, as seems fairly evident from the early
realistic dramatic literature of various countries, no
special horror of speaking plainly regarding the sacro-pubic
regions and their functions existed among the general
population until the seventeenth century. There is, however,
one marked exception. Such a feeling clearly existed as
regards menstruation. It is not difficult to see why it
should have begun at this function. We have here not only
a function confined to one sex and, therefore, easily
lending itself to a vocabulary confined to one sex; but,
what is even of more importance, the belief which existed
among the Romans, as elsewhere throughout the world, concerning
the specially dangerous and mysterious properties of menstruation,
survived throughout mediaeval times. (See e.g., Ploss
and Bartels, _Das Weib_, Bd. I, XIV; also Havelock Ellis,
_Man and Woman_, fourth ed. Ch. XI.) The very name, _menses_
("monthlies"), is a euphemism, and most of the
old scientific names for this function are similarly vague.
As regards popular feminine terminology previous to the
eighteenth century, Schurig gives us fairly ample information
(_Parthenologia_, 1729, pp. 27 et seq.). He remarks that
both in Latin and Germanic countries, menstruation was
commonly designated by some term equivalent to "flowers,"
because, he says, it is a blossoming that indicates the
possibility of fruit. German peasant women, he tells us,
called it the rose-wreath (Rosenkrantz). Among the other
current feminine names for menstruation which he gives,
some are purely fanciful; thus, the Italian women dignified
the function with the title of "marchese magnifico;"
German ladies, again, would use the locution, "I
have had a letter," or would say that their cousin
or aunt had arrived. These are closely similar to the
euphemisms still used by women.
It should be added that euphemisms for menstruation are
not confined to Europe, and are found among savages. According
to Hill Tout (_Journal of the Anthropological Institute_,
1904, p. 320; and 1905, p. 137), one of these euphemisms
was "putting on the moccasin," and in another
branch of the same people, "putting the knees together,"
"going outside" (in allusion to the customary
seclusion at this period in a solitary hut), and so on.
It would, however, be a mistake to suppose that this process
is an intensification of modesty. It is, on the contrary,
an attenuation of it. The observances of modesty become
merely a part of a vast body of rules of social etiquette,
though a somewhat stringent part on account of the vague
sense still persisting of a deep-lying natural basis.
It is a significant coincidence that the eighteenth century,
which was marked by this new extension of the social ritual
of modesty, also saw the first appearance of a new philosophic
impulse not merely to analyze, but to dissolve the conception
of modesty. This took place more especially in France.
The swift rise to supremacy, during the seventeenth century,
of logical and rational methods of thinking, in conjunction
with the new development of geometrical and mathematical
science, led in the eighteenth century to a widespread
belief in France that human customs and human society
ought to be founded on a strictly logical and rational
basis. It was a belief which ignored those legitimate
claims of the emotional nature which the nineteenth century
afterwards investigated and developed, but it was of immense
service to mankind in clearing away useless prejudices
and superstitions, and it culminated in the reforms of
the great Revolution which most other nations have since
been painfully struggling to attain. Modesty offered a
tempting field for the eighteenth century philosophic
spirit to explore.
The manner in which the most distinguished and adventurous
minds of the century approached it, can scarcely be better
illustrated than by a conversation, reported by Madame
d'Epinay, which took place in 1750 at the table of Mlle.
Quinault, the eminent actress. "A fine virtue,"
Duclos remarked, "which one fastens on in the morning
with pins." He proceeded to argue that "a moral
law must hold good always and everywhere, which modesty
does not." Saint-Lambert, the poet, observed that
"it must be acknowledged that one can say nothing
good about innocence without being a little corrupted,"
and Duclos added "or of modesty without being impudent."
