CHAPTER 1 - On the Manner of Living of
a Virtuous Woman, and of Her Behaviour During the Absence of Her
Husband
CHAPTER 2 - On the Conduct of the Elder Wife Towards the Other
Wives of Her Husband, and on that of a Younger Wife Towards the
Elder Ones. Also on the Conduct of a Virgin Widow Re-Married;
of a Wide Disliked by Her Husband; of the Women in the King's
Harem; and Lastly on the Conduct of a Husband Towards Many Wives
CHAPTER 1
On the Manner of Living of a Virtuous Woman, and of her Behaviour
During the Absence of Her Husband
A virtuous woman, who has affection for her husband, should
act in conformity with his wishes as if he were a divine being,
and with his consent should take upon herself the whole care of
his family. She should keep the whole house well cleaned, and
arrange flowers of various kinds in different parts of it, and
make the floor smooth and polished so as to give the whole a neat
and becoming appearance. She should surround the house with a
garden, and place ready in it all the materials required for the
morning, noon and evening sacrifices. Moreover she should herself
revere the sanctuary of the Household Gods, for, says Gonardiya,
`nothing so much attracts the heart of a householder to his wife
as a careful observance of the things mentioned above'.
Towards the parents, relations, friends, sisters, and servants
of her husband she should behave as they deserve. In the garden
she should plant beds of green vegetables, bunches of the sugar
cane, and clumps of the fig tree, the mustard plant, the parsley
plant, the fennel plant, and the xanthochymus pictorius. Clusters
of various flowers such as the trapa bispinosa, the jasmine, the
jasminum grandiflorum, the yellow amaranth, the wild jasmine,
the tabernamontana coronaria, the nadyaworta, the china rose and
others, should likewise be planted, together with the fragrant
grass andropogon schaenanthus, and the fragrant root of the plant
andropogon miricatus. She should also have seats and arbours made
in the garden, in the middle of which a well, tank, or pool should
be dug.
The wife should always avoid the company of female beggars, female
Buddhist mendicants, unchaste and roguish women, female fortune
tellers and witches. As regards meals she should always consider
what her husband likes and dislikes and what things are good for
him, and what are injurious to him. When she hears the sounds
of his footsteps coming home she should at once get up and be
ready to do whatever he may command her, and either order her
female servant to wash his feet, or wash them herself. When going
anywhere with her husband, she should put on her ornaments, and
without his consent she should not either give or accept invitations,
or attend marriages and sacrifices, or sit in the company of female
friends, or visit the temples of the Gods. And if she wants to
engage in any kind of games or sports, she should not do it against
his will.
In the same way she should always sit down after him, and get
up before him, and should never awaken him when he is asleep.
The kitchen should be situated in a quiet and retired place, so
as not to be accessible to strangers, and should always look clean.
In the event of any misconduct on the part of her husband, she
should not blame him excessively, though she be a little displeased.
She should not use abusive language towards him, but rebuke him
with conciliatory words, whether he be in the company of friends
or alone. Moreover, she should not be a scold, for, says Gonardiya,
`there is no cause of dislike on the part of a husband so great
as this characteristic in a wife'. Lastly she should avoid bad
expressions, sulky looks, speaking aside, standing in the doorway,
and looking at passers-by, conversing in the pleasure groves,
and remaining in a lonely place for a long time; and finally she
should always keep her body, her teeth, her hair and everything
belonging to her tidy, sweet, and clean.
When the wife wants to approach her husband in private her dress
should consist of many ornaments, various kinds of flowers, and
a cloth decorated with different colours, and some sweet-smelling
ointments or unguents. But her everyday dress should be composed
of a thin, close-textured cloth, a few ornaments and flowers,
and a little scent, not too much. She should also observe the
fasts and vows of her husband, and when he tries to prevent her
doing this, she should persuade him to let her do it.
At appropriate times of the year, and when they happen to be cheap,
she should buy earth, bamboos, firewood, skins, and iron pots,
as also salt and oil. Fragrant substances, vessels made of the
fruit of the plant wrightea antidysenterica, or oval leaved wrightea,
medicines, and other things which are always wanted, should be
obtained when required and kept in a secret place of the house.
