Hints for Lovers
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ion, of sympathy or charm, is to say nothing save that we know not what it is. All unknown to herself, it wraps its owner round with airs the which to breathe uplifts the spirit, and yet, may be, perturbs the heart, of man. Even its effects are recondite and obscure. It allures; but how it allures now man shall tell. It impels; but to what, does not appear. It rouses all manner of hopes, stirs sleeping ambition, and desires and aspirations unappeasable; but for what purport or to what end, none stays to inqui
e understands women, d
a mystery, she would no
ag
But woman need have no caus
sified; women n
he case of women
woman is a variety. And every man
a study in he
nd women would be friends, not lovers (But
on, in however fair or however frai
le in man the divine spark by means 30 of the m
it is determined by tw
other way o
e true to the kindred po
u
and identical that her orbit becomes the per
n vain. Towards varying coast-lines it bears itself variously; here, placid and content; there, dashing furious. But none ever stamped his marked upon its brim, and always it remains the refluent, reluctant sea. Of it man knows only the waves that br
g to house that sea, shaping it, over looking it, and staying and governing its tides. Yet cha
as is that which is
e made for men; men fo
sign of Nature, that they sho
to discover something. She asks a man
risk is her personal appearance.
w at an unseasonable hour, bu
ke a woman au p
ghts are:
uties are
d monarchial about a woman: like a que
nly transformed from an absolute into a constitutional monarch : she act
world is: to spur men on to high and noble ac
ost fervid emotions, and at the same time to keep them at their high
c is inexorable. But it proceeds per saltum. It
: To let a woman have her own way is
please a woman is to let
acting as the spa
is, nobody knows,
really is, one must se
ccepted lover to whom she has utterly devoted herself can a woman bare h
ys partially ec
comes, the man
be alone she opens the innermost recesses of her soul. For him she wears no masks, affect no accent, plays no part. Even her features take on a different and unique expression before the offspring of her womb. Ne
the goal of
t, a woman's burthen is
ng"
an is like till she is
s womanhood. And,
wives-who could mother mankind in their bo
e is has owed his al
combined, will ever reveal the real feelings of a woman. To
ate utterance is n
is: first, to get married; s
e greater havoc among men: the women with t
, beware. When a woma
ys prepared fo
ousy rarely go hand in ha
t is apt to be at fault is in detraction
n as its best is in deploying the men who s
r, she not only deploys them, but tri
than a multiple and simultaneous
an will maneuver her a
ot argue. Hear her ex
man is a contradi
o feel that she is want
d, It is astonishing how much downright cruelty a woman will
o attracts wom
to pity, to comfort, to de
ms is a sight which should arouse -not o
ommon
ink a woman will sympath
is a si
ubtle combination of for
orcefulness and gentleness, always
s can go without endangering a woman's admira
nature as in the delight with which, at the bottom of her heart, she recal
oman never brings pure reason to bear upon her actions; she acts
egard herself culpable. Always, she says to herself, she wa
nt woman
reason, thinks he has proved her wrong, at th
in the myriad shapes she assumes, but also in her amenability to nothing but superior force. Women form, perhaps, where men are concerned, the single exception to the rule
f. Co
l women, an
ines, from
creo
. And this they neve
uce between h
f infinitely more potent in
bility is a wonderfull
mplex and the most var
e delectable combination known to men; and Aphrodite has
Bologna, the enchantress of Ottaviano; of Francesca; of Guenevere; of the sweet seventeen-year old novice of Andouillets, Margarita, the fille who was "rosy as the morn"; of the Beguine who nursed Cap
to the rapt star-gazer when he f
ven; bit did the blush make her
unclouded pool is the
tency of woman's capriciousness is only exceed
id to comprehend the laws by which she is swayed. Woman
e place to two things: a lover, and a baby.-But perhap
ted to be the consorts of kings, yet comport themse
ce, 44 there is no position to wh
she is ex o
paragingly of her se
-well, she will not be up in arms. The reason for
ts abstract disparageme
s perfect
accounted quite as stainless as the sta
eservedly loves, her love will go to leng
an despot t
f demureness features by nature t
ften a clue to his char
omes ab
ic face is often owne
rthe
iablerie in a woman at on
men that so many women are unaw
her concerning herself than that you
vious of some men's fami
d it is by a woman she will be last forgiven. The last
onsidered indiscreet. Cast a slur upon a woman's p
a woman's s
ng-mindedness in woman is t
soned arrow in her quiver. Well is it for the men
rn the quality of the adm
tless this is trite. But it is true as trite. Yet men rarely fi
in a sigh than a ma
an so much as indiff
iscovered passion she q
all things, that to hold that heart she must never wholly satisfy it. And many-and
any man beyond possibility of extrication. And 48 so perhaps they could; but th
unscrupulous woman
an, like the snow-clad hearth, sparkles: Under the gaze of a man by whom she knows
cozen men: few women th
e those who combine too effective
e part of the lady is not always symbol of
y no means betokens
invincible by man.
