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.
“Miscellaneous congress very often terminated their dances and festivals.  Such orgies were of common occurrence among the Algonkins and Iroquois at a very early date, and are often mentioned in the Jesuit Relations; Venagas describes them as frequent among the tribes of Lower California, and Oviedo refers to certain festivals of the Nicaraguans, during which the women of all ranks extended to whosoever wished just such privileges as the matrons of ancient Babylon, that mother of harlots and all abominations, used to grant even to slaves and strangers in the temple of Melitta as one of the duties of religion.”

In Part I. (140-42) of the Final Report of Investigations among the Indians of the Southwestern United States,[202] A.F.  Bandelier, the leading authority on the Indians of the Southwest, writes regarding the Pueblos (one of the most advanced, of all American tribes): 

“Chastity was an act of penitence; to be chaste signified to do penance.  Still, after a woman had once become linked to a man by the performance of certain simple rites it was unsafe for her to be caught trespassing, and her accomplice also suffered a penalty.  But there was the utmost liberty, even license, as toward girls.  Intercourse was almost promiscuous with members of the tribe.  Toward outsiders the strictest abstinence was observed, and this fact, which has long been overlooked or misunderstood, explains the prevailing idea that before the coming of the white man the Indians were both chaste and moral, while the contrary is the truth.”

Lewis and Clarke travelled a century ago among Indians that had never been visited by whites.  Their observations regarding immoral practices and the means used to obviate the consequences bear out the above testimony.  M’Lean (II., 59, 120) also ridicules the idea that Indians were corrupted by the whites.  But the most conclusive proof of aboriginal depravity is that supplied by the discoverers of America, including Columbus and Amerigo Vespucci.  Columbus on his fourth voyage touched the mainland going down near Brazil.  In Cariay, he writes,[203] the enchanters

“sent me immediately two girls very showily dressed.  The elder could not be more than eleven years of age and the other seven, and both exhibited so much immodesty that more could not be expected from public women.”

On another page (30) he writes:  “The habits of these Caribbees are brutal,” adding that in their attacks on neighboring islands they carry off as many women as they can, using them as concubines.  “These women also say that the Caribbees use them with such cruelty as would scarcely be believed; and that they eat the children which they bear to them.”

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