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Erotic Historyof France

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The document appears to describe a catalog of erotic books published by The Panurge Press in the early 20th century.

The novel Black Lust describes the experiences of a British woman, Grace, who is taken by African tribesmen after their attack on Khartoum, and her developing relationship with one of the tribal leaders.

The document text provides explicit descriptions of various erotic and sexually explicit books, including themes of torture, perversion, and non-consensual sex.

..J..

^^E^
SOME RECENT PRIVATELY PRINTED

AND LIMITED

EDITIONS

f BLACK LUST hy Jean de Villiot The love and hate of a white woman for a
chief

black Mohammedan the overtone of this historic novel whose background paints the native tribes in the Valley of the Nile before This diabolic novel is an encyclopedia the turn of this century. of venery, a kaleidoscope of perversions, a jungle of horrors.

forms

Limited to 2000 press-numbered copies.

\ CHASTITY BELTS by Esar Levine The only full-length account ever written of one of the strangest methods devised to bridle the privates of women. This volume
subject for the author has inis a factual encyclopedia of the cluded anecdotes, secret memoirs, court trials, short stories, newspaper accounts and numerous full-page illustrations of these belts.

Limited to 2000 press-numbered copies.

EUNUCHS, ODALISQUES AND LOVE


by Nicholas Fromaget
fascinating novel

dealing with a Frenchprotagonist is an insatiable lover who slakes his lust at every opportunity and whose venereal hazards reveal the extravagance of harem sexuality and the parts played by eunuchs and odalisques.
of oriental

passion

man's amatory adventures in Turkey.

The

Limited to 2000 press-numbered copies.

f Modern women,

MADAME SEX

by Dr. Isaac Goldberg

sex psychology has opened the door to a new gallery of This is passion-driven erotomaniacs of different types. Gruethe first collection of short stories ever written about them. perversions rub shoulders with normal love, while the comic some

profundity of these stories recalls Pantagruel and Panurge.

Limited to 2000 privately printed

copies.

THE GODS OF GENERATION

by

J.-A.

Dulaure

This immense history is the most documented work on erotics The author's enormous reever published by the Panurge Press. searches and lengthy textual matter, and his hundreds of notes and annotations, comprise the most comprehensive guide on the worship of obscene Gods and phallic religions.

Limited to 2000 privately printed copies.

EROTIC FAIRY TALES

by the Abbe de Voisenon

They discuss fairy tales are for adults only. the eternal batde of the sexes and are liberally sprinkled with high lights on marital indelicacies, the higher mysteries of esoteric passion, complicated cuckoldry, sophisticated tomfooleries, indiscreet virgins, and hilarious erotic adventures of all sorts.
These superlative
Limited to 1000 press-numbered copies.

THE ARABIAN ART OF LOVE


by Carlisle E.

Viman

This work deals with Arabic love-life in the most intimate and serious way, quoting hundreds of holy sheiks and others on the most esoteric phases of physical love-making. It includes fascinating miscellanea on curious sexualia, electuaries, aphrodisiacs, facetious folklore, and al munkir.
erotic
tales,

Limited to 2000 privately printed copies.

THE MERRY NIGHTS

of Straparola

This collection of panurgic stories is a veritable handbook on amorous intrigue but it is vastly more facetious than the Heptameron or the Decameron. Its contents include Trust Not a Friend, The Way of All Wives, A Mistake in the Dark, The Revenge Indelicate, Cuckolds Will Be Cuckolds, etc.

Limited to 1000 press-numbered copies.

ALL PANURGE PRESS PUBLICATIONS ARE $5.00 EACH

THE EROTIC HISTORY OF FRANCE

Of this work,
the erotic history of France

and
only

its

erotic literature,

woo

copies have been printed

for private collectors of

panurgics and sexualia

e^e^e^E^e^e^(!^^!^?^e^e^^e^e^

THE EKOTIC HISTORY OF FBANCE


INCLUDING A MISTOEY OF
EBOTIC LITEMATUKE
ITS

BY MENEY

L.

MAECHANB

YOEK PRIVATELY FEINTED THE FANUEGE PEESS


1933

Copyright, i^sSy ^y The Panurge Press, Inc. Printed in U.S.A.

INTRODUCTION

PAGE

BOOK
CHAPTER

MEDIEVAL AND RENAISSANCE


PAGE

27

SEXUALITY IN MEDIEVAL FRANCE


II

35

INDECENT FABLIAUX AND FARCES


III

45

TROUBADOURS AND COURTS OF LOVE

BOOK

II

THE SIXTEENTH AND SEVENTEENTH


CENTURIES

IV

59

THE SIXTEENTH CENTURY


V
75

THE SEVENTEENTH CENTURY

BOOK
VI

III

THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY


93

THE GOLDEN AGE OF LOVE


VII

114

ANTI-ROYAL AND ANTI-CHURCH LITERATURE


11

CONTENTS
CHAPTER
PAGE

VIII

THE OBSCENITY OF THE THEATRES


IX

134

142

VENEREAL VERSES
SECRET CLUBS AND PERVERSIONS
XI

147

154

CELEBRATED PORNOLOGISTS
XII

OTHER CELEBRATED PORNOLOGISTS


XIII

174

198

PORNOGRAPHIA RAMPANT

BOOK
XIV

IV

THE NINETEENTH CENTURY


213

THE NAPOLEONIC REGIME


XV
220

BABYLON ON THE SEINE


XVI

238

THE HEYDAY OF OBSCENE ART


XVII

THE REIGN OF THE PROSTITUTE


XVIII

244

253

MASTERS OF EROTIC LITERATURE


XIX 271

PUBLISHERS OF EROTICA
XX
280

VENUS VICTORIOUS
12

INTRODUCTION THE EROTIC HISTORY OF FRANCE

THE EROTIC HISTORY OF FRANCE

THIS book sets itself the interesting and intriguing task of writing
the erotic history of France and
its

erotic literature. Perhaps

someone
is

will inquire

why we choose
a

such a theme, and what profit

to be derived

from

knowledge of the numerous piquant and


It is possible, too,

gallant details that

we shall meet on our quest.


wonder about the

that

some reader

will

latter part of the title:

The

History of French Erotic Literature.


this phrase?

Let us spend a

What is the justification for few moments now in trying to under-

stand

why France should be chosen as the subject of an erotic history; why the history of the vast system of practices connected
with the most unbridled and diverse expression of sex
of the Gauls
is

life in

the land

of importance for us.

Then we

shall

be in a position

to realize the
shall

tremendous value of French erotic writings, which


this

be our guides in our expedition through


nice question whether there
is

land of love.

It is a

an

essential

and an

all-

pervasive difference between the different races of mankind. But

whatever be the truth about

this

very moot question,

it is

an indisas

putable fact that France has for


the

many

centuries been

renowned

home par excellence

of eroticism, and

Frenchmen

as the typical

representatives of the erotic spirit and practitioners of the erotic art.

This by no means implies that there

is

something inherent in the

French which impels them to


stating a fact

this

type of activity.

We are merely

which can be buttressed by numerous phenomena,


15

THE EEOTIC HISTORY OF FMANCE


historical

and

sociological.
all

Many investigators have asserted the funand have even denied that there has

damental unity of

nations,

been any development through the course of history, by which modern men, for instance, have

come into

the possession of

new traits of
critic

character or elements of physical structure.

The French

Remy de Gourmonthas gone so far as to develop a quasi-law of history which claims that in
all

ages and in

all

climes

the same diversities which separated classes of


at a

men are alike, and men and individuals


it is,

bygone age are


view
is

still

observable today, mutatis mutandis.

If this

true,

and

we

incline to believe that

then the

sources for the development and importance of the erotic motif


in

French culture are to be led back not French people but

to certain structural

peculiarities of the

to certain peculiarities in
at

their history
traits first

and sociological organization. Just


it is

what date

these

became manifest

difficult to assert

with precision.
to

During the Renaissance period, when new blood began

run in
first

the veins of the awakened and enlightened Europeans, and the


fruits of the

new

culture

became documented

in literature,

we

are

already able to discern the strength of this motif.

Of

course at this

time other nations of Europe, the Italians principally and also the

Germans, were producing

similar works. Indeed, the beginning of

this literature as forsooth of

the whole drive and potency of the

Renaissance

is

to be seen in Italy; but at

any

rate this direction

manifested in literature was the reflection of tendencies continued,


developed, and augmented which at a later date

made France

the

mundane residence of Venus in Europe.


There
France in
list

are so
this
all.

many
a

items which testify to the importance of


it is

connection that

difficultnay, impossible
illustrations will

^to

them

Only

few

facts

and

now

be cited
the

as witnesses to the truth of

our contention.

We

appeal

first to

testimony of language.

The existence of certain words in a language


16

THE EKOTIC HISTOMY OF FRANCE


prove that institutions represented by these words are found among
the people speaking that language. If these words have been bor-

rowed by other languages,


borrowed from the people

it is

clear that the institutions

were

who first employed

these words. Thus,

many
their

musical terms

show

their Italian origin; psychological terms

German

origin; etc. Characteristically

enough, the greatest

number

of erotic

words spring from French.


as

Furthermore, France has long been recognized


all

the source of

types of art and literature connected with the erotic sphere. In


times,

modem

France has been the producer of novels,

tales

and

dramas dealing in divers ways and from exceedingly varied viewpoints with sexual love. France exported these products to every

other nation of the world.

Why

is it,

for instance, that

when we
its

think of the French influence

we

immediately conjure up certain


char-

notions about the naughtiness and venereal escapades of


acters.5

Why

is it

that the majority of erotic books are French?

Why
Do

is it

that

naughty picture cards and various other indecent


rest of the

drawings have been marketed to the

world from France.^

not these facts serve to bolster up the truth of our contention

about the primacy of France in the erotic realm!


Finally, Paris has long

been the center of modes in dress for the

world, from which

world created.

new modes are dictated and the chic of the Any adult who has tried to understand the delirious
women's
clothing, will conclude without
is

and apparently chaotic alternation of modes and fashions and designs, especially in

any

The latter contends that clothes were not invented because women were modest, but because they were immodest. That is, women did not cover
shadow of a doubt
that the anthropologist
right.

their nakedness because they

were disturbed

at

being seen in

full

view.

Women

concealed part of their anatomy in order to make

themselves more seductive. In short,


17

women

concealed those por-

THE EEOTIC HISTOHY OF FEANCE


rions of themselves

which were not altogether

esthetically satisfac-

tory in order to increase their charm for men.

Now when women


pampered

reveal their nakedness today, or carefully selected and

portions of their nakedness, they are carrying out this motive attrib-

uted to them by the student of

human

evolution. Fashions change,

apart from the sheerly economic motives of profit to designers and

manufacturers of clothing, because


tions to be revealed to unsuspecting

it is

necessary for
a little

new

attrac-

man:

more

of the leg or
little differ-

little less

a little

more of the

breast or a

little less

ent outline to the female form,

more

flesh or less

a these are the

dominant motivations for the unaccountable panorama of the mode.


Is it,

therefore, to be

wondered

at that Paris,

which more than any

other city in the world has cultivated the erotic, and has undergone
a long

and rigorous schooling


is

in indulging every

whim and

every

taste in the erotic,

also the arbiter of destiny in fashion?

These remarks on the importance of France


erotic activity in the

as the center of

Occident during

modem

times will serve

to justify the present project of writing an erotic history of France.

We

are

now

ready to take up the question about the sources of

this history.

To what

materials or

phenomena

shall

we

turn for

information about the successive stages of this development? There


are

many

possible procedures.

One might go through


select
all all

the

files

of French legal archives and

matters connected with the erotic realm. If

we were
we

to

trace

laws, injunctions, prohibitions, litigations, etc. connected

with

this field,

and then systematize and analyse them,

should

certainly be
in France.

on the way to tracing the history of these questions


trace
all

Thus we might

the laws connected with the

regimentation of brothels and prostitutes and thus arrive at the


history of this question; or

we might

collect

all

references to incest,

both prohibitions or records of

cases,

and thus develop the history

THE EMOTIC HISTORY OF FHANCE


of this aspect of erotic affairs,
all

the while proceeding on the


in the

very obvious assumption that whatever becomes recorded

law

is

not an abstract invention or speculation but rather a record

of actual existing conflicts in

human

affairs.

Closely allied to this procedure

would be the

analysis of the

church's reaction to the domain of sex. If

we were

to collect the
if

sermons, pamphlets,

etc.,

composed on these themes, and

we

were

to collate the decisions of ecclesiastical bodies concerning

the erotic,

we should have an enormous mass of materials for tracing

the history of this problem.

Another approach would be through the realm of medicine,


medical history and
instance,
vital statistics.

Using

this

road

we might

for

examine

all

available records concerning the origin

and

spread of syphilis in France, and


this

by

tracing the distribution of


it

plague throughout France, and the references to

in various

sources,

we

should be in a position to understand the significance

of this

malady and draw some conclusions about the conditions


it.

responsible for

This would be a clear contribution to the erotic

history of France and a compilation of such

monographs would

undoubtedly form a corpus of writings of great importance.

Another way would be

to collect the

low

linguistic usages, the

"bad words" of the French language, and by examining the data


of speech, endeavor to determine

where and whence

certain

words

entered the language.

By

doing so and by studying the semantic

changes in those words which have taken on a


coloring,

new and

erotic

we

could write the erotic history of France from the

philological point of view.

This

effort

would be considerably

supplemented by the cognate activity of collecting the folk songs

and proverbs of the land, which would generally afford us


insights than single words.

fuller

Or we might make

a collection of objects connected with the

19

THE EEOTIC HISTOEY OF FKANCE


domain of
sex, all sorts of appliances for aiding

and augmenting

carnal pleasures, for abetting the normal and appeasing the perverse

impulse. Such a collection properly labeled and understood,

would

be an invaluable
to professional

We come
all

at

museum for the illustration of actual practices men and sociologists. last to a different method. If we were to examine

the paintings and sculptures that are concerned with love, naked-

ness, sex activity, etc.,

we

should have an excellent method of

seeing the impact of this problem


therefore,

upon

successive ages.

We

are,

now no

longer dealing directly with the materials of

sex life or their relation to legal, ecclesiastical, or medical history,

but rather with their reflection in the mirror of

art.

The

painter

and sculptor hold the mirror up


capture and
fix,

to nature,

and the glimpses they


all

remain forever.

We

can read to

eternity the

message they wrote.

The

literary figure

we

have

just

employed

brings us to another and perhaps the greatest art

the

art of letters.

There may be great and


as in the other arts.

far reaching changes in literature as well

But

after

all,

the meaning with

which words
heard and

are laden cannot be dispelled and forgotten.

The word

spoken afar

off, retains

for us today, a goodly portion at least, of


it

the efficacy and verity

possessed then. Hence,

we

shall

choose

to trace the erotic history of


literature,

France

as reflected chiefly in its

the most potent of the productions of men.

We

shall

not altogether overlook the other methods

we

have enumerated,

and whenever possible


is

shall

employ them, but primarily our concern


prosaists,

with what French writers, poets and


in their words.

wrote; what they

saw and immortalized

The

Gallic spirit

was well equipped

to treat of these themes,

indeed, in a fashion unexampled

among

other nations.

What do

we

think of in the complex of vague notions that are comprised in

Vesprit gaulois?

certain clarity and lucidity

combined with a

20

THE EMOTIC HISTORY OF FRANCE


marvellous grace and finished levity. Freedom, wit, polish, are

not these the inevitable characters of the French mind and lan-

guage? Hence, in dealing with the enormous mass of materials

connected with the most dominant impulse of living things after


food-hunger, which

among human

beings

may assume

forms and

consequences awful and unspeakably nasty; in addition to being


responsible for exquisite joys, and happy, ordered lives, can

we

not see the importance of the French gifts of mind?


grace, and

It is

their

charm and wit

that lightens serious issues; and their


to us in proper perspective.

lucidity that clarifies

them

The

love
in

of leisure of these people, their joy in the exercise of the


all its

body

senses,

and of the mind in

all its

capacities

these

qualities

have made France one of the greatest and wisest nations in Christen-

dom.

And

if

we

cannot condemn too severely their sexual un-

restraint

and

perversities, let us

remember

that their high and

ennobling virtues vastly outweigh their eroticism.

The merry French people love words and are happy in the exercise of the pen. They love their language as no other nation and for many centuries have so cultivated it until it has become the
most
flexible

instrument in the hands of the trained writer. In

France, one can say everything

and that which


On

is

said

is

tolerable

even to the modest

ear,

because the magic of the language enables


the whole, the opinion of
is

one to overlook the subject matter.

Engel, expressed in his Psychology of French Literature,


true: that the
is

quite

preponderance of sexual matters in French

literature

much

less to

be attributed to unrestrained lustfulness than to

The French are not so much sexually passionate as sexually witty. The jokes and amorous adventures of the middle ages known as fabliaux never show a trace of really glowing sensuality. They are smirking tales of doubtful content told and punctuated by the laughter of fauns. The everlasting butt of the
the love of laughter.
21

THE EBOTIC HISTOMY OF FMANCE


humor
in these tales
is

the deceived husband; and up to this day

in the very latest boulevard comedies the

husband bears the brunt

of the laughter, even -with a masculine audience. Moreover, Rabelais

scarcely a page of

whose work

is

free

from sexual matters or

suggestions, has treated the sexual relationship with rough rudeness

but without any

evil intent,

without any secondary object, and

merely

as material for the satisfaction of his

own

love of laughter,

and that of
or obscenity. of this sort:
in

others.

There

is

no question of

earnestness, passion,

The same is true of another old book, one of the worst The Hundred Merry Tales of Antoine de la Sale
utter shamelessness, and reckless wit, but

which we discover

nothing that resembles real participation by the author in the sensual


activities of the

book.

Nevertheless, the conclusions of Engel apply to only one part


of French erotic literature.

One need merely mention


as

the erotic

writers of the eighteenth century: Sade, Bretonne, Dulaurens; and

such nineteenth century authors

Maupassant, Zola, Flaubert,


all

Gautier and Verlaine, to prove that

these poets and authors

were very much

in earnest about their eroticism.

For them,

it

was

not always the love of laughter, but

vital interest in

the material

that directed their pens to their artistic tasks.

And now

one word more concerning the plan of the book.


is

The

great age of uncontrolled love in France

the eighteenth century.

More than during

the Renaissance, and no less than the classic


life at

period of antiquity, sex ruled

that time. Naturally, literature

mirrored the reign of sex in countless productions which surpass

any previous or subsequent period in the


This representation of the
classical

erotic history of France.

age of French love will be the

climax of the book; the remainder will lead up to and

away from

it.

The

beginning will treat of the early period in France, the age of

knighthood and chivalry, the rule of the church and the song of
22

THE EKOTIC mSTOKY OF FMANCE


the troubadour. There will be passed in review the love court,

worship of the Virgin, fabhaux, medieval farces and other sexual


customs of that time. This will lead into the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries which foreshadow even greater vices and sextravagances.

Then

the grand epoch of French love will be presented with

its

multitude of amazing personalities and startling incidents. This


will be followed

by an

analysis of the nineteenth century, so near

to us

and

still

so responsible for so

many

elements of our

life.

The

book

will close

with the

last

years of the nineteenth century

for

most of the works produced by

later writers are accessible to


it

discerning readers. Perhaps at a later day

will

be opportune to

continue this history through the


century.

first

decades of our

own twentieth

All through this history there will be included significant surveys


of the general sexual situation of the times.
conditions really?

How

free

were

What

of prostitution?
esoteric

And

perversion?

What

were the most popular forms of

amusement? All these and

many

other questions having been disposed of,

we

shall

turn to

an examination of the

literature of the particular periods, first exeroti-

amining general trends and then describing the outstanding


cists of
is

successive ages.
I

One very
laid

unusual feature of this history


these erotic
listed,

the emphasis

have

upon quotations from

authors.

Not merely
possible
I

are their most important

works

but

whenever

have given a synopsis of the


is

plot, or

quoted

a typical extract. It

superfluous to indicate the value of this


it is

procedure.

Many

of these erotic classics are inaccessible and

certainly necessary, in a serious history of this kind, to describe

the contents of these works.


Finally,
I

must explain that the presentation which follows makes

no pretence to completeness. Apart from the utter impossibility


33

THE EEOTIC HISTORY OF FEANCE


of writing a complete erotic history of France, such an attempt

would

necessitate the insertion of obscene details

which

it is

neither

my

purpose nor pleasure to record. This volume has been written


I

for serious adult students of history and

have deliberately ex-

cluded anything and everything which would appeal to porno-

graphic-minded readers. For those

who may

be interested in more

detailed information, the bibliographical

works of Barbier, Brunet,

Gay and Querard

will

prove invaluable.

BOOK MEDIEVAL AND RENAISSANCE


I

SEXUALITY IN MEDIEVAL FRANCE

ITthe erotic history of France that the instinctive

IS

important to recognize at the outset of our investigation into

endowment

of

men remains unahered through all the ages and climes of the world. In our introduction we were concerned to establish the essential similitude of human beings in space that is, to show that despite

differences of nationality and race the fundamental and inexorable


instincts are the

same for every son and daughter of men. This fact

must be remembered when

we come

to study the history of the

manifestations of the dominant

human impulse within

the nation of

France.

This sexual

instinct,

which

its

people share alike with the rest of

the universe, has never throughout the ages suffered change or


diminution. But in every period
tions
it

has assumed different manifesta-

depending on the varied sociological conditions. Factors of

politics

and economics, of religion and philosophy,

in short, real

and

ideal,

served to build the channels for the flow of the stream

but the stream kept flowing unabated. Rich and poor, noble and
serf,

learned and ignorant,

all

were impelled by love and

felt its

sacred or, as the case


their instincts.

may

be, profane impulsion

and acted out

Now

in the

middle ages, what were the dominant forms of

sexual activity?

Or

to put the question

somewhat

differently:

how
life

did the expression of the sexual instinct and the forms of sexual

27

THE EKOTIC HISTORY OF FRANCE


differ

from those current among us today?

We

all

somehow have
all

the feeling that in those dim, dark days of the medieval period
life

was so much

in the control of the church, that certainly the


all

expression of the most heinous of

the instincts according to the

church's doctrine must have been suppressed to the point of extinction. Before

we
is

can answer

this question

we must

look at the

structure of medieval society.

There were,

as

well known, three strata in this social structure.

At

the top stood the king and his court of nobles,

who owned
work

vast

tracts of land as feudal lords.

These fortunate

individuals

were exof the

empt from work;

all

the menial, necessary, productive


their serfs,

world was accomplished for them by

whom they owned


protection,

bodily. All that they gave these slaves in return


in those lawless times this
al

was

and

was not

a small thing; there


life

were continu-

wars between

rival feudal

barons and the

of the

common man

was of no importance. Between these two

classes

was the clergy,

who ministered to both


inclination

the upper and lower group alike, but was in

and position more nearly akin to the former.

Now to

come back

to the question of eroticism. Despite the lip

service to poverty, chastity and obedience, despite the glorification

of purit}", the actualization of these ideals remained as impossible in

the religious middle ages as at other times. Nature can only be

conquered by obeying her, taught an ancient teacher; and the

church was to prove for

itself

the essential verity of these truths.

Each of the three


sition,

classes, living

on

a different level of wealth, poits

education and opportunity, gratified the sex instinct in

own way, but they had this in common:


instincts.

the public religiosity of the

period which impressed the age, did not alter the course of their

The church was very

early to realize this and hence their

institution of the confessional.

What
It

is

the latter but a shrewd

compromise with unalterable life?

must be admitted that men will

28

BOOK
sin. If

I:

MEDIEVAL AND EENAISSANCE


is

the church

incapable of

damming up

the flow of passion,


its

then

let it at least retain

some measure of control over

adherents

by
and

ascertaining

where the

flood has broken the dikes. Let

them

come and admit


inflict

their sins. Let the

church take cognisance of them

some slight penalty

for them.
its

But this candid capitulation

to sin and vice, this recognition of


slight penalties for
it,

inevitability, this assignation of

are they not

all

admissions of defeat.^ Indeed


if

are they not even greater incitements to wickedness? For

one can

get off so lightly,

why

even make the attempt to


class

live virtuously?

Let us begin with the lowest


utterly ignorant,

the

serfs.

Poor, miserable,

worked

to the bone, with their faces


,

ground by

poverty, the lives of this class were certainly nasty brutish and short.
It is

no wonder then that there were frequent


exercised
its

infractions of virtue

among them. Here the church


here its success was

greatest effect but even


all

slight. Chastity,

continence, fidelity, were


shall

too

infrequent, and again and again

we

meet

literary testimony to

these evil conditions.

Language was

foul

and coarse and there was

a fierce delight in unmitigated ribaldry. Girls and boys lost their


virginity very

young

and hence they were married


of the

off as early as

possible but not always in time, in spite of the hurry.

The girls were


and pity

continually at the

mercy

men

of the upper classes,

the pretty or shapely one especially. Life was short and difficult
sin

so
The

was not infrequent, but the confessional made

restitution.

poor had their

own brothels, and

divers other forms of

amusement

of a similar nature. Early they developed the coarse presentations

which were combinations of miracle play and


poor was then what
it

farce.

The life of the

has always been.

The general uncertainty of life, combined with the vast and fairly
unchecked power of the king, and to a
set the
lives

lesser

degree of his nobles,

pace for their

life. It is

no wonder that they led licentious


titanic proportions.

which occasionally assumed

We shall read

29

THE EBOTIC HISTOEY OF FBANCE


later of the

sumptuous gatherings of high born ladies and men where

the foulest talk circulated; and of the almost unbelievable richness

and

pomp of some of their orgies in which were


viii

enacted in the

flesh,

by living actors,
Italian

the most intimate and passionate scenes. Again, one

motive for the ItaUan invasion of Charles

was

his desire for

women, and

as

we shall see later,

he has

left us vivid

records

of his incredible exploits with the

winsome daughters

of Latium.

But,

we are inclined to ask, what


and high
ideality.

of knighthood? Surely there


different,

was

a portion of medieval society


in its purity

which was

was resplendent
discover to our

Unfortunately

we

great disillusionment that this institution


foul

was ridden by numerous

and vicious elements; that very early whatever nobility there

may have been in knighthood disappeared, and the service of woman became pretty confined to one area or function of the woman.
If

the knight did battle for the lady and went to extravagant lengths
it

in his ostentatious fidelity to her, like wearing a lock of her hair,

was

for a purpose. This lock of hair


his lady's

was not infrequently plucked


This institution
it

from

mons

veneris as

we

shall see later.

ultimately gave rise to such ugly and pervasive abuses that


perish.

had to

In connection with knighthood and the service of

women a word
its

should be said about the medieval cult of love which found


pression in the Minnesingers.

ex-

These songs composed by trouba-

dours and

less

frequently

by

knights, are part of the witness to the

importance of
ages.

woman

and the strength of love even in the middle


the tone of these songs
praises are
is

As we

shall learn

none too exalted

and the most passionate

sung to the physical beauties of

the beloved, and particularly to her sexual attractions.


esting

A most inter-

and unusual feature of the middle ages were the so-called

courts of love.

Here tournaments

of words are supposed to have

taken place in connection with questions of love.

Or

to vary the

30

BOOK
tions of the love

I:

MEDIEVAL AND RENAISSANCE


full

image, and to bring out the


life,

meaning of the

title,

certain ques-

occasionally ideal, but

more generally very

obscene, were argued as though before a court; and at the close of

the "litigation", a verdict was rendered. These decisions were fre-

quently later embodied in the actual

life

of the given groups

among
a

whom
But

the "court" had been held.


if

knighthood was not

all

a flower, the
it

church was not


as

all

cloud of sacred incense. Indeed,


consistent

would appear

though the most

and violent transgressions in the sphere of sex were comto preach sanctity
priests

mitted

by those appointed

and exemplify

it.

The
their

idleness,

power, and ignorance of the


their flock

combined with

unexampled hold upon

due to

their status, gave

them an

unlimited field for the exercise of their

lusts.

Outside of the church


the church's servi-

and within

it,

the minds and bodies of

many of

tors served not the Christ

but Priapus. Priests were

known

as vigor-

ous lovers and were sought after because of their prowess and
discretion.

Indeed

all

doors were opened to them. Their churches


pictures;

were occasionally even decorated with indecent

and the

monasteries and nunneries were the homes of the most indiscriminate perversions.
pression

Many
its

cloisters

were
its

virtually brothels.

The

sup-

upon the

sexual instinct of

clergy that the church had

sought to enforce in

injunction of celibacy proved a boomerang.

Not only was


lost.

the body not conquered but the soul was frequently

Hence
most

it is

no wonder that the

priest

became the

target of the
life

vitriolic criticism

and condemnation. His immoral

was an
to

outrage to any moral sensibility and


lash,

when

there was so

much

we must not be surprised at the quantity of anti-clerical


its

litera-

ture or

intensity.

This was one of the dominant motifs of medie-

val erotic literature

and has

lasted into

modem times.

Another and

related

theme was

anti-royalism.

The life of king and


31

court was also

THE EKOTIC HISTORY OF FMANCE


soaked in pornographic lubricity and
tant clouds.
its

putridity stank to the dis-

The

incessant and multiple erotic diligence and appli-

cation, the insatiability, cruelty,

and folly of king and noble was

at

the base of the mass of anti-royalist writing. Another motif, and in-

deed one that was prior to the ones

just

mentioned, was that con-

nected with the Virgin Mary. This innocent Mariolatry was, as


shall presently discover,strangely intertwined with erotical

we

elements

of

all sorts,

some of them rather shocking. Indeed, from being the

symbol of immaculateness and pure unsullied mother love she occasionally


is

became the patron

saint of unchastity.

This transformation

interesting in correlation with the

decay in the service of

women
in

noted in connection with knighthood.

What

is

most striking

many medieval
tive of all that

writings

is

the utter disrespect for

women,

the un-

speakably low estimate of the whole female sex,


is

who are representa-

base and wicked in

human

nature. This notion,

partly derived from experience, partly also from the low status of

woman, was however to


tion, at this time, of a

a great

measure influenced by the circulastories.

whole cycle of Buddhist


is

In these of

course, the poor female of the species

nothing but a sinner and a

snare for the entire race of men.

Let us say a word

now

about the literary forms of medieval


life

France in which these records of her erotic

are preserved.

good number of these were


survived
it,

distinctive of that period

and have not

while others have been transmitted but have assumed

different forms.

We will content ourselves with a mere mention of


their explanation

them

here,

and leave

and

illustration for the next

two

chapters.

There

are the fabliau (the tale), the farce, the tensor

(the report of the court of love) the dramatized farce, the chanson
(lyric)

and brothel poetry, and the chronique scandaleuse.


final

One

remark about the progress of medieval French


first

erotic

literature.

As we

find

it

we see something primitive,


32

coarse, un-

BOOK
very
earliest

I:

MEDIEVAL AND MENAISSANCE


few
genres, and in the

differentiated. In the early periods there are

but one, the fabliaux, aside from the panurgic anecdote

which

circulates

among

the people. These are rough, rude, and


artistic skill.

have no adumbration of

As time

goes on and culture

becomes somewhat more

differentiated,

more genres develop and


artistic

every type in turn becomes refined and hence amenable to

treatment. During the twelfth, thirteenth, and fourteenth centuries,

under the influence of the troubadours and knightly gallantry,

much

is

achieved. Poetry

is

developed to a high degree and even

becomes precious and

affected.

The

lyric poetry of the fifteenth

century shows sophistication and already gives finished expression


to satire. It
is

useful to

remember, although it is not entirely relevant


began to ravage

in this connection, that in this century syphilis

Europe, fixing men's minds to the realm of sex as never before, and
giving literature

many new themes both


all

in tragedy

and in

satirical

comedy.

By the end
century can

of this century

the genres of the medieval period

have been invented and are in active currency. Thus the fifteenth
also

show an admirably simple and genuinely homely

lyricism in Villon for example.

The

gradual growth of cities and

the rise of the middle class created a need for a

writing more suited to the activities of this group.

new type of The highfalutin,

pampered, precious gallantry of knightly writing was no longer to


the taste of these groups, for
it

corresponded to nothing in their hfe.


see

In the sixteenth century


gallantry like

we

by the

side of the

romance of

Amadis with

its false

sentimentality, erotic produc-

tions that are lyric, naturalistic, coarse

and finished
field.

in

short, eroti-

cism that covers the whole range of the

The

foulest brothel

poetry was to be found, but also the most deUcate and tender
emotional depictions; earnest reflectiveness and lewd buffoonery

both were to be met in the extensive erotic literature of the century.


33

THE EROTIC HISTORY OF FRANCE


And this plethora of works with all the anti-clerical and anti-royalist
broadsides and

bawdy outlines of sex continued into the seventeenth


of
all

century.

The growth and development


life

these types

was of

course only a reflection in letters of the intensity and development


of the actual erotic
life as reflected

in France.

We now turn to the history of this

in these literary forms.

CHAPTER

II

INDECENT FABLIAUX AND FARCES

THE

literature of the

middle ages

is

undoubtedly much beholden

to the formation

and propagation of the legends clustering

around the Virgin.


pied the medieval

The immaculate conception, in particular, occupoets considerably. One gets this impression not
this

merely from the frequency with which

matter

is

referred to,

but also from the intensity of the efforts many of the poets display in
espousing and establishing their belief.
ration of the Virgin could go,

To what extremes

this ado-

may be surmised from the fact that the monks of the Order of Mary drank up dish water and licked the
afflicted parts of lepers in
saint.

order to

show

their reverence for their

Mary
those

first

appears in the old French fabliaux and jokes as the

guardian of virginity; but she frequently also comes to the aid of

who have gotten into


tells

difficulties of their

own

making. Thus,

one of the fabliaux

woman who is surprised by her husband as she sports with a cleric. The latter dashes out of bed and hides. When the husband lies down beside his wife she jumps out of bed
of a

and simulates

insanity,

all

the while invoking the virgin; while the

deceived husband seeks to calm the apparently hysterical wife, the


cleric departs.

Although Mary
virginity, there
is

is

everywhere represented

as the guardian of
chasti-

one story of an abbess famed for her piety,

ty and service to Mary,

who

has

become pregnant. The night be-

35

THE EMOTIC HISTORY OF FRANCE


fore delivery she fervently implores the help of the Virgin to save

her from the impending shame; whereupon the former accompanied

by two
tact,

angels comes and delivers the abbess, keeping her

body inone

and then leaves the child with a hermit. There are other stories
aids in illegitimate enterprises, notably the

in

which the Virgin

of Caeser of Heisterbach in which she substitutes herself for the lady


superior who is leading a whore's
life

outside the cloister.

The aid of the Virgin is invoked in many other needs and distresses: The young priest who has fallen in love with a young girl calls upon Mary to help him in his suit; and the lover abandoned by his love, prays for a change of heart in the beloved, or offers his love to Mary who is faithful and never deceives a lover. In this feeling there are many sensual elements as numerous fabliaux will attest (collected in the book of Coincy ) Thus Mary reproaches a young priest who has
.

been unfaithful to her and reminds him that for love of him she can

open the heavens and admit him to her private chambers where
rich bed holds great pleasures of love in store for them.

a a

Or when

pious sacristan desires to kiss her feet she presents her face instead.

Or when a young priest slips a ring on the finger of a statue of Mary but becomes unfaithful to her, she soon permits herself to be won
back for
ever, despite her jealousy. In these instances the

mother of
as

God

is

entirely divested of her divinity

and

is

regarded merely

the loving, yielding woman.

This conception

is

rooted in the amalgamation of earthly and


essential characteristics are its duality,

heavenly love, whose

and

the exclusion of any other loves.

Man
if

cannot love earthly and


latter,

heavenly beings at the same time;


there
is

he chooses the

then

an end to loving the daughters of men.

Mary

takes

com-

plete possession of the lover's emotions

and for that reason she conalso the earthly

centrates
love.

upon

herself not

merely the heavenly, but

36

BOOK

I:

MEDIEVAL AND RENAISSANCE

Comparatively early, however, certain frivolous elements appeared by the side of this reverence for Mary. Faithless women
invoked her
as witness to their

"innocence", and the formulas


Sainte Marie\ 'por le cul dieu\
as are also 'par le
teste',

were more than

coarse.

Tor

le cul

^par les boiaus sainte Marie' are

very frequent;

cortez\ 'par les mamelles\ 'par les denz\ 'par la gorge', 'par la
'par la cuer Sainte
less

Marie\

Among the common people such thought-

and frequently vulgar invocation of the Virgin was customary.

In the church poems of Jesuit Jacob Pontanus, the poet can think
of nothing more beautiful in

Mary than her breasts,

nothing sweeter

than her milk, nothing more excellent than her belly.


It is

easy to understand the great reverence in which she was held

when one realizes


cult situations

her utter readiness to help even in the most


continually taught

diffi-

a fact

by

the priests. Indeed

when only

a simple prayer

was necessary to avoid unpleasant con-

sequences and to snap one's fingers at righteousness, every

man and

woman really received a charter of license.


It is

well

known

that the later comic poets, especially those

of Italy and Germany,

owe much

to the French fabliaux,

which
of de-

exercised great influence and inspired a very large


rivative works.

number

What

is

a fabliau? Pilz defines

it

as the poetic rep-

resentation of an adventure that takes place within bounds of

normal Hfe.

It

belongs to the class of epic, or epic-didactic poetry,


is

and

its

chief aim

to

amuse and
indicated

to arouse laughter. It

is this

gen-

eral character

which

is

by

the designations employed

by

poets to characterize their works, viz: une trufe, une boiirde, une
risee,

un gab. Later on a moral was gradually added. With few


composed
in octosyllabic

ex-

ceptions they are

rhymed

couplets.

They

are the poetry of the rising citizenry as opposed to the ideals of the

courdy-sentimental poetry. Three elements have participated in


their formation: the stream of Oriental stories

with their Buddhis-

37

THE EEOTIC HISTORY OF FEANCE


tic ideal

of the contempt of

women,

the low status of the minstrels,

and the moral decadence of the clergy.

The
it is

Buddhistic conception denied

woman

every right and per-

sonal dignity, regarding her as the inescapable

burden of man. She

who

keeps him in the bondage of sensuality and thus prevents


true
life. Its

him from achieving the

pronounced

ascetic character

inclines to emphasize the virtues of celibacy.

These notions reap-

pear in the fabliaux verses in their low valuation of marriage and


in their

tendency to attribute every

fiasco

and error of the man to

the

woman.
motives that actuated the low-born minstrels, to whose sa-

The
tiric

streak

many

a fabliau

owes

its

existence,

can scarcely be called


singers

noble. Ostentation,

combined with the poverty of the


if

and

the hope for jingling rewards


their audiences, supplied

they would

flatter

the opinions of
re-

ample material for laughter. This

sulted in a conscious effort to pander to the


lic

demands of

their

pub-

which demanded amusement and which was beginning

to feel

a definite antipathy to the knightly ideal of reverence for

women.

Furthermore, the disrespect of

women
its

is

also to

be attributed to

the disastrous influence of the clergy from whose pens so


fabliaux flowed; celibacy, too, and

many

consequences were subject

matter for

satire.

A
they

rude peasantry

as

yet untouched

by

refined culture tends to


life,

seek amusement in relating the occurrences of everyday


still

since
tales

lack

what seem

to us to be higher interests.

These

treat of the

most natural things, and they always excite the laugh-

ter of the ignorant peasant


tell

whose

greatest joy

is

to play a joke or

about

it later.

This hearty and even pleasant tone so


is

common

in

German

jokes despite their coarseness

alien to the
is

Frenchman
always on

who

toys with everything, titters over everything,


it

the lookout for the humorous and pursues

relentlessly

with a

3$

BOOK
he
is

I:

MEDIEVAL AND KENAISSANCE


his

measure of pride in

own

superiority.

Yet he

is

not malicious;

merely

light

and

frivolous.

Thus he laughs

at the stupid hus-

band who has had horns conferred upon him; for has he not done
the very same

many

times?

He

laughs at the prostitute cheated of


or
so
his

her hire, and at lovers.

He laughs at stories of priests which may


is

may

not end happily, because their conduct in erotic matters

rarely in accordance with their cowls and calling.

Above

all,

laughter

is

aroused

by

the cunning of

women,

their sensuality,

their fickleness, falsehood,

wantonness and gluttony. In most of

the fabliaux the whole story turns on an erotic situation and the
erotic joke
is

rarely lacking.

obscene stories
sible.

The greatest joy is derived from those where woman is drawn in the blackest colors posstories

This leads us to the conclusion that these

must usually

have been recited in the absence of those censured.

Many

of these tales excel in obscenity

and a

few of the imtreats of a

portant ones will


stupid knight
duties. In

now

be mentioned. Le sot Chevalier

who is

instructed

by

his

mother-in-law in his marital


oir parler

La demoiselle qui ne povoit

de foutre, a young

man

learns of the daughter of a certain knight


foutre

who

can't hear the

word

spoken without

falling into a faint.

He

decides to try

his luck

with her and offers

his services to that knight.

He

is

very

well received for the reason that he too becomes unconscious

when-

ever he hears lewd words.

The
la

girl falls in love

with him and they

become a happy
fi'aust

pair.

De

demoiselle qui neot parler de fotre qui

mal au cuer

treats of a similar situation.

For

his

Bijoux indis-

crets,

Diderot borrowed from the work of Garin: Le chevalier qui


cous et
les culs.

faisoit parler les

This

ability

was conferred upon


his conduct.

certain noble knight

by two

fairies in

reward for

The
The

third fairy promises that he will be well received everywhere.

prophesy

is

fulfilled

and he becomes

wealthy man. In

De

VEscui-

39

THE EHOTIC HISTOMY OF FEANCE


ruel,

young Robin

uses the inexperience of a girl in order to

win

his love.

The wanton
so obscene.

women is what makes most of the fabliaux These women enjoy foul words and coarse jokes, and
life

of

delight in cynical doubles entrendre and filthy oaths. It

is

apparent

from many references

in the poets Preine

and Bedier that


tales

women
and

were present

at the narration of

such obscene

and

farces;

Jean de Conde does not hesitate to put into the mouth of a noble
girl

obscene words and sentiments which are never uttered today.

For these reasons

women

can very
if

easily

be won, and the most

threadbare grounds will sufKce,


lieved.

the poets' words are to be be-

Thus, a priest gets into the bed of a virgin

who

struggles

against his attack

and seeks to

call for help.

He

asks her to remain


is

quiet for no one will

suaded

now believe in and capitulates. And why not?


pleasures;

her innocence; she

per-

Girls have the greatest en-

joyment in sensual
they
are, as

and no matter

how

inexperienced

soon as the

first bite is

taken of the apple, they are

greedy to devour the

rest.

girl will

wish to be married only

to a young, strong man. Should her wish not be gratified

and

should her parents compel her to be married to an old man, she


will bewail her years.

The young woman

will then experience as

much

discomfort in her enforced continence as will one whose

husband, whether owing to stupidity or inexperience, does not


fulfill his

connubial obligations. In these cases of course the lover

must

suffer.

When

a shield-bearer laments the fact that he has


entreats

slain his love

by the intensity of his embraces, another one


this does

him

for the

same death; but

not happen.

And no wonder,
satisfied,

for according to the poets one

woman

can suck the marrow out of

the bones of a hundred

men

before she will be

and to

prove

this point

they resort to a remarkable exegesis of two verses

in the Bible (Prov. 30, 15-16).

Even the
40

nunneries,

which should

BOOK
be the
ous
lusts.

I:

MEDIEVAL AND RENAISSANCE


most
lasciviall

seats of pious discipline, are the scenes of the

From

the newest novice to the abbess,

feel the prick

of the flesh.

Three nuns have found an obscene

picture, accordit

ing to another version un vit grossier et plenier, and bring


abbess to assign
declaring
self.
it

to the

it

to

one of them.

The

latter settles the dispute

by

to be a miniature

from her

psalter

and keeps

it

for her-

The

standing figures in the fabliaux and farces are the priest,


serf.

husband, wife, maid, procuress, knight, student and

The
much

priest

is

represented as a seducer

the fabliaux than in the middle high

much more frequently in German tales. He was very

sought after as a lover and there were good grounds for

this, as a

daughter once explained to her mother. "The knight and

the slave will spread abroad their exploits with me; but

when

have
It

lain

with the priest he must shut his mouth and keep


his

still."

was to

advantage as well

as

the

girl's,

to keep the matter


life,

secret.

As

a result of his inactive


lit.

and voluptuous

he became a

bon ouvrier en

His wiles to achieve

his aims are


is

numerous; but

once apprehended in a love scene he


tremulous coward.

revealed as a ludicrous,

The

stories

about husbands generally do not deal with the wise,

superior husband

who

sees

through the intrigues of his wife and

understands

how

to revenge himself

upon the seducer, or how

to

enjoy some escapades of his own; but rather with the


figure of the cuckolded and

common
justifi-

henpecked husband. Generally the

husband

is

old, ugly, stupid, naive or anxious

all

of

them

cation for his wife's extra-marital pleasures.

Woman is
drawn
and
in
all

seldom absent in these


conceivable colors.

tales.

Generally her beauty

is

The

breast especially appears to


it

be an important fact of feminine pulchritude:


full,

must be round

but not too

big.

For the designation of more private parts


41

THE EEOTIC HISTORY OF FRANCE


rude words are used.
wishes to shine; and

The more
it's

beautiful a

woman

the

more she
fall.

a short

way from
is

her vanity to her

Consequently the unfaithful wife


false, daring, unhesitating,

the usual type in the fabliaux,

mendacious, always ready for love and

always with enough presence of mind to avoid being caught in


her escapades.

The

virgin

is

usually naive. She

knows nothing

of love but

is

quite willing to be taught. This playing with naivete and erotic

innocence so attractive to the

German and Russian writers, is also employed by the French, but in a much coarser way. What was the reason for the pessimistic evaluation of women?
It

certainly

was not dictated exclusively by the

ascetic notions of

the middle ages about the inferiority of

women

and marriage. At

the end of the middle ages such harking back to the Bible or church
fathers

was

rare.

What

gives these satires their force

is

their tone
at the

of personal experience.

Thorough knowledge of the female is

base of these poets' warnings against marriage


different after marriage than they

for
A

girls are

much

were

before.

favorable judgto

ment about women would be very


behind
this entire catalogue of

difficult if

we had
tales.

depend

only upon the meagre words of praise in these

Nevertheless,

female vices there slumbers the


is

conviction that the female

mind

superior.

The

constantly reafter

occurring circumstance that the

woman emerges as victorious,


and jealousy
a

having taken advantage of the unworthy characteristics of the

man

his credulity, fear, clumsiness, inertia

is

an

indirect recognition of her power,

which one must have

knowl-

edge

of, if

one

is

to escape

it.

The
traced.

subject matter of these tales and farces has frequently been

Le Grand D'Aussy and Barbazan-Meon have

followed, in

their editions of the old

French fabliaux and contes, the treatment

of this subject matter throughout

many

centuries and in

many

42

BOOK
Romance

I:

MEDIEVAL AND RENAISSANCE


his general conclusion
is

languages. Bedier has investigated their sources in his


that the

Les fabliaux; and

raw

material

does spring from the Orient, but that the French poet has so devel-

oped these themes


esprit gaulois.

as to

make

his stories a

pure product of the

After the lapse of time, these dramatized farces were acted out.

They

generally consisted of one hundred to three hundred verses.

Few
1

of

them were ever written down and

still

fewer printed. All

that have

come down to us, about

150 pieces, date from the period


soties, closely related to

440- 1 450. After 1450 there appeared the

these farces but having real fools or clowns in the chief role.

The

Guild of lawyers, the Basoches, was most instrumental in developing the farces. Miraulmont, their historian,
tells

us that at set times

during the year they would present pieces in which they would
ridicule their

own

individual

members and

in editions secrettes

galantes des maisons particulieres.

On Shrove Tuesday they would


They would
deal with an imagi-

hold a session and

satirize

the law just as the choir boys did to the

church service
nary

at

Christmas time.

legal process usually of a

very coarse nature.

We don't know
bom six
months

much

about the repertoire of these societies but here are some


litigation:

examples dealing with


after the

Whether

baby

wedding can be considered

legitimate; a defloration case;

the jarce

du pect

(pet)

where man and wife accuse each other


which the woman brings

of

breaking wind in formal legal manner; or Les femmes qui de-

mandent

les

arresages in

suit for

non-

fulfillment of marital duties but later

becomes reconciled

to her

husband. Again there


wives.

is

no lack of farces dealing with unfaithful

Thus we

find the story of a one-eyed

man whose

wife

covers that one eye while her lover escapes; and then that of the
fool

whose wife

is

confined

much
43

too early.

The cunning

tricks
is

of amorous

women

play a great role in these farces, and there

no

THE EEOTIC HISTORY OF FKANCE


dearth of obscenity, but on the whole there
is

more of the

latter

and

less

of wit in the Germanic productions of that time than

in these

French farces or in the

Italian bejfe or burle tales.


it

gallantries of the clerics

were

also dramatized. In general

The may
as

be said that only a small fraction of the farces can be regarded

dramatized fabliaux which were but little used. However, the primitive

joy in piquant and panurgic situations

is

not to be mistaken in

them.

CHAPTER in
TROUBADOURS AND COURTS OF LOVE

ONE must not judge


ple, for

too harshly the licentiousness of the peo-

joy in erotic matters has been found


as

among

the high

and the low in the gray mists of antiquity

well as in the present.

The higher classes of that time were no exception. The plays which
were publicly produced
in

France during the reign of Henry

ix

were exceedingly

offensive.

Thus, The fimny

tale of

the physician
of a pregnant

who cures all diseases and makes the nose of the child
ivonian; or the boisterous and

merry

tale

which

describes the dis-

pute over a
before the

girl

between a young monk and an old gendarme, held


Cupid.

God

At

the time of Louis xi and Charles the

Bold there were representations comparable to those of antiquity


with absolutely naked
girls participating in scenes like
etc.

the Judg-

ment of

Paris, the

History of Noah,

Schnaase reports some of


at Lille in 1454
11,

the doings at a party that Philip the


the occasion of a
all

Good gave

on

summons

to a crusade issued

by Pope Pius

with

the accompanying revelry and license.


a

At one end

of the board
veil,

was

naked
breasts

girl

covered only by her long hair and a thin

whose

poured forth Hypocras a favorite drink; and on the


a

table there

was

naked boy

who

scattered rose water in an even

more naive

fashion.

The
scenes.

paintings and the tapestries of the rich

showed the same


century has
this

William Pepin,

a preacher of the fifteentli

to say:

'The

paintings and tapestries frequently display such dis-

45

THE EROTIC HISTORY OF FRANCE


gustingly lewd matters that passions are aroused in even the most
tranquil dispositions.
nobility.

These are usually found


that none

in the castles of the in the resiI

Would

to

Heaven

were even seen


I

dences of prelates and the clergy. But

cannot deny that

have

even seen certain lewd paintings in the interior of a famous church

which was decked out which

this

way

in honor of Easter. I

had them

removed and carried them elsewhere." The palace


Italian artists

at Fontainbleau,
I,

bmlt and decorated for Francis

had a mass

of lewd paintings according to the fashion of that time. Sauval says


that one could see represented in
as

them gods and

goddesses, as well

men and women

indulging in unnatural and horrible excesses.

In 1643 the regent queen caused


destroyed; and the loss amounted to

many

of these paintings to be
million francs.

more than half a

The handwritten

prayer books were decorated with miniatures;

and collectors saved those which portrayed offensive matters.


Brantome's writings constitute an inexhaustible source for evaluating the moral conditions of the higher society of that time.
writes:

He
of

"The gallery

of

Count du Chateau-Vilain, known

as Seign-

eur Adjacet, was visited


their admirers.

by

a horde of

women

in the

company

Their eyes were entranced by the splendid and

rare paintings that

hung

in this gallery.
beautiful

painting

which portrayed

They saw a very pretty women at the bath embracing


coldest

one another and doing one another various other kinds of love
service;

upon observing which, even the

nun or hermitess
I

could become ardent.

One

of the

women whom
'I

knew suddenly
it

turned to her lover and kissed him excitedly, intoxicated with


the amorous madness depicted on the wall:
longer. Quick, into the carriage
can't stand

any

and home.
"

am

burning!

Come

on!

We

will extinguish the

fire.'

How

widespread

this love for

exciting pictures was, can be gathered

from a sarcastic remark made

by

the Marquis d'Argens apropos of

Mary

Medici's destruction

46

BOOK
of a

I:

MEDIEVAL AND MENAISSANCE


had better
set all of Fontain-

number of
if

these paintings: "She

bleau aflame
enterprise."

she wishes to have some measure of success in her

Brantome

also relates the following: "I

knew
it

a prince

who

pur-

chased from a goldsmith a beaker of gilded silver which was a


masterpiece. All around, and even inside,
representations of

had

delicate but clear

some

figures of Aretino

and many scenes of co-

habiting animals. During the feasts that this prince gave, the beaker

would be passed around


and
of

who found
iii

great

women who had to drink from it amusement in it." And again: "At the time
to the

Henry

nobleman of

my

acquaintance presented his love


ladies of the court disporting

with a picture book, representing 32

themselves in venery with their admirers.


tain ladies

Among them were

cer-

who had two

or three or

more

lovers each, and these 32

exemplified 27 postures of Aretino.


nesses

The pictures were

perfect like-

some fully naked, some in the same clothes and coiffure


same was true of the men repIt

that they always wore; and the


resented. In short this

book was splendidly made.

cost about nine

hundred

thalens,

and the drawings were colored." Brantome furof the court ladies thus represented saw
all

ther relates that

when one

these pictures of herself she didn't feel at

insulted,

but rather

experienced a high degree of excitement. Obscene amusements

Were the order of the day with the


contemporary writings demonstrate.

gallant ladies of the court, as

Something more should be

said

concerning knighthood. This


it

institution possessed indubitable merits but

also

was disfigured

by many
notions

defects

which

are not at
it.

all

in accordance with the


it is

commonly held about

For generally

supposed that

knighthood and the Minnesingers were based on, and culminated


in,

the highest degree of reverence for

women. Yet

it

was anything

but that.

To be sure, the poet-lover of a


47

given lady regarded himself

THE EMOTIC HISTOKY OF FRANCE


as a vassal of his love,

and assumed the obligations of

this vassal-

dom and

its

privileges.

The

lady love was the feudal lord and he

served her in the expectation that his services would finally be

recompensed with the

desired, ultimate boon. In this

concept of
soon to

mutuality there lay a deeply immoral

moment which was

become the point of attack

for the annihilating criticism of knight-

hood. Since this mutuality was nearly always carried into the realm
of the sexual, the

homage

to

woman

soon was
all

lost.

Why?

Because

there had to result a gradual demolition of

marital relationships,
fideli-

and a revaluation of

all

moral conceptions concerning marital


life.

ty and purity of family

This strong emphasis on sexual matters was aided by the thor-

ough occupation with love


preponderant theme
being
solicited,

in

all its

phases

which

characterizes the

didactic poetry of that time. In the Minnesongs for example the


is

the corporeal attraction of the lady


love.

who
is

is

and the joys of physical

No attention

paid

to the spiritual qualities of the


as

woman, who indeed

has value only

an object for serving man's insatiable passions. Consequently,

pleasure in

woman

is

confined to the externals;

if

she possesses
in songs of

physical merits these are glorified

by her knight

appropriate praise. But

what

if

these corporeal attractions decay?

Then they become disesteemed, as are from the start all those women who have not been dowered with beauty, and are cast upon the junk heap. The Minnesongs can be pronounced to be
immoral in the wide usage of the term,
it is

if

only for the reason that

always a married

woman who

is

the mistress of the poet's

heart.

And since

there

was no lack of

jealous husbands at this time,

the singing troubadour was frequently compelled to use fictitious

names and
lady. It
is

allegorical signs in order to conceal the identity of his


this

circumstance that to a considerable degree spoils

the naturalness and truth of the experiences in these poems. But

BOOK
this reserve

I:

MEDIEVAL AND MENAISSANCE


in the foreground

does not extend to the physical charms of the beloved

which were always placed


utter candor.

and celebrated with

Her most

intimate beauties and private favors were

poetized and revealed to an interested world, and

what woman

could remain deaf to music so flattering to her

ear!

The forms

which the Minnesingers assumed were frequently very grotesque.

The

knights wore the shirt of their beloved, saved their hair,

often their pubic hair, and were present to lend a helping hand

when their lady-loves disrobed and retired.


had
his lip operated for

Ulrich von Lichtenstein

(1276) drank with great relish the water of his beloved's bath,

her sake,

etc.

Once

the lady's favor was

won, the happy lover did not have


faction of his impatient desire.

to wait very long for the satisrelationships took place with-

These

out delay and quite openly, and were sanctioned, indeed demanded,

by

society.

To

such a pass did matters reach, that the husband


to be content with a secondary, inferior posi-

was often compelled

tion in his wife's favor. Certainly one cannot


astic

become very

enthusi-

about the moral conditions of that time.


not extraordinary, therefore,
his

It is

when the poet

inflamed

by

the

charms of

beloved and reveling in the memories of sweet hours

of intimacy, gave such free rein to his fancy that his words were

somewhat too outspoken

for seminary

girls. It is

even pardonable,

for these songs are the expression of a genuinely experienced


tion.

emo-

Not

quite the same justification exists for the composition of

erotic verses

which

are calculated to dazzle or to


is

amuse by

their

brilliance, since in this case there

no inner feeling struggling for

expression that might,


speech.

however

slightly, excuse the license of

The low

moral standard of the Minne-poetry


it

is

also attribu-

table to the fact that

was not always knights who were the comis

posers of these songs, since a certain measure of talent

necessary

49

THE EMOTIC HISTORY OF FMANCE


for their composition,

which cannot be

learnt.

For the most

part,

itinerant singers, troubadours

dependent on the kindness of the

knight,

were the

creators of this poetry.

Troubadours (from trou-

ver) denotes discoverer, poet.

They

flourished in the period be-

tween the middle of the twelfth and fourteenth century. Their productions include violent satires against the clergy, didactic poems,
love songs and abstruse speculations anent the nature
their

but above
of love.

all,

They sought to establish

fame in the Tensons, in which

questions posed at various courts of love


fashion.

were treated

in pedantic

These tensons consisted of dialogues


these various speculative opinions

in alternating couplets

in

which

were

expressed. In their
life

own

land the troubadours led an idle and uncertain


a cordial

but they

found

welcome

at the palaces of the nobles

where they

consorted with low

villains.

This afforded them a

fine opportunity

to gather the anecdotes

and the chronique scandaleuse of the day


for the benefit of their hearers, with
their songs

which they afterwards utilized

due corrections. The unquestionable beauty of many of


is

nevertheless disfigured

by numerous

failings.

Thus

the tales are

sometimes extravagant and more often offensive, not merely in


expression but also in content.
into the

Many
by

obscene matters are even put

mouths of women.
is

Love
rules.

represented as an art

this poetry,

and reduced to

Hence
is

the expression. Saber d'amor: to be wise in matters of


this art, for

love. It

very likely that manuals were composed for


as preceptor.

which Ovid served


It

has already been mentioned that there existed a great predi-

lection for investigating the nature

and essence of love; and

this

brings us to the courts of love with their questions of the Minnesingers, frequently

very free ones, too! The

Roman

de

la

Rose is an

excellent example of this pedantic inclination to a scholastic consideration of love.

