2- The Marriage
Relation
Men and women, by indulging the appetite with
rich and highly-seasoned foods, especially flesh-meats and rich gravies, and by
using stimulating drinks, as tea and coffee, create unnatural appetites. The
system becomes fevered, the organs of digestion become injured, the mental
faculties are beclouded, while the baser passions are excited, and predominate.
The appetite becomes more unnatural, and more difficult of restraint. The
circulation is not equalized, and the blood becomes impure. The whole system is
deranged, and the demands of appetite become more unreasonable, craving
exciting, hurtful things, until it is thoroughly depraved.
With many, the appetite clamors for the
disgusting weed, tobacco, and ale, made powerful by poisonous, health-destroying
mixtures. Many do not stop even here. Their debased appetites call for stronger
drink, which has a still more benumbing influence upon the brain. Thus they give
themselves up to every excess, until appetite holds complete control over the
reasoning faculties; and man, formed in the image of his Maker, debases himself
lower than the beasts. Manhood and honor are alike sacrificed to appetite. It
required time to benumb the sensibilities of the mind. It was done gradually,
but surely. The indulgence of the appetite in first eating food highly seasoned,
created a morbid appetite, and prepared the way for every kind of indulgence,
until health and intellect were sacrificed to lust.
Many have entered the marriage relation who
have not acquired property, and who have had no inheritance. They did not
possess physical strength or mental energy, to acquire property. It has been
just such ones who have been in haste to marry, and who have taken upon
themselves responsibilities of which they had no just sense. They did not
possess noble, elevated feelings, and had no just idea of the duty of a husband
and father, and what it would cost them to provide for the wants of a family.
And they manifested no more propriety in the increase of their families than
that shown in their business transactions. Those who are seriously deficient in
business tact, and who are the least qualified to get along in the world,
generally fill their houses with children; while men who have ability to acquire
property, generally have no more children than they can well provide for. Those
who are not qualified to take care of themselves, should not have children. It
has been the case that the numerous offspring of these poor calculators are left
to come up like the brutes. They are not suitably fed or clothed, and do not
receive physical or mental training, and there is nothing sacred in the word
home, to either parents or children.
The marriage institution was designed of
Heaven to be a blessing to man; but, in a general sense, it has been abused in
such a manner as to make it a dreadful curse. Most of men and women have acted,
in entering the marriage relation, as though the only question for them to
settle was, whether they loved each other. But they should realize that a
responsibility rests upon them in the marriage relation farther than this. They
should consider whether their offspring will possess physical health, and mental
and moral strength. But few have moved with high motives, and with elevated
considerations which they could not lightly throw off-- that society had claims
upon them, that the weight of their family's influence would tell in the upward
or downward scale.
Society is composed of families; and heads of
families are responsible for the molding of society. If those who choose to
enter the marriage relation without due consideration were alone to be the
sufferers, then the evil would not be so great, and their sin would be
comparatively small. But the misery arising from unhappy marriages is felt by
the offspring of such unions. They have entailed upon them a life of living
misery; and, though innocent, suffer the consequences of their parents'
inconsiderate course. Men and women have no right to follow impulse, or blind
passion, in their marriage relation, and then bring innocent children into the
world to realize from various causes that life has but little joy, but little
happiness, and is therefore a burden. Children generally inherit the peculiar
traits of character which the parents possess; and in addition to all this, many
come up without any redeeming influence around them. They are too frequently
huddled together in poverty and filth. With such surroundings and examples, what
can be expected of the children when they come upon the stage of action, but
that they will sink lower in the scale of moral worth than their parents, and
their deficiencies, in every respect, be more apparent than theirs? Thus have
this class perpetuated their deficiencies, and cursed their posterity with
poverty, imbecility, and degradation. These should not have married. At least,
they should not have brought innocent children into existence to share their
misery, and hand down their own deficiencies, with accumulating wretchedness,
from generation to generation. This is one great cause of the degeneracy of the
race.
