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Aboriginal Australian Love
Survivals Of Promiscuity
Henry Theophilus Finck
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       _ Since this chapter was written a new book on Australia has appeared which bears out the views here taken so admirably that I must insert a brief reference to its contents. It is Spencer and Gillen's _The Native Tribes of Central Australia_ (1899), and relates to nine tribes over whom Baldwin Spencer had been placed as special magistrate and sub-protector for some years, during which he had excellent opportunities to study their customs. The authors tell us that
       "In the Urabunna tribe every woman is the special
       _Nupa_ of one particular man, but at the same time he
       has no exclusive right to her, as she is the
       _Piraungaru_ of certain other men who also have the
       right of access to her.... There is no such thing as
       one man having the exclusive right to one woman....
       Individual marriage does not exist either in name or in
       practice in the Urabunna tribe."
       "Occasionally, but rarely, it happens that a man
       attempts to prevent his wife's _Piraungaru_ from having
       access to her, but this leads to a fight, and the
       husband is looked upon as churlish. When visiting
       distant groups where, in all likelihood, the husband
       has no _Piraungaru_, it is customary for other men of
       his own class to offer him the loan of one or more of
       their _Nupa_ women, and a man, besides lending a woman
       over whom he has the first right, will also lend his
       _Piraungaru_."
       In the Arunta tribe there is a restriction of a particular woman to a particular man, "or rather, a man has an exclusive right to one special woman, though he may of his own free will lend her to other men," provided they stand in a certain artificial relation to her. However:
       "Whilst under ordinary circumstances in the Arunta and
       other tribes one man is only allowed to have marital
       relations with women of a particular class, there are
       customs which allow at certain times of a man having
       such relations with women to whom at other times he
       would not on any account be allowed to have access. We
       find, indeed, that this holds true in the case of all
       the nine different tribes with the marriage customs of
       which we are acquainted, and in which a woman becomes
       the private property of one man."
       In the southern Arunta, after a certain ceremony has been performed, the bride is brought back to camp and given to her special _Unawa_. "That night he lends her to one or two men who are _unawa_ to her, and afterward she belongs to him exclusively." At this time when a woman is being, so to speak, handed over to one particular individual, special individuals with whom at ordinary times she may have no intercourse, have the right of access to her. Such customs our authors interpret plausibly as partial promiscuity pointing to a time when still greater laxity prevailed--suggesting rudimentary organs in animals.
       Among some tribes at corrobboree time, every day two or three women are told off and become the property of all the men on the corrobboree grounds, excepting fathers, brothers, or sons. Thus there are three stages of individual ownership in women: In the first, whilst the man has exclusive right to a woman, he can and does lend her to certain other men; in the second there is a wider relation in regard to particular men at the time of marriage; and in the third a still wider relation to all men except the nearest relatives, at corrobboree time. Only in the first of these cases can we properly speak of wife "lending"; in the other cases the individuals have no choice and cannot withhold their consent, the matter being of a public or tribal nature. As regards the corrobborees, it is supposed to be the duty of every man at different times to send his wife to the ground, and the most striking feature in regard to it is that the first man who has access to her is the very one to whom, under normal conditions, she is most strictly taboo, her _Mura_. [All women whose daughters are eligible as wives are _mura_ to a man.]
       Old and young men alike must give up their wives on these occasions. "It is a custom of ancient date which is sanctioned by public opinion, and to the performance of which neither men nor women concerned offer any opposition". _