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Island Love On The Pacific
Fickle And Shallow Passion
Henry Theophilus Finck
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       _ Though the Dyaks may be somewhat less coarse than those Australians who make a captured woman marry the man who killed her husband, an almost equal callousness of feeling is revealed by J. Dalton's statement that the women taken on the head-hunting expedition "soon became attached to the conquerors"--resembling, in this respect, the Australian woman who, of her own accord, deserts to an enemy who has vanquished her husband. Cases of frantic amorous infatuation occur, as a matter of course. Brooke (II., 106) relates the story of a girl of seventeen who, for the sake of an ugly, deformed, and degraded workman, left her home, dressed as a man, and in a small broken canoe made a trip of eighty miles to join her lover. In olden times death would have been the penalty for such an act; but she, being a "New Woman" in her tribe, exclaimed, "If I fell in love with a wild beast, no one should prevent me marrying it." In this Eastern clime, Brooke declares, "love is like the sun's rays in warmth." He might have added that it is as fickle and transient as the sun's warmth; every passing cloud chills it. The shallow nature of Dyak attachment is indicated by their ephemeral unions and universal addiction to divorce. "Among the Upper Sarawak Dyaks divorce is very frequent, owing to the great extent of adultery," says Haughton (Roth, I., 126); and St. John remarks:
       "One can scarcely meet with a middle-aged Dayak who has
       not had two, and often three or more wives. I have
       heard of a girl of seventeen or eighteen years who had
       already had three husbands. Repudiation, which is
       generally done by the man or woman running away to the
       house of a near relation, takes place for the slightest
       cause--personal dislike or disappointments, a sudden
       quarrel, bad dreams, discontent with their partners'
       powers of labor or their industry, or, in fact, any
       excuse which will help to give force to the expression,
       'I do not want to live with him, or her, any longer.'"
       "Many men and women have married seven or eight times
       before they find the partner with whom they desire to
       spend the rest of their lives."
       "When a couple are newly-married, if a deer or a
       gazelle, or a moose-deer utters a cry at night near the
       house in which the pair are living, it is an omen of
       ill--they must separate, or the death of one would
       ensue. This might be a great trial to an European
       lover; the Dayaks, however, take the matter very
       philosophically."
       "Mr. Chalmers mentions to me the case of a young
       Penin-jau man who was divorced from his wife on the
       third day after marriage. The previous night a deer had
       uttered its warning cry, and separate they must. The
       morning of the divorce he chanced to go into the 'Head
       House' and there sat the bridegroom contentedly at
       work."
       "'Why are you here?' he was asked, as the 'Head House'
       is frequented by bachelors and boys only; 'What news of
       your new wife?'"
       "'I have no wife, we were separated this morning
       because the deer cried last night.'"
       "'Are you sorry?'"
       "'Very sorry.'"
       "'What are you doing with that brass wire?'"
       "'Making _perik_'--the brass chain work which the women
       wear round their waists--'for a young woman whom I want
       to get for my new wife,'" (I., 165-67; 55.)
       Such is the love of Dyaks. Marriage among them, says the same keen observer, "is a business of partnership for the purpose of having children, dividing labor, and, by means of their offspring, providing for their old age;" and Brooke Low remarks that "intercourse before marriage is strictly to ascertain that the marriage will be fruitful, as the Dyaks want children," In other words, apart from sensual purposes, the women are not desired and cherished for their own sakes, but only for utilitarian reasons, as a means to an end. Whence we conclude that, high as the Dyaks stand above Australians and many Africans, they are still far from the goal of genuine affection. Their feelings are only skin deep. _