[Studies in the Psychology of Sex, Volume 6 (of 6) by Havelock Ellis]@TWC D-Link book
Studies in the Psychology of Sex, Volume 6 (of 6)

CHAPTER III
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But unless we do we hopelessly fetter ourselves in our march along the road of civilization, we deprive ourselves at once of a source of moral strength and of joyous inspiration.
Just as Wesley once asked why the devil should have all the best tunes, so to-day men are beginning to ask why the human body, the most divine melody at its finest moments that creation has yielded, should be allowed to become the perquisite of those who lust for the obscene.

And some are, further, convinced that by enlisting it on the side of purity and strength they are raising the most powerful of all bulwarks against the invasion of a vicious conception of life and the consequent degradation of sex.

These are considerations which we cannot longer afford to neglect, however great the opposition they arouse among the unthinking.
"Folk are afraid of such things rousing the passions," Edward Carpenter remarks.

"No doubt the things may act that way.

But why, we may ask, should people be afraid of rousing passions which, after all, are the great driving forces of human life ?" It is true, the same writer continues, our conventional moral formulae are no longer strong enough to control passion adequately, and that we are generating steam in a boiler that is cankered with rust.


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