Show i r S1 t kb J 1 I t 1 l J. J x J I J h f rAl an a aI aK f ff f Y r r I r t 1 11 II 1 I r rI AV I ea nd C i 11 p t Vr V- V t r f t Mrs Havelock Ellis Ellis' is Tells How A IA KA A F i Mf A f r 4 E t y Her Husband Has Had Her a W WUnder V 34 Under the e Microscope of 11 r I I t A Investigation i a ion for o r 24 Years Years' in i r a an n Effort to J I I if J nil all purely purer female But nut this tills is rarely tho llio case I for In instance tance have o man many ti masculine traits trains and m my any husband 1 y i RM ht I tt f feminine ones That is 18 f probably bablY wh why y L we wc are so entirely con congenial ii S 5 Masculine and antI feminine characteristics character character- x x B oa c. c I aro are more moro or less mingled led in all nil of us No o 0 rule ers covers all nil men or all dal Ix k T w ti women omen Some Somme women can mana manage e Y L g R t k complex business affairs but hut can cannot of ook Some Somo men can cun wash dishes I r ta s t and sew but cannot s commer commer- These things arc based Sell on the perc ta take e of or maleness and femaleness fe- fe 1 J r y a maleness In their composition ti My Iy I husband and antI I hn have havo vc been b en mar- mar 1 led 2 1 I years ears we arc are very happy halPY and of or the greatest r oneness in all es essential 1 A things Throughout hout m my married manic 1 1 life ife V I have hallo been ben economically Independent ent 5 as ls I believe It Is the only wa way for forn n women to live c the lar larger ct life When 7 i vt we married we to vowed owed a solemn vow 1 t that we wc would not see sec so much of or orr f 4 4 r t. t OMAN I. Is the Sphinx riddle of I I W WOMAN vt creation creation the tho riddle le and amI the thc answer No 0 man may know mow I her with the same samo certainty that he hc I beholds his own reflection In a mirror 4 5 or with the same samo familiarity with i which ho regards s his Ills inner self A Aman Aman w man in perfect t spiritual accord with his wife of like artistic tastes and anti aspirations ma may know the tho wife as ns ho knows himself for himself for Indeed she is a re reflection ro- ro or a complement of ot himself himself- but the W Woman man Is never ne entirely re ro- ro Take Talc for case of ot Havelock havelock Have Have- lock Kills Ellis sided many scientist and literary critic who has lias made mado the most 1 exhaustive study of woman of modern times times clock Havelock Ellis an and his r CI equally u all scientific and literary wife Sue She amiably admits th that than t she has been cen t tin on n tho the table tahle of or his mind and observation atlon for nearly 21 1 years years' ear L but from the summary y of or a all Il 11 the tremendous work walk he has done one in the ther r study of man and Woman it Is evident e A that thero thelo is much relating to tho Woman that r remains to be revealed calc In a a. marital accord that I Is beautiful l both Loth oth In tho the Ideal nn and the coldly practical practical rac- rac ho he Cull fully understands his wife wIre but hut the proposition of or tho the Woman sweeps him b beyond rond tho the relatively puny ii limitations of his personal activities c I Into nto the tine realm of ot eternal mystery Many I n a woman has hag flattered herself that she could rend read men like u a book hook Which from tho tim angle single of sex she a he in- in J adopts she hc ma may IH be able to too do o But Dut though man is a Ics less complex x r proposition than V Woman I and not BO so adept at dissimulation there there are arc still deeps in his nature that escape even cn the keenest scrutiny Tho man who boasts that unerringly he lie can read rend Woman writes himself a fool for ho hois hois hois is falsely claiming claiming- a territory upon tho the border horder o of which the tlc wisest of the worlds world's greatest investigators stand questioningly expectant Sex Se is the tho hl insurmountable wall between be be- between tween the complete understanding of or Woman b by man declares Dr Carleton Carleton Carleton Carle- Carle ton Simon experimental psychologist Th Through ough laboratory tests and professional pro pro- fe observation wo ma may cometo como come comoto comoto to learn even o to the minutest detail how woman differs from man Wo We may painstakingly tako take her physical measurements note her nerve reflexes rc- rc Hexes flexes stUll study her emotions her pro- pro dispositions color of eyes ces and hair texture of oe sl skin ln explore her hor mental capacity and In fact leave lea no detail of her physical and psychical condition overlooked u With this study ruin ruin- forced by the researches of ot the keenest keenest keen keen- est eMt minds that precede us we wc may may Matter latter ourselves that before us UIS stands revealed re the Real Woman But In Indeed Indeed In- In deed it iris Is hs only a material shadow as aR near th the elu elusive actuality as a ln 1110 moving picture woman Is to the orl original Carleton Simons Simon's Difference There is Js the hi big essential lacking an Intangible yet stahl stable something of the sex which in n greater and Ics lesser er degree shows allows In varying per Iler- er- er I cannot explain it better than to say it is the time tile difference tho state B nto that developed tlc when in the course of or