Erotic Historyof France
Erotic Historyof France
Erotic Historyof France
^^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
\ 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.
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
The
f Modern women,
MADAME SEX
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
copies.
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.
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.
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,
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.
Of this work,
the erotic history of France
and
only
its
erotic literature,
woo
e^e^e^E^e^e^(!^^!^?^e^e^^e^e^
BY MENEY
L.
MAECHANB
INTRODUCTION
PAGE
BOOK
CHAPTER
27
35
45
BOOK
II
IV
59
BOOK
VI
III
114
CONTENTS
CHAPTER
PAGE
VIII
134
142
VENEREAL VERSES
SECRET CLUBS AND PERVERSIONS
XI
147
154
CELEBRATED PORNOLOGISTS
XII
174
198
PORNOGRAPHIA RAMPANT
BOOK
XIV
IV
238
244
253
PUBLISHERS OF EROTICA
XX
280
VENUS VICTORIOUS
12
THIS book sets itself the interesting and intriguing task of writing
the erotic history of France and
its
someone
is
will inquire
why we choose
a
to be derived
from
that
some reader
will
The
Let us spend a
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
Then we
shall
be in a position
to realize the
shall
land of love.
It is a
an
essential
and an
all-
this
it is
an indisas
many
centuries been
renowned
of eroticism, and
Frenchmen
as the typical
is
this
type of activity.
We are merely
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
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
still
If this
true,
and
we
then the
to certain structural
peculiarities of the
to certain peculiarities in
at
their history
traits first
what date
these
became manifest
difficult to assert
with precision.
to
run in
first
new
culture
became documented
in literature,
we
are
Of
course at this
time other nations of Europe, the Italians principally and also the
Renaissance
is
any
made France
the
are so
this
all.
many
a
connection that
difficultnay, impossible
illustrations will
^to
them
Only
few
facts
and
now
be cited
the
our contention.
We
appeal
first to
testimony of language.
it is
were
many
their
musical terms
show
German
number
of erotic
the source of
modem
tales
and
dramas dealing in divers ways and from exceedingly varied viewpoints with sexual love. France exported these products to every
Why
is it,
when we
its
we
Why
is it
Why
Do
is it
that
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.
were disturbed
at
being seen in
full
view.
Women
women
esthetically satisfac-
portions of their nakedness, they are carrying out this motive attrib-
human
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
more
flesh or less
therefore, to be
wondered
at that Paris,
other city in the world has cultivated the erotic, and has undergone
a long
in indulging every
whim and
every
as the center of
Occident during
modem
We
are
now
this history.
To what
materials or
phenomena
shall
we
turn for
many
possible procedures.
the
files
we were
we
to
trace
with
this field,
should
certainly be
in France.
Thus we might
we might
collect
all
references to incest,
cases,
law
is
human
affairs.
would be the
analysis of the
we were
to collect the
if
sermons, pamphlets,
etc.,
we
were
the erotic,
Using
this
road
we might
for
examine
all
and
by
in various
sources,
we
of this
responsible for
monographs would
to collect the
low
certain
words
By
new and
erotic
we
This
effort
would be considerably
fuller
Or we might make
19
and augmenting
carnal pleasures, for abetting the normal and appeasing the perverse
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-
we
upon
successive ages.
We
are,
now no
art.
The
painter
to nature,
remain forever.
We
can read to
eternity the
The
literary figure
we
have
just
employed
the
art of letters.
But
after
all,
which words
heard and
The word
spoken afar
off, retains
we
shall
choose
France
We
shall
we
have enumerated,
shall
The
Gallic spirit
among
other nations.
What do
we
Vesprit gaulois?
combined with a
20
not these the inevitable characters of the French mind and lan-
among human
beings
may assume
forms and
we
It is
their
them
The
love
in
body
senses,
all its
capacities
these
qualities
have made France one of the greatest and wisest nations in Christen-
dom.
And
if
we
restraint
and
perversities, let us
remember
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
is
said
is
tolerable
ear,
quite
literature
much
less 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
scarcely a page of
whose work
is
free
evil intent,
merely
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
book.
the erotic
For them,
it
was
vital interest in
the material
And now
The
away from
it.
The
knighthood and chivalry, the rule of the church and the song of
22
Then
its
by an
to us
and
still
so responsible for so
many
elements of our
life.
The
book
will close
with the
last
for
will
be opportune to
first
decades of our
own twentieth
How
free
were
What
of prostitution?
esoteric
And
perversion?
What
many
we
shall
turn to
an examination of the
successive ages.
I
One very
laid
the emphasis
have
authors.
Not merely
possible
I
works
but
whenever
plot, or
quoted
a typical extract. It
procedure.
Many
would
which
it is
neither
my
who may
be interested in more
will
prove invaluable.
IS
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
we come
the nation of
France.
This sexual
instinct,
which
its
politics
in short, real
and
ideal,
but the stream kept flowing unabated. Rich and poor, noble and
serf,
all
felt its
may
Now
in the
sexual activity?
Or
somewhat
differently:
how
life
did the expression of the sexual instinct and the forms of sexual
27
We
all
somehow have
all
the feeling that in those dim, dark days of the medieval period
life
was so much
church's doctrine must have been suppressed to the point of extinction. Before
we
is
can answer
this question
we must
look at the
There were,
as
At
who owned
work
vast
These fortunate
individuals
all
was
and
was not
were continu-
wars between
rival feudal
of the
common man
classes
Now to
come back
itself
classes, living
on
period which impressed the age, did not alter the course of their
What
It
is
28
BOOK
sin. If
I:
the church
incapable of
damming up
then
adherents
by
and
ascertaining
where the
them
for them.
its
all
one can
why
live virtuously?
the
serfs.
Poor, miserable,
worked
ground by
poverty, the lives of this class were certainly nasty brutish and short.
It is
infractions of virtue
slight. Chastity,
too
we
meet
literary testimony to
Language was
foul
young
off as early as
continually at the
mercy
men
the pretty or shapely one especially. Life was short and difficult
sin
so
The
restitution.
amusement
farce.
The general uncertainty of life, combined with the vast and fairly
unchecked power of the king, and to a
set the
lives
lesser
life. It is
We shall read
29
and
enacted in the
flesh,
by living actors,
Italian
was
women, and
as
he has
left us vivid
records
winsome daughters
of Latium.
But,
was
which was
was resplendent
discover to our
Unfortunately
we
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
was
from
mons
veneris as
we
had to
women a word
its
ex-
dours and
less
frequently
by
importance of
ages.
woman
As we
shall learn
A most inter-
courts of love.
Here tournaments
Or
to vary the
30
BOOK
tions of the love
I:
meaning of the
title,
certain ques-
life
among
a
whom
But
all
a flower, the
it
all
would appear
and violent transgressions in the sphere of sex were comto preach sanctity
priests
mitted
by those appointed
and exemplify
it.
The
their
idleness,
combined with
due to
them an
lusts.
and within
it,
many of
known
as vigor-
ous lovers and were sought after because of their prowess and
discretion.
Indeed
all
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
sought to enforce in
Hence
most
it is
priest
became the
target of the
life
vitriolic criticism
was an
to
when
there was so
much
litera-
ture or
intensity.
and has
lasted into
modem times.
Another and
related
theme was
anti-royalism.
The
at
the base of the mass of anti-royalist writing. Another motif, and in-
just
we
elements
of
all sorts,
saint of unchastity.
This transformation
women
in
What
is
most striking
many medieval
tive of all that
writings
is
women,
the un-
human
partly derived from experience, partly also from the low status of
a great
In these of
now
are preserved.
different forms.
them
here,
and leave
and
two
chapters.
There
(the report of the court of love) the dramatized farce, the chanson
(lyric)
One
erotic
literature.
As we
find
it
coarse, un-
BOOK
very
earliest
I:
which
circulates
among
have no adumbration of
As time
differentiated,
much
is
achieved. Poetry
is
affected.
The
useful to
Europe, fixing men's minds to the realm of sex as never before, and
giving literature
in tragedy
and in
satirical
comedy.
By the end
century can
of this century
have been invented and are in active currency. Thus the fifteenth
also
The
we
by the
side of the
romance of
Amadis with
its false
and finished
field.
in
short, eroti-
The
foulest brothel
poetry was to be found, but also the most deUcate and tender
emotional depictions; earnest reflectiveness and lewd buffoonery
century.
these types
was of
in France.
CHAPTER
II
THE
literature of the
middle ages
is
to the formation
The immaculate conception, in particular, occupoets considerably. One gets this impression not
this
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
Mary
those
first
difficulties of their
own
making. Thus,
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
Although Mary
virginity, there
is
is
everywhere represented
as the guardian of
chasti-
who
has
35
by two
tact,
body inone
and then leaves the child with a hermit. There are other stories
aids in illegitimate enterprises, notably the
in
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
and
is
regarded merely
This conception
is
and
Man
if
he chooses the
then
Mary
takes
com-
centrates
love.
upon
herself not
36
BOOK
I:
Comparatively early, however, certain frivolous elements appeared by the side of this reverence for Mary. Faithless women
invoked her
as witness to their
coarse.
Tor
le cul
very frequent;
cortez\ 'par les mamelles\ 'par les denz\ 'par la gorge', 'par la
'par la cuer Sainte
less
Marie\
In the church poems of Jesuit Jacob Pontanus, the poet can think
of nothing more beautiful in
nothing sweeter
diffi-
a fact
by
when only
a simple prayer
man and
well
known
owe much
which
of de-
number
What
is
it
normal Hfe.
It
and
its
chief aim
to
amuse and
indicated
to arouse laughter. It
is this
gen-
eral character
which
is
by
by
poets to characterize their works, viz: une trufe, une boiirde, une
risee,
ex-
rhymed
couplets.
They
are the poetry of the rising citizenry as opposed to the ideals of the
37
of the contempt of
women,
The
it is
woman
who
pronounced
ascetic character
fiasco
the
woman.
motives that actuated the low-born minstrels, to whose sa-
The
tiric
streak
many
a fabliau
owes
its
existence,
noble. Ostentation,
and
they would
flatter
the opinions of
re-
demands of
their
pub-
to feel
women.
women
its
is
also to
be attributed to
many
matter for
satire.
A
they
rude peasantry
as
yet untouched
by
since
tales
lack
what seem
to us to be higher interests.
These
treat of the
whose
greatest joy
is
to play a joke or
about
it later.
common
in
German
alien to the
is
Frenchman
always on
who
relentlessly
with a
3$
BOOK
he
is
I:
measure of pride in
own
superiority.
Yet he
is
not malicious;
merely
light
and
frivolous.
Thus he laughs
band who has had horns conferred upon him; for has he not done
the very same
many
times?
He
may
Above
all,
laughter
is
aroused
by
the cunning of
women,
their sensuality,
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
must usually
Many
and a
now
who is
instructed
by
his
de foutre, a young
man
who
word
spoken without
He
decides to try
his luck
He
is
very
when-
The
la
become a happy
fi'aust
pair.
De
mal au cuer
For
his
Bijoux indis-
crets,
This
ability
by two
fairies in
reward for
The
The
prophesy
is
fulfilled
and he becomes
wealthy man. In
De
VEscui-
39
young Robin
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
is
apparent
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
women
can very
if
easily
who
struggles
and seeks to
He
suaded
per-
joyment in sensual
they
are, as
and no matter
how
inexperienced
soon as the
first bite is
rest.
girl will
and
much
must
suffer.
When
him
for the
not happen.
And no wonder,
satisfied,
woman
men
and to
prove
this point
Even the
40
nunneries,
which should
BOOK
be the
ous
lusts.
I:
From
of the flesh.
picture, accordit
to the
it
to
one of them.
The
by
to be a miniature
from her
psalter
and keeps
it
for her-
The
The
much
priest
is
represented as a seducer
this, as a
the slave will spread abroad their exploits with me; but
when
have
It
lain
still."
was to
advantage as well
as
the
girl's,
secret.
As
and voluptuous
he became a
bon ouvrier en
numerous; but
revealed as a ludicrous,
The
stories
superior husband
who
sees
understands
how
to revenge himself
to
common
justifi-
husband
is
all
of
them
Woman is
drawn
and
in
all
tales.
is
The
must be round
big.
The more
it's
beautiful a
woman
the
more she
fall.
a short
way from
is
The
virgin
is
knows nothing
of love but
is
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
ascetic notions of
women
and marriage. At
the end of the middle ages such harking back to the Bible or church
fathers
was
rare.
What
is
their tone
at the
of personal experience.
for
A
girls are
much
were
before.
favorable judgto
difficult if
we had
tales.
depend
Nevertheless,
mind
superior.
The
constantly reafter
man
is
an
knowl-
edge
of, if
one
is
to escape
it.
The
traced.
followed, in
many
centuries and in
many
42
BOOK
Romance
I:
raw
material
does spring from the Orient, but that the French poet has so devel-
as to
make
his stories a
After the lapse of time, these dramatized farces were acted out.
They
Few
1
of
still
that have
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
during the year they would present pieces in which they would
ridicule their
own
individual
members and
in editions secrettes
satirize
church service
nary
at
Christmas time.
We don't know
bom six
months
much
Whether
baby
the jarce
du pect
(pet)
of
mandent
les
arresages in
suit for
non-
becomes reconciled
to her
is
Thus we
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
no
more of the
latter
and
less
in these
were
The may
as
dramatized fabliaux which were but little used. However, the primitive
is
not to be mistaken in
them.
CHAPTER in
TROUBADOURS AND COURTS OF LOVE
among
the high
The higher classes of that time were no exception. The plays which
were publicly produced
in
ix
were exceedingly
offensive.
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
pute over a
before the
girl
God
At
the Judg-
ment of
Paris, the
History of Noah,
Good gave
on
summons
to a crusade issued
by Pope Pius
with
At one end
of the board
veil,
was
naked
breasts
girl
whose
table there
was
naked boy
who
more naive
fashion.
The
scenes.
William Pepin,
to say:
'The
45
Would
to
Heaven
have
this
way
in honor of Easter. I
had them
at Fontainbleau,
I,
had a mass
goddesses, as well
many
of these paintings to be
million francs.
The handwritten
He
of
"The gallery
of
as Seign-
by
a horde of
women
in the
company
hung
in this gallery.
beautiful
painting
which portrayed
one another and doing one another various other kinds of love
service;
nun or hermitess
I
One
of the
women whom
'I
knew suddenly
it
any
and home.
"
am
burning!
Come
on!
We
fire.'
How
widespread
by
Mary
Medici's destruction
46
BOOK
of a
I:
number of
if
bleau aflame
enterprise."
Brantome
knew
it
a prince
who
pur-
had
some
figures of Aretino
habiting animals. During the feasts that this prince gave, the beaker
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
cer-
or three or
more
perfect like-
hundred
thalens,
and the drawings were colored." Brantome furof the court ladies thus represented saw
all
when one
insulted,
but rather
said
also
was disfigured
by many
notions
defects
which
are not at
it.
all
For generally
supposed that
women. Yet
it
was anything
but that.
this vassal-
dom and
its
privileges.
The
concept of
soon to
hood. Since this mutuality was nearly always carried into the realm
of the sexual, the
homage
to
woman
soon was
all
lost.
Why?
Because
marital relationships,
fideli-
and a revaluation of
all
in
all its
phases
which
characterizes the
who
is
is
No attention
paid
pleasure in
woman
is
if
she possesses
in songs of
by her knight
what
if
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
always a married
woman who
is
heart.
And since
there
was no lack of
names and
lady. It
is
BOOK
this reserve
I:
Her most
what woman
ear!
The forms
The
often their pubic hair, and were present to lend a helping hand
(1276) drank with great relish the water of his beloved's bath,
her sake,
etc.
Once
These
out delay and quite openly, and were sanctioned, indeed demanded,
by
society.
To
become very
enthusi-
It is
inflamed
by
the
charms of
of intimacy, gave such free rein to his fancy that his words were
for seminary
girls. It is
even pardonable,
emo-
Not
erotic verses
which
amuse by
their
however
The low
is
also attribu-
necessary
49
which cannot be
learnt.
part,
knight,
were the
They
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,
were treated
in pedantic
in alternating couplets
in
which
were
expressed. In their
life
own
but they
found
welcome
where they
villains.
fine opportunity
nevertheless disfigured
by numerous
failings.
Thus
Many
by
mouths of women.
is
Love
rules.
represented as an art
this poetry,
and reduced to
Hence
is
love. It
this
brings us to the courts of love with their questions of the Minnesingers, frequently
Roman
de
la
Rose is an
Even the
privileges
50
BOOK
were codified
I:
in such works
Which
de Reprobatione inhonesti
lover shows
more
affection
he who
he
is
so
jealous as to be disturbed
on the
slightest provocation, or
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,
missed.
The
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
society.
The
more
likely.
Probably these
were brought up
seem to be of
this
mind.
that
cer-
Schultz
is
doubtless right
when he says: "It is highly probable who had been following the suit of a
would
final
interest,
favor or
this sort of
amusement
to the writ-
The
satire.
women, and
the moral
There were those preachers who babbled about the good old
times and
who wished
made
for instance,
who
treats
which
subject with
all
Raymond
Vidal com-
which
love,
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
experience.
tions
The
were
The
satirical
treatment of the errors of society, combined with an amazing erudition, lent a prestige to this
work which
it
maintained throughout
up
among the
attacked
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
life
attracted
science,
and he was drawn deeper and deeper into the whirlpool of pleasure.
