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Specimens Of African Love
Black Love In Kamerun
Henry Theophilus Finck
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       _ From the banks of the Congo to Kamerun is not a very far cry as distances go in Africa. Kamerun is under the German flag, and a German writer, Hugo Zoeller, has described life in that colony with the eyes of a shrewd observer. What he says about the negro's capacity for love shows deep psychological insight (III., 68-70):
       "Europeans residing in Africa who have married a negro
       woman declare unanimously that there is no such thing
       there as love and fidelity in the European sense. It
       happens with infinitely greater frequency that a
       European falls in love with his black companion than
       she with him; or rather the latter does not happen at
       all. A hundred times I have listened to discussions of
       this topic in many different places, but I have never
       heard of a single case of a genuine full-blooded
       negress falling in love with a white man.... The
       stupidest European peasant girl is, in comparison with
       an African princess, still an ideally endowed being."
       Zoeller adds that in all his African experiences he never found a negress of whom he should have been willing to assume that she would sacrifice herself for a man she was attached to. On another page he says:
       "A negro woman does not fall in love in the same sense
       as a European, not even as the least civilized peasant
       girl. Love, in our sense of the word, is a product of
       our culture belonging to a higher stage in the
       development of latent faculties than the negro race has
       reached. Not only is the negro a stranger to the
       diverse intellectual and sentimental qualities which we
       denote by the name of love: nay, even in a purely
       bodily sense it may be asserted that his nervous system
       is not only less sensitive, but less well-developed.
       The negro loves as he eats and drinks.... And just as
       little as a black epicure have I ever been able to
       discover a negro who could rise to the imaginative
       phases of amorous dalliance. A negro ... may buy dozens
       upon dozens of wives without ever being drawn by an
       overpowering feeling to any one of them. Love is, among
       the blacks, as much a matter of money as the palm oil
       or ivory trade. The black man buys his wife when she is
       still a child; when she reaches the age at which our
       maidens go to their first ball, her nervous system,
       which never was particularly sensitive anyway, is
       completely blunted, so that she takes it as a matter of
       course to be sold again and again as a piece of
       property. One hears often enough of a 'woman palaver,'
       which is regarded exactly like a 'goat palaver,' as a
       damage to property, but one never, positively never,
       hears of a love-affair. The negress never has a
       sweetheart, either in her youngest days or after her
       so-called marriage. She is regarded, and regards
       herself, as a piece of property and a beast of burden." _