CHAPTER V
ON CERTAIN FORMS OF MARRIAGE 1
WHEN a girl cannot meet her lover frequently in
private, she should send the daughter of her nurse to him, it being
understood that she has confidence in her, and had previously gained her
over to her interests. On seeing the man, the daughter of the nurse
should, in the course of conversation, describe to him the noble birth,
the good disposition, the beauty, talent, skill, knowledge of human
nature and affection of the girl in such a way as not to let him suppose
that she had been sent by the girl, and should thus create affection for
the girl in the heart of the man. To the girl also she should speak
about the excellent qualities of the man, especially of those qualities
which she knows are pleasing to the girl. She should, moreover, speak
with disparagement of the other lovers of the girl, and talk about the
avarice and indiscretion of their parents, and the fickleness of their
relations. She should also quote samples of many girls of ancient times,
such as Sakoontala and others, who, having united themselves with lovers
of their own caste and their own choice, were ever happy afterwards in
their society. And she should also tell of other girls who married into
great families, and being troubled by rival wives, became wretched and
miserable, and were finally abandoned. She should further speak of the
good fortune, the continual happiness, the chastity, obedience, and
affection of the man, and if the girl gets amorous about him, she should
endeavour to allay her shame 2
and her fear as well as her suspicions about any disaster that might
result from her marriage. In a word, she should act the whole part of a
female messenger by telling the girl all about the man's affection for
her, the places he frequented, and the endeavours he made to meet her,
and by frequently repeating, 'It will be all right if the man will take
you away forcibly and unexpectedly.'
The Forms of Marriage
When the girl is gained over, and acts openly
with the man as his wife, he should cause fire to be brought from the
house of a Brahman, and having spread the Kusha grass upon the ground,
and offered an oblation to the fire, he should marry her according to
the precepts of the religious law. After this he should inform his
parents of the fact, because it is the opinion of ancient authors that a
marriage solemnly contracted in the presence of fire cannot afterwards
be set aside.
After the consummation of the marriage, the
relations of the man should gradually be made acquainted with the
affair, and the relations of the girl should also be apprised of it in
such a way that they may consent to the marriage, and overlook the
manner in which it was brought about, and when this is done they should
afterwards be reconciled by affectionate presents and favourable
conduct. In this manner the man should marry the girl according to the
Gandharva form of marriage.
When the girl cannot make up her mind, or will
not express her readiness to marry, the man should obtain her in any one
of the following ways:
On a fitting occasion, and under some excuse,
he should, by means of a female friend with whom he is well acquainted,
and whom he can trust, and who also is well known to the girl's family,
get the girl brought unexpectedly to his house, and he should then bring
fire from the house of a Brahman, and proceed as before described.
When the marriage of the girl with some other
person draws near, the man should disparage the future husband to the
utmost in the mind of the mother of the girl, and then having got the
girl to come with her mother's consent to a neighbouring house, he
should bring fire from the house of a Brahman, and proceed as above.
The man should become a great friend of the
brother of the girl, the said brother being of the same age as himself,
and addicted to courtesans, and to intrigues with the wives of other
people, and should give him assistance in such matters, and also give
him occasional presents. He should then tell him about his great love
for his sister, as young men will sacrifice even their lives for the
sake of those who may be of the same age, habits, and dispositions as
themselves. After this the man should get the girl brought by means of
her brother to some secure place, and having brought fire from the house
of a Brahman should proceed as before.
The man should on the occasion of festivals get
the daughter of the nurse to give the girl some intoxicating substance,
and then cause her to be brought to some secure place under the pretence
of some business, and there having enjoyed her before she recovers from
her intoxication, should bring fire from the house of a Brahman, and
proceed as before.
The man should, with the connivance of the
daughter of the nurse, carry off the girl from her house while she is
asleep, and then, having enjoyed her before she recovers from her sleep,
should bring fire from the house of a Brahman, and proceed as before.
When the girl goes to a garden, or to some
village in the neighbourhood, the man should, with his friends, fall on
her guards, and having killed them, or frightened them away, forcibly
carry her off, and proceed as before.
There are verses on this subject as follows:
'In all the forms of marriage given in this
chapter of this work, the one that precedes is better than the one that
follows it on account of its being more in accordance with the commands
of religion, and therefore it is only when it is impossible to carry the
former into practice that the latter should be resorted to, As the fruit
of all good marriages is love, the Gandharva 3
form of marriage is respected, even though it is formed under
unfavourable circumstances, because it fulfils the object sought for.
Another cause of the respect accorded to the Gandharva form of marriage
is that it brings forth happiness, causes less trouble in its
performance than the other forms of marriage, and is above all the
result of previous love.'
Footnotes
1 These forms of
marriage differ from the four kinds of marriage mentioned in Chapter I,
and are only to be made use of when the girl is gained over in the way
mentioned in Chapters III and IV.
2 About this, see
a story on the fatal effects of love at of Early Ideas: a Group of
Hindoo Stories, collected and collated by Anaryan, W. H. Allen and
Co., London, 1881.
3 'About the
Gandharvavivaha form of marriage, see note to page 28 of Captain R. F.
Burton's Vickram and the Vampire; or Tales of Hindu Devilry,
Longmans, Green and Co., London 1870. This form of matrimony was
recognised by the ancient Hindoos, and is frequent in hooks. It is a
kind of Scotch wedding--ultra-Caledonian--taking place by mutual consent
without any form or Ceremony. The Gandharvas are heavenly minstrels of
Indra's court, who are opposed to be witnesses.
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