If women of past generations had always moved from high considerations,
realizing that future generations would be ennobled or debased by their course
of action, they would have taken their stand, that they could not unite their
life interest with men who were cherishing unnatural appetites for alcoholic
drinks, and tobacco which is a slow, but sure and deadly, poison, weakening the
nervous system, and debasing the noble faculties of the mind. If men would
remain wedded to these vile habits, women should have left them to their life of
single blessedness, to enjoy these companions of their choice. Women should not
have considered themselves of so little value as to unite their destiny with men
who had no control over their appetites, but whose principal happiness consisted
in eating and drinking, and gratifying their animal passions. Women have not
always followed the dictates of reason. They have sometimes been led by blind
impulse. They have not always felt in a high degree the responsibilities resting
upon them, to form such life connections as would not enstamp upon their
offspring a low degree of morals, and a passion to gratify debased appetites, at
the expense of health, and even life. God will hold them accountable in a large
degree for the physical health and moral characters thus transmitted to future
generations.
Men and women who have corrupted their own
bodies by dissolute habits, have also debased their intellects and destroyed the
fine sensibilities of the soul. Very many of this class have married, and left
for an inheritance to their offspring the taints of their own physical debility
and depraved morals. The gratification of animal passions and gross sensuality
have been the marked characteristics of their posterity, which have descended
from generation to generation, increasing human misery to a fearful degree, and
hastening the deterioration of the race.
Men and women who have become sickly and
diseased, have often in their marriage connections selfishly thought only of
their own happiness. They have not seriously considered the matter from the
standpoint of noble, elevated principles, reasoning in regard to what they could
expect of their posterity, but diminished energy of body and mind which would
not elevate society, but sink it still lower.
Sickly men have often won the affections of
women apparently healthy, and because they loved each other, they have felt
themselves at perfect liberty to marry, neither considering that by their union
the wife must be a sufferer, more or less, because of the diseased husband. In
many cases, the diseased husband improves in health, while the wife shares his
disease. He lives very much upon her vitality, and she soon complains of failing
health. He prolongs his days by shortening the days of his wife. Those who thus
marry, commit sin in lightly regarding health and life given to them of God to
be used to his glory. But if those who thus enter the marriage relation were
alone concerned, the sin would not be so great. Their offspring are compelled to
be sufferers by disease transmitted to them. Thus disease has been perpetuated
from generation to generation. And many charge all this weight of human misery
upon God, when their wrong course of action has brought the sure result. They
have thrown upon society an enfeebled race, and done their part to deteriorate
the race, by rendering disease hereditary, and thus accumulating human
suffering.
Another cause of the deficiency of the present
generation in physical strength and moral worth, is the union of men and women
in marriage whose ages widely differ. It is frequently the case that old men
choose to marry young wives. By thus doing the life of the husband has often
been prolonged, while the wife has had to feel the want of that vitality which
she has imparted to her aged husband. It has not been the duty of any woman to
sacrifice life and health, even if she did love one so much older than herself,
and felt willing on her part to make such a sacrifice. She should have
restrained her affections. She had considerations higher than her own interest
to consult. She should consider, if children were born to them, what their
condition would be. It is still worse for young men to marry women considerably
older than themselves. The offspring of such unions in many cases, where ages
widely differ, have not well-balanced minds. They have been deficient also in
physical strength. In such families, varied, peculiar, and often painful, traits
of character have frequently been manifested. The children often die
pre-maturely, and those who reach maturity, in many cases, are deficient in
physical and mental strength, and moral worth.
The father is seldom prepared, with his failing
faculties, to properly bring up his young family. These children have peculiar
traits of character, which constantly need a counteracting influence, or they
will go to certain ruin. They are not educated aright. Their discipline has too
often been of the fitful, impulsive kind, by reason of his age. The father has
been susceptible of changeable feelings. At one time over-indulgent, while at
another he is unwarrantably severe. Everything in such families is wrong, and
domestic wretchedness is greatly increased. Thus a class of beings have been
thrown upon the world as a burden to society.
