Esthetic sense:
(See Beauty).
Esthonians:
Mock coyness.
Fashion and mutilation.
Females:
Kinship thorough.
Feminine ideals:
Superior to masculine;
Encouraged by Christianity;
Greek ignorance of.
Fetiches.
Fijians:
Murder a virtue;
Infanticide;
Preference;
Similarity of sexes;
Jealousy;
Proposal by a girl;
Feathers to attract
attention;
Eat useless wives;
Choice;
Cleanliness;
Treatment of women;
Modesty and chastity;
Sentimentality;
Love-poems;
Serenades and proposals;
Suicides and bachelors.
Fondness.
Fuegians:
Marriage.
Gallantry:
A lesson in;
American Indians;
Wild tribes of India;
Greeks;
Hebrews.
Gallas:
Coarseness of.
Garos:
Proposing by girls.
Gipsies:
Incest.
Greeks:
Hegel on love;
Love in Homer;
Wood, Shelley;
Macaulay, Bulwer, Gautier;
Sentimentality;
No love of romantic
scenery;
Incest;
Jealousy;
Homeric women not coy;
Women the embodiment
of lust;
Masculine coyness;
Shy women;
War and love;
Mercenary coyness;
Mixed moods in love;
Amorous hyperbole;
Artificial symptoms;
Sympathy denounced by
Plato;
Estimate of women;
Unchivalrous;
Risking life for a woman;
Suicide and love;
Love turns to hate;
Woman-love considered
sensual;
Attitude toward female
beauty;
Sensual love;
Barrenness a cause of
divorce;
Chapter on Greek love;
Champions of;
Gladstone on the women
of Homer;
Achilles as a lover;
Words versus actions;
Odysseus, libertine
and ruffian;
Penelope as a model
wife;
Conjugal tenderness
of Hector;
Barbarous treatment
of women;
Love in Sappho’s
poems;
Anacreon and others;
Woman and love in AEschylus;
In Sophocles;
In Euripides;
Romantic love for boys;
Platonic love excludes
women;
Made impossible in Sparta;
Preference for masculine
women and beauty;
Oriental costumes;
Love in life and in
literature;
In Greater Greece;
Seventeen symptoms;
Alexandrian chivalry;
The New Comedy;
Theocritus and Callimachus;
Medea and Jason;
Poets and hetairai;
No stories of romantic
love;
Romances;
Marriage among.
Greenlanders:
Indifferent to chastity;
Courtship.
Guatemalans:
Brides selected for
men;
Erotic philology.