Tuesday, May 7, 2013

How to Rid Oneself of a Good Woman


In my last bit of instruction, I touched upon two important measures to take when attracting the wrong woman. One must appear unintelligent and richly dressed. Some of you may say, “Old fellow, I’m afraid it’s too late for me. Before I saw your advice, I was a model of intelligence and a lack of pretension. I am betrothed as a result.” Well, this post is for you. It may be hard to get your lady to quit you by looking like an unintelligent show off. She has, unfortunately, already seen the good in you. Still, you aren’t married, so there is time yet. For a bit of help in how to rid oneself of a fine lady, we may look to such authors as Hester Mulso Chapone and James Fordyce.
If you have shown yourself to be intelligent, the remedy to the attraction that brings is to appear boring, and Chapone and Fordyce will be great references for anyone trying to appear as boring as possible. One may think that the way to appear boring is to have nothing to talk about. This is quite untrue. If you speak very little, your significant other will fill the emptiness with gabbing about lady things such as frocks and hair doodads. She will consider you an excellent listener and wrap her claws even tighter around you than before. One must talk to appear boring. The trick is to talk about boring things such as those mentioned by Chapone and Fordyce. Topics to avoid include anything that may make you seem too interesting and imaginative. You should never speak of a novel you have recently read. Novels are far too entertaining a topic to put anyone off. It was noted by Chapone that these “fictitious stories, that so enchant the mind… tend to inflame the passions of youth, whilst the chief purpose of education should be to moderate and refrain them.”
Instead of reading novels, you should follow Chapone’s advice and read historical texts. Don’t read recent history, as it may be too relatable. Chapone instructs as to which ancient texts to read and says that “[w]hen you have got through Rollin, if you add Vertot’s Revolutions Romaines… you may be said to have read as much as is absolutely necessary of ancient history. Plutarch’s Lives of famous Greeks and Romans… can never be read to so much advantage as immediately after the histories of Greece and Rome.” After you read these texts, give your opinions on them to your fair lady. Recounting the tousles of Lucius Cornelius Sulla Felix is a sure way to bore your woman half to death.
If history isn’t dull enough, then moral texts are worth a try. The ideas in texts such as Fordyce’s Sermons are either outdated or common sense, so discussing them will make listening to you unbearable. Share with your darling this sentiment of Fordyce’s, and try to act as sincere as possible when stating it:
“I am astonished at the folly of many women who are still reproaching their husbands for leaving them alone, for preferring this or that company to theirs, when, to speak the truth, they have themselves in great measure to blame. Had you behaved to them with more respectful observance studying their humours, overlooking their mistakes, submitting to their opinions in matters indifferent, giving soft answers to hasty words, complaining as little as possible your house might be the abode of domestic bliss.”
After you both bore and offend your lady, she will realize that as much as she loved you, she cannot spend her life with the drudgery of listening to you speak. You may rid yourself of a lady, and in her place you may frolic with a girl such as the one pictured below.


The excerpt from Fordyce's Sermons by James Fordyce was taken from: 
A copy of Hester Mulso Chapone's Letters on the Improvement of the Mind can be found as an e-book at:

1 comment:

  1. Fordyce is so right. If women just ignored all the mistakes men made the world would be such a blissful place.

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