CHAPTER VII.—CONCLUSIONS.
The Prevention of Homosexuality—The Influence of the
School—Coeducation—The Treatment of Sexual
Inversion—Castration—Hypnotism—Associational
Therapy—Psycho-analysis—Mental and Physical Hygiene—Marriage—The
Children of Inverts—The Attitude of Society—The Horror Aroused by
Homosexuality—Justinian—The Code Napoléon—The State of the Law in
Europe Today—Germany—England—What Should be our Attitude toward
Homosexuality?
Having now completed the psychological analysis of the sexual invert, so
far as I have been able to study him, it only remains to speak briefly of
the attitude of society and the law. First, however, a few words as to the
medical and hygienic aspects of inversion. The preliminary question of the
prevention of homosexuality is in too vague a position at present to be
profitably discussed. So far as the really congenital invert is concerned,
prevention can have but small influence; but sound social hygiene should
render difficult the acquisition of homosexual perversity, or what has
been termed pseudo-homosexuality. It is the school which is naturally the
chief theater of immature and temporary homosexual manifestations, partly
because school life largely coincides with the period during which the
sexual impulse frequently tends to be undifferentiated, and partly because
in the traditions of large and old schools an artificial homosexuality is
often deeply rooted.
Homosexuality in English schools has already been briefly
referred to in chapter iii. As a precise and interesting picture
of the phenomena in French schools, I may mention a story by
Albert Nortal, Les Adolescents Passionnés (1913), written
immediately after the author left college, though not published
until more than twenty-five years later, and clearly based on
personal observation and experience. As regards German schools,
see, e.g., Moll, Untersuchungen über die Libido Sexualis, p.
449 et seq., and for sexual manifestations in early life
generally, the same author's Sexual Life of the Child; also
Hirschfeld, Jahrbuch für sexuelle Zwischenstufen, vol. v,
1903, p. 47 et seq., and, for references, Hirschfeld, Die
Homosexualität, p. 46 et seq.
While much may be done by physical hygiene and other means to prevent the
extension of homosexuality in schools,[243] it is impossible, and even
undesirable, to repress absolutely the emotional manifestations of sex in
either boys or girls who have reached the age of puberty.[244] It must
always be remembered that profoundly rooted organic impulses cannot be
effectually combated by direct methods. Writing of a period two centuries
ago, Casanova, in relating his early life as a seminarist trained to the
priesthood, describes the precautions taken to prevent the youths entering
each other's beds, and points out the folly of such precautions.[245] As
that master of the human heart remarks, such prohibitions intensify the
very evil they are intended to prevent by invoking in its aid the impulse
to disobedience natural to every child of Adam and Eve, and the
observation has often been repeated by teachers since. We probably have to
recognize that a way to render such manifestations wholesome, as well as
to prepare for the relationships of later life, is the adoption, so far as
possible, of the method of coeducation of the sexes,[246]—not, of course,
necessarily involving identity of education for both sexes,—since a
certain amount of association between the sexes helps to preserve the
healthiness of the sexual emotional attitude. Association between the
sexes will not, of course, prevent the development of congenital
inversion. In this connection it is pointed out by Bethe that it was
precisely in Sparta and Lesbos, where homosexuality was most ideally
cultivated, that the sexes, so far as we know, associated more freely than
in any other Greek State.[247]
The question of the treatment of homosexuality must be approached with
discrimination, caution, and skepticism. Nowadays we can have but little
sympathy with those who, at all costs, are prepared to "cure" the invert.
There is no sound method of cure in radical cases.
At one time the seemingly very radical method of castration was advocated
and occasionally carried out, as in a case I have recorded in a previous
chapter (History XXVI). Like all methods of treatment, it is sometimes
believed to have been successful by those who carried it out. Usually,
after a short period, it is found to be unsuccessful, and in some cases
the condition, especially the mental condition, is rendered worse. It is
not difficult to understand why this should be. Sexual inversion, is not a
localized genital condition. It is a diffused condition, and firmly
imprinted on the whole psychic state. There may be reasons for castration,
or the slighter operation of vasectomy, but, although sexual tension may
be thereby diminished, no authority now believes that any such operation
will affect the actual inversion. Castration of the body in adult age
cannot be expected to produce castration of the mind. Moll, Féré, Näcke,
Bloch, Rohleder, Hirschfeld, are all either opposed to castration for
inversion, or very doubtful as to any beneficial results.
In a case communicated to me by Dr. Shufeldt, an invert had
himself castrated at the age of 26 to diminish sexual desire,
make himself more like a woman, and to stop growth of beard. "But
the only apparent physical effect," he wrote, "was to increase my
weight 10 per cent., and render me a semi-invalid for the rest
of my life. After two years my sexuality decreased, but that may
have been due to satiety or to advancing years. I was also
rendered more easily irritated over trifles and more revengeful.
Terrible criminal auto-suggestions came into my head, never
experienced before." Féré (Revue de Chirurgie, March 10, 1905)
published the case of an invert of English origin who had been
castrated. The inverted impulse remained unchanged, as well as
sexual desire and the aptitude for erection; but neurasthenic
symptoms, which had existed before, were aggravated; he felt less
capable to resist his impulses, became migratory in his habits of
life, and addicted to the use of laudanum. In a case recorded by
C. H. Hughes (Alienist and Neurologist, Aug., 1914) the results
were less unsatisfactory; in this case the dorsal nerve of the
penis was first excised, without any result (see also Alienist
and Neurologist, Feb., 1904, p. 70, as regards worse than
useless results of cutting the pudic nerve), and a year or so
later the testes were removed and the patient gained tranquillity
and satisfaction; his homosexual inclinations appeared to go, and
he began to show inclination for asexualized women, being
specially anxious to meet with a woman whose ovaries had been
removed on account of inversion. (Reference may also be made to
Näcke, "Die Ersten Kastrationen aus sozialen Grunden auf
europäischen Boden," Neurologisches Centralblatt, 1909, No. 5,
and E. Wilhelm in Juristisch-psychiatrische Grenzfragen, vol.
viii, Heft 6 and 7, 1911.)
More trust has usually been placed in the psychotherapeutical than the
surgical treatment of homosexuality. At one time hypnotic suggestion was
carried out very energetically on homosexual subjects. Krafft-Ebing seems
to have been the first distinguished advocate of hypnotism for application
to the homosexual. Dr. von Schrenck-Notzing displayed special zeal and
persistency in this treatment. He undertook to treat even the most
pronounced cases of inversion by courses lasting more than a year, and
involving, in at least one case, nearly one hundred and fifty hypnotic
sittings; he prescribed frequent visits to the brothel, previous to which
the patient took large doses of alcohol; by prolonged manipulations a
prostitute endeavored to excite erection, a process attended with varying
results. It appears that in some cases this course of treatment was
attended by a certain sort of success, to which an unlimited good will on
the part of the patient, it is needless to say, largely contributed. The
treatment was, however, usually interrupted by continual backsliding to
homosexual practices, and sometimes, naturally, the cure involved a
venereal disorder. The patient was enabled to marry and to beget
children.[248] It is a method of treatment which seems to have found few
imitators. This we need not regret. The histories I have recorded in
previous chapters show that it is not uncommon for even a pronounced
invert to be able sometimes to effect coitus. It often becomes easy if at
the time he fixes his thoughts on images connected with his own sex. But
the perversion remains unaffected; the subject is merely (as one of Moll's
inverts expressed it) practising masturbation per vaginam. Such
treatment is a training in vice, and, as Raffalovich points out, the
invert is simply perverted and brought down to the vicious level which
necessarily accompanies perversity.[249]
There can be no doubt that in slight and superficial cases of
homosexuality, suggestion may really exert an influence. We can scarcely
expect it to exert such influence when the homosexual tendency is deeply
rooted in an organic inborn temperament. In such cases indeed the subject
may resist suggestion even when in the hypnotic state. This is pointed out
by Moll, a great authority on hypnotism, and with much experience of its
application to homosexuality, but never inclined to encourage an
exaggerated notion of its efficacy in this field. Forel, who was also an
authority on hypnotism, was equally doubtful as to its value in relation
to inversion, especially in clearly inborn cases. Krafft-Ebing at the end
said little about it, and Näcke (who was himself without faith in this
method of treating inversion) stated that he had been informed by the
last homosexual case treated by Krafft-Ebing by hypnotism that, in spite
of all good-will on the patient's side, the treatment had been quite
useless. Féré, also, had no belief in the efficacy of suggestive
treatment, nor has Merzbach, nor Rohleder. Numa Praetorius states that the
homosexual subjects he is acquainted with, who had been so treated, were
not cured, and Hirschfeld remarks that the inverts "cured" by hypnotism
were either not cured or not inverted.[250]
Moll has shown his doubt as to the wide applicability of suggestive
therapeutics in homosexuality by developing in recent years what he terms
association-therapy. In nearly all perverse individuals, he points out,
there is a bridge,—more or less weak, no doubt,—which leads to the
normal sexual life. By developing such links of association with
normality, Moll believes, it may be possible to exert a healing influence
on the homosexual. Thus a man who is attracted to boys may be brought to
love a boyish woman.[251] Indications of this kind have long been observed
and utilized, though not developed into a systematic method of treatment.