Even the

privileges

and obligations of the lovers

50

BOOK
were codified

I:

MEDIEVAL AND RENAISSANCE


as the

in such works
Which

Love Court of Raymond Vidal;


et

and the Liber de Arte honeste amandi

de Reprobatione inhonesti

Amoris of Andreas Capellanus. There were debates on such questions as these:

lover shows

more

affection

he who
he

is

so

jealous as to be disturbed

on the

slightest provocation, or

so prepossessed in favor of his love as not to be jealous


substantial proofs are at

who is even when

Which lover owes more to his love he who has won her heart after a long siege or he who has not to sohe who at licit so long? Which lover demonstrates his love more
hand?

the behest of his love absents himself from a tournament that he desires to witness,

or he who, again at the request of his love, accom-

panies her to a tournament he

would rather have


is

missed.

The

existence of these courts of love

certified

by numerous

poems of the troubadours. What we are not certain however is whether they were regarded as pastimes, or whether the decisions
of these courts really had any effect
first

upon the courtly

society.

The

of these suppositions seems the

more

likely.

Probably these

questions about love

were brought up

at social gatherings for the

delectation of the guests. Aretino would also

seem to be of

this

mind.
that
cer-

Schultz

is

doubtless right

both ladies and gallants


tain

when he says: "It is highly probable who had been following the suit of a
would
final

young man with

interest,

discuss the matter to deter-

mine whether the lover had already attained the


whether he was to suffer much longer." But

favor or

this sort of

amusement
to the writ-

and the court of love which gives decisions according


ings of Andreas are quite different things.

The
satire.

distortions of the knightly service of

women, and

the moral

excesses of the time afforded

ample material for didactic poetry and

There were those preachers who babbled about the good old

times and

who wished

to lead their misguided and neglected con-

temporaries back to morality and honor. These attempts were


51

made

THE EEOTIC HISTOEY OF FMANCE


in a very formal

manner by Maitre Ermenen,


( 1

for instance,

who
treats

composed Breviari d'Amor


of
its

288), a iiandbook of love

which

subject with

all

the available knowledge of that time, starting


in earthly love.

from divine love and ending

Raymond

Vidal com-

posed a volume in which he imparted wise doctrines to lovers.


Peire Giullem composed a novel in

which

love,

and her attendants,

grace, shame, and frivolity, appeared as allegorical characters.

All these attempts and numerous others pale

by comparison with

Roman de la Rose of Guillaume of Louis (ca. 1260) w^hich Jehan de Meung completed about 1300. In certain respects he
the
stands on the threshold between
gallantry to
sort,

two

periods.

The

earlier

knightly

women had
art of love

been succeeded by a

satirical

and superior

and the

was taught out of the treasure trove of rich

experience.
tions

The

pruriency and voluptuousness of the representa-

were

in accordance with the taste of the time.

The

satirical

treatment of the errors of society, combined with an amazing erudition, lent a prestige to this

work which

it

maintained throughout

the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries, even though there rose

up

among the

attacked

many who defended the old order.


Its

Lyric poetry of the troubadours had but a shadowy existence in


the fifteenth century.
its

rare and precious forms,

its

affectation,

new taste, which sought genuine, homely lyricism. Among those who satisfied the new demands were Froissart, Besselin and especially Villon, who was bom
concealed allusions did not appeal to the
near Paris, in 143
the loose student
1.

He came

to Paris to attend the university but

life

attracted

him much more than did

science,

and he was drawn deeper and deeper into the whirlpool of pleasure.
His chief occupation was aimer.

When one

of his sweethearts disa satirical


left Paris

missed him he revenged himself


for

by composing
Thereupon he

poem,

which he was publicly

flogged.

but not

before he had composed (in 1456) his will

the Small Testament.

52

BOOK
nies for

I:

MEDIEVAL AND RENAISSANCE


felo-

His miserable circumstances compelled him to perpetrate two

which he was twice sentenced

to the gallows

and twice

pardoned.

The

date of his death

is

1480 and 1490. His chief

work

is

unknown but it falls between the Grand Testament which he


It

composed

in the

shadow of imminent death by hanging.


poems
in

was

collection of ballads and


tives

which he bequeathed to

his rela-

and cronies that which did not belong to him and which the

heirs

would have
jest

to steal to

make

their

own.

To

his

enemies he

bequeathed a

or a term of abuse. His roguish songs were collecthis

ed by a friend under the title Repues franches. All


peculiar impression

works make

upon us with

their rapid alternation of the

coarsely erotic, and the noblest and purest of sentiment.

With

great candor he reveals to us his evil characteristics, and even his


crimes. All his

works are characterized by melancholy, humor, and


all

a naive devotion to his impressions of reality;


a

his

works breathe

deep truthfulness. His expression

is

frequently foul and obscene,

and the wordplays which he


ses

skillfully scatters
allusion.

throughout

his ver-

have nearly always an obscene

Despite

all his

short-

comings, Villon remains the best folk poet before Marot, and
stands in conscious opposition to the lascivious, sentimental, idyllic

poetry which was the accepted thing in France since the


la

Roman de

Rose.

In the realm of the humorous story the


tions are the

two outstanding produc-

Mensa Philosophica and the Cent Novelles Nouvelles.


1475 and
is

The first was printed in


author's purpose
is,

attributed to Michael Scot.

The

in his

how

to speak at the

own words, to teach his readers what and table. The fourth part contains a collection of
stories.

"honorable, merry" stories that are adapted for table amusement,

and include
a

a great

number of indecent
it,

Bebel has borrowed


(vii, 5

number of his Facetiae from


is

Boccaccio's

Decameron

and

IX, 2)

beholden to

it,

and Gargantua's table amusement looks


53

THE EEOTIC HISTOMY OF FKANCE


back to
it

as prototype.

Michael Scot,

who

died in 1291, can un-

hesitatingly be regarded as the author of the first three treatises.

The
as

fourth treatise, however,

which includes the

erotical tales

is

very likely the production of a Dominican monk.

The Mensa served


them from

model for the later narrators of humorous

tales.

The Cent Novelles Nouvelles,


get into print before i486; they

so called to distinguish

the Cent Nouvelles antiche, were produced about 1460 but did not

may be regarded as the first French


for this purpose.

book of

tales

which was consciously produced


sorts of guesses

Neither the
give the

first

printing of Verard nor any of the subsequent ones


all

name

of the author;

have been made,


it

even the name of Louis xi having been suggested. At any rate

was assumed

as certain that

they sprang from the King's

table.

The

Marquis d'Argens mentions that the favorite table talk in that monarch's refectory consisted of obscene love adventures,
stories doubtless

and these

gave the impetus to

this

bock.

It

remained for
to es-

Wright in

his edition of the

work (1858) and the Grisebach,


Italy,

tablish that
at

Anthoine de

la Sale

was the author. The latter was

bom

Provence in 1 388, jomneyed through

Brabant and Flanders

and in 141 5 took part in a military expedition to Portugal. After his return he became a judge in Aries, and tutor to the Dauphin
and to the sons of Count Saint-Pol.
except that he was past seventy
Little
is

known of

his last years,

when he

died.

The form of
noblemen,
fireplace,

the stories resembles Boccaccio's.

A group of young

just returned

from the hunt are gathered round the

and

as

they feast they regale each other with coarse,

humorous

stories.

The

stories are told broadly, are

rooted in a rude,
Fifteen of

rough eroticism, and are scarcely fit for female


are

ears.

them

borrowed from Poggio, and Boccaccio too contributes some

material; furthermore, the author took

much from
La

the fabliaux of
all

the twelfth and thirteenth centuries. But

Sale has revised

54

BOOK

I:

MEDIEVAL AND RENAISSANCE


work can
really serve as

his sources so that his

an accurate mirror

of the morals of his days. Lusty cavaliers, faithless and frivolous


wives, jealous husbands, cunning

monks and

lascivious

nuns pass

before our eyes in colorful alternation. All their thoughts are con-

cerned with the satisfaction of sexual


delicate matters are represented

desire.

Yet even the most

with smooth grace, which seems

to be instinctive in the

French people.

La Sale is

also the

author of another very well

known work which

appeared anonymously, Les quinze joyes de manage.


of this

The

edition
in Paris

work

issued with

many

lacunae,

by Jehan Treperel

between 1495 and 1502, contains

foreword which gives the name

of the author in a charade. This riddle was not deciphered until

1830

when Dr. Andre

Pother, municipal librarian of Rouen, wrote

the solution to a certain bookseller Techener. This

work

is

not

merely a collection of obscenities but a striking and mordant

satire

on marriage, and though done in an admirable


mistic and misogynous.

style, is quite pessi-

BOOK

II

THE SIXTEENTH AND SEVENTEENTH


CENTURIES

e^c^?^e^@^W&^s^(W^E|U e^

CHAPTER IV
THE SIXTEENTH CENTURY

SENTIMENTAL lovc reached its peak in the flood of Amadis stories.


I

During

his

imprisonment in Madrid (1525) Francis


stories

had read

some of the Spanish Amadis


alvo.

by Garcia Ordonez de Mont-

These

stories of

adventures and love appealed to him so


translate

much
into

that

he requisitioned d'Herberay des Essarts to

them

French.
title

The task was completed in


failures.

540 and despite its long winded


rise to

aroused the intensest interest and gave

numerous imita-

tions

which were

In

all

of

them the

erotic element

was

dominant.
It is in

the heroic romances of gallantry, in fictions like Amadis


pastorals, that songs of praise are

and in the

sung to sexual
life.

love,

which constituted the chief desideratum of


tradition that
all

It is

almost a

heroes of the Amadis romances must have been

the fruit of premarital unions; and the knights

who extol the notions

of free sexual relations always find ladies of like mind. In the


heroic romances of gallantry there
is

not quite such a degree of


to apply a

freedom; indeed

it

was the part of courtiy perfection

curb to erotic passion and to paraphrase matters almost sanctimoniously instead of employing the blunt word. But this does not imply
that a nobler conception of love

had come to be entertained. From


life

contemporary descriptions of the moral


that at the court of Louis xiv chastity
as

of the period,

we know

an

ideal

worth

striving for,

and that
59

was by no means regarded sexual pleasures were more

THE EEOTIC HISTOEY OF FRANCE


highly valued than anything
one's erotic desires to the
else;

only,

it

was held that

to display

whole world was not compatible with the

dignity and honor required of a courtier.

Madame Scudery

is

prototype of the poets


she lost

who composed

these romances.

Although

much

of her popularity after Boileau's biting satire, the

public continued to favor these romances; and in

Germany they

were even more popular than in France.

However,
appetites can

this fare of false sentimentality

which our

modem

no longer enjoy, did not hold the

sole place in the

esteem of that period. Other genres, more substantial, were also


favored; and the grotesque, the piquant, the ribald found as
lovers as the

many

Amadis romances, or even more. The

chief rep-

resentatives of each variety will

now

be mentioned.

The
is

first

place

is

without a doubt occupied by Master Frangois

Rabelais (1483-1553) with his Gargantua and Pantagruel,

which

more than

a grotesque-humorous fiction.

There

is

unrolled be-

fore our eyes a satirical picture of the times,


its

which has never found

equal.

There

is

no need for us to give a more detailed analysis

of the

work

since this will be found in


satire

any history of

literature.

This world famous


publishers,

owes

its

origin to the suggestion of his

who

requested Rabelais to write a popular


sale of that author's

work

to

indemnify them for the poor

medical works.

So Rabelais composed his Pantagruel roy des Dipsodes, restitue a son


naturel avec ses faicetz et ses promesses esponentables; composez par

feu

M.

Alcofribas abstracteur de quintessence to which he soon


satire

added the revised

La

vie ires horrifique

de Gargantua, pere

Pantagruel fadis compose e par


tessence. In the first

M.

Alcofribas, abstracteur de quin-

book Rabelais lets the giant Pantagruel journey

through

all

provinces of folly. Everywhere he punishes fools and

protects the righteous. His

companion

is

the infinitely amusing

Panurge,

who addresses him in all

possible languages following the

60

BOOK
evil

II:

THE SIXTEENTH CENTURY


his time;

custom of the scholars of

and they exchange experichurch and the monks


line

ences. Rabelais lashes the crimes of the

and their lascivious

life

with unsurpassed, vigorous humor. In


is

with the comic content, the narrative

adorned with speeches


linguistic frills of all

and words in foreign languages, and with


sorts

which

despite their nonsense, give a most just characterization

of the persons represented.

Naturally

this
it

book was a thorn in the


ill

side of those

whom

it

attacked, and

would have fared


i

with the author had not the

royal hand protected him. Francis


in the unrestrained

in particular took great delight

merriment of the delightful work. However,

Rabelais never aimed at lewdness in these books.

Even

as

prudish

a historian of literature as E. Engel admits that while certain chapters in

Gargantua are so immeasurably indecent that


list

it is

impossible

to give even a

of

its

headings,

it

must nevertheless be admitted

that Rabelais

is

never lewd, no matter


is

how

far

he strays beyond
artist,

the bounds of

what

permissible to the writer or

or

how

much he

indulges in offensive and monstrous nastiness.

He

never

aims to excite the reader sensually, though he always and quite

without scruple, uses the shocking word to designate the shocking


deed. In other words, although he revels in the vocabulary of
coarseness so that

many

chapters are complete lexica of porno-

graphy, which have no equal even in the wide realms of French


literature,

he never smirks, and only uses such words to portray

faithfully coarse

men and raw

situations.

In the rhymed foreword to Gargantua, Rabelais expresses himself

unequivocally about the purpose of his work:

Mieulx est de ris que de larmes escrire


pource que
rire est le

propre de Vhomme.
is

The

hostility of the theologues

quite understandable for even

Protestant literature cannot

show more witty and


61

malicious

mock-

THE EMOTIC HISTOMY OF FMANCE


ery than Rabelais offers in the chapters 49 to 54 of the third book,

and chapters
is

to 8 of the fourth

book of Pantagruel. His work


and pruri-

a splendid antidote to the literature of libidinousness

ency

like a

mudbath. His piercing scorn

is

also directed against

the female sex, particularly against the immorality of his feminine

contemporaries.

What

a grotesque impression

is

created

by

his ac-

count of the unusual condition of the laborator natur<

(clitoris)

which

in

some women
it

is

so long, large, thick, fat

and vigorous,

that they can twine

around their bodies

five or six times as a

girdle, or actually use it as a lance in certain circumstances!

How

insatiable the

women

of his time

were may be gathered

from the following anecdote from


Panurge met a fellow

Rabelais:

One

fine

morning
about

who was

carrying two baby

girls of

two or

three years of age in a double knapsack, slung across his

shoulders

one

in front

and the other on

his back.

Panurge

who

had but
ately

little

respect for the female species asked the


virgins.

man immedi-

whether the children were

To which the man replied

that he
in front
still

had been carrying them about for two years; that the one

whom

he carried on

his chest

he supposed that she was


he carried on
his back,

a virgin; but as for the one

whom

he

could not undertake to speak with certainty.

Quite in the

spirit of Rabelais,

but not

at all a part of literature,

are the Erreurs popolaires et propos vulgaires touchant la ?nedicine


et la

regime of Laurent Joubert (1578).

The very

headings betray

the roguish wantonness of the author:

why

one should not meet

women before going to bed; the abuse of women who bathe in order to become gravid; how it is possible that a woman should bear nine children at once; whether it is good for a woman to sit on a hot
kettle or place the night cap of her

husband on her belly to assure


girl's virginity; etc.

an easy parturition; are there sure signs of a

62

BOOK
breath of Rabelais'

II:

THE SIXTEENTH CENTUMY


this coarse

Obviously the roguish author of


spirit.

humor

has caught the

Guillaume Bouchet,

who Hved between

15 13

and 1593 and was


as

a bookseller at Poitiers, has also long been


Rabelais.

famed

an imitator of

He wrote the
who

Series, fifty gallant "jokes"

which have the

effect of well-told anecdotes in their pregnant setting.

One

reads

here of the lady

has to

sit

on the pot de chambre and gets

pinched in her private parts by a crayfish; of the dreamer

who

dreams of gold but

who

receives turds; of the cuckolded husband

who must

get into the privy at once but

who

cannot open the

door because his wife and her lover are having a very important
conference there. Whereas the stories of the Heptameron and the

Nouvelles Recreations

still

contain

much

that

is

superfluous, the

tendency toward the pure form of the anecdote appears ever more
clearly in the last decades of the in the
1

6th century, to assume final form

work

of Bouchet and Beroalde de Verville. In these anec-

dotes of the Series, and of the

Moyen

de parvenir soon to be

dis-

cussed, with their condensation and pointedness, the material of the

old French fabliaux assumed the

form of the modern French

conte.

A few illustrations will prove this.


\

A pregnant woman feels that her hour

is

due.

supports her and desires to put her


she cries:
tune."

upon the "No, not on the bed; that's where I met

The midwife bed. Whereupon

my

misfor-

A group was conversing about the slightness of hand


it

found

among gypsies, and one man related how they took


closed
in their
fist

a stone, en-

and were so skilled in making it disappear that no one could tell whether it was still there or not. His wife who had not been listening very attentively remarked, quite naively: "Tush, that can't be so difficult. I always know whether it is inside or not."
in the sight of
all,

63

THE EEOTIC HISTORY OF FMANCE


married couple had just gone to bed and the husband was praising his wife for her chastity during their betrothal that is, for not having granted him that which he had been so fervently desiring. Thereupon she said to him, "Yes,
f

A newly

dear,

I I

that

took great care not to let myself go in spite of the fact desired you, because I had already been deceived too

many
Des
also

times in such matters."

Periers the valet, secretary and page of Margaret of Valois,

wrote witty anecdotes.

Gay

gives a full report about his life


at

and works. Bonaventure des Periers was


author.

once philosopher and

He was bom at the end

of the fifteenth century and stood

in relationship to

Clement Marot and Rabelais. By Catholics he was

suspected of Protestantism, and


1537 he published

by

the latter of licentiousness. In


a collection of philosophical

Cymbalum mundi,
whole

dialogues. Immediately, the

edition,

with the exception of

two

copies,

was placed under embargo and destroyed. Of these

two, one is in the Bibhotheque Nationale, the other in the municipal


library of Versailles.

The

protection of Margaret of Valois saved


edition

him from persecution and the following year another


issued

was

by a different

publisher,

Bonn of Lyons. For

a short while he

belonged to the intimate circle gathered around Margaret which

was devoted
suicide in a
his friends,

to the cultivation of bel-esprit. In 1543

he committed

fit

of insanity. After his death his

works were issued by

and among them were Les Nouvelles. The following are


erotic stories of des Periers that

some of the

may

be considered

characteristic of his time:

^ Concerning the three unmarried sisters

who

give witty an-

swers to their husbands on the night of their marriages.


f Concerning the procurator who has a girl from the country come to minister to his needs, and his secretary who enjoyed

her too.

64

BOOK

II:

THE SIXTEENTH CENTURY


first

f Concerning the

Scotchman and his wife who displayed quite


skirmish.

an unaccountable skill during the

f Concerning the poor bumpkin who found his lost ass thanks to an enema that his physician had given him.

Concerning a superstitious physician who would play with his wife only when it rained; and of the great good fortune that
f
befell

her upon his death.


a priest

Concerning

who

let

himself be castrated at the

insti-

gation of his housekeeper.

Concerning the trick that a young woman of Orleans employed in order to ensnare a young student to whom she had
^

taken a fancy.

Concerning the lawsuit that a mother-in-law brought against her son-in-law because he had not deflowered her daughter on
^

the

first

night.

two youths of Sienna who were in love with two Spanish women, of whom one in order to help the other attain the pleasures of love, went through great dangers, which subsequently brought him much joy and satisfaction.
f Concerning

much the same way Nicolas of Troyes, the saddle master, wrote down the humorous stories that came to his ears. He lived about
In
1

530 at the time of Francis


stories

and composed

his stories just before the


Sale,

Heptameron. His
elles nouvelles,

depend on Boccaccio, La

Cent nov-

Gesta Romanorum, old sermons and books of leg-

ends, the dialogues of the holy Gregory, Jacob de Vitry

and

others.

In order to characterize the stories a


tents of

bit,

we will summarize the con-

some of them:

young woman engaged to be married has her duties knocked into her by the barn thresher in order that she may be a ready worker by the time she is married.
^

65

THE EEOTIC HISTORY OF FMANCE


^

merchant purchases from a

priest the sacrifice of

all

the

women whom

the latter has had. But the man's

own wife who


him
again.

has been one of the company, subsequently deceives


f
to

A priest
cross.

is

enamoured of a woman painter and what happens


entirely naked, the crucified one up-

him after he represents,

on a
^

A youthful

couple were married.

Once

the husband leaves

and when he returns his wife asks what he has done with the Httle ploughman that he used to have befor a short trip to Paris
fore.

certain baker

is

in love with a

maid and embraces her

whenever he comes for the dough. Her mistress lies in wait for him one day, gives him his dough and gets in return what was coming to the maid.

young wife f to be pregnant.


transfer his
nates.

persuaded that she has caused her husband Whereupon his wife consents to have him
is

pregnancy

to the

maid whom he promptly impreg-

certain girl

is

unwilling to marry any

man who

has the

generative organs of the male.


^

A youth bound for Lyons lies with an abbess while en route.


many strange adventures.
valuable to us for the historical materials they
this,

A hermit presents him with a ring that adds half a foot to the stature of his member. A certain bishop finds the said ring and
encounters

These

tales are

contain. Aside

from

however, the circumstantial narratives

of the upright artisan are neither of literary nor cultural value.


Infinitely

more

alive

is

the master of the droll

tale,

Francois

Beroalde de Verville

(i 558-1 612),

whom we now
at thirty-five

consider.

He
he

was born and

raised as a Protestant but after his father's death

went over

to the Catholic church,

and

became canon

BOOK
dition

II:

THE SIXTEENTH CENTUEY


He
was the author of
a series of novels

of Saint-Gatien de Tours, in recognition of his extraordinary eru-

and superb

gifts.

including

La Pucelle d'Orleans but none

of these

would have

res-

cued

his

name from

oblivion had he not hit

upon the happy notion


titled

of collecting piquant anecdotes.

The volume

Moyen

de Par-

venir appeared about 1610 with no author's or publisher's

name and
titles,

no place of publication. Subsequent editions bore other quaint


as

Le Coupgu de

la

Melancholie and Venus en belle hu7neur,

etc.

We have here a
the festive board.

collection of extremely free tales related

round

The modern reader needs much patience to read Beroalde who makes many demands upon that particular virtue because he is very prolix and repetitious. The boon companions
spin their yarns to great lengths indeed.

Most of the anecdotes


it

have to do with the genital and anal regions; and


as

would appear

though

this strong,

and not

at all

prudish nation, took particular


put-

joy in

swimming in cesspools. Beroalde finds special pleasure in


Sappho, Rabelais, Calvin and

ting the juiciest jests and anecdotes into the


ers like

mouths of famous writscholars

many other

whom

he
a

vulgarizes before us. His influence

was very considerable and for

long time his

work was
tales

attributed to Rabelais.

Even today we

find

some of

his

witty

included in contemporary works.

few examples

will illustrate

how

coarse these anecdotes are.

Several characters are conversing:

The Other:

will tell

you

all

about

it.

Gaffer Genebrard

had married a young, pretty, and dainty wife, and in due course
they went to bed.

and fondled her to his heart's content (he was soon content) and then tapped her gently, saying: "Roach, sweetheart, roach." Next Friday the maid was charged to go to the fishmarket, and asked her mistress what
she should buy. "Whatever you please," said the lady. "Shall

He kissed her

n)ring some roach?" (The name of a


take you!
I

common fish.) "The devil


this

never hear anything but roach in

house!"

67

THE EROTIC HISTORY OF FRANCE


f Gaupil: Roach is a good name, considering the care that nature hath to ward off eficj'oachmejits, otherwise women would

be perpetually hoarse. But


tery of nature can
f Sappho: It

it is

wondrous thing how

this

mys-

come together again after it has been parted.

came about when Jupiter severed the androgyne. He bade Mercury sew up the bellies of the two halves; and thus
the belly
is

tender to the touch to this day.

sew up the man was too long, so the and when he came to the woman he took too short a lace, and there was not enough to finish her; hence for want of a stitch a gash remained open. Do you understand that? Then lay it up in the cedar chest by the hearth. Know you, learned sirs, what are the seven wonders of the world? You say not a word. It is evident that I can teach you some rare doctrines, so make ready to listen. Don't you know that though the hen and the cow live in the same field neither eats buttered eggs! I will tell you greater secrets which contain the marrow of all the sciences. The seven miracles are as follows: i. A black hen, which lays a white egg. 2. Claret, which goes in red and comes out white. 3. The spigot that has no ears, and yet hears well enough when there is talk of grappling. 4. The vessel which has its mouth at the bottom, and yet lets nothing out. 5. The bow which bends of itself without a winch. 6. The rose which sucks the marrow of men's bones, and yet does not break them. 7. The anus which opens and shuts like a purse, without any strings. Ah, ha! What do you say to
that?

The lace he used to end hung down in front;

Here
as the

is

another example from Beroalde, as witty and


less characteristic

as coarse

preceding excerpt and no

of the age:

once on a time that as Brother Laillee was journeying to Angers, he spent a night in the house of a good woman who had long known him; if I am not mistaken she was called La Coibaude. When he was in bed they put a chamber-pot on the stool beside him, and on the same stool was a round and hollow rat-trap; not one of the traps with a door, but with a spring
^ It fell out

BOOK

II:

THE SIXTEENTH CENTUHY

by the middle of the body. This trap was at least half a foot in diameter, it was ready set, and the spring was stiff and strong. In the night Brother Jean woke up to micturate, and took hold of the trap by the rim, thinking it had been the pot. He then presented John Chouart to the instrument, and as it stretched down as far as the catch, the spring went off,
that gripped the rat

and grabbed hold of the Greyfriar. He bawled out loudly enough to awake the Seven Sleepers, and they brought a candle, and set him free. f The maid laughed at him with all her heart, for she was now avenged of an ill turn he had done her when he was sleeping there before. It was in summertime, and the house being full, he who was a familiar friend slept in the lower room, where the good wife and her maid lay in another bed. The rascal got up to take the air, and the night being dark, he called out to the maid: "Marchioness, I have lost my way; prithee, come and set me right." The poor wench got up and went to him, and in the meantime the friar had tucked up his shirt and was holding his arms high above his head. "Prithee, take me by the hand," said he. "Alack!" quoth she, "your fingers are mighty thick; no, it's your arm. Why, what's this? Go away, I will have nothing to do with you." With that she gave him a push and left him in
the dark.

In marked contrast to Beroalde's naturalness and primitiveness


is

the courtliness that emanates from every line of the Heptameron,


its

despite

attention to sexual matters. Marguerite de Valois, born


ii,

on April

1492 and dying on 21st of

December

1549, stood at

the center of the literary circle gathered at the court of her brother,

Francis

i.

Rabelais thought a great deal of her and dedicated the third

book of

his Pantagruel to her.

Clement Marot who poetized about

her was regarded as her lover.

The

fruit of this social intercourse

was the Heptameron des nouvelles which was written


debt to Boccaccio.

in conscious

The seventy-two
69

stories are spread

over eight

days, and the introduction as well as the general

scheme of the book

THE EMOTIC HISTOEY OF FEANCE


reminds one of the great
Italian masterpiece.

A company of ladies

and gentlemen

who

are journeying to the Pyrenees to take the

baths, take refuge in a


flood.

monastery in order to escape a storm and

To

beguile the tedium of the enforced delay, everyone of


tells a

the group

love story. Besides certain very tolerant opinions

springing from the spirit of a sophisticated humanitarianism, there


are

some extremely forceful

attacks

on the

evils of

the time, espe-

cially

on the abuses of the church, and the immorality, pride and


French
literature

superstition of the monks.

owes

its first

fluent

and

merry book of entertainment,

free

from excessive erudition and

bombastic euphuism, to Marguerite.


In her introduction the authoress relates

how

the Dauphin, and


jointly

Madame Marguerite
like Boccaccio's,

(that

is,

herself)

had resolved

and with

the further assistance of other ladies, to write a collection of stories

whose work but recently

translated

by

a secretary

of the king,

had met with great

success. Lotheisen believes that

the stories were not meant for publication but were intended only
for a small circle of friends. In 1550 the
first

edition

was

issued

by

Pierre Boaistuau under the


it

title:

Histoire des amans fortunes but

did not bear Marguerite's name.

However,

since he

had mutilated

the text Marguerite's daughter, Johanna of Navarre, caused to be


issued in 1559 a
title

more conscientious but


has

castrated text,

under the

by which

it

come

to be

known: The Heptaineron. Later

editions contain the unmutilated text.

The
and

authoress set as her task the narration of real occurrences

historical incidents, in the

form of the very short

stories that

her age loved. Generally they are of a prurient nature but told

with a seemingly naive candor. However erotic they


are told quite undisguisedly but they

may be,

they

do not aim

to excite the read-

er through lascivious descriptions. Marguerite's

pen was moved


able to

by joy

in writing these venereal anecdotes

which are well

70

BOOK
arouse even the

II:

THE SIXTEENTH CENTUKY


reader's laughter. Marguerite

modern

was thorwas part

oughly aware of the daring nature of her material but


of the age and she was certainly no prude
raries.

it

among her contempotale


is

And

sometimes,

when an

extremely erotic

told,

Mar-

guerite

was shrewd enough, aping the hypocrisy of her


a pious moral.

time, to

make it yield

Beroalde de Verville, des Periers and Margaret of Valois are

then a few of the most significant representatives of French writers


of funny
tales.

Their work

is

by no means diminished
x,

in import-

ance because they borrowed most of their material from popular


sources. Karl

Amrain (Anthropophytheia

248) gives a very


stories.

illu-

minating explanation of the wandering of such


that the female domestics

He

holds

who

are notorious for their love of tattle

put into circulation

all

the intimate details, love talk, panurgics,

obscenity, and chit-chat of their sensual and loose mistresses, the

high born ladies whom they prepared for love.

The tales then ran the


gave them
pi-

gamut of the lower

classes

and the best were embellished and magfacetiae

nified. Finally the poets

and collectors of

quant form and thus they reached the upper

classes.

This explains

the frequent recurrence of similar stories in collections far re-

moved in space and time. There is no question of plagiarism at all. Even today there are extant among people jokes and anecdotes
which
first

appeared hundreds of years ago.


discussed the

When we

Heptmneron we mentioned the name


he early became a page
at the

of Clement Marot.

Born

in 1495,

court of Marguerite where his charm and wit brought him


success with

much

women. As valet to the

king, he stood in close relationi

ship to Diana of Poitiers.

He

accompanied Francis

on the

latter's

expedition into Italy,

was wounded near Pavia and captured, but


sorts of

was soon

released,

and in 1525 was back in France. All

gallant adventures together

with the suspicion that he inclined


71

THE EEOTIC HISTORY OF FMANCE


to Calvinism

brought him to

jail,

but he was released at the com-

mand of the king. He then went to Geneva where he became a member of the reformed church, but owing to his amorous exploits
was banished from the
city.

He went

back to Italy where he re1

turned to Catholicism, dying at Turin in September


parative poverty.

544 in com-

many No matter how


his

Of

writings only the Epigrams are readable today.


brilliant his other

poems

are they are vitiated

by

the defects of the style of the time, the obsolete emotion and pon-

derous pomp. For erotica however Marot found the clear classic

form of the epigram whose master he was.


a

He was

able to enclose
his

whole

Italian story in eight lines of verse;


all

and so great was

skill

that this morsel contained


its

the spice of the original.

The

age he lived in with


rial

intense joy in love gave

him the mate-

for his maddest inspirations

and he created pictures which

recall the strength of a

Goya. Marot's epigrams entertained and


still

corrupted the dazzling court of Francis, and they


little

sparkle, like

mirrors, with

all

the license and insouciance of that time.

The

driving force of Marot's period, the force that colored and


its

ruled over

thought and emotion was the


viii

erotic. It has
all

been sugis

gested that Charles

of Burgundy, to

whom

Europe

re-

sponsible for the spreading of lues (according to Bloch) undertook


his Italian expedition

merely because he yearned for

Italian

women.

He

and

his

men were

received with great enthusiasm. For over


his soldiery

one hundred and twenty days and nights, the king and
revelled in a limitlessly giddy
life,

until the defeat at the river

Tarro
a

on July

6,

1495.

He was

just barely able to force his

march with

part of his baggage.

The Veronese physician Alexander


among

Benedictus

who was
found the

an eye witness related that


illustrated diary of the
all

the booty there was

king in which were inscribed the

names of

the beauties whose lover he had been, and each one

72

BOOK
libertine

II:

THE SIXTEENTH CENTUMY


all

was pictured therein with


hope

her charms. In this

way

did the royal

to perpetuate the

memory
cities.

of the pleasures of his

insane sensuality in various Italian

But

this catalogue has

been

lost.

The

loveliest

and noblest of the creatures arranged


6,

grandiose spectacle at Chieri on September

1494.

They wanted to

wish the monarch luck upon


tector of the fair sex.
his royal delectation

his arrival

and proclaim him the pro-

Among other scenes which they portrayed for


was an
actual confinement.

There
bridled
fidelity,

is

one authentic eye witness

who

has depicted the un-

life

of pleasure characteristic of his time with clarity and


(
1

namely Pierre de Bourdeille, Seigneur de Brantome

539-

I6I4). His childhood


varre.

was spent

at the

court of the queen of

Na-

Henry 11 bestowed upon him the abbey of Brantome, by which name he has come to be remembered. After journeys through
Italy, Spain,

England and Scotland he participated


fall

in the

cam-

paigns of his time and finally in a sudden

of his horse sustained

grave injuries which kept him in bed for four whole years. During
this period

he devoted himself to study and to the writing of


July
5,

his

works.
at

On

16 14

he retired to

his castle

which he had

built

Richmont, a mile and a half away from the abbey. His most famous
is

work, Gallant Ladies,


hear the courtiers

entirely subjective throughout.

We see and

who

have been

bom and
Brantome

reared in fastidiousness,

and

how they

trifle

away

their days.
side.

Everything amuses them, for


is

everything has a ridiculous

a brilliant chatterer,

nonchalant and amusing,


alcoves with cunning
attracted
little

who

blurts out the secrets of discreet


ears.

eyes and corked

We

moderns are

by the

impartiality of his presentation, and with the untreats the

concerned manner in which he

most intimate things. But

the charge of frivolity cannot be maintained against him. There


are

many

contributions to sexual pathology in his work.

And

not

73

THE EKOTIC HISTOEY OF FMANCE


alone for this reason
as to the historian.
is it

of definite value to the physician as well

His chronicle of scandals contains seven


ing themes

treatises

on the follow-

i:

Concerning
2:

their husbands cuckolds,

women who cultivate love and make What has the most charm in love the

emotion, the face, or speech.

Concerning pretty legs and their

charms.
their

4:

Concerning older
sisters. 5:

ladies

who
6:

are as eager for love as

younger

How fair and honorable ladies love valiant

men, and the


speak
7:
ill

latter,

courageous women.

Why one should

never

of

women, and

of the consequences that follow therefrom.

Concerning married women, widows and maids, and which of

these are the best to love.

These seven headings by no means exhaust the contents of the


work. Brantome no sooner begins
expression calls
his

theme than every name and


sets

up an anecdote which he promptly

down. This

in turn provides material for interesting parallels, and so he labori-

ously returns to the starting point


long.

but he doesn't stay there very


He
gives

For very soon another ton mot or piquant story ensnares him
for
all

which he cannot

the world pass over.

homage
and

to

the beautiful and "honorable"


marital shackles,

women who
to

grant their love despite


please,
his

whenever and
on the

whomsoever they

sympathy
amount of
is

is

entirely

side of the fair sex.


is

tremendous

interesting material

revealed to us in this

work which
it

of great value in the history of culture and manners, because

re-

veals to us a clearer

and more consistent picture of that period than

could be derived from a thousand sermons.

e|,^^e|*^*^e|*^4*4'#4*##4*#4*4*4'4*#4*#4*###4'4'

CHAPTER V
THE SEVENTEENTH CENTURY

THE good never


its

old times" to

which harmless old

souls

always refer,

really existed.
alas!

They

are merely a Utopia, a beautiful


its

and pious wish, but


weaknesses.

no more. Every century has


really better or worse;
is

merits and
differ-

No
in

age

is

it is

merely

ent.

The

personal viewpoint of the historian

responsible for his

drawing one age

gray and another in rosy

colors.
all

In sixteenth century France


ture and erotic writers,

we

already find

genres of litera-

from the most

delicate emotional depictions

to the foulest brothel-poetry,

from the

serious learned writer to

the coarsest and most unintelligent buffoon. the seventeenth century, there
is

And

in the France of

no lack of

erotic light literature,

nor of anti-royalist and anti-clerical pamphlets, nor of free chansons,

nor of lascivious popularizations and outlines of


for instance

sex.

Thus
des

we might mention the pamphlet which Adrien


de
la

de Montluc directed against the government, entitled Infortwie


filles

de

joie siiivie

Maigre (1648). In

this

brochure the
filles

author espouses most energetically the interests of the

de

joies

whom
Paris.

there was talk of compelling to settle outside the walls of

Lupanie, histoire ajnoureuse de ce temps (1668), attributed


is

to Blessebois,

generally regarded as a satire directed against the


this short erotic story portrays

Montespan, but erroneously, since


a middle class milieu. This

same Pierre de Blessebois was

also the

author of another work: Le Rut, which contains an indiscreet and

75

THE EEOTIC HISTORY OF FRANCE


candid account of his relations with a Mile. Scay. In addition, there
are extant a

number of scandalous

stories

about Alen9on which the

author terms a modern Sodom.

Every one of the crowned heads served


jest

as a target for

obscene

and
is

satire, despite

the extremely strict censorship. For example

there

the Description de Visle des Hermaphrodites directed

against the bisexual


d' Henri

Henry

in,

and the Histoire secrete des Amours


Force, which exposes the love-life

IV by Caucont
iv.

de

la

of Henri

The immoral
are criticised in

life

of the clergy and the inmates of the convents


libertinage secret de cloitre, (1683)
latter

Le

and Le

moine au parloir (1682). The


than bold
tales

work

is

a collection of
verse,

more

and anecdotes, in prose and

whose chief

headings will give one a notion of the contents:


la religieuse

les tetons naissants,

en chemise, V accouchement,

le chat, le

ventre

litre, le

bon

office, etc.

Collections of chansons are very numerous. I will merely mention

the

Le nouveau cabinet des Muses

gaillardes (1660), reprinted fre-

quently in the eighteenth, nineteenth and twentieth centuries.

Among

the most important works in the popularizations of sex,

should be mentioned Tableau de V amour conjugal (1685),


Nicolas Venette, often reprinted, and
(1671).

by

Le nouveau jardin de V amour

In other words, in this erotic history of France no lengthy proof


is

needed that lascivious

literature existed there in the seventeenth

century. Indeed, contemporary writers confirm the inclination of


their contemporaries to excesses,

and to a

naturalistic conception

of the sexual. Nevertheless, their testimony must be accepted with


great reservation, for the greatest failing of most historians
is

the

tendency to generalize from but a few


be absurd to brand an age as
evil

if

true particulars.

It

would

and barbarous because immorality


76

BOOK
that erotic

II:

THE SEVENTEENTH CENTURY


is

and brutality were immoderately widespread. There

no doubt

manners occupied
is

predominating place in seventeenth-

century France; but it

equally certain that there were to be found

unprejudiced and incorruptible


selves to

men who

did not permit them-

be swept away by the whirlpool of sensuality but kept

their heads cool in order to judge the weaknesses of their time.

few such

will

now be mentioned.
is

Chief among these writers


1692) whose Histoiriettes
is

Gideon Tallement des Reaux


first

6 19-

of the

importance for a knowledge

of the manners and morals of the time.

What Brantome was


Henry
iv
is

to the
xiii.

age of Francis

i,

Tallement
is

is

for that of

and Louis

While Brantome
succinct,

lengthy and detailed, the later writer

brief,

and hence pleasant to read. For a long time the manuscript

remained unprinted. In 1803

when

the library of the Castle of


it

Montigny was
twenty
francs,

sold, the

Marquis de Chateaugiron purchased


folio

for

had the 798

pages copied. Later,

when
it

the

society of French Bibliophiles

was organized, he turned

over to

them

for publication. Since 1833-36

when the

first

edition appeared

there have been numerous other editions.

Another writer of significance

is

Bussy-Rabutin, the notorious

author of the Histoire amoureuse des Gaules.

He

sprang from a

very distinguished family, entered the military service very early

and earned great


first

distinction.

During the war of the Fronde he


side of the King. Until

served Prince

Conde but then took the

1659 he was lucky, but afterwards a series of misfortunes descended

upon him. The most improbable rumors were circulated about him.

Thus he was
exhumed
dances.
exile.

reputed, in the

company
his

of three cronies, to have

celebrated the black mass during passion week; and again, to have
a corpse with

which

drunken fellows danced crazy

The

penalty for these rumored extravaganzas was a year of


his transgressions

What made

worse in the eyes of the king,

77

THE EEOTIC HISTOMY OF FEANCE


was the growing
distribution of the Histoire amoiireiise des Gaiiles.

Bussy had hit upon the idea of writing down the gallant adventures of
great ladies, partly for his
tion of his mistress,

own pastime and partly for the delectaMadame de Monglas. Only four or five persons
few was
a

were permitted
traitor.

to read the manuscript but one of these

Madame La Baume

divulged the contents, and what was

much worse

for the author several courtiers

were

able to persuade

Louis XIV that his mistress had not fared so well in this work.

The

embittered king didn't hesitate to sentence the foolhardy pamphleteer,

who had had

the additional audacity to send him the manuBastille.

script, to thirteen

months in the
and
it

After his

release,

Bussy had

to retire to his estate,

was not

until 1682 that

he regained

permission to reappear at court. In 1693 he died at the age of seventy-five.

There

is

no doubt that Bussy owed

his incarceration

entirely to the king's personal displeasure for there

was nothing

novel in the Histoire to justify his punishment.


various other

At

the same time

works and

collections of courtly gossip

had appeared

and their authors were not molested: Histoire

cf amours d' Henri

IV

avec diverses lettres escrites a ses maitresses, et


euses
(
1

aiitres pieces curi-

Amours du Palais Royal ( 66^). All of them sought to show that under Henry iv and Louis xiii marital infidelity was a pastime, under Louis xrv a rule, and later an obligation. The
664) ; and Les

cuckolded husband was regarded not


a comical creature at

as a tragic

person but always


of fun; indeed, not

whose expense one had lots

even crowned heads were immune from the fate of wearing horns.

The various
and

editions of the Histoire

were naturally

secretly printed

distributed.
as the

Bussy-Rabutin can also be regarded

author of an extremely

obscene comedy La Comtesse d'Olonne which was circulated in

many editions. The play is


of Olonne. Argenie,

enacted in the bedroom of the Comtesse

who

represents the countess suddenly awakes

78

BOOK
sees her

II:

THE SEVENTEENTH CENTUEY


induced by a nightmare. In her dream she

in her bed, in a fright

former lover and husband, the duke of Candole. As she

berates

him

for his neglect of marital duties

he breaks out into

imprecations, and prophesies the impotence of Argenie's next lover.

The account

of the

dream

is

interrupted

by

the

visit

of a friend,

the Countess Fiesko. Argenie,

who

has a violent passion for Count


latter,

Guiches, sounds her friend about the


is

and

is

informed that he

a zealous skirt chaser. This

news

doesn't discourage the countess


a love episode

at all

and the next scene finds her in

with the object


in the

of her desires

who

at first labors

under the curse foretold

dream.

It is

only after

many

repeated exertions that the Count

triumphs and then both lovers compliment each other upon their
venereal prowess.

An

important contribution to the history of morals was made


(i

by Count Anthony Hamilton


Comte de Grammont
brother-in-law,
(

646-1 721) in his

Memoir es du

17

3), in

which he

describes the loves of his


at the court of

Count

Philibert of

Grammont,

Charles
tain

11

of England.

The Memoir es of Duke Saint-Simon also con-

much important material.


turn to belles lettres

When we

we

find that light literature in


is

general which has no artistic aims but

created for

no higher pur-

pose than entertainment, does not evince a particularly high moral


conception. Stories were proliferated in whole series as well as in
single works,
safe

and no country,

historical

epoch or personality was

from exploitation

as a possible

theme. There was nothing that

could daunt the insatiable commercial ambitions of the writers of


this fustian. If

one

series failed,

it

was refurbished with

new

title

and was once again sent into the world. The curiosity and
ousness of readers was aroused
Histoire avioureuse, etc.

libidin,

by such

titles as

Les amours de

By the end
79

of the seventeenth century this

THE EMOTIC HISTOEY OF FRANCE


genre which had been losing in
fit

artistic

value every year was only

for supplementary readings

by the unlettered.

In

all

these tales the

word

"love" occurs constantly, and accom-

panies

man from

cradle to the grave. Children live in expectation

of future love, and the aged revel in memories of past loves. But

withal this "love"

is

no emotional content.

It is

merely a means of
gallantry.

pleasure without any depth, nothing

more than

This was

perhaps induced by excessive prudishness for in the attempt to appear "decent" these scribblers
fell

into affectation.

The

effort to

remove

all

sensual elements

from the sphere of love led


all

to the

same

folly as the converse effort to banish

ethical elements.

Despite the reign of the precious, mannered style there were

none the

less dissenting voices.

Moliere in his Les Precieuses led the

battle against the current folly

and

lesser figures

helped to prove

that original wit

still

could be found. In his humorous novel Franc-

ion (1622) Sorel de Souvigny


tales of his

poked fun at the

idyllic

and precious

period and included a

number

of dirty stories for the

sake of the moral effect.

Gradually the sexual note became more audible in the higher


type of novel and play. For the
first

time a courtesan was displayed,

without any camouflaging, in the Gustav Vasa of

Madame
senses

de

la

Force. Soon the password of the time was Volupte, the sentimental
ecstasy
souls of

which exercised complete control over the


men.

and the

The

olfactory organ of upright and unprejudiced

apprentices accustomed to the strong smell of the stable could


find but
little

joy in the close odor of the perfumed salon.

By

the

side of the ethereal

poesy of the precious, the century can show

number

of strong erotics

which have not yet

lost their original


filles.

attractiveness, especially the Aloisia Sigea

and Vecole des

Undoubtedly the most famous


after Aretino's

erotic

work

in

world

literature
it is

Raggionamenti

is

the Aloisia or Luisa Sigea, as

BOOK
titled in English.

II:

THE SEVENTEENTH CENTUMY


in 1660.

These dialogues of love appeared

The

supposedly Spanish authoress

who was

as a

matter of fact a des-

cendant of French stock and later became court lady to Donna

Maria of Portugal, was


chastity

bom

about 1500 and died in 1560.

Her

and virtuous deportment brought her many admirers


this did

throughout the Spanish realm. But


author from bringing her
scenity par excellence.
It

not hinder the real

name

into connection with erotic obclear to the thinking people

was perfectly

of that time that no such book could have been composed

by

woman,

least of all

by one who
relation

led such an exemplary

life.

Nor
real
it

has the supposititious translator, the famous professor of the University of

Leyden any

with the dialogue; for the

author, the lawyer Nicolas Chorier of Grenoble,

composed

in

the Latin language.

The latter lived between

1622 and 1692,

became
1

a doctor of laws at the age of seventeen, procureur

du

roi in

666^

and

later

was

raised to the nobility.

He

enjoyed a pretty unsavory

reputation and was, for example, accused of having stolen three


capitularies

from the archives of the Archbishop of Grenoble which


back to the
cleric at considerable prices.

he

later shamelessly sold

At

the expense of a

M. de May,

the attorney-general of the Par-

lement, Chorier's dialogues were published


seller,

by

Grenoble bookhis business

one Nicolas.

The

latter

had to shut down

and

flee to

escape worse punishment, which was only stayed at the

intervention of very powerful friends. Search

was

instituted for

the author but Chorier was passed

by

since Aloisia contained


in 1680

two

Latin verses composed

by him and published


Latin poems.

among

a vol-

ume

containing his

own

He

maintained that these

verses

had been

stolen

and inserted into the Aloisia to mislead the

public.

In the introduction the author, anonymously of course, employs


a trick dear to contemporary authors of erotica.
81

He

describes him-

THE EKOTIC HISTOMY OF FMAMCE


self as

having miraculously come into possession of the


"It

lost

manu-

script of Meursius:

were

a pity to withhold these dialogues

from our generation.

Who

could be so dull and insensible as not

to grieve over the deprivation of such piquant, such pleasant, nay,

such instructive percepts of a merry life?" Chorier had living models

for the characters of this Sotadicum but

we

have no key to

identify

them by. Alcide Bonneau


which
a

claims that there

was one copy

of this \vork in

contemporary had indicated the key in

notes scrawled across the margins of his private copy. According to


this,

the heroine of the tale narrated

by Octavia

in the Fascennine

dialogue was a certain Anastasie Serment whose beauty, wit and


free life in Paris

were celebrated by Comeille and Quinault. Per-

haps too Chorier composed preliminary studies for the dialogues


since he speaks in his

memoirs of a book, designated

as

Anecdota,

neither published nor

shown

to his friends, in

which he had de-

scribed ninety-five intimate and scandalous portraits of

men and

women known
work.

to him. If these anecdotes are not identical with

Luisa Sigea, as Bonneau hints,

we must lament

the loss of a valuable

Despite the fact that Chorier's authorship was so successfully

concealed as to prevent agreement even


fiction of the translation

by

recent authorities, the


e-

from the Spanish seems transparent

nough.

Had

the manuscript been translated from that tongue and


a Spanish lady,
it

were the authoress


practically
all

would appear remarkable


all

that

the action takes place in Italy, and that

the charit is

acters are Itahans. If examples are chosen

from other lands


is

France and Germany but never Spain that


probably saw the force of
in the
is

called upon. Chorier

this point himself as

time went on, for

Geneva

edition of 1678 he

added a seventh dialogue which


soil

enacted in

its

entirety
is

upon Spanish

and by Spanish char-

acters;

but there

no word

in explanation of the addition.

82

BOOK
It is

II:

THE SEVENTEENTH CENTUKY


omission, but the plan

perhaps possible that Chorier entertained hopes of revising

the whole

work

to

make good the

was never

carried out. It is

much more likely that he left many gaps in his work


once give verisimilitude to
his

which would
it

at

work and thus lend


its

greater plausibility as well as diverting suspicion of


latter

authorship

from himself. In the

ambition he was entirely successful and

he remained unmolested, for no proofs could be obtained against


him.

He was careful not to give any sign that the work was his own
Thus
in his memoirs,

except for a few small hints in other works.

no longer
of

accessible today,

he mentions two youthful works one

which was of a

sotadic nature,

which may

refer to the dialogues.

Then
this

too, the edition of 1678 contains a short

poem which had

appeared in the edition of his Latin poems published in 1670.

Now
Tu-

poem

contains practically the same denunciations of one

bero,

who was

probably a personal enemy of the author, so that


in
1

we

must assume a common authorship. Furthermore,


the

660 he caused
works.

work

to be printed in the
is

same format with

his other

Finally, the style

the same, and the same figurative use of words

leaves

no doubt of Chorier's authorship.


are entitled:

The six original dialogues

The Skirmish, Tribadicon,


Ovid
bril-

Fabric, the Duel, Pleasures, Frolics and Sports. In choice, flowery

language, with copious erudition derived from Latin writers,


particularly, Chorier describes
liant wit,

with

his

unexampled frankness,

humor, and masterful

gifts of observation, the shameless

and lewd conduct of the higher

classes of his time.


latter's

He

employs the

same

fidelity as

Aretino in the

depiction of the

mad

econ-

omy

of the
is

Roman

procuresses and their world. Indeed, Aretino's

influence

undeniable

not only

in the author's high praise of

this "divine

genius" but also in his assigning of the action to the


as the

same period

Raggionajnenti (about 1530), and in the use of

the names of Aretino's friends for his chief characters.

83

THE EROTIC HISTORY OF FRANCE


The
filles^

other famous

work

of this class bears the


is

title

of Vecole des

etc.

This original edition (1665)


is

lost today,

but in the

municipal library of Breslau there


1667.

to be found a reprint dated

The

author

is

concerned to instruct in matters of love those


live

young

girls

who

still

with their mothers, in order that they

may

afford genuine joy in the sport of


lovers.

Venus
is

to their future hus-

bands or
logues.

Hence

the whole art of love

covered in two dia-

Robinet, a
loves

young

Parisian
is

merchant of the time of Louis

xiii,

Fanchon who

too naive to

know

what's expected of her.

In order to get

what he wants, he

asks Susanna, a girl of experience,

to light the flame in Fanchon.

The incendiary

does her task so well

that Robinet soon finds a willing ear and perfect delight in Fan-

chon. In the second dialogue Susanna again

visits

the other girl

who

describes the events of the devirgination. Both

compare expraise

periences and

what one

lacks, the other supplies.

Poems of
woman's

are sung to the genitals of both sexes, and there

is

a discussion of
solitary

those vicarious devices of love


hours. In brief,

which may

fill

we have here a whole compendium of the art of love.

The

author Helot, Milot, Millitot or Milliot, as designated in the

preface, got into very hot water because of the publication of this

book.
effigy

He had

to flee, his

book was burnt under the gallows and

his

hung upon them.


not very forbearing during that period in their treatearly as Louis xiii
a disturber of the until

They were
it

ment of authors of such pornographic works. As


was
felt that

the art of printing might


its

become

public peace and a corruption of

morals.

Hence from 1 660

1756 some 869 authors, publishers and printers were sentenced to


the Bastille for works inimical to religion, the state, or morals. For
a libel against

Mme. de Maintenon, two printers were hung


84

in 1694,

and the other participants severely punished.

BOOK

II:

THE SEVENTEENTH CENTUMY


earlier

But a generation

such a hard fate was already the


life

lot of

one Theophile de Viau whose


except that the latter remains
of very
at first,

reminds one strongly of Villon's


sympathetic.
little

much more

A collection
recognition

bawdy

verse appeared

which found but

but in 1622 a reprint was issued, augmented by numerous

piquant pieces which were attributed to Colletet (1598- 1659) and

Viau (1590- 1 62 6) under the

title

Le P^rw^y^e des poetes satyriques.

The

earlier

work bore

Viau's

name upon the


him

title

page. Viau

denied authorship but his denial did not help him for very long.

year

later,

the hostile Jesuits accused

of irrehgion and im-

morality.

bench of judges selected to convict him found the

charges true and sentenced our poet, after he had fled to Chantilly,
to death

by fire. Bertholet was sentenced to the gallows, and Colletet

to nine years of exile.

On

the very day the verdict was rendered,

Viau's effigy was burnt under the gallows. Shortly afterwards, he

was

arrested and languished in

jail

for

two years awaiting

his fate.

At

the expiration of that time Parliament quashed the original sen-

tence but banished

him from France.


Viau's punishment as harsh for there were

Today we regard
example
about
it

other collections of erotic verse which were tolerated freely.


is

One

Les Muses gaillardes (1609).


is

No

fuss

was ever made


it

though there

very

little

difference

between

and the

Farnasse.

From

this

and other

cases,

we must

conclude that the

reason for Theophile Viau's persecution was not his immorality

but his

irreligiosity.

A far greater popularity was enjoyed by a subsequent collection:


Le
cabinet satyrique (1632). This collection
field of
is

one of the cleverest

products in the

panurgic poetry.

It is

one of the few works


its

whose

originality cannot

be denied, nor should

literary value

be

underestimated.

An

impartial reader cannot refrain

from admiring

the graceful treatment of single thoughts, and the pointed ex-

85

THE EEOTIC MISTOEY OF FMANCE


One must go back to Martial for a similar treatment of equally clever thoughts. Anyone of experience knows how monotonous the erotic theme can become unless wit and humor can discover new angles for treating the novel suggestions. Hence we can give the full meed of praise to the genius of this much maligned poet. The Cabinet is not a whit more decent than the Parnasse but remained unmolested by the persecutions which beset the latter,
pressions.

because the author was careful enough not to attack religion and
the church.

Perhaps a few examples of these witty epigrams will help to

show the nature

of the work.
all

The
all

author would agree perfectly


passions, desires,

with Coleridge that


this

thoughts,

whatever

stirs

mortal frame,

all

are but instruments of love and minister to his

sacred flame.

He would even go further and insist that the sexual emall

brace
ity.

is

the paramount, propulsive, central goal of


this

human

activ-

But

embrace

is

entirely dependent

on the whim of the

Master

Iste.

Hence an impotent man cannot be counted

in the council of

men who can


his lady

calculate their happiness in accordance with their

priapic perimeters.

Thus

youth

who

craves the highest favor of

but

who has

been but poorly provided


it's

"Remove
play the
efforts.
is

it!

I'm afraid
the poet

a caterpillar."

is

answered by her:

If a

maiden loves to
for her artistic

flute,

knows another instrument


I

Or, "Madame,
I

bring you a beautiful bird."


is

"But
it

this

no bird." "Well,

admit there

a slight difference.

Whereas
so

other birds hate to get into cages, this one yearns for
that
it

much

weeps with joy."

The more or less skillful pretenses of girls who give themselves if the man is only daring enough, are jeered at ironically. "I told her that I wanted it. She was angry when she heard it. But when I did it
a
little

while later

noticed that she thoroughly enjoyed

it,

although

BOOK

II:

THE SEVENTEENTH CENTUMY

she hadn't with her ears shortly before."


his sweetheart: "I

young man

tells

am

so full of love

can't sleep nights.

You

don't

believe

The
night:

me? Very

well. Just let

me

sleep with

you and

you'll see."

"Am I not sweet?" "Yes," answers the newly wedded husman who taught you it."
and uses

newly wedded wife

asks her

husband on the wedding

band, "but the devil take the


returns

A cuckold
But

home

in a dark night

his marital privileges.

when he

begins to speak, the loving wife sighs disappointedly and

murmurs sleepily: "O, it's only you."


"you mustn't say she
sings like

When

Lisa's

song

is

praised

an angel but that she sings

as

though

she were being loved up."


It is

questionable

who is more versed


sum
of

in the art

men or women.
he would lead

A lady promised
he
replies

a large

money

to a poet if

her into Eden's lovely paradise ten times in one night. "Very well,"

"count out the money and get ready." Occasionally the


is

debt to Martial
tion.

very obvious, giving the impression of a transla-

Thus
a

in the case of Lisa

who once
that

received a fortune for her


gratis.

favors but has since sunk so

low

no one wants her even

Or when
vises

man

sends one of his friends Aretino's posuires but ad-

him

to have a girl around lest

he become a husband without

a wife.

Aside from these verses on special incidents there are


a

many

of

more general

nature: the defense of breasts

worn

exposed, blasts

against courtesans, jeremiads inspired

by

gallant disease, compari-

son of the instruments of love with


of the

all

possible things, comparison

two

genital apparatuses, paeans to the


parts.

male organ, and lyrics

on the female

These few comments

will afford

some notion

of the highly interesting contents of this compilation.

The

lion's

share of this compilation

was borne by Mathurin


his colleagues.

