The Kreutzer Sonata and Other Stories


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drivel, pretending to enjoy this little amusement. The vice of marriage  
.
. ."  
"What! Vice?" I said. "But you are talking of one of the most natural  
things."  
"Natural!" said he. "Natural! No, I consider on the contrary that it  
is against nature, and it is I, a perverted man, who have reached this  
conviction. What would it be, then, if I had not known corruption? To  
a young girl, to every unperverted young girl, it is an act extremely  
unnatural, just as it is to children. My sister married, when very  
young, a man twice her own age, and who was utterly corrupt. I remember  
how astonished we were the night of her wedding, when, pale and covered  
with tears, she fled from her husband, her whole body trembling, saying  
that for nothing in the world would she tell what he wanted of her.  
"You say natural? It is natural to eat; that is a pleasant, agreeable  
function, which no one is ashamed to perform from the time of his birth.  
No, it is not natural. A pure young girl wants one thing,--children.  
Children, yes, not a lover." . . .  
"But," said I, with astonishment, "how would the human race continue?"  
"But what is the use of its continuing?" he rejoined, vehemently.  
"What! What is the use? But then we should not exist."  
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