The seeds of the radish, the potato, the common beet, the Indian
wormwood, the mango, the cucumber, the egg plant, the kushmanda,
the pumpkin gourd, the surana, the bignonia indica, the sandal
wood, the premna spinosa, the garlic plant, the onion, and other
vegetables, should be bought and sown at the proper seasons. The
wife, moreover, should not tell to strangers the amount of her
wealth, nor the secrets which her husband has confided to her.
She should surpass all the women of her own rank in life in her
cleverness, her appearance, her knowledge of cookery, her pride,
and her manner of serving her husband. The expenditure of the
year should be regulated by the profits. The milk that remains
after the meals should be turned into ghee or clarified butter.
Oil and sugar should be prepared at home; spinning and weaving
should also be done there; and a store of ropes and cords, and
barks of trees for twisting into ropes should be kept. She should
also attend to the pounding and cleaning of rice, using its small
grain and chaff in some way or other. She should pay the salaries
of the servants, look after the tilling of the fields, and keeping
of the flocks and herds, superintend the making of vehicles, and
take care of the rams, cocks, quails, parrots, starlings, cuckoos,
peacocks, monkeys, and deer; and finally adjust the income and
expenditure of the day. The worn-out clothes should be given to
those servants who have done good work, in order to show them
that their services have been appreciated, or they may be applied
to some other use. The vessels in which wine is prepared, as well
as those in which it is kept, should be carefully looked after,
and put away at the proper time. All sales and purchases should
also be well attended to. The friends of her husband she should
welcome by presenting them with flowers, ointment, incense, betel
leaves, and betel nut. Her father-in-law and mother-in-law she
should treat as they deserve, always remaining dependent on their
will, never contradicting them, speaking to them in few and not
harsh words, not laughing loudly in their presence, and acting
with their friends and enemies as with her own. In addition to
the above she should not be vain, or too much taken up with her
enjoyments. She should be liberal towards her servants, and reward
them on holidays and festivals; and not give away anything without
first making it known to her husband.
Thus ends the manner of living of a virtuous woman.
During the absence of her husband on a journey the virtuous woman
should wear only her auspicious ornaments, and observe the fasts
in honour of the Gods. While anxious to hear the news of her husband,
she should still look after her household affairs. She should
sleep near the elder women of the house, and make herself agreeable
to them. She should look after and keep in repair the things that
are liked by her husband, and continue the works that have been
begun by him. To the abode of her relations she should not go
except on occasions of joy and sorrow, and then she should go
in her usual travelling dress, accompanied by her husband's servants,
and not remain there for a long time. The fasts and feasts should
be observed with the consent of the elders of the house. The resources
should be increased by making purchases and sales according to
the practice of the merchants and by means of honest servants,
superintended by herself. The income should be increased, and
the expenditure diminished as much possible. And when her husband
returns from his journey, she should receive him at first in her
ordinary clothes, so that he may know in what way she has lived
during his absence, and should bring to him some presents, as
also materials for the worship of the Deity.
Thus ends the part relating to the behaviour of a wife during
the absence of her husband on a journey.
There are also some verses on the subject as follows:
`The wife, whether she be a woman of noble family, or a virgin
widow1 remarried, or a concubine, should lead a chaste life, devoted
to her husband, and doing everything for his welfare. Women acting
thus acquire Dharma, Artha, and Kama, obtain a high position,
and generally keep their husbands devoted to them.
Footnotes
1 This probably refers to a girl married in her
infancy, or when very young and whose husband had died before
she arrived at the age of puberty. Infant marriages are still
the common custom of the Hindoos.

CHAPTER 2
On the Conduct of the Elder Wife Towards the Other Wives of Her
Husband, and on That of a Younger Wife Towards the Elder Ones.
Also on the Conduct of a Virgin Widow Re-Married; of a Wife Disliked
by Her Husband; of the Women in the King's Harem; and Lastly on
the Conduct of a Husband Towards Many Wives
The causes of re-marrying during the lifetime of the wife are
as follows:
· The folly or ill-temper of the wife
· Her husband's dislike to her
· The want of offspring
· The continual birth of daughters
· The incontinence of the husband
From the very beginning, a wife should endeavour to attract the
heart of her husband, by showing to him continually her devotion,
her good temper, and her wisdom. If however she bears him no children,
she should herself toilette her husband to marry another woman.