In the case of bisexual individuals, or of youthful subjects whose
homosexuality is not fully developed, it is probable that this method is
beneficial. It is difficult to believe, however, that it possesses any
marked influence on pronounced and developed cases of inversion.[252]
Somewhat the same aim as Moll's association-therapy, though on the basis
of a more elaborate theory, is sought by Freud's psychoanalytic method of
treating homosexuality. For the psychoanalytic theory (to which reference
was made in the previous chapter) the congenital element of inversion is a
rare and usually unimportant factor; the chief part is played by perverse
psychic mechanisms. It is the business of psychoanalysis to straighten
these out, and from the bisexual constitution, which is regarded as common
to every one, to bring into the foreground the heterosexual elements, and
so to reconstruct a normal personality, developing new sexual ideals from
the patient's own latent and subconscious nature. Sadger has especially
occupied himself with the psychoanalytic treatment of homosexuality and
claims many successes.[253] Sadger admits that there are many limits to
the success of this treatment, and that it cannot affect the inborn
factors of homosexuality when present. Other psychoanalysts are less
sanguine as to the cure of inversion. Stekel appears to have stated that
he has never seen a complete cure by psychoanalysis, and Ferenezi is not
able to give a good account of the results; especially as regards what he
terms obsessional homosexuality, he states that he has never succeeded in
effecting a complete cure, although obsessions in general are especially
amenable to psychoanalysis.[254]
I have met with at least two homosexual persons who had undergone
psychoanalytic treatment and found it beneficial. One, however, was
bisexual, so that the difficulties in the way of the success—granting it
to be real—were not serious. In the other case, the inversion persisted
after treatment, exactly the same as before. The benefit he received was
due to the fact that he was enabled to understand himself better and to
overcome some of his mental difficulties. The treatment, therefore, in his
case, was not a method of cure, but of psychic hygiene, of what Hirschfeld
would call "adaptation-therapy." There can be no doubt that—even if we
put aside all effort at cure and regard an invert's condition as inborn
and permanent—a large and important field of treatment here still
remains.
As we have seen in the two previous chapters, sexual inversion cannot be
regarded as essentially an insane or psychopathic state.[255] But it is
frequently associated with nervous conditions which may be greatly
benefited by hygiene and treatment, without any attempt at all to overcome
a homosexual attitude which may be too deeply rooted to be changed. The
invert is specially liable to suffer from a high degree of neurasthenia,
often involving much nervous weakness and irritability, loss of
self-control, and genital hyperesthesia.[256] Hirschfeld finds that over
67 per cent. inverts suffer from nervous troubles, and among the cases
dealt with in the present Study (as shown in chapter v) slight nervous
functional disturbances are very common. These are conditions which may be
ameliorated, and they may be treated in much the same way as if no
inversion existed, by physical and mental tonics; or, if necessary,
sedatives; by regulated gymnastics and out-of-door exercises; and by
occupations which employ, without overexerting, the mind. Very great and
permanent benefit may be obtained by a prolonged course of such mental and
physical hygiene; the associated neurasthenic conditions may be largely
removed, with the morbid fears, suspicions, and irritabilities that are
usually part of neurasthenia, and the invert may be brought into a fairly
wholesome and tonic condition of self-control.
The inversion is not thus removed. But if the patient is still young, and
if the perversion does not appear to be deeply rooted in the organism, it
is probable that—provided his own good-will is aiding—general hygienic
measures, together with removal to a favorable environment, may gradually
lead to the development of the normal sexual impulse. If it fails to do
so, it becomes necessary to exercise great caution in recommending
stronger methods. Purely "Platonic association with the other sex," Moll
points out, "leads to better results than any prescribed attempt at
coitus." For even when such attempt is successful, it is not usually
possible to regard the results with much satisfaction. Not only is the
acquisition of the normal instinct by an invert very much on a level with
the acquisition of a vice, but probably it seldom succeeds in eradicating
the original inverted instinct.[257] What usually happens is that the
person becomes capable of experiencing both impulses,—not a specially
satisfactory state of things. It may be disastrous, especially if it leads
to marriage, as it may do in an inverted man or still more easily in an
inverted woman. The apparent change does not turn out to be deep, and the
invert's position is more unfortunate than his original position, both for
himself and for his wife.[258]
It may be observed in the Histories brought forward in chapter iii that
the position of married inverts (we must, of course, put aside the
bisexual) is usually more distressing than that of the unmarried. Among my
cases 14 per cent. are married. Hirschfeld finds that 16 per cent. of
inverts are married and 50 per cent. are impotent; he is unable to find a
single cure of homosexuality, and seldom any improvement, due to marriage;
nearly always the impulse remains unaffected. The invert's happiness is,
however, often affected for the worse, and not least by the feeling that
he is depriving his wife of happiness. An invert, who had left his country
through fear of arrest and married a rich woman who was in love with him,
said to Hirschfeld: "Five years' imprisonment would not have been worse
than one year of marriage."[259] In a marriage of this kind the homosexual
partner and the normal partner—however ignorant of sexual matters—are
both conscious, often with equal pain, that, even in the presence of
affection and esteem and the best will in the world, there is something
lacking. The instinctive and emotional element, which is the essence of
sexual love and springs from the central core of organic personality,
cannot voluntarily be created or even assumed.[260]
For the sake of the possible offspring, also, marriage is to be avoided.
It is sometimes entirely for the sake of children that the invert desires
to marry. But it must be pointed out that homosexuality is undoubtedly in
many cases inherited. Often, it is true, the children turn out fairly
well, but, in many cases, they bear witness that they belong to a neurotic
and failing stock;[261] Hirschfeld goes so far as to say that it is always
so, and concludes that from the eugenic standpoint the marriage of a
homosexual person is always very risky. In a large number of cases such
marriages prove sterile. The tendency to sexual inversion in eccentric and
neurotic families seems merely to be nature's merciful method of winding
up a concern which, from her point of view, has ceased to be profitable.
As a rule, inverts have no desire to be different from what they
are, and, if they have any desire for marriage, it is usually
only momentary. Very pathetic appeals for help are, however,
sometimes made. I may quote from a letter addressed to me by a
gentleman who desired advice on this matter: "In part, I write to
you as a moralist and, in part, as to a physician. Dr. Q. has
published a book in which, without discussion, hypnotic treatment
of such cases was reported as successful. I am eager to know if
your opinion remains what it was. This new assurance comes from a
man whose moral firmness and delicacy are unquestionable, but you
will easily imagine how one might shrink from the implantation of
new impulses in the unconscious self, since newly created
inclinations might disturb the conditions of life. At any rate,
in my ignorance of hypnotism I fear that the effort to give the
normal instinct might lead to marriage without the assurance that
the normal instinct would be stable. I write, therefore, to
explain my present condition and crave your counsel. It is with
the greatest reluctance that I reveal the closely guarded secret
of my life. I have no other abnormality, and have not hitherto
betrayed my abnormal instinct. I have never made any person the
victim of passion: moral and religious feelings were too
powerful. I have found my reverence for other souls a perfect
safeguard against any approach to impurity. I have never had
sexual interest in women. Once I had a great friendship with a
beautiful and noble woman, without any mixture of sexual feeling
on my part. I was ignorant of my condition, and I have the bitter
regret of having caused in her a hopeless love—proudly and
tragically concealed to her death. My friendships with men,
younger men, have been colored by passion, against which I have
fought continually. The shame of this has made life a hell, and
the horror of this abnormality, since I came to know it as such,
has been an enemy to my religious faith. Here there could be no
case of a divinely given instinct which I was to learn to use in
a rational and chaste fashion, under the control of spiritual
loyalty. The power which gave me life seemed to insist on my
doing that for which the same power would sting me with remorse.
