<h2><SPAN name="PART_VI" id="PART_VI"></SPAN>PART VI.</h2>
<h2>ABOUT COURTESANS.</h2>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
<h2><SPAN name="INTRODUCTORY_REMARKS" id="INTRODUCTORY_REMARKS"></SPAN>INTRODUCTORY REMARKS.</h2>
<p>This Part VI., about courtesans, was prepared by Vatsyayana, from a
treatise on the subject, that was written by Dattaka, for the women of
Pataliputra (the modern Patna), some two thousand years ago. Dattaka's
work does not appear to be extant now, but this abridgement of it is
very clever, and quite equal to any of the productions of Emile Zola,
and other writers of the realistic school of to-day.</p>
<p>Although a great deal has been written on the subject of the courtesan,
nowhere will be found a better description of her, of her belongings, of
her ideas, and of the working of her mind, than is contained in the
following pages.</p>
<p>The details of the domestic and social life of the early Hindoos would
not be complete without mention of the courtesan, and Part VI. is
entirely devoted to this subject. The Hindoos have ever had the good
sense to recognise courtesans as a part and portion of human society,
and so long as they behaved themselves with decency and propriety, they
were regarded with a certain respect. Anyhow, they have never been
treated in the East with that brutality and contempt so common in the
West, while their education has always been of a superior kind to that
bestowed upon the rest of womankind in Oriental countries.</p>
<p>In the earlier days the well-educated Hindoo dancing girl and courtesan
doubtless resembled the Hetera of the Greeks, and being educated and
amusing, were far more acceptable as companions than the generality of
the married or unmarried women of that period. At all times and in all
countries, there has ever been a little rivalry between the chaste and
the unchaste. But while some women are born courtesans,<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_138" id="Page_138"></SPAN></span> and follow the
instincts of their nature in every class of society, it has been truly
said by some authors that every woman has got an inkling of the
profession in her nature, and does her best, as a general rule, to make
herself agreeable to the male sex.</p>
<p>The subtlety of women, their wonderful perceptive powers, their
knowledge, and their intuitive appreciation of men and things, are all
shown in the following pages, which may be looked upon as a concentrated
essence that has been since worked up into detail by many writers in
every quarter of the globe.</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_PVI_I" id="CHAPTER_PVI_I"></SPAN>CHAPTER I.</h2>
<h3>OF THE CAUSES OF A COURTESAN RESORTING TO MEN; OF THE MEANS OF ATTACHING TO HERSELF THE MAN DESIRED; AND OF THE KIND OF MAN THAT IT IS DESIRABLE TO BE ACQUAINTED WITH.</h3>
<p>By having intercourse with men courtesans obtain sexual pleasure, as
well as their own
<SPAN name="corr35" id="corr35"></SPAN><SPAN class="correction" href="#cn35" title="changed from 'maintainance'">maintenance</SPAN>.
Now when a courtesan takes up with a man
from love, the action is natural; but when she resorts to him for the
purpose of getting money, her action is artificial or forced. Even in
the latter case, however, she should conduct herself as if her love were
indeed natural, because men repose their confidence on those women who
apparently love them. In making known her love to the man she should
show an entire freedom from avarice, and for the sake of her future
credit she should abstain from acquiring money from him by unlawful
means.</p>
<p>A courtesan, well dressed and wearing her ornaments, should sit or stand
at the door of her house, and without exposing herself too much, should
look on the public road so as to be seen by the passers by, she being
like an object on view for sale.<SPAN name="FNanchor_74_74" id="FNanchor_74_74"></SPAN><SPAN href="#Footnote_74_74" class="fnanchor">[74]</SPAN> She should form friendships with
such persons as would enable her to separate men from other women, and
attach<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_139" id="Page_139"></SPAN></span> them to herself, and repair her own misfortunes, to acquire
wealth, and to protect her from being bullied, or set upon by persons
with whom she may have dealings of some kind or another.</p>
<p>These persons are:</p>
<ul style="list-style: none;">
<li>The guards of the town, or the police.</li>
<li>The officers of the courts of justice.</li>
<li>Astrologers.</li>
<li>Powerful men, or men with interest.</li>
<li>Learned men.</li>
<li>Teachers of the sixty-four arts.</li>
<li>Pithamardas or confidants.</li>
<li>Vitas or parasites.</li>
<li>Vidushakas or jesters.</li>
<li>Flower sellers.</li>
<li>Perfumers.</li>
<li>Vendors of spirits.</li>
<li>Washermen.</li>
<li>Barbers.</li>
<li>Beggars.</li>
</ul>
<p>And such other persons as may be found necessary for the particular
object to be acquired.</p>
<p>The following kinds of men may be taken up with simply for the purpose
of getting their money.</p>
<ul style="list-style: none;">
<li>Men of independent income.</li>
<li>Young men.</li>
<li>Men who are free from any ties.</li>
<li>Men who hold places of authority under the King.</li>
<li>Men who have secured their means of livelihood without difficulty.</li>
<li>Men possessed of unfailing sources of income.</li>
