AUTO-EROTISM:
A STUDY OF THE SPONTANEOUS MANIFESTATIONS OF THE SEXUAL
IMPULSE.
I. Definition of Auto-erotism--Masturbation only Covers
a Small Portion of the Auto-erotic Field--The Importance
of this Study, especially To-day--Auto-erotic Phenomena
in Animals--Among Savage and Barbaric Races--The Japanese
_rin-no-tama_ and other Special Instruments for Obtaining
Auto-erotic Gratification--Abuse of the Ordinary Implements
and Objects of Daily Life--The Frequency of Hair-pin in
the Bladder--The Influence of Horse-exercise and Railway
Traveling--The Sewing-machine and the Bicycle--Spontaneous
Passive Sexual Excitement--_Delectatio Morosa_--Day-dreaming--_Pollutio_--Sexual
Excitement During Sleep--Erotic Dreams--The Analogy of
Nocturnal Enuresis--Differences in the Erotic Dreams of
Men and Women--The Auto-erotic Phenomena of Sleep in the
Hysterical--Their Frequently Painful Character.
By "auto-erotism" I mean the phenomena of spontaneous
sexual emotion generated in the absence of an external
stimulus proceeding, directly or indirectly, from another
person. In a wide sense, which cannot be wholly ignored
here, auto-erotism may be said to include those transformations
of repressed sexual activity which are a factor of some
morbid conditions as well as of the normal manifestation
of art and poetry, and, indeed, more or less color the
whole of life.
Such a definition excludes the normal sexual excitement
aroused by the presence of a beloved person of the opposite
sex; it also excludes the perverted sexuality associated
with an attraction to a person of the same sex; it further
excludes the manifold forms of erotic fetichism, in which
the normal focus of sexual attraction is displaced, and
voluptuous emotions are only aroused by some object--hair,
shoes, garments, etc.--which, to the ordinary lover, are
of subordinate--though still, indeed, considerable--importance.[176]
The auto-erotic field remains extensive; it ranges from
occasional voluptuous day-dreams, in which the subject
is entirely passive, to the perpetual unashamed efforts
at sexual self-manipulation witnessed among the insane.
It also includes, though chiefly as curiosities, those
cases in which individuals fall in love with themselves.
Among auto-erotic phenomena, or on the borderland, we
must further include those religious sexual manifestations
for an ideal object, of which we may find evidence in
the lives of saints and ecstatics.[177] The typical form
of auto-erotism is the occurrence of the sexual orgasm
during sleep.
I do not know that any apology is needful for the invention
of the term "auto-erotism."[178] There is no
existing word in current use to indicate the whole range
of phenomena I am here concerned with. We are familiar
with "masturbation," but that, strictly speaking,
only covers a special and arbitrary subdivision of the
field, although, it is true, the subdivision with which
physicians and alienists have chiefly occupied themselves.
"Self-abuse" is somewhat wider, but by no means
covers the whole ground, while for various reasons it
is an unsatisfactory term. "Onanism" is largely
used, especially in France, and some writers even include
all forms of homosexual connection under this name; it
may be convenient to do so from a physiological point
of view, but it is a confusing and antiquated mode of
procedure, and from the psychological standpoint altogether
illegitimate; "onanism" ought never to be used
in this connection, if only on the ground that Onan's
device was not auto-erotic, but was an early example of
withdrawal before emission, or _coitus interruptus_.
While the name that I have chosen may possibly not be
the best, there should be no question as to the importance
of grouping all these phenomena together. It seems to
me that this field has rarely been viewed in a scientifically
sound and morally sane light, simply because it has not
been viewed as a whole. We have made it difficult so to
view it by directing our attention on the special group
of auto-erotic facts--that group included under masturbation--which
was most easy to observe and which in an extreme form
came plainly under medical observation in insanity and
allied conditions, and we have wilfully torn this group
of facts away from the larger group to which it naturally
belongs. The questions which have been so widely, so diversely,
and--it must unfortunately be added--often so mischievously
discussed, concerning the nature and evils of masturbation
are not seen in their true light and proportions until
we realize that masturbation is but a specialized form
of a tendency which in some form or in some degree normally
affects not only man, but all the higher animals. From
a medical point of view it is often convenient to regard
masturbation as an isolated fact; but in order to understand
it we must bear in mind its relationships. In this study
of auto-erotism I shall frequently have occasion to refer
to the old entity of "masturbation," because
it has been more carefully studied than any other part
of the auto-erotic field; but I hope it will always be
borne in mind that the psychological significance and
even the medical diagnostic value of masturbation cannot
be appreciated unless we realize that it is an artificial
subdivision of a great group of natural facts.
The study of auto-erotism is far from being an unimportant
or merely curious study. Yet psychologists, medical and
non-medical, almost without exception, treat its manifestations--when
they refer to them at all--in a dogmatic and off-hand
manner which is far from scientific. It is not surprising,
therefore, that the most widely divergent opinions are
expressed. Nor is it surprising that ignorant and chaotic
notions among the general population should lead to results
that would be ludicrous if they were not pathetic. To
mention one instance known to me: a married lady who is
a leader in social-purity movements and an enthusiast
for sexual chastity, discovered, through reading some
pamphlet against solitary vice, that she had herself been
practicing masturbation for years without knowing it.
The profound anguish and hopeless despair of this woman
in face of what she believed to be the moral ruin of her
whole life cannot well be described. It would be easy
to give further examples, though scarcely a more striking
one, to show the utter confusion into which we are thrown
by leaving this matter in the hands of blind leaders of
the blind. Moreover, the conditions of modern civilization
render auto-erotism a matter of increasing social significance.
As our marriage-rate declines, and as illicit sexual relationships
continue to be openly discouraged, it is absolutely inevitable
that auto-erotic phenomena of one kind or another, not
only among women but also among men, should increase among
us both in amount and intensity. It becomes, therefore,
a matter of some importance, both to the moralist and
the physician, to investigate the psychological nature
of these phenomena and to decide precisely what their
attitude should be toward them.
I do not purpose to enter into a thorough discussion of
all the aspects of auto-erotism. That would involve a
very extensive study indeed. I wish to consider briefly
certain salient points concerning auto-erotic phenomena,
especially their prevalence, their nature, and their moral,
physical, and other effects. I base my study partly on
the facts and opinions which during the last thirty years
have been scattered through the periodical and other medical
literature of Europe and America, and partly on the experience
of individuals, especially of fairly normal individuals.
Among animals in isolation, and sometimes in freedom--though
this can less often be observed--it is well known that
various forms of spontaneous solitary sexual excitement
occur. Horses when leading a lazy life may be observed
flapping the penis until some degree of emission takes
place. Welsh ponies, I learn from a man who has had much
experience with these animals, habitually produce erections
and emissions in their stalls; they do not bring their
hind quarters up during this process, and they close their
eyes, which does not take place when they have congress
with mares. The same informant observed that bulls and
goats produce emissions by using their forelegs as a stimulus,
bringing up their hind quarters, and mares rub themselves
against objects. I am informed by a gentleman who is a
recognized authority on goats, that they sometimes take
the penis into the mouth and produce actual orgasm, thus
practicing auto-fellatio. As regards ferrets, the Rev.
H. Northcote states: "I am informed by a gentleman
who has had considerable experience of ferrets, that if
the bitch, when in heat, cannot obtain a dog she pines
and becomes ill. If a smooth pebble is introduced into
the hutch, she will masturbate upon it, thus preserving
her normal health for one season. But if this artificial
substitute is given to her a second season, she will not,
as formerly, be content with it."[179]
Stags in the rutting season, when they have no partners,
rub themselves against trees to produce ejaculation. Sheep
masturbate; as also do camels, pressing themselves down
against convenient objects; and elephants compress the
penis between the hind legs to obtain emissions.[180]
Blumenbach observed a bear act somewhat similarly on seeing
other bears coupling, and hyenas, according to Ploss and
Bartels, have been seen practicing mutual masturbation
by licking each other's genitals. Mammary masturbation,
remarks Fere, is found in certain female and even male
animals, like the dog and the cat.[181] Apes are much
given to masturbation, even in freedom, according to the
evidence of good observers; for while no female apes are
celibates, many of the males are obliged to lead a life
of celibacy.[182] Male monkeys use the hand in masturbation,
to rub and shake the penis.[183]
In the human species these phenomena are by no means found
in civilization alone. To whatever extent masturbation
may have been developed by the conditions of European
life, which carry to the utmost extreme the concomitant
stimulation, and repression of the sexual emotions, it
is far from being, as Mantegazza has declared it to be,
one of the moral characteristics of Europeans.[184] It
is found among the people of nearly every race of which
we have any intimate knowledge, however natural the conditions
under which men and women may live.[185] Thus, among the
Nama Hottentots, among the young women at all events,
Gustav Fritsch found that masturbation is so common that
it is regarded as a custom of the country; no secret is
made of it, and in the stories and legends of the race
it is treated as one of the most ordinary facts of life.
It is so also among the Basutos, and the Kaffirs are addicted
to the same habit.[186] The Fuegians have a word for masturbation,
and a special word for masturbation by women.[187] When
the Spaniards first arrived at Vizcaya, in the Philippines,
they found that masturbation was universal, and that it
was customary for the women to use an artificial penis
and other abnormal methods of sexual gratification. Among
the Balinese, according to Jacobs (as quoted by Ploss
and Bartels), masturbation is general; in the boudoir
of many a Bali beauty, he adds, and certainly in every
harem, may be found a wax penis to which many hours of
solitude are devoted. Throughout the East, as Eram, speaking
from a long medical experience, has declared, masturbation
is very prevalent, especially among young girls. In Egypt,
according to Sonnini, it is prevalent in harems. In India,
a medical correspondent tells me, he once treated the
widow of a wealthy Mohammedan, who informed him that she
began masturbation at an early age, "just like all
other women." The same informant tells me that on
the _facade_ of a large temple in Orissa are bas-reliefs,
representing both men and women, alone, masturbating,
and also women masturbating men. Among the Tamils of Ceylon
masturbation is said to be common. In Cochin China, Lorion
remarks, it is practiced by both sexes, but especially
by the married women.[188] Japanese women have probably
carried the mechanical arts of auto-erotism to the highest
degree of perfection. They use two hollow balls about
the size of a pigeon's egg (sometimes one alone is used),
which, as described by Joest, Christian, and others,[189]
are made of very thin leaf of brass; one is empty, the
other (called the little man) contains a small heavy metal
ball, or else some quicksilver, and sometimes metal tongues
which vibrate when set in movement; so that if the balls
are held in the hand side by side there is a continuous
movement. The empty one is first introduced into the vagina
in contact with the uterus, then the other; the slightest
movement of the pelvis or thighs, or even spontaneous
movement of the organs, causes the metal ball (or the
quicksilver) to roll, and the resulting vibration produces
a prolonged voluptuous titillation, a gentle shock as
from a weak electric inductive apparatus; the balls are
called _rin-no-tama_, and are held in the vagina by a
paper tampon. The women who use these balls delight to
swing themselves in a hammock or rocking-chair, the delicate
vibration of the balls slowly producing the highest degree
of sexual excitement. Joest mentions that this apparatus,
though well known by name to ordinary girls, is chiefly
used by the more fashionable _geishas_, as well as by
prostitutes. Its use has now spread to China, Annam, and
India. Japanese women also, it is said, frequently use
an artificial penis of paper or clay, called e.g.. Among
the Atjeh, again, according to Jacobs (as quoted by Ploss),
the young of both sexes masturbate and the elder girls
use an artificial penis of wax. In China, also, the artificial
penis--made of rosin, supple and (like the classical instrument
described by Herondas) rose-colored--is publicly sold
and widely used by women.[190]
It may be noticed that among non-European races it is
among women, and especially among those who are subjected
to the excitement of a life professionally devoted to
some form of pleasure, that the use of the artificial
instruments of auto-erotism is chiefly practiced. The
same is markedly true in Europe. The use of an artificial
penis in solitary sexual gratification may be traced down
from classic times, and doubtless prevailed in the very
earliest human civilization, for such an instrument is
said to be represented in old Babylonian sculptures, and
it is referred to by Ezekiel (Ch. XVI. v. 17). The Lesbian
women are said to have used such instruments, made of
ivory or gold with silken stuffs and linen. Aristophanes
(_Lysistrata_, v. 109) speaks of the manufacture by the
Milesian women of a leather artificial penis, or olisbos.
