The Physiology of Marriage, Part 3 by Honoré de Balzac
page 62 of 125 (49%)
page 62 of 125 (49%)
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bronze enveloped in bodies so supple and capricious that their grace
attracts the friendship of others, and their beauty calls for a caress. But if you flatter the exterior man with your hand, the _Homo duplex_, the interior man, to use an expression of Buffon, immediately rouses himself and rends you with his keen points of contact. This description of a special class of human creatures, which we hope you will not run up against during your earthly journey, presents a picture of what your wife may be to you. Every one of the sentiments which nature has endowed your heart with, in their gentlest form, will become a dagger in the hand of your wife. You will be stabbed every moment, and you will necessarily succumb; for your love will flow like blood from every wound. This is the last struggle, but for her it also means victory. In order to carry out the distinction which we think we have established among three sorts of feminine temperament, we will divide this Meditation into three parts, under the following titles: 1. OF HEADACHES. 2. OF NERVOUS AFFECTATIONS. 3. OF MODESTY, IN ITS CONNECTION WITH MARRIAGE. 1. OF HEADACHES. Women are constantly the dupes or the victims of excessive sensibility; but we have already demonstrated that with the greater |
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