Rambles in Womanland. O'Rell Max

Rambles in Womanland - O'Rell Max


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      Rambles in Womanland

      PART I

      RAMBLES IN WOMANLAND

      CHAPTER I

      THOUGHTS ON LIFE IN GENERAL

      Cupid will cause men to do many things; so will cupidity.

      

      I like economy too much as a virtue not to loathe it when it becomes a vice.

      

      Many virtues, when carried too far, become vices.

      

      Envy is a vice which does not pay. If you let your envy be apparent, you advertise your failure.

      

      Nothing is less common than common-sense.

      

      Whenever you can, pay cash for what you buy. A bill owing is like port wine – it generally improves by keeping.

      

      There are people whose signature has no more significance at the end of a letter of insults than it has value at the bottom of a cheque.

      

      The hardest thing to do in life is to make a living dishonestly for any length of time.

      

      The harm that happens to others very seldom does us any good, and the good that happens to them very seldom does us any harm. People who are successful are neither envious, jealous, nor revengeful.

      

      Very often a man says, 'I have made a fool of myself!' who should only accuse his father.

      

      A contract is a collection of clauses signed by two honourable persons who take each other for scoundrels.

      

      Many people make a noise for the simple reason that, like drums, they are empty. Many others think themselves deep who are only hollow.

      

      Never have anything to do with women in whose houses you never see a man. You may say what you like, but I have heard many women admit that the presence of a man adds a great deal of respectability to a house.

      

      If you cannot prevent evil, try not to see it. What we do not know does not hurt us.

      

      A self-conscious man is sometimes one who is aware of his worth; a conceited man is generally one who is not aware of his unworthiness.

      

      Many a saint in a small provincial town is a devil of a dog in the Metropolis. Life in small towns is like life in glass-houses. The fear of the neighbour is the beginning of wisdom.

      

      Great revolutions were not caused by great grievances or even great sufferings, but by great injustices.

      

      Revolutions, like new countries, are often started by somewhat objectionable adventurers. When they have been successful, steady and honest people come in.

      

      The good diplomatist is not the one who forces events, but the one who foresees them, and, when they come, knows how to make the best of them. The good diplomatist is not the one who successfully takes people in, but the one who, when he has discovered who are his true friends, sticks to them through thick and thin.

      

      I prefer unrighteousness to self-righteousness. The unrighteous man may see the error of his ways and improve. He may even be lovable. The self-righteous man is unteachable, uncharitable, unloving, unlovable, and unlovely.

      

      You can judge the social standing of a woman from the way she sits down.

      

      A woman may love a man she has hated, never one she has despised, seldom one who has been indifferent to her.

      

      A woman is seldom jealous of another on account of her intellectual attainments, but if her bosom friend has on purpose or by mere chance eclipsed her by her dress at a party, they will probably be no longer on speaking terms.

      

      Scientific men are generally the most honest of men, because their minds are constantly bent on the pursuit of truth.

      

      It requires a head better screwed on the shoulders to stand success than to endure misfortune.

      

      The world is not ruled by men of talent, but by men of character.

      

      A vain man speaks either well or ill of himself. A modest man never speaks of himself at all.

      CHAPTER II

      OH, YOU MEN!

      The Paris Presse had asked its male readers to mention which virtue they most admire in women. Here is the result, with the number of votes obtained by each virtue, and truly it is not an edifying result:

      Surely, here is food for reflections and comments. Economy, order, and devotion head the list; chastity and self-abnegation figure at the bottom. I should have imagined the last two virtues would have obtained the maximum of votes.

      And is it not wonderful that the most beautiful trait in a woman's character – I mean Loyalty – should be altogether omitted from this list of twenty-one most characteristic virtues in women? Are we to conclude that loyalty is a virtue for men alone, such as willpower, magnanimity, energy, bravery, and straightforwardness?

      And Sincerity, that most indispensable and precious virtue, which is supposed to make the friendship of men so valuable, is it not also a virtue that we should value in women?

      Do men mean to say that loyalty and sincerity should not be or could not be expected to be found in women? Woman must be sweet, of course, and be economical. She must charm men and keep their house on the principles of the strictest order. Lovely!

      I know men who allow their wives £1 a day to keep their houses in plenty, and who spend £2 every day at their club. Whatever the husband does, however, the wife must be faithful, and possess patience and self-abnegation. She must be resigned, and, mind you, always amiable and cheerful.

      Poor dear fellow! the truth is, that when a man has spent a jolly evening at his club with the 'boys,' it is devilishly hard on him to come home at one or two in the morning and to find his wife not amiable, not cheerful, but


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