In the British Museum is a vase representing a _hetaira_
holding such instruments, which, as found at Pompeii,
may be seen in the museum at Naples. One of the best of
Herondas's mimes, "The Private Conversation,"
presents a dialogue between two ladies concerning a certain
olisbos (or nbon), which one of them vaunts as a dream
of delight. Through the Middle Ages (when from time to
time the clergy reprobated the use of such instruments[191])
they continued to be known, and after the fifteenth century
the references to them became more precise. Thus Fortini,
the Siennese novelist of the sixteenth century, refers
in his _Novelle dei Novizi_ (7th Day, Novella XXXIX) to
"the glass object filled with warm water which nuns
use to calm the sting of the flesh and to satisfy themselves
as well as they can"; he adds that widows and other
women anxious to avoid pregnancy availed themselves of
it. In Elizabethan England, at the same time, it appears
to have been of similar character and Marston in his satires
tells how Lucea prefers "a glassy instrument"
to "her husband's lukewarm bed." In sixteenth
century France, also, such instruments were sometimes
made of glass, and Brantome refers to the godemiche; in
eighteenth century Germany they were called _Samthanse_,
and their use, according to Heinse, as quoted by Duehren,
was common among aristocratic women. In England by that
time the dildo appears to have become common. Archemholtz
states that while in Paris they are only sold secretly,
in London a certain Mrs. Philips sold them openly on a
large scale in her shop in Leicester Square. John Bee
in 1835, stating that the name was originally dil-dol,
remarks that their use was formerly commoner than it was
in his day. In France, Madame Gourdan, the most notorious
brothel-keeper of the eighteenth century, carried on a
wholesale trade in _consolateurs_, as they were called,
and "at her death numberless letters from abbesses
and simple nuns were found among her papers, asking for
a 'consolateur' to be sent."[192] The modern French
instrument is described by Gamier as of hardened red rubber,
exactly imitating the penis and capable of holding warm
milk or other fluid for injection at the moment of orgasm;
the compressible scrotum is said to have been first added
in the eighteenth century.[193]
In Islam the artificial penis has reached nearly as high
a development as in Christendom. Turkish women use it
and it is said to be openly sold in Smyrna. In the harems
of Zanzibar, according to Baumann, it is of considerable
size, carved out of ebony or ivory, and commonly bored
through so that warm water may be injected. It is here
regarded as an Arab invention.[194]
Somewhat similar appliances may be traced in all centres
of civilization. But throughout they appear to be frequently
confined to the world of prostitutes and to those women
who live on the fashionable or semi-artistic verge of
that world. Ignorance and delicacy combine with a less
versatile and perverted concentration on the sexual impulse
to prevent any general recourse to such highly specialized
methods of solitary gratification.
On the other hand, the use, or rather abuse, of the ordinary
objects and implements of daily life in obtaining auto-erotic
gratification, among the ordinary population in civilized
modern lands, has reached an extraordinary degree of extent
and variety we can only feebly estimate by the occasional
resulting mischances which come under the surgeon's hands,
because only a certain proportion of such instruments
are dangerous. Thus the banana seems to be widely used
for masturbation by women, and appears to be marked out
for the purpose by its size and shape[195]; it is, however,
innocuous, and never comes under the surgeon's notice;
the same may probably be said of the cucumbers and other
vegetables more especially used by country and factory
girls in masturbation; a lady living near Vichy told Pouillet
that she had often heard (and had herself been able to
verify the fact) that the young peasant women commonly
used turnips, carrots, and beet-roots. In the eighteenth
century Mirabeau, in his _Erotikca Biblion_ gave a list
of the various objects used in convents (which he describes
as "vast theatres" of such practices) to obtain
solitary sexual excitement. In more recent years the following
are a few of the objects found in the vagina or bladder
whence they could only be removed by surgical interference[196]:
Pencils, sticks of sealing-wax, cotton-reels, hair-pins
(and in Italy very commonly the bone-pins used in the
hair), bodkins, knitting-needles, crochet-needles, needle-cases,
compasses, glass stoppers, candles, corks, tumblers, forks,
tooth-picks, toothbrushes, pomade-pots (in a case recorded
by Schroeder with a cockchafer inside, a makeshift substitute
for the Japanese _rin-no-tama_), while in one recent English
case a full-sized hen's egg was removed from the vagina
of a middle-aged married woman. More than nine-tenths
of the foreign bodies found in the female bladder or urethra
are due to masturbation. The age of the individuals in
whom such objects have been found is usually from 17 to
30, but in a few cases they have been found in girls below
14, infrequently in women between 40 and 50; the large
objects, naturally, are found chiefly in the vagina, and
in married women.[197]
Hair-pins have, above all, been found in the female bladder
with special frequency; this point is worth some consideration
as an illustration of the enormous frequency of this form
of auto-erotism. The female urethra is undoubtedly a normal
centre of sexual feeling, as Pouillet pointed out many
years ago; a woman medical correspondent, also, writes
that in some women the maximum of voluptuous sensation
is at the vesical sphincter or orifice, though not always
so limited. E.H. Smith, indeed, considers that "the
urethra is the part in which the orgasm occurs,"
and remarks that in sexual excitement mucus always flows
largely from the urethra.[198] It should be added that
when once introduced the physiological mechanism of the
bladder apparently causes the organ to tend to "swallow"
the foreign object. Yet for every case in which the hair-pin
disappears and is lost in the bladder, from carelessness
or the oblivion of the sexual spasm, there must be a vast
number of cases in which the instrument is used without
any such unfortunate result. There is thus great significance
in the frequency with which cases of hair-pin in the bladder
are strewn through the medical literature of all countries.
In 1862, a German surgeon found the accident so common
that he invented a special instrument for extracting hair-pins
from the female bladder, as, indeed, Italian and French
surgeons have also done. In France, Denuce, of Bordeaux,
came to the conclusion that hair-pin in the bladder is
the commonest result of masturbation as known to the surgeon.
In England cases are constantly being recorded. Lawson
Tait, stating that most cases of stone in the bladder
in women are due to the introduction of a foreign body,
very often a hair-pin, adds: "I have removed hair-pins
encrusted with phosphates from ten different female bladders,
and not one of the owners of these bladders would give
any account of the incident."[199] Stokes, again,
records that during four years he had four cases of hair-pin
in the female urethra.[200] In New York one physician
met with four cases in a short experience.[201] In Switzerland
Professor Reverdin had a precisely similar experience.[202]
There is, however, another class of material objects,
widely employed for producing physical auto-erotism, which
in the nature of things never reaches the surgeon. I refer
to the effects that, naturally or unnaturally, may be
produced by many of the objects and implements of daily
life that do not normally come in direct contact with
the sexual organs. Children sometimes, even when scarcely
more than infants, produce sexual excitement by friction
against the corner of a chair or other piece of furniture,
and women sometimes do the same.[203] Guttceit, in Russia,
knew women who made a large knot in their chemises to
rub against, and mentions a woman who would sit on her
naked heel and rub it against her. Girls in France, I
am informed, are fond of riding on the _chevaux-de-bois_,
or hobby-horses, because of the sexual excitement thus
aroused; and that the sexual emotions play a part in the
fascination exerted by this form of amusement everywhere
is indicated by the ecstatic faces of its devotees.[204]
At the temples in some parts of Central India, I am told,
swings are hung up in pairs, men and women swinging in
these until sexually excited; during the months when the
men in these districts have to be away from home the girls
put up swings to console themselves for the loss of their
husbands.
It is interesting to observe the very wide prevalence
of swinging, often of a religious or magic character,
and the evident sexual significance underlying it, although
this is not always clearly brought out. Groos, discussing
the frequency of swinging (_Die Spiele der Menschen_,
p. 114) refers, for instance, to the custom of the Gilbert
Islanders for a young man to swing a girl from a coco
palm, and then to cling on and swing with her. In ancient
Greece, women and grown-up girls were fond of see-saws
and swings. The Athenians had, indeed, a swinging festival
(Athenaeus, Bk. XIV, Ch. X). Songs of a voluptuous character,
we gather from Athenaeus, were sung by the women at this
festival. J.G. Frazer (_The Golden Bough_, vol. ii, note
A, "Swinging as a Magical Rite") discusses the
question, and brings forward instances in which men, or,
especially, women swing. "The notion seems to be,"
he states, "that the ceremony promotes fertility,
whether in the vegetable or in the animal kingdom; though
why it should be supposed to do so, I confess myself unable
to explain" (loc. cit., p. 450). The explanation
seems, however, not far to seek, in view of the facts
quoted above, and Frazer himself refers to the voluptuous
character of the songs sometimes sung.
Even apart from actual swinging of the whole body, a swinging
movement may suffice to arouse sexual excitement, and
may,--at all events, in women,--constitute an essential
part of methods of attaining solitary sexual gratification.
Kiernan thus describes the habitual auto-erotic procedure
of a young American woman: "The patient knelt before
a chair, let her elbows drop on its seat, grasping the
arms with a firm grip, then commenced a swinging, writhing
motion, seeming to fix her pelvis, and moving her trunk
and limbs. The muscles were rigid, the face took on a
passionate expression; the features were contorted, the
eyes rolled, the teeth were set, and the lips compressed,
while the cheeks were purple. The condition bore a striking
resemblance to the passional stage of grand hysteria.
The reveling took only a moment to commence, but lasted
a long time. Swaying induced a pleasurable sensation,
accompanied with a feeling of suction upon the clitoris.
Almost immediately after, a sensation of bursting, caused
by discharge from the vulvo-vaginal glands, occurs, followed
by a rapture prolonged for an indefinite time." The
accompanying sexual imagery is so vivid as almost to become
hallucinatory. (J.G. Kiernan, "Sex Transformation
and Psychic Impotence," _American Journal of Dermatology_,
vol. ix, No. 2.)
Somewhat similarly sensations of sexual character are
sometimes experienced by boys when climbing up a pole.
It is not even necessary that there should be direct external
contact with the sexual organs, and Howe states that gymnastic
swinging poles around which boys swing while supporting
the whole weight on the hands, may suffice to produce
sexual excitement.
Several writers have pointed out that riding, especially
in women, may produce sexual excitement and orgasm.[205]
It is well-known, also, that both in men and women the
vibratory motion of a railway-train frequently produces
a certain degree of sexual excitement, especially when
sitting forward. Such excitement may remain latent and
not become specifically sexual.[206] I am not aware that
this quality of railway traveling has ever been fostered
as a sexual perversion, but the sewing-machine has attracted
considerable attention on account of its influence in
exciting auto-erotic manifestations. The early type of
sewing-machine, especially, was of very heavy character
and involved much up and down movement of the legs; Langdon
Down pointed out many years ago that this frequently produced
great sexual erethism which led to masturbation.[207]
According to one French authority, it is a well-recognized
fact that to work a sewing-machine with the body in a
certain position produces sexual excitement leading to
the orgasm. The occurrence of the orgasm is indicated
to the observer by the machine being worked for a few
seconds with uncontrollable rapidity. This sound is said
to be frequently heard in large French workrooms, and
it is part of the duty of the superintendents of the rooms
to make the girls sit properly.[208]
"During a visit which I once paid to a manufactory
of military clothing," Pouillet writes, "I witnessed
the following scene. In the midst of the uniform sound
produced by some thirty sewing-machines, I suddenly heard
one of the machines working with much more velocity than
the others. I looked at the person who was working it,
a brunette of 18 or 20. While she was automatically occupied
with the trousers she was making on the machine, her face
became animated, her mouth opened slightly, her nostrils
dilated, her feet moved the pedals with constantly increasing
rapidity. Soon I saw a convulsive look in her eyes, her
eyelids were lowered, her face turned pale and was thrown
backward; hands and legs stopped and became extended;
a suffocated cry, followed by a long sigh, was lost in
the noise of the workroom. The girl remained motionless
a few seconds, drew out her handkerchief to wipe away
the pearls of sweat from her forehead, and, after casting
a timid and ashamed glance at her companions, resumed
her work. The forewoman, who acted as my guide, having
observed the direction of my gaze, took me up to the girl,
who blushed, lowered her face, and murmured some incoherent
words before the forewoman had opened her mouth, to advise
her to sit fully on the chair, and not on its edge.
"As I was leaving, I heard another machine at another
part of the room in accelerated movement. The forewoman
smiled at me, and remarked that that was so frequent that
it attracted no notice. It was specially observed, she
told me, in the case of young work-girls, apprentices,
and those who sat on the edge of their seats, thus much
facilitating friction of the labia."
In cases where the sewing-machine does not lead to direct
self-excitement it has been held, as by Fothergill,[209]
to predispose to frequency of involuntary sexual orgasm
during sleep, from the irritation set up by the movement
of the feet in the sitting posture during the day. The
essential movement in working the sewing-machine is the
flexion and extension of the ankle, but the muscles of
the thighs are used to maintain the feet firmly on the
treadle, the thighs are held together, and there is a
considerable degree of flexion or extension of the thighs
on the trunk; by a special adjustment of the body, and
sometimes perhaps merely in the presence of sexual hyperaesthesia,
it is thus possible to act upon the sexual organs; but
this is by no means a necessary result of using the sewing-machine,
and inquiry of various women, with well-developed sexual
feelings, who are accustomed to work the treadle, has
not shown the presence of any tendency in this direction.
Sexual irritation may also be produced by the bicycle
in women. Thus, Moll[210] remarks that he knows many married
women, and some unmarried, who experience sexual excitement
when cycling; in several cases he has ascertained that
the excitement is carried as far as complete orgasm. This
result cannot, however, easily happen unless the seat
is too high, the peak in contact with the organs, and
a rolling movement is adopted; in the absence of marked
hyperaesthesia these results are only effected by a bad
seat or an improper attitude, the body during cycling
resting under proper conditions on the buttocks, and the
work being mainly done by the muscles of the thighs and
legs which control the ankles, flexion of the thigh on
the pelvis being very small. Most medical authorities
on cycling are of opinion that when cycling leads to sexual
excitement the fault lies more with the woman than with
the machine. This conclusion does not appear to me to
be absolutely correct. I find on inquiry that with the
old-fashioned saddle, with an elevated peak rising toward
the pubes, a certain degree of sexual excitement, not
usually producing the orgasm (but, as one lady expressed
it, making one feel quite ready for it), is fairly common
among women. Lydston finds that irritation of the genital
organs may unquestionably be produced in both males and
females by cycling. The aggravation of haemorrhoids sometimes
produced by cycling indicates also the tendency to local
congestion. With the improved flat saddles, however, constructed
with more definite adjustment to the anatomical formation
of the parts, this general tendency is reduced to a negligible
minimum.