If there is no remedy I must either cry out against the injustice
of this life of torment between nature and conscience, or submit
to the blind trust of baffled ignorance. If there is a remedy
life will not seem to be such an intolerable ordeal. I am not
pleading that I must succumb to impulse. I do not doubt that a
pure celibate life is possible so far as action is concerned. But
I cannot discover that friendship with younger men can go on
uncolored by a sensuous admixture which fills me with shame and
loathing. The gratification of passion—normal or abnormal—is
repulsive to esthetic feeling. I am nearly 42 and I have always
diverted myself from personal interests that threatened to become
dangerous to me. More than a year ago, however, a new fate seemed
to open to my unhappy and lonely life. I became intimate with a
young man of 20, of the rarest beauty of form and character. I am
confident that he is and always has been pure. He lives an
exalted moral and religious life dominated by the idea that he
and all men are partners of the divine nature, and able in the
strength of that nature to be free from evil. I believe him to be
normal. He shows pleasure in the society of attractive young
women and in an innocent, light-hearted way refers to the time
when he may be able to marry. He is a general favorite, but
turned to me as to a friend and teacher. He is poor, and it was
possible for me to guarantee him a good education. I began to
help him from the longings of a lonely life. I wanted a son and
a friend in my inward desolation. I craved the companionship of
this pure and happy nature. I felt such a reverence for him that
I hoped to find the sensuous element in me purged away by his
purity. I am, indeed, utterly incapable of doing him harm; I am
not morally weak; nevertheless the sensuous element is there, and
it poisons my happiness. He is ardently affectionate and
demonstrative. He spends the summers with me in Europe, and the
tenderness he feels for me has prompted him at times to embrace
and kiss me as he always has done to his father. Of late I have
begun to fear that without will or desire I may injure the
springs of feeling in him, especially if it is true that the
homosexual tendency is latent in most men. The love he shows me
is my joy, but a poisoned joy. It is the bread and wine of life
to me; but I dare not think what his ardent affection might ripen
into. I can go on fighting the battle of good and evil in my
attachment to him, but I cannot define my duty to him. To shun
him would be cruelty and would belie his trust in human fidelity.
Without my friendship he will not take my money—the condition of
a large career. I might, indeed, explain to him what I explain to
you, but the ordeal and shame are too great, and I cannot see
what good it would do. If he has the capacity of homosexual
feeling he might be violently stimulated; if he is incapable of
it, he would feel repulsion.
"Suppose, then, that I should seek hypnotic treatment, I still do
not know what tricks an abnormal nature might play me when
diverted by suggestion. I might lose the joy of this friendship
without any compensation. I am afraid; I am afraid! Might I not
be influenced to shun the only persons who inspire unselfish
feeling?
"Bear with this account of my story. Many virtues are easy for
me, and my life is spent in pursuits of culture. Alas, that all
the culture with which I am credited, all the prayers and
aspirations, all the strong will and heroic resolves have not rid
my nature of this evil bent! What I long for is the right to
love, not for the mere physical gratification, for the right to
take another into the arms of my heart and profess all the
tenderness I feel, to find my joy in planning his career with
him, as one who is rightfully and naturally entitled to do so. I
crave this since I cannot have a son. I leave the matter here.
"When I read what I have written I see how pointless it is. It is
possible, indeed, that brooding over my personal calamity
magnifies in my mind the sense of danger to this friend through
me, and that I only need to find the right relation of
friendliness coupled with aloofness which will secure him against
any too ardent attachment. Certainly I have no fear that I shall
forget myself. Yet two things array themselves on the other
side: I rebel inwardly against the necessity of isolating myself
as if I were a pestilence, and I rebel against the taint of
sensuous feeling. The normal man can feel that his instinct is no
shame when the spirit is in control. I know that to the
consciousness of others my instinct itself would be a shame and a
baseness, and I have no tendency to construct a moral system for
myself. I have, to be sure, moments when I declare to myself that
I will have my sensuous gratification as well as other men, but,
the moment I think of the wickedness of it, the rebellion is soon
over. The disesteem of self, the sense of taint, the necessity of
withdrawing from happiness lest I communicate my taint, that is a
spiritual malady which makes the ground-tone of my existence one
of pain and melancholy. Should you have only some moral
consolation without the promise of medical assistance I should
feel grateful."
In such a case as this, one can do little more than advise the
sufferer that, however painful his lot may be, it is not without
its consolations, and that he would be best advised to pursue, as
cheerfully as may be, the path that he has already long since
marked out for himself. The invert sometimes fails to realize
that for no man with high moral ideals, however normal he may be,
is the conduct of life easy, and that if the invert has to be
satisfied with affection without passion, and to live a life of
chastity, he is doing no more than thousands of normal men have
done, voluntarily and contentedly. As to hypnotism in such a case
as this, it is altogether unreasonable to expect that suggestion
will supplant the deeply rooted organic impulses that have grown
up during a lifetime.
We may thus conclude that in the treatment of inversion the most
satisfactory result is usually obtained when it is possible by direct and
indirect methods to reduce the sexual hyperesthesia which frequently
exists, and by psychic methods to refine and spiritualize the inverted
impulse, so that the invert's natural perversion may not become a cause of
acquired perversity in others. The invert is not only the victim of his
own abnormal obsession, he is the victim of social hostility. We must seek
to distinguish the part in his sufferings due to these two causes. When I
review the cases I have brought forward and the mental history of inverts
I have known, I am inclined to say that if we can enable an invert to be
healthy, selfrestrained and selfrespecting, we have often done better than
to convert him into the mere feeble simulacrum of a normal man. An appeal
to the paiderastia of the best Greek days, and the dignity, temperance,
even chastity, which it involved, will sometimes find a ready response in
the emotional, enthusiastic nature of the congenital invert. Plato's
Dialogues have frequently been found a source of great help and
consolation by inverts. The "manly love" celebrated by Walt Whitman in
Leaves of Grass, although it may be of more doubtful value for general
use, furnishes a wholesome and robust ideal to the invert who is
insensitive to normal ideals.[262]
Among recent books, Ioläus: An Anthology of Friendship, edited
by Edward Carpenter, may be recommended. A similar book in
German, of a more extended character, is Lieblingminne und
Freudesliebe in der Weltliteratur, edited by Elisár von Kupffer.
Mention may also be made of the Freundschaft (1912) of Baron
von Gleichen-Russwurm, a sort of literary history of friendship,
without specific reference to homosexuality, although many
writers of inverted tendency are introduced. Platen's
Tagebücher are notable as the diary of an invert of high
character and ideals. The volumes of the Jahrbuch für sexuelle
Zwischenstufen contain many studies bearing on the ideal and
esthetic aspects of homosexuality.
Various modern poets of high ability have given expression to
emotions of exalted or passionate friendship toward individuals
of the same sex, whether or not such friendship can properly be
termed homosexual. It is scarcely necessary to refer to In
Memoriam, in which Tennyson enshrined his affection for his
early friend, Arthur Hallam, and developed a picture of the
universe on the basis of that affection. The poems of Edward
Cracroft Lefroy are notable, and Mr. John Gambril Nicholson has
privately issued several volumes of verse (A Chaplet of
Southernwood, A Garland of Ladslove, etc.) showing delicate
charm combined with high technical skill. Some books mainly or
entirely written in prose may fairly be included in the same
group. Such are In the Key of Blue, by John Addington Symonds,
and the Memoirs of Arthur Hamilton (published anonymously by a
well-known author, A. C. Benson), in which on somewhat Platonic
lines the idea is worked out that the individual sufferer must
pass "from the love of one fair form to the love of abstract
beauty" and "from the contemplation of his own suffering to the
consideration of the root of all human suffering."
As regards the modern poetic literature of feminine homosexuality
there is probably nothing to put beside the various
volumes—pathetic in their brave simplicity and sincerity—of
"Renée Vivien" (see ante, p. 200). Most other feminine singers
of homosexuality have cautiously thrown a veil of heterosexuality
over their songs.
