III.
The Prevalence of Masturbation--Its Occurrence in Infancy
and Childhood--Is it More Frequent in Males or Females?--After
Adolescence Apparently more Frequent in Women--Reasons
for the Sexual Distribution of Masturbation--The Alleged
Evils of Masturbation--Historical Sketch of the Views
Held on This Point--The Symptoms and Results of Masturbation--Its
Alleged Influence in Causing Eye Disorders--Its Relation
to Insanity and Nervous Disorders--The Evil Effects of
Masturbation Usually Occur on the Basis of a Congenitally
Morbid Nervous System--Neurasthenia Probably the Commonest
Accompaniment of Excessive Masturbation--Precocious Masturbation
Tends to Produce Aversion to Coitus--Psychic Results of
Habitual Masturbation--Masturbation in Men of Genius--Masturbation
as a Nervous Sedative--Typical Cases--The Greek Attitude
toward Masturbation--Attitude of the Catholic Theologians--The
Mohammedan Attitude--The Modern Scientific Attitude--In
What Sense is Masturbation Normal?--The Immense Part in
Life Played by Transmuted Auto-erotic Phenomena.
The foregoing sketch will serve to show how vast is the
field of life--of normal and not merely abnormal life--more
or less infused by auto-erotic phenomena. If, however,
we proceed to investigate precisely the exact extent,
degree, and significance of such phenomena, we are met
by many difficulties. We find, indeed, that no attempts
have been made to study auto-erotic phenomena, except
as regards the group--a somewhat artificial group, as
I have already tried to show--collected under the term
"masturbation" while even here such attempts
have only been made among abnormal classes of people,
or have been conducted in a manner scarcely likely to
yield reliable results.[289] Still there is a certain
significance in the more careful investigations which
have been made to ascertain the precise frequency of masturbation.
Berger, an experienced specialist in nervous diseases,
concluded, in his _Vorlesungen_, that 99 per cent. of
young men and women masturbate occasionally, while the
hundredth conceals the truth;[290] and Hermann Cohn appears
to accept this statement as generally true in Germany.
So high an estimate has, of course, been called in question,
and, since it appears to rest on no basis of careful investigation,
we need not seriously consider it. It is useless to argue
on suppositions; we must cling to our definite evidence,
even though it yields figures which are probably below
the mark. Rohleder considers that during adolescence at
least 95 per cent. of both sexes masturbate, but his figures
are not founded on precise investigation.[291] Julian
Marcuse, on the basis of his own statistics, concludes
that 92 per cent. male individuals have to some extent
masturbated in youth. Perhaps, also, weight attaches to
the opinion of Dukes, physician to Rugby School, who states
that from 90 to 95 per cent. of all boys at boarding school
masturbate.[292] Seerley, of Springfield, Mass., found
that of 125 academic students only 8 assured him they
had never masturbated; while of 347, who answered his
questions, 71 denied that they practiced masturbation,
which seems to imply that 79 per cent. admitted that they
practiced it.[293] Brockman, also in America, among 232
theological students, of the average age of 231/2 years
and coming from various parts of the United States, found
that 132 spontaneously admitted that masturbation was
their most serious temptation and all but one of these
admitted that he yielded, 69 of them to a considerable
extent. This is a proportion of at least 56 per cent.,
the real proportion being doubtless larger, since no question
had been asked as to sexual offenses; 75 practiced masturbation
after conversion, and 24 after they had decided to become
ministers; only 66 mentioned sexual intercourse as their
chief temptation; but altogether sexual temptations outnumbered
all others together.[294] Moraglia, who made inquiry of
200 women of the lower class in Italy, found that 120
acknowledged either that they still masturbate or that
they had done so during a long period.[295] Gualino found
that 23 per cent. men of the professional classes in North
Italy masturbate about puberty; no account was taken of
those who began later. "Here in Switzerland,"
a correspondent writes, "I have had occasion to learn
from adult men, whom I can trust, that they have reached
the age of twenty-five, or over, without sexual congress.
'_Wir haben nicht dieses Beduerfniss_,' is what they say.
But I believe that, in the case of the Swiss mountaineers,
moderate onanism is practiced, as a rule." In hot
countries the same habits are found at a more precocious
age. In Venezuela, for instance, among the Spanish creoles,
Ernst found that in all classes boys and girls are infested
with the vice of onanism. They learn it early, in the
very beginning of life, from their wet-nurses, generally
low Mulatto women, and many reasons help to foster the
habit; the young men are often dissipated and the young
women often remain single.[296] Niceforo, who shows a
special knowledge of the working-girl class at Rome, states
that in many milliners' and dressmakers' workrooms, where
young girls are employed, it frequently happens that during
the hottest hours of the day, between twelve and two,
when the mistress or forewoman is asleep, all the girls
without exception give themselves up to masturbation.[297]
In France a country _cure_ assured Debreyne that among
the little girls who come up for their first communion,
11 out of 12 were given to masturbation.[298] The medical
officer of a Prussian reformatory told Rohleder that nearly
all the inmates over the age of puberty masturbated. Stanley
Hall knew a reform school in America where masturbation
was practiced without exception, and he who could practice
it oftenest was regarded with hero-worship.[299] Ferriani,
who has made an elaborate study of youthful criminality
in Italy, states that even if all boys and girls among
the general population do not masturbate, it is certainly
so among those who have a tendency to crime. Among 458
adult male criminals, Marro (as he states in his _Caratteri
dei Delinquenti_) found that only 72 denied masturbation,
while 386 had practiced it from an early age, 140 of them
before the age of thirteen. Among 30 criminal women Moraglia
found that 24 acknowledged the practice, at all events
in early youth (8 of them before the age of 10, a precocity
accompanied by average precocity in menstruation), while
he suspected that most of the remainder were not unfamiliar
with the practice. Among prostitutes of whatever class
or position Moraglia found masturbation (though it must
be pointed out that he does not appear to distinguish
masturbation very clearly from homosexual practices) to
be universal; in one group of 50 prostitutes everyone
had practiced masturbation at some period; 28 began between
the ages of 6 and 11; 19, between 12 and 14, the most
usual period--a precocious one--of commencing puberty;
the remaining 3 at 15 and 16; the average age of commencing
masturbation, it may be added, was 11, while that of the
first sexual intercourse was 15.[300] In a larger group
of 180 prostitutes, belonging to Genoa, Turin, Venice,
etc., and among 23 "elegant cocottes," of Italian
and foreign origin, Moraglia obtained the same results;
everyone admitted masturbation, and not less than 113
preferred masturbation, either solitary or mutual, to
normal coitus. Among the insane, as among idiots, masturbation
is somewhat more common among males, according to Blandford,
in England, as also it is in Germany, according to Naecke,[301]
while Venturi, in Italy, has found it more common among
females.[302]
There appears to be no limit to the age at which spontaneous
masturbation may begin to appear. I have already referred
to the practice of thigh-rubbing in infants under one
year of age. J.P. West has reported in detail 3 cases
of masturbation in very early childhood--2 in girls, 1
in a boy--in which the practice had been acquired spontaneously,
and could only be traced to some source of irritation
in pressure from clothing, etc.[303] Probably there is
often in such cases some hereditary lack of nervous stability.
Block has recorded the case of a girl--very bright for
her age, though excessively shy and taciturn--who began
masturbating spontaneously at the age of two; in this
case the mother had masturbated all her life, even continuing
the practice after marriage, and, though she succeeded
in refraining during pregnancy, her thoughts still dwelt
upon it, while the maternal grandmother had died in an
asylum from "masturbatory insanity."
Freud considers that auto-erotic manifestations are common
in infancy, and that the rhythmic function of any sensitive
spot, primarily the lips, may easily pass into masturbation.
He regards the infantile manifestations of which thumb-sucking
is the most familiar example (Luedeln or Lutschen in German)
as auto-erotic, the germ arising in sucking the breasts
since the lips are an erogenous zone which may easily
be excited by the warm stream of milk. But this only occurs,
he points out, in subjects in whom the sensitivity of
the lip zone is heightened and especially in those who
at a later age are liable to become hysterical.[304] Shuttleworth
also points out that the mere fidgetiness of a neurotic
infant, even when only a few months old, sometimes leads
to the spontaneous and accidental discovery of pleasurable
sexual sensations, which for a time appease the restlessness
of nervous instability, though a vicious circle is thus
established. He has found that, especially among quite
young girls of neurotic heredity, self-induced excitement,
often in the form of thigh-friction, is more common than
is usually supposed.[305]
Normally there appears to be a varying aptitude to experience
the sexual organism, or any voluptuous sensations before
puberty. I find, on eliciting the recollections of normal
persons, that in some cases there have been voluptuous
sensations from casual contact with the sexual organs
at a very early age; in other cases there has been occasional
slight excitement from early years; in yet other cases
complete sexual anaesthesia until the age of puberty.
That the latter condition is not due to mere absence of
peripheral irritation is shown by a case I am acquainted
with, in which a boy of 7, incited by a companion, innocently
attempted, at intervals during several weeks, to produce
erection by friction of the penis; no result of any kind
followed, although erections occurred spontaneously at
puberty, with normal sexual feelings.[306]
I am indebted to a correspondent for the following notes:--
"From my observation during five years at a boarding-school,
it _seems_ that eight out of ten boys were more or less
addicted to the practice. But I would not state _positively_
that such was the proportion of masturbators among an
average of thirty pupils, though the habit was very common.
I know that in one bedroom, sleeping seven boys, the whole
number masturbated frequently. The act was performed in
bed, in the closets, and sometimes in the classrooms during
lessons. Inquiry among my friends as to onanism in the
boarding-schools to which they were sent, elicited somewhat
contradictory answers concerning the frequency of the
habit. Dr. ----, who went to a French school, told me
that _all_ the older boys had younger accomplices in mutual
masturbation. He also spoke with experience of the prevalence
of the practice in a well-known public school in the west
of England. B. said _all_ the boys at his school masturbated;
G. stated that _most_ of his schoolmates were onanists;
L. said 'more than half' was the proportion.
"At my school, manual masturbation was both solitary
and mutual; and sometimes younger boys, who had not acquired
the habit, were induced to manipulate bigger boys. One
very precocious boy of fifteen always chose a companion
of ten 'because his hand was like a woman's.' Sometimes
boys entered their friend's bed for mutual excitement.
In after-life they showed no signs of inversion. Another
boy, aged about fourteen, who had been seduced by a servant-girl,
embraced the bolster; the pleasurable sensations, according
to his statement, were heightened by imagining that the
bolster was a woman. He said that the enjoyment of the
act was greatly increased during the holidays, when he
was able to spread a pair of his sister's drawers upon
the pillow, and so intensify the illusion.
"Before puberty the boys appeared to be more continent
than afterward. A few of the older and more intelligent
masturbators regulated the habit, as some married men
regulate intercourse. The big boy referred to, who chose
always the same manipulator, professed to indulge only
once in twenty days, his reason being that more frequent
repetition of the act would injure his health. About twice
a week for boys who had reached puberty, and once a week
for younger boys, was, I think, about the average indulgence.
I have never met with a parallel of one of those cases
of excessive masturbation recorded by many doctors. There
may have been such cases at this school; but, if so, the
boys concealed the frequency of their gratifications.
"My experience proved that many of the lads regarded
masturbation as reprehensible; but their plea was 'everyone
does it.' Some, often those who indulged inordinately
and more secretly than their companions, gravely condemned
the practice as sinful. A few seemed to think there was
'no harm in it,' but that the habit might stunt the growth
and weaken the body if practiced very frequently. The
greater number made no attempt to conceal the habit, they
enlarged upon the pleasure of it; it was 'ever so much
nicer than eating tarts,' etc.
"The chief cause I believe to be initiation by an
older schoolmate. But I have known accidental causes,
such as the discovery that swarming up a pole pleasurably
excited the organ, rubbing to allay irritation, and simple,
curious handling of the erect penis in the early morning
before rising from bed."
I quote the foregoing communication as perhaps a fairly
typical experience in a British school, though I am myself
inclined to think that the prevalence of masturbation
in schools is often much overrated, for, while in some
schools the practice is doubtless rampant, in others it
is practically unknown, or, at all events, only practiced
by a few individuals in secret. My own early recollections
of (private) school-life fail to yield any reminiscences
of any kind connected with either masturbation or homosexuality;
and, while such happy ignorance may be the exception rather
than the rule, I am certainly inclined to believe that--owing
to race and climate, and healthier conditions of life--the
sexual impulse is less precocious and less prominently
developed during the school-age in England than in some
Continental countries. It is probably to this delayed
development that we should attribute the contrast that
Ferrero finds (_L'Europa Giovane_, pp. 151-56), and certainly
states too absolutely, between the sexual reserve of young
Englishmen and the sexual immodesty of his own countrymen.
In Germany, Naecke has also stated ("Kritisches zum
Kapitel der Sexualitaet," _Archiv fuer Psychiatrie_,
pp. 354-56, 1899) that he heard nothing at school either
of masturbation or homosexuality, and he records the experience
of medical friends who stated that such phenomena were
only rare exceptions, and regarded by the majority of
the boys as exhibitions of "_Schweinerei_."
At other German schools, as Hoche has shown, sexual practices
are very prevalent. It is evident that at different schools,
and even at the same school at different times, these
manifestations vary in frequency within wide limits.
Such variations, it seems to me, are due to two causes.