His chief occupation was aimer.
When one
by composing
Thereupon he
poem,
flogged.
but not
52
BOOK
nies for
I:
to the gallows
and twice
pardoned.
The
is
work
is
composed
in the
was
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
works make
upon us with
With
his
works breathe
is
skillfully scatters
allusion.
throughout
his ver-
Despite
all his
short-
comings, Villon remains the best folk poet before Marot, and
stands in conscious opposition to the lascivious, sentimental, idyllic
Roman de
Rose.
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.
and include
a
a great
number of indecent
it,
Boccaccio's
Decameron
and
IX, 2)
beholden to
it,
as prototype.
Michael Scot,
who
The
as
erotical tales
is
tales.
so called to distinguish
the Cent Nouvelles antiche, were produced about 1460 but did not
book of
tales
Neither the
give the
first
name
of the author;
was assumed
as certain that
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
this
bock.
It
remained for
to es-
Wright in
tablish that
at
Anthoine de
la Sale
bom
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
when he
died.
The form of
noblemen,
fireplace,
A group of young
just returned
and
as
humorous
stories.
The
rooted in a rude,
Fifteen of
ears.
them
much from
La
the fabliaux of
all
54
BOOK
I:
an accurate mirror
monks and
lascivious
nuns pass
before our eyes in colorful alternation. All their thoughts are con-
desire.
to be instinctive in the
French people.
La Sale is
also the
The
edition
in Paris
work
issued with
many
lacunae,
by Jehan Treperel
1830
work
is
not
satire
BOOK
II
e^c^?^e^@^W&^s^(W^E|U e^
CHAPTER IV
THE SIXTEENTH CENTURY
During
his
had read
These
stories of
much
into
that
them
French.
title
numerous imita-
tions
which were
In
all
of
them the
erotic element
was
dominant.
It is in
and in the
sung to sexual
life.
love,
It is
almost a
freedom; indeed
it
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
of the period,
we know
an
ideal
worth
striving for,
and that
59
only,
it
to display
Madame Scudery
is
who composed
these romances.
Although
much
Germany they
However,
appetites can
which our
modem
many
chief rep-
now
be mentioned.
The
is
first
place
is
which
more than
a grotesque-humorous fiction.
There
is
unrolled be-
equal.
There
is
of the
work
any history of
literature.
owes
its
who
work
to
medical works.
feu
M.
La
de Gargantua, pere
M.
through
all
companion
is
Panurge,
60
BOOK
evil
II:
life
which
Naturally
this
it
side of those
whom
it
attacked, and
Even
as
prudish
it is
impossible
to give even a
of
its
headings,
it
that Rabelais
is
how
far
he strays beyond
artist,
the bounds of
what
or
how
much he
He
never
many
faithfully coarse
situations.
propre de Vhomme.
is
The
malicious
mock-
and chapters
is
to 8 of the fourth
ency
like a
is
contemporaries.
What
a grotesque impression
is
created
by
his ac-
(clitoris)
which
in
some women
it
is
and vigorous,
How
insatiable the
women
of his time
Rabelais:
One
fine
morning
about
who was
girls of
two or
shoulders
one
in front
his back.
Panurge
who
had but
ately
little
man immedi-
that he
in front
still
had been carrying them about for two years; that the one
whom
he carried on
his chest
whom
he
Quite in the
spirit of Rabelais,
but not
The very
headings betray
why
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
62
BOOK
breath of Rabelais'
II:
humor
Guillaume Bouchet,
15 13
famed
an imitator of
He wrote the
who
One
reads
has to
sit
who
who
who must
who
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
work
Moyen
de parvenir soon to be
dis-
conte.
is
due.
my
misfor-
found
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
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
Gay
in relationship to
by
Cymbalum mundi,
whole
edition,
two
copies,
The
was
by a different
publisher,
a short while he
was devoted
suicide in a
his friends,
he committed
fit
some of the
may
be considered
who
her too.
64
BOOK
II:
f Concerning 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
Concerning
who
let
insti-
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
and composed
Heptameron. His
elles nouvelles,
depend on Boccaccio, La
Cent nov-
and
others.
bit,
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
all
the
women whom
A priest
cross.
is
on a
^
A youthful
Once
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
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.
persuaded that she has caused her husband Whereupon his wife consents to have him
is
pregnancy
to the
certain girl
is
man who
has the
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
more
alive
is
tale,
Francois
Beroalde de Verville
(i 558-1 612),
whom we now
at thirty-five
consider.
He
he
went over
and
became canon
BOOK
dition
II:
and superb
gifts.
including
of these
would have
res-
cued
his
name from
The volume
Moyen
de Par-
name and
titles,
Le Coupgu de
la
etc.
We have here a
the festive board.
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.
would appear
though
this strong,
and not
at all
joy in
many other
whom
he
a
work was
tales
attributed to Rabelais.
Even today we
find
some of
his
witty
few examples
will illustrate
how
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
house!"
67
it is
this
mys-
came about when Jupiter severed the androgyne. He bade Mercury sew up the bellies of the two halves; and thus
the belly
is
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?
Here
as the
is
as coarse
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:
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.
despite
on April
December
1549, stood at
the center of the literary circle gathered at the court of her brother,
Francis
i.
book of
The
in conscious
The seventy-two
69
over eight
A company of ladies
and gentlemen
who
To
the group
attacks
on the
evils of
cially
owes
its first
fluent
and
free
how
Madame Marguerite
like Boccaccio's,
(that
is,
herself)
had resolved
and with
translated
by
a secretary
of the king,
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
title:
However,
since he
had mutilated
castrated text,
under the
by which
it
come
to be
The
and
stories that
her age loved. Generally they are of a prurient nature but told
may be,
they
do not aim
by joy
70
BOOK
arouse even the
II:
modern
it
And
sometimes,
when an
extremely erotic
told,
Mar-
guerite
time, to
make it yield
Their work
is
by no means diminished
x,
in import-
Amrain (Anthropophytheia
illu-
He
holds
who
all
classes
and collectors of
classes.
This explains
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
When we
of Clement Marot.
Born
in 1495,
much
He
accompanied Francis
on the
latter's
was soon
released,
brought him to
jail,
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
544 in com-
Of
poems
by
the defects of the style of the time, the obsolete emotion and pon-
derous pomp. For erotica however Marot found the clear classic
He was
able to enclose
his
whole
skill
The
sparkle, like
mirrors, with
all
The
ruled over
erotic. It has
all
been sugis
of Burgundy, to
whom
Europe
re-
Italian
women.
He
and
his
men were
one hundred and twenty days and nights, the king and
revelled in a limitlessly giddy
life,
Tarro
a
on July
6,
1495.
He was
march with
Benedictus
who was
found the
names of
72
BOOK
libertine
II:
way
to perpetuate the
memory
cities.
But
been
lost.
The
loveliest
1494.
They wanted to
his arrival
There
bridled
fidelity,
is
who
life
539-
was spent
at the
Na-
Henry 11 bestowed upon him the abbey of Brantome, by which name he has come to be remembered. After journeys through
Italy, Spain,
in the
cam-
grave injuries which kept him in bed for four whole years. During
this period
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
We see and
who
have been
bom and
Brantome
reared in fastidiousness,
and
how they
trifle
away
their days.
side.
a brilliant chatterer,
who
We
moderns are
by the
many
And
not
73
treatises
on the follow-
i:
Concerning
2:
women who cultivate love and make What has the most charm in love the
charms.
their
4:
Concerning older
sisters. 5:
ladies
who
6:
younger
latter,
courageous women.
never
of
women, and
down. This
For very soon another ton mot or piquant story ensnares him
for
all
which he cannot
homage
and
to
women who
to
whenever and
on the
whomsoever they
sympathy
amount of
is
is
entirely
tremendous
interesting material
revealed to us in this
work which
it
re-
veals to us a clearer
e|,^^e|*^*^e|*^4*4'#4*##4*#4*4*4'4*#4*#4*###4'4'
CHAPTER V
THE SEVENTEENTH CENTURY
old times" to
souls
always refer,
really existed.
alas!
They
merits and
differ-
No
in
age
is
it is
merely
ent.
The
colors.
all
we
already find
genres of litera-
from the
the coarsest and most unintelligent buffoon. the seventeenth century, there
is
And
in the France of
no lack of
sex.
Thus
des
de
joie siiivie
Maigre (1648). In
this
brochure the
filles
de
joies
whom
Paris.
to Blessebois,
also the
75
number of scandalous
stories
as a target for
obscene
and
is
satire, despite
there
Henry
in,
IV by Caucont
iv.
de
la
of Henri
The immoral
are criticised in
life
Le
and Le
work
is
a collection of
verse,
more
whose chief
en chemise, V accouchement,
le chat, le
ventre
litre, le
bon
office, etc.
the
Among
by
and to a
naturalistic conception
the
if
true particulars.
It
would
BOOK
that erotic
II:
no doubt
manners occupied
is
men who
few such
will
now be mentioned.
is
6 19-
of the
to the
xiii.
age of Francis
i,
Tallement
is
is
for that of
and Louis
While Brantome
succinct,
brief,
when
Montigny was
twenty
francs,
sold, the
for
when
it
the
over to
them
when the
first
edition appeared
is
He
sprang from a
distinction.
served Prince
upon him. The most improbable rumors were circulated about him.
Thus he was
exhumed
dances.
exile.
reputed, in the
company
his
celebrated the black mass during passion week; and again, to have
a corpse with
which
The
What made
77
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.
Madame La Baume
much worse
were
able to persuade
Louis XIV that his mistress had not fared so well in this work.
The
script, to thirteen
months in the
and
it
After his
release,
Bussy had
was not
he regained
There
is
his incarceration
was nothing
At
works and
had appeared
IV
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
as a tragic
even crowned heads were immune from the fate of wearing horns.
The various
and
were naturally
secretly printed
distributed.
as the
author of an extremely
who
78
BOOK
sees her
II:
berates
him
The account
of the
dream
is
interrupted
by
the
visit
of a friend,
who
and
is
informed that he
news
at all
of her desires
who
at first labors
dream.
It is
only after
many
triumphs and then both lovers compliment each other upon their
venereal prowess.
An
Memoir es du
17
3), in
which he
Count
Philibert of
Grammont,
Charles
tain
11
of England.
When we
we
created for
no higher pur-
and no country,
historical
from exploitation
as a possible
one
series failed,
it
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
artistic
by the unlettered.
In
all
word
panies
man from
of future love, and the aged revel in memories of past loves. But
is
no emotional content.
It is
merely a means of
gallantry.
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
to the
same
ethical elements.
none the
and
lesser figures
helped to prove
still
idyllic
and precious
number
Madame
senses
de
la
Force. Soon the password of the time was Volupte, the sentimental
ecstasy
souls of
and the
The
By
the
number
of strong erotics
erotic
work
in
world
literature
it is
Raggionamenti
is
BOOK
titled in English.
II:
The
who was
as a
bom
Her
name
was perfectly
by
woman,
least of all
by one who
relation
life.
Nor
real
it
Leyden any
composed
in
became
1
du
roi in
666^
and
later
was
He
he
At
the expense of a
M. de May,
by
one Nicolas.
The
latter
and
flee to
was
instituted for
by
two
among
a vol-
ume
containing his
own
He
verses
had been
stolen
public.
He
describes him-
lost
manu-
script of Meursius:
were
Who
we
have no key to
identify
of this \vork in
by Octavia
in the Fascennine
as
Anecdota,
shown
to his friends, in
men and
women known
work.
we must lament
by
nough.
Had
that
the charit is
Geneva
edition of 1678 he
enacted in
its
entirety
is
upon Spanish
acters;
but there
no word
82
BOOK
It is
II:
the whole
work
to
was never
carried out. It is
which would
it
at
authorship
He was careful not to give any sign that the work was his own
Thus
in his memoirs,
no longer
of
accessible today,
which was of a
sotadic nature,
which may
Then
this
Now
Tu-
poem
bero,
who was
we
660 he caused
works.
work
to be printed in the
is
his other
leaves
with
his
unexampled frankness,
He
employs the
same
fidelity as
Aretino in the
depiction of the
mad
econ-
omy
of the
is
Roman
influence
undeniable
not only
this "divine
same period
83
other famous
work
title
of Vecole des
etc.
lost today,
but in the
The
author
is
young
girls
who
still
may
Venus
is
bands or
logues.
Hence
Robinet, a
loves
young
Parisian
is
xiii,
Fanchon who
too naive to
know
In order to get
what he wants, he
The incendiary
that Robinet soon finds a willing ear and perfect delight in Fan-
visits
who
compare expraise
periences and
what one
Poems of
woman's
is
a discussion of
solitary
which may
fill
The
preface, got into very hot water because of the publication of this
book.
effigy
He had
to flee, his
his
They were
it
become
morals.
in 1694,
BOOK
II:
But a generation
lot of
much more
A collection
recognition
bawdy
verse appeared
title
The
earlier
work bore
Viau's
title
page. Viau
denied authorship but his denial did not help him for very long.
year
later,
morality.
charges true and sentenced our poet, after he had fled to Chantilly,
to death
On
was
jail
for
his fate.
At
Today we regard
example
about
it
One
No
fuss
though there
very
little
difference
between
and the
Farnasse.
From
this
and other
cases,
we must
but his
irreligiosity.
products in the
panurgic poetry.
It is
whose
originality cannot
literary value
be
underestimated.
An
from admiring
85
because the author was careful enough not to attack religion and
the church.
of the work.
all
The
all
thoughts,
whatever
stirs
mortal frame,
all
sacred flame.
brace
ity.
is
human
activ-
But
embrace
is
entirely dependent
Master
Iste.
in the council of
priapic perimeters.
Thus
youth
who
but
who has
"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,
Or, "Madame,
I
"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
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
it,
although
BOOK
II:
young man
tells
am
so full of love
You
don't
believe
The
night:
me? Very
me
sleep with
you and
you'll see."
"Am I not sweet?" "Yes," answers the newly wedded husman who taught you it."
and uses
asks her
A cuckold
But
home
in a dark night
when he
When
Lisa's
song
is
praised
as
though
questionable
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,"
debt to Martial
tion.
Thus
a
who once
that
low
Or when
vises
man
him
a wife.
many
of
more general
worn
exposed, blasts
by
all
two
on the female
will afford
some notion
The
lion's
who
S7
he differed but
Httle
from many of
But
naturalistic,
but not
whom
known only
French
literature
is
one
man
who
still lives,
Jean
^^
making
some realm of
with the charm
human
of his
La Fontaine
own
personality.
With
French
and Rabelais.
In 1655 the
first
volume of
his
its
composition to Marie
Ann
of Mazarin, the French cardinal and prime minister under Louis xiv.
The
dis-
pleasure.
At
a time
when
elicit
undivided ap1675,
M. de
la
BOOK
When
II:
When
he lay on
Whereupon he
so
asked in
all
bad?"
He enjoined his
One hundred
The
his
it
that
all
by
so
much ado
were best to
work go undoesn't
La
say
are
which
much
Why? They
Grecourt, Gresset which that century and the following one were
very fond
this craft,
of. If
it
first
to achieve excellence in
certainly
mood
of
if
we
ac-
It is
own
an admirable chatter-box,
good-humored moral
all
reflections,
which
justify
him
to the reader
a
the more.
None
of his
La
Fontaine's,
who was
the
France, and the most truthful historian of the morals of that period.
CHAPTER
VI
THE
two
To
achievements of the latter are far surpassed in magnitude and quality by the two
different.
first
first
two
Rome may be
it
were
to us.
of the seventeenth
century. Louis xiv with his basic tenet of Vetat c'est moi, and his
free participation in
life.
Everything was
decreed from above, so interest in politics declined. element pressed to the front.
The
personal
One
it
One
plea-
commonest of
life
to achieve
spell
maximum
of
of the pious
Mme.
de Maintenon
all this
secret. Etiquette
engendered the
were made
stiff
make them
vats,
Grace
Grandeur
now
the hair
was worn
powdered and
movement.
Dwellings became
No
more high
more grand
life
ostentatious
chambers opened
in pretty dislit
with a
perfumed
light seeping
silk.
Volup-
tuous paintings beckoned from the walls where blue and white
soft pillows
hung
in the
fidelity
an empty nought.
The
virtue of most
it
was
all
men had
was regarded
poach to
his
utmost
satisfaction.
fidelity
how
ridiculously
was
it
considered,
how
how commonplace!
have the familiar
all
woman could
94
BOOK
this
III:
family friend. Marriage was the charter for erotic needs, and in
Mme. Vence
married you
who one day thus addressed him. may do it as you both please, but
ried first."
It
is
become mar-
one to
infidelity,
it
may be
also a
in predisposing
women
change was
The
"The
become
better,
There
will
be a return to virtue to a
it
affords pleasure.