<li>Men who consider themselves handsome.</li>
<li>Men who are always praising themselves.</li>
<li>One who is an eunuch, but wishes to be thought a man.</li>
<li>One who hates his equals.</li>
<li>One who is naturally liberal.</li>
<li>One who has influence with the King or his ministers.</li>
<li>One who is always fortunate.</li>
<li>One who is proud of his wealth.</li>
<li>One who disobeys the orders of his elders.</li>
<li><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_140" id="Page_140"></SPAN></span>One upon whom the members of his caste keep an eye.</li>
<li>The only son whose father is wealthy.</li>
<li>An ascetic who is internally troubled with desire.</li>
<li>A brave man.</li>
<li>A physician of the King.</li>
<li>Previous acquaintance.</li>
</ul>
<p>On the other hand, those who are possessed of excellent qualities are to
be resorted to for the sake of love, and fame. Such men are as follows:</p>
<p>Men of high birth, learned, with a good knowledge of the world, and
doing the proper things at the proper times, poets, good story tellers,
eloquent men, energetic men, skilled in various arts, far-seeing into
the future, possessed of great minds, full of perseverance, of a firm
devotion, free from anger, liberal, affectionate to their parents, and
with a liking for all social gatherings, skilled in completing verses
begun by others and in various other sports, free from all disease,
possessed of a perfect body, strong, and not addicted to drinking,
powerful in sexual enjoyment, sociable, showing love towards women and
attracting their hearts to himself, but not entirely devoted to them,
possessed of independent means of livelihood, free from envy, and last
of all free from suspicion.</p>
<p>Such are the good qualities of a man.</p>
<p>The woman also should have the following characteristics, viz.:</p>
<p>She should be possessed of beauty, and
<SPAN name="corr36" id="corr36"></SPAN><SPAN class="correction" href="#cn36" title="changed from 'aimiability'">amiability</SPAN>,
with auspicious body
marks. She should have a liking for good qualities in other people, as
also a liking for wealth. She should take delight in sexual unions
resulting from love, and should be of a firm mind, and of the same class
as the man with regard to sexual enjoyment.</p>
<p>She should always be anxious to acquire and obtain experience and
knowledge, be free from avarice, and always have a liking for social
gatherings, and for the arts.</p>
<p>The following are the ordinary qualities of all women, viz.:</p>
<p>To be possessed of intelligence, good disposition, and good manners; to
be straightforward in behaviour, and to be grateful; to consider well
the future before doing anything; to
<SPAN name="corr37" id="corr37"></SPAN><SPAN class="correction" href="#cn37" title="changed from 'ssess'">possess</SPAN>
activity, to be of
consistent behaviour, and to have a knowledge of the proper times and
places for doing things;<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_141" id="Page_141"></SPAN></span> to speak always without meanness, loud
laughter, malignity, anger, avarice, dullness, or stupidity, to have a
knowledge of the Kama Sutra, and to be skilled in all the arts connected
with it.</p>
<p>The faults of the women are to be known by the absence of any of the
above mentioned good qualities.</p>
<p>The following kinds of men are not fit to be resorted to by courtesans,
viz.:</p>
<p>One who is consumptive; one who is sickly; one whose mouth contains
worms; one whose breath smells like human excrement; one whose wife is
dear to him; one who speaks harshly; one who is always suspicious; one
who is avaricious; one who is pitiless; one who is a thief; one who is
self-conceited; one who has a liking for sorcery; one who does not care
for respect or disrespect; one who can be gained over even by his
enemies by means of money; and lastly, one who is extremely bashful.</p>
<p>Ancient authors are of opinion that the causes of a courtesan resorting
to men are love, fear, money, pleasure, returning some act of enmity,
curiosity, sorrow, constant intercourse, Dharma, celebrity, compassion,
the desire of having a friend, shame, the likeness of the man to some
beloved person, the search after good fortune, the getting rid of the
love of somebody else, the being of the same class as the man with
respect to sexual union, living in the same place, constancy, and
poverty. But Vatsyayana decides that desire of wealth, freedom from
misfortune, and love, are the only causes that affect the union of
courtesans with men.</p>
<p>Now a courtesan should not sacrifice money to her love, because money is
the chief thing to be attended to. But in cases of fear, etc., she
should pay regard to strength and other qualities. Moreover, even though
she be invited by any man to join him, she should not at once consent to
an union, because men are apt to despise things which are easily
acquired. On such occasions she should first send the shampooers, and
the singers, and the jesters, who may be in her service, or, in their
absence the Pithamardas, or confidants, and others, to find out the
state of his feelings, and the condition of his mind. By means of these
persons she should ascertain whether the man is pure or impure,
affected, or the reverse, capable of attachment, or indifferent, liberal
