PART IV
CHAPTER I
ON THE MANNER OF LIVING OF A
VIRTUOUS WOMAN, AND OF HER BEHAVIOUR DURING THE ABSENCE OF HER HUSBAND
A VIRTUOUS woman, who has affection for her
husband, should act in conformity with his wishes as if he were a divine
being, and with his consent should take upon herself the whole care of
his family. She should keep the whole house well cleaned, and arrange
flowers of various kinds in different parts of it, and make the floor
smooth and polished so as to give the whole a neat and becoming
appearance. She should surround the house with a garden, and place ready
in it all the materials required for the morning, noon and evening
sacrifices. Moreover she should herself revere the sanctuary of the
Household Gods, for, says Gonardiya, 'nothing so much attracts the heart
of a householder to his wife as a careful observance of the things
mentioned above'.
Towards the parents, relations, friends,
sisters, and servants of her husband she should behave as they deserve.
In the garden she should plant beds of green vegetables, bunches of the
sugar cane, and clumps of the fig tree, the mustard plant, the parsley
plant, the fennel plant, and the xanthochymus pictorius. Clusters of
various flowers such as the trapa bispinosa, the jasmine, the jasminum
grandiflorum, the yellow amaranth, the wild jasmine, the tabernamontana
coronaria, the nadyaworta, the china rose and others, should likewise be
planted, together with the fragrant grass andropogon schaenanthus, and
the fragrant root of the plant andropogon miricatus. She should also
have seats and arbours made in the garden, in the middle of which a
well, tank, or pool should be dug.
The wife should always avoid the company of
female beggars, female Buddhist mendicants, unchaste and roguish women,
female fortune tellers and witches. As regards meals she should always
consider what her husband likes and dislikes and what things are good
for him, and what are injurious to him. When she hears the sounds of his
footsteps coming home she should at once get up and be ready to do
whatever he may command her, and either order her female servant to wash
his feet, or wash them herself. When going anywhere with her husband,
she should put on her ornaments, and without his consent she should not
either give or accept invitations, or attend marriages and sacrifices,
or sit in the company of female friends, or visit the temples of the
Gods. And if she wants to engage in any kind of games or sports, she
should not do it against his will. In the same way she should always sit
down after him, and get up before him, and should never awaken him when
he is asleep. The kitchen should be situated in a quiet and retired
place, so as not to be accessible to strangers, and should always look
clean.
In the event of any misconduct on the part of
her husband, she should not blame him excessively, though she be a
little displeased. She should not use abusive language towards him, but
rebuke him with conciliatory words, whether he be in the company of
friends or alone. Moreover, she should not be a scold, for, says
Gonardiya, 'there is no cause of dislike on the part of a husband so
great as this characteristic in a wife'. Lastly she should avoid bad
expressions, sulky looks, speaking aside, standing in the doorway, and
looking at passers-by, conversing in the pleasure groves, and remaining
in a lonely place for a long time; and finally she should always keep
her body, her teeth, her hair and everything belonging to her tidy,
sweet, and clean.
When the wife wants to approach her husband in
private her dress should consist of many ornaments, various kinds of
flowers, and a cloth decorated with different colours, and some
sweet-smelling ointments or unguents. But her everyday dress should be
composed of a thin, close-textured cloth, a few ornaments and flowers,
and a little scent, not too much. She should also observe the fasts and
vows of her husband, and when he tries to prevent her doing this, she
should persuade him to let her do it.
At appropriate times of the year, and when they
happen to be cheap, she should buy earth, bamboos, firewood, skins, and
iron pots, as also salt and oil. Fragrant substances, vessels made of
the fruit of the plant wrightea antidysenterica, or oval leaved wrightea,
medicines, and other things which are always wanted, should be obtained
when required and kept in a secret place of the house. The seeds of the
radish, the potato, the common beet, the Indian wormwood, the mango, the
cucumber, the egg plant, the kushmanda, the pumpkin gourd, the surana,
the bignonia indica, the sandal wood, the premna spinosa, the garlic
plant, the onion, and other vegetables, should be bought and sown at the
proper seasons. The wife, moreover, should not tell to strangers the
amount of her wealth, nor the secrets which her husband has confided to
her. She should surpass all the women of her own rank in life in her
cleverness, her appearance, her knowledge of cookery, her pride, and her
manner of serving her husband. The expenditure of the year should be
regulated by the profits. The milk that remains after the meals should
be turned into ghee or clarified butter. Oil and sugar should be
prepared at home; spinning and weaving should also be done there; and a
store of ropes and cords, and barks of trees for twisting into ropes
should be kept. She should also attend to the pounding and cleaning of
rice, using its small grain and chaff in some way or other. She should
pay the salaries of the servants, look after the tilling of the fields,
and keeping of the flocks and herds, superintend the making of vehicles,
and take care of the rams, cocks, quails, parrots, starlings, cuckoos,
peacocks, monkeys, and deer; and finally adjust the income and
expenditure of the day. The worn-out clothes should be given to those
servants who have done good work, in order to show them that their
services have been appreciated, or they may be applied to some other
use. The vessels in which wine is prepared, as well as those in which it
is kept, should be carefully looked after, and put away at the proper
time. All sales and purchases should also be well attended to. The
friends of her husband she should welcome by presenting them with
flowers, ointment, incense, betel leaves, and betel nut. Her
father-in-law and mother-in-law she should treat as they deserve, always
remaining dependent on their will, never contradicting them, speaking to
them in few and not harsh words, not laughing loudly in their presence,
and acting with their friends and enemies as with her own. In addition
to the above she should not be vain, or too much taken up with her
enjoyments. She should be liberal towards her servants, and reward them
on holidays and festivals; and not give away anything without first
making it known to her husband.
Thus ends the manner of living of a virtuous
woman.
During the absence of her husband on a journey
the virtuous woman should wear only her auspicious ornaments, and
observe the fasts in honour of the Gods. While anxious to hear the news
of her husband, she should still look after her household affairs. She
should sleep near the elder women of the house, and make herself
agreeable to them. She should look after and keep in repair the things
that are liked by her husband, and continue the works that have been
begun by him. To the abode of her relations she should not go except on
occasions of joy and sorrow, and then she should go in her usual
travelling dress, accompanied by her husband's servants, and not remain
there for a long time. The fasts and feasts should be observed with the
consent of the elders of the house. The resources should be increased by
making purchases and sales according to the practice of the merchants
and by means of honest servants, superintended by herself. The income
should be increased, and the expenditure diminished as much possible.
And when her husband returns from his journey, she should receive him at
first in her ordinary clothes, so that he may know in what way she has
lived during his absence, and should bring to him some presents, as also
materials for the worship of the Deity.
Thus ends the part relating to the behaviour of
a wife during the absence of her husband on a journey.
There are also some verses on the subject as
follows:
'The wife, whether she be a woman of noble
family, or a virgin widow 1
remarried, or a concubine, should lead a chaste life, devoted to her
husband, and doing everything for his welfare. Women acting thus acquire
Dharma, Artha, and Kama, obtain a high position, and generally keep
their husbands devoted to them.
Footnotes
1 This probably
refers to a girl married in her infancy, or when very young and whose
husband had died before she arrived at the age of puberty. Infant
marriages are still the common custom of the Hindoos.
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