In the first place, they largely depend upon the character
of the more influential elder boys. In the second place,
they depend upon the attitude of the head-master. With
reference to this point I may quote from a letter written
by an experienced master in one of the most famous English
public schools: "When I first came to ----, a quarter
of a century ago, Dr. ---- was making a crusade against
this failing; boys were sent away wholesale; the school
was summoned and lectured solemnly; and the more the severities,
the more rampant the disease. I thought to myself that
the remedy was creating the malady, and I heard afterward,
from an old boy, that in those days they used to talk
things over by the fireside, and think there must be something
very choice in a sin that braved so much. Dr. ---- went,
and, under ----, we never spoke of such things. Curiosity
died down, and the thing itself, I believe, was lessened.
We were told to warn new boys of the dangers to health
and morals of such offences, lest the innocent should
be caught in ignorance. I have only spoken to a few; I
think the great thing is not to put it in boys' heads.
I have noticed solitary faults most commonly, and then
I tell the boy how he is physically weakening himself.
If you notice, it is puppies that seem to go against Nature,
but grown dogs, never. So, if two small boys acted thus,
I should think it merely an instinctive feeling after
Nature, which would amend itself. Many here would consider
it a heinous sin, but those who think such things sins
make them sins. I have seen, in the old days, most delightful
little children sent away, branded with infamy, and scarce
knowing why--you might as well expel a boy for scratching
his head when it itched. I am sure the soundest way is
to treat it as a doctor would, and explain to the boy
the physical effects of over-indulgence of any sort. When
it is combated from the monkish standpoint, the evil becomes
an epidemic." I am, however, far from anxious to
indorse the policy of ignoring the sexual phenomena of
youth. It is not the speaking about such things that should
be called in question, but the wisdom and good sense of
the speaker. We ought to expect a head-master to possess
both an adequate acquaintance with the nature of the phenomena
of auto-erotism and homosexuality, and a reasonable amount
of tact in dealing with boys; he may then fairly be trusted
to exercise his own judgment. It may be doubted whether
boys should be made too alive to the existence of sexual
phenomena; there can be no doubt about their teachers.
The same is, of course, true as regards girls, among whom
the same phenomena, though less obtrusive, are not less
liable to occur.
As to whether masturbation is more common in one sex than
the other, there have been considerable differences of
opinion. Tissot considered it more prevalent among women;
Christian believed it commoner among men; Deslandes and
Iwan Bloch hold that there are no sexual differences,
and Garnier was doubtful. Lawson Tait, in his _Diseases
of Women_, stated his opinion that in England, while very
common among boys, it is relatively rare among women,
and then usually taught. Spitzka, in America, also found
it relatively rare among women, and Dana considers it
commoner in boys than in girls or adults.[307] Moll is
inclined to think that masturbation is less common in
women and girls than in the male sex. Rohleder believes
that after puberty, when it is equally common in both
sexes, it is more frequently found in men, but that women
masturbate with more passion and imaginative fervor.[308]
Kellogg, in America, says it is equally prevalent in both
sexes, but that women are more secretive. Morris, also
in America, considers, on the other hand, that persistent
masturbation is commoner in women, and accounts for this
by the healthier life and traditions of boys. Pouillet,
who studied the matter with considerable thoroughness
in France, came to the conclusion that masturbation is
commoner among women, among whom he found it to be equally
prevalent in rich and poor, and especially so in the great
centres of civilization. In Russia, Guttceit states in
his _Dreissig Jahre Praxis_, that from the ages of 10
to 16 boys masturbate more than girls, who know less about
the practice which has not for them the charm of the forbidden,
but after 16 he finds the practice more frequent in girls
and women than in youths and men. Naecke, in Germany,
believes that there is much evidence pointing in the same
direction, and Adler considers masturbation very common
in women. Moraglia is decidedly of the opinion, on the
ground of his own observations already alluded to, that
masturbation is more frequent among women; he refers to
the fact--a very significant fact, as I shall elsewhere
have to point out--that, while in man there is only one
sexual centre, the penis, in woman there are several centres,--the
clitoris, the vagina, the uterus, the breasts,[309]--and
he mentions that he knew a prostitute, a well-developed
brunette of somewhat nervous temperament, who boasted
that she knew fourteen ways of masturbating herself.
My own opinion is that the question of the sexual distribution
of masturbation has been somewhat obscured by that harmful
tendency, to which I have already alluded, to concentrate
attention on a particular set of auto-erotic phenomena.
We must group and divide our facts rationally if we wish
to command them. If we confine our attention to very young
children, the available evidence shows that the practice
is much more common in females,[310] and such a result
is in harmony with the fact that precocious puberty is
most often found in female children.[311] At puberty and
adolescence occasional or frequent masturbation is common
in both boys and girls, though, I believe, less common
than is sometimes supposed; it is difficult to say whether
it is more prevalent among boys or girls; one is inclined
to conclude that it prevails more widely among boys. The
sexual impulse, and consequently the tendency to masturbation,
tend to be aroused later, and less easily in girls than
in youths, though it must also be remembered that boys'
traditions and their more active life keep the tendency
in abeyance, while in girls there is much less frequently
any restraining influence of corresponding character.[312]
In my study of inversion I have found that ignorance and
the same absence of tradition are probably factors in
the prevalence of homosexual tendencies among women.[313]
After adolescence I think there can be no doubt that masturbation
is more common in women than in men. Men have, by this
time, mostly adopted some method of sexual gratification
with the opposite sex; women are to a much larger extent
shut out from such gratification; moreover, while in rare
cases women are sexually precocious, it more often happens
that their sexual impulses only gain strength and self-consciousness
after adolescence has passed. I have been much impressed
by the frequency with which masturbation is occasionally
(especially about the period of menstruation) practiced
by active, intelligent, and healthy women who otherwise
lead a chaste life. This experience is confirmed by others
who are in a position to ascertain the facts among normal
people; thus a lady, who has received the confidence of
many women, told me that she believes that all women who
remain unmarried masturbate, as she found so much evidence
pointing in this direction.[314] This statement certainly
needs some qualification, though I believe it is not far
from the truth as regards young and healthy women who,
after having normal sexual relationships, have been compelled
for some reason or other to break them off and lead a
lonely life.[315] But we have to remember that there are
some women, evidently with a considerable degree of congenital
sexual anaesthesia (no doubt, in some respect or another
below the standard of normal health), in whom the sexual
instinct has never been aroused, and who not only do not
masturbate, but do not show any desire for normal gratification;
while in a large proportion of other cases the impulse
is gratified passively in ways I have already referred
to. The auto-erotic phenomena which take place in this
way, spontaneously, by yielding to revery, with little
or no active interference, certainly occur much more frequently
in women than in men. On the other hand, contrary to what
one might be led to expect, the closely-related auto-erotic
phenomena during sleep seem to take place more frequently
in men, although in women, as we have found ground for
concluding, they reverberate much more widely and impressively
on the waking psychical life.
We owe to Restif de la Bretonne what is perhaps the earliest
precise description of a woman masturbating. In 1755 he
knew a dark young woman, plain but well-made, and of warm
temperament, educated in a convent. She was observed one
day, when gazing from her window at a young man in whom
she was tenderly interested, to become much excited. "Her
movements became agitated; I approached her, and really
believe that she was uttering affectionate expressions;
she had become red. Then she sighed deeply, and became
motionless, stretching out her legs, which she stiffened,
as if she felt pain." It is further hinted that her
hands took part in this manoeuvre (_Monsieur Nicolas_,
vol. vi, p. 143).
Pictorial representations of a woman masturbating also
occur in eighteenth century engravings. Thus, in France,
Baudouin's "Le Midi" (reproduced in Fuchs's
_Das Erotische Element in der Karikatur_, Fig. 92), represents
an elegant young lady in a rococo garden-bower; she has
been reading a book she has now just dropped, together
with her sunshade; she leans languorously back, and her
hand begins to find its way through her placket-hole.
Adler, who has studied masturbation in women with more
care than any previous writer, has recorded in detail
the auto-erotic manifestations involved in the case of
an intelligent and unprejudiced woman, aged 30, who had
begun masturbating when twenty, and practiced it at intervals
of a few weeks. She experienced the desire for sexual
gratification under the following circumstances: (1) spontaneously,
directly before or after menstruation; (2) as a method
to cure sleeplessness; (3) after washing the parts with
warm (but not cold) water; (4) after erotic dreams; (5)
quite suddenly, without definite cause. The phenomena
of the masturbatory process fell into two stages: (1)
incomplete excitement, (2) the highest pleasurable gratification.
It only took place in the evening, or at night, and a
special position was necessary, with the right knee bent,
and the right foot against the knee of the extended left
leg. The bent index and middle fingers of the right hand
were then applied firmly to the lower third of the left
labium minus, which was rubbed against the underlying
parts. At this stage, the manifestations sometimes stopped,
either from an effort of self-control or from fatigue
of the arm. There was no emission of mucus, or general
perspiration, but some degree of satisfaction and of fatigue,
followed by sleep. If, however, the manipulation was continued,
the second stage was reached, and the middle finger sank
into the vagina, while the index finger remained on the
labium, the rest of the hand holding and compressing the
whole of the vulva, from pubes to anus, against the symphysis,
with a backwards and forwards movement, the left hand
also being frequently used to support and assist the right.
The parts now gave a mushroom-like feeling to the touch,
and in a few seconds, or after a longer interval, the
complete feeling of pleasurable satisfaction was attained.
At the same moment there was (but only after she had had
experience of coitus) an involuntary elevation of the
pelvis, together with emission of mucus, making the hand
wet, this mucus having an odor, and being quite distinct
from the ordinary odorless mucus of the vagina; at the
same time, the finger in the vagina felt slight contractions
of the whole vaginal wall. The climax of sexual pleasure
lasted a few seconds, with its concomitant vaginal contractions,
then slowly subsided with a feeling of general well-being,
the finger at the same time slipping out of the vagina,
and she was left in a state of general perspiration, and
sleep would immediately follow; when this was not the
case, she was frequently conscious of some degree of sensibility
in the sacrum, lasting for several hours, and especially
felt when sitting. When masturbation was the result of
an erotic dream (which occurred but seldom), the first
stage was already reached in sleep, and the second was
more quickly obtained. During the act it was only occasionally
that any thoughts of men or of coitus were present, the
attention being fixed on the coming climax. The psychic
state afterwards was usually one of self-reproach. (O.
Adler, _Die Mangelhafte Geschlechtsempfindung des Weibes_,
1904, pp. 26-29.) The phenomena in this case may be regarded
as fairly typical, but there are many individual variations;
mucus emissions and vaginal contractions frequently occur
before actual orgasm, and there is not usually any insertion
of the finger into the vagina in women who have never
experienced coitus, or, indeed, even in those who have.
We must now turn to that aspect of our subject which in
the past has always seemed the only aspect of auto-erotic
phenomena meriting attention: the symptoms and results
of chronic masturbation. It appears to have been an Englishman
who, at the beginning of the eighteenth century, first
called popular attention to the supposed evils of masturbation.
His book was published in London, and entitled: _Onania,
or the Heinous Sin of Self-pollution, and all its Frightful
Consequences in both Sexes, Considered, with Spiritual
and Physical Advice_, etc. It is not a serious medical
treatise, but an early and certainly superior example
of a kind of literature which we have since become familiar
with through the daily newspapers. A large part of the
book, which is cleverly written, is devoted in the later
editions to the letters of nervous and hypochondriacal
young men and women, who are too shy to visit the author,
but request him to send a bottle of his "Strengthening
Tincture," and mention that they are inclosing half
a guinea, a guinea, or still larger sum. Concerning the
composition of the "Strengthening Tincture"
we are not informed.[316] This work, which was subsequently
attributed to a writer named Bekkers, is said to have
passed through no less than eighty editions, and it was
translated into German. Tissot, a physician of Lausanne,
followed with his _Traite de l'Onanisme: Dissertation
sur les Maladies produites par la Masturbation_, first
published in Latin (1760), then in French (1764), and
afterward in nearly all European languages. He regarded
masturbation as a crime, and as "an act of suicide."
His book is a production of amusing exaggeration and rhetoric,
zealously setting forth the prodigious evils of masturbation
in a style which combines, as Christian remarks, the strains
of Rousseau with a vein of religious piety. Tissot included
only manual self-abuse under the term "onanism;"
shortly afterward, Voltaire, in his _Dictionnaire Philosophique_,
took up the subject, giving it a wider meaning and still
further popularizing it. Finally Lallemand, at a somewhat
later period (1836), wrote a book which was, indeed, more
scientific in character, but which still sought to represent
masturbation as the source of all evils. These four writers--the
author of _Onania_, Tissot, Voltaire, Lallemand--are certainly
responsible for much. The mistaken notions of many medical
authorities, carried on by tradition, even down to our
own time; the powerful lever which has been put into the
hand of unscrupulous quacks; the suffering, dread, and
remorse experienced in silence by many thousands of ignorant
and often innocent young people may all be traced in large
measure back to these four well-meaning, but (on this
question) misguided, authors.
