IS
SUICIDE A SIN?
Col. Ingersoll's First Letter.
To me this is not cowardly, but manly and noble.
Under the Roman law persons found guilty of certain offence were not only
destroyed, but their blood was polluted and their children became outcasts. If,
however, they died before conviction their children were saved. Many committed
suicide to save their babes. Certainly they were not cowards. Although guilty of
great crimes they had enough of honor, of manhood, left to save their innocent
children. This was not cowardice.
Without doubt many suicides are caused by insanity. Men lose their
property. The fear of the future overpowers them. Things lose proportion, they
lose poise and balance, and in a flash, a gleam of frenzy, kill themselves. The
disappointed in love, broken in heart -- the light fading from their lives --
seek the refuge of death.
Those who take their lives in painful, barbarous ways -- who mangle their
throats with broken glass, dash themselves from towers and roofs, take poisons
that torture like the rack -- such persons must be insane. But those who take
the facts into account, who weigh the arguments for and against, and who decide
that death is best -- the only good -- and then resort to reasonable means, may
be, so far as I can see, in full possession of their minds.
Life is not the same to all -- to some a blessing, to some a curse, to
some not much in any way. Some leave it with unspeakable regret, some with the
keenest joy and some with indifference.
Religion, or the decadence of religion, has a bearing upon the number of
suicides. The fear of God, of Judgment, of eternal pain will stay the hand, and
people so believing will suffer here until relieved by natural death. A belief
in eternal agony beyond the grave will cause such believers to suffer the pangs
of this life. When there is no fear of the future, when death is believed to be
a dreamless sleep, men have less hesitation about ending their lives. On the
other hand, orthodox religion has driven millions to insanity. It has caused
parents to murder their children and many thousands to destroy themselves and
others.
It seems probable that all real, genuine orthodox believers who kill
themselves must be insane, and to such a degree that their belief is forgotten.
God and hell are out of their minds.
I am satisfied that many who commit suicide are insane, many are in the
twilight or dusk of insanity, and many are perfectly sane.
The law we have in this State making it a crime to attempt suicide is
cruel and absurd and calculated to increase the number of successful suicides.
When a man has suffered so much, when he has been so persecuted and pursued by
disaster that he seeks the rest and sleep of death, why should the State add to
the sufferings of that man? A man seeking death, knowing that he will be
punished if he fails, will take extra pains and precautions to make death
certain.
This law was born of superstition, passed by thoughtlessness and enforced
by ignorance and cruelty.
When the house of life becomes a prison, when the horizon has shrunk and
narrowed to a cell, and when the convict longs for the liberty of death, why
should the effort to escape be regarded as a crime?
Of course, I regard life from a natural point of view. I do not take
gods, heavens or hells into account. My horizon is the known, and my estimate of
life is based upon what I know of life here in this world. People should not
suffer for the sake of supernatural beings or for other worlds or the hopes and
fears of some future state. Our joys, our sufferings and our duties are here.
The law of New York about the attempt to commit suicide and the law as to
divorce are about equal. Both are idiotic. Law cannot prevent suicide. Those who
have lost all fear of death, care nothing for law and its penalties. Death is
liberty, absolute and eternal.
We should remember that nothing happens but the natural. Back of every
suicide and every attempt to commit suicide is the natural and efficient cause.
Nothing happens by chance. In this world the facts touch each other. There is no
space between -- no room for chance. Given a certain heart and brain, certain
conditions, and suicide is the necessary result. If we wish to prevent suicide
we must change conditions. We must by education, by invention, by art, by
civilization, add to the value of the average life. We must cultivate the brain
and heart -- do away with false pride and false modesty. We must become generous
enough to help our fellows without degrading them. We must make industry --
useful work of all kinds -- honorable. We must mingle a little affection with
our charity -- a little fellowship. We should allow those who have sinned to
really reform. We should not think only of what the wicked have done, but we
should think of what we have wanted to do. People do not hate the sick. Why
should they despise the mentally weak -- the diseased in brain?
Our actions are the fruit, the result, of circumstances -- of conditions
-- and we do as we must. This great truth should fill the heart with pity for
the failures of our race.
Sometimes I have wondered that Christians denounced the suicide; that in
olden times they buried him where the roads crossed, drove a stake through his
body, and then took his property from his children and gave it to the State.
If Christians would only think, they would see that orthodox religion
rests upon suicide -- that man was redeemed by suicide, and that without suicide
the whole world would have been lost.
If Christ were God, then he had the power to protect himself from death.
But instead of using his power he allowed them to take his life.
If a strong man should allow a few little children to hack him to death
with knives when he could easily have brushed them aside, would we not say that
he committed suicide?
There is no escape. If Christ were, in fact, God, and allowed himself to
be killed. then he consented to his own death -- refused, though perfectly able,
to defend and protect himself, and was, in fact, a suicide.
We cannot reform the world by law or by superstition. As long as there
shall be pain and failure, want and sorrow, agony and crime, men and women will
untie life's knot and seek the peace of death.
To the hopelessly imprisoned -- to the dishonored and despised -- to
those who have failed, who have no future, no hope -- to the abandoned, the
brokenhearted, to those who are only remnants and fragments of men and women --
how consoling, how enchanting is the thought of death!
And even to the most fortunate, death at last is a welcome deliverer.
Death is as natural and as merciful as life. When we have journeyed long -- when
we are weary -- when we wish for the twilight, for the dusk, for the cool kisses
of the night -- when the senses are dull -- when the pulse is faint and low --
when the mists gather on the mirror of memory -- when the past is almost
forgotten, the present hardly perceived -- when the future has but empty hands
-- death is as welcome as a strain of music.
After all, death is not so terrible as Joyless life. Next to eternal
happiness is to sleep in the soft clasp of the cool earth, disturbed by no
dream, by no thought, by no pain, by no fear, unconscious of all and forever.
The wonder is that so many live, that in spite of rags and want, in spite
of tenement and gutter, of filth and pain, they limp and stagger and crawl
beneath their burdens to the natural end. The wonder is that so few of the
miserable are brave enough to die -- that so many are terrified by the
"something after death" -- by the specters and phantoms of
superstition.
Most people are in love with life. How they cling to it in the arctic
snows -- how they struggle in the waves and currents of the sea -- how they
linger in famine -- how they fight disaster and despair! On the crumbling edge
of death they keep the flag flying and go down at last full of hope and courage.
But many have not such natures. They cannot bear defeat. They are
disheartened by disaster. They lie down on the field of conflict and give the
earth their blood.
They are our unfortunate brothers and sisters. We should not curse or
blame -- we should pity. On their pallid faces our tears should fall.
One of the best men I ever knew, with an affectionate wife, a charming
and loving daughter, committed suicide. He was a man of generous impulses. His
heart was loving and tender. He was conscientious, and so sensitive that he
blamed himself for having done what at the time he thought was wise and best. He
was the victim of his virtues. Let us be merciful in our judgments.
All we can say is that the good and the bad, the loving and the
malignant, the conscientious and the vicious, the educated and the ignorant,
actuated by many motives, urged and pushed by circumstances and conditions --
sometimes in the calm of Judgment, sometimes in passion's storm and stress,
sometimes in whip and tempest of insanity -- raise their hands against
themselves and desperately put out the light of life.
Those who attempt suicide should not be punished. If they are insane they
should if possible be restored to reason; if sane, they should be reasoned with,
calmed and assisted.
Robert G. Ingersoll.