您的位置 : 首页 > 英文著作
Island Love On The Pacific
The Girl With The Clean Face
Henry Theophilus Finck
下载:Island Love On The Pacific.txt
本书全文检索:
       _ Is a Dyak capable of admiring personal beauty? Some of the girls have fine figures and pretty faces; but there is no evidence that any but the voluptuous (non-esthetic) qualities of the figure are appreciated, and as for the faces, if the men really appreciated beauty as we do, they would first of all things insist that the girls must keep their faces clean. An amusing experiment made by St. John with some Ida'an girls (I., 339) is suggestive from this point of view:
       "We selected one who had the dirtiest face--and it was
       difficult to select where all were dirty--and asked her
       to glance at herself in a looking-glass. She did so,
       and passed it round to the others; we then asked which
       they thought looked best, cleanliness or dirt: this was
       received with a universal giggle.
       "We had brought with us several dozen cheap
       looking-glasses, so we told Iseiom, the daughter of Li
       Moung, our host, that if she would go and wash her face
       we would give her one. She treated the offer with
       scorn, tossed her head, and went into her father's
       room. But about half an hour afterwards, we saw her
       come into the house and try to mix quietly with the
       crowd; but it was of no use, her companions soon
       noticed she had a clean face, and pushed her to the
       front to be inspected. She blushingly received her
       looking-glass and ran away, amid the laughter of the
       crowd."
       The example had a great effect, however, and before evening nine of the girls had received looking-glasses.[184]
       [FOOTNOTE 184: The Ida'an are the aboriginal population; in dress, habitations, manners, and customs they are essentially the same as the Dyaks in general.] _