您的位置 : 首页 > 英文著作
Aboriginal Australian Love
Love-Letters
Henry Theophilus Finck
下载:Aboriginal Australian Love.txt
本书全文检索:
       _ Apart from magic and birds Australian lovers appear not to have been without means of communicating with one another. Howitt says that if a Kurnai girl took a fancy to a man she might send him a secret message asking, "Will you find me some food?" And this was understood to be a proposal--a rather unsentimental and utilitarian proposal, it must be confessed. According to one of the correspondents of Curr (III., 176) the natives along the Mary River even made use of a kind of love-letters which, he says, "were peculiar."
       "When the writer was once travelling with a black boy
       the latter produced from the lining of his hat a bit of
       twig about an inch long and having three notches cut on
       it. The black boy explained that he was a _dhomka_
       (messenger), that the central notch represented
       himself, and the other notches, one the youth sending
       the message, the other the girl for whom it was
       intended. It meant, in the words of Dickens, 'Barkis is
       willin'.' The _dhomka_ sewed up the love-symbol in the
       lining of his hat, carried it for months without
       divulging his secret to his sable friends, and finally
       delivered it safely. This practice appeared to be
       well-known, and was probably common."
       Such a "love-letter," consisting of three notches cut in a twig, symbolically sums up this whole chapter. The difference between this bushman's twig and the love-letter of a civilized modern suitor is no greater than the difference between aboriginal Australian "love" and genuine romantic love.
       [THE END]
       Henry Theophilus Finck's Book: Aboriginal Australian Love
       _