Reference may be made at this point to the influence of
tight-lacing. This has been recognized by gynaecologists
as a factor of sexual excitement and a method of masturbation.[211]
Women who have never worn corsets sometimes find that,
on first putting them on, sexual feeling is so intensified
that it is necessary to abandon their use.[212] The reason
of this (as Siebert points out in his _Buch fuer Eltern_)
seems to be that the corset both favors pelvic congestion
and at the same time exerts a pressure on the abdominal
muscles which brings them into the state produced during
coitus. It is doubtless for the same reason that, as some
women have found, more distension of the bladder is possible
without corsets than with them.
In a further class of cases no external object whatever
is used to procure the sexual orgasm, but the more or
less voluntary pressure of the thighs alone is brought
to bear upon the sexual regions. It is done either when
sitting or standing, the thighs being placed together
and firmly crossed, and the pelvis rocked so that the
sexual organs are pressed against the inner and posterior
parts of the thighs.[213] This is sometimes done by men,
and is fairly common among women, especially, according
to Martineau,[214] among those who sit much, such as dressmakers
and milliners, those who use the sewing-machine, and those
who ride. Vedeler remarks that in his experience in Scandinavia,
thigh-friction is the commonest form of masturbation in
women. The practice is widespread, and a medical correspondent
in India tells me of a Brahmin widow who confessed to
this form of masturbation. I am told that in London Board
Schools, at the present time, thigh-rubbing is not infrequent
among the girl scholars; the proportion mentioned in one
school was about ten per cent, of the girls over eleven;
the thigh-rubbing is done more or less openly and is interpreted
by the uninitiated as due merely to a desire to relieve
the bladder. It is found in female infants. Thus, Townsend
records the case of an infant, 8 months old, who would
cross her right thigh over the left, close her eyes and
clench her fists; after a minute or two there would be
complete relaxation, with sweating and redness of face;
this would occur about once a week or oftener; the child
was quite healthy, with no abnormal condition of the genital
organs.[215] The frequency of thigh-friction among women
as a form of masturbation is due to the fact that it is
usually acquired innocently and it involves no indecorum.
Thus Soutzo reports the case of a girl of 12 who at school,
when having to wait her turn at the water-closet, for
fear of wetting herself would put her clothes between
her legs and press her thighs together, moving them backwards
and forwards in the effort to control the bladder; she
discovered that a pleasurable sensation was thus produced
and acquired the habit of practicing the manoeuvre for
its own sake; at the age of 17 she began to vary it in
different ways; thus she would hang from a tree with her
legs swinging and her chemise pressed between her thighs
which she would rub together.[216] Thigh-friction in some
of its forms is so comparatively decorous a form of masturbation
that it may even be performed in public places; thus,
a few years ago, while waiting for a train at a station
on the outskirts of a provincial town, I became aware
of the presence of a young woman, sitting alone on a seat
at a little distance, whom I could observe unnoticed.
She was leaning back with legs crossed, swinging the crossed
foot vigorously and continuously; this continued without
interruption for some ten minutes after I first observed
her; then the swinging movement reached a climax; she
leant still further back, thus bringing the sexual region
still more closely in contact with the edge of the bench
and straightened and stiffened her body and legs in what
appeared to be a momentary spasm; there could be little
doubt as to what had taken place. A few moments later
she slowly walked from her solitary seat into the waiting-room
and sat down among the other waiting passengers, quite
still now and with uncrossed legs, a pale quiet young
woman, possibly a farmer's daughter, serenely unconscious
that her manoeuvre had been detected, and very possibly
herself ignorant of its true nature.
There are many other forms in which the impulse of auto-erotism
presents itself. Dancing is often a powerful method of
sexual excitement, not only among civilized but among
savage peoples, and Zache describes the erotic dances
of Swaheli women as having a masturbatory object.[217]
Stimulation of the nates is a potent adjuvant to the production
of self-excitement, and self-flagellation with rods, etc.,
is practiced by some individuals, especially young women.[218]
Urtication is another form of this stimulation; Reverdin
knew a young woman who obtained sexual gratification by
flogging herself with chestnut burrs, and it is stated
that in some parts of France (departments of the Ain and
Cote d'Or) it is not uncommon for young girls to masturbate
by rubbing the leaves of the _Linaria cymbalaria_ (here
called "pinton" or "timbarde") on
to the sexual parts, thus producing a burning sensation.[219]
Stimulation of the mamma, normally an erogenous centre
in women, may occasionally serve as a method for obtaining
auto-erotic satisfaction, including the orgasm, in both
sexes. I have been told of a case in a man, and a medical
correspondent in India informs me that he knows a Eurasian
woman, addicted to masturbation, who can only obtain the
orgasm by rubbing the genitals with one hand while with
the other she rubs and finally squeezes her breasts. The
tactile stimulation even of regions of the body which
are not normally erogenous zones in either sex may sometimes
lead on to sexual excitement; Hirschsprung, as well as
Freud, believes that this is often the case as regards
finger-sucking and toe-sucking in infancy. Even stroking
the chin, remarks Debreyne, may produce a pollution.[220]
Taylor refers to the case of a young woman of 22, who
was liable to attacks of choreic movements of the hands
which would terminate in alternately pressing the middle
finger on the tip of the nose and the tragus of the ear,
when a "far-away, pleased expression" would
appear on her face; she thus produced sexual excitement
and satisfaction. She had no idea of wrong-doing and was
surprised and ashamed when she realized the nature of
her act.[221]
Most of the foregoing examples of auto-erotism, are commonly
included, by no means correctly, under the heading of
"masturbation." There are, however, a vast number
of people, possessing strong sexual emotions and living
a solitary life, who experience, sometimes by instinct
and sometimes on moral grounds, a strong repugnance for
these manifestations of auto-erotism. As one highly intelligent
lady writes: "I have sometimes wondered whether I
could produce it (complete sexual excitement) mechanically,
but I have a curious unreasonable repugnance to trying
the experiment. It would materialize it too much."
The same repugnance may be traced in the tendency to avoid,
so far as possible, the use of the hands. It is quite
common to find this instinctive unreasoning repugnance
among women, a healthy repugnance, not founded on any
moral ground. In men the same repugnance exists, more
often combined with, or replaced by, a very strong moral
and aesthetic objection to such practices. But the presence
of such a repugnance, however invincible, is very far
from carrying us outside the auto-erotic field. The production
of the sexual orgasm is not necessarily dependent on any
external contact or voluntary mechanical cause.
As an example, though not of specifically auto-erotic
manifestations, I may mention the case of a man of 57,
a somewhat eccentric preacher, etc., who writes: "My
whole nature goes out so to some persons, and they thrill
and stir me so that I have an emission while sitting by
them with no thought of sex, only the gladness of soul
found its way out thus, and a glow of health suffused
the whole body. There was no spasmodic conclusion, but
a pleasing gentle sensation as the few drops of semen
passed." (In reality, no doubt, not semen, but urethral
fluid.) This man's condition may certainly be considered
somewhat morbid; he is attracted to both men and women,
and the sexual impulse seems to be irritable and weak;
but a similar state of things exists so often in women,
no doubt due to sexual repression, and in individuals
who are in a general state of normal and good health,
that in these it can scarcely be called morbid. Brooding
on sexual images, which the theologians termed _delectatio
morosa_, may lead to spontaneous orgasm in either sex,
even in perfectly normal persons. Hammond described as
a not uncommon form of "psychic coitus," a condition
in which the simple act of imagination alone, in the presence
of the desired object, suffices to produce orgasm. In
some public conveyance, theatre, or elsewhere, the man
sees a desirable woman and by concentrating his attention
on her person and imagining all the stages of intimacy
he quickly succeeds in producing orgasm.[222] Niceforo
refers to an Italian work-girl of 14 who could obtain
ejaculation of mucus four times a day, in the workroom
in the presence of the other girls, without touching herself
or moving her body, by simply thinking of sexual things.[223]
If the orgasm occurs spontaneously, without the aid of
mental impressions, or any manipulations _ad hoc_, though
under such conditions it ceases to be sinful from the
theological standpoint, it certainly ceases also to be
normal. Serieux records the case of a somewhat neurotic
woman of 50, who had been separated from her husband for
ten years, and since lived a chaste life; at this age,
however, she became subject to violent crises of sexual
orgasm, which would come on without any accompaniment
of voluptuous thoughts. MacGillicuddy records three cases
of spontaneous orgasm in women coming under his notice.[224]
Such crises are frequently found in both men and women,
who, from moral reasons, ignorance, or on other grounds
are restrained from attaining the complete sexual orgasm,
but whose sexual emotions are, literally, continually
dribbling from them. Schrenck-Notzing knows a lady who
is spontaneously sexually excited on hearing music or
seeing pictures without anything lascivious in them; she
knows nothing of sexual relationships. Another lady is
sexually excited on seeing beautiful and natural scenes,
like the sea; sexual ideas are mixed up in her mind with
these things, and the contemplation of a specially strong
and sympathetic man brings the orgasm on in about a minute.
Both these ladies "masturbate" in the streets,
restaurants, railways, theatres, without anyone perceiving
it.[225] A Brahmin woman informed a medical correspondent
in India that she had distinct though feeble orgasm, with
copious outflow of mucus, if she stayed long near a man
whose face she liked, and this is not uncommon among European
women. Evidently under such conditions there is a state
of hyperaesthetic weakness. Here, however, we are passing
the frontiers of strictly auto-erotic phenomena.
_Delectatio morosa_, as understood by the theologians,
is distinct from desire, and also distinct from the definite
intention of effecting the sexual act, although it may
lead to those things. It is the voluntary and complacent
dallying in imagination with voluptuous thoughts, when
no effort is made to repel them. It is, as Aquinas and
others point out, constituted by this act of complacent
dallying, and has no reference to the duration of the
imaginative process. Debreyne, in his _Moechialogie_ (pp.
149-163), deals fully with this question, and quotes the
opinions of theologians. I may add that in the early Penitentials,
before the elaboration of Catholic theology, the voluntary
emission of semen through the influence of evil thoughts,
was recognized as a sin, though usually only if it occurred
in church. In Egbert's Penitential of the eighth or ninth
century (cap. IX, 12), the penance assigned for this offence
in the case of a deacon, is 25 days; in the case of a
monk, 30 days; a priest, 40 days; a bishop, 50. (Haddon
and Stubbs, _Councils and Ecclesiastical Documents_, vol.
iii, p. 426.)
The frequency of spontaneous orgasm in women seems to
have been recognized in the seventeenth century. Thus,
Schurig (_Syllepsilogia_, p. 4), apparently quoting Riolan,
states that some women are so wanton that the sight of
a handsome man, or of their lover, or speech with such
a one, will cause them to ejaculate their semen.
There is, however, a closely allied, and, indeed, overlapping
form of auto-erotism which may be considered here: I mean
that associated with revery, or day-dreaming. Although
this is a very common and important form of auto-erotism,
besides being in a large proportion of cases the early
stage of masturbation, it appears to have attracted little
attention.[226] The day-dream has, indeed, been studied
in its chief form, in the "continued story,"
by Mabel Learoyd, of Wellesley College. The continued
story is an imagined narrative, more or less peculiar
to the individual, by whom it is cherished with fondness,
and regarded as an especially sacred mental possession,
to be shared only, if at all, with very sympathizing friends.
It is commoner among girls and young women than among
boys and young men; among 352 persons of both sexes, 47
per cent. among the women and only 14 per cent. among
the men, have any continued story. The starting-point
is an incident from a book, or, more usually, some actual
experience, which the subject develops; the subject is
nearly always the hero or the heroine of the story. The
growth of the story is favored by solitude, and lying
in bed before going to sleep is the time specially sacred
to its cultivation.[227] No distinct reference, perhaps
naturally enough, is made by Miss Learoyd to the element
of sexual emotion with which these stories are often strongly
tinged, and which is frequently their real motive. Though
by no means easy to detect, these elaborate and more or
less erotic day-dreams are not uncommon in young men and
especially in young women. Each individual has his own
particular dream, which is always varying or developing,
but, except in very imaginative persons, to no great extent.
Such a day-dream is often founded on a basis of pleasurable
personal experience, and develops on that basis. It may
involve an element of perversity, even though that element
finds no expression in real life. It is, of course, fostered
by sexual abstinence; hence its frequency in young women.
Most usually there is little attempt to realize it. It
does not necessarily lead to masturbation, though it often
causes some sexual congestion or even spontaneous sexual
orgasm. The day-dream is a strictly private and intimate
experience, not only from its very nature, but also because
it occurs in images which the subject finds great difficulty
in translating into language, even when willing to do
so. In other cases it is elaborately dramatic or romantic
in character, the hero or heroine passing through many
experiences before attaining the erotic climax of the
story. This climax tends to develop in harmony with the
subject's growing knowledge or experience; at first, merely
a kiss, it may develop into any refinement of voluptuous
gratification. The day-dream may occur either in normal
or abnormal persons. Rousseau, in his _Confessions_, describes
such dreams, in his case combined with masochism and masturbation.
