The Kreutzer Sonata and Other Stories


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upon herself as such, and she will always remain an inferior being.  
Either, with the aid of the rascally doctors, she will try to prevent  
conception, and descend, not to the level of an animal, but to the  
level of a thing; or she will be what she is in the great majority of  
cases,--sick, hysterical, wretched, without hope of spiritual progress."  
.
. .  
"But why that?" I asked.  
"Oh! the most astonishing thing is that no one is willing to see this  
thing, evident as it is, which the doctors must understand, but which  
they take good care not to do. Man does not wish to know the law of  
nature,--children. But children are born and become an embarrassment.  
Then man devises means of avoiding this embarrassment. We have not  
yet reached the low level of Europe, nor Paris, nor the 'system of two  
children,' nor Mahomet. We have discovered nothing, because we have  
given it no thought. We feel that there is something bad in the two  
first means; but we wish to preserve the family, and our view of woman  
is still worse.  
"
With us woman must be at the same time mistress and nurse, and her  
strength is not sufficient. That is why we have hysteria, nervous  
attacks, and, among the peasants, witchcraft. Note that among the young  
girls of the peasantry this state of things does not exist, but only  
among the wives, and the wives who live with their husbands. The reason  
is clear, and this is the cause of the intellectual and moral decline of  
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