There is really no end to the list of real or supposed
symptoms and results of masturbation, as given by various
medical writers during the last century. Insanity, epilepsy,
numerous forms of eye disease, supra-orbital headache,
occipital headache (Spitzka), strange sensations at the
top of the head (Savage), various forms of neuralgia (Anstie,
J. Chapman), tenderness of the skin in the lower dorsal
region (Chapman), mammary tenderness in young girls (Lacassagne),
mammary hypertrophy (Ossendovsky), asthma (Peyer), cardiac
murmurs (Seerley), the appearance of vesicles on wounds
(Baraduc), acne and other forms of cutaneous eruptions
(the author of _Onania_, Clipson), dilated pupils (Skene,
Lewis, Moraglia), eyes directed upward and sideways (Pouillet),
dark rings around the eyes, intermittent functional deafness
(Bonnier), painful menstruation (J. Chapman), catarrh
of uterus and vagina (Winckel, Pouillet), ovarian disease
(Jessett), pale and discolored skin (Lewis, Moraglia),
redness of nose (Gruner), epistaxis (Joal, J.N. Mackenzie),
morbid changes in nose (Fliess), convulsive cough of puberty
(Gowers), acidity of vagina (R.W. Shufeldt), incontinence
of urine in young women (Girandeau), warts on the hands
in women (Durr, Kreichmar, von Oye), hallucinations of
smell and hearing, (Griesinger, Lewis), intermittent functional
deafness (Bonnier), indican in the urine (Herter), an
indescribable odor of the skin in women (Skene), these
are but a few of the signs and consequences of masturbation
given by various prominent authorities.[317]
That many of these manifestations do occur in connection
with masturbation is unquestionable; there is also good
reason to believe that some of them may be the results
of masturbation acting on an imperfectly healthy organism.
But in all such cases we must speak with great caution,
for there appears to be little reliable evidence to show
that simple masturbation, in a well-born and healthy individual,
can produce any evil results beyond slight functional
disturbances, and these only when it is practiced in excess.
To illustrate the real pathological relationships of masturbation,
a few typical and important disorders may be briefly considered.
The delicate mechanism of the eye is one of the first
portions of the nervous apparatus to be disturbed by any
undue strain on the system; it is not surprising that
masturbation should be widely incriminated as a cause
of eye troubles. If, however, we inquire into the results
obtained by the most cautious and experienced ophthalmological
observers, it grows evident that masturbation, as a cause
of disease of the eye, becomes merged into wider causes.
In Germany, Hermann Cohn, the distinguished ophthalmic
surgeon of Breslau, has dealt fully with the question.[318]
Cohn, who believes that all young men and women masturbate
to some extent, finds that masturbation must be excessive
for eye trouble to become apparent. In most of his cases
there was masturbation several times daily during from
five to seven years, in many during ten years, and in
one during twenty-three years. In such cases we are obviously
dealing with abnormal persons, and no one will dispute
the possibility of harmful results; in some of the cases,
when masturbation was stopped, the eye trouble improved.
Even in these cases, however, the troubles were but slight,
the chief being, apparently, photopsia (a subjective sensation
of light) with otherwise normal conditions of pupil, vision,
color-sense, and retina. In some cases there was photophobia,
and he has also found paralysis of accommodation and conjunctivitis.
At a later date Salmo Cohn, in his comprehensive monograph
on the relationship between the eye and the sexual organs
in women, brought together numerous cases of eye troubles
in young women associated with masturbation, but in most
of these cases masturbation had been practiced with great
frequency for a long period and the ocular affections
were usually not serious.[319] In England, Power has investigated
the relations of the sexual system to eye disease. He
is inclined to think that the effects of masturbation
have been exaggerated, but he believes that it may produce
such for the most part trivial complaints as photopsisae,
muscsae, muscular asthenopia, possibly blepharospasm,
and perhaps conjunctivitis. He goes on, however, to point
out that more serious complaints of the eye are caused
by excess in normal coitus, by sexual abstinence, and
especially by disordered menstruation. Thus we see that
even when we are considering a mechanism so delicately
poised and one so easily disturbed by any jar of the system
as vision, masturbation produces no effect except when
carried to an extent which argues a hereditarily imperfect
organism, while even in these cases the effects are usually
but slight, moreover, in no respect specific, but are
paralleled and even exceeded by the results of other disturbances
of the sexual system.
Let us turn to the supposed influence of masturbation
in causing insanity and nervous diseases. Here we may
chiefly realize the immense influence exerted on medical
science by Tissot and his followers during a hundred years.
Mental weakness is the cause and not the result of excessive
masturbation, Gall declared,[320] but he was a man of
genius, in isolation. Sir William Ellis, an alienist of
considerable reputation at the beginning of the last century,
could write with scientific equanimity: "I have no
hesitation in saying that, in a very large number of patients
in all public asylums, the disease may be attributed to
that cause." He does, indeed, admit that it may be
only a symptom sometimes, but goes on to assert that masturbation
"has not hitherto been exhibited in the awful light
in which it deserves to be shown," and that "in
by far the greater number of cases" it is the true
cause of dementia.[321] Esquirol lent his name and influence
to a similar view of the pernicious influence of masturbation.
Throughout the century, even down to the present day,
this point of view has been traditionally preserved in
a modified form. In apparent ignorance of the enormous
prevalence of masturbation, and without, so far as can
be seen, any attempt to distinguish between cause and
effect or to eliminate the hereditary neuropathic element,
many alienists have set down a large proportion of cases
of insanity, idiocy, epilepsy, and disease of the spinal
cord to uncomplicated masturbation. Thus, at the Matteawan
State Hospital (New York) for criminal lunatics and insane
prisoners, from 1875 to 1907, masturbation was the sole
assigned cause of insanity in 160 men (out of 2,595);
while, according to Dr. Clara Barrus, among 121 cases
of insanity in young women, masturbation is the cause
in ten cases.[322] It is unnecessary to multiply examples,
for this traditional tendency is familiar to all.
It appears to have been largely due to Griesinger, in
the middle of the last century, that we owe the first
authoritative appearance of a saner, more discriminating
view regarding the results of masturbation. Although still
to some extent fettered by the traditions prevalent in
his day, Griesinger saw that it was not so much masturbation
itself as the feelings aroused in sensitive minds by the
social attitude toward masturbation which produced evil
effects. "That constant struggle," he wrote,
"against a desire which is even overpowering, and
to which the individual always in the end succumbs, that
hidden strife between shame, repentance, good intentions,
and the irritation which impels to the act, this, after
not a little acquaintance with onanists, we consider to
be far more important than the primary direct physical
effect." He added that there are no specific signs
of masturbation, and concluded that it is oftener a symptom
than a cause. The general progress of educated opinions
since that date has, in the main, confirmed and carried
forward the results cautiously stated by Griesinger. This
distinguished alienist thought that, when practiced in
childhood, masturbation might lead to insanity. Berkhan,
in his investigation of the psychoses of childhood, found
that in no single case was masturbation a cause. Vogel,
Uffelmann, and Emminghaus, in the course of similar studies,
have all come to almost similar conclusions.[323] It is
only on a congenitally morbid nervous system, Emminghaus
insists, that masturbation can produce any serious results.
"Most of the cases charged to masturbation,"
writes Kiernan (in a private letter), basing his opinion
on wide clinical experience, "are either hebephrenia
or hysteria in which an effect is taken for the cause."
Christian, during twenty years' experience in hospitals,
asylums, and private practice in town and country, has
not found any seriously evil effects from masturbation.[324]
He thinks, indeed, that it may be a more serious evil
in women than in men. But Yellowlees considers that in
women "it is possibly less exhausting and injurious
than in the other sex," which was also the opinion
of Hammond, as well as of Guttceit, though he found that
women pushed the practice much further than men, and Naecke,
who has given special attention to this point, could not
find that masturbation is a definite cause of insanity
in women in a single case.[325] Koch also reaches a similar
conclusion, as regards both sexes, though he admits that
masturbation may cause some degree of psychopathic deterioration.
Even in this respect, however, he points out that "when
practiced in moderation it is not injurious in the certain
and exceptionless way in which it is believed to be in
many circles. It is the people whose nervous systems are
already injured who masturbate most easily and practice
it more immoderately than others"; the chief source
of its evil is self-reproach and the struggle with the
impulse.[326] Kahlbaum, it is true, under the influence
of the older tradition, when he erected katatonia into
a separate disorder (not always accepted in later times),
regarded prolonged and excessive masturbation as a chief
cause, but I am not aware that he ever asserted that it
was a sole and sufficient cause in a healthy organism.
Kiernan, one of the earliest writers on katatonia, was
careful to point out that masturbation was probably as
much effect as cause of the morbid nervous condition.[327]
Maudsley (in _Body and Mind_) recognized masturbation
as a special exciting cause of a characteristic form of
insanity; but he cautiously added: "Nevertheless,
I think that self-abuse seldom, if ever, produces it without
the co-operation of the insane neurosis."[328] Schuele
also recognized a specific masturbatory insanity, but
the general tendency to reject any such nosological form
is becoming marked; Krafft-Ebing long since rejected it
and Naecke decidedly opposes it. Kraepelin states that
excessive masturbation can only occur in a dangerous degree
in predisposed subjects; so, also, Forel and Loewenfeld,
as at an earlier period, Trousseau.[329] It is true that
Marro, in his admirable and detailed study of the normal
and abnormal aspects of puberty, accepts a form of masturbatory
insanity; but the only illustrative case he brings forward
is a young man possessing various stigmata of degeneracy
and the son of an alcoholic father; such a case tells
us nothing regarding the results of simple masturbation.[330]
Even Spitzka, who maintained several years ago the traditional
views as to the terrible results of masturbation, and
recognized a special "insanity of masturbation,"
stated his conclusions with a caution that undermined
his position: "Self-abuse," he concluded, "to
become a sole cause of insanity, must be begun early and
carried very far. In persons of sound antecedents it rarely,
under these circumstances, suffices to produce an actual
vesania."[331] When we remember that there is no
convincing evidence to show that masturbation is "begun
early and carried very far" by "persons of sound
antecedents," the significance of Spitzka's "typical
psychosis of masturbation" is somewhat annulled.
It is evident that these distinguished investigators,
Marro and Spitzka, have been induced by tradition to take
up a position which their own scientific consciences have
compelled them practically to evacuate.
Recent authorities are almost unanimous in rejecting masturbation
as a cause of insanity. Thus, Rohleder, in his comprehensive
monograph (_Die Masturbation_, 1899, pp. 185-92), although
taking a very serious view of the evil results of masturbation,
points out the unanimity which is now tending to prevail
on this point, and lays it down that "masturbation
is never the direct cause of insanity." Sexual excesses
of any kind, he adds (following Curschmann), can, at the
most, merely give an impetus to a latent form of insanity.
On the whole, he concludes, the best authorities are unanimous
in agreeing that masturbation may certainly injure mental
capacity, by weakening memory and depressing intellectual
energy; that, further, in hereditarily neurotic subjects,
it may produce slight psychoses like _folie du doute_,
hypochondria, hysteria; that, finally, under no circumstances
can it produce severe psychoses like paranoia or general
paralysis. "If it caused insanity, as often as some
claim," as Kellogg remarks, "the whole race
would long since have passed into masturbatic degeneracy
of mind.... It is especially injurious in the very young,
and in all who have weak nervous systems," but "the
physical traits attributed to the habit are common to
thousands of neurasthenic and neurotic individuals."
(Kellogg, _A Text-book of Mental Diseases_, 1897, pp.
94-95.) Again, at the outset of the article on "Masturbation,"
in Tuke's _Dictionary of Psychological Medicine_, Yellowlees
states that, on account of the mischief formerly done
by reckless statements, it is necessary to state plainly
that "unless the practice has been long and greatly
indulged, no permanent evil effects may be observed to
follow." Naecke, again, has declared ("Kritisches
zum Kapitel der Sexualitaet," _Archiv fuer Psychiatrie_,
1899): "There are neither somatic nor psychic symptoms
peculiar on onanism. Nor is there any specific onanistic
psychosis. I am prepared to deny that onanism ever produces
any psychoses in those who are not already predisposed."
That such a view is now becoming widely prevalent is illustrated
by the cautious and temperate discussion of masturbation
in a recent work by a non-medical writer, Geoffrey Mortimer
(_Chapters on Human Love_, pp. 199-205).
The testimony of expert witnesses with regard to the influence
of masturbation in producing other forms of psychoses
and neuroses is becoming equally decisive; and here, also,
the traditions of Tissot are being slowly effaced. "I
have not, in the whole of my practice," wrote West,
forty years ago, "out of a large experience among
children and women, seen convulsions, epilepsy, or idiocy
_induced_ by masturbation in any child of either sex.
Neither have I seen any instance in which hysteria, epilepsy,
or insanity in women after puberty was _due_ to masturbation,
as its efficient cause."[332] Gowers speaks somewhat
less positively, but regards masturbation as not so much
a cause of true epilepsy as of atypical attacks, sometimes
of a character intermediate between the hysteroid and
the epileptoid form; this relationship he has frequently
seen in boys.[333] Leyden, among the causes of diseases
of the spinal cord, does not include any form of sexual
excess. "In moderation," Erb remarks, "masturbation
is not more dangerous to the spinal cord than natural
coitus, and has no bad effects";[334] it makes no
difference, Erb considers, whether the orgasm is effected
normally or in solitude. This is also the opinion of Toulouse,
of Fuerbringer, and of Curschmann, as at an earlier period
it was of Roubaud.
While these authorities are doubtless justified in refusing
to ascribe to masturbation any part in the production
of psychic or nervous diseases, it seems to me that they
are going somewhat beyond their province when they assert
that masturbation has no more injurious effect than coitus.
