Romance Art Of Kissing | Page 7

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ART OF KISSING

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And, this same thing applies to the mouth in kissing. Don't be afraid to\
kiss with more
than your lips. After your lips have been glued together fo
r some time, open them
slightly. Then put the tip of your tongue out so that you can feel the s\
mooth surface of
your kissee's teeth. This will be a signal for her to respond in kind. I\
f she is wholly in
accord with you, if she is, truly, your real love -mat e, then you will notice that she, too,
has opened her lips slightly and that., soon, her teeth will be parted. \
Then, if she is all that
she should be, she should project the tip of her tongue so that it meets\
with the tip of
yours.
Heaven will be in that u nion!
Lava will run through your veins instead of blood. Your breath will come\
in short gasps.
There will rise up in you an Overpowering, overwhelming surge of emotion\
such as you
have never before experienced. If you are a man, you will clutch the sho\
ulde rs of your
loved one and sense a shudder course through you that makes you pant. If\
you are a
woman, and being kissed, you will feel a strange languor passing through\
your limbs,
you -r entire body. A shudder will go through you. You will moan in the delic\
i ous
transports of love. And, in all probabilities, you will go faint because\
the blood in your
veins will be rushing furiously into your entire system and away from yo\
ur head. Thus,
you will be unable to think any longer. You will only be able to feel, t\
d feel the most
exquisite of pleasures that it has been your lot to feel.
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 th is, you are merging your souls. That is why
this kiss was called the "soul" kiss by the French who were said to be t\
he 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 k\
issing.
Learn from the French.
Learn also from the Old Romans , especially Catullus, whose love poems t\
o Lesbia have
lived through t he ages because of the sincerity of his passion and the genius of his ab\
ility
to express his emotions in the form of beautiful poetry. For it was Catu\
llus 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."
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THE ART OF KISSING

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Kisses cost nothing. So kiss on. There is one thing that you cannot. tak\
e 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 the\
y continued to
have children. In fact, according to recently released figures, there we\
re, more children
born during the depression than there ha d 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:
Wh at 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 w\
rote 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 Jonson, who are gluttons for kisses. There has been attr\
ibuted to John
Ruskin, an old fogy of a philosopher if ever there was one, a request fr\
o m him to a young
lady friend of his that she "kiss him not sometimes but continually." St\
ill another poet
wrote:
Kisses told by hundreds o'er;
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