Those who increase their number of children, when, if they consulted
reason, they must know that physical and mental weakness must be their
inheritance, are transgressors of the last six precepts of God's law, which
specify the duty of man to his fellow-man. They do their part in increasing the
degeneracy of the race, and in sinking society lower, thus injuring their
neighbor. If God thus regards the rights of neighbors, has he no care in regard
to closer and more sacred relationship? If not a sparrow falls to the ground
without his notice, will he be unmindful of the children born into the world,
diseased physically and mentally, suffering in a greater or less degree, all
their lives? Will he not call parents to an account, to whom he has given
reasoning powers, for putting these higher faculties in the background, and
becoming slaves to passion, when, as the result, generations must bear the mark
of their physical, mental, and moral deficiencies? In addition to the suffering
they entail upon their children, they have no portion but poverty to leave to
their pitiful flock. They cannot educate them, and many do not see the necessity
of it; neither could they, if they did see such necessity, find time to train
them, and instruct them, and lessen, as much as possible, the wretched
inheritance transmitted to them. Parents should not increase their families any
faster than they know that their children can be well cared for, and educated. A
child in the mother's arms from year to year is great injustice to her. It
lessens, and often destroys, social enjoyment, and increases domestic
wretchedness. It robs their children of that care, education, and happiness,
which parents should feel it their duty to bestow upon them.
The husband violates the marriage vow and the
duties enjoined upon him in the word of God, when he disregards the health and
happiness of the wife, by increasing her burdens and cares by numerous
offspring. "Husbands, love your wives, even as Christ also loved the church, and
gave himself for it. So ought men to love their wives as their own bodies. He
that loveth his wife loveth himself. For no man ever yet hated his own flesh,
but nourisheth and cherisheth it, even as the Lord the church."
We see this holy injunction almost wholly
disregarded, even by professed Christians. Everywhere you may look, you will see
pale, sickly, careworn, broken-down, dispirited, discouraged women. They are
generally overworked, and their vital energies exhausted by frequent
child-bearing. The world is filled with images of human beings who are of no
worth to society. Many are deficient in intellect, and many who possess natural
talents do not use them for any beneficial purposes. They are not cultivated,
and the one great reason is, children have been multiplied faster than they
could be well trained, and have been left to come up much like the brutes.
3-
The Care of Children.
Children
in this age are suffering with their parents, more or less, the penalty of the
violation of the laws of health. The course generally pursued with them, from
their infancy, is in continual opposition to the laws of their being. They were
compelled to receive a miserable inheritance of disease and debility, before
their birth, occasioned by the wrong habits of their parents, which will affect
them in a greater or less degree through life. This bad state of things is made
every way worse by parents' continuing to follow a wrong course in the physical
training of their children during their childhood.
Parents manifest astonishing ignorance,
indifference, and recklessness, in regard to the physical health of their
children, which often results in destroying the little vitality left the abused
infant, and consigns it to an early grave. You will frequently hear parents
mourning over the providence of God which has torn their children from their
embrace. Our Heavenly Father is too wise to err, and too good to do us wrong. He
has no delight in seeing his creatures suffer. Thousands have been ruined for
life because parents have not acted in accordance with the laws of health. They
have moved from impulse, instead of following the dictates of sound judgment,
constantly having in view the future well being of their children.
The first great object to be attained in the
training of children is soundness of constitution, which will prepare the way,
in a great measure for mental and moral training. Physical and moral health are
closely united. What an enormous weight of responsibility is seen to rest upon
parents, when we consider that the course pursued by them, before the birth of
their children, has very much to do with the development of their characters
after their birth.
Many children are left to come up with less
attention from their parents than a good farmer devotes to his dumb animals.
Fathers, especially, are often guilty of manifesting less care for wife and
children than that shown to their cattle. A merciful farmer will take time, and
devote especial thought as to the best manner of managing his stock, and will be
particular that his valuable horses shall not be overworked, overfed, or fed
when heated, lest they be ruined. He will take time and care for his stock, lest
they be injured by neglect, exposure, or any improper treatment, and his
increasing young stock depreciate in value. He will observe regular periods for
their eating, and will know the amount of work they can perform without injuring
them. In order to accomplish this, he will provide them only the most healthful
food, in proper quantities, and at stated periods. By thus following the
dictates of reason, farmers are successful in preserving the strength of their
beasts. If the interest of every father, for his wife and children, corresponded
to that care manifested for his cattle, in that degree that their lives are more
valuable than the dumb animals, there would be an entire reformation in every
family, and human misery be far less.
