CHAPTER X
OF THE WAY HOW TO BEGIN AND HOW
TO END THE CONGRESS. DIFFERENT KINDS OF CONGRESS AND LOVE QUARRELS
IN the pleasure-room, decorated with flowers,
and fragrant with perfumes, attended by his friends and servants, the
citizen should receive the woman, who will come bathed and dressed, and
will invite her to take refreshment and to drink freely. He should then
seat her on his left side, and holding her hair, and touching also the
end and knot of her garment, he should gently embrace her with his right
arm. They should then carry on an amusing conversation on various
subjects, and may also talk suggestively of things which would be
considered as coarse, or not to be mentioned generally in society. They
may then sing, either with or without gesticulations, and play on
musical instruments, talk about the arts, and persuade each other to
drink. At last when the woman is overcome with love and desire, the
citizen should dismiss the people that may be with him, giving them
flowers, ointments, and betel leaves, and then when the two are left
alone, they should proceed as has been already described in the previous
chapters.
Such is the beginning of sexual union. At the
end of the congress, the lovers with modesty, and not looking at each
other, should go separately to the washing-room. After this, sitting in
their own places, they should eat some betel leaves, and the citizen
should apply with his own hand to the body of the woman some pure sandal
wood ointment, or ointment of some other kind. He should then embrace
her with his left arm, and with agreeable words should cause her to
drink from a cup held in his own hand, or he may give her water to
drink. They can then eat sweetmeats, or anything else, according to
their likings and may drink fresh juice, 1
soup, gruel, extracts of meat, sherbet, the juice of mango fruits, the
extract of the juice of the citron tree mixed with sugar, or anything
that may be liked in different countries, and known to be sweet, soft,
and pure. The lovers may also sit on the terrace of the palace or house,
and enjoy the moonlight, and carry on an agreeable conversation. At this
time, too, while the woman lies in his lap, with her face towards the
moon, the citizen should show her the different planets, the morning
star, the polar star, and the seven Rishis, or Great Bear.
This is the end of sexual union.
Congress is of the following kinds:
Loving congress
Congress of subsequent love
Congress of artificial love
Congress of transferred love
Congress like that of eunuchs
Deceitful congress
Congress of spontaneous love
When a man and a woman, who have been in love
with each other for some time, come together with great difficulty, or
when one of the two returns from a journey, or is reconciled after
having been separated on account of a quarrel, then congress is called
the 'loving congress'. It is carried on according to the liking of the
lovers, and as long as they choose.
When two persons come together, while their
love for each other is still in its infancy, their congress is called
the 'congress of subsequent love'.
When a man carries on the congress by exciting
himself by means of the sixty-four ways, such as kissing, etc., etc., or
when a man and a woman come together, though in reality they are both
attached to different persons, their congress is then called 'congress
of artificial love'. At this time all the ways and means mentioned in
the Kama Shastra should be used.
When a man, from the beginning to the end of
the congress, though having connection with the woman, thinks all the
time that he is enjoying another one whom he loves, it is called the
'congress of transferred love'.
Congress between a man and a female water
carrier, or a female servant of a caste lower than his own, lasting only
until the desire is satisfied, is called 'congress like that of
eunuchs'. Here external touches, kisses, and manipulation are not to be
employed.
The congress between a courtesan and a rustic,
and that between citizens and the women of villages, and bordering
countries, is called 'deceitful congress'.
The congress that takes place between two
persons who are attached to one another, and which is done according to
their own liking is called 'spontaneous congress'.
Thus end the kinds of congress.
We shall now speak of love quarrels.
A woman who is very much in love with a man
cannot bear to hear the name of her rival mentioned, or to have any
conversation regarding her, or to be addressed by her name through
mistake. If such takes place, a great quarrel arises, and the woman
cries, becomes angry, tosses her hair about, strikes her lover, falls
from her bed or seat, and, casting aside her garlands and ornaments,
throws herself down on the ground.
At this time, the lover should attempt to
reconcile her with conciliatory words, and should take her up carefully
and place her on her bed. But she, not replying to his questions, and
with increased anger, should bend down his head by pulling his hair, and
having kicked him once, twice, or thrice on his arms, head, bosom or
back, should then proceed to the door of the room. Dattaka says that she
should then sit angrily near the door and shed tears, but should not go
out, because she would be found fault with for going away. After a time,
when she thinks that the conciliatory words and actions of her lover
have reached their utmost, she should then embrace him, talking to him
with harsh and reproachful words, but at the same time showing a loving
desire for congress.
When the woman is in her own house, and has
quarrelled with her lover, she should go to him and show how angry she
is, and leave him. Afterwards the citizen having sent the Vita, the
Vidushaka or the Pithamarda 2
to pacify her, she should accompany them back to the house, and spend
the night with her lover.
Thus end the love quarrels.
In conclusion.
A man, employing the sixty-four means mentioned
by Babhravya, obtains his object, and enjoys the woman of the first
quality. Though he may speak well on other subjects, if he does not know
the sixty-four divisions, no great respect is paid to him in the
assembly of the learned. A man, devoid of other knowledge, but well
acquainted with the sixty-four divisions, becomes a leader in any
society of men and women. What man will not respect the sixty-four
arts, 3
considering they are respected by the learned, by the cunning, and by
the courtesans. As the sixty-four arts are respected, are charming, and
add to the talent of women, they are called by the Acharyas dear to
women. A man skilled in the sixty-four arts is looked upon with love by
his own wife, by the wives of others, and by courtesans.
Footnotes
1 The fresh juice
of the cocoa nut tree, the date tree, and other kinds of palm trees are
drunk in India. It will keep fresh very long, but ferments rapidly, and
is then distilled into liquor.
2 The
characteristics of these three individuals have been given in Part I,
page 117.
3 A definition of
the sixty-four arts is given in Part I, Chapter III, pages 107-111.
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