The Philippine Islands, 1493-1803 — Volume 5 of 55 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 289 pages of information about The Philippine Islands, 1493-1803 — Volume 5 of 55.

The Philippine Islands, 1493-1803 — Volume 5 of 55 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 289 pages of information about The Philippine Islands, 1493-1803 — Volume 5 of 55.

The natives of the Pintados Islands are not very dark.  Both men and women are well formed and have regular features.  Some of the women are white.  Both men and women wear their hair long, and fastened in a knot on the crown of the head, which is very becoming.  The men tattoo their entire bodies with very beautiful figures, using therefor small pieces of iron dipped in ink.  This ink incorporates itself with the blood, and the marks are indelible.  They are healthy people, for the climate of that land is good.  Among them are found no crippled, maimed, deaf, or dumb persons.  No one of them has ever been possessed by evil spirits, or has become insane.  Therefore they reach an advanced age in perfect health.  The Pintados are a courageous and warlike race; they have continually waged war on both land and sea.  They bore their ears in two places and wear beautiful ornaments, not only in their ears, but also around their necks and arms.  Their dress is neat and modest, made generally of cotton, medrinaque, or silk (which they get from China and other places).  They are greatly addicted to the use of a kind of wine which they make from rice and from the palm-tree, and which is good.  Very rarely do they become angry when drunk, for their drunkenness passes off in jests or in sleep.

The men are very fond of their wives, for it is the men who give the dowry at marriage.  And even if their wives commit adultery, action is never taken against the woman, but against the adulterer.  An abominable custom among the men is to bore a hole through the genital organ, placing within this opening a tin tube, to which they fasten a wheel like that of a spur, a full palm in circumference.  These are made of tin, and some of them weigh more than half a pound.  They use twenty kinds of these wheels; but modesty forbids us to speak of them.  By means of these they have intercourse with their wives. [13] The inhabitants of the mountains do not follow this custom; all, however, circumcise themselves, saying that they do it for their health and for cleanliness.  When they marry, they are not concerned whether their wives are virgins or not.

The women are beautiful, but unchaste.  They do not hesitate to commit adultery, because they receive no punishment for it.  They are well and modestly dressed, in that they cover all the private parts; they are very clean, and are very fond of perfumes.  It is considered a disgrace among them to have many children; for they say that when the property is to be divided among all the children, they will all be poor, and that it is better to have one child, and leave him wealthy.  The Pintados are very strict as to whom they marry; for no one marries below his station.  Therefore chiefs will never marry any but women of rank.  All the men are accustomed to have as many wives as they can buy and support.  The women are extremely lewd, and they even encourage their own daughters to a life of unchastity; so that there is nothing so vile for the latter that they cannot do it before their mothers, since they incur no punishment.  The men, however, are not so vile as the Moros.  The Pintados love their wives so dearly, that, in case of a quarrel they take sides with their wives’ relatives, even against their own fathers and brothers.

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The Philippine Islands, 1493-1803 — Volume 5 of 55 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.