Great care should be manifested by parents in
providing them the most healthful articles of food for themselves and for their
children. And in no case should they place before their children food which
their reason teaches them is not conducive to health, but which would fever the
system, and derange the digestive organs. Parents do not study from cause to
effect in regard to their children, as in the case of their dumb animals, and do
not reason that to overwork, to eat after violent exercise, and when much
exhausted, and heated, will injure the health of human beings, as well as the
health of dumb animals, and will lay the foundation for a broken constitution in
man, as well as in beasts.
The father in many cases exercises more reason
respecting, and manifests more care for, his cattle when with young, than he
manifests for his wife, when in a similar condition. The mother, in many cases
previous to the birth of her children, is permitted to toil early and late,
heating her blood, while preparing various unhealthful dishes of food to suit
the perverted taste of the family, and of visitors. Her strength should be
tenderly cherished. A preparation of healthful food would require but about
one-half of the expense and labor, and would be far more nourishing.
The mother, before the birth of her children,
is often permitted to labor beyond her strength. Her burdens and cares are
seldom lessened, and that period, which should be to her of all others, a time
of rest, is one of fatigue, sadness, and gloom. By too great exertion on her
part, she deprives her offspring of that nutrition which nature has provided for
it, and by heating her blood, she imparts to it a bad quality of nourishment.
The offspring is robbed of its vitality, robbed of physical and mental strength.
The father should study how to make the mother happy. He should not allow
himself to come to his home with a clouded brow. It he is perplexed in business,
he should not, unless it is actually necessary to counsel with his wife, trouble
her with such matters. She has cares and trials of her own to bear, and she
should be tenderly spared every needless burden.
The mother too often meets with cold reserve
from the father. If everything does not move off just as pleasantly as he could
wish, he blames the wife and mother, and seems indifferent to her cares and
daily trials. Men who do this are working directly against their own interest
and happiness. The mother becomes discouraged. Hope and cheerfulness depart from
her. She goes about her work mechanically, knowing that it must be done, which
soon debilitates physical and mental health. Children are born to them,
suffering from various diseases, and God holds the parents accountable in a
great degree; for it was their wrong habits which fastened disease upon their
unborn children, under which they are compelled to suffer all through their
lives. Some live but a short period with their load of debility. The mother
anxiously watches over the life of her child, and is weighed down with sorrow as
she is compelled to close its eyes in death, and she often regards God as the
author of all this affliction, when the parents in reality were the murderers of
their own child.
The father should bear in mind that the
treatment of his wife before the birth of his offspring will materially affect
the disposition of the mother during that period, and will have very much to do
with the character developed by the child after its birth. Many fathers have
been so anxious to obtain property fast, that higher considerations have been
sacrificed and some men have been criminally neglectful of the mother and her
offspring, and too frequently the lives of both have been sacrificed to the
strong desire to accumulate wealth. Many do not immediately suffer this heavy
penalty for their wrong-doing, and are asleep to the result of their course. The
condition of the wife is sometimes no better that than of a slave, and sometimes
she is equally guilty with the husband, of squandering physical strength, to
obtain means to live fashionably. It is a crime for such to have children, for
their offspring will often be deficient in physical, mental, and moral worth,
and will bear the miserable, close, selfish impress of their parents; and the
world will be cursed with their meanness.
It is the duty of men and women to act with
reason in regard to their labor. They should not exhaust their energies
unnecessarily, 118 for by doing this, they not only bring suffering upon
themselves, but, by their errors, bring anxiety, weariness, and suffering, upon
those they love. What calls for such an amount of labor? Intemperance in eating
and in drinking, and the desire for wealth, have led to this intemperance in
labor. If the appetite is controlled, and that food only which is healthful be
taken, there will be so great a saving of expense, that men and women will not
be compelled to labor beyond their strength, and thus violate the laws of
health. The desire of men and women to accumulate property is not sinful, if, in
their efforts to attain their object, they do not forget God, and transgress the
last six precepts of Jehovah, which dictate the duty of man to his fellow-man,
and place themselves in a position where it is impossible for them to glorify
God in their bodies and spirits which are his. If, in their haste to be rich,
they overtax their energies and violate the laws of their being, they place
themselves in a condition where they cannot render to God perfect service, and
are pursuing a course of sin. Property thus obtained is at an immense sacrifice.