Novels of a more or less definitely homosexual tone are now very
numerous in English, French, German, and other languages. In
English the homosexuality is for the most part veiled and the
narrative deals largely with school-life and boys in order that
the emotional and romantic character of the relations described
may appear more natural. Thus Tim, an anonymously published
book by H. O. Sturgis (1891), described the devotion of a boy to
an older boy at Eton and his death at an early age. Jaspar
Tristram, by A. W. Clarke (1899), again, is a well-written story
of a schoolboy friendship of homosexual tone; a boy is
represented as feeling attraction to boys who are like girls, and
a girl became attractive to the hero because she is like a boy
and recalls her brother whom he had formerly loved. The Garden
God: A Tale of Two Boys, by Forrest Reid (1905), is another
rather similar book, in its way a charming and delicately written
idyll. Imre: A Memorandum, (1906), by "Xavier Mayne" (the
pseudonym of an American author, who has also written The
Intersexes), privately issued at Naples, is a book of a
different class; representing the frankly homosexual passion of
two mutually attracted men, an Englishman who is supposed to
write the story and a Hungarian officer; it embodies a notable
narrative of homosexual development which is probably more or
less real.
In French there are a number of novels dealing with
homosexuality, sometimes sympathetically, sometimes with artistic
indifference, sometimes satirically. André Gide (in
L'Immoraliste and other books), Rachilde (Madame Vallette),
Willy (in the well-known Claudine series) may be mentioned,
among other writers of more or less distinction, who have once or
oftener dealt with homosexuality. Special reference should be
made to the Belgian author George Eekhoud, whose Escal-Vigor
(prosecuted at Bruges on its publication) is a book of special
power. The homosexual stories of Essebac, of which L'Elu
(1902) is considered the best, are of a romantic and sentimental
character. Lucien (1910), by Binet-Valmer, is a penetrating and
scarcely sympathetic study of inversion. Nortal's Les
Adolescents Passionnés (already mentioned, p. 325) is a notably
intimate and precise study of homosexuality in French schools. It
would be easy to mention many others.
In Germany during recent years many novels of homosexual
character have been published. They are not usually, it would
seem, of high literary character, but are sometimes notable as
being more or less disguised narratives of real fact. Body's Aus
Eines Mannes Mädchenjahren is said to be a faithful
autobiography. Der Neue Werther: eine Hellenische
Passions-geschichte by Narkissos (1902) is also said to be
authentic. Another book that may be mentioned is Konradin's Ein
Junger Platos: Aus dem Leben eines Entgbeistes (1914). The
German belletristic literature of homosexuality, as well as that
of other countries, will be found adequately summarized and
criticised by Numa Praetorius in the volumes of the Jahrbuch für
sexuelle Zwischenstufen. See also Hirschfeld's Die
Homosexualität, pp. 47 and 1018 et seq.
It is by some such method of self-treatment as this that most of the more
highly intelligent men and women whose histories I have already briefly
recorded have at last slowly and instinctively reached a condition of
relative health and peace, both physical and moral. The method of
self-restraint and self-culture, without self-repression, seems to be the
most rational method of dealing with sexual inversion when that condition
is really organic and deeply rooted. It is better that a man should be
enabled to make the best of his own strong natural instincts, with all
their disadvantages, than that he should be unsexed and perverted, crushed
into a position which he has no natural aptitude to occupy. As both
Raffalovich and Féré have insisted, it is the ideal of chastity, rather
than of normal sexuality, which the congenital invert should hold before
his eyes. He may not have in him the making of l'homme moyen sensuel; he
may have in him the making of a saint.[263] What good work in the world
the inverted may do is shown by the historical examples of distinguished
inverts; and, while it is certainly true that these considerations apply
chiefly to the finer-grained natures, the histories I have brought
together suffice to show that such natures constitute a considerable
proportion of inverts. The helplessly gross sexual appetite cannot thus be
influenced; but that remains true whether the appetite is homosexual or
heterosexual, and nothing is gained by enabling it to feed on women as
well as on men.
A strictly ascetic life, it needs scarcely be said, is with difficulty
possible for all persons, either homosexual or heterosexual. It is,
however, outside the province of the physician to recommend his inverted
patients to live according to their homosexual impulses, even when those
impulses seem to be natural to the person displaying them. The most that
the physician is entitled to do, it seems to me, is to present the
situation clearly, and leave to the patient a decision for which he must
himself accept the responsibility. Forel goes so far as to say that he
sees no reason why inverts should not build cities of their own and marry
each other if they so please, since they can do no harm to normal adults,
while children can be protected from them.[264] Such notions are, however,
too far removed from our existing social conventions to be worth serious
consideration.
The standpoint here taken up, it may be remarked, by no means
denies to the invert a right to the fulfillment of his impulses.
Numa Praetorius remarks, it would seem justly, that while the
invert must properly be warned against unnatural sexual license,
and while those who are capable of continence do well to preserve
it, to deny all right to sexual activity to the invert merely
causes those inverts who are incapable of self-control to throw
recklessly aside all restraints (Zeitschrift für sexuelle
Zwischenstufen, vol. viii, 1906, p. 726). The invert has the
right to sexual indulgence, it may be, but he has also the duty
to accept the full responsibility for his own actions, and the
necessity to recognize the present attitude of the society he
lives in. He cannot be advised to set himself in violent
opposition to that society.
The world will not be a tolerable place for pronounced inverts
until they are better understood, and that will involve a radical
change in general and even medical opinion. An inverted
physician, of high character and successful in his profession,
writes to me on this point: "The first, and easiest, thing to do,
it seems to me, is to convince the medical profession that we
unfortunate people are not only as sane, but as moral, as our
normal brothers; and that we are even more alive to the supreme
necessity of self-control (necessary from every point of view)
than they. It is not license we want, but justice; it is the
cruelty and prejudice of convention which we wish to abolish—not
the proper and just indignation of society with crimes against
the social order. We want to make it possible for us to satisfy
our inborn instincts (which are not concerned essentially with
sexual acts, so called, alone) without thereby becoming
criminals. One of us who would, under any circumstances, seduce a
person of his own sex of immature age, and particularly one whose
sexual complexion was unknown, deserves the severe punishment
which would be meted out to a normal person who did the same to a
young girl—but no more; while, so long as no public offense is
given, there should be no penalty or obloquy whatever attached
to sexual acts committed with full consent between mature
persons. These acts may or may not be wrong and immoral, just as
sexual acts between mature persons of different sexes may or may
not be wrong or immoral. But in neither case has the law any
concern; and public opinion should make no distinction between
the two. It is in the highest degree important that it should be
clearly understood that we want no relaxation of moral
obligations. At present we suffer an inconceivably cruel wrong."
We have always to remember, and there is, indeed, no possibility of
forgetting, that the question of homosexuality is a social question.
Within certain limits, the gratification of the normal sexual impulse,
even outside marriage, arouses no general or profound indignation; and is
regarded as a private matter; rightly or wrongly, the gratification of the
homosexual impulse is regarded as a public matter. This attitude is more
or less exactly reflected in the law. Thus it happens that whenever a man
is openly detected in a homosexual act, however exemplary his life may
previously have been, however admirable it may still be in all other
relations, every ordinary normal citizen, however licentious and
pleasure-loving his own life may be, feels it a moral duty to regard the
offender as hopelessly damned and to help in hounding him out of society.
At very brief intervals cases occur, and without reaching the newspapers
are more or less widely known, in which distinguished men in various
fields, not seldom clergymen, suddenly disappear from the country or
commit suicide in consequence of some such exposure or the threat of it.
It is probable that many obscure tragedies could find their explanation in
a homosexual cause.
Some of the various tragic ways in which homosexual passions are
revealed to society may be illustrated by the following
communication from a correspondent, not himself inverted, who
here narrates cases that came under his observation in various
parts of the United States. The cases referred to will be known
to many, but I have disguised the names of persons and places:—
"At the age of 14 I was a chorister at —— church, whose
choirmaster, an Englishman named M. W. M., was an accomplished man,
seemingly a perfect gentleman, and a devout churchman. He never
seemed to care for the society of ladies, never mingled much with
the men, but sought companionship with the choristers of my age.
