Smirnov
I don't understand how to behave in the company
of ladies. Madam, in the course of my life I have seen more women
than you have sparrows. Three times have I fought duels for women,
twelve I jilted and nine jilted me. There was a time when I played
the fool, used honeyed language, bowed and scraped. I loved,
suffered, sighed to the moon, melted in love's torments. I loved
passionately, I loved to madness, loved in every key, chattered
like a magpie on emancipation, sacrificed half my fortune in
the tender passion, until now the devil knows I've had enough
of it. Your obedient servant will let you lead him around by
the nose no more. Enough! Black eyes, passionate eyes, coral
lips, dimples in cheeks, moonlight whispers, soft, modest sights--for
all that, madam, I wouldn't pay a kopeck! I am not speaking of
present company, but of women in general; from the tiniest to
the greatest, they are conceited, hypocritical, chattering, odious,
deceitful from top to toe; vain, petty, cruel with a maddening
logic and in this respect, please excuse my frankness, but one
sparrow is worth ten of the aforementioned petticoat-philosophers.
When one sees one of the romantic creatures before him he imagines
he is looking at some holy being, so wonderful that its one breath
could dissolve him in a sea of a thousand charms and delights;
but if one looks into the soul--it's nothing but a common crocodile.
But the worst of all is that this crocodile imagines it is a
masterpiece of creation, and that it has a monopoly on all the
tender passions. May the devil hang me upside down if there is
anything to love about a woman! When she is in love, all she
knows is how to complain and shed tears. If the man suffers and
makes sacrifices she swings her train about and tries to lead
him by the nose. You have the misfortune to be a woman, and naturally
you know woman's nature; tell me on your honor, have you ever
in your life seen a woman who was really true and faithful? Never!
Only the old and the deformed are true and faithful. It's easier
to find a cat with horns or a white woodcock, than a faithful
woman.
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