Hard labor and anxious care often make the
father nervous, impatient, and exacting. He does not notice the tired look of
his wife, who has labored, with her feebler strength, just as hard as he has
labored, with his stronger energies. He suffers himself to be hurried with
business, and, through his anxiety to be rich, loses in a great measure the
sense of his obligation to his family, and does not measure aright his wife's
power of endurance. He often enlarges his farm, requiring an increase of hired
help, which necessarily increases the housework. The wife realizes every day
that she is doing too much work for her strength, yet she toils on, thinkIng the
work must be done. She is continually reaching down into the future, drawing
upon her future resources of strength, and is living upon borrowed capital, and
at the period when she needs that strength, it is not at her command; and if she
does not lose her life, her constitution is broken, past recovery.
If the father would become acquainted with
physical law, he might better understand his obligations and his
responsibilities. He would see that he had been guilty of almost murdering his
children, by suffering so many burdens to come upon the mother, compelling her
to labor beyond her strength before their birth, in order to obtain means to
leave for them. They nurse these children through their suffering life, and
often lay them prematurely in the grave, little realizing that their wrong
course has brought the sure result. How much better to have shielded the mother
of his children from wearing labor and mental anxiety, and let the children
inherit good constitutions, and give them an opportunity to battle their way
through life, not relying upon their father's property, but upon their own
energetic strength. The experience thus obtained would be of more worth to them
than houses and lands, purchased at the expense of the health of mother and
children.
It seems perfectly natural for some men to be
morose, selfish, exacting, and overbearing. They have never learned the lesson
of self-control, and will not restrain their unreasonable feelings, let the
consequences be what they may. Such men will be repaid, by seeing their
companions sickly and dispirited, and their children bearing the peculiarities
of their own disagreeable traits of character.
It is the duty of every married couple to
studiously avoid marring the feelings of each other. They should control every
look and expression of fretfulness and passion. They should study each other's
happiness, in small matters, as well as in large, manifesting a tender
thoughtfulness, in acknowledging kind acts and the little courtesies of each
other. These small things should not be neglected, for they are just as
important to the happiness of man and wife, as food is necessary to sustain
physical strength. The father should encourage wife and mother to lean upon his
large affections. Kind, cheerful, encouraging words from him with whom she has
intrusted her life happiness, will be more beneficial to her than any medicine;
and the cheerful rays of light which such sympathizing words will bring to the
heart of the wife and mother, will reflect back their own cheering beams upon
the heart of the father.
The husband will frequently see his wife
care-worn and debilitated, growing prematurely old, in laboring to prepare food
to suit the vitiated taste. He gratifies the appetite, and will eat and drink
those things which it costs much time and labor to prepare for the table, and
which have a tendency to make those who partake of them nervous and irritable.
The wife and mother is seldom free from the headache, and the children are
suffering the effects of eating unwholesome food, and there is a great lack of
patience and affection with parents and children. All are sufferers together,
for health has been sacrificed to lustful appetite. The offspring, before its
birth, has had transmitted to it disease and an unhealthy appetite. And the
irritability, nervousness, and despondency, manifested by the mother, will mark
the character of her child.
In past generations, if mothers had informed
themselves in regard to the laws of their being, they would have understood that
their constitutional strength, as well as the tone of their morals, and their
mental faculties, would in a great measure be represented in their offspring.
Their ignorance upon this subject, where so much is involved, is criminal. Many
women never should have become mothers. Their blood was filled with scrofula,
transmitted to them from their parents, and increased by their gross manner of
living. The intellect has been brought down and enslaved to serve the animal
appetites, and children, born of such parents, have been poor sufferers, and of
but little use to society.