Saint-Lambert finally held forth with much poetic enthusiasm
concerning the desirability of consummating marriages
in public.[59] This view of modesty, combined with the
introduction of Greek fashions, gained ground to such
an extent that towards the end of the century women, to
the detriment of their health, were sometimes content
to dress in transparent gauze, and even to walk abroad
in the Champs Elysees without any clothing; that, however,
was too much for the public.[60] The final outcome of
the eighteenth century spirit in this direction was, as
we know, by no means the dissolution of modesty. But it
led to a clearer realization of what is permanent in its
organic foundations and what is merely temporary in its
shifting manifestations. That is a realization which is
no mean task to achieve, and is difficult for many, even
yet. So intelligent a traveler as Mrs. Bishop (Miss Bird),
on her first visit to Japan came to the conclusion that
Japanese women had no modesty, because they had no objection
to being seen naked when bathing. Twenty years later she
admitted to Dr. Baelz that she had made a mistake, and
that "a woman may be naked and yet behave like a
lady."[61] In civilized countries the observances
of modesty differ in different regions, and in different
social classes, but, however various the forms may be,
the impulse itself remains persistent.[62]
Modesty has thus come to have the force of a tradition,
a vague but massive force, bearing with special power
on those who cannot reason, and yet having its root in
the instincts of all people of all classes.[63] It has
become mainly transformed into the allied emotion of decency,
which has been described as "modesty fossilized into
social customs." The emotion yields more readily
than in its primitive state to any sufficiently-strong
motive. Even fashion in the more civilized countries can
easily inhibit anatomical modesty, and rapidly exhibit
or accentuate, in turn, almost any part of the body, while
the savage Indian woman of America, the barbarous woman
of some Mohammedan countries, can scarcely sacrifice her
modesty in the pangs of childbirth. Even when, among uncivilized
races, the focus of modesty may be said to be eccentric
and arbitrary, it still remains very rigid. In such savage
and barbarous countries modesty possesses the strength
of a genuine and irresistible instinct. In civilized countries,
however, anyone who places considerations of modesty before
the claims of some real human need excites ridicule and
contempt.
FOOTNOTES:
[4] Fliess (_Die Beziehungen zwischen Nase und weiblichen
Geschlechts-Organen_, p. 194) remarks on the fact that,
in the Bible narrative of Eden, shame and fear are represented
as being brought into the world together: Adam feared
God because he was naked. Melinaud ("Psychologie
de la Pudeur," _La Revue_, Nov. 15, 1901) remarks
that shame differs from modesty in being, not a fear,
but a kind of grief; this position seems untenable.
[5] Bashfulness in children has been dealt with by Professor
Baldwin; see especially his _Mental Development in the
Child and the Race_, Chapter VI, pp. 146 et seq., and
_Social Interpretations in Mental Development_, Chapter
VI.
[6] Bell, "A Preliminary Study of the Emotion of
Love Between the Sexes," _American Journal Psychology_,
July, 1902.
[7] Professor Starbuck (_Psychology of Religion_, Chapter
XXX) refers to unpublished investigations showing that
recognition of the rights of others also exhibits a sudden
increment at the age of puberty.
[8] Perez, _L'Enfant de Trois a Sept Ans_, 1886, pp. 267-277.
[9] It must be remembered that the Medicean Venus is merely
a comparatively recent and familiar embodiment of a natural
attitude which is very ancient, and had impressed sculptors
at a far earlier period. Reinach, indeed, believes ("La
Sculpture en Europe," _L'Anthropologie_, No. 5, 1895)
that the hand was first brought to the breast to press
out the milk, and expresses the idea of exuberance, and
that the attitude of the Venus of Medici as a symbol of
modesty came later; he remarks that, as regards both hands,
this attitude may be found in a figurine of Cyprus, 2,000
years before Christ. This is, no doubt, correct, and I
may add that Babylonian figurines of Ishtar, the goddess
of fertility, represent her as clasping her hands to her
breasts or her womb.
[10] When there is no sexual fear the impulse of modesty
may be entirely inhibited. French ladies under the old
Regime (as A. Franklin points out in his _Vie Privee d'Autrefois_)
sometimes showed no modesty towards their valets, not
admitting the possibility of any sexual advance, and a
lady would, for example, stand up in her bath while a
valet added hot water by pouring it between her separated
feet.
[11] I do not hereby mean to deny a certain degree of
normal periodicity even to the human male; but such periodicity
scarcely involves any element of sexual fear or attitude
of sexual defence, in man because it is too slight to
involve complete latency of the sexual functions, in other
species because latency of sexual function in the male
is always accompanied by corresponding latency in the
female.
[12] H. Northcote, _Christianity and the Sex Problem_,
p. 8. Crawley had previously argued (_The Mystic Rose_,
pp. 134, 180) that this same necessity for solitude during
the performance of nutritive, sexual, and excretory functions,
is a factor in investing such functions with a potential
sacredness, so that the concealment of them became a religious
duty.