If sexual coitus were a purely physiological phenomenon,
this position would be sound. But the sexual orgasm is
normally bound up with a mass of powerful emotions aroused
by a person of the opposite sex. It is in the joy caused
by the play of these emotions, as well as in the discharge
of the sexual orgasm, that the satisfaction of coitus
resides. In the absence of the desired partner the orgasm,
whatever relief it may give, must be followed by a sense
of dissatisfaction, perhaps of depression, even of exhaustion,
often of shame and remorse. The same remark has since
been made by Stanley Hall.[335] Practically, also, as
John Hunter pointed out, there is more probability of
excess in masturbation than in coitus. Whether, as some
have asserted, masturbation involves a greater nervous
effort than coitus is more doubtful.[336] It thus seems
somewhat misleading to assert that masturbation has no
more injurious effect than coitus.[337]
Reviewing the general question of the supposed grave symptoms
and signs of masturbation, and its pernicious results,
we may reach the conclusion that in the case of moderate
masturbation in healthy, well-born individuals, no seriously
pernicious results necessarily follow.[338] With regard
to the general signs, we may accept, as concerns both
sexes, what the Obstetrical and Gynecological Society
of Berlin decided in 1861, in a discussion of it in women,
that there are none which can be regarded as reliable.[339]
We may conclude finally, with Clouston, that the opposing
views on the subject may be simply explained by the fact
that the writers on both sides have ignored or insufficiently
recognized the influence of heredity and temperament.
They have done precisely what so many unscientific writers
on inebriety have continued to do unto the present day,
when describing the terrible results of alcohol without
pointing out that the chief factor in such cases has not
been the alcohol, but the organization on which the alcohol
acted. Excess may act, according to the familiar old-fashioned
adage, like the lighted match. But we must always remember
the obvious truth, that it makes a considerable difference
whether you threw your lighted match into a powder magazine
or into the sea.
While we may thus dismiss the extravagant views widely
held during the past century, concerning the awful results
of masturbation, as due to ignorance and false tradition,
it must be pointed out that, even in healthy or moderately
healthy individuals, any excess in solitary self-excitement
may still produce results which, though slight, are yet
harmful. The skin, digestion, and circulation may all
be disordered; headache and neuralgia may occur; and,
as in normal sexual excess or in undue frequency of sexual
excitement during sleep, there is a certain general lowering
of nervous tone. Probably the most important of the comparatively
frequent results--though this also arises usually on a
somewhat morbid soil--is neurasthenia with its manifold
symptoms. There can be little doubt that the ancient belief,
dating from the time of Hippocrates, that sexual excesses
produce spinal disease, as well as the belief that masturbation
causes insanity, are largely due to the failure to diagnose
neurasthenia.
The following case of neurasthenia, recorded by Eulenburg,
may be given as a classical picture of the nervous disturbances
which may be associated with masturbation, and are frequently
regarded as solely caused by habits of masturbation: Miss
H.H., 28 years of age, a robust brunette, with fully developed
figure, without any trace of anaemia or chlorosis, but
with an apathetic expression, bluish rings around the
eyes, with hypochondriacal and melancholy feelings. She
complains of pressure on the head ("as if head would
burst"), giddiness, ringing in the ears, photopsia,
hemicrania, pains in the back and at sacrum, and symptoms
of spinal adynamia, with a sense of fatigue on the least
exertion in walking or standing; she sways when standing
with closed eyes, tendon-reflexes exaggerated; there is
a sense of oppression, intercostal neuralgia, and all
the signs of neurasthenic dyspepsia; and cardialgia, nausea,
flatulence, meteorism, and alternate constipation and
diarrhoea. She chiefly complains of a feeling of weight
and pain in the abdomen, caused by the slightest movement,
and of a form of pollution (with clitoridian spasms),
especially near menstruation, with copious flow of mucus,
characteristic pains, and hyperexcitability. Menstruation
was irregular and profuse. Examination showed tumid and
elongated nymphae, with brown pigmentation; rather large
vagina, with rudimentary hymen; and retroflexion of uterus.
After much persuasion the patient confessed that, when
a girl of 12, and as the result of repeated attempts at
coitus by a boy of 16, she had been impelled to frequent
masturbation. This had caused great shame and remorse,
which, however, had not sufficed to restrain the habit.
Her mother having died, she lived alone with her invalid
father, and had no one in whom to confide. Regarding herself
as no longer a virgin, she had refused several offers
of marriage, and thus still further aggravated her mental
condition. (Eulenburg, _Sexuale Neuropathie_, p. 31.)
Since Beard first described neurasthenia, many diverse
opinions have been expressed concerning the relationships
of sexual irregularities to neurasthenia. Gilles de la
Tourette, in his little monograph on neurasthenia, following
the traditions of Charcot's school, dismisses the question
of any sexual causation without discussion. Binswanger
(_Die Pathologie und Therapie der Neurasthenie_), while
admitting that nearly all neurasthenic persons acknowledge
masturbation at some period, considers it is not an important
cause of neurasthenia, only differing from coitus by the
fact that the opportunities for it are more frequent,
and that the sexual disturbances of neurasthenia are,
in the majority of cases, secondary. Rohleder, on the
other hand, who takes a very grave view of the importance
of masturbation, considers that its most serious results
are a question of neurasthenia. Krafft-Ebing has declared
his opinion that masturbation is a cause of neurasthenia.
Christian, Leyden, Erb, Rosenthal, Beard, Hummel, Hammond,
Hermann Cohn, Curschmann, Savill, Herman, Fuerbringer,
all attach chief importance to neurasthenia as a result
of masturbation. Collins and Phillip (_Medical Record_,
March 25, 1899), in an analysis of 333 cases of neurasthenia,
found that 123 cases were apparently due to overwork or
masturbation. Freud concludes that neurasthenia proper
can nearly always be traced to excessive masturbation,
or to spontaneous pollutions. (E.g., _Sammlung Kleiner
Schriften zur Neurosenlehre_, first series, p. 187.) This
view is confirmed by Gattel's careful study (_Ueber die
Sexuellen Ursachen der Neurasthenie und Angstneurose_,
1898). Gattel investigated 100 consecutive cases of severe
functional nervous disorder in Krafft-Ebing's clinic at
Vienna, and found that in every case of neurasthenia in
a male (28 in all) there was masturbation, while of the
15 women with neurasthenia, only one is recorded as not
masturbating, and she practiced _coitus reservatus_. Irrespective
of the particular form of the nervous disorder, Gattel
found that 18 women out of 42, and 36 men out of 58, acknowledged
masturbation. (This shows a slightly larger proportion
among the men, but the men were mostly young, while the
women were mostly of more mature age.) It must, however,
always be remembered that we have no equally careful statistics
of masturbation in perfectly healthy persons. We must
also remember that we have to distinguish between the
_post_ and the _propter_, and that it is quite possible
that neurasthenic persons are specially predisposed to
masturbation. Bloch is of this opinion, and remarks that
a vicious circle may thus be formed.
On the whole, there can be little doubt that neurasthenia
is liable to be associated with masturbation carried to
an excessive extent. But, while neurasthenia is probably
the severest affection that is liable to result from,
or accompany, masturbation, we are scarcely yet entitled
to accept the conclusion of Gattel that in such cases
there is no hereditary neurotic predisposition. We must
steer clearly between the opposite errors of those, on
the one hand, who assert that heredity is the sole cause
of functional nervous disorders, and those, on the other
hand, who consider that the incident that may call out
the disorder is itself a sole sufficient cause.
In many cases it has seemed to me that masturbation, when
practiced in excess, especially if begun before the age
of puberty, leads to inaptitude for coitus, as well as
to indifference to it, and sometimes to undue sexual irritability,
involving premature emission and practical impotence.
This is, however, the exception, especially if the practice
has not been begun until after puberty. In women I attach
considerable importance, as a result of masturbation,
to an aversion for normal coitus in later life. In such
cases some peripheral irritation or abnormal mental stimulus
trains the physical sexual orgasm to respond to an appeal
which has nothing whatever to do with the fascination
normally exerted by the opposite sex. At puberty, however,
the claim of passion and the real charm of sex begin to
make themselves felt, but, owing to the physical sexual
feelings having been trained into a foreign channel, these
new and more normal sex associations remain of a purely
ideal and emotional character, without the strong sensual
impulses with which under healthy conditions they tend
to be more and more associated as puberty passes on into
adolescence or mature adult life. I am fairly certain
that in many women, often highly intellectual women, the
precocious excess in masturbation has been a main cause,
not necessarily the sole efficient cause, in producing
a divorce in later life between the physical sensuous
impulses and the ideal emotions. The sensuous impulse
having been evolved and perverted before the manifestation
of the higher emotion, the two groups of feelings have
become divorced for the whole of life. This is a common
source of much personal misery and family unhappiness,
though at the same time the clash of contending impulses
may lead to a high development of moral character. When
early masturbation is a factor in producing sexual inversion
it usually operates in the manner I have here indicated,
the repulsion for normal coitus helping to furnish a soil
on which the inverted impulse may develop unimpeded.
This point has not wholly escaped previous observers,
though they do not seem to have noted its psychological
mechanism. Tissot stated that masturbation causes an aversion
to marriage. More recently, Loiman ("Ueber Onanismus
beim Weibe," _Therapeutische Monatshefte_, April,
1890) considered that masturbation in women, leading to
a perversion of sexual feeling, including inability to
find satisfaction in coitus, affects the associated centres.
Smith Baker, again ("The Neuropsychical Element in
Conjugal Aversion," _Journal of Nervous and Mental
Disease_, September, 1892), finds that a "source
of marital aversion seems to lie in the fact that substitution
of mechanical and iniquitous excitations affords more
thorough satisfaction than the mutual legitimate ones
do," and gives cases in point. Savill, also, who
believes that masturbation is more common in women than
is usually supposed, regards dyspareunia, or pain in coition,
as one of the signs of the habit.
Masturbation in women thus becomes, as Raymond and Janet
point out (_Les Obsessions_, vol. ii, p. 307) a frequent
cause of sexual frigidity in marriage. These authors illustrate
the train of evils which may thus be set up, by the case
of a lady, 26 years of age, a normal woman, of healthy
family, who, at the age of 15, was taught by a servant
to masturbate. At the age of 18 she married. She loved
her husband, but she had no sexual feelings in coitus,
and she continued to masturbate, sometimes several times
a day, without evil consequences. At 24 she had to go
into a hospital for floating kidney, and was so obliged
to stop masturbating. She here accidentally learnt of
the evil results attributed to the habit. She resolved
not to do it again, and she kept her resolution. But while
still in hospital she fell wildly in love with a man.
To escape from the constant thought of this man, she sought
relations with her husband, and at times masturbated,
but now it no longer gave her pleasure. She wished to
give up sexual things altogether. But that was easier
said than done. She became subject to nervous crises,
often brought on by the sight of a man, and accompanied
by sexual excitement. They disappeared under treatment,
and she thereupon became entirely frigid sexually. But,
far from being happy, she has lost all energy and interest
in life, and it is her sole desire to attain the sexual
feelings she has lost. Adler considers that even when
masturbation in women becomes an overmastering passion,
so far as organic effects are concerned it is usually
harmless, its effects being primarily psychic, and he
attaches especial significance to it as a cause of sexual
anaesthesia in normal coitus, being, perhaps, the most
frequent cause of such anaesthesia. He devotes an important
chapter to this matter, and brings forward numerous cases
in illustration (Adler, _Die Mangelhafte Geschlechtsempfindung
des Weibes_, pp. 93-119, also 21-23). Adler considers
that the frequency of masturbation in women is largely
due to the fact that women experience greater difficulties
than men in obtaining sexual satisfaction, and so are
impelled by unsatisfying coitus to continue masturbation
after marriage. He adds that partly from natural shyness,
partly from shame of acknowledging what is commonly accounted
a sin, and partly from the fear of seeming disgusting
or unworthy of sympathy in the doctor's eyes, women are
usually silent on this matter, and very great tact and
patience may be necessary before a confession is obtained.
On the psychic side, no doubt, the most frequent and the
most characteristic result of persistent and excessive
masturbation is a morbid heightening of self-consciousness
without any co-ordinated heightening of self-esteem.[340]
The man or woman who is kissed by a desirable and desired
person of the opposite sex feels a satisfying sense of
pride and elation, which must always be absent from the
manifestations of auto-erotic activity.[341] This must
be so, even apart from the masturbator's consciousness
of the general social attitude toward his practices and
his dread of detection, for that may also exist as regards
normal coitus without any corresponding psychic effects.
The masturbator, if his practice is habitual, is thus
compelled to cultivate an artificial consciousness of
self-esteem, and may show a tendency to mental arrogance.
Self-righteousness and religiosity constitute, as it were,
a protection against the tendency to remorse. A morbid
mental soil is, of course, required for the full development
of these characteristics. The habitual male masturbator,
it must be remembered, is often a shy and solitary person;
individuals of this temperament are especially predisposed
to excesses in all the manifestations of auto-erotism,
while the yielding to such tendencies increases the reserve
and the horror of society, at the same time producing
a certain suspicion of others. In some extreme cases there
is, no doubt, as Kraepelin believes, some decrease of
psychic capacity, an inability to grasp and co-ordinate
external impressions, weakness of memory, deadening of
emotions, or else the general phenomena of increased irritability,
leading on to neurasthenia.
