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CHAPTER VII
OF THE VARIOUS MODES OF STRIKING, AND OF THE SOUNDS APPROPRIATE
TO THEM
SEXUAL intercourse can be compared to a quarrel, on account of
the contrarieties of love and its tendency to dispute. The place
of striking with passion is the body, and on the body the special
places are:
- The shoulders
- The head
- The space between the breasts
- The back
- The jaghana, or middle part of the body
- The sides
Striking is of four
kinds:
- Striking with the back of
the hand
- Striking with the fingers a little contracted
- Striking with the fist
- Striking with the open palm of the hand
On account of its
causing pain, striking gives rise to the hissing sound, which is
of various kinds, and to the eight kinds of crying:
- The sound Hin
- The thundering sound
- The cooing sound
- The weeping sound
- The sound Phut
- The sound Phât
- The sound Sût
- The sound Plât
Besides these, there are also
words having a meaning, such as `mother', and those that are expressive
of prohibition, sufficiency, desire of liberation, pain or praise,
and to which may be added sounds like those of the dove, the cuckoo,
the green pigeon, the parrot, the bee, the sparrow, the flamingo,
the duck, and the quail, which are all occasionally made use of.
Blows with the fist should
be given on the back of the woman while she is sitting on the lap
of the man, and she should give blows in return, abusing the man
as if she were angry, and making the cooing and the weeping sounds.
While the woman is engaged in congress the space between the breasts
should be struck with the back of the hand, slowly at first, and
then proportionately to the increasing excitement, until the end.
At this time the sounds Hin
and others may be made, alternately or optionally, according to
habit. When the man, making the sound Phât, strikes the woman
on the head, with the fingers of his hand a little contracted, it
is called Prasritaka, which means striking with the fingers of the
hand a little contracted. In this case the appropriate sounds are
the cooing sound, the sound Phât and the sound Phut in the
interior of the mouth, and at the end of congress the sighing and
weeping sounds. The sound Phât is an imitation of the sound
of a bamboo being split, while the sound Phut is like the sound
made by something falling into water. At all times when kissing
and such like things are begun, the woman should give a reply with
a hissing sound. During the excitement when the woman is not accustomed
to striking, she continually utters words expressive of prohibition,
sufficiently, or desire of liberation, as well as the words `father',
`mother', intermingled with the sighing, weeping and thundering
sounds.1 Towards the conclusion of the congress,
the breasts, the jaghana, and the sides of the woman should be pressed
with the open palms of the hand, with some force, until the end
of it, and then sounds like those of the quail or the goose should
be made.
There are two verses on the
subject as follows:
`The characteristics of
manhood are said to consist of roughness and impetuosity, while
weakness, tenderness, sensibility, and an inclination to turn away
from unpleasant things are the distinguishing marks of womanhood.
The excitement of passion, and peculiarities of habit may sometimes
cause contrary results to appear, but these do not last long, and
in the end the natural state is resumed.'
The wedge on the bosom,
the scissors on the head, the piercing instrument on the cheeks,
and the pinchers on the breasts and sides, may also be taken into
consideration with the other four modes of striking, and thus give
eight ways altogether. But these four ways of striking with instruments
are peculiar to the people of the southern countries, and the marks
caused by them are seen on the breasts of their women. They are
local peculiarities, but Vatsyayana is of opinion that the practice
of them is painful, barbarous, and base, and quite unworthy of imitation.
In the same way anything
that is a local peculiarity should not always be adopted elsewhere,
and even in the place where the practice is prevalent, excess of
it should always be avoided. Instances of the dangerous use of them
may be given as follows. The king of the Panchalas killed the courtesan
Madhavasena by means of the wedge during congress. King Satakarni
Satavahana of the Kuntalas deprived his great Queen Malayavati of
her life by a pair of scissors, and Naradeva, whose hand was deformed,
blinded a dancing girl by directing a piercing instrument in a wrong
way.
There are also two verses
on the subject as follows:
`About these things there
cannot be either enumeration or any definite rule. Congress having
once commenced, passion alone gives birth to all the acts of the
parties.'
`Such passionate actions
and amorous gesticulations or movements, which arise on the spur
of the moment, and during sexual intercourse, cannot be defined,
and are as irregular as dreams. A horse having once attained the
fifth degree of motion goes on with blind speed, regardless of pits,
ditches, and posts in his way; and in the same manner a loving pair
become blind with passion in the heat of congress, and go on with
great impetuosity, paying not the least regard to excess. For this
reason one who is well acquainted with the science of love, and
knowing his own strength, as also the tenderness, impetuosity, and
strength of the young women, should act accordingly. The various
modes of enjoyment are not for all times or for all persons, but
they should only be used at the proper time. and in the proper countries
and places.'
Footnotes
- Men who are well acquainted with the
art of love are well aware how often one woman differs from another
in her sighs and sounds during the time of congress. Some women
like to be talked to in the most loving way, others in the most
lustful way, others in the most abusive way, and so on. Some women
enjoy themselves with closed eyes in silence, others make a great
noise over it, and some almost faint away. The great art is to
ascertain what gives them the greatest pleasure, and what specialities
they like best.
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