Hints for Lovers eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 123 pages of information about Hints for Lovers.

Hints for Lovers eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 123 pages of information about Hints for Lovers.

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It is curious to listen to the explanations by one woman of the reasons of the attractiveness of another woman.  Very apt is she to say that the other woman is too “free and easy”, too liberal of her favors, too expansive of her sympathy, too exhibitive of her charms.—­Ahem!

Women know women.  And

Women know that women know men.  And

Women know that men do not know women.—­Ahem!—­Men in this respect are somewhat different: 

A man usually regards not ungenerously the qualities of his successful rival; a woman never.  The former will candidly admit the possession of a more potent charm; the latter will trace it to the crudest of causes.  In a word,

The unsuccessful man blames, not his rival, nor the women he loses, but himself.

The unsuccessful woman blames, never herself, but either the outrageous meretriciousness of her rival, or the blindness of the man she loses.  From which it may once more be deduced that The unsuccessful woman blames, never herself, but either the outrageous meretricousness of her rival, or the blindness of the man she loses.  From which it may once more be deduced that Men are won by more primitive means than are women.  And, alas for men (alas also for many women),

The majority of men are so blind, so abominably blind, that they cannot distinguish the women who are really in love with them, from the women who pretend to be in love with them, but are not.  For because,

So completely do women know men, that it is easy for any woman to delude any man.  This is one of the reasons why

Every woman is the rival of every other woman: 

This woman will be herself, her own true, simple, and virtuous self; will resort to no subterfuge, adopt no meretricious methods, scorn to rely upon tactics or strategy, be ever reserved, reluctant, shy;—­yet fail.

This other woman will openly and blatantly, overtly and unconcernedly, assail the masculine heart with word and look and gesture—­and win.  —­Ach! the purblindess of the masculine heart! how it exasperates even the woman!

* * *

That man has sunk low who cannot recognize and respect the remnant of sex even in a degraded woman.

* * *

Woman can persuade themselves—­and men—­far more easily than can a man, of the propriety of their actions.

* * *

Man is powerless before an injured woman.  He has no more dangerous foe than this.

* * *

It is the man who seeks excuses.  The woman braves it out.

* * *

Coquetry is Love’s lady’s-maid.  She is accessory and ancillary to Love; she bedizens Love, she tricks her out in gay apparel.

When Love’s lord and master enters, my lady’s maid is dismissed. (It might be as well sometimes to recall her.) And

Nudity ousts coquetry.

* * *

Chastity is a word with as many shades of meaning as there are peoples —­perhaps as there are individuals—­upon the face of this habitable world.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Hints for Lovers from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.