creation the thc lino of clea a cleavage o ward hut ward but just how tho the creative in intelligence In- In enee decides is still a thousand fol fold mystery The difference is at this parting of tho ways was when the hc purpose e ot of line lIno divides ldes one branch becoming male malo and one female It seems to me mo that study the living living liv liv- In ing Woman oman for an nn eternity but hut the revelation rc of the minute points groping grop grop- groping roIn ro- ro In ing in III the mortal darkness can never be he made And nd even en should the thc solemn secret c ret of creation be bc unfolded In the laboratory tho difference o of sex will still the persist persist thc t-thc the difference that tho the study of oC man mall will not be he able to over over- come And so I 1 say a man no matter maller what his wisdom his personal knowl knowl- knowledge edge eIge e o of the sex and the information that exact science has yielded him will never nc bo ho able to entirely understand understand under under- stand Mand Woman Used to Being Vivisected Fur For narl nearly 21 1 1 years ears I have he been en under tho the microscope of or m my husbands husband's s 's In estl Investigation tl n psychically physically I very r way declares Mrs l Havelock clock l' l lolls Kills I remember how struck I W was S with consternation when he first bega began be be- ga gan i taking m my dimensions with a tape mea measure The Sunda Sunday after wo we were married he lie rushed Into tho the drawing room suddenly and amI erl cried Hold out your our han hands s I want the len length th of your our fingers Now ow your chin and anti ears earl I am and used to heln being mentally vivisected vivi now and dont don't mind she smiled In fact I think I shall return return re re- re turn the compliment and have havo for on ona on of m my lectures Havelock Ellis laths Criticised Criticised h by His Ills Wife But he lie need have o no fear Perhaps It nu ma may tako take such a lecture fUI for him him to realize how highly I think of or him Do I share m my may hus bus hands bands view that the mind of mananti man anti and woman are fundamentally different different dif dif- ferent I think tho they should be if IC men were all pure purely malo male an and women each other that we wo would get et to the tho point of saying my tear dear In a mean snippy way to each catch e ch other We e meant to keep the beauty of our love p always alwa's to remain sweethearts forever an and so wo 0 have ha lived live and labored labore side h by side each of oC us with our own s separate workshop We 13 took two wee stone cottages in Cornwall because we yc could not find one ono that was big big- enough for us to he be perfectly comfortable In Mr Ur ElIls's Elliss rooms an and tho kitchen were in ono one cottage IU my rooms and tho the dinIng dinIng din- din dining Ing rooms were h in the other Some of tho the good narrow-minded narrow Cornish lolk tolk were sadly shocked and thou thought ht we wo shouldn't love lo each cach other any anymore more Her tier live 11 In one house an and him himin him himin himin in th the next house they gossiped and every ery night the servant ser maid do lo lock the door on he and give the key koy to she Two Students And In the thc picturesque roomy roomy- room house e that is now the home of the In Cornwall the they live livo together yet et apart Here besides es her own literary and scientific activities Mrs Ellis as asa asa asa a subject has hns realized for her stu student ent husband an nn abstract composite of the tho sex such as us touched with lire tire in his individualization n of who In her perfect yet terrible self solf was the tho Incarnation o of all women Romance may grasp and deck In hi color the Eternal Feminine but hut science science ence may never ne reach the revealing rc heart of or It the Jt-the the well spring of the difference And yet et under circumstances circumstances circum circum- stances there arc are compensating Joys in fn heln being a subject for this s' s sort rt or of vivi of-vivi 1 section And n If neat mat ma may never ne understand Woman Yoman woman herself has a fuller understanding of man An English reviewer re in dealing with Mrs Elliss Ellis's remarkable book Kits Woman says She Shu captures Rn and analyzes a vague ue and terrible emotions and und that the ordinary man nan and woman always conceal from their neighbors and auld generally from If we 0 look at Truth veiled wo half suspect her a monster with every yell yell- tint Is removed from her face faeo a Him of dread drops from frum the tho watchIng watchIng watching watch- watch Ing soul Th The beast in man never ne looms so terrible as 09 when so to speak wo the squint at it around a corner Mrs Ellis faces him removes his muzzle and finds his bite bite if If properly treated not so poisonous after all oIL To Tu know and to understand Woman oman says say's Mark Telfair man inan would have ha Master the Most Difficult Study of All and the to tu know and to measure the Intall ihie i- i ble hie Some Somo one jokingly has sat said that 1 clock Havelock Ellis was born horn and amid married with nath a tape measure sure In his hand and anti the 1 ho testimony of or his wife would seem to give gave this raillery some sonic justification He lie has collected thousands s of or meas measurements of men and women In the course courso of his great Work ork ork and what he says concerning skulls will give he a clear idea of oC his method metho of stud study an and classification The Difference in Skulls has shown by ly his observations Hons on the skulls of children at nt Florence Flurence says he hc that sexual differences differences dif dif- begin to be he visible at the age of or 6 and that Ura t most of or the tire chief t a v- v s W 4 f j r t j r. r t i t if J 1 I. I j Ny IM I. I l J T V v II t 11 d' d Y 1 I I t 1 W 4 r i o Cc n M II rt r- r t j u l 4 0 I 6 r V t 1 i 1 f I I i t 4 1 N v. v t-l t r 1 t-t- t t v 1 I p S il V- V I t f f x S g f Yas W v t TOI- TOI I t. t 1 t tv tr t.