He frequently visited at the homes of his favorites, to tea, and
when he asked the parents' consent for George's or Frank's
company on an excursion or to the theater, and then to spend the
night with him, such request was invariably granted. I shall ever
remember my first night with him; he began by fondling and
caressing me, quieting my alarm by assurances of not hurting me,
and after invoking me to secrecy and with promises of many future
pleasures, I consented to his desire or passion, which he seemed
to satisfy by an attempt at fellatio. Was this depravity? I
would say 'No!' after reading his subsequent confession, found in
his room after his death by suicide. This was brought about by
his too intimate relations with the rector's son who contracted
St. Vitus's dance and in the delirium of a fever that followed
from nervous exhaustion told of him and his doings. A thorough
investigation took place and M. fled, a broken-hearted and
disgraced man, who, as the result of remorse, relentless
persecution, and exposure through several years, ended his life
by drowning himself. In his confession he spoke of having been
raised under a very strong moral restraint and having lived an
exemplary life, with the exception of this strange desire that
his will-power could not control.
"The next case is that of C. H. He came of an old family of brainy
men who have, and do yet, occupy prominent places in the pulpit
and the bar, and was himself a gifted young attorney. I knew him
intimately, as for six years he was a close neighbor and we were
associated in lodge-work. He was an effeminate little fellow:
height, 5 feet 2 inches; weight, 105 pounds; very near-sighted;
and he had a light voice, not a treble or falsetto, but still a
voice that detracted materially from the beautiful rhetoric that
flowed from his lips. He had served his country as its
representative in the Legislature and had received the nomination
for senator, over a hard-fought political battle. The last
canvass and speeches were made at a town which was, in
consequence, crowded. That night H. had to occupy a room with a
stranger, named E., a travelling salesman. There were two beds in
this room. Mr. E., on the following day told several people that
during the night he was awakened by H., who had come over to his
bed and had his mouth on his 'person,' and that he had threatened
to kick him out of the room, but that H. pleaded with him and
fell on his knees and swore that he had been overcome by a
passion that he had heretofore controlled, and begged of him not
to expose him. These facts coming to the notice of his opponents,
within twenty-four hours, they hastened to take advantage of it
by placarding H. as a second Oscar Wilde, and stating the facts
as far as decency and the law allowed. H.'s friends came to him
and gave him one of two alternatives: if guilty, either to kill
himself or leave that section forever; if not guilty, to slay his
traducer, E. H. affirmed his innocence, and in company with two
friends, C. and J., took the train for ——. Learning there that
E. was at a town twelve miles east, they hired a fast livery and
drove overland. They found E. at the station, awaiting the
arrival of a train. H., with a pistol, strode forward and in his
excitement said: 'You exposed me, did you?' Being near-sighted,
his aim proved wide of the mark. E. sprang forward and grappled
with H. for possession of the pistol, and was fired upon by C.
and J., who shot him in the back. He expired in a few minutes,
his last statement being to the effect that H. was guilty as
accused. H., C., and J. were sentenced to the penitentiary for
life. During my six years' acquaintance with H. I knew of nothing
derogatory to his character, nor has anyone ever come forward to
say that on any other occasion he ever displayed this weakness. I
know his early life had a pure atmosphere, as he was an only
child and the idol of both his parents, who builded high their
hopes of his future success, and who survive this disgrace, but
are broken-hearted.
"The next case is that of the Rev. T. W., professor at the
University of ——. Mr. W. is a scholarly gentleman, affable in
his address, eloquent in his oratory, and a fine classical
scholar. He was exposed by some of his students, who, to use a
slang phrase, accused him of being a 'head-worker.' At his
examination by the faculty he confessed his weakness, and said
he could not control his unholy passion. His resignation was
accepted both by the church and the college, and he left.
"I know of a few other cases that have their peculiar traits, and
am confident that these persons did not become possessed of this
habit through the so-called 'indiscretions of youth,' as in every
case their early life was freer from contamination than that of
90 per cent. of the boys who, on reaching man's estate, have,
like myself, no desire to deviate from the old-fashioned way
formulated by our ancient sire, Adam."
It can scarcely be said that the consciousness of this attitude of society
is favorable to the invert's attainment of a fairly sane and well-balanced
state of mind. This is, indeed, one of the great difficulties in his way,
and often causes him to waver between extremes of melancholia and
egotistic exaltation. We regard all homosexuality with absolute and
unmitigated disgust. We have been taught to venerate Alexander the Great,
Epaminondas, Socrates, and other antique heroes; but they are safely
buried in the remote past, and do not affect our scorn of homosexuality in
the present.
It was in the fourth century, at Rome, that the strong modern opposition
to homosexuality was first clearly formulated in law.[265] The Roman race
had long been decaying; sexual perversions of all kinds flourished; the
population was dwindling. At the same time, Christianity, with its
Judaic-Pauline antagonism to homosexuality, was rapidly spreading. The
statesmen of the day, anxious to quicken the failing pulses of national
life, utilized this powerful Christian feeling. Constantine, Theodosius,
and Valentinian all passed laws against homosexuality, the last, at all
events, ordaining as penalty the vindices flammæ; but their enactments
do not seem to have been strictly carried out. In the year 538, Justinian,
professing terror of certain famines, earthquakes, and pestilences in
which he saw the mysterious "recompense which was meet" prophesied by St.
Paul,[266] issued his edict condemning unnatural offenders to the sword,
"lest as the result of these impious acts" (as the preamble to his Novella
77 has it) "whole cities should perish, together with their inhabitants;
for we are taught by Holy Scripture that through these acts cities have
perished with the men in them."[267] This edict (which Justinian followed
up by a fresh ordinance to the same effect) constituted the foundation of
legal enactment and social opinion concerning the matter in Europe for
thirteen hundred years.[268] In France the vindices flammæ survived to
the last; St. Louis had handed over these sacrilegious offenders to the
Church to be burned; in 1750 two pederasts were burned in the Place de
Grève, and only a few years before the Revolution a Capuchin monk named
Pascal was also burned.
After the Revolution, however, began a new movement, which has continued
slowly and steadily ever since, though it still divides European nations
into two groups. Justinian, Charlemagne, and St. Louis had insisted on the
sin and sacrilege of sodomy as the ground for its punishment.[269] It was
doubtless largely as a religious offense that the Code Napoléon omitted
to punish it. The French law makes a clear and logical distinction between
crime on the one hand, vice and irreligion on the other, only concerning
itself with the former. Homosexual practices in private, between two
consenting adult parties, whether men or women, are absolutely unpunished
by the Code Napoléon and by French law of today. Only under three
conditions does the homosexual act come under the cognizance of the law
as a crime: (1) when there is outrage public à la pudeur,—i.e., when
the act is performed in public or with a possibility of witnesses; (2)
when there is violence or absence of consent, in whatever degree the act
may have been consummated; (3) when one of the parties is under age, or
unable to give valid consent; in some cases it appears possible to apply
Article 334 of the penal code, directed against habitual excitation to
debauch of young persons of either sex under the age of 21.
This method of dealing with unnatural offenses has spread widely, at first
because of the political influence of France, and more recently because
such an attitude has commended itself on its merits. In Belgium the law is
similar to that of the Code Napoléon, as it is also in Italy, Spain,
Portugal, Roumania, Japan, and numerous South American lands. In
Switzerland the law is a little vague and varies slightly in the different
cantons, but it is not severe; in Geneva and some other cantons there is
no penalty; the general tendency is to inflict brief imprisonment when
serious complaints have been lodged, and cases can sometimes be settled
privately by the magistrate.
The only large European countries in which homosexuality per se remains
a penal offense appear to be Germany, Austria, Russia, and England. In
several of the German States, such as Bavaria and Hanover, simple
homosexuality formerly went unpunished, but when the laws of Prussia were
in 1871 applied to the new German Empire this ceased to be the case, and
unnatural carnality between males became an offense against the law. This
article of the German Code (Section 175) has caused great discussion and
much practical difficulty, because, although the terms of the law make it
necessary to understand by widernatürliche Unzucht other practices
besides pædicatio, not every homosexual practice is included; it must be
some practice resembling normal coitus. There is a widespread opinion that
this article of the code should be abolished; it appears that at one time
an authoritative committee pronounced in favor of this step, and their
proposition came near adoption. The Austrian law is somewhat similar to
the German, but it applies to women as well as to men; this is logical,
for there is no reason why homosexuality should be punished in men and
left unpunished in women. In Russia the law against homosexual practices
appears to be very severe, involving, in some cases, banishment to Siberia
and deprivation of civil rights; but it can scarcely be rigorously
executed.
