Page:Love and its hidden history.djvu/168

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the master passion.

their love is less tempestuous and fiery, but can be wholly relied upon when fairly won! . . . Not one man in a thousand knows how to make love to a woman. They marvel because she won't say " Yes;" that she will admit nothing — in words! The fools fail to comprehend that her looks alone tell the story; that actions or non-actions speak louder than words. He is a ninny who teases for verbal consent, and a greater one, whether single or married, who cannot tell when a woman is in a hurry; and hasten to her relief. It is a crime to keep a woman waiting, for any thing or service whatever, for in this age the sex is not overburdened with patience. If you love her, tell her quick! If you don't love her, scoundrel! quit at once. No man, I care not how tightly he is "legally" married, has a right to enjoy the embraces of a woman unless he loves her and she loves him. Great God! how many cases of legal rape there are in this world! And what a pity it is that the victims of it do not know the simple and efficient means of overcoming its damning effects upon their bodies, and hence their spirits, therefore their souls! I wish I could, without offending this already corrupt and rotten thing called society, put forth this little bit of information in ten short lines, for I know it would save millions of agony-freighted hours to unhappy "wives"!

Nature never sends a great man into the planet without confiding the secret to another soul, nor a woman capable of loving without providing her a lover. If she fails to find him out, or come across him, let her forthwith go to work and make one to her own liking by putting in practice the magnetic law stated, or the operation described in the pages of " Love and its Hidden History." . . . It is as real as law that others should be law as that we shall be law ; for we must have society, and if we would realize love in its fulness it is essential that we obey its primary principles, and these have already herein been fully set forth. . . Many a match has been broken off, and many a happy couple separated, and many a poor heart broken by scandal, which in a moral point of view is like a counterfeit bill, or bogus coin. The one who receives and undertakes to pass them as genuine, is considered as guilty as the one who first gave them circulation. In either case, ignorance cannot be made as a plea of justification. We have no business to be ignorant, says the law, in passing bad money. And we certainly have no right to traduce and