Primitive Love and Love-Stories eBook

Henry Theophilus Finck
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 1,176 pages of information about Primitive Love and Love-Stories.

Primitive Love and Love-Stories eBook

Henry Theophilus Finck
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 1,176 pages of information about Primitive Love and Love-Stories.

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.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Primitive Love and Love-Stories from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.