Regnier (i573-i6i3),a priest


to be sure,

who
S7

led a fairly loose life in which,

he differed but

Httle

from many of

But

THE EEOTIC MISTOHY OF FEANCE


intellectually,

he stood head and shoulders above them and became

the founder of the so called classic satire in France. Possessed of


a thoroughly sensuous nature,

he exercised no inhibitions on the


is

choice of his expressions. His presentation


earnest; factual, but merry.

naturalistic,

but not

His purpose was to make those

whom

he attacked ridiculous, and every means, including obscenity, was


valid for this purpose.

Nevertheless, despite their undoubted importance the mass of

such writings and writers are


history of

known only

to students of the erotic

French

literature
is

and to a number of book collectors


of this century
i^

of erotics. But there

one

man

who

still lives,

Jean

La Fontaine (162 1- 1695).


achieve immortality
it is

^^

proof of the contention that to

not necessary to have contributed epoch-

making

discoveries or profound investigations in


research.

some realm of
with the charm

human
of his

La Fontaine

did none of these things. All he did


filled

was to write light verse about common themes

own

personality.

With

the same openness and grace that

characterized his fables he later versified the themes of the old

French

fabliaux, of Boccaccio, Ariosto, the

Hundred Merry Tales,

and Rabelais.
In 1655 the
first

volume of

his

Contes appeared which owed

its

composition to Marie

Ann

Mancini, duchess of Bouillon and niece

of Mazarin, the French cardinal and prime minister under Louis xiv.

The

second volume appeared in 1666 and aroused the king's

dis-

pleasure.

At

a time

when

the precious bluestockings set the tone


society,

and when d'Urfee's WAstree was the popular book of high


the open eroticism of

La Fontaine could not

elicit

undivided ap1675,

plause. TTie publication of the third


at the instigation of the clergy.

book took place in

Yet on the same day on which

M. de

la

Reinie had officially prohibited the distribution of the

Contes^ as a sapient man, he privately invited the author to lunch.

BOOK
When

II:

THE SEVENTEENTH CENTUEY


his elegant his death-

the prohibition seemed to have been forgotten, the fourth

book was issued (1685). The poet never suspected that


and amusing verses could give
offense.

When

he lay on

bed the shameful character of the book was mentioned to him.

Whereupon he
so

asked in

all

naive wonder: "Are they then really

bad?"

He enjoined his

friends to atone for his sins in this manner.

One hundred

copies of his tales should be sold and the proceeds


tale,

given to the poor. In the

The
his
it

Geese, he explains with con-

siderable persuasiveness that his efforts couldn't possibly do harm;

that

all

the furore aroused

by

merry jokes was


let his

so

much ado

about nothing and that hence


molested.

were best to

work go undoesn't

La
say
are

Fontaine's tales are better than their reputation,

which

much

because they enjoy a vicious reputation.

Why? They

no better and no worse than the other

gallant tales of Piron,

Grecourt, Gresset which that century and the following one were

very fond
this craft,

of. If
it

La Fontaine was the


is

first

to achieve excellence in

certainly

not to be taken as a proof of his immorality,


taste of his

but rather of the playful dallying

age and the

mood

of

the people whose child he was. These tales are immoral

if

we

ac-

cept the moral code of prudes.


has
its

It is

platitudinous that every age


is

own

moral code. La Fontaine


is

an admirable chatter-box,

giving the impression that he


reader. Moreover, often

having a pleasant chat with the

he deliberately digresses to present some

good-humored moral
all

reflections,

which

justify

him

to the reader
a

the more.

None

of his

countrymen ever again achieved such

graceful tone, such a flexible form as

La

Fontaine's,

who was

the

crowning glory of the

erotic literature of seventeenth-century

France, and the most truthful historian of the morals of that period.

BOOK III THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY

CHAPTER

VI

THE GOLDEN AGE OF LOVE

IN periods of erotic literaturethe period of imperial Rome great


and the rococo.

THE

cultural history of the Occident there have been

two

To

be sure, Greece and the Renaissance contribis little

uted considerably, but there

extant of the former and the

achievements of the latter are far surpassed in magnitude and quality by the two
different.
first

mentioned. But the

first

two

are themselves very

Rome may be

considered cynical, raw, crude, coarse,

extremely frivolous. Yet

it

cannot be accused of producing witless

things or aiming merely to arouse sensuality, although there


a

were

number of such works according to some of the writers preserved


Utterly different was France of the
last half

to us.

of the seventeenth

century. Louis xiv with his basic tenet of Vetat c'est moi, and his

court set the tone. There was


politics, for

now no room for

free participation in

independent activity in public

life.

Everything was

decreed from above, so interest in politics declined. element pressed to the front.

The

personal

One
it

lived for sensation only and

gave in to every excess provided

promised some pleasure.

One
plea-

lived for pleasure, took unlimited joy in the


sures, that
is,

commonest of
life

the sexual; and one ordered one's whole


it.

to achieve
spell

maximum

of

Later, while the ageing king

was under the

of the pious

Mme.

de Maintenon

all this

joy had to be taken in


style

secret. Etiquette

was the supreme law and


93

engendered the

THE EEOTIC HISTORY OF FRANCE


changed mood. Coat
to
tails

were made

stiff

with wire sieves in order

make them

respectable and quite unapproachable; collars, cra-

vats,

and gloves were strengthened; the mighty and uncomfortable

Allonge wig forced one to keep a gravitational posture.

When the Regent came to power all was changed at once.


supplanted honor and everything was cut out for
in clothes
ease.

Grace

Grandeur

and in externals had already played

their roles; the pe-

rukes wandered into the old lumber room;

now

the hair

was worn

powdered and

loosely dressed in order not to hinder fast


less

movement.

Dwellings became

formal and more seductive.

No

more high

cold rooms of state, no

more grand
life

ostentatious

chambers opened
in pretty dislit

only on grand occasions. Daily


creet boudoirs, in small salons
soft

was now enacted

warmly cozy and dimly

with a

perfumed

light seeping

through shades of colored

silk.

Volup-

tuous paintings beckoned from the walls where blue and white

predominated; and gold-framed, crystal mirrors reflected pictures


of ardent pleasures; to these the swelling sofa with easily displaceable cushions and the soft yielding fauteuil with
its

soft pillows

clamorously invited. Orgiastic perfumes which sweetened every


healthy and natural odor

hung

in the

rooms and were good pan-

ders for amorous pleasures, served with multitudinous refinements.

This joy was more pleasurable since virtue, marriage and

fidelity

were but poorly marketable wares.


Virtue was regarded
as

an empty nought.

The

virtue of most
it

creatures seemed only the creation of masculine virtue, and


difficult to

was

guard a treasure to which


as a free

all

men had

the key. Marriage

was regarded
poach to
his

hunting ground in which anyone could

utmost

satisfaction.

Mutual love and


insipid,

fidelity

how

ridiculously

was

it

considered,

how

how commonplace!
have the familiar

The man found

all

possible joys of marriage with the lovely girls

of the ballet and the opera; and the

woman could

94

BOOK
this

III:

THE EIGHTEENTH CENTUKY


is

family friend. Marriage was the charter for erotic needs, and in

connection Mirabeau's confirmation

interesting. In his letters

to Sophie he speaks of his relations to the daughter of

Mme. Vence
married you

who one day thus addressed him. may do it as you both please, but
ried first."
It

"Milord, after she

is

pray, permit her to

become mar-

need not even be sensual

lust that spurs

one to

infidelity,

it

may be
also a

just curiosity. Certainly curiosity

played an important role

in predisposing

women

to infidelity but the desire for

change was

motive for inconstancy.

The

following judgment of a confacts.

temporary writer does not by any means correspond with the

"The

times are not

become

better,

they can't be any different, but


if it

some change may be discerned even


disgust with shamelessness.

springs out of tedium and

There

will

be a return to virtue to a

certain degree because

it

affords pleasure.

At

present nothing
is

is as

much

decried as marital fidelity but the prejudice


last

too strong and


one's desires,
all

cannot

forever."

There was no need of curbing

or one's lewdness, for the Regent set the example for

of France.

After his accession to the throne he continued the same dissolute


life

he had lived before. Towards evening he would lock himself

in the

Temple, the former dwelling of the lords of the Temple


his mistresses,

and now the residence of the Princes Vendome, with


his singers

and dancers, and together with ten or twelve


orgies, heavily

associates

would hold wild


blasphemy.

punctuated with obscenity and

The

corrupting
all

life

of the court

became worse than ever when


and

the king of
mistresses

rakes, Louis

xv came to the throne. The rule by


satires

had already become the subject of

literary

criticism during the reign of Louis xiv but the "solar" king didn't

exactly appreciate the

humor

of these

sallies.

Thus, he banished
been
at the court

one day the

Italian

comedy-players
95

who had

THE EROTIC HISTORY OF FRANCE


since 1661. Saint-Simon
affair.

makes the following remark anent

this

"So long

as these players did

no more than discharge their

filth

and their

irreligious

blasphemies they were greeted with

laughter.

But one day they got the idea of producing a piece by the

name

of

La

fausse

prude which was unmistakably aimed


it,

at

Mme.

de Maintenon. Everyone flocked to see

but after three or four

performances the theatre had to close and within a month the


actors

had

to leave the

kingdom.
left all

Louis XV, on the other hand,

shame behind. The large


quench
his

number
the
his

of his

avowed

mistresses did not sufRce to


at the

tremendous

lust,

whereupon

urging of the Pompadour and

Abbe

d'Aigre he caused a private brothel to be established for

own

usufruct in the notorious Pare an cerf.

At

the head of this

stood the

Pompadour who would have

to supply fresh goods conat the rudder.

tinually, if she intended to

keep her place

When

the ex-brothel-inmate

Dubarry was advanced to Pompwere

adour's place as royal court strumpet, many vitriolic pamphlets

directed against her because she carried over her brothel manners
to her
ier

new

post,

and remained open to every

flattering courtlove's
lists.

however

inferior

provided he was potent in


by becoming a sort
and in

But these

active, private orgies didn't satisfy the

glowing senses

of the royal scapegrace. So he had to feed his lust anew. Thus, he

chose to pander to his libido


in the following fashion.

of vicarious voyeur

He now

insisted that the Paris police inall

form him

at regular intervals
all

piquant detail

all

obscene

occurrences, and
plenty.

scandals and sex crimes.

Of

these, there

were

At

this
is

time Rousseau's influence began to make

itself felt. If
is

nature

good, then pleasure that does not offend her,


justified.

both per-

mitted and

The

feelings of

shame and

religious sensibility

are merely the result of societal influence. Better give

men unlimited

96

BOOK
quires a

III:

THE EIGHTEENTH CENTUEY


by one
alone;
it

sex freedom. But this cannot be accomplished

re-

complement

in others.

Away then with


if

modest yearnings,

with coy wooing for a favor which


as

granted, one must conceal


If love is

something prohibited. Ridiculous sham!

something

natural,

one should give oneself naturally!

But the physical receives a value only when the desired pleasure
bathed in beauty hightens the pleasure. Because the sexual domain
has always been ruled

by women,
such
a

so

women

give the tone to love


joy.
as in

when

fashion

makes sexual pleasure the crowning

Never bethe rococo

fore or since has

woman had
due to

dominant place
all

period. Despite the fact that she lacked


this exalted position

legal rights, she

occupied

a coincidence of the factors mentioned:

a strict but moribund despotism, an educated but disintegrated society, sharp class differences

and

rising democratic levelling, politialertness. It

cal

weakness conjoined with mental


lull

was the period of


to play

tense

before the tornado; those with

weak nerves had

at all costs in

order to forget.

Now in matters of pleasure woman


far surdesires, she grasps firm-

knows no middle way. Once she has put away shame, she
passes
ly;

man in
if

shamelessness.
isn't

Whatever she
deep,
is it

even

the interest

holds her spellbound. Because


erotic, she will

her whole thinking and doing


reveal herself without
is

concerned with the

any concealment whenever man's influence

but

slight.

This influence

man had
morals

shuffled off.

Man was

nothing

more than a lap dog to play with,


feelings. In this loosening of
sibility

to heighten joy and arouse ecstatic

man

bore the greatest respon-

by permitting

himself to be harnessed to the triumphal

chariot of the loved one. Inactivity led to effeminacy.

This shallowness and effeminacy was stamped on science

too,

and especially on philosophy. The


Helvetius,

crass materialism of a

Holbach,

La Mettrie and
is

others, led directly to the

hunt for pleaif

sure. If life

only a short span between birth and death, 97

there

THE EKOTIC HISTOMY OF FKANCE


is

nothing to hope for or fear after death, then

all

feeling,

thought

and action are to be concentrated on

this life. Ideals

which one

could grasp at for support no longer existed for this sceptical group.
It

was

folly to suppress one's impulses, since

one could not hope


such a struggle
life

for

any reward and could find no

satisfaction in

and victory.
enjoy
it as

What

remained therefore, except to exploit

and

pleasantly as possible?

Duty and

self

mastery were for-

gotten words; whatever was not tangible or pleasurable was hurled


out.
fall

Morals erect walls and forge chains; therefore, the walls must

and the chains be broken.

It

followed that soon

all

ethical

norms

were denied not out of any deep conviction but because they were
felt to

be uncomfortable.
as

One

further step, and marital infidelity


spirits

is

regarded merely

the activity of enlightened

and the nat-

ural satisfaction of corporeal hungers.

However,

as artists of pleasure it will

not do to forget that the bare

material delight without intensification of joy, without the ecstatic

embroideries of the spirit will finally bring ennui instead of perfect


satisfaction. It

was

just this to-do, the costly preparations, the

mea-

suring of powers, that conferred a value

upon the

desired goal. For

men and women


the

alike the joy in the

smart play of "wit" was parself

amount. Care was taken not to give one's

completely at once for


if brief,

acme of

refined pleasure required an alert,

contest be-

tween the

sexes.

What was

desired

was

to bind the other, couple


all

him

(or her) , to strip the character of the other completely,

the

while remai ning oneself aloof. Coolness of heart is the indispensable

element in these curious tournaments of sentiments. Every pleasure


is

the result of a fine education, resting on the mobility of the spirit


its

which acquired

routine and perfection in the salon. All

life

had

the character of the demi-mondaine,


It is

why

not amusement.^
to the shocks of

so easy and pleasant to

become accustomed
on their

a gallant conversation. See the laughter

lips as

the

company

BOOK
listens to the

III:

THE EIGHTEENTH CENTUEY


stories,

naughty

the erotic jokes, the intimate details


details

of the chrofiiqiie scandaleuse.

The most scabrous

won't

elicit

the start of dismay or the blush of surprise; but the downright and

known and countenanced facts will bring the displeasure of the company down on the head of the uncouth narrator. Occasionally in a small company one would remove all reforthright recital of
straint
this
it is

and completely indulge the desire for obscene words; and

in

pastime

women were

in

no wise outdone by the

roues.

Thus,
she

narrated of the gorgeous lady de Sainte-Julien that


at table

when

was

with gallant Abbes, she

just loved to say the dirtiest

words; and so astonishing would the words sound coming from her
beautiful

mouth

that she turned the heads of

all

the

men by

this

unrestraint of speech.

In the salon of Fanney de Beauharnais the receptions lasted from


eight in the evening to six the following morning.

Her

chief ad-

mirers were three realistic poets: Dorat, Mercier and Cubieres,

who

heaped abuse

at the classics

and earned the

title

of the truimvirat

du mauvais

gout. In her salon Cazotte and Restif read their auda-

cious works.

When the actress Quinault retired from


weekly meeting
at

the theatre in

1742, she instituted a

her

home

of choice spirits

such

as Duclos,

Abbe Voisenon, Count


lively.

Gaylos, Crebillon, Mariit

vaux, Voltaire and Piron. In this Societe du Bont-du-banc, as

was

known, things were very


was

Tribute was freely paid to the

Muses and every free joke was applauded, every piquant anecdote
laughed
If

at if

only

it

clever.

the

women

as rulers of the salon

lowered the level and sancthis

tioned complete revelation

how much more would

undressing
gladly,

process take place in the realm of letters.

Everybody wrote

wrote well, jested wittily and gossiped

blithely; there

was no trace

of faultfinding anywhere and one was greedy for success only in


the art of pleasing.

At

the early age of fifteen or sixteen the

young

99

THE EEOTIC HISTORY OF FMANCE


lady would leave the
cloister,

the general educational institution

for the highborn, and inaugurate her literary career in the follow-

ing fashion:
secretary,

Mama would

present daughter with a darling


little

little

and a perfectly cunning

key. Every night

when
and
with

dear

mama would
little

shut her eyes in slumber, daughter whose eyes


slink to her little secretary

had already been opened, would


pour out her

soul in languishing letters

which
alas!

dallied

eroticism or celebrated joys already tasted. But


er.

one grows old-

The mirror shows it every day; and what was formerly genuine emotion is now pushed into the background, and weighed down
reflections,

under a mass of

genuine or more probably

factitious.

The once
is

genuine feeling has become literary and the epistolatrix


ef-

concerned only with her reflections and the reception of her

forts.

The whole
upon

task
it

is

undertaken because

it is

pleasurable in the
sees one's

doing, and because

confers pleasure later

when one

influence
It

others.

Thus one

escapes ennui.

could not be otherwise than that

women
de

should set the pace

here too.

At

the age of eighteen,


erotic epistles.

Mme.

Stael,

then Miss Necker,

wrote highly

Other

ladies of the court described

their first loves, extra-marital loves, etc. in obscene letters.

Nor
feel-

must

it

be supposed that gentlemen did any violence to their


all

ings and suppressed


letter writing.

traces of

them when they approached


erotic letters of

Everyone knows the

Mirabeau to

his

two

sweethearts. Because of their obscenity the letters of


tells

Mon-

tesquieu were kept under lock. Saint-Simon


ship between a very high cleric,
resulting correspondence.

of a love relation-

Dom Gervaise,
letter

and a nun, and the


a

'The whole
filthiest

was

mass of vulgar
jests

expressions

mixed with the

words of tenderness and


delights, sorrows,

of a shockingly dissolute

monk; her

and sexual

yearnings are

all

depicted with utter frankness and license."


of panurgic correspondence

That

this

mode

was not confined

to

100

BOOK

III:

THE EIGHTEENTH CENTUMY

great writers of sentiment or significant personalities but was a very-

widespread practise, the collections of Beardsley, Paul Dublin and

Grand

Carteret will

attest.

Some

of these letters are very attrac-

tively set

up

indeed.

Naked

cupids, hearts and arrows serve as

letter heads; letter papers are


ters.

used which open and close like shut-

When

the pretty one opened the shutter she would see the

cupids drawing a classic phallus out of a drum, or two grenadiers


presenting arms.

Along with such

letters stood the

Memoires which were nothing were responsible

more than
for

clever gossip and scandal. Since they

many uncomfortable

revelations their appearance

was not

greeted with unmixed pleasure and they were criticized rather


unfavorably.

On

this point the

remarks of Count Tilly, one of

Marie Antoinette's

circle, are interesting:


is

"What is most

to

be cen-

sured in these people

not so

much

the indecency of their rep-

resentations (I do not speak of the intentionally coarse depictions

of the orgasm) as their foolish intention or desire to delude and

persuade that the private vice of the great world


ality of that

is

the public mor-

whole world. That indecent conversation conducted


is

in the boudoir
ladies of the

also

conducted in the business

office; that

young
the

world are puppies and snot-noses

who employ
a sort of

most bizarre and improper jargon for their language; that finally the
school of the refined court etiquette in France
stall
is

quack-

where one hears nothing but candied

foulness,

broad jokes and

elegant nonsense.

These are the figures drawn by those gentry when

they desire to depict the morals of the great world. Such depictions,
in

which the most barbarous absence of


no longer novel or rare

taste is

shown, deserve

much more
which
are

censure than isolated sketches of single immoralities


in a

century accustomed to hear

such things without shame or blush."


In order properly to evaluate the worth of the literary produc101

THE EEOTIC HISTOMY OF FEANCE


tions of that period,

we must

keep
first

in

mind how the


last!

society then

was organized. The king was


planets

and

the sun to which the


society, at

owed

their light.

His opinion was decisive for

least for

the nobility grouped around his throne.


it is

At

that time Paris

was much smaller than


of locomotion

today. Trains, autos, and other means


in existence,

were not yet

and people were con-

demned
a
little

to greater fixity

and immobility. Encounters were not for


at Paris

while only.

Only

and Versailles did the royal sun

shine. Indeed,

both the monarch and the powerful lords profited


in solitary rule.

from the royal graciousness, for Louis found no joy

He
tain

needed

praise, admiration, incense

all

of

which he could obhis

from a group whose gratitude he won through


His

great

generosities.

own

person had very

little

that

was

lovable.

On

the other hand, the pleasure-hungry nobility and clergy could not

do without the king's open hand. For after one had grown ac-

customed to the charms of Paris and Versailles


to think of living without them.
at

it

was impossible

The income

of the neglected estate


life

home was

scarcely sufficient for this extravagant

within the
desired
raise

confines of the royal residence. Therefore the king


to assemble a rich

who

and luxurious court about himself and to

the nobility and the clergy above the wealthy bourgeois class, as-

sumed the

responsibility of supporting an aristocratic class in acits

cordance with

rank. For this

pomp and

splendor tremendous

funds were necessary. Since there were not enough positions in


the royal establishment to
since the illusion
sions
fill

with the horde of noble

parasites,

and

had

to

be maintained that the sinecures and penreal service,

were granted for some

new

posts

were created
interested

upon paper with impossible names and


in this aspect of the subject

functions.

Those

would do well to read Taine's La France

contemporaine.

Two

vicious results

from

this profitable

dependence upon the

102

BOOK

III:

THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY


all its evil

king were: (i) extravagance, with

consequences and (2)

the delight in gossip, which derived from the joy of scandal and

nourished
a

it.

The
to

elite,

following the example of their ruler, were


for serious work.

weak group not made


be

But the dreadful


this

idleness

would have

filled

with something, and in

they were

wondrously expert. Funds were never lacking, so no wish need go


unfulfilled;

and the more

easily

they were

gratified, the

more they
natural,

were magnified. There was no longer any regard for the


so one sought the unnatural, the vicious;

and great perfections were

achieved in this search.

Whoever

did not lend himself willingly to

abuse and did not permit himself to be drawn into the whirlpool of
unlimited pleasure, was impelled to sacrifice his strongest principles

by the sound and shimmer

of gold.

What was not purchasable? Love of parents,


all fell

children and mate

under the sway of the glittering metal. Since virtue was

listed so

low on the exchange, the favor of the


from the
alas!

fair

one could be
consequently,

won by him who had the most wealth, and who was,
able to drive his rival

contest. Expenditures

and needs

should be balanced, but

human demands
all gifts

are often in excess;

hence there

results a

mad

rush for gold, a wild pursuit of the favor

of the king from whose open hand

come.

It is, after all,

the

king
shall

who
be
less

will decide

whether

this or that

noble parasite's desire

gratified.

The

favored one must think of other means to reach his ends.


effica-

Accordingly, he launches hidden attacks, sometimes more


cious than those of the rich and powerful.
is

The most popular weapon


gossip
if

the

libel, gossip,

or the pamphlet.

Always the

must be
latter,

brought into connection with the person of the king


the dispenser of
gifts,

the

good and
is

evil alike, is to

be enlisted against

the libeled one. That

why

this sort of gossip is

common, raw,
exists for

cunning, poisonous, and untrue; for usually no basis


103

the

THE EMOTIC HISTOMY OF FRANCE


accusation.

But what of

it?

The

goal has been reached.

The

libeled

one has

lost,

the grace of the king has been gained, and the scandalingratiated himself into royal favor.
a rival,

monger has
is

Even when

there

no question of displacing

one

still

scores a point with his

royal majesty,

who
were

swallowed the Parisian police reports with

such lusty avidity and


especially
s

who knew

well

how

to price such gossip

if it

filthy enough.
less attractive side

This was the public,

of gossip.

which profaned private

secrets

was

less reprehensible.
little

The other One had so


busmess to

much
attend

time
to.

and

these petty fellows had very


to gratify
all

One had enough means

one's desires

and

enough time to gossip about

one's neighbor's affairs.

Each knew

the affairs of the other, and since life was regarded from the joy-

ous

side,

judgment was not very

strict.

Why

pretend to a mor-

ality

which has no validity? One merely sought pleasant amusement


as such, gossip
is

and

invaluable. It

was whispered

that

Count

found

his

wife in the arms of the singer Y, that the bosom of that


so youthful

renowned beauty was not quite

and fresh

as a score of

years ago; that the pretty Clarice never goes to bed at night with-

out having made at least three lovers happy.


a pair of horns to the duke,

Today the Marquis dealt


given,

tomorrow the revenge has been

and the other head wears the horny emblem. Or a few days ago
a certain ladies'
it is

man

got a venereal disease, and some weeks later

whispered that the intimate friend of the household bears

the same cross. This ominous coincidence arouses laughter but no

shudder; at the most there

is

word

of

sympathy

for the hard luck.

For it was no more than that


since
to the

in the eyes of this frivolous

company,
bring us

tomorrow some indiscriminate


same pass; so let's

sexual union

may

forestall the evil interpretation

now.
ser-

Not only

cavaliers enjoyed the favor of

women, powerful
at all times.

vants or stable attendants were also

welcome

Nerciat

104

BOOK
tells

III:

THE EIGHTEENTH CENTUEY

us the reason: "Since the gentlemen cavaliers and officers, in


all

short

who once

boasted polite behavior, gallant conduct and

honesty, have lost their civility and set no

more
us,

store

by

elegant

deportment which has much of charm for

the servant

generally well built, well dressed and proud of the

who is attention we

bestow upon him,


Moreover, he
is

is

much more

serviceable for our pleasures.


less likely to

more trustworthy, and

be hazardous

to his lady both before

and after the relationship."

In these memoirs the most intimate female charms are described

with a lack of ceremony that


for us her

is

amazing.

Madame

Tallien depicts

bosom and her thighs with the same

fullness of detail as

she expends upon her face. In the diary of a contemporary belle,

Mme. Celie-Epomine Dupont


of

occurs the following note:

"Which
a

my

gorgeous dresses

shall I

wear?

It's

no matter, for they're

equally transparent. Recently at a soiiper a friend


that

made

wager

my

whole garb including


silver pieces. I

rings, anklets

and shoes weighed

more than two

forthwith disrobed and


is

won

the bet."

The number

of these secret memoirs

legion, so only a

few
most

characteristic ones will be mentioned.


faithfully mirrored in the

The

life

of that time
all

is

memoirs of the prince of

adventurers,

the likeable

Giacomo Casanova, Chevalier de

Seingalt,
is

bom

at

Venice, 1725, died in Bohemia, 1798. Casanova

another proof

of the contention that the personality living in perpetual


the laws of the normal citizen has
lives of

war with

much more

of interest than the


life.

other men,

who abide by the


him

conventionalities of social

Today we

incline to call

a rascally swindler, but the termi-

nology of his time recognized no such designation. Crowned heads


sought his presence, Frederic the Great sought to attract him to his
court but the arch-restles^ one could not long remain in one spot

and the

strictly regulated life of the


is

average bourgeois was an


responsible for the uncer-

abomination to him. His restlessness


105

THE EMOTIC MISTOKY OF FKANCE


tainty, the

ups and downs of his

the land in a chariot


stuffed with gold;

Today journeying through accompanied by two servants, his pockets


life.

tomorrow once again deprived of the most


sell his

ele-

mentary needs, driven to


to obtain the

watch for

a bit of bread. In order

means for

his luxurious life

he did not hesitate to

deceive the credulous.

When he played

at cards or other

games of
it

chance he did not hesitate to cheat quite shamelessly; to him

was

merely to corriger

la

fortune and he passionately praised his

tactics.

He was

frequently brought into contact with the stolid guardians

of the law

who were

naturally unable to appreciate his extra-

ordinary ability; he was also compelled to make the acquaintance of


the leaden prison of Venice but here too his audacity and astound-

ing nerve saved him.

However, when we think of Casanova today, we do not

re-

member
to

the extraordinary wealth of his adventures.


all

He

is

for us

the type of

erotomaniacs. Indeed, his

name would be known


a heart.

merely a few scholars had he not possessed so inflammable


is

For him love


flight of

the

sum

of

life;

thus,

when,

after the inexorable


bitter

time he

lost his

power over women, he became

and

resigned and withdrew from the world.


ideal of beauty; love, red, blonde
it

He never

had one

definite

was woman

whom

he

desired. In his

round of

and brunette

sisters

lend each other a hand.

Young
tempt

or middle-aged, slim or plump, virgin or whore him.


less

all

alike

He

bestows his ardent embraces upon dazzling beauty no

than upon repulsive ugliness.

With

imperious candor he re-

ports his orgies with

two and

three,

without applying any moral


his natural incli-

criterion to the situation.

Undismayed, he follows

nations and never avoids the pleasure they hold in store for him.

And

despite the breathtaking frankness of his narration


all

we

do

not lose our sympathy, for Casanova avoids

perversity, merely

regarding

woman

as

an object of natural pleasure to be discarded


106

BOOK
as

III:
is

THE EIGHTEENTH CENTUEY


appeased.

soon as hunger

He

does not love with his senses

alone,

he gives

all

of himself and his personality, desiring to be

loved for himself.


less

He remains

true to each one so long as his rest-

heart has not been caught in

new

bonds. In every temporary

sweetheart he sees a person of like rights with himself and extends


the same consideration to her desire for pleasure as his own.

Hence

the joy he

is

preparing for

is

greater than the experience. His love

wishes to encompass the object of his interest completely, body

and

soul.

Witty

chatter

is

an indispensible concomitant of physical suris


is

render; hence his great love for bed-talk. Sometimes his desire

doomed
merely a

to disappointment,
vessel of

and frequently enough the object


then he
is

impure

lust;

compelled to appeal from


their favorite

Venus
Such

to

Mercury. But the gods have endowed

with

healthy blood and soon he has expelled the poisons from his body.
little

wounds

sustained

on the

battlefield of love are not suf-

ficient to turn

him into

a hater of

women. No, indeed


makes
life

not.

He

sings

the Canticles of

Women know how to appreciate and reward his utter surrender. When
alone

Woman who

worth

living.

the delicate hands of one inclination loosen, and the restless one

is

driven to a

new garden, to

dust the petal of a

new

flower, there are

occasionally tears

which embitter the

farewell; but

no hatred ever
long

pursues the fickle one. Sometimes,


friendship blooms in
its

when

his love has died, a


all

place.

The

actual process of

his loves,

the conquest and the liberation from fetters found galling, Casanova
relates in

unadorned truth and pleasurable

pride.

Yet

his vanity

doesn't lead

him

to leave everything in a rosy glow.

He

reports his

misfortunes in love, the blanks he has chosen in the lottery, with


the same candor and admits that in his case too. Master Iste has had
his

whims, and on occasion has brought him into the most


This love of truth
at the cost of his reputation,
is

fatal

situations.

quite

THE EKOTIC HISTOMY OF FEANCE


a sacrifice to his

amour propre.

It

constitutes the best guarantee of

the documentary value of these writings deahng with the social


life

of his time.
far

It is this

quality

which has

raised Casanova's docu-

ment

above the great number of contemporary memoirs.


reflects the erotic morals of
as faithfully,
is

There is another work which


composed on
wide

France
it is

during the eighteenth century quite


so
a

although

not

background. This

the compilation of the

Memoires secrets by the Royal Censor, Matth ieu Frangois Pidausat


de Mairobert.
bath in 1779,

He

was born
it

in 1707

and committed suicide in

his

when

became known

that certain pamphlets di-

rected against France which had appeared in the English press, had

been composed by him. In


bit of gossip
is

his compilation of anecdotes not


little

every

garnered up without criticism. All the

scandals

that had been aired with gusto in the salon of

Madame Doublet de

Person by the daily

visitors like

Madame de

Tencin,

Du

Deffand,

Geoffrin, Lespinasse, Voisenon, or Piron underwent a very strict


criticism as to their truthfulness; only after truth

had been con-

scientiously sifted

from fiction were they written down by Bachau-

mont and

his successors. It

would be more correct


first

to say that

Bachaumont wrote only the

form and

half of the fifth vol-

ume between

767 and

77 1 ; and Pidausat de Mairobert took charge


until his death in 1779.

from 1 77 1 and continued


a

Then

the author

of the Private Life of Louis

XV assumed control and together with

few

others accumulated material until the year 1789.


articles

These

and memoirs contain more than mere gallant anec-

dotes. Politics

and religion likewise play important parts therein

but the gallantries occupy chief place. Particularly interesting are


the notices concerning erotic writings and pamphlets. Naturally
these

memoirs are not to be regarded

as

trustworthy historical

sources, for

many

of

them

are obviously a result of prejudice,

and

there

is

certainly

no denying the delight


lOS

in piquant indecencies.

BOOK
By and
large

Ills

THE EIGHTEENTH CENTUEY


constitute an unsurpassable reflection
life.
is

however they

of contemporary social

The second work


78),

of this class

UObservateur Anglais (1777is

reworked

in

Uespion Anglais (1779). This too


is

probably
this

the product of Pidausat's pen although there


point.

no certainty on

At least this much is certain, that many remarks and verbatim

quotations from this


writings.

work were found

scattered

among

his other

The work

contains a collection of satirical and free pieces

and

is

most important source document for the study of prostitu-

tion in eighteenth-century France.

The infamous Mde.

Justine
lavish

and equally notorious Mde. Gourdan maintained the most


brothels in France.

They were

figures of national importance

and

exercised great influence

on the moral conditions of


to the

their time.

There were many supplements

memoirs of Bachaumont

and Pidausa t. The Marquis d'Argens, for example, served up some


very saucy
details

concerning the amorous relationships of the


satirical verses in his

French kings combined with anecdotes and

Memoir es

historiques et secrets (1739).

And

there were

many

other scandalous chronicles.

The most infamous

penny-dreadful

journaHst of this time was undoubtedly Thevenot de

Morande

(1748- 1 803)

who

proliferated a great deal of


life.

smut and obscenity.

He

led a rather active

At

the wish of his

own

family he was

held in the Bastille for a while, and upon his release journeyed to

England. Here he published the Le philosophe cyniqiie and the

Melanges Confus (177

),

both of which caused considerable scandal


profit.

and brought the author a considerable

Since his business

was

flourishing,

he devoted himself to the accumulation of further

scandals and anecdotes of a similar type.

He made a sally

against

Du

Barry with

a satiric blast:

Vie (Vune

courtesane du dix-huitihne siecle (1776), and at her instigation he

was pursued by the London

police.

As

early as 1774 she had sent

109

THE EROTIC HISTOKY OF FEANCE


the police inspector Receveur to

London

to bring the pamphletist

back to France, but in


his sharp
all

vain. Persons of high


it

and low degree feared

tongue and pointed pen. Hence

was not considered

at

queer to enter into negotiations with


a

this

dangerous pamphletist.

For

second pamphlet which had already been printed,


lires

Du

Barry

paid the author 32,000

and assigned him an annual pension of

4800

lires,

whereupon the

edition

was destroyed.

It

was only

later

in 1784 that the Marquis de Pellepart dared to lash Morande's

shameless career in his Diable dans

un

benitier,

but he himself

brought out
others.

many

scandalous stories about Dubarry, Gourdan, and

Thevenot de Morande wrote another amusing work which was


not quite in the vein of his other
feuille
satirical blasts. It is called

La Portefrom

de

Madame Gourdan

1783).

A strongly augmented edition


the

appeared the following year but


sufficient recognition.

still

work found

far

The

author states that he had come into


a visit

possession of the letters


to

which comprise the volume through

Mde. Gourdan and was now giving them

to the public. This


as

lady was called

by

the pet

name

of

La Comtesse and was,

we

have mentioned above, one of the most notorious brothel-keepers


of her time. She practised her extremely lucrative profession to-

gether with the equally notorious Justine Paris from 1759


death, probably

till

her

from poisoning,

in 1783.

This work presents a

paragraph in the erotic history of France far better than


thick folios of that time.

many
be

Here

are a

few specimen

letters to

found in Morande's work.

From Mademoiselle Savigni,


Paris, July
/ j, i'J7<f'

Dear Mama,

The
to

officer

who

supported
is

me

has had to return


I

to his regiment because his furlough

over.

don't

know what

do and

am turning to you

for help.

You know that I'm a good

110

BOOK
girl, afraid

III:

THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY


all

of nothing, and that everything's

right with

me

provided

am

well paid for

it.

am

not of the class that de-

mands
is

that everything be done according to rules of decency.

That's nonsense.

What do men expect to find?

A regular whore

everywhere at her post and has every privilege. I hope that you will praise my principles and not forget your loving child.

From Mademoiselle Rancourt,


Madame:

July, 8, ijSi.

At the Italian theatre yesterday I saw in your company a young pretty person. If you can get her for me for one night I shall pay you six louis d'or. Entirely yours, R.

From Mademoiselle Sophie,


Paris,

February 2j, ijS^.


with your damn

Dear Mama,
I've gotten into a hell of a hole

Carmelite.

my

life

He has gotten me into a terrible condition. Never in have I been so sick. A-Iy physician, for whom I have

sent this morning, informs

me that I shall be sick for at least two months. I hope that you will help me and not leave me in this condition. After all, I got this wound while under your standards. Please send me by this messenger, two louis. You will

greatly oblige. Yours gratefully, S.

From Madame Berbier, Paris, April p,


Madame:

I'jS^.

comply with your wish Immediately after the ballet she had a miscarriage. As soon as she will be well again, however, she will present herself at A'ladame's, and will be ready for service. I have the honor to be your very devoted servant. Mrs. Berbier.
able to
at this time.
ill

My daughter is not

THE EKOTIC HISTOKY OF FRANCE


From Mademoiselle Frangois,
Arpajon,

May

27, 77^5.

Madame:
I'm only a simple country girl but that I am pretty, no one can deny. I am an orphan, and not yet eighteen years old. I've heard the servants at the castle say that I have a maiden-

head which would be bought dearly at Paris and that for you Madame, I would be worth much gold. Hence, I have obtained your address from them, who laughed at my request but gave it to me none the less. If you want me, you have merely to summon me and I shall come with my maidenhead. I don't know
yet what
thing.
I it is,

but they say that you will take care of every-

remain very respectfuly,

Your devoted

servant.

From M.
Madame:

T., Paris, 2^rd

June

I'jj^.

My daughter

is

turning fourteen. If you wish


all difficult

we can

win the youngster. With a few bonbons and a little courtesy one can do with her what one wills. One only needs certain preparations. It will be necessary that you take her to you as chambermaid. Please specify the time and I will come with my daughter and
talk about first fruits. It will not be at

to

we

shall settle everything. I

have the honor to remain in


F.

all

respect,

your very devoted.

From Monsieur de B., May


Madame:
I

i, i'j'j6.

possess a collection of the positions of Aretino in


I

am going to Rome I should like to dispose of them. It seems to me that as a room decoration nothing would be more suitable for you. They cost five thousand francs.
forty pictures. Since

was unwilling to part with them to (Duke them I shall de ) for a hundred louis. If you wish to inspect remain at home all day tomorrow.

Only

a year ago

112

BOOK
Madame:

III:

THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY


From Mr. D. (Book Agent), June
22, ijSo.

I have just received from Holland editions de luxe of the Virgin, Portier des Chartreux, Margo, Positions of Aretino, Ode to Friapus, Futromeni, Discourse of Two Nuns, for the

instruction of

any of these

young dames who want to enter into society. If appeal to you, madame, please inform me at what

time to bring them.

This sheaf of

letters

from the

portfolios of the notorious

and
life

powerful panderess gives us some insight into the nefarious

which she and countless others of her

ilk led,

and the

infinite mis-

chief and corruption they engendered.

^$e^i^$^^^9^^9(^$^e^e^^e^e^e^^

CHAPTER Vn
ANTI-ROYAL AND ANTI-CHURCH LITERATURE

\iNYBODY might become the target of the storm of

satire

which

y\
places

has been just mentioned, but

it is

obvious that those in high


least

would be most exposed

to

it,

and could find

refuge from

the downpour. Perverse dissoluteness has always found a fierce pleasure in tearing the veil

from the most intimate matters of

one's self

or the other fellow's.


ness of another to a

It is a

debauched delight to display the nakedspectators,

band of

and

it is

accounted an even
there can be

more voluptuous

delight to display one's own.

Hence

nothing more piquant than the publication of these detailed enumerations.


Is

there any wonder, therefore, at the colossal proportions

this shamelessness

assumed in eighteenth-century France when the

highest classes engaged in the composition of such scandalous

works?

The Duke of Richelieu, one of time, set down the reminiscences


Regent.

the greatest heartbreakers of

all

of his youth at the court of the

He

mentions in his memoirs that a book had been comde Tencin, describing the most obscene practises

posed by
of
all

Madame

the rakes before the eighteenth century, which was destined

for the personal use of the Regent.

These regal voluptuaries sowed


xv, one of the greatest of

wind and reaped the whirlwind. Louis


libertines,

with

his corps of mistresses certainly


satire.

gave ample prosatires,

vocation to the most vitriolic

One

of these

with

its

witty allusion to the frigidity of the Pompadour, cost the royal


114

BOOK
all

III:

THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY


During
his

minister, Maurepas, his post.

banishment he assembled
in red

possible erotic

works and bound them

morocco adorned

with his coat-of-arms.

The King and


pamphlets.

his mistresses

were the

targets of the

most obscene

Pompadour was not so sensitive

to these malicious squibs.

In her letters she speaks of a pamphleteer

who had composed some


flee to

vulgar verses at her expense but had been compelled to

Lon-

don in order to escape her wrath. "He can always return," she continues.
I

"Though I am a woman I can forgive insult, and what's more

can reward

my

friends and

compel them,

if

not to love me, at


letters are

least to

have a measure of respect for me". These

most

probably forged. Dubarry was not able to exercise such magnanimity and
against

we

have seen above that she took very stern measures


letters too

Thevenot de Morande. Her published


as historical sources,

must be

regarded

but are nevertheless of some interest

for the contemporary moral situation.

With the ascent of Louis xvi the ball of satire had gained such momentum that there was no stopping the stream of anti-royalist literature which was directed not so much against him, as against
Marie Antoinette. As a foreigner she proved an excellent object
for national hatred, and in addition she provoked public opinion
in

many

ways.

Her

ostentatious aversion to "crapule"; her secret

nocturnal outings to disreputable inns where firmly believing that she was unsuspected, she carried on her undisguised affair with the

King's brother, the Count d'Artois, a notorious wastrel; and the


visits to

her private theatre where frequently the performances


similar matters

were indecent. These and

were not calculated

to

arouse the sympathy of the people.


In his memoirs.

Count Tilly seeks to defend

her,

"Her appearance
was

on the

terraces at Versailles

where the

beautiful evenings and enstrollers,

chanting music called forth the groups of


115

new

pre-

THE EEOTIC MISTOEY OF FMANCE


text for libel

and malice .... In these nocturnal

strolls

were sought wound.

and found the weapons which

finally dealt her a fatal

The

mask-balls at the opera and the theatre, the intimacy between

her and the Princess of Lamballe, her long friendly connection with
the Duchess of Polignac, offered enough material for accusation.

Her

aversion to court coercion and to the precise obedience of the

etiquette proper to her class,

were regarded
one

as neglect

and

dis-

respect of royal duties.

And though no

knew

better than she

how

to act the role of


still

queen with dignity and grace when she so


as immorality,
is

desired,

they interpreted her unforced freedom


as irascibility."

and her aversion to some people


partial, as

But Tilly

too

he needs must be, to a queen


it

who was very

generous to

him.

And

should be recalled that he was not a regular

of the inner circle, so that he was not altogether


ertheless, despite his partiality for the queen,

member enlightened. Nev-

he admits that she

had two love


Fersen.

affairs

with

the

Duke de Coincy and Count de


pam-

One
phlets

of the most successful of the anti-court anti-Marie

was an obscene

satire describing

her amour with the Count

d'Artois

later

King Charles

x; the
is

supposed impotence of the

King

is

mocked and the Queen

represented as a model of licen-

tiousness.

At the behest

of the court, the whole edition

was bought

from the booksellers


Bastille.

at the price of 17,000 francs,

and burnt in the

Naturally, a

few

copies escaped this destruction, and later


in his

this piece

was reprinted by Mercier de Compiegne

Momus

redivivus.

The

notorious story of the necklace

was the occasion


a secret con-

of the pamphlet

Le bordel

royal,

which describes

ference of the

Queen with

the Bordel patriotique.

Of equal obscenity is The Queen and Madame Theroigne decCardinal Rohan.

orate the statue of Priapus with flowers, and use their hands

upon
in-

the statue in a very obscene fashion. This Theroigne


116

woman

BOOK

III:

THE EIGHTEENTH CENTUMY


and
in the freest of language

stituted a patriotic brothel,

makes

known the prerequisites and conditions of the brothel business. Of a similar nature is the Messaline Franfaise, in which the author doesn't hesitate to slander the Queen for having had intercourse with him. Of like scope is the book UAutrichiene en goguette, attributed to Mayeur de Saint-Paul. The interest here centers, as
in dozens of others, in a lesbian scene

between Marie Antoinette,


It is especially

the Duchess of Polignac and Count d'Artois.

amus-

ing since

all

the erotic events take place behind the back of the

sleeping King.

pamphlet directed against the whole courtly society

is

the

rare and remarkable Bibliotheque de la cour (1781).

The

peculiar

thing about it

is

that every person

is

characterized

by

the possession
life.

of an eroticon

which

is

somehow

suited to his character or

Thus, Cardinal Rohan has the Liaison dangereiises; Chevalier d'Eon

whose sex

will

always remain a mystery, has Description de Vile

des Hermaphrodites; Talleyrand, the Archbishop of Lyons, has the


Traite sur Vapostasie; the Archbishop of Paris has the
peter; the so

VArt

de

Abbess de Polignac, Traite sur


indefinitely.

les

accouchements, and

on almost

Most of

these writings

were distributed from England or Hol-

land since France possessed in the Bastille, an excellent means of


silencing these malicious tongues.

For England and other

lands,

there was another remedy.

Out

of fear of these poisonous pam-

phlets one entered into negotiations with the authors, through intermediaries, and sought to

buy

their silence.

This practice, begun

during the reign of Louis xiv, roused the greed of the malefactors.
It It

became
became

good

business, this mulcting the great

and near-great.
to

a regular trick for these

wallowers in

mud

warn the
manu-

Chief of Police at Paris concerning the impending publication of a


libel,

and then to negotiate for the very profitable


117

sale of the

THE EROTIC HISTOMY OF FRANCE


script.

The

breadgiver of these unsavory folk was one Brossiere, a

former lackey
If in a

who had
it

barely escaped the gallows.

land as absolutistic as France, the throne could not escape


certainly
is

these attacks,

no wonder that the clergy was


life

fero-

ciously set upon.

The immoral

of

many

priests,

who

could not

be represented

as

other than "loving", provided enough material

for fierce satire.


verses

The

anthologies too, received


clerics in

enough cynical
It

which censured these

rounds of profanity.

was

not unnatural that religion

itself

should finally be blamed for the


its

continuous misdeeds and abominations of

professionals.

Cause

was mistaken for


Evariste

effect

and the

devil exorcised

by Beelzebub. Thus
which he
at-

Parny wrote Les Galanteries de

la Bible, in

tempted to make the Bible ridiculous by


in a frivolous

retelling

its

love episodes

manner.

The
by

first

place

among

anti-clerical

pamphleteers was occupied

the Parisian lawyer, Charles Gervais de Latouche (17 18-1782),


classic Portier des

with his
title

chartreux which appeared under the


.

of Histoire de

Pom
1

Bougre Bougre derives from Bulgaria,


is

from which land pederasty


first

supposed to have spread.


is

The book
of cler-

appeared about
be regarded
as

745,

though the exact date

uncertain, and

may

the naughtiest and maddest

mockery
its

icaldom, especially monkery.

No

other book of

kind aroused

such a furore and was so frequently reprinted; no other represented


the

monks

in their degradation with so


it

much wit and savage

satire.

At

the same time,

was

a breviary of the art of love perfectly

suited to the erotic taste of France during the eighteenth century.

Naturally the offended priests

moved heaven and


all

earth to have the

book destroyed, but

in vain; for despite

persecutions the reprints

were

as

numerous
it.

as

mushrooms

after rain.

Everyone with any


Aphorisms and
in

education read

Lichtenberg mentions in
lis

his

wp
BOOK
witty
Its
if

III:

THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY


it,

a letter to Dietrich that he has read

and remarks that

it is

a very

a very dirty book.


is

history too

interesting. It

is first

mentioned by the Marquis

de Paulmy in the manuscript of his catalogue. This edition was

provided with twenty-three engravings by Catylas, well cut but


poorly drawn.

Today

there

is

but one copy owned by the noted

English collector Hankey.

The Marquise de Pompadour had a very


this

handsome
miniatures

edition, richly

bound and decorated with twenty-eight


book

drawn on parchment. She was very fond of

with

its

daring philosophy, genial composition, magnificent style,


least, its
it

and not

obscenity. In a letter to

Vicomte d'Herbigny she


and urges him to get

speaks of
a

in terms of the highest admiration


as it afforded

copy

at

once

her so

many

hours of pleasant excita-

tion.

Pompadour's copy

later

came

to the collection of Berard

and

was doubtless destroyed with other books of the Arsenal

library.

Of

the third edition printed at Versailles there

is

again but one ex-

tant

copy

in the Bibliotheque Mozarine, with a dedication to

Marie Antoinette.

most valuable and attractive edition of these

Memoires

is

the one published

by

the Cazin press in 1787, disits

tinguished for the absolute accuracy of

text

and decorated with

twenty-four lovely engravings by Borel and Elluin. This edition,


of
is

which one copy


also

is

found in the library of the

Palais des Arts,

very

rare.
its

Because of

great importance in the history of French erotic

literature the contents of the story will

be briefly summarized.

The

author looks back upon his stirring


conquests and achievements.

life

and

sees the array of all his

He

is

presumably the son of

a peasant

couple but in his paternity


cipants. It
is

all

the brothers of a cloister were partithat Saturnin


is
is

quite

by accident

inducted into the


siesta

mysteries of Venus.

One

afternoon he

aroused from his

by

the sound of sighs and groans.

Through
119

a hole in the wall

he

sees

THE EEOTIC HISTORY OF FMANCE


his

supposed mother in the most intimate posture with the family

confessor.

Thoroughly aroused by the


his

sight,

he sings the song of

Hymen
things

with

own

hand.

As

a result of this experience

many
all

become

clear

which have hitherto been obscure, and


His

his

wishes are hereafter directed to doing that which the Pater had

done with

his mother.

sister

Susanna appears to him to be a

likely object for the satisfaction of his lust.

He

finds her picking

flowers one day and after some hesitation decides to take her
force.
as

by
the

But she defends herself pluckily, so he

desists, especially
visit

he sees their mother approaching. Next day they both


Susanna

religious preceptress of

but particularly to Saturnin,

who is suspiciously tender to both who is daring enough to venture some


arrival of the administrator pre-

amorous contacts. The untimely


vents

him from using

his advantages,

but he

is

invited to

come

another day.

On

the

way home he
and to

again seeks to

make Susanna
from her

comply with

his wishes

his great surprise learns

statements that she


does. After

knows much more about such matters than he


this

some struggle she informs him how she came by

knowledge.

One

night while she was asleep at the cloister where she was

being educated. Sister Monika had slipped into her bed and initiated

her into tribady. In the ensuing conversation Monika sings a paean


to the male organ

and

is

astounded to discover that Susanna doesn't

know

the names for the genital parts.

Monika

confesses that while

very young she had


efforts to cool

felt intense sex desires

and had made various

her heat. Since the manipulations of manustupration


her eyes upon the brother of one of

no longer

satisfy her, she casts

her schoolmates. She offers no resistance to his approaches but they


are discovered while
still

in the preliminary stages.


is

A strict investi-

gation ensues and

Monika

sentenced to chastisement but she desix

fends herself so wildly that

nuns are no match for her. In the


120

BOOK

III:

THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY


to use as soon as she
is

scuffle there drops

from the pocket of one of them a godemiche


alone.

which Monika attempts


finds

When

she

no success in

this

she desists in great disappointment but de-

cides to revenge herself for the treatment she has received, and

then to disappear.

The

Another Superior reproaches her severely


all

for her conduct of the previous day, but becomes

kindness

when

Monika shows her the instrument,


thing that goes on in the
cloister.

as

an example of the sort of


it

At once

becomes obvious from


is

her embarrassment that the Mother Superior


article.
is

the

owner of the

When Monika's mother arrives in answer to a summons, she


is

informed by the Superior that her daughter

perfectly innocent

and that the summons had been a misunderstanding.

During the night Monika has an


she awakes that
self in
it

erotic

dream and

realizes

when

has been no dream but reality, for she finds her-

the arms of the valet to the nunnery chaplain, and had thus

painlessly lost her maidenhood.

One
is

night of love succeeds another

and soon Monika notices that she


Martin, her valet-lover,
his

pregnant. Tearfully she informs

who

comforts her with the assurance that

master has a medicine which can remove the disagreeable con-

sequences. This medicine has been used successfully

by Angelica,
This he

one of the six nuns

who had sought to punish Monika.


to his master.

knew

from Angelica's letters

Thereupon, Monika decides to

have her revenge and orders Martin to bring her the letters

and the

medicine. She succeeds in getting the letters to the Mother Superior,

and the

latter, jealous

of the favors of the chaplain to another, in-

carcerates Angelica.

The

chaplain suspects Martin of having pur-

loined the letters and dismisses him.

The end

of the narrative brings

another love scene between Monika and Susanna.

This lengthy
siderably,

recital has excited

both Satumin and Susanna conpassion,


if
is

and the former, tense with

now

convinced

that he will

meet with no opposition


121

he

is

but able to assure

THE EHOTIC HISTORY OF FRANCE


Susanna that there will be no
gets an idea.
evil

consequences. Just then he

He

takes the girl

up

to his

room and

lets

her be the

eye witness of the sex play between Pater Ambrosius and Toinette.
Susanna
is

so

overwrought that she makes no

resistance whatever.

Attracted

by

the noise, the Pater and Toinette

become aware of
Satumin
Pater

the others' game.


into her

The latter is at first


him

speechless, then takes

room

to instruct

in the mysteries of Venus.

The

who had remained with Susanna was not quite so fortunate. Since the boy is in the way of the Pater and his love, he is sent away to the pension of the local priest. From here he visits Susanna's nun who gives him happiness. On one of the following nights he seeks
to gain his

end with the

priest's niece

but misses her door and

enters the

room

of the old governess instead.


is

The

next day he

enters the cloister, and with this the first part

concluded.

The
first.

second portion deals with the experiences of Saturnin in

the monastery in which he finds himself very uncomfortable at

With no women

present,

he once again

falls

into the sin of

self-abuse.

A fellow inmate once comes upon him


him
to

as

he

is

engaged
ex-

in this pastime and invites

become acquainted with the

cesses of the brothers in the church.

The

novice participates in
his real

these orgies, and at one of

them makes the acquaintance of

mother

who

requests

him

to cohabit with her; a vestige of


praise him. After
life,

shame

restrains him, for

which the monks

an excursus
tells

concerning the delights of venery and cloister


of his impotence induced
in

Satumin

by

excessive indulgence.

An

old Pater,

whom he confides,

advises

him

to

become father confessor

for

the piquant confessions of the lovely confessors are not to be


despised as aphrodisiacs.

Saturnin follows this advice and soon feels himself in possession


of his virile powers. In his

new potency he rapes a pretty


122

confessor,

who

turns out to be Monika, Susanna's

bosom friend and mentor.

BOOK

III:

THE EIGHTEENTH CENTUEY


who had come
to

She reports that she had carried on a simultaneous relationship with


Verland and the valet Martin,
discovered their partnership.

blows

when they

Hence

she had fled to Saturnin, and

wished to remain with him.

He

decides to have her participate

in the orgies of the cloister but his plan meets with failure. In his

absence they find Monika, and to escape punishment

by

his order,

he

flees to Paris

where he meets Susanna


is

in a brothel. Despite her

struggle and her warning that she


her.

sick,

Saturnin cohabits with

During their sleep there

is

a raid

and in the confusion they are


grave venereal con-

separated.
dition,

He

finally gets to the hospital in a


is

the outcome of which

that he

is

eunuchized. Susanna dies

of her sorrows, and with these tragic events the book closes.
are the

Thus
work
was

ways of sin rewarded.

This book which

may

justly

be regarded

as the standard

of erotic anti-clerical literature had an enormous vogue. Frederick

the Great found

it

in the

equipment of French

officers. It

therefore natural that in a time


sex, it

which was almost

delirious about

should

call forth a

host of imitations.

The

chief of the fol-

lowers of Gervaise

who
is

sought to justify their debaucheries by

attacking the church,

indubitably the
life

Abbe Henri Jos. de Dulaulast

rens (17 19-1797). All his

he harbored a berserker rage against

the Jesuits.
years of his

He was
life

finally

rendered invulnerable; the


hospital.

twenty
it

he was confined in a mental

He

was

who

said that

he

knew God

only from heresay. His most famous

works UArretin Moderne and Le Compere Mathieu are cynical


in the extreme.

The

first

book

is

preceded by the almost prophetic phrase:

Parve, nee invideo, sine me, liber ibis ignem. This

work

contains an

obscene criticism of the Bible and religious observances in twentyfive stories. In

keeping with the ideas of the time, the book


is

is

an

apologia for vice. It

an endeavor to remodel ethical values and


123

THE EMOTIC HISTORY OF FMANCE


to defend the lax morals of the author.
inal
is

The wish

to appear orig-

transparent but the proof of the positions assumed are mere

sophistry,

and the inner mendacity and emptiness of the author


This whole offensive against the clergy

leers at us all the time.

lacks wit

and the book has been worsened considerably by the

frivolities that

weigh

it

down.
the

What

for example does Dulaurens

hope

to accomplish

by

silly tale

of the godemiche?
enlists

Father

Superior has impregnated a nun and

the aid of an old witch

who

advises

him

to feed the unfortunate one

mandragora roots and

other ingredients to the accompaniment of magic incantations.


follows this advice and the

He

nun

gives birth to no

human

creature,

but to a godemiche. This comforts a number of nuns and he finally


breathes his
tale
last

while in the arms of the decrepit sorceress. This


its

does not stand alone in


fifteenth story
is

absurdity.

The

the most cynical and paradoxical


vices.

it

deals

with the theme of L' Utilite des


that vices are
sterile,

Dulaurens takes the position

more

useful to society than virtues.

The
is

latter are

uniform, monotonous

in

short, chimeras to
if

keep

men
go

in

darkness.

Vanity and egotism are necessary

the world

to

on.

Crimes are

many and
is

diverse and nature itself develops the seeds


is

of our vices. Love

the indispensable sin for society. Passion

the
a
It

favorite child of nature.

A passionate

girl affords

more joy than

virtuous one, and


takes a

it is

lust alone

which makes us love women.

man who embraces

a virtuous girl a long time to experience

the joys he can find among the girls of Montigny.


fied

Man cannot be satischildbirth!


is

with one woman.

How many days are there when his wife is into menstruation,

accessible to

him owing

pregnancy and

Hence, he must wander to other pastures; and while society

con-

demning him

to continence,

by opposing

it

he has made many

additions to the population. Passion performs a public service for


it

prevents hoarding and keeps

money flowing
124

into industry.

