The Kama Sutra Part VI Introductory Remarks




The Kama Sutra: Part VI Introductory Remarks








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INTRODUCTORY REMARKSTHIS 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 today.
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.
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.
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, 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.
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.


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