A distinguished American novelist, Hamlin Garland, has
admirably described in _Rose of Dutcher's Coolly_ the
part played in the erotic day-dreams of a healthy normal
girl at adolescence by a circus-rider, seen on the first
visit to a circus, and becoming a majestic ideal to dominate
the girl's thoughts for many years.[228] Raffalovich[229]
describes the process by which in sexual inverts the vision
of a person of the same sex, perhaps seen in the streets
or the theatre, is evoked in solitary reveries, producing
a kind of "psychic onanism," whether or not
it leads on to physical manifestations.
Although day-dreaming of this kind has at present been
very little studied, since it loves solitude and secrecy,
and has never been counted of sufficient interest for
scientific inquisition, it is really a process of considerable
importance, and occupies a large part of the auto-erotic
field. It is frequently cultivated by refined and imaginative
young men and women who lead a chaste life and would often
be repelled by masturbation. In such persons, under such
circumstances, it must be considered as strictly normal,
the inevitable outcome of the play of the sexual impulse.
No doubt it may often become morbid, and is never a healthy
process when indulged in to excess, as it is liable to
be by refined young people with artistic impulses, to
whom it is in the highest degree seductive and insidious.[230]
As we have seen, however, day-dreaming is far from always
colored by sexual emotion; yet it is a significant indication
of its really sexual origin that, as I have been informed
by persons of both sexes, even in these apparently non-sexual
cases it frequently ceases altogether on marriage.
Even when we have eliminated all these forms of auto-erotic
activity, however refined, in which the subject takes
a voluntary part, we have still left unexplored an important
portion of the auto-erotic field, a portion which many
people are alone inclined to consider normal: sexual orgasm
during sleep. That under conditions of sexual abstinence
in healthy individuals there must inevitably be some auto-erotic
manifestations during waking life, a careful study of
the facts compels us to believe. There can be no doubt,
also, that, under the same conditions, the occurrence
of the complete orgasm during sleep with, in men, seminal
emissions, is altogether normal. Even Zeus himself, as
Pausanias has recorded, was liable to such accidents:
a statement which, at all events, shows that to the Greek
mind there was nothing derogatory in such an occurrence.[231]
The Jews, however, regarded it as an impurity,[232] and
the same idea was transmitted to the Christian church
and embodied in the word _pollutio_, by which the phenomenon
was designated in ecclesiastical phraseology.[233] According
to Billuart and other theologians, pollution in sleep
is not sin, unless voluntarily caused; if, however, it
begins in sleep, and is completed in the half-waking state,
with a sense of pleasure, it is a venial sin. But it seems
allowable to permit a nocturnal pollution to complete
itself on awaking, if it occurs without intention; and
St. Thomas even says "_Si pollutio placeat ut naturae
exoneratio vel alleviatio peccatum non creditur_."
Notwithstanding the fair and logical position of the more
distinguished Latin theologians, there has certainly been
a widely prevalent belief in Catholic countries that pollution
during sleep is a sin. In the "Parson's Tale,"
Chaucer makes the parson say: "Another sin appertaineth
to lechery that cometh in sleeping; and the sin cometh
oft to them that be maidens, and eke to them that be corrupt;
and this sin men clepe pollution, that cometh in four
manners;" these four manners being (1) languishing
of
body from rank and abundant humors, (2) infirmity, (3)
surfeit of meat and drink, and (4) villainous thoughts.
Four hundred years later, Madame Roland, in her _Memoires
Particulieres_, presented a vivid picture of the anguish
produced in an innocent girl's mind by the notion of the
sinfulness of erotic dreams. She menstruated first at
the age of 14. "Before this," she writes, "I
had sometimes been awakened from the deepest sleep in
a surprising manner. Imagination played no part; I exercised
it on too many serious subjects, and my timorous conscience
preserved it from amusement with other subjects, so that
it could not represent what I would not allow it to seek
to understand. But an extraordinary effervescence aroused
my senses in the heat of repose, and, by virtue of my
excellent constitution, operated by itself a purification
which was as strange to me as its cause. The first feeling
which resulted was, I know not why, a sort of fear. I
had observed in my _Philotee_, that we are not allowed
to obtain any pleasure from our bodies except in lawful
marriage. What I had experienced could be called a pleasure.
I was then guilty, and in a class of offences which caused
me the most shame and sorrow, since it was that which
was most displeasing to the Spotless Lamb. There was great
agitation in my poor heart, prayers and mortifications.
How could I avoid it? For, indeed, I had not foreseen
it, but at the instant when I experienced it, I had not
taken the trouble to prevent it. My watchfulness became
extreme. I scrupulously avoided positions which I found
specially exposed me to the accident. My restlessness
became so great that, at last I was able to awake before
the catastrophe. When I was not in time to prevent it,
I would jump out of bed, with naked feet on to the polished
floor, and with crossed arms pray to the Saviour to preserve
me from the wiles of the devil. I would then impose some
penance on myself, and I have carried out to the letter
what the prophet King probably only transmitted to us
as a figure of Oriental speech, mixing ashes with my bread
and watering it with my tears."
To the early Protestant mind, as illustrated by Luther,
there was something diseased, though not impure, in sexual
excitement during sleep; thus, in his _Table Talk_ Luther
remarks that girls who have such dreams should be married
at once, "taking the medicine which God has given."
It is only of comparatively recent years that medical
science has obtained currency for the belief that this
auto-erotic process is entirely normal. Blumenbach stated
that nocturnal emissions are normal.[234] Sir James Paget
declared that he had never known celibate men who had
not such emissions from once or twice a week to twice
every three months, both extremes being within the limits
of good health, while Sir Lauder Brunton considers once
a fortnight or once a month about the usual frequency,
at these periods the emissions often following two nights
in succession. Rohleder believes that they may normally
follow for several nights in succession. Hammond considers
that they occur about once a fortnight.[235] Ribbing regards
ten to fourteen days as the normal interval.[236] Loewenfeld
puts the normal frequency at about once a week;[237] this
seems to be nearer the truth as regards most fairly healthy
young men. In proof of this it is only necessary to refer
to the exact records of healthy young adults summarized
in the study of periodicity in the present volume. It
occasionally happens, however, that nocturnal emissions
are entirely absent. I am acquainted with some cases.
In other fairly healthy young men they seldom occur except
at times of intellectual activity or of anxiety and worry.
Lately there has been some tendency for medical opinion
to revert to the view of Luther, and to regard sexual
excitement during sleep as a somewhat unhealthy phenomenon.
Moll is a distinguished advocate of this view. Sexual
excitement during sleep is the normal result of celibacy,
but it is another thing to say that it is, on that account,
satisfactory. We might, then, Moll remarks, maintain that
nocturnal incontinence of urine is satisfactory, since
the bladder is thus emptied. Yet, we take every precaution
against this by insisting that the bladder shall be emptied
before going to sleep. (_Libido Sexualis_, Bd. I, p. 552.)
This remark is supported by the fact, to which I find
that both men and women can bear witness, that sexual
excitement during sleep is more fatiguing than in the
waking state, though this is not an invariable rule, and
it is sometimes found to be refreshing. In a similar way,
Eulenburg (_Sexuale Neuropathie_, p. 55) states that nocturnal
emissions are no more normal than coughing or vomiting.
Nocturnal emissions are usually, though not invariably,
accompanied by dreams of a voluptuous character in which
the dreamer becomes conscious in a more or less fantastic
manner of the more or less intimate presence or contact
of a person of the opposite sex. It would seem, as a general
rule, that the more vivid and voluptuous the dream, the
greater is the physical excitement and the greater also
the relief experienced on awakening. Sometimes the erotic
dream occurs without any emission, and not infrequently
the emission takes place after the dreamer has awakened.
The widest and most comprehensive investigation of erotic
dreams is that carried out by Gualino, in northern Italy,
and based on inquiries among 100 normal men--doctors,
teachers, lawyers, etc.--who had all had experience of
the phenomenon. (L. Gualino, "Il Sogno Erotico nell'
Uomo Normale," _Rivista di Psicologia_, Jan.-Feb.,
1907.) Gualino shows that erotic dreams, with emissions
(whether or not seminal), began somewhat earlier than
the period of physical development as ascertained by Marro
for youths of the same part of northern Italy. Gualino
found that all his cases had had erotic dreams at the
age of seventeen; Marro found 8 per cent, of youths still
sexually undeveloped at that age, and while sexual development
began at thirteen years, erotic dreams began at twelve.
Their appearance was preceded, in most cases for some
months, by erections. In 37 per cent, of the cases there
had been no actual sexual experiences (either masturbation
or intercourse); in 23 per cent, there had been masturbation;
in the rest, some form of sexual contact. The dreams are
mainly visual, tactual elements coming second, and the
_dramatis persona_ is either an unknown woman (27 per
cent, cases), or only known by sight (56 per cent.), and
in the majority is, at all events in the beginning, an
ugly or fantastic figure, becoming more attractive later
in life, but never identical with the woman loved during
waking life. This, as Gualino points out, accords with
the general tendency for the emotions of the day to be
latent in sleep. Masturbation only formed the subject
of the dream in four cases. The emotional state in the
pubertal stage, apart from pleasure, was anxiety (37 per
cent.), desire (17 per cent.), fear (14 per cent.). In
the adult stage, anxiety and fear receded to 7 per cent,
and 6 per cent., respectively. Thirty-three of the subjects,
as a result of sexual or general disturbances, had had
nocturnal emissions without dreams; these were always
found exhausting. Normally (in more than 90 per cent.)
erotic dreams are the most vivid of all dreams. In no
case was there knowledge of any monthly or other cyclic
periodicity in the occurrence of the manifestations. In
34 per cent, of cases, they tended to occur very soon
after sexual intercourse. In numerous cases they were
peculiarly frequent (even three in one night) during courtship,
when the young man was in the habit of kissing and caressing
his betrothed, but ceased after marriage. It was not noted
that position in bed or a full bladder exerted any marked
influence in the occurrence of erotic dreams; repletion
of the seminal vesicles is regarded as the main factor.
In Germany erotic dreams have been discussed by Volkelt
(_Die Traum-Phantasie_, 1875, pp. 78-82), and especially
by Loewenfeld (_Sexual-Probleme_, Oct., 1908), while in
America, Stanley Hall thus summarizes the general characteristics
of erotic dreams in men: "In by far the most cases,
consciousness, even when the act causes full awakening
from sleep, finds only scattered images, single words,
gestures, and acts, many of which would perhaps normally
constitute no provocation. Many times the mental activity
seems to be remote and incidental, and the mind retains
in the morning nothing except, perhaps, a peculiar dress
pattern, the shape of a finger-nail, the back of a neck,
the toss of a head, the movement of a foot, or the dressing
of the hair. In such cases, these images stand out for
a time with the distinctness of a cameo, and suggest that
the origin of erotic fetichisms is largely to be found
in sexual dreams. Very rarely is there any imagery of
the organs themselves, but the tendency to irradiation
is so strong as to re-enforce the suggestion of so many
other phenomena in this field, that nature designs this
experience to be long circuited, and that it may give
a peculiar ictus to almost any experience. When waking
occurs just afterward, it seems at least possible that
there may be much imagery that existed, but failed to
be recalled to memory, possibly because the flow of psychic
impressions was over very familiar fields, and this, therefore,
was forgotten, while any eruption into new or unwonted
channels, stood out with distinctness. All these psychic
phenomena, although very characteristic of man in his
prime, are not so of the dreams of dawning puberty, which
are far more vivid." (G. Stanley Hall, _Adolescence_,
vol. i, p. 455.)
I may, further, quote the experience of an anonymous contributor--a
healthy and chaste man between 30 and 38 years of age--to
the _American Journal of Psychology_ ("Nocturnal
Emissions," Jan., 1904): "Legs and breasts often
figured prominently in these dreams, the other sexual
parts, however, very seldom, and then they turned out
to be male organs in most cases. There were but two instances
of copulation dreamt. Girls and young women were the,
usual _dramatis personae_, and, curiously enough, often
the aggressors. Sometimes the face or faces were well
known; sometimes, only once seen; sometimes, entirely
unknown. The orgasm occurs at the most erotic part of
the dream, the physical and psychical running parallel.
This most erotic or suggestive part of the dream was very
often quite an innocent looking incident enough. As, for
example: while passing a strange young woman, overtaken
on the street, she calls after me some question. At first,
I pay no heed, but when she calls again, I hesitate whether
to turn back and answer or not--emission. Again, walking
beside a young woman, she said, 'Shall I take your arm?'
I offered it, and she took it, entwining her arm around
it, and raising it high--emission. I could feel stronger
erection as she asked the question. Sometimes, a word
was enough; sometimes, a gesture. Once emission took place
on my noticing the young woman's diminished finger-nails.
Another example of fetichism was my being curiously attracted
in a dream by the pretty embroidered figure on a little
girl's dress. As an illustration of the strange metamorphoses
that occur in dreams, I one night, in my dream (I had
been observing partridges in the summer) fell in love
with a partridge, which changed under my caresses to a
beautiful girl, who yet retained an indescribable wild-bird
innocence, grace, and charm--a sort of Undina!"
