FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   57   58   59   60   61   62   63   64   65   66   67   68   69   70   71   72   73   74   75   76   77   78   79   80   81  
82   83   84   85   86   87   88   89   >>  
to "amour propere". And yet, strangely enough, or perhaps not so strangely, This is a fiction but rarely maintained with regard to her own cardiac transportations. And for this reason:-- Woman is, and knows herself to be, a multiple personality; Man, a tyro in emotions, is cast in a simpler mould. So, A woman may donate herself piecemeal, or over and over again, yet deem herself perfectly loyal.--And perhaps naturally and legitimately; for, That man who will comprehend and appreciate all the intricacies of feminine emotion . . . . . . . but there is no such being existent. Indeed even Self-revelation is a task no daughter of Eve has achieved. * * * To sum up: between men and women The consummation of love is a bodily oblation, the outcome of spiritual obsession.--Must I explain this? No, I shall not. Suffice it to say that The Heavenly Aphrodite is true friend to the Earthly.(4) So Nothing offends love; since love finds in all that savors of the mortal only a symbol and epitome of the supernatural. And There is in Love a cosmic force and secret incomprehensible, incommunicable by man. Is not, after all, Love the one supreme and significant fact of the cosmos: indelible, indecipherable: efflorescing in Man; emerging from the material; idealizing the carnal; pointing to an inscrutable, a spiritual goal? Can it be that If we could explain Love, we should explain the cosmos? What if we could explain why it is that no one single isolated portion of the cosmos can live alone--and vaunt itself in itself sufficient--(5), but must seek some other single and isolated portion of the cosmos in order that that very cosmos shall continue, shall evolve, shall go towards its goal . . . Do we put our finger here upon some curious and recondite cosmic fact utterly transcending our mean comprehension? (4) Cf. Plato, Symposium, 180 et seq. (5) S.T. Coleridge, "Lectures on Shakespeare". * * * X. On Jealousy ". . . la jalousie . . . monster odieux." --Moliere 'Ware jealousy as you would 'ware wire: for it no psychiater has yet discovered a balm. * * * To make an experiment of jealousy is to make a very hazardous experiment indeed. * * * Jealousy is no proof of love, for Often jealousy is but rancor under a sense of humiliation. Indeed, Jealousy is a sign of weakness: The lover whose self-confidence assures him of his pre-eminence fears no rival. Yet Male sel
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   57   58   59   60   61   62   63   64   65   66   67   68   69   70   71   72   73   74   75   76   77   78   79   80   81  
82   83   84   85   86   87   88   89   >>  



Top keywords:

cosmos

 

explain

 
jealousy
 
Jealousy
 

cosmic

 

Indeed

 

strangely

 

spiritual

 

experiment

 

single


isolated
 

portion

 

curious

 

reason

 
recondite
 
finger
 

Symposium

 

transcending

 

comprehension

 

utterly


multiple

 

personality

 

sufficient

 

continue

 

evolve

 

Lectures

 

weakness

 

humiliation

 

rancor

 

confidence


eminence

 
assures
 

hazardous

 

jalousie

 

monster

 

odieux

 

propere

 

Shakespeare

 

Moliere

 

psychiater


discovered

 

cardiac

 

Coleridge

 

daughter

 

achieved

 

consummation

 

donate

 
obsession
 

bodily

 

oblation