At
present nothing
is
is as
much
cannot
forever."
of France.
in the
associates
The
corrupting
all
life
of the court
the king of
mistresses
rakes, Louis
literary
criticism during the reign of Louis xiv but the "solar" king didn't
humor
of these
sallies.
Thus, he banished
been
at the court
Italian
comedy-players
95
who had
this
"So long
filth
and their
irreligious
laughter.
But one day they got the idea of producing a piece by the
name
of
La
fausse
at
Mme.
had
to leave the
kingdom.
left all
number
the
his
of his
avowed
tremendous
lust,
whereupon
Abbe
own
At
stood the
When
the ex-brothel-inmate
directed against her because she carried over her brothel manners
to her
ier
new
post,
flattering courtlove's
lists.
however
inferior
But these
glowing senses
of vicarious voyeur
He now
form him
at regular intervals
all
piquant detail
all
obscene
occurrences, and
plenty.
Of
these, there
were
At
this
is
itself felt. If
is
nature
both per-
mitted and
The
feelings of
shame and
religious sensibility
men unlimited
96
BOOK
quires a
III:
re-
complement
in others.
modest yearnings,
something
natural,
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
when
fashion
woman had
due to
dominant place
all
occupied
a strict but moribund despotism, an educated but disintegrated society, sharp class differences
and
cal
tense
at all costs in
order to forget.
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
but
slight.
This influence
man had
morals
shuffled off.
Man was
nothing
man
by permitting
too,
crass materialism of a
Holbach,
La Mettrie and
is
sure. If life
there
all
feeling,
thought
which one
could grasp at for support no longer existed for this sceptical group.
It
was
for
satisfaction in
and victory.
enjoy
it as
What
and
pleasantly as possible?
Duty and
self
Morals erect walls and forge chains; therefore, the walls must
It
all
ethical
norms
were denied not out of any deep conviction but because they were
felt to
be uncomfortable.
as
One
is
regarded merely
However,
was
mea-
upon the
acme of
contest be-
tween the
sexes.
What was
desired
was
him
the
which acquired
life
had
why
not amusement.^
to the shocks of
become accustomed
on their
lips as
the
company
BOOK
listens to the
III:
naughty
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
in
pastime
women were
in
roues.
Thus,
she
when
was
words; and so astonishing would the words sound coming from her
beautiful
mouth
all
the
men by
this
unrestraint of speech.
Her
chief ad-
who
heaped abuse
at the classics
title
of the truimvirat
du mauvais
cious works.
the theatre in
her
home
of choice spirits
such
as Duclos,
was
Muses and every free joke was applauded, every piquant anecdote
laughed
If
at if
only
it
clever.
the
women
undressing
gladly,
Everybody wrote
blithely; there
was no trace
At
young
99
for the highborn, and inaugurate her literary career in the follow-
ing fashion:
secretary,
Mama would
little
when
and
with
dear
mama would
little
which
alas!
dallied
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
factitious.
The once
is
forts.
The whole
upon
task
it
is
undertaken because
it is
pleasurable in the
sees one's
when one
influence
It
others.
Thus one
escapes ennui.
women
de
here too.
At
Mme.
Stael,
wrote highly
Other
Nor
feel-
must
it
traces of
Mirabeau to
his
two
Mon-
of a love relation-
Dom Gervaise,
letter
'The whole
filthiest
was
mass of vulgar
jests
expressions
of a shockingly dissolute
monk; her
and sexual
yearnings are
all
That
this
mode
to
100
BOOK
III:
Grand
Carteret will
attest.
Some
tively set
up
indeed.
Naked
When
the pretty one opened the shutter she would see the
more than
for
many uncomfortable
was not
On
Marie Antoinette's
"What is most
to
be cen-
not so
much
is
in the boudoir
ladies of the
also
office; that
young
the
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-
foulness,
elegant nonsense.
they desire to depict the morals of the great world. Such depictions,
in
taste is
shown, deserve
much more
which
are
we must
keep
first
in
society then
and
owed
their light.
least for
At
demned
a
little
to greater fixity
while only.
Only
shine. Indeed,
He
tain
needed
all
of
great
generosities.
own
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-
it
was impossible
The income
home was
within the
desired
raise
who
the nobility and the clergy above the wealthy bourgeois class, as-
sumed the
cordance with
pomp and
splendor tremendous
parasites,
and
had
to
new
posts
were created
interested
functions.
Those
contemporaine.
Two
vicious results
from
this profitable
102
BOOK
III:
the delight in gossip, which derived from the joy of scandal and
nourished
a
it.
The
to
elite,
idleness
would have
filled
they were
easily
they were
gratified, the
more they
natural,
Whoever
abuse and did not permit himself to be drawn into the whirlpool of
unlimited pleasure, was impelled to sacrifice his strongest principles
of gold.
listed so
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
human demands
all gifts
hence there
results a
mad
come.
the
king
shall
who
be
less
will decide
whether
this or that
gratified.
The
the
libel, gossip,
or the pamphlet.
Always the
must be
latter,
the
good and
is
evil alike, is to
be enlisted against
why
common, raw,
exists for
the
But what of
it?
The
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
royal majesty,
who
were
who knew
well
how
if it
filthy enough.
less attractive side
of gossip.
secrets
was
less reprehensible.
little
much
attend
time
to.
and
one's desires
and
Each knew
the affairs of the other, and since life was regarded from the joy-
ous
side,
strict.
Why
pretend to a mor-
ality
and
invaluable. It
was whispered
that
Count
found
his
and fresh
as a score of
years ago; that the pretty Clarice never goes to bed at night with-
and the other head wears the horny emblem. Or a few days ago
a certain ladies'
it is
man
is
word
of
sympathy
company,
bring us
sexual union
may
now.
ser-
Not only
women, powerful
at all times.
welcome
Nerciat
104
BOOK
tells
III:
short
who once
more
us,
store
by
elegant
the servant
who is attention we
is
much more
be hazardous
is
amazing.
Madame
Tallien depicts
fullness of detail as
"Which
a
my
gorgeous dresses
shall I
wear?
It's
made
wager
my
rings, anklets
won
the bet."
The number
legion, so only a
few
most
The
life
of that time
all
is
adventurers,
the likeable
Seingalt,
is
bom
at
another proof
war with
much more
other men,
conventionalities of social
Today we
incline to call
and the
ele-
watch for
means for
When he played
at cards or other
games of
it
was
merely to corriger
la
tactics.
He was
of the law
who were
re-
member
to
He
is
for us
the type of
the
sum
of
life;
thus,
when,
time he
lost his
and
He never
had one
definite
was woman
whom
he
desired. In his
round of
and brunette
sisters
Young
tempt
all
alike
He
With
two and
three,
Undismayed, he follows
nations and never avoids the pleasure they hold in store for him.
And
we
do
perversity, merely
regarding
woman
as
BOOK
as
III:
is
soon as hunger
He
alone,
he gives
all
He remains
new
Hence
the joy he
is
preparing for
is
and
soul.
Witty
chatter
is
render; hence his great love for bed-talk. Sometimes his desire
doomed
merely a
to disappointment,
vessel of
impure
lust;
Venus
Such
to
with
healthy blood and soon he has expelled the poisons from his body.
little
wounds
sustained
on the
ficient to turn
him into
a hater of
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
new
occasionally tears
farewell; but
no hatred ever
long
when
place.
The
actual process of
his loves,
the conquest and the liberation from fetters found galling, Casanova
relates in
pride.
Yet
his vanity
doesn't lead
him
He
reports his
fatal
situations.
quite
amour propre.
It
of his time.
far
It is this
quality
which has
ment
France
it is
although
not
background. This
He
was born
it
in 1707
his
when
became known
rected against France which had appeared in the English press, had
every
scandals
Madame Doublet de
visitors like
Madame de
Tencin,
Du
Deffand,
scientiously sifted
mont and
his successors. It
to say that
form and
ume between
767 and
Then
the author
few
These
dotes. Politics
as
trustworthy historical
sources, for
many
of
them
and
there
is
certainly
in piquant indecencies.
BOOK
By and
large
Ills
however they
of contemporary social
of this class
reworked
in
probably
this
no certainty on
scattered
among
his other
The work
and
is
Justine
lavish
They were
and
their time.
memoirs of Bachaumont
Memoir es
And
there were
many
penny-dreadful
Morande
(1748- 1 803)
who
He
At
own
family he was
held in the Bastille for a while, and upon his release journeyed to
),
was
flourishing,
He made a sally
against
Du
Barry with
a satiric blast:
Vie (Vune
police.
As
109
London
at
this
dangerous pamphletist.
For
Du
Barry
4800
lires,
whereupon the
edition
was destroyed.
It
was only
later
un
benitier,
but he himself
brought out
others.
many
La Portefrom
de
Madame Gourdan
1783).
still
work found
far
The
by
the pet
name
of
we
till
her
from poisoning,
in 1783.
many
be
Here
are a
few specimen
letters to
Dear Mama,
The
to
officer
who
supported
is
me
over.
don't
know what
do and
am turning to you
for help.
110
BOOK
girl, afraid
III:
right with
me
provided
am
it.
am
mands
is
That's nonsense.
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.
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.
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
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
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
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,
Your devoted
servant.
From M.
Madame:
June
I'jj^.
My daughter
is
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
all
respect,
i, i'j'j6.
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:
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
This sheaf of
letters
from the
and
life
ilk led,
and the
infinite mis-
^$e^i^$^^^9^^9(^$^e^e^^e^e^e^^
CHAPTER Vn
ANTI-ROYAL AND ANTI-CHURCH LITERATURE
satire
which
y\
places
it is
to
it,
refuge from
the downpour. Perverse dissoluteness has always found a fierce pleasure in tearing the veil
one's self
It is a
band of
and
it is
accounted an even
there can be
more voluptuous
Hence
this shamelessness
works?
all
He
mentions in his memoirs that a book had been comde Tencin, describing the most obscene practises
posed by
of
all
Madame
with
One
of these
with
its
BOOK
all
III:
banishment he assembled
in red
possible erotic
morocco adorned
his mistresses
were the
targets of the
most obscene
Lon-
don in order to escape her wrath. "He can always return," she continues.
I
can reward
my
friends and
compel them,
if
least to
most
probably forged. Dubarry was not able to exercise such magnanimity and
against
we
must be
regarded
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
nocturnal outings to disreputable inns where firmly believing that she was unsuspected, she carried on her undisguised affair with the
to
her,
"Her appearance
was
on the
terraces at Versailles
where the
new
pre-
strolls
The
her and the Princess of Lamballe, her long friendly connection with
the Duchess of Polignac, offered enough material for accusation.
Her
were regarded
one
as neglect
and
dis-
And though no
knew
how
desired,
But Tilly
too
generous to
him.
And
affairs
with
the
One
phlets
was an obscene
satire describing
d'Artois
later
King Charles
x; the
is
King
is
tiousness.
At the behest
was bought
Naturally, a
few
this piece
Momus
redivivus.
The
of the pamphlet
Le bordel
royal,
which describes
ference of the
Queen with
orate the statue of Priapus with flowers, and use their hands
upon
in-
woman
BOOK
III:
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
amus-
ing since
all
sleeping King.
is
the
The
peculiar
thing about it
is
is
characterized
by
the possession
life.
of an eroticon
which
is
somehow
whose sex
will
VArt
de
les
accouchements, and
on almost
Most of
these writings
lands,
Out
phlets one entered into negotiations with the authors, through intermediaries, and sought to
buy
their silence.
during the reign of Louis xiv, roused the greed of the malefactors.
It It
became
became
good
and near-great.
to
wallowers in
mud
warn the
manu-
sale of the
The
former lackey
If in a
who had
it
these attacks,
fero-
The immoral
of
many
priests,
who
could not
be represented
as
The
enough cynical
It
rounds of profanity.
was
itself
professionals.
Cause
effect
and the
devil exorcised
by Beelzebub. Thus
which he
at-
la Bible, in
retelling
its
love episodes
manner.
The
by
first
place
among
anti-clerical
with his
title
of Histoire de
Pom
1
The book
of cler-
appeared about
be regarded
as
745,
uncertain, and
may
mockery
its
No
other book of
kind aroused
monks
satire.
At
was
were
as
numerous
it.
as
mushrooms
after rain.
education read
Lichtenberg mentions in
lis
his
wp
BOOK
witty
Its
if
III:
it is
a very
history too
interesting. It
is first
Today
there
is
handsome
miniatures
edition, richly
with
its
and not
obscenity. In a letter to
speaks of
a
copy
at
once
her so
many
tion.
Pompadour's copy
later
came
and
library.
Of
is
tant
copy
Marie Antoinette.
Memoires
is
by
text
is
very
rare.
its
Because of
be briefly summarized.
The
life
and
He
is
a peasant
all
quite
by accident
mysteries of Venus.
One
afternoon he
by
Through
119
he
sees
confessor.
sight,
Hymen
things
with
own
hand.
As
many
all
become
clear
his
wishes are hereafter directed to doing that which the Pater had
done with
his mother.
sister
He
flowers one day and after some hesitation decides to take her
force.
as
by
the
desists, especially
visit
religious preceptress of
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
knowledge.
One
night while she was asleep at the cloister where she was
being educated. Sister Monika had slipped into her bed and initiated
and
is
know
Monika
no longer
A strict investi-
Monika
BOOK
III:
When
she
no success in
this
cides to revenge herself for the treatment she has received, and
then to disappear.
The
kindness
when
as
At once
the
owner of the
perfectly innocent
erotic
dream and
realizes
when
the arms of the valet to the nunnery chaplain, and had thus
One
is
who
by Angelica,
This he
knew
have her revenge and orders Martin to bring her the letters
and the
and the
latter, jealous
carcerates Angelica.
The
The end
This lengthy
siderably,
now
convinced
that he will
he
is
He
up
to his
room and
lets
her be the
eye witness of the sex play between Pater Ambrosius and Toinette.
Susanna
is
so
resistance whatever.
Attracted
by
become aware of
Satumin
Pater
room
to instruct
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
priest's niece
enters the
room
The
next day he
concluded.
The
first.
With no women
present,
he once again
falls
self-abuse.
as
he
is
engaged
ex-
The
novice participates in
his real
mother
who
requests
him
shame
an excursus
tells
Satumin
by
excessive indulgence.
An
old Pater,
whom he confides,
advises
him
to
for
confessor,
who
BOOK
III:
blows
when they
Hence
He
in the orgies of the cloister but his plan meets with failure. In his
by
his order,
he
flees to Paris
sick,
is
a raid
separated.
dition,
He
that he
is
of her sorrows, and with these tragic events the book closes.
are the
Thus
work
was
may
justly
be regarded
as the standard
it
in the
equipment of French
officers. It
delirious about
should
call forth a
host of imitations.
The
lowers of Gervaise
who
is
indubitably the
life
the Jesuits.
years of his
He was
life
finally
twenty
it
He
was
who
said that
he
knew God
The
first
book
is
work
contains an
is
an
The wish
to appear orig-
sophistry,
lacks wit
frivolities that
weigh
it
down.
the
What
hope
to accomplish
by
silly tale
of the godemiche?
enlists
Father
who
advises
him
He
nun
gives birth to no
human
creature,
absurdity.
The
it
deals
more
The
is
latter are
uniform, monotonous
in
short, chimeras to
if
keep
men
go
in
darkness.
the world
to
on.
Crimes are
many and
is
the
a
It
A passionate
girl affords
it is
lust alone
How many days are there when his wife is into menstruation,
accessible to
him owing
pregnancy and
con-
demning him
to continence,
by opposing
it
money flowing
124
into industry.
BOOK
Of
III:
is
similar scope
Le Compere Mathieu. In
and he
his
customary blending of
good and
evil;
wherefore,
all is
doomed to pass away. This is the true evil and the source of it all is the
state
which
is
third
author.
La Chandelle,
It
La Chris-
Restoration
fiscated.
was
finally
These
contains
more
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
Great had
that
Madame
little".
Cochois.
pictures
vain for
we are not
The
based on actual incidents which had taken place some time before.
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
The
uninterrupted
orgiastic erethism
spiritual raptures
induced a
when
she
knew how
to
employ an
efficacious abortive.
The
matter
pay
in a devastat-
A supposed
eye-witness,
her
own
human
as a source
document of
social
and
erotic history; for this reason it has defied all attempts at sup-
work two
is
ob-
by no means
who lack
The
judgment.
aims to disprove freedom of the
will.
first
We
are
com-
pelled to act
by
The
kind of
con-
BOOK
III:
The
If
last
mentioned are
no more or
less free
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,
them and
God? Let
things be as the
as it
is.
made them,
for
all is
denied, and
it
by
"God
The The
see
second quotation
all
is
expurgated to omit
room and
still
in the
" Eradice
is
the stigma
"Ah,
it is still
and
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.
will
own
pious contemplation.
flesh
On
your knees,
my
The
I
pain
you
feel will
bring your
spirit into
and
let
two splendid
thighs.
"Now
Fill
that's better.
spirit
Now
lift
your
soul to
God.
your
with the
bliss
it
He
kneeled down,
a
cowl high,
tied
with
his girdle,
thick
bunch
of long rods
girl to kiss.
She obeyed
silently.
The
whispered to himself:
breasts." Presently
"What
a beautiful
bosom.
