Primitive Love and Love-Stories eBook

Henry Theophilus Finck
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 1,176 pages of information about Primitive Love and Love-Stories.

Primitive Love and Love-Stories eBook

Henry Theophilus Finck
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 1,176 pages of information about Primitive Love and Love-Stories.

XV.  RELIGIOUS PREJUDICE

Among peoples sufficiently advanced to have dogmas, religion has always proved a strong barrier in the way of the free bestowal of affection.  Not only have Mohammedans and Christians hated and shunned each other, but the different Christian sects for a long time detested and tabooed one another as cordially as they did the heathen and the Jews.  Tertullian denounced the marriage of a Christian with a heathen as fornication, and Westermarck cites Jacobs’s remark that

“the folk-lore of Europe regarded the Jews as something infra-human, and it would require an almost impossible amount of large toleration for a Christian maiden of the Middle Ages to regard union with a Jew as anything other than unnatural.”

There are various minor obstacles that might be dwelt on, but enough has been said to make it clear why romantic love was the last of the sentiments to be developed.

Having considered the divers ingredients and different kinds of love and distinguished romantic love from sensual passion and sentimentality, as well as from conjugal affection, we are now in a position to examine intelligently and in some detail a number of races in all parts of the world, by way of further corroborating and emphasizing the conclusions reached.

SPECIMENS OF AFRICAN LOVE

What is the lowest of all human races?  The Bushmen of South Africa, say some ethnologists, while others urge the claims of the natives of Australia, the Veddahs of Ceylon, or the Fuegians of South America.  As culture cannot be measured with a yardstick, it is impossible to arrive at any definite conclusion.  For literary and geographic reasons, which will become apparent later on, I prefer to begin the search for traces of romantic love with the Bushmen of South Africa.  And here we are at once confronted by the startling assertion of the explorer James Chapman, that there is “love in all their marriages.”  If this is true—­if there is love in all the marriages of what is one of the lowest human races—­then I have been pursuing a will-o’-the-wisp in the preceding pages of this book, and it will be a waste of ink and paper to write another line.  But is it true?  Let us first see what manner of mortals these Bushmen are, before subjecting Mr. Chapman’s special testimony to a cross-examination.  The following facts are compiled from the most approved authorities.

BUSHMAN QUALIFICATIONS FOR LOVE

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Primitive Love and Love-Stories from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.