您的位置 : 首页 > 英文著作
Aboriginal Australian Love
Other Obstacles To Love
Henry Theophilus Finck
下载:Aboriginal Australian Love.txt
本书全文检索:
       _ Looking back over the ground traversed in this chapter, we see that Cupid is thwarted in Australia not only by the natural stupidity, coarseness, and sensuality of the natives, but by a number of artificial obstacles which seem to have been devised with almost diabolical ingenuity for the express purpose of stifling the germs of love. The selfish, systematic, and deliberate suppression of free choice is only one of these obstacles. There are two others almost equally fatal to love--the habit of marrying young girls to men old enough to be their fathers or grandfathers, and the complicated marriage taboos. We have already seen that as a rule the old men appropriate the young girls, the younger men not being allowed to marry till they are twenty-five or thirty, and even then being compelled to take an old man's cast-off wife of thirty-five or forty summers, "It is usual," says Curr (I., 110),
       "to see old men with mere girls as wives, and men
       in the prime of life married to widows.... Women
       have very frequently two husbands during their l
       ife-time, the first older and the second younger
       than themselves.... There are always many bachelors
       in every tribe."[176]
       [FOOTNOTE 176: With his usual conscientious regard for facts Westermarck declares that in a savage condition of life "every full-grown man marries as soon as possible."]
       Not to speak of love, this arrangement makes it difficult even for animal passion to manifest itself except in an adulterous or illegitimate manner.
       "At present," we learn from Spencer and Gillen,
       "by far the most common method of getting a wife is
       by means of an arrangement made between brothers or
       fathers of the respective men and women whereby a
       particular woman is assigned to a particular man."
       This most usual method of getting a wife is also the most extraordinary. Suppose one man has a son, another a daughter, generally both of tender age. Now it would be bad enough to betroth these two without their consent and before they are old enough to have any real choice. But the Australian way is infinitely worse. It is arranged that the girl in the case shall be, by and by, not the boy's wife, but his mother-in-law; that is, the boy is to wed her daughter. In other words, he must wait not only till she is old enough to marry but till her daughter is old enough to marry! And this is "by far the most common method"! _