[13] _Zeitschrift fuer Ethnologie_, 1878, p. 26.
[14] _Essais_, livre ii, Ch. XV.
[15] _Monsieur Nicolas_, vol. i, p. 89.
[16] Lane, _Arabian Society_, p. 228. The Arab insistence
on the value of virginal modesty is well brought out in
one of the most charming stories of the _Arabian Nights_,
"The History of the Mirror of Virginity."
[17] This has especially been emphasized by Crawley, _The
Mystic Rose_, pp. 181, 324 et seq., 353.
[18] _Geschlecht und Gesellschaft_, Bd. II, Heft 8, p.
358.
[19] This, however, is not always or altogether true of
experienced women. Thus, the Russian correspondent already
referred to, who as a youth was accustomed, partly out
of shyness, to feign complete ignorance of sexual matters,
informs me that it repeatedly happened to him at this
time that young married women took pleasure in imposing
on themselves, not without shyness but with evident pleasure,
the task of initiating him, though they always hastened
to tell him that it was for his good, to preserve him
from bad women and masturbation. Prostitutes, also, often
take pleasure in innocent men, and Hans Ostwald tells
(_Sexual-Probleme_, June, 1908, p. 357) of a prostitute
who fell violently in love with a youth who had never
known a woman before; she had never met an innocent man
before, and it excited her greatly. And I have been told
of an Italian prostitute who spoke of the exciting pleasure
which an unspoilt youth gave her by his freshness, _tutta
questa freschezza_.
[20] _Anatomy of Melancholy_, Part III, Sect. III. Mem.
IV. Subs. I.
[21] N. Venette, _La Generation de l'Homme_, Part II,
Ch. X.
[22] _Monsieur Nicolas_, vol. i, p. 94.
[23] Kryptadia, vol. ii, p. 26, 31. Ib. vol. iii, p. 162.
[24] "Modesty is, at first," said Renouvier,
"a fear which we have of displeasing others, and
of blushing at our own natural imperfections." (Renouvier
and Prat, _La Nouvelle Monadologie_, p. 221.)
[25] C. Richet, "Les Causes du Degout," _L'Homme
et l'Intelligence_, 1884. This eminent physiologist's
elaborate study of disgust was not written as a contribution
to the psychology of modesty, but it forms an admirable
introduction to the investigation of the social factor
of modesty.
[26] It is interesting to note that where, as among the
Eskimo, urine, for instance, is preserved as a highly-valuable
commodity, the act of urination, even at table, is not
regarded as in the slightest degree disgusting or immodest
(Bourke, _Scatologic Rites_, p. 202).
[27] Hawkesworth, _An Account of the Voyages_, etc., 1775,
vol. ii, p. 52.
[28] _Journal of the Anthropological Institute_, vol.
vi, p. 173.
[29] Stevens, "Mittheilungen aus dem Frauenleben
der Orang Belendas," _Zeitschrift fuer Ethnologie_,
Heft 4, p. 167, 1896. Crawley, (_Mystic Rose_, Ch. VIII,
p. 439) gives numerous other instances, even in Europe,
with, however, special reference to sexual taboo. I may
remark that English people of lower class, especially
women, are often modest about eating in the presence of
people of higher class. This feeling is, no doubt, due,
in part, to the consciousness of defective etiquette,
but that very consciousness is, in part, a development
of the fear of causing disgust, which is a component of
modesty.
[30] Shame in regard to eating, it may be added, occasionally
appears as a neurasthenic obsession in civilization, and
has been studied as a form of psychasthenia by Janet.
See e.g., (Raymond and Janet, _Les Obsessions et la Psychasthenie_,
vol. ii, p. 386) the case of a young girl of 24, who,
from the age of 12 or 13 (the epoch of puberty) had been
ashamed to eat in public, thinking it nasty and ugly to
do so, and arguing that it ought only to be done in private,
like urination.
[31] "Desire and disgust are curiously blended,"
remarks Crawley (_The Mystic Rose_, p. 139), "when,
with one's own desire unsatisfied, one sees the satisfaction
of another; and here we may see the altruistic stage beginning;
this has two sides, the fear of causing desire in others,
and the fear of causing disgust; in each case, personal
isolation is the psychological result."
