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The French "Soul" Kiss
But
don't stop at this.
Surely, there is more to your tongue than merely its
tip. Probe further. Go deeper. Gently caress each
other's tongues. For, in doing this, you are merging
your souls. That is why this kiss was called the "soul"
kiss by the French who were said to be the first people
to have perfected it. The French have always been a
liberal minded people. And, it is because of the fact
that they dropped Puritanism many years ago, that they
were able to perfect themselves in the art of love and,
particularly, in the art of kissing.
Learn from the French.
Learn also from the Old Romans , especially Catullus,
whose love poems to Lesbia have lived through the ages
because of the sincerity of his passion and the genius
of his ability to express his emotions in the form of
beautiful poetry. For it was Catullus who wrote:
"Then to those kisses add a hundred more,
A thousand to that hundred so, kiss on!
To make that thousand up to a million;
Treble this million, and when that is done,
Let's kiss afresh, as when we first begun."
Kisses cost nothing. So kiss on. There is one thing that
you cannot take away from people and that is the ability
to make love to each other. Despite the fact that the
world suffered from a long depression, people continued
to get married and they continued to have children. In
fact, according to recently released figures, there
were, more children born during the depression than
there had been in good times. This means that, although
married people did not have money, they still had
themselves. They still had love. They still had the
ability to kiss as they pleased and when they pleased
and as often as they pleased.
Another poet asks:
What is a kiss? alack, at worst,
A single drop to quench a thirst,
Tho oft it proves in happier hour,
The first sweet drop of one long shower.
Because kisses cost nothing.
So
kiss on. Keep on kissing. Rare old Ben Jonson realized
this when he wrote that, if he had one wish, it would be
that he could die kissing. But it is not only the robust
and lusty poets, like Ben Johnson, who are gluttons for
kisses. There has been attributed to John Ruskin, an old
fogy of a philosopher if ever there was one, a request
from him to a young lady friend of his that she "kiss
him not sometimes but continually." Still another poet
wrote:
Kisses told by hundreds o'er;
Thousands told by thousands more.
Millions, countless millions then
Told by millions o'er again;
Countless as the drops that glide
In the ocean's billowy tide,
Countless as yon orbs of light
Spangled o'er the vault of night
I'll with ceaseless love bestow
On those cheeks of crimson glow,
On those lips so gently swelling,
On those eyes such fond tales telling.
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