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Adultery |
Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus, Legal, Wikipedia, Hutchinson | 0.04 sec. |
adulterySexual relations between a married person and someone other than his or her spouse. Prohibitions against adultery are found in virtually every society; Jewish, Christian, and Islamic traditions all condemn it, and in some Islamic countries it is still punishable by death. Attitudes toward adultery in different cultures have varied widely. Under the Code of Hammurabi (18th century BC) in Babylonia it was punishable by death by drowning, and in ancient Rome an offending woman could be killed, though men were not severely punished. In western Europe and North America, adultery by either spouse is a ground for divorce, though in the U.S. the shift to no-fault divorce significantly reduced the importance of adultery as an element in divorce proceedings. The spread of Western ideas of equality in marriage has resulted in pressure for equal marital rights for women in traditional African and Southeast Asian societies. Adultery See also Cuckoldry, Faithlessness. Alcmena unknowingly commits adultery when Jupiter impersonates her husband. [Rom. Lit.: Amphitryon] betrays old husband amusingly with her lodger, Nicholas. [Br. Lit.: Canterbury Tales, “Miller’s Tale”] eventually has child by lover, not husband. [Fr. Lit.: Mont-Oriol, Magill I, 618–620] pressured by David to commit adultery during husband’s absence. [O.T.: II Samuel 11:4] sensual wife of Leopold has an affair with Blazes Boylan. [Irish Lit.: Joyce Ulysses in Magill I, 1040] acquires lovers to find rapture marriage lacks. [Fr. Lit.: Madame Bovary, Magill I, 539–541] fatefully falls for general’s wife. [Am. Lit.: Mourning Becomes Electra] even with Daisy’s knowledge, deliberately has affairs. [Am. Lit.: The Great Gatsby] takes the gameskeeper of her impotent husband as her lover. [Br. Lit.: D. H. Lawrence Lady Chatterley’s Lover in Benét, 559] takes Aegisthus as paramour. [Gk. Lit.: Orestes] group of ten husbands sleep with each others’ wives. [Am. Lit.: Weiss, 108] amours with Sordello while married to first husband. [Br. Lit.: Sordello] symbol of infidelity. [Flower Symbolism: Jobes, 398] Jeanne’s young philandering husband, who has affairs with her foster-sister and their neighbor’s wife. [Fr. Lit.: Maupassant A Woman’s Life in Magill I, 1127] Puritan minister who commits adultery. [Am. Lit.: Hawthorne The Scarlet Letter] King Arthur’s unfaithful wife. [Br. Lit.: Le Morte d’Arthur] insatiable husband plays the field. [Am. Lit.: Herzog]
Alfonso’s wife; gives herself to Don Juan. [Br. Lit.: “Don Juan” in Magill I, 217–219] commits adultery with Count Vronsky; scandalizes Russian society. [Russ. Lit.: Anna Karenina] enters into an adulterous relationship with Guinevere. [Br. Lit.: Malory Le Mort d’Arthur] conspires with lover to poison husband; discovered, commits suicide. [Am. Lit.: Mourning Becomes Electra] personification of adultery. [Br. Lit.: The Purple Island, Brewer Handbook, 715] bored with husband, acquires Trukhashevsky as lover. [Russ. Lit.: The Kreutzer Sonata, Magill I, 481–483] adulterous woman in Puritan New England; condemned to wear a scarlet letter. [Am. Lit.: The Scarlet Letter] “A” for “adultery” sewn on Hester Prynne’s dress. [Am. Lit.: The Scarlet Letter] after Nedda’s repulsion, tells husband of her infidelities. [Ital. Opera: Leoncavallo, Pagliacci, Westerman, 341–342] misprint gives Commandment: “Thou shalt commit adultery.” [sic] [Br. Hist.: Brewer Dictionary, 108] |
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Fully aware as she was of the seriously flawed moral code and
behaviour of the ruling class, Lady Anne [Barnard] was also fascinated
by and appalled at the promiscuity of colonial women and she returns
again and again to record the endless liaisons, adulteries and
depraved behaviour of more than a few of the colonists. Virtually blackmailing his wife
into taciturn acceptance of his adulteries, he reminds her that it is
his money that gives her and the children a luxurious nest in a white
world. He considers those who have been
caught up in adulteries, love affairs, and the sexual revolution, and he
concludes:
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