The existing law in England is severe, but simple. Carnal knowledge per
anum of either a man or a woman or an animal is punishable by a sentence
of penal servitude with not less than three years, or of imprisonment with
not more than two years. Even "gross indecency" between males, however
privately committed, has been since 1885 a penal offense.[270] The clause
is open to criticism. With the omission of the words "or private," it
would be sound and in harmony with the most enlightened European
legislation; but it must be pointed out that an act only becomes indecent
when those who perform it or witness it regard it as indecent. The act
which brought each of us into the world is not indecent; it would become
so if carried on in public. If two male persons, who have reached years of
discretion, consent together to perform some act of sexual intimacy in
private, no indecency has been committed. If one of the consenting parties
subsequently proclaims the act, indecency may doubtless be created, as may
happen also in the case of normal sexual intercourse, but it seems
contrary to good policy that such proclamation should convert the act
itself into a penal offense. Moreover, "gross indecency" between males
usually means some form of mutual masturbation; no penal code regards
masturbation as an offense, and there seems to be no sufficient reason why
mutual masturbation should be so regarded.[271] The main point to be
insured is that no boy or girl who has not reached years of discretion
should be seduced or abused by an older person, and this point is equally
well guaranteed on the basis introduced by the Code Napoléon. However
shameful, disgusting, personally immoral, and indirectly antisocial it may
be for two adult persons of the same sex, men or women, to consent
together to perform an act of sexual intimacy in private, there is no
sound or adequate ground for constituting such act a penal offense by law.
One of the most serious objections to the legal recognition of private
"gross indecency" is the obvious fact that only in the rarest cases can
such indecency become known to the police, and we thus perpetrate what is
very much like a legal farce. "The breaking of few laws," as Moll truly
observes, regarding the German law, "so often goes unpunished as of this."
It is the same in England, as is amply evidenced by the fact that, of the
English sexual inverts, whose histories I have obtained, not one, so far
as I am aware, has ever appeared in a police-court on this charge.
It may further be pointed out that legislation against homosexuality has
no clear effect either in diminishing or increasing its prevalence. This
must necessarily be so as regards the kernel of the homosexual group, if
we are to regard a considerable proportion of cases as congenital. In
France homosexuality per se has been untouched by the law for a century;
yet it abounds, chiefly, it seems, among the lowest in the community;
although the law is silent, social feeling is strong, and when—as has
been the case in one instance—a man of undoubted genius has his name
associated with this perversion it becomes difficult or impossible for the
admirers of his work to associate with him personally; very few cases of
homosexuality have been recorded in France among the more intelligent
classes; the literature of homosexuality is there little more than the
literature of male prostitution, as described by police-officials, and as
carried on largely for the benefit of foreigners. In Germany and Austria,
where the law against homosexuality is severe, it abounds also, perhaps
to a much greater extent than in France;[272] it certainly asserts itself
more vigorously; a far greater number of cases have been recorded than in
any other country, and the German literature of homosexuality is very
extensive, often issued in popular form, and sometimes enthusiastically
eulogistic. In England the law is exceptionally severe; yet, according to
the evidence of those who have an international acquaintance with these
matters, homosexuality is fully as prevalent as on the Continent; some
would say that it is more so. Much the same is true of the United States,
though there is less to be seen on the surface. It cannot, therefore, be
said that legislative enactments have very much influence on the
prevalence of homosexuality. The chief effect seems to be that the attempt
at suppression arouses the finer minds among sexual inverts to undertake
the enthusiastic defense of homosexuality, while coarser minds are
stimulated to cynical bravado.[273]
As regards the prevalence of homosexuality in the United States,
I may quote from a well-informed American correspondent:—
"The great prevalence of sexual inversion in American cities is
shown by the wide knowledge of its existence. Ninety-nine normal
men out of a hundred have been accosted on the streets by
inverts, or have among their acquaintances men whom they know to
be sexually inverted. Everyone has seen inverts and knows what
they are. The public attitude toward them is generally a negative
one—indifference, amusement, contempt.
"The world of sexual inverts is, indeed, a large one in any
American city, and it is a community distinctly organized—words,
customs, traditions of its own; and every city has its numerous
meeting-places: certain churches where inverts congregate;
certain cafés well known for the inverted character of their
patrons; certain streets where, at night, every fifth man is an
invert. The inverts have their own 'clubs,' with nightly
meetings. These 'clubs' are, really, dance-halls, attached to
saloons, and presided over by the proprietor of the saloon,
himself almost invariably an invert, as are all the waiters and
musicians. The frequenters of these places are male sexual
inverts (usually ranging from 17 to 30 years of age); sightseers
find no difficulty in gaining entrance; truly, they are welcomed
for the drinks they buy for the company—and other reasons.
Singing and dancing turns by certain favorite performers are the
features of these gatherings, with much gossip and drinking at
the small tables ranged along the four walls of the room. The
habitués of these places are, generally, inverts of the most
pronounced type, i.e., the completely feminine in voice and
manners, with the characteristic hip motion in their walk; though
I have never seen any approach to feminine dress there, doubtless
the desire for it is not wanting and only police regulations
relegate it to other occasions and places. You will rightly infer
that the police know of these places and endure their existence
for a consideration; it is not unusual for the inquiring stranger
to be directed there by a policeman."
The Oscar Wilde trial (see ante, p. 48), with its wide
publicity, and the fundamental nature of the questions it
suggested, appears to have generally contributed to give
definiteness and self-consciousness to the manifestations of
homosexuality, and to have aroused inverts to take up a definite
attitude. I have been assured in several quarters that this is so
and that since that case the manifestations of homosexuality have
become more pronounced. One correspondent writes:—
"Up to the time of the Oscar Wilde trial I had not known what the
condition of the law was. The moral question in itself—its
relation to my own life and that of my friends—I reckoned I had
solved; but I now had to ask myself how far I was justified in
not only breaking the law, but in being the cause of a like
breach in others, and others younger than myself. I have never
allowed the dictum of the law to interfere with what I deemed
to be a moral development in any youth for whom I am responsible.
I cannot say that the trial made me alter my course of life, of
the rightness of which I was too convincingly persuaded, but it
made me much more careful, and it probably sharpened my sense of
responsibility for the young. Reviewing the results of the trial
as a whole, it doubtless did incalculable harm, and it
intensified our national vice of hypocrisy. But I think it also
may have done some good in that it made those who, like myself,
have thought and experienced deeply in the matter—and these must
be no small few—ready to strike a blow, when the time comes,
for what we deem to be right, honorable, and clean."
From America a lady writes with reference to the moral position
of inverts, though without allusion to the Wilde trial:—
"Inverts should have the courage and independence to be
themselves, and to demand an investigation. If one strives to
live honorably, and considers the greatest good to the greatest
number, it is not a crime nor a disgrace to be an invert. I do
not need the law to defend me, neither do I desire to have any
concessions made for me, nor do I ask my friends to sacrifice
their ideals for me. I too have ideals which I shall always hold.
All that I desire—and I claim it as my right—is the freedom to
exercise this divine gift of loving, which is not a menace to
society nor a disgrace to me. Let it once be understood that the
average invert is not a moral degenerate nor a mental degenerate,
but simply a man or a woman who is less highly specialized, less
completely differentiated, than other men and women, and I
believe the prejudice against them will disappear, and if they
live uprightly they will surely win the esteem and consideration
of all thoughtful people. I know what it means to an invert—who
feels himself set apart from the rest of mankind—to find one
human heart who trusts him and understands him, and I know how
almost impossible this is, and will be, until the world is made
aware of these facts."
But, while the law has had no more influence in repressing abnormal
sexuality than, wherever it has tried to do so, it has had in repressing
the normal sexual instinct, it has served to foster another offense. What
is called blackmailing in England, chantage in France, and Erpressung
in Germany—in other words, the extortion of money by threats of exposing
some real or fictitious offense—finds its chief field of activity in
connection with homosexuality.[274] No doubt the removal of the penalty
against simple homosexuality does not abolish blackmailing, as the
existence of this kind of chantage in France shows, but it renders its
success less probable.