- 1 Ir y v t t I t o 4 Yf fr i X Zi A j i r X f d V 1 L- L j eI rn 5 1 n a MAN WOMAN T f r S. S r r f fV V l f r J Two Diagrams from Havelock Elliss Ellis's s B Book k on Man and Woman Showing the 4 x 4 r It V Differences in the Average Formats Formation on of the Male and Female Skull Note t fe 3 k l' l i V ti kA Different Form of Forehead and Shorter Skull and Lower Crown of Female V w J. J v x d K I. I j J Yo J. J l ZA ko Y f t r- r rS S P. P wr r 5 began which K I If X 10 TrI i y e r m I n es 1 b- b sex It Is primordial prim 1 and so ordial JIs t 11 dim m mt t H f far r its II mystery has not been rI re rc- rc i Science ma may maybe 1 I r be 10 able to tell t t tho the 1 predisposing C 3 Mrs Havelock Ellis Who Says I III I am Used to Being Mentally Vivisected In ing factors In Ind determining d n 1 Now and Dont Don't t Mind L sex which sex which is a great step for- for sexual distinctions are fairly well marked before the ago of 12 As to what the mo most t constant sexual differences differences differences differ differ- taken comprehensively l are it cannot be he said that an any two authorities authorities authorities ties are quito quite agreed for each craniologist craniologist hus lius his hits own preferences an and wo we have ha to bear in mind that sometimes sometimes sometimes some some- times a skull ma may be he masculine c in some of Its characters feminine in oth others Is I's while a mans man's skull ma may approach ap up- approach a womans woman's in character or more mere frequently in Mantegazza's ex experience experience ex- ex a womans woman's skull ma may resemble re resemble re- re a mans man's There Thero Is no one constant sexual character in the tho skull but there thero arc arca a few characters which when taken taleen to together unmistakably Indicate its sex ex I will briefly state these following following follow follow- ing In- so far as possible the opinions of or four anthropologists belon belonging ln to different countries countrIes countrIes-Broca Broca in France Franc In Germany Mantegazza Mante- Mante gazza In Italy an and Turner r in Great Britain 1 0 Perhaps tho the most conspicuous and distinctive of oC all aU the characteristics of oC tho the male human skull Is the prominence prominence prominence nence of oC the tho or bon bony proJection projection projection tion over o tho the nose and of the ridges lt that Is to say 8 that men have ha overhanging brows which are arc ro little little lit lit- tle marked In women while thoy they they-do do donot donot not exist In children they develop de at puberty and Increase with age and form a distinctly retrogressive e character character char char- acter neter being exa exaggerated In man many lower races and to 0 an extreme extent In Ir the anthropoid apes A Associated with the these c bon bony In men arc are large frontal sinuses air which In women are aro much smaller 2 In women certain bosses which are arc prominent In children have ha usually persisted to a more marked market extent than thanIn In men these are arc the parietal bosses boses at atthe atthe atthe the outer and aural upper tipper part of oC tho ho back bacle backof backof of the tho head bead and HilI the frontal bosses halfway halfway half half- way up the forehead over tho the eyes eyell In hi himen men these present the appearance of or having lun been largely larger obliterated by the expansion of tho skull 3 All the muscular prominence uro are better hetter marked in men and the bores bones of oC tho the skull generally are thicker and stronger thus the the tho he small occipital protuberance at the back of or ortho tho the head I Is nearly Va al always 11 larger In ha hamen men as arc are the processes bo- bo neath the tho car eal which In children are HIvery HI HIr r very small The Tho ridges on un the tho skull for the attachment of oC muscles are aro also more marked In men w With Ith rr regard to these tin tIll there en eo points It ma may ma bo ho confidently said that there thero Is I or very general agreement agree agree- nt im-nt among anatomists Them Thero arc aro other r sexual dl distinctions which seem cem to tobe tobo tobo bo be fairly I 11 well marked but which aie ale less ICES obvious ou thus In women omen tho the to top of or ortho tho the head bead appears to bo ho Hatter flatter and mata mat lit t u u. moro morn marked anglo angle with tho the straight forehead while In iii men tho curve cuno from before backwards Is more smooth andena and even a even a distinction In Inflated upon U by Eckert and and recognized b by the Greek |