[32] Hohenemser argues that the fear of causing disgust
cannot be a part of shame. But he also argues that shame
is simply psychic stasis, and it is quite easy to see,
as in the above case, that the fear of causing disgust
is simply a manifestation of psychic stasis. There is
a conflict in the woman's mind between the idea of herself
which she has already given, and the more degraded idea
of herself which she fears she is likely to give, and
this conflict is settled when she is made to feel that
the first idea may still be maintained under the new circumstances.
[33] We neither of us knew that we had merely made afresh
a very ancient discovery. Casanova, more than a century
ago, quoted the remark of a friend of his, that the easiest
way to overcome the modesty of a woman is to suppose it
non-existent; and he adds a saying, which he attributes
to Clement of Alexandria, that modesty, which seems so
deeply rooted in women, only resides in the linen that
covers them, and vanishes when it vanishes. The passage
to which Casanova referred occurs in the _Paedagogus_,
and has already been quoted. The observation seems to
have appealed strongly to the Fathers, always glad to
make a point against women, and I have met with it in
Cyprian's _De Habitu Feminarum_. It also occurs in Jerome's
treatise against Jovinian. Jerome, with more scholarly
instinct, rightly presents the remark as a quotation:
"_Scribit Herodotus quod mulier cum veste deponat
et verecundiam_." In Herodotus the saying is attributed
to Gyges (Book I, Chapter VIII). We may thus trace very
far back into antiquity an observation which in English
has received its classical expression from Chaucer, who,
in his "Wife of Bath's Prologue," has:--
"He sayde, a woman cast hir shame away, When she
cast of hir smok."
I need not point out that the analysis of modesty offered
above robs this venerable saying of any sting it may have
possessed as a slur upon women. In such a case, modesty
is largely a doubt as to the spectator's attitude, and
necessarily disappears when that doubt is satisfactorily
resolved. As we have seen, the Central Australian maidens
were very modest with regard to the removal of their single
garment, but when that removal was accomplished and accepted,
they were fearless.
[34] The same result occurs more markedly under the deadening
influence of insanity. Grimaldi (_Il Manicomio Moderno_,
1888) found that modesty is lacking in 50 per cent, of
the insane.
[35] For some facts bearing on this point, see Houssay,
_Industries of Animals_, Chapter VII. "The Defence
and Sanitation of Dwellings;" also P. Ballion, _De
l'Instinct de Proprete chez les Animaux_.
[36] Thus, Stevens mentions (_Zeitschrift fuer Ethnologie_,
p. 182, 1897) that the Dyaks of Malacca always wash the
sexual organs, even after urination, and are careful to
use the left hand in doing so. The left hand is also reserved
for such uses among the Jekris of the Niger coast (_Journal
of the Anthropological Institute_, p. 122, 1898).
[37] Lombroso and Ferrero--who adopt the derivation of
_pudor_ from _putere_; i.e., from the repugnance caused
by the decomposition of the vaginal secretions--consider
that the fear of causing disgust to men is the sole origin
of modesty among savage women, as also it remains the
sole form of modesty among some prostitutes to-day. (_La
Donna Delinquente_, p. 540.) Important as this factor
is in the constitution of the emotion of modesty, I need
scarcely add that I regard so exclusive a theory as altogether
untenable.
[38] _Das Weib_, Ch. VI.
[39] For references as to a similar feeling among other
savages, see Westermarck, _History of Human Marriage_,
p. 152.
[40] See e.g., Bourke, _Scatologic Rites_, pp. 141, 145,
etc.
[41] Crawley, op. cit., Ch. VII.
[42] S, Reinach, _Cultes, Mythes et Religions_, p. 172.
[43] Tertullian, _De Virginibus Velandis_, cap. 17. Hottentot
women, also (Fritsch, _Eingeborene Suedafrika's_, p. 311),
cover their head with a cloth, and will not be persuaded
to remove it.
[44] Wellhausen, _Reste Arabischen Heidentums_, p. 196.
The same custom is found among Tuareg men though it is
not imperative for the women (Duveyrier, _Les Touaregs
du Nord_, p. 291).
[45] Quoted in _Zentralblatt fuer Anthropologie_, 1906,
Heft I, p. 21.
[46] Or rather, perhaps, because the sight of their nakedness
might lead the angels into sin. See W.G. Sumner, _Folkways_,
p. 431.