I find good reason to believe that in many cases the psychic
influence of masturbation on women is different from its
effect on men. As Spitzka observed, although it may sometimes
render women self-reproachful and hesitant, it often seems
to make them bold. Boys, as we have seen, early assimilate
the tradition that self-abuse is "unmanly" and
injurious, but girls have seldom any corresponding tradition
that it is "unwomanly," and thus, whether or
not they are reticent on the matter, before the forum
of their own conscience they are often less ashamed of
it than men are and less troubled by remorse.
Eulenburg considers that the comparative absence of bad
effects from masturbation in girls is largely due to the
fact that, unlike boys, they are not terrorized by exaggerated
warnings and quack literature concerning the awful results
of the practice. Forel, who has also remarked that women
are often comparatively little troubled by qualms of conscience
after masturbation, denies that this is due to a lower
moral tone than men possess (Forel, _Die Sexuelle Frage_,
p. 247). In this connection, I may refer to History IV,
recorded in the Appendix to the fifth volume of these
_Studies_, in which it is stated that of 55 prostitutes
of various nationalities, with whom the subject had had
relations, 18 spontaneously told him that they were habitual
masturbators, while of 26 normal women, 13 made the same
confession, unasked. Guttceit, in Russia, after stating
that women of good constitution had told him that they
masturbated as much as six or ten times a day or night
(until they fell asleep, tired), without bad results,
adds that, according to his observations, "masturbation,
when not excessive, is, on the whole, a quite innocent
matter, which exerts little or no permanent effect,"
and adds that it never, in any case, leads to _hypochondria
onanica_ in women, because they have not been taught to
expect bad results (_Dreissig Jahre Praxis_, p. 306).
There is, I think, some truth--though the exceptions are
doubtless many--in the distinction drawn by W.C. Krauss
("Masturbational Neuroses," _Medical News_,
July 13, 1901): "From my experience it [masturbation]
seems to have an opposite effect upon the two sexes, dulling
the mental and making clumsy the physical exertions of
the male, while in the female it quickens and excites
the physical and psychical movements. The man is rendered
hypoesthetic, the woman hyperesthetic."
In either sex auto-erotic excesses during adolescence
in young men and women of intelligence--whatever absence
of gross injury there may be--still often produce a certain
degree of psychic perversion, and tend to foster false
and high-strung ideals of life. Kraepelin refers to the
frequency of exalted enthusiasms in masturbators, and
I have already quoted Anstie's remarks on the connection
between masturbation and premature false work in literature
and art. It may be added that excess in masturbation has
often occurred in men and women whose work in literature
and art cannot be described as premature and false. K.P.
Moritz, in early adult life, gave himself up to excess
in masturbation, and up to the age of thirty had no relations
with women. Lenau is said--though the statement is sometimes
denied--to have been a masturbator from early life, the
habit profoundly effecting his life and work. Rousseau,
in his _Confessions_, admirably describes how his own
solitary, timid, and imaginative life found its chief
sexual satisfaction in masturbation.[342] Gogol, the great
Russian novelist, masturbated to excess, and it has been
suggested that the dreamy melancholy thus induced was
a factor in his success as a novelist. Goethe, it has
been asserted, at one time masturbated to excess; I am
not certain on what authority the statement is made, probably
on a passage in the seventh book of _Dichtung und Wahrheit_,
in which, describing his student-life at Leipzig, and
his loss of Aennchen owing to his neglect of her, he tells
how he revenged that neglect on his own physical nature
by foolish practices from which he thinks he suffered
for a considerable period.[343] The great Scandinavian
philosopher, Soeren Kierkegaard, suffered severely, according
to Rasmussen, from excessive masturbation. That, at the
present day, eminence in art, literature, and other fields
may be combined with the excessive practice of masturbation
is a fact of which I have unquestionable evidence.
I have the detailed history of a man of 30, of high ability
in a scientific direction, who, except during periods
of mental strain, has practiced masturbation nightly (though
seldom more than once a night) from early childhood, without
any traceable evil results, so far as his general health
and energy are concerned. In another case, a schoolteacher,
age 30, a hard worker and accomplished musician, has masturbated
every night, sometimes more than once a night, ever since
he was at school, without, so far as he knows, any bad
results; he has never had connection with a woman, and
seldom touches wine or tobacco. Curschmann knew a young
and able author who, from the age of 11 had masturbated
excessively, but who retained physical and mental freshness.
It would be very easy to refer to other examples, and
I may remark that, as regards the histories recorded in
various volumes of these _Studies_, a notable proportion
of those in which excessive masturbation is admitted,
are of persons of eminent and recognized ability.
It is often possible to trace the precise mechanism of
the relationship between auto-erotic excitement and intellectual
activity. Brown-Sequard, in old age, considered that to
induce a certain amount of sexual excitement, not proceeding
to emission, was an aid to mental work. Raymond and Janet
knew a man considering himself a poet, who, in order to
attain the excitation necessary to compose his ideal verses,
would write with one hand while with the other he caressed
his penis, though not to the extent of producing ejaculation.[344]
We must not believe, however, that this is by any means
the method of workers who deserve to be accepted seriously;
it would be felt, to say the least, as unworthy. It is
indeed a method that would only appeal to a person of
feeble or failing mental power. What more usually happens
is that the auto-erotic excitement develops, _pari passu_
and spontaneously, with the mental activity and at the
climax of the latter the auto-erotic excitement also culminates,
almost or even quite spontaneously, in an explosion of
detumescence which relieves the mental tension. I am acquainted
with such cases in both young men and women of intellectual
ability, and they probably occur much more frequently
than we usually suspect.
In illustration of the foregoing observations, I may quote
the following narrative, written by a man of letters:
"From puberty to the age of 30 (when I married),
I lived in virgin continence, in accord with my principle.
During these years I worked exceedingly hard--chiefly
at art (music and poetry). My days being spent earning
my livelihood, these art studies fell into my evening
time. I noticed that productive power came in periods--periods
of irregular length, and which certainly, to a partial
extent, could be controlled by the will. Such a period
of vital power began usually with a sensation of melancholy,
and it quickened my normal revolt against the narrowness
of conventional life into a red-hot detestation of the
paltriness and pettiness with which so many mortals seem
to content themselves. As the mood grew in intensity,
this scorn of the lower things mixed with and gave place
to a vivid insight into higher truths. The oppression
began to give place to a realization of the eternity of
the heroic things; the fatuities were seen as mere fashions;
love was seen as the true lord of life; the eternal romance
was evident in its glory; the naked strength and beauty
of men were known despite their clothes. In such mood
my work was produced; bitter protest and keen-sighted
passion mingled in its building. The arising vitality
had certainly deep relation to the periodicity of the
sex-force of manhood. At the height of the power of the
art-creative mood would come those natural emissions with
which Nature calmly disposes of the unused force of the
male. Such emissions were natural and healthy, and not
exhaustive or hysterical. The process is undoubtedly sane
and protective, unless the subject be unhealthy. The period
of creative art power extended a little beyond the end
of the period of natural seed emission--the art work of
this last stage being less vibrant, and of a gentler force.
Then followed a time of calm natural rest, which gradually
led up to the next sequence of melancholy and power. The
periods certainly varied in length of time, controlled
somewhat by the force of the mind and the mental will
to create; that is to say, I could somewhat delay the
natural emission, by which I gained an extension of the
period of power."
How far masturbation in moderately healthy persons living
without normal sexual relationships may be considered
normal is a difficult question only to be decided with
reference to individual cases. As a general rule, when
only practiced at rare intervals, and _faute de mieux_,
in order to obtain relief for physical oppression and
mental obsession, it may be regarded as the often inevitable
result of the unnatural circumstances of our civilized
social life. When, as often happens in mental degeneracy,--and
as in shy and imaginative persons, perhaps of neurotic
temperament, may also sometimes become the case,--it is
practiced in preference to sexual relationships, it at
once becomes abnormal and may possibly lead to a variety
of harmful results, mental and physical.[345]
It must always be remembered, however, that, while the
practice of masturbation may be harmful in its consequences,
it is also, in the absence of normal sexual relationships,
frequently not without good results. In the medical literature
of the last hundred years a number of cases have been
incidentally recorded in which the patients found masturbation
beneficial, and such cases might certainly have been enormously
increased if there had been any open-eyed desire to discover
them. My own observations agree with those of Sudduth,
who asserts that "masturbation is, in the main, practiced
for its sedative effect on the nervous system. The relaxation
that follows the act constitutes its real attraction....
Both masturbation and sexual intercourse should be classed
as typical sedatives."[346]
Gall (_Fonctions du Cerveau_, 1825, vol. iii, p. 235)
mentioned a woman who was tormented by strong sexual desire,
which she satisfied by masturbation ten or twelve times
a day; this caused no bad results, and led to the immediate
disappearance of a severe pain in the back of the neck,
from which she often suffered. Clouston (_Mental Diseases_,
1887, p. 496) quotes as follows from a letter written
by a youth of 22: "I am sure I cannot explain myself,
nor give account of such conduct. Sometimes I felt so
uneasy at my work that I would go to the water-closet
to do it, and it seemed to give me ease, and then I would
work like a hatter for a whole week, till the sensation
overpowered me again. I have been the most filthy scoundrel
in existence," etc. Garnier presents the case of
a monk, aged 33, living a chaste life, who wrote the following
account of his experiences: "For the past three years,
at least, I have felt, every two or three weeks, a kind
of fatigue in the penis, or, rather, slight shooting pains,
increasing during several days, and then I feel a strong
desire to expel the semen. When no nocturnal pollution
follows, the retention of the semen causes general disturbance,
headache, and sleeplessness. I must confess that, occasionally,
to free myself from the general and local oppression,
I lie on my stomach and obtain ejaculation. I am at once
relieved; a weight seems to be lifted from my chest, and
sleep returns." This patient consulted Gamier as
to whether this artificial relief was not more dangerous
than the sufferings it relieved. Gamier advised that if
the ordinary _regime_ of a well-ordered monastry, together
with anaphrodisiac sedatives, proved inefficacious, the
manoeuvre might be continued when necessary (P. Garnier,
_Celibat et Celibataires_, 1887, p. 320). H.C. Coe (_American
Journal of Obstetrics_, p. 766, July, 1889) gives the
case of a married lady who was deeply sensitive of the
wrong nature of masturbation, but found in it the only
means of relieving the severe ovarian pain, associated
with intense sexual excitement, which attended menstruation.
During the intermenstrual period the temptation was absent.
Turnbull knew a youth who found that masturbation gave
great relief to feelings of heaviness and confusion which
came on him periodically; and Wigglesworth has frequently
seen masturbation after epileptic fits in patients who
never masturbated at other times. Moll (_Libido Sexualis_,
Bd. I, p. 13) refers to a woman of 28, an artist of nervous
and excitable temperament, who could not find sexual satisfaction
with her lover, but only when masturbating, which she
did once or twice a day, or oftener; without masturbation,
she said, she would be in a much more nervous state. A
friend tells me of a married lady of 40, separated from
her husband on account of incompatibility, who suffered
from irregular menstruation; she tried masturbation, and,
in her own words, "became normal again;" she
had never masturbated previously. I have also been informed
of the case of a young unmarried woman, intellectual,
athletic, and well developed, who, from the age of seven
or eight, has masturbated nearly every night before going
to sleep, and would be restless and unable to sleep if
she did not.
Judging from my own observations among both sexes, I should
say that in normal persons, well past the age of puberty,
and otherwise leading a chaste life, masturbation would
be little practiced except for the physical and mental
relief it brings. Many vigorous and healthy unmarried
women or married women apart from their husbands, living
a life of sexual abstinence, have asserted emphatically
that only by sexually exciting themselves, at intervals,
could they escape from a condition of nervous oppression
and sexual obsession which they felt to be a state of
hysteria. In most cases this happens about the menstrual
period, and, whether accomplished as a purely physical
act--in the same way as they would soothe a baby to sleep
by rocking it or patting it--or by the co-operation of
voluptuous mental imagery, the practice is not cultivated
for its own sake during the rest of the month.
In illustration of the foregoing statements I will here
record a few typical observations of experiences with
regard to masturbation. The cases selected are all women,
and are all in a fairly normal, and, for the most part,
excellent, state of health; some of them, however, belong
to somewhat neurotic families, and these are persons of
unusual mental ability and intelligence.
OBSERVATION I.--Unmarried, aged 38. She is very vigorous
and healthy, of a strongly passionate nature, but never
masturbated until a few years ago, when she was made love
to by a man who used to kiss her, etc. Although she did
not respond to these advances, she was thrown into a state
of restless sexual excitement; on one occasion, when in
bed in this restless state, she accidentally found, on
passing her hand over her body, that, by playing with
"a round thing" [clitoris] a pleasurable feeling
was produced. She found herself greatly relieved and quieted
by these manipulations, though there remained a feeling
of tiredness afterward. She has sometimes masturbated
six times in a night, especially before and after the
menstrual period, until she was unable to produce the
orgasm or any feeling of pleasure.
OBSERVATION II.--Unmarried, aged 45, of rather nervous
temperament. She has for many years been accustomed, usually
about a week before the appearance of the menses, to obtain
sexual relief by kicking out her legs when lying down.
In this way, she says, she obtains complete satisfaction.
