The Project Gutenberg eBook, How Women Love, by Max Simon Nordau
This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
Title: How Women Love
(Soul Analysis)
Author: Max Simon Nordau
Release Date: August 4, 2006 [eBook #18989]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HOW WOMEN LOVE***
E-text prepared by Al Haines
HOW WOMEN LOVE
(Soul Analysis.)
Translated from the German of
MAX NORDAU,
Author of "Degeneration," "The Malady of the Century,"
"The Comedy of Sentiment," Etc., Etc
Copyright, 1898, by F. T. Neely.
Copyright, 1901, by Hurst & Co.
New York
Hurst & Company
Publishers
CONTENTS
Justice or Revenge
Prince and Peasant
The Art of Growing Old
How Women Love
A Midsummer Night's Dream
JUSTICE OR REVENGE.
CHAPTER I.
A more unequally matched couple than the cartwright Molnar and his wife
can seldom be seen. When, on Sunday, the pair went to church through
the main street of Kisfalu, an insignificant village in the Pesth
county, every one looked after them, though every child, nay, every cur
in the hamlet, knew them and, during the five years since their
marriage, might have become accustomed to the spectacle. But it seemed
as though it produced an ever new and surprising effect upon the by no
means sensitive inhabitants of Kisfalu, who imposed no constraint upon
themselves to conceal the emotions awakened by the sight of the Molnar
pair. They never called the husband by any other name than "Csunya
Pista," ugly Stephen. And he well merited the epithet. He was
one-eyed, had a broken, shapeless nose, and an ugly scar, on which no
hair grew, upon his upper lip, so that his moustache looked as if it
had been shaven off there; to complete the picture, one of his upper
eye-teeth and incisors were missing, and he had the unpleasant habit of
putting his tongue into these gaps in his upper row of teeth, which
rendered his countenance still more repulsive.
The wife, on the contrary, was a very beautiful woman, a magnificent
type of the Magyar race. She was tall, powerful, only perhaps a trifle
too broad-shouldered. Her intensely dark hair
|