BOOK
Of

III:
is

THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY


the second work,
frivolity

similar scope

Le Compere Mathieu. In
and he

his

customary blending of

and blasphemy, Dulaurens repestablishes the rel-

resents religion as something unnatural,


ativity of

good and

evil;

wherefore,

all is

permitted and punishment

doomed to pass away. This is the true evil and the source of it all is the
state

which

is

also fated to disappear.


is

third

work by the same

author.

La Chandelle,

an obscene mock heroic poem concerning

the fortunes of a strumpet healed of her illness through the inter-

vention of the Virgin Alary.

It

depicts with great clarity the female

practices in the nunneries. In this same fashion, writers like Evariste

Parny, Voltaire, Voisenon and Mirabeau wrote. Parny's work


gallantries of the Bible,

on the war of the gods and the


tainide,

La Chris-

was strenuously suppressed by Napoleon and during the


it

Restoration
fiscated.

was

finally

bought up by the government and conwith the


taste of the

These

anti-clerical attacks fell in

time whose influence few could escape.

A most important work,


century France, for
it

perfectly typical of erotic eighteenth-

contains

more

fact than fiction,


is

is

the
it

work

may with strong probability be attributed to the Marquis d'Argens who was the author of other erotica. There are many grounds for this attribution, and that it was suspected a long time ago may be seen
Therese_^htlQm^he. Although the authorship
doubtful

from the following

interesting anecdote. Frederick the

Great had
that

painted the most important scenes of this

work and ordered

chief figures be painted to resemble Marquis d'Argens and

Madame
little".

Cochois.
pictures

Once the Marquis' room was secretly decorated with these


which "greatly astonished milord but pleased him
is

In reality, however, this fuss about authorship


dealing here with creations of fancy.

vain for

we are not

The

contents of the book are

based on actual incidents which had taken place some time before.

Catharina Cariere (Eradice), the pious and beautiful daughter of a


125

THE EEOTIC HISTORY OF FKANCE


rich merchant, had entered the native confessional institution for

women estabhshed by the Jesuit Girard Dirrag. The lubricity of the monk immediately directed itself toward this shy young creature. By using her dreams and visions for his shocking purposes and
invoking an attenuated sex mysticism, he finally succeeded in

making the

girl accessible to his erotic desires.

The

uninterrupted

orgiastic erethism

and the excessive

spiritual raptures

induced a

grave hysteria in Catharina; and


Jesuit

when

she

became pregnant the

knew how

to

employ an

efficacious abortive.

The

matter

finally got to the courts

and despite general disappointment, the


worse, sentenced the unfortunate

court freed the


girl to
It

man and, what is

pay

costs for libel.

was this true material which the author employed

in a devastat-

ing satire against the clergy and religion.

A supposed

eye-witness,

the philosophical Therese describes the proceedings, informs us of

her

own

reactions to them, and throughout her views concerning

the rational satisfaction of

human

love needs. Although there are

obscene incidents aplenty, these are overlooked, due to the para-

mount importance of the book


pression.

as a source

document of

social

and

erotic history; for this reason it has defied all attempts at sup-

In order to characterize the style and thought content of the

work two

excerpts from different portions are appended. It

is

ob-

vious that the doctrines are

by no means

harmless, and are cal-

culated to induce considerable confusion in the minds of readers

who lack
The

judgment.
aims to disprove freedom of the
will.

first

We

are

com-

pelled to act

by

various factors not in our control.

The

kind of

organs, the distribution of nerves in our body, a certain type of

movement, the absence of particular


trol

juices, all these variables

con-

our passions, whose strength determines our will in the most


126

BOOK

III:

THE EIGHTEENTH CENTUEY


life.

important relationships of our


ate people, wise people

Accordingly there are passion-

and crazy people.

The
If

last

mentioned are

no more or

less free

than both other types for they also act in ac-

cordance with the same fundamental laws.


that

we
set

are to assume
a plane

man

is

free

and follows

his

own
by

will,

we

him on

with God. Foolish people to believe that you have the power to
suppress the passions implanted
nature! Shall

human

creatures,

the handiwork of God, suppress their passions or destroy

them and

thus attempt to appear mightier than


old creator has

God? Let

things be as the
as it
is.

made them,

for

all is

good and must be


is

We can see at once that if the freedom of the will


passion
is

denied, and

not to be opposed because


is

it

has been placed in us

by

God, every man

free to give himself over to debauchery accordso, for

ing to the measure of his power. Indeed he must do


wills it".

"God

The The
see

second quotation
all

is

an abridgement of the seduction scene,

expurgated to omit

the obscenities of detail and description.

Pater enters the confessional

room and
still

asks his pupil: "Is the

stigma that you have on your breast


it?

in the

same spot? Let me

" Eradice
is

immediately uncovers her left breast beneath which

the stigma

located. there, rosy

"Ah,

it is still

and

red. Saint Francis

still

loves you.

And I have once again brought with me a piece of his rope which we shall use at our exercise later. We shall have great reward, dear
daughter,
if

you

fulfill

your

obligations.

This holy exercise

will

shower you with


Francis and your
child.

ineffable bliss, thanks to the rope of the sacred

own

pious contemplation.
flesh

On

your knees,

my

Expose that part of your

which arouses God's wrath!


connection with God.

The
I

pain

you

feel will

bring your

spirit into

repeat: forget yourself

and

let

everything happen to you."

Eradice obeyed at once in silence. Holding a book before her,


127

THE EROTIC HISTORY OF FRANCE


she kneeled and lifted her skirts and undershirt until her girdle,
discovering snow-white and perfectly formed buttocks carried by-

two splendid

thighs.

"Raise your skirt higher," he ordered.


fold

"Now
Fill

that's better.
spirit

Now

your hands and

lift

your

soul to

God.

your

with the

thought of the eternal


raised his

bliss
it

destined for you."

He

kneeled down,
a

cowl high,

tied

with

his girdle,

and brought forth

thick

bunch

of long rods

which he gave the

girl to kiss.

She obeyed

silently.

The

Pater feasted his eyes hungrily on her thighs and

whispered to himself:
breasts." Presently

"What

a beautiful

bosom.

What charming

he arose and murmured a Biblical phrase. Noth-

ing escaped his lascivious curiosity. Finally, he asked the beautiful


penitent whether her soul was in devotion.

"Yes,

worthy

father. I feel that

my

soul

is

becoming separated

from

my body, and I beg you to begin the holy work."


suffices.

"That
ers

Your spirit

will

be

satisfied."

He said

few pray-

and then administered three

light

blows upon her hind quarters,


holy rope got into action.

followed

by another

verse. Finally, the

One can readily understand what sort of rope it was.

Of

course every one at

all

acquainted with the history of French

culture realizes that the case of Pater Gerard does not stand alone,

and that intimate

relations

between confessor and penitent were

not infrequent in those days.


raise so

Today such

a contretemps

would not

much

dust though every year a

number

of such are re-

ported in the newspapers.


the

Abbe Reginald

One may compare the similar case of Outhier who however defended himself very
peche du confesseur

skillfully in his Dissertation theologique sur le

avec sa penitente.
In 1760 there appeared Les Delices
ecclesiastiques, the

du

Cloitre

and Les Lauriers

work

of Jacques-Rochete de la Morliere, the


(

famous author of Angela. This La Morliere


12s

17 19-1785)

was

bad

BOOK
sort.

III:

THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY


Having been
dis-

Originally destined for the law he was disqualified, entered

the

army and had

to flee because of a scandal.

owned by
flight.

his family,

he turned to writing romances in the style of

Crebillon the younger. Difficulties with the police resulted in his

Upon

returning he took to the drama but was hissed off the

stage. In desperation

he became a cliqueur and gradually sank deep-

er into misery.

those parents

The first of the above mentioned writings scores who still believe in the purity of cloister life and
without consideration for their
is

immure
wicked
teem

their inexperienced girls

love desires.
life

He

believes that there

no better way of lashing the

of the cloister than a frank exposure of the vices that

in those institutions.

His expose

is

never obscene, though per-

haps too informative. His moral lessons are obvious and persuasive.

Two nuns, Julia and Dorothea are conversing. The first reports that
the cloister physician
is

preparing for an amorous affair with her

and describes

his palpations

and her shyness. Dorothea enjoins her

not to permit her lover to languish in vain. Julia takes her advice

and the next scene discovers her surrender.

The
ety.

other story, based largely upon facts, departs somewhat


clerical life

from the scenes of

and journeys merrily into high

soci-

The Abbe Terray,


some

contemporary of La Morliere,

visits his

uncle and becomes acquainted with the


after

latter's soul-friend

who
is

hesitation grants his love-request.

Their pleasure

heightened because they take their joys on the same bed on which
the cuckold reposes and in his immediate proximity. But the happiness of the lovers doesn't last long.

A young serving maid has

fallen

so violently in love with the abbe that she finally goes to his

room

and declares her love. The happy man must

now share his love with

two women. The Marquise promptly


spies.

discovers this through her

Her

jealousy

is

aroused to such a pitch that she has the young


129

THE EEOTIC HISTOMY OF FEANCE


abbe transferred to a distant abbey and the
cat married to a bourgeois.
little

chamber pussy

The

exiled

one takes

his

luck with him, however.

meets a charming lady whose coach has broken


her the use of his
the

On the way he down. He offers


realizes that

own vehicle, becomes useful in other ways and on


the

morrow receives
is

siimmum bonum. But he soon


brawny
Franciscan.

he

sharing his beloved with a

He

and two
find

cronies administer a solid drubbing to the latter


in delicto flagrante

when they

him

with the charming lady. In the meantime, the


latter

father of the

young abbe has died and the

must return home.

He

has a slight dispute over some boundaries with a neighboring


settles in

duke which he
joyed at

favor of the

latter.

The duke
alone.

is

so over-

this eventuality that


is still

he presents the abbe to the duchess,

while the lady

in bed,

and leaves the two

He

assists at

her levee and, though disturbed by an untimely


to the onslaught successfully.

visitor,

proceeds

But for the nth time, he finds that there are other

men

in the

world, for he surprises his Dulcinea in the arms of her servant.

He
is

foreswears the unfaithful one, and returns to his uncle where he

present at the investiture of a most beautiful nun, whose parents


are compelling her to assume the veil.
all

He falls in love
girl's

with her and


parents, both

obstacles are overcome.


clerical life

At

the death of the

renounce the
him.

and the abbe leads the nun home with

In another important book of a similar nature, Venus dans


tre^

le cloi-

which appeared

at the close of the seventeenth

century but

was many times reprinted


Free indulgence
selled as a

in the eighteenth,

two nuns, Angelica


cloister.

and Agnes, chat about the amorous regimen current in the


is

defended with philosophic

cliches,

and coun-

was well

way of life. This book also shows that erotic literature known to the ladies of the cloister. Liiisa Sigea comes in

BOOK
for a special

III:

THE EIGHTEENTH CENTUEY


is

meed

of praise, and in one place a catalogue


all lost

given

of a series of porneia,

today, but whose

titles

amply

testify

to their strong anti-clerical tendency.


If these

works were occasionally written for a purpose, they

nevertheless in their totality constitute a true picture of the im-

moral deportment of the church and

many

of

its

servants. Indeed,

we possess enough historical witnesses to


pamphlets, for instance:

confirm the truth of these


clerge devoilee ou Proces-

La Chastete du

Verbaux des seances du clerge chez


Bastille (1790).

les filles

du Fans. Trouves

a la

This

is

authentic material.
clerics

Here we

find the exact

names,

status,

and residence of those

who were

caught with

prostitutes before the Revolution.

The

list is

long though only a


since most

small proportion of these debaucheries


of

became public

them were
There
are

naturally carried

on

secretly.

two more far-reaching works which have


society of that time.

to be con-

sidered, since their revolting cynicism opens invaluable perspectives

upon French

The

first is a

book of

six

songs, each of

which contains three hundred

verses.

The

title is

La Foutromajzie, and the author Senac de Meilhan. Gods and man


alike

have joy in foutromanie, the former to dispel their ennui, the

latter for their


f ran^aise,

very happiness. Mile. Dubois,

actress, of the

Comedie
and

cannot be without it. Mesdames Arnould and Clairon with

their parner

Count Valbelle are passionately devoted


it

to

it;

Mme.
ladies

Allard has probed the utmost refinements of

with Duke de

Mazarin.

At the conclusion
in

of the

first

song the duchesses and court

march
is

and have dalHance with their lackeys.

The

second

song

opened with

a description of the corporeal delights of a

virgin

who
is

has fallen into the clutches of a roue. After the inter-

polation of Chrysostom against sexual debaucheries in the cloister,

there

broadly related

how

one

afflicted

with

satyriasis enters a

monastery and

how

he ministers to
131

his blazing desires.

This affords

THE EROTIC HISTOBY OF FRANCE


the author the best opportunity to attack the vices of tribady and pederasty.

Towards

the close, de Meilhan mentions syphilis

which

forms the transition to the third song, almost entirely dedicated to


this disease.

The

author cannot sufficiently praise the

now

per-

fected means of curing the malady.

Many luetic

lovers are

adduced
ends

and the

luetic prelates

come

in for special mention.

The song

with a praise of Aretino, the discoverer of the

plastic positions.

The

fourth song emphasizes the great advantages of the bordello.

hymn

of praise

is

sung to the great procuresses:


Carlier, etc.,

Paris,

Gourdan,

Montigny, d'Hericourt

and then

we

are permitted to

witness passionate orgies in these dives.


a praise of

The

song

is

concluded with

German women and a curse upon Italy where the author had lost health and money. The fifth chanson seeks to allay the fears
of syphiliphobes.

Not

all

women

contain this abominable ailment.

Montesquieu, Rousseau, Marmontel dared and came out unscathed.


Finally the timorous are encouraged

by pointing
to Dr.

to the

example of

Maria-Theresa, Catherine

ii,

the King of Poland and the deceased

Queen of Denmark. The last song is a paean


cured the author of his
disease.

Agyroni who has

After a display of his medical


in a repeated eulogy

knowledge on the subject the song culminates


of Foutromanie as the pillar of the world.

This book served

as a

model for La Masturbomanie,


states that

in the fore-

word

to

which the author

he sings the incomparable joy

of Onan, the independent self-created pleasure of man, and one

most worthy of a philosopher.

The
Bordes.

other far-reaching
is

work

that serves as a

companion piece

to

Foutromanie

ParapiUa, a book of five songs written

by Charles
is

It tells

the story of a wonderful instrument which

the
it

joy of

all ladies.

Rodric receives
to a

it

direct

from heaven; from him


finally to the

gets to

Donna Capponi,

nunnery and

hands of

Lucrezia Borgia. This affords the writer an excellent opportunity


132

BOOK

III:

THE EIGHTEENTH CENTUKY


under Alexander
vi.

to describe the wild life

Although

this

work

was not published

until 1775 it

was known
it

earlier; in 1773 Voltaire

in a letter to Bordes

had termed

one of the "best books of

this

genre that

we

possess". In his memoirs,

Bachaumont makes some

perspicacious remarks concerning this book.


despite the obscene subject matter there
is

He

points out that

not an obscene

word

to

be found in

it;

in keeping

with his theme the fabulist had drawn

very free pictures but always veiled and with the most decorous
means.

He

asserts that there

never was a merrier or lighter volume

than

this short epic of folly

and choice

taste.

The

readers for

whom

the above mentioned works were in-

tended did not, naturally, belong to the circle of those normal,


naive people

who

find pleasure in bathing

nymphs and enraptured

shepherds. For the readers of this erotic literature of the eighteenth

century, strong stuff was needed, cynical and urmatural, for their

jaded senses would not react to ordinary or high literature.

CHAPTER Vni
THE OBSCENITY OF THE THEATRES

THE any

theatre has always been the best mirror of morality in


age.

When

life

became more than

free,

the boards

swarmed with

frivolity

and obscenity of every kind. In twentyskirt as

three theatres the

muse wore her

high up

as possible

and

pornographic clubs multiplied and came out of their concealment.


Pamphlets, comedies, vaudevilles, even parodies upon operas and
musical pieces had to include the erotic touch.
avers that the

One contemporary
at all virtue.

works of Crebillon junior were moral by comparison


But

with these small pieces which laughed hilariously

no matter

how far some had mimes who refused to say


is

gone, there were

still

many

poets and

obscene things. However, in a small


inhibition, not

intimate circle there

no need for any

even of the

most extreme perversity. Hence private theatres were established


in

which no bounds were

set to

any word or deed. Behind the

grated lodges of these small secret theatres, the noble ladies of finest
society might witness the erotic plays

which showed priapism and

philosophy in strange mixture.

such a theatre in her


plied the shows.

The famous dancer Guimard had country home at Panin for which Colle supperiod.

We must not make the mistake of concluding that


were the original creation of the rococo

these secret theatres

They are as old as the theatre itself and as justified to a certain type of human being as when the odi projanum viilgus was first uttered. The wealthy lover of the theatre provided for himself a stage on
134

BOOK.
duced. This
is

Ill:

THE EIGHTEENTH CENTUEY


would
gratify his

which those plays

that

own

taste

would be profact that

no more unnatural than the corresponding

poets will always be found

who will

drive their Pegasus to a water-

ing place of excrement for the sake of money.


writers of farces
tin's

The

old French

may
la

here be remembered; and that Bussy-Rabuis

Comtesse (VOlonfie
la

as characteristic of
is

its

century as the
it

Theatre de

rue de

Sante

of the nineteenth century. But

does

remain true that the rococo period has the doubtful distinction of
being richest in these erotic theatres.

The indiscreet

deeds at nunneries form the subject of derision in

various pieces. Colle

composed
his

a skit about four bishops called

Accidents, which

by

own

testimony was so obscene that he

dared not print

it.

Very numerous were the revolutionary comedies


was
and
Royal where
a a so-called savage

directed against church, state and monarchy. In 1791 there


a public theatre at the Palais

woman
it

performed coitus before

crowd

of people of both sexes.


justice of the peace

Finally both actors

were summoned before the

and
of

turned out that the savage was some rascal from the suburb

St.

Anthoine, and the

woman

common whore who had

earned

considerable sums
If

by such pandering to the pruriency

of the public.

the latter could not be actors in these spectacles at least they

could be spectators; and La Mettrie remarks in his

VArt

de

Joiiir:

The

sight of others' pleasure

is

our own.
orgies of the better society one

To obtain some insight into these

should read Co?jfessio?is generales des Princes du sang, otherwise

one will never understand the lewd


existed at the time.

royalistic tragedies

which

Or

failing this,

one should thumb La France

foutue.

These are the indispensable documents for the history of

erotic elements in political caricature.

On

the title-page one sees

Louis XVI sitting on the penitent's seat in line with other penitents.

On

one side kneels a high courtier and on the other a princely


135

THE EMOTIC HISTOKY OF FMANCE


strumpet.
acters are:

brief

resume of the plot

is

now

appended.

The

char-

La France
England

brothel mistress ivho oixms a brothel the Duke of Orleans' a lady of honor and intime of France Mlle. Vendee Duke of Orleans brothel monger Count de Puissaye king of rogues
at
castle.

Frederick William III Francis II of GerxMany Charles IV of Spain Three knights, five English women, five pages of the Duke of Orleans, troops and citizens.
action takes place in the private chambers of the Duke of Orleans at the Palais Royal. The theatre represents a luxurious

The

boudoir equipped with

many sofas.

Act
Frederick William
III,

Francis

II,

Charles

IV and

the

Duke

of

Orleans are engaged with an equal number of Englishwomen, each one on a sofa. One bares the boso?n of his woman and kisses
the breasts, another fondles the dorsal hemispheres, after he has hiked her skirts up to her girdle, a third uncovers his wench
aft

and explores the decks there. The women are standing or siting on the knees of their men, depending on the position of the latter. England lies on a couch in the center in a very indecent

position.

Act

II

In the instant in which the three kings carry

Madame France

to

the couch, the five Englishwomen enter, each carrying a different object: a bidet, a pot of water, a sponge, perfume bottle, and
finally

underwear. Puissaye makes an obscene gesture to the Vendee woman and draws her to a sofa alongside them. Duke of Orleans hies him to the opposite sofa with England and exer136

BOOK
cet

III:

THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY


and Charles stand behind the couch
se delectant,

actum de

retro. Francis

as expectant observers

and manustupratione

while

Frederick rapes France.

Act
enter the stage
a?id the sides.

III

In this scene Orleans, Puissaye, followed by the Englishwomen,

from the

rear.

Armed citizens also

enter the rear

on the left. therear,thepagesfallonthewomen. At the command of the Duke of Orleans to his satellites a stall slave comes forward, two others approach from another side and all assume obscene positions. In the background the Englishwomen are seen with their pages; presently the armed ones push the pages aside and demonstrate the vice of sodomy. In the foreground, Puissaye sits on his sofa and attei7ipts to rape Vendee but she struggles viciously. Suddenly the duke cries out, and
all

After them, grooms enter on the right and pages The citizenry in battle formation take their place in

stop suddenly, staring at

him

Vendee leaves Puissaye to go to La France but Puissaye kills her. The three kings regard this scene with bent arms, whereby it is clearly indicated that they regard with

on

his deathbed.

equanimity

how France dismembers


is

itself.

La France foutue

the full-grown flower of eroticism, the saditself

ism of the ancien regime which completely expended


ual perversions

on

sex-

and was unable to enjoy anything other than vicious

erotic experiences.

According to Dr. Bloch


is

this

work

derives

from

the Marquis de Sade, but this

unlikely since he

was

a thorough
its

republican, while this writing must have had a royalist as

author.

Several additional theatrical pieces of importance will

now

be

considered but no attention will be given to the merely erotic.

Our purpose

is

to demonstrate the diverse erotic conditions

which

affected the social and historic life of France, and to eliminate any

and everything obscene per


erotic matter,
it is

se. If

we

have toned
all

down many an

because

we

wish to avoid
137

things unnecessary

THE EROTIC HISTORY OF FRANCE


to students of

French history and

literature.

We

prefer to shoot

below the mark rather than above

it.

The
for

piece Les plaisirs

du

cloitre,

though written for

a theatre of

high society, never was performed because no actors could be found

some of the

parts.

The

roles of

Agathe and Marton were easy


Jesuits required

and desired by young women, but Clitandres and

characters of robustness and these could not be found.

The

author

believed that this dramatic piece

would

lose little in the reading

and boasted that he had omitted every expression that might give
offense.

Was

it

such an incomprehensible boast which gave the


first

book

tremendous vogue? In the


cell

act Marton, a novice,

is

read-

ing an obscene book in her


friend

and becomes greatly inflamed. Her


in wait

Agathe who has been lying

comes

to her aid, but the

abbess surprises them, confiscates the book, and sentences Marton


to chastisement.

In the second act the punishment

is

carried out and

Marton

gets

forty strokes with the lash upon her bare body. After the flagellation,

Agathe hurries

to her friend

and continues the

discipline

with her

hand; then both friends give themselves over to sapphic love. Agathe
promises Marton a
still

greater pleasure. In the third act,

Agathe

brings to her friend her lover Clitandre and a Jesuit father, where-

upon

normal love scene ensues. But the Pater aroused by the sight

of the lovers, Clitandre and Agathe, cannot resist the temptation of


a pederastic exercise

with Marton.

Another

piece, Vaste, attributed to Piron, created a sensation at


it is

the time, but

of such obscenity that


set

we

shall

do no more than

mention it. Le Bourdel


is

up the claim to moral

effectiveness.

What

better calculated to dissuade


full

young people from going

to brothels

than a
result

depiction of

all

the disagreeable consequences likely to

from such

a visit?

To

achieve this purpose the very words

which

are popular in such places

must be used; and whoever writes

BOOK
in the style of

III:

THE EIGHTEENTH CENTUEY

whores cannot avoid such expressions. Then follows

list

of words from the realm of pomology. After reading this piece


visit

it is

hoped that those desiring to

brothels will be scared


as a

away

lest

they lose their money, health and honor

consequence. This

piece contains
is

many items

of interest for the social historian. If one

to believe the following words, the


a pretty

contemporary moral police


is

were in

bad way. The police official

represented as speak-

ing to a prostitute: "First one needs money. Don't trust friends.

They may make


certainly don't

it

easier for
it

you

to leave the hospital but they

make

harder for you to enter.


the police.

What you

need

above

all

are friends

among

How
way

can you have them?

With money, Mme. Dru."

The
visit

piece closes in the most edifying

with an unexpected
all

by

the police patrol.

The
I

commissioner has

the exits guard"Sir, I

ed and asks everyone his business. Bel-air answers:


soldier

am

from Champign.
I

came

to visit a sick jade just as


that
I

you

entered and
I

give

you

my word

would not have come had

expected to find you here."


"I

understand

pimp?"
little,

"Well now, commissioner, the king pays mighty


must try to earn an extra penny."

so one

At

the conclusion several wenches are sent to Bicetre and the


is

moral purpose

achieved.
these obscene compositions
to,

While many of
tended
for,

may have been

in-

and accessible

the hoi polloi, the cavaliers of the

court however had their worldlings was the


into an

own pornographers.The foremost of these Duke Henin who was bom in 744 and came
1

enormous fortune

at the

age of twenty-six. Frivolous and

passionate,
theatre.

he gave free rein to

his lusts

and to

his affection for the

With

unlimited means at his disposal he had his


his

own

theatre

and retained

contemporary, Delisle de
139

Sales, to furnish erotic

THE EEOTIC MISTOMY OF FMANCE


pieces

which were collected

into four volumes

and were formerly

in the possession of the bibliophile Alfred Begis.


as a typical case

Henin

is

adduced

and

his perverse tendencies

were shared by many

others

who

doted on obscene theatricals.


to these

The foreword

works

testifies

to the fact that these

sketches were really acted out. Antiquity echoes with the dialogues

concerning more than merely free love composed by Elephantis,


for

which

professional artists

drew

pictures representing love in

every attitude the coarsest fancy could imagine; and more recent
times have contributed the dialogues of Luisa Sigea and the sonnets
of Aretino.

A nobleman

and

a fine fellow to boot, tired of

normal

pleasures, fitted out a private theatre to


his circle

which only the roues of


rank

were admitted and


courtesans.

also those ladies of

who were
Re-

worthy of being

These were the

saturnalia of the

gency. Here were enacted quite frankly the priapeia of Petronius

and the orgies of Latouche.

"On

the occasion of one festival," de


last-

Sales says in the foreword, "I

was asked how to make the


I

mentioned daring play more interesting, and

had the weakness to

explain that Socrates himself in this condition had surrendered

himself to the folly of Alcibiades. Thereafter there were no secrets


for me, and
I

was invited to

refine the theatre so that even a sage in

one of the lodges could give himself over to the pleasures of the play.

Four pieces of

this collection:

Babylon, Ccesar

Juno and Ganymede, the Virgin of and the Vestals, and the Judgment of Paris were

played without change but some of the others were slightly altered
for the performance.

At least twenty times I thought of throwing inand Finette,'whose prototypes I knew

to the flames the piecc,Ninette

but
the

have kept

it

here for a moral purpose to

show the dangers


before the

of

little

intimate theatre,

where innocence

is

lost

young

person realizes the necessity of guarding

it."
all

One may

well ask

what

this

moral purpose was, since

the

140

BOOK

III:

THE EIGHTEENTH CENTUEY


we
shall

pieces are swollen with a scabrousness so disgusting that

not even synopsize the contents. Furthermore, according to de


Sales'

own

confession, there

was no purity

to be endangered since

only roues and ladies of quality worthy of being courtesans, were


admitted. In the
there
is

first

piece Juno seduces

Ganymede,

in the second

represented the devirgination of a Babylonian girl


first

by

the

high priest of the Temple. In the third, Caesar


vestals

ravishes
last

two

but later ends his performance like Onan.


deals

The

piece

Myrza
spats
at the

with a pair of lovers

who go

through a few amorous

with orgiastic pantomime,

at first in Sophie's bath,

and

later

Opera

Ball.

The

female role was acted by the celebrated

Sophie Arnould, and her lover by Grammont, the famous author


of the Memoirs.

The

dialogue was so shocking that the Chevalier

was able

to sing only the first six stanzas

and those only under an

assumed name.

The

dialogue unaccompanied

by

gestures left the

erotic audience cold, but the situation

was

far different with

Chevalier de

Grammont and
and

Sophie Arnould. Both finished their


less

lines in the tensest heat,

than an hour later the Chevalier

rushed to the

actress' lodgings

where they repeated the performrepetitions.

ance with no omissions, and

many

These thespian debaucheries


to exercise public opinion,

in the princely theatres soon

began

and after 1779 the performances ceased.

As long
became

as the scandal

remained behind four walls, everyone was

permitted to seek happiness in his

own fashion, but when the matter


had to
interfere.

a public concern the police

CHAPTEM IX
VENEREAL VERSES

THROUGH
last

undermining

all

ethical

and

religious sensibility, the


It

embers of shame and decency were extinguished.

came

to a pass

where the strongest type of brothel poetry, of which there


ripple of criticism.

was a veritable mass production, aroused hardly a


Bachaumont
relates that
it

was customary

to

bring the

filles

d'Opera couplets celebrating their venereal

talents

and

gallantries.

These couplets were collected and issued

in

form of almanacs:

Etrennes aux paillardes, etrennes gaillardes, etrennes aux fauteurs.

Only

once, in 1763, were the Tablettes de paillardes suppressed,

but soon these salacious products were afoot again.


It

goes without saying that no gallant souper was without the

spice of erotic verse, and frequently of the chansons that later

went

out into the world. These almanacs were usually small gilt-edged,
coquettishly appointed volumes, provided with a tiny pencil and
a

few blank pages

for

memoranda. The

titles

of most give their

lewd contents away, though some were much more lewd than
others.

A small Almanac h dii

Troii-Madames which seemed

fairly

harmless gave rise to the most daring performances which were

extremely popular about 1760 under the


In this poetry Priapus

title

of Trou-Trou.
officials,

was king. Courtier and lowest of


obligated to

poet and poetaster,

all felt

show

their reverence for

the sign of the grotesque god of the garden.

It

was good form to

represent in smooth verse the normal process of copulation as some-

142

THE EIGHTEENTH CENTUMY thing strange, as some special discovery of the century. When galUc
III:

BOOK

wit was unable to transfigure

this subject matter, the shamelessly

prostituted fantasy could at least turn out quite ordinary brothel

poetry.

There was hardly

contemporary author

who

failed to

place his votive offering

upon the

altar of the corporeal

Venus, and

almost every one that pretended to the

name

of poet

composed

CEuvres badines.

A very influential collection of these gallant songs and verse tales


is

the Recueil de pieces choisiespar les soins


first

du cosmopolite (1735).

This was the

of these collections to be printed in the eighteenth

century, and incidentally the only one of Jean Baptiste Grecourt's

books to be published during


let

his lifetime (168 3- 1743).

The bookat the castle

was put together by Princess Conti and Pater Vinet

of the
sources.

Duke de
Grecourt

Arguillon, and contains epigrams from


is

the prototype of the gallant

many Abbe. At the


lost his living

tender age of thirteen he became a priest, but soon

because his sermons, which described vice in the most natural


colors,

and

his predilection for satire

which he indulged unrestrain-

edly, aroused

more

evil

than induced edification.

He

lived in the

friendliest relationship

with the Marshal d'Estrees and the Duke


his

de Arguillon
first

whom

he kept amused with

peppery

jokes.

The
it

edition of Grecourt's fugitive works,

none of which, except

the above-mentioned collection,

would have been preserved had

not been for the copies

made by his
1

friend de Lassere shortly before

the former's death, appeared in


It

747 as the CEuvres badines.


task, this

was

a thankful

and lucrative

compiling of erotic
it

anthologies, and

many famous

figures occupied themselves with

including Count Caylus the renowned archaeologist, Parny, and


others. Related to this type of

gay

effort in

name, but quite different

in essence,

is

Sylvain Marechal's Alma7iach des sonjietes fe?mnes

de

la

Societe Joyeuse. In this wide-spread and frequently reprinted

143

THE EEOTIC HISTOKY OF FKANCE


livret of

but thirty-two pages, one hundred

women

are mercilessly

censured.

Despite

its

eroticism

it

occupies so important a place in French


it

literature because of

its

notorious influence, that

merits a brief

examination.
existed

The "Joyous

Society"

which by the way actually


The
saints are to

is

indignant because the almanacs have been appearing

annually, had not paid sufficient and exclusive attention to the fair
sex.

This omission was

now

to be rectified.

be

dethroned since no one pays any attention to them today; and in


their stead shall be elevated the great heroines of love.

January

is

henceforth the month of the Fricatrices.


for this exercise. It requires a fine white
finger.

Not

all

ladies are fitted

hand and a long and narrow


first is

The

feast of circumcision

on January

to be the

Festival of the Foreskin.

Many

nations observe the custom of redoesn't

moving something from the organ, but lovely womankind


approve of that subtractive
Trictatrices.
is

rite.

February

is

dedicated to the

to be

The known as

second day of the month, Mary's purification,


the Festival of the Bidets. Cleanliness was law

among the
this

ancient

Hebrews and

the Romans.

Why

not follow
is

praiseworthy custom with the choice of bidets. March

to

be

the

month

of Fellatrices.

Of

all

forms of passion,

this is to

be

striven for

most highly and

consists of sucer le gland

de son amant.
love; but
is

Few women
now

are able to bring themselves to this

form of

such lovers are constant. March twenty-fifth, the Annunciation,


to be the Festival of the Procurers. This change does

no

vi-

olence to our worthy religion because the whole world


the holy Gabriel was the love messenger of the holy

knows

that

spirit.

The almanac now


themselves to
fellatio.

mentions four mondaines


April
is

who had

given

reserved for Lesbians. In Lesbia girls


children..

were accounted virtuous when they bore no

May

is

the

month of the Corinthians. These lovely women multiply the

delight

M4

BOOK
of the

III:

THE EIGHTEENTH CENTUEY


caresses

men they love. Whatever way he always find new sensations. June belongs to
of gamahucher. August
is

them he

will

the Samians renowned

for their debaucheries. July to the Phoenicians,

who refined

the art
of the
their

the

month of Syphiasans (one

Cyclades)

who had very

lazy men. In order to excite


la

them

women inserted their little fingers into


the practice

porte poste of their men,

known today

as diligence or postilion.

September

is

reserved for the Phisidisseusans

whose contention

it

was

that

were not the only ones who had been created to give
trembled at the approach of a vigorous

pleasure.

men They

man and much


November
is

preferred

the delicate tongue of a lapdog. October goes to the Chalcidians

who employ young,


for tribady.

innocent children,
is

the

month

December

assigned to the Hircineans (from hircus)

who go in for peeping


lost Virginity;

(voyeuses).

December eighth

is

the Feast of

and December twenty-fifth, the Feast of the Cuckold,

after the

holy Joseph.

The

livret closes

with the significant request

that readers contribute suggestions for the pletion of this calendar.

improvement and comat the time!

Such were the worlds


its

Most

notorious, because of
is

disgusting shamelessness and vile

blasphemy,

Piron's
all

Ode

to Priapus in sixteen strophes

which

is

found in almost
(
1

the contemporary anthologies. Alexis Piron

689- 1 77 3) found fame at a very early age through this ode. Later

his occasional verse,

rhymed

epistles, tales

and epigrams,

all

dis-

tinguished
ple's

by

a caustic wit
last

and amazing
least

skill

in discovering peo-

weaknesses, and

but not

by

their shameless tone,

brought him numerous admirers and


ing, not

friends.

Piron

who was

"noth-

even an Academician",

failed to achieve a place in the


xiv,

French Pantheon through the disfavor of Louis

and not because

the other immortals didn't recognize his wit or objected to his Ode.
Fontenelle, with characteristic impartiality, said:

"Piron, having

composed the Ode, we may be wroth with him; but Piron without
145

THE EKOTIC HISTORY OF FMANCE


the

Ode

well,

we would

shut our doors against him."

And

Presi-

dent Bouhier said to the author: "If someone throws the authorship
of this piece up to you, you should reply calmly,
'I

was the author'


Protest as he
his

Yet all

his life his

Ode to Priapus hindered his progress.


his enemies, point as
it

might against the attacks of


blameless
life

he might to
vain.

and irreproachable morals,

was in
either.

He was

malicious

satirist

and did not spare himself


is

The following anecdote man now blind, went for


ing them laughed, and the

characteristic.

One day

Piron, an old

a stroll

with

his little niece.

Men

see-

little girl

informed her uncle that the

laughter was due to a certain irregularity in his clothes. "Uncle,"


she whispered, "everyone
is

gaping

at us

won't you please cover

your.

your history".
child," spoke the poet, "this history has long

"Dear
ulous".

become

fab-

His

own

characterization of himself

is

concise and telling.

"The
spirit

fury of an ape and the simphcity of the child; a wit-drenched

and a golden heart; that

is

Piron".

#
4*

CHAPTER X
SECRET CLUBS AND PERVERSIONS

THERE has been no distinction


authors
those

drawn

until

now between

those

who

luxuriated in the domain of normal love, and

whose minds and writings were obsessed by unnatural and

perverse sexual activity. This


repetition, for hardly a single

would have

led to difficulties
itself

and

work confined

to describing
in the ac-

the natural act alone; rather did everyone of

them drag

companying expressions of the


vivid expositions.

libido sexualis for their share of

Even the

Cloister porter
tales.

and

its

echoes, cannot

be regarded

as

merely pederastic

Voisenon wrote a book against bigotry and cant


exercises of Devotion of

entitled:

The
his

M. Roch with M?ne. Condor, which,

contemporaries added, had better be entitled The Devotion with

He wrote this story for the amusement of his young girl friend, whom he laid down beside him to warm him as King David had done of old. He always slept
Respect
to the front

and rump of Mme. C.

side

by

side

with her and permitted her to remain virgin. In witty


flayed.

and caustic fashion hypocrisy and bigotry are


dialogue (in bed) between a Tartuffe and a
has been married to an elderly husband. These

There

is

young woman who


worthy descendants

of Tartuffe are always with us and under the pretext of combating

the

call

of the flesh these hypocrites indulge in the vilest debauch-

eries.

Here's an example.

The good woman


to

launches into the fol-

lowing edifying discourse

her pious
147

friend.

THE EROTIC HISTORY OF FRANCE "When I have my attacks I am greatly to be pitied and
your generosity
ments
too.
I

without

would probably have died

and without sacra-

God himself has brought me to you in order that you may help me with my devotional exercises today. He could not let me die before I've confessed, I thank Him and you for that. May I ask
you
for another favor, Mr.

Roch? You

see these attacks

come upon
first.

me six or seven
Isn't there
if

times and the last are always stronger than the


.
.

anything.
if it isn't

.1

Oh,

too

am confident that much trouble may

I I

can get rid of them


ask

you

to give

me
I

the remedy, for the third time. In order to drive

away every

thought of
shall

sin

and prohibited pleasure

I shall

do the following.

now

imagine that

my

husband

is

doing the work of

God

in

my

garden, for the sake of

my

recovery.

And when you

have

completed

my

cure

we

will

renew our devotional

exercises,

we

will read a second spiritual lecture

and pray a while in

silence.

While Madame was speaking, Mr. Roch had enveloped her and
begun the work of God. As soon
life

as it

was ended Madame came to

again and asked: "Without appearing too curious, could you

inform

me what is the name of

that

which cures me".

"It's called

my

heart".
is

"What? That
were our

your heart?

had never believed


I

it.

O
.

dear

sir,

how surely your heart

has been created for mine.


I

assure
ill.

you
.

that

hearts forever united,

would never be

." etc.

This Abbe Claude Henri de Voisenon

(i 708-1 775)

had

ability

to treat the most trying themes with graceful charm,

and composed

numerous

erotic works.

His Erotic Fairy Tales are masterpieces of

genial and piquant gallantry. His friend Favoit relates that his life

was unexceptionable, and that he wrote these pieces


friends.

to please his

As

executrix of his will, he appointed the clever Countess


Crisse,

Turpin de

chairwoman of the

gallant society, Societe

de

la

Table Ronde, and directed her to publish his manuscripts. This task
148

BOOK

III:

THE EIGHTEENTH CENTUEY

the gallant lady accepted and carried out without any prudishness
or fear of scandal.
If it is true that

the most popular erotic works gave equal attenit is

tion to

all

types of sexual activity, natural or perverse,


i.e.,

no

less

true that certain of these writings "specialized",

gave particular

attention and emphasis to certain types of abnormal sexual practises.

Thus the vice


secte

of tribady was extolled

by two works, Uhistoire de la


la

anandryne and the very popular Vapologue de

secte anan-

dryne.

The

latter

work

is

the story of a 15 year old girl

who

falls
is

into the hands of the infamous panderess

Mme. Gourdan and


is

conveyed

to a lady of rank.

Thus

Mile.

Sappho

inducted into

a circle of lesbians

who

celebrate their mysterious rites in a temple

constructed for the purpose, and

who

at the

same time

satisfy their

debauched

desires.

The book ends with a detailed

address delivered

by

the actress Raucourt in praise of Lesbian love, an address re-

plete with the

most informative material on that theme. The society

referred to in this novel actually existed and

was one of the numerous

clubs in contemporary Paris dedicated to the realization of erotic


fantasies

and the satisfaction of strange lusts. These clubs

will be dis-

cussed presently.
It

was quite natural that an age


as the

in

which love
life,

really

was or was

only regarded

foremost thing in

should create manuals


really as

for the best possible use of this joy. It


said:

was

Abbe

Galiani

one loved with the head not with the heart; and love for these
la pensee.

people was the libertinage de

In

it

one realized the glow-

ing dreams of an imagination artificially stimulated; hence love was

debased to an exciting game. Ovid was master, and La Mettrie

UArt de jouir in conscious derivation. His essential thesis is that the highest that man can achieve is corporeal pleasure. Since the supposed spirituality of man is founded on the body, we can
wrote
his

only strive after bodily happiness.

It

were

infantile to forego plea-

149

THE EEOTIC HISTORY OF FKANCE


sures or regret past joys because of the soul

which
first

is

notoriously

untrustworthy. Passionate desire stands in the


cause
it is

place not be-

the only one but because

it is

the most general; and


It is

spiritual desire

must be subordinated to the corporeal.

not reason

which
is

is

antipathetic to happiness or lust, but prejudices.


virtue;
evil
all is
is

There

no absolute

relative to society; the only difference

bet\\'een
inates,

good and

that in one case the public interest


interest has

predom-

and in the other the private

conquered the

general.

The
scored

greatest success in this field of the manuals of love

was
For

by Gentil-Bemard

(17 10-1775) with his

Uart

cf aimer.

twenty years the

salons of Paris heard his

low and seductive voice


listened

read fragments of his poetry, and


his orgiastic verse. Voltaire

women

with rapture to
letter.

wrote him an enthusiastic

Pomp-

adour invited him to her soupers and commissioned him to compose


pieces for her amateur theatre.
lished in
1

When

his

Art of Love was pubillness.

775 Bernard had already fallen prey to mental

The

art

purveyed

in these

and other propaedeutics of copulation

was not

to

be merely book learning. Societies were formed to carry


if

out the doctrines thus learnt; and


tivate "love"

one desired consciously to cul-

and

ecstasy,

one joined one of these clubs. The most

famous societes
i).

(V amour

were:

UAcademie de

ces

Dames

et

de ces Messieurs, founded by

Count Caylus

to bring before the public the facetiae

and serious

works of the passionate muse.


Tressan, Duclos,

Among

the

members were Count

Vade and Count Maurepas. Their secretary, under

the pseudonym of Vade, has left us the constitution and history of the
order.

Although the

literary products of this order are

very

frivol-

ous and free, especially of the feminine members, they lack attic
salt

too utterly to be appropriate for our taste.

Even

the talented

150

BOOK
Crebillon
2).
flls.

III:

THE EIGHTEENTH CENTUEY


didn't

members somehow

do

their best here,

as

for example,

In 1776 the group died a quiet death.


Paroisse,

Another society La
Persan

met regularly

at the

home

of

Mme, Doublet de
Into her

who

lived such a retired life after the

death of her husband that for 40 years she never ventured outdoors.

home

she received the most distinguished and witty great

ones of her day, as well as the loveliest


president.

women. Bachaumont was the


the Nouvelles a
la

From

this circle there first issued

main,

so called because they could only be read with one hand.


tales

These

were put on public

sale,

and contained such racy and wanton


in 1852. It

tales in verse

and prose that they were prohibited

was
his

from

this

group that Bachaumont gathered the materials for

Memoires secrets.
3).

Certain societies like the Order and Society of the Hose, the

Bee, the Anacreontic Society of Rosate, and the Valmiise were in-

nocuous clubs devoted to the reverence of beauty, woman, and platonic love.

The Order

of Felicity,

whose history was written by


pleasures.

Voisenon, went in for


4).

much more realistic private


of
all

The most famous

these clubs

is

undoubtedly the Les


feasts,

Aphrodites whose history, constitution and

Nerciat has
title.

voluminously recorded in
If

his

pornographic novel of the same

he

is

to be believed, the club lasted for 20 years,

and during that

time had 4959 members, about 260 a year. All classes were represented,

from the grand seigneur

to the simplest soldier, but the


costly.

mode

of reception

was not so easy and quite

Every member
gift, in

paid an admission fee, of course, and gave the society a

keeping with his circumstances. In addition he had to deposit


10,000 livres for himself and 5,000 for his female partner, since

women were

admitted without charge. This

money was kept

at

5%

interest

and

if

member

left

the club, the principle

was

returned.

At the time the club was


151

dissolved, during the revolution,

THE EBOTIC HISTOEY OF FEANCE


it

had

a fortune of 4,558,923 livres,

which was removed from France.


cultivation of passion in every

The purpose
form

of the society
this

was the

and about

Nerciat gives us very detailed information.


particular perversions. Thus,

5). Certain clubs

were devoted to

lesbian love

was the

raison d'etre of the club of the

Anandrynes

whereof Pidausat

treats

thoroughly in his English Spy. Pederasty


palissar-

was the specialty of the Guebres and the Arracheurs de


des,

whose

constitutions

committed them to eschew women. There

was

also a society of hermaphrodites, to

which Voisenon belonged,

and many other types. Thus the Duchess of Gesvre was the head
of the
ladies.

Medusa order whose membership was confined


Their cult
seats

to

high-bom

were decorated with

statues of Priapus,

Apollo and Sappho together, and other symbols of sexual pleasure.

The

ill-famed and horrible Society of the friends of crime,


is

whose

organization

treated in Sade's Juliette, had

its

own

seraglio of

boys and

girls,

and even

its

own

zoological garden in order to

do

justice to all tastes.

These and many other clubs, devoted

to the culture of the senses,

were
in his

clearly portrayed

by

a contemporary,

Vicomte de Varause,

Lewd

Sisters.

The

prospectus to a translation of this

work

published a quarter of a century ago, states that this writer was born
in the

country about 1750 to an impoverished nobleman. Thanks

to the efforts of his aunt, one of the


XIV,

he became a page at court.


alas!

many mistresses of King Louis The way seemed to be clear for

advancement, but

he was caught with one of the young


dreams of happiness, wealth and fame
a place in

favorites of the king. All his

were

dispelled

and he was sentenced, lightly enough, to


This was a very fortunate blow for
it

a line regiment.

saved him

from the storms of the revolution which sent so many of his friends
to the guillotine, or compelled

them

to live in ignominious exile.

He

rose to the position of lieutenant but

was severely wounded

in

BOOK

III:

THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY


some measure of
health, but

the battle at Valmy, and one of his legs was shattered. After a protracted sickness he regained

emerged
his

a cripple.
ories

He entered

a Benedictine cloister at

Rheims but

mem-

gave him no

respite. Finally
at

he had to write them down.

He

never loses his poise and

the wildest leaps of his imagination ever

remains the elegant, clever


highest

man

of hyper-refined culture. In the


still

moments of happiness

his lovers

use the polite address.

Unfortunately he died in 1806. This whole account sounds very


credible,

and reproduces eighteenth-century club-life amazingly,

but

it

seems unfortunately untrue. All the exhaustive French biog-

raphers and bibliographers report absolutely nothing about this


writer,

which would be strange indeed

in the case of so important

a work.

Hence we

are forced to the conclusion that

we

are dealing

here with a hoax on the part of the publisher, or perhaps the author.
Actually, the French original
is

not

known

before 1891 which

is

possibly the original date of publication.

CHAPTEM XI
CELEBRATED PORNOLOGISTS

VIVANT DENON

WHAT grace the gallant age was able to write is witnessed by the delightful tale of Vivant Denon entitled Poin t de L endtale, it is said,

emain. This

owes

its rise

to an interesting incident.
it

In 1775, while the author was at the French court,


in his presence that

was

asserted

no one could write an authentic love story

without using smutty words. Denon was of a different opinion,

and in a few days he read


didn't offend

his story to

them.

It said

everything and

good

taste in

any way. This anecdote need not be


is

taken too seriously for the same story

related concerning Musset's

Gamiani and Cleland's Fanny


he sent these poems and
death, enjoyed
frivolous

Hill.

Denon's friend Dorat to

whom

who

published them in the year of his


as the

some reputation
kisses,

author of a pedantic though

work on

which

leaves us rather cold today.

The

same

is

somewhat true of Montesquieu's Temple de Gnide which,

according to the author, was written in honor of the Princess de

Clermont and
to

after

one of her

ideas,

without any further aim than

draw

a poetic picture of passion.

The

direct causes of the

com-

position

were a heart

affair

and the reading of Fenelon's Telemait

chus. Montesquieu secured royal permission and in 1775

was

published anonymously in prose and purported to be a translation

from the Greek. But the

stuff

is

of such a nature that

it

can only

be properly valued by powdered and curled heads.


154

The Abbe

BOOK
loves

III;

THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY


its

Voisenon reported that the effusion brought

author numerous

which he was wise enough


monotonous

to conceal.

Grimm,
these

the friend of Diderot and of the philosophers, criticised


pastorals

very unfavorably and perhaps he was

thinking of Diderot's smart

B ijoux

indiscrets

which was of an

alto-

gether different order than the insipid poetry of shepherds. Diderot


felt

impelled to deny his authorship of the Bijoux but no one else


less a

could have written this master work, which no


Lessing had translated into

personage than

Germa n. The book owes its origin to a chat held by the author with Mme. de Puisieux. The scabrous novels of Crebillon fils were being discussed when Diderot asserted
that this stuff

was

easy, for

once one had a pleasing foundation,

everything

else

depended on the execution. The others doubted

his opinion, so

Diderot went

home and

set to

work. In

a fortnight

the Bijoux were done and he had


possible that Diderot

won

50 louis d'or.

It is

not im-

was strongly influenced by


as early as 1747

a panurgic

work
The

which had appeared


c avalier

under the amazing

title:

who

co uld

make

vulvce speak.

The
of the

contents

may be

briefly

summarized

thus. In the

kingdom

Congo lives the

Sultan,

Mongogul, in the

friendliest relations

with

his favorite wife,

Mirzopa. But despite his success in love, ennui

overcomes him and he turns to the demon, Kukufa,

who

has often

been of help to his house. From him he obtains a ring which possesses
the extraordinary quality that
it

can make the jewel of every wois

man speak as
At

soon

as a

stone inserted into the ring

turned upon

it.

the same time the ring makes the bearer invisible.

Mongogul
sur-

finds great pleasure in the ring for a

whole

series of

women

render their secrets to him.

The

Sultan duly reports this to his

Mirzopa, and both use the knowledge thus

temporary morals, which are sad enough.

won to criticize conNone of the solicited


have been
tar-

women

has ever stood the

test,

and
155

all

their jewels

THE EKOTIC HISTORY OF FRANCE


nished.

The

Sultan promises his favorite a castle and a


if

little

baboon

that she desires very strongly,


faithful

only he will be able to find one


test-

woman

at the court.

Soon he has the opportunity of


falls

ing his theories. His beloved

into a severe

fit

of cramps and

the sultan in great curiosity hastens to turn his stone


jewel, but this remains silent.

upon her

Whereupon

the Sultan realizes with


at the court.
is

immense

glee that she


see

is

the only faithful

woman

One can
a novel

from

this brief synopsis that the

Bijoux

not really
the

but a loose enchainment of


varieties of the

realistic tales, a gallery of

most diverse

female nature.

The

chill, fiery, gallant,

coquettish, passionate, tender,

moody, and constant

are

drawn with

The hypocrisy, intrigue, cunning, dissimulation, wantonness, and insatiability of women are illustrated in a thousand piquant lives. We can read between the lines that women
psychological exactness.

can be moved by self-seeking, pleasure and vanity, but not a word

can be

said in defense of her love

and

fidelity.

Diderot did not for-

get to satirize Platonic love and could not desist from touching on the aberrations of the sexual libido.

The sapphic

love of Fricamone

to Acaris, the inclination of Haria to her dogs, the

sodomy

of a

Pasha, cast their

murky and repulsive shadow over the comic


by having
marital infidelity in the

lights

which generally play

in these cynical anecdotes. Diderot seeks to

satisfy bourgeois justice

Congo
sinful

punishable

by the

forcible subtraction

from the sinner of the


in
its

member, which generally brings death


Diderot's

wake.
dicere
el-

work was impelled by the Horatian ridendo


this

verum, and for


ements
as

purpose he employs comic and fantastic

well as humor. But his satire leaves the modern reader


for Diderot possesses neither the force of an Aris-

unmoved;

tophanes nor the healthy joy of Rabelais, nor the seductive frivolity
of Crebillon.

One

recognizes the thinker and the savant through


undertones. Diderot never abandons

many pedantic and doctrinaire

156

BOOK

III:

THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY


work
is

a certain standard of decency, save in the confession of the travelling jewel of Cypria. Strong as the
in

imaginary power,

it is

very poor poetry. Diderot


regretted having composed In 1796 there appeared
actual event.

later
it.

denied this child of his muse, and

La Religieuse

(the

Nun)

based on an

nun was coerced

into breaking her vows.


circle interested

The
him-

Marquis de Croismare of the Encyclopaedist's


self in

her welfare. Later owing to family circumstances he retired

to his country seat. His friends desiring his return, cooked

up the

story that the

nun had escaped from the


odium

cloister

and stood in need

of his help.

What

has given the book

its

is its

representation of
superior.

tri-

badic scenes between the

nun and the mother

But with

what tenderness has Diderot approached


or obscene
girl, in
is

his task!

Nothing lewd
it is

contained in
is

it.

Diderot ever remembers that

whose name he

writing, one

who

has only a vague pre-

monition of the vice that

is

threatening to engulf her.

He only

per-

mits her to go far enough to

make us realize the extent of the


is

danger.

One

feels that his

whole

interest

on the

side of the persecuted

nun, whose whole sin lay in her being nothing more than a woman.
This, however, she
is

prevented from being; and Diderot depicts

with high gusto and disgust the infamy of the attempts to divert
the natural sexual
life

of the girl into unnatural channels.


is

The

third of Diderot's stories belonging to this class

Jacques

the Fatalist, written about 1772, a collection of tales contained and

held together

by

the story of the narrator,

master and his ser-

vant

tell

each other of their love adventures, which are frivolous

but not in the sense of libertinage. Nevertheless, the book was


declared lewd. Diderot defended himself against this charge of

obscenity and took a fling at the practise of permitting to the 157

THE EROTIC HISTORY OF FRANCE


ancients

what

is

forbidden to the moderns. But in this apologia his


offensive than the story had been.

expression

became more

VOLTAIRE
It

was

the

Maid

of Orleans

which made

Voltaire's

name known
his friends, in

to every pious

churchman. The work was composed in sections

and

at first the early


less

poems circulated only among

more or
the

complete copies.

The wider

public was introduced to


at

work

in 1751.

While Voltaire was staying

Rome

the

manu-

script

was

stolen

and came into the wrong hands, for in the same


first

year there appeared the

unauthorized edition. Another un-

authorized edition followed and Voltaire


of his authorship.

made

vociferous denial
edition pro-

However, in 1762 he authorized an


it

vided with 20 copper plates and in

he toned

down

the most im-

proper passages; for instance, he

now had

the maid keep her


it

pucelage until the capture of Orleans, and only then offer


the altar of victory.

up on

The poem

opens with a very intimate description of the erotic

connection between King Charles and Agnes Sorel. While both are
living in their idyl of love,

France

is

being devastated by England

who

has already arrived at the gates of Orleans.

Now

the patron

saint of France, Saint

Dionysus waxes indignant over the sloth of

Charles and riding upon a sunbeam enters the terror-stricken municipal council, as

they are considering plans to cope with the im-

minent dangers.

He

assures

them

that just as France

had been

brought into the present plight by a woman, so they will be saved

by

a virgin; but they are incredulous

and laugh him out of counhis

tenance. In high

dudgeon he departs on

sunbeam.

Voltaire
idyllic

now

introduces us to Jeanne d'Arc, the fruit of an

hour between a

monk and
158

a peasant

woman.

An

English

BOOK
itinerant friar,

III:

THE EIGHTEENTH CENTUEY


who was
an adept at magic, and

Dom

Grisbourdon,

learnt

from Sybilline books that France's destiny depended on

Jeanne's virginity.

Hence he immediately
is

decides to obtain this


his rival,

precious prize, and his decision

shared

by

an

ass driver.

To

this

end he causes Jeanne to

fall asleep,

uncovers her, and pre-

pares to snatch her prize; but while the rivals are bickering about
priority, St.

Dionysus comes ariding and they


is

flee.

The girl

awakes,

covers herself again, and

provided by the saint with historic

weapoiis and launched upon her historic mission.

To

complete
is

matters Dionysus bewitches a winged donkey which she


to

to bring
to the

King

Charles.

They come upon


general,

the English

first,

and get

tent of the

enemy

Hans Chandos, whose sword and


a

trou-

sers she steals, not before

making

few drawings on the exposed


Charles she comes and the

hind parts of a handsome page.


Saint spurs

To

him on

so that

he becomes very bellicose when he


Jeanne owns.

hears

what

sort of treasure

The

latter

is

examined

by

the king's physicians and her reputation sustained.

Now

the

battle

can begin.

After a few sorties against philosophy and the clergy, Voltaire


describes Agnes' grief at her lover's desertion. She sets out in the

company

of

Bonneau

to pursue Charles,

and in the meantime stops


steals Charles' trouis

off at the inn


sers

where Jeanne is tarrying. Here she


this

and Jeanne's armor. Bedizened in

heavy armor she

cap-

tured

by the

Britons and led before Chandos,

who

strips

her of his

trousers

and wants to ravish her naked, when Jeanne storms into

the hostile camp.

The Englishmen

suffer a crushing defeat, but

Jeanne and the hero Dunois in their martial fury become separated

from the

rest,

and find themselves alone. Suddenly

a little

dog ap-

pears and leads

them

to a fairy place inhabited

by

a monster
is

who is
name,
lusts

man by day and woman by


lives

night. Conculix, for that

his

only for passion and he seeks in vain to have his dual


159

THE EKOTIC HISTOMY OF FRANCE


gratified
to

by

either or both his guests.

Out

of revenge he attempts

burn

his guests.

When

they are both standing naked upon the


air

stake,

Dom

Grisbourdon enters through the

upon

his ass

and

persuades Concuhx to spare them, promising that they would share


the wench. Presently

we

find

Dom

Grisbourdon in Hell, again in

the circle of devils, and the satanic

monk

reports his last exploit.