or niggardly; and if she finds him<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_142" id="Page_142"></SPAN></span> to her liking, she should then
employ the Vita and others to attach his mind to her.</p>
<p>Accordingly, the Pithamarda should bring the man to her house, under the
pretence of seeing the fights of quails, cocks, and rams, of hearing the
maina (a kind of starling) talk, or of seeing some other spectacle, or
the practice of some art; or he may take the woman to the abode of the
man. After this, when the man comes to her house the woman should give
him something capable of producing curiosity, and love in his heart,
such as an affectionate present, telling him that it was specially
designed for his use. She should also amuse him for a long time by
telling him such stories, and doing such things as he may take most
delight in. When he goes away she should frequently send to him a female
attendant, skilled in carrying on a jesting conversation, and also a
small present at the same time. She should also sometimes go to him
herself under the pretence of some business, and accompanied by the
Pithamarda.</p>
<p>Thus end the means of attaching to herself the man desired.</p>
<p>There are also some verses on the subject as follows:</p>
<p>"When a lover comes to her abode, a courtesan should give him a mixture
of betel leaves and betel nut, garlands of flowers, and perfumed
ointments, and, showing her skill in arts, should entertain him with a
long conversation. She should also give him some loving presents, and
make an exchange of her own things with his, and at the same time should
show him her skill in sexual enjoyment. When a courtesan is thus united
with her lover she should always delight him by affectionate gifts, by
conversation, and by the application of tender means of enjoyment."</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_143" id="Page_143"></SPAN></span></p>
<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_PVI_II" id="CHAPTER_PVI_II"></SPAN>CHAPTER II.</h2>
<h3>OF LIVING LIKE A WIFE.</h3>
<p>When a courtesan is living as a wife with her lover, she should behave
like a chaste woman, and do everything to his satisfaction. Her duty in
this respect, in short, is, that she should give him pleasure, but
should not become attached to him, though behaving as if she were really
attached.</p>
<p>Now the following is the manner in which she is to conduct herself, so
as to accomplish the above mentioned purpose. She should have a mother
dependent on her, one who should be represented as very harsh, and who
looked upon money as her chief object in life. In the event of there
being no mother, then an old and confidential nurse should play the same
role. The mother or nurse, on their part, should appear to be displeased
with the lover, and forcibly take her away from him. The woman herself
should always show pretended anger, dejection, fear, and shame on this
account, but should not disobey the mother or nurse at any time.</p>
<p>She should make out to the mother or nurse that the man is suffering
from bad health, and making this a pretext for going to see him, she
should go on that account. She is, moreover, to do the following things
for the purpose of gaining the man's favour, viz.:</p>
<p>Sending her female attendant to bring the flowers used by him on the
previous day, in order that she may use them herself as a mark of
affection, also asking for the mixture of betel nut and leaves that have
remained uneaten by him; expressing wonder at his knowledge of sexual
intercourse, and the several means of enjoyment used by him; learning
from him the sixty-four kinds of pleasure mentioned by Babhravya;
continually practising the ways of enjoyment as taught by him, and
according to his liking; keeping his secrets; telling him<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_144" id="Page_144"></SPAN></span> her own
desires and secrets; concealing her anger; never neglecting him on the
bed when he turns his face towards her; touching any parts of his body
according to his wish; kissing and embracing him when he is asleep;
looking at him with apparent anxiety when he is wrapt in thought, or
thinking of some other subject than herself; showing neither complete
shamelessness, nor excessive bashfulness when he meets her, or sees her
standing on the terrace of her house from the public road; hating his
enemies; loving those who are dear to him; showing a liking for that
which he likes; being in high or low spirits according to the state that
he is in himself; expressing a curiosity to see his wives; not
continuing her anger for a long time; suspecting even the marks and
wounds made by herself with her nails and teeth on his body to have been
made by some other woman; keeping her love for him unexpressed by words,
but showing it by deeds, and signs, and hints; remaining silent when he
is asleep, intoxicated, or sick; being very attentive when he describes
his good actions, and reciting them afterwards to his praise and
benefit; giving witty replies to him if he be sufficiently attached to
her; listening to all his stories, except those that relate to her
rivals; expressing feelings of dejection and sorrow if he sighs, yawns,
or falls down; pronouncing the words "live long" when he sneezes;
pretending to be ill, or to have the desire of pregnancy, when she feels
dejected; abstaining from praising the good qualities of any body else,