These experiences may be regarded as fairly typical of
the erotic dreams of healthy and chaste young men. The
bird, for instance, that changes into a woman while retaining
some elements of the bird, has been encountered in erotic
dreams by other young men. It is indeed remarkable that,
as De Gubernatis observes, "the bird is a well-known
phallic symbol," while Maeder finds ("Interpretations
de Quelques Reves," _Archives de Psychologie_, April,
1907) that birds have a sexual significance both in life
and in dreams. The appearance of male organs in the dream-woman
is doubtless due to the dreamer's greater familiarity
with those organs; but, though it occurs occasionally,
it can scarcely be said to be the rule in erotic dreams.
Even men who have never had connection with a woman, are
quite commonly aware of the presence of a woman's sexual
organs in their erotic dreams.
Moll's comparison of nocturnal emissions of semen with
nocturnal incontinence of urine suggests an interesting
resemblance, and at the same time seeming contrast. In
both cases we are concerned with viscera which, when overfilled
or unduly irritable, spasmodically eject their contents
during sleep. There is a further resemblance which usually
becomes clear when, as occasionally happens, nocturnal
incontinence of urine persists on to late childhood or
adolescence: both phenomena are frequently accompanied
by vivid dreams of appropriate character. (See e.g. Ries,
"Ueber Enuresis Nocturna," _Monatsschrift fuer
Harnkrankheiten und Sexuelle Hygiene_, 1904; A.P. Buchan,
nearly a century ago, pointed out the psychic element
in the experiences of young persons who wetted the bed,
_Venus sine Concubitu_, 1816, p. 47.) Thus, in one case
known to me, a child of seven, who occasionally wetted
the bed, usually dreamed at the same time that she wanted
to make water, and was out of doors, running to find a
suitable spot, which she at last found, and, on awaking,
discovered that she had wetted the bed; fifteen years
later she still sometimes had similar dreams, which caused
her much alarm until, when thoroughly awake, she realized
that no accident had happened; these later dreams were
not the result of any actual strong desire to urinate.
In another case with which I am acquainted, a little girl
of eight, after mental excitement or indigestible meals,
occasionally wetted the bed, dreaming that she was frightened
by some one running after her, and wetted herself in consequence,
after the manner of the Ganymede in the eagle's clutch,
as depicted by Rembrandt. These two cases, it may be noted,
belong to two quite different types. In the first case,
the full bladder suggests to imagination the appropriate
actions for relief, and the bladder actually accepts the
imaginative solution offered; it is, according to Fiorani's
phrase, "somnambulism of the bladder." In the
other case, there is no such somnambulism, but a psychic
and nervous disturbance, not arising in the bladder at
all, irradiates convulsively, and whether or not the bladder
is overfull, attacks a vesical nervous system which is
not yet sufficiently well-balanced to withstand the inflow
of excitement. In children of somewhat nervous temperament,
manifestations of this kind may occur as an occasional
accident, up to about the age of seven or eight; and thereafter,
the nervous control of the bladder having become firmly
established, they cease to happen, the nervous energy
required to affect the bladder sufficing to awake the
dreamer. In very rare cases, however, the phenomenon may
still occasionally happen, even in adolescence or later,
in individuals who are otherwise quite free from it. This
is most apt to occur in young women even in waking life.
In men it is probably extremely rare.
The erotic dream seems to differ flagrantly from the vesical
dream, in that it occurs in adult life, and is with difficulty
brought under control. The contrast is, however, very
superficial. When we remember that sexual activity only
begins normally at puberty, we realize that the youth
of twenty is, in the matter of sexual control, scarcely
much older than in the matter of vesical control he was
at the age of six. Moreover, if we were habitually, from
our earliest years, to go to bed with a full bladder,
as the chaste man goes to bed with unrelieved sexual system,
it would be fully as difficult to gain vesical control
during sleep as it now is to gain sexual control. Ultimately,
such sexual control is attained; after the age of forty,
it seems that erotic dreams with emission become more
and more rare; either the dream occurs without actual
emission, exactly as dreams of urination occur in adults
with full bladder, or else the organic stress, with or
without dreams, serves to awaken the sleeper before any
emission has occurred. But this stage is not easily or
completely attained. St. Augustine, even at the period
when he wrote his _Confessions_, mentions, as a matter
of course, that sexual dreams "not merely arouse
pleasure, but gain the consent of the will." (X.
41.) Not infrequently there is a struggle in sleep, just
as the hypnotic subject may resist suggestions; thus,
a lady of thirty-five dreamed a sexual dream, and awoke
without excitement; again she fell asleep, and had another
dream of sexual character, but resisted the tendency to
excitement, and again awoke; finally, she fell asleep
and had a third sexual dream, which was this time accompanied
by the orgasm. (This has recently been described also
by Naecke, who terms it _pollutio interrupta, Neurologisches
Centralblatt_, Oct. 16, 1909; the corresponding voluntary
process in the waking state is described by Rohleder and
termed _masturbatio interrupta, Zeitschrift fuer Sexualwissenschaft_,
Aug., 1908.) The factors involved in the acquirement of
vesical and sexual control during sleep are the same,
but the conditions are somewhat different.
There is a very intimate connection between the vesical
and the sexual spheres, as I have elsewhere pointed out
(see e.g. in the third volume of these _Studies_, "Analysis
of the Sexual Impulse"). This connection is psychic
as well as organic. Both in men and women, a full bladder
tends to develop erotic dreams. (See e.g. K.A. Scherner,
_Das Leben des Traums_, 1861, pp. 187 et seq.; Spitta
also points out the connection between vesical and erotic
dreams, _Die Schlaf und Traumzustaende_, 2d ed., 1882,
pp. 250 et seq.) Raymond and Janet state (_Les Obscessions_,
vol. ii, p. 135) that nocturnal incontinence of urine,
accompanied by dreams of urination, may be replaced at
puberty by masturbation. In the reverse direction, Freud
believes (_Monatsschrift fuer Psychiatrie_, Bd. XVIII,
p. 433) that masturbation plays a large part in causing
the bed-wetting of children who have passed the age when
that usually ceases, and he even finds that children are
themselves aware of the connection.
The diagnostic value of sexual dreams, as an indication
of the sexual nature of the subject when awake, has been
emphasized by various writers. (E.g., Moll, _Die Kontraere
Sexualempfindung_, Ch. IX; Naecke, "Der Traum als
feinstes Reagens fuer die Art des sexuellen Empfindens,"
_Monatsschrift fuer Kriminalpsychologie_, 1905, p. 500.)
Sexual dreams tend to reproduce, and even to accentuate,
those characteristics which make the strongest sexual
appeal to the subject when awake.
At the same time, this general statement has to be qualified,
more especially as regards inverted dreams. In the first
place, a young man, however normal, who is not familiar
with the feminine body when awake, is not likely to see
it when asleep, even in dreams of women; in the second
place, the confusions and combinations of dream imagery
often tend to obliterate sexual distinctions, however
free from perversions the subjects may be. Thus, a correspondent
tells me of a healthy man, of very pure character, totally
inexperienced in sexual matters, and never having seen
a woman naked, who, in his sexual dreams, always sees
the woman with male organs, though he has never had any
sexual inclinations for men, and is much in love with
a lady. The confusions and associations of dream imagery,
leading to abnormal combinations, may be illustrated by
a dream which once occurred to me after reading Joest's
account of how a young negress, whose tattoo-marks he
was sketching, having become bored, suddenly pressed her
hands to her breasts, spirting two streams of lukewarm
milk into his face, and ran away laughing; I dreamed of
a woman performing a similar action, not from her breasts,
however, but from a penis with which she was furnished.
Again, by another kind of confusion, a man dreams sexually
that he is with a man, although the figure of the partner
revealed in the dream is a woman. The following dream,
in a normal man who had never been, or wished to be, in
the position shown by the dream, may be quoted: "I
dreamed that I was a big boy, and that a younger boy lay
close beside me, and that we (or, certainly, he) had seminal
emissions; I was complacently passive, and had a feeling
of shame when the boy was discovered. On awaking I found
I had had no emission, but was lying very close to my
wife. The day before, I had seen boys in a swimming-match."
This was, it seems to me, an example of dream confusion,
and not an erotic inverted dream. (Naecke also brings
forward inverted dreams by normal persons; see e.g. his
"Beitraege zu den sexuellen Traeumen," _Archiv
fuer Kriminal-Anthropologie_, Bd. XX, 1908, p. 366.)
So far as I have been able to ascertain, there seem to
be, generally speaking, certain differences in the manifestations
of auto-erotism during sleep in men and women which I
believe to be not without psychological significance.
In men the phenomenon is fairly simple; it usually appears
about puberty continues at intervals of varying duration
during sexual life provided the individual is living chastely,
and is generally, though not always, accompanied by erotic
dreams which lead up to the climax, its occurrence being,
to some extent, influenced by a variety of circumstances:
physical, mental, or emotional excitement, alcohol taken
before retiring, position in bed (as lying on the back),
the state of the bladder, sometimes the mere fact of being
in a strange bed, and to some extent apparently by the
existence of monthly and yearly rhythms. On the whole,
it is a fairly definite and regular phenomenon which usually
leaves little conscious trace on awaking, beyond probably
some sense of fatigue and, occasionally, a headache. In
women, however, the phenomena of auto-erotism during sleep
seem to be much more irregular, varied, and diffused.
So far as I have been able to make inquiries, it is the
exception rather than the rule for girls to experience
definitely erotic dreams about the period of puberty or
adolescence.[238] Auto-erotic phenomena during sleep in
women who have never experienced the orgasm when awake
are usually of a very vague kind; while it is the rule
in a chaste youth for the orgasm thus to manifest itself,
it is the exception in a chaste girl. It is not, as a
rule, until the orgasm has been definitely produced in
the waking state--under whatever conditions it may have
been produced--that it begins to occur during sleep, and
even in a strongly sexual woman living a repressed life
it is often comparatively infrequent.[239] Thus, a young
medical woman who endeavors to deal strenuously with her
physical sexual emotions writes: "I sleep soundly,
and do not dream at all. Occasionally, but very rarely,
I have had sensations which awakened me suddenly. They
can scarcely be called dreams, for they are mere impulses,
nothing connected or coherent, yet prompted, I know, by
sexual feeling. This is probably an experience common
to all." Another lady (with a restrained psycho-sexual
tendency to be attracted to both sexes), states that her
first sexual sensations with orgasm were felt in dreams
at the age of 16, but these dreams, which she has now
forgotten, were not agreeable and not erotic; two or three
years later spontaneous orgasm began to occur occasionally
when awake, and after this, orgasm took place regularly
once or twice a week in sleep, but still without erotic
dreams; she merely dreamt that the orgasm was occurring
and awoke as it took place.
It is possible that to the comparative rarity in chaste
women of complete orgasm during sleep, we may in part
attribute the violence with which repressed sexual emotion
in women often manifests itself.[240] There is thus a
difference here between men and women which is of some
significance when we are considering the natural satisfaction
of the sexual impulse in chaste women.
In women, who have become accustomed to sexual intercourse,
erotic dreams of fully developed character occur, with
complete orgasm and accompanying relief--as may occasionally
be the case in women who are not acquainted with actual
intercourse;[241] some women, however, even when familiar
with actual coitus, find that sexual dreams, though accompanied
by emissions, are only the symptoms of desire and do not
produce actual relief.
Some interest attaches to cases in which young women,
even girls at puberty, experience dreams of erotic character,
or at all events dream concerning coitus or men in erection,
although they profess, and almost certainly with truth,
to be quite ignorant of sexual phenomena. Several such
dreams of remarkable character have been communicated
to me. One can imagine that the psychologists of some
schools would see in these dreams the spontaneous eruption
of the experiences of the race. I am inclined to regard
them as forgotten memories, such as we know to occur sometimes
in sleep. The child has somehow seen or heard of sexual
phenomena and felt no interest, and the memory may subsequently
be aroused in sleep, under the stimulation of new-born
sexual sensations.
It is a curious proof of the ignorance which has prevailed
in recent times concerning the psychic sexual nature of
women that, although in earlier ages the fact that women
are normally liable to erotic dreams was fully recognized,
in recent times it has been denied, even by writers who
have made a special study of the sexual impulse in women.
Eulenburg (_Sexuale Neuropathie_, 1895, pp. 31, 79) appears
to regard the appearances of sexual phenomena during sleep,
in women, as the result of masturbation. Adler, in what
is in many respects an extremely careful study of sexual
phenomena in women (_Die Mangelhafte Geschlechtsempfindung
des Weibes_, 1904, p. 130), boldly states that they do
not have erotic dreams. In 1847, E. Guibout ("Des
Pollutions Involontaires chez la Femme," _Union Medicale_,
p. 260) presented the case of a married lady who masturbated
from the age of ten, and continued the practice, even
after her marriage at twenty-four, and at twenty-nine
began to have erotic dreams with emissions every few nights,
and later sometimes even several times a night, though
they ceased to be voluptuous; he believed the case to
be the first ever reported of such a condition in a woman.