What charming
"Yes,
worthy
my
soul
is
becoming separated
from
"That
ers
Your spirit
will
be
satisfied."
He said
few pray-
light
followed
by another
Of
all
culture realizes that the case of Pater Gerard does not stand alone,
relations
Today such
a contretemps
would not
much
number
Abbe Reginald
One may compare the similar case of Outhier who however defended himself very
peche du confesseur
avec sa penitente.
In 1760 there appeared Les Delices
ecclesiastiques, the
du
Cloitre
work
17 19-1785)
was
bad
BOOK
sort.
III:
the
owned by
flight.
his family,
Upon
stage. In desperation
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
love desires.
life
He
in those institutions.
His expose
is
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
and describes
his palpations
not to permit her lover to languish in vain. Julia takes her advice
The
ety.
soci-
contemporary of La Morliere,
visits his
latter's soul-friend
who
is
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.
fallen
so violently in love with the abbe that she finally goes to his
room
Her
jealousy
is
chamber pussy
The
exiled
one takes
his
morrow receives
is
he
He
and two
find
when they
him
father of the
He
duke which he
joyed at
favor of the
latter.
The duke
alone.
is
so over-
in bed,
He
assists at
visitor,
proceeds
But for the nth time, he finds that there are other
men
in the
He
is
He falls in love
girl's
At
renounce the
him.
le cloi-
which appeared
century but
in the eighteenth,
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:
meed
given
of a series of porneia,
titles
amply
testify
many
of
its
servants. Indeed,
La Chastete du
les filles
du Fans. Trouves
a la
This
is
authentic material.
clerics
Here we
names,
status,
who were
caught with
The
list is
became public
them were
There
are
naturally carried
on
secretly.
to be con-
upon French
The
first is a
book of
six
songs, each of
verses.
The
title is
actress, of the
Comedie
and
their parner
to
it;
Mme.
ladies
with Duke de
Mazarin.
At the conclusion
in
of the
first
march
is
The
second
song
opened with
virgin
who
is
there
broadly related
how
one
afflicted
with
satyriasis enters a
monastery and
how
he ministers to
131
This affords
Towards
which
The
now
per-
Many luetic
lovers are
adduced
ends
and the
luetic prelates
come
The song
plastic positions.
The
hymn
of praise
is
Paris,
Gourdan,
Montigny, d'Hericourt
and then
we
are permitted to
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
by pointing
to Dr.
to the
example of
Maria-Theresa, Catherine
ii,
as a
in the fore-
word
to
The
Bordes.
other far-reaching
is
work
that serves as a
companion piece
to
Foutromanie
by Charles
is
It tells
the
it
joy of
all ladies.
Rodric receives
to a
it
direct
gets to
Donna Capponi,
nunnery and
hands of
BOOK
III:
Although
this
work
until 1775 it
was known
it
in a letter to Bordes
had termed
this
genre that
we
He
not an obscene
word
to
be found in
it;
in keeping
very free pictures but always veiled and with the most decorous
means.
He
than
and choice
taste.
The
readers for
whom
who
century, strong stuff was needed, cynical and urmatural, for their
CHAPTER Vni
THE OBSCENITY OF THE THEATRES
THE any
When
life
free,
the boards
swarmed with
frivolity
high up
as possible
and
One contemporary
at all virtue.
no matter
still
many
poets and
even of the
set to
grated lodges of these small secret theatres, the noble ladies of finest
society might witness the erotic plays
The famous dancer Guimard had country home at Panin for which Colle supperiod.
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:
that
own
taste
who will
The
old French
may
la
Comtesse (VOlonfie
la
as characteristic of
is
its
century as the
it
Theatre de
rue de
Sante
does
remain true that the rococo period has the doubtful distinction of
being richest in these erotic theatres.
The indiscreet
composed
his
Accidents, which
by
own
it.
woman
it
crowd
and
of
turned out that the savage was some rascal from the suburb
St.
woman
earned
considerable sums
If
of the public.
VArt
de
Joiiir:
The
is
our own.
orgies of the better society one
royalistic tragedies
which
Or
failing this,
foutue.
On
Louis XVI sitting on the penitent's seat in line with other penitents.
On
brief
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
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
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:
actum de
retro. Francis
as expectant observers
and manustupratione
while
Act
enter the stage
a?id the sides.
III
from 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
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
itself.
La France foutue
on
sex-
erotic experiences.
this
work
derives
from
unlikely since he
was
a thorough
its
author.
now
be
Our purpose
is
which
affected the social and historic life of France, and to eliminate any
se. If
we
have toned
all
down many an
because
we
wish to avoid
137
things unnecessary
literature.
We
prefer to shoot
it.
The
for
du
cloitre,
a theatre of
some of the
parts.
The
roles of
The
author
would
and boasted that he had omitted every expression that might give
offense.
Was
it
book
is
read-
comes
is
Marton
gets
forty strokes with the lash upon her bare body. After the flagellation,
Agathe hurries
to her friend
discipline
with her
hand; then both friends give themselves over to sapphic love. Agathe
promises Marton a
still
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
with Marton.
Another
we
shall
do no more than
effectiveness.
What
to brothels
than a
result
depiction of
all
from such
a visit?
To
which
BOOK
in the style of
III:
list
it is
away
lest
consequence. This
piece contains
is
many items
were in
represented as speak-
it
easier for
it
you
make
What you
need
above
all
are friends
among
How
way
The
visit
with an unexpected
all
by
The
I
commissioner has
am
from Champign.
I
came
you
entered and
I
give
you
my word
understand
pimp?"
little,
so one
At
moral purpose
achieved.
these obscene compositions
to,
While many of
tended
for,
in-
and accessible
own pornographers.The foremost of these Duke Henin who was bom in 744 and came
1
enormous fortune
at the
passionate,
theatre.
his lusts
and to
With
own
theatre
and retained
contemporary, Delisle de
139
Henin
is
adduced
and
others
who
The foreword
works
testifies
sketches were really acted out. Antiquity echoes with the dialogues
which
professional artists
drew
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
normal
who were
Re-
worthy of being
saturnalia of the
"On
was invited to
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.
but
the
have kept
it
of
little
intimate theatre,
where innocence
is
lost
young
it."
all
One may
well ask
what
this
the
140
BOOK
III:
own
confession, there
was no purity
to be endangered since
first
Ganymede,
in the second
by
the
ravishes
last
two
The
piece
Myrza
spats
at the
who go
and
later
Opera
Ball.
The
The
was able
assumed name.
The
dialogue unaccompanied
by
was
Chevalier de
Grammont and
and
rushed to the
actress' lodgings
many
began
As long
became
as the scandal
CHAPTEM IX
VENEREAL VERSES
THROUGH
last
undermining
all
ethical
and
came
to a pass
was customary
to
bring the
filles
talents
and
gallantries.
in
form of almanacs:
Only
went
out into the world. These almanacs were usually small gilt-edged,
coquettishly appointed volumes, provided with a tiny pencil and
a
for
memoranda. The
titles
lewd contents away, though some were much more lewd than
others.
fairly
title
of Trou-Trou.
officials,
all felt
show
It
142
THE EIGHTEENTH CENTUMY thing strange, as some special discovery of the century. When galUc
III:
BOOK
poetry.
contemporary author
who
failed to
upon the
Venus, and
name
of poet
composed
CEuvres badines.
du cosmopolite (1735).
of the
sources.
Duke de
Grecourt
and
edly, aroused
more
evil
He
lived in the
friendliest relationship
de Arguillon
first
whom
peppery
jokes.
The
it
made by his
1
was
a thankful
and lucrative
compiling of erotic
it
anthologies, and
many famous
gay
effort in
in essence,
is
de
la
143
women
are mercilessly
censured.
Despite
its
eroticism
it
literature because of
its
merits a brief
examination.
existed
The "Joyous
Society"
is
annually, had not paid sufficient and exclusive attention to the fair
sex.
now
to be rectified.
be
January
is
Not
all
The
feast of circumcision
on January
to be the
Many
rite.
February
is
dedicated to the
to be
The known as
among the
this
ancient
Hebrews and
the Romans.
Why
not follow
is
to
be
the
month
of Fellatrices.
Of
all
forms of passion,
this is to
be
striven for
de son amant.
love; but
is
Few women
now
form of
no
vi-
knows
that
spirit.
who had
given
May
is
the
delight
M4
BOOK
of the
III:
men they love. Whatever way he always find new sensations. June belongs to
of gamahucher. August
is
them he
will
who refined
the art
of the
their
the
Cyclades)
them
known today
as diligence or postilion.
September
is
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
preferred
innocent children,
is
the
month
December
(voyeuses).
December eighth
is
the Feast of
after the
holy Joseph.
The
livret closes
Most
notorious, because of
is
blasphemy,
Piron's
all
Ode
which
is
found in almost
(
1
689- 1 77 3) found fame at a very early age through this ode. Later
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
friends.
Piron
who was
"noth-
even an Academician",
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
Ode
well,
we would
And
Presi-
dent Bouhier said to the author: "If someone throws the authorship
of this piece up to you, you should reply calmly,
'I
Yet all
he might to
vain.
was in
either.
He was
malicious
satirist
characteristic.
One day
Piron, an old
a stroll
with
Men
see-
little girl
gaping
at us
your.
your history".
child," spoke the poet, "this history has long
"Dear
ulous".
become
fab-
His
own
characterization of himself
is
"The
spirit
is
Piron".
#
4*
CHAPTER X
SECRET CLUBS AND PERVERSIONS
drawn
until
now between
those
who
would have
led to difficulties
itself
and
work confined
to describing
in the ac-
them drag
Even the
Cloister porter
tales.
and
its
echoes, cannot
be regarded
as
merely pederastic
entitled:
The
his
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
side
by
side
There
is
the
call
eries.
Here's an example.
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
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
come upon
first.
me six or seven
Isn't there
if
anything.
if it isn't
.1
Oh,
too
I I
you
to give
me
I
away every
thought of
shall
sin
I shall
do the following.
now
imagine that
my
husband
is
God
in
my
my
recovery.
have
completed
my
cure
we
will
exercises,
we
silence.
While Madame was speaking, Mr. Roch had enveloped her and
begun the work of God. As soon
life
as it
inform
that
"It's called
my
heart".
is
"What? That
were our
your heart?
it.
O
.
dear
sir,
assure
ill.
you
.
that
would never be
." etc.
(i 708-1 775)
had
ability
and composed
numerous
erotic works.
genial and piquant gallantry. His friend Favoit relates that his life
to please his
As
Turpin de
chairwoman of the
de
la
Table Ronde, and directed her to publish his manuscripts. This task
148
BOOK
III:
the gallant lady accepted and carried out without any prudishness
or fear of scandal.
If it is true that
tion to
all
no
less
gave particular
secte anan-
dryne.
The
latter
work
is
who
falls
is
conveyed
to a lady of rank.
Thus
Mile.
Sappho
inducted into
a circle of lesbians
who
who
at the
same time
satisfy their
debauched
desires.
address delivered
by
will be dis-
cussed presently.
It
in
which love
life,
really
was or was
only regarded
foremost thing in
was
Abbe
Galiani
one loved with the head not with the heart; and love for these
la pensee.
In
it
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
It
were
149
which
first
is
notoriously
it is
spiritual desire
not reason
which
is
is
There
no absolute
bet\\'een
inates,
good and
predom-
conquered the
general.
The
scored
was
For
by Gentil-Bemard
Uart
cf aimer.
women
with rapture to
letter.
Pomp-
When
his
The
art
purveyed
in these
was not
to
and
ecstasy,
famous societes
i).
(V amour
were:
UAcademie de
ces
Dames
et
Count Caylus
and serious
Among
the
the pseudonym of Vade, has left us the constitution and history of the
order.
Although the
very
frivol-
ous and free, especially of the feminine members, they lack attic
salt
Even
the talented
150
BOOK
Crebillon
2).
flls.
III:
members somehow
do
as
for example,
Another society La
Persan
met regularly
at the
home
of
Mme, Doublet de
Into her
who
death of her husband that for 40 years she never ventured outdoors.
home
From
main,
These
sale,
tales in verse
was
his
from
this
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,
these clubs
is
Nerciat has
title.
voluminously recorded in
If
his
he
is
time had 4959 members, about 260 a year. All classes were represented,
mode
of reception
Every member
gift, in
women were
at
5%
interest
and
if
member
left
was
returned.
had
The purpose
form
of the society
this
was the
and about
were devoted to
lesbian love
was the
Anandrynes
whereof Pidausat
treats
whose
constitutions
was
and many other types. Thus the Duchess of Gesvre was the head
of the
ladies.
to
high-bom
statues of Priapus,
The
whose
organization
its
own
seraglio of
boys and
girls,
and even
its
own
do
were
in his
clearly portrayed
by
a contemporary,
Vicomte de Varause,
Lewd
Sisters.
The
work
published a quarter of a century ago, states that this writer was born
in the
advancement, but
were
dispelled
a line regiment.
saved him
from the storms of the revolution which sent so many of his friends
to the guillotine, or compelled
them
He
in
BOOK
III:
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
man
moments of happiness
his lovers
but
it
a work.
Hence we
we
are dealing
here with a hoax on the part of the publisher, or perhaps the author.
Actually, the French original
is
not
known
is
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
was
asserted
his story to
them.
It said
everything and
good
taste in
Hill.
whom
who
some reputation
kisses,
work on
which
The
same
is
Clermont and
to
after
one of her
ideas,
draw
The
com-
position
were a heart
affair
was
stuff
is
it
can only
The Abbe
BOOK
loves
III;
author numerous
to conceal.
Grimm,
these
B ijoux
indiscrets
which was of an
alto-
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
everything
else
his opinion, so
Diderot went
home and
set to
work. In
a fortnight
won
50 louis d'or.
It is
not im-
a panurgic
work
The
title:
who
co uld
make
vulvce speak.
The
of the
contents
may be
briefly
summarized
thus. In the
kingdom
Sultan,
Mongogul, in the
friendliest relations
with
who
has often
been of help to his house. From him he obtains a ring which possesses
the extraordinary quality that
it
man speak as
At
soon
as a
turned upon
it.
Mongogul
sur-
whole
series of
women
The
women
test,
and
155
all
their jewels
The
little
baboon
woman
at the court.
into a severe
fit
of cramps and
upon her
Whereupon
immense
is
woman
One can
a novel
from
Bijoux
not really
the
most diverse
female nature.
The
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
and
fidelity.
get to satirize Platonic love and could not desist from touching on the aberrations of the sexual libido.
The sapphic
love of Fricamone
sodomy
of a
lights
Congo
sinful
punishable
by the
forcible subtraction
wake.
dicere
el-
unmoved;
tophanes nor the healthy joy of Rabelais, nor the seductive frivolity
of Crebillon.
One
156
BOOK
III:
a certain standard of decency, save in the confession of the travelling jewel of Cypria. Strong as the
in
imaginary power,
it is
later
it.
La Religieuse
(the
Nun)
based on an
The
him-
up the
cloister
of his help.
What
its
is its
representation of
superior.
tri-
But with
his task!
Nothing lewd
it is
contained in
is
it.
whose name he
writing, one
who
is
He only
per-
danger.
One
whole
interest
on the
nun, whose whole sin lay in her being nothing more than a woman.
This, however, she
is
with high gusto and disgust the infamy of the attempts to divert
the natural sexual
life
The
Jacques
held together
by
vant
tell
what
is
expression
became more
VOLTAIRE
It
was
the
Maid
of Orleans
which made
Voltaire's
name known
his friends, in
to every pious
and
more or
the
complete copies.
The wider
work
in 1751.
Rome
the
manu-
script
was
stolen
made
vociferous denial
edition pro-
he toned
down
now had
up on
The poem
connection between King Charles and Agnes Sorel. While both are
living in their idyl of love,
France
is
who
Now
the patron
Charles and riding upon a sunbeam enters the terror-stricken municipal council, as
minent dangers.
He
assures
them
had been
by
tenance. In high
dudgeon he departs on
sunbeam.
Voltaire
idyllic
now
hour between a
monk and
158
a peasant
woman.
An
English
BOOK
itinerant friar,
III:
Dom
Grisbourdon,
learnt
Jeanne's virginity.
Hence he immediately
is
shared
by
an
ass driver.
To
this
fall asleep,
pares to snatch her prize; but while the rivals are bickering about
priority, St.
flee.
The girl
awakes,
To
complete
is
to bring
to the
King
Charles.
the English
first,
and get
tent of the
enemy
trou-
making
To
him on
so that
hears
what
sort of treasure
The
latter
is
examined
by
Now
the
battle
can begin.
company
of
Bonneau
to pursue Charles,
cap-
tured
by the
who
strips
her of his
trousers
The Englishmen
Jeanne and the hero Dunois in their martial fury become separated
from the
rest,
a little
dog ap-
them
by
a monster
is
who is
name,
lusts
his
by
Out
of revenge he attempts
burn
his guests.
When
stake,
Dom
upon
his ass
and
we
find
Dom
monk
is
just
made
for Voltaire
and he
deals hefty
Dom
The monk
ass
ass
air
upon he had
by whom Dunois
and jealousy had
was thoroughly
The
ass driver
now
whereupon Jeanne
in ire
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
leader.