Naturally this scene

is

just

made

for Voltaire

and he

deals hefty

blows to the church.

Dom

Grisbourdon meets Constantine, the

holy Dominicus, and others.

The monk

driver had been on the point of forcing

how he and the Jeanne, when Jeanne's


tells

ass

ass

had come through the

air

and taken her away to Dunois. Where-

upon he had

disguised himself as a seductive girl


ravished.

by whom Dunois
and jealousy had

was thoroughly

The

ass driver

now

turned his attention

to this stunning girl,

whereupon Jeanne

in ire

run him through with her sword.

who regards herself as having been very shabbily treated by Chandos who had rejected her, turns her back upon the camp of
Agnes,
the English
still

wearing the clothes of their

leader.

But the page


a fall

of the latter observes her flight and pursues her.

Agnes has

and he

treats

her wounds and later escorts her to an hostelry


alone.

where he leaves her

But

a friar

knows how

to take advantage

of opportunities and shares Agnes' bed and body. In the meantime

Dunois rescues a young witch from the

stake.

She informs him

of her love story and her rescuer fights for her and wins. King Charles

now

learns with grief of the disappearance of his


friar.

Agnes

who
by

all this

while was being made happy by the

Thereafter

the page became recipient of her favors, but both are apprehended
the English in the midst of their copulatory activity.

Agnes sucsins,
is

ceeds in escaping to a convent where she desires to expiate her

but

alas for

her good intentions, the acting mother superior

disguised youth.

Now the English

break into the nunnery and hold

150

BOOK

III:

THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY


all

foul orgies with the nuns. St. Dionysus sees

and hastens to the


St.

scene with Jeanne to


also arrives

dam
by

the torrent of passion. But


fall

George

and both holy ones

to

with their swords until they

are forcibly reconciled

Gabriel. Charles with

Bonneau and

his

confessor arrive at the castle of Cutendres

where the young page,

who

has just slain the lecherous

monk

that had done violence to

Agnes, was

now

enjoying her again after a long absence. Full of

desire the king hurries to

Agnes and the page


is

scurries into hiding

but throws over a night table and


ever,

discovered
nit- wit

by

the king.

How-

Agnes is

able to

hoodwink the

monarch.

In the meantime luck favors the English. Jeanne fights with

Chandos and

loses,

whereupon the

sensual Briton seeks to rob her

virginity but Dionysus succeeds in preventing this. In the church

Dorothea

is

oppressed

by

the

all

too free attentions of Chandos.

Her
and

lover Trimouille arrives on the scene and measures swords


latter

with the

but

is

worsted. However, Dunois takes


is

up her cause

slays the Briton. Charles

victorious at Orleans but loses his


all

Agnes when the

earth opens and swallows

the pretty girls plus

the page Montros, to deposit

them

in the

magic palace of Conculix.


its

Jeanne's ass makes an avowal of love to


off

mistress but

is

driven

by Dunois. In the meantime, our heroes them from


that captivity

are with Conculix

who

will release

when one

of the captives

will give himself in love. Since all shrink back, Paul Tirconel de-

cides to sacrifice himself for the others.

takes

Agnes

off to

her Charles,

The ass comes to the castle, and rushes to Jeanne who finally

surrenders to him.

From every
taire

line there

is

wafted to us the love with which Vol-,


his delight in the erotic situa-

wrote the Pucelle d^Orleans, and

tions

which

are interspersed through the epic. Voltaire wouldn't

really

have been himself had he not utilized every opportunity

to hurl his darts of satire against the court, Louis, his mistresses

161

THE EMOTIC HISTORY OF FMANCE


and the clergy.
If

we who

read

it

today are apt to

set it

down
be-

with meagre delight or perhaps even with some disgust,


cause the book no longer contains truth for us.
is it

it is

no longer

a frivolous one; but


It

Our world view we must remember how and why


as the practical reaction against

could be so then.

came about

Christian spiritualism. In Christianity, the sensual in

man

is

funda-

mentally denied in theory, and only tolerated in practice. Contin-

ence and virginity are the higher, the true


fulfilled

ideals,

which should be

and established in the

lives of

men and women if only they


very paragons of our

could be compassed; and occasionally in some few individuals these


virtues are realized,
species.

which

sets

them

off as the

On the other hand, the


it

enlightenment in the sensualist form

which

assumed in France

asserted,

and to that extent

at least

justly, that

man was not essentially spirit. But now it went


just as one-sided as the
flesh

further,

and became
that he
is

church,

by proclaiming further
sensuality.

only

and nothing more than

Hence, the

poet endeavors to discover a series of pictures in which the flesh

always brings the

spirit to ruin, in

which

ostensible purity

is

always

revealed in the end as hypocrisy, and the most unsuspected saints,


as the

most dissolute of men.

It

may

be said that in Voltaire's


delight in its frivolity,

Maid of Orleans, the eighteenth century took


which
in itself
is

certainly not praiseworthy, but

which cannot be

separated from

its

other characteristics.

CREBILLON JUNIOR
The
frivolous literature of France reached
its

high point in Claude

Prosper Jolyot de Crebillon (1707-1777), and


radical representative of this class of writers,

who

as the

most
with

worked

his field

resolution

and perspicacity. His works thoroughly convey the tone

and

spirit of his society

and evince an unexampled candor. Cre162

BOOK
folly,

III:

THE EIGHTEENTH CENTUKY

billon's novels are

always sparkling and frivolous to the point of

and yet always (with some few exceptions) stopping before

the ultimate revelation, always halting before the naked representation of the final climax. His desire to mirror life as
it

really

is, is

aided

by

his utter lack of piety,

and

his mercilessly clear


illusions.

powers of

observation. Crebillon had

no more

Wherever he looked

he saw lechery and rottenness, and these conditions are truthfully


mirrored in his works.
If despite this

we

accuse him of lewdness,

we

are forgetting that an author

who

wishes to be read must ever

be the slave of his reading public. Crebillon wished to be read and his
public deified frivolity. This subservience to the taste of his time
explains, in part, the immorality of his novels

which found

their

admirers even in England. British

men

of the world frequently

came to

Paris to

become

better acquainted with the refined art of

loving, to provide themselves with clothes,

and to purchase

dozen

of Crebillon's novels to present to their friends

upon

their return.

His best
appeared
essential

known work

is

undoubtedly The Sofa.

When this novel


title

it

aroused great discussion.

The very
and

reveals the

tendency of the work. In 1741 he received a command to

exile himself

from

Paris because the king


tale.

his courtiers believed

themselves to be portrayed in this

Crebillon fled to England


at the

and confessed that he had written Le Sopha


rick
II,

wish of Fred-

that

it

had not been intended for publication but that the

manuscript had been stolen from him. After some time, he received
permission to return to France.

As

in Sade, so also in Crebillon, the

wars of love are fought not

upon the bed, but upon the sofa. The story takes the form of an oriental
tale, in

which Almanzai,

nobleman

in the court of a certain Shah,

Baham, becomes transmogrified

into a sofa for punishment.

The

conditions of the enchantment and the subsequent release are that he

may

choose any form, any material, any color, which he wishes,


163

THE EEOTIC HISTOMY OF FRANCE


and serve
will
is

whom

he

will;

only that he must remain a sofa until there


his

be enacted upon him or in

immediate vicinity a scene which

of extreme rarity: namely, innocence meeting innocence, and

both being mutually conquered.


Crebillon
his time,

We

may wish

to

remember

that

drew

the framework of his story

from another novel of


in

The Metempsychosis of the Mandarin Finn Horn,

which

the latter experiences the most intimate details in his various incarnations.

When

Crebillon cast about for

some object which would

be compelled to observe the most suggestive and lascivious scenes,


his first

thought was the

sofa,

but

it

goes without saying that Cre-

billon

was altogether original in the

erotic situations.

The success that


found.

greeted this book was so immense that

many imitations were


tidbits

Even England produced echoes


sofa to observe

of this novel, but instead of the

and report the amorous


as lap dogs, drawers,

such diverse objects

were introduced

bank

notes,

and formal

coats.

An

example of a typically French


is

caiiserie

with fine pointed

psychological graces
travaganza.

offered us

by

Crebillon in his unusual Sexlife at

It is a faithful

mirror of the naughty

the court of

Louis XV, where

women

give themselves as naturally as the

men

who

take them. In Sextravaganza there are but

two
is

characters,
a

Countess Cidalise and Count Clitandre.


palace at night,

The

scene

country

more

exactly, the

room

of the countess,

who

has

retired but forgotton to bolt the door. Clitandre, walking about in


his nightshirt, sees

an open door and walks


is

in. Is

he expected?

We
who

are not informed, for Crebillon


leaves
sation
ess

master of the half-tone,

much more to our surmise than he tells

us definitely. Conver-

becomes more and more lively and more intimate. The Count-

wishes to hear more of his love adventures.


is

He is rather reluctant
by and by, he

to continue his tale, because he

quite frozen, but

obtains the Countess' permission to finish the tale in her bed.

Now

he

relates his

meeting with Julie on one hot summer's day, during


164

BOOK
finally

III:

THE EIGHTEENTH CENTUEY


virility

which the influence of heat on

was discussed and

in

which,

he gave her proof that in

his case at least,

no diminution was
closer to each

to be marked. After this the


other,

two bed-mates huddle

and each makes sexual confessions to the other, and declare

themselves attracted one to the other. Clitandre


her, according to
all
is

now

lays siege to

the rules of the

art, until

the citadel capitulates.

This performance
ous relations, and

followed by the vivid narration of other amorgrays, Clitandre has exhausted his

when morning

report and his power.

Next

in

importance
to

is

Crebillon's Chinese story,

The

Parasite,

which pretends

be a translation from the land of lotus blossoms.

The
In

story

is

prolix

and involved and the conclusion

is

rather dull.

all it is

a rather painful task for the


is

modern

reader.
details

The

thread

of the story

constantly torn

by unnecessary

and there
The
sale

are frequent intrusions of philosophic and gallant details.

of the book was strictly prohibited and as a result


large
as

it

enjoyed a

underground distribution and even court


it.

ladies are reported

having been "crazy" for

The

reason for the prohibition was


a satire against Cardinal
in

that in this

book there could be discerned


result that Crebillon

Rohan, with the


the Bastille.
If
all

had to spend some time

Crebillon here has retained some traces of decency he dropped

the veils in the

work now

to be mentioned, the

famed Dialogue

T ableaux

of Morals in Diffe rent Ages. Both this

volume and Sex-

travagafiza have recently been published in this country. In seven-

teen chapters a veritable master paints the gallant


empire. Seventeen pictures out of
life,

life

of the old

caught by the inexorable


to-

eye and limned with a delicate impressionistic pencil, joined

gether to form a total portrait of the most ostentatious era of French


history

glowing with ardent

sensuality. In the midst of this kalgirl

eidoscope of passions stands Mile. Tlierese, a society


165

of enchant-

THE EEOTIC HISTOHY OF FKANCE


ing beauty and grace.

We make her acquaintance when she


Her

is

just a

young

girl

being educated in the cloister and already here, within


senses cry out for ful-

the holy walls, her hot blood simmers.


fillment

and

stormy need for love draws her to her friends and


at the cloister

associates.

How these young girls


how

engage in numer-

ous, deeply erotic practices,

the awakening of spring finds

expression in the most daring of games and adventures, constitute

one of the most effective and exquisite


in full

parts.

Later

we

see the girl

bloom

as bride

and young matron. Very soon, however, the

marriage partners go their

own way.
enormously wealthy farmer-general

This remarkable book has a very interesting history. Crebillon

wrote

it

at the request of the

of taxes, Popeliniere,
his lavishness

who was famous for his grand style, his luxury,


wenching. In addition he had an itch to write

and

his

poetry, which hasn't survived. But two of his novels have

come down
its
it

to us, and the Histoire de Zairette has been preserved because

author affixed

it

to Crebillon's Tableaux of Morals, to rescue

from

oblivion. Zairette,

born in

Paris, is after

many

venereal ad-

ventures brought to the kingdom of Karaktay where she must


serve the sensual desires of the ruler Moufhack,

which love scenes

are represented with sextravagant imaginativeness. According to

Marquis de Paulmy's account,


with the utmost care in
just

this

book of Crebillon was printed

one copy, in the house and under the

eye of Popeleniere. After printing, the plates were destroyed.

The

work contained twenty


showed Popeleniere
this

large but

handsome miniatures which

in various positions. After the latter's death in a sealed packet so that at first Popeleniere

volume was found

was suspected of being the author of both books, both Zairette


and the Tableaux. As soon
as it

was unwrapped and examined, the

great monetary value of the book


rarity

became obvious because of

its

and the beauty of

its

pictures. Mile, de Vandi,

one of the heir-

166

BOOK
find

III:

THE EIGHTEENTH CENTUMY


when
she saw this

esses to the Popeleniere estate cried out aloud

and

insisted that the

work

of the devil be burnt immediately.


this

But the

officer in

charge explained that


all

procedure would have


sealed the package

to be sanctioned

by

the heirs;

whereupon he

again and informed the chief of police

with the minister, Saint-Florentin.

who in turn communicated The minister ordered that the


it

book be obtained for His Majesty, and so


changed hands many times, and
for over 20,000 francs.
in
1

was. Later the book


sold to a bibliophile

89 1

it

was

There have been numerous


a frontispiece to

reprints

and

Rops once contributed

one of

these.

The French

government has always confiscated these reprints so that copies


are exceedingly rare.

Crebillon wrote numerous other works and


in his day.

all

were widely read

His writings

fitted the taste of the times perfectly

to
The

portray the most amatory situations with the most moral words.
Sensual pleasure has but
little

charm without

spirited talk.

witty preludes are the ornaments and the excuse for these im-

moral carryings on.

The

fairy tale

form and the Oriental frame-

work were
adopted.

also part of

the contemporary

mode which

Crebillon

Peculiar to Crebillon
alizing tone

is

the extraordinary combination or mor-

with scabrous reporting of love relationships.

No

one can
his time.

fail

to appreciate his desire to give a faithful mirror of

At moments

the

satirist in

him makes

his

appearance

when he
it

takes aim at theological and political abuses

but he does

guardedly and makes these reconnoitres appear quite accidental.


his

His influence on the literature of

time was tremendous and

can

easily

be demonstrated.

167

THE EMOTIC MISTOMY OF FMANCE

CHODERLOS DE LACLOS
Since love was everything in
this century, the gallant ladies

and

gentlemen of the day became systematic and reduced seduction


to a system.

The mere surrender of a woman was no


tasted so

great achieve-

ment.

One had

much, and

so frequently, that one could

find pleasure only

when one

gained one's goal


slogan.

by

craft or force.

"First enjoy, then destroy"

went the

With

unsurpassable

mastery Choderlos de Laclos (1741-1803), in


euses,
tails

his Liaisojis

Dangerthe de-

reproduced with the

fidelity of a

photographer,

all

of courtly depravity

which degraded love

to sly deceit.

A
is

young and innocent

girl is

seduced by two genial criminals and

made

into the meanest whore.

young and

religious

matron

systematically driven to infidelity

by

this pair

and

finally to death.

And
at

the motive of

it all is

not love, not even sensuality, but the

exquisite lust for psychological experimentation

which

will stop

no crime. Seduction

is

not the motive but corruption. But the


in earnest about his

satirist

was hardly

so

much

theme

that he
literary

forgot his Gallic smile and frivolity.

He was

impelled

by

ambition, and to achieve a widely-read book he

would have

to

employ the loudest

colors possible in the depiction of vice.

De

Laclos cannot be accused of depicting crime with great expansiveness and providing the "heroes" of corruption with such brilliant

accoutrement.

If his

work was

to be complete and effective

it

would have

to

be done in the

finest

and most circumstantial manner.

De Laclos's contemporary, Count Tilly, makes a very interesting comment. The author expended much art upon Mme. de Mertuil.

He

purposely represented her

as

being so corrupt that he might

the better contrast the angelic purity of

Mme.

de Tourvel.
in evil

And

he is even

justified in

making the former lady outdo

Valmont

BOOK
himself, for he
is

III:

THE EIGHTEENTH CENTUEY


men and knows that generally women
left

a student of

are better than

men and

worthier than us; but once they have

the path of virtue and womanliness, they proceed downhill into the

mire at an alarmingly

fast clip.

For the

rest

he has drawn pictures


are elegant,
a trowel.

more reprehensible than Aretino; but most of them


some true, others exaggerated, and
their colors laid

on with

By

those

who knew

the great

men

only from hearsay

this

work
one of

was accepted

as a splendid representation of the general morality


it

of the higher classes; and in this sense

can be regarded,

as

the thousand billows of the revolutionary ocean which swallowed

up the

court, one of the thousand lightning flashes in the storm

that razed the throne. In a word, his

work

is

the product of a head

of the
evil.

first

rank, a heart given over to rottenness and the genius of

So well was he able to get the proper note that people actually

asked whether the correspondence was genuine or fanciful; and


Laclos, in a naive and philistine introduction, sought to maintain

the belief in the genuineness of the

letters.

De Laclos told
was stationed
ing of boredom.

his friend Tilly that the

work

originated while he
perish-

in a garrison

on the

island of

Re where he was

He

had already tried composing some

elegies

and

had

also gotten into scrapes.

But

now he

yearned to achieve some-

thing that would bring

him

lasting fame,

even after
also

his death.

One
only

of his friends, a literar)^

man who had

made
life

his

mark

in

the sciences, had had a host of adventures in his


a

which lacked

frame and

a stage since

they had plenty of glory and

eclat.

This friend was really born for woman, and was thorough-

ly versed in the falsehoods and infidelities in


species has accomplished so

which the female


at

much. Indeed, had he been born

court he would have been a lovelace and would even have surpassed the latter in form. This friend chose Laclos for his confidant

who laughed

at his

pranks and occasionally helped out with advice.


169

THE EROTIC MISTOMY OF FBANCE


TTie latter
Alertuil,

knew one

of his mistresses

who
was

stood near to

Mme.

de

and in Grenoble he found the lady

who was the prototype


Marquise con-

of the Alertuil

woman

in the story. It

a certain

cerning

whom

the whole city

knew and

told things related only

of the most notorious empresses of ancient

Rome.

He

wrote down

the most noteworthy of these reports with an eye to using


later,

them

and added

to these erotic episodes that


his

had become bywords,


it all

and certain passages from

own

life.

Then he melted

into

one precious metal, invited the


character of

rest

and created particularly the


to

Mme. de Tourvel who meant very much


as

him and

whom
he sent

he regarded

being too virtuous for

this earth.

After ex-

pending a number of months of diligent labor to perfect the style


it

into the

world and achieved


his

his purpose.

Fame was

his

in large measure.

During

own life the book was


make

reprinted fifty

times. Stendhal (Beyle) sought to

his acquaintance

and was

so impressed

by

the Laclos reputation that he acted like a diffident

schoolboy in the presence of the famous author.

LOUVET DE COUVRAY
In strict contrast to the Dangerous Connections of Choderlos stands
another, hardly less famous work,

The Adventures

of Chevalier

Faublas by Jean Baptiste Louvet de Couvray. In 1772 he was taken


into the convent

where he joined the party of the Girondists


to rise against Robespierre. In 1793
latter

and was not afraid


flee

he had to
re-

but after the death of the

he returned and was

admitted into the convent, joined the Council of 500 and died in
1797. poet.
all

But

his

work

will live for all time as the creation of a great

This work permits us to see yet once more in roseate hues

that the old society

had

fitted

out with so

much pomp and


its

circumstance. If the Dangerous Liaisons had exposed

contempo-

170

BOOK
raries

HI:

THE EIGHTEENTH CENTUMY


lovely grace,
its

with cynical candor, the other book waxed enthusiastic about

the handsome he

its

exquisite frivolity,

which

the society flattered

itself it lived

under.
is

In contrast to Casanova's experienced reports, Faublas's

an

imaginary account, and


of the time.
doir scenes

may be The whole is a web


is

accounted

as the

moral balance

of lubricity and passionate bou-

where people

love, converse wittily, debate about love;

where night and day there

nothing

else

but carnal pleasure;

where
all

folk smilingly deceive

and are deceived; where despite


is

this nothingness,

no tedium
lust

experienced. Everything remains

superficial
all,

and neither

nor grief goes very deep; and above

these idlers fear a genuine passion


trivialism.

which
all

is

not compatible

with their

Faublas sums up

these hundreds of in-

dividual details in his wonderful pictures of the times.

The contents

of this book are too well

known

to need repetition here. Besides,

a compressed narrative account will give no notion of the attractive

and vividly

warm

paintings, for

it is

just this

mass of

little

mis-

chievous and lascivious details which afford

it its

true splendor.

Louvet comprehended the ideal of rakishness with almost remarkable


talents.

His inventiveness

is

happy,

his devices

which

set it in

motion are nimble, swift and


aids

effective.

One
his

marvels at the heap of

and combinations the author has

at his disposal.

The
is

situations

he invents are comical and original and

dramatic talent teaches


action
full

him how

to handle characters properly.

The

of

fire.

The movement

of scenes abounds in vital

warmth which never

harms the probability or impedes the unfolding. Twenty characters


and a half dozen intrigues are going
in the
at

one time and nothing gets

way

of anything

else.

On

the contrary they illuminate each

other with pure and tender love and patriotic enthusiasm resting
the mind, for everything fatigues, even vice. His style
is

elegant
It

and

light;

and

if

panurgic in places, thoroughly pleasant.


171

has

THE EKOTIC MISTOEY OF FEANCE


more of grace than
observation and
the queer
wit,

more wit than


frivolity than

passion,

more passion than


else.

more of

anything

To sum

up,

amalgam of inconstant

tenderness, sensual intoxication

and merry comedy produces


Extremely praiseworthy
is

a remarkable but dangerous book.

is

the naturalness with which emotion

represented and motivated.

Here

is

no affected sentimentality,

ostentatious with artifiicial sensations, but pure truth, even


it

when

goes hand in hand with the greatest frivolity.

As an

illustration

of the spirit of the

work and

its

language, a scene will be quoted in

which the Marquise apparently makes the discovery that the young
Faublas

who is

lying beside her, dressed as a

girl, is really

of mas-

culine gender.

Deep

silence reigned for a

few breaths, then the Marquise asked

me in a wonderfully changed voice.


"Are you asleep already, pretty child.^" "No, I am still awake." She opened her arms rapidly and pressed me

to her bosom.

"Heavens!" she then cried out with a surprise that was excellently simulated, "A man." And pushing me from her quickly she added,

"How,
I

sir, is

this possible?"

answered trembling. "Quite right, sir, but it was incredible. You shouldn't have remained here or you should at least not have prevented them from preparing another bed for you." "But it wasn't I who did it, madame, but the Marquis himtold

"Madame,

you

expressly.

."

self."

"Please speak quietly,

sir. I

repeat

you must not remain

here.

You must go."


"Good, madame, I go." But she seized me by my sleeve and cried, "Go? where to and what for? To wake my maids so that we will surely be apprehended? So that all will be able to say that a man has been in my bed?" "Gracious madame, do not be angry. I shall spend the night

172

BOOK
in
situation."

III:

THE EIGHTEENTH CENTUMY


way
out of an

an armchair. This will be the best

awkward

But she
tainly

still

held on to

my arm and went on, "Now that's an


is,

idea for you. Tired as he

As a matter of fact you deserve some such fate, but I will permit you to remain here if you promise to be good." "Then you forgive me?"
//

give him a cold

a night in this cold

room ivould
illness.

cer-

not some more serious

"No,

don't forgive you.

am merely looking out

much more
natural

than for you. But dear


it

what a cold hand he

for myself,
has."

Full of pity she put

upon her ivory neck, but guided by impulse and love, the fortunate hand soon slid down;

an incomprehensible excitation set my blood aboiling. "Has ever woman been in such a pickle as the one he has put me into?" the Marquise complained petulantly.
"Forgive me, forgive me, dearest mama."

"You are really considerate of your mama, you little wretch." Then her arms drew me to her again, oh so gently. And soon we were so close that our lips met and I had the temerity to press a hot kiss upon hers. "Faublas, is this what you promised me?" she said almost voicelessly. Her hand suddenly strayed, and a consuming fire
raced through

my veins.
I

"Gracious lady, forgive me,


I

die!"

"My dear Faublas, my friend!


became motionless. The Marquise had pity with my helplessness which she rather enjoyed and helped along my timid awkwardness. I underwent with as much wonder as pleasure a lesson which I repeated more than once.

CHAPTEM Xn
OTHER CELEBRATED PORNOLOGISTS

COMTE DE MIRABEAU
749 IN the castle of Bignon. He died in 1791. His biography at
1

Honore Gabriel

Riquette,

Comte de Mirabeau was bom


is

known

to

all.

Because he had seduced Sophie Ruffey, the Marquise of

Monnier, both were persecuted by the furious husband. Mirabeau

was sentenced to the


in a cloister.

jail

at Vincennes,

and Sophie was immured

But the motives which impelled the aging Count Ruf-

fey to these acts of punishment did not spring from any exalted
motives. Repeatedly, Mirabeau accuses

Monnier unequivocally of

the ignominious design to get a child from his wife at any price,

which he himself could not hope for from


wanted
his

his

own

efforts.

He

a child so badly because he wished to avenge himself against

married daughter and her husband.

He would
his

be able to

disin-

herit

them only

if

he could have a child by

second marriage
as his

which

in the eyes of the

world could be considered

own.

When

these calculations

were destroyed by Mirabeau and Sophie

he became extremely embittered and engineered the persecutions


of the lovers.

While Mirabeau was


there,

in prison the

Marquis de Sade was brought

and there were many subsequent encounters between these

two

writers. In the 1780's the latter

came

to

pay

his respects to
this visit to

Mirabeau,

who

later

wrote the following account of

Police Chief Boucher,

whom

Mirabeau called
174

his

guardian angel:

BOOK
tion

III:

THE EIGHTEENTH CENTUEY

"Yesterday M. de Sade fired his cell. He did me the honor of introducing himself to me and without the slightest provoca-

on my part he made me the butt of

his

infamous attack.

He

accused

me of

being the favorite of the inspector of prisons

M. de Rougememont
daily stroll

who accorded me the

privilege of a

which was denied him. Finally he asked

for

my

he might have the pleasure of cutting my ears off after he would again be at liberty. Then I lost patience and replied: 'My name is that of a gentleman who has never cut women up, and poisoned them, and who will spell the name out on your back if you won't shut up, for which business I shan't have much regret.' Whereupon he kept still and he hasn't dared

name

so that

to

open his mouth since. If you are inclined to bear me some illwill about it I might answer that it is easy enough to exercise patience at a distance, but mighty sad to live under one roof with such a monster,"

The

incarceration of the lovers, Mirabeau and Sophie, did not


love.

have the effect of extinguishing their

They

languished each

for the other and their letters bear witness to their passionate tem-

perament. Sophie

is

delighted to read the description of Mirabeau 's

love affairs with the highest ladies of the court.

His

letters are

momentary

inspirations of the

most personal

art,

not really meant for the external world.


that

When rumors

came

to

him

some one was planning


that
if

to publish

them he was shocked and


live

vowed

he could survive the blow he would

only for

revenge. Unfortunately, he had no way of hindering the realizations


of these rumors, for
archives.
all

the letters had gotten into the Paris police

During the revolution the whole department came under


1

the control of the municipal council whose syndic in

792

was the

convent deputy Manuel.


letters for himself

The

latter

used his position to obtain the

and to publish them despite the opposition of the

family.

Mirabeau

also

corresponded in a very free manner indeed with


175

THE EEOTIC HISTORY OF FRANCE


another lady

whom he

did not

know

at

all.

The

suppressed desires

of the lovers found partial expression in this erotic correspondence

which

is

an important source for the


is

life

of Mirabeau.

Thus we

learn that A4irabeau

the author of the notorious

My

Conversion,

known as The Li bertine of Qu ality. Some have suggested that it was the father of Mirabeau who wrote the book but attributed
frequently
it

to the son that the latter's

name might be

discredited, but several

of these letters to Julie contain explicit and indubitable testimony


that Mirabeau himself wrote the book.

Thus he

writes to her:

I have written and called My Conversiofi. The following extract may give you an idea of the contents, and show you at the same time how faithful to you I still am. (There now follows a quotation from the above book.) 'Until now, my friend, I was a ne'er-do-well. I pursued skirts and was only a rotter and a But now youth

"I

am

not enclosing a quite insane book that

returns to

my heart.

Hereafter

shall love

only for gold.

will

advertise myself as a
is

sworn

stallion for

women whose summer


hop with
their poste-

almost gone, and so will teach

them

to

riors

every month.'
can't believe

and amusing contrasts fit into this frame. All types of women, and all ages pass before the eye. The idea is quite mad but the details are rollicking and some day I'm going to read it all to you, although I fear that you'll be scratching my eyes out. I've already finished the wofigures

"You

how many

man

of means, the prude, the nun, the president, the business

woman, the court lady, the old one, and now I'm doing the young woman. This is one grand work and a correct manual of
morals."

In a later letter he writes Sophie that he


for the

is

preparing engravings
its

book which

if

he were

its

bookseller and not

author,

would be making

his fortune.

He

promises to leave enough time


if

for hours of dalliance with her, even

he

is

giving most of his

present time to the completion of this book. If she will promise to

176

BOOK

III:

THE EIGHTEENTH CENTUBY


is,

be tolerant to free words and loose portraiture, which

however,

nothing but the reflection of current immorality, he will send her


the book which
is less

frivolous than

would appear

at first glance.

He

has already thoroughly analyzed the court ladies and finished


girls.

anatomizing the nuns and the opera

Now he is

treating the

monks but is planning to make


where he will

a short excursion to the

underworld

fornicate with Prosperina and dig

up some droll news.

In short, he regards his book as an extraordinary piece of madness

which no one can read without


the
first

laughter.

A month later he sent her

part of the book.

The
is

second he was afraid to entrust to the

mails.

A melancholy note

sounded in the brief note accompanying

the book as he speaks of the dismalness of the prison environment

where one must beat

one's thigh to induce laughter:


all

"For
life."

if

one

doesn't laugh one loses

courage, or reason, or even

The novel is entirely concerned with a man who sells his potency.
In order to pay for his luxurious indulgences a cavalier belonging
to

French court

circles distributes his favors for suitable


series of

remuneraless

tion to a

whole

women, more or

less

old and

more or

ugly, but always rich. Mirabeau published the book because he just

had to pay

off

some

debts.

Hence we cannot assume

that

we
life

are

dealing with an absolutely faithful reflection of the social

of

the times.

The lascivious

life

of that epoch appears caricatured; but


value.

the book has an abiding

human

Later Mirabeau wrote his

little

pussy, Sophie, that he had

com-

posed a

new and very original work

entitled Erotica Biblion t reating


less serious

the most roguish themes in a grotesque but none the


fashion.

He

asks her

whether she can believe that

in the Bible

and

classical times investigations

were

instituted concerning onanism,

tribadism, and on

all

indelicate matter treated

by the

casuists.

These

matters were treated in the Bible in such a


readable

way

that they

were

by even

the most squeamish, and incidentally they were

THE EEOTIC HISTOKY OF FEANCE


interlarded with

philosophical ideas.

Here Mirabeau

treats

all

manner of passion and perversity

in a fairly unexceptionable style

and shows that among the ancient peoples, particularly the Jews,
there existed the same degree of sexual excitability as in his time.

The work is cleverly erotic but by no means pornographic. In many respects it is one of the strangest books ever written. Here
are

some of his chapter headings

with

their paraphrased meanings:

IscHA, or the creation of man Tropoide, or about incest.

and his superiority

to zvoman.

Thalabe, or concerning masturbation. Anandrine, or concerning tribadism.


Akripoidie, or concerjiing circumcision.

Kadesch, or concerning unnatural unchastity. Behemao, or concerning unchastity with animals. Leguanmanie, or views about orgasm and divers notes anent
prostitution.

The whole

edition of this

work was
it

confiscated immediately so

that only fourteen copies of

are extant today. It


title

was naturally

placed on the Index, too, under the

of Amatoria Bibliorum.

Subsequent editions met the same


itself.

fate

but the book has reproduced

If

Mirabeau's authorship of these books

is

fairly certain, this

is

not the case with Hie a Hec, dealing with the adventures of a

young pupil

of the

Avignon

Jesuits

wealthy home after the dissolution


are recruited

who becomes a of the order. The

tutor in a

characters

from the clergy and

nobility;

and the action leaves

nothing to be desired in the

way of

caprice and lasciviousness.

Another work of uncertain authorship that has been attributed


to a

Mirabeau without

justification

is

The Raised Curta in, probably

work

of the Marquis de Sentilly. It purports to be an apology for


is

incest but the task

not carried out, perhaps because of a sudden

BOOK

III:

THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY


we have it today has been worked
is

access of scruple; and the story as

over by another pen. Little Laura whose education


in the hands of her father, gets a

completely
spends an

new

governess

who
leads

unaccountably long time in her father's room.

To allay her curiosity


it

Laura

ties a

thread to the curtain in this

room and

through

the keyhole into her

own room

next door.
rises,

One day

she pulls this

thread gently and as the curtain


situation

discovers her father in a tight

with her governess. But her deed has been noticed and she
to the performance. Later she receives the informaties

must be witness
tion that

no natural bond

her to her father. Since she


is

is

too

young

for the tussle of love

and since her father

aware of her

fiery temperament, he has her fitted with a chastity belt

which she

must wear
berty,
etc.,
it is

until she

becomes

ripe.

When

little

Laura reaches pu-

removed and there follow

orgies with the father, youths,

which

are broadly depicted with philosophic discussions and

justifications.

A number of other works are attributed to Mirabeau, some justly


but others wrongly. His works found wide recognition even outside
of France, and were greedily read

by women,

too. Pauline Wiesel,

the lover of Prince Louis Ferdinand, was greatly enthusiastic about

them

as

we know from

a letter of

von Benz which characterizes

Mirabeau's writing as cold libertinism and urges her friend to read

cognate productions of Voltaire, Crebillon and Grecourt

if

she

would know the best

that has been achieved in this field.

NERCIAT
Andre Robert Andrea de Nerciat was born
adventurous
life

in 1739, led a fairly

and died in 1800.

He

began to travel very early in

order to perfect himself in languages, then entered the service of


the king of

Denmark and

finally returned to

France where he rose

179

TME EHOTIC HISTOMY OF FRANCE


to chief lieutenant. After being pensioned he journeyed through

Belgium and became assistant librarian to the Landgrave of HessenCassel,

but after the newspapers accused him of disorganizing the

public library he resigned, and became director of construction to


the

Duke

of Hessen-Rothenburg, and finally returned to France.

During the revolution he emigrated and served the Duke of Braunschweig. In 1798 he was sent to the pope on a special mission
the queen of Naples but

by

was captured by French troops and

jailed.

Shortly after his release, he died.

As

a writer Nerciat

is

distinguished

by

his spirit

and

style.

His
in

dialogues are brilliant and evince strong dramatic


erotic scenes

skill.

Even

he knows

how

to introduce relief.

He

never offends

with coarse speech but even in the freest scenes he knows


divert attention

how

to

from carnal

reality

by

the aid of proper sentiment.

But despite

all

these virtues, his writings leave the reader untouched

for they lack the chief desideratum

emotion. He belongs to that


Choderlos de Laclos erected

type of rococo individual to

whom

such a lasting monument in his immortal story.


Nerciat's chief

work is Felicia. The person of Felicia is no creation


his,

of the author's fancy but a real individual, a friend of

and

we

meet her again

in

Montrose and Aphrodite. The heroine opens her


is

eyes upon the world on a pirate ship. She

adopted by an
is

Italian

who
she

gives her an excellent education.

Her

libido

aroused

when

is still

very young and

at fourteen a little
falls in

dancing instructor

turns her head.

At

nineteen she
a prelate
is

love with the Chevalier


series.

d'Aiglemont.

Then

added to the

Her

lust for

adventure draws her to Paris.

On the way she is attacked by robbers


Her love adventures

but freed by a young, knightly hero, Montrose.

with him

fill

the

first

half of the second volume. Despite their great

love for each other neither hesitates to stray off into other pastures.
Felicia falls in

with a rich Briton

who is

a slave to a peculiar

whim.

BOOK

III:

THE EIGHTEENTH CENTUEY

He invites young

couples and pretty girls to his castle and eaves-

drops upon them quite invisibly, for the castle has double walls.

There are numerous episodes and many characters appear. All the
love scenes give way to a mass wedding. Sidney marries Zeila

whom

he had once

lost.

Aiglemont takes

a little flapper

home with him

and only Montrose escapes the matrimonial chains.


family, joins the

He

finds his

army and

is

promoted

to the rank of captain.

subsequent novel, Montrose, carries on this story, although

there isn't really an integral plot.

Many new
by

characters are intro-

duced and

all

have but one function besides the inevitable sexual


all

debauchery; they are

actuated

the caprice of play-acting.

Nerciat boasts that his characters are not the usual simple creations,
utterly clear, calculable
virtues

and of one

cloth,

but are rare mixtures of

and

infirmities.

They make

swift and constant transitions

from sorrow to

joy,

from

lust to regret,

from wrath

to tenderness.
it is

They

are half chastity and half corruption, of the sort that

unique achievement to escape in the metropolis, especially


has the inclination and the means of gratifying
it.

if

one

In this tale Felicia

has already been advanced to the presidency of the profligate love


society.

An

added point of

interest in this

book

is

that the her-

maphrodite, Nicelte, probably served as the model for Zambinella,


in Balzac's short story Sarrazine.

In

My Novitiate, the author describes the experiences of a daughown


peculiar

ter of joy in his

compound

of clever sophistry and


title

licentiousness. Better

known

is

the book with the amazing


all

The Devil

in

Him. This

story, like

of Nerciat's work,

is

strongly

interwoven with dialogues and contains some pretty broad expressions.

pair of dissolute

women who

engage in monstrous

practices: the
a

Marquise and her friend. Countess Motte-en-feu;

German

prelate

whose

life

work

consists in

purveying most unthe lovely

equivocal knightly services to pretty


ISl

women;

Mme.

THE EROTIC HISTORY OF FRANCE


Couplet, the most refined brothel mistress in
all Paris.

The

worthy-

abbot and his monks

all

of

whom must

bring sacrifices to the love

altar of the little Countess; Nicola, the earnest

and

jealous;

and

Phillipine, the soft

and amorous servant of the Marquise

both of

whom

emulate the example of their mistress; the always faithful


alias

Hector,

Bel-amour; and the boy Felix


is

who

has long since

ceased being a boy. There

also the
is

amusing phenomenon of the


able to cure the Marquise
finally,

Capuchin who
afflicted

fears

nothing and

with a fever; the negro Zamer; and

the

ass.

This
their

concludes the enumeration of the characters

who go through

merry pranks

in this book.

This novel portrays the moral coloring of the French society


that he
in this

saw and there


work.
is

are very
is

few invented or imagined elements

The same

true of the next book to be considered,

which

not quite as accurate, but nevertheless based upon confacts. It is

temporary
as

Les Aphrodites.

Morosophs, were a society of

The Aphrodites, also known men and women current in the


they met in Paris on the slope
the chairmanship of a certain

reign of Phillip of Orleans.


of the valley of

At

first

Montmorency under

Marquis de Person.

The

purpose of the society was simply the

gratification of sensual lusts.

These actual circumstances formed

the skeleton of Nerciat's novel.

He

added some

fictitious material

to the plot and embroidered everything with fragments of his


eclectic sophistries.

own

A summary of Les Aphrodites follows:


The
him
chevalier dismounts

from

his horse

and enters

a villa before

the gates of Paris.

Two servitors, one dumb and the other deaf, lead


Mme. Durut
receives the
it

to the landlady of this house of joy.

guest joyfully; for


teries of love

was she who had inducted him

into the

mys-

four years ago, and since that time she has not seen him.
of her charms, for

Durut

lets

him examine and adore every one


182

BOOK
Then
a

III:

THE EIGHTEENTH CENTUMY


still

despite her thirty-six years she

knows how

to captivate men.

she brings

him

to a boudoir

where a negress washes him and

maid soothes him with chocolate. In the meantime the proud and Duchess de Enginieres enters to keep a rendezvous
is

high-spirited

with a certain count. She

disgruntled at being kept waiting and

orders a bath prepared in the meantime, to be accompanied

by

appropriate reading.
version and

Mme. Durut

brings her Mirabeau's


first is

My

Con-

Le

Fils
its

d'Hercule; the

rejected

by the nobleintrigue.

woman

because

author, himself a nobleman, had taken active

part in the revolution.

Durut now weaves a new

She

arouses interest of the duchess in the chevalier


as

whom she

speaks of
is

her nephew and

calls

him

in

on the pretext that the duchess

a famous actress

who

can help him get a place in her company.

Durut presently

leaves the

two

alone and the chevalier acts the


leaves her bath.

chambermaid when the duchess


that the

She

now suggests
the

young man who has pleased her

shall enter the bath;

chevalier plays the part of a real lover despite her struggles,

which

arouses her fury since she regards the love of


as

any but

nobleman

an abomination. In the meantime, the expected count, the real

lover of the duchess, arrives but


to detain

Durut receives him and knows how


duchess. She sends

him from disturbing the pastime of the

him

Celestine, her supposed step-sister,

who

arouses the count to

a double sacrifice.

During

this love episode

Durut hurries
is

to the

duchess and the chevalier and informs the lady that he

really a

nobleman.

Whereupon

the latter

is

relieved

and overjoyed. Meanis

while the count,


to his defeat.

who

has tired of waiting, comes in and

witness

duel appears unavoidable, but the cunning

Durut

knows how
Celestine
is

to mollify the rivals.

At

sumptuous repast to which


exchanged.

also invited, the roles are

The

duchess

chooses the count and the chevalier, Celestine, so that general


satisfaction
is

achieved. After the guests have gone,

Durut remains

i83

THE EKOTIC MISTOEY OF FEANCE


alone with Celestine and they go over their account to discover
that this

month has brought them

a surplus of 1200 livres.

The

outstanding debts are discussed and the perverse erotic practices


of certain

members come in
is

for full discussion.

The

next visitor

the Marquise Fieremotte

who

is

looking for

a travelling

companion. Durut has suggested M. de Limecoeur and

while they are waiting for him, the marquise spends her time with

Bel-amour in reading the eroticon Matinee Libertine. Limecoeur


arrives punctually,

but the post doesn't

suit

him and he

declines

the offer.

The

disappointed panderess notifies the marquise of his

decision; she desires to speak with

him

herself,

only they must

both be masked. Limecoeur

is

given a comfortable sleeping outfit


voice captivates

and

is

led to the marquise.

Her

him

at

once and

he ravishes her. However, to punish him for his


the marquise slips

initial

reluctance

away with

the help of Durut.

They inform him

that she has already journeyed to Paris in her chariot and that she
is

ugly

as

night but he will not renounce his passion.

The next chapter introduces us to M. de Trottignac who, because


he
is

such a swaggerer, has been hurled into a cage.


is

physician

examines him to see whether he


his virility

infected.

Then
his

Celestine tests

by hanging

50-lb.

weight upon

tumescent organ,

which the

athlete easily carries for three minutes.


is

At

the recom-

mendation of another member he

accepted.

Next morning

madame looks up the marquise and


agreement with Limecoeur.

discovers that she has

come to an

Now

Durut plays the panderess and

instead of Bel-amour she sends her the Chevalier Alfons

whom

we've met above, disguised


achieving his goal which
is

as a servitor.

The

latter

succeeds in

eternally one. In the

meantime Lime-

coeur has gone off to Paris.

The

early scenes of the second


Paris.

volume are enacted

at a

country

house near

Mme.

de Montchaud confesses to her cousin,


1S4

BOOK
Mme.

III:

THE EIGHTEENTH CENTUEY


monks of the

Valcreux, that her deceased husband had been insufficient

for her temperament and that the thirty-seven


cloister

had been

collaborators.

Mme. Durut
trial

enters and brings

Mme. Valcreux an enormous godemiche, which


appropriates; with the aid of her cousin a

the latter promptly


is

performance

forth-

with

instituted.

Through Durut, Mme. de Montchaud makes an


earlier date

ap-

pointment with Trottignac but can't get an

than the

following Sunday for he has a very crowded calendar.

Then

Countess Motte-au-feu comes upon the scene and relates to

Mme.
first

Durut the number of her


day

lovers.

For twenty years, from her

to the present, there are 4959

which does not give one even


judges, monks,

a day, she complains. But she reads the names, recruited from every

conceivable

class, princes, nobles, prelates, officers,

soldiers, servants, negroes,

mulattoes and

many

of

unknown occu-

pation

There
here.

are

numerous other episodes which

shall

not be mentioned

Not many
little is

of these are distinguished for their high tone and

very

to be gained

by spending time over such


is

matters.
as

The

important point to be remembered

that this novel

was

common

to eighteenth-century France as dozens of best sellers are in the

United

States. It reflects

and

sets in

high relief the customs of the

country, for literature and manners go hand in hand.

When
any

litera-

ture turns from the trivial to the erotic and then to the licentious,

we

shall

merely report the

latter

without giving

it

detail or

length of description.

MARQUIS DE SADE
The
erotic literature of the gallant period reached
its

culmination

in the

Marquis de Sade. In

his

work
1S5

there

is

found everything that

THE EEOTIC HISTORY OF FKANCE


an imagination wallowing in the cesspools of the most offensive
vileness could conjure

up

a reversal of all values.

The good

is

hymn of praise is sung to baseness, and the scum of the earth are now regarded as the leading and illustrious spirits and as paragons of conduct. What a dissolute, infernally clever fancy could invent in the way of crime and disgusting
trampled in the
dirt,

but a

scenes,

is

recommended

to the

world with grinful delight and

dia-

bolical animality as the only laudable condition.

To

this

monster
soil.

nothing was holy or noble; he touched nothing that he did not

Human honor, an empty word without content. Men are only to be


considered insofar as they can serve a hellish passion which
ated to
its
is

gener-

highest voltage

by

the sight of the most horrible pains


delight of this voluptuary could

inflicted

upon some one

else.

The

only be purchased with the pain of another.

woman's sensation

of pleasure can sometimes be shammed, but her pain never. Cruelty


is

the highest virtue especially

when it is tied up with


it

sexual activi-

ty.

Nothing

is

so monstrous that

cannot become a source of joy.

He

delights in bloody corpses, children torn

from the arms of


filled

their

mothers, girls burned at the end of an orgy; goblets

with

blood and wine; and


torture benches are
flesh.

all sorts

of unheard of tortures. Caldrons boil,


is

made

ready, and the skin

torn of the living

There

are shouts and curses; people bite each

and

literally

tear each other's hearts out.

And

this continues incessantly

through

every page of ten interminable volumes.

God,

religion, ethical

commandments
passion.

are butts for a horrible art,

and serve only to heighten

The

servants of the church

were

themselves the accomplices in these disgusting debauches and practices. It is

they, principally,

who

cannot do enough in the

way

of

mocking repulsively
one thinks of

at the precepts of religion

and morals.

When

this, obscenities, cruelties

and blasphemies combined

and served up with a

devilish philosophy,

many

of the scenes based

186

BOOK

III:

THE EIGHTEENTH CENTUEY


incidents, the

on actually experienced

example of a corrupt society

always before the eye, a society whose members sought to surpass


each other only in profligacy,
of pornography in
that could
all

who

clamored for the sweet poison


life

the relationships of

and hailed every one one cannot be surto

purvey a new variation of

pleasure,

prised that the revolution

came and indeed had

come.

The

corrupting influence of an imagination operating with the most

unthinkable cruelties had to

make

itself felt finally.

This condition

spread from so-called society

down to the

people and after cruelty

had been praised

as the stimulant of passion

and practiced to a

small degree, then the blood-shedding of the reign of terror

was

only a magnification of the same doctrine by the larger group that

had become infected by

it.

If the

former had had to see suffering


his associates

and blood in order to be merry, then Robespierre and

found no less joy and passion when the heads clattered down by the
dozens from the sharp knife of the guillotine.

De Sade fitted into such an age and was its typical representative. You may recall Flaubert's forceful judgment about him, that he was
the last

word

of the medieval and Renaissance

Church

for in

him

spake the

spirit

of the inquisition, of punishment

by

torture, of

aversion to nature. In 1791 there appeared his Justine


first

which

in the

edition is only obscene

and does not contain the blood-drenched

incidents of subsequent editions.


Justine and Juliette

The

year 1797 saw the edition of


illustrations

with 104 horrible


De Sade was
tears in pride that

both

as regards

subject and execution.

well aware of his destructive

contribution and in his foreword he remarks that virtue might well


forget to

wipe her

France should possess such a

significant

work, one that combines the most cynical language with

the strongest and most daring system of immoral and blasphemous


ideas.

The tendency

of his infamous book

is

meager enough. In
falls

Justine virtue, represented

by Justine
187

is

very unfortunate,

into

THE EEOTIC MISTOMY OF FEANCE


evil

and crime. The good fortune of vice

is

portrayed in horrible
is

pictures.
is

The basic thought is that


A\^ith

either there

no

God or else He
would not

not concerned

the welfare of man, else virtue

suffer so

much

here on earth, nor would vice have such triumphs.

He

adds iniquitously:

"Will not

men

say that

when
it is

virtue

is

followed

by misfortune and vice by

prosperity that

better to

go

with the scoundrels


tuous

who

are favored

by nature than with the


up
this point of

vir-

who meet with ruin?


is

In order to bolster
it

view

there

no point

in concealing

we wish to give to the world


induce those fools to quit

the story of Justine.

Maybe
and

this will

praying to that ridiculous idol of virtue which will only reward

them with

ingratitude;

will strengthen in the opposite belief

those sensible folk


ness

who always

see the amazing examples of happi-

and fortune which crime and debauchery almost invariably

bring in their wake."


grimace. "It
is

And how much

monstrous

evil

there

is

in this

undoubtedly painful

to

have to recount the dreadful

misfortunes that pour upon the gentle and sensitive

woman who

hearkens entirely to the voice of virtue; and on the other hand to

demonstrate that those

who

persecute this very

her to death, enjoy great happiness. But the


of a philosopher to be able to
pleasantnesses.
tell

woman and drive author who is enough


tears

the truth stands above these un-

Coerced by necessity, to cruelty, he

down with
has been

merciless hands the superstitious veils with


to beautify virtue,

which stupidity seeks

and shows to the ignorant man,


all

who

gulled until now, vice with


it

the charms and joys that follow from

uninterruptedly. For these reasons

we

shall describe

crime in the

most cynical language and with the most immoral and godless
ideas,

crime

as

it is,

triumphant, always

satisfied

and always happy;

whereas virtue

shall

be seen

as eternally

unhappy, and persecuted."


is

In the same style as Sade's larger

work

his

Philosophy

the

Boudoir.

It is

not unlikely that Mirabeau's Education of Laura gave

188

BOOK

III:

THE EIGHTEENTH CENTUEY


this

Sade the impetus and perhaps the idea to compose


education of a young
girl to vice is

work.

The

represented in the form of

dialogues and long quasi-academic speeches, only punctuated every


so often

by

the practical demonstration and application of the

theoretic principle so discussed.

few words about the contents

may
de

not be irrelevant. In the

first

conversation there appears

Mme.

Ange and her brother, Chevalier de Mirvel. The lady is a Juliette type who poisons everything she touches and her brother is far inferior to her. The scene is dominated by Dolmance, a
St.

thoroughbred in
val, a

vice, cynic, pederast

and

atheist.
St.

Eugenie de

Alist-

young

girl, is

being expected.

Mme.

Ange had corrupted


is

her so far theoretically that only her to be a

a bit of practice

necessary for
is

real prostitute. In the course of a single afternoon she

duly

initiated into all the mysteries of sex life.

Later others are

added to the corps of instructors


a gardener boy,

in the applied art, the Chevalier,

and the

idiot

Augustin, so that Eugenie learns the

arrangement of obscene groups. Towards evening,


has already
in.

when Eugenie
mother comes

become

a ferocious erotic monster, her


is

In the sight of her exulting daughter she

monstrously raped,

infected with syphilis

by

the slave Lapierre, and before they go to

the table, Eugenie must carry out the operation of infibulation

upon

her mother.

Another of

his books.

Aline and Valcoiir reminds one very

strongly of the Justine. Valcour, a virtuous

young man

loves Aline,

the lovely daughter of the gentle wife of the cruel President de

Blamont.

The latter

desires his

daughter to marry the old debauche


the virtuous
mistress.

Dalbourg, to which old

Sophie

man he had already given whom he regarded as his own daughter, for a
his

He

yearns to have his plan succeed for a vile reason. After the marriage

he intends to give

own

wife,

Mme.

de Blamont, to Dalbourg

for a lover, and in return he wants to get the latter's wife,

namely

1S9

THE EROTIC HISTORY OF FRANCE


his o\\Ti

daughter AHne,
is

as his lover.

herself

and her mother

poisoned

The plan fails. Aline kills at the command of her husband.


two

Valcour enters a monastery. Dalbourg becomes \artuous and the


President must
foul hussies.
flee.

In Rosa and Leonore there are represented


is

The

latter especially

always in luck and

is

a sort of

pendant to
Sade
also

Juliette.

wrote

pamphlet against Napoleon which earned for


Corsican. It
is

him the enmity of the mighty


represents Josephine and the

Xoloe and her Acolytes


his circle. Zoloe

and deals with the debaucheries of Napoleon and

two

acolytes,

Lameda and Volsange,


style,

symbolize Mesdames Tallien and Visconti. In very sluttish

Sade relates the orgies of these three


ners.

women

with three male part-

So far

as

obscenity goes, Sade does not surpass any of his con-

temporaries. It

was not immorality, but the

satirical sallies against

Napoleon and

his circle that aroused the ire of the ruler.

When the

story appeared in 1800, a tremendous scandal ensued. Practically


all

the characters were easily recognizable.

Thus

d'Orsac, anagram
1

for de Corse,

was Napoleon. Sabar stood for

Barras, etc. In

80 1

while Sade was visiting his publisher and discussing the rewritten
Juliette

which he had brought with him, he was

arrested.

He

was

kept prisoner in the Hospital of Charenton where he died on

December

2,

18 14 at the

age of 75.

It is

very interesting to note

that Sade sent a de luxe

copy of Justine
state,

to the consul

and

his

two

foremost assistants in the

and that Napoleon had no other


to consign the

punishment for
the
fire.

this

immense boldness than

work

to

About

thirty years ago. Dr.

Iwan Bloch, the world's foremost

authority on Sade, found another

work

of Sade's

which had been

preserved in ms. only: The 120 days of Sodom. This ms. has a rich
history.

Although

it

was well known that Sade had written such

work,

it

was held

to be lost because in 1832 the ms. of an unedited

190

BOOK
work of
Sade's

III:

THE EIGHTEENTH CENTUEY


in the presence of the latter's son,

was burnt
to be

and
it

this

was presumed

Les 120 Joiirnees de Sodome. However,


this

must

have been another, for Bloch was able to find


it

ms. Sade wrote

while he was in the


27, 1785.

Bastille, in

36 days between October 22 to

November
end to end

He worked
a roll
1

at it three

hours daily between 7

and 10 in the evening and wrote in loose papers which he pasted


until

he had

meters long. Inasmuch


roll as well.

as

he lacked
the ms.

paper, he wrote on the reverse side of the


in
its final

Thus

form

is

a roll of strips written

on both

sides.

When

the

Marquis
his

left

the Bastille in 1789 this ms., together with other of


It finally
it

works, remained there.

came

into the possession of the

family Villeneuve-Trans where

stayed for three generations until


it.

Bloch found

it.

But no customer was found for

A young German

novelist succeeded in deciphering the almost microscopic writing,

now

almost illegible through age.

The book
la

seems undoubtedly to

be the one referred to by Restif de


evidence
is

Bretonne, and the internal

almost irrefutable.

The

peculiarities of his sentence

structure, tropes of speech,

and narrative manner are perfectly in


all

evidence here.

And

above

there

is

the peculiar defense of the


to clearer

most profligate passion so idiopathic of Sade, which comes


expression here than in any other work.

The

plan of this book has


it lies

come down

to us

and although only a part of


can see that
this

completed in
a far

the 120 Days,

we

book was conceived on

larger scale than even the comprehensive Justine. All conceivable

perversions of the story

were
is

to be illustrated

through 600 examples.

The

plan

the following. Four wealthy rakes, too blase to find


life,

any joy

in the ordinary pleasures of

join forces in a

most

unusual and passionate undertaking.


deresses journey
all

They have

panders and pan-

through France to abduct the handsomest boys


richest

and

prettiest girls

from the

and most distinguished

families.

From

this collection the

most attractive are chosen and with other


191

THE EROTIC HISTOKY OF FHANCE


objects of lust are brought to an inaccessible mountain castle belong-

ing to one of the voluptuaries. In this castle they

immure themselves
broken down.

with their victims. All entrances are walled up and the only bridge
that connects the castle with the outside world
is

And

now, secure from any


constructed
castle,

surprise or interruption in this marvellously

appointed with every luxury and every think-

able necessity, they are ready for the beginning of the most extra-

ordinary orgies. Four of the most experienced brothel mistresses


of Paris have the duty of relating in assigned order and in full
detail,

the experiences of their


will

life.

In the course of a

month each
were
be

woman

have told 150

stories of the

most interesting cases of


then, there
to

sexual perversions in her experience. In

all,

600 different

tales

of sexual profligacy, systematically ordered, and

proceeding in the direction of ever greater and rarer perversions.


In this

way

the whole great realm of Psychopathia sexualis

is

un-

rolled before us, clearly

and thoroughly. During these narratives


and every

the

human

objects, of the debauchees' lust of both sexes

age, are kept

on hand so that whatever sex urge

is

roused in them

by any

of the stories,

may immediately

be

gratified.

RESTIF DE LA
Sade's antipode and yet like
typical of Sade,
is

BRETONNE

him in many ways, except in the cruelty


whose printed works num-

Restif de la Bretonne,

ber two hundred and twelve volumes.

He

is

as

much

of a grapho-

maniac
to

as Sade.

He

writes about his

life, his

experiences from day

day without inventing much.

He

doesn't see anything objection-

able in using his

own

correspondence and does not even halt at

giving the names of people.


et je

He desires to portray the truth:


impertinentey

"/^ dois

ne dois rien dire que


it

la verite, jiit-elle

And

im-

pertinent

certainly

was on innumerable
192

occasions, for Restif

was

THE EIGHTEENTH CENTUMY also an erotomaniac. Women had to give content to his life and withIII:

BOOK
life

out them

was empty. Hence

his

whole existence revolved about


his

them, the bringers of joy and the sources of happiness; in short,


life

was

fixed

by

the sexual. Eulenberg's judgment about

him was

that he

was goaded by the wildest sensuality and driven by the

idolatrous worship of his

own

self to a sort

of exhibitionism. For
dis-

that reason he
tinctiveness

was

able as

no other to analyze the origin and

and demoniac force of sexual love and to devote to

his

ego a most refined cultivation.

Thus he

relates the story of his life in sixteen volumes, entitled


is

Monsieur Nicolas, which

nothing more than the narrative of

his

erotic achievements. In the thirteenth


all

volume he keeps

a diary of

the

women whose
Very
for
into
it,

acquaintance he had made, had seduced and

impregnated.

likely anecdotes

and experiences of others are


that Restif
,

woven

Count Tilly once mentioned

who had

never met him, had once requested the story of certain of the count's

amorous

exploits,

which the latter very decidedly refused

to impart.

