Penguin Island by Anatole France (best romantic novels to read txt) ๐
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Penguin Island, published by Anatole France in 1908, is a comic novel that satirizes the history of France, from its prehistory to the authorโs vision of a distant future.
After setting out on a storm-tossed voyage of evangelization, the myopic St. Maรซl finds himself on an island populated by penguins. Mistaking them to be humans, Maรซl baptizes themโtouching off a dispute in Heaven and ushering the Penguin nation into history.
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- Author: Anatole France
Read book online ยซPenguin Island by Anatole France (best romantic novels to read txt) ๐ยป. Author - Anatole France
One Thursday therefore, in Madame Clarenceโs drawing room, the conversation turned upon love. The ladies spoke of it with pride, delicacy, and mystery, the men with discretion and fatuity; everyone took an interest in the conversation, for each one was interested in what he or she said. A great deal of wit flowed; brilliant apostrophes were launched forth and keen repartees were returned. But when Professor Haddock began to speak he overwhelmed everybody.
โIt is the same with our ideas on love as with our ideas on everything else,โ said he, โthey rest upon anterior habits whose very memory has been effaced. In morals, the limitations that have lost their grounds for existing, the most useless obligations, the cruelest and most injurious restraints, are because of their profound antiquity and the mystery of their origin, the least disputed and the least disputable as well as the most respected, and they are those that cannot be violated without incurring the most severe blame. All morality relative to the relations of the sexes is founded on this principle: that a woman once obtained belongs to the man, that she is his property like his horse or his weapons. And this having ceased to be true, absurdities result from it, such as the marriage or contract of sale of a woman to a man, with clauses restricting the right of ownership introduced as a consequence of the gradual diminution of the claims of the possessor.
โThe obligation imposed on a girl that she should bring her virginity to her husband comes from the times when girls were married immediately they were of a marriageable age. It is ridiculous that a girl who marries at twenty-five or thirty should be subject to that obligation. You will, perhaps, say that it is a present with which her husband, if she gets one at last, will be gratified; but every moment we see men wooing married women and showing themselves perfectly satisfied to take them as they find them.
โStill, even in our own day, the duty of girls is determined in religious morality by the old belief that God, the most powerful of warriors, is polygamous, that he has reserved all maidens for himself, and that men can only take those whom he has left. This belief, although traces of it exist in several metaphors of mysticism, is abandoned today, by most civilised peoples. However, it still dominates the education of girls not only among our believers, but even among our freethinkers, who, as a rule, think freely for the reason that they do not think at all.
โDiscretion means ability to separate and discern. We say that a girl is discreet when she knows nothing at all. We cultivate her ignorance. In spite of all our care the most discreet know something, for we cannot conceal from them their own nature and their own sensations. But they know badly, they know in a wrong way. That is all we obtain by our careful education.โ โโ โฆโ
โSir,โ suddenly said Joseph Boutourlรฉ, the High Treasurer of Alca, โbelieve me, there are innocent girls, perfectly innocent girls, and it is a great pity. I have known three. They married, and the result was tragical.โ
โI have noticed,โ Professor Haddock went on, โthat Europeans in general and Penguins in particular occupy themselves, after sport and motoring, with nothing so much as with love. It is giving a great deal of importance to a matter that has very little weight.โ
โThen, Professor,โ exclaimed Madame Crรฉmeur in a choking voice, โwhen a woman has completely surrendered herself to you, you think it is a matter of no importance?โ
โNo, Madame; it can have its importance,โ answered Professor Haddock, โbut it is necessary to examine if when she surrenders herself to us she offers us a delicious fruit garden or a plot of thistles and dandelions. And then, do we not misuse words? In love, a woman lends herself rather than gives herself. Look at the pretty Madame Pensรฉe.โ โโ โฆโ
โShe is my mother,โ said a tall, fair young man.
โSir, I have the greatest respect for her,โ replied Professor Haddock; โdo not be afraid that I intend to say anything in the least offensive about her. But allow me to tell you that, as a rule, the opinions of sons about their mothers are not to be relied on. They do not bear enough in mind that a mother is a mother only because she loved, and that she can still love. That, however, is the case, and it would be deplorable were it otherwise. I have noticed, on the contrary, that daughters do not deceive themselves about their mothersโ faculty for loving or about the use they make of it; they are rivals; they have their eyes upon them.โ
The insupportable Professor spoke a great deal longer, adding
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