Yet, thousands of years ago, the Indian of Vedic days
recognized erotic dreams in women as an ordinary and normal
occurrence. (Loewenfeld quotes a passage to this effect
from the Oupnek'hat, _Sexualleben und Nervenleiden_, 2d
ed., p. 114.) Even savages recognize the occurrence of
erotic dreams in women as normal, for the Papuans, for
instance, believe that a young girl's first menstruation
is due to intercourse with the moon in the shape of a
man, the girl dreaming that a man is embracing her. (_Reports
Cambridge Expedition to Torres Straits_, vol. v., p. 206.)
In the seventeenth century, Rolfincius, in a well-informed
study (_De Pollutione Nocturna_, a Jena Inaugural Dissertation,
1667), concluded that women experience such manifestations,
and quotes Aristotle, Galen, and Fernelius, in the same
sense. Sir Thomas Overbury, in his _Characters_, written
in the early part of the same century, describing the
ideal milkmaid, says that "her dreams are so chaste
that she dare tell them," clearly implying that It
was not so with most women. The notion that women are
not subject to erotic dreams thus appears to be of comparatively
recent origin.
One of the most interesting and important characters by
which the erotic dreams of women--and, indeed, their dreams
generally--differ from those of men is in the tendency
to evoke a repercussion on the waking life, a tendency
more rarely noted in men's erotic dreams, and then only
to a minor extent. This is very common, even in healthy
and normal women, and is exaggerated to a high degree
in neurotic subjects, by whom the dream may even be interpreted
as a reality, and so declared on oath, a fact of practical
importance.
Hersman--having met with a case in which a school-girl
with chorea, after having dreamed of an assault, accused
the principal of a school of assault, securing his conviction--obtained
the opinions of various American alienists as to the frequency
with which such dreams in unstable mental subjects lead
to delusions and criminal accusations. Dercum, H.C. Wood,
and Rohe had not personally met with such cases; Burr
believed that there was strong evidence "that a sexual
dream may be so vivid as to make the subject believe she
has had sexual congress"; Kiernan knew of such cases;
C.H. Hughes, in persons with every appearance of sanity,
had known the erotic dreams of the night to become the
erotic delusions of the day, the patient protesting violently
the truth of her story; while Hersman reports the case[242]
of a young lady in an asylum who had nightly delusions
that a medical officer visited her every night, and had
to do with her, coming up the hot-air flue. I am acquainted
with a similar case in a clever, but highly neurotic,
young woman, who writes: "For years I have been trying
to stamp out my passional nature, and was beginning to
succeed when a strange thing happened to me last autumn.
One night, as I lay in bed, I felt an influence so powerful
that a man seemed present with me. I crimsoned with shame
and wonder. I remember that I lay upon my back, and marveled
when the spell had passed. The influence, I was assured,
came from a priest whom I believed in and admired above
everyone in the world. I had never dreamed of love in
connection with him, because I always thought him so far
above me. The influence has been upon me ever since--sometimes
by day and nearly always by night; from it I generally
go into a deep sleep, which lasts until morning. I am
always much refreshed when I awake. This influence has
the best effect upon my life that anything has ever had
as regards health and mind. It is the knowledge that I
am loved _fittingly_ that makes me so indifferent to my
future. What worries me is that I sometimes wonder if
I suffer from a nervous disorder merely." The subject
thus seemed to regard these occurrences as objectively
caused, but was sufficiently sane to wonder whether her
experiences were not due to mental disorder.[243]
The tendency of the auto-erotic phenomena of sleep to
be manifested with such energy as to flow over into the
waking life and influence conscious emotion and action,
while very well marked in normal and healthy women, is
seen to an exaggerated extent in hysterical women, in
whom it has, therefore, chiefly been studied. Sante de
Sanctis, who has investigated the dreams of many classes
of people, remarks on the frequently sexual character
of the dreams of hysterical women, and the repercussion
of such dreams on the waking life of the following day;
he gives a typical case of hysterical erotic dreaming
in an uneducated servant-girl of 23, in whom such dreams
occur usually a few days before the menstrual period;
her dreams, especially if erotic, make an enormous impression
on her; in the morning she is bad-tempered if they were
unpleasant, while she feels lascivious and gives herself
up to masturbation if she has had erotic dreams of men;
she then has a feeling of pleasure throughout the day,
and her sexual organs are bathed with moisture.[244] Pitres
and Gilles de la Tourette, two of Charcot's most distinguished
pupils, in their elaborate works on hysteria, both consider
that dreams generally have a great influence on the waking
life of the hysterical, and they deal with the special
influence of erotic dreams, to which, doubtless, we must
refer those conceptions of _incubi_ and _succubi_ which
played so vast and so important a part in the demonology
of the Middle Ages, and while not unknown in men were
most frequent in women. Such erotic dreams--as these observers,
confirming the experience of old writers, have found among
the hysterical to-day--are by no means always, or even
usually, of a pleasurable character. "It is very
rare," Pitres remarks, when insisting on the sexual
character of the hallucinations of the hysterical, "for
these erotic hallucinations to be accompanied by agreeable
voluptuous sensations. In most cases the illusion of sexual
intercourse even provokes acute pain. The witches of old
times nearly all affirmed that in their relations with
the devil they suffered greatly.[245] They said that his
organ was long and rough and pointed, with scales which
lifted on withdrawal and tore the vagina." (It seems
probable, I may remark, that the witches' representations,
both of the devil and of sexual intercourse, were largely
influenced by familiarity with the coupling of animals).
As Gilles de la Tourette is careful to warn his readers,
we must not too hastily assume, from the prevalence of
nocturnal auto-erotic phenomena in hysterical women, that
such women are necessarily sexual and libidinous in excess;
the disorder is in them psychic, he points out, and not
physical, and they usually receive sexual approaches with
indifference and repugnance, because their sexual centres
are anaesthetic or hyperaesthetic. "During the period
of sexual activity they seek much more the care and delicate
attention of men than the genital act, which they often
only tolerate. Many households, begun under the happiest
auspices--the bride all the more apt to believe that she
loves her betrothed in virtue of her suggestibility, easily
exalted, perhaps at the expense of the senses--become
hells on earth. The sexual act has for the hysterical
woman more than one disillusion; she cannot understand
it; it inspires her with insurmountable repugnance."[246]
I refer to these hysterical phenomena because they present
to us, in an extreme form, facts which are common among
women whom, under the artificial conditions of civilized
life, we are compelled to regard as ordinarily healthy
and normal. The frequent painfulness of auto-erotic phenomena
is by no means an exclusively hysterical phenomenon, although
often seen in a heightened form in hysterical conditions.
It is probably to some extent simply the result of a conflict
in consciousness with a merely physical impulse which
is strong enough to assert itself in spite of the emotional
and intellectual abhorrence of the subject. It is thus
but an extreme form of the disgust which all sexual physical
manifestations tend to inspire in a person who is not
inclined to respond to them. Somewhat similar psychic
disgust and physical pain are produced in the attempts
to stimulate the sexual emotions and organs when these
are exhausted by exercise. In the detailed history which
Moll presents, of the sexual experiences of a sister in
an American nursing guild,--a most instructive history
of a woman fairly normal except for the results of repressed
sexual emotion, and with strong moral tendencies,--various
episodes are narrated well illustrating the way in which
sexual excitement becomes unpleasant or even painful when
it takes place as a physical reflex which the emotions
and intellect are all the time struggling against.[247]
It is quite probable, however, that there is a physiological,
as well as a psychic, factor in this phenomenon, and Sollier,
in his elaborate study of the nature and genesis of hysteria,
by insisting on the capital importance of the disturbance
of sensibility in hysteria, and the definite character
of the phenomena produced in the passage between anaesthesia
and normal sensation, has greatly helped to reveal the
mechanism of this feature of auto-erotic excitement in
the hysterical.
No doubt there has been a tendency to exaggerate the unpleasant
character of the auto-erotic phenomena of hysteria. That
tendency was an inevitable reaction against an earlier
view, according to which hysteria was little more than
an unconscious expression of the sexual emotions and as
such was unscientifically dismissed without any careful
investigation. I agree with Breuer and Freud that the
sexual needs of the hysterical are just as individual
and various as those of normal women, but that they suffer
from them more, largely through a moral struggle with
their own instincts, and the attempt to put them into
the background of consciousness.[248] In many hysterical
and psychically abnormal women, auto-erotic phenomena,
and sexual phenomena generally, are highly pleasurable,
though such persons may be quite innocent of any knowledge
of the erotic character of the experience. I have come
across interesting and extreme examples of this in the
published experiences of the women followers of the American
religious leader, T.L. Harris, founder of the "Brotherhood
of the New Life." Thus, in a pamphlet entitled "Internal
Respiration," by Respiro, a letter is quoted from
a lady physician, who writes: "One morning I awoke
with a strange new feeling in the womb, which lasted for
a day or two; I was so very happy, but the joy was in
my womb, not in my heart."[249] "At last,"
writes a lady quoted in the same pamphlet, "I fell
into a slumber, lying on my back with arms and feet folded,
a position I almost always find myself in when I awake,
no matter in which position I may go to sleep. Very soon
I awoke from this slumber with a most delightful sensation,
every fibre tingling with an exquisite glow of warmth.
I was lying on my left side (something I am never able
to do), and was folded in the arms of my counterpart.
Unless you have seen it, I cannot give you an idea of
the beauty of his flesh, and with what joy I beheld and
felt it. Think of it, luminous flesh; and Oh! such tints,
you never could imagine without seeing. He folded me so
closely in his arms," etc. In such cases there is
no conflict between the physical and the psychic, and
therefore the resulting excitement is pleasurable and
not painful.
At this point our study of auto-erotism brings us into
the sphere of mysticism. Leuba, in a penetrating and suggestive
essay on Christian mysticism, after quoting the present
_Study_, refers to the famous passages in which St. Theresa
describes how a beautiful little angel inserted a flame-tipped
dart into her heart until it descended into her bowels
and left her inflamed with divine love. "What physiological
difference," he asks, "is there between this
voluptuous sensation and that enjoyed by the disciple
of the Brotherhood of New Life? St. Theresa says 'bowels,'
the woman doctor says 'womb,' that is all."[250]
The extreme form of auto-erotism is the tendency for the
sexual emotion to be absorbed and often entirely lost
in self-admiration. This Narcissus-like tendency, of which
the normal germ in women is symbolized by the mirror,
is found in a minor degree in some men, and is sometimes
well marked in women, usually in association with an attraction
for other persons, to which attraction it is, of course,
normally subservient. "The mirror," remarks
Bloch (_Beitraege_ 1, p. 201), "plays an important
part in the genesis of sexual aberration.... It cannot
be doubted that many a boy and girl have first experienced
sexual excitement at the sight of their own bodies in
a mirror."
Valera, the Spanish novelist, very well described this
impulse in his _Genio y Figura_. Rafaela, the heroine
of this novel, says that, after her bath: "I fall
into a puerility which may be innocent or vicious, I cannot
decide. I only know that it is a purely contemplative
act, a disinterested admiration of beauty. It is not coarse
sensuality, but aesthetic platonism. I imitate Narcissus;
and I apply my lips to the cold surface of the mirror
and kiss my image. It is the love of beauty, the expression
of tenderness and affection for what God has made manifest,
in an ingenuous kiss imprinted on the empty and incorporeal
reflection." In the same spirit the real heroine
of the _Tagebuch einer Verlorenen_ (p. 114), at the point
when she was about to become a prostitute, wrote: "I
am pretty. It gives me pleasure to throw off my clothes,
one by one, before the mirror, and to look at myself,
just as I am, white as snow and straight as a fir, with
my long, fine, hair, like a cloak of black silk. When
I spread abroad the black stream of it, with both hands,
I am like a white swan with black wings."
A typical case known to me is that of a lady of 28, brought
up on a farm. She is a handsome woman, of very large and
fine proportions, active and healthy and intelligent,
with, however, no marked sexual attraction to the opposite
sex; at the same time she is not inverted, though she
would like to be a man, and has a considerable degree
of contempt for women. She has an intense admiration for
her own person, especially her limbs; she is never so
happy as when alone and naked in her own bedroom, and,
so far as possible, she cultivates nakedness. She knows
by heart the various measurements of her body, is proud
of the fact that they are strictly in accordance with
the canons of proportion, and she laughs proudly at the
thought that her thigh is larger than many a woman's waist.
She is frank and assured in her manners, without sexual
shyness, and, while willing to receive the attention and
admiration of others, she makes no attempt to gain it,
and seems never to have experienced any emotions stronger
than her own pleasure in herself. I should add that I
have had no opportunity of detailed examination, and cannot
speak positively as to the absence of masturbation.
In the extreme form in which alone the name of Narcissus
may properly be invoked, there is comparative indifference
to sexual intercourse or even the admiration of the opposite
sex. Such a condition seems to be rare, except, perhaps,
in insanity. Since I called attention to this form of
auto-erotism (_Alienist and Neurologist_, April, 1898),
several writers have discussed the condition, especially
Naecke, who, following out the suggestion, terms the condition
Narcissism. Among 1,500 insane persons, Naecke has found
it in four men and one woman (_Psychiatrische en Neurologische
Bladen_, No. 2, 1899), Dr. C.H. Hughes writes (in a private
letter) that he is acquainted with such cases, in which
men have been absorbed in admiration of their own manly
forms, and of their sexual organs, and women, likewise,
absorbed in admiration of their own mammae and physical
proportions, especially of limbs. "The whole subject,"
he adds, "is a singular phase of psychology, and
it is not all morbid psychology, either. It is closely
allied to that aesthetic sense which admires the nude
in art."