Despite the not infrequent obscenities and the free scenes, a very
definite value attaches to the

work. Schiller held

it

in high regard,
latter

and

in 1789

wrote to Goethe to inquire whether the

had ever

read the unusual


"I

work

of Restif.

have already read it and despite much that is flat, distasteful or even revolting, have nevertheless greatly enjoyed it. For I have never come across a nature so sensual; and one must also
be interested in the multitude of characters, particularly female, the vitality and contemporaneity of the writing, and the depiction of the moral life of certain classes of the French people. For one who has so little opportunity to draw from outside sources and to study men in real life, such a book has incalculable value."

Another work of Restif is


in seventeen volumes.

also well

known. The Contemporaries,


tales

These are a series of


193

based on experiences

THE EROTIC HISTORY OF FRANCE


and pictures of moral conditions. According to the established
formula, Restif wishes to employ Catullus' phrase upon himself:

Lasciva nobis pagina, vita proba. In the preface he says: "If science
is

deserving of respect, the same can certainly not be asserted of

false

modesty. The Contemporaries


details
is

is

a piece of

moral medicine.

Should the
respect and

appear ribald,

it is

in

its essentials

desening of

destined for a career of great moral usefulness. For

what

is

a novelist?
I

The painter of moral

conditions.

Now morals are


You
re-

corrupt. Shall

then depict the morals of an ideal creature?

spectable ladies, hold your nose against this thoroughly hypocritical

public morality, those infamous double entendres, those free gestures, those shameless expressions that

men

permit themselves to
as w^ell.

say in your presences and before your daughters

But do not
a

account

it

crime

if

a courageous waiter

who, serving

moral

purpose, dares to hold a mirror to vice in order to bring you

knowevery

ledge, uses perforce revolting matters, in order ultimately to im-

prove them." But, despite these emphatic words,


line

we

feel in

what

utter joy he finds in tarrying over the most intimate


his as

things,

and what expansiveness must be

he indulges himself
situais

in the broadest
tions.

drawing of the most immoral incidents and


is

The end

supposed to sanctify the means, but the end

no whit better than the means employed.


In succeeding works, The Ruined Sivain and The Ruined Lass,

he intendes to demonstrate that even the most exalted goodness

must necessarily go

to the dogs

when touched by

vice.

Here

is

the

most bizarre collection of adventures and characters


addition the milieu
is

possible;

and in

constantly changing. Restif leads us to public

houses, churches, free spirits, salons of worldly ladies, boudoirs of


prostitutes and,

with most deUght, to the brothel.

The book is

writ-

ten in the form of letters and consists of scenes but loosely joined
together.

The

characters are well

drawn and

vve feel that

he has

194

BOOK

III:

THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY


life.

modelled them from


ten not only for his

These books he considered

his best, writ-

own time but for subsequent generations as


two novels
that got

well.

But

it

was

just these

him

into difficulties with

the police and especially with the censor,


lication for

who

delayed their pub-

two

years. It required continued efforts

and the enortells

mous

persistency of Restif, to free his book.


fruitless visits to the police.

He

himself

of

seventy-two

The

animosity against

these novels appears strange in

view of the

fact that so

many

other

scandals of far worse and reprehensible quality


a

were passed without

murmur.

The
in

next book to be mentioned took Restif 20 years to write.


of Paris occupied every that

The Nights

morning of these

years.

Here-

were inscribed

which he had seen and

lived through the

night before.

Hence

these eight volumes constitute an excellent

account of the moral situation of the time.


In the

higmue

Saxancous, he worked in the style of Sade.


tell

The
a

book

is

supposed to

the story of his daughter

who had made

very unhappy marriage. After the wedding she has to give herself
to the

most profligate whims of her husband, a rake of the worst

order, and suffers the most incredible cruelties. Naturally the

material

is

such that there

is

no lack of obscenity, cynicism or


this

cruelty; but

none the

less

Dumas borrowed very much from

story for his

own

Ingenue.

If Restif follows

Sade here, he took up arms against him in an-

other work where he scored Sade's horrible imagination. This erotic


polemical tract was entitled Anti- Justine. This

work was mapped

out on a very large scale but of eight sections planned, only one and
a fraction in his

were completed.

It is said

that Restif finished six copies


secret division

own underground

press, of

which number the

of the Paris National Library has about a half.


first to

La Bedoyere was the

possess an original.

Another was in the possession of Cigognes


195

THE EROTIC HISTOEY OF FRANCE


who
sold
it

to the

Duke

of Aumale,

whence

it

went

to Frederick

Hankey

for 2000 francs. All the books of the latter later

came

into

the possession of Pisanus Fraxi,

who

left his library to

the British
all

Museum, where there is probably a copy of the original. As in


reader

his

works, Restif represents himself in such a stupid fashion that the


is

at

once repelled. TTiere

is

no development of character, no
erotic situations,

serious thought, only a piling

up of

pure pomology,
titles

only so improbable and so horribly tiresome!


so vile that we forbear to

The very
as

are

mention them. Suffice it to say that incestu-

ous relations between father and daughter as well

between

mother and son occupy

a large place here.

The

obscenities with

which the Anti-Justine

is

swollen were

supposed to have been written for a moral purpose! Restif remarks


in the preface to this book:

"No one has been more

irritated

than
is,

by

the dirty works of the hideous Marquis de Sade

that

the

Justine, Boudoir,
prison.

and Theory of Passion

which
is

read while in

This devil has represented the delights of love forever ac-

companied by torture and murder.

My

purpose

to write a

book

that will be juicier than the others, one that

women can
place

confidently

put into the hands of their husbands in order the better to be served

by them;

book in which the heart

will

have

its

by

the side

of the senses, in

which passion knows no cruelty;

in

which love con-

ceived naturally without any affection or hesitation conjures up

only gay and joyous pictures.


ship
to

When

one has read

it

one will worIt is

woman, and

after

one has enjoyed her, one will deify her.

be hoped that
jail

when
14,

that manslaughterer, Sade, will be dragged

from

on July

1789 a whitebearded old man, he will be de-

tested according to his deserts.

May my charming work which I am


his

herewith publishing annihilate

own;

it is
I

a bad book, perhaps,

but written with a good purpose. Thus,


196

have only introduced

BOOK

III:

THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY


which Sade
gal-

incest in order to supplant those cruelties with

vanizes the senses of the enervated roues."


Restif followed this intention

and purveyed the coarsest and

foulest depictions of passion possible.

He

was not by any means

content with following the established custom of the time of the


erotic writer,

who has the

tyro inaugurate his sex

life

by witnessing

an erotic scene between his parents, or a pair of lovers. Oh, no,


that will never do.

He

starts right off

with

perversities. First, his

eight sisters are the objects of his youthful lust; then, he accidentally

cohabits with his mother; and finally, the father seduces his

own

daughter; but "seducing"


selves gladly

is

hardly the word, for they give them-

and are

as profligate as the narrator. In addition to his

love for beautiful feet and shoes, Restif seems to have had a special
predilection for ciinnilingus, for this
in for

form of sex

satisfaction

comes

much

attention.

What

is

worse, he even has a scene after the

fashion of the degenerated Sade.


sells his

A rascal by the name of Vit-Negre


The
latter rapes

wife to a

monk

for 60,000 francs.

her in

such a brutal and

bestial fashion that she dies of the

consequences.

Whereupon
minds!

the latter draws and quarters his victim and finally


pieces.

consumes the

Such horrible productions flowed from human


for the gift of language

What a price to pay

and thought!

^^-

CHAPTEM Xni
PORNOGRAPHIA RAMPANT

To WHAT
It is

purpose these writings served

is

obvious at

first sight.

true that in a certain


satire,

number

the erotic elements


it

were

subordinate to
or personal.

panurgics or hbel

be

political, anti-clerical

Some few

others had undeniably artistic aims and

actually achieved their ends. But

by

far the greatest portion of erotic desires

these

works were written only to inflame


to enrich sex lust.

and amatory

hunger or

And

since the

French of the rococo

period were

artists in pleasure, its ladies

and gentlemen of the pen

knew how
heaviness.

to sound the proper chords perfectly calculated to a-

chieve the desired effects.

They

are entirely free

from Germanic

There

is

a
is

good

deal of chat

and play and laughter, and

love; but the latter

graceful and seductive, yet entirely without

passion and having no connection with the inner spirit and the

deeper emotion.

One must be

truthful to give the effect of truth,

but

this truth

is

born of the time. These erotica which permitted


be clearly discerned, fluttered out

their purpose, viz., to seduce, to

into the

world in

little

insignificant volumes,

and were bought,

read and discussed avidly.

By the

side of these stood the hypocrites

who assumed

mask

in

order to remain

unknown and the better to engage


it?

in their nefarious

business. Is vice abominable? Certainly!

Must one then be

fright-

ened away from

Undoubtedly! But

a thoroughly faithful reproduction of

how can this occur without it? The more one unveils it,

198

BOOK
only

III:

THE EIGHTEENTH CENTUKY


this, all

the greater will be the revulsion from vice. Virtue has real value

when

it is

based upon experience. Aside from

laws set

how can one avoid that which one does not know thoroughly? Thus we have a second cogent reason for representing it in the most terrifying aspect and maximum clarity.
penalties for crime.

But

But

it is

just the sins of a sex nature

which

are of greatly diverse


is

character; hence they require diverse treatment. It

admitted,

oddly enough, that the unchaste are stimulated by such reading to


greater lust; but for

them nothing

is

holy.

hand, are strengthened in their virtue.


It is

The good, on the other Quod erat demonstrandum.

how many works are directed against the clergy, monks and nuns. The reason is that the immoral conduct of the
striking

clergy, induced

by

their enforced "celibacy",

had assumed the

proportions of a national plague, so that nunneries were virtually


disguised brothels. In these practises the nuns followed the
forting dictum that

com-

much would

be forgiven to whoever had loved

much, and successfully forgot


doubted

their vows.

But the

erotic writer

this intrepretation of their

conduct, and has a different


start

view of these matters


can a
girl

altogether.

To
all

with poverty, says he,

documentate her lack of


till

needs better than

when

she

removes everything
chastity in

her skin? Can she show a more ravishing


to that of her gleaming

any words or deeds comparable

natural nakedness?

Can

nun show
up her

greater token of her obedience

than
dress
tion?

when
up

at the

command

of her priestly adviser she hikes her


virginity or submits to flagella-

to her navel, offers

This interpretation has

at least the virtue of originality.

But one gets a very unpleasant impression when the preacher of


morals,
still

wearing the mantle of morality, begins to revel in foul

obscenities.

Here an

ethically degenerate

Capuchin

is

lashing the

vice of his time but he uses such expressions and images to leave no

doubt that he

is

not at

all

in earnest about his preaching.

199

THE EEOTIC HISTORY OF FMANCE


Then
contain
too there was no dearth of manuals for worldings

which

much

that

is

of interest to cultural history.


life

They

afford us

an insight into the

of Parisian prostitutes, the affairs of the

profligates of both sexes,

and the chronicles of scandal.


is

And

bein

cause debauchery

is

the rule, and virginity

to be

found only

the cradle, another philanthropic author renders counsel

how lovers
as

can obtain even


selves against
virgins.

this rare

dehght, and

how they

are to guard them-

second-hand goods being fubbed off on them

But

it isn't

only the males that are looked after and provided

with advice.
cation
is

The

females are taught ways and means, whose appli-

gone over in practice,

how

to

palm

off

upon

their unsus-

pecting bridegrooms, their abused and marred virginal honor as


intact.
It is

obvious that the entire imaginations of these readers were

utterly obsessed with eroticism. But the life of the normal person

contains

many

other aims than sexual pleasure.

Hence only

those

people were chosen as chief bearers of the erotic action

who

de-

voted their whole


celebrated whores.

life

to "love", that
it is

is,

brothel mistresses and


these dames

And

remarkable

how much

from the

half- or quarter-world

can accumulate in the

way

of ex-

perience as related in

many
is

novels or memoirs written

by them.

Their whole deportment

based upon the experience accumulated

on the capture of men, on a knowledge of the male psyche.


in the "pleasure" itself they

And

must accommodate themselves


his lusts,

to the

wish of any of their

fares,

and submit to any of


it.

however

perverse or disgusting. Their business calls for

Now
love

if

the prostitute lives through so much, especially in her

how much more is this true of the panderess. For no matter how energetic the strumpet is in her trade, she can after all know the taste of men only, and even then, of but a small group,
life,

for generally her clientel will be recruited

from but one

class

200

BOOK
of society.

III:

THE EIGHTEENTH CENTUEY


is

Hence her experience

always one-sided. But the

panderess

is

differently situated since her vocation brings her into


all

connection with

classes of the populace.

Her

clientel

comprises

women

as well as

men, and she knows

how

to appease the desire

for sex partners of the opposite or the same sex. She purveys stout

and vigorous navvies and farmhands of overflowing strength with


the same ease that she supplies full-bloomed beauties and
girls

young

barely in their teens. She procures for the lascivious rake the
all

prostitute versed in

the arts of whoredom, and

knows how
She

to

hunt up the virginity of

a scarcely developed adolescent.

aids

the powerfully natural instincts of the farmhand to find satisfaction

and accommodates herself to the


ture".

desires of a taste refined

by

"culat

She comes into contact with the dregs of the people and

the same time counts

among her customers

the notables of the king-

dom and

the ladies in waiting to the queen. In short, she can cer-

human is alien to her. Hence, such a worldly person who seems to know everybody and everything can certainly reveal a great deal when she has begun to display the riches of her experience. That is why we find so many
tainly claim for herself that nothing

of these Memoirs, Confessions, Diaries, etc. of panderesses, in the


erotic literature of this time.

The

calling of such a brokeress


it is

was

not so despised and marked with the badge of shame as

today.

After

all.

Pompadour belonged

to this profession, and

Madame La
could really

Comtesse certainly had no negligible influence. Their activities were

conducted publicly and were

fairly

well-known.

One

expect something from such confessions, and one was usually not
disappointed.
It

scarcely needs to be mentioned that

many

of these

memoirs were invented and that they were attributed


loose

to notorious

women, opera
and many

girls

and brothel

mistresses, in order to
a perfectly

make

possible greater sales.

These works had


poor wretch
201

tremendous
left

success;

who

still

had some shame

THE EEOTIC MISTOHY OF FRANCE


excused his conduct by pointing to the pubHc's taste which he was

compelled to gratify or

else starve.

In another set of works, the results of a careless pleasure were


set forth in the

form of

a confession.

To

the gallant diseases, such

works as Foutromanie and Cacamonade erected a very questionable

monument. Thus

in

The

Mortificatio?is of Pleasure, the author unin love

folds his tale of woe.

He had fallen

with a married woman,

given her presents and finally had

won

her favor but got a present

from her that he hadn't

anticipated.

He

has to undergo a long

treatment, and while waiting for the cure, he makes the acquaint-

ance of Auguste, an opera


lets

girl.

She

tells

him her

life story,

and he

himself be carried away;


a

whereupon luck being

against him,

he becomes infected

second time.

cure; but he forever forswears


despises.

They both look forward to their love and w^men, whom he now

After

all,

that

is

the natural result of every pleasure driven to the

extent and enjoyed to the utmost, the insidious

payment

that lurks

behind every intoxication. Before fulfillment, no price


to

is

too high

pay for the object of pleasure whose possession

is

considered of
diseased
as

indispensable value. Afterwards, he (or she)

who has been

by

passion cannot find invective strong enough.

Such works

Sade's can only arouse regret, surfeit and disgust.

As
there

far as the technique of the average erotic


is

work
is

is

concerned

a regularly recurrent scheme.

Very

typical

the increasing

tempo with which

these erotic scenes are portrayed. Starting

from
the

the gentle awakening of sensuality

we

are introduced to

all
is

stages that a libidinous fantasy can imagine.

motif that

very

popular

is

that of the keyhole.

The young

girl in

her puberty once

observes through the keyhole the antics of her parents or a pair of


lovers as they perform the act,

and from that time on her sexual

imaginings, subconscious until now, take on tangible form.

A very

202

BOOK
common
device

III:
is

TME EIGHTEENTH CENTUEY


role of teacher or enlightener
is

the gradual initiation of the inexperienced into

the arcana of sex,


usually played

whereby the

by an

older and experienced girl friend. For this


as

purpose the naive one must be made


that the friend versed in
all

naive as possible in order

the procedures of "love"


is

may be

able

to display her wares to best advantage. Usually she

married and

reports to her astounded listener

all

the lurid and gory details of

her defloration with the preliminary scenes and the ensuing orgies
of delight.
to

The
dull.

naive one must ask questions

if

the narrative

is

not

become

Or

young man
first in

talks of his successes in the

realm
first

of Venus, tarrying at
sortie into sex
is

the realm of probability, and the

graphically drawn. But after this peak has been

passed, the narrator usually loses

power and cannot invent anything


do

new. His whole


gressively
find cases

art

now

consists of multiplying erotic scenes, pro-

more improbable and


where the author

revolting. All too rarely

we

limits himself to single erotic incidents

which

are

drawn with refinement


is

of invention and wit.

Of

course,

such excellence

the privilege of only extraordinary writers,


in eighteenth-century France.

who

were not too common

We
classic

have already seen that the rococo can be regarded

as the

age of erotic literature. This tremendous productivity which

could appease every appetite must naturally have coexisted with


a correspondingly great

demand.

If this

had already reached an


it

exorbitant figure, according to our present conceptions,


to

grew

enormous dimensions the nearer the Revolution came, and even


Thus, in 1796 Mercier reports that

after this world-shaking event.

the only books displayed were the obscene ones, those

whose

titles

and engravings outraged modesty and good


neia

taste alike.

These por-

were

sold everywhere, at restaurants, near bridges, at the gates

of the theatres and on the boulevards.

They were

sold cheaply

enough from

10 sous a piece

and up. They outdid each other in


203

THE EKOTIC HISTORY OF FEANCE


lust,

and undermined public morals without

a vestige of scruple.

The peddlers of these brochures were to a


dispensers of obscenities, for every
title

certain degree privileged

that wasn't filthy

was very

obtrusively kept out of their display.

From
all

these defiled sources,

youth drank up the


or difficulty.

essential

elements of

vice,

without hindrance

What
alas!

one would read on the title-pages of these


too true: "this pamphlet
is

pamphlets was

always to be found
horrible Justine

in the pockets of

even those

who condemn it." The


its

of the Marquis de Sade with

equally impossible and vicious en-

gravings lay open in

all

shop windows. For our present-day, none


is

too prudish notions such protected vice

criminal. Alercier de

Compiegne (1763-1800)
logical works,

private secretary, marine official

and

finally book-seller, published a host of

pornographic and scato-

and even wrote some of them himself. Even in the

very

Bastille there

was

a secret press

which printed the most ob-

scene books, with which the police did a thriving business.

The

best erotic writers of this period

found an inteUigent and


the business of

sympathetic pubHsher in Cazin,


printing with publishing. Born at
lucrative trade of bookselling

who combined
Rheims
still

in 1724, he took

up the
Leger

and the

more

lucrative one of
St,

publishing erotic works. His relations with Mercier de

and Merard de Saint-Just made matters

easier for

him and brought

him
with

to the idea of issuing a


his

handsome

collection of erotica, in line

own taste. These works have been rewarded by


is

the respect

of book-collectors so that the merit of a Cazin edition

recognized

even today. Until 1792


revolution

his business flourished

but then came the

which brought him ruin and


he
left a cafe.

death.

He was

killed

by

cannon

ball as

Many

examples have come

down

to us of striking

and shocking

productions of the erotic imagination. Carriage doors were decorated with pornographic drawings, and w^omen surpassed

men

in

204

BOOK
this ribaldry.

III:

THE EIGHTEENTH CENTUEY


not to be outdone, sought to score in an-

The

latter,

other

way by

decorating their clothes with obscene pictures,

namely

their vestes

de petits-soupers. According to the prevalent

mode, the jackets were worn buttoned up and the upper portion
of the vests could not be seen.
their vests

The

rich debauchees used to have


at certain

embroidered with obscene figures and

mo-

ments they would unbutton their jackets and display their


It

"art".

goes without saying that


masses, there
artists,

by the side of the cheap

stuff designed

by the

were

bibliophilic tidbits, illustrated

by con-

temporary
rich.

for the greater delectation of the elegant and

Pompadour

possessed a library of such porneia, and in letters

to her friends admits that she frequently experienced

with pleasure

the stimulating effect of such writings.

When

Sade speaks of obscene books and

libraries, this rests

on

the foundation of facts.

There

is

the characteristic scene in Juliette

where she and Clairmil


Carmelite Claude and
Juliette remarks:

are browsing about in the

home

of the

come upon his excellent pornographic library.


idea

"You can have no


there."

what obscene books and

pictures

we found

Among

the books were the Porter of

Chartreux, more of a prankish than a passionate book; the conversations of Luisa Sigea, well

planned but poorly carried out; Mirabeau's


little

Laura, a poor scrawl with

passion and
is

much murder; and


enthusiastic because

Therese philosophe, about which Juliette


here passion
ing glance
is

combined

in full

harmony with

atheism.

A devastat-

is

cast at the horrid little brochures

which

are found in

every cafe and brothel. In another place, too,


finds a large collection of erotic works,

at Delibene's, Juliette
is

some of which she

to read
sit

during mass, in order to alleviate the monotony of having to

through such a horrible ceremony.

Two

more important witnesses

to the

wide distribution of these

works are Casanova and Goethe, though numerous others report the
203

THE EEOTIC HIS TOM Y OF FEANCE


fact.

In his memoirs, the former relates the following:


I

"When

the
for

hour came

went
I

to the

Temple

of Love.

While

was waiting

my

goddess

amused myself by examining the books of the small

library

which the boudoir contained. There weren't many books,


all

but well chosen and worthy of their place. Here were


against religion,

the books

and

all

that passionate pens

had written about the

joys of love, seductive books

whose

style sets the reader

on

fire

and

compels him to seek the living reality of that whose incendiary depiction he has just read.
lascivious

Many richly bound folio volumes contained


much
drawing than
in the lewdness of their

copper plate engravings whose great merit consisted

more

in the purity of their

representations.
to Aloysia,

The

English engravings to the Porter, the pictures


all

and

others,

were of

rare beauty. Innumerable masterall

pieces covered the walls of the room,


sort a > the

masterworks of the same

copper

plates. I

spent an hour in examining these things,


in

which aroused such an excitement


the arrival of
clothes."

me that I could

scarcely await

my mistress who presently entered bedizened in men's


the account of our second chronicler Goethe,

From

we

learn that

raw warriors

carried such stimulants about with them. In

Wahrheit iind Dichtung, he reports


in the

how he found
what
it

erotic paintings

room of the

lieutenant Thorane. Seeing a black box behind


it

the oven he

drew

forth

little

suspecting

might contain.

To his great surprise


rarely
his

he found a collection of paintings which very

come to

one's eye,

and which sent the blood tingling through and


heat.

body with
It is

a great excitement

hardly worthy of notice that the brothels were richly fur-

nished with such articles for the stimulation of the impotent. So,

we are told the famous house of A4me. Gourdan had a small chamber
called the Infirmerie in

which the

light fell

from above.

On

the

walls

hung

passionate paintings and engravings, in the corners stood

obscene plastic figures and groups, and on the tables reposed ob-

20S

BOOK

III:

THE EIGHTEENTH CENTUEYwhom

scene books. In the autobiography of Clairon (about 1750),

the brothers Goncourt have called the most delicate artiste in love
that the eighteenth century possessed,
herself

we are informed that to make


through educative

more

desirable she educated her spirit

and piquant reading. "Brantome and Aloysia delighted


thousand beauties.
feast to the

me with

The

attractive pictures
I

found therein were a

eye and mind and


I

could hardly await with im-

patience

when

could transmute these pictures into reality".

The

library of the Marechale de


six

Luxembourg

consisted of the Thirty

Postures of Aretino, Philosophical Theresa, and Luisa Sigea.


is

Short but significant

her

comment apropos

of a livre polisson of

Count Besenval:

"It

can be read with one hand only".


it

Interestingly enough,

was women who supplied the

greatest

contingent of readers. In fact, their hypocrisy went so far that they

bound obscene pictures and brochures


that

into their prayer books so

by

this

means they could drive away boredom during mass


is

and yet retain the reputation of piety. Here


Choiseul says in his memoirs:
their guests

what the Duke de

"The
a

nobles of Hautefontaine and

would not have missed

Sunday mass
it

for the w^orld.

Everyone went to church very proudly, but


remarkable to see a smile playing around the

was not considered


of a worshipper,

lips

here and there. Everyone had a book in his or her hand out of which

they read greedily. According to the covers


its
is

it is

prayerbook, but
tales.

contents are really a collection of indecent, scandalous

This

known

to

all,

and

all

week

these books remain in the chapel for

the delectation of the servitors and watchmen."


In the Voyage through the Boudoir of Pauline (1800) in

which

La Libordiere

depicts

how

the girls of his time lived, he praises

his mistresses for lacking those

obscene engravings which were

being exhibited as openly as pious paintings had been in days gone


by. His

own

chosen one, he relates with pride, had in her chamber

207

THE EEOTIC HISTOMY OF FRANCE


no passionate
pictures,

no voluptuous paintings which are calcu-

lated to seduce.

But so saying he continues the report with the


visit

statement that he had advised her to

certain literary

rooms

where she would

find the choicest collection of the best novels

produced in France during the previous four years.


to present such panurgics to

No one hesitated
quite the thing.

women; indeed
pocket
this purpose.

it

was

The books were produced


made with
a special
his

in

editions,

and every dress was

pocket for

Sade praised

own works

as

models of obscene reading matter

and reports that

in the execution

chamber of the Archbishop of


in the Boudoir. In

Grenoble an Abbe read the Philosophy


shops these books were displayed opened

book-

up

so that their contents

might be sampled by

all;

and they were everywhere to be had.


and sold without any hindrance

They were

listed in all catalogues

great capitalist supported the distribution both domestic and

foreign with ample means, and reaped a pretty return

from

his in-

vestment. Sade even dared to send a de luxe edition of his Justine


to the

members of the Directory, and even when Napoleon became


was suddenly changed
in 1801. In the previous
its

consul the distribution of these pornographies was not interfered


with. But
all this

year Sade had been thoughtless enough to launch his Zoloe vidth
denigration of Napoleon and
factors,
its

anti-religious fulminations.

These

and not

its

overweening immorality, were responsible for

the ensuing persecution of Sade's

work which soon extended


all

to

most other erotic works. At the command of Napoleon

com-

positions of this category in the possession of his soldiers or their


prostitutes

were confiscated and destroyed. Only two copies of

every work were kept and secreted in the National Library at


Paris, as

reported

by Penchet,

erstwhile archivist of police under

Napoleon. Parent-Duchatelet, author of the Imjnorality of


in Paris got a glimpse of this collection

Women

and actually saw them on the

208

BOOK
ground
floor.

III:

THE EIGHTEENTH CENTUEY


is still

This collection

extant today and


is

it

has been

greatly augmented

by many new

acquisitions. It
it

very strongly

guarded and one can gain access to


local police.

only by permission of the

collection of such works, almost comparable to the one just


is

mentioned,

that contained in the Palais

Bourbon

at Paris.

This

library also dates

from the time of the revolution and was the


politician,

property of the famed law teacher and


In 1793 he was sent

Gaston Camus.

by the convent

to disarm

Dumouriez but was


kept him prisoner
xvi.

turned over by the latter to the Austrians


for

who

two years,

until

he was exchanged for the daughter of Louis


Paris,

When
fever.

he returned to

he succumbed to the book-collecting

At

that time the gallant libraries of emigrated nobles for sale, in mass quantities,
to Jesuits, theology,

were

thrown upon the market

and Camus
all

bought up everything pertaining


else,

and above

pornography. Later he presented

his collection to the Palais

Bourbon, where the Council of Five Hundred met, and where the

Chamber
ized

of Deputies

now has its seat. Today

this library is

patron-

more than any

other.

BOOK IV THE NINETEENTH CENTURY

####'4*4*#"^4*##4*4*4*#4*#4*4*4'#4*#4*#4*"'l''^4'

CHAPTER XIV
THE NAPOLEONIC REGIME

THE French Revolution with


up the French love of
that portion of society
set
life

its

reign of terror was able to clean


little

for a

while especially since

which before the revolution had been most


was now out of France;
could

on such

pleasures, viz., the nobility,


last

but even
love

so, this restriction

only awhile.

The type

of

which had reigned

in the pre-revolutionary salon did not soon

return, for at present the field

was held by the plebeian

coarse

manners of the parvenu speculators and usurers

who had

battened

on the misery of the people.


society did not dare to resume

What
its

there remained o^ the old

old life out of fear of the did the


its

new

wielders of power, but


bourgeoisie

by

that

much more

throw

itself

into the

enjoyment of

mob and the new freedom.

Never was there

so

much immorality
came

as in the years following

the revolution. Presently there


to

into being the society balls

which every man had

access, for there

were no

differences of

rank and position.

To

these

came the grand

ladies of the

former

society, rich profiteers, officers of the revolution,


prostitutes;

and many, many

and each vied with the other

in constrained merriment,

in order to forget the worries of the time.

As

consequence of the colossal changes, the people

lost all
its

understanding of spiritual interests and set up the belly for

god.

The place of spirituality now came


213

to be occupied

by the adoration
a cult of ath-

of crude power. Post-revolutionary France

made

THE EMOTIC HISTOEY OF FKANCE


leticism: boxing, wrestling, etc.

The men of brawn who participated


like

in these tournaments

and matches feasted

Homer's

heroes.

To

be a big eater was

grand thing and these fellows enacted the most

incredible eating bouts.

Thus

there

was one
It is

titan

who

once put

away

loo dozen oysters for breakfast.

understood that such

gluttony was accompanied

by

equally tremendous guzzling.


level.

The
this

other amusements of the time were on the same


jokes

The

crudest

were

in order

and there was no prank too

coarse.

At

time clowns and mysticateurs were very popular at


after these

parties.

And

had

set the

tone and enough wine had been consumed,

there

came the

recitation of

bawdy

stories

and the most revolting

ditties.

What
members

could one expect of this crowd which had

grown

rich

overnight? Everything could be bought for


of the Directory

money and even

the

were

accessible to bribery.
pestilential

From

their

residence, the Palais

Luxembourg, the

vapors of their

moral corruption rose up and poisoned their surroundings. Barras,


the lazy passionate glutton, needed a great deal of
feasts

money

for his

and

orgies.

Hence he had

to let himself be bought, as did

the other directors.


ball that

Women threw themselves


later to

upon

Barras, grease-

he was, and he didn't pass up any one of them, not Joseph-

ine Beauhamais,

who was

become empress, nor Madame

who was open to anyone who could pay for her, nor the mulatto Hamelin, who would publicly expose her nakedness through its "moral" covering of muslin, nor Madame Recamier who knew modesty only above the waist, nor dozens of other citizenesses who gave themselves to this voluptuary without a struggle.
Tallien
If

they could gain something by their surrender to

this

omnivorous

roue they regarded their physical surrender as worthwhile. Napoleon realized that there must be certain ordered conditions of
if his

life

rule

were

to be maintained.

Hence he made

the strongest

214

BOOK
efforts to

IV:

THE NINETEENTH CENTURY


much
success.

check

this

immorality but without

He did

however succeed
age.

in increasing public safety

and reducing brigand-

The

salons reappeared

and the rawness of the immorality of

the years immediately preceding was mitigated. the emigres would be in attendance and
vices of

At

these parties

would reintroduce the


some of them

pre-revolutionary times.

Yet Napoleon countenanced

these parties and even encouraged and subsidized


for through

them his

spies

were able to keep tabs on certain people. Fouche went


to great expense to

The

chief of the secret service

have numerous purveyors of information.


of society stood in his pay and

Many

unsuspected ladies

were expected to overhear the

conversation of their guests and to ascertain their various reactions.

Many a
ones,

soiree

ended with an

arrest

a tribute to the faithful work


in the field

of these spies.

When Napoleon

was

one of

his faithful

Madame

de Genlis, had the obligation of keeping him inin Paris, at an annual salary of 6,000

formed about opinions current

francs and free residence in the arsenal.

Even the domestic

servants

of the Corsican were not seldom paid to keep

him informed about

what was going on

at

home.

All efforts were directed at keeping the revolutionary spirits in

check in order to safeguard the hardly


best and easiest

won

imperial power.
to permit
all

The

way
his

to achieve this goal

was

sexual

impulses to be
dissatisfied

satisfied.

In this

way

those restive spirits

who were
set a

with

regime were silenced. Indeed, he himself

good example in

this direction.

He who in all his actions showed the

despot did not belie this character in sexual matters.


a

When he wanted

woman

he made no pretense about charming deportment or win-

ning conduct.

He

wasn't at

all

concerned about captivating the

lady with the charms of his personahty.


his privileged

An

order to his valet or

pander was held to be

sufficient to

supply the desired

object.

And

if his

fame was not

sufficient to attract the lady, she

215

THE EMOTIC HISTOMY OF FMANCE


was brought by
force.

His impulses are best illuminated by the

concealed fact that he would sometimes in the midst of the most

bloody battle dash into His


relatives

his tent

and order a

woman

toute de suite.

were lashed by the same

fierce impulses.

One need
no

only think of Jerome

who
life;

didn't permit anything to stand in the

way

of his epicurean

or of Lucien who,

when

his mistress

longer satisfied him, shared her with his friend.

He

finally got so

enmeshed

in the snares of the notorious

whoremonger Mme. Jou-

berthon, that he

made her

his lawful spouse.

As compared

to

Jerome, Lucien was an ideal personality, for

this caricature of a

human being regarded

the court of Cassel as a harem, and

many
which

women dazzled by his royal status fell victim to him. His physicians
were constantly engaged in
in truth

restoring his expended vitality of

he had none too much, and they believed that wine baths
best

would be the

remedy

for his malady.

The wine

thus used

would, after the bath, be bottled up by the courtiers and secretly


sold to the innkeepers of Cassel.
dissolute sister Pauline, of
erick,

One remembers

his lovely

and

whom one

of her erstwhile lovers, Fred-

wrote in

his

memoirs; Forty Years out of the Life of a Dead

07ie, that at twelve she

had already had

lovers;

and the malicious

world had

it,

though without

justice, that

Napoleon himself had

been one of them. Very well known are the adventures which

under the name of Amelie she enjoyed with

young man with


Bac.

whom
see his

she had

many rendezvous

at i88.

Rue du

One day
to

he went to the theatre and was struck

dumb with amazement


sister.

Amelie bedecked with

brilliants in

the imperial box and

learned that she was Princess Borghese, Napoleon's

The

next

morning he was ordered

to appear at the ministry of the Interior


fifty leagues

and a very lucrative post was assigned him some

away

from
hours.

Paris;

but he had to leave for his

new

situation within 48

Everyone knows her amourettes with the actor Lafont


21^

BOOK

IV:

THE NINETEENTH CENTUMY


etc.,

Forbin, the Prince Cononville,

whose horse (and

rider)

Na-

poleon during an inspection found too wild and hence sent hundreds
of miles

away from

Paris.

For the most part however the great

number

of Pauline's adventures as well as those of her sisters re-

mained unknown to their royal brother for no one was eager to


bring them to his notice.

Even the chief of spies Fouche was unwill-

ing to bring his master into bad humor.

Nor were the other members of the royal family any better. Not the step-daughter Hortense, the former mistress of her royal step-father who, when she was pregnant, attached her to his brother Ludwig; nor Joseph who was intimate with the most infamous courtesans, such as Mme. Regnault, a veritable nymphomaniac, probably one of the most immoral women of her time,
whose husband calmly regarded
his notorious wife's sexcapades
latter there are

and capitalized on them. Concerning the

many

pi-

quant anecdotes. These conditions were very widespread. Even


Talleyrand, Napoleon's most influential minister,
a

who

lived with
later

demi-mondaine of very low grade, (and had to marry her


once expressed

at the direction of his master)

his regret at the

death of one of his trollop's intimates:

"He was an

honorable

man

and gave her good counsel which she certainly needed.


into

Who knows
which

what hands she

will fall next?"

The memory
still

of the gallant pre-revolutionary times in


title

the designation of "whore" was regarded as a


too green for giving too
distant

of honor was

much honor to chastity; but the former


to give

remembrance was

enough

some rein

to the puritanism

demanded by the heroes of the


ism came to the fore again.

revolution.

Gluttony and epicureandinners of the Minister

The famous
and

Cambaceres could have taught Lucullus plenty. His table was decorated

by the

rarest delicacies

this at a

time

when

the endless

wars of Napoleon had brought extreme poverty to the land.


217

THE EKOTIC HISTORY OF FMANCE


In a government of bayonets
it is

which depended exclusively upon the might

obvious that the

army would occupy the


more than
a

first

place

in the life of the nation.

The

officers,

the backbone of the army,

were distinguished
uniform.

for nothing

good figure and smart

They

carried over into civilian life the rude manners


in the roughness of martial existence,

which characterized them


and

their excessive combativeness

and cruelty were a great burden


the chief amusements

for the public. Play,

women and gossip were

of garrison

life.

When

the warriors went off to the wars their


to

womenfolk amused themselves very agreeably indeed, and


an extent that

such

many

disliked the

approach of peace, with the con-

sequent return of the husband and the end of their delightful days.

The

marshals and the generals set the worst possible example

to their subordinates in cruelty, dishonesty

and

lust.

Wherever
whose
months'

these fellows pitched their tent they indulged in orgies

pomp and
were
cost

prodigality

shame

description.

During

his six

stay at Lisbon, Junot had such an open table that 300,000 francs
insufficient to cover expenses,

and of course

his mistresses

him no

less

than his

table.

These tremendous expenses, of


land.

course,

were squeezed from the conquered

All these upstarts sought to establish their reputation

by

sur-

passing pre-revolutionary nobles in lavishness and extravagance.

The

aforementioned Junot paid a certain actress 12,000 francs

for an hour of love.

Napoleon never went beyond


less

4,000.

Murat

The women of these military leaders didn't lag behind in crazy prodigality. Thus
would never spend
than 500 francs for drinks.
200,000 francs for a toilette was not an infrequent expense. Duchess

de Junot spent 10,000 francs for needle and thread. All these ladies
accoutred in
little

more than a

title

and free of the weight of

spirit

or heart, were strong adherents to one moral principle: live and


let live.

There was no such thing


21s

as

an open, deep and honest

BOOK

IV:

THE NINETEENTH CENTUMY


seized the opportunity

love for these folks.

One

whenever

it

came,
side.

and then shook oneself free without much concern on either


This was the society which owed

much

of

its

being to the Corsithat he

can and one can't say that he was proud of

it.

He realized

could not hope for power and consolidated rule until he had suc-

ceeded in winning over


efforts the latter

all

the royalist groups. But despite

all

his

remained on one side and met

his efforts, to create

new

nobility,

with nothing but scorn. Napoleon was furious but

did not

show

his wrath. Instead,

he tried to appear grateful and


his circle as court ladies.

drew the

ladies of the old

regime into

But he only succeeded

in

making of them witnesses

to the scandalto increas-

ous practises of his family which contributed not a


ing the aversion of these elegant groups to him,
all

little

who showed himself

too

much in the manners

of an upstart

of his imperialship.

Thus he contributed

when he put on the glory to his own downfall.

#
BABYLON ON THE SEINE

jiFTER the revolution, and in the

first

third of the nineteenth cen-

/\

tury, moral conditions in France

were not

a bit better than

they had been in pre-revolutionary days.

The

ladies of the

demi-

monde

still

set the

pace for the rest of the world, Hiere was, to be


all

sure, a police regulation ordering the confiscation of

publicly-

exhibited indecent pictures of

women, but

so great

was the number

of prostitutes that this regulation was unenforceable.


at least

There were
were held

one thousand houses in Paris where public


half- world sought
its

balls

and where the

victims. Since the court pro-

ceedings took place quite publicly even

when

the most delicate

and shameful matters were being discussed, "for only unworthy


females would be present at that sort of thing," old and
to these hearings as

young ran
and

though they were the most spicy theatre per-

formances. Efforts were


propriety. In
1

made

in the theatres to restore morals

794 the former French theatre was reopened under

the

name

of the Equality theatre, in

which the

actors

were pledged
it

to maintain the sanctity of morality

and modesty. But

went no
if

further than the pledge, and people flocked to the theatre


save light and heat at home.
Prostitution could not be restrained although
flaunt itself as openly as before.
it

only to

did not perhaps

How

well appointed and politely

conducted were the good Parisian brothels of that time can be


learned from the memoirs of Castelii. There were servants in livery

220

BOOK
and the
ladies

IV:

THE NINETEENTH CENTUEY


clothes.

and gentlemen wore formal

There was no
gentleman

rude note, no conversation or amusement that would offend out-

ward decency or honor. But


would withdraw with the
was widespread and had
fair

after the souper every


his

one of

choice into her room.

Such houses catered only to the public of means. But poverty


to

buy

its

joys cheaply; and in the country

too they did without any veneer.

The same

Castelli relates that at


as

Dijon

little

boys between seven and fourteen would act


his

panders.

Every one praised


his competitor.

wares to the traveller and sought to underbid

In such circumstances there was naturally no lack of secret

subterranean literature.

The

old and well-known erotica con-

tinued to be published and there were always


chasers.

new and

eager pur-

One moral advance can be

noted during the revolutionary


sold so openly; ever since

period. This merchandise

was no longer

1815 the police kept surveillance over dealers in these products.

A most interesting sidelight as to how the distribution was effected


is

many erotic scenes. "At the Palais Royal I was frequently amused by an old fat rascal who stood right at the entrance, with many large
given us by the same Castelli

who was

an eye witness of so

and small books resting on

his head, reposing

under

his arms,

and

stuck into his pockets, bosom and even boots.

He

looked like a
his wares. All

walking bookstall.

And how
all

curiously he

hawked

that he could offer for sale publicly, he shouted in a penetrating

raucous voice, and

that pertained to the prohibited articles, he

whispered quietly into the ears of passersby."

The

restoration received a difficult inheritance indeed,


to

and

it

was necessary

sweep clean with an iron broom. Napoleon would


it

not have a nominal censorship but actually


after his downfall
it

was

practised;

and
ex-

was again

officially instituted.

But

it

was

tremely

difficult to force the

disappearance of these erotica which


221

THE EBOTIC HISTOMY OF FMANCE


flooded the market and were available at every
stall.

The

authors

were not

to

be reached since they had taken refuge in other lands


political storm.

during the

Hence

it

was decided

to

dam up
all

the

circulation of the anti-religious

and

erotic writings at the con-

sumer's end. In 1825 the government issued an order to


inspectors laying

police

down

the general procedure for the suppression


alas!

of this corrupt and corrupting reading matter. But

the success
is

of these manoeuvres was contrary to original expectations, as

evidenced

by

the continuous confiscations and litigations in which

long prison and

money

sentences were imposed

upon the

guilty.

There could not be any thoroughgoing success


if

in these endeavors

only for the reason that

all

the wheels of the organization did not


in order to forestall

click together.

Thus, the dealers and publishers

objections,

might obtain a permit direct from the minister to publish


free but valuable

a certain

somewhat

work

of literature; but the

courts

would reverse the decision and condemn the book anew


public opinion

when

demanded the suppression


fell to

of such writings.

These prosecutions frequently

the lot of books which belong

to the best type of erotic French literature, as

La

Fontaine's tales,

for example.

In the

first

third of the nineteenth century there

came

into

fashion the transparent obscene cards which, for the poorer public,

was

a substitute for erotic literature, since the latter

had become

costly as a result of the suppression.

On

one side of the card one

saw only

smooth surface, and the obscenity of the representation

only became visible


as to a

when

the card was held

up
as

to bright light,

burning lamp. Booksellers didn't bother


articles as did pedlers,

much with

these

smutty
in Paris.

which indeed

is

almost as true today

Now

people began to look back with admiration and yearning

to the great love artists, masculine

and feminine, of bygone times.

222

BOOK
Hence
alities,

IV:

THE NINETEENTH CENTURY


market for the memoirs of such personin

there

was

a great

which were now proHferated

immense

quantities.

Now

the panurgics of famous Hbertines hke the


reprinted, or entirely

Duke

of

Lauzun were

new

books were issued to satisfy the hunger


versifiers seized

for these piquanteries.

Some

upon the

old idea of

working up the lives of the

hetairai in poetical fashion.

Thus Ninon

de Lenclos, Marquise de Montespan, and Sophie Arnould were

some of the subjects chosen


But there was
a

for these poetized autobiographies.

type of writing

much more

popular at

this time,

the so-called secret memoirs which usually appeared anonymously

under

fictitious

names, since the contents were very definitely


a considerable extent these
lives of the

objectionable.
details derived

To

memoirs of piquant

from the private

French kings, from the

families of Orleans, of the

queen Hortense and the royal family,


of Louis xvi, etc.

the

Duke

of

Normandy, son

The

authorities

took drastic measures against these writings, and many, which were
issued with impunity in
lishers in

German

translations,

brought their pubpenalties.

France long prison terms or high monetary


at this

There were enough novels appearing

time in addition to

the types just mentioned. Perhaps one of the most popular was

Madame
title;

Potiphar. In this story

Pompadour

is

the heroine of the

and the author depicts the amorous adventures of an ambitious


with two nuns. Because the book contains about sixteen
it

solicitor

free situations
others.

was

confiscated.

The same

fate

was shared by
These

Nor was France poor

in collections of erotic songs.

went the whole hog and chattered volubly and unconcernedly


about everything connected with
sex, hesitating at

nothing

at

all.

Hence we cannot be surprised

that

many

of

them were

confiscated,

and those responsible, severely punished. Thus, in 1844 a hawker

who had sold the


to

So?igster of the

Daughters of Love was sentenced


jail.

pay 6,000 francs and

in addition to serve five years in

This

223

THE EKOTIC HISTOHY OF FRANCE


collection contained forty-five chanso?is of Beranger in addition

to Piron's

Ode

to Priapiis,

and was tame in comparison with

others.

Much

filthier are the collections like

the Broad Songs of Priapiis or

the Satirical Parnassus of the nineteenth century,

which

in ob-

scenity rival the most lascivious products of the eighteenth century.

We have already mentioned that memoirs were


the royal families no
less

directed against

than against other humans.

The

typical

Frenchman
spect.

is

not excessively oppressed

by

feelings of awful re-

Many

dozens of scandalosa could be mentioned here, but

we

shall

give only one specific illustration.


virtue, needs

That Napoleon

was

no paragon of

no exposition to the student of

history.

He

had

his recognized mistresses,

and gladly strayed to foreign


butt for erotic
in,
jests

pastures to boot. But a

much more welcome

was found

later in the

person of his namesake. Napoleon

and

his marriage to the fiery Spaniard


vinistic

Eugenie de Montijo.

The

chau-

French people turned up their noses

at this mesalliance,

much

as their grandfathers

had done when Louis xvi had brought

the Austrian Marie Antoinette


tiric verses

home with

him. But the broad sa-

of this time

which were quickly and continually being

born, also disappeared quickly, and were not filled with that drivelling hate

which made

so

many

cognate effusions of the eighteenth


is

century so unpalatable.

An

example

the

Wife

of desar, a biog-

raphy of Eugenie de Montijo, Queen of France, by Mme. U. R.

(M. de

S.).

These

initials

were designed to give the impression

that

Madame Urbain
this

Rattazzi (Marie de Solins)


it

was the author of


certain

pamphlet. However,

was soon discovered that a

Vesinier was the author, whereupon he was sentenced to eighteen

months of

jail,

and i,ooo francs

fine.

This book

tells

the supposed

loves of Eugenie with three princes of the house of Orleans,


eral

Gen-

Navarez, Rothschild,

etc.

After the Franco-Prussian War, Paris was inundated by the so-

224

BOOK
all

IV:

THE NINETEENTH CENTUKY


which were printed
in just a

called Bodinguettes,

few

sheets, in

formats, and occasionally with illustrations.

They were

charac-

terized

by the grossest

license

and displayed none of that customary


of Napoleon,

Gallic grace and gallantry.

Even the famous opponent


went

Henri Rochefort,
of the
things

also contributed to this fad.

After the destruction


at these

Commune,

the restored government


tong, and
it

foul

hammer and

succeeded in checking the abuse.

In the preceding century, the clergy was continually being rep-

resented as "loving", and tons of rubbish had been emptied out of


pots over the heads of the unfortunate servants of the church

who

had sunk quite low,

it

must be admitted. The revolution deprived

many of them
interest

of their privileges, displaced

them from the center of


them

and the restoration appointed them to a very modest place

indeed.

Hence

the

number

of pamphlets directed against

at this time did not

compare with the swarm of the


stories

earlier period.

Most of these scandal


stories.

were written

in the

form of love

The Child

of a Jesuit

by Laumer (1822)
Other

described the im-

moral

life

of a Jesuit's pupil, rich in licentious and shameful deeds,


stories like

until his sentence to the gallows.

The Woman of

the Jesuit (1826) and the Mysteries of a Bishopric (1872) contain

vigorous attacks

lit

with glowing sensuaHty against the church


books sought to give actual source materials

and

its

servitors.

Two

for a history of the infamies of the

church and the clergy, erotic

and otherwise, and thus to have an educative influence; they were


Crimes^ Delinquencies and Scandals in the

Bosom

of the Church,

by Villeneuve and Casenade (1861), and Morals of Convents, Abbeys,

and Monasteries (1843). The broad descriptions of intimate

scenes and the ostensible generalizations, rendered the latter


.

work

objectionable; and
prints

it

soon became the object of continuous re-

and suppressions.

In our times

we

have experienced a tremendous growth of Sex225

THE EMOTIC HISTOEY OF FMANCE


ology, the science of sex. In the nineteenth century

we

can see

the beginnings of the application of the scientific all-conquering

viewpoint and method to the study of

this

most important realm,

and the compilation of the

first fruits

of this
first

method

as

garnered in

various introductory researches.


to a

The

place should be assigned


treats

book of Jacques-Antoine Dulaure (1805) in which he


title:

of phallic worship under the


first

The Gods

of Generatioji, the

English translation of which has recently appeared in the


States.

United
cult

Like Dupuis before him, Dulaure derives the phallic

from

solar worship;

but he gives an excellent description of

the ceremonies

among

the Egyptians, Syrians, Jews, Phoenicians,

Phrygians, Persians, and Assyrians. In addition, he presents a detailed exposition of

lingam worship among the Hindus,

treats brief-

ly of the related cult

among

the Mexicans, and then, turning to

the Greeks and Romans, he considers the cult of


to phallic worship. After considering these rites

Venus

in relation

among

the early

European peoples, he gives a highly interesting and instructive account of


this

worship among the medieval Christians

who

in cer-

tain respects surpassed the

immoral orgies of antiquity.

The

noted bibliophile Paul Lacroix composed his complete Hisis

tory of Prostitution in 185 1-3. This

the

first
it

comprehensive work

written on this important subject, and

remained decisive until


it

the appearance of Bloch's monumental work. Unfortunately,

remained a

torso, for Lacroix,

weary of perpetual
task.

legal persecu-

tions, lost all desire to

complete his

One

seeks in vain for

sources or exact quotations of contemporary material, so that


scientific verification is

extremely

difficult

and the usefulness of


isn't

the

work

is

thereby impaired. Despite the subject matter there

a loose allusion in the book. Quite

on the contrary, so often do angry

protests occur, that one gains the impression that the author

was

a prudish moralist; but other scientific writings

by Lacroix prove

226

BOOK
that he
ture.

IV:

THE NINETEENTH CENTUEY


and pornographic Htera-

had

a fine understanding of erotic

The literature of popularization

also

found many representatives.

Among

the numerous guides for lovers there should be men-

tioned the Physiology of the First Night of Marriage

by Octave

de Saint-Ernest (1842). Warnings against venereal disease were

sounded by the Protector against the Disease of Venus of Rubempre


(1826) and the very widely

known

treatise

of the physician

Tardieu, Medico-Legal Moral Offences.

There were any number of writers who saw

to

it

that those

who

derived pleasure from reading books on sex should not go

unappeased. In 1870 Jean Richepin issued his poetry collection

La Chanson de Gucux. The eroticism of


extreme,
the
first
is

these songs,

however

just

gibed with the taste of the time, and in a month

edition

was exhausted. Richepin paid for


jail.

his success

by

spending the next month in

It is

unfortunate that such a gifted

writer did not turn his talents to better tasks.

Paul de

Kock

(i 794-1

871) found numerous readers for his


society

ri-

bald stories of sex sins in

modern French

which he crammed
far

into his fifty-five volumes. His

namesake Henry did not lag

behind in lasciviousness.

He

sought to gain the favor of

his readers

with

his saucy, scandalous

work. History of Celebrated Libertines

(1870), and wrote numerous other risque stories.

The best known is

The Murder

in the

Chestnut Forest^ in which the bloodthirsty and

lubric achieve a unique amalgam.

The foremost

representative of the gallant novel in the last quar-

ter of the nineteenth

century and the cleverest, was indisputably


his

Marcel Prevost. In most of


relations

works he depicted the intimate


with rare magic of language

between men and

women
227

and a wonderful comprehension of the physiological and psycho-

THE EMOTIC HISTORY OF FMANCE


logical motives

behind them. His pictures are almost oppressive

in their fidelity to truth.

The importance

of these and other

unnamed

writers

lies

in their

natural representation of contemporary circumstances

which they

portray without disguise. In the third empire the cocotte again

came

to

power and
was

set

her

seal

upon French
all

life.

She drew everymorality of the

thing under her sway and dictated


cocotte
decisive in
all

laws.

The

realms of sexual morality.

The
Of
all

spirit

of the cocotte dictated the mode, and controlled the forms of

expression in the realm of the spirit and of language.

course,

her

field of action has

always been in the domain of sexuality, and

she remains true to her


to the
like

own

class

when

she reduces
taste.

relations

common

denominator of her coarse

With

her polyp-

arms she

tears everything to herself

with

irresistible force,

and the victims

who can no

longer envisage redemption from her

embraces, finally surrender completely to her with body and soul

and deem themselves fortunate when they are permitted to sing


the praises of their mistress. In an age
there can be no

when

the cocotte

is

supreme,

more inward

cult than that of the female body,

no theme of conversation more important than the description of


adventures and chances in the service of Venus. There could be

no greater

praise for a

woman

than

when

her praises were sung

in everyone's

mouth.
litera-

The
Dumas

real

beginning of the supremacy of the prostitute in


in
1

ture and

drama began

840 with the Lady of the Camelias


in love with a

by

jils.

strumpet

falls

young man

of distin-

guished family

who

is

naturally not in agreement with his choice.

After his family remonstrates with her by appealing to her love


for

him and pointing out the

dire consequences of such a union,

she decides to give

him up. She pretends


and

to her betrothed that she

really loves another, leaves him,

finally dies of tuberculosis.

228

BOOK
The

IV:

THE NINETEENTH CENTUMY


is

question that immediately occurs to us

this:

Are the

characters of prostitutes and such, capable of poetic or dramatic

development
one.

at all?

The answer would seem

to

be an affirmative

false step or a

breach of marital fidelity very frequently

has consequences of a tragic nature. Surely no one will be intolerant enough to insist that one error
a
is

enough to

seal the fate of

woman and
is

to be taken as the index of her worth. Sin


is

demands

repentance, and this

found

sufficiently in regret

and sorrow.

Such regret
cess,

an inward process, a protracted psychological proanalysis of

and presupposes lengthy


This
is

changing impulses and

reactions.

difficult to

achieve within the narrow limits of

a drama, destined for representation

on the

stage,

and which must


its

reckon with the relatively short time available for

production.

The problem

thus posed would seem to be

much more amenable


at

to epic, than dramatic treatment.

But the nineteenth century French dramatists did not aim

creating a logically constructed theatrical piece corresponding to

the laws of internal probability; for in their plays of adultery

it is
all.

not the results of waywardness that are represented..

Not

at

This situation

is

used in

all

possible piquant permutations

and com-

binations in order to

amuse the public for the greater enrichment of


believe thatdt
is

the author's purse.


theatre to live

The French
vow,
if

permissible in the

somewhat

in the fashion of the

demi-monde, to

violate the marriage

only the dramatist and public can get

a satisfactory ending for the whole mess.


If

one asks

why
so

these pieces of adultery, with their undressing

scenes,

became

enormously popular, the answer


life

is

not difficult

to find. Nineteenth century


in
its

was exciting and nerve-wracking


it

mad

pursuit of success, and in most people

helped to deof an

stroy the normal uses of composure.

The average Frenchman,

evening, sought in the theatre refreshment and entertainment.

He

229

THE EEOTIC HISTOEY OF FRANCE


respected esprit, and
if

the dialogue was witty and interspersed

with erotic

allusions,

the author or dramatist had fulfilled his duty

and deserved approbation.

The

material of these comic writers and dramatists


life.

were usually

taken from

Venal love

is

found among men and

women

alike.

Thus Poritzky

relates that

many

of the poor students in Paris

were were

able to keep their heads above water only because they


erotically potent. TTie

demand, by

insatiable licentious

women,

was very

great.

Students

whom

nature had especially favored

were ardently desired and besought


their labor.

and

well recompensed for

The
and

novel stood on the same low plane with the theatre during

the third kingdom.


fitted it

The
all

ordinary feuilleton story prettified vice


the splendor of romance.

out with

The

adulterous

woman was

an angel, the courtesan always a delightful creature,


fault.

and her profession a fascinating

Lovers and seducers were


irresistible.

always handsome, generous, extremely masculine,

The

deceived husbands on the other hand were always ill-mannered,

dumb

or simply ridiculous.
rice

And

every intrigue trailed a cloud of

musk and

powder. Intimacies! That was the shibboleth of

the novel and the theatre alike. In their diary, the brothers

Gon-

court have an entry under February


a

14, 1866, in

which they quote/

"What do you wish," he called out, "when you can only make money in the theatre by making girls'
elder.

dictum of Dumas the

tights rip.

These constantly ripping

tights

made the fortune

of

Directeur Holstein.

He

ordered his dancers to wear tights that

had

ripped seam, always on the same spot. Those were the days

for opera glasses. But finally the censor interfered and with his
interference, most dealers in opera glasses

went out of

business."

Two

citations

may be adduced

here to characterize the morality

of that period. In the excellent novel

drawn from

life

by

German

230

BOOK

IV:

THE NINETEENTH CENTUEY


we
find the following-f

author, and entitled the Tale of a Clerk,

statement: "Lucian deeply enjoyed this lounging in Paris, utterly


idle,

purely a spectator, and was richer in pleasures than he had


five

been

days before. In Montmartre he had become acquainted


left

with the caverns of luxurious vice; with orgies which


because they were ordered and paid
for,

one cold

and did not proceed from

genuine emotion but were enacted by actors and actresses; naked


dancing and living
illustrations of Aretino's sonnets
life

and the

dia-

logues of Luisa Sigea, and scenes from the

of

The Philosophical
opium

Theresa and the Marquise of Montrevers.


real vice was,

Now Lucian learnt what


He came
to

and

it is

so cheap in Paris,

dives

and to

lascivious balls in the quarter of St. Michel, in the atelier

region of Montparnasse.

