[The Soul of the Far East by Percival Lowell]@TWC D-Link book
The Soul of the Far East

CHAPTER 4
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If, however, it be the female with which man has most to do, she is allowed to bestow her name upon her male partner.

Examples of the latter description occur in the use of "cows" for "cattle," and "hens" for "fowls." A Japanese can say only "fowl," defined, if absolutely necessary, as "he-fowl" or "she-fowl." Now such a slighting of one of the most potent springs of human action, sex, with all that the idea involves, is not due to a pronounced misogynism on the part of these people, but to a much more effective neglect, a great underlying impersonality.

Indifference to woman is but included in a much more general indifference to mankind.

The fact becomes all the more evident when we descend from sex to gender.

That Father Ocean does not, in their verbal imagery, embrace Mother Earth, with that subtle suggestion of humanity which in Aryan speech the gender of the nouns hints without expressing, is not due to any lack of poesy in the Far Oriental speaker, but to the essential impersonality of his mind, embodied now in the very character of the words he uses.


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