Fere (_L'Instinct Sexuel_, 2d ed., p. 271) mentions a
woman who experienced sexual excitement in kissing her
own hand. Naecke knew a woman in an asylum who, during
periodical fits of excitement, would kiss her own arms
and hands, at the same time looking like a person in love.
He also knew a young man with dementia praecox? who would
kiss his own image ("Der Kuss bei Geisteskranken,"
_Allgemeine Zeitschrift fuer Psychiatrie_, Bd. LXIII,
p. 127). Moll refers to a young homosexual lawyer, who
experienced great pleasure in gazing at himself in a mirror
(_Kontraere Sexualempfindung_, 3d ed., p. 228), and mentions
another inverted man, an admirer of the nates of men,
who, chancing to observe his own nates in a mirror, when
changing his shirt, was struck by their beauty, and subsequently
found pleasure in admiring them (_Libido Sexualis_, Bd.
I, Theil I, p. 60). Krafft-Ebing knew a man who masturbated
before a mirror, imagining, at the same time, how much
better a real lover would be.
The best-observed cases of Narcissism have, however, been
recorded by Rohleder, who confers upon this condition
the ponderous name of automonosexualism, and believes
that it has not been previously observed (H. Rohleder,
_Der Automonosexualismus_, being Heft 225 of _Berliner
Klinik_, March, 1907). In the two cases investigated by
Rohleder, both men, there was sexual excitement in the
contemplation of the individual's own body, actually or
in a mirror, with little or no sexual attraction to other
persons. Rohleder is inclined to regard the condition
as due to a congenital defect in the "sexual centre"
of the brain.
FOOTNOTES:
[176] All the above groups of phenomena are dealt with
in other volumes of these _Studies_: the manifestations
of normal sexual excitement, in vols. iii, iv, and v;
homosexuality, in vol. ii, and erotic fetichism, in vol.
v.
[177] See Appendix C.
[178] Letamendi, of Madrid, has suggested "_auto-erastia_"
to cover what is probably much the same field. In the
beginning of the nineteenth century, Hufeland, in his
_Makrobiotic_, invented the term "_geistige Onanie_,"
to express the filling and heating of the imagination
with voluptuous images, without unchastity of body; and
in 1844, Kaan, in his _Psychopathia Sexualis_, used, but
did not invent, the term "_onania psychica_."
Gustav Jaeger, in his _Entdeckung der Seele_, proposed
"monosexual idiosyncrasy," to indicate the most
animal forms of masturbation taking place without any
correlative imaginative element, a condition illustrated
by cases given in Moll's _Untersuchungen ueber die Libido
Sexualis_, Bd. I, pp. 13 et seq. Dr. Laupts (a pseudonym
for the accomplished psychologist, Dr. Saint-Paul) uses
the term _autophilie_, for solitary vice. (_Perversion
et Perversite Sexuelles_, 1896, p. 337.) But all these
terms only cover a portion of the field.
[179] H. Northcote, _Christianity and Sex Problems_, p.
231.
[180] Rosse observed two elephants procuring erection
by entwining their proboscides, the act being completed
by one elephant opening his mouth and allowing the other
to tickle the roof of it. (I. Rosse, _Virginia Medical
Monthly_, October, 1892.)
[181] Fere, "Perversions sexuelles chez les animaux,"
_Revue Philosophique_, May, 1897.
[182] Tillier, _L'Instinct Sexuel_, 1889, p. 270.
[183] Moll, _Libido Sexualis_, Bd. I, p. 76. The same
author mentions (ibid., p. 373) that parrots living in
solitary confinement masturbate by rubbing the posterior
part of the body against some object until ejaculation
occurs. Edmund Selous ("Habits of the Peewit,"
_Zooelogist_, April, 1902) suggests that the peewit, when
rolling on the ground, and exerting pressure on the anal
region, is moved by a sexual impulse to satisfy desire;
he adds that actual orgasm appears eventually to take
place, a spasm of energy passing through the bird.
[184] Dr. J.W. Howe (_Excessive Venery, Masturbation,
and Continence_, London and New York, 1883, p. 62) writes
of masturbation: "In savage lands it is of rare occurrence.
Savages live in a state of Nature. No moral obligations
exist which compel them to abstain from a natural gratification
of their passions. There is no social law which prevents
them from following the dictates of their lower nature.
Hence, they have no reason for adopting onanism as an
outlet for passions. The moral trammels of civilized society,
and ignorance of physiological laws, give origin to the
vice." Every one of these six sentences is incorrect
or misleading. They are worth quoting as a statement of
the popular view of savage life.
[185] I can recall little evidence of its existence among
the Australian aborigines, though there is, in the Wiradyuri
language, spoken over a large part of New South Wales,
a word (whether ancient or not, I do not know) meaning
masturbation (_Journal of the Anthropological Institute_,
July-Dec., 1904, p. 303). Dr. W. Roth (_Ethnological Studies
Among the Northwest-Central Queensland Aborigines_, p.
184), who has carefully studied the blacks of his district,
remarks that he has no evidence as to the practice of
either masturbation or sodomy among them. More recently
(1906) Roth has stated that married men in North Queensland
and elsewhere masturbate during their wives' absence.
As regards the Maori of New Zealand, Northcote adds, there
is a rare word for masturbation (as also at Rarotonga),
but according to a distinguished Maori scholar there are
no allusions to the practice in Maori literature, and
it was probably not practiced in primitive times. The
Maori and the Polynesians of the Cook Islands, Northcote
remarks, consider the act unmanly, applying to it a phrase
meaning "to make women of themselves." (Northcote,
loc. cit., p. 232.)
[186] Greenlees, _Journal of Mental Science_, July, 1895.
A gentleman long resident among the Kaffirs of South Natal,
told Northcote, however, that he had met with no word
for masturbation, and did not believe the practice prevailed
there.
[187] Hyades and Deniker, _Mission Scientifique du Cap
Horn_, vol. vii, p. 295.
[188] _La Criminalite en Cochin-Chine_, 1887, p. 116;
also Mondiere, "Monographie de la Femme Annamite,"
_Memoires Societe d'Anthropologie_, tome ii, p. 465.
[189] Christian, article on "Onanisme," _Dictionnaire
Encyclopedique des Sciences Medicales_; Ploss and Bartels,
_Das Weib_; Moraglia, "Die Onanie beim normalen Weibe,"
_Zeitschrift fuer Criminal-Anthropologie_, 1897; Dartigues,
_De la Procreation Volontaire des Sexes_, p. 32. In the
eighteenth century, the _rin-no-tama_ was known in France,
sometimes as "pommes d'amour." Thus Bachaumont,
in his Journal (under date July 31, 1773), refers to "a
very extraordinary instrument of amorous mystery,"
brought by a traveler from India; he describes this "boule
erotique" as the size of a pigeon's egg, covered
with soft skin, and gilded. Cf. F.S. Krauss, _Geschlechtsleben
in Brauch und Sitte der Japaner_, Leipzig, 1907.
[190] It may be worth mentioning that the Salish Indians
of British Columbia have a myth of an old woman having
intercourse with young women, by means of a horn worn
as a penis (_Journal of the Anthropological Institute_,
July-Dec., 1904, p. 342).
[191] In Burchard's Penitential (cap. 142-3), penalties
are assigned to the woman who makes a phallus for use
on herself or other women. (Wasserschleben, _Bussordnungen
der abendlaendlichen Kirche_, p. 658.) The _penis succedaneus_,
the Latin _phallus_ or _fascinum_, is in France called
_godemiche_; in Italy, _passatempo_, and also _diletto_,
whence _dildo_, by which it is most commonly known in
England. For men, the corresponding _cunnus succedaneus_
is, in England, called _merkin_, which meant originally
(as defined in old editions of Bailey's _Dictionary_)
"counterfeit hair for women's privy parts."
[192] Duehren, _Der Marquis de Sade und Seine Zeit_, 3d
ed., pp. 130, 232; id. _Geschlechtsleben in England_,
Bd. II, pp. 284 et seq.
[193] Gamier, _Onanisme_, p. 378.
[194] _Zeitschrift fuer Ethnologie_, 1899, p. 669.
[195] The mythology of Hawaii, one may note, tells of
goddesses who were impregnated by bananas they had placed
beneath their garments. B. Stern mentions (_Medizin in
der Tuerkei_, Bd. II, p. 24) that the women of Turkey
and Egypt use the banana, as well as the cucumber, etc.,
for masturbation. In a poem in the _Arabian Nights_, also
("History of the Young Nour with the Frank"),
we read: "O bananas, of soft and smooth skins, which
dilate the eyes of young girls ... you, alone among fruits
are endowed with a pitying heart, O consolers of widows
and divorced women." In France and England they are
not uncommonly used for the same purpose.
[196] See, e.g., Winckel, _Die Krankheiten der weiblichen
Harnrohre und Blase_, 1885, p. 211; and "Lehrbuch
der Frauenkrankheiten," 1886, p. 210; also, Hyrtl,
_Handbuch du Topographischen Anatomie_, 7th ed., Bd. II,
pp. 212-214. Gruenfeld (_Wiener medizinische Blaetter_,
November 26, 1896), collected 115 cases of foreign body
in the bladder--68 in men, 47 in women; but while those
found in men were usually the result of a surgical accident,
those found in women were mostly introduced by the patients
themselves. The patient usually professes profound ignorance
as to how the object came there; or she explains that
she accidentally sat down upon it, or that she used it
to produce freer urination. The earliest surgical case
of this kind I happen to have met with, was recorded by
Plazzon, in Italy, in 1621 (_De Partibus Generationi Inservientibus_,
lib. ii, Ch. XIII); it was that of a certain honorable
maiden with a large clitoris, who, seeking to lull sexual
excitement with the aid of a bone needle, inserted it
in the bladder, whence it was removed by Aquapendente.
[197] A. Poulet, _Traite des Corps etrangers en Chirurgie_,
1879. English translation, 1881, vol. ii, pp. 209, 230.
Rohleder (_Die Masturbation_, 1899, pp. 24-31) also gives
examples of strange objects found in the sexual organs.
[198] E.H. Smith, "Signs of Masturbation in the Female,"
_Pacific Medical Journal_, February, 1903, quoted by R.W.
Taylor, _Practical Treatise on Sexual Disorders_, 3d ed.,
p. 418.
[199] L. Tait, _Diseases of Women_, 1889, vol. i, p. 100.
[200] _Obstetric Journal_, vol. i, 1873, p. 558. Cf. G.J.
Arnold, _British, Medical Journal_, January 6, 1906, p.
21.
[201] Dudley, _American Journal of Obstetrics_, July,
1889, p. 758.
[202] A. Reverdin, "Epingles a Cheveux dans la Vessie,"
_Revue Medicale de la Suisse Romande_, January 20, 1888.
His cases are fully recorded, and his paper is an able
and interesting contribution to this by-way of sexual
psychology. The first case was a school-master's wife,
aged 22, who confessed in her husband's presence, without
embarrassment or hesitation, that the manoeuvre was habitual,
learned from a school-companion, and continued after marriage.
The second was a single woman of 42, a _cure's_ servant,
who attempted to elude confession, but on leaving the
doctor's house remarked to the house-maid, "Never
go to bed without taking out your hair-pins; accidents
happen so easily." The third was an English girl
of 17 who finally acknowledged that she had lost two hair-pins
in this way. The fourth was a child of 12, driven by the
pain to confess that the practice had become a habit with
her.
[203] "One of my patients," remarks Dr. R.T.
Morris, of New York, (_Transactions of the American Association
of Obstetricians_, for 1892, Philadelphia, vol. v), "who
is a devout church-member, had never allowed herself to
entertain sexual thoughts referring to men, but she masturbated
every morning, when standing before the mirror, by rubbing
against a key in the bureau-drawer. A man never excited
her passions, but the sight of a key in any bureau-drawer
aroused erotic desires."
[204] Freud (_Drei Abhandlungen zur Sexualtheorie_, p.
118) refers to the sexual pleasure of swinging. Swinging
another person may be a source of voluptuous excitement,
and one of the 600 forms of sexual pleasure enumerated
in De Sade's _Les 120 Journees de Sodome_ is (according
to Duehren) to propel a girl vigorously in a swing.
[205] The fact that horse exercise may produce pollutions
was well recognized by Catholic theologians, and Sanchez
states that this fact need not be made a reason for traveling
on foot. Rolfincius, in 1667, pointed out that horse-riding,
in those unaccustomed to it, may lead to nocturnal pollutions.
Rohleder (_Die Masturbation_, pp. 133-134) brings together
evidence regarding the influence of horse exercise in
producing sexual excitement.
[206] A correspondent, to whom the idea was presented
for the first time, wrote: "Henceforward I shall
know to what I must attribute the bliss--almost the beatitude--I
so often have experienced after traveling for four or
five hours in a train." Penta mentions the case of
a young girl who first experienced sexual desire at the
age of twelve, after a railway journey.
[207] Langdon Down, _British Medical Journal_, January
12, 1867.
[208] Pouillet, _L'Onanisme chez la Femme_, Paris, 1880;
Fournier, _De l'Onanisme_, 1885; Rohleder, _Die Masturbation_,
p. 132.