On all these grounds, and taking into consideration the fact that the
tendency of modern legislation generally, and the consensus of
authoritative opinion in all countries, are in this direction, it seems
reasonable to conclude that neither "sodomy" (i.e., immissio membri in
anum hominis vel mulieris) nor "gross indecency" ought to be penal
offenses, except under certain special circumstances. That is to say, that
if two persons of either or both sexes, having reached years of
discretion,[275] privately consent to practise some perverted mode of
sexual relationship, the law cannot be called upon to interfere. It should
be the function of the law in this matter to prevent violence, to protect
the young, and to preserve public order and decency. Whatever laws are
laid down beyond this must be left to the individuals themselves, to the
moralists, and to social opinion.
At the same time, and while such a modification in the law seems to be
reasonable, the change effected would be less considerable than may appear
at first sight. In a very large proportion, indeed, of cases boys are
involved. It is instructive to observe that in Legludic's 246 cases
(including victims and aggressors together) in France, 127, or more than
half, were between the ages of 10 and 20, and 82, or exactly one-third,
were between the ages of 10 and 14. A very considerable field of operation
is thus still left for the law, whatever proportion of cases may meet with
no other penalty than social opinion.
That, however, social opinion—law or no law—will speak with no uncertain
voice is very evident. Once homosexuality was primarily a question of
population or of religion. Now we hear little either of its economic
aspects or of its sacrilegiousness; it is for us primarily a disgusting
abomination, i.e., a matter of taste, of esthetics; and, while
unspeakably ugly to the majority, it is proclaimed as beautiful by a small
minority. I do not know that we need find fault with this esthetic method
of judging homosexuality. But it scarcely lends itself to legal purposes.
To indulge in violent denunciation of the disgusting nature of
homosexuality, and to measure the sentence by the disgust aroused, or to
regret, as one English judge is reported to have regretted when giving
sentence, that "gross indecency" is not punishable by death, is to import
utterly foreign considerations into the matter. The judges who yield to
this temptation would certainly never allow themselves to be consciously
influenced on the bench by their political opinions. Yet esthetic opinions
are quite as foreign to law as political opinions. An act does not become
criminal because it is disgusting. To eat excrement, as Moll remarks, is
extremely disgusting, but it is not criminal. The confusion which thus
exists, even in the legal mind, between the disgusting and the criminal is
additional evidence of the undesirability of the legal penalty for simple
homosexuality. At the same time it shows that social opinion is amply
adequate to deal with the manifestations of inverted sexuality. So much
for the legal aspects of sexual inversion.
But while there can be no doubt about the amply adequate character of the
existing social reaction to all manifestations of perverted sexuality, the
question still remains how far not merely the law, but also the state of
public opinion, should be modified in the light of such a psychological
study as we have here undertaken. It is clear that this public opinion,
molded chiefly or entirely with reference to gross vice, tends to be
unduly violent in its reaction. What, then, is the reasonable attitude of
society toward the congenital sexual invert? It seems to lie in the
avoidance of two extremes. On the one hand, it cannot be expected to
tolerate the invert who flouts his perversion in its face, and assumes
that, because he would rather take his pleasure with a soldier or a
policeman than with their sisters, he is of finer clay than the vulgar
herd. On the other, it might well refrain from crushing with undiscerning
ignorance beneath a burden of shame the subject of an abnormality which,
as we have seen, has not been found incapable of fine uses. Inversion is
an aberration from the usual course of nature. But the clash of contending
elements which must often mark the history of such a deviation results now
and again—by no means infrequently—in nobler activities than those
yielded by the vast majority who are born to consume the fruits of the
earth. It bears, for the most part, its penalty in the structure of its
own organism. We are bound to protect the helpless members of society
against the invert. If we go farther, and seek to destroy the invert
himself before he has sinned against society, we exceed the warrant of
reason, and in so doing we may, perhaps, destroy also those children of
the spirit which possess sometimes a greater worth than the children of
the flesh.
Here we may leave this question of sexual inversion. In dealing with it I
have sought to avoid that attitude of moral superiority which is so common
in the literature of this subject, and have refrained from pointing out
how loathsome this phenomenon is, or how hideous that. Such an attitude is
as much out of place in scientific investigation as it is in judicial
investigation, and may well be left to the amateur. The physician who
feels nothing but disgust at the sight of disease is unlikely to bring
either succor to his patients or instruction to his pupils.
That the investigation we have here pursued is not only profitable to us
in succoring the social organism and its members, but also in bringing
light into the region of sexual psychology, is now, I hope, clear to every
reader who has followed me to this point. There are a multitude of social
questions which we cannot face squarely and honestly unless we possess
such precise knowledge as has been here brought together concerning the
part played by the homosexual tendency in human life. Moreover, the study
of this perverted tendency stretches beyond itself;
"O'er that art
Which you say adds to Nature, is an art That Nature makes."
Pathology is but physiology working under new conditions. The stream of
nature still flows into the bent channel of sexual inversion, and still
runs according to law. We have not wasted our time in this toilsome
excursion. With the knowledge here gained we are the better equipped to
enter upon the study of the wider questions of sex.
[243]
In this connection I may refer to Moll's Sexual Life of
the Child, to the writings of Dr. Clement Dukes, physician to Rugby
School, who fully recognizes the risks of school-life, and to the
discussion on sexual vice in schools, started by an address by the Rev.
J. M. Wilson, head-master of Clifton College, in the English Journal of
Education, 1881-82.
[244]
With regard to the importance of the sexual emotions
generally and their training, see the well-known book by Edward Carpenter,
Love's Coming of Age; Professor Gurlitt ("Knabenfreundschaften,"
Sexual-Probleme, Oct., 1909) also upholds the intimate friendships of
youth, which in his own experience have not had even a suspicion of
homosexuality.
[245]
Casanova, Mémoires, vol. i (edition Garnier), p. 160. See
also remarks by an experienced master in one of the largest English public
schools, which I have brought forward in vol. i of these Studies,
"Auto-erotism," 3d ed., 1910.
[246]
See, e.g., Professor J. R. Angell, "Some Reflections upon
the Reaction from Coeducation," Popular Science Monthly, Nov., 1902;
also Moll's Sexual Life of the Child, ch. ix, and for a general
discussion of coeducation, S. Poirson, La Coéducation, 1911.
[247]
Bethe, "Die Dorische Knabenliebe," Rheinisches Museum für
Philologie; vol. lxii, Heft 3, p. 440; cf. Edward Carpenter,
Intermediate Types among Primitive Folk, ch. vi.
[248]
Schrenck-Notzing, Die Suggestionstherapie bei krankhaften
Erscheinungen des Geschlechtsinnes, 1892. (Eng. trans. Therapeutic
Suggestion, 1895.)
[249]
Raffalovich, Uranisme et Unisexualité, 1896, p. 16. He
remarks that the congenital invert who has never had relations with women,
and whose abnormality, to use Krafft-Ebing's distinction, is a perversion
and not a perversity, is much less dangerous and apt to seduce others than
the more versatile and corrupt person who has known all methods of
gratification.
[250]
See, e.g., Moll, Die Konträre Sexualempfindung, ch. xi;
Forel, Die Sexuelle Frage, ch. xiv; Näcke, "Die Behandlung der
Homosexualität," Sexual-Probleme, Aug., 1910; Hirschfeld, Die
Homosexualität, ch. xxii.
[251]
Moll, Zeitschrift für Psychotherapie, 1911, Heft 1;
id., Handbuch der Sexualwissenschaften, 1912, p. 662 et seq.
[252]
This is also the opinion of Numa Praetorius, Jahrbuch für
sexuelle Zwischenstufen, Jan., 1913, p. 222.
[253]
See, especially, Sadger, Zeitschrift für
Sexualwissenschaft, Heft 12, 1908; also Jahrbuch für sexuelle
Zwischenstufen, vol. ix, 1908; Sadger's methods are criticised by
Hirschfeld, Die Homosexualität, ch. xxii, and defended by Sadger,
Internationale Zeitschrift für Aerztliche Psychoanalyse, July, 1914, p.
392. For a discussion of the psychoanalytic treatment of homosexuality by
a leading American Freudian, see Brill, Journal American Medical
Association, Aug. 2, 1913.
[254]
Internationale Zeitschrift für Aerztliche Psychoanalyse,
March, 1914.
