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How American Indians Love
Pantomimic Love-Making
Henry Theophilus Finck
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       _ It is noticeable in the foregoing accounts that courtship and even proposal are apt to be by pantomime, without any spoken words. The young Piute who visits his girl while she is in bed with her grandmother "does not speak to her." The Nishinam hunter leaves his presents and they are accepted "without a word being spoken;" and the Apaches, as we saw, "pop the question" with stones or ponies. Why this silent courtship? Obviously because the Indian is not used to playing so humble a role as that of suitor to so inferior a being as a woman. He feels awkward, and has nothing to say. As Burton has remarked _(C.S._, 144), "in savage and semi-barbarous societies the separation of the sexes is the general rule, because, as they have no ideas in common, each prefers the society of its own." "Between the sexes," wrote Morgan
       "there was but little sociality, as this term is
       understood in polished society. Such a thing as formal
       visiting was entirely unknown. When the unmarried of
       opposite sexes were casually brought together there was
       little or no conversation between them. No attempts by
       the unmarried to please or gratify each other by acts
       of personal attention were ever made. At the season of
       councils and religious festivals there was more of
       actual intercourse and sociality than at any other
       time; but this was confined to the dance and was in
       itself limited." _