The Kreutzer Sonata and Other Stories


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man, shaking his head so triumphantly and so severely that the clerk,  
deciding that the victory was on his side, burst into a loud laugh.  
"Yes, you men think so," replied the lady, without surrendering, and  
turning toward us. "You have given yourself liberty. As for woman, you  
wish to keep her in the seraglio. To you, everything is permissible. Is  
it not so?"  
"
"
"
Oh, man,--that's another affair."  
Then, according to you, to man everything is permissible?"  
No one gives him this permission; only, if the man behaves badly  
outside, the family is not increased thereby; but the woman, the wife,  
is a fragile vessel," continued the merchant, severely.  
His tone of authority evidently subjugated his hearers. Even the lady  
felt crushed, but she did not surrender.  
"Yes, but you will admit, I think, that woman is a human being, and has  
feelings like her husband. What should she do if she does not love her  
husband?"  
"
If she does not love him!" repeated the old man, stormily, and knitting  
his brows; "why, she will be made to love him."  
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