And when the second wife is married, and brought to the house,
the first wife should give her a position superior to her own,
and look upon her as a sister. In the morning the elder wife should
forcibly make the younger one decorate herself in the presence
of their husband, and should not mind all the husband's favour
being given to her. If the younger wife does anything to displease
her husband the elder one should not neglect her, but should always
be ready to give her most careful advice, and should teach her
to do various things in the presence of her husband. Her children
she should treat as her own, her attendants she should look upon
with more regard, even than on her own servants, her friends she
should cherish with love and kindness, and her relations with
great honour.
When there are many other wives besides herself, the elder wife
should associate with the one who is immediately next to her in
rank and age, and should instigate the wife who has recently enjoyed
her husband's favour to quarrel with the present favourite. After
this she should sympathize with the former, and having collected
all the other wives together, should get them to denounce the
favourite as a scheming and wicked woman, without however committing
herself in any way. If the favourite wife happens to quarrel with
the husband, then the elder wife should take her part and give
her false encouragement, and thus cause the quarrel to be increased.
If there be only a little quarrel between the two, the elder wife
should do all she can to work it up into a large quarrel. But
if after all this she finds the husband still continues to love
his favourite wife she should then change her tactics, and endeavour
to bring about a conciliation between them, so as to avoid her
husband's displeasure.
Thus ends the conduct of the elder wife.
The younger wife should regard the elder wife of her husband as
her mother, and should not give anything away, even to her own
relations, without her knowledge. She should tell her everything
about herself, and not approach her husband without her permission.
Whatever is told to her by the elder wife she should not reveal
to others, and she should take care of the children of the senior
even more than of her own. When alone with her husband she should
serve him well, but should not tell him of the pain she suffers
from the existence of a rival wife. She may also obtain secretly
from her husband some marks of his particular regard for her,
and may tell him that she lives only for him, and for the regard
that he has for her. She should never reveal her love for her
husband, nor her husband's love for her to any person, either
in pride or in anger, for a wife that reveals the secrets of her
husband is despised by him. As for seeking to obtain the regard
of her husband, Gonardiya says, that it should always be done
in private, for fear of the elder wife. If the elder wife be disliked
by her husband, or be childless, she should sympathize with her,
and should ask her husband to do the same, but should surpass
her in leading the life of a chaste woman.
Thus ends the conduct of the younger wife towards the elder.
A widow in poor circumstances, or of a weak nature, and who allies
herself again to a man, is called a widow remarried. The followers
of Babhravya say that a virgin widow should not marry a person
whom she may be obliged to leave on account of his bad character,
or of his being destitute of the
excellent qualities of a man, she thus being obliged to have recourse
to another person. Gonardiya is of opinion that as the cause of
a widow's marrying again is her desire for happiness, and as happiness
is secured by the possession of excellent qualities in her husband,
joined to love of enjoyment, it is better therefore to secure
a person endowed with such qualities in the first instance. Vatsyayana
however thinks that a widow may marry any person that she likes,
and that she thinks win suit her. At the time of her marriage
the widow should obtain from her husband the money to pay the
cost of drinking parties, and picnics with her relations, and
of giving them and her friends kindly gifts and presents; or she
may do these things at her own cost if she likes.
In the same way she may wear either her husband's ornaments or
her own. As to the presents of affection mutually exchanged between
the husband and herself there is no fixed rule about them. If
she leaves her husband after marriage of her own accord, she should
restore to him whatever he may have given her, with the exception
of the mutual presents. If however she is driven out of the house
by her husband she should not return anything to him. After her
marriage she should live in the house of her husband like one
of the chief members of the family, but should treat the other
ladies of the family with kindness, the servants with generosity,
and all the friends of the house with familiarity and good temper.
She should show that she is better acquainted with the sixty-four
arts than the other ladies of the house, and in any quarrels with
her husband she should not rebuke him severely but in private
do everything that he wishes, and make use of the sixty-four ways
of enjoyment. She should be obliging to the other wives of her
husband, and to their children she should give presents, behave
as their mistress, and make ornaments and playthings for their
use. In the friends and servants of her husband she should confide
more than in his other wives, and finally she should have a liking
for drinking parties, going to picnics, attending fairs and festivals,
and for carrying out all kinds of games and amusements.
Thus ends the conduct of a virgin widow remarried.