She never touches herself. On the following day she frequently
has pains over the lower part of the abdomen, such pains
being apparently muscular and due to the exertion.
OBSERVATION III.--Aged 29, recently married, belonging
to a neurotic and morbid family, herself healthy, and
living usually in the country; vivacious, passionate,
enthusiastic, intellectual, and taking a prominent part
in philanthropic schemes and municipal affairs; at the
same time, fond of society, and very attractive to men.
For many years she had been accustomed to excite herself,
though she felt it was not good for her. The habit was
merely practiced _faute de mieux_. "I used to sit
on the edge of the bed sometimes," she said, "and
it came over me so strongly that I simply couldn't resist
it. I felt that I should go mad, and I thought it was
better to touch myself than be insane.... I used to press
my clitoris in.... It made me very tired afterward--not
like being with my husband." The confession was made
from a conviction of the importance of the subject, and
with the hope that some way might be found out of the
difficulties which so often beset women.
OBSERVATION IV.--Unmarried, aged 27; possesses much force
of character and high intelligence; is actively engaged
in a professional career. As a child of seven or eight
she began to experience what she describes as lightning-like
sensations, "mere, vague, uneasy feelings or momentary
twitches, which took place alike in the vulva or the vagina
or the uterus, not amounting to an orgasm and nothing
like it." These sensations, it should be added, have
continued into adult life. "I always experience them
just before menstruation, and afterward for a few days,
and, occasionally, though it seems to me not so often,
during the period itself. I may have the sensation four
or five times during the day; it is not dependent at all
upon external impressions, or my own thoughts, and is
sometimes absent for days together. It is just one flash,
as if you would snap your fingers, and it is over."
As a child, she was, of course, quite unconscious that
there was anything sexual in these sensations. They were
then usually associated with various imaginary scenes.
The one usually indulged in was that a black bear was
waiting for her up in a tree, and that she was slowly
raised up toward the bear by means of ropes and then lowered
again, and raised, feeling afraid of being caught by the
bear, and yet having a morbid desire to be caught. In
after years she realized that there was a physical sexual
cause underlying these imaginations, and that what she
liked was a feeling of resistance to the bear giving rise
to the physical sensation.
At a somewhat later age, though while still a child, she
cherished an ideal passion for a person very much older
than herself, this passion absorbing her thoughts for
a period of two years, during which, however, there was
no progress made in physical sensation. It was when she
was nearly thirteen years of age, soon after the appearance
of menstruation, and under the influence of this ideal
passion, that she first learned to experience conscious
orgasm, which was not associated with the thought of any
person. "I did not associate it with anything high
or beautiful, owing to the fact that I had imbibed our
current ideas in regard to sexual feelings, and viewed
them in a very poor light indeed." She considers
that her sexual feelings were stronger at this period
than at any other time in her life. She could, however,
often deny herself physical satisfaction for weeks at
a time, in order that she might not feel unworthy of the
object of her ideal passion. "As for the sexual satisfaction,"
she writes, "it was experimental. I had heard older
girls speak of the pleasure of such feelings, but I was
not taught anything by example, or otherwise. I merely
rubbed myself with the wash-rag while bathing, waiting
for a result, and having the same peculiar feeling I had
so often experienced. I am not aware of any ill effects
having resulted, but I felt degraded, and tried hard to
overcome the habit. No one had spoken to me of the habit,
but from the secrecy of grown people, and passages I had
heard from the Bible, I conceived the idea that it was
a reprehensible practice. And, while this did not curb
my desire, it taught me self-control, and I vowed that
each time should be the last. I was often able to keep
the resolution for two or three weeks." Some four
years later she gradually succeeded in breaking herself
of the practice in so far as it had become a habit; she
has, however, acquired a fuller knowledge of sexual matters,
and, though she has still a great dread of masturbation
as a vice, she does not hesitate to relieve her physical
feelings when it seems best to her to do so. "I am
usually able to direct my thoughts from these sensations,"
she writes, "but if they seem to make me irritable
or wakeful, I relieve myself. It is a physical act, unassociated
with deep feeling of any kind. I have always felt that
it was a rather unpleasant compromise with my physical
nature, but certainly necessary in my case. Yet, I have
abstained from gratification for very long periods. If
the feeling is not strong at the menstrual period, I go
on very well without either the sensation or the gratification
until the next period. And, strange as it may seem, the
best antidote I have found and the best preventive is
to think about spiritual things or someone whom I love.
It is simply a matter of training, I suppose,--a sort
of mental gymnastics,--which draws the attention away
from the physical feelings." This lady has never
had any sexual relationships, and, since she is ambitious,
and believes that the sexual emotions may be transformed
so as to become a source of motive power throughout the
whole of life, she wishes to avoid such relationships.
OBSERVATION V.--Unmarried, aged 31, in good health, with,
however, a somewhat hysterical excess of energy. "When
I was about 26 years of age," she writes, "a
friend came to me with the confession that for several
years she had masturbated, and had become such a slave
to the habit that she severely suffered from its ill effects.
At that time I had never heard of self-abuse by women.
I listened to her story with much sympathy and interest,
but some skepticism, and determined to try experiments
upon myself, with the idea of getting to understand the
matter in order to assist my friend. After some manipulation,
I succeeded in awakening what had before been unconscious
and unknown. I purposely allowed the habit to grow upon
me, and one night--for I always operated upon myself before
going to sleep, never in the morning--I obtained considerable
pleasurable satisfaction, but the following day my conscience
awoke; I also felt pain located at the back of my head
and down the spinal column. I ceased my operations for
a time, and then began again somewhat regularly, once
a month, a few days after menstruation. During those months
in which I exercised moderation, I think I obtained much
local relief with comparatively little injury, but, later
on, finding myself in robust health, I increased my experiments,
the habit grew upon me, and it was only with an almost
superhuman effort that I broke myself free. Needless to
say that I gave no assistance to my suffering friend,
nor did I ever refer to the subject after her confession
to me.
"Some two years later I heard of sexual practices
between women as a frequent habit in certain quarters.
I again interested myself in masturbation, for I had been
told something that led me to believe that there was much
more for me to discover. Not knowing the most elementary
physiology, I questioned some of my friends, and then
commenced again. I restricted myself to relief from local
congestion and irritation by calling forth the emission
of mucus, rather than by seeking pleasure. At the same
time, I sought to discover what manipulation of the clitoris
would lead to. The habit grew upon me with startling rapidity,
and I became more or less its slave, but I suffered from
no very great ill effects until I started in search of
more discoveries. I found that I was a complete ignoramus
as to the formation of a woman's body, and by experiments
upon myself sought to discover the vagina. I continued
my operations until I obtained an entrance. I think the
rough handling of myself during this final stage disturbed
my nervous system, and caused me considerable pain and
exhaustion at the back of my head, the spinal column,
the back of my eyes, and a general feeling of languor,
etc.
"I could not bear to be the slave of a habit, and
after much suffering and efforts, which only led to falls
to lower depths of conscious failure, my better self rebelled,
until, by a great effort and much prayer, I kept myself
pure for a whole week. This partial recovery gave me hope,
but then I again fell a victim to the habit, much to my
chagrin, and became hopeless of ever retracing my steps
toward my ideal of virtue. For some days I lost energy,
spirit, and hope; my nervous system appeared to be ruined,
but I did not really despair of victory in the end. I
thought of all the drunkards chained by their intemperate
habits, of inveterate smokers who could not exist without
tobacco, and of all the various methods by which men were
slaves, and the longing to be freed of what had, in my
case, proved to be a painful and unnecessary habit, increased
daily until, after one night when I struggled with myself
for hours, I believed I had finally succeeded.
"At times, when I reached a high degree of sexual
excitement, I felt that I was at least one step removed
from those of morbid and repressed sex, who had not the
slightest suspicion of the latent joys of womanhood within
them. For a little while the habit took the shape of an
exalted passion, but I rapidly tired it out by rough,
thoughtless, and too impatient handling. Revulsion set
in with the pain of an exhausted and badly used nervous
system, and finding myself the slave of a passion, I determined
to endeavor to be its master.
"In conclusion, I should say that masturbation has
proved itself to be to me one of the blind turnings of
my life's history, from which I have gained much valuable
experience."
The practice was, however, by no means thus dismissed.
Some time later the subject writes: "I have again
restarted masturbation for the relief of localized feelings.
One morning I was engaged in reading a very heavy volume
which, for convenience sake, I held in my lap, leaning
back on my chair. I had become deep in my study for an
hour or so when I became aware of certain feelings roused
by the weight of the book. Being tempted to see what would
happen by such conduct, I shifted so that the edge of
the volume came in closer contact. The pleasurable feelings
increased, so I gave myself up to my emotions for some
thirty minutes.
"Notwithstanding the intense pleasure I enjoyed for
so long a period, I maintain that it is wiser to refrain,
and, although I admit in the same breath that, by gentle
treatment, such pleasure may be harmless to the general
health, it does lead to a desire for solitude, which is
not conducive to a happy frame of mind. There is an accompanying
reticence of speech concerning the pleasure, which, therefore,
appears to be unnatural, like the eating of stolen fruit.
After such an event, one seems to require to fly to the
woods, and to listen to the song of the birds, so as to
shake off after-effects."
In a letter dated some months later, she writes: "I
think I have risen above the masturbation habit."
In the same letter the writer remarks: "If I had
consciously abnormal or unsatisfied appetites I would
satisfy them in the easiest and least harmful way."
Again, eighteen months later, she writes: "It is
curious to note that for months this habit is forgotten,
but awakens sometimes to self-assertion. If a feeling
of pressure is felt in the head, and a slight irritation
elsewhere, and experience shows that the time has come
for pacification, exquisite pleasure can be enjoyed, never
more than twice a month, and sometimes less often."
OBSERVATION VI.--Unmarried, actively engaged in the practice
of her profession. Well-developed, feminine in contour,
but boyish in manner and movements; strong, though muscles
small, and healthy, with sound nervous system; never had
anaemia. Thick brown hair; pubic hair thick, and hair
on toes and legs up to umbilicus; it began to appear at
the age of 10 (before pubic hair) and continued until
18. A few stray hairs round nipples, and much dark down
on upper lip, as well as light down on arms and hands.
Hips, normal; nates, small; labia minora, large; and clitoris,
deeply hooded. Hymen thick, vagina, probably small. Considerable
pigmentation of parts. Menstruation began at 15, but not
regular till 17; is painless and scanty; the better the
state of health, the less it is. No change of sexual or
other feelings connected with it; it lasts one to three
days.
"I believe," she writes, "my first experience
of physical sex sensations was when I was about 16, and
in sleep. But I did not then recognize it, and seldom,
indeed, gave the subject of sex a thought. I was a child
far beyond the age of childhood. The accompanying dreams
were disagreeable, but I cannot remember what they were
about. It was not until I was nearly 19 that I knew the
sexual orgasm in my waking state. It surprised me completely,
but I knew that I had known it before in my sleep.
"The knowledge came one summer when I was leading
a rather isolated life, and my mind was far from sex subjects,
being deep in books, Carlyle, Ruskin, Huxley, Darwin,
Scott, etc. I noticed that when I got up in the morning
I felt very hot and uncomfortable. The clitoris and the
parts around were swollen and erect, and often tender
and painful. I had no idea what it was, but found I was
unable to pass my water for an hour or two. One day, when
I was straining a little to pass water, the full orgasm
occurred. The next time it happened, I tried to check
it by holding myself firmly, of course, with the opposite
result. I do not know that I found it highly pleasurable,
but it was a very great relief. I allowed myself a good
many experiments, to come to a conclusion in the matter,
and I thought about it. I was much too shy to speak to
any one, and thought it was probably a sin. I tried not
to do it, and not to think about it, saying to myself
that surely I was lord of my body. But I found that the
matter was not entirely under my control. However unwilling
or passive I might be, there were times when the involuntary
discomfort was not in my keeping. My touching myself or
not did not save me from it. Because it sometimes gave
me pleasure, I thought it might be a form of self-indulgence,
and did not do it until it could scarcely be helped. Soon
the orgasm began to occur fairly frequently in my sleep,
perhaps once or twice a week. I had no erotic dreams,
then or at any other time, but I had nights of restless
sleep, and woke as it occurred, dreaming that it was happening,
as, in fact, it was. At times I hardly awoke, but went
to sleep again in a moment. I continued for two or three
years to be sorely tried by day at frequent intervals.
I acquired a remarkable degree of control, so that, though
one touch or steadily directed thought would have caused
the orgasm, I could keep it off, and go to sleep without
'wrong doing.' Of course, when I fell asleep, my control
ended. All this gave me a good deal of physical worry,
and kept my attention unwillingly fixed upon the matter.
I do not think my body was readily irritable, but I had
unquestionably very strong sexual impulses.
"After a year or two, when I was working hard, I
could not afford the attention the control cost me, or
the prolonged mitigated sexual excitement it caused. I
took drugs for a time, but they lost effect, produced
lassitude, and agreed with me badly. I therefore put away
my scruples and determined to try the effect of giving
myself an instant and business-like relief. Instead of
allowing my feelings to gather strength, I satisfied them
out of hand. Instead of five hours of heat and discomfort,
I did not allow myself five minutes, if I could help it.