Agnes has
and he
treats
But
a friar
knows how
to take advantage
stake.
of her love story and her rescuer fights for her and wins. King Charles
now
Agnes
who
by
all this
Thereafter
the page became recipient of her favors, but both are apprehended
the English in the midst of their copulatory activity.
Agnes sucsins,
is
but
alas for
disguised youth.
150
BOOK
III:
dam
by
George
to
Bonneau and
his
who
monk
Agnes, was
now
discovered
nit- wit
by
the king.
How-
Agnes is
able to
hoodwink the
monarch.
Chandos and
loses,
whereupon the
Dorothea
is
oppressed
by
the
all
Her
and
with the
but
is
up her cause
them
in the
mistress but
is
driven
who
will release
when one
of the captives
will give himself in love. Since all shrink back, Paul Tirconel de-
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
tions
which
really
to hurl his darts of satire against the court, Louis, his mistresses
161
we who
read
it
set it
down
be-
it is
no longer
could be so then.
came about
man
is
funda-
ideals,
which should be
lives of
which
sets
them
off as the
which
assumed in France
asserted,
at least
justly, that
further,
and became
that he
is
church,
by proclaiming further
sensuality.
only
Hence, the
spirit to ruin, in
which
ostensible purity
is
always
It
may
which cannot be
separated from
its
other characteristics.
CREBILLON JUNIOR
The
frivolous literature of France reached
its
who
as the
most
with
worked
his field
resolution
and
BOOK
folly,
III:
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
and
powers of
no more
Wherever he looked
we
we
who
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
men
came to
Paris to
become
and to purchase
dozen
upon
their return.
His best
appeared
essential
known work
is
it
The very
and
reveals the
exile himself
from
wish of Fred-
that
it
manuscript had been stolen from him. After some time, he received
permission to return to France.
As
upon the bed, but upon the sofa. The story takes the form of an oriental
tale, in
which Almanzai,
nobleman
The
may
whom
he
will;
We
may wish
to
remember
that
drew
which
the latter experiences the most intimate details in his various incarnations.
When
sofa,
but
it
billon
erotic situations.
were introduced
bank
notes,
and formal
coats.
An
caiiserie
psychological graces
travaganza.
offered us
by
It is a faithful
the court of
women
men
who
two
is
characters,
a
The
scene
country
more
exactly, the
room
of the countess,
who
has
in. Is
he expected?
We
who
us definitely. Conver-
becomes more and more lively and more intimate. The Count-
He is rather reluctant
by and by, he
Now
he
relates his
BOOK
finally
III:
in
which,
no diminution was
closer to each
now
lays siege to
art, until
This performance
ous relations, and
followed by the vivid narration of other amorgrays, Clitandre has exhausted his
when morning
Next
in
importance
to
is
The
Parasite,
which pretends
The
In
story
is
prolix
is
rather dull.
all it is
modern
reader.
details
The
thread
of the story
constantly torn
by unnecessary
and there
The
sale
it
enjoyed a
The
that in this
work now
to be mentioned, the
famed Dialogue
T ableaux
life
of the old
of enchant-
is
just a
young
girl
and
associates.
engage in numer-
parts.
Later
we
bloom
as bride
own way.
enormously wealthy farmer-general
wrote
it
of taxes, Popeliniere,
his lavishness
and
his
come down
its
it
author affixed
it
from
oblivion. Zairette,
born in
Paris, is after
many
venereal ad-
this
The
large but
in various positions. After the latter's death in a sealed packet so that at first Popeleniere
its
its
166
BOOK
find
III:
and
work
But the
officer in
to be sanctioned
by
the heirs;
whereupon he
89 1
it
was
reprints
and
one of
these.
The French
all
His writings
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-
The
fairy tale
work were
adopted.
also part of
the contemporary
mode which
Crebillon
Peculiar to Crebillon
alizing tone
is
No
one can
his time.
fail
At moments
the
satirist in
him makes
his
appearance
when he
it
but he does
can
easily
be demonstrated.
167
CHODERLOS DE LACLOS
Since love was everything in
this century, the gallant ladies
and
great achieve-
ment.
One had
much, and
when one
by
craft or force.
went the
With
unsurpassable
his Liaisojis
Dangerthe de-
fidelity of a
photographer,
all
of courtly depravity
to sly deceit.
A
is
girl is
made
young and
religious
matron
by
this pair
and
finally to death.
And
at
the motive of
it all is
which
will stop
no crime. Seduction
is
satirist
was hardly
so
much
theme
that he
literary
He was
impelled
by
would have
to
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
it
would have
to
be done in the
finest
De Laclos's contemporary, Count Tilly, makes a very interesting comment. The author expended much art upon Mme. de Mertuil.
He
as
Mme.
de Tourvel.
in evil
And
he is even
justified in
Valmont
BOOK
himself, for he
is
III:
a student of
men and
the path of virtue and womanliness, they proceed downhill into the
mire at an alarmingly
fast clip.
For the
rest
on with
By
those
who knew
the great
men
this
work
one of
was accepted
can be regarded,
as
up the
work
is
of the
evil.
first
So well was he able to get the proper note that people actually
letters.
De Laclos told
was stationed
ing of boredom.
work
originated while he
perish-
in a garrison
on the
island of
Re where he was
He
elegies
and
had
But
now he
him
lasting fame,
even after
also
his death.
One
only
made
life
his
mark
in
which lacked
frame and
a stage since
eclat.
This friend was really born for woman, and was thorough-
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
knew one
of his mistresses
who
was
stood near to
Mme.
de
of the Alertuil
woman
in the story. It
a certain
cerning
whom
knew and
Rome.
He
wrote down
them
and added
own
life.
Then he melted
into
rest
him and
whom
he sent
he regarded
this earth.
After ex-
into the
his purpose.
Fame was
his
in large measure.
During
reprinted fifty
his acquaintance
and was
so impressed
by
LOUVET DE COUVRAY
In strict contrast to the Dangerous Connections of Choderlos stands
another, hardly less famous work,
The Adventures
of Chevalier
he had to
re-
admitted into the convent, joined the Council of 500 and died in
1797. poet.
all
But
his
work
had
fitted
out with so
contempo-
170
BOOK
raries
HI:
the handsome he
its
exquisite frivolity,
which
itself it lived
under.
is
an
accounted
as the
moral balance
where people
nothing
else
where
all
this nothingness,
no tedium
lust
superficial
all,
and neither
which
all
is
not compatible
with their
Faublas sums up
The contents
known
and vividly
warm
paintings, for
it is
just this
mass of
little
mis-
it its
true splendor.
His inventiveness
is
happy,
his devices
which
set it in
effective.
One
his
at his disposal.
The
is
situations
him how
The
of
fire.
The movement
way
of anything
else.
On
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
has
passion,
more of
anything
To sum
up,
amalgam of inconstant
is
Here
is
no affected sentimentality,
when
As an
illustration
work and
its
which the Marquise apparently makes the discovery that the young
Faublas
who is
girl, is really
of mas-
culine gender.
Deep
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."
sir. I
repeat
here.
172
BOOK
in
situation."
III:
awkward
But she
tainly
still
held on to
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?"
//
room ivould
illness.
cer-
"No,
much more
natural
for myself,
has."
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
die!"
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,
known
to
all.
jail
at Vincennes,
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,
his
own
efforts.
He
He would
his
be able to
disin-
herit
them only
if
second marriage
as his
which
own.
When
these calculations
in prison the
two
came
to
pay
his respects to
this visit to
Mirabeau,
who
later
whom
Mirabeau called
174
his
guardian angel:
BOOK
tion
III:
"Yesterday M. de Sade fired his cell. He did me the honor of introducing himself to me and without the slightest provoca-
his
infamous attack.
He
accused
me of
M. de Rougememont
daily stroll
privilege of a
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
They
languished each
for the other and their letters bear witness to their passionate tem-
perament. Sophie
is
His
letters are
momentary
inspirations of the
most personal
art,
When rumors
came
to
him
to publish
vowed
only for
792
was the
The
latter
family.
Mirabeau
also
whom he
did not
know
at
all.
The
suppressed desires
which
is
life
of Mirabeau.
Thus we
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
name might be
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
returns to
my heart.
Hereafter
shall love
will
advertise myself as a
is
sworn
stallion for
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
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."
is
preparing engravings
its
book which
if
he were
its
author,
would be making
his fortune.
He
he
is
176
BOOK
III:
however,
frivolous than
would appear
at first glance.
He
Now he is
treating the
underworld
laughter.
The
is
mails.
A melancholy note
"For
life."
if
one
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
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.
that
we
life
are
of
the times.
The lascivious
life
human
little
com-
posed a
He
asks her
in the Bible
and
were
tribadism, and on
all
by the
casuists.
These
way
that they
were
by even
philosophical ideas.
Here Mirabeau
treats
all
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
with
to zvoman.
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
was naturally
of Amatoria Bibliorum.
fate
If
is
is
not the case with Hie a Hec, dealing with the adventures of a
young pupil
of the
Avignon
Jesuits
tutor in a
characters
nobility;
way of
Mirabeau without
justification
is
work
BOOK
III:
completely
spends an
new
governess
who
leads
Laura
ties a
room and
through
own room
next door.
rises,
One day
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
is
too
young
aware of her
which she
must wear
berty,
etc.,
it is
until she
becomes
ripe.
When
little
which
justifications.
by women,
them
as
we know from
a letter of
if
she
NERCIAT
Andre Robert Andrea de Nerciat was born
adventurous
life
He
Denmark and
finally returned to
179
Duke
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
jailed.
As
a writer Nerciat
is
distinguished
by
his spirit
and
style.
His
in
skill.
Even
he knows
how
to introduce relief.
He
never offends
how
to
from carnal
reality
by
But despite
all
whom
and
we
in
adopted by an
is
Italian
who
she
Her
libido
aroused
when
is still
at fourteen a little
falls in
dancing instructor
At
nineteen she
a prelate
is
d'Aiglemont.
Then
added to the
Her
lust for
with him
fill
the
first
love for each other neither hesitates to stray off into other pastures.
Felicia falls in
who is
a slave to a peculiar
whim.
BOOK
III:
He invites young
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
He
finds his
army and
is
promoted
Many new
by
duced and
all
actuated
Nerciat boasts that his characters are not the usual simple creations,
utterly clear, calculable
virtues
and of one
cloth,
and
infirmities.
They make
from sorrow to
joy,
from
lust to regret,
from wrath
to tenderness.
it is
They
if
one
An
added point of
interest in this
book
is
In
compound
licentiousness. Better
known
is
The Devil
in
Him. This
story, like
of Nerciat's work,
is
strongly
pair of dissolute
women who
engage in monstrous
practices: the
a
German
prelate
whose
life
work
consists in
women;
Mme.
The
worthy-
all
of
whom must
and
jealous;
and
both of
whom
Hector,
who
also the
is
Capuchin who
afflicted
fears
nothing and
the
ass.
This
their
who go through
merry pranks
in this book.
are very
is
The same
which
temporary
as
Les Aphrodites.
At
first
Montmorency under
Marquis de Person.
The
He
added some
fictitious material
own
from
his horse
and enters
a villa before
into the
mys-
four years ago, and since that time she has not seen him.
of her charms, for
Durut
lets
BOOK
Then
a
III:
knows how
to captivate men.
she brings
him
to a boudoir
maid soothes him with chocolate. In the meantime the proud and Duchess de Enginieres enters to keep a rendezvous
is
high-spirited
by
appropriate reading.
version and
Mme. Durut
My
Con-
Le
Fils
its
d'Hercule; the
rejected
by the nobleintrigue.
woman
because
She
whom she
speaks of
is
calls
him
in
a famous actress
who
Durut presently
leaves the
two
She
now suggests
the
which
any but
nobleman
him
who
a double sacrifice.
During
Durut hurries
is
to the
really a
nobleman.
Whereupon
the latter
is
relieved
who
witness
Durut
knows how
Celestine
is
At
The
duchess
Durut remains
i83
The
members come in
is
The
next visitor
who
is
looking for
a travelling
while they are waiting for him, the marquise spends her time with
suit
him and he
declines
the offer.
The
him
herself,
is
and
is
Her
him
at
once and
initial
reluctance
away with
that she has already journeyed to Paris in her chariot and that she
is
ugly
as
physician
infected.
Then
his
Celestine tests
by hanging
50-lb.
weight upon
tumescent organ,
which the
At
the recom-
accepted.
Next morning
come to an
Now
whom
as a servitor.
The
latter
succeeds in
meantime Lime-
The
at a
country
house near
Mme.
BOOK
Mme.
III:
had been
collaborators.
Mme. Durut
trial
performance
forth-
with
instituted.
ap-
than the
Then
Mme.
first
lovers.
a day, she complains. But she reads the names, recruited from every
conceivable
mulattoes and
many
of
unknown occu-
pation
There
here.
are
shall
not be mentioned
Not many
little is
very
to be gained
matters.
as
The
was
common
United
States. It reflects
and
sets in
When
any
litera-
ture turns from the trivial to the erotic and then to the licentious,
we
shall
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
up
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
dia-
To
this
monster
soil.
gener-
highest voltage
by
inflicted
else.
The
woman's sensation
sexual activi-
ty.
Nothing
is
so monstrous that
He
their
with
all sorts
made
There
and
literally
And
through
God,
religion, ethical
commandments
passion.
The
were
they, principally,
who
way
of
mocking repulsively
one thinks of
and morals.
When
devilish philosophy,
many
186
BOOK
III:
on actually experienced
who
the relationships of
pleasure,
come.
The
make
This condition
down to the
and practiced to a
was
it.
If the
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
Church
for in
him
spake the
spirit
by
torture, of
which
in the
The
both
as regards
wipe her
significant
The tendency
is
meager enough. In
falls
by Justine
187
is
very unfortunate,
into
is
portrayed in horrible
is
pictures.
is
either there
no
God or else He
would not
not concerned
suffer so
much
He
adds iniquitously:
"Will not
men
say that
when
it is
virtue
is
followed
prosperity that
better to
go
who
are favored
vir-
In order to bolster
it
view
there
no point
in concealing
Maybe
and
this will
them with
ingratitude;
who always
monstrous
evil
there
is
in this
undoubtedly painful
to
woman who
who
down with
has been
who
we
shall describe
crime in the
most cynical language and with the most immoral and godless
ideas,
crime
as
it is,
triumphant, always
satisfied
whereas virtue
shall
be seen
as eternally
work
his
Philosophy
the
Boudoir.
It is
188
BOOK
III:
work.
The
by
may
de
first
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
and
atheist.
St.
Eugenie de
Alist-
young
girl, is
being expected.
Mme.
a bit of practice
necessary for
is
duly
and the
idiot
when Eugenie
mother comes
become
monstrously raped,
by
upon
her mother.
Another of
his books.
young man
loves Aline,
Blamont.
The latter
desires his
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
namely
1S9
daughter AHne,
is
as his lover.
herself
poisoned
The
latter especially
is
a sort of
pendant to
Sade
also
Juliette.
wrote
two
acolytes,
women
So far
as
temporaries. It
Napoleon and
When the
Thus
d'Orsac, anagram
1
for de Corse,
Barras, etc. In
80 1
while Sade was visiting his publisher and discussing the rewritten
Juliette
arrested.
He
was
December
2,
18 14 at the
age of 75.
It is
copy of Justine
state,
to the consul
and
his
two
punishment for
the
fire.
this
work
to
About
work
of Sade's
preserved in ms. only: The 120 days of Sodom. This ms. has a rich
history.
Although
it
work,
it
was held
190
BOOK
work of
Sade's
III:
was burnt
to be
and
it
this
was presumed
must
Bastille, in
November
end to end
He worked
a roll
1
at it three
he had
as
he lacked
the ms.
Thus
form
is
on both
sides.
When
the
Marquis
his
left
came
Bloch found
it.
A young German
now
The book
la
seems undoubtedly to
almost irrefutable.
The
evidence here.
And
above
there
is
The
come down
to us
completed in
a far
we
were
is
to be illustrated
The
plan
any joy
join forces in a
most
They have
and
prettiest girls
from the
families.
From
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
able necessity, they are ready for the beginning of the most extra-
life.
In the course of a
month each
were
be
woman
stories of the
all,
600 different
tales
way
is
un-
the
human
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
Restif de la Bretonne,
He
is
as
much
of a grapho-
maniac
to
as Sade.
He
life, his
He
own
"/^ dois
la verite, jiit-elle
And
im-
pertinent
certainly
was on innumerable
192
was
THE EIGHTEENTH CENTUMY also an erotomaniac. Women had to give content to his life and withIII:
BOOK
life
out them
his
was
fixed
by
him was
that he
own
self to a sort
of exhibitionism. For
dis-
that reason he
tinctiveness
was
able as
his
Thus he
his
volume he keeps
a diary of
the
women whose
Very
for
into
it,
impregnated.
likely anecdotes
woven
who had
never met him, had once requested the story of certain of the count's
amorous
exploits,
to impart.
