Iranian Women flocked to Blond blokes in 1800s
"Lady Sheil has described how the ladies of Teheran flocked to the English doctor, a privileged
person in al parts of the East, under the pretence of consutling him upon imaginary ills, but
really with a view to indulge an appetite, oftenfelt in Persia, as elsewhere, for gossip and scandal. Eastern
women, indeed, are always eager to avail themselves fo any excuse to seea a 'Frank.' 'You wish to
see the women,' said an indigenous British vice-consul to an English tarveller: 'well, keep a monkey
or a peacock, and you will always have the yard of your house fullo f them.' The suggestion was
adopted, and witht he fullest success - no husband venturing to do more than remonstrate against
the gratification of so reasonable a curiosity as that of seeing a strange a****l.' p.277,
The London Quarterly Review, Volumes 101-102, in Art. VII - 1. Caraven Journayes and Wanderings
in Persia, Herat etc etc. by J P Ferrier ... and 2. Glipmpes of Life and Manners in persia,
Lady Sheil 1 vol 8 vo. London 1856. review.
Note the SOPH of Iranian boys, and also the percentage of Iranian prostitutes in the Benelux.
- Pyrard says that "the Indian women are fond of the European men, and prefer them even to
the white Indians." - p.263, Natural History, General and Particular ... Illustrated with Above ..., Volume 1
By George Louis LE CLERC (Count de Buffon.)
The American Journal of Islamic Social Sciences - Volume 22 - Page 36
https://books.google.co.in/books?id=_0UkAQAAIAAJ
2005 - Snippet view - More editions
Kipling's Indian women are, as Said observes, "debased or unsuitable for male attention - prostitutes, elderly widows, or importunate and lusty."41 Kipling's ... in his short story "Lispeth."42 This conforms quite well with the Orientalist portrayal of Arab Muslim women as being repressed by a putative local Islamic patriarchy and living in a suffocating cage, always ready to come out to meet European men.
person in al parts of the East, under the pretence of consutling him upon imaginary ills, but
really with a view to indulge an appetite, oftenfelt in Persia, as elsewhere, for gossip and scandal. Eastern
women, indeed, are always eager to avail themselves fo any excuse to seea a 'Frank.' 'You wish to
see the women,' said an indigenous British vice-consul to an English tarveller: 'well, keep a monkey
or a peacock, and you will always have the yard of your house fullo f them.' The suggestion was
adopted, and witht he fullest success - no husband venturing to do more than remonstrate against
the gratification of so reasonable a curiosity as that of seeing a strange a****l.' p.277,
The London Quarterly Review, Volumes 101-102, in Art. VII - 1. Caraven Journayes and Wanderings
in Persia, Herat etc etc. by J P Ferrier ... and 2. Glipmpes of Life and Manners in persia,
Lady Sheil 1 vol 8 vo. London 1856. review.
Note the SOPH of Iranian boys, and also the percentage of Iranian prostitutes in the Benelux.
- Pyrard says that "the Indian women are fond of the European men, and prefer them even to
the white Indians." - p.263, Natural History, General and Particular ... Illustrated with Above ..., Volume 1
By George Louis LE CLERC (Count de Buffon.)
The American Journal of Islamic Social Sciences - Volume 22 - Page 36
https://books.google.co.in/books?id=_0UkAQAAIAAJ
2005 - Snippet view - More editions
Kipling's Indian women are, as Said observes, "debased or unsuitable for male attention - prostitutes, elderly widows, or importunate and lusty."41 Kipling's ... in his short story "Lispeth."42 This conforms quite well with the Orientalist portrayal of Arab Muslim women as being repressed by a putative local Islamic patriarchy and living in a suffocating cage, always ready to come out to meet European men.
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