The Kama Sutra of Vatsyayana. Vatsyayana
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SALUTATION TO DHARMA, ARTHA AND KAMA.
In the beginning, the Lord of Beings created men and women, and in the form of commandments in one hundred thousand chapters laid down rules for regulating their existence with regard to Dharma,[1] Artha,[2] and Kama.[3] Some of these commandments, namely those which treated of Dharma, were separately written by Swayambhu Manu; those that related to Artha were compiled by Brihaspati; and those that referred to Kama were expounded by Nandi, the follower of Mahadeva, in one thousand chapters.
Now these 'Kama Sutra' (Aphorisms on Love), written by Nandi in one thousand chapters, were reproduced by Shvetaketu, the son of Uddvalaka, in an abbreviated form in five hundred chapters, and this work was again similarly reproduced in an abridged form, in one hundred and fifty chapters, by Babhravya, an inhabitant of the Punchala (South of Delhi) country. These one hundred and fifty chapters were then put together under seven heads or parts named severally—
1st. Sadharana (general topics).
2nd. Samprayogika (embraces, etc.).
3rd. Kanya Samprayuktaka (union of males and females).
4th. Bharyadhikarika (on one's own wife).
5th. Paradika (on the wives of other people).
6th. Vaisika (on courtesans).
7th. Aupamishadika (on the arts of seduction, tonic medicines, etc.).
The sixth part of this last work was separately expounded by Dattaka at the request of the public women of Pataliputra (Patna), and in the same way Charayana explained the first part of it. The remaining parts, viz., the second, third, fourth, fifth, and seventh were each separately expounded by—
Suvarnanabha (second part).
Ghotakamukha (third part).
Gonardiya (fourth part).
Gonikaputra (fifth part).
Kuchumara (seventh part), respectively.
Thus the work being written in parts by different authors was almost unobtainable, and as the parts which were expounded by Dattaka and the others treated only of the particular branches of the subject to which each part related, and moreover as the original work of Babhravya was difficult to be mastered on account of its length, Vatsyayana, therefore, composed his work in a small volume as an abstract of the whole of the works of the above-named authors.
PART I.
CHAPTER I.
BEING THE INDEX TO OR CONTENTS OF THE WORK.
Chapter | II. | Observations on the three worldly attainments of Virtue, Wealth and Love. |
" | III. | On the study of the Sixty-four Arts. |
" | IV. | On the Arrangements of a House, and Household Furniture; and about the Daily Life of a Citizen, his Companions, Amusements, &c. |
" | V. | About classes of Women fit and unfit for Congress with the Citizen, and of Friends, and Messengers. |
PART II.
ON SEXUAL UNION.
Chapter | I. | Kinds of Union according to Dimensions, Force of Desire, and Time; and on the different kinds of Love. |
" | II. | Of the Embrace. |
" | III. | On Kissing. |
" | IV. | On Pressing or Marking with the Nails. |
" | V. | On Biting, and the ways of Love to be employed with regard to Women of different countries. |
" | VI. | On the various ways of Lying Down, and the different kinds of Congress. |
" | VII. | On the various ways of Striking, and of the Sounds appropriate to them. |
" | VIII. | About females acting the part of Males. |
" | IX. | On holding the Lingam in the Mouth. |
" | X. | How to begin and how to end the Congress. Different kinds of Congress, and Love Quarrels. |
PART III.
ABOUT THE ACQUISITION OF A WIFE.
Chapter | I. | Observations on Betrothal and Marriage. |
" | II. | About creating Confidence in the Girl. |
" | III. | Courtship, and the manifestations of the feelings by outward signs and deeds. |