and from censuring those who possess the same faults as her own man:
wearing anything that may have been given to her by him; abstaining from
putting on her ornaments, and from taking food when he is in pain, sick,
low-spirited, or suffering from misfortune, and condoling and lamenting
with him over the same; wishing to accompany him if he happens to leave
the country himself or if he be banished from it by the King; expressing
a desire not to live after him; telling him that the whole object and
desire of her life was to be united with him; offering previously
promised sacrifices to the Deity when he acquires wealth, or has some
desire fulfilled, or when he has recovered from some illness or disease;
putting on ornaments every day; not acting too freely with him; reciting
his name and the name of his family in her songs; placing<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_145" id="Page_145"></SPAN></span> his hand on
her loins, bosom and forehead, and falling asleep after feeling the
pleasure of his touch; sitting on his lap and falling asleep there;
wishing to have a child by him; desiring not to live longer than he
does; abstaining from revealing his secrets to others; dissuading him
from vows and fasts by saying "let the sin fall upon me;" keeping vows
and fasts along with him when it is impossible to change his mind on the
subject; telling him that vows and fasts are difficult to be observed,
even by herself, when she has any dispute with him about them; looking
on her own wealth and his without any distinction; abstaining from going
to public assemblies without him, and accompanying him when he desires
her to do so; taking delight in using things previously used by him, and
in eating food that he has left uneaten; venerating his family, his
disposition, his skill in the arts, his learning, his caste, his
complexion, his native country, his friends, his good qualities, his
age, and his sweet temper; asking him to sing, and to do other such like
things, if able to do them; going to him without paying any regard to
fear, to cold, to heat, or to rain; saying with regard to the next world
that he should be her lover even there; adapting her tastes, disposition
and actions to his liking; abstaining from sorcery; disputing
continually with her mother on the subject of going to him, and, when
forcibly taken by her mother to some other place, expressing her desire
to die by taking poison, by starving herself to death, by stabbing
herself with some weapon, or by hanging herself; and lastly assuring the
man of her constancy and love by means of her agents, and receiving
money herself, but abstaining from any dispute with her mother with
regard to pecuniary matters.</p>
<p>When the man sets out on a journey, she should make him swear that he
will return quickly, and in his absence should put aside her vows of
worshipping the Deity, and should wear no ornaments except those that
are lucky. If the time fixed for his return has passed, she should
endeavour to ascertain the real time of his return from omens, from the
reports of the people, and from the positions of the planets, the moon
and the stars. On occasions of amusement, and of auspicious dreams, she
should say "Let me be soon united to him."
<SPAN name="corr38" id="corr38"></SPAN><SPAN class="correction" href="#cn38" title="changed from ' f'">If</SPAN>,
moreover, she feels
melancholy, or sees any inauspicious omen, she should perform some rite
to appease the Deity.</p>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_146" id="Page_146"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>When the man does return home she should worship the God Kama (<i>i.e.</i>,
the Indian Cupid), and offer oblations to other Deities, and having
caused a pot filled with water to be brought by her friends, she should
perform the worship in honour of the crow who eats the offerings which
we make to the manes of deceased relations. After the first visit is
over she should ask her lover also to perform certain rites, and this he
will do if he is sufficiently attached to her.</p>
<p>Now a man is said to be sufficiently attached to a woman when his love
is disinterested; when he has the same object in view as his beloved
one; when he is quite free from any suspicions on her account; and when
he is indifferent to money with regard to her.</p>
<p>Such is the manner of a courtesan living with a man like a wife, and set
forth here for the sake of guidance from the rules of Dattaka. What is
not laid down here should be practised according to the custom of the
people, and the nature of each individual man.</p>
<p>There are also two verses on the subject as follows:</p>
<p>"The extent of the love of women is not known, even to those who are the
objects of their affection, on account of its
<SPAN name="corr39" id="corr39"></SPAN><SPAN class="correction" href="#cn39" title="changed from 'subtletly'">subtlety</SPAN>,
and on account
of the avarice, and natural intelligence of womankind."</p>
<p>"Women are hardly ever known in their true light, though they may love
men, or become indifferent towards them; may give them delight, or
abandon them; or may extract from them all the wealth that they may
possess."</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_147" id="Page_147"></SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />