Ik- » VII formal 5ex relations the first attitude which a little girl learns towards boys is one of avoidance and antagonism. She learn; to observe the brother and sister taboo towards the boys of her relationship group and household, and togethe-with the other small girls of her age group she treaf all other small boys as enemies elect. After a little girl is eight or nine years of age she has learned neve-to approach a group of older boys. This feeling of antagonism towards younger boys and shamed avoidance of older ones continues up to the age of thirteen or fourteen, to the group of girls who are just reaching puberty and the group of boys who have just been circumcised. These children are growing away from the age-group life and the age-group antagonisms; They are not yet actively sex-conscious. And it is at this time that relationships between the sexes are least emotionally charged. Not until she is an old married woman with several children will the Samoan girl again regard the opposite sex so quietly. When these adolescent children gather together there is a good-natured banter, a minimum of embarrassment, a great deal of random teasing which usually takes the form of accusing some little girl of a consuming passion for [86] FORMAL SEX RELATIONS decrepit old man of eighty, or some small boy of t>eing tne fat^er °^ a buxom matron's eighth child. Occasionally the banter takes the form of attributing affection between two age mates and is gaily and indignantly repudiated by both. Children at this age meet at informal siva parties, on the outskirts of more formal occasions, at community reef fishings (when many yards of reef have been enclosed to make a great fish ^p) and on torch-fishing excursions. Good-natured tussling and banter and co-operation in common activities are the keynotes of these occasions. But unfortunately these contacts are neither frequent nor sufficiently prolonged to teach the girls co-operation or to give either boys or girls any real appreciation of personality in members of the opposite sex. Two or three years later this will all be changed. The fact that little girls no longer belong to age groups makes the individual's defection less noticeable. The boy who begins to take an active interest in girls is also seen less in a gang and spends more time with one close companion. Girls have lost all of their nonchalance. They giggle, blush> bridle, run away. Boys become shy, embarrassed, taciturn, and avoid the society of girls in the daytime and on the brilliant moonlit nights for which they accuse the girls of having an exhibition-istic preference. Friendships fall more strictly within the relationship group. The boy's need for a trusted confidante is stronger than that of the girl, for only the most adroit and hardened Don Juans do their own [87] COMING OF AGE IN SAMOA courting. There are occasions, of course, when two youngsters just past adolescence, fearful of ridicule^ even from their nearest friends and relatives, will slip! away alone into the bush. More frequently still an; older man, a widower or a divorced man, will be a; girl's first lover. And here there is no need for an--ambassador. The older man is neither shy nor frightened, and furthermore there is no one whom he can! trust as an intermediaryj a younger man would betray; him, an older man would not take his amours seriously. "■• But the first spontaneous experiment of adolescent chil-;; dren and the amorous excursions of the older men* among the young girls of the village are variants on^ the edge of the recognised types of relationships j so also is the first experience of a young boy with an older] woman. But both of these are exceedingly frequent occurrences, so that the success of an amatory experience is seldom jeopardised by double ignorance. Nevertheless, all of these occasions are outside the recognised forms into which sex relations fall. The little boy and gjrl are branded by their companions as guilty of tautala Id tin (presuming above their ages) as is. the boy who loves or aspires to love an older woman, while the idea of an older man pursuing a young girl appeals strongly to their sense of humour; or if the girl is very young and naive, to their sense of unfitness. "She is too young, too young yet. He is too old," they will say, and the whole weight of vigorous disapproval fell upon a matai who was known to be [88] I I FORMAL SEX RELATIONS the father of the child of Lotu, the sixteen-year-old keble-minded girl on Olesega. Discrepancy in age or experience always strikes them as comic or pathetic according to the degree. The theoretical punishment which is meted out to a disobedient and runaway daughter is to marry her to a very old man, and I have heard a nine-year-old giggle contemptuously over her mother's preference for a seventeen-year-old boy. Worst among these nnpatterned deviations is that of the man who makes love to some young and dependent woman of his household, his adopted child or his wife's younger sister. The cry of incest is raised against him and sometimes feeling runs so high that he has to leave the group. Besides formal marriage there are only two types of sex relations which receive any formal recognition from the community—love affairs between unmarried young people (this includes the widowed) who are very nearly of the same age, whether leading to marriage or merely a passing diversion; and adultery. Between the unmarried there are three forms of relationship: the clandestine encounter, "under the palm trees," the published elopement, Avaga, and the ceremonious courtship in which the boy "sits before the girl"; and on the edge of these, the curious form of surreptitious rape, called moetotoloy sleep crawling, resorted to by youths who find favour in no maiden's eyes. In these three relationships, the boy requires a con- [89] COMING OF AGE IN SAMOA FORMAL SEX RELATIONS fidant and ambassador whom he calls a soa. Where | boys are close companions, this relationship may extend | over many love affairs, or it may be a temporary one, ?! terminating with the particular love affair. The soa ) follows the pattern of the talking chief who makes 1 material demands upon his chief in return for the im- ,j material services which he renders him. If marriage results from his ambassadorship, he receives a specially , fine present from the bridegroom. The choice of a J soa presents many difficulties. If the lover chooses a 1 steady, reliable boy, some slightly younger relative devoted to his interests, a boy unambitious in affairs