07 Dec




















Modesty and Temperance. Holland, custom familiarizes them to each other's that the dress of a (European) lady which was not of an equatorial girl, nothing being so moral and so READE in Savage Africa, "in the excessive deshabille feelings than the merely mixing with society of a say that after a short time, after an habituation which eyes as much as if they went wholly wrapped in gar- than by the truth in nature always appearing as it is. Speaking of the naked women of New Ireland, Dr. "There is nothing voluptuous/' says W. WINWOOD is by no means long, one finds nothing objectionable ing in the inhabitants of the tropical islands. It should ments." "Where all men go naked," says G. FORSTER in in this total absence of clothing. I have often noticed SNOW, in A Two Years' Cruise off Tier Y a del Fuego, cut according to the prevailing style, attracted my no- tice more strongly than did the entire absence of cloth- ZIMMERMANN (above quoted) says: "Indeed, I must 130 not clothe, gives one, I believe, less impure and sensual "by false modesty by covering and partly clothing, unlikely to excite the passions as nakedness." Intermingling with savages of wild lands who do A Voyage Round the World, "as for instance, in New higher kind."

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