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Tuesday 19 January 2010

Woman Hate The Folk Lore Of Women T F Thistelton Dyer

Woman Hate The Folk Lore Of Women T F Thistelton Dyer
"Not plump the soldiers wrath, raised in war,

The passion of tyrants at whatever time stubbornness stings 'em!

The conceit of priests, so bloodless at whatever time in power,

Are partly so terrible as a woman's adversary."

SAVAGE. IT is around stubborn that a enterprise to be avoided by man at any pace is a woman's hatred; except, according to Walter Savage Landor, "No friendship is so tender or so full as that of a girl for a girl; no opposition so quick or unsympathetic as that of woman for woman." And the aversion of one woman for additional is mostly attributed to jealousy; for, according to a well-known French saw, "It is the men who get as far as the women to aversion each former."

But, as it has been observed, "The anger of a woman is the greatest criminal with which one can coerce enemies, actual as customary experience tells us that "A woman is luxury faithful in irritation than in love" a lesson which has emergency reproach at whatever time it is remembered that "No woman is too irrational not to breakfast a rush for malice"--added to which may be quoted this constituent of German saw lore: "A woman's adversary knows no bounds;" and, again: "A woman, at whatever time irritated by love or opposition, will do doesn't matter what." To the extraordinarily effect is the French saying: "Women's counsels are ever bitter," the reproach being beyond that "you prerequisite character only one word in forty that a woman speaks," a fact which is made-up to be very true at whatever time she is anxious to emphasise her terminology of opposition against her unfortunate be against.

And we are reminded that the irritation of a woman is all the luxury to be dreaded, for plump at whatever time at her best we are told that "Women like good wine are a secret become disillusioned," and that "despite the fact that women's love is judicious, their irritation is eternal."

This view, too, is the extraordinarily everyplace, and a fantastic Hindustani lesson tells us that "the passion of a woman, a player, and a bull is no matter which terrible" but it consoles us by addendum that "A woman's threats and goblin's stones break no bones."

And, as in love, so in irritation, a woman is academically proverbially blind, seeing zilch but what is carefully bad in the take care of her hatred; and as a result the popular saw, of which offer are diverse versions: "Malice is blind as well as love."

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