The Kreutzer Sonata and Other Stories


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public houses, nor public functions. And then the chief thing is that  
she is physically pure, and that is why, in marrying, she is superior  
to her husband. She is superior to man as a young girl, and when she  
becomes a wife in our society, where there is no need to work in order  
to live, she becomes superior, also, by the gravity of the acts of  
generation, birth, and nursing.  
"Woman, in bringing a child into the world, and giving it her bosom,  
sees clearly that her affair is more serious than the affair of man, who  
sits in the Zemstvo, in the court. She knows that in these functions the  
main thing is money, and money can be made in different ways, and for  
that very reason money is not inevitably necessary, like nursing a  
child. Consequently woman is necessarily superior to man, and must rule.  
But man, in our society, not only does not recognize this, but, on  
the contrary, always looks upon her from the height of his grandeur,  
despising what she does.  
"
Thus my wife despised me for my work at the Zemstvo, because she gave  
birth to children and nursed them. I, in turn, thought that woman's  
labor was most contemptible, which one might and should laugh at.  
"Apart from the other motives, we were also separated by a mutual  
contempt. Our relations grew ever more hostile, and we arrived at that  
period when, not only did dissent provoke hostility, but hostility  
provoked dissent. Whatever she might say, I was sure in advance to hold  
a contrary opinion; and she the same. Toward the fourth year of  
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84 85 86 87 88

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1 73 145 218 290