Despite the not infrequent obscenities and the free scenes, a very
definite value attaches to the
it
in high regard,
latter
and
in 1789
had ever
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."
also well
based on experiences
Lasciva nobis pagina, vita proba. In the preface he says: "If science
is
false
is
a piece of
moral medicine.
Should the
respect and
appear ribald,
it is
in
its essentials
desening of
what
is
a novelist?
I
conditions.
corrupt. Shall
public morality, those infamous double entendres, those free gestures, those shameless expressions that
men
permit themselves to
as w^ell.
But do not
a
account
it
crime
if
a courageous waiter
who, serving
moral
knowevery
we
feel in
what
things,
he indulges himself
situais
in the broadest
tions.
The end
must necessarily go
to the dogs
when touched by
vice.
Here
is
the
possible;
and in
The book is
writ-
ten in the form of letters and consists of scenes but loosely joined
together.
The
drawn and
he has
194
BOOK
III:
well.
But
it
was
just these
him
who
two
mous
He
himself
of
seventy-two
The
animosity against
view of the
fact that so
many
other
murmur.
The
in
The Nights
morning of these
years.
Here-
were inscribed
night before.
Hence
higmue
The
a
book
is
supposed to
very unhappy marriage. After the wedding she has to give herself
to the
material
is
is
cruelty; but
none the
less
own
Ingenue.
If Restif follows
out on a very large scale but of eight sections planned, only one and
a fraction in his
were completed.
It is said
own underground
press, of
possess an original.
to the
Duke
of Aumale,
whence
it
went
to Frederick
Hankey
came
into
who
the British
all
his
at
is
no development of character, no
erotic situations,
up of
pure pomology,
titles
The very
as
are
between
The
obscenities with
is
swollen were
irritated
than
is,
by
that
the
Justine, Boudoir,
prison.
which
is
read while in
My
purpose
to write a
book
women can
place
confidently
put into the hands of their husbands in order the better to be served
by them;
will
have
its
by
the side
of the senses, in
in
When
it
woman, and
after
be hoped that
jail
when
14,
from
on July
own;
it is
I
BOOK
III:
He
life
by witnessing
He
with
eight sisters are the objects of his youthful lust; then, he accidentally
cohabits with his mother; and finally, the father seduces his
own
is
and are
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
wife to a
monk
her in
consequences.
Whereupon
minds!
consumes the
and thought!
^^-
CHAPTEM Xni
PORNOGRAPHIA RAMPANT
To WHAT
It is
is
obvious at
first sight.
number
were
subordinate to
or personal.
panurgics or hbel
be
political, anti-clerical
Some few
by
these
and amatory
hunger or
And
since the
period were
knew how
heaviness.
They
from Germanic
There
is
a
is
good
deal of chat
passion and having no connection with the inner spirit and the
deeper emotion.
One must be
but
this truth
is
into the
world in
little
insignificant volumes,
By the
who assumed
mask
in
order to remain
in their nefarious
fright-
Undoubtedly! But
how can this occur without it? The more one unveils it,
198
BOOK
only
III:
the greater will be the revulsion from vice. Virtue has real value
when
it is
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
which
admitted,
them nothing
is
holy.
how many works are directed against the clergy, monks and nuns. The reason is that the immoral conduct of the
striking
clergy, induced
by
com-
much would
their vows.
But the
erotic writer
altogether.
To
all
when
she
removes everything
chastity in
natural nakedness?
Can
nun show
up her
than
dress
tion?
when
up
at the
command
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
199
which
much
that
is
They
afford us
And
bein
cause debauchery
is
to be
found only
how lovers
as
this rare
dehght, and
how they
But
it isn't
with advice.
cation
is
The
how
to
palm
off
upon
their unsus-
utterly obsessed with eroticism. But the life of the normal person
contains
many
Hence only
those
who
de-
life
to "love", that
it is
is,
And
remarkable
how much
from the
half- or quarter-world
way
of ex-
perience as related in
many
is
by them.
And
to the
fares,
however
Now
love
if
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,
class
200
BOOK
of society.
III:
panderess
is
connection with
Her
clientel
comprises
women
as well as
how
for sex partners of the opposite or the same sex. She purveys stout
young
barely in their teens. She procures for the lascivious rake the
all
prostitute versed in
knows how
She
to
aids
by
"culat
She comes into contact with the dregs of the people and
dom and
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
The
was
today.
After
all.
Pompadour belonged
Madame La
could really
fairly
well-known.
One
expect something from such confessions, and one was usually not
disappointed.
It
many
of these
to notorious
women, opera
and many
girls
and brothel
mistresses, in order to
a perfectly
make
tremendous
left
success;
who
still
compelled to gratify or
else starve.
form of
a confession.
To
monument. Thus
in
The
He had fallen
won
anticipated.
He
treatment, and while waiting for the cure, he makes the acquaint-
girl.
She
tells
him her
life story,
and he
against him,
he becomes infected
second time.
They both look forward to their love and w^men, whom he now
After
all,
that
is
payment
that lurks
is
too high
is
considered of
diseased
as
by
Such works
As
there
work
is
is
concerned
Very
typical
the increasing
from
the
we
are introduced to
all
is
motif that
very
popular
is
The young
girl in
A very
202
BOOK
common
device
III:
is
whereby the
by an
may be
able
married and
all
her defloration with the preliminary scenes and the ensuing orgies
of delight.
to
The
dull.
if
the narrative
is
not
become
Or
young man
first in
realm
first
of Venus, tarrying at
sortie into sex
is
art
now
we
which
are
Of
course,
such excellence
who
We
classic
as the
demand.
If this
grew
whose
titles
taste alike.
These por-
were
They were
sold cheaply
enough from
10 sous a piece
a vestige of scruple.
was very
From
all
essential
elements of
vice,
without hindrance
What
alas!
pamphlets was
always to be found
horrible Justine
in the pockets of
even those
all
criminal. Alercier de
Compiegne (1763-1800)
logical works,
and
very
Bastille there
was
a secret press
The
who combined
Rheims
still
in 1724, he took
up the
Leger
and the
more
lucrative one of
St,
easier for
him
with
handsome
the respect
recognized
death.
He was
killed
by
cannon
ball as
Many
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
latter,
other
way by
namely
their vestes
mode, the jackets were worn buttoned up and the upper portion
of the vests could not be seen.
their vests
The
mo-
"art".
stuff designed
by the
were
by con-
temporary
rich.
Pompadour
with pleasure
When
on
There
is
home
of the
pictures
we found
Among
Chartreux, more of a prankish than a passionate book; the conversations of Luisa Sigea, well
passion and
is
combined
in full
harmony with
atheism.
A devastat-
is
which
are found in
at Delibene's, Juliette
is
to read
sit
Two
to the
works are Casanova and Goethe, though numerous others report the
203
"When
the
for
hour came
went
I
to the
Temple
of Love.
While
was waiting
my
goddess
library
the books
and
all
whose
on
fire
and
compels him to seek the living reality of that whose incendiary depiction he has just read.
lascivious
more
representations.
to Aloysia,
The
and
others,
were of
copper
plates. I
me that I could
scarcely await
From
we
learn that
raw warriors
how he found
what
it
erotic paintings
room of the
the oven he
drew
forth
little
suspecting
might contain.
come to
one's eye,
body with
It is
a great excitement
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
obscene plastic figures and groups, and on the tables reposed ob-
20S
BOOK
III:
the brothers Goncourt have called the most delicate artiste in love
that the eighteenth century possessed,
herself
more
me with
The
attractive pictures
I
patience
when
The
Luxembourg
her
comment apropos
of a livre polisson of
Count Besenval:
"It
Interestingly enough,
greatest
by
this
"The
a
Sunday mass
it
lips
here and there. Everyone had a book in his or her hand out of which
it is
prayerbook, but
tales.
This
known
to
all,
and
all
week
which
La Libordiere
depicts
how
own
207
lated to seduce.
certain literary
rooms
No one hesitated
quite the thing.
women; indeed
pocket
this purpose.
it
was
in
editions,
pocket for
Sade praised
own works
as
in the execution
book-
up
might be sampled by
all;
They were
from
his in-
year Sade had been thoughtless enough to launch his Zoloe vidth
denigration of Napoleon and
factors,
its
anti-religious fulminations.
These
and not
its
to
com-
reported
by Penchet,
Women
208
BOOK
ground
floor.
III:
This collection
it
has been
greatly augmented
by many new
acquisitions. It
it
very strongly
mentioned,
Bourbon
at Paris.
This
Gaston Camus.
by the convent
to disarm
who
two years,
until
When
fever.
he returned to
At
that time the gallant libraries of emigrated nobles for sale, in mass quantities,
to Jesuits, theology,
were
and Camus
all
and above
Bourbon, where the Council of Five Hundred met, and where the
Chamber
ized
of Deputies
this library is
patron-
other.
####'4*4*#"^4*##4*4*4*#4*#4*4*4'#4*#4*#4*"'l''^4'
CHAPTER XIV
THE NAPOLEONIC REGIME
its
for a
on such
but even
love
only awhile.
The type
of
coarse
who had
battened
What
its
new
by
that
much more
throw
itself
into the
enjoyment of
so
much immorality
came
were no
differences of
To
these
ladies of the
former
in constrained merriment,
As
lost all
its
god.
to be occupied
by the adoration
a cult of ath-
made
in these tournaments
Homer's
heroes.
To
Thus
there
was one
It is
titan
who
once put
away
by
The
this
The
crudest
were
in order
coarse.
At
parties.
And
had
set the
there
came the
recitation of
bawdy
stories
ditties.
What
members
grown
rich
the
were
accessible to bribery.
pestilential
From
their
Luxembourg, the
vapors of their
money
for his
and
orgies.
Hence he had
upon
Barras, grease-
ine Beauhamais,
who was
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
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:
check
this
He did
however succeed
age.
The
salons reappeared
the years immediately preceding was mitigated. the emigres would be in attendance and
vices of
At
these parties
pre-revolutionary times.
them his
spies
The
Many
unsuspected ladies
Many a
ones,
soiree
ended with an
arrest
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
servants
at
home.
won
imperial power.
to permit
all
The
way
his
was
sexual
impulses to be
dissatisfied
satisfied.
In this
way
who were
set a
with
good example in
this direction.
When he wanted
woman
ning conduct.
He
wasn't at
all
An
sufficient to
object.
And
if his
215
his tent
and order a
woman
toute de suite.
fierce impulses.
One need
no
who
life;
way
of his epicurean
or of Lucien who,
when
his mistress
He
finally got so
enmeshed
berthon, that he
made her
As compared
to
this caricature of a
many
which
women dazzled by his royal status fell victim to him. His physicians
were constantly engaged in
in truth
he had none too much, and they believed that wine baths
best
would be the
remedy
The wine
thus used
One remembers
his lovely
and
whom one
wrote in
his
lovers;
world had
it,
though without
justice, that
been one of them. Very well known are the adventures which
whom
see his
she had
many rendezvous
at i88.
Rue du
One day
to
brilliants in
The
next
away
from
hours.
Paris;
new
situation within 48
BOOK
IV:
rider)
Na-
poleon during an inspection found too wild and hence sent hundreds
of miles
away from
Paris.
number
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
many
pi-
who
lived with
later
"He was an
honorable
man
Who knows
which
The memory
still
of honor was
remembrance was
enough
some rein
to the puritanism
revolution.
The famous
and
Cambaceres could have taught Lucullus plenty. His table was decorated
by the
rarest delicacies
this at a
time
when
the endless
first
place
The
officers,
were distinguished
uniform.
for nothing
They
of garrison
life.
When
such
many
disliked the
sequent return of the husband and the end of their delightful days.
The
and
lust.
Wherever
whose
months'
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.
course,
by
sur-
The
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
spirit
as
BOOK
IV:
One
whenever
it
came,
side.
much
of
its
it.
He realized
could not hope for power and consolidated rule until he had suc-
all
all
his
new
nobility,
did not
show
drew the
regime into
in
little
too
of an upstart
of his imperialship.
Thus he contributed
#
BABYLON ON THE SEINE
first
/\
were not
The
ladies of the
demi-
monde
still
set the
publicly-
women, but
so great
There were
were held
balls
when
young ran
and
made
the
name
which the
actors
were pledged
it
went no
if
only to
How
220
BOOK
and the
ladies
IV:
There was no
gentleman
one of
buy
its
The same
Dijon
little
panders.
subterranean literature.
The
new and
eager pur-
was no longer
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
under
his arms,
and
He
looked like a
his wares. All
walking bookstall.
And how
all
curiously he
hawked
The
and
it
was necessary
was
practised;
and
ex-
was again
officially instituted.
But
it
was
tremely
The
authors
were not
to
during the
Hence
it
was decided
to
dam up
all
the
and
police
down
the success
is
evidenced
by
money
upon the
guilty.
in these endeavors
all
click together.
objections,
a certain
somewhat
work
courts
when
of such writings.
La
Fontaine's tales,
for example.
In the
first
came
into
fashion the transparent obscene cards which, for the poorer public,
was
had become
On
saw only
when
up
as
to bright light,
much with
these
smutty
in Paris.
which indeed
is
Now
222
BOOK
Hence
alities,
IV:
there
was
a great
immense
quantities.
Now
Duke
of
Lauzun were
new
Some
upon the
old idea of
Thus Ninon
type of writing
much more
popular at
this time,
under
fictitious
objectionable.
details derived
To
memoirs of piquant
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,
time in addition to
the types just mentioned. Perhaps one of the most popular was
Madame
title;
Pompadour
is
solicitor
free situations
others.
was
confiscated.
The same
fate
was shared by
These
nothing
at
all.
that
many
of
them were
confiscated,
So?igster of the
This
223
to Piron's
Ode
to Priapiis,
others.
Much
which
in ob-
directed against
The
typical
Frenchman
spect.
is
by
Many
we
shall
That Napoleon
was
no paragon of
history.
He
had
was found
later in the
and
Eugenie de Montijo.
The
chau-
at this mesalliance,
much
as their grandfathers
home with
of this time
born, also disappeared quickly, and were not filled with that drivelling hate
which made
so
many
century so unpalatable.
An
example
the
Wife
of desar, a biog-
(M. de
S.).
These
initials
that
Madame Urbain
this
pamphlet. However,
months of
jail,
fine.
This book
tells
the supposed
Gen-
Navarez, Rothschild,
etc.
224
BOOK
all
IV:
called Bodinguettes,
few
sheets, in
They were
charac-
terized
by the grossest
license
Henri Rochefort,
of the
things
Commune,
foul
hammer and
who
it
many of them
interest
indeed.
Hence
the
number
earlier period.
were written
in the
form of love
The Child
of a Jesuit
by Laumer (1822)
Other
moral
life
The Woman of
vigorous attacks
lit
and
its
servitors.
Two
Bosom
of the Church,
work
objectionable; and
prints
it
and suppressions.
In our times
we
we
can see
this
first fruits
of this
first
method
as
garnered in
The
The Gods
of Generatioji, the
United
cult
from
solar worship;
the ceremonies
among
treats brief-
among
Venus
in relation
among
the early
who
in cer-
The
the
first
it
comprehensive work
remained a
weary of perpetual
task.
legal persecu-
complete his
One
extremely
difficult
the
work
is
protests occur, that one gains the impression that the author
was
by Lacroix prove
226
BOOK
that he
ture.
IV:
had
also
Among
by Octave
known
treatise
of the physician
to
it
that those
who
these songs,
however
just
edition
his success
by
It is
Paul de
Kock
(i 794-1
ri-
modern French
which he crammed
far
behind in lasciviousness.
He
his readers
with
The Murder
in the
The foremost
women
227
The importance
unnamed
writers
lies
in their
which they
came
to
power and
was
set
her
seal
upon French
all
life.
laws.
The
The
Of
all
spirit
course,
her
own
class
when
she reduces
taste.
relations
common
With
her polyp-
arms she
with
irresistible force,
who can no
when
the cocotte
is
supreme,
more inward
no greater
praise for a
woman
than
when
in everyone's
mouth.
litera-
The
Dumas
real
ture and
drama began
by
jils.
strumpet
falls
young man
of distin-
guished family
who
is
228
BOOK
The
IV:
this:
Are the
development
one.
at all?
to
be an affirmative
false step or a
has consequences of a tragic nature. Surely no one will be intolerant enough to insist that one error
a
is
enough to
woman and
is
demands
found
sufficiently in regret
and sorrow.
Such regret
cess,
reactions.
difficult to
on the
stage,
production.
The problem
it is
all.
Not
at
This situation
is
used in
all
and com-
binations in order to
The French
vow,
if
permissible in the
somewhat
demi-monde, to
one asks
why
so
scenes,
became
is
not difficult
mad
helped to deof an
He
229
with erotic
allusions,
The
were usually
taken from
Venal love
is
women
alike.
Thus Poritzky
relates that
many
were were
demand, by
insatiable licentious
women,
was very
great.
Students
whom
and
The
and
novel stood on the same low plane with the theatre during
The
all
out with
The
adulterous
woman was
The
dumb
or simply ridiculous.
rice
And
musk and
the novel and the theatre alike. In their diary, the brothers
Gon-
14, 1866, in
"What do you wish," he called out, "when you can only make money in the theatre by making girls'
elder.
tights rip.
tights
of
Directeur Holstein.
