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قراءة كتاب The Ten Pleasures of Marriage and the Second Part, The Confession of the New Married Couple
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The Ten Pleasures of Marriage and the Second Part, The Confession of the New Married Couple
THE TEN PLEASURES OF MARRIAGE
AND THE SECOND PART
THE CONFESSION OF THE NEW MARRIED COUPLE
Contents
THE TEN PLEASURES OF MARRIAGE | |
---|---|
INTRODUCTION | v |
Publisher's Preface | xvii |
To the READER | xx |
THE TEN PLEASURES | 1 |
THE FIRST PLEASURE | 11 |
THE SECOND PLEASURE | 24 |
THE THIRD PLEASURE | 34 |
THE FOURTH PLEASURE | 47 |
THE FIFTH PLEASURE | 56 |
THE SIXTH PLEASURE | 67 |
THE SEVENTH PLEASURE | 76 |
THE EIGHTH PLEASURE | 84 |
THE NINTH PLEASURE | 97 |
THE TENTH PLEASURE | 118 |
A LETTER | 132 |
THE CONFESSION OF THE NEW MARRIED COUPLE | |
To the READER | 143 |
INTRODUCTION | 145 |
The First Pleasure | 147 |
The Second Pleasure | 159 |
The Third Pleasure | 170 |
The Fourth Pleasure | 181 |
The Fifth Pleasure | 189 |
The Sixth Pleasure | 215 |
The Seventh Pleasure | 228 |
The Eighth Pleasure | 239 |
The Ninth Pleasure | 259 |
The Tenth Pleasure | 270 |
Transcriber's Note : Title and Contents above were not part of the original book, but are provided for the convenience of the reader.
THE TEN PLEASURES OF MARRIAGE
Printed at London 1682.
Published by The Navarre Society, London.
THE TEN PLEASURES OF
MARRIAGE
AND THE SECOND PART
THE CONFESSION OF THE
NEW MARRIED COUPLE
ATTRIBUTED TO
APHRA BEHN
REPRINTED WITH AN INTRODUCTION
BY
JOHN HARVEY
AND THE ORIGINAL TWENTY PLATES
AND TWO ENGRAVED TITLES
RE-ENGRAVED
LONDON: MCMXXII
PRIVATELY PRINTED FOR THE NAVARRE SOCIETY LIMITED
Printed in Great Britain
INTRODUCTION
he Restoration brought back to England something more than a king and the theatre. It renewed in English life the robust vitality of humour which had been repressed under the Commonwealth—though, in spite of repression, there were, even among the Puritan divines, men like the author of Joanereidos, whose self-expression ran the whole gamut from freedom to licentiousness.
It is a curious thing, that fundamental English humour. It can be vividly concentrated into a single word, as when, for instance, the chronicler of The Ten Pleasures of Marriage revives the opprobrious term for a tailor—"pricklouse": the whole history of the English woollen industry and of the stuffy Tudor and Stuart domestic architecture is in the nickname. Or a single phrase can light up an idea, as when, a few days before marriage, "the Bridegroom is running up and down