It has been one of the greatest causes of
degeneracy in generations back, up to the present time, that wives and mothers
who otherwise would have had a beneficial influence upon society, in raising the
standard of morals, have been lost to society through multiplicity of home
cares, because of the fashionable, health-destroying manner of cooking, and also
in consequence of too frequent child-bearing. She has been compelled to needless
suffering, her constitution has failed, and her intellect has become weakened,
by so great a draught upon her vital resources. Her offspring suffer her
debility, and thus a class is thrown upon society, poorly fitted, through the
mother's inability to educate them, to be of the least benefit.
If these mothers had given birth to but few
children, and if they had been careful to live upon such food as would preserve
physical health and mental strength, so that the moral and intellectual might
predominate over the animal, they could have so educated their children for
usefulness, as to have made them bright ornaments to society.
If parents in past generations had, with
firmness of purpose, kept the body servant to the mind, and had not allowed the
intellectual to be enslaved by animal passions, there would be in this age a
different order of beings upon the earth. And if the mother, before the birth of
her offspring, had always possessed self-control, realizing that she was giving
the stamp of character to future generations, the present state of society would
not be so depreciated in character as at the present time.
Every woman about to become a mother, whatever
may be her surroundings, should encourage constantly a happy, cheerful,
contented disposition, knowing that for all her efforts in this direction she
will be repaid tenfold in the physical, as well as the moral, character of her
offspring. Nor is this all. She can, by habit, accustom herself to cheerful
thinking, and thus encourage a happy state of mind, and cast a cheerful
reflection of her own happiness of spirit upon her family, 124 and those with
whom she associates. And in a very great degree will her physical health be
improved. A force will be imparted to the life springs, the blood will not move
sluggishly, as would be the case if she were to yield to despondency and gloom.
Her mental and moral health are invigorated by the buoyancy of her spirits. The
power of the will can resist impressions of the mind, and will prove a grand
soother of the nerves. Children who are robbed of that vitality which they
should have inherited of their parents, should have the utmost care. By close
attention to the laws of their being, a much better condition of things can be
established.
The period during which the infant receives its
nourishment from the mother, is a critical one. Many mothers, while nursing
their infants, have been permitted to overlabor, and to heat their blood in
cooking, and the nursling has been seriously affected, not only with fevered
nourishment from the mother's breast, but its blood has been poisoned by the
unhealthy diet of the mother, which has fevered her whole system, thereby
affecting the food of the infant. The infant will also be affected by the
condition of the mother's mind. If she is unhappy, easily agitated, irritable,
giving vent to outbursts of passion, the nourishment the infant receives from
its mother will be inflamed, often producing colic, spasms, and, in some
instances, causing convulsions and fits.
The character also of the child is more or less
affected by the nature of the nourishment received from the mother. How
important, then, that the mother, while nursing her infant, should preserve a
happy state of mind, having the perfect control of her own spirit. By thus
doing, the food of the child is not injured, and the calm, self-possessed course
the mother pursues in the treatment of her child has very much to do in molding
the mind of the infant. If it is nervous, and easily agitated, the mother's
careful, unhurried manner will have a soothing and correcting influence, and the
health of the infant can be very much improved.
Infants have been greatly abused by improper
treatment. If fretful, they have generally been fed to keep them quiet, when, in
most cases, the very reason of their fretfulness was because of their having
received too much food, made injurious by the wrong habits of the mother. More
food only made the matter worse, for their stomachs were already overloaded.
Children are generally brought up from the
cradle to indulge the appetite, and are taught that they live to eat. The mother
does much toward the formation of the character of her children in their
childhood. She can teach them to control the appetite, or she can teach them to
indulge the appetite, and become gluttons. The mother often arranges her plans
to accomplish a certain amount through the day, and when the children trouble
her, instead of taking time to soothe their little sorrows, and divert them,
something is given them to eat, to keep them still, which answers the purpose
for a short time, but eventually makes things worse. The children's stomachs
have been pressed with food, when they had not the least want of it. All that
was required was a little of the mother's time and attention. But she regarded
her time as altogether too precious to devote to the amusement of her children.
