The Eleventh Virgin Dorothy Day (digital ebook reader .TXT) đ
- Author: Dorothy Day
Book online «The Eleventh Virgin Dorothy Day (digital ebook reader .TXT) đ». Author Dorothy Day
âThen if you lived with one man for a year or so and got tired of him, physically and mentallyâ âand found he hadnât any depths to discover, then I should think youâd lack the courage to change and take another mate for fear youâd tire again.
âSuch a course would just lead to promiscuity, I should think, even though it deserves a more dignified name than promiscuity.â
âPromiscuity wouldnât be so bad,â Regina said thoughtfully. âThereâs Madame du Barry. Think of the education youâd get by living with one man after another. That is, if you have a receptive mind and pick out intelligent men.â
âBut couldnât you get it without the physical side entering in?â June protested, a little shocked.
âNo,â Regina decided. âYouâd get just the smattering of an education. If you want to make an intensive study, youâd have to live with the man who knew all you wanted to know. You see with women of brains, an intelligent man uses his mental charms rather than physical to captivate her.â
âYes, and when the personal equation enters in, you learn much more than when youâre studying by yourself. I was slumping in history till you joined the class in January. Then I felt I had to go you one better, so Iâve been studying like mad ever since.â
âI want a thorough knowledge of biology,â Regina went on dreamily.
âBut who would want to live with a man like Professor Hawkinsââ âJune interrupted her practically.
Regina made a wry face. âThatâs the trouble. Youâve got to have a mental and physical combination and I suppose itâs rare. No, I couldnât ever live with Professor Hawkins.â
âEven if we were immoralâ ââ
âNo, unmoral,â Regina corrected.
âEither way. As long as youâre independent about it, you donât care whether people call you the one or the other. Anyway, even if we were immoral we couldnâtâ âwe wouldnât have any opportunityâ âwe probably wouldnât even be asked if we did have the opportunity of knowing themâ âto live with the men we wanted to; Anatole France, for instance, or Fritz Kreisler, or H. G. Wells. But think what weâd learn if we could!â
The girls sighed.
And there were the other conversations that would always be remembered. One morning Regina cut a class to interview Mrs. Rose Pastor Stokes who was lecturing at the university on socialism. The girls took turns getting stories for the school paper and the well known radical had fallen to Regina, much to her delight. She was still blazing with enthusiasm that afternoon at tea, and her eyes had red lights in them. Tomorrow she would talk with equal fire of Benvenuto Cellini but today radicalism, as expressed by Mrs. Stokes, flowed through her veins.
âWhat a wonder she is! Didnât you think she was stunning, June? Tall and distinguished and just as poised!â (Poised was one of Reginaâs favorite words at the time.)
âAnd she was so lovely to me. She said she had red hair the color of mine and that I reminded her of herself when she was a girl. That was a real compliment, I think. She told me how she worked in a factory on the East Side of New York when she was a girl and how she struggled for an education in the university settlement there. And this New York millionaire came along and married her. Thereâs romance for you. Itâll make a ripping story for tomorrow morningâs paper. Iâll write it after tea.â
Socialism as a creed did not appeal to Regina. Perhaps it was because on the only occasions she had attended the Socialist local in the town, two of her instructors had been there, and held positions as executives in the branch. This was sufficient evidence that socialists were not persecuted, as she had imagined, and that free speech was not merely a phrase in the constitution. She could learn all she wanted on the subject from her economics professor, who was a well-read and nonpartisan teacher. âI am an instructor,â he once told them, ânot a politician.â So Regina, partly as a result of American indifference to politics and partly through a Nietzschean conviction that the mob wasnât worth assisting, learned just enough about socialism to pass her term examinations in political economy, and no more.
âI told Mrs. Stokes why I wasnât interested in Socialism and she laughed at me and said I was very young.â Regina dimpled ruefully. âSo I told her I would like to hear about her activities in the birth control movement, since they didnât teach that in Economics 1b and didnât have a society in the town.â
âYouâre not going to say anything about that in the Mirror,â Reginaâs fiancĂ© Ray broke in. âWeâd be suppressed and probably weâd be canned.â
âThere you areâ âthereâs your free speech,â pointed out Jim, who had his astute moments.
âHere is part of the feminist movement which people donât know about except when they pick up their papers and find out Mrs. Stokes has gone to jail for a month for distributing pamphlets on the subject. What wouldnât tenement mothers give to have one of those pamphlets. But they havenât any chance to learn until the newspapers agitate for it and the legislature changes the laws. Itâs up to the press.â
âYouâre editor, Jim. If Regina or I wrote an article on the history of the birth control movement, would you print it?â June asked.
âNope.â
âOf course not. You havenât the guts. But this is what would happen. The article would be printed and you and the person who wrote it would be called up before the dean and expelled. The rest of the staff would stand back of you, print a farewell edition of
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