KAMASUTRA
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She in whom the following signs and symptoms appear is called a Padmini. Her face is
pleasing as the full moon; her body, well clothed with flesh, is soft as the Shiras or
mustard flower, her skin is fine, tender and fair as the yellow lotus, never dark coloured.
Her eyes are bright and beautiful as the orbs of the fawn, well cut, and with reddish
corners. Her bosom is hard, full and high; she has a good neck; her nose is straight and
lovely, and three folds or wrinkles cross her middle - about the umbilical region. Her yoni
resembles the opening lotus bud, and her love seed (Kama salila) is perfumed like the lily
that has newly burst. She walks with swan-like gait, and her voice is low and musical as
the note of the Kokila bird, she delights in white raiments, in fine jewels, and in rich
dresses. She eats little, sleeps lightly, and being as respectful and religious as she is clever
and courteous, she is ever anxious to worship the gods, and to enjoy the conversation of
Brahmans. Such, then, is the Padmini or Lotus woman.
Detailed descriptions then follow of the Chitrini or Art woman; the Shankhini or Conch
woman, and the Hastini or Elephant woman, their days of enjoyment, their various seats
of passion, the manner in which they should be manipulated and treated in sexual
intercourse, along with the characteristics of the men and women of the various countries
in Hindostan. The details are so numerous, and the subjects so seriously dealt with, and at
such length, that neither time nor space will permit of their being given here.
One work in the English language is somewhat similar to these works of the Hindoos. It
is called `Kalogynomia: or the Laws of Female Beauty', being the elementary principles
of that science, by T. Bell, M.D., with twenty-four plates, and printed in London in 1821.
It treats of Beauty, of Love, of Sexual Intercourse, of the Laws regulating that
Intercourse, of Monogamy and Polygamy, of Prostitution, of Infidelity, ending with a
catalogue raisonnée of the defects of female beauty.
Other works in English also enter into great details of private and domestic life: The
Elements of Social Science, or Physical, Sexual and Natural Religion, by a Doctor of
Medicine, London, 1880, and Every Woman's Book, by Dr Waters, 1826. To persons
interested in the above subjects these works will be found to contain such details as have
been seldom before published, and which ought to be thoroughly understood by all
philanthropists and benefactors of society.
After a perusal of the Hindoo work, and of the English books above mentioned, the
reader will understand the subject, at all events from a materialistic, realistic and practical
point of view. If all science is founded more or less on a stratum of facts, there can be no
harm in making known to mankind generally certain matters intimately connected with
their private, domestic, and social life.
Alas! complete ignorance of them has unfortunately wrecked many a man and many a
woman, while a little knowledge of a subject generally ignored by the masses would have
enabled numbers of people to have understood many things which they believed to be
quite incomprehensible, or which were not thought worthy of their consideration.