"The effect was marvelous. I practically had no more
trouble. The thing rarely came to me at all by day, and
though it continued at times by night, it became less
frequent and less strong; often it did not wake me. The
erotic images and speculations that had begun to come
to me died down. I left off being afraid of my feelings,
or, indeed, thinking about them. I may say that I had
decided that I should be obliged to lead a single life,
and that the less I thought about matters of sex, the
more easy I should find life. Later on I had religious
ideas which helped me considerably in my ideals of a decent,
orderly, self-contained life. I do not lay stress on these;
they were not at all emotional, and my physical and psychical
development do not appear to have run much on parallel
lines. I had a strong moral sense before I had a religious
one, and a 'common-sense' which I perhaps trusted more
than either.
"When I was about 28 I thought I might perhaps leave
off the habit of regular relief I had got into. (It was
not regular as regards time, being anything from one day
to six weeks.) The change was probably made easier by
a severe illness I had had. I gave this abstinence a fair
trial for several years (until I was about 34), but my
nocturnal manifestations certainly gathered strength,
especially when I got much better in health, and, finally,
as at puberty, began to worry my waking life. I reasoned
that by my attempt at abstinence I had only exchanged
control for uncontrol, and reverted to my old habits of
relief, with the same good results as before. The whole
trouble subsided and I got better at once. (The orgasm
during sleep continued, and occurs about once a fortnight;
it is increased by change of air, especially at the seaside,
when it may occur on two or three nights running.) I decided
that, for the proper control of my single life, relief
was normal and right. It would be very difficult for anyone
to demonstrate the contrary to me. My aim has always been
to keep myself in the best condition of physical and mental
balance that a single person is capable of."
There is some interest in briefly reviewing the remarkable
transformations in the attitude toward masturbation from
Greek times down to our own day. The Greeks treated masturbation
with little opprobrium. At the worst they regarded it
as unmanly, and Aristophanes, in various passages, connects
the practice with women, children, slaves, and feeble
old men. AEschines seems to have publicly brought it as
a charge against Demosthenes that he had practiced masturbation,
though, on the other hand, Plutarch tells us that Diogenes--described
by Zeller, the historian of Greek philosophy, as "the
most typical figure of ancient Greece"--was praised
by Chrysippus, the famous philosopher, for masturbating
in the market-place. The more strenuous Romans, at all
events as exemplified by Juvenal and Martial, condemned
masturbation more vigorously.[347] Aretaeus, without alluding
to masturbation, dwells on the tonic effects of retaining
the semen; but, on the other hand, Galen regarded the
retention of semen as injurious, and advocated its frequent
expulsion, a point of view which tended to justify masturbation.
In classical days, doubtless, masturbation and all other
forms of the auto-erotic impulse were comparatively rare.
So much scope was allowed in early adult age for homosexual
and later for heterosexual relationships that any excessive
or morbid development of solitary self-indulgence could
seldom occur. The case was altered when Christian ideals
became prominent. Christian morality strongly proscribed
sexual relationships except under certain specified conditions.
It is true that Christianity discouraged all sexual manifestations,
and that therefore its ban fell equally on masturbation,
but, obviously, masturbation lay at the weakest line of
defence against the assaults of the flesh; it was there
that resistance would most readily yield. Christianity
thus probably led to a considerable increase of masturbation.
The attention which the theologians devoted to its manifestations
clearly bears witness to their magnitude. It is noteworthy
that Mohammedan theologians regarded masturbation as a
Christian vice. In Islam both doctrine and practice tended
to encourage sexual relationships, and not much attention
was paid to masturbation, nor even any severe reprobation
directed against it. Omer Haleby remarks that certain
theologians of Islam are inclined to consider the practice
of masturbation in vogue among Christians as allowable
to devout Mussulmans when alone on a journey; he himself
regards this as a practice good neither for soul nor body
(seminal emissions during sleep providing all necessary
relief); should, however, a Mussulman fall into this error,
God is merciful![348]
In Theodore's Penitential of the seventh century, forty
days' penance is prescribed for masturbation. Aquinas
condemned masturbation as worse than fornication, though
less heinous than other sexual offences against Nature;
in opposition, also, to those who believed that _distillatio_
usually takes place without pleasure, he observed that
it was often caused by sexual emotion, and should, therefore,
always be mentioned to the confessor. Liguori also regarded
masturbation as a graver sin than fornication, and even
said that _distillatio_, if voluntary and with notable
physical commotion, is without doubt a mortal sin, for
in such a case it is the beginning of a pollution. On
the other hand, some theologians have thought that _distillatio_
may be permitted, even if there is some commotion, so
long as it has not been voluntarily procured, and Caramuel,
who has been described as a theological _enfant terrible_,
declared that "natural law does not forbid masturbation,"
but that proposition was condemned by Innocent XI. The
most enlightened modern Catholic view is probably represented
by Debreyne, who, after remarking that he has known pious
and intelligent persons who had an irresistible impulse
to masturbate, continues: "Must we excuse, or condemn,
these people? Neither the one nor the other. If you condemn
and repulse absolutely these persons as altogether guilty,
against their own convictions, you will perhaps throw
them into despair; if, on the contrary, you completely
excuse them, you maintain them in a disorder from which
they may, perhaps, never emerge. Adopt a wise middle course,
and, perhaps, with God's aid, you may often cure them."
Under certain circumstances some Catholic theologians
have permitted a married woman to masturbate. Thus, the
Jesuit theologian, Gury, asserts that the wife does not
sin "_quae se ipsam tactibus excitat ad seminationem
statim post copulam in qua vir solus seminavit_."
This teaching seems to have been misunderstood, since
ethical and even medical writers have expended a certain
amount of moral indignation on the Church whose theologians
committed themselves to this statement. As a matter of
fact, this qualified permission to masturbate merely rests
on a false theory of procreation, which is clearly expressed
in the word _seminatio_. It was believed that ejaculation
in the woman is as necessary to fecundation as ejaculation
in the man. Galen, Avicenna, and Aquinas recognized, indeed,
that such feminine semination was not necessary; Sanchez,
however, was doubtful, while Suarez and Zacchia, following
Hippocrates, regarded it as necessary. As sexual intercourse
without fecundation is not approved by the Catholic Church,
it thus became logically necessary to permit women to
masturbate whenever the ejaculation of mucus had not occurred
at or before coitus.
The belief that the emission of vaginal mucus, under the
influence of sexual excitement in women, corresponded
to spermatic emission, has led to the practice of masturbation
on hygienic grounds. Garnier (_Celibat_, p. 255) mentions
that Mesue, in the eighteenth century, invented a special
pessary to take the place of the penis, and, as he stated,
effect the due expulsion of the feminine sperm.
Protestantism, no doubt, in the main accepted the general
Catholic, tradition, but the tendency of Protestantism,
in reaction against the minute inquisition of the earlier
theologians, has always been to exercise a certain degree
of what it regarded as wholesome indifference toward the
less obvious manifestations of the flesh. Thus in Protestant
countries masturbation seems to have been almost ignored
until Tissot, combining with his reputation as a physician
the fanaticism of a devout believer, raised masturbation
to the position of a colossal bogy which during a hundred
years has not only had an unfortunate influence on medical
opinion in these matters, but has been productive of incalculable
harm to ignorant youth and tender consciences. During
the past forty years the efforts of many distinguished
physicians--a few of whose opinions I have already quoted--have
gradually dragged the bogy down from its pedestal, and
now, as I have ventured to suggest, there is a tendency
for the reaction to be excessive. There is even a tendency
to-day to regard masturbation, with various qualifications,
as normal. Remy de Gourmont, for instance, considers that
masturbation is natural because it is the method by which
fishes procreate: "All things considered, it must
be accepted that masturbation is part of the doings of
Nature. A different conclusion might be agreeable, but
in every ocean and under the reeds of every river, myriads
of beings would protest."[349] Tillier remarks that
since masturbation appears to be universal among the higher
animals we are not entitled to regard it as a vice; it
has only been so considered because studied exclusively
by physicians under abnormal conditions.[350] Hirth, while
asserting that masturbation must be strongly repressed
in the young, regards it as a desirable method of relief
for adults, and especially, under some circumstances,
for women.[351] Venturi, a well-known Italian alienist,
on the other hand, regards masturbation as strictly physiological
in youth; it is the normal and natural passage toward
the generous and healthy passion of early manhood; it
only becomes abnormal and vicious, he holds, when continued
into adult life.
The appearance of masturbation at puberty, Venturi considers,
"is a moment in the course of the development of
the function of that organ which is the necessary instrument
of sexuality." It finds its motive in the satisfaction
of an organic need having much analogy with that which
arises from the tickling of a very sensitive cutaneous
surface. In this masturbation of early adolescence lies,
according to Venturi, the germ of what will later be love:
a pleasure of the body and of the spirit, following the
relief of a satisfied need. "As the youth develops,
onanism becomes a sexual act comparable to coitus as a
dream is comparable to reality, imagery forming in correspondence
with the desires. In its fully developed form in adolescence,"
Venturi continues, "masturbation has an almost hallucinatory
character; onanism at this period psychically approximates
to the true sexual act, and passes insensibly into it.
If, however, continued on into adult age, it becomes morbid,
passing into erotic fetichism; what in the inexperienced
youth is the natural auxiliary and stimulus to imagination,
in the degenerate onanist of adult age is a sign of arrested
development. Thus, onanism," the author concludes,
"is not always a vice such as is fiercely combated
by educators and moralists. It is the natural transition
by which we reach the warm and generous love of youth,
and, in natural succession to this, the tranquil, positive,
matrimonial love of the mature man." (Silvio Venturi,
_Le Degenerazioni Psico-sessuale_, 1892, pp. 6-9.)
It may be questioned whether this view is acceptable even
for the warm climate of the south of Europe, where the
impulses of sexuality are undoubtedly precocious. It is
certainly not in harmony with general experience and opinion
in the north; this is well expressed in the following
passage by Edward Carpenter (_International Journal of
Ethics_, July, 1899): "After all, purity (in the
sense of continence) _is_ of the first importance to boyhood.
To prolong the period of continence in a boy's life is
to prolong the period of _growth_. This is a simple physiological
law, and a very obvious one; and, whatever other things
may be said in favor of purity, it remains, perhaps, the
most weighty. To introduce sensual and sexual habits--and
one of the worst of them is self-abuse--at an early age,
is to arrest growth, both physical and mental. And what
is even more, it means to arrest the capacity for affection.
All experience shows that the early outlet toward sex
cheapens and weakens affectional capacity."
I do not consider that we can decide the precise degree
in which masturbation may fairly be called normal so long
as we take masturbation by itself. We are thus, in conclusion,
brought back to the point which I sought to emphasize
at the outset: masturbation belongs to a group of auto-erotic
phenomena. From one point of view it may be said that
all auto-erotic phenomena are unnatural, since the natural
aim of the sexual impulse is sexual conjunction, and all
exercise of that impulse outside such conjunction is away
from the end of Nature. But we do not live in a state
of Nature which answers to such demands; all our life
is "unnatural." And as soon as we begin to restrain
the free play of sexual impulse toward sexual ends, at
once auto-erotic phenomena inevitably spring up on every
side. There is no end to them; it is impossible to say
what finest elements in art, in morals, in civilization
generally, may not really be rooted in an auto-erotic
impulse. "Without a certain overheating of the sexual
system," said Nietzsche, "we could not have
a Raphael." Auto-erotic phenomena are inevitable.
It is our wisest course to recognize this inevitableness
of sexual and transmuted sexual manifestations under the
perpetual restraints of civilized life, and, while avoiding
any attitude of excessive indulgence or indifference,[352]
to avoid also any attitude of excessive horror, for our
horror not only leads to the facts being effectually veiled
from our sight, but itself serves to manufacture artificially
a greater evil than that which we seek to combat.
The sexual impulse is not, as some have imagined, the
sole root of the most massive human emotions, the most
brilliant human aptitudes,--of sympathy, of art, of religion.
In the complex human organism, where all the parts are
so many-fibred and so closely interwoven, no great manifestation
can be reduced to one single source. But it largely enters
into and molds all of these emotions and aptitudes, and
that by virtue of its two most peculiar characteristics:
it is, in the first place, the deepest and most volcanic
of human impulses, and, in the second place,--unlike the
only other human impulse with which it can be compared,
the nutritive impulse,--it can, to a large extent, be
transmuted into a new force capable of the strangest and
most various uses. So that in the presence of all these
manifestations we may assert that in a real sense, though
subtly mingled with very diverse elements, auto-erotism
everywhere plays its part. In the phenomena of auto-erotism,
when we take a broad view of those phenomena, we are concerned,
not with a form of insanity, not necessarily with a form
of depravity, but with the inevitable by-products of that
mighty process on which the animal creation rests.
FOOTNOTES:
[289] For a bibliography of masturbation, see Rohleder,
_Die Masturbation_, pp. 11-18; also, Arthur MacDonald,
_Le Criminel Type_, pp. 227 et seq.; cf. G. Stanley Hall,
_Adolescence_, vol. i, pp. 432 _et seq._
[290] Oskar Berger, _Archiv fuer Psychiatrie_, Bd. 6,
1876.
[291] _Die Masturbation_, p. 41.
[292] Dukes, _Preservation of Health_, 1884, p. 150.
[293] G. Stanley Hall, _Adolescence_, vol. i, p. 434.
[294] F.S. Brockman, "A Study of the Moral and Religious
Life of Students in the United States," _Pedagogical
Seminary_, September, 1902. Many pitiful narratives are
reproduced.
