CHAPTER III
ON COURTSHIP, AND THE
MANIFESTATION OF THE FEELINGS BY OUTWARD SIGNS AND DEEDS
A POOR man possessed of good qualities, a man
born of a low family possessed of mediocre qualities, a neighbour
possessed of wealth, and one under the control of his father, mother or
brothers, should not marry without endeavouring to gain over the girl
from her childhood to love and esteem him. Thus a boy separated from his
parents, and living in the house of his uncle, should try to gain over
the daughter of his uncle, or some other girl, even though she be
previously betrothed to another. And this way of gaining over a girl,
says Ghotakamukha, is unexceptional, because Dharma can be accomplished
by means of it as well as by any other way of marriage.
When a boy has thus begun to woo the girl he
loves, he should spend his time with her and amuse her with various
games and diversions fitted for their age and acquaintanceship, such as
picking and collecting flowers, making garlands of flowers, playing the
parts of members of a fictitious family, cooking food, playing with
dice, playing with cards, the game of odd and even, the game of finding
out the middle finger, the game of six pebbles, and such other games as
may be prevalent in the country, and agreeable to the disposition of the
girl. In addition to this, he should carry on various amusing games
played by several persons together, such as hide and seek, playing with
seeds, hiding things in several small heaps of wheat and looking for
them, blindman's buff, gymnastic exercises, and other games of the same
sort, in company with the girl, her friends and female attendants. The
man should also show great kindness to any woman whom the girl thinks
fit to be trusted, and should also make new acquaintances, but above all
he should attach to himself by kindness and little services the daughter
of the girl's nurse, for if she be gained over, even though she comes to
know of his design, she does not cause any obstruction, but is sometimes
even able to effect a union between him and the girl. And though she
knows the true character of the man, she always talks of his many
excellent qualities to the parents and relations of the girl, even
though she may not be desired to do so by him.
In this way the man should do whatever the girl
takes most delight in, and he should get for her whatever she may have a
desire to possess. Thus he should procure for her such playthings as may
be hardly known to other girls. He may also show her a ball dyed with
various colours, and other curiosities of the same sort; and should give
her dolls made of cloth, wood, buffalo-horn, wax, flour, or earth; also
utensils for cooking food, and figures in wood, such as a man and woman
standing, a pair of rams, or goats, or sheep; also temples made of
earth, bamboo, or wood, dedicated to various goddesses; and cages for
parrots, cuckoos, starlings, quails, cocks, and partridges;
water-vessels of different sorts and of elegant forms, machines for
throwing water about, guitars, stands for putting images upon, stools,
lac, red arsenic, yellow ointment, vermilion and collyrium, as well as
sandalwood, saffron, betel nut and betel leaves. Such things should be
given at different times whenever he gets a good opportunity of meeting
her, and some of them should be given in private, and some in public,
according to circumstances. In short, he should try in every way to make
her look upon him as one who would do for her everything that she wanted
to be done.
In the next place he should get her to meet him
in some place privately, and should then tell her that the reason of his
giving presents to her in secret was the fear that the parents of both
of them might be displeased, and then he may add that the things which
he had given her had been much desired by other people. When her love
begins to show signs of increasing he should relate to her agreeable
stories if she expresses a wish to hear such narratives. Or if she takes
delight in legerdemain, he should amaze her by performing various tricks
of jugglery; or if she feels a great curiosity to see a performance of
the various arts, he should show his own skill in them. When she is
delighted with singing he should entertain her with music, and on
certain days, and at the time of going together to moonlight fairs and
festivals, and at the time of her return after being absent from home,
he should present her with bouquets of flowers, and with chaplets for
the head, and with ear ornaments and rings, for these are the proper
occasions on which such things should be presented.
He should also teach the daughter of the girl's
nurse all the sixty-four means of pleasure practised by men, and under
this pretext should also inform her of his great skill in the art of
sexual enjoyment. All this time he should wear a fine dress, and make as
good an appearance as possible, for young women love men who live with
them, and who are handsome, good looking and well dressed. As for the
sayings that though women may fall in love, they still make no effort
themselves to gain over the object of their affections, that is only a
matter of idle talk.
Now a girl always shows her love by outward
signs and actions, such as the following:
She never looks the man in the face, and
becomes abashed when she is looked at by him; under some pretext or
other she shows her limbs to him; she looks secretly at him though he
has gone away from her side, hangs down her head when she is asked some
question by him, and answers in indistinct words and unfinished
sentences, delights to be in his company for a long time, speaks to her
attendants in a peculiar tone with the hope of attracting his attention
towards her when she is at a distance from him, does not wish to go from
the place where he is, under some pretext or other she makes him look at
different things, narrates to him tales and stories very slowly so that
she may continue conversing with him for a long time, kisses and
embraces before him a child sitting in her lap, draws ornamental marks
on the foreheads of her female servants, performs sportive and graceful
movements when her attendants speak jestingly to her in the presence of
her lover, confides in her lover's friends, and respects and obeys them,
shows kindness to his servants, converses with them, and engages them to
do her work as if she were their mistress, and listens attentively to
them when they tell stories about her lover to somebody else, enters his
house when induced to do so by the daughter of her nurse, and by her
assistance manages to converse and play with him, avoids being seen by
her lover when she is not dressed and decorated, gives him by the hand
of her female friend her ear ornament, ring, or garland of flowers that
he may have asked to see, always wears anything that he may have
presented to her, becomes dejected when any other bridegroom is
mentioned by her parents, and does not mix with, those who may be of his
party, or who may support his claims.
There are also some verses on the subject as
follows:
'A man, who has seen and perceived the feelings
of the girl towards him, and who has noticed the outward signs and
movements by which those feelings are expressed, should do everything in
his power to effect a union with her. He should gain over a young girl
by childlike sports, a damsel come of age by his skill in the arts, and
a girl that loves him by having recourse to persons in whom she
confides.'
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