[47] In Moruland, Emin Bey remarked that women are mostly
naked, but some wear a girdle, with a few leaves hanging
behind. The women of some negro tribes, who thus cover
themselves behind, if deprived of this sole covering,
immediately throw themselves on the ground on their backs,
in order to hide their nakedness.
[48] E.g., Letourneau, _L'Evolution de la Morale_, p.
146.
[49] Spencer and Gillen, _Northern Tribes of Central Australia_,
p. 683.
[50] J.R. Forster, _Observations Made During a Voyage
Round the World_, 1728, p. 395.
[51] Westermarck (_History of Human Marriage_, Ch. IX)
ably sets forth this argument, with his usual wealth of
illustration. Crawley (_Mystic Rose_, p. 135) seeks to
qualify this conclusion by arguing that tattooing, etc.,
of the sex organs is not for ornament but for the purpose
of magically insulating the organs, and is practically
a permanent amulet or charm.
[52] _Iliad_, II, 262. Waitz gives instances (_Anthropology_,
p. 301) showing that nakedness is sometimes a mark of
submission.
[53] The Celtic races, in their days of developed barbarism,
seem to have been relatively free from the idea of proprietorship
in women, and it was probably among the Irish (as we learn
from the seventeenth century _Itinerary_ of Fynes Moryson)
that the habit of nakedness was longest preserved among
the upper social class women of Western Europe.
[54] A.B. Ellis, _Tshi-Speaking Peoples_, p. 280.
[55] Burnet, _Life and Death of Rochester_, p. 110.
[56] _L'Annee Sociologique_, seventh year, 1904, p. 439.
[57] Tallemont des Reaux, who began to write his _Historiettes_
in 1657, says of the Marquise de Rambouillet: "Elle
est un peu trop delicate ... on n'oscrait prononcer le
mot de _cul_. Cela va dans l'exces." Half a century
later, in England, Mandeville, in the Remarks appended
to his _Fable of the Bees_, refers to the almost prudish
modesty inculcated on children from their earliest years.
[58] In one of its civilized developments, this ritualized
modesty becomes prudery, which is defined by Forel (_Die
Sexuelle Frage_, Fifth ed., p. 125) as "codified
sexual morality." Prudery is fossilized modesty,
and no longer reacts vitally. True modesty, in an intelligent
civilized person, is instinctively affected by motives
and circumstances, responding sensitively to its relationships.
[59] _Memoires de Madame d'Epinay_, Part I, Ch. V. Thirty
years earlier, Mandeville had written, in England, that
"the modesty of women is the result of custom and
education."
[60] Goncourt, _Histoire de la Societe Francaise pendant
le Directoire_, p. 422. Clothes became so gauze-like,
and receded to such an extent from the limbs, that for
a time the chemise was discarded as an awkward and antiquated
garment.
[61] _Zeitschrift fuer Ethnologie_, 1901, Heft 2, p. 179.
[62] In the rural districts of Hanover, Pastor Grashoff
states, "even when natural necessities are performed
with the greatest possible freedom, there is no offence
to modesty, in rural opinion." But he makes a statement
which is both contradictory and false, when he adds that
"modesty is, to the country man in general, a foreign
idea." (_Geschlechtlich-Sittliche Verhaeltnisse im
Deutsche Reiche_, vol. ii, p. 45.)
[63] It is frequently stated that prostitutes are devoid
of modesty, but this is incorrect; they possess a partial
and diminished modesty which, for a considerable period
still remains genuine (see e.g., Reuss, _La Prostitution_,
p. 58). Lombroso and Ferrero (_La Donna_, p. 540) refer
to the objection of prostitutes to be examined during
the monthly periods as often greater than that of respectable
women. Again, Callari states ("Prostituzione in Sicilia,"
_Archivio di Psichiatria_, 1903, p. 205), that Sicilian
prostitutes can only with difficulty be persuaded to expose
themselves naked in the practice of their profession.
Aretino long since remarked (in _La Pippa_) that no women
so detest gratuitous _decolletage_ as prostitutes. When
prostitutes do not possess modesty, they frequently simulate
it, and Ferriani remarks (in his _Delinquenti Minorenni_)
that of ninety-seven minors (mostly females) accused of
offences against public decency, seventy-five simulated
a modesty which, in his opinion, they were entirely without.
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