He
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
drawn from
life
by
German
230
BOOK
IV:
been
one cold
and the
dia-
of
The Philosophical
opium
and
it is
so cheap in Paris,
dives
and to
region of Montparnasse.
He
visited the
Roman
baths
where amid
vases,
shameful in
this
Olympian atmosphere,
it
in the circle
was handsome
youths
It will
only
a novel in
which
no
But
in real life
however
an author
Alexander Moszkowski
own
experience and
who
is
out of his
of nudity
With
flood,
which found
no stage
up
like
may
be. In the
Horloge Theatre
on the
were dressed
when they
revealed a wide split extending from the neck to the calves, so that
Venus
resented
In Paris
it
all
among
more clothing
left for
the actors
The
seven
deadly
were shown
tights;
as
animated moving
effect
pictures without
any subterfuges of
and the
was
aids, especially
mirror
which
still
left
when
one saw everything clearly with one's eyes. In addition there were
parties
differ in
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
enforced regulation
etc.
Everyone had
pass
to
come before
be admitted.
whole
set of authorities
who would
on the
Any
one
who was
232
BOOK
out. Until
its
IV:
was kept
were
and not
the
ball.
purpose of
Then
a single
woman would
light.
lery,
bathed in a flood of
tidings
this
was the
every
woman had
and
flesh
now
icler
off
was
on.
With
deems
it
necessary to
What was
the situation
"What a disgrace! " he exday when some woman will come to the exalted
or contortion.
whore au
with enthusiasm.
into
And how
can
be otherwise?
We
have fallen
we we
accursed age.
We
we
become
free
men."
image
is
An
hy-
is
provided only
233
per-
litera-
One
of these deserves
he
the
which he
treated
all
the possible
The
he
is
so unrestrained that
only one
little
step
from
manage
to hint at everyis
left.
The
reader's imagination
com-
begun by the
Willy draws
Paris
still
The
stranger just
come
early
I
erotic pleasures.
Very
therefore there
were
to
women's
flesh marts.
These brothel
were already
in
an example, one
may
remarkable
(
title
1
786) ;
said to
of transportation brought
more
visitors
became more/
hall
|
numerous and
obtrusive. In every
little
were
234
BOOK
IV:
of obscene pictures, or
perversities
haustive detail.
One
title:
Les
had only
a short
was
unscrupulous individuals
the enormous
who engaged
as
we
number
of these guides.
The
Mar-
in
was
the
was attributed
to
Only
book could
it is
deals
with characters
who
lived
under Louis-Philippe.
mass of obscene
The book
The
too, a
political
pamphlets
is
My
this class.
Another
is
The Pranks
of
High
women.
The
first
who bobbed up
about
Mayeux by
Travies.
He is the
made him
Hence
quite apart
from
he figures
as the
novels, such as
of
of Hercules;
The Twelve
(erotic) Days'
235
Some
notion of
its
contents
may
be gained from
thief; Cuilseller
whoremonger and
The whole
way by
.-
Cruche and
his gang.
The
language
is
foul
The Examination
many
pieces,
mostly
to
produce any of
writers
is
the
initials
E. D. This
Dumoulin had
a certain
amount of
literary
skill.
He
was a
flagellant,
throughout
Buttocks,
his books.
Some
of the
Turned-Up
He
is
named
novel, the
which argues
also
for personal
knowledge and
participation.
There
are
numerous
The Animated
Marble he
also the
The
undoubtedly was
A Summer
23
BOOK
in the
IV:
1
Country
theless
was able
title
name removed
inform each
from the
young
ladies, a
who
first
young
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
we
shall find
in this
signal con-
resentation in letters.
The first
great
799-
1850). In his Droll Stories, he endeavored to revive the fresh sensuality of the old fabliaux
in
modern
of
tells stories
manner of the
Italian novelists,
a jolly jest
going
and suggestiveness.
Who
can refrain
from laughter
at
the
ment
for
amused
at the
cuckold
who
The
At
The
effects
238
BOOK
one from
ing comedy.
IV:
who
his
real
today famed
as the
He
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
affection of
Curiously enough,
He
which he
celebrates
wit and
jest.
One must
who
twenty
years.
of adultery, of carnal
The moving
and
Mary
Stuart
that
bawdy
street song,
a song of
of an uncontrolled grisette.
all
composed poems
demesne
which
are, to
first
They were
was
when
in
was reprinted
to
few years
confiscated. Beranger
jail
was sentenced
Ode
to Priapus
and
few miscellaneous
were published
d''
in
Le Chansonnier
des
filles
amour.
Two
was
work was
issued in
all
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-
the realm of art was very fertile and French erotic art continued /
to lead the world.
From
market of
erotic pictures,
and
it still
The
artists
heyday and
at their
in their
former which
are to be accounted as
among
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-
us of Poitevin.
What some
quantity.
made up
in
These
tw^o
and others of
any
idealization of sensuality.
The
was
and only
at
BOOK
in their tasks.
IV:
They
mechanics of love, and they can suggest nothing more than the
physical delights
,
to the
woman,
erotic
charms of the
female body.
I
Numerous
up
for those
who
With
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
he revealed
the
weak and
which
1820
drawing
pencil. In
smug
circle
who
has
become
as
much
a figure in
French
literature
as Moliere's Tartuffe.
veloped with swift strokes and were originally composed just for
his friends,
When
the erotic
theatre
was
on the Rue de
la
no action
to speak of. It
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
come
to
you
Love me always
as I love you.
If
is
you wish, we
1 1:
(He
speaks: "It
at
10.
She
will not
noon")
(To
11:30.
He
is
come
there?"
Is
that
you?"
(Remember,
flights
you
live
all
out of breath.
is!
below
I
wanted.
understand?
And your housekeeper, She asked me again and again whom She made me repeat it many times
I
despise these
damned
female
tricks.
Don't
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!
me!
Whereupon
out warningly:
"No murder
little
its
But
this
does
activities undisturbed.
to Crebillon in
Two women
visit a
mutual
have
The two
visitors
who
first
the con-
They
chatter about
242
BOOK
stood.
IV:
Each
flatters
draw
The
talk
intense,
and their
digitation
desires.
more
ecstatic, until
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
849.
much
longer.
dealt a
When
coup
d'etat
and
in 1859
many
powrep-
disaffection of
From
horde of Orleanists
who had
others.
St.
resentatives in
Remusat and
Faubourg
Then
legitimists of the
Germain,
this
they
knew
emperor and
from
this source.
And
al-
BOOK
IV:
Even more than in the gallant period the prostitute now ruled. She
played the
first
fiddle in
life, literature,
arts,
The
coup
d'etat
press.
Any
one
who
/
now
wished to found a
to deposit a security
of 50,000 francs,
which made
growth
:
jury hearings but had to be tried before criminal courts and were
threatened with Draconian penalties. After
two warnings
it
a news-,^
was
abolished.
Since the press was gagged and prevented from discussing political
matters,
it
turned to realms
less
financial operations,
and
journalistic wit.
How
successful such
fact
cultivation of
new
pastures
jumped from
3,000 to
and Villemessant
who
made
his
capital.
What
did
it
attacked and libelled in his sheet sought redress in the courts and
that he had to
in fines?
The growing
he
is
insatiable.
The
public
it
difficult to live
without such
slop.
more
whole
fife is
one chain of
245
separates these
who
Philippe!
Murger
as crea-
giving themselves
the cocotte of this time has gone far beyond such considerations.
When
of
she
sells
and chooses
nor
is
this
what the
business
men and
is
knights of happi-
The
sexual satisfaction.
Many
features,
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
to squander one's
money upon
her.
The Duke
of
Grammont-
Caderousse, wasted
money and
lost
Arthur de Lauriston
giers
self
where he entered the army. Prince Achille Murat shot himleft penniless.
when he was
Moreover,
fell
it
who
modem
the Babylon
to find pleasure
246
BOOK
home
IV:
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
mys-
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
them
They
could
now
from
vice.
rob the
man /
his family
with the
woman
came
to the pass
indistinguishable
woman.
litera-
The
ture brought her undisguised praise and the theatre lay at her feet.
artist
drew
mythological divinity; a Phryne, a Leda with the Swan, or whatever other mythological
it is
demi-monde. ^J
praises
of his love in his sheet; and for similar favors the hopeless mediocre
creatures of the stage could expect glowing dramatic panegyrics
upon
method
would
buy
gold.
Even
the famous critic Jules Janin never showed any aversion to a certain sort of erotic handclasp,
after every
six
and eight
247
into literature
when
the younger
with sentimentality.
woman hawks
all
Nothing
is
borrowed from the most corrupt places. xA.nd this wench with camelias
is
who
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,
life, at
it is said:
"Much
will
Although
as the
shame of
drama corresponded
instincts of the
it
became one of
it
whence
made
way
it
home on
this. Barriere's
The
amounted
to
dirtiest
patches of
life.
vice.
came forward
as authoresses
own
experiences.
stir
One
of the most
underwent one
248
BOOK
IV:
called Rigolboche,
who was
even one sensible sentence. Hence her memoirs were really composed by two unscupulous writers, Blum and Huart.
The same
less
Mogador, who could neither read nor write but none the
de-
manded
her lewd confessions. Indeed, her lurid past did not prevent her
like Rosalie
Leon, Mar-
known
as
it is
no
wonder
that
number
Castiglione
who
said to
Gouy competed
with
own
the repertoire of
a Tlieresia,
A
life
his
Nana;
this effort
Injection^
and by Sardou's
is
The Family
Benoiton.
The
money and
249
Only money
everyone pursues
France
swam
in gold
and
and without
effort.
The newly
created stock
Commerce
classes
sky-
how
to use
Paris.
French
purveyed
The world
part,
went
it
much
good
their
hands
too,
The
full
prostitutes
swarmed
streets
Soon
its
found
is
to
be observed
While the
was being
who
and
Flaubert,
Edmond
and
others,
all
being
ship.
When
an
artist
represents the
in
sit
judgment
250
BOOK
upon such
IV:
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
have been guardians of morality saw themselves accused. Accordingly the personal animosities of these outraged officials found
On
which the
real
opposition of justice should have been directed, found wide distribution and flowered in gallic profusion.
Venality
wherever
flesh,
the eye
fell.
purchase of
there
and
attitude.
her
left
hand know
what her
right
itself
squarely on the
The
who showed
was
a seductive
make themselves
Exchange. Most of the greatest Parisian newspapers were the possession of the speculators
who
and didn't
hesitate a
moment
to
possibility of
who
of well-meaning readers
foolish trusts in the
latter.
offi-
were accused of
Duke de Momy,
the
first
and
a half millions to
his usurious
demands,
Morny was
Mexican
to
go in for the
and
disastrous
which
cost Maximilian
This he
renewed
many. Thus
downfall.
indirectly, a swindler
was the
real cause of
C^^t^
^^^
CHAPTER
XVIII
is
more
fruitful than
is
of erotica. It
as
though
itself in
much-
worked
partially
field
had to
There were
a very considerable
number
We
and Huys-
we
shall cast a
and Hugo.
school,
We
shall
then tarry a
moment with
And
The
still
remains
it is
but
only
known in castrated
editions.
At the time
of
a
appearance
it
aroused
is
French roman-
His work
is
characterized
by
253
he
let
himself go
all
the way.
The
six tales
were so open
When
by
He
had de-
he
asserted,
to remain true to
life.
with
his
which
with
sex,
weird apprehenits
and flames
in eternity,
and in
tiny cinders,
which
victories.
Who
woman
beautiful
lusts,
who
burns perpetually
and while
battles
man
after
assigna-
who
has
come with
The
general
berates his spouse for her wantonness, and hints that he has heard
practices.
Stung
him that the child she had born him and which
254
BOOK
IV:
general's,
but
the fruit of her lust with the lover just departed. She informs
too that
it
him
when
its
memento. In demoniac
she
now
demented
blinded
child!
figures, a
What a frightful scene! Two partially woman charred by many lusts and a man
furies,
by elemental
is
wax upon
burning her to
Thus
is
quenched forever.
In this connection
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
problematic nature
of daily
life,
who
dissatisfied
with murder
and sexual
excesses.
There
are
many
by
by
satyriasis. "It
appeared
his
as
though
nature
grew
and that
mere proximity
head
down dug
its
roots, feet
thighs,
which
up and getting
smaller the
further
away they
is
are
in
Now it
bough
rammed
is
between these
legs in
an immoble orgiastic
writhing which
255
foliage; or
on the contrary
shoots out
earth.
long-stemmed beech
alit
with
At
in
little
openings
yawned
animals.
rolled
up
minded him of
shot
vault.
satanic.
immense
their contents in
And
here
is
a later excerpt:
"By and
large,
everything here
has the
same form
it is
as the penis
which
is
And
all
When
it
the
human
imagination seeks to
Look
at machines,
Romeos
law
in cast-iron Juliettes,
The
varieties of
human
expression are in no
is
to, if
one
is
256
BOOK
IV:
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
make an
strictly
limited for he
was
ALFRED DE MUSSET
(1810-1856)
number
Musset disputed
days later he read his Gamiani before his friends, a book which
describes everything without employing a single indecent word.
work
holds
it
to
be a
mistress,
George Sand.
where poor
Sand
is
his illness
Italian, for
which
Musset
he was impotent.
To
revenge
this,
also
first
one
is
edition of
Ga?mani bears
Not only
is
there a dispute about the real motive for the writing of this novel,
257
is
absurd.
The
work
himself showed
lascivious
number of his
friends,
drawings for
And
finally, as
Through an
publisher at Brussels
who issued it
Here is
At a house
ball
Baron Alcide,
dis-
a lesbian.
He determines
girl
to eavesdrop
on
her,
and
young
of seventeen.
The
latter doesn't
is
know how
sight.
to get
home
no coach
in
Hence
The
latter
and tenderness,
When
Her
tribadic
Fanny
is
at first frightened,
but at length
who
cealment
now
amid
Now
tendencies.
As
nunnery by her
aunt.
Once,
the
Then
258
the others
the stories of
erotic scenes
BOOK
IV:
mad embrace
come
to their help.
THEOPHILE GAUTIER
In his Mile, de Maiipi?i, Gautier
(
1
novel. This
One and
its
That, aroused so
much
opposition
among
was
was recog-
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
Henry Mongallantries
guests.
and desired that the most abstract and serious subjects be discussed
in her
company. For
this reason
president
possible grace
and inimitable
Gautier's son-in-law
who
which
confess
its
have
author
that
it
was directed
stress
who
tone of the
publication,
atelier.
Furthermore, the
it
letter
which
phile Gautier
more
to gain
259
was native
to him,
and
which
One
of the letters
have referred
record of a trip to
and
it,
iasm about
it."
his
which because of
their
were
STENDHAL
Stendhal-beyle was
also
and
VICTOR
HUGO
quite conclusive.
When
and Dangerous
He
means
to get into
my
father's library
understood no Latin.
few
articles in the
and the
New Heloise^
known
that his
executor,
Romain Coulomb,
Grenoble there
a manuscript designated
80 1
intimate things.
One
260
BOOK.
best.
IV:
anecdote the most innocuous turn and everything would be for the
One
by
by Balzac
as
Gloomy
Stories.
Victor
Hugo
who
flees to
an
escape
first
model and
young countess
which the
artist
and
the
two
lesbians
form an
is
obviously an eroticon
talent.
certainly
The
intense delight
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
author. Several
trick
by some publisher.
Madame Bovary
deep
The former
is
woman
who
is
but
261
that he
had remained
his descriptions..
He was
self as well.
this
Germany during
191
editor,
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
The
by name.
showed
As
critical spirit
by
his
the differentiated
phenomena of
sexual
built
life.
Indeed
many
of
work.
Who does not know the following stories? The comic efforts
woman to
drive
away
the gallant
whom
she has
whom
when
who
has been sent to chaperon three boys has to play the mid-wife
life
and doings in
a brothel.
The
who makes
her
if
by her
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
much, and
his
267
BOOK
and they are
IV:
sex,
this
prolific raconteur.
He
tells
money and
when
make
own natural
of lovers
daughter;
who unwittingly cohabits with his of a lesbian, who drives her lover to suicide
He
a pair
who
He
describes the
woman
to have at least
at
one
idyllic
moment
in her
life;
and the
first
heroism of a boy
boarding school
desires,
who wins
ual fashion
He
by
a distinguished matron,
is
who winks
the fashion of
edgment of her
herself to him.
signal, she
17, 1882,
irritation
One
much
works of
of
The
question
arises
why
seems reasonable
had some
some knowledge
also
of, this
and that he
would lead us
Maupassant
his friends
among
second sup-
true.
Turkish House which was never printed. This work was written
in collaboration with Robert
is
in
Le
Pottevin.
The
as
"bawdy enough
is
make
a sargeant blush".
The Turkish
house
a brothel
and
and in 1877,
in the studio of
and
left
women
The
was
so vivid
Edmond
Two more
of
works
sail
First,
The Girl
sisters,
whom
one
is
lives
with a
man
disillusioned
by her
experience.
The
Maubook.
by
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:
called
The Advendetermining
There
is
no way
at all of
it.