Perhaps the arrangement of her house in a tasteful manner for visitors to
praise, and to have her food cooked in a fashionable style, are with her higher
considerations than the happiness and health of her children.
Intemperance in eating and in labor debilitates
the parents, often making them nervous, and disqualifying them to rightly
discharge their duty to their children. Three times a day, parent and children
gather around the table loaded with a variety of fashionable foods. The merits
of each dish have to be tested. Perhaps the mother had toiled till she was
heated and exhausted, and was not in a condition to take even the simplest food
till she had first had a period of rest. The food she wearied herself in
preparing was wholly unfit for her at any time, but especially taxes the
digestive organs when the blood is heated and the system exhausted. Those who
have thus persisted in violating the laws of their being, have been compelled to
pay the penalty at some period in their life.
There are ample reasons why there are so many
nervous women in the world, complaining of the dyspepsia, with its train of
evils. The cause has been followed by the effect. It is impossible for
intemperate persons to be patient. They must first reform bad habits, learn to
live healthfully, and then it will not be difficult for them to be patient. Many
do not seem to understand the relation the mind sustains to the body. If the
system is deranged by improper food, the brain and nerves are affected, and
slight things annoy those who are thus afflicted. Little difficulties are to
them troubles mountain high. Persons thus situated are unfitted to properly
train their children. Their life will be marked with extremes. Sometimes they
are very indulgent, at other times severe, censuring for trifles which deserve
no notice.
The mother frequently sends her children from
her presence, because she thinks she cannot endure the noise occasioned by their
happy frolics. But with no mother's eye over them to approbate or disapprove at
the right time, unhappy differences often arise. A word from the mother would
set all right again. They soon become weary, desire change, and go into the
street for amusement; and pure, innocent-minded children are driven into bad
company, and evil communications breathed into their ears corrupt their good
manners. The mother often seems to be asleep to the interests of her children
until she is painfully aroused by the exhibition of vice. The seeds of evil were
sown in their young minds, promising an abundant harvest. And it is a marvel to
her that her children are so prone to do wrong. Parents should begin in season
to instill into infant minds good and correct principles. The mother should be
with her children as much as possible, and should sow precious seed in their
hearts.
The mother's time belongs in a special manner
to her children. They have a right to her time which no others can have. In many
cases mothers have neglected to discipline their children, because it would
require too much of their time, which time they think must be spent in the
cooking department, or in preparing their own clothing, and that of their
children, according to fashion, to foster pride in their young hearts. In order
to keep their restless children still, they have given them cake or candies, at
almost any hour of the day, and
their stomachs are crowded with hurtful things at irregular periods. Their pale
faces testify to the fact that mothers are doing what they can to destroy the
remaining life-forces of their poor children. The digestive organs are
constantly taxed, and are not allowed periods of rest. The liver becomes
inactive, and the blood impure; and the children are sickly and irritable,
because they are real sufferers from intemperance, and it is impossible for them
to exercise patience.
Parents wonder that children are so much more
difficult to control than they used to be. In most cases their own criminal
management has made them so. The quality of food they bring upon their tables,
and encourage their children to eat, is constantly exciting their animal
passions, and weakening the moral and intellectual faculties. Very many children
are made miserable dyspeptics in their youth by the wrong course their parents
have pursued toward them in childhood. Parents will be called to render an
account to God for thus dealing with their children.
Many parents do not give their children lessons
in self-control. They indulge their appetite, and suffer them to form, in their
childhood, habits of eating and drinking according to their own desires. So will
they be in their general habits in their youth. Their desires have not been
restrained, and as they grow older, they will not only indulge in the common
habits of intemperance, but they will go still further in indulgences. They will
choose their own associates, although corrupt. They cannot endure restraint from
their parents. They will give loose rein to their corrupt passions, and have but
little regard for purity or virtue. This is the reason why there is so little
purity and moral worth among the
youth of the present day, and is the great cause why men and women feel
under so little obligation to render obedience to the law of God. Some parents
have not control over themselves. They do not control their own morbid
appetites, or their passionate tempers; therefore they cannot educate their
children in regard to the denial of their appetite, and teach them self-control.
CONTINUE -
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