He

visited the

Roman

baths

where amid

clouds of steam there were arranged the erotic figures found on

Greek pottery and


appear at
all

vases,

where the invention of Nero did not

shameful in

this

Olympian atmosphere,
it

in the circle

of enraptured spectators, but rather beautiful, since

was handsome

youths

who were acting

out the pantomime."


this is

It will

very likely be objected that

only

a novel in

which

no

limits are fixed to the author's fantasy.

But

in real life

however

there are bounds set to profligacy. Yet this captatio benevolentice


is

here being employed on an unworthy cause. Let us hear what


like

an author

Alexander Moszkowski

own

experience and

who

is

who speaks wholly reliable: "A flood


says,

out of his
of nudity

inundated the whole of Paris.


theatre

With
flood,

the exception of the Elite

which found

a natural dike in its fixed repertoire,

no stage

was able to withstand the wild

and other show places grew


either

up

like

mushrooms which varied the theme of nakedness

stupidly or wittily, as the case

may

be. In the

Horloge Theatre

on the

damps Elysees, Prevost's Half


The young
231

Virgins was enacted in trav-

estied society scenes.

ladies of this piece

were dressed

THE EKOTIC HISTOEY OF FMANCE


very correctly in front, but

when they

turned their backs they

revealed a wide split extending from the neck to the calves, so that

every half virgin could be either an elegant lady of the salon, or


a

Venus

Kallipygos, depending on her position.

The Olympia The-

atre in the Boulevard acted out a

pantomimic drama which rep-

resented
In Paris
it

all

the phases of a bridal night with painful accuracy.

was no longer worth the trouble of mobilizing the censor


details.

and the police against the living enactment of these

"In the Cigale, an attractive suburban temple of the nude muse,

nakedness overflowed to the other side of the footlights


the spectators. After there was no
to take off, the orchestra leader

among

more clothing

left for

the actors

and musicians began to remove

everything dispensable, and soon the public began to participate


in the

orgy of disrobing. In many establishments of the Pigalle


nakedness took on allegorical forms.

district this stark

The

seven

deadly

sins or the cardinal virtues

were shown
tights;

as

animated moving
effect

pictures without

any subterfuges of

and the

was

heightened by the introduction of optical


reflections

aids, especially

mirror

which

still

left

something to guess about, even

when

one saw everything clearly with one's eyes. In addition there were
parties

which did not

differ in

any way from the scenes represented

in the erotic theatres of the revolutionary period.

The way was

led

by the

artists'

guild of

Montmartre with

its

sensational arrange-

ments of the Bal des quatrez-arts and the Bal du Courier which

were carried on
balls

in the

wide spaces of the Moulin Rouge. These


a strictly

were under the dictatorship of

enforced regulation

concerning costume which was constantly changed, sometimes


ancient

Greek or Oriental or Renaissance,


a

etc.

Everyone had
pass

to

come before
be admitted.

whole

set of authorities

who would

on the

authenticity and correctness of one's costume before one could

Any

one

who was

unfortunate enough to wear a

232

BOOK
out. Until
its

IV:

THE NINETEENTH CENTUEY


style

costume not absolutely in keeping with the decreed


midnight the
festivities

was kept

were

a delight to the eyes, with

recreation of a past epoch. Everything


a gesture or allusion

was utterly decorous,


real

and not
the
ball.

would betray the

purpose of

Then

a single

woman would
light.

suddenly appear in the gal-

lery,

bathed in a flood of

This one was the bearer of good


festivities.

tidings

and the living semaphore of the


fell

tug her dress

from her and


cast off her

this

was the

With one little signal; in a moment


shame was

every

woman had
and
flesh

every bit of covering. Clothes were


clothes hurled off,

now
icler

off

was

on.

With

exorcised and wild passionate orgies

were now begun. The chronexhibits

deems

it

necessary to

draw the curtain on the herd

of these scenes worse than bestiality."

But these were private performances.

What was

the situation

with regard to those in public? Zola protested indignantly against


the applause which
resses

would always greet one

of these so-called act-

whenever she would emphasize some obscene expression

by some bodily motion


claimed, "on the
idea of playing the

"What a disgrace! " he exday when some woman will come to the exalted
or contortion.

whore au

naturel. All Paris will be beside itself


it

with enthusiasm.
into

And how

can

be otherwise?

We

have fallen

shame and ignominy,

we we

are the bastard offspring of an


breasts,

accursed age.

We

have only got so far as revealing the

and showing the thighs, but


unless

shall certainly fall into the gutter

we

arouse ourselves and

become

free

men."

Zola's call died unheard.

Marcel Prevost shows us with inexorable


life

sharpness the utterly immoral


reflected

of his time and nation, and the

image

is

anything but pleasing.

An

example of the worst


i.e.,

moral dissoluteness combined with corporeal intactness,

hy-

meneal imperf oration,


is

is

given in the Half Virgins. Here everything


girl of the better classes

permitted the educated

provided only

233

THE EEOTIC HISTOKY OF FMANCE


that she enters marriage with an unimpaired maidenhead. It
is

per-

fectly evident that under such circumstances a morally pure marriage


is

impossible, as well as that this type of parent cannot be

a model for her children.

Most of the works of the other writers of entertainment


ture touch the borders of the pornographic.
brief notice,
real

litera-

One

of these deserves

he

who wrote under


life,

the

pseudonym of Willy. His

name was Henry

Gauthier-Villars and he never wrote about


of

anything other than sex

which he

treated

all

the possible

forms of adultery and perversion.


of language
is

The
he
is

representation and choice

so unrestrained that

only one

little

step

from

the morass of pornography. His writings are dangerous because


of their gracious and vivid depictions

which say almost everything

in half-concealed word-plays, or at least

manage

to hint at everyis

thing so that no doubts are

left.

The

reader's imagination

com-

pelled to collaborate and to spin further the thought


author.
is

begun by the

Willy draws

his sexual pictures

with naturalness, but he

far inferior to Zola in objectivity.

Paris

still

remains the model city of Venus vulghaga, and only

Brussels offers really serious competition.


to

The

stranger just

come
early
I

Babylon on the Seine generally seeks

erotic pleasures.

Very

therefore there

were

to

be found printed directories of guides to


directories
as

women's

flesh marts.

These brothel

were already

in

vogue during the eighteenth century and,


be
cited. It bears the

an example, one

may

remarkable
(

title
1

Funeral Oration of the very


it is

High and Mighty Mme. Justine


prominent personage
population

786) ;

said to

have had a very

as its author. In the nineteenth century, as

grew and means

of transportation brought

more

visitors

to the great capital of pleasure, these directories

became more/
hall
|

numerous and

obtrusive. In every

little

bookshop and dance

these Guides to the Stranger in Paris

were

sold, either as collections

234

BOOK

IV:

THE NINETEENTH CENTUEY


more
usually as printed manuals to the plea-

of obscene pictures, or

sure-seeking provincial or stranger. The address of the brothel and the


jades, their prices,

and the catalogue of their sexual practices and


ex-

perversities

were described with breath-taking frankness and

haustive detail.

One

of these manuals bore the amusing

title:

Les

cocottes, biches et lorettes. Naturally such guides


lease of life for

had only

a short

they soon were out of date or were rapidly con-

fiscated. Nevertheless, this

was

very profitable business for the


in
it,

unscrupulous individuals
the enormous

who engaged

as

we

can judge from

number

of these guides.

The

horrible mixture of cruelty and passion, so peculiar to

Mar-

quis de Sade, as well as the predilection for philosophical excursions


in defence of his perversities, did not

remain without influence

in

the nineteenth century.

work was published about 1830 which


it

was
the

so full of the spirit of Sade that for a while


latter.

was attributed

to

Only

a careful examination reveals that the


1

book could
it is

not have been written in

803, as the title

page declares, since

deals

with characters

who

lived

under Louis-Philippe.
mass of obscene

The book

The

Dominican. At that time,

too, a

political

pamphlets
is

was thrown upon the market.


one of the most important of
the

My

Cousin Matthew by Rabau

this class.

Another

is

The Pranks

of

High

Ladies, containing a wealth of gossip

and scandals con-

cerning actresses and well-known society

women.

The

first

important erotic type character

who bobbed up

about

1830 was that of

Mayeux by

Travies.

He is the

born cynic, practi-

cally always erotic if not directly obscene.

His bodily malformation


to
his

made him

desirable only to insatiable

women, who knew how

appreciate his extraordinary potency.


pictorial representation,

Hence

quite apart

from

he figures

as the

panurgic hero of erotic

novels, such as

The Secret Loves

of

Mayeux; The Twelve Labors


Work;
etc.

of Hercules;

The Twelve

(erotic) Days'

235

THE EHOTIC HISTOEY OF FMANCE


Louis Protat was the author of the notorious and grotesque erotic
tale Serrefesse.

Some

notion of

its

contents

may

be gained from
thief; Cuilseller

inspecting the characters. Pinecul,


lardin, chief

whoremonger and

sewer cleaner; Cruche, supposedly a eunuch,

of condoms; Pinolie, Cruche's wife; and Serrefesse.


plot hinges

The whole

on the fact that Cuillardin had raped Serrefesse and


is

after she has shot herself, her betrayer

put out of the

way by
.-

Cruche and

his gang.

The

language

is

foul

though there are traces

of wit in the volume. Another book of Protat's,


of Flora, eclipses
all its

The Examination

contemporaries both in erotic license and,

in this one case, in literary value as well.

A few more of erotic writers in the last quarter of the nineteenth


century must be mentioned. Le Nismois wrote
for the theatre but

many

pieces,

mostly
to

no director in the world would be found


works.

produce any of
writers
is

the

One of pornographer who


his

the most fruitful French erotic

hid himself behind the

initials

E. D. This

Dumoulin had

a certain

amount of

literary

skill.

He

was a

flagellant,

but was also able to appreciate other types of sex


indulgence are plentifully littered
titles:

activity, for orgies of natural

throughout
Buttocks,

his books.

Some

of the

Procession of the Bare,

Turned-Up

Skirts, Schoolmistress, indicate sufficiently!

the type of porneia that they contain.

He

is

the foremost rep-

resentative of flagellational eroticism. In the last

named

novel, the

adventures are related with honesty and a luxuriousness of detail

which argues
also

for personal

knowledge and

participation.

There

are

numerous

tribadic scenes in this girls' school. In

The Animated

Marble he

treats a variant of the

Pygmalion and Galatea theme.

The hero of the romance


forgets to indicate that he

enkindles passion in the living but marble-

cold statue of a princess. In numerous other books the author never


is

also the

author of other smut.

The

best tribadic novel of the time

undoubtedly was

A Summer

23

BOOK
in the

IV:
1

THE NENETEENTH CENTUEY


who nevertwo
have
his

Country

868), long attributed to Gustave Droz,

theless

was able
title

to obtain the legal right to

name removed
inform each

from the

page. This novel contains the correspondence of

young

ladies, a

governess and her former pupil,

who
first

other of the emotions rising in their

young

souls, of their erotic

observations and experiences, and finally their


to love.

introductions

*t^'^****e***c**!**s**f*^

CHAPTEK XVI
THE HEYDAY OF OBSCENE ART

THERE has been but one great age of erotic literature in France,
namely the eighteenth.

No

previous period, nor any subse-

quent one, can be compared to those halcyon days of the seventeen


hundreds. Nevertheless
field

we

shall find

some great writers

in this

during the nineteenth century,

men who made

signal con-

tributions to the understanding of erotic problems

and their rep-

resentation in letters.

The first

great

name to be considered is Honore de Balzac

799-

1850). In his Droll Stories, he endeavored to revive the fresh sensuality of the old fabliaux

and the roughness of Rabelais

in

modern
of

combination. In the language of the old French he


the most suggestive sort after the

tells stories

manner of the

Italian novelists,

and perpetrates many


thirty-six stories, each

a jolly jest

on the way. The work contains


all

one gayer than the preceding, and

going

as far as possible in daring

and suggestiveness.

Who

can refrain

from laughter

at

the

monk Amader who

possesses the best instruwill not be

ment

for

winning the suit of the abbey? Or who

amused

at the

cuckold

who

can no longer recognize a certain thing?

The
At

panurgics of the good king Louis xi really belong to the realm of


scatology.

The

king arranges a peculiar sort of entertainment.

the instigation of his paramour he mixes a purgative with the food

and when the

effects

begin to show themselves he hinders every

238

BOOK
one from
ing comedy.

IV:

THE NINETEENTH CENTUMY


The resultant
scenes are of oversvhelm-

visiting the toilet.

In poetry there was a bard

who

stood out considerably above

the remainder of contemporary singers both because of the contents

and the influence of

his

work. Beranger (1780-1857) was the


is
still

real

creator of the French chanson, and


national poet.

today famed

as the

He

sang for the people and captured their native

notes as perhaps no other.


all

hearts.

The singing quality of his songs captivated He knew how to live himself into the soul of those who
and rejected by
fate,

were

tried

and

this capacity of
all.

sympathy

and understanding
Beranger
is

won him the

affection of

Curiously enough,

almost as great in political satire as in simple songs. But

his chief strength lies in his erotic chanson.

He

does not represent

the overwhelming passion, or sentimental love; he


dalliance with love
gallic

knows only the

which he

celebrates

and decorates with true

wit and

jest.

One must

laugh at the worthy philistine

who

boasts of the transparent friendship of the senator; or at the epitha-

lamion to the lovers


past

twenty

years.

who have By the side


lust,

been living out of wedlock for the


of these there are the glorifications

of adultery, of carnal

of the carpe diem,


eff^ect.

which has sometimes

a depressing and even harmful

Everything occurs cheek by


farewell of

jowl in these collections.


near a

The moving
and

Mary

Stuart
that

bawdy

street song,

a song of

King Yvetot near

of an uncontrolled grisette.

In addition to these songs, which


of good taste, Beranger of powerful eroticism,
official collections.
title:

all

too often violate the dictates


entirely in the

composed poems

demesne

which

are, to
first

be sure, not found in the

They were
was

published in 1815 under the


the edition

Songs, Moral and Otherwise;


later, it

when
in

was reprinted
to

few years

confiscated. Beranger
jail

was sentenced

pay 50 francs and spend three months


239

for insulting morality

THE EEOTIC HISTORY OF FEANCE


and
religion. In 1832, all these

obscene songs introduced by Piron's


pieces

Ode

to Priapus

and

few miscellaneous

were published
d''

in

the previously mentioned

Le Chansonnier

des

filles

amour.

Two
was

years later a complete edition of Beranger's

work was

issued in

four volumes; a fifth volume containing

all

the erotic poetry

printed secretly, but was confiscated in the same year. Thirty years
later these forty-four pieces
eties of
If

were

issued

under the

title,

The Gay-

Beranger, and this constitutes the most complete collection.

the field of erotic literature was relatively sterile at this time,

the realm of art was very fertile and French erotic art continued /
to lead the world.

From

the year 1825 France was mistress of the!

market of

erotic pictures,

and

it still

remains the chief producer.

The

artists

Bouchot, Poitevin, Deveria, Maurin, Gavami, Johannot


their

and Monnier were in


tivity.

heyday and

at their

maximum producof greatness

Only Portevin and Monnier had any breath


work, especially the Diablerie
series of the

in their

former which

are to be accounted as

among

the boldest, most fantastic and perall

haps the most memorable productions in

erotic painting. Johan-

not and Monnier, on the other hand, are merely the vicious, cynical
depicters of lower middle-class salacity.
ni's erotic lithographs.

The same is

true of Gavar-

Bouchot again has something that reminds

us of Poitevin.

What some
quantity.

of the others lacked in greatness they

made up

in

Maurin and Deveria were

virtually inexhaustible in their

production of lithographs which they brought to the market in


series.

These

tw^o

and others of

their ilk, glorified obscenity with-

out manifesting any trace of a higher idea. Although they gave


themselves out for anti-philistines, everything they produced lacks j/

any

idealization of sensuality.

The

representation of the sexual

act in hundreds of variations


their very best

was

their chief theme,

and only

at

do they show an occasional gracefulness or refinement


240

BOOK
in their tasks.

IV:

THE NINETEENTH CENTUBY


are the most enthusiastic eulogists of the

They

mechanics of love, and they can suggest nothing more than the
physical delights
,

which masculine potency brings

to the

woman,

and which female wantonness and sophistication afford the man.


In fine,
it is

glowing cult of the individual

erotic

charms of the

female body.
I

Numerous

gallant lithographs that appeared publicly

in the 30's of the last century

were obscenely varied and touched

up

for those

who

liked their eroticism undiluted.


its

With

the spread period of

of photography, this flood reached


activity began.

ebb, and a

new

One of these artists was also by way of being an author. Indeed, Henry Monnier (1799-1875) was also an actor of repute. When he
was
still

a subordinate official in the ministry of justice,

he revealed

a native gift of observation, a sharp


crasies,

and inexorable eye for idiosyn-

the

weak and

ridiculous features of his environment,


his

which
1820

he endeavored to perpetuate with


appeared

drawing

pencil. In

his little booklet. Administrative

Customs; and at the same

time he created the figure of Joseph Prudhomme, that worthy


bourgeois

smug
circle

who

has

become

as

much

a figure in

French

literature

as Moliere's Tartuffe.

Soon Monnier was admitted to the

which included Musset, Paul de Koch, Gautier, Gavarni, and he


gave free reign to
his abilities.

His erotic compositions were de-

veloped with swift strokes and were originally composed just for
his friends,

without any thought of publication.


established

When

the erotic

theatre

was

on the Rue de

la

Sante in 1862 he con-

tributed a small piece entitled


playlet has

The Strumpet and the Student. The


is

no action

to speak of. It

a series of love scenes be-

tween the two characters, punctuated by quarrels and


tions,

reconcilia-

but the charm of the writing and the capricious wit are what

give
i

it

power. Here
student
is

is

an example,

The

sitting alone

and reading
241

a letter.

"Tuesday

at

THE EMOTIC HISTOMY OF FMANCE


noon
I shall

come

to

you

rather earlier than later.

Love me always

as I love you.
If
is

Be clever and understanding but not too wanton.


shall

you wish, we
1 1:

kick over the traces a bit."

(He

speaks: "It
at

10.

She

will not

come.") Reading again: "Tuesday


I

noon")

(To

himself: "She surely won't be late.

will arrange the seat.")

11:30.

He
is

reads again: "I shall


is

come

rather earlier than later."

A knock heard: "Who A light voice: "I."


"Yes, of course,
it's

there?"

The student pretends not to recognize: "Who is T?


me."
enters red as a beet.

Is

that

you?"

He opens the door, the grisette


it's six

(Remember,

flights

up) "Good day,


.

my little pup. How goes it? My lord,

you

live

high up. I'm

all

out of breath.
is!

below
I

what a bitch she


You
I

wanted.

understand?

And your housekeeper, She asked me again and again whom She made me repeat it many times
I

over in order that

might become worried.


I

despise these

damned

female

tricks.

Don't

get a kiss? Let

me remove my hat

first."

The student, ready: "Come here my angel." The entertainment grows more exciting, passionate, and finally winds up in groans and snorts. The grisette pants: "Oh, how wonderful

you love!
a

Kill

me!

... oh, kill

me!

Whereupon
out warningly:

deep bass voice from the adjoining room booms

"No murder
little
its

in this house, please."

But

this

does

not disturb the lovers and they continue their

activities undisturbed.

Monnier has another


compared

work. The Lesbians, which can be y


supple narrative
skill.

to Crebillon in

Two women
visit a

of Paris, young, handsome, elegant, pleasure seeking,


friend in the latter's country home.

mutual
have

The two

visitors

who

never met before, are given a bedroom in common. At


versation flows in quite conventional channels.
social events,

first

the con-

They

chatter about

about their husbands. Both feel themselves misunder-

242

BOOK
stood.

IV:

THE NINETEENTH CENTURY


They

Each

flatters

the other, and makes pretty Httle speeches to

the other. Their speech becomes freer and more intimate.

draw

closer to each other in the

wide double bed, and gradually

each attempts certain tender manipulations which the other reciprocates.

The

talk

becomes more ardent and more

intense,

and their

digitation
desires.

more

ecstatic, until

both give themselves over to their


lies

The charm
taste.

of the

work

in

its

manner

of treatment, in

the witty and clever wantonness which never forgets the canons
of good

CHAPTEM XVII
THE REIGN OF THE PROSTITUTE

ITLouis Napoleon was able to maneuver his election to the presidency of the French Republic
in
1

WAS with

perfect consummate planning, and cleverness that

849.

His term of ofRce was to be

only four years but already there were a sufficient number of


signs to indicate that

he intended to remain in the saddle very

much

longer.
dealt a

When
coup

his efforts in this direction

became too obvious he

d'etat

and

in 1859

he dissolved the Assembly, sent and caused the


arrest of

sixty of the hostile delegates into exile,

about 26,000 malcontents. But this brutal exercise of force did


not guarantee any sort of safety or certainty. There were
attempts on his
life

many
powrep-

which showed how great the

disaffection of

the people really was.

From

the very start he had numerous

erful enemies, chiefly the great

horde of Orleanists

who had
others.
St.

resentatives in

commerce, in officialdom and among the bourgeoisie.


as Thiers, Guizot,

Here were such men


there

Remusat and
Faubourg

Then

was the party of

legitimists of the

Germain,

descendants of the ancien regime with numerous connections

throughout France. This party possessed but few capable brains

and practically their only weapon was gossip but

this

they

knew

how to use masterfully. The whole mass


lated at this time concerning the

of scandalous stories circuhis spouse, the

emperor and

beautiful Spaniard, Eugenie, springs

from

this source.

And

al-

though most of them bear the stamp of falsehood their importance


244

BOOK

IV:

THE NINETEENTH CENTUEY


how
to uncover

must not be underestimated. They knew well

the nakedness of the emperor so skillfully that their fictions a-

chieved the semblance of verity.

Even more than in the gallant period the prostitute now ruled. She
played the
first

fiddle in

life, literature,

the theatre and the


this state of affairs.

arts,

and Napoleon himself bore the blame for

The

coup

d'etat

had pressed the clamp down on the

press.

Any

one

who
/

now

wished to found a

new newspaper had

to deposit a security

of 50,000 francs,

which made

virtually impossible the

growth
:

of a press. Misdemeanors of the press

were no longer permitted

jury hearings but had to be tried before criminal courts and were
threatened with Draconian penalties. After

two warnings
it

a news-,^

paper was suspended and after two convictions

was

abolished.

Since the press was gagged and prevented from discussing political
matters,
it

turned to realms

less

dangerous: social satire and scandal,

financial operations,

and

journalistic wit.

How

successful such
fact

cultivation of

new

pastures

was may be judged from the

that the circulation of the Constitutionel


45,00;

jumped from

3,000 to

and Villemessant

who

edited Figaro after 1854

made

his

paper the favorite of the

capital.

What

did

it

matter that those

attacked and libelled in his sheet sought redress in the courts and
that he had to

pay out considerable money


its

in fines?

The growing

popularity of his paper with

consequent financial gain was

more than enough


But once the

to balance his losses.

tiger has licked blood

he

is

insatiable.

The

public

naturally fond of gossip and saucy details, took delight in the

steaming ordure served up to them, and found

it

difficult to live

without such

slop.

In no realm can gossip be as enjoyable as in

the sexual, and in this respect no class of bourgeoisie society offers

more

material than the half- world. Their

whole

fife is

one chain of

scandalous episodes. Particularly did the cocottes of the second

245

THE EEOTIC HISTORY OF FRANCE


empire offer considerable material.
prostitutes

And what a gap

separates these

who

peddle their flesh from the grisette under Louis


in his

Philippe!

Murger

La Boheme has represented them

as crea-

tures of lovely frivolity


as

who do not shrink from

giving themselves

long as they have the illusion of love, however momentary. But

the cocotte of this time has gone far beyond such considerations.

When
of

she

sells

herself she uses her opportunity well


is

and chooses

only the highest bidder. She


spirit,

not overburdened with an excess

nor

is

this

what the

business

men and
is

knights of happi-

ness seek in her.

The

only thing of value

her capacity to purvey

sexual satisfaction.

Many

of these creatures boasted a rare beauty but they did not

always exercise the greatest fascination. Thus Cora Pearl, one of


the most famous denizens of the half- world, was actually repulsive,

what with her coarse


ners.

features,

coachman's voice and vulgar manin her


stall,

Yet she had twelve horses


it is said,

charged 10,000 francs

for a night and,

received from a grand duke the gift of

a massive silver bidet filled

with jewels and gold pieces. Exploitasquandering of

tion of their lovers

and

senseless

money were

the

occupations with which these hussies busied themselves and instead of repelling men, this unconcealed pursuit of gain

drew

them
and

on. It

was

a source of popularity to be seen with a strumpet

to squander one's

money upon

her.

The Duke

of

Grammont-

Caderousse, wasted

money and
lost

health until he died of tuberculosis.

Arthur de Lauriston
giers
self

everything, and one day ran off to Al-

where he entered the army. Prince Achille Murat shot himleft penniless.

when he was

Moreover,
fell

it

was not only the

Parisians but also foreigners


hetaerae, for Paris

who

into the nets of these


itself as

modem

had gradually established

the Babylon

of the Seine. Visitors


at all costs,

from every land came here

to find pleasure

and not infrequently

lost their shirts in the process. In

246

BOOK
home

IV:

THE NINETEENTH CENTUEY


Bey ran through
1

two or three years

Khalil

5 millions

and returned

The Princes Narischkin, Paul Demidoff, and Lord Hamilton threw money away with open hands though they
impoverished.
did not exactly

employ the method of

their contemporary, the

mys-

terious Prince Possos,

who amused

himself

by dropping gold

pieces

upon the heads of the passersby from the balcony of the Maison Doree.
Although merely tolerated by the
soon became recognized by society.
for
state at first, the prostitute ^
It

was no longer necessary

them

to crawl in the darkest corners, like pariahs.


full publicity,

They

could

now
from
vice.

ply their seductive occupations in


his consort,

rob the

man /

and through him inoculate

his family

with the

Soon the most honorable

woman

assumed the manners of the


fallen sister's immorality.

demi-mondaine and sought to emulate her


It

came

to the pass

where the boundaries became


tell

indistinguishable

and one could no longer

cocotte from honorable


itself

woman.
litera-

The

great world occupied

only with her. Art and

ture brought her undisguised praise and the theatre lay at her feet.

She dominated everything, no matter whether an

artist

drew

mythological divinity; a Phryne, a Leda with the Swan, or whatever other mythological

name he immortalized upon the canvas,

it is

always the sensuality incorporated in the cocotte that served to


inspire him. Journalism too, stood in the service of the

demi-monde. ^J
praises

For an hour of love the fortunate scribbler would sing the

of his love in his sheet; and for similar favors the hopeless mediocre
creatures of the stage could expect glowing dramatic panegyrics

upon

their deathless art. If this

method

failed these ladies

would

buy

favorable critical notices

by counting out good


and people knew that

gold.

Even

the famous critic Jules Janin never showed any aversion to a certain sort of erotic handclasp,
after every

premiere he could enter upon his books between

six

and eight

thousand francs from unspecified sources.

247

THE EEOTIC HISTOEY OF FBANCE


The
prostitute

made her triumphal entry

into literature

when

the younger

Dumas brought upon

the stage in his

Cajnelias, a prostitute dripping

with sentimentality.

Lady of the Through five


out

long acts says Vieil-Castel in his notebook, this


before an educated public
tuted
life.

woman hawks

all

the disgusting details of her prosti-

Nothing

is

missing in the representation, and scenes are

borrowed from the most corrupt places. xA.nd this wench with camelias
is

supposed to represent true love, she

who

accepts alternately the

embraces of customers and the

kisses of

her heart's

own

friend,

who permits the rich one to pay in order to support the poor one. Nor do the other details of her sordid existence improve the picture
at
all,

culminating in the apologia for her

life, at

her grave where

it is said:

"Much

will

be forgiven her for she has loved much." strumpet

Although
as the

this writer designated the exaltation of the

shame of

his age, this

drama corresponded

so well with the

instincts of the

populace that in a short while

it

became one of
it

the most popular pieces of the Parisian theatre,


its

whence

made

way

throughout France. In addition,


to be quite at

it

also created the t)^pe

which hereafter was

home on

the stage. Soon there


Girl of Marble

were many models and copies of


appeared a year
in 1855
later;

this. Barriere's

and Augier wrote The Marriage of Olympia


1859.

and Poor Lionesses in

The

rudest and crudest sort

of realism dominated the theatre and the novel and

amounted

to

nothing more than a servile copying of the

dirtiest

patches of

life.

In both fiction and drama the period revelled in the depiction of


filthy scenes

and in the eulogy of

vice.

When prostitutes realized


and sought to depict
their

that they occupied the chief interests

of even serious writers, they themselves

came forward

as authoresses

own

experiences.
stir

One

of the most

whorish of them created a tremendous

with her memoirs which

underwent one

edition after another. This

was Marguerite Badel,

248

BOOK

IV:

THE NINETEENTH CENTUEY


too unlettered to be able to write

called Rigolboche,

who was

even one sensible sentence. Hence her memoirs were really composed by two unscupulous writers, Blum and Huart.

The same
less

circumstances were true of the memoirs of Celeste Vainard, called

Mogador, who could neither read nor write but none the

de-

manded

the spotlight of literature. People

utter ignorance of this cocotte, but

knew all this, knew the were somehow crazy about


married Count

her lewd confessions. Indeed, her lurid past did not prevent her

from climbing up the

social ladder for she later

Lionel de Moreton Chabrillan. Similar marriages into the nobility

were effected by other notorious whores


guerite Bellanger, another

like Rosalie

Leon, Mar-

known

as

Madonna, and Paiva who

captured respectively Prince Peter Wittgenstein, Lord Coulback,


Prince Soltikoff and Count Henckel von Donnersmarck. Since

such incredible success attended these daughters of joy,

it is

no

wonder

that

women of society began to copy

the loose allurements

of their weaker sisters in order to try for similar prizes. Boehn


gives a

number

of names, for example, that of the lovely Countess


is

Castiglione

who

said to

have received for one night from Lord

Hertford the sum of one million francs. In Dieppe during 1854,


the Marquise de Belboeuf and the Countess

Gouy competed

with

the cocottes in their scandalous dancing and daring clothes. In


Paris the ladies looked to the stars of the operettas, Lise Tautain,

Hortense Schneider, Zulma Bouffar, Blanch d'Antigny and copied


their clothing

and gestures, and made their

own

the repertoire of

a Tlieresia,

A
life

most powerful and masterful delineation of the demoralizing

influence of the prostitute and the poisoning of public and private

through her was given by Emile Zola in

his

Nana;

this effort

was abetted by the drama of Augier,

Injection^

and by Sardou's
is

The Family

Benoiton.

The

only goal of the cocotte

money and

249

THE EROTIC HISTORY OF FRANCE


her greed
is

nourished in the pursuit of unscrupulous transactions.


offers the
it.

Only money

key to power and happiness, and hence

everyone pursues

France

swam

in gold

and

this profusion de-

veloped a fever of speculation. Everyone desired to multiply his


possessions quickly

and without

effort.

The newly

created stock

banks, after the model of the brothers Pereire

which was founded

for this purpose in order to finance great enterprises through

accumulation of small holdings, led to risky enterprises.

Commerce
classes

and business expanded and the income of the middle


rocketed. Napoleon understood very well
tions for the gain of

sky-

how

to use
Paris.

good suggesIn 1855 there

France and particularly of


fair after

took place in Paris a world

the model of the one in

England which brought over

five million visitors to the

French

metropolis. This influx naturally

purveyed

very numerous and


exposition of 1867

elaborate clientele for prostitutes.

The world
part,

went

it

much

better with fourteen million visitors


also, in

only for business but


of

good
their

who came not for pleasure. The devotees


full,

Cimmerian love thus had

hands

and their purses


in
all

too,

for these bulged with gold.

The
full

prostitutes

swarmed

streets

and places of amusement. In

consciousness of their importance

they pressed ever further into the foreground.

Soon
its

this rottenness, this disintegrative process of society

found
is

analyzers and depictors. But an interesting contradiction


at this point.

to

be observed

While the

cult of the prostitute

was being

celebrated as never before, the artists

who

merely copied nature


police

saw themselves continually exposed to the chicaneries of


authorities.

and

Flaubert,

Edmond

de Goncourt, Zola, Maupassant,


artful wiles in order to avoid

and

others,
all

had to practise the most

being
ship.

too forcibly reminded of the existence of a harsh censorlogical.

That was thoroughly

When

an

artist

represents the
in

morals of his time in his serious work, he should

sit

judgment

250

BOOK
upon such

IV:

THE NINETEENTH CENTUKY


and other
officials

conditions. Judges

who had

permitted

themselves to be carried along by the stream of foulness and corruption saw themselves represented in their true and quite unflattering light in these writings. In these

works those who should

have been guardians of morality saw themselves accused. Accordingly the personal animosities of these outraged officials found

vent in the imposition of indiscriminate punishments upon serious


writers.

On

the other hand, pornography, the outright panegyric

of vice and the real herald of prostitution against

which the

real

opposition of justice should have been directed, found wide distribution and flowered in gallic profusion.

Venality

wherever
flesh,

the eye

fell.

Besides the actual sale and


spirit

purchase of

there

was the degradation of


let

and

attitude.

Bribery triumphed over justice which never

her

left

hand know

what her

right

hand was doing; and placed

itself

squarely on the

side of the large capital that

was defending these foul-smelling

transactions with brutal cynicism.

The

press influenced public

opinion in favor of those


pay. For the journalists
to
it

who showed
was

themselves most willing to

a seductive

and profitable business

make themselves

the unscrupulous organ of speculation on the

Exchange. Most of the greatest Parisian newspapers were the possession of the speculators

who

set the tone,

and didn't

hesitate a

moment

to

expend huge sums when they saw the

possibility of

realizing their aims.

The newspapers merely


That thousands

served to draw the

public into the swindling business of the publishers or the bankers

who

stood behind them.

of well-meaning readers
foolish trusts in the

had been brought to beggardom by their


honesty of the press, meant nothing to the
Similarly the jurists
cials as well.

latter.
offi-

were accused of venality and other


his family

Napoleon himself and

were accused of

being purchasable for a sufficient price, a charge surely untrue in


251

THE EEOTIC HISTOEY OF FKANCE


the case of Napoleon himself. But this charge was certainly true
of his stepson, the

Duke de Momy,

the

first

cavalier of his time.

certain voracious swindler, the banker Jecker, had lent one

and

a half millions to

Mexico and wanted

sixty-five millions in return.

To help this swindler realize won over to advise Napoleon


expedition,

his usurious

demands,

Morny was
Mexican

to

go in for the
and

disastrous

which

cost Maximilian

his followers their lives,

and Napoleon a goodly share of


sought to counteract through
a

his imperial splendor.


call to

This he

renewed

arms against GerNapoleon's

many. Thus
downfall.

indirectly, a swindler

was the

real cause of

^96^ ^^X^ e>L^ eSjM

C^^t^

^^^

CHAPTER

XVIII

MASTERS OF EROTIC LITERATURE

the nineteenth century THE second regarding the composition the


half of
first

is

more

fruitful than
is

of erotica. It

as

though

the erotic imagination had exhausted

itself in

the period of the

Enlightenment and the Revolution, and required a long breathing


space to recruit
its

constitution; or to vary the metaphor, the


lie

much-

worked
partially

field

had to

fallow for almost half a century, or be only

and lightly cultivated, so that in the second half of the

century energetic and ambitious cultivators might again reap


plenteous harvest from
it.

There were

a very considerable

number

of writers and only the most important will be considered.


will first consider the Symbolist novelists D'Aurevilly

We

and Huys-

mans. After that

we

shall cast a

glance at Musset, Gautier, Stendhal

and Hugo.
school,

We

shall

then tarry a

moment with

Flaubert and his

Maupassant and Zola.

And

the chapter will close with a

statement concerning the symbolist poets, Verlaine and Baudelaire.

The

Diaboliques of Barbey d'Aurevilly (1874)


literature,
its

still

remains
it is

one of the masterpieces of modern French

but

only

known in castrated

editions.

At the time

of
a

appearance

it

aroused

great interest and opposition. Aurevilly

is

very remarkable writer,


late

one of the most powerful representatives of


ticism.

French roman-

His work

is

characterized

by

dazzling wit, psychological

observation, a wonderful flow of talk, and a panurgic joy in the

coarsely physical, erotically mysterious and perverse. In these

253

THE EEOTIC HISTORY OF FMANCE


stories

he

let

himself go

all

the way.

The

six tales

were so open

and unvarnished that they could not be distributed, but were


immediately confiscated because of immorality and blasphemy.

When

Aurevilly was taken to task, he naturally declared that he


profit

had not wished to

by

the ribaldry of his readers, but that he


to exert a moral effect.

had on the contrary, desired


sired to lash vice,

He

had de-

he

asserted,

and had therefore, been compelled

to remain true to

life.

His story was believed, but the remaining


less confiscated,

480 copies of his work were none the


approval.
It is difficult

with

his

to transmit the flavor of these devilish stories

which

are fiendish in their cruelty, their horrible ingenuity, in their

overtones of the demonic world which swathes about us, and of

which we hear echoes


fire

in the ecstasies of sex.

When the senses are a-

with

sex,

we are somehow brought

near to the elemental flames

of the universe, blazing murkily in the primeval chaos and flaring

with undiminished heat and unmitigated destructiveness beneath


the thin layer of cosmic, orderly coolness.
sion of eternal depths
It is this

weird apprehenits

and flames

in eternity,

and in

tiny cinders,

which

are the children of men, that Aurevilly scores his greatest

victories.

Who
woman

can ever forget that monstrous story of that


of inextinguishable
is

beautiful

lusts,

who

burns perpetually

with the diabolical flame? She

the wife of a general and ac-

companies him upon

his military expeditions

and while

battles

are being fought or campaigns planned, she hurls one

man

after

another upon her flame.


tion with an old lover

One night she is apprehended in an

assigna-

who

has

come with

a formal message but

has remained for an altogether different business.

The

general

berates his spouse for her wantonness, and hints that he has heard

rumors of her incessant and promiscuous venereal


to fury, she informs

practices.

Stung

him that the child she had born him and which
254

BOOK

IV:

THE NINETEENTH CENTUEY


its

had but recently met

death, even that

was not the

general's,

but

the fruit of her lust with the lover just departed. She informs
too that
it

him

when

the child had died she had cut out

its

heart and kept


rage,

in a beautiful casket as a perpetual

memento. In demoniac

she

now

rushes to this casket and hurls her child's heart at the

general, the supposed father.

demented
blinded
child!

figures, a

What a frightful scene! Two partially woman charred by many lusts and a man
furies,

by elemental
is

hurling at each other the heart of a

But the end

even more demoniac.

an orgy of berserker rage beats his wife


despite her terrible shrieks, melts
death.

The crazed general in down with his feet, and


her,

wax upon

burning her to

Thus

the hellish fire in her

is

quenched forever.

In this connection

In his novel Ld-bas

we should also mention Joris Karl Huysmans. (Down There) he scores the emotional poverty

of our time and his imagination looks hungrily at the religious and
Satanic ecstasies of the middle ages.

He

creates Gilles de Rais, a

problematic nature
of daily
life,

who

dissatisfied

with the even monotony


life

brings emotional content into his

with murder

and sexual

excesses.

There

are

many

crass scenes in this novel

and Huysmans gives

a stark characterization of his hero persecuted

by

erotic spectres, obsessed

by

satyriasis. "It

appeared
his

as

though

nature

grew

sick in his presence


first

and that

mere proximity

corrupted her. For the

time he understood the uncleanness of


festi-

the immoble existence of forests, and discovered the priapic


vals in the life of
as a living being,

deep dark woods. Here the tree appeared to him

head

down dug

into the earth with tufts of

its

roots, feet

on high, straddled and branched out onto ever new


are continually opening

thighs,

which

up and getting

smaller the

further

away they
is

are
in

from the stem.

Now it

appears that another

bough

rammed
is

between these

legs in

an immoble orgiastic

writhing which

transmitted from branch to branch until the

255

THE EEOTIC HISTOKY OF FMANCE


very top. There the shaft seems to be a phallus which has become
erect and

which disappears into a skirt of


from
a

foliage; or

on the contrary

shoots out
earth.

green coat into the over-stuffed abdomen of the

Images confuse him. In the pale and smooth bark of the


trees,

long-stemmed beech

he saw again the skin of boys,

alit

with

their parchment-like whiteness. In the black

and grooved barks of

the old oaks he discerned the deeply fissured elephantine skin of


beggars.

At
in

the knots where the branch forked out,

little

openings

yawned
animals.

which the bark


filthy

rolled

up

in ovals, these apertures re-

minded him of

rectums or the small gaping genitals of female


arose out of the earth and

Everywhere obscene forms

shot

up madly toward the heavenly


which disseminate
These
all

vault.

That too became

satanic.

Clouds swell to huge


penes,
seeds.

breasts, split into buttocks, swell into

immense

their contents in

wide showers of milky


forest,

correspond to the sultry revelries of the

where nothing remains but the images of


gaping wounds, moist excretory

giant or branched thighs,

the feminine deltas, the form of the great V, sodomite mouths,


orifices."

And

here

is

a later excerpt:

"By and

large,

everything here
has the

below, runs into the act which you refuse.

The heart which

reputation of being the most noble constituent of man, has the

same form
it is

as the penis

which

is

supposed to be a lower organ.

And

extremely symbolic, for


it.

all

love of the heart culminates in that

organ which resembles

When
it

the

human

imagination seeks to

vitalize artificial creatures,

has to take models from the motions

of living creatures in the act of procreation.


at the

Look

at machines,

play of pistons in cylinders; what are these but steel

Romeos
law

in cast-iron Juliettes,

The

varieties of

human

expression are in no
is

wise different from the motions of our machines. This

which one must do homage


holy."

to, if

one

is

to be neither impotent nor

256

BOOK

IV:

THE NINETEENTH CENTURY

What a feeling for nature and a living of oneself into her moods! What a contiguity with, and strange comprehension of, apparently inorganic matter! And what philosophical absorption in the vague
mysteries of sexual impulses and instincts even in the domain of

the non-living.

It

needs only a development of these thoughts to

make an

eroticon par excellence, but

Huysmans' work was

strictly

limited for he

was

a psychopathic case, with the peculiar visions

and obsessions characteristic of such types.

ALFRED DE MUSSET

We have already remarked about Alfred de Musset's


erotic story,

(1810-1856)

Gamiani, to the effect that while in the company of

number

of Bohemians, the conversation turned to the inferiority


It

of current erotic literature.

was maintained that no one could


quanti-

write that sort of


ties.

work without using obscenities in profuse


this

Musset disputed

and offered to prove the contrary. Three

days later he read his Gamiani before his friends, a book which
describes everything without employing a single indecent word.

truer explanation of the genesis of this

work

holds

it

to

be a

pamphlet directed against Musset's erstwhile

mistress,

George Sand.

In 1834 the lovers had undertaken a trip to Venice,

where poor
Sand
is

Musset became sick with brain fever. During


said to

his illness

have been unfaithful to him with a certain

Italian, for

which
Musset

reason Musset left her.


late the report that

The abandoned woman now began to circu-

he was impotent.

To

revenge

this,

represented Sand as Gamiani, the tribadist. This version of the


story
is

also

found in the Memoirs of a Singer. But the


first

first

one

is

much more likely to be true since the

edition of

Ga?mani bears

the date 1833, one year before the journey to Venice.

Not only

is

there a dispute about the real motive for the writing of this novel,

257

THE EROTIC HISTORY OF FRANCE


but a number of distinguished authorities have expressed the doubt
that

Musset was the author of the book, which


exhibits
all
it

is

absurd.

The

work

the peculiarities of Musset's style. Secondly, he


off to a
it.

himself showed
lascivious

number of his

friends,

and even provided

drawings for

And

finally, as

long as he lived the book


this attribution.

was attributed to him, and he never once denied

Through an

indiscretion the manuscript fell into the hands of a

publisher at Brussels

who issued it

with colored lithographs. Today

there are countless translations and reprints of the work, one of

the high spots of French pornographic literature.

Here is

a brief summary of the plot.

At a house

ball

Baron Alcide,
dis-

becoming suspicious of Gamiani, the mistress of the house,


covers that she
is

a lesbian.

He determines
girl

to eavesdrop

on

her,

and

hides himself in an alcove behind some clothes. Presently Gamiani


enters with Fanny, a

young

of seventeen.

The

latter doesn't
is

know how
sight.

to get

home

in the pouring rain since

no coach

in

Hence

she accepts Gamiani's hospitality for the night.


flattery

The

latter

overcomes Fanny's opposition with


hastily.

and tenderness,

and proceeds to undress her

When

both are completely


lust.

undressed Gamiani can no longer restrain her


desires break through.

Her

tribadic

Fanny

is

at first frightened,

but at length

in her sensual excitement surrenders to the fierce manipulations

of her hostess. Alcide,

who

has observed everything from his con-

cealment

now

springs out and hurls himself on Fanny, despite


fill,

the attack of Gamiani. After he has had his

they are reconciled

amid

a lot of erotic playing.

Now

Gamiani narrates how she has

come by her abnormal


in a

tendencies.

As

a girl she had been placed


all

nunnery by her

aunt.

Once,

after a frightful flagellation,

the

monks had taken

their desire of her;

and since that time she


tell

has had an antipathy to men.


their earliest love adventures,

Then
258

the others

the stories of
erotic scenes

which motivate the most

BOOK

IV:

THE NINETEENTH CENTUEY

of normal love and abnormal perversions. Finally, Gamiani mixes


a poisonous love potion for herself and Fanny, and ends their lives
in a

mad embrace

before Alcide can

come

to their help.

THEOPHILE GAUTIER
In his Mile, de Maiipi?i, Gautier
(
1

87 2 ) sought to ape Gamiani.

Maupin is too well-known to require any


little

description here. Gautier's

novel. This

One and
its

That, aroused so

much

opposition

among

the strait-laced, with


scenes, that
it

open-hearted representation of erotic

was

confiscated. Furthermore, Gautier

was recog-

nized as the author of a primitively powerful eroticon in the form


of a travel diary
certain

which he wrote

to a

woman

friend in Paris, a

of his

Madame Sabatier to whom Baudelaire also dedicated a cycle poems. Madame Sabatier, who lived in the Rue Frochot,
artists,

received only

and every Saturday most of her friends would

foregather at dinner. Gautier, Flaubert, Baudelaire and


nier

Henry Mongallantries

were her regular

guests.

She would have none of

and desired that the most abstract and serious subjects be discussed
in her

company. For

this reason

they gave her the nickname of


all

president

which she wore with

possible grace

and inimitable

charm. Gautier called

his travel diary: Lettre a la Fresidente.

Gautier's son-in-law

who

edited this Lettre says in his foreword,


letter

"with regard to the tone of the endeavored to tone down,


it

which

confess
its

have

must be remembered that


it;

author

was twenty-four years old when he wrote


to a friend

that

it

was directed
stress

who

belonged to the same romantic storm and

period with himself; and that he was accustomed to the ribald

tone of the
publication,

atelier.

Furthermore, the
it

letter

was not written for

which

seems almost superfluous to point out. Theoletters in his life,

phile Gautier

wrote two or three

more

to gain

259

THE EROTIC HISTORY OF FRANCE


practice in Rabelaisian coarseness that

was native

to him,

and

in the use of forbidden words, than out of base motives

which

might perhaps be suspected by some. Gautier sought to master the


language of the older Gallic narrators and dreamed of being able
to use
to, a
it

with lavish eloquence.

One

of the letters

have referred

record of a trip to

Italy, is entirely in the style of Rabelais,

and

the artists of our circle

who have read

it,

speak with great enthus-

iasm about

it."

These and other works of

his

which because of

their

erotic content could not be published in official collections,

were

issued separately in a very limited edition.

STENDHAL
Stendhal-beyle was
also

and

VICTOR

HUGO

an erotic writer. There are a number of

grounds leading us to conclude that he did engage in such activity


but none
is

quite conclusive.

When

he was but twelve years old


Felicia,

he read erotic works, particularly Nerciat's


Liaisons.

and Dangerous

He

tells all this

in his Vie de Brulard. "I

found ways and


a precious
I

means

to get into

my

father's library

where there was


I

collection of Elzevir editions, but alas!


tried to read a

understood no Latin.

few

articles in the

Encyclopedia but what was that


It is also

after the Felicia

and the

New Heloise^

known

that his

executor,

Romain Coulomb,

in his excessive discretion, burnt 282

passionate letters addressed to


Curial,

him by the Countess Clementine


ladies as well. In the library at

and very likely of other


is

Grenoble there

a manuscript designated

by number 5896 which

contains an unfinished and untitled erotic tale dated

famous and notorious


in congenial

as well as a teller of anecdotes.

He was When he was


1

80 1

company he would gladly recount little

intimate things.

One

constantly feared that at any instant he might tumble into

the steaming ordure of foulness, but suddenly he would give his

260

BOOK.
best.

IV:

THE NINETEENTH CENTURY

anecdote the most innocuous turn and everything would be for the

One

of these httle stories has been preserved in a collection

by

various authors edited

by Balzac

as

Gloomy

Stories.

Victor

Hugo

has occasionally been regarded as the author of an


is

obscene work, The Romance of Violet. Herein


of a fifteen year old servant girl

related the story


artist to

who

flees to

an

escape

the snares of her master. She


later as mistress.

first

serves the artist as


casts her

model and

young countess

eye upon the pretty

miss and initiates her into a lesbic cult; after

which the

artist

and

the

two

lesbians

form an

erotic trio. Violet goes

on the stage where

she develops her capacities and achievements.

Towards the end,


There

other tribadic scenes are enacted. This


like

is

obviously an eroticon
talent.

hundreds of others, one written without special


is

certainly

not a trace of Victor Hugo's style.

The

intense delight

depicted in the book of sapphic pleasures, makes one suspect that

women have been suspected; e.g., Countess Maurice de Boissiron or a Madame Querouen de Boussiron, but at this late day it is impossible to tell with certainty who the unknown author was. But that Victor Hugo had no hand in this tale is fairly certain. The attribution to him was certainly a shrewd
a

woman was the

author. Several

trick

by some publisher.

FLAUBERT, MAUPASSANT, ZOLA


Flaubert the
stylist,

acrobat, and the esthetic realist certainly did

not put blinkers on to escape erotic problems. His

Madame Bovary
deep

and The Holy Anthony of Padua are


interest in this field.

sufficient proof of his

The former

is

the story of an eccentric

woman

who

is

chained to a good but dull husband. She neglects her house-

hold, gallivants about with lovers, sinks ever


finally poisons herself. Flaubert

more deeply and


this novel,

was indicted for

but

261

THE EROTIC HISTORY OF FRANCE


was released because the court recognized
utterly moral in
all

that he

had remained

his descriptions..

He was

always truthful concerning others, and concerning him-

self as well.

His notebook demonstrates

this

and shows a number

of fairly strong erotic passages. This diary of Flaubert's was published in

Germany during

191

and despite the fact that the


and omitted

editor,

Wilhelm Herzog, weakened

several passages

num-

ber of others, both he and his publisher were indicted for disseminating immoral literature and fined fifty marks each.

At the Sunday
little

meetings of Flaubert, Zola, Daudet and Turgenieff there was


attempt at formality.
if

The

tone that reigned was that of Rabelais

not that of Villon, and spades were called

by name.

Flaubert's friends revelled in their literary productions, in the

depiction of fairly free situations. Maupassant particularly

showed

himself to be an idealizing realist in his works.

As

critical spirit

and cool observer of human weaknesses he naturally does not pass

by
his

the differentiated

phenomena of

sexual
built

life.

Indeed

many

of

works are saturated with sex and

up on the most intimate


establish the fact
if

relationships of both sexes.

A few examples will


is

that the experience of sex

primary for many

not most of his

work.

Who does not know the following stories? The comic efforts
woman to
drive

of the old peasant

away

the gallant

whom

she has

been supporting and

whom

she has given her tiny estate,

when

she discovers that he has been unfaithful to her.

The young abbe


cold mondaine

who

has been sent to chaperon three boys has to play the mid-wife
life

on the way. The

and doings in

a brothel.

The

who makes
her
if

her husband so wild

by her

seductive disrobing that


lie

he consents to her conditions, namely, that he can only he will pay her,
his wife, for her favors.

with

The

unfortunate

plight of a husband

who

suffers

much

because he must love too

much, and

his

subsequent improvement after he provides his wife

267

BOOK
and they are

IV:

THE NINETEENTH CENTURY


lover. All these

with a sturdy, powerful


just a tiny

themes are soaked in

sex,

sampling of the vast production of

this

prolific raconteur.

He

tells

of the petty adventures of the pretty


pleasure; of the
little sailor

modiste in her hunt for


girl,

money and

when

the four fathers of her still-born baby, promise to

make

another for her; of the hermit

own natural
of lovers

daughter;

who unwittingly cohabits with his of a lesbian, who drives her lover to suicide

because of her tribadic impulses.

He

shows the surprise of

a pair

who

have forgotten to bolt the door.

He

describes the

romantic desire of an aging good philistine

woman

to have at least
at

one

idyllic

moment

in her

life;

and the

first

heroism of a boy

boarding school
desires,

who wins

as his mistress not the flapper of his

but the dormitory mother. In thoroughly serious and fact-

ual fashion

he discusses the problem of undesired motherhood.

He

depicts with masterful conciseness the frivolous conception of


marital fidelity entertained

by

a distinguished matron,
is

who winks

from her window to a passing man because such


the prostitute across the way.

the fashion of

When the man comes up in acknowlway out but


of giving

edgment of her
herself to him.

signal, she

can find no other

In their diary under February

17, 1882,

the brothers Goncourt

have an entry expressive of their


hypocrisy of certain
that he had,
critics.

irritation

with the dishonest

One

of these gentry had asserted

much

against his will, taken a peep at the


at the

works of

Marquis de Sade. But


that this very critic

same time Maupassant informed them,

had requested him to obtain for him a supply


certain Belgian publishers.
task. It

of

bawdy books from

The

question

arises

why

Maupassant was given the

seems reasonable

to suppose that the critic suspected that Maupassant

had some

predilection for, and


ductions,

some knowledge
also

of, this

type of literary pro-

and that he

had certain connections with publishers


263

THE EROTIC HISTOEY OF FEANCE


of porneia. This

would lead us

to suppose that either

Maupassant
his friends

himself was a lover of erotic literature, or that

among

he was known to be active in


position
is

this field. Actually, the

second sup-

true.

There is a grotesque eroticon from his pen called The


Pinchon and the manuscript

Turkish House which was never printed. This work was written
in collaboration with Robert
is

in

the possession of Maupassant's uncle the painter,


piece
is,

Le

Pottevin.

The

according to the admission of the author, "horribly init

decent" and a Parisian journal characterized


to

as

"bawdy enough
is

make

a sargeant blush".

The Turkish

house

a brothel

and

Maupassant, the brothel master. This piece was enacted in 1875


in the studio of the painter Leloir,

and in 1877,

in the studio of

another painter Becker. Flaubert, Turgenieff, Zola and others were


spectators. Zola

remained earnest, Turgenieff applauded, Flaubert

refreshed himself with the coarse jesting.


Lazier, protested
passant, the eight

A female spectator, Suzane


Mauwith masks on.

and

left

the room. According to a letter of


in the cast appeared

women

The

remembrance of the marvelous


to

frivolity of this piece

was

so vivid

Edmond

de Goncourt that thirteen years


it.

later his conversation

would occasionally revert to

Two more
of

works

sail

under Maupassant's name.

First,

The Girl
sisters,

Cousins of the Colonel^ which contains the story of two

whom

one

is

married to a weak husband and the other


is

lives

with a

man

out of wedlock and

disillusioned

by her

experience.

The

really erotic scenes are thinly


is

sowed over throughout the


greatest moderation.
this

book and everything

drawn with the

Maubook.

passant himself absolutely denied


It is likely that

any connection with

the book was written

by

the same hand that wrote

The Romance of Violet, Countess Maurice de Boissiron, an intimate friend of George Sand, Both volumes manifest the author's constant
predilection for tribadic scenes.

264

BOOK
The second

IV:

THE NINETEENTH CENTUHY


is

novel attributed to Maupassant

called

The Advendetermining

tures of a Parisian Cocotte.

There

is

no way

at all of
it.

Maupassant's authorship but


still

many have assumed


a

When

he was

young and unknown, he composed

number

of ultra-realistic

erotic novels.

He was impelled to produce this type of literature not


his

merely because of

marked tendencies

to erotic representations,

which appears

so strongly in his recognized immortal masterpieces,

but also because he needed money; and an

unknown author can

always find a publisher in Paris for this sort of thing

much more
is

readily than for his serious works. Nevertheless, the book


fully done,

master-

and

if

Maupassant was the author he did not have to

be ashamed of
interesting
,

this natural child.

The book

is

an uncommonly

even fascinating, picture of metropolitan morality, rich

in remarkable figures, extraordinary events

and

thrilling action.

All gallant Paris at about 1880 passes in review before our eyes.

We become acquainted with the boudoir of a distinguished cocotte, and the separees of aristocratic restaurants. We catch glimpses behind the curtains of great varietes, and of those night quarters

which serve the needs of

fugitive gallantry.

We

see the grand

cocotte, the highly paid prostitute

who

seeks her clients only in

high society.

We see the addicts of lesbian love cults; the journalist


how
to

who

understands

make

all

gallant ladies favorably disposed


sacrifices

to him; the spendthrift banker

who

thousands to his perjust

verse desires; the clever


to rip her tights, etc.

little ballet

dancer

who knows
all

when

The

relationships of

these people are

drawn with great

realistic fidelity

and psychological understanding.


his

Emile Zola belonged to the Flaubert-Maupassant group. In

youth he wrote

a little eroticon in the style of Lafontaine called

The Devilish Hermit,

in

which he very

successfully copied the

pleasing style of the good abbe.


in erotic situations
is

That

Zola's general

works abound

known

to every one.

Take

for instance the

265

THE EROTIC HISTORY OF FRANCE


grandiose scene in Germinal
Maigrat.

when

the old

women unman the

dead

Now they heard the piercing voice of the Brule woman: "We must mutilate him like a tomcat".
"Yes, yes!

Out upon the

tomcat.

Out with

the tomcat.

He

has done too much, the filthy fellow."

Already Mouquette was opening his trousers and pulling them off, while Levaque raised the feet of the dead man. Now Brule spread apart the thighs of the corpse, and seized with the fleshless hands of old women its genitories. She got hold of everything and tore with such force that her dry old spine bent and her long arms cracked. The soft fleshy parts resisted. She had to grab hold again and finally tore, tore everything out, tore the whole mass out, a filthy bleeding bundle of flesh which she swung in the air with a cry of triumph. "I have it, I have it". Yawping voices greeted the monstrous trophy with insults. "Now you dog, you shall no longer fill the bellies of our
girls."

"Now everything is out. We shall no longer be forced to hold


your buttocks for a piece of bread."

"Hey you, I owe you two francs. Do you want to have somewant it right now, if you can still do it." These jests filled them with horrible gayety. They showed each other the bleeding bundle as though it were a wild animal from which they had all had to suffer and which now, finally, they had in their power, dead. They spat upon it, thrust out their chins at it and repeated their mockery in wild
thing on account?
I

expressions.