of i the heart, very likely the ambassador will bungle the whole affair through inexperience and lack of tact. But if he chooses a handsome and expert wooer who knows just how "to speak softly and walk gently," then as likely as not the girl will prefer the second to the principal. This difficulty is occasionally anticipated by employing two or three soas and setting them to spy on each other. But such a lack of trust is likely to inspire a similar attitude in the agents, and as one over- v cautious and disappointed lover told me ruefully, "I had five soas, one was true and four were false." Among possible soas there are two preferences, a brother or a girl. A brother is by definition loyal, while a girl is far more skilful for "a boy can only approach a girl in the evening, or when no one is by, but a girl can go with her all day long, walk with her and lie on the mat by her, eat off the same platter, and [90] whisper between mouthfuls the name of the boy, speaking eyer °^ him, how good he is, how gentle and how true, how worthy of love. Yes, best of all is the soajafnsy the woman ambassador." But the difficulties of obtaining a soafafine are great. A boy may not choose from his own female relatives. The taboo forbids him ever to mention such matters in their presence. It is only by good chance that his brother's sweetheart may be a relative of the girl upon whom he has set his heart j or some other piece of good fortune may throw him into contact with a girl or woman who will act in his interests. The most violent antagonisms in the young people's groups are not between ex-lovers, arise not from the venom of the deserted nor the smarting pride of the jilted, but occur between the boy and the soa who has betrayed him, or a lover and the friend of his beloved who has in any way blocked his suit. In the strictly clandestine love affair the lover never presents himself at the house of his beloved. His soa may go there in a group or upon some trumped-up errand, or he also may avoid the house and find opportunities to speak to the girl while she is fishing or going to and from the plantation. It is his task to sing his friend's praise, counteract the girl's fears and objections, and finally appoint a rendezvous. These affairs are usually of short duration and both boy and girl may be carrying on several at once. One of the recognised causes of a quarrel is the resentment of the [91] COMING OF AGE IN SAMOA first lover against his successor of the same night, "for the boy who came later will mock him." These clandestine lovers make their rendezvous on the outskirts of the village. "Under the palm trees" is the conventionalised designation of this type of intrigue. Verj often three or four couples will have a common rendezvous, when either the boys or the girls are relatives who are friends. Should the girl ever grow faint ot dizzy, it is the boy's part to climb the nearest palm anc fetch down a fresh cocoanut to pour on her face in lieu of eau de cologne. In native theory, barrenness is the punishment of promiscuity j and, vice versa, only persistent monogamy is rewarded by conception. When a pair of clandestine experimenters whose rank is so low that their marriages are not of any great economic importance become genuinely attached to each other and maintain the relationship over several months, marriage often follows. And native sophistication distinguishes between the adept lover whose adventures are many and of short duration and the less skilled man who can find no better proof of his virility than a long affair ending in conception. Often the girl is afraid to venture out into the night, infested with ghosts and devils, ghosts that strangle one, ghosts from far-away villages who come in canoes to kidnap the girls of the village, ghosts who leap upon the back and may not be shaken off. Or she may feel that it is wiser to remain at home, and if necessary, attest her presence vocally. Jn this case the lover FORMAL SEX RELATIONS braves the house; taking off his lavalava, he greases his body thoroughly with cocoanut oil so that he can slip through the fingers of pursuers and leave no trace, and stealthily raises the blinds and slips into the house. The prevalence of this practice gives point to the familiar incident in Polynesian folk tales of the ill fortune that falls the luckless hero who "sleeps until morning, until the rising sun reveals his presence to the other inmates of the house." As perhaps a dozen or more people and several dogs are sleeping in the house, a due regard for silence is sufficient precaution. But it is this habit of domestic rendezvous which lends itself to the peculiar abuse of the moetotolo, or sleep crawler. The moetotolo is the only sex activity which presents a definitely abnormal picture. Ever since the first contact with white civilisation, rape, in the form of violent assault, has occurred occasionally in Samoa. It is far less congenial, however, to the Samoan attitude than moetotolo, in which a man stealthily appropriates the favours which are meant for another. The need for guarding against discovery makes conversation impossible, and the sleep crawler relies upon the girl's expecting a lover or the chance that she will indiscriminately accept any comer. If the girl suspects and resents him, she raises a great outcry and the whole household gives chase. Catching a moetotolo is counted great sport, and the women, who feel their safety endangered, are even more active in pursuit than the [93] COMING OF AGE IN SAMOA men. One luckless youth in Luma neglected to n move his lavalava. The girl discovered him and h< r sister succeeded in biting a piece out of his lavalai i before he escaped. This she proudly exhibited tK-next day. As the boy had been too dull to destroy h" lavalava, the evidence against him was circumstanti;.' and he was the laughing stock of the village; the chi!- f dren wrote a dance song about it and sang it after him wherever he went. The moetotolo problem is compli- i cated by the possibility that a boy of the household '-may be the offender and may take refuge in the hue : and cry following the discovery. It also provides the j girl with an excellent alibi, since she has only to call \ out "moetotolo" in case her lover is discovered. "To . the family and the village that may be a moetotolo, J« but it is not so in the hearts of the girl and the boy." Two motives are given for this unsavoury activity, anger and failure in love. The Samoan girl who plays the coquette does so at her peril. "She will say,