A woman who is disliked by her husband, and annoyed and distressed
by his other wives, should associate with the wife who is liked
most by her husband, and who serves him more than the others,
and should teach her all the arts with which she is acquainted.
She should act as the nurse to her husband's children, and having
gained over his friends to her side, should through them make
him acquainted of her devotion to him. In religious ceremonies
she should be a leader, as also in vows and fasts, and should
not hold too good an opinion of herself. When her husband is lying
on his bed she should only go near him when it is agreeable to
him, and should never rebuke him, or show obstinacy in any way.
If her husband happens to quarrel with any of his other wives,
she should reconcile them to each other, and if he desires to
see any woman secretly, she should manage to bring about the meeting
between them. She should moreover make herself acquainted with
the weak points of her husband's character, but always keep them
secret, and on the whole behave herself in such a way as may lead
him to look upon her as a good and devoted wife.
Here ends the conduct of a wife disliked by her husband.
The above sections will show how all the women of the king's seraglio
are to behave, and therefore we shall now speak separately only
about the king. The female attendants in the harem (called severally
Kanchukiyas (1) Mahallarikas (2) and Mahallikas (3) should bring
flowers, ointments and clothes from the king's wives to the king,
and he having received these things should give them as presents
to the servants, along with the things worn by him the previous
day. In the afternoon the king, having dressed and put on his
ornaments, should interview the women of the harem, who should
also be dressed and decorated with jewels. Then having given to
each of them such a
place and such respect as may suit the occasion and as they may
deserve, he should carry on with them a cheerful conversation.
After that he should see such of his wives as may be virgin widows
remarried, and after them the concubines and dancing girls. All
of these should be visited in their own private rooms.
When the king rises from his noonday sleep, the woman whose duty
it is to inform the king regarding the wife who is to spend the
night with him should come to him accompanied by the female attendants
of that wife whose turn may have arrived in the regular course,
and of her who may have been accidentally passed over as her turn
arrived, and of her who may have been unwell at the time of her
turn. These attendants should place before the king the ointments
and unguents sent by each of these wives, marked with the seal
of her ring, and their names and their reasons for sending the
ointments should be told to the king. After this the king accepts
the ointment of one of
them, who then is informed that her ointment has been accepted,
and that her day has been settled (4).
At festivals, singing parties and exhibitions, all the wives of
the king should be treated with respect and served with drinks.
But the women of the harem should not be allowed to go out alone,
neither should any women outside the harem be allowed to enter
it except those whose character is well known. And lastly the
work which the king's wives have to do should not be too fatiguing.
Thus ends the conduct of the king towards the women of the harem,
and of their own conduct.
A man marrying many wives should act fairly towards them all.
He should neither disregard nor pass over their faults, and should
not reveal to one wife the love, passion, bodily blemishes and
confidential reproaches of the other. No opportunity should be
given to any one of them of speaking to him about their rivals,
and if one of them should begin to speak ill of another, he should
chide her and tell her that she has exactly the same blemishes
in her character. One of them he should please by secret confidence,
another by secret respect, and another by secret flattery, and
he should please them all by going to gardens, by amusements,
by presents, by honouring their relations, by telling them secrets,
and lastly by loving unions. A young woman who is of a good temper,
and who conducts herself according to the precepts of the Holy
Writ, wins her husband's attachments, and obtains a superiority
over her rivals.
Thus ends the conduct of a husband towards many wives.
Footnotes
1 A name given to the maid servants of the zenana
of the kings in ancient times, on account of their always keeping
their breasts covered with a cloth called Kanchuki. It was customary
in the olden time for the maid servants to cover their breasts
with a cloth, while the queens kept their breasts
uncovered. This custom is distinctly to be seen in the Ajunta
cave paintings.
2 The meaning of this word is a superior woman, so it
would seem that a Mahallarika must be a person in authority over
the maid servants of the house.
3 This was also appertaining to the rank of women employed
in the harem. In latter times this place was given to eunuchs.
4 As kings generally had many wives, it was usual
for them to enjoy their wives by turns. But as it happened sometimes
that some of them lost their turns owing to the king's absence,
or to their being unwell, then in such cases the women whose turns
had been passed over, and those whose turns had come, used to
have a sort of lottery, and the ointments of all the claimants
were sent to the king, who accepted the ointment of one of them,
and thus settled the question.