When
he was
number
of ultra-realistic
erotic novels.
merely because of
marked tendencies
to erotic representations,
which appears
much more
is
master-
and
if
be ashamed of
interesting
,
The book
is
an uncommonly
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
fugitive gallantry.
We
who
high society.
who
understands
make
all
who
little ballet
dancer
who knows
all
when
The
relationships of
realistic fidelity
youth he wrote
in
which he very
That
Zola's general
works abound
known
to every one.
Take
265
when
the old
dead
Now they heard the piercing voice of the Brule woman: "We must mutilate him like a tomcat".
"Yes, yes!
tomcat.
Out with
the tomcat.
He
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."
"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:
work
that
do not
correspond to squeamish
taste,
would undoubtedly
a prey to the
was actually
made
Zola
in France.
Towards the
contained
all
A mass
up
way
to
it.
Each of
these pots
name of
is
a writing of Zola.
Zola
raw
strosities of
human
he fears no stench,
are omitted
he permits
his
characters to
from ordinary
illusions.
lexicons,
he
is
never lascivious.
He knows
no bawdy
He
does not
way and
complete the
it
process. If
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
famous poems
ated Verlaine.
whole unadulter-
To
man
are
one must
latter,
we
to us
is
267
Hke
a cold fire-
cracker, and does not break forth mightily like a hot stream of
lava
interior. It
is
is
this
which
casts a
shadow
upon
Les Amies
sonnets
It is
which
two budding
its
girls.
magsenti-
nificent
ment, will not obscure the picture of the poet. But what of the
collection,
Men
in
his place
among
the
time.
He
They
self-rev-
in realistic representation.
at
The sexual
an
was frequently
utterly obscene. It
is
man
for a
on the
hospital
lists
these pitiful
rhymes about
all
few
francs with
which
cul,
to
buy some
And
just as the
poem, Le trou de
still
retains the
sympathy
of
all
26S
BOOK
Femmes was
IV:
published in 1890 in
As can
so that only a
were
work
those
poems were
honor of uranic
poems
CHARLES BAUDELAIRE
By the
side of Verlaine
we might
He
regarded divinity
and love
as
versed themselves for him and good became bad, and evil became
ideal.
to
make
really
be regarded
edition of this
future
them
privately together
with some
satirical
poems
in the
practically non-existent
maid complains
rise to a
in
midsu?nmer "how
The poem,
he was
gave
When
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
sorts as
having informed
me
would
also like to
know
the price of
and
laire
literary qualities of
such slop?
You may
ask
want with
this
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
to
Sainte-Beuve
that
Baudelaire's
own
CHAPTER XIX
PUBLISHERS OF EROTICA
THE publication of
liable to
erotic
discovered both
would be
hard punishment.
It is
sen-
The
much when
is
Under
certain circumstances he
ered
edition of a pornographic
his fortune fell a
work
into
which he
And
yet
who though
aware of
What was
the attraction? Surely the chief motive was the desire to earn
large and quick profits, for obscene books
a higher price than
several reasons for this: the fact that they are prohibited, that they
titillate
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
from the
sale of
one product, he
exposed to great
loss if
interest
which impelled
of value, what-
home
to
new books
garb.
by
reprinting
them
in
worthy
There was
also a
to gather
who were
to obtain a
now be
mentioned.
a carpenter
Felix Regnier-Becker,
by
trade.
verses
The Siege
him
up
a collection for
so successful
little
pay the
fine but
sum
left,
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
and
we
find
him sucfinally in
Brussels again
Mile. Douce.
In
who opened
particularly in the
domain of
erotica.
272
BOOK
IV:
famous
he
frequently ran afoul of the law which could not understand his
aims,
which were
ideal
bibliophile.
his identity
he gave the
own
He
circu-
listed above.
As
of a
Gay had
number of books
in this genre
bookworm.
Besides
women,
his art
Many
of these
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
many
the rest in the decadent style of the ninteenth century. All his
artist,
refer to
women.
who began
to write about
colors.
women
pay
as
he represented her in
his lines
Gay was
and
suff^er
Two
years later he again appeared before the court, this time in the
company
months
trials in
of other publishers.
He
lisher of 38 erotic
in
jail
Gay
his sentence
but merely
at the
Gay was
fine,
Poulet-Malassis
in
who
punishment for the 86 erotica he had sent into the world, and
was
definitely a bibliophile.
classics
was
a terrible failure to
Now he was
compelled
move
where Baudelaire
lived,
and to
among
desire to
recoup
him
to
Here
the
slender
man
sat
bent over
were
com-
of the distinguished
little
books wan-
The most
fruitful
work
of
Gay was
carried
on by
Isidore
Liseux. In
for
him
many
hazards as
much
Kistemaecker in Brussels
is
from Liseux.
at all coarse
be the contents
solid or froth,
was meat
for Kiste-
274
BOOK
IV:
At
who
followed in the
footsteps of
Gay and
at a
cheap
price.
his
True
bibliophile
no
erotic
domain: anthro-
works on
sex, etc.
by
chicaneries even
He
died after
the
World War.
(
183 3- 1898),
whom
as the illustrator of
numerous
This Flemish
artist,
From
that
the
came under
life
mind
all
He
is
mixture of
nerves and
Paris
He
everything.
And
left
every
woman
but always
corset; anything to
pilloried
often
body, with eyes staring and made wild by alcohol, with protruding
jaws; a prostitute
is
a mixture of base
the sexual
life
by
medium
of
275
He
women, whose
sadistic feeling;
and by her
modem women,
is
whose prototype
that street
strength, appearing
into the hell of the in
whom
im-
its
work
by
the endless
monotony
of their
flat
whom
uge
become
and
have taken
ref-
in absinthe,
which
still
leaves
them a few
pitiful illusions,
and
confers
upon them an
artificial
meagre
intoxicain
tion of forgetfulness.
cover the nakedness of their withering body, washed out, enervated Messalinas.
He
inexorable decline.
The
them confused
of alcohol
fire
woman whose
flesh into
Of
all
male
once a
heap of human
ruins.
What was
now
is
tegrated
modem
perversities,
the
Before
century,
we
let
us say a
little
erotic theatre
on the Rue de
previously referred
to.
This
erotic theatre,
its rise
which
actually existed
to a
drunken
jest.
276
BOOK
one got the idea
IV:
of,
creating a
ment of
no
limits
few chosen
to
were
to be presented
and
were
be
of the poets.
The
theatre
was
opened and
young
authors, publishers
artists.
Among
Some
of the
comments were:
Still a
The harlequin thrusts have at all morality and when the mother cannot
this hospitable place will
bring her
little
daughter here,
become the
literati.
few
of
will be
summarized.
is,
The Eyes
license,
still
despite
its
erotic
the intimate relations between her girls and the visitors, while no
go on the
is
girl-dealer
him he follows
Deceived by
his fine
clothing she acquiesces to his terms of paying later. But his end
states
his
own
such a one
as stupid as
who
did not
know enough
to
which he
assents.
277
to a strumpet
toilette.
whose suggestive
name
is
at
her
In the introductory
fulfilling his
is
wife.
But variety
at-
vessel.
Hence he
suffers a
when
him
to the act, he
and
rises to
new
life.
But
of moral scruples.
is
to be
found only
home.
is
Scapin by Glatigny
want
to
parts.
The
whereupon the
latter offers
come
to his institution.
visits
is
Corbin agrees.
By chance
the brothel
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
comedy
in three acts
Monnier's contribution.
growing
possible
artifices,
itself
is
which we
as
shall leave
The drama
occupies
much with
infidelities as
278
BOOK
describes
IV:
The Anniversary
by Neuville and Duboys, two young and now honorably married women, despite
wanton
Hfe,
their earlier
in a separee. their
who
Memories
thing
love between
moment when
ushering
the lovers
in,
both
women
of a
The Grisette mid the Student of Monnier has already been analyzed.
Grand Symphony
All in
of the
Condemned Man of Tisserand and The Bug of Neder and Bataille, possess neither
effort has
been expended
little justifica-
to
be
effort except as a
century.
^e^e^e^s^^c^e^e^?
CHAPTER XX
VENUS VICTORIOUS
THIS
final
France up-to-date.
marital infidelities
eroticism and
altered the
among the
bourgeoisie and
how they
which have
history
also
This
but in
this closing
we
shall treat
century France.
at all times
all
peoples,
and indeed
it
and economic
not altered
by
progressive emancipation of
marital intercourse has
women
it sets
begun
to disappear. It in the
way
class,
development has
primitive
280
BOOK
form which
it
IV:
flexible.
But
this
moraUty.
in
all
common
in harbor brothels
is,
in Paris,
found only
in the
very
lowest dives. But the average prostitute in Paris wants to create the
it
heart,
be
it
ever
probably has
its
ground
among
not simply a
whim
The famous
olis
sexologist
Rohleder
the metrop-
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
vilest
What makes
every-
thing so easy
smaller and
is
medium
which
One must have seen how immensely large prostitution is, how here almost any kind of woman,
to the
how
here at every
moment
of the
day and
281
how
almost
all
pleasure and
He
has scarcely
alighted
by
individuals
who
pour
les
amusements.
When
if
he arrives
at the hotel
he
may
warmly and
lovingly
by
the
filles
de chambre; and
he
is
a grand-cafe of the
ready for
consumption after
his meal.
When he goes to
an amusement place
he will be surprised
at the elegance
and
But
which
cater to an
enormous contingent of
who
have to
be amused. Since Paris has long borne the odium of being the most
wicked
it
must
strive to
do
But
not
many
other motives
which
under-
The
However, only a
them
unemployment, domestic
quarrels,
all
are just a
2S2
BOOK
can
still
IV:
inbred
this
gay evaluation
which
whereby
realize
woman
desires.
her
were offered by the maisons de rendezvous. This system of temporary quarters, in which the
willing to
sell
all
her
the
opportunities and delights of intimate intercourse without subjecting either of the parties to the degrading feeling of venality.
to
these occasional
The woman, on the other hand, earned from adventures some valuable pin money whereby she
little
head
who visited
very
many
\
\
Corruption in
Paris.
He
con-
little
some-
woman
to visit such
Some came
regularly, others
Whatever
all
class of society
2S3
in
need
of,
But
we must
it
de
who
ultimately
many
customers to
is
carry on.
The mania
quite
com-
prehensible, in
working for
and
it
women and
ladies of society;
mistress of such
houses to arouse the belief in these gulls that their wishes v/ere
women
most cases be
When
or Marquise
de
was ready
Such
a pleasure naturally
simpletons
who bought
might be offensive
and give away baldly the preciously guarded secrets of the house.
After
all, it
love-nests that
who made
all
Of
They
if
served
they but
No
matter
how much
a girl
was tortured,
284
BOOK
perversities.
IV:
re-
change be a complete
and
this
change,
ways and
called into
modern technique.
Sourire, there are
all
Le
sorts
enacted in the
travagance.
flesh.
There
is
As soon
as the spectators
find themselves in
behind
from the rue Lepic give themselves to lesbian love just as the collegean
student might imagine
as the milieu of the
it.
Or
is
employed
pieces of
scene to be enacted.
The famous
St.
tween
empty easy
They
Newly Married
of Lafontaine.
Couple, and
many
It is
understood that
this
cultured folks only, for one must at least be acquainted with the
tales of
mime.
But no matter
for the
how
resentations
no matter
how
what the
fare
visitor to
a brothel expects.
He
desires
more powerful
2S5
and
this is
pur-
are, to
pornographic
erotic tastes
is
an extent that the sexual act occurs behind the scenes. England
produces such stuff principally for consumption by India; and
flagellational scenes
is
and
sadistic abuses of
among
beasts.
In
erotic
movies of
One can
say, in brief,
scale of
all
variations,
which shudders
in
all its
were
in most cases
depraved individuals.
They
Something should be
ing
concern-
whom
by an accommodating
2S6
BOOK
terior.
IV:
The
They
are
only recreated or called back into life to impress tourists and create
local color
is
and the
all
illusion of cruelty,
love.
There
nothing at
set
which
would
them
American
much
attention
these fellows
is
worried
who "run"
The
latter factor
is
more ima-
when they
him continuously,
their earnings
him and
if
manhandling
will
punishment.
And
lost creatures
hang on
to her
in
because in a
moment
of fierce jealousy
Again, hke American racketeers, these bullies had to have a vocation through
which they
They
usu-
ally pretend to
whose economic
possibilities
is
who
little
"belongs" will not hesitate to augextra job like theft, fake, swindle,
his fellow
ment
etc., a
his business
with a
workers
the laws
as declassed
if
by
must not be
a matter of surprise
they do not
287
we come
its
to
the history of
erotic literature.
There
on the
its literature,
could find no
erotic of
work
the most
European
its
What is
arts?
its
eroticism and
eminence in the
eminence
this
world
literature?
We
few
ideas in the
mind
modern world.
man
are immeasurable.
And in the
peer.
May
this?
it
account for
Finally,
any offense
work.
It
has been
much more
for
it
World War
that
Americans have
many
by men
in
walks of
life
definite
scenity
there
still
************
JACQUES- ANTOINE
DULAURE
THE GODS OF
6ENER7ITION
* *
Privately Printed
TflE
GODS OF GENERATIOI^ BY
J. A.
DIJLAURE
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
first
English transla-
The
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
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
a single page.
Privately^ Printed.
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Fifth Jive.,
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ISAAC GOLDBERG
MADAME
SEX
NEW YORK
PRIVATELY PRINTED
I^IADAJIIE
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.
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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1/-1
toiik
ncisio
cTltsiorp oj
\Ulale
\^naf)iers
on ^UleriaaapnrocitsnafCiJnjiouiaiionf
ana
cJkallic K^usionas
^n<^^
cJrivaiely C/rinied
\\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
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.
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
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
praeptitii tnctsio
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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\fj
fwmcv
by
i^s.
Jpa^nuvas.
t^vess
/iicS>
yovk -^^sls
Si
EIJIV1JCHS,
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
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
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
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
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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miiLmmimmmm> mmin
^w
irmm mmmmimik\k
<
WSMIEU
IIIEW
Y^mu
a book that
defies
is
no other book
it
like
it
in
has ever been attempted despite the fact that for hunthese chastity belts.
Chastity belts are metal instruments fitting over the private parts of
key. Jealous
sleeping
urination,
women and
securely kept in
place
men would
other
lock
up
their
wives in
absence.
this
way
before
departing
on long
journeys
to
prevent
with
men
during
their
silver girdles
Many
of
This history races through the centuries up to the present time, crowding
strangest information ever put between
its
in tracing the
many
a similar sexual instrument of ancient and primitive days. The book assembles and assorts
subject:
court
trials,
short
stories,
and
fact.
We
of
hesitate to hint at
the
of this
women;
women;
their
employment
in
horrors of
sadism,
masochism, mutilation,
and as instruments of
But
this
history
is
catalogue of Inquisitorial
ferocity.
It
is
as comprehensive
as
Sex
itself,
and
counterbalances
a
.
its
for chastity
belts only
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
FULL-PAGE
ILLUSTRATIONS.
Scattered throughout this history are spicy short stories which in
Some
Merry
of
them
are:
Verville, the
futility
of
Brutal
of
women
to
will
by Comazano,
which a simpleton
tries
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
all
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ABBE DE VOISENON
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:
THE IMMODEST PARTRIDGES THE COLICS OF CUCKOLDRY THE BIZARRE TAPESTRY SPELL THE MOVING PICTURE GALLERY OF DEBAUCHERY
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
to
intrigue,
. .
indiscretion
to
indiscretion,
embarrassing vicissitudes.
Isis in
is
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.
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LACK
LIST
JEAN DE VILLIOT
New
York
fiction
details live
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
no book
many
The
first chapter opens with scenes in London between two lovers. After a few drinks James Churchill tries to force
most brazen way. Disillusioned, she goes to Khartoum where she eventually becomes a nurse.
later
to seek
forgiveness.
and put
all
for
oriental
purposes.
James,
protecting
Grace,
is
raped and led away by one of the chiefs to ornament his harem.
of this white
woman
Mohammedan
first
whim
by
dint of flagellafalls
and similar
a lustful and willing submission. After his death the black chief's brother
heir to the
tortures
and perversions
The background
of
Black Lust describes the savage struggle for supremacy among the native
With
its
sharp, nervou
t
with intensity,
the milk test, the skull trophies, the skin-slicing salt revenge
these
nothing
since
the
and a host
And
mad
is
picture of necrophilia
lust of
the
violation
of corpses, a
And through
wave.
it
all,
the
black
men
for white
it,
like
tidal
No pantomime
this or
extravaganza of imagination.
all
The scabrous
passion,
sensuality are
of
is
adventures therein, the clandestine lesbianism of the inmates, the parts played by the eunuchs, the diversified types of
women
all
The deeper
left
with the blackamoor lord of the harem, their animal love and
must be
to the reader's
own
impressions.
it
is
men
only,
men
Nevertheless
is
not concerned with problem or propaganda of any sort but with the true and unrelenting events
in the
memory
of
and sexuality
Privately Printed.
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100
^ew
PATE
I?UE
OCT
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UNIVERSITY OF FLORIDA
1262
05638
0677
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