LITERATURE
On the early history of the Family, see the works cited at close of ch. ii.; also Starcke, The Primitive Family, 1889; Westermarck, The History of Human Marriage, 1901; Howard, A History of Matrimonial Institutions, 3 vols., 1904. On present problems: H. Bosanquet, The Family, 1906; Parsons, The Family, 1906; Bryce, Marriage and Divorce in Roman and in English Law, in Studies in History and Jurisprudence, 1901; Ellis, Man and Woman; Thomas, Sex and Society, 1906; Bebel, Woman and Socialism; Riehl, Die Familie.
FOOTNOTES:
[249] Morals in Evolution, Part I., p. 216.
[250] Howard, History of Matrimonial Institutions, I., ch. vii.
[251] Pollock and Maitland, Hist. Eng. Law, II., 383, quoted in Howard, I., 325-26.
[252] Eckstein, Woman under Monasticism, p. 478.
[253] Hobhouse, op. cit., I., 218.
[254] Helen Bosanquet, The Family, p. 313: "'They must hinder your work very much,' I said to a mother busy about the kitchen, with a two-year-old clinging to her skirt. 'I'd never get through my work without them,' was the instant rejoinder, and in it lay the answer to much of our sentimental commiseration of hard-worked mothers. It may be hard to carry on the drudgery of daily life with the little ones clamoring around; it is ten times harder without, for sheer lack of something to make it worth while."
[255] Bosanquet, Part II., ch. x.