The author presents a series of essays that examine female nature, the dynamics between sexes, marriage, suffrage, and changing moral values. He blends social observation, biological speculation, and cultural satire to question contemporary ideas about women's intelligence, emotions, domestic roles, and political rights, dissecting courtship, marital institutions, and the effects of emancipation. Chapters survey alleged instincts, myths, and hypocrisies surrounding honor, piety, and aesthetics, and consider how war and cultural shifts might reshape gender relations. The tone alternates between critical polemic and ironic commentary, inviting debate about assumptions that underlie sexual politics and the future of intimate and civic arrangements.