he not vary, men would tire. T
ke and disgust vari
d temporary pleasure. (Though this they do not always instinc
incompatible
g woman reproves! How
nd unmarried-the world contains
er par excellence
women will devise to intensify the lur
as right and proper for the woman as to ma
ttracting has long sinc
ck to recogni
ouses curiosity
lubly, calls down a curse upon her successful
icap them in multifarious ways. Probably the o
ed of her stricter sisters. But, before
cter than are men. A woman will often startle a
put on his guard b
l be ill content with s
d woman loves be
is a shy
tters is a fool.-Her gesture will conta
could punctuat
unger sister evok
is, May a moneyed man fall in love with me ! And she is not alway
fitter companion for men than the old,
of the New Woman rathe
s more inclined to aim at rivalry than at companionship with
nhood, that, whether new or old, woman
ing to women, so, it is probable, every variety of f
phrase the "New Chemistry": the materials a
vogue in Europe and America in the last two decades o
ally worse than a man's. At all
woman's love for him s
e that is sweet
more tremulous t
n element of the freest and frankest savagery in the
he extraordinary fabl
d m
ever a savage. I
onal fiction: she can avert an attack by a
ried. See "Dramatic I
. The invincibly taciturn woman is so rare as to have
ous of any woman that opens a man'
o could and would delibera
fling artifice to the winds, and look and act and say as great Nature prompts,-wildly,
ny a woman would dispense wi
ven love, what else is
re of itself-much le
ord
he community to provide for the preservation of th
en who are worth the r
trength of will than to
n overcurious to enquire whet
us to enquire whether the strength of the
feminine, the feminine mind is satisfied. O
, strong-minded or weak- are never happier th
, and depends upon, the woman, will some da
feet-that is exquisite to
refrains from exhibiting a man's se
in a resplendent woman. And of this
adroit finesse, where a man woul
ould blind his eyes to
y pretends oblivion
he is too fastidious to espouse the men who would marry her; the men she would marry s
scence and bloom of life, is bes
it of woman; but in penetr
tracts her against her will. But such a man rouses a
ble argument is: a look. And a
ffective weapon; rarely if
e men be concerned, it is upon her personality that she
man: it must be immaculate; constant with the fashion of the hour; an
ese form the code of
part of a woman i
cause man is too blind
n or frankness of speech, it is not to be expected of her that she sho
n order to arouse or to retain t
y made love to the man-and few
fluence, and that women, does not, no earthly sage will ever know. A
'I will be loved,' as it is for a ma
wer are div
nd, ground off which I shall be hooted by
her choice, rail as it as the woman may, has not yet
he ownership of her by the man, that it is to the man who a
changes her all
oyalty to the man who assumes a
the shadow of a doubt of his proprietorship-at on
ent at the ease with which a woman wi
, but only because the previous owner lightly esteemed,
fender; the man a mate for his delight, his comfort, and his solace, a keeper op is cave or hut, a mother and nurse for his heirs. And provision, support, and defense, being, in pristine days, matters of strength
altered the relationship of man to mate, conceal thou
of her heart has any ob
o woman would sa
n who she thinks will glory in that ownership and keep his property safe-not only from material ha
t any other man should dare for one instant to covet or alienate (5) that most precious of hi
ther she regards him as one having discernment, and his daring
ans, in her eyes, loyalty to him who properly ex
: to the man who proves himsel
g petted and admired and made much of all their lives: this bu
and women tacitly (though never openly) look up to and admire this dominance, even when exercised over themselves; since THIS,
f the gift by word as well as by deed, the woman is
he fact that one man may sue another in a cour
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