[209] _West-Riding Asylum Reports_, 1876, vol. vi.
[210] _Das Nervoese Weib_, 1898, p. 193.
[211] In the Appendix to volume iii of these _Studies_,
I have recorded the experience of a lady who found sexual
gratification in this manner.
[212] Dr. J.G. Kiernan, to whom I am indebted for a note
on this point, calls my attention also to the case of
a homosexual and masochistic man (_Medical Record_, vol.
xix) whose feelings were intensified by tight-lacing.
[213] Some women are also able to produce the orgasm,
when in a state of sexual excitement, by placing a cushion
between the knees and pressing the thighs firmly together.
[214] _Lecons sur les Deformations Vulvaires_, p. 64.
Martineau was informed by a dressmaker that it is very
frequent in workrooms and can usually be done without
attracting attention. An ironer informed him that while
standing at her work, she crossed her legs, slightly bending
the trunk forward and supporting herself on the table
by the hands; then a few movements of contraction of the
adductor muscles of the thigh would suffice to produce
the orgasm.
[215] C.W. Townsend, "Thigh-friction in Children
under one Year," Annual Meeting of the American Pediatric
Society, Montreal, 1896. Five cases are recorded by this
writer, all in female infants.
[216] Soutzo, _Archives de Neurologie_, February, 1903,
p. 167.
[217] Zache, _Zeitschrift fuer Ethnologie_, 1899, p. 72.
I have discussed what may be regarded as the normally
sexual influence of dancing, in the third volume of these
_Studies_, "The Analysis of the Sexual Impulse."
[218] The case has been recorded of a Russian who had
the spontaneous impulse to self-flagellation on the nates
with a rod, for the sake of sexual excitement, from the
age of 6. (_Rivista Mensile di Psichiatria_ April, 1900,
p. 102.)
[219] Kryptadia, vol. v, p. 358. As regards the use of
nettles, see Duehren, _Geschlechtsleben in England_, Bd.
II, p. 392.
[220] Debreyne, _Moechialogie_, p. 177.
[221] R.W. Taylor, _A Practical Treatise on Sexual Disorders_,
3rd ed., Ch. XXX.
[222] Hammond, _Sexual Impotence_, pp. 70 et seq.
[223] Niceforo, _Il Gergo_, p. 98.
[224] _Functional Disorders of the Nervous System in Women_,
p. 114.
[225] Schrenck-Notzing, _Suggestions-therapie_, p. 13.
A. Kind (_Jahrbuch fuer Sexuelle Zwischenstufen_, Jahrgang
ix, 1908, p. 58) gives the case of a young homosexual
woman, a trick cyclist at the music halls, who often,
when excited by the sight of her colleague in tights,
would experience the orgasm while cycling before the public.
[226] Janet has, however, used day-dreaming--which he
calls "_reveries subconscients_"--to explain
a remarkable case of demon-possession, which he investigated
and cured. (_Nevroses et Idees fixes_, vol. i, pp. 390
et seq.)
[227] "Minor Studies from the Psychological Laboratory
of Wellesley College," _American Journal of Psychology_,
vol. vii, No. 1. G.E. Partridge ("Reverie,"
_Pedagogical Seminary_, April, 1898) well describes the
physical accompaniments of day-dreaming, especially in
Normal School girls between sixteen and twenty-two. Pick
("Clinical Studies in Pathological Dreaming,"
_Journal of Mental Sciences_, July, 1901) records three
more or less morbid cases of day-dreaming, usually with
an erotic basis, all in apparently hysterical men. An
important study of day-dreaming, based on the experiences
of nearly 1,500 young people (more than two-thirds girls
and women), has been published by Theodate L. Smith ("The
Psychology of Day Dreams," _American Journal Psychology_,
October, 1904). Continued stories were found to be rare--only
one per cent. Healthy boys, before fifteen, had day-dreams
in which sports, athletics, and adventure had a large
part; girls put themselves in the place of their favorite
heroines in novels. After seventeen, and earlier in the
case of girls, day-dreams of love and marriage were found
to be frequent. A typical confession is that of a girl
of nineteen: "I seldom have time to build castles
in Spain, but when I do, I am not different from most
Southern girls; i.e., my dreams are usually about a pretty
fair specimen of a six-foot three-inch biped."
[228] The case has been recorded of a married woman, in
love with her doctor, who kept a day-dream diary, at last
filling three bulky volumes, when it was discovered by
her husband, and led to an action for divorce; it was
shown that the doctor knew nothing of the romance in which
he played the part of hero. Kiernan, in referring to this
case (as recorded in John Paget's _Judicial Puzzles_),
mentions a similar case in Chicago.
[229] _Uranisme_, p. 125.
[230] The acute Anstie remarked, more than thirty years
ago, in his work on _Neuralgia_: "It is a comparatively
frequent thing to see an unsocial, solitary life (leading
to the habit of masturbation) joined with the bad influence
of an unhealthy ambition, prompting to premature and false
work in literature and art." From the literary side,
M. Leon Bazalgette has dealt with the tendency of much
modern literature to devote itself to what he calls "mental
onanism," of which the probable counterpart, he seems
to hint, is a physical process of auto-erotism. (Leon
Bazalgette, "L'onanisme considere comme principe
createur en art," _L'Esprit Nouveau_, 1898.)
[231] Pausanias, _Achaia_, Chapter XVII. The ancient Babylonians
believed in a certain "maid of the night," who
appeared to men in sleep and roused without satisfying
their passions. (Jastrow, _Religion of Babylonia_, p.
262.) This succubus was the Assyrian Liler, connected
with the Hebrew Lilith. There was a corresponding incubus,
"the little night man," who had nocturnal intercourse
with women. (Cf. Ploss, _Das Weib_, 7th ed., pp. 521 et
seq.) The succubus and the incubus (the latter being more
common) were adopted by Christendom; St. Augustine (_De
Civitate Dei_, Bk. XV, Ch. XXIII) said that the wicked
assaults of sylvans and fauns, otherwise called incubi,
on women, are so generally affirmed that it would be impudent
to deny them. Incubi flourished in mediaeval belief, and
can scarcely, indeed, be said to be extinct even to-day.
They have been studied by many authors; see, e.g., Dufour,
_Histoire de la Prostitution_, vol. v, Ch. XXV, Saint-Andre,
physician-in-ordinary to the French King, pointed out
in 1725 that the incubus was a dream. It may be added
that the belief in the succubus and incubus appears to
be widespread. Thus, the West African Yorubas (according
to A.B. Ellis) believe that erotic dreams are due to the
god Elegbra, who, either as a male or a female, consorts
with men and women in sleep.
[232] "If any man's seed of copulation go out from
him, then he shall bathe all his flesh in water and be
unclean until the even. And every garment, and every skin,
whereon is the seed of copulation, shall be washed with
water and be unclean until the even." Leviticus,
XV, v. 16-17.
[233] It should be added that the term _pollutio_ also
covers voluntary effusion of semen outside copulation.
(Debreyne, _Moechialogie_, p. 8; for a full discussion
of the opinions of theologians concerning nocturnal and
diurnal pollutions, see the same author's _Essai sur la
Theologie Morale_, pp. 100-149.)
[234] _Memoirs_, translated by Bendyshe, p. 182.
[235] _Sexual Impotence_, p. 137.
[236] _L'Hygiene Sexuelle_, p. 169.
[237] _Sexualleben und Nervenleiden_, p. 164.
[238] I may here refer to the curious opinion expressed
by Dr. Elizabeth Blackwell, that, while the sexual impulse
in man is usually relieved by seminal emissions during
sleep, in women it is relieved by the occurrence of menstruation.
This latter statement is flagrantly at variance with the
facts; but it may perhaps be quoted in support of the
view expressed above as to the comparative rarity of sexual
excitement during sleep in young girls.
[239] Loewenfeld has recently expressed the same opinion.
Rohleder believes that pollutions are physically impossible
in a _real_ virgin, but that opinion is too extreme.
[240] It may be added that in more or less neurotic women
and girls, erotic dreams may be very frequent and depressing.
Thus, J.M. Fothergill (_West-Riding Asylum Report_, 1876,
vol. vi) remarks: "These dreams are much more frequent
than is ordinarily thought, and are the cause of a great
deal of nervous depression among women. Women of a highly-nervous
diathesis suffer much more from these drains than robust
women. Not only are these involuntary orgasms more frequent
among such women, but they cause more disturbance of the
general health in them than in other women."
[241] I may remark here that a Russian correspondent considers
that I have greatly underestimated the frequency of erotic
manifestations during sleep in young girls. "All
the women I have interrogated on this point," he
informs me, "say that they have had such pollutions
from the time of puberty, or even earlier, accompanied
by erotic dreams. I have put the question to some twenty
or thirty women. It is true that they were of southern
race (Italian, Spanish, and French), and I believe that
Southerners are, in this matter, franker than northern
women, who consider the activity of the flesh as shameful,
and seek to conceal it." My correspondent makes no
reference to the chief point of sexual difference, so
far as my observation goes, which is that erotic dreams
are comparatively rare in those women "_who have
yet had no sort of sexual experience in waking life_."
Whether or not this is correct, I do not question the
frequency of erotic dreams in girls who have had such
experience.
[242] C.C. Hersman, "Medico-legal Aspects of Eroto-Choreic
Insanities," _Alienist and Neurologist_, July, 1897.
I may mention that Pitres (_Lecons cliniques sur l'Hysterie_,
vol. ii, p. 34) records the almost identical case of a
hysterical girl in one of his wards, who was at first
grateful to the clinical clerk to whom her case was intrusted,
but afterward changed her behavior, accused him of coming
nightly through the window, lying beside her, caressing
her, and then exerting violent coitus three or four times
in succession, until she was utterly exhausted. I may
here refer to the tendency to erotic excitement in women
under the influence of chloroform and nitrous oxide, a
tendency rarely or never noted in men, and of the frequency
with which the phenomenon is attributed by the subject
to actual assault. See H. Ellis, _Man and Woman_, pp.
269-274.
[243] In Australia, some years ago, a man was charged
with rape, found guilty of "attempt," and sentenced
to eighteen months' imprisonment, on the accusation of
a girl of 13, who subsequently confessed that the charge
was imaginary; in this case, the jury found it impossible
to believe that so young a girl could have been lying,
or hallucinated, because she narrated the details of the
alleged offence with such circumstantial detail. Such
cases are not uncommon, and in some measure, no doubt,
they may be accounted for by auto-erotic nocturnal hallucinations.
[244] Sante de Sanctis, _I sogni e il sonno nell'isterismo
e nella epilessia_, Rome, 1896, p. 101.
[245] Pitres, _Lecons cliniques sur l'Hysterie_, vol.
ii, pp. 37 et seq. The Lorraine inquisitor, Nicolas Remy,
very carefully investigated the question of the feelings
of witches when having intercourse with the Devil, questioning
them minutely, and ascertained that such intercourse was
usually extremely painful, filling them with icy horror
(See, e.g., Dufour, _Histoire de la Prostitution_, vol.
v, p. 127; the same author presents an interesting summary
of the phenomena of the Witches' Sabbath). But intercourse
with the Devil was by no means always painful. Isabel
Gowdie, a Scotch witch, bore clear testimony to this point:
"The youngest and lustiest women," she stated,
"will have very great pleasure in their carnal copulation
with him, yea, much more than with their own husbands....
He is abler for us than any man can be. (Alack! that I
should compare him to a man!)" Yet her description
scarcely sounds attractive; he was a "large, black,
hairy man, very cold, and I found his nature as cold within
me as spring well-water." His foot was forked and
cloven; he was sometimes like a deer, or a roe; and he
would hold up his tail while the witches kissed that region
(Pitcairn, _Criminal Trials in Scotland_, vol. iii, Appendix
VII; see, also, the illustrations at the end of Dr. A.
Marie's _Folie et Mysticisme_, 1907).
[246] Gilles de la Tourette, loc. cit., p. 518. Erotic
hallucinations have also been studied by Bellamy, in a
Bordeaux thesis, _Hallucinations Erotiques_, 1900-1901.
[247] On one occasion, when still a girl, whenever an
artist whom she admired touched her hand she felt erection
and moisture of the sexual parts, but without any sensation
of pleasure; a little later, when an uncle's knee casually
came in contact with her thigh, ejaculation of mucus took
place, though she disliked the uncle; again, when a nurse,
on casually seeing a man's sexual organs, an electric
shock went through her, though the sight was disgusting
to her; and when she had once to assist a man to urinate,
she became in the highest degree excited, though without
pleasure, and lay down on a couch in the next room, while
a conclusive ejaculation took place. (Moll, _Libido Sexualis_,
Bd. I, p. 354.)
[248] Breuer and Freud, _Studien ueber Hysterie_, 1895,
p. 217.
[249] Calmeil (_De la Folie_, vol. i, p. 252) called attention
to the large part played by uterine sensations in the
hallucinations of some famous women ascetics, and added:
"It is well recognized that the narrative of such
sensations nearly always occupies the first place in the
divagations of hysterical virgins."
[250] H. Leuba, "Les Tendances Religieuses chez les
Mystiques Chretiens," _Revue Philosophique_, November,
1902, p. 465. St. Theresa herself states that physical
sensations played a considerable part in this experience.
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