"He can no longer do it, he can no longer do it. This is no more a man which will now be hurled into the earth. Now rot,
you
useless dog."

Brule stuck the whole bundle on her stick and holding it on high as though it were a flag, began to move followed by the

howling horde of women. Drops of blood fell from it and the lump of flesh dangled from the stick like a piece of refuse meat hangs from the butcher's table.
366

BOOK
If

IV:

THE NINETEENTH CENTURY


all

one were to compile

the passages of Zola's

work

that

do not

correspond to squeamish

taste,

one would obtain an integral work


fall

of gross obscenity which

would undoubtedly

a prey to the

censor. Curiously enough, this attempt at compilation

was actually

made
Zola

in France.

Towards the

close of 1896 a second-hand dealer,


title

Antoine Laporte by name, issued a compilation under the


agaijist Zola. It

contained

all

the most daring and realistic

scenes of Zola's writings in some sort of order. This anthology

was adorned with

a frontispiece of exquisitely refined taste.

A mass

of chamberpots have been set

up

against the edifice of the forty

Academicians and are blocking the


bears the
If

way

to

it.

Each of

these pots

name of
is

a writing of Zola.

Zola

raw

to the point of disgust, if


life, if

he wallows in the monif

strosities of

human

he fears no stench,
are omitted

he permits

his

characters to

employ words that

from ordinary
illusions.

lexicons,

he

is

never lascivious.

He knows

no bawdy

He

does not

raise curtains half

way and

invite the imagination to

complete the
it

process. If

he has something to say or show, he says and shows

with the rawness of truth and indignation.

FAUL VERLAINE
Paul Verlaine (1844- 1896) has given us in his famous poetry, verse of overwhelming power and natural charm. There is something unFrench in his naturalness, and that
so fond of the emotional
is

why

foreigners are

warmth and

truth in his work. But these

famous poems
ated Verlaine.

in the official collections are not the

whole unadulter-

To

be able to form a correct judgment of the

man
are

one must

also read his secret books.

Having done the

latter,

we

constrained to admit that he

would have remained nearer

to us
is

had we been spared the other

side of his poetical creation. It

267

THE EKOTIC HISTOEY OF FBANCE


not the fact that Verlaine was an erotic writer that puts us out of

humor, but that

this factitious eroticism explodes

Hke

a cold fire-

cracker, and does not break forth mightily like a hot stream of
lava

from some glowing


his character.

interior. It
is

is

this

which

casts a

shadow

upon

Les Amies

a series of six extremely candid

sonnets
It is

which

treats of the sapphic exercises of

two budding
its

girls.

delightful despite the passionate eroticism because of

magsenti-

nificent

rhythm. These poems, wonderfully delicate in their

ment, will not obscure the picture of the poet. But what of the
collection,

Men

and Women, which appeared clandestinely

in

Verlaine's last years? Stefan Zweig, the best student of Verlaine's

work, holds that in these works Verlaine takes


greatest pornologists of
tradition of the
all

his place

among

the

time.

He

has sharply broken with the


to record
are,

charming ribaldry of Grecourt and Piron

with unparalled shamelessness, subjective pornography.


despite their
elation, the

They

smooth form, the most repulsive in their


arts,

self-rev-

most complete lexicon of perverse

the most brutal

in realistic representation.
at

The sexual

gaminerie of Verlaine which,

an

earlier stage of his life in the Fetes Galantes,

was frequently

able to unite with the tender sentiment of his sensitive soul a


coquettish, panurgic, lascivious sort, has here

become naked and


an old

utterly obscene. It

is

infinitely tragic, this spectacle of

man
for a

on the

hospital

lists

writing with uncertain and trembling hand


his vices

these pitiful

rhymes about

and past nakedness,


absinthe.

all

few

francs with

which
cul,

to

buy some

And

just as the

poem, Le trou de

written together with Rimbaud, and repro-

duced in the pederastic book Hombres, destroyed the legend of


a purely psychic and ethereal friendship, so too the existence and
distribution of these books banishes the fable of the "pure fool".
It is all

too pitiful, but the immortal singer

still

retains the

sympathy

of

all

great poets and writers.

26S

BOOK
Femmes was

IV:

THE NINETEENTH CENTUMY


London and Verlaine got
few
copies
latter
it.

published in 1890 in

twelve pounds sterling for

As can

well be imagined, the edition

was almost immediately confiscated

so that only a

were

sneaked away. Hombres too was confiscated. In the


all

work

those

poems were

unified that sprang

from the love experience

of Verlaine with Arthur Rimbaud, and are therefore songs of


praise in

honor of uranic

love. All these shamelessly erotic

poems

{Amies, Femmes, Hombres) were later united and published.

CHARLES BAUDELAIRE
By the
side of Verlaine

we might

fittingly place the poet of deca-

dence, of the abnormal, Charles Baudelaire.

He

regarded divinity

and love

as

merely welcome texts from which to derive stimulus

for inhumanly smooth and satanically cool poems. Concepts re-

versed themselves for him and good became bad, and evil became
ideal.

In his Flowers of Evil there stands revealed his morbid mania,


the ugly and hateful the subject of poetry. Yet he cannot
as

to

make

really

be regarded

an erotic writer even though he extols Venus

imlgivaga in his poetry, though not exactly in the same measure


as Verlaine. Six
as

poems in the first

edition of this

work were branded


all

immoral by the police and had to be expurgated from

future

editions. Nevertheless, Baudelaire printed

them

privately together

with some

satirical

poems

in the

volume Epaves, which Rops prois

vided with a frontispiece. This volume

practically non-existent

today but other editions have been reprinted often.

maid complains
rise to a

in

midsu?nmer "how

The poem,
he was

long will love last?"

gave

wide-spread pornographic parody.

When

only twenty-one, Baudelaire chose

as the epitaph suitable for

him

who had hurried to the worms too soon because he had fooled with women too much."
some doggerel
to the effect that "here lay a fellow

269

THE EROTIC HISTOMY OF FMANCE


Baudelaire had a great love for erotic literature of
all

sorts as

appears from a letter of his to his publisher in 1865. "Thanks for

having informed

me

about the price of Sade's Justine and where


it.

could possibly find

would

also like to

know

the price of

Aphrodite, and what in your opinion are the characteristic moral

and
laire

literary qualities of

such slop?

You may

ask

what does Baude-

want with

this

has enough spirit the information


believes
I

The said Baudelaire to study crime and vice in his own heart. Well, want from you is intended for a great man who
package of excrement?
is

he can study crime in other people." This reference

to

Sainte-Beuve
that

who once asked Baudelaire for one of the dirty poems


publisher.

had appeared in the publishing house of Poulet-Malassis,

Baudelaire's

own

CHAPTER XIX
PUBLISHERS OF EROTICA

THE publication of
liable to

erotic

books has meant


if

at all times great risks

for both author and publisher, for

discovered both

would be

hard punishment.

It is

remarkable that these dangers did


jail

not have an intimidating effect, that large monetary and

sen-

tences just did not impede the propagation of this literature.

The

author generally does not lose very


confiscated.

much when

his writings are

But much more

is

at stake for the publisher.

Under

certain circumstances he

saw the foundation of his business endang-

ered

when the entire

edition of a pornographic
his fortune fell a

work

into

which he

had sunk a portion of

prey to the censor.


fully

And

yet

there were innumerable booksellers

who though

aware of

these dangers continually sought to outwit the law.

What was

the attraction? Surely the chief motive was the desire to earn
large and quick profits, for obscene books
a higher price than

must always obtain

any other kind of reading matter. There are

several reasons for this: the fact that they are prohibited, that they
titillate

the senses, that they can serve as a help in seduction, that

they are good investments for their value increases with the passage
of time, and occasionally such books are sold at very high prices
indeed. But this economic

moment
if

alone will not serve to explain

everything satisfactorily. For


profits

the publisher or bookseller reaps


is

from the

sale of

one product, he

exposed to great

loss if

some other of these books should be


271

confiscated. It appears likely

THE EROTIC HISTORY OF FRANCE


that there

was also a very strong bibliophilic

interest

which impelled
of value, what-

the daring publishers to offer a

home

to

new books
garb.

ever their eroscenic nature, or to pluck certain old books from


oblivion

by

reprinting

them

in

worthy

There was

also a

degree of spiritual relationship between the publisher and his


authors,

which impelled the former

to gather

around him people

who were
to obtain a

of similar taste for erotics, facetiae, curiosa, and thus

more accessible market for his more tolerable publications.

A half dozen of the most important French publishers of erotica


in the last century will
1.

now be

mentioned.
a carpenter

Felix Regnier-Becker,

bom Mem, was


own

by

trade.

In 1829 he issued a collection of his


lished

verses

and in 1830 puba penalty of three

The Siege

of Paradise. This brought

him

months' imprisonment and a fine of 300 francs. However, a certain


journal took

up

a collection for

him which was


had a tidy

so successful
little

that he could not only

pay the

fine but

sum

left,

with which he became a bookdealer.

He devoted himself to the pro-

mulgation of obscene books and put more than a hundred of these


into circulation. Indictments

and penalties against him multiplied

but the more the persecutions increased, the greater became his
bookselling activities. Nothing further
2.
is

known

of his later

life.

Jules

Gay was

a vagrant bookseller.

He

lived first at 41

quai des Grands-Augustins, Paris, but fled to Belgium to escape

punishment. In 1865 he became a partner of a Belgian publisher,


Mertens. Later he
left Brussels secretly

and

we

find

him sucfinally in

cessively in Geneva, Turin,

Nice and San Remo, and

Brussels again

where he formed a new firm with a

Mile. Douce.

In

87 1 he founded the Soviet e des bibliophiles cosmopolites whose

only members, however, were himself and his son Jean,


a small

who opened

bookshop in Turin in 1875. The senior

Gay was very active,

particularly in the

domain of

erotica.

His chief interest was not

272

BOOK

IV:

THE NINETEENTH CENTURY


works but
in the reprinting of

in the publication of original

famous

masterpieces of erotic literature, which he sent out into the small

world of bibliophiles in exceedingly

fine editions. Naturally

he

frequently ran afoul of the law which could not understand his
aims,

which were

ideal

from the standpoint of the

bibliophile.
his identity

In order to escape persecution.


at least in the

Gay was careful to hide


as a general rule,

most daring books; but

he gave the

child of his firm, his


lated his books

own

name, or that of Gay-Douce.

He

circu-

from one of the metropolitan centers

listed above.

As
of a

the illustrator for his books,


less

Gay had

the virtuoso Felicien

Rops who was himself more or

responsible for the publication

number of books

in this genre

and was himself,

bookworm.

Besides

women,

his art

and flowers, he loved nothing more than

to brouse about old books.


later published, e.g..

Many

of these

were found by him and

The

sieur

Roch, and

others.

The Devotions of MonAll the books, about 70, which Rops illustSatirical Cabinet^

rated

were more or

less erotic,

some

in the quarrelsome,

humorous
and

old Flemish style,

many

in the gallant forms of the eighteenth,

the rest in the decadent style of the ninteenth century. All his

engravings which were the products of a ripe


It is difficult to

artist,

refer to

women.

say whose influence was greater: that of contem-

porary literature upon Rops, or the influence he exerted upon the


writing of his contemporaries

who began

to write about
colors.

women
pay

as

he represented her in

his lines

and planes and

Gay was

indicted several times, and in 1863 he had to

fine of 100 francs

and

suff^er

the confiscation of his books.

Two

years later he again appeared before the court, this time in the

company
months
trials in

of other publishers.

He

was accused of being the pub-

lisher of 38 erotic

and obscene books, and was sentenced to four


fine.

in

jail

and 500 francs

Gay

himself reported these

work which he published


273

in a limited edition of but 100

THE EROTIC HISTORY OF FRANCE


copies. In this

he does not polemize against

his sentence

but merely

sets forth the reasons that

induced him to become a fervent lover

of clandestine literature and an inveterate bibliophile, and hence


to undertake the publication of these
3.

and other confiscated works.

Another publisher sentenced

at the

same time with


jail

Gay was
fine,

Poulet-Malassis
in

who

received one year in

and 500 francs'

punishment for the 86 erotica he had sent into the world, and

the unscrupulousness that characterized this distribution. Undoubt-

edly monetary motives were paramount with him, but even he

was

definitely a bibliophile.

His de luxe edition of the

classics

was

a terrible failure to

and well-nigh ruined him.

Now he was

compelled

move

to the suburbs, to Ixelles,

where Baudelaire

lived,

and to

take a small house

among

the philistines. Bibliographic interests

and the very natural


take

desire to

recoup

his fortunes impelled

him

to

up the publishing and


little

reprinting of piquant works.


his

Here

the

slender

man

sat

bent over

manuscripts and proofs,

indefatigable and indomitably ambitious, and supervised the editions that

were

to bring the choicest products to the small

com-

munity of booklovers. Baudelaire gave him encouragement and


stimulus;

and Poulet succeeded in obtaining the active cooperation


artist,

of the distinguished

Rops. These delightful

little

books wan-

dered into the world on strong China or Holland paper, in very


limited editions.

The most

fruitful

year was 1864, which saw the

publication of about a dozen classics.


4.

In the eighties, the

work

of

Gay was

carried

on by

Isidore

Liseux. In
for

him

too the bibliophile was superior to the tradesman,


as

what merchant would expose himself to

many

hazards as

did Liseux? His editions are as


5.

much

sought after today as Gay's.

Kistemaecker in Brussels

is

at the opposite pole

from Liseux.
at all coarse

He cultivated pure pornography. Everything that was


and
offensive,

be the contents

solid or froth,

was meat

for Kiste-

274

BOOK

IV:

THE NINETEENTH CENTUMY

maecker. His obscene productions were smuggled over the border


to provide France with saucy stuff.
6.

At

the turn of the century a successor

who

followed in the

footsteps of

Gay and

Liseux, established himself in Paris, Charles

Carrington by name, an Englishman. In excellent editions, provided

with prefaces, he issued, both in English and French, the most

famous erotica of the world


that he was,

at a

cheap

price.
his

True

bibliophile

no

erotic

product was outside

domain: anthro-

pology, chronicles of scandal, flagellation, original gallant literature,


scientific
official

works on

sex, etc.

Charles Carrington was harassed


Liseux.

by

chicaneries even

more than Gay or

He

died after

the

World War.
(

A word will be in order about Felicien Rops


we
have mentioned several times
erotic books.

183 3- 1898),

whom

as the illustrator of

numerous

This Flemish

artist,

of colossal strength, found in

Paris the world's center of the striving after pleasure.

From
that

the

wealth of experience he had here and the multitude of sights that

came under
life

his eyes, the notion crystallized in his

mind

all

and thought centered around woman.


silk,

He
is

loved the Parisian

mixture of

nerves and

powder with eyes greatly enlarged


nothing more ravish-

through the application of cosmetics. There


ing, colorful, or gallant

than the plastic Decameron of elegant

Paris

which Rops undertook.

He

looked everywhere and saw


*/

everything.

And
left

every

woman

that he represented he undressed,

but always

her some bit of clothing: a pair of hose, a panty, a

corset; anything to
pilloried

make her nakedness more titillating. Rops

often

modern woman, representing her as a prostitute, with bony


whose tremendous power
It is

body, with eyes staring and made wild by alcohol, with protruding
jaws; a prostitute
is

a mixture of base

and lusting elements.

the sexual

life

destroyed and poisoned

by

a depraved morality that speaks to us through the

medium

of

275

THE EEOTIC HISTORY OF FKANCE


Rops' intellectual
revengeful
art.

He

represents the lurid tragedies of love of


passion dotes

women, whose

on the strong spice of

sadistic feeling;

and by her

side, in his inexhaustible gallery of

modem women,
is

those grinning children of lust

whose prototype

that street

Venus bursting with power and


Rops descended

strength, appearing
into the hell of the in

in the picture Pornocraty.

brothel and cheap tavern to

show us the women


of disintegration.

whom

im-

morality has begun


seated

its

work

by

the endless

monotony

of their
flat

Weary and naumetier, these women for


stale,

whom
uge

the beaker of lust has

become

and

have taken

ref-

in absinthe,

which

still

leaves

them a few

pitiful illusions,

and

confers

upon them an

artificial

happiness, and the

meagre

intoxicain

tion of forgetfulness.

Hollow-eyed they he there before us

expectation of the routine embrace, with just a rag of a shirt to

cover the nakedness of their withering body, washed out, enervated Messalinas.

He

shows us these unfortunate creatures on the


progress of their ruin makes

inexorable decline.

The

them confused
of alcohol

and wasted drunkards in whose eyes only the

fire

glimmers; or they become that mercilessly emaciated

woman whose
flesh into

type he draws for us in Mors syphilitica.


of the earthly goddesses,
fury, nothing
I

Of

all

the thrilling beauty


lash

which once could

male

once a

now remains but a woman, now is entirely


by
the foul profusion of

heap of human

ruins.

What was
now
is

debased, debauched, and disin-

tegrated

modem

perversities,

the

broken, shapeless, useless plaything of the devil hurled on the


rubbish heap to complete her decay.

Before
century,

we
let

get to the end of our forage into the nineteenth

us say a

little

about erotic theatres, particularly the


la Sante,

erotic theatre

on the Rue de

previously referred

to.

This

erotic theatre,
its rise

which

actually existed

from 1862 to 1864 owes

to a

drunken

jest.

In the circle of young bohemians some

276

BOOK
one got the idea

IV:
of,

THE NINETEENTH CENTUEY


little

creating a

puppet theatre for the amuse-

ment of
no
limits

few chosen
to

ones. Droll pieces

were

to be presented

and

were

be

set to the fancies

of the poets.

The

theatre

was

opened and

in the presence of twenty-five

young

authors, publishers

artists.

Among

the invited guests were Chamfleury, Monselet,

Daudet, and Poulet-Malassis. These presentations even found a


favorable review in the press.

Some

of the

comments were:

Still a

new theatre. An intimate theatre. Theatron eroticon that is, a theatre


with love arousing marionettes. But without excitation, and everything
is

held within moral bounds.

times been the guardians of

The harlequin thrusts have at all morality and when the mother cannot
this hospitable place will

bring her

little

daughter here,

become the

pleasurable gathering place of talented artists and

literati.

In order to afford the reader some notion of these plays a


the

few

of

more common ones


of

will be

summarized.
is,

The Eyes
license,
still

Love by Lemercier de Neuville

despite

its

erotic

very interesting psychologically. Sylvia, a brothel mistress

young, complains in a monologue that she must always further

the intimate relations between her girls and the visitors, while no

hour of love comes to her. For


"line"

this reason she decides to

go on the

once again. Luck

is

with her. Dorante, a famous pimp and


his

girl-dealer

wants to pay for

female flesh once, for a change.


her.

Since Sylvia pleases

him he follows

Deceived by

his fine

clothing she acquiesces to his terms of paying later. But his end

having been gained, the pander in him comes out and he

states

very brutally that in


tolerate
insist

his

own

house of prostitution he would not


she

such a one

as stupid as

who

did not

know enough

to

on payment before the deed.


desires,

Now Sylvia removes her mask,

avows her amorous


to

and proposes that he become her bully,

which he

assents.

Caprice by the same author deals with a married skirt-chaser

277

THE EEOTIC HISTOEY OF FEANCE


by
the

name of Florestan. He comes


Urinette, but she
is still

to a strumpet
toilette.

whose suggestive

name

is

at

her

In the introductory
fulfilling his
is

monologue he avers that he was on the point of


connubial function with his sleeping
tractive,
little

wife.

But variety

at-

and so he decides to go out and hunt up a new

vessel.

Hence he
suffers a

interrupts his siege to his wife and saves his ammunition

for later. But

when

the jade enters and tempts

him

to the act, he

shameful impotence. Urinette leaves him alone, raging mad.


his caprice

Soon Don Priapus shows


Urinette
is

and

rises to

new

life.

But

implacable and Florestan experiences a recrudescence

of moral scruples.
is

Why debauch away from home? True happiness


at

to be

found only

home.
is

Scapin by Glatigny

a peculiar sort of drama. Lucinde, the

daughter of Corbin and the betrothed of Pignouflard, does not

want

to

wash her private

parts.

The

father complains to Scapin,

a brothel master, about his troubles

whereupon the

latter offers

to bring about the girl's ablution if she will

come

to his institution.
visits
is

Corbin agrees.

By chance

the fiance of Lucinde

the brothel

and naturally meets

his bride.

The engagement

in danger of

being broken. Thereupon the master of the brothel brings in a tub with the bathwater, and the pestilential fumes stream out,
a sign that the girl
is

washing

herself. All

ends in harmony.

The Sign

of

Gold by Amadee Rolland and Jean Duboys has


as

been aptly designated


logical musical
tion, after

excrement by Deditius. This erotic scatois

comedy

in three acts

the best thing in the collecis

Monnier's contribution.

The Marquis who

growing
possible
artifices,
itself
is

old wants an heir to carry on his


effort to gain his end.

name and makes every

But he must have recourse to many


undescribed here.

which we
as

shall leave

The drama

occupies

much with

infidelities as

with excrement but the dialogue

carried out with considerable wit.

278

BOOK
describes

IV:

THE NINETEENTH CENTURY


of the Marriage^

The Anniversary

by Neuville and Duboys, two young and now honorably married women, despite
wanton
Hfe,

their earlier
in a separee. their

who

are expecting their former lovers

Memories

are exchanged. Both are dissatisfied with

husbands who do not understand


is

how to love. The only lovely


inis

thing

love between

women. They become more and more

timate and at the very

moment when

the waiter outside

ushering

the lovers

in,

both

women
of a

disappear in order to flee to Lesbos.

The Grisette mid the Student of Monnier has already been analyzed.

The Last Day

Grand Symphony
All in

of the

Condemned Man of Tisserand and The Bug of Neder and Bataille, possess neither
effort has

the wit nor the effectiveness of the others.


all,

one must admit that much

been expended
little justifica-

on such none too worthy dramas. There seems


tion for the expenditure of

to

be

money and intellectual

effort except as a

manifestation of French drama and thought during the nineteenth

century.

^e^e^e^s^^c^e^e^?

CHAPTER XX
VENUS VICTORIOUS

THIS

final

chapter will attempt to bring the erotic history of


It will

France up-to-date.
marital infidelities

show the wide-spread

eroticism and
altered the

among the

bourgeoisie and

how they

customs of the houses of prostitution which had been practically

unchanged since the birth of France,


also point out the significant

a thousand years ago. It will

consequences of the erotic movies,


brothels.

which have
history

also

become an indispensable part of

This

makes no pretence to go beyond the nineteenth century,


chapter

but in

this closing

we

shall treat

somewhat of twentiethand among

century France.

Venal love has been found

at all times

all

peoples,

and indeed

it

will continue to exist as long as social


life.

and economic

contrasts remain in national


capital of
life
its

Poverty compels youth to make/

body; indolence and the desire to lead a comfortable

without strenuous labor will always recruit the ranks of prostiis

tutes. Tliis fact

not altered

by

the circumstance that with the


the stigmatization of extra-4is

progressive emancipation of
marital intercourse has

women
it sets

begun

to disappear. It in the

true that our social

evolution with the difficulties


cially for those

way
class,

of marriage, espehas gradually a-

belonging to the middle

chieved some measure of recognition for the varied forms of pre-

and extra-marital sex

relationships. Indeed, this

development has
primitive

already progressed very

far. Prostitution still exists in that

280

BOOK
form which
it

IV:

THE NINETEENTH CENTUHY

has had for centuries, with one important difference;

the rigid boundaries erected between bourgeoisie and prostitution

have become more


as a higher stage of

flexible.

But

this

can scarcely be interpreted

moraUty.
in
all

Although the practices

the brothels of the world are

essentially the same, there are

some differences between the French

and those of foreign brothels. The satisfaction of the sheerly physical


need without any trace of emotional excitation, the practice most

common

in harbor brothels

is,

in Paris,

found only

in the

very

lowest dives. But the average prostitute in Paris wants to create the

impression at least that

it

was an impulse of the

heart,

be

it

ever

so ephemeral, that impelled her to give herself. This circumstance

probably has

its

ground

in the fact that


life is

among

the French, almost

/ the whole private and public


satisfaction
is

steeped in sex. Hence, physical


that appears suddenly and will
act.

not simply a

whim

be submerged by other interests immediately after the

The famous
olis

sexologist

Rohleder

who went through

the metrop-

of France with wide-open impartial eyes characterizes the

dominant atmosphere in most telUng words.

He

concluded that

one need only to have lived in Paris a very short while and to have
observed attentively, to realize

how everywhere

in public

life,

in

the larger and particularly the smaller theatres, varietes, cafes chantants, the

main boulevards, the restaurants down to the

vilest

absinthe dive, everything turns on the sexual.

What makes

every-

thing so easy
smaller and

is

the system of hotel quarters. There are thousands of


sized hostelries

medium

which

are available to couples

for a brief hour or so.


this clandestine

One must have seen how immensely large prostitution is, how here almost any kind of woman,
to the

from the honorable matron

maid and factory operative, give

themselves to a greater or less degree to this clandestine prostitution;

how

here at every

moment

of the

day and

in every section of the

281

THE EROTIC HISTOKY OF FRANCE


city sexual debauches are indulged,
art itself, serve the sexual.

how

almost

all

pleasure and

Let the stranger enter Paris from the


VEst. Unless
\vill
it is

Gare du Nord or the Gare de

very early in the

morning and even then the stranger

find immediate incitement

to sex, his attention will soon be riveted to sex.

He

has scarcely

alighted

from the train when he will, not uncommonly, be accosted

by

individuals

who

will volunteer to act as his guides

pour

les

amusements.

When
if

he arrives

at the hotel

he

may

have the ex-

perience of being smiled at most

warmly and

lovingly

by

the

filles

de chambre; and

he

is

too naive to understand their smiles or too

indifferent, these females will

inform him quite directly that they

are ready for an hour of love.


it is

When he goes to a restaurant, unless


is

a grand-cafe of the

most elaborate kind, he will very soon be


is

informed that white meat

on the menu, and which

ready for

consumption after

his meal.

When he goes to

an amusement place

he will be surprised

at the elegance

and luxury of the appointments;


itself.

and

also at the naturalness

with which prostitution manifests


is

But

in this respect Paris

like other great metropolitan centers,


travellers

which

cater to an

enormous contingent of

who

have to

be amused. Since Paris has long borne the odium of being the most

wicked

capital in the world,

it

must

strive to

do

justice to all tastes

in order to bring gold into the land.

But

this fact alone will

not

explain the overplus of prostitution. Indeed,

many

other motives

are at work, particularly the poor economic circumstances

which
under-

continually recruit the ranks of the daughters of joy.

The

paid salesgirls and shop clerks can practice prostitution as their

main vocation for quite


tutes.

a while without passing as official prostislight

However, only a

impetus will be necessary to push

them

in that direction. Sickness,

unemployment, domestic

quarrels,

trouble with the police,

all

are just a

few causes which may make


do

professional prostitutes out of clandestine ones. If these factors

2S2

BOOK
can
still

IV:

THE NINETEENTH CENTURY


traffic

not come into operation, then the

with one's corporeal charms

contribute a very appreciable addition to the otherwise


to the level of purchasable goods
is
is

meagre income. The sinking

rendered easy by the frivolity of the Parisienne which

inbred

and nurtured by the germs of seduction which enter every pore of


her body with the very air of Paris.

This frivolity of attitude to mate or lover,

this

gay evaluation

of marital fidelity, had necessarily to seek a vent through

which

the accumulated sexual tension could be relieved, and the

whereby
realize

woman
desires.

with an eye to financial remuneration could

her

The most convenient opportunity for these amusements

were offered by the maisons de rendezvous. This system of temporary quarters, in which the

woman who was

willing to

sell
all

her
the

body could enter and

leave secretly, offered to both sexes

opportunities and delights of intimate intercourse without subjecting either of the parties to the degrading feeling of venality.

The man, who had

to

pay a higher price for these goods than for

the usual prostitute, could enjoy the piquant feeling of having an

adventure with a good woman, while continuing to enjoy the


lure of the forbidden.

these occasional

The woman, on the other hand, earned from adventures some valuable pin money whereby she
little

could satisfy the extravagant wishes of her capricious

head

without molesting the purse of her legitimate consort. Talmeyr,

who visited

very

many

of these houses of rendezvous at the behest

\
\

of the police, has described his experiences in a book entitled:

TkeEnd of a Society: New Forms of


firms the fact that
it

Corruption in

Paris.

He

con-

was primarily the wish to earn

little

some-

thing from her escapade that impelled the

woman

to visit such

convenient houses of opportunity.


infrequently.

Some came

regularly, others

Whatever
all

class of society

they were recruited from,

they found here at

times and under the most discreet circum-

2S3

THE EROTIC MISTOHY OF FEANCE


stances whatever

sum they were

in

need

of,

the fifty or one

hundred francs of the

httle business to the 3,000 or 4,00 francs

of the big transaction, in return for the usufruct of their person.

But

we must

not forget the fact that


it

it

was men who were the


visited these maisons

patrons of these houses;

was they who

de

rendezvous to give free rein to their passions and


guaranteed the profitability of such establishments.
It is self

who

ultimately

evident that such houses needed

many

customers to
is

carry on.

The mania

of the male visitors consisted, as


their partners married

quite

com-

prehensible, in

working for
and
it

women and

ladies of society;

was the duty of the

mistress of such

houses to arouse the belief in these gulls that their wishes v/ere

being gratified. There certainly was no lack of married

women

and even the demand for


suppHed.

ladies of society could in

most cases be

When

the latter was not possible the clever panderesses

could always create the illusion that Countess de

or Marquise

de

was ready

to give her private favors for a suitable price.

Such

a pleasure naturally

was worth much and there were enough


for a dear price nothing

simpletons

who bought

more than the

commonest whore. But although ever


patetic vocation

so often ladies of the peri-

would be frequenters of such


to avoid anything that

houses, the effort

was constantly made

might be offensive

and give away baldly the preciously guarded secrets of the house.
After
all, it

was the unsuspected nature of these

love-nests that

constituted their value to those

who made
all

occasional use of them.

Of

course these houses did considerable damage to the brothel


shades,

business but they continued to exist in

from the most

luxurious palatial villa to the most miserable hovel.


all

They
if

served

types of perversities including the most fiendishly cruel; and


sadists

even the most repulsive


paid enough for
it.

got what they wanted

they but

No

matter

how much

a girl

was tortured,

284

BOOK
perversities.

IV:

THE NINETEENTH CENTUMY


if

the police could not interfere

she had consented to suffer these

Doctors agree that the modern cultured person needs variety

and that constant physical copulation with the same person


quires change. It

re-

was but one

step further to suggest that the

change be a complete

alteration of the sexual act,

and

this

change,

the Parisian brothels met in the cleverest

ways and

called into

service the most complicated achievements of

modern technique.
Sourire, there are
all

In the illustrated comic weeklies, particularly

Le

weekly advertisements of these temples of vice where

sorts

of "artistic tableaux" and representations of gallant engravings are

enacted in the
travagance.

flesh.

There

is

a great appeal about this sort of sex-

As soon

as the spectators

have taken their places and

find themselves in

good hands, the presentation begins

behind

a glass plate. Behind the scenes of suburban theatres, bayaderes

from the rue Lepic give themselves to lesbian love just as the collegean
student might imagine
as the milieu of the
it.

Or

the eighteenth century

is

employed
pieces of

scene to be enacted.

The famous
St.

Schall, Fragonard, Borell,

and the lesser masters, follow in order beAntoine and two

tween

bed from the milieu of the Faubourg


chairs.

empty easy

They

enacted The Enema^ The Lever of the

Newly Married
of Lafontaine.

Couple, and

many

daring illustrations to the tales


all

It is

understood that

this

was amusement for

cultured folks only, for one must at least be acquainted with the
tales of

Lafontaine to appreciate the detailed points of the panto-

mime.
But no matter
for the

how

clever and attractive such shows might be

numerous audiences of well-read people, they could never

satisfy the coarser instincts of the average public. Artificial rep-

resentations

no matter

how

piquant, are not

what the
fare

visitor to

a brothel expects.

He

desires

more powerful
2S5

and

this is

pur-

THE EROTIC HISTORY OF FRANCE


veyed
in the

very numerous pornographic movies. These

are, to

be sure, no monopoly of the French for they are found in the


brothels of
all

other countries. Curt Moreck, writing about the

pornographic
erotic tastes

film, says that it offers us

an insight into the varied


nations.

and views of the different

Thus the French

films specialize in depictions of the orgasm, of the acts of dis-.

charge, and go into the broadest descriptions of the preparatory


acts,

though occasionally attention

is

centered on the latter to such

an extent that the sexual act occurs behind the scenes. England
produces such stuff principally for consumption by India; and

South Africa prefers


negroes. Italy,

flagellational scenes
is

and

sadistic abuses of

whose southern extremity


its

already in the zone of

Oriental sexuality, cultivates as

specialty the sotadic film, the

representation of sodomitic acts; and only slightly less popular

than photographs of sexual acts between


of copulation

among

beasts.

In

men and beasts, are scenes Germany sin is without grace


this land the

and indeed in the


true.

erotic

movies of

charge seems quite

For they generally show well executed, terribly realistic coitus

scenes but lack the erotic pictures of animals.


that the pornographic movie

One can

say, in brief,

comprehends the whole

scale of

immorality and includes

all

variations,

from the refined piquanterie


and depicts

which shudders

at the representation of the sex act


flirt

only the immoral

in

all its

dangers, to the most bestial wallow-

ing in the foulest and most extravagant postures.

How these scenes


fact that the

were staged and enacted can be imagined from the


actors

were

in most cases

whores and alphonses, or other shady and


lack every trace of artistic refinement

depraved individuals.

They

and are merely the witless hackwork of depraved imaginations.

Something should be
ing

said about this alphonse or bully

concern-

whom

the reader of newspapers, whose curiosity has been fed


press, has

by an accommodating

got quite false notions. These de-

2S6

BOOK
terior.

IV:

THE NINETEENTH CENTUEY

classed of society have nothing queef or striking about their ex-

The

balloon cap and the red neckerchief, the chief outward

signs of the Apaches,

have passed from the picture.

They

are

only recreated or called back into life to impress tourists and create
local color
is

and the
all

illusion of cruelty,

mystery and mad

love.

There

nothing at
set

distinctive about the clothing of these Louis

which

would

them

apart from the average citizen; and indeed, like

American

racketeers, they don't like to have too

much

attention

drawn to them in any way. The support of


about by the
girls

these fellows

is

worried

who "run"

for them; and in turn, the girls find in

these pimps, protectors and lovers.

The

latter factor

is

more ima-

ginary than real for


contract to support
to

when they

choose their bully, they virtually


to transfer
all

him continuously,

their earnings

him and

if

these are sometimes insufficient to suffer abuse and


as

manhandling
will

punishment.

And

yet one of these

lost creatures

hang on

to her

pimp and swear every manner of perjury


jail,

in

order to save him from

because in a

moment

of fierce jealousy

at his choice of another, she

had gotten him into a scrape.

Again, hke American racketeers, these bullies had to have a vocation through

which they

ostensibly support themselves.

They

usu-

ally pretend to

be commercial representatives, travelling salesmen

of wine, cigars or perfumes, or else they choose some other free


profession

whose economic

possibilities
is

cannot be checked up.


it is

Every bourgeois occupation


understood that everyone

thoroughly eschewed; and

who
little

"belongs" will not hesitate to augextra job like theft, fake, swindle,
his fellow

ment
etc., a

his business

with a

procedure not only not frowned upon by

workers
the laws

but rather abetted. Since they are regarded


of the bourgeoisie,
it

as declassed
if

by

must not be

a matter of surprise

they do not

accept such laws. In this respect the Parisian bully differs in no

wise from his colleagues in the metropolis of any other land.

287

THE EROTIC HISTOHY OF FRANCE


And
so,

we come
its

to

an end of the erotic history of France, and

the history of

erotic literature.

There

are endless books

on the

history of France, endless books on

its literature,

but hitherto one


this,

could find no
erotic of

work

dealing with the erotic aspects of


countries.

the most

European
its

What is
arts?
its

the relation between France's

eroticism and

eminence in the

What is the relation between


in

France's erotic literature and

eminence
this

world

literature?

We

do not pretend to know but perhaps


gested a

volume may have sug-

few

ideas in the

mind

of the reader. France typifies the

highest and noblest peak of Latin civilization in the


Its

modern world.

contributions to the spirit of

man

are immeasurable.

And in the

use of leisure, in the art of living and loving, no nation in Europe


is its

peer.

May
this?
it

not this volume contain some kernel of truth to

account for
Finally,

behooves us to repeat that we have tried to avoid giving

any offense

to the reader despite the nature of this


difficult to pull in

work.

It

has been

much more
for
it

the reins than the reader imagines,

has only been since the

World War

that

Americans have

been able to read

many

of the books mentioned herein; and even

today, despite the general condemnation of censorship


all

by men

in

walks of

life

except for works of

definite

and deliberate obs-

scenity

there

still

remain blue laws and censors to hound the

honest and intimidate the free.

DESCRIPTIVE SELECTION OF CURRENT PUBLICATIONS BY THE PANURGE PRESS

************

JACQUES- ANTOINE

DULAURE

THE GODS OF
6ENER7ITION

A HISTORY OF PHALLIC CULTS

AMONG ANCIENTS & MODERNS


TRANSLATED FROM THE FRENCH BY
A. F. N.

* *

Privately Printed

THE PANURGE PRESS NEV7 YORK


:

TflE

GODS OF GENERATIOI^ BY

J. A.

DIJLAURE

Translated with a Special Preface by A. F. N. One of America's Foremost Authorities on Erotology

Including

One
This immense history
author^s

Biography of the Author by Alcide Bonneau of the Greatest French Writers on Phallicism
a

is the most documented work on erotics ever fublished by the Panurge enormous researches and lengthy textual matter, and his hundreds of Press. The notes and annotations, comprise the most comfrehensive guide on the worshif of obscene Gods and fhallic religions I

world-famous masterpiece has been translated into many languages in It is entirely complete, abridged editions, this Panurge Press edition is the first in English. without abridgement, without expurgation, and with no textual passages in Latin!

Although

Dulaure's

When

the Gods of Generation first appeared in Paris it was vigorously condemned but the (The author escaped imprisonment by publishing his great erotic masterpiece anonymously. Twenty years later the work was reissued volume.) original title-page is reproduced in this and was judged outrageous to public morals. The edition was seized, suppressed, and destroyed.

Only

few

copies escaped

and

the author.

These
tion.

facts

should not prejudice any serious-minded person against this


author, neither prudent nor prurient, having chosen a

first

English transla-

The

theme on the borderland of

The reader forbidden matters, of necessity had to stir up a bitter brew of unpleasant facts. will catch his breath at Dulaure's transcriptions of secret manuscripts and at his discoveries of No religion escapes his prying eyes and no story is told, obscenity In the most sacred places. no matter how risque, without its source being given. And neither laity nor royalty fares any For these matters and a thousand other friafeia are better from Dulaure's merciless pen.
necessary to build the most remarkable history of obscene

Gods and

phallic religions ever written.

Roger Goodland, the greatest living bibliographer of sexual rites and customs, and who has annotated over 9,000 of such booh and articles in all languages, declares the Dulaure's masterfiece "is the standard work on the subject'^
Everything would have to be extravagant praise for It belongs to that strange class of genuine erotic masterpieces, works One can't even describe which endure from century to century with Increasing popularity. the Gods of Generation by tabling its contents, for the notes alone occupy 50 pages.

No

one can even begin to describe such a work in

a single page.

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ISAAC GOLDBERG

MADAME
SEX

NEW YORK
PRIVATELY PRINTED

THE PANURGE PRESS

I^IADAJIIE

SEX BY DR. ISAAC GOLDBERG

Modern sex psychology has opened the door to a new gallery of abnormal women and has described them at full scientific length. But writers of fiction have curiously avoided these scabrous discoveries for obvious, unworthy reasons. Now, for the first time in any language, has a work been written which embodies in serious fiction the devious laws of sex and the latest discoveries concerning these strange passion-driven women.

A summary

of the stories contained in this large collection can barely beggar its fascinatThe worldly-wise behavior of a nymphomaniac among a large society of men. The combat of oriental voluptuousness with occidental hard-boiled lust. The curative effects The sex psychology of rich old maids and their of sexual gratification on insomnia. tenacious pursuit of young men. The reaction of normal feminine desire to homosexual These and other amatory relations are described with such insight that bebetrayal. fore the reader has finished even a couple of stories, he begins to realize that for sheer absorbing interest he has read no other volume like it.

ing contents.

Nymphomania
gives herself to every member of a symphony orchestra, starting at the bottom and working up to the temperamental ("Madame Sex") leader.

A nymphomaniac

How

Masochism

a sensual pianist, finding the possession of pretty girls no aid to stardom, becomes the gigolo of a rich old spinster who expects him to repay her in non-musical ways. ("Gigolo")

Hindu Love
IJranism

How

a passionate woman, in love with her husband's business partner, tries to arouse the latter's passions only to discover that the men are homosexualist lovers. ("Square Triangle")

Portraying a Hindu lover whose yen for taking nude movies of his American mistresses leads to an ironic affair with a beautiful modern sophisticate. ("Nude Mood")

Aphrodisia An artist's insomnia verges on madness until a woman incognito finally effects his cure by
playing on his passions.
In

Lesbianism

("Insomnia")

father, opposing his son's marriage, explains the situation to his own mistress who. unknown to him, is the sapphic lover of his ("One Good Turn") son's fiancee.

Conjugal
display of sexual behavior.

Rape

which a bride and groom during their first night together participate in a most unusual
("Bridal Suite")

Calf

Love

Incest

An amatory

picture of the younger generation depicting a small-town calf lover and his city-bred sophisticated girl friend, ending in curious comic relief. ("First Edition")

detailed example of incest between brother and sister, its disastrous effect on normal

marriage,
finale.

and its strange ("Happy Ending")

unconventional

MADAME SEX
erature.
It is

is a private publication for serious adult students of out-of-the-ordlnary litcertainly not for those who relish sub rosa productions of gutter obscenity. The tone of this erotic treasure-house is singularly robust in spite of its psychopathic nature. Stark tragedy jostles comedy and gruesome perversions rub shoulders with normal love, while the profundity of the work Is lifted with a lightheartedness which recalls the candor of Chaucer and Boccaccio, and the comic element in Pantagruel and Panurge. For Madame Sex is Madame X under the skin and her amatory experiences as described in this volume certainly justify her appellation.

Prioately Printed.

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raepuht
1/-1
toiik

ncisio

cTltsiorp oj

\Ulale

circumcision ana cJemale \^n

\^naf)iers

on ^UleriaaapnrocitsnafCiJnjiouiaiionf

(Ounucnismf cyriapisvn ana divers other \^urious

ana

cJkallic K^usionas

^n<^^
cJrivaiely C/rinied

cJne Cyanur^e Cyress

\\l

lew cJJovk

PRAEPUTU
A

INCISIO

History of Male and Female Cireumclsion iw'ith Chapters on Hermaphrodlsm, Infibulatlon, Eunuchism, Priapism and divers other Curious and Phallie Customs.

this curious volume is primarily a history of male and female circumcision, it is really, by virtue discursive chapters, an astonishing history of genital curiosities. The anonymous doctor-traveller-author not only brings to light the most unorthodox phallic habits of numerous races, but takes the reader's breath

Although
of
its

away by

his

startling

revelations of erotic ethnology.

SIMILAR PRACTICES is an eye-opener. Here we find the strangest instruments attached to the organs of men to preserve their chastity. Among women the instruments and genital incisions are of even greater variety and barbarity: chastity belts, pierced straps, proclaiming bells, bamboo sticks, miscellaneous locks, etc. Naturally, these instruments are of devilish cunning and are prevalent among oriental harems, Judean virgins, married women of Ethiopia, Mohammedan brides, etc. . . . The author also describes methods of sewing up the sexes of women, a procedure as widespread as it is brutal.

The chapter on INFIBULATION

AND

THE HOLY PREPUCE is the next theme. Here are discussed the conflicting claims made by various churches to their supposed possession of the holy prepuce and the efScacy of this relic as a miracThese presumably authentic relics enabled many ulous cure for any and every ailment of feminine sterility. Even kings and queens had a roguish priest to practice easy deceptions upon pious and credulous women. recourse to these holy prepuces, of which our author furnishes historic proof. The whole theme with its amusing anecdotes throws a lurid light on the close relationship between phallic worship and medieval
PRIAPISM
European
Christianity.

AND

The

is simply amazing. There are different kinds of eunuchs According to our author, every race has its own peculiar method; the Chinese manner of taille a fletir de ventre is the most primitive whereas the great eunuch factory at AbouGerghe in the Soudan prescribes the most revolting. To lighten the severity of these operations and other descriptions, he chronicles eccentric stories on the castrated Italian choir boys, the Skoptsy sect of Russia, the marriage of eunuchs, the remarkable cases of Origines and his monks, and the harem intrigues of eunuchs.

subject of

EUNUCHISM AND CASTRATION


castration.

and different degrees of

The account of FEMALE CIRCUMCISION confides some of the least realized secrets of anthropology. Though its practice is sporadic in South America and Indo-Asia, it is common among the Mohammedans and even more extensive among genuine negro tribes of Africa. Sometimes it is a national custom as among
the Indians of Ecuador, Peru and Brazil; sometimes a religious ritual as in Egypt and Abyssinia; and sometimes as in modern Europe, a surgical operation as a prevention of self-abuse among little girls or as a cure for adult female erotomania. The topic is a fascinating one, albeit cruel, and a mine of strange information for it covers the practice of female circumcision at all ages, from early girlhood until long after marriage, up to its modern introduction into England and the United States.

Endless have been the stories of double-sexed persons but this chapter on HERMAPHRODISM HYPOSPADIAS records some of the most curious cases in all history. Pregnant males, freaks of nature, the development of eunuchism to pederasty, hermaphrodlsm among lower forms of animals, marital difficulties among bisexualists, autopsy revelations, medico-legal aspects, etc., etc. indeed the most mongrel cross-bred human beings with the genitals of both men and women are here discussed and recorded with incredible proofs.

AND

The theme
tween

of

IMPOTENCE AND FLAGELLATION


and anaphrodisia.

praeptitii tnctsio

lack of space the author illustrates this

renders in many a tale and detail the correlation beAs in other chapters not mentioned in this announcement through theme with his personal experiences as a surgeon all over the world,

and does not hesitate to describe such outrageous customs as point-tying, the Judicial Congress, etc. Eliminating all prurient appeal throughout the 300-odd pages of this volume, he discusses everything in outspoken, descriptive detail; for many of the genital secrets explained in this private opus will prove wholly unknown to the interested reader.

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cu fpc/tic-^/may s ci/tnaiovy aove/niuve$

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t^vess

/iicS>

yovk -^^sls

Si

EIJIV1JCHS,

ODAUSqiJES AND LOVE BY IVICOLAS FROZ^IAGET A FRENCHMAN'S AMATORY ADVENTURES IN TURKEY

Here is a record of oriental passions and harem sexuality which could be written only by an adventurer and a lover. No other serious author has told us with such candor the secrets of harem love and the parts played by eunuchs and odalisques in Turkey. This novel is the long, gripping story of a man who loved passionately and trickily, a man to whom women were the most important thing in life and who, no matter what the risk or
danger, slaked his lust at every opportunity.

Some

of the

W^omen -who Pass

throusSh the Frenchman's

Arms

FAKMA

initiates the
is

love affair

Frenchman into the mysteries of oriental passion and their unrestrained curiously interrupted

GUL.TRIC

finds her old husband tedious and encourages the Frenchman to former's biological deficiencies

make up

for the

INDGI proves

insatiable in the vicious pleasures of Venus and her demoniac sexuality quickly brings her lover to collapse

FATIMA demands MIRZALA

the Frenchman's favors after discovering another the insatiable reprobate gratifies her

woman

in his

arms, and

the Sultan's sister, is confidentially aided by eunuchs and odalisques in carrying out her mysterious harem intrigues

CHARMEN

proves to the Frenchman that her languorous intimacies are the sensual transports of her mistress
is

more

thrilling than

CHEMAME
CHERA

the unwitting victim of seduction through a strange

arrangement between the

Frenchman and her mother-in-law


at first refuses to surrender because of her immoral Becthaschite sect but afterwards gives herself gladly

NEDOUA

towers above the Frenchman's ribald loves and his overwhelming passion for her leads to repeated tragic adventures
resists in vain his chief odalisque

ZAMBAK

and afterwards the Sultan, unaware of her defloration, appoints her


slip-

MARIQUILLA

pursues the Frenchman with her brazen advances and thinks nothing of ping into his bed stark naked

NAMEK

and the Frenchman carry on their shameless dalliance in the open despite the prying eyes of eunuchs and odalisques

This gorgeous volume of 300 pages achieves pure Turkish feeling through the emplosmient Turkoman type effects. Although neither offensive, obscene nor doctrinal, this volume is an indubitable classic of Turkish life, warm with the color and conviction of an eye-witness. "The reader is egged on to jump from chapter to chapter in his eager pursuit of the kaleidoscopic amours of the protagonist. Action is the keynote of this novel, and speed its tempo, and once the pace quickens to full swing, the reader is not given a paragraph even to pause for breath."From the INTRODUCTION.
of

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<

WSMIEU

IIIEW

Y^mu

CHASTITY BELTS BY ESAR LEVINE


HERE
is

a book that

defies

description because there

is

no other book
it

like

it

in

any language. Several pamphlets

have been written on the subject but no extended history of


dreds of years European

has ever been attempted despite the fact that for hunthese chastity belts.

women have been

harnessed and bridled in

Chastity belts are metal instruments fitting over the private parts of
key. Jealous
sleeping
urination,

women and

securely kept in

place

by lock and them


from

men would
other

lock

up

their

wives in
absence.

this

way

before

departing

on long

journeys

to

prevent

with

men

during

their

These iron and

silver girdles

were perforated with tiny holes to permit

preventing at the same time the pleasures of Venus.


orifices.

Many

of

them were double models which safeguarded

both the front and back

This history races through the centuries up to the present time, crowding
strangest information ever put between

its

hundreds of pages with some of the


origin of these belts, discusses
all

two covers. For the author,

in tracing the

many

a similar sexual instrument of ancient and primitive days. The book assembles and assorts
subject:

the rich material on the

epigrams, verses, witty anecdotes, memoirs, scandalous

court

trials,

short

stories,

newspaper accounts, anthro-

pological tidbits, etc.

rapid-fire of fable, fiction

and

fact.

We
of

hesitate to hint at

the

more revolting aspects

of this

unique work: the discovery of chastity belts on the corpses

women;

the irremovable models on pregnant


torture.

women;

their

employment

in

horrors of

sadism,

masochism, mutilation,

and as instruments of

But

this

history

is

much more than a

catalogue of Inquisitorial

ferocity.

It

is

as comprehensive

as

Sex

itself,

and

counterbalances
a
.

its

horrors with hundreds of laughable indelicacies

for chastity

belts only

too often fanned the fires of


off

woman's
. .

lust.

Duplicate keys were often available, locksmiths easily bribed, and belts ripped

by impatient
woodcuts,

lovers.

Anticipating the reader's disbelief, the author substantiates his tales by reproducing etchings,
private

museum

specimens,

models,

engravings,

etc.,

of

dozens

of chastity

belts

of

every

shape and style in

FULL-PAGE

ILLUSTRATIONS.
Scattered throughout this history are spicy short stories which in

themselves comprise an excellent volume of erotica.

Some
Merry

of

them

are:

The Painter's Ass by

Verville, the

futility

of

female belly-painting as a scare to lovers;

Brutal

Punishment by Giovanni Fiorentino, a passionate drama


Talcs, proving that the cunning of
in

of

padlocked love; The Use of Dirty Water from The Hundred

women
to

will

always outwit the vigilance of husbands; Horns rather than Crosses


belt.

by Comazano,

which a simpleton

tries

improve upon the chastity

These and other

stories

culled from

rare

forbidden classics lend a wealth of color to this gold mine of miscellaneous tidbits.

The

author's place

among

authorities of erotica

is

sufficient to

stamp any of

his

works of unique

interest.
all

No

other living

writer in America today possesses so wide a knowledge of literary curiosa and esoterica.

Eschewing

pornographic and

prurient appeal, he records on almost every page some casual anecdote from an erotic classic, some amusing paraphrase of

an unknown genital law, some curious reference to an unmentionable perversion. Indeed, the index pages of

CHASTITY

BELTS

read like some elaborate encyclopedia of

all

the sexual sciences.

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EROTIC FAIRY TALES


EnglisUed from \\\e FrcncVi of \\\e

ABBE DE VOISENON

NEWYORK: PRIVATELY PRINTED


For Private Collectors of Erotica

THE PANURGE PRESS

EROTIC FAIRY TAUES BY THE ABB^ DE VOISENON


is a riot of erotic adventures in the guise of a fairy tale. Two rival each desiring the Princess as her daughter-in-law, transform their sons into various animals in order to attain their ends. Follows a series of quick, tumbling amorous frustrations, ending with the marriage of one of them to the Princess. But every time he attempts to culminate his duties as a husband, the other fairy plays the most hilarious pranks upon him. The humor is simply irresistible.

ROYAL BED OP ROSES

fairies,

In despair, the husband sends for the Grand Instructor who overcomes the fairy's artifices in a manner which infuriates the husband Meanwhile, his rival obtains the Princess" private favors until
. .

The Grand Instructor, whose advice on marital indelicacies is solicited by all the gallant ladies and courtiers, is a scream in the higher mysteries of esoteric passion, and performs his amatory miracles with the most sophisticated tomfoolery Some of the high lights of this erotic fairy tale are:

PERSUASION VIA THE LAP OF ROYAL


MOTHE.'^S

THE IMMODEST PARTRIDGES THE COLICS OF CUCKOLDRY THE BIZARRE TAPESTRY SPELL THE MOVING PICTURE GALLERY OF DEBAUCHERY

A TICKLISH LIAISON IN THE WOODS THE REVERSAL OF THE WEDDINGNIGHT PAINS

THE 17 CHILDREN OF A VIRGIN THE MAIDENHOOD RESTORATIVES THE ENCHANTED FOUNTAIN OF


SEDUCERS

RHAPSODY RISQUE is a mad whirl of sexual lubricity. It narrates the adventures of a Prince and Princess in their efforts to marry. The Princess has been brought up as an innocent prude but a mischievous fairy breaks down her love resistance and she charmingly surrenders to her sweetheart. Soon another fairy, jealous of their happiness, separates them.
Then the fun begins.
through a wild whirl of

Every page adds intrigue


ticklish,

to

intrigue,
. .

indiscretion

to

indiscretion,

embarrassing vicissitudes.
Isis in

At length the Princess

is

abducted to the Temple of

the

Community

of Virgins.

And

what

virgins!

Meanwhile the Prince, beset by a veritable rhapsody of risque adventures, is finally discovered by a friendly fairy who transforms him into a dog and leads him to the Community of Virgins. As a dog he wanders about bedrooms and boudoirs and is privileged to witness what no man may. The finale of this novelette is a whirlwind of complicated, convulsive erotics.
.
. .

a superlative achievement of modern typographic art, both in elegance of forThe entire book is printed in color. Although the contents of EROTIC FAIRY TALES are thoroughly facetious, they trespass neither on the domain of pornography nor vague symbolism. An explanatory introduction containing a biographical sketch of the author is included in this volume.
This volume
is

mat and

in richness of binding.

Privately) Printed.

Sold

to

Adults Only.
Fifth Jive.,

Price

$5.00

"Uhe Vanurge "Press,

100

V^ew York

LACK
LIST
JEAN DE VILLIOT

Privately Printed ty THE PANURCE PRESS

New

York

BLACK LUST BY JEAX DE VILLIOT


Black Lust
is

one of those bizarre works of

fiction

and fact whose haunting

details live

with the reader forever. It


if

is

an

encyclopedia of venery, a kaleidoscope of perversions, a jungle of horrors. This description does not exaggerate;
thing,
it

any-

is

an understatement of
in

this

tremendous work. The publishers assure the reader of

this prospectus that

no book

which he has read

many

years can compare with Black Lust in disturbing, diabolic sexuality.

The

first chapter opens with scenes in London between two lovers. After a few drinks James Churchill tries to force

his sweetheart, Grace, in the

most brazen way. Disillusioned, she goes to Khartoum where she eventually becomes a nurse.
later

James follows a few months


city

to seek

forgiveness.

Presently the black dervishes of the neighboring tribes sack the


girls

and put

all

Christians to the sword, reserving the pretty


is

for

oriental

purposes.

James,

protecting

Grace,

is

brutally murdered while she

raped and led away by one of the chiefs to ornament his harem.

The love and hate


tion

of this white

woman

for the black

Mohammedan

chief forms the overtone of this historic novel of

300-odd pages. Horror-stricken at

first

in being forced to serve every

whim

of her master, the latter

by

dint of flagellafalls

and similar

brutalities arouses in her

a lustful and willing submission. After his death the black chief's brother

heir to the

harem and adds new

tortures

and perversions

to break her rebellious spirit.

The background

of

Black Lust describes the savage struggle for supremacy among the native

tribes in the Valley of the


it

Nile before the turn of this century.

With

its

sharp, nervou
t

style, all quivering

with intensity,

vividly reproduces the

nightmare terror of those wild times. The bamboo torture,

e pebble death, the

head-drum rack, the genital punishment,


Spanish Inquisition can compare
with

the milk test, the skull trophies, the skin-slicing salt revenge
these

nothing

since

the

and a host

of other sadic torments.

And
mad

perversions! What a theatre of sexual scenes this book presents! Here

is

a spectacle of the Venus aversa, there a


flagellation.

picture of necrophilia
lust of

the

violation

of corpses, a

few pages further on a frenzy of

And through
wave.

it

all,

the

black

men

for white

women. The whole book throbs and surges with

it,

like

tidal

No pantomime

this or

extravaganza of imagination.
all

The scabrous

detail, the seething

passion,

the quick flash and fade-out of tropical

sensuality are

true, all authentic, all taken

from records and eye-witnesses.

This kaleidoscopic background

of

cruelty and perversion

is

interwoven with the stark secrets of the harem. Grace's

adventures therein, the clandestine lesbianism of the inmates, the parts played by the eunuchs, the diversified types of

women

all

these are colorfully painted with a magic of representment.


lust,

The deeper
left

tones of Grace's private experiences

with the blackamoor lord of the harem, their animal love and

must be

to the reader's

own

impressions.

Lovers of romantic literature


wine and
is

will not find

Black Lust easily digestible for


with mature, shock-proof
tastes.

it

is

strong with merciless fact like heady


its

intended for strong


it

men

only,

men

Nevertheless

hundreds of pages are

not pornography for

is

not concerned with problem or propaganda of any sort but with the true and unrelenting events

which took place

in the

Valley of the Nile within the recent

memory

of

men. A mighty document whose haunting horror

and sexuality

will live with the reader joreverl

Privately Printed.

Sold

to

Adults Only.
Fifth Jive.,

Price

$5.00
York

"Uhe Tanurge Tress,

100

^ew

PATE
I?UE
OCT
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UNIVERSITY OF FLORIDA

1262

05638

0677

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