[255]
This is now generally recognized. See, e.g., Roubinovitch
and Borel, "Un Cas d'Uranisme," L'Encéphale, Aug., 1913. These authors
conclude that it is today impossible to look upon inversion as the
equivalent or the symptom of a psychopathic state, though we have to
recognize that it frequently coexists with morbid emotional states. Näcke,
also, in his extensive experience, found that homosexuality is rare in
asylums and slight in character; he dealt with this question on various
occasions; see, e.g., Jahrbuch für sexuelle Zwischenstufen, vol. viii,
1906.
[256]
Krafft-Ebing considered that the temporary or lasting
association of homosexuality with neurasthenia having its root in
congenital conditions is "almost invariable," and some authorities (like
Meynert) have regarded inversion as an accidental growth on the foundation
of neurasthenia.
[257]
Féré expressed himself concerning the general treatment of
homosexuality in the same sense, and even more emphatically (Féré,
L'Instinct Sexuel, 1899, pp. 272, 286). He considers that all forms of
congenital inversion resist treatment, and that, since a change in the
invert's instincts must be regarded rather as a perversion of the invert
than a cure of the inversion, one may be permitted to doubt not only the
utility of the treatment, but even the legitimacy of attempting it. The
treatment of sexual inversion, he declared, is as much outside the
province of medicine as the restoration of color-vision in the
color-blind. The ideal which the physician and the teacher must place
before the invert is that of chastity; he must seek to harness his wagon
to a star.
[258]
I have been told by a distinguished physician, who was
consulted in the case, of a congenital invert highly placed in the English
government service, who married in the hope of escaping his perversion,
and was not even able to consummate the marriage. It is needless to insist
on the misery which is created in such cases. It is not, of course, denied
that such marriages may not sometimes become eventually happy. Thus
Kiernan ("Psychical Treatment of Congenital Sexual Inversion," Review of
Insanity and Nervous Diseases, June, 1894) reports the case of a
thoroughly inverted girl who married the brother of the friend to whom she
was previously attached merely in order to secure his sister's
companionship. She was able to endure and even enjoy intercourse by
imagining that her husband, who resembled his sister, was another sister.
Liking and esteem for the husband gradually increased and after the sister
died a child was born who much resembled her; "the wife's esteem passed
through love of the sister to intense natural love of the daughter, as
resembling the sister; through this to normal love of the husband as the
father and brother." The final result may have been satisfactory, but this
train of circumstances could not have been calculated beforehand. Moll is
also opposed, on the whole (e.g., Deutsche medicinische Presse, No. 6,
1902), to marriage and procreation by inverts.
[259]
Hirschfeld, Die Homosexualität, ch. xxi. It might seem on
theoretical grounds that the marriage of a homosexual man with a
homosexual woman might turn out well. Hirschfeld, however, states that he
knows of 14 such marriages, and the theoretical expectation has not been
justified; 3 of the cases speedily terminated in divorce, 4 of the couples
lived separately, and all but 2 of the remaining couples regretted the
step they had taken. I may add that in such a case even the expectation of
happiness scarcely seems reasonable, since neither of the parties can feel
a true mating impulse toward the other.
[260]
Hirschfeld also notes (Die Homosexualität, p. 95) that
women often instinctively feel that there is something wrong in the love
of their inverted husbands who may perhaps succeed in copulating, but
betray their deepest feelings by a repugnance to touch the sexual parts
with the hand. The homosexual woman, also, as Hirschfeld elsewhere points
out with cases in illustration (p. 84), may suffer seriously through being
subjected to normal sexual relationships.
[261]
Féré reports the case of an invert of great intellectual
ability who had never had any sexual relationships, and was not averse
from a chaste life; he was urged by his doctor to acquire the power of
normal intercourse and to marry, on the ground that his perversion was
merely a perversion of the imagination. He did so, and, though he married
a perfectly strong and healthy woman, and was himself healthy, except in
so far as his perversion was concerned, the offspring turned out
disastrously. The eldest child was an epileptic, almost an imbecile, and
with strongly marked homosexual impulses; the second and third children
were absolute idiots; the youngest died of convulsions in infancy (Féré,
L'Instinct Sexuel, p. 269 et seq.) No doubt this is not an average
case, but the numerous examples of the offspring of similar marriages
brought forward by Hirschfeld (op. cit., p. 391) scarcely present a much
better result.
[262]
It is scarcely necessary to add that the same principle is
adaptable to the case of homosexual women. "In all such cases," writes an
American woman physician, "I would recommend that the moral sense be
trained and fostered, and the persons allowed to keep their individuality,
being taught to remember always that they are different from others,
rather sacrificing their own feelings or happiness when necessary. It is
good discipline for them, and will serve in the long run to bring them
more favor and affection than any other course. This quality or
idiosyncrasy is not essentially evil, but, if rightly used, may prove a
blessing to others and a power for good in the life of the individual; nor
does it reflect any discredit upon its possessor."
[263]
The existence of an affinity between homosexuality and the
religious temperament has been referred to in ch. i as recognized in many
parts of the world. See, for a more extended discussion, Horneffer, Der
Priester, and Bloch, Die Prostitution, vol. i, pp. 101-110. The
psychoanalysts have also touched on this point; thus Pfister, Die
Frommingkeit des Grafen von Zinzendorf (1910), argues that the founder of
the pietistic sect of the Herrenhuter was of sublimated homosexual (or
bisexual) temperament.
[264]
Forel, Die Sexuelle Frage, p. 528. Such ideas are, of
course, often put forward by inverts themselves.
[265]
Roman law previously seems to have been confined in this
matter to the protection of boys. The Scantinian and other Roman laws
against paiderasty seem to have been usually a dead letter. See, for
various notes and references, W. G. Holmes, The Age of Justinian and
Theodora, vol. i, p. 121.
[266]
Epistle to the Romans, chapter i, verses 26-7.
[267]
In practice this penalty of death appears to have been
sometimes commuted to ablation of the sexual organs.
[268]
For a full sketch of the legal enactments against
homosexual intercourse in ancient and modern times, see Numa Praetorius,
"Die straflichen Bestimmungen gegen den gleichgeschlechtlichen Verkehr,"
Jahrbuch für sexuelle Zwischenstufen, vol. i, pp. 97-158. This writer
points out that Justinian, and still more clearly, Pius V, in the
sixteenth century, distinguished between occasional homosexuality and
deep-rooted inversion, habitual offenders alone, not those who had only
been guilty once or twice, being punished.
[269]
The influence of the supposed connection of sodomy with
unbelief, idolatry, and heresy in arousing the horror of it among earlier
religions has been emphasized by Westermarck, The Origin and Development
of the Moral Ideas, vol. i, p. 486 et seq.
[270]
"Any male person who in public or private commits, or is a
party to the commission of, or procures or attempts to procure the
commission by any male person of, any act of gross indecency with another
male person, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor, and, being convicted
thereof, shall be liable at the discretion of the court to be imprisoned
for any term not exceeding two years, with or without hard labor."
[271]
This point is brought forward by Dr. Léon de Rode in his
report on "L'Inversion Génitale et la Législation," prepared for the Third
(Brussels) Congress of Criminal Anthropology in 1892. The same point is
insisted on by some of my correspondents.
[272]
It is a remarkable and perhaps significant fact that, while
homosexuality is today in absolute disrepute in France, it was not so
under the less tolerant law of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries.
The Duc de Gesvres, as described by Besenval (Mémoires, i, p. 178), was
a well-marked invert of feminine type, impotent, and publicly affecting
all the manners of women; yet he was treated with consideration. In 1687
Madame, the mother of the Regent, writes implying that "all the young men
and many of the old" practised pederasty: il n'y a que les gens du commun
qui aiment les femmes. The marked tendency to inversion in the French
royal family at this time is well known.
[273]
A man with homosexual habits, I have been told, declared he
would be sorry to see the English law changed, as then he would find no
pleasure in his practices.
[274]
Blackmailing appears to be the most serious risk which the
invert runs. Hirschfeld states in an interesting study of blackmailing
(Jahrbuch für sexuelle Zwischenstufen, April, 1913) that his experience
shows that among 10,000 homosexual persons hardly one falls a victim to
the law, but over 3000 are victimized by blackmailers.
[275]
Krafft-Ebing would place this age not under 16, the age at
which in England girls may legally consent to normal sexual intercourse
(Psychopathia Sexualis, 1893, p. 419). It certainly should not be
lower.
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