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SAVINGS ABOUT WOMEN.

Wrinkles disfigure a woman lees than ill nature. —Dupuy.

Woman is an idol that man worships, until he throws it down.

Women love always ; when earth slips from them they take refuge in heaven.

The whisper of a beautiful woman can be heard further than the loudest call of duty.

There is no torture that a woman would not suffer to enhance her beauty.—Montaigne. Of all things that man possesses, women alone take pleasure in being possessed. — Matherbe.

Before promising a woman to love only her, one should have seen them all, or should see only her. We censure the inconstancy of woman when we are the victims. We find it charming when'we are the object 3. r ; We meet in society many beautiful and attractive women whom we think would make excellonfc wires—for our friends.

Woman among savages is a beast of burden ; .in Asia, shois a piece of furniture ; in Europe, sho 13 a spoiled child.—Sonac de Meilhan.

Tho highest mark of esteem a woman can give a man is to ask his friendship ; and the most signal proof of her indifference is to offer him hers.

At 20 man is less a lover of woman than of women. He is more in love with tho sex than with the individual, however charming she may be.

It is not easy to be a widow ; one must reassume all the modesty of girlhood, without being allowed to feign its ignorance.— Madame de Girardin.

Men are so fearful of wounding a woman's vanity that they rarely remember that she may by some possibility possess a grain of common sense.—Miss Braddon.

Women of the world never use harsh expressions, when condemning their rivals. Like savages, they hurl elegant arrows, ornamented with feathers of purple and azure, but with poisoned points.

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/DTN18810521.2.9

Bibliographic details

Daily Telegraph (Napier), 21 May 1881, Page 4

Word Count
302

SAVINGS ABOUT WOMEN. Daily Telegraph (Napier), 21 May 1881, Page 4

SAVINGS ABOUT WOMEN. Daily Telegraph (Napier), 21 May 1881, Page 4

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