[Mr. Isaacs by F. Marion Crawford]@TWC D-Link book
Mr. Isaacs

CHAPTER III
11/24

Would you not say that with such a woman the transitory pleasure of early conversation and intercourse had been the stepping-stone to the lasting happiness of such a friendship as you could never hope for in your old age among your sex?
Would not her faithful love and abounding sympathy be dearer to you every day, though the roses in her cheek should fade and the bright hair whiten with the dust of life's journey?
Would you not feel that when you died your dearest wish must be to join her where there should be no parting--her from whom there could be no parting here, short of death itself?
Would you not believe she had a soul ?" "There is no end of your 'supposing,' but it is quite pretty.

I am half inclined to 'suppose' too." He took a sip of sherbet from the tall crystal goblet the servant had placed on a little three-legged stool beside him, and as he drank the cool liquid slowly, looked over the glass into my eyes, with a curious, half earnest, half smiling glance; I could not tell whether my enthusiastic picture of conjugal bliss amused him or attracted him, so I waited for him to speak again.
"Now that you have had your cruise in your ship of happiness on the waters of your cerulean imagination, permit me, who am land-born and a lover of the chase, to put my steed at a few fences in the difficult country of unadorned facts over which I propose to hunt the wily fox, matrimony.

I have never hunted a fox, but I can quite well imagine what it is like.
"In the first place, it is all very well to suppose that it had pleased Allah in his goodness to relieve me of my three incumbrances--meanwhile, there they are, and they are very real difficulties I assure you.
Nevertheless are there means provided us by the foresight of the apostle, by which we may ease ourselves of domestic burdens when they are too heavy for us to bear.

It would be quite within the bounds of possibility for me to divorce them all three, without making any special scandal.

But if I did this thing, do you not think that my experience of married life has given me the most ineradicable prejudices against women as daily companions?
Am I not persuaded that they all bicker and chatter and nibble sweetmeats alike--absolutely alike?
Or if I looked abroad--" "Stop," I said, "I am not reasoner enough to persuade you that all women have souls.


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