[Across the Zodiac by Percy Greg]@TWC D-Link book
Across the Zodiac

CHAPTER X - WOMAN AND WEDLOCK
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Her capacity of maintaining herself, in the days when women did work, was found practically to be even smaller than before marriage.

You may say that this really amounts to a recognition by custom of the natural inequality denied by law; but at any rate, it is an inequality which it was scarcely possible to overlook.

Examine the practical working of the covenants, and you will find that in affecting to treat unequals as equals they merely make the weaker the slave of the stronger." "Surely," I said, "husband and wife are so far equal, where neither is tied to the children, that each can make the other heartily glad to assent to a divorce." "Perhaps, where law interferes to enforce monogamy, and thereby to create an artificial equality of mutual dependence.

But our law cannot dictate to equals, whose sex it ignores, the terms or numbers of partnership.

So, the terms of the contract being voluntary, men of course insist on excluding legal interference in household quarrels; and before the prohibitive clause was generally adopted, legal interposition did more harm than good.


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