[295] Moraglia, "Die Onanie beim normalen Weibe und
bei den Prostituten," _Zeitschrift fuer Criminal-Anthropologie_,
1897, p. 489. It should be added that Moraglia is not
a very critical investigator. It is probable, however,
that on this point his results are an approximation to
the truth.
[296] Ernst, "Anthropological Researches on the Population
of Venezuela," _Memoirs of the Anthropological Society_,
vol. iii, 1870, p. 277.
[297] Niceforo, _Il Gergo nei Normali_, etc., 1897, cap.
V.
[298] Debreyne, _Moechialogie_, p. 64. Yet theologians
and casuists, Debreyne remarks, frequently never refer
to masturbation in women.
[299] Stanley Hall, op. cit., vol. i, p. 34. Hall mentions,
also, that masturbation is specially common among the
blind.
[300] Moraglia, _Archivio di Psichiatria_, vol. xvi, fasc.
4 and 5, p. 313.
[301] See his careful study, "Die Sexuellen Perversitaeten
in der Irrenanstalt," _Psychiatrische Bladen_, No.
2. 1899.
[302] Venturi, _Degenerazioni Psico-sessuali_, pp. 105,
133, 148, 152.
[303] J.P. West, _Transactions of the Ohio Pediatric Society_,
1895. _Abstract in Medical Standard_, November, 1895;
cases are also recorded by J.T. Winter, "Self-abuse
in Infancy and Childhood," _American Journal Obstetrics_,
June, 1902.
[304] Freud, _Abhandlungen zur Sexualtheorie_, pp. 36
et seq.
[305] G.E. Shuttleworth, _British Medical Journal_, October
3, 1903.
[306] See for a detailed study of sexuality in childhood,
Moll's valuable book, _Das Sexualleben des Kindes_; cf.
vol. vi of these _Studies_, Ch. II.
[307] This is, no doubt, the most common opinion, and
it is frequently repeated in text-books. It is scarcely
necessary, however, to point out that only the opinions
of those who have given special attention to the matter
can carry any weight. R.W. Shufeldt ("On a Case of
Female Impotency," pp. 5-7) quotes the opinions of
various cautious observers as to the difficulty of detecting
masturbation in women.
[308] This latter opinion is confirmed by Naecke so far
as the insane are concerned. In a careful study of sexual
perversity in a large asylum, Naecke found that, while
moderate masturbation could be more easily traced among
men than among women, excessive masturbation was more
common among women. And, while among the men masturbation
was most frequent in the lowest grades of mental development
(idiocy and imbecility), and least frequent in the highest
grades (general paralysis), in the women it was the reverse.
(P. Naecke, "Die Sexuellen Perversitaeten in der
Irrenanstalt," _Psychiatrische en Neurologische Bladen_,
No. 2, 1899.)
[309] Mammary masturbation sometimes occurs; see, e.g.,
Rohleder, _Die Masturbation_ (pp. 32-33); it is, however,
rare.
[310] Hirschsprung pointed out this, indeed, many years
ago, on the ground of his own experience. And see Rohleder,
op. cit., pp. 44-47.
[311] In many cases, of course, the physical precocity
is associated with precocity in sexual habits. An instructive
case is reported (_Alienist and Neurologist_, October,
1895) of a girl of 7, a beautiful child, of healthy family,
and very intelligent, who, from the age of three, was
perpetually masturbating, when not watched. The clitoris
and mons veneris were those of a fully-grown woman, and
the child was as well informed upon most subjects as an
average woman. She was cured by care and hygienic attention,
and when seen last was in excellent condition. A medical
friend tells me of a little girl of two, whose external
genital organs are greatly developed, and who is always
rubbing herself.
[312] R.T. Morris, of New York, has also pointed out the
influence of traditions in this respect. "Among boys,"
he remarks, "there are traditions to the effect that
self-abuse is harmful. Among girls, however, there are
no such saving traditions." Dr. Kiernan writes in
a private letter: "It has been by experience, that
from ignorance or otherwise, there are young women who
do not look upon sexual manipulation with the same fear
that men do." Guttceit, similarly, remarks that men
have been warned of masturbation, and fear its evil results,
while girls, even if warned, attach little importance
to the warning; he adds that in healthy women, masturbation,
even in excess, has little bad results. The attitude of
many women in this matter may be illustrated by the following
passage from a letter written by a medical friend in India:
"The other day one of my English women patients gave
me the following reason for having taught the 17-year-old
daughter of a retired Colonel to masturbate: 'Poor girl,
she was troubled with dreams of men, and in case she should
be tempted with one, and become pregnant, I taught her
to bring the feeling on herself--as it is safer, and,
after all, nearly as nice as with a man.'"
[313] H. Ellis, _Studies in the Psychology of Sex_, volume
ii, "Sexual Inversion," Chapter IV.
[314] See, also, the Appendix to the third volume of these
_Studies_, in which I have brought forward sexual histories
of normal persons.
[315] E.H. Smith, also, states that from 25 to 35 is the
age when most women come under the physician's eye with
manifest and pronounced habits of masturbation.
[316] It may, however, be instructive to observe that
at the end of the volume we find an advertisement of "Dr.
Robinson's Treatise on the Virtues and Efficacy of a Crust
of Bread, Eat Early in the Morning Fasting."
[317] Pouillet alone enumerates and apparently accepts
considerably over one hundred different morbid conditions
as signs and results of masturbation.
[318] "Augenkrankheiten bei Masturbanten," Knapp-Schweigger's
_Archiv fuer Augenheitkunde_, Bd. II, 1882, p. 198.
[319] Salmo Cohn, _Uterus und Auge_, 1890, pp. 63-66.
[320] _Fonctions du Cerveau_, 1825, vol. iii, p. 337.
[321] W. Ellis, _Treatise on Insanity_, 1838, pp. 335,
340.
[322] Clara Barrus, "Insanity in Young Women,"
_Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease_, June, 1896.
[323] See, for instance, H. Emminghaus, "Die Psychosen
des Kindesalters," Gerlandt's _Handbuch der Kinder-Krankheiten_,
Nachtrag II, pp. 61-63.
[324] Christian, article "Onanisme," _Dictionnaire
Encyclopedique des Sciences Medicales_.
[325] Naecke, _Verbrechen und Wahnsinn beim Weibe_, 1894,
p. 57.
[326] J.L.A. Koch, _Die Psychopathischen Minderwertigkeiten_,
1892, p. 273 et seq.
[327] J.G. Kiernan, _American Journal of Insanity_, July,
1877.
[328] Maudsley dealt, in his vigorous, picturesque manner,
with the more extreme morbid mental conditions sometimes
found associated with masturbation, in "Illustrations
of a Variety of Insanity," _Journal of Mental Science_,
July, 1868.
[329] See, e.g., Loewenfeld, _Sexualleben und Nervenleiden_,
2d. ed., Ch. VIII.
[330] Marro, _La Puberta_, Turin, 1898, p. 174.
[331] E.C. Spitzka, "Cases of Masturbation,"
_Journal of Mental Science_, July, 1888.
[332] Charles West, _Lancet_, November 17, 1866.
[333] Gowers, _Epilepsy_, 1881, p. 31. Loewenfeld believes
that epileptic attacks are certainly caused by masturbation.
Fere thought that both epilepsy and hysteria may be caused
by masturbation.
[334] Ziemssen's _Handbuch_, Bd. XI.
[335] _Adolescence_, vol. i, p. 441.
[336] See a discussion of these points by Rohleder, _Die
Masturbation_, pp. 168-175.
[337] The surgeons, it may be remarked, have especially
stated the harmlessness of masturbation in too absolute
a manner. Thus, John Hunter (_Treatise on the Venereal
Disease_, 1786, p. 200), after pointing out that "the
books on this subject have done more harm than good,"
adds, "I think I may affirm that this act does less
harm to the constitution in general than the natural."
And Sir James Paget, in his lecture on "Sexual Hypochondriasis,"
said: "Masturbation does neither more nor less harm
than sexual intercourse practiced with the same frequency,
in the same conditions of general health and age and circumstances."
[338] It is interesting to note that an analogous result
seems to hold with animals. Among highly-bred horses excessive
masturbation is liable to occur with injurious results.
It is scarcely necessary to point out that highly-bred
horses are apt to be abnormal.
[339] With regard to the physical signs, the same conclusion
is reached by Legludic (in opposition to Martineau) on
the basis of a large experience. He has repeatedly found,
in young girls who acknowledged frequent masturbation,
that the organs were perfectly healthy and normal, and
his convictions are the more noteworthy, since he speaks
as a pupil of Tardieu, who attached very grave significance
to the local signs of sexual perversity and excess. (Legludic,
_Notes et Observations de Medecine Legale_, 1896, p. 95.)
Matthews Duncan (_Goulstonian Lectures on Sterility in
Women_, 1884, p. 97) was often struck by the smallness,
and even imperfect development, of the external genitals
of women who masturbate. Clara Barrus considers that there
is no necessary connection between hypertrophy of the
external female genital organs and masturbation, though
in six cases of prolonged masturbation she found such
a condition in three (_American Journal of Insanity_,
April, 1895, p. 479). Bachterew denies that masturbation
produces enlargement of the penis, and Hammond considers
there is no evidence to show that it enlarges the clitoris,
while Guttceit states that it does not enlarge the nymphae;
this, however, is doubtful. It would not suffice in many
cases to show that large sexual organs are correlated
with masturbation; it would still be necessary to show
whether the size of the organs stood to masturbation in
the relation of effect or of cause.
[340] Thus, Bechterew ("La Phobie du Regard,"
_Archives de Neurologie_, July, 1905) considers that masturbation
plays a large part in producing the morbid fear of the
eyes of others.
[341] It is especially an undesirable tendency of masturbation,
that it deadens the need for affection, and merely eludes,
instead of satisfying, the sexual impulse. "Masturbation,"
as Godfrey well says (_The Science of Sex_, p. 178), "though
a manifestation of sexual activity, is not a sexual act
in the higher, or even in the real fundamental sense.
For sex implies duality, a characteristic to which masturbation
can plainly lay no claim. The physical, moral, and mental
reciprocity which gives stability and beauty to a normal
sexual intimacy, are as foreign to the masturbator as
to the celibate. In a sense, therefore, masturbation is
as complete a negative of the sexual life as chastity
itself. It is, therefore, an evasion of, not an answer
to, the sexual problem; and it will ever remain so, no
matter how surely we may be convinced of its physical
harmlessness."
[342] "I learnt that dangerous supplement,"
Rousseau tells us (Part I, Bk. III), "which deceives
Nature. This vice, which bashfulness and timidity find
so convenient, has, moreover, a great attraction for lively
imaginations, for it enables them to do what they will,
so to speak, with the whole fair sex, and to enjoy at
pleasure the beauty who attracts them, without having
obtained her consent."
[343] "Ich hatte sie wirklich verloren, und die Tollheit,
mit der ich meinen Fehler an mir selbst raechte, indem
ich auf mancherlei unsinnige Weise in meine physische
Natur sturmte, um der sittlichen etwas zu Leide zu thun,
hat sehr viel zu den koerperlichen Uebeln beigetragen,
unter denen ich einige der besten Jahre meines Lebens
verlor; ja ich waere vielleicht an diesem Verlust vollig
zu Grunde gegangen, haette sich hier nicht das poetische
Talent mit seinen Heilkraften besonders huelfreich erwiesen."
This is scarcely conclusive, and it may be added that
there were many reasons why Goethe should have suffered
physically at this time, quite apart from masturbation.
See, e.g., Bielschowsky, _Life of Goethe_, vol. i, p.
88.
[344] _Les Obsessions_, vol. ii, p. 136.
[345] A somewhat similar classification has already been
made by Max Dessoir, who points out that we must distinguish
between onanists _aus Noth_, and onanists _aus Leidenschaft_,
the latter group alone being of really serious importance.
The classification of Dallemagne is also somewhat similar;
he distinguishes _onanie par impulsion_, occurring in
mental degeneration and in persons of inferior intelligence,
from _onanie par evocation ou obsession_.
[346] W. Xavier Sudduth, "A Study in the Psycho-physics
of Masturbation," _Chicago Medical Recorder_, March,
1898. Haig, who reaches a similar conclusion, has sought
to find its precise mechanism in the blood-pressure. "As
the sexual act produces lower and falling blood-pressure,"
he remarks, "it will of necessity relieve conditions
which are due to high and rising blood-pressure, such,
for instance, as mental depression and bad temper; and,
unless my observation deceives me, we have here a connection
between conditions of high blood-pressure with mental
and bodily depression and acts of masturbation, for this
act will relieve these conditions and tend to be practiced
for this purpose." (_Uric Acid_, 6th edition, p.
154.)
[347] Northcote discusses the classic attitude towards
masturbation, _Christianity and Sex Problems_, p. 233.
[348] _El Ktab_, traduction de Paul de Regla, Paris, 1893.
[349] Remy de Gourmont, _Physique de l'Amour_, p. 133.
[350] Tillier, _L'Instinct Sexuel_, Paris, 1889, p. 270.
[351] G. Hirth, _Wege zur Heimat_, p. 648.
[352] Fere, in the course of his valuable work, _L'Instinct
Sexuel_, stated that my conclusion is that masturbation
is normal, and that "_l'indulgence s'impose_."
I had, however, already guarded myself against this misinterpretation.
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