long story. We swear it and close our ears to
our admirers, and to escape them we plunge into consideration
of Violet’s soul and her aptitudes, saying, and
saying well, that if polygamy thrives with Mohammedanism
in the East, polyandry has settled down in the West
with Christianity, and that since Nora slammed the
door the practice of acquiring a share in a woman’s
life, rather than insisting on the whole of it, has
caught such firm root in our civilization that it
is no exaggeration to say that every married woman
to-day will admit she could manage two men better than
her husband could manage two wives. If we inquire
still further, we submit, and confidently, that every
woman—saint or harlot, it matters not which—would
confess she would prefer to live with two men rather
than share her husband with another woman. All
women are of one mind on this subject; it is the one
thing on which they all agree irrespective of creed
or class, so these remarks barely concern them; but
should male eyes fall on this page, and if in the
pride of his heart he should cry out, ‘This
is not so,’ I would have him make application
to his wife or sister, and if he possess neither he
may discover the truth in his own mind. Let him
ask himself if it could be otherwise, since our usage
and wont is that a woman shall prepare for the reception
of visitors by adorning her rooms with flowers and
dressing herself in fine linen and silk attire, and
be to all men alike as they come and go. She must
cover all with winning glances, and beguile all with
seductive eyes and foot, and talk about love, though,
perhaps she would prefer to think of one who is far
away. Men do not live under such restraint.
A man may reserve all his thoughts for his mistress,
but the moment he leaves, his mistress must begin
to cajole the new-comer, however indifferent he may
be to her. The habit of her life is to cajole,
to please, to inspire, if possible, and if she be
not a born coquette she becomes one, and takes pleasure
in her art, devoting her body and mind to it, reading
only books about love and lovers, singing songs of
love, and seeking always new scents and colours and
modes of fascination. If lovers are away and
none calls, she abandons herself to dreams, and her
imagination furnishes quickly a new romance.
Somebody she has half-forgotten rises up in her memory,
and she thinks that she could like him if he were to
come into her drawing-room now. It would be happiness
indeed to walk forward into his arms and to call her
soul into her eyes; or, if a letter were to come from
him asking her to dinner, she would accept it; and,
lying back among her silken cushions, she thinks she
could spend many hours in his company without weariness.
She creates his rooms and his person and his conversation,
and when he is exhausted a new intrigue rises up in
her mind, and then another and another. Some drop
away and remain for ever unfulfilled, while others
‘come into their own,’ as the saying is.