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Fantasia of the Unconscious
Chapter 12. Litany Of Exhortations
D.H.Lawrence
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       _ CHAPTER XII. LITANY OF EXHORTATIONS
       I thought I'd better turn over a new leaf, and start a new chapter.
       The intention of the last chapter was to find a way out of the vicious
       circle. And it ended in poison-gas.
       Yes, dear reader, so it did. But you've not silenced me yet, for all
       that.
       We're in a nasty mess. We're in a vicious circle. And we're making a
       careful study of poison-gases. The secret of Greek fire was lost long
       ago, when the world left off being wonderful and ideal. Now it is
       wonderful and ideal again, much wonderfuller and _much_ more ideal. So
       we ought to do something rare in the way of poison-gas. London a
       Pompeii in five minutes! How to outdo Vesuvius!--title of a new book
       by American authors.
       There is only one single other thing to do. And it's more difficult
       than poison-gas. It is to leave off loving. It is to leave off
       benevolenting and having a good will. It is to cease utterly. Just
       leave off. Oh, parents, see that your children get their dinners and
       clean sheets, but don't love them. Don't love them one single grain,
       and don't let anybody else love them. Give them their dinners and
       leave them alone. You've already loved them to perdition. Now leave
       them alone, to find their own way out.
       Wives, don't love your husbands any more: even if they cry for it, the
       great babies! Sing: "I've had enough of that old sauce." And leave off
       loving them or caring for them one single bit. Don't even hate them or
       dislike them. Don't have any stew with them at all. Just boil the eggs
       and fill the salt-cellars and be quite nice, and in your own soul, be
       alone and be still. Be alone, and be still, preserving all the human
       decencies, and abandoning the indecency of desires and benevolencies
       and devotions, those beastly poison-gas apples of the Sodom vine of
       the love-will.
       Wives, don't love your husbands nor your children nor anybody. Sit
       still, and say Hush! And while you shake the duster out of the
       drawing-room window, say to yourself--"In the sweetness of solitude."
       And when your husband comes in and says he's afraid he's got a cold
       and is going to have double pneumonia, say quietly "surely not." And
       if he wants the ammoniated quinine, give it him if he can't get it for
       himself. But don't let him drive you out of your solitude, your
       singleness within yourself. And if your little boy falls down the
       steps and makes his mouth bleed, nurse and comfort him, but say to
       yourself, even while you tremble with the shock: "Alone. Alone. Be
       alone, my soul." And if the servant smashes three electric-light bulbs
       in three minutes, say to her: "How very inconsiderate and careless of
       you!" But say to yourself: "Don't hear it, my soul. Don't take fright
       at the pop of a light-bulb."
       Husbands, don't love your wives any more. If they flirt with men
       younger or older than yourselves, let your blood not stir. If you can
       go away, go away. But if you must stay and see her, then say to her,
       "I would rather you didn't flirt in my presence, Eleanora." Then, when
       she goes red and loosens torrents of indignation, don't answer any
       more. And when she floods into tears, say quietly in your own self,
       "My soul is my own"; and go away, be alone as much as possible. And
       when she works herself up, and says she must have love or she will
       die, then say: "Not my love, however." And to all her threats, her
       tears, her entreaties, her reproaches, her cajolements, her
       winsomenesses, answer nothing, but say to yourself: "Shall I be
       implicated in this display of the love-will? Shall I be blasted by
       this false lightning?" And though you tremble in every fiber, and feel
       sick, vomit-sick with the scene, still contain yourself, and say, "My
       soul is my own. It shall not be violated." And learn, learn, learn the
       one and only lesson worth learning at last. Learn to walk in the
       sweetness of the possession of your own soul. And whether your wife
       weeps as she takes off her amber beads at night, or whether your
       neighbor in the train sits in your coat bottoms, or whether your
       superior in the office makes supercilious remarks, or your inferior is
       familiar and impudent; or whether you read in the newspaper that Lloyd
       George is performing another iniquity, or the Germans plotting another
       plot, say to yourself: "My soul is my own. My soul is with myself, and
       beyond implication." And wait, quietly, in possession of your own
       soul, till you meet another man who has made the choice, and kept it.
       Then you will know him by the look on his face: half a dangerous look,
       a look of Cain, and half a look of gathered beauty. Then you two will
       make the nucleus of a new society--Ooray! Bis! Bis!!
       But if you should never meet such a man: and if your wife should
       torture you every day with her love-will: and even if she should force
       herself into a consumption, like Catherine Linton in "Wuthering
       Heights," owing to her obstinate and determined love-will (which is
       quite another matter than love): and if you see the world inventing
       poison-gas and falling into its poisoned grave: never give in, but be
       alone, and utterly alone with your own soul, in the stillness and
       sweet possession of your own soul. And don't even be angry. And
       _never_ be sad. Why should you? It's not your affair.
       But if your wife should accomplish for herself the sweetness of her
       own soul's possession, then gently, delicately let the new mode assert
       itself, the new mode of relation between you, with something of
       spontaneous paradise in it, the apple of knowledge at last digested.
       But, my word, what